Review – The Cyber Sanction by Nicholas Gretener #nicholasgretener #thecybersanctuin

I read Nicholas Gretener’s first book and debut novel in the LawForce series, Bending The Arc, and loved the idea of a legal team standing up for the little guy, so I was eager to see where he would take The Cyber Sanction, the second book in the series.

Law Force is a team of elite lawyers with the full backing of the United States government.

“They don’t take passengers; they take fighters.”

“…I wasn’t blindsided because I was careless-I was attacked because I was a threat.”

I think a lot of our future wars will be held in the cyber world. The world we live in is small. Taking down one country’s financial system can have a domino affect that could spread all over the world.

We’ll travel from Zurich to Washington to Switzerland to China and back again.

Listen to that voice in your head. Knock, knock, intuition calling.

Nicholas Gretener writes novels that are easy to follow, though they deal with the law, banking, and other complicated institutions. Sometimes books are over my head, not so with Nicholas’ novels. He writes in a way that makes everything easy to follow. I will warn you, though, the tension, suspense and pacing can keep you flipping pages, unable to stop reading. There’s danger and betrayal. The scenario reads like a true crime novel. Could this be our future?

My thanks go out to Nicholas Gretener and Qualitas Publishing.

4 Stars

“Sunshine is the best disinfectant.”
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis


A legal thriller at the confluence of law, banking, and cybercrime.

In a world where power no longer lies in armies or arsenals, but in algorithms and access, the next great war will be fought across digital frontiers.

When BostonFirst Bank implodes in a mysterious cyberattack, the financial aftershocks threaten to upend the global economy. The evidence leads to Helvex Financial, a Swiss banking giant—yet deeper still to Zhonghua Capital, a covert Chinese state holding company intent on reshaping the world’s financial order.

Enter LawForce, a task force of elite lawyers with full U.S. governmental support created to defend justice where traditional systems fail. At its helm stands Steve Shane, a lawyer driven by conscience, and Jonathan Hendrix, the U.S. Attorney General, whose vision for LawForce blurs the line between legality and warfare.

From Zurich war rooms to Washington boardrooms, from the shadowed servers of Helvex Financial to the mountain passes of Switzerland, The Cyber Sanction hurtles toward a reckoning where truth, technology, and justice collide.

Blending the tension of a legal thriller with the precision of a geopolitical espionage novel, The Cyber Sanction is a searing exploration of digital warfare, accountability, and the moral cost of justice in an interconnected cyber world.

The Cyber Sanction—where justice goes global, and every byte can kill.

  • Genre: Fiction, Legal, Suspense, Thriller
  • 406 pages, Kindle Edition
  • Published December 4, 2025 by Qualitas Publishing
  • Series: A LawForce Novel #2

Nick is a retired lawyer and engineer, based out of Calgary, Alberta, Canada. He splits his time between Calgary, Canada; Wengen, Switzerland; and Maui, USA.

He can usually be found writing on a laptop somewhere, skiing down a piste, hiking up a mountain, or rafting down a river in canyon country.

He is convinced that if people read more, the world would be a better place. It doesn’t always have to be heavy. Read something that will stretch your mind, then enjoy a beach read. Rinse and repeat.

Website

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    $10 GC – Bait The Devil by Winter Austin @partnersincr1me #winteraustin #baitthedevil

    Bait the Devil by Winter Austin Banner

    BAIT THE DEVIL

    by Winter Austin

    February 2 – March 13, 2026 Virtual Book Tour

    Synopsis:

    A BOUNTY OF SHADOWS

     

    In bounty hunting, clean jobs are a myth. Dot knows—she’s seen the blood.

    Dot Ybarra doesn’t bluff. Fresh into her bounty hunting career, she’s already earning a reputation for results. But when a “routine” rogue bounty—taken as a favor to her lawyer cousin—turns lethal, she’s staring down a case with international reach, bodies in its wake, and the stench of power.

    Her business partner, T.J. Roman, is hiding a secret. If Dot finds out … well, she can’t find out. It would end the effective partnership they’ve built. But the trail won’t wait. What should have been a clean pickup of a fellow military veteran spirals into a hunt through the shadows, where one wrong move could see them both buried in an unmarked grave.

    To stop the predators at the center of a violent trafficking ring, they’ll have to go straight into its core—and make themselves the bait. Every step makes them vulnerable to each other as well.

    The devil’s coming for them.

    Dot plans to be the one still standing after he bites.

    Bait the Devil Trailer:

    Book Details:

    Genre: Modern Western Thriller
    Published by: Tule Mystery
    Publication Date: January 19, 2026
    Number of Pages: 285
    ISBN: 9781969218651 (ISBN10: 1969218657)
    Series: A BOUNTY OF SHADOWS, Book 2 {Amazon, Tule}
    Book Links: Amazon | Kindle | Barnes & Noble | Apple Books | Goodreads | BookBub | Tule Mystery

    Read an excerpt:

    From Chapter 1

    Two hours later, they had managed to corral the quickly sobering Freddy into the back of the Suburban, with no more eventful chases, and turn him over to the county jail. Freddy’s bail bondsman paid out their fair share of the bond and a huge tip after some hard pressing on T.J.’s part about the circumstances leading up to Freddy’s apprehension. Once the check was cashed, a celebratory late lunch at one of the best Basque eateries Dot had found in Boise was the best way to top off a successful day of bounty hunting.

    Parked behind the Bar Gernika, she and T.J. sat in the back end of the Chevy Suburban with the hatch up eating chorizo sandwiches with smoked cod croquetas and a bowl of green olives dripping in garlic olive oil. Dot slurped down half of her Coke, then shook the ice in her cup.

    T.J. pointed the remains of his smoked beef chorizo at her. “We should register for the SHOT show in Vegas.”

    “Why?”

    “Because we can.” T.J. pulled his duh face.

    Dot rolled her eyes and bit into her sandwich.

    “Have you ever been there?” T.J. asked.

    She shook her head, wiping smokey chorizo juice from the corner of her mouth.

    “The woman raised to be a hunter and a firearms collector has never been to the great SHOT show?” He lowered his reflective sunglasses and eyed her over the top of the rims. “Never?”

    “You do realize my family wasn’t made of money.” Dot popped one of the croquetas into her mouth. “And that’s in the dead of winter, when we couldn’t just up and run off while we were in the middle of lambing season.”

    “All the more reason you should go now.” T.J. grinned. “A lot of the best bounty hunters meet up there.”

    Dot scowled at her partner and sometimes bunk buddy. “Lemme guess. You wanna show off your shiny new partner to the boys?”

    “Maybe.” His grin turned devilish. “Or maybe I wanna see you kick their asses.”

    Dot wadded up the sandwich wrapper and chucked it at T.J.’s head. “I’m not a toy.”

    The crumbled ball of waxed paper bounced off his forehead and landed on the Suburban floor between them.

    “Really? Then why are you so easy to wind up?”

    “You sonofa—” Dot lunged for his throat but was quickly subdued.

    Their moment of levity was interrupted by a shrill ring from T.J.’s phone.

    “Damn it,” he snapped and patted down his body in search for his cell.

    Dot found it lying on the makeshift floor behind his hulking frame. She snatched it up and checked the screen. She batted her eyelashes at T.J.

    “Don’t you dare,” he snarled.

    She pressed the green icon to answer the call. “Well, hello, cousin dearest.”

    Lawyer-extraordinaire and covert purveyor of information, Vivian Montgomery was Dot’s second cousin. And apparently had earned a spot on T.J.’s contact list under the moniker of Hot Ass Lawyer.

    “Dot? When did you start taking business calls?” Vivian asked, her brisk tone underscored by the sound of her heavy breathing.

    “What are you doing?” Dot asked. “You sound like you’re saving the horse and riding a cowboy.”

    “Oh, grow up. I’m on a treadmill. Put T.J. on the phone.”

    “You shouldn’t run on those things. They destroy your knees and back,” Dot chided.

    “When I want health advice from a cigar smoker who jumps from helicopters for fun, I’ll call.”

    “I don’t jump from the helo. Unless it’s crashing. Even then, that’s sketchy shit.”

    T.J., giving a rumbling growl, jerked the phone from Dot, and pressed it to his ear. “Vivian, what do you need?” He waited a moment, then with another low growl, pulled the phone from his ear and put it on speaker. “You’re on speaker.”

    “I need a huge favor from the two of you.”

    “When you say huge favor, how huge are we talking?” Dot asked.

    “You know, I think I liked you better when you were a brooding, isolated eremite whose main goal in life was equal parts trying to piss off her mother and keep her out of trouble,” Vivian shot back.

    “Love you too, coz.”

    “Now shut up and let me finish.” The whining sound of the treadmill belt slowing echoed over the phone connection. “I just got a call from one of my colleagues. She had a client fail to appear today.”

    “Shouldn’t the defendant’s bail bondsman be calling us?” T.J. asked.

    “It’s … complicated.”

    Dot smiled as T.J. groaned.

    “Vivian, every time you rope us into one of your firm’s problems with their unruly children, we’re out money, time, and patience. We’re called bounty hunters for a reason. Bounty is in the name.”

    “Roman, if you keep up the condescending behavior, I’ll expose your dirty little secret.”

    “Dirty secret, huh,” Dot piped in. “What’s that?”

    He thrust a finger at her nose. “None of your business. Vivian, if you so much as breathe out of line, I’ll make you regret it.”

    “Will you do me the favor?”

    T.J. stared at Dot, who shrugged as if to say, Why not?

    “Fine. Mark my words, I’ll be cashing in on this huge favor sooner than you think.”

