Spotlight: The Soft Underbelly by Carlisle Richardson

He did not get twenty feet from the duo before he heard the click of the gun. Simon’s last thoughts as a bullet hit the back of his head were of his mother and Gina. He hoped they would forgive him. It had all been for them.

A murdered customs worker accused of stealing imported goods; collusion between competing politicians to overthrow the sitting Prime Minister; an international weapons trafficking syndicate one step ahead of British authorities; and a mysterious expat living on a small Caribbean island.

In what used to be a tropical paradise, police officer Gerald Brookes and MI6 agent Fiona Sawyer race against time to connect these seemingly isolated dots. But for the mastermind of these acts, there is a far more nefarious revenge plot in play. A grand design that would lead to an assassination and the resumption of a decades-old international conflict.

Excerpt

The cold night air tickled the back of Simon’s neck as he slunk along the dirt path. He knew he should not be there. He had been weaned on the stories of the area. “No good comes from unsettling the ghosts of the past,” his grandmother used to say.

He had parked in the bushes behind the cul-de-sac, just out of view from the main road, and he planned to walk the rest of the way. The track zig-zagged through a little village, passing wooden, one-story chattel houses with galvanized roofs that had been built haphazardly over the years. In the dead of night, they seemed abandoned and haunted. He tried to move more quickly so as not to be detected, but he need not have agonized about that possibility. In these old villages the inhabitants locked the doors with rusted hooks and tightened the screws of the hurricane shutters whenever the first signs of night descended. They remembered their ancestors’ fables and hugged their progeny close. Even the stray dogs sensed that his presence was unusual, as rather than barking at him they whimpered, and ran behind the houses.

He could not stop a shudder running through his body. Was he that superstitious? Or was it apprehension of the night’s mission? She would understand.

The ‘she’ in his mind alternated between his mother and Gina, his ex-girlfriend. He sought to convince himself they would not be disappointed in him if they knew his intentions tonight.

At the edge of the village, he looked around once more to verify there were no witnesses. Darkness and bush loomed before him, as the reach of the lone streetlight extended no further. In this part of the village there was no need for light. Anyone venturing into the bush of ‘The Rocks’ at night would make no request to be seen clearly.

He slogged through the muddy track between the acacia trees, putting his hands up to shield his face from the thorns. The path was overrun with harsh vegetation, but he kept moving. The cuts on the palm of his hands stung from each additional scratch, but this was the only way to protect his face. The quarter moon’s sliver provided little light on the few occasions that it peaked out from the gathering rain clouds. Despite his increasing distance from the village, he still tried to be as silent as he could, navigating around the twigs beneath. With each crack he grimaced and contorted his body, channeling the sound into himself.

She would understand.

Gina had been so pleased when he had become a customs officer. Many of their classmates had suffered the indignity of unemployment after high school. Gina liked his uniform, and the pride he took in wearing it. But she encouraged him to do more, told him this job was just a building block, that he had potential and shouldn’t be idle like the others he worked with.

How he wished he had listened to her.

When she had been accepted to the University of the West Indies on a full scholarship to become a lawyer, he was deflated. She was his one and only love. No one else mattered. They had promised each other to always be together, and ten years later, this was still all he wanted. But now she was gone to another island, possibly with someone else stroking her face while she studied.

She had offered to help him apply for loans, encouraging him to get a degree. But he’d pushed her away. He refused to admit it at the time, but he was jealous of her success. He could not wait to finish high school so that his days of studying were over, but she wanted more. He had no desire to pick up a textbook ever again, and he told her this in one of their rare arguments. He also accused her of being a snob, of looking down on where they were from, and it hurt her. But then she was gone, and he had lost her. He never had the chance to apologize, and his regret knew no bounds.

He would get her back. He had to get her back. He would go to university too. He would get the money.

While working at the customs department, Simon observed many things. He knew that once every month a container arrived that only Mr. Lincoln, his supervisor, was allowed to examine. He also knew that Mr. Lincoln was able to afford a luxury vehicle on a government salary. Most interestingly, Simon knew that the container in question belonged to Mr. Antonio Del Vasto.

