Wednesday, December 20, 2023

What I'm reading for December 20, 2023


I read across a fairly wide range of genres. Which I guess shouldn't be too much of a surprise given how many sub-genres I write in. And if I  had to pick a favorite, for either reading or writing, it would have to be a blend. Again, not a surprise. I write the kinds of books I like to read. 

This past week I read two books by K.L.. Noone: Snowed in: Kit and Harry and Midwinter Firelight--which is a sequel, of sorts. And which was, honestly, somewhat difficult to find!

They're part of her Demon Universe series, except most of those are contemporary and these are not. They're MM paranormal romances set in an alternative Regency England, one that accepts and supports both those things. 

Regency was my gateway romance--via a box of books that was donated to my family after our house burned down when I was eleven. So there's still a lot of comfort and familiarity in that world. There were also a few gothic thrillers in that box, as well. So grumpy-sunshine, one of them titled, snowed in together in an isolated manor house while a storm and unseen, hostile, possibly supernatural forces rage outside...yep. That pushes ALL my buttons. 

They're not hugely suspenseful--which, again, is something I happen to like. Especially as a break from tormenting my own characters. And, honestly, I found them perfect for reading over the holiday season. Light and engaging filled with snow and holiday cheer. 

Best of all, there's a sequel to the sequel--Midwinter Music--due out later this week! I can't wait.

Oddly, they reminded me of Allie Therin's Magic in Manhattan and Roaring Twenties Magic books...even though, I know, entirely different time periods. 




Monday, December 18, 2023

Mug Shot Monday: Peet's Xmas Mugs, Week Two

 



Here are two more Peet's Christmas mugs. I think these are the oldest ones. You'll notice (or maybe you won't!) that they have a rim around the top, which the others don't. I posted these together, even though I don't think they were from the same year, because together they act as a bridge between last week's design and next week's mug. Also, they both have a sort of Christmas Sweater motif. 

The mug on the right carries on with last week's snowflake design, while the one on the left heralds next week's music theme. The red mug is also the first one I saw with the Peet's & Joy logo. 

I kind of wish they'd kept this more traditional shape (all the older mugs have that lip) but I like all the designs and I enjoyed collecting them every year.  And I love breaking them out every December and recalling what seemed a truly magical time in my life. 

I have a free Ugly Christmas Sweater short story available (not that these mugs are ugly!). Details below, if you're interested.



Counting On Christmas

I originally wrote this short story for the Nine Naughty Novelists' Ugly Christmas Sweater Party. It's short—just two scenes--about Mike and Claire's (Let Me Count the Ways) first Christmas together. I always wondered how their weekend might have turned out. Did it live up to their expectations? Were all their fantasies fulfilled?

 

I got to explore the answer when I wrote Christmasing With You which will release next year as part of the Snowed in and Spiteful project! (see below for details).

And, in the meantime, download Counting On Christmas HERE

Thursday, December 14, 2023

Foodie Friday Post: Faux Window Displays


 Not exactly food related, but I  was in the grocery store the other day, and Central Market had decorated for the holidays with Faux Shop Window displays that were just too fun--especially for someone who'd spent her twenties wandering up and down NYC's Fifth Avenue admiring the windows. Here's a fun video I made after my visit:



And because I love posting excerpts, here's one from Christmas Angel...

Tony

I return from the kitchen just in time to hear my mother say, “Are you all right, Jake? You look so tired.”

“Long day,” he mumbles, sounding drained.

One look convinces me that he wasn’t lying about his energy levels not being tied to food consumption. He looks wrecked. “C’mon,” I tell him. “I’ll walk you back to your cabin. Make sure you have everything you need.”

“Tony, don’t you think—” Mama starts to say, but I cut her off with a swift shake of my head.

“No. I don’t. The cabin’ll be fine.” 

And I don’t rightly know if it will be fine. Or if anything will be fine, ever again. But I also know that I can’t have him in my bed tonight. For oh so many reasons.

 

“Are you sure you’re going to be okay tonight?” I ask as we make our way back toward the cabins. I don’t know why I phrased it like that. What am I going to do if he says no?