    “I wouldn’t have bothered you with this, expect the guy is a veteran, and you two being veterans yourself, I figured he’d be more likely to work with you than anyone else.”

    “What’s on his file?” Dot asked.

    “That’s the complicated part. Officially, his file says he was picked up a third time for carrying with the intent to sell. Unofficially, he’s … classified.”

    Dot frowned as she and T.J. locked eyes. As a former army ranger who spent a lot of time flying in and out of forward operating bases in Afghanistan, T.J. knew all about classified situations. Dot, as the main helicopter pilot shuttling him and his team back and forth, though never read in on his actual missions, typically was under strict orders of her own.

    “Vivian, I’m not getting fuzzy feelings about this,” T.J. said.

    “Neither am I. It’s why I’m calling the two of you in. The judge wants to issue a bench warrant. My colleague was able to ask for a delay before it’s submitted. She was given three hours to present her client or the warrant is released. If you’d rather, you could consider this job PI work instead of fugitive recovery.”

    The shingle hanging outside their business office did say private investigators. At this point, that title belonged to T.J. and T.J. alone.

    “Still not selling me on this,” he said. “If there’s no bench warrant, there’s no cash for catching him.”

    “Hang on.” Vivian spoke to someone, her voice muffled, then she was back. “The firm will pay you a finder’s fee.”

    T.J. continued to stare at Dot. She could sense what he was thinking. He was torn. Take this off-the-cuff job and cash in on the favor department with Vivian to help a fellow veteran? Or say fuck it and play hooky for the rest of the day like he’d planned?

    Dot didn’t really have much of a say in the business dealings of their partnership since she was eight months into the training phase as a fugitive recovery agent and she wasn’t a licensed PI. It didn’t stop T.J. from pressing her for her opinion, who argued that, because she was about to start taking bounties on her own, she needed to take the reins more often.

    “If it helps you make a decision, I’ve got his last known address and a phone number along with a photo,” Vivian said. “This won’t be a hard catch.”

    “Stop saying that. Every time you tell me it’s an easy one, it turns into a disaster,” T.J. snarled.

    “He’s right,” Dot added.

    “Okay, I retract my statement. But, please say yes. Huge favor to me. I’ll do anything.”

    “Anything?”

    Dot glared at him.

    “Within reason,” Vivian shot back.

    “We’ll do it,” Dot said, tired of T.J.’s runaround. “Send us the four-one-one, and we’ll go check it out.”

    T.J. glared at her; his dark eyes flashed a warning. Dot returned his glare with a smug look of her own that dared him to bring it.

    “Thank you, coz. Hurry. There’s only two hours left before the bench warrant goes out. Then it’ll be a free-for-all.”

    “You couldn’t have called us about this an hour ago?” T.J. groused.

    “Shut your yap, Roman,” Vivian said. “There. Info sent.”

    His phone dinged.

    “His name is Cade Porter. He was a staff sergeant in the Marine Corps.” Vivian sucked in a breath. “Oooh.”

    “Oooh, what?” T.J. insisted.

    “If this is right, he was in an artillery unit.”

    “Oh my God.” T.J. groaned.

    Dot grinned. Not only did acting on a favor for Vivian chafe T.J. in the chaps, but doing it for a Marine with explosives expertise was going to make that chafe burn. Throughout their long, storied history, there had always been a deep-seated friendly animosity between the army and the Marines. Push came to shove, however, they still had each other’s backs.

    “If that crayon eater blows us up, I’m going to haunt you,” he said.

    “I look forward to the visits. Now get going.” Vivian ended the call.

    T.J. shoved his phone in a side pocket of his cargo pants. “Tell me again why we let Vivian help us out?”

    “Because,” Dot said as she scooted out of the SUV’s backend, “she’s good for the money. And I trust her intel more than I would some of your bail bondsmen.”

    “You say that because you’re biased.”

    Nire familia da. Garrantzitsua da.

    T.J. paused before closing the hatch. “I speak Pashto, Arabic, some Spanish, and Oklahoman. I do not speak Basque.”

    Dot chuckled. “Time to learn, Danger Ranger.”

    “Load up and let’s roll.”

    ***

    Excerpt from Bait the Devil by Winter Austin. Copyright 2026 by Winter Austin. Reproduced with permission from Winter Austin. All rights reserved.

     

     

    Author Bio:

    Winter Austin

    Winter Austin perpetually answers the question: “were you born in the winter?” with a flat “nope,” but believe her, there is a story behind her name.

    A lifelong Mid-West gal with strong ties to the agriculture world, Winter grew up listening to the captivating stories told by relatives around a table or a campfire. As a published author, she learned her glass half-empty personality makes for a perfect suspense/thriller writer. Taking her ability to verbally spin a vivid and detailed story, Winter translated that into writing deadly romantic suspense, mysteries, and thrillers.

    When she’s not slaving away at the computer, you can find Winter supporting her daughter in cattle shows, seeing her three sons off into the wide-wide world, loving on her fur babies, prodding her teacher husband, and nagging at her flock of hens to stay in the coop or the dogs will get them.

    She is the author of multiple novels.

    Catch Up With Winter Austin:

    AuthorWinterAustin.com
    Amazon Author Profile
    Goodreads
    BookBub – @WinterAustin
    Instagram – @iasuspensewriter
    Facebook – @author.winteraustin

     

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    Saddle Up & Win: Autographed Winter Austin Novel + Gift Card

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    BAIT THE DEVIL by Winter Austin | Gift Card & Book

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    Review – Dead Woman Walking by Carolyn Arnold @carolynarnold #netgalley #deadwomanwalking

    Amazon / Goodreads

    Here we are. Back with Amanda Steele in Dead Woman Walking, Book 15, and this time it hits close to home. Amanda’s half brother is dating Christine Lane, a realtor and the murder victim. Carolyn Arnold is quit to set the hook and that is only one of the reasons I love her books so much. She is great at taking us step by step, through the investigation.

    The owner of the house where Christine Lane was found is Dominique Sharp, a lawyer who has a long line of disgruntled employees and so many secrets and a trail that leads to the killer. Could Christine’s murder be a case of mistaken identity?

    Carolyn Arnold has a way with words. The short chapters make for an easy read with the mystery set at a steady pace. She has a way of creating doubt, when it comes to flushing out the villain. She calls in help from characters that appear in other series she writes. So, brace yourself for another great read in the Amanda Steele series.

     

    4 Stars

    Preparing the empty house for another viewing, she knows she’s taking a risk showing it at night. She never told anyone she was here, but she desperately needs this sale. If she pulls it off, she can finally give her daughter the life she deserves. But as she climbs the stairs, goosebumps spread down her arms. She’s not alone

    When the body of realtor Christine Lane is discovered in one of Woodbridge’s most affluent homes, Detective Amanda Steele is left reeling. The victim was dating Amanda’s half-brother, making him an immediate suspect. They’ve never been close but Amanda knows he’s not a killer.

    As forensics move in to process the crime scene, Amanda is ambushed by a well-dressed woman desperately trying to get inside the house. Dominique Sharp is a successful lawyer and expected her house to be sold by the time she returned from a business trip to DC. Could she have been the intended target?

    Delving into Dominique’s business, Amanda and Trent discover a long line of disgruntled employees and a dark web of secrets that lead them to a killer who will stop at nothing to get their deadly revenge on her.

    But can Amanda take the greatest risk of her career to lure the killer back into the light? And will she have to sacrifice someone close to her to ensure justice is finally served?

    A totally addictive and pulse-pounding crime thriller that will have you turning the pages late into the night. Perfect for fans of Mary Burton, Elle Gray and A. J. Rivers.

    • Genre: Fiction, Mystery, Police Procedural, Suspense, Thriller
    • 337 pages, Kindle Edition
    • Expected publication February 25, 2026 by Bookouture
    • Series: Detective Amanda Steele #15

    CAROLYN ARNOLD is an international bestselling and award-winning author, as well as a speaker, teacher, and inspirational mentor. She has several continuing fiction series and has many published books. Her genre diversity offers her readers everything from police procedurals, hard-boiled mysteries, and thrillers to action adventures. Her crime fiction series have been praised by those in law enforcement as being accurate and entertaining. This led to her adopting the trademark: POLICE PROCEDURALS RESPECTED BY LAW ENFORCEMENT™.

    Carolyn was born in a small town and enjoys spending time outdoors, but she also loves the lights of a big city. Grounded by her roots and lifted by her dreams, her overactive imagination insists that she tell her stories. Her intention is to touch the hearts of millions with her books, to entertain, inspire, and empower.

    She currently lives near London, Ontario, Canada with her husband and two beagles.

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    Cyberpunk – Review – The Zone: Fallen Son by Stu Jones @StuJonesFiction #thezone

    Amazon / Goodreads

    Gotta love Chance. In for a penny, in for a pound.

    The Zone: Fallen Son by Stu Jones, is the second book in this cyberpunk series. It is filled with fast paced action and the stakes are high. The battles are brutal, savage, and many lives will be lost.

    Everything revolves around Chance, a father, a son, a hero. His son is ill and he will do anything to get the treatment his child needs, but when he is taken, he will also do anything to get him back.

    It all begins in Neo Terminus, where Chance had taken down the Zone, a walled off area in the middle of the city where Enforcers, nano boosted gladiators, would fight to the death. He finds out his son has been taken to a distant city, New West City, and he will have to partner up with an unlikely ally. He will face betrayal and hordes of mutant humans.

    Action and adventure, life and death, thought provoking moments, The Zone engulfed me in rapid fire reading, flipping pages, caught up, unable to look away. BUT..the story is not done. Chance may have completed one mission, but his son is still missing, being used as a bargaining chip by High Director Marko Senterian. I can hardly wait to see what happens next.