Del Vasto. People said many things about him, including that he was connected to drug lords in the Americas and revolutionaries in Eastern Europe. The official story was that he was a wealthy retired businessman. He certainly had enough money and political connections that people lowered their gaze when he walked by. And he had purchased this derelict, cursed land, The Rocks, for development.

Simon did not want to pursue illegal activities. He had seen too many of his contemporaries succumb. He knew of the risks involved in accepting Mr. Del Vasto’s request for this late-night private meeting, but if he agreed to turn one blind eye, maybe, just maybe, he would make enough money to win Gina back.

This was how he found himself walking towards an abandoned warehouse on the outskirts of a construction site, far off the beaten track, in the darkest hours of the night.

He hoped his mother’s heart would not be broken. This was the woman who had sacrificed so much for him and his siblings. Their father had migrated to Miami years before, promising to send for them once he had settled. He never did. So, she worked overtime and extra jobs to ensure they were secure. Truthfully, he could not complain about his childhood.

They had food on the table, clothes to wear, and a roof over their heads. He personally knew of those denied such luxuries. But why did she have to work so hard for the basics? Every time he turned on any show based in North America or Europe, people his age and younger were enjoying a life of which he could only dream. Having a starter vehicle straight out of high school? Unreal. The ability to travel the world in a gap year? What did that even mean? Opportunities to join a Fortune 500 business and work his way to the top on pure determination? In which company around here? She would understand.

He walked past the remnants of homes that were built more than a century before. They had been abandoned for so long that they had become part of the terrain. He thought briefly about the history of the place. This was the area spared for the former slaves to inhabit following the Emancipation Proclamation. It was uninviting, desolate, and near barren, save for the acacia trees and shrubs. The historians had deduced that the area had been selected for the newly freed persons precisely because agricultural productivity would be slim. They would have to maintain contact with their former oppressors if they wanted to survive. Stories abounded of the great suffering that persisted. Tales of robberies, disappearances, and murders infiltrated the psyche of the inhabitants to the point that they were convinced the area was cursed, that anyone venturing there risked being cursed themselves.

The howling winds screamed, and Simon hugged his body. He was terrified, and he wondered if his fear was due to the yarns he had heard as a child about the area, or his apprehension of the night’s mission.

He inhaled, expecting the crisp night air to be fresh with the aroma of the moist foliage, but instead there was a faint stench growing stronger as he moved through the bush. He stumbled over a rock and fell headfirst, scratching himself. He yelped in pain and recoiled in horror when he saw the decomposing carcass of a bull, just inches from his face. The stench was at its peak there. He struggled to move away, retching as he scrambled to stand up. The bile settled in his throat, and he ran through the bush until the air cleared. He hunched over, gasping for air, wishing he was home. Why, oh why, had he got involved in this?

He straightened up. The acacia trees swayed in the breeze, casting shadows. The cold chill on his neck returned as his imagination and conscience wreaked havoc in his mind, making him believe that the trees were actual people. Perhaps they were the forces of nature warning him to deviate from this path. But it was too late. He dared not cross Del Vasto.

Finally, in the distance, he saw the silhouette of a warehouse. The surrounding area had been cleared of all trees and bushes, and it stood on the top of an incline, a lone shadow in the dark.

He swallowed the lump in his throat.

Just a simple thing, he had been told by Mr. Del Vasto’s assistant. Pick up the package from the freight before it’s processed in customs and put it in your backpack. Nobody will notice. Bring it to us on Sunday night. Easy ten thousand dollars.

He could begin his university dream with that sort of money. Why did it all feel so wrong?

He approached two figures outside the warehouse. “Mr. Lincoln,” Simon said, recognizing him as he got closer. He looked at the other man and froze. His stomach tightened. The foreboding he had felt earlier returned in a flash. Finally, he forced words out in a whisper. “Please. I won’t tell.”

He knew the other man only as ‘Phantom’. Hollow, dead eyes. Black lips from smoking since childhood. A rasping voice from a ruptured voice box in the gang war. A known hitman.

Simon tried to remember the prayers he used to garble through on mornings in Sunday school, but he had never truly cared at the time, and his mind now drew a blank.

“Tell who what, eh?” Mr. Lincoln asked. “What you gonna tell? Just give us the package then go your way.”