“I dunno, do I?” he replies with a shrug. “Never done this before.” He has his hands jammed deep in his jacket pockets. His head’s back, looking up at the sky. “I’d forgotten how pretty it is here at night,” he says quietly. “Maybe being a ghost won’t be so bad after all, if I can have this to look at all the time.”

“Jake…” I start to protest, but his appearance startles me into momentary silence. He’s wearing a cattleman’s hat and a shearling jacket that I’m certain he didn’t have on a moment earlier. “Where did those clothes come from?”

“Same place this came from,” he says, lifting a hand that now holds a lit cigar. “Would you like one?”

“No. Aren’t you supposed to be conserving energy?” I snap at him. “You look like shit right now. You really think any of this is helping?”

“Well, that’s just rude.” He shoots me a wounded look that I don’t buy for a minute. “I was cold and…okay, look. I just got here, right? I can’t possibly have run through all my energy in less than one night. I figure Heaven’s gotta play fair, don’t you think so?  And no one could expect me to accomplish all I have to do in under one night. That’s just not reasonable. So, just because I look—thanks for that, by the way—and feel like shit right now. I can’t be as far gone as all that. I’m here to help you get your Christmas Spirit back, that’s a tall order.”

“I guess so. Not that you would know anything about that. Besides, my Christmas spirit is just fine.”

“Sure, it is.”

“Plus, I thought we’d decided you’re here to answer my mother’s prayers—not mine.”

“Yeah, but she’s worried about you so…two birds, one stone.” He slants me a look. “And what did you mean when you said, ‘not that I would know about that’? Know about what?”

“Christmas spirit. Obviously.”

“Oh, bullshit. I know a lot. I’m full of the stuff.”

“You never had a clue,” I tell him. “In all the time we lived in New York, how often did you make room in your schedule for a stroll along Fifth Avenue, to look at the windows? Or to go ice skating at Rockefeller Center? You were always too busy.”

“Oh, no,” Jake says. He’s scowling now. “Don’t lay that on me. You were guilty of that, too. I remember. I suggested skating once and you said it was too cold. You also said you didn’t know how to skate, which is why I never brought it up again.”

“Of course, I can skate,” I tell him. “I said I didn’t know if you knew how. Big difference. For that matter, I still don’t know.”

“No difference. I was willing to try it, but you—”

“Oh, stop it, already,” I snarl at him, annoyed that he ignored my question—again. Annoyed by how much it bothers me. “Why are we arguing about this anyway?” Why do I care if he can fucking ice-skate?

“If I knew you were that excited for a bunch of lights I’d have made the time. But I never got the impression that you were. Besides, if I was busy, it was because I was trying to make a better life for us. It wasn’t just about me. None of it was.”

“Yeah,” I scoff. “You keep telling yourself that.”

We’ve reached the cabin by then, and I’ve followed him up onto the small front porch out of habit. Jake glances up at the eaves and shakes his head. “No mistletoe? What kind of Christmas village is this?”

“Why do we need mistletoe?” I ask—and immediately recognize my error. “Scratch that. It’s not a question. We don’t need it.”

“Are you sure?” he teases, lifting the cigar between us and wagging it back and forth. “Because this could easilybecome something else. If you wanted it to. Just say the word…”

“No. Stop. I don’t.” I back away quickly, stumbling down the stairs. “Good night, Jake. I’ll see you in the morning.” And then, before I can stop myself, I add, “I will, won’t I?” 

“Far as I know.” He shrugs and turns toward the door. “’Night, Tony.”

“And you’re sure you have everything you need?”

Jake pauses. Glancing at me over his shoulder, he hesitates. Then he smiles and answers, “Yeah, Tone. I’m sure,” right before he disappears into the dark cabin and closes the door behind him.

I’m left standing there in the cold. I don’t move for a long moment, just continue staring at the door, resisting the urge to climb those steps again. Eventually, I realize there’s a cold breeze behind me and it’s pushing me forward, like ghostly hands at my back.

“No,” I mutter as I turn away, and trudge back toward the house. “I can’t. I won’t.” But, in my heart of hearts, I really wish I could.

