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Today we have something special for those of you who like a little mystery with your romance – enjoy!
*****
byΒ Liah Penn
Blurb:
LoveΒ and Suspense β Southern Style
When a skull is found buried in theΒ courtyard of the Art House during renovations, executive director MeredithΒ OβNeill is forced to halt the over-budget and oft-delayed project. Working withΒ architect Kieran Ford has been a nightmare, despite his icy good-looks andΒ brilliant design. Now that the Art House is declared a crime scene, the entireΒ project is threatened. Forced to work together in close proximity, Meredith and Kieran soon find the tensions between them changing into something elseΒ entirely. Still, she canβt help but wonder how long the heat between them willΒ last, especially when Kieran was once so cold.
Kieran is donating his time and talents to the Art House renovation, but working with Meredith is driving him crazy,Β and his pro bono project is quicklyΒ going south. When the skull of a child is discovered, Kieran must confront hisΒ own loss as well as keep the project, and Meredith, on task.Β Keeping his emotions in check proves to be impossible, and Kieran soon realizes that he is falling for Meredith. When heΒ is framed for a crime, Kieran must learn to trust again. He and Meredith formΒ an uneasy alliance as they seek answers to the mystery at the Art House. ButΒ someone is intent on destroying the historic building . . . and wonβt hesitateΒ to harm anyone who gets in the way.
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Excerpt:
The skull was small, that of a woman or child, the lower jawΒ separated in the dirt, as if the mouth had been open during the internmentΒ process. The foreman scraped away at the mud revealing a few bone fragments.Β The clenched hand, turned upward, was disarticulated from the arm, as if the skeleton had thrust its fist in anger at the gods. The man jerked back. It wasΒ definitely a human skull. And this was no cemetery.
βCall the police,β he said to his worker. βAnd you better call theΒ architect, too.β
MeredithΒ stood over the hole, her four-inch heels sinking into the red clay, her linen dress sticking to her body, slick with perspiration. She could clearly see bitsΒ of bone and the smooth curve of the skull. There were a few longer bonesΒ scattered about and what appeared to be a hand, balled up and reaching to theΒ sky. The grave was shallow, only a few feet deep, and it was a wonder that theΒ bones hadnβt appeared sooner. Meredith placed her hands on her hips, resistingΒ the impulse to jump into the hole and free the remaining skeleton from the dirtΒ and cradle it in her arms.
βItβs got to be human.β The foreman wiped his brow with a dirtyΒ towel. Red clay smeared his forehead like dried blood.
βItβs a child,β Meredith said. She crouched down, looking closer.Β Yes, it had to be a child. She cleared the muck from the back of her throat.Β Digging her fingers in the mounded dirt, she felt the soil clump togetherΒ before she released it. The resting place for this poor soul. βI called theΒ police. Did you call the architect?β
The foreman nodded. The courtyard was quiet, the digger nowΒ stopped, the work crew standing idly by, their heads hung in deference to theΒ grave.
Meredith stood up and brushed the morsels of clay from herΒ fingers. βI suppose weβll be delayed again.β She didnβt know what else to say.Β Turning her back on the hole, she saw the crowd of workers part and theΒ architect trudged toward her, his sleeves rolled up in the heat, his expressionΒ that of exasperation. βHello, Kieran,β she said. She offered her hand to himΒ even as her back stiffened. Although he was the project manager on this job, he was still the last person she wanted to see.
βI halted the work. Iβm sorry. I know weβre behind scheduleΒ alreadyβ¦β He flung a tube of blue prints to the ground. He had a sheen ofΒ perspiration in his forehead, which he wiped away impatiently. Dressed inΒ khakis and a button-down shirt, he looked as wilted as Meredith felt.
βThe police are on their way.β Meredith stepped back as KieranΒ gave her a look and then made his way to the edge of the dig site and looked in.
βShit.β He ran his fingers through his fair hair, the strandsΒ sticking together and becoming disarrayed. βIβve seen this before. In Mosul.Β Thatβs definitely human.β
*****
LiahΒ Penn is an author and attorney who resides outside of New Orleans, Louisiana
with her husband and two sons.Β A formerΒ prosecutor, she has worked on an Indian reservation, on the Mexican border andΒ as a small town lawyer.
Author Links –Β WebsiteΒ |Β Twitter
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