Simon fumbled in his backpack and pulled out a small box. He dropped it nervously, bent to retrieve it, and dropped it again. He slowly got on his knees and reached for the box again, but his middle finger was stabbed by a twig. He stifled a yelp as the pain seared through his finger. Maybe the pain was exaggerated, brought on by the dread he felt. He tried to remain calm, and this gave him the strength to grasp the box firmly. While on his knees, he handed it over to Mr. Lincoln’s outstretched hand.

“Can I leave now?” he pleaded, standing and backing away slowly, the words barely escaping his throat, which felt so tight it hurt. “I promise I’ll be quiet about the package.”

He was met with cold stares, and he knew it was over. He was at the place cursed with untold suffering of his ancestors, and now he was destined to join the ranks of the wretched.

If he could just make it back into the bush, he might have a chance. It was dark enough to evade them there.

Simon turned and sprinted away. His heart pounded, and he could feel the blood flowing through the veins of his temples. His lungs were on fire as he pumped his arms with all the might he could muster. All thoughts of his face getting scratched by the needles of the acacia trees had disappeared, as survival was now his only instinct. He was almost there.

He did not get twenty feet from the duo before he heard the click of the gun. Simon’s last thoughts as a bullet hit the back of his head were of his mother and Gina. He hoped they would forgive him. It had all been for them.

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About the Author

Carlisle Richardson, author of The Soft Underbelly, is an International Relations expert. He has served as Ambassador of St. Kitts and Nevis to the United Nations, and as an Economic Affairs Officer of the United Nations. He is currently based in Melbourne as a Lecturer in International Relations, and as an independent consultant supporting organisations in their multilateral engagement and in implementing the SDGs. 

Carlisle has published articles on international relations in the International Peace Institute, the Lowy Institute, and the Australian Institute of International Affairs and is author of the book, Island Journeys: The Impact of the Island Way of Life at Home and Abroad.

As a fiction writer, Carlisle has published short stories in Litro Magazine, Lolwe Magazine, Bookends, and Mystery Tribune.

He recently published a Children’s Picture Book, entitled “Rose Grows Veggies,” which addresses sustainability, making new friends, the importance of community, and the joys of gardening.

The Soft Underbelly is his debut novel.

Spotlight: The Rainy Day Bookshop by Raeanne Thayne

Life is full of plot twists...

Sandwiched between caring for her mother and rebuilding the relationship with her estranged daughter, Emma, Rosie Lucas’s life is full. In the best way. With Emma and her 3-year old daughter, Olive, back home, Rosie has a partner for The Rainy Day Bookshop, the family business, and a chance to fix the past. What she doesn’t have time for is a romantic relationship. And even if she did, Andrew Morgan is the last person she’d choose. Not only is he an arrogant and reclusive writer, but he’s a single dad with two young kids. She’s already been there, done that.  Still as an irresistible flirtation builds between them, he becomes her unexpected confidante on the distance Rosie can’t seem to overcome with Emma, a secret she can’t quite unravel…

Emma isn’t proud of her past. But she’s pulled herself up by the bootstraps, caring for her own daughter, and protecting her mom at all costs. Just as she always has. She never told Rosie what she saw all those years ago and she never will. But some secrets refuse to stay buried, and sometimes the truth is more shocking than fiction. Rosie and Emma will have to navigate an unimaginable path forward. Together.

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About the Author

New York Times bestselling author RaeAnne Thayne finds inspiration in the beautiful northern Utah mountains where she lives with her family. Her books have won numerous honors, including six RITA Award nominations from Romance Writers of America and Career Achievement and Romance Pioneer awards from RT Book Reviews. She loves to hear from readers and can be reached through her website, raeannethayne.com.

Spotlight: Nobody's Quest by Alyssa Day

Series: The Nobody Chronicles , Book 1

Release Date: June 2, 2026

Imprint: Red Tower Books

Genre: New Adult, Fantasy

Tropes: Overcoming odds

The goddess needs a nobody. The prince needs a miracle. Soli Graymind might be both.

Soli has spent most of her life being invisible—an indentured servant, a library mold-scrubber, the girl no one sees unless she’s in the way. So, when the king’s guards show up with swords drawn, she assumes it’s a mistake.