* * *

Jake

I wait, breathless, just inside the door, until I hear Tony walk away. Part of me was hoping he’d change his mind and come after me. Because part of me is an idiot. 

Glancing around, I notice there’s no ashtray, so I dematerialize the cigar and start across the room, shedding clothes as I go. By the time I get to the bed, I’m down to just a pair of boxer briefs. 

I sit on the bed, in the darkened room, and stare out the window at the sky. The night is so clear, so dark, the stars above are so bright. I find myself wondering what it would feel like to touch one? 

And yes, yes, I know. Dead suns. Hundreds of millions of miles away. Not happening.

But that’s not how it feels. It feels like they’re living things, tiny and perfect. Like fireflies, easily within reach. But, then again, a lot of things don’t feel the way they are tonight. I don’t feel like I’m dead. I can’t believe Tony doesn’t care anymore. I can’t believe I’m going to end up a ghost—and possibly by morning. Because I was lying before. I can feel the clock ticking. Time’s close to running out. 

So why would I waste the little I have left on a jacket and hat and another cigar? Because I was cold, that’s why. Because if I’m winking out of existence this evening, I want to go in style and wring every last bit of pleasure from the experience on my way out the door. Like a kiss beneath the mistletoe. A kiss that didn’t happen, that probably won’t ever happen now.

“I look like shit,” I growl, remembering Tony’s words—no wonder he wasn’t tempted. “Thanks a lot, babe. And, no, by the way, since you asked; I don’t have everything I need. I don’t have anything I need!”

I lie on my side, punch the pillow a couple of times until it’s just the way I like it, then go back to staring at the stars. Because there’s nothing else to do.

You know that saying about how you’ll have ‘time enough to sleep when you’re dead’? It’s a total farce. In my experience, there’s no sleep at all beyond the grave. Which makes sense when you think about it. Lacking an actual body, why would I need to sleep?

So instead, I lie awake, prey to my own sorry thoughts. Which, of course, end up circling back to Tony. “No Christmas spirit, my ass,” I grumble remembering all the details that Tony conveniently forgot. From wrapping presents to emptying stockings, and everything in between. Kisses in the snow. Dancing beneath enormous crystal chandeliers. Pulling on Christmas sweaters to go caroling. I remember waking up together on Christmas morning, and falling asleep, wrapped in each other’s arms, in the early hours of New Year’s Day.

There were also snowball fights in Bryant Park, snow angels on Central Park’s Great Lawn. The x-rated snowman we erected—pun intended—that one year when we finally got enough snow to make it possible. Oh! And what about that one time that we did go to see the Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony at Rockefeller Center? Or the hot chocolate we stopped for on the way home? Not the frozen hot chocolate that everyone knows about—the one large enough for two people to share. 

That would have been romantic too, right? It’s not just me who thinks so?

But these were good, as well. Made with bougie chocolate ganache and flavored liqueurs—Fireball for Tony, Peppermint Schnapps for me—topped with mounds of whipped cream and foam and extra-large, extra-fluffy, handmade marshmallows. 

“How can it all be over? And how dare he not remember any of it?”




Christmas Angel
An Angels in the Afterlife Story

Being fully transparent is good for a relationship, right? Well, maybe not when it’s literal.

 

Christmas Angel is a second-chance, holiday romance with a celestial twist. Probationary angel Jake Hennessy's been sent back to earth to mend fences with his ex. Or has he? Certainly Tony doesn’t seem to think that's the case. 

 

Tony DiCecco might have ninety-nine problems—and then some—between dealing with his meddlesome family AND running the family business (a Christmas tree farm in rural Texas) but he's pretty sure that playing catch-up with his ex-husband isn’t supposed to be one of them. 

 

And what would even be the point? It’s hard to imagine what kind of future the two of them could have when one of them is alive and the other...isn't?


https://books2read.com/Christmas-Angel

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

What I'm Reading post for December 13, 2023


 This past week I read two books by Tessa Bailey--Wreck the Halls, which is a fun, sort-of-Christmas book that was recommended by Kelly Jamieson. We share a fondness for Christmas-in-NYC stories, like her latest release, Merry Pucking Christmas.  