    4 Stars

    In the shadow of Neo Terminus, a father’s desperation becomes his only weapon.

    Chance Griffin—super cop, fallen gladiator, hunted fugitive—will stop at nothing to rescue his kidnapped infant son. Even if that means tracking down and confronting the Glom’s shadowy masters.

    But he can’t do it alone.

    To save his child, Chance must forge an uneasy alliance with a ruthless adversary—a villain whose hands drip with the blood of Chance’s friends. Together, they’ll journey beyond the neon streets of Neo Terminus to the lawless frontier of New West City, where even legends are broken.

    With each fractured step Chance is drawn deeper into a web of manipulation and betrayal, stretching the fragile thread connecting him to the life he left behind—to a wife whose face may soon fade from memory.

    As Neo Terminus burns behind him and New West City looms ahead, Chance knows he can’t let the wasteland claim what’s left of his soul. He is more than the Glom’s former star Enforcer, their fallen son.

    He is a father, a husband. A hero.

    AWARDS for The Zone
    Gold Medal(1st Place) Winner – The Bookfest Awards – Cyberpunk Category
    Honorable Mention – Reader’s Favorite Awards – Science Fiction Category
    Finalist – Best Thriller Book Awards – Science Fiction
    Finalist – IAN Book of the Year Awards – Science Fiction
    Semi-Finalist – Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards – Science Fiction
    Approved Seal – Indie Reader

    • Genre: Action And Advenure, Cyberpunk, Fiction, Science Fiction, Suspense, Thriller
    • 402 pages, Kindle
    • Published: 2.17.26 by Dropship Publishing
    • Series: The Zone #2

    Stu Jones. SWAT Sniper. Adventurer. Award-Winning Author of Epic Genre-Bending Fiction.

    A veteran law enforcement officer, Stu has served as a beat cop, narcotics, criminal investigations, as an instructor of firearms and police defensive tactics and as a team leader of a multi-jurisdictional SWAT team. He is trained and qualified as a law enforcement SWAT sniper, as well as in hostage rescue and high-risk entry tactics. Recently, Stu served for three years with a U.S. Marshal’s Regional Fugitive Task Force – hunting the worst of the worst.

    He is the author of multiple sci-fi/action/thriller novels, including the multi-award-winning It Takes Death To Reach A Star duology, written with co-author Gareth Worthington (Children of the Fifth Sun).

    Known for his character-driven stories and blistering action sequences, Stu strives to create thought-provoking reading experiences that challenge the status quo. When he’s not chasing bad guys or writing epic stories, he can be found planning his next adventure to some remote or exotic place.

    Stu is represented by Italia Gandolfo of Gandolfo-Helin-Fountain literary

    Catch Up With Stu Jones:
    Goodreads
    BookBub – @stujonesfiction
    Instagram – @stujonesfiction
    Facebook – @stujonesfiction

     

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    Review – Adrift by Will Dean #netgalley @willrdean #adrift #netgalley

    Amazon / Goodreads

    Adrift was so much more than I thought it would be. The subtle evil of Drew’s manipulations had Peggy questioning her own actions. Drew stepped up his machinations when he found out his wife, Peggy, had sold a novel. They were both authors, but he has turned into a has been. He begrudges Peggy’s success in every way, whether it was getting a check from a publisher or getting a job with the library. He sabotages all her successes. Denies her and his son food and water. Isolates them, continually moving their canal boat farther and farther away from everyone else.

    Peggy is determined to find a way out for her and their son. She didn’t want him growing up to be like his father, a failure in every way. Samson is fourteen years old and bullied by the kids in school. His determination to do well in school and leave town when he is older drives him to endure. The isolation and poverty is brutal.

    My emotions were all over the place. If you want a character to hate, Will Dean has supplied one. Every time I didn’t think Drew could do something worse, he did. As Peggy searches every nook and cranny in their canal boat, she discovers some truths.

    As their worst moments came about, I saw the ending unfold. Some I knew and some I hoped for.

    My thanks go out to NetGalley and Atria Books for the opportunity to read Adrift by Will Dean. What a wild ride it was. He’s definitely on my radar now.

      Animated Animals. Pictures, Images and Photos
      4 Stars

      The author of the “master class in suspense” (Shari Lapena, New York Times bestselling author)The Chamber returns with a high-tension thriller about a family’s descent into darkness that is perfect for fans of Dennis Lehane and Lisa Jewell.

      Peggy and Drew, both aspiring writers, move to an isolated canal boat with their fourteen-year-old son. Peggy is the glue that holds their family together, even as their son is bullied relentlessly for his physique and his family’s lack of money. But when Drew becomes frustrated by his wife’s sudden writing success, he moves their boat further and further from civilization.

      With their increasing isolation, personal challenges become harder to ignore, even as they desperately try to break toxic generational patterns. But when Drew’s gaslighting becomes too much for Peggy to take, it sets off a catastrophic series of events.

      With Will Dean’s signature “well-drawn characters and excellent prose” (Sarah Pearse, New York Times bestselling author), Adrift is gripping exploration of the ties that bind when everything spirals out of control.

      • Genre: Adult, Dark, Fiction, Mystery, Suspense, Thriller
      • Kindle Edition
      • Expected publication February 17, 2026 by Atria/Emily Bestler Books

        Will Dean grew up in the East Midlands, living in nine different villages before the age of eighteen. He was a bookish, daydreaming kid who found comfort in stories and nature (and he still does). After studying Law at the LSE, and working in London, he settled in rural Sweden. He built a wooden house in a boggy clearing at the centre of a vast elk forest, and it’s from this base that he compulsively reads and writes. He is the author of Dark Pines.

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        Review – They’ll Take Everything by C H Connor @CHConnor_ #theylltakeeverything

        Amazon / Goodreads

        I love the cover for They’ll Take Everything by C H Connor. The colors and content are eye catching. And that title…definitely draws me in. For a debut novel, C H Connor hit it out of the ballpark.

        David Dale carries a heavy weight of guilt. He feels responsible for the car accident that killed his family. He decides to make a drastic change, trying to find redemption. He is going to start a charity that will help others that find it hard to move on from a tragedy. Bev, a close personal friend of thirteen years, agrees to join in. It’s not long before things begin to happen. Anonymous messages, Threats. Extortion. David stands firm on his mission.

        The suspense builds slowly as the danger increases. Revenge is coming, knocking at his door.

        WTF? That’s why I don’t read ahead. I love when an author can surprise me and I didn’t see it coming, though I knew who the villain was. I went back and reread the last chapter because it was just that great.

        My thanks go out to C H Connor for the opportunity to read They’ll Take Everything.

         

        4 Stars

        David Dale has been running from guilt for three years.

        The car accident that killed his family was his fault. Now he has one chance at redemption: opening a charity for families shattered by tragedy.

        But that’s made him the perfect target.

        Days before the launch, anonymous messages begin. Precise. Threatening. Someone’s been watching him. Someone knows exactly how to break him. What begins as extortion becomes a calculated campaign to dismantle David’s life, piece by piece.

        The charity launches to national attention — which only makes things worse.

        David finds himself targeted by a criminal syndicate who don’t leave witnesses. As he unravels the conspiracy, he’s forced to confront the past he thought he’d buried. But that’s when he realises the terrifying truth.

        This isn’t extortion. It’s revenge.

        Three years of guilt. Two weeks of terror. One truth that changes everything.

        How far would you go to turn heartbreak into hope?

        Perfect for fans of Stieg Larsson and Harlan Coben, and for readers who crave layered suspense, emotional depth, and immersive, character-driven stories.

        • Genre: Fiction, Suspense, Thriller
        • 323 pages, Kindle Edition
        • Expected publication February 16, 2026

        C.H. Connor is the debut author of the psychological crime thriller, THEY’LL TAKE EVERYTHING, released 16 February 2026.

        Connor built his career in software before putting pen to paper and publishing his upcoming novel. Connor lives with his partner and son in Manchester, UK.

        You can connect with Connor on Instagram. To receive updates on his latest work and upcoming events, you can sign up to his spam-free newsletter at chconnor.com.

        Connect on Instagram: ch_connor

        Website

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        Review – I Don’t Wish You Well by Jumata Emill @brownboywriting #idontwishyouwell

        Murder is just the beginning...
        Unlikely detective duo, small-town scandal, Friday Night Lights meets a Good Girl's Guide to Murder

         

        Amazon / Goodreads

        The eye catching cover and title for I Don’t Wish You Well by Jumata Emill made me curious. You can say curiosity killed the cat, because Pryce Cummings, a podcaster and aspiring journalist, starts his own investigation into Moss Pointe, Louisiana’s Trojan mask killings and someone wants to keep the secrets buried. Did they really catch the killer? There are many who believe they had convicted an innocent man, and the deeper Pryce dug, the more he is convinced they got it wrong.

        Moss Pointe is a small town with small minded people. Church and football were worshiped. Being gay in a racist town had Pryce struggling to keep his sexuality secret, at least until he left for college, where he felt free to explore.

        Pryce gets help from an unlikely source, free spirited Izzy. He wears his gayness in the open. Pryce slowly begins to understand what he has sacrificed to keep his secret.

        “That paranoia hasn’t drained you yet? God, I felt suffocated under it when I lived here.”

        Halfway through the pace picked up. Bodies fell and secrets were exposed. All the questions raised by vigilante justice arise. I love thought provoking books, and I Don’t Wish You Well by Jumata Emill had me wondering…what would I do if I walked a mile in someone’s shoes?

        My thanks go out to NetGalley and Delacorte Press for the opportunity to read I Don’t Wish You Well by Jumata Emill.