It’s not.

Moments later, she’s standing in the throne room while the king tells her she’s been chosen to retrieve a set of ancient keys—only the keys can save the goddess and stop the chaos beyond the palace walls. Because the world isn’t waiting to be saved.

It’s already burning.

And beside him stands Prince Kaelen: devastatingly beautiful, mercilessly cold, and certain Soli won’t survive the hard journey ahead.

He’s probably right.

But Soli's survived a lifetime of hard everything. She may be a nobody—no training, no real power, and no idea why she was chosen—but she refuses to be expendable. Even if the quest ahead is anything but simple. When assassins, monsters, and impossible choices fracture the fragile alliance slowly building with the Prince, Soli realizes she can’t hide in the shadows anymore. 

Because, for the first time in her life, she has something to lose… 

A high-stakes romantasy filled with slow-burn romance, found family, and a heroine who never expected to be anyone’s first choice.

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About the Author

ALYSSA DAY is a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of romantasy, mystery, and romance whose books have sold more than a million copies and been translated into many languages. She is also a mental health advocate who has lived with depression since she was a teenager. She’s an Ohio State alum, graduated summa cum laude from Capital University Law School, and practiced as a trial lawyer for a decade, when she also served as an advocate for at-risk children. She lives in Florida with her Navy Guy husband, has two amazing kids, and rescues dogs. Especially pugs. So Many Pugs.

Connect:

Website: https://alyssaday.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/authoralyssaday/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/authoralyssaday/

Spotlight: Miriam in the Shadows by John Winn Miller

In Miriam in the Shadows, award-winning author John Winn Miller delivers a heart-pounding World War II thriller that explores the cost of resistance, betrayal, and survival.

Spring 1944. The world is holding its breath.

While the Allies prepare to storm the beaches, the real threat lies deep inside a Nazi-occupied coal mine in northern France, where the Third Reich races to arm V-2 rockets with radioactive warheads.If they succeed, London burns, and D-Day is over before it begins.

Enter Miriam Maduro—a 26-year-old Jewish mother from Amsterdam, trained at the British Special Operations Executive’s “gangster school” to be a saboteur and silent killer. Captured and tortured by the Nazis, she escaped—twice—with the help of Jake Rogers, an American cargo ship captain with secrets of his own.

The SOE taps into Miriam’s survivor’s guilt and maternal instinct to coerce her into one final mission: infiltrate the concentration camp/rocket facility disguised as an engineer’s assistant and destroy it from within. Meanwhile, Jake’s story runs parallel—recruited by Naval Intelligence officer Ian Fleming, only to be betrayed by real-life MI6 villain Claude Dansey, who uses Jake as bait to sabotage Miriam’s mission and destroy the hated SOE from the inside. When Miriam discovers Jake is a prisoner just miles away, she faces the ultimate question: Will she complete her mission and save D-Day, or save the man she loves?

Delivering high-stakes espionage, historical depth, and an unforgettable heroine, Miriam in the Shadows takes readers deep into the world of espionage, deception, and sabotage.

Excerpt

(From Miriam in the Shadows by John Winn Miller, published by June 2026 by Bancroft Press. Reprinted by permission.)

Miriam Maduro plunged through the nearly moonless night over Nazi-occupied northern France, her rigid body slicing through the air like a dagger until a bone-jarring yank of the static line ripped off her parachute’s cover, releasing the silk canopy.

It did not slow her down.

With only seconds to go before slamming into the unforgiving ground, she tugged and twisted the two risers connecting the harness to her parachute’s rigging lines, struggling to fix the Roman Candle, the dreaded part of a parachute canopy that had failed to open properly above her. After one last desperate yank, the canopy fluttered open fully, snapping her upward and slowing her descent. 

Exhaling in relief, she glanced down just as she crashed into a treetop. Her canopy caught on the limbs and bounced her up and down like a yoyo as the harness straps cut into her thighs.

Now, after badly missing her landing site, she was on her own, dangling high above the pitch-black ground on a cool spring night. Her parachute rigging and canopy were hopelessly tangled in the outstretched branches of an oak tree. She retrieved a pistol from her jumpsuit and wrapped her hand tightly around the checkered walnut grip of the .32-caliber Colt.