To be honest, I found it a little hard to get into at first. Maybe because I've gotten so used to First Person/present tense POV--and this was Third Person/past tense. Which is all I read or wrote for YEARS. But eventually I loved it. So much so that I then went on to read Same Time Next Year. Which (I'm dating myself here) has nothing to do with the movie of the same name. 

This was a hockey book! So I was surprised that this wasn't the book Kelly recommended. And, I have to say that the hockey parts weren't as interesting to me as the hockey scenes in Kelly's books. I  mean...I don't even follow sports. AT ALL. But I'm a HUGE fan of her hockey players. 

This was also a cute book. But it opened with a scene set on December 31st 2023 and ends a year later on December 31st 2024. So that was a little time-trippy. It also HUGELY glossed over the difficulties inherent in getting a green card even when your marriage is legit. My son and daughter in law had to jump through SO MANY HOOPS and it took months and months and months before they could relax and stop worrying. Not to mention the fact that they apparently didn't get a marriage license?  

But, hey, like I  said, it's a cute story. I loved the relationship between the two MCs. And suspending my disbelief was easy. 

I struggled more with Amy Poston's chef-who-can't-stand-cilantro and heroine who prefers the taste of cheap wine. I can be perfectly happy with cheap wine, but I wouldn't actually say that I prefer it.


Christmas Angel
An Angels in the Afterlife Story

Being fully transparent is good for a relationship, right? Well, maybe not when it’s literal.

 

Christmas Angel is a second-chance, holiday romance with a celestial twist. Probationary angel Jake Hennessy's been sent back to earth to mend fences with his ex. Or has he? Certainly Tony doesn’t seem to think that's the case. 

 

Tony DiCecco might have ninety-nine problems—and then some—between dealing with his meddlesome family AND running the family business (a Christmas tree farm in rural Texas) but he's pretty sure that playing catch-up with his ex-husband isn’t supposed to be one of them. 

 

And what would even be the point? It’s hard to imagine what kind of future the two of them could have when one of them is alive and the other...isn't?


https://books2read.com/Christmas-Angel







 

Tuesday, December 12, 2023

News Day post for December 12, 2023

 



The Small but Mighty MM Romance Group is hosting their annual 12 Tropes of Christmas Event. #12tropes23  I'm taking part on two days, Second Chance (on the 11th) and Poly Romance (on the 15th). 

https://www.facebook.com/groups/605057917169258



 https://books.bookfunnel.com/decemberpnrreleases/eb5rj9llnk 

Sunday, December 10, 2023

Mug Shot Monday: Peet's Coffee Christmas Mugs Week One


 


For the next few weeks I’m going to be highlighting my Peet’s Christmas mugs. I have a lot of them. These have a snowflake design on a gold (?) background, with interiors that are either red or blue. The mug on the right is the only blue Christmas mug I have and I am conflicted about it. I have a complicated relationship with the color blue. 

See, my mother loved blue. So, in my mind it's always been her color. Besides which, she'd gotten it in her head that blue looked better if your hair was fair. If you had dark hair, on the other hand, as I did, she felt red was a better color. My sister, who is a year younger than I am, had lighter hair than I did, so she got dressed in blue all the time while I wore a lot of red. I grew to like red quite a lot, but there was a time when I felt like my sister was her favorite because she dressed her in "her" color. 

For most of my adult life I stayed away from blue. But lately I've been adding a lot more of it into my life. I'm still not quite sure what I think of this mug. I'll only drink tea in it, however. The red mug gets coffee, cocoa, occasionally some Lapsang Souchong. The blue mug only gets tea. Maybe some spiced cider. 

Fun note. I always thought my sister liked blue. Turns out she doesn't. She prefers red. And of course, I find that low key annoying. I'm telling you, sibling rivalry, man; it really never goes away. lol!


Friday, December 8, 2023

Saturday Snippet: Finders Keepers

 


First of all, I want to send out a great big THANK YOU! to ScaryMaryTheHamsterLady for posting this new review for Finders Keepers! It's always great when a not-so-new book gets some love. So here's a snippet that I don't think I've shared before--although it's a cookie baking scene, so it's not entirely impossible. I love Aldo so much. He's soooo grumpy--with good reason--and that was just such fun to write!