        4 Stars

        A teen investigative podcaster decides to dig into the truth behind a grisly murder spree that rocked his hometown five years ago, but soon discovers that this cold case is still hiding deadly secrets—in this chilling thriller perfect for fans of A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder.

        Five years ago, the infamous Trojan murders turned the small town of Moss Pointe, Louisiana into a living nightmare. Four teen boys—all star players on Moss Pointe High’s football team—were murdered one after the other by a Trojan-mask wearing killer. 

        Eventually, the murderer was unmasked. But the community has never forgotten—and some folks in town still wonder whether the police got it right.

        Eighteen-year-old Pryce Cummings is one of them. An aspiring journalist, Pryce is pretty sure he just stumbled upon evidence that throws the killer’s guilt into question. It’s the perfect story for his own podcast, and a reason to go back to the hometown he’s avoided since coming to terms with his sexuality while at college.

        But in Moss Pointe, digging into the past is anything but welcome. There’s so much more to what happened in there five years ago, and Pryce is ready to crack it all wide open . . . if he lives to tell the tale.

        • Genre: Crime, Fiction, LGBTQ, Mystery, Queer, Suspense, Thriller
        • 400 pages, Hardcover
        • First published January 20, 2026 by Delacorte Press

        Jumata Emill is a journalist who has covered crime and local politics in Mississippi and parts of Louisiana. He earned his BA in mass communications from Southern University and A&M College. He’s a Pitch Wars alum and a member of the Crime Writers of Color. When he’s not writing about murderous teens, he’s watching and obsessively tweeting about every franchise of the Real Housewives. Jumata lives in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and is the author of The Black Queen and Wander in the Dark.

        Website

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        $25 GC – Haunted By A Broken Oath by Dee Armstrong @partnersincr1me @deearmstrongbks #hauntedbyabrokenoath

        Haunted by a Broken Oath by Dee Armstrong Banner

        HAUNTED BY A BROKEN OATH

        by Dee Armstrong

        February 2 – March 13, 2026 Virtual Book Tour

        Synopsis:

        A JD WOLFE INVESTIGATION

         

        When a hero dies and children vanish, PI JD Wolfe must confront a deadly conspiracy–and the ghost that’s haunted her since childhood.

        A decorated military hero is found hanging from a rope. Two young boys vanish without a trace. And private investigator JD Wolfe’s world begins to unravel.

        The deeper she digs, the closer the danger creeps–not just to her, but to the family that saved her and the career that keeps her sane. JD knows these crimes aren’t random. They’re a message. And she might be the target.

        Once called Diamond in a grim orphanage, the Wolfe family adopted JD, but she’s never felt like she truly belonged. She harbors secrets too dark to speak. Secrets that landed her in an asylum. Secrets tied to a ghost that’s haunted her since the night her mother died in a fire.

        This ghost doesn’t sleep. It invades JD’s cases, her dreams, and even her heart. She’s kept it buried for years. But now, with lives on the line, JD must do the unthinkable.

        She must let the ghost in.

        Praise for Haunted by a Broken Oath:

        “Meet JD Wolfe—a tough, smart, quirky PI with special skills and a meddling ghost in tow. Buckle up for a wild ride!”
        ~ DP Lyle, Award-Winning Author of the Jake Longly and Cain/Harper Thriller Series and Co-Creator of the Outliers Writing University

        “Dee Armstrong is a refreshing new voice in action thrillers. Her new novel is packed with gut-gripping suspense, peppered with witty quips that had me chuckling, while her plot twists had me biting back a scream. Blazing brilliant!”
        ~ Kathleen Baldwin, Wall Street Journal and #1 Barnes & Noble bestselling author of A School for Unusual Girls

        Haunted By A Broken Oath will grip you from the very first page and linger in your mind long after the last. Armstrong’s strong voice and resonant characters make this an unforgettable read.”
        ~ Kathleen Antrim, Bestselling Author

        “A highly eventful but fast-paced supernatural thriller.”
        ~ Kirkus Reviews

        Book Details:

        Genre: Thriller with a touch of paranormal
        Published by: Outliers Press . Suspense Publishing
        Publication Date: November 11, 2025
        Number of Pages: 424
        ISBN: 9798999682994 (Paperback)
        Series: A JD Wolfe Investigation, Book 1
        Book Links: Amazon | KindleUnlimited | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | BookBub

        Read an excerpt:

        Chapter 1

        The first rule on my “JD Wolfe’s Survival List” was: Don’t trust the ghost, because she couldn’t leave anything alone. Not when you were awake, not when you were asleep, not when she was haunting you. Not when the only surprise you received for your eighth birthday, other than the death of your mom in a fire, was for the ghost who had tormented her to transfer that torment to you.

        And torment you forever.

        During the thirteen years since the fire, I went from homeless to orphan to private eye. I reinvented myself. I became stronger. When life comes at you, and you have no one to protect you, and flight isn’t an option, you either fight or surrender.

        I chose fight.

        I took my adopted family’s surname and changed my name from Diamond, the girl with no last name, to Justyne Diamond Wolfe, or JD for short. I haven’t forgotten my survival rules.

        I’ve added more to the list.

        Past midnight, I sat hunched at the counter, scrolling through my phone in one of those diners you see in the movies with wide windows, cushy booths, a long counter, and pictures of All American Little League baseball teams lining the walls. You’d expect to see couples snuggled in the booths and a clean-cut, milkshake melt-in-your-mouth kind of guy in a starched button-down shirt. Instead, I was alone with Creepy Diner Guy working the counter. His hair slicked back, his shirt a stain-spattered rendering of a Jackson Pollock painting, his buttons playing hopscotch, missing every other hole.

        He wiped a dirty rag around a glass jar with a MISSING flier taped to the front. A pretty, fresh-faced, school-age girl smiled for the camera wearing decades-old clothes and a Hello Kitty backpack. The change and dollar bills stuffed into the jar suggested hope was still alive.

        I wasn’t so sure. In my experience, hope was for suckers.

        “Get you another coffee, Red?” His nasty meth-smile busted and blackened.

        “Still struggling with this one.” I swirled the sludge he called coffee in the bottom of my cup. It had created a tar pit inside my gut. I decided to check in with the office before the coffee killed me.

        On the stool at my nine, a ball of light appeared. Flickered. Sparked in shades between blue, violet and eye-piercing white. The air snapped. The skin on my arms tingled and puckered like a plucked goose’s butt.

        The light shifted from a pixelated pattern into a semi-transparent woman, all monochromatic shades of gray. Stringy hair stuck to her face, hiding her features. Only her silver eyes and charcoal lips showed through. A dingy nightgown hung from her shoulders and fluttered in shreds around her bare feet.

        Home, home, home, the ghost whispered in my brain, where the thoughts were supposed to be mine, not hers. One of many things about the Woman that ticked me off.

        Most people would call the ghost a spirit or specter, but I preferred “the Woman.”

        Or “Bitch.”

        Instead of playing patty-cake and singing nursery rhymes, I learned how to survive living with a not-so-dearly departed. I didn’t care how she died, only that she stuck to my mom like a nasty rash.

        The second rule I learned? Never tell anyone about the ghost. Otherwise, they’ll think you’re crazy and lock you up.

        Creepy Diner Guy didn’t react to his supernatural guest. He walked past and wiped down tables. That didn’t shock me. My mom had been the only other living person I’d known who could see or hear or smell the Woman.

        Even when the Woman didn’t appear, she watched. Listened. Waited for a way to interfere. It was inevitable. I lived with the dead.

        An overwhelming smell of lavender clung to the Woman. I gagged on the disgusting sweetness. My hand tugged at the collar of my leather jacket and the t-shirt beneath. “Why can’t you give me one day?” I whispered. “One day without your lavender scent up my nose, your annoying voice blabbing in my head, your bony butt blocking my way?”

        S-s-sorry, s-s-sorry, sorry, she repeated.

        “Yeah, right. If you were sorry, you’d go back to hell.”

        La-la-late. The staccato beat of her words pounded against my temples. As if the ghost cared if she didn’t get forty winks.

        “I’m on a job. Go away.” I worked in the family’s business, White Wolfe Investigations. Today’s job was more of a payback than a paycheck. My adopted father, Milt Wolfe—whom I liked to call Fixer Geezer in my head—owed a lifelong favor to his old Navy buddy, Master Chief Ben Palmer. I didn’t know why Master Chief had bought a 24-hour diner right off I-95. Senile? Maybe.

        This kind of debt could never be paid off. How could you put a price on someone saving your life?

        I understood Milt’s orders: Sit tight. Observe and report. Master Chief thought Creepy Diner Guy volunteered for the night shift to make money on the shady side of life—the side where things slip from white-lie gray to back-alley black; the side where cops close your restaurant and cart you off to jail.

        My phone buzzed. No doubt it was one of the Geezers. Two brothers I considered my real fathers, and my bosses. “Sweet cheeks, I’ll be home soon.”

        “Sweet cheeks?” Their voices blended into one. They’d put me on speakerphone. Great. Two opinionated, life-controlling Geezers for the price of one.

        I couldn’t bring myself to call Milt anything like Dad or Daddy or Pop. Some things took time and a barge load of counseling. “Is everything okay, Sweet Cheeks?”

        “Has he passed any packages? Drugs? Money?” Cliff Wolfe, a.k.a. Smarty Pants Geezer and my adopted uncle, was super stinkin’ smart. The type of smart that could send a rocket to the moon but not close the refrigerator door.

        “Nope. Only coffee.” I ignored the ghost and monitored Creepy Diner Guy. He picked at a stain on his shirt and popped something into his mouth.