All around her, tawny owls exchanged urgent hoots as if sounding an alarm in the early hours before dawn. In the dense shadows below the tree, twigs crunched and bushes swished. But no wind was blowing. Flashlight beams flittered among the leaves of nearby branches like twinkling Christmas tree lights. Footsteps approached, but it was too dark to see who it was. Shifting clouds and thick foliage blocked almost all the dim light from the sliver of a waning crescent moon.

Voices. Speaking German.

Soundlessly, Miriam pulled back the slide of her pistol to chamber a round, aimed down with both hands, and fought to control her breathing. She had only eight bullets. Seven were for the Germans.

I will not be taken alive again.

***

Miriam’s troubled journey began nearly three months earlier during a meeting in the Special Operations Executive’s headquarters in London convened by Maj. Gen. Colin Gubbins, the new chief of the secret intelligence service that Prime Minister Winston Churchill had created to “set Europe ablaze.” Its mission was to infiltrate British-trained agents into Nazi-occupied Europe to help local resistance groups sabotage the German war effort. 

Gubbins glared from behind his desk, arms crossed over his chest, at the two feuding section chiefs sitting across from him in his office in the top floor of a six-story building at 64 Baker Street. It was one of six buildings commandeered by the SOE on Baker Street, not far from the fictional home of Sherlock Holmes at 221B Baker Street, giving rise to one of the agency’s nicknames as the “Baker Street Irregulars.”

“What’s this all about?” said Gubbins, known by the initials “CD,” in his clipped, gravelly voice thick with a Scottish brogue.

“Rhubarb,” said Lt. Col. Maurice Buckmaster, the head of SOE’s French section, puffing on a pipe.

Staring straight ahead, Maj. Seymour Bingham, the Rotterdam-born leader of the Netherlands Section, which gave its agents vegetable code names, said, “You can’t use Rhubarb.”

“Now, look here, old chap,” said Buckmaster, who pronounced English like an aristocrat and French like a native in his baritone voice. “Rhubarb is perfect for the job. Speaks fluent Dutch, French, and German, has almost all the necessary training, and has shown great initiative in the field.”

“Who is Rhubarb?” Gubbins said. “What’s his name?”

“Hers, sir,” Bingham said with a slight lisp reminiscent of Churchill’s.

“Well, who is she? Get on with it,” Gubbins said in an impatient voice, hovering between exasperation and irritation.

Bingham glanced at his smug peer from the French section and then back at Gubbins, apparently uneasy about violating SOE rules about the absolute separation of information and agents between sections. “Real or field name, CD?”

“Real,” said Gubbins, who had literally written the manuals on guerrilla warfare for resistance groups based on his time battling the Irish Republican Army and his experience in the Russian Civil War. Every agent had four names: their real one, one used in the field, and one for coded communications and identification. The fourth was a combination of their code name and their réseau, or circuit, a network in France established by a three-person SOE unit that recruited and trained local resistance members.

Bingham plucked a thick manila folder from his briefcase and slid it across the spotless, burled walnut desk to Gubbins, who shoved it back with an impatient sigh. “In your own words, man. I haven’t all day.”

“Very good, sir.” Bingham flipped open the file. “Her real name is Miriam Maduro. Twenty-six. She was expelled from medical school in Amsterdam when the Nazis invaded.”

“What for?”

“For being Jewish, sir.”

“I say, Colonel, is it wise to drop a Jew into France?” Gubbins said.

“Wouldn’t be the first, CD,” said Buckmaster, who oversaw more than eighty circuits and some 200 agents in France.

“Go on, Major,” Gubbins said.

“She and several of her family members were smuggled out of the Netherlands aboard an American tramp steamer shortly before Pearl Harbor and made it safely to Palestine. Joined the Jewish Parachutists of Mandate Palestine there.”

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About the Author

John Winn Miller is an award-winning investigative reporter (Pulitzer finalist), foreign correspondent, editor, newspaper publisher, screenwriter, movie producer, and novelist. He was named to the Kentucky Journalism Hall of Fame in 2026. The Lexington native also produced four indie films, including Band of Robbers, written and directed by Adam and Aaron Nee.