Aldo was baking cookies. Spicy black-pepper-cinnamon cookies—Davis’s favorite. He rolled the dough thin, then cut them out using the maple-leaf cookie cutter Sally and Davis had brought him back from Vancouver. Then he decorated them with sanding sugar in a variety of colors, some in plain red or green in a nod to the season, some swirled with autumn shades of burgundy and gold, others frosted just at the tips in blue and white, as though they’d been touched by an ice fairy. Maple leaves weren’t particularly Christmasy, he supposed, but he didn’t care. He liked the way the cookies looked, liked the way the edges browned first, like real leaves would. Besides, he doubted anyone else here would even notice what shape cookies he made…not unless he used the pornographic cookie cutters he’d received one year as a gag gift. Too bad he wasn’t in the mood to play around like that. Not when he was the only one in the house who wasn’t getting any.

That was a big part of the reason he was baking, come to think of it—because he had nothing better to do. Or no one better to do. No one at all to do, for that matter—but let’s not go there. And because baking cookies was part of what he’d always done at this time of year.

Of course, in years past he’d baked mostly because Davis, who had a hellacious sweet tooth, couldn’t get enough of them. But Sally had always liked his cookies as well, and anything that made her happy, anything that made her feel like the world hadn’t ended with Davis’s death was a good thing. They both needed to feel like that. Besides, the weather had turned cold and it had been snowing for the better part of the afternoon, so going for another hike was out unless he wanted to end up with hypothermia. He could either bake or spend all his time curled up in front of the fire thinking gloomy thoughts. He’d done more than enough of that in the past few days.




Finders Keepers

Sometimes finding what you want is the easy part...

 

Caleb is a bionic soldier with little-to-no memory of his past. Aldo's an undercover cop who's searching for the man who got away. Then there's Sally, an ER physician who used to be married to Aldo's late partner, Davis. Sally's just looking for a reason to keep on getting up every day. 

 

This holiday season, chance will bring them together and give them an opportunity to help one another find what they each want most. But every gift comes with a price. And keeping what they've found once they've found it? Yeah, that's gonna be the hard part.


https://books2read.com/Finders



Wednesday, December 6, 2023

What I'm Reading post for December 6, 2023

 

This week I read Seven Year Slip by Ashley Poston. It's a time-travely book set in New York City, which I have come to realize is my very favorite trope. I mean, I love the movie The Lake House, but it loses points for not being set in New York. Of course, there's no lake in New York, so it couldn't have been set there, but it's still a really good movie.

In Seven Year Slip, the heroine (Clementine) inherits an apartment that occasionally sends people back and forth in time, but only by seven years. She meets someone in the apartment who's living seven years in the past. And then meets him again in the present time. He has memories of all the times they'd interacted in the past, but she doesn't yet, because some of them are still in her future. 

The story is much less confusing than I'm making it sound. It's a really good book--even if the heroine has regrettable tastes in wine.  It also revolves around food, cooking, and publishing. So it's almost perfect. 

It reminds me of Casey McQuiston's One Last Stop, which I also loved. In that one, the magical apparatus that sends people back and forth in time is a subway car. 

And now I'm not going to be satisfied until I start writing my own time-travel book, damn it. 



Monday, December 4, 2023

New Release! Christmas Angel!

 


 


I'm so excited for this new release! I think it's the cutest Christmas story I've ever written--and that's saying something, because I love ALL my Christmas stories! It came out unexpectedly sweet--which I did not see coming. It's funny, romantic, VERY Christmasy, and makes me feel hopelessly nostalgic. 





Christmas Angel

An Angels in the Afterlife Christmas Story

Being fully transparent is good for a relationship, right? Well, maybe not when it’s literal.

 

Christmas Angel is a second-chance, holiday romance with a celestial twist. Probationary angel Jake Hennessy's been sent back to earth to mend fences with his ex. Or has he? Certainly Tony doesn’t seem to think that's the case. 