        My stomach revolted.

        “Stolen anything?” Street smart and straight to the point, Milt didn’t waste words.

        “Nope. Nada. Not cash from the till or a quarter from the floor.”

        “Be smart.” Uncle Cliff’s voice geared into lecture mode.

        I rolled my eyes. “Yeah, yeah. I’ll be smart.”

        “Don’t approach anyone. Don’t draw attention to yourself. Get the intel. Get home. You’re more important than a favor.” Milt, the man who fixed everything with what he had on hand, even if it was only his brute strength or a rubber band, sounded as strong and sure as the day he saved me from St. Francis’ Group Home for Lost Souls. A fancy name for an orphanage. People rebrand and rename. It’s all the same. Group home or orphanage. I preferred orphanage. Or St. Francis’ Hell Hole.

        The name didn’t catch on.

        “Pleeease.” Unwanted emotions compressed my chest. I struggled to remain in character. “I know better than to talk to strangers.”

        “She can handle this.” The rise in Cliff’s voice vetoed any worry.

        Creepy Diner Guy inched closer with each swipe of his rag.

        Unsure what he could hear, I kept my words soft. “Don’t worry. I’m a big girl.”

        The Woman leaned in.

        I leaned away, checking the diner’s clock. “It’s past midnight. Do you need me home?”

        “A few more hours. Nothing good happens between midnight and three,” said Cliff.

        “I don’t like her on her own.” Concern lined the deep timbre of Milt’s voice. “We’ll meet you there. Follow orders and stay safe.”

        My face burned solar-flare hot. He didn’t trust me. How could I prove myself if he didn’t give me a chance? “Sheesh. You don’t need to pick me up. I can drive home. I’m not eleven anymore.”

        Back ramrod-straight, her hands clasped tightly in her lap, the Woman disapproved of my tone. You’d think after decades of death, she’d have pulled the sequoia-sized stick out of her spectral butt.

        “It’s been a long time since you lived on the streets.” Milt shouted into the speakerphone. Technology wasn’t one of his strengths.

        “Sweet cheeks, don’t yell.” A sick part of me enjoyed the charade. “I can hear you.” My gaze flickered to Creepy Diner Guy, and I clicked down the volume on my phone. “It’s a cellphone, not a handheld radio.”

        “Milt’s right. We shouldn’t have sent you in alone.” Cliff’s words rose decibels higher than his brother’s.

        They’d joined forces and wanted to pull the plug on my mission. I couldn’t let that happen.

        “I’m okay.” I kept my voice light and confident. To ease their angst, I added a hint of humor. “Worrying is only going to make you grayer.” By age seven, I’d mastered controlling my voice to manipulate adults. That was how you survived when you were the proxy adult because your mom had surrendered to another drug-enhanced dream.

        Bored with our conversation, the Woman hummed a song—not a pop or a rap or a country song, but that lullaby. I rubbed my temples, biting my tongue to prevent myself from begging her to stop.

        “Keep us posted.” Milt barked out the order as if I was a newbie boot on his ship.

        I suppressed an aye, aye, Sir, and replied, “Be home soon.” I hung up and glared at the Woman. “Don’t you start.”

        The Woman switched to a jazzy tune.

        I passed the time naming the stains on Creepy Diner Guy’s shirt. Red—ketchup. Yellow—mustard. There was a slick of brown across his midriff. Grease? Gravy?

        The coffee pit in my belly bubbled. I didn’t want to know.

        He shuffled into the back and returned with a plate stacked high with raw hamburger patties and a bag of frozen fries. He tossed the meat on the grill, dumped the fries into a basket, lowered them into grease, and wiped the grill’s metal front with his rag.

        In the mirror above the grills, I scanned the parking lot behind me through the diner’s gigantic windows. Empty except for my Jeep.

        Through the same mirror, Creepy Diner Guy gave me a hey-baby-I’m-the-answer-to-your-prayers look.

        I shot back a don’t-make-me-shove-that-rag-down-your-throat glare. The ghost’s laughter rang in my head. A girly giggle slipped from my throat before I could kill it.

        Creepy Diner Guy flipped the hamburgers. He turned, wiping his hands down his shirt. “Waiting for a boyfriend?”

        “Expecting a midnight rush?” I countered. The meat smelled a little off, or maybe the nauseous odor came from him.

        “Nonya.”

        Was that code for something? “Nonya?”

        “None ya business.” His shrill laugh shredded my eardrums. He planted his elbows on the counter and leaned in. “Lived in Rubyville long?” His lunch haunted his breath. Hamburger with extra onions.

        Home, home, home.

        “Kinda,” I replied with my own one-word cryptic answer and snubbed the ghost.

        Home, Home, HOME. The Woman didn’t like to be left out or ignored. The longer it went, the more insistent she’d become. At least her humming stopped.

        Creepy Diner Guy turned back to the grill, removed the hamburgers, and lifted the basket of fries from the grease. He came around the counter. Sat on a ripped vinyl stool, sandwiched me between his onion breath and the Woman’s putrid potpourri. He leaned close. “I like green eyes and red hair. You look real good in black.”

        As if I cared what he thought. Shades from onyx to ebony filled ninety percent of my wardrobe. My leather jacket and knee-high boots fell comfortably in the range. Black was easy to accessorize. It went with more black. “Uh-huh. Thanks.”

        Truck pipes rumbled. I checked the parking lot in the mirror. A baby-blue, nineteen-eighty-two Ford parked out front. I’d love to have a truck like that. All shiny and clean.

        Home, Home, Home.

        I raised my phone as a shield between his breath and me. I texted the Geezers: Got movement, adding the truck’s description and license plate number. In a low voice, I told the Woman, “Hit the bricks.”

        “No need to be like that. I’m not going to hurt you,” Creepy Diner Guy replied, his tone operator-smooth. He rubbed a piece of my hair between his fingers. My hair. “Red’s my favorite color.”

        My muscles tensed. One swift back fist. That’s all it would take. He could add fresh blood to the stains on his shirt. Bright red would enhance his color palette. Besides, red was his favorite.

        But I was on a job. A job I couldn’t mess up by spilling his blood. “Don’t you have more burgers to flip? Potatoes to peel?”

        “You wanna peel my potato?”

        The coffee tar backed up into my throat. Leaning into my third rule—keep everything important safe in your boots and everything important will keep you safe—I palmed the knife from my boot and showed him the blade. “I can peel more than that. Wanna play?”

        Bad, bad, bad, bad, bad, the Woman chanted. The lights in the diner flashed.

        I slid the blade of my knife against his jaw, giving him a free shave. “You’re not really bad, are you?”

        The diner’s door opened. I shifted, keeping my back between the door and the knife. No need to frighten a customer or warn off the pick-up guy.

        Creepy Diner Guy’s face turned morgue gray. Scared stiff worked for him. He scrambled backward, helter-skelter, and side slipped from the stool.

        “That’s what I thought.” I lowered my knife.

        Like a buck caught in the crosshairs, he froze. A tsunami of fear flowed over his face. He gazed over my head. Neither my blade nor the Woman caused his locked stare.

        Someone scarier than a knife to his throat stood behind me.

        Dread dripped down my backbone like bacon grease from a hot pan, setting my nerves on fire. I tucked my chin and snuck a peek over my shoulder.

        Scary didn’t do the guy justice. He was a mashup of Godzilla and King Kong—butt ugly and horribly wrong. A massive neck—a monster mama would be proud of—steel-studded earlobes, his hair spiky and nuclear green. He’d claimed this cement jungle and declared himself king.

        And I?

        I was the bug in his way. But I wasn’t Diamond, the girl with no last name, anymore. I was JD Wolfe, Private Eye.

        ***

        Excerpt from Haunted by a Broken Oath by Dee Armstrong. Copyright 2025 by Dee Armstrong. Reproduced with permission from Dee Armstrong. All rights reserved.

         

         

        Author Bio:

        Dee Armstrong

        Dee Armstrong writes thrillers and romantic suspense with a paranormal twist — stories that squeeze the heart, rattle the nerves, and still leave room for love, laughter, and sass.

        She pits tough heroines against bad guys you’ll love to hate — with twists that keep the pages flying and endings that fight for hope.

        A former U.S. Air Force Russian linguist and three-time Taekwondo Black Belt National Sparring Champion, Dee believes the vulnerable should be protected and justice must be fierce—because the past never stays buried, and the truth never sleeps.

        When she’s not writing about danger and desire, Dee is chasing after her littles, sipping tea on the porch, and plotting against the weeds in her garden.

        Find her on social @DeeArmstrongAuthor for sneak peeks, behind-the-scenes chaos, and stories that leave a fingerprint on your heart.

        Catch Up With Dee Armstrong:

        DeeArmstrong.com
        Dee Armstrong’s Newsletter
        Amazon Author Profile
        Goodreads
        BookBub – @DeeArmstrong
        Instagram – @dee_armstrong_author
        X – @deearmstrongbks
        Facebook – @DeeArmstrongAuthor
        YouTube – @DeeArmstrongAuthor
        TikTok – @DeeArmstrongAuthor
        Pinterest – @DeeArmstrongAuthor

         

        Tour Participants:

        Click through the other tour stops for can’t-miss reviews, insider interviews, exclusive guest posts, and more chances to WIN!

        Click here to view the Tour Schedule

         

         

        Love Mystery & Suspense? Celebrate Haunted by a Broken Oath with a Gift Card Giveaway!

        This giveaway is hosted by Partners in Crime Tours for Dee Armstrong. See the widget for entry terms and conditions. Void where prohibited.
        HAUNTED BY A BROKEN OATH by Dee Armstrong | Gift Card Giveaway

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        Get More Great Reads at Partners In Crime Tours

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        Review – Stolen In Death by J D Robb #jdrobb #stolenindeath #netgalley #stmartinspress

        Amazon / Goodreads

        I have been reading J D Robb’s and Nora Robert’s work for many years now, and she has never let me down. That makes it easy to snatch a copy of one of her books whenever I see it. I want to thank NetGalley for my copy.

        “You’re here. No dead bodies.” “Night’s young,” Eve said.

        I love the Eve Dallas and Roarke stories. Eve is a homicide police lieutenant and Roarke is a retired billionaire thief. When murder and a hidden safe holding many valuable objects is discovered, Eve is on the case. Roarke’s expertise will come in handy. Roarke’s past can sometimes make Eve’s life more complicated, but she couldn’t be sorry about it. I’m glad, because they make an intriguing couple.

        I was waiting for something to happen, and now, we’re off and running.

        The year is 2061, and while most things are the same, there are some things that bode well for the future. Such as, the AutoChef. Hungry? How about a burger from the AutoChef? Thirsty? How about a tube of Pepsi? I love it, seeing I am not a very good cook and a little on the lazy side when it comes to preparing food. And prison? How about an off planet cage for criminals?

        J D Robb doesn’t waste any time setting the hook for her futuristic suspense, In Death, thriller series. The pacing makes the story flow smoothly, and the mystery growing. Stolen In Death may be J D Robb’s 62nd book in the series, but it still has a lot of bite.

        Animated Animals. Pictures, Images and Photos
        4 Stars

        A violent death and a vault of stolen treasures has Eve Dallas struggling to solve crimes old and new in the latest thriller in the #1 New York Times-bestselling series.

        A blow to the head with a block of amethyst has left multibillionaire Nathan Barrister dead―while nearby, a vault, its door ajar, sits filled with priceless paintings, jewelry, and other treasures. Lieutenant Eve Dallas’s husband, Roarke―who misspent his youth in Ireland as a scrappy thief―recognizes at least two stolen pieces among the hoard. The crime scene suggests a burglar caught in the act. But only one item seems to be missing.

        Then it’s revealed that the vault had actually belonged to the victim’s late father―and no one in the household knew it was there until a recent remodeling project exposed it. To protect the family name and business, they explain to Eve, they’d been looking for a way to return the ill-gotten gains anonymously and avoid the police. But now the police are all over their elegant house, and have a bigger, bloodier mystery to solve.

        By all accounts, Nathan Barrister was a good man, a generous employer, a devoted husband and father. As for his father―he clearly had secrets. Now it’s up to Eve and her team to find out if those secrets got Nathan killed―and if it was a crime of passion or revenge.

        • Genre: Fiction, Mystery, Romance, Science Fiction, Suspense, Thriller
        • 368 pages, Hardcover
        • Publication February 3, 2026 by St. Martin’s Press
        • Series: In Death #62

        J.D. Robb is the author of the #1 New York Times bestselling In Death series and the pseudonym for #1 New York Times bestselling author Nora Roberts. The futuristic suspense series stars Eve Dallas, a New York City police lieutenant with a dark past. Initially conceived as a trilogy, readers clamored for more of Eve and the mysterious Roarke. Stolen in Death (St. Martin’s Press, February 2026) will be the 62nd entry in the series.

        • You can see my Giveaways HERE.
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        $25 GC – Winter’s Season by R J Koreto @partnersincr1me @RJKoreto #wintersseason

        Winter's Season by R.J. Koreto Banner

        WINTER’S SEASON

        by R.J. Koreto

        January 26 – February 20, 2026 Virtual Book Tour

        Synopsis:

        In 1817 London, Before the Police, There Was Captain Winter.

        London, 1817. A city teeming with life, yet lacking a professional police force. When a wealthy young woman is brutally murdered in an alley frequented by prostitutes, a shadowy government bureau in Whitehall dispatches its “special emissary”―Captain Winter. A veteran of the Napoleonic Wars and a gentleman forged by chance and conflict, Winter is uniquely equipped to navigate the treacherous currents of London society, from aristocratic drawing rooms to the city’s grimmest taverns.

        Without an army of officers or the aid of forensic science, Winter must rely on his wits and a network of unconventional allies. His childhood friend, a nobleman, opens doors in high society, while a wise Jewish physician uncovers secrets the dead cannot hide.

        But Winter’s most intriguing, and potentially dangerous, asset is Barbara Lightwood. Shrewd, beautiful, and operating as a discreet intermediary among the elite, Barbara shares a past with Winter from the war years. Their rekindled affair is fraught with wariness; she offers intimate information crucial to his investigation, but guards her own secrets fiercely. Like Winter, she is both cunning and capable of danger.

        From grand houses to dimly lit streets, death stalks Captain Winter. He must tread carefully to unmask a killer, navigate a web of secrets and lies, and perhaps, in the process, save his own soul.

        Winter’s Season Trailer:

        Book Details:

        Genre: Thriller, Historical, Romance, Political, Crime
        Published by: Histria Books
        Publication Date: January 20, 2026
        Number of Pages: 300
        ISBN: 9781592116898 (ISBN10: 1592116892)
        Book Links: Amazon | Kindle | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | Histria Books

        Read an excerpt:

        Chapter I

        It was the custom of Colonel Sir Joshua Williams to invite his veteran officers to his house each Season to commemorate the Battle of San Stefano. After dinner, the closing ceremony was invariable: First, the ladies rose, the young in their pale blues and pinks and the more matronly in their deeper reds and purples. They smiled and departed, leaving the table surrounded by men in their scarlet coats, adorned with medals glittering by the light of dozens of beeswax candles in their silver holders. The liveried footmen filled the port glasses and left as well, closing the doors behind them.

        One former company captain looked around, taking note that he was the youngest battle veteran there—the toast would fall to him. Others had moved on or died. He had himself missed last year’s dinner, spending it on the Afghan border, dressed like a Saracen and getting his skin burned black while trying to uncover the secrets of that land’s sullen and violent inhabitants. Even the task he had to complete after leaving tonight, difficult as it seemed, was nothing compared with that.

        The colonel caught his eye, and so the captain stood. Every man stopped talking as the captain raised his glass, and then they stood at attention. He remembered the words easily, and in a strong voice he said, “Did our battle line ever break?”

        “No!” shouted the company.

        “Why did it not break?”

        “We are the hard men,” they replied in unison.

        “Gentlemen, to our departed brothers of the First Northumberland Foot,” called the captain. They drained their glasses and slammed them down, then burst into applause. The dinner was over.

        The captain—indeed, he suspected, the other officers as well—was reflecting on how this dinner came about in a year of peace. The English and their allies had defeated Napoleon for the final time at Waterloo two years past now in 1815 and life was moving on—the best people were all in London this time of year, with no war to talk about, just fashions and parties and theater and how good it was to be able to import from France the best claret again.

        They rejoined the ladies in the drawing room, and the captain sought out Lady Williams, the colonel’s wife.

        “My Lady, thank you for your invitation.”

        “It is I who should thank you, captain. These dinners mean so much to the colonel as he ages, having all his officers around.”

        “And he means so much to us, Lady Williams, the pleasure and honor are ours. I am only glad I am back in London so I can attend.”

        “Yes, he mentioned you found a position in the Home Office?” She showed as much surprise and curiosity as a lady of her breeding dared reveal. The captain knew the look—how did a man of his obscure background land what appeared to be a distinguished government position? Despite its simple name, the Home Office had become, since its founding some 25 years before, one of the most powerful and overarching government ministries, with responsibility for security and safety within the British Isles. The Home Secretary was one of the most influential men in England. How Winter had advanced his career in that august body was beyond reckoning.

        “Yes, my lady. The work is interesting, but at times onerous, I’m afraid. Indeed, my masters call me even now.”

        “At this hour, captain? How tedious for you. But again, I am pleased you could come. Give my warmest regards to the Earl and Countess.”

        The captain said goodbye to his colonel and a few other officers, and the butler saw him out. He walked to the nearest stand and engaged a hackney cab to Bow Street Court. A few heads turned as he entered the building, but no one accosted him. A clerk gave him the barest nod but said nothing as he entered a room.

        A few minutes later, the captain came out. He was no longer in his regimentals, but in rather shabby outfit, almost rural, with a slouch hat. Down the hall, he entered another room, where a squad of Bow Street Runners awaited—constables, employed by the local court at Bow Street, to keep order and seize felons. Winter suppressed a grimace. They were poorly trained and poorly paid, but it was pretty much all London had for law enforcement. Many still thought the idea of a formal professional constabulary too much government interference—too un-English. So, the Runners would have to do. At least they were willing and obedient.

        “We have already gone over where you should be standing,” said the captain. “You know how important it is you aren’t seen.” There was more than instruction in his voice–there was menace.

        “Yes, sir,” said the most senior constable present.

        “Then take your places. I’ll be along shortly.”

        Moving quickly, he left the building and walked along dark streets that became progressively dirtier and more dangerous. He saw men hiding in the shadows, those who preyed on the weak and unaware, but nothing happened to him.

        Eventually he came to a building that was well-lit, at least by the neighborhood standards. It was certainly the noisiest venue in the street. The cracked and faded sign marked it as The Three Bells.

        The Captain entered—a few were eating off dirty plates, and almost everyone was drinking beer, or something stronger. Slatternly women laughed and tried to slip away from the half-drunk men who loudly pursued them. Some allowed themselves to be caught, and there was more laughter and then a talk of money. The whole room smelled of smoke and grease, and the floor was sticky from weeks of spilled ale.

        Few paid attention to the captain, but a fat man walked up to him surprisingly quickly for someone of his bulk.

        “Oh captain, I am so pleased, do you think—”

        “Shut up. Where’s Sally? She was suitable last night, and she’ll be suitable tonight.”

        “Sally—oh there she is.” He pointed to a tallish girl wearing more makeup than an actress. A large man in worker’s clothes, probably a stevedore, thought the captain, had grabbed her and placed her on his lap. She didn’t seem to mind.

        The captain strode over, grabbed the woman by her wrist, and pulled her off the man’s lap.

        “Come, my girl, we have an appointment as you well know.”

        She yelped with surprise, then gave a shrug and followed. The large man stood up.

        “See here—I saw her first,” he said. His accent wasn’t London, which explained everything.

        “Good for you,” said the Captain, and pulled the girl across the room. The big man started to follow, but two of his friends grabbed him.

        “Now Jake, no need to cause trouble,” said the first, who was clearly local.

        “Cause trouble? I’ll flatten him—”

        “No, you won’t. You don’t know, you’re new here. For God’s sake, that’s the Captain, a soldier, they say he was, and you don’t want to start something with him—I’ve seen what happens to those who do—”

        “That’s right,” chimed in the other friend, also a Londoner. “Remember Big Nick—used to be here, no one stood up to him, but he challenged the Captain…” he shuddered.

        “And what happened?” asked a skeptical Jake. Both men look their heads.

        “We never saw him again. He wasn’t arrested. They didn’t find his body—he was just…gone. So just stop thinking about it. There are plenty of other girls.”

        But Jake still felt he had to make a show of standing up for himself.

        “So, you’re telling me it would be a mistake to call him out?”

        “Your last mistake,” said the first man. Then very softly, as if he was afraid of his words, he said, “He’s called Winter. If you’re thinking of staying in this part of London, you would do well to remember that name.”

        #

        Captain Winter—indeed, that was his family name—dragged the girl along to the same place as the night previous, with a hope of better hunting. He told her to ply her trade in this alley and then set himself up again behind some empty crates that had once held vegetables, brought to London from the farmlands. Winter was a country boy and knew the smells. Memories of his childhood came back, which kept him from getting bored. He had learned to keep himself occupied while waiting indefinitely for something to happen. Few realized how much time in the army was spent just waiting. In the army, patience was usually rewarded with a battle, and tonight, he hoped, it would be rewarded with the capture of a killer.

        Although the evening had been spent remembering battles past, he put those out of his mind and thought about grain at harvest time on the estate, the bacon being smoked, the farm workers shearing the sheep and the earthy smell of the fine horses—especially the joy of riding them through the earl’s lands, with Charlotte, chattering and giggling. Half his mind focused on the scene in front of him, while the other half wandered back to a past Twelfth Night: The coach had been stopped 10 miles from Rockland Court by a surprising snow, so he had borrowed a big white horse from the coaching inn and set out against all advice.

        It was hardly an elegant mount, more suited for pulling a plow than for carrying an officer, but it was strong, and Winter had urged it through the drifts. Charlotte had seen him from her bedroom window high up, and as he approached the manor house she had raced down and out the door, wrapped in her rabbit fur cloak.

        “You made it! I never thought you would!”

        “I’m a gentleman—and a gentleman always keeps his word.” Once he was inside, servants came to relieve him of his wet outer garments, leaving him in his red coat. A footman pressed a hot cup of wassail in his hand, and he let himself be led into the library, where a fire was roaring. The earl and countess joined them, chiding him for taking such a risk in stormy weather, but he had just laughed.

        Cook outdid herself that day, with a magnificent roast, and while the Earl noticed Winter’s insatiable appetite, Winter noticed Charlotte hardly ate anything, hanging on his every word. The family stayed up late, until Winter fell asleep in a library chair, and the countess sent a reluctant Charlotte to bed. But when he was alone, Charlotte slipped back down and, on his brow, planted a kiss she mistakenly thought he wouldn’t notice, before tiptoeing back out again.

        A noise brought Winter back to the present. His hand checked the pistol on his lap, caressed the smooth wood stock, felt the metal trigger. Then he reached for the blade hidden in his boot—thin, but strong, with a razor edge on each side. He was ready.

        The girl he was watching meanwhile had apparently lost herself in an impossible daydream, walking slowly, and idly playing with her hair. For now, she could imagine being the well-kept mistress of a gentleman—she was still young and fairly pretty. In another year or two, she would be neither. Winter had wanted an attractive girl, but more than that, an obedient one. That miserable fat procurer had told him the first night that the man was killing the best of them, and feared “sweet little Sally” would be next.

        “She was born to this, she was, captain, she’s natural for it,” he had said.

        Winter had told him to shut his mouth. But the man spoke anyway. He’d need more of a motivation to keep quiet, thought Winter, entertaining pleasantly dark thoughts about what he’d like to do to that bastard–thoughts he knew he couldn’t act on.

        It was the third night. Winter had narrowed down the location, but couldn’t be completely sure. The killer was also easily spooked, and if the night was too lively, he didn’t show. But this evening was perfect, foggy, with little moon, in an alley a short walk to St. Jude. Wasn’t he the one for lost causes? How perfect.

        The girl had been complaining after two empty nights, but when Winter pointed out the options to walking out under his protection, she sulkily cooperated.

        There was the barest illumination from the busy street near the alley, and Winter had a lantern, lit but masked, at his side. He had told the constables to stay some distance away and hidden, but within whistle call. They were getting bored too. But perhaps tonight. Hadn’t Colonel Williams once told him, “You’re a good officer, Winter, but even better, you’re a lucky one.”

        Winter had tried to anticipate everything, but he knew that was impossible. The noise of a boot lightly treading on a cobblestone and Winter had the pistol out, but even he wasn’t fast enough: The man was quicker and darker than he had expected. It took him a second to have his arm around the girl, and a knife to her throat. But he hadn’t yet cut her when Winter had opened the lantern, stood, and aimed the pistol.

        “Let the girl go and drop the knife.” The man’s eyes darted in each direction, but Winter blew the whistle and a moment later they heard running feet, and the squad of Bow Street Runners was on the scene. They looked uncertain at the standoff. Winter hoped they would follow his directions.

        “Escape is impossible. Let the girl go, surrender, and you will have a fair trial.”

        And the man laughed, slightly hysterical. It was as Dr. Wolfe had said, some men were sick in body, and some sick in mind.

        “Yes, a trial, and then a hanging. Well, I can take one more—one more sinner off the streets.”

        The Runners had brought lanterns too, and now Winter could see his face, and his clothes. Yes—a gentleman. He knew there had been a reason they couldn’t find him. They were looking in all the wrong places.

        The girl gurgled in absolute terror as the blade came ever closer, and Winter knew it took a lot to frighten a woman in her line of work.

        “If you spill one drop of her blood, I swear you will not leave this alley alive.”

        “Rope or ball, it’s all the same.”

        “No, it’s not. I’ll shoot you in the stomach. You might live a whole day like that, in agony you can’t begin to imagine.” He held the lantern up higher. “Look at me and realize I am not bluffing.”

        Winter saw the eyes waver and knew he had won. Before any battle, he could always look at each one of his men and tell: Who would stand to the end. Who would panic. Who would freeze.

        “It would seem we have a draw, then,” said the man.

        “We do not. I am going to count down from five. Then I will shoot right through the girl—”

        At that she screamed, and the man held her tighter.

        “I will shoot right through the girl and at this range the ball will go directly into you. The girl will die instantly, but London has plenty of whores and one less won’t be a problem. I’m counting now. When I reach one, I’ll shoot.”

        The scene froze, like just like the beginning of a battle. The Runners looked both curious and frightened. The girl was now hysterical. And the man—he would break.

        “Five…Four…”

        “But—you’re a gentleman,” said the killer, who had in the short time taken in Winter’s voice and demeanor, which came through despite his clothes. Winter almost laughed.

        Three…Two—”

        The killer threw the girl and raised his hands, still holding the dagger. He was mad, but not stupid.

        “You have made a sensible decision,” said Winter. He laid the pistol on a box. “Now give me that blade and come with us peacefully to Bow Street.”

        But the eyes darted to the discarded pistol, and he suddenly came at Winter with the knife poised to bury itself in his chest. A moment later, however, the dagger was flying, and Winter had landed a fist full into the man’s face. He felt into a heavy heap on the ground, as he bled from his nose.

        “Well don’t stand there gawking, tie him up before he wakes. And someone pick up that blade—it will be needed for the trial.” Two of the Runners woke from their stupor and did as they were told.

        “I…I’ve never seen fighting like that, sir,” said the senior Runner. “You kicked the knife right out of his hand.”

        “It’s French street-fighting. I learned it from a French prisoner.”

        “Very impressive, sir, but if I may take a liberty, you shouldn’t have put your pistol down while he was still armed.”

        “But it was intentional. I didn’t want to miss the pleasure of beating him senseless.” And Winter smiled humorlessly. He was an odd one, the Runners knew, and you couldn’t be sure…

        Winter turned his attention to Sally, huddled and whimpering in the corner. “It’s all over, my sweet.” His voice was very gentle, and he reached a hand out to her. She took a breath, then looked Winter in the eye.

        “You bastard,” she said, and followed with an impressive stream of invective.

        “Our regimental sergeant major was known throughout the army for his skill at cursing, but you have him beat.” He laughed.

        “You were going to shoot me!” she said.

        “I knew he’d fold. You were never in any danger. I told you that you would be safe, and you are. Now for being such a good girl, I’m going to give you a reward.” He held out some money, and she stared as if she couldn’t believe it. Then her hand reached out quickly and snatched it.

        “Do I have to share it with…”

        “I won’t tell if you won’t,” said Winter.

        “Uh…Captain…?” The constables were leading the prisoner away, stumbling and still a little stunned, and one of them was holding his lantern high into a corner of the alley. “I think I found another one.”

        Winter sighed and walked over. Yes, there was another woman, but he quickly saw this was something different. She was dressed in dark clothes, not the cheap gaudy dresses Sally and her cohorts wore. And her throat was untouched. Winter bent down but couldn’t immediately see a wound—and there was nothing stuffed into her mouth. The captured killer hadn’t done this one.

        He stood up and sighed again. “You two—take him back to Bow Street and return with a cart, anything to carry this body away.” He turned to the other two Runners. “You—take the girl back to tavern.” He pulled some more coins from his pocket and handed them to one of the runners. “Get her something to drink and a hot meal.” She looked even more pleased at that. “Then bring that fat bastard back. I want him to look at this girl.”

        “Yes, sir.”

        “And you—Johnson—do you know where Wilkie Lane is? Go to number 7 and you’ll find a Dr. Wolfe there. Wake him and tell him I’ll need him to see a body tonight.”

        “But, sir, orders are—”

        “Orders are as I give them.”

        “Yes, sir.”

        The Runners hurried off to their tasks, and Winter was left alone with the dead woman. He took a closer look at her. Although Winter had ordered the procurer to the scene, he was sure she was not a woman of the streets. She looked clean and healthy. Her hands were soft. The woman’s dress was simple and sober—perhaps a maid on her day off, but that didn’t entirely fit either.

        The young woman was beyond modesty, and Winter began looking for a wound. He found it, just under her ribcage. A very nasty hole. He stood and flashed the lantern around—no blood.

        The Runner returned with the procurer, puffing and sweaty, although the night was cool.

        “Captain, captain, they tell me you caught the man—I cannot tell you how grateful I am. At last, my girls are safe. They haven’t been going out in the streets, and the money—”

        “Your business dealings are of no interest to me. This dead girl is.” He shined the lantern on the body.

        “Oh, I say, Captain, not one of mine. Although I wish she had been, a pretty girl.”

        “I didn’t think so, but I need to be sure.”

        “Poor little girl. These streets just aren’t safe for young girls such as her.”

        “Your sentiment does you credit,” said Winter.

        “Thank you, Captain.”

        Sarcasm was wasted on him.

        “You’re dismissed—get back to your tavern. And clean it up. I’ll be back in a week and if I don’t like the way it looks then I’ll wake a company from the Middlesex garrison, arrest everyone, and raze your tavern to the ground. I don’t care who your protectors are.” And he had the pleasure of watching him run away as fast as he could with his bulk. No doubt he’d contact his patrons, to find out just how powerful Winter was—could this mysterious gentleman really shut him down? Well, at least Winter had scared him for a while.

        Winter and the remaining constable waited for the cart for the body.

        #

        Wilkie Lane, where Dr. Wolfe lived, ran to about a dozen houses, a little scuffed but generally in good repair, and quiet. People kept themselves to themselves here, and few Londoners from other parts of the city found reason to visit.

        Winter had the constable drive there and told him to stay outside with the cart. The man had had the forethought to bring a bottle of ale and some bread and cheese, and didn’t seem too upset at the prospect.

        Throwing the body over his shoulder, Winter entered the house, which Dr. Wolfe had left unlocked in anticipation of Winter’s arrival. The doctor was dressed and in his well-lit examining room, his face impassive behind his beard.

        “Don’t you ever have crimes during the workday?” asked Wolfe.

        “The criminal classes work better by night,” said Winter, and placed the corpse on the table.

        Now Winter could see—she had been a very pretty girl, with a clear face and hair that held the remnants of a fashionable style.

        “A better class of victim than usual,” said the doctor. “Who is she?”

        “I don’t know. She was found in an alley. There’s an apparent knife wound in her side.”

        “We’ll come to that presently. First, let’s see what we can uncover.” He prodded her, then ran his hands over different bones. “This one got plenty of food.” Next, he pried open her mouth. “A suitable diet.”

        “But her dress is plain. I guessed a superior servant, a parlor maid or lady’s maid. But I looked at her hands, and now in the light, I’m sure she wasn’t. They’re too soft. Even lady’s maids should have pinpricks from sewing or other signs of work. This woman did nothing.”

        “Gentry?” asked the doctor. “Should I even be examining her, then?”

        Another man might’ve taken the doctor’s reluctance for fear, but Winter had seen Wolfe calmly dressing wounds on a battlefield while musket balls flew around his head. The doctor had no fear. He had wanted to study wounds, so he just showed up at the regimental HQ and offered his service on the front lines. The need was great, so no one was in a position to turn down a volunteer doctor, even a foreigner and a Jew. And as it turned out, he saved lives and limbs. He earned Winter’s respect, and then his friendship. Winter made it clear that any man who had a problem with Dr. Wolfe, had a problem with him.

        “Do whatever you need to. But time isn’t unlimited. A woman of her class will be missed, and I can’t keep the body forever.”

        “Then you’ll be my assistant.” They wrestled the dress off the girl.

        “She was a lady. Those are expensive and fine underthings. No servant would wear those.”

        Winter looked up from the body to see a wry smile on the doctor’s face. “Dare I ask how you come by that knowledge, my friend?”

        “My position has forced me to educate myself in many different subjects,” responded Winter, coolly.

        “Someday the king will realize the sacrifices you have made in his service, and you’ll get a knighthood,” said Wolfe. “Now let’s see this wound.” He examined the slit in the woman’s side. “Did you see lots of blood?”

        “None. Not under her or nearby.”

        “Then she was killed elsewhere. There should’ve been a lot of blood. Now, as to a weapon.” He pulled out some lenses. “This is different from the last ones I examined. Not only the location on her body but a much different weapon, not thin and sharp, I’d almost say a bayonet. But—there’s some tearing, as if the blade had a nick. I wonder….” He frowned. “Come with me.”

        They walked back to the kitchen. “Let’s hope Miriam doesn’t find out I was here. This is her room only.” Miriam was a cousin of the doctor’s, who cooked and kept house for him, with the assistance of local girl who lived out and did the heavy cleaning. Efficient and hard-working, Miriam was loyal to the doctor, but had disliked Winter from the moment she met him, and no amount of time would change that.

        Kitchen knives were hanging on a rack. Wolfe selected a couple, thumbed the blades, and carried them back to the examining room. He held them against the wound. “That is my conclusion, Captain. If we assume kitchen knives are much alike, that’s what killed this girl. Cooks keep them sharp, but over the years the blades get nicks, chopping through bone. She would’ve died quickly.”

        “But why a well-born girl in a servant’s clothes? And why no jewelry?”

        “Wouldn’t anything have been stolen from the body?”

        “There are no signs that rings were wrenched off quickly, or necklaces pulled off a neck. I think jewelry was removed and clothing changed, to disguise her. She was wearing something else when she was killed—we know that, because there’s almost no blood on the inside of her dress, and no corresponding cut in the dress.”

        Wolfe stepped over to his lenses, chose one, and bent over to get as close as possible to the wound.

        “Hand me my tweezers,” he said, and Winter did. The doctor held his glass with one hand and manipulated the tweezers with great care into the slit. “Very good.” He gingerly carried the tweezers to an odd device, almost like a sextant, and placed what he captured in the tweezers on a small glass plate. He adjusted the device and looked through an eyepiece on the top. “Very good, indeed. Captain, this is a microscope. Just as telescopes make far things close, this makes small things big. Look—tell me what you see.”

        Winter squinted into the eyepiece. “Blue threads.”

        “Exactly. When the knife went into the girl, it pushed threads from the dress into the wound. She was wearing a pale blue dress.”

        “You have exceeded yourself, doctor. You’ve worked a miracle.”

        “Only the good Lord above works miracles,” said the doctor.

        “Your Lord or mine?” asked Winter, smiling.

        “Aren’t they one and the same?” asked the doctor, mildly, and Winter laughed.

        Dr. Wolfe turned back to the body, and explored her hands, and feet and various joints. It was almost impossible to imagine this girl in a fashionable dress, dancing at one of the Season’s parties. And Winter didn’t try. He had seen fields of men like that, and thoughts about the lives they had led before, the lives they would never now lead, could only provoke madness.

        “There is little roughness. The young lady did not walk much and did no work, as you guessed. Additional proof she was a lady of leisure. But if it helps you, she broke the smallest finger on her left hand. They either didn’t send for a doctor quickly enough or he was clumsy. There would’ve been some permanent stiffness.”

        “They should’ve called for you.”

        “Yes, I am the first physician the English gentry considers,” he said, dryly.

        Then Dr. Wolfe thought for a moment and laid his hand on her abdomen. “My friend, I think the young lady has one more secret to give up. Hand me that tray of tools…” Wolfe’s fingers worked quickly and surely, his brow furrowed as he focused on his tasks. Then he allowed himself a smile of triumph. “It is as I thought. The young lady was with child.”

        “You’re certain?”

        “Within the first three months, I believe. She should’ve known.” He shrugged. “Unless she chose not to know.”

        “So, I have a pregnant woman from a good family in a part of London she shouldn’t even have known about, let alone entered, in a dress that wasn’t hers. This will be a little harder than finding out who decided to rid London of whores.”

        “And that reminds me. How does that investigation fare?”

        “I actually caught the man this evening. I found this girl in the same area, and first thought she was another of his victims.”

        “Congratulations on your success.”

        “Yours too, doctor. You were the one who identified the kind of blade it was.” The doctor had examined the murdered ladies of the street and had concluded the blade was expensive and