Miller has taught media literacy classes at his alma mater, the University of Kentucky, and Transylvania University. He is also a second-degree black belt in Shaolin karate. Miller and his wife, Margo, live in Lexington with two standard poodles and a Maine Coon cat. Their daughter Allison Miller is an actress- screenwriter-director who most recently starred in the ABC series, A Million Little Things.

Miriam in the Shadows is the third novel in his Peggy C series following The Hunt for Peggy C and Rescue Run.

Spotlight: The History We Carry by Margaret Whitford

For fans of Jennette McCurdy’s I’m Glad My Mom Died, a memoir for daughters who recognize that to truly understand themselves and the patterns of their lives, they must first understand their mothers and the forces that shaped these women.

When Margaret Whitford’s mother was dying, she told those present that her daughter “had her history.” This was true; Margaret had conducted interviews with her mother during the last decade of her life. But this didn’t end their estrangement, and Margaret chose not to return to her mother’s side during her final days.

In this memoir, Margaret confronts this decision by unearthing in her mother’s traumatic history the roots of the emotional distance between them. She explores how a history marked by the devastation of World War II in Europe, a violent childhood home, and sexual assault accumulated into complex PTSD that shaped her mother and the way she parented Margaret as her firstborn and as a daughter—and, in turn, how Margaret carried her mother’s trauma forward in her sense of self, in her relationships to others, and in the ways she navigated her world. Indeed, Margaret not only had her mother’s history—she embodied it.

Ultimately, The History We Carry confronts the legacy of intergenerational trauma with wisdom and compassion, revealing how familial history shapes each of us but need not be wholly determinative of whom we become and how we choose to live.

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About the Author

Margaret Whitford’s writing has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and has appeared in Water~Stone Review, Brevity, Under the Gum Tree and other publications. Her work often explores the theme of refuge—how we find shelter, both physical and emotional, for ourselves and those we love in an unstable world. She is especially drawn to personal essays for their rich literary possibilities and to memoir as a way to interrogate personal experience and illuminate what it means to be human. 

Before turning to writing, Margaret spent twenty years in leadership roles within the nonprofit sector, including a decade working to advance social justice. These experiences continue to inform her writing, particularly her interest in the intersection of identity, belonging, and community. 

A native of Philadelphia, Margaret attended the Philadelphia High School for Girls and later earned a BA in International Relations and French from the University of Pennsylvania, graduating summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa. She also holds an MBA from The Wharton School and an MFA in Creative Nonfiction from Chatham University.

Margaret's diverse academic background and love of language nurture her appreciation for the moments and rhythms of daily life, whether in the United States or abroad. A dedicated Francophile, with her husband, she divides her time between Concord, Massachusetts and a small village in Provence.

Connect:

Author website

Facebook: @MargaretWhitfordAuthor

Instagram: @margaretwhitfordwriter

Spotlight: Murphy's Laws by Terry Newman

Genre: Contemporary Romantic Comedy 

Thirty days. Seven rules. One undeniable attraction.

After her fiancé skips out on her wedding, Murphy Clarke buries herself in her life-coaching career and develops seven rules to protect her heart. Number one? Never take vacations.

Oops. We find her on a month-long vacation in North Carolina, where she’s alarmed by the sparks flying between her and an arrogant yoga instructor. She’s confident, though, that she’ll be able to keep her other six rules... until she isn’t so sure. Of anything.

Noah Andrews’s name was once synonymous with the San Francisco tech industry, but his heart broke - both physically and emotionally. After a heart attack sidelined his career, his long-time girlfriend dumped him. Why is he now so attracted to this woman who seems to embody the life he left behind?

Witty and full of heart, MURPHY'S LAWS is a story of second chances, small-town charm, and the beautiful chaos that comes when you stop following your own rules... and start following love instead.

Excerpt

Chapter 1 

Murphy 

It looked as if the yoga class was about to end. Thank you, Jesus. And not a moment too soon. Murphy Clarke hadn’t intended to spend the third anniversary of her un-wedding in a yoga class some six hundred fifty miles away from home. But somehow her annoyingly perky sister, TC, had worn her down.