 

Tony DiCecco might have ninety-nine problems—and then some—between dealing with his meddlesome family AND running the family business (a Christmas tree farm in rural Texas) but he's pretty sure that playing catch-up with his ex-husband isn’t supposed to be one of them. 

 

And what would even be the point? It’s hard to imagine what kind of future the two of them could have when one of them is alive and the other...isn't.


https://books2read.com/Christmas-Angel










Sunday, December 3, 2023

Mug Shot Monday: Rae Dunn Naughty/Nice Mug


 















I bought this mug to use while I was writing Christmasing With You, which was initially published as part of the Let's Get Naughty collection. But really, it totally fits with Christmas Angel, as well. 

If they were two separate mugs, rather than two sides of the same mug, Jake would get the naughty mug, and Tony the Nice one. 


And here's a little excerpt of my boys as they take a little trip down memory lane...

“Here we are,” Tony says, startling me out of my reverie, as he pulls into a field of trees. 

I take a quick look around and feel myself frowning. It seems anti-climactic. But really, what was I expecting? It’s a tree farm. That’s what they’ve got here. Lots and lots of trees.

Once we come to a stop, Tony sets the brake and hops out of the vehicle. I do the same. The sky above is overcast, the temperature is dropping pretty quickly—nothing strange about that. That’s just how the weather works here. 

All the same, I huddle deeper into my jacket, shivering slightly. Reminding myself that there’s no cause for alarm. Even a forty degree change in temperature, between morning to night, is not unusual for this time of year. 

I still don’t know what we’re doing here, however. So I glance at Tony, only to find that he’s watching me expectantly. “What?” I ask cautiously, aware that I’m missing something.

He nods towards the trees. “I guess the place looks a little different than you remember it, huh?” 

Yeah, because I don’t remember it, I think.  Still, I look around again, trying to humor him, trying to pick out something, anything that might spark a memory. And then… “Wait….these trees. These aren’t… I mean, this isn’t…is it?”

There’s nothing coherent in the clumsy words that fall from my lips, but Tony nods as though they made perfect sense. And the sad, reluctant smile he gives me leaves me with no doubt. He knows what I was trying to ask him. And the answer is yes.

“Wow.”  I lose my breath a little bit as I contemplate the trees again, trying to see them as they once were, those very first seedlings the two of us planted together. “They got big, huh?” 

“Yeah. They did.” 

“Aw,” I say in a desperate attempt to downplay my emotions. “Our first babies. All grown up.”

“That tends to be how it works,” Tony replies dryly. He’s always been much better than I at hiding his emotions. Still, he brought me here, didn’t he? I mean, he brought me here—and made sure I knew it. That’s got to mean something

I glance around again. “So, which one…? I mean, do you know…?” 

“No.” Tony sighs. “I have no idea.” And, for just a moment, he looks like maybe he regrets that, too.

“So, what’re we doing with ’em today?” 

Tony shrugs and looks away. “Oh, you know. Just a little last-minute shape up to make them look nice.” 

Last-minute? Oh, shit. I draw in another quick breath and ask, “You mean, before they’re cut down.” 

“Yeah.” 

“Wow.” It’s a tree farm, I remind myself. A. Tree. Farm. That’s what they do here. That’s why we planted them in the first place. “That’s some Circle of Life shit right there, innit?”

“Yep.” 

Reaching into the vehicle, I grab gloves and shears. “Okay. Show me what you need me to do.” 

And maybe it’s not the reconciliation I was hoping for, but as a way of bonding and finding closure with one another, it doesn’t suck.





You’ve heard this story, or one just like it, so many times before. It’s the one about the cranky workaholic who dies, is turned into an angel, and gets sent back to earth to save some other poor schmuck from suffering the same unhappy fate.

 

Typically, it’s billed as a rom-com, or a dramedy or a supernatural, holiday romantasy; perfect for those cozy, “stay at home with the family and try to pretend that compromise is fun” nights.

 

Which is ludicrous. Even Dickens, the man who invented cheesy Christmas stories, knew better. His Marley was clearly miserable, as who wouldn’t be in his situation? Which, as it happens, is also my situation. Lucky me.

 

Hi. My name is Jacob. I’m a Christmas Angel. And this is my story.

Saturday, December 2, 2023

Saturday Snippet: Light Up the Night



So I woke up early this morning and saw this meme:


And it reminded me of the following scene from Light Up the Night. In this scene Heather is arguing with her sire, Marc, about who she is and isn't allowed to date. 

Oh, and in case you aren't familiar with the series, they're all vampires. For reference, Heather was a teenage runaway when she was turned (against her will) just a year or two earlier. Marc is NOT the guy who turned her, but IS her "guardian" now (long story) and super-protective. He was born in 1969--which makes him really young by vampire standards, not so much by Heather's Gen Z standards.  Drew and Elise, OTOH, are both several hundred years old.


“I thought you liked Drew. Aren’t you supposed to be friends, or something?”

“I do like him. And of course, we’re friends. Did you really think I’d have trusted just anyone to look after you? I don’t like being the bad guy. I don’t like making the people I care about unhappy. But he’s just too damn old for you. There’s no getting around that.”

“And how much older than you is Elise?”

“That’s different.”

“No, it really isn’t. It’s a double standard—and that’s not different at all.” She shook her head. “You know it’s funny. People keep talking about how we’re a new type of vampire clan. They say we’re re-writing the rules and making history, and blah, blah, blah. And I’m not seeing it. But I do like the way it sounds. And I think it’s something we could maybe lean into a little harder. And you know where a good place to start would be?  If you let me make my own decisions about who I get involved with. It’s like the song says: you don’t own me.”

Marc frowned. “Wait. Did you just quote Lesley Gore at me?”

“No?” Heather replied. “I don’t even know who that is.”

“She was a singer. She’s dead now, but she was very popular during the sixties. That song was one of her biggest hits.” 

“Oh. Well, then maybe I did. But all I know is the song. And only that one part. I remember it from a movie I saw when I was a kid. I think the song was old then.” She studied him for a moment then asked, “So, you must be really old, huh?”

“Oh, thank you very much. Not that old, no.”

“If you say so.”

Marc shot her an amused look. “You know, someday, when you’re my age—which, by the way, is going to come along a whole lot sooner than you apparently think—I’m going to remind you of this conversation and ask you how old you feel then.” He shook his head and added, mockingly, “And you say you’re not a kid.”

“Yeah, because I’m not,” Heather replied. “Just because I’m going to look like a kid forever doesn’t mean you get to treat me like one. We’re not living in the nineteen-hundreds anymore.”

“Don’t you mean the eighteen-hundreds?  Although I wouldn’t know anything about that, since I wasn’t alive back then. You know who you could ask, though—right? That’d be Drew. Because he lived through that entire century, not to mention the previous two. Or maybe even the previous three. I don’t know for sure.”

“Nice try. But no. I said the nineteen-hundreds and that’s what I meant. Didn’t you ever see West Side Story? Or Titanic? Endless Love? The Notebook?”

“Wait—are you talking about movies? I thought we were discussing real life?”

“We are. But all those movies I mentioned were set in the nineteen-hundreds. In fact, I think they were filmed then, too. So, they’re probably reasonably accurate depictions of the idiotic notions you all had back then.”




Light Up the Night

A Children of Night/Ugly Christmas Sweater Story


Her love will light up his night. If they both can survive that long. 

 

Heather is having the worst Christmas ever! Or, at least, the worst Christmas since she was forced to become a vampire. Her sire's distracted, her nest-mates have forgotten her existence, and a bunch of weirdos have taken over her lair. The only bright spot in her life right now is Drew--who didn't even used to like her! She knows he's coming around, but that's not good enough. She wants more. She wants everything. She wants him. And she's not giving up. 

 

Drew Geiger gave up on love a long time ago. Such tender emotions have no place in a vampire's heart. But, somehow, the girl he once described as a "feral kitten" has got her claws in him, and she's not letting go. That would be fine, if only someone didn't want her dead--and if her sire didn't still inconveniently remember that it was Drew who'd once suggested that maybe she'd be better off that way.

***This story features characters from the Children of Night series. It takes place between books six and seven in the series and follows Going Back to Find You.***


https://books2read.com/LightNight