As a life coach, she couldn’t just take a month off, like her sister, the teacher, could. Her responsibilities didn’t end at the beginning of summer. She had developed a set of rules, and here she was, breaking the first.

That’s how she found herself in Summer’s Beach, North Carolina, staring at the boyishly handsome instructor who had a penchant for torturing his students with contortionist poses.

She sat up and was nearly standing when—

“It’s time for our ending meditation. Take the stillness and peace of this session as well as the silence into the world with you today.”

Murphy sighed as she sat back down. Apparently, rather loudly. Not only did her sister and their friend, Eli, scowl at her, the instructor fixed a spine-chilling stare at her with his steel-gray eyes. Again. She had walked in ten minutes late—through no fault of her own. Well, her client, Amelia, had a crisis and she couldn’t leave her hanging. She had to take the call. He had flashed her one of those if-looks-could-kill stares  .

Grimacing as she assumed the half-lotus pose, she placed her index fingers to her thumbs and slowly breathed out an om. She checked on her sister. Full lotus. Show off.

“Ommmm.” The instructor breathed out. The students followed with their own om, strung out so it felt as if the entire room was vibrating.

Brrnng! Brnng! Murphy’s cellphone broke the silence. Damn it. She reached into her tote bag and fumbled for it.

Brnng! Brnng! Her cheeks burning, she rooted around the large vacation bag and grabbed it.

“Murphy here. How may I help you…Josh…wait a second.”

She rose, gave the instructor a shrug, and walked to the back of the room.

“No, I don’t think so. I think at this point in your life you’re exactly where you need to be. Don’t you feel it?” 

Josh Millcreek was one of Murphy’s first life coach clients. His level of self-confidence fluctuated over the three years of their relationship. This most recent crisis would end soon. She just needed to be there for him. And vacation or not, that’s what she intended to do.

She held the phone in front of her, nearly parallel to the floor as she talked. “You’re not your old—”

A shadow hovered over her phone. She blinked. Frowning, she looked up to see the yoga instructor. His eyes bore into her. He snatched the phone from her hand. She shivered as a spark of electricity skittered up her arm. She swallowed hard.

“What the…?”

The yoga instructor grabbed her phone? The tall, handsome instructor? The one with broad shoulders? And loosely curled caramel-colored hair? She imagined if he’d ever smile, he’d probably have adorable laugh lines. For a split second, she was lost in his penetrating eyes and those shoulders—far too broad to belong to a yoga instructor.

Earth to Murphy. That, however, didn’t excuse him from stealing her phone. She glowered at him.

“What the hell are you doing?” The nerve of this man.

“Ma’am” —Ma’am? He called me ma’am?— “we’re in meditation. Silent meditation. Who are you talking to?” He nodded toward her phone.

“My client, as if it’s any of your business.” She held one hand out, the other on her hip as she waited for him to return her phone. Instead, he raised it to his ear. What?

“Ms. Murphy is in meditation at the moment. I’m sure she’ll return your call later.” He clicked the phone off and tossed it to her. It bobbled in her hands before she clutched it in her palm.

“Let’s continue our closing routine.” He pivoted and walked to the front of the room, leaving her to stare at his nicely formed butt. “Now that I’ve put Ms. Murphy’s phone on airplane mode.”

“How dare you.”

Murphy grumbled to herself but returned to her spot and sat down next to her sister. She placed her left ankle over her right thigh and huffed.

“What is your problem?” TC kept her gaze on the instructor.

“I told you I didn’t want to go on vacation, but—”

“Ladies, are we ready? Ms. Murphy, you can talk about your fear of vacations after the session.”

“I’m not afraid of—”

“Everyone take a deep breath. Think peace and stillness. This is the attitude you’re taking with you as you leave the class.”

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About the Author 

Terry Newman is an award-winning author who writes romantic comedy with a splash of fantasy.

Fueled by coffee, peanut butter, and popcorn, she writes stories set in fictional towns in northeast Ohio. Terry loves to place her characters in improbably situations, then allows them to take over…uhm…guide the story.

She lives in a small apartment with overflowing bookshelves, her muse, Moose, and all her characters, in North Lima, a real town in northeast Ohio. And, yes, it does get crowded at times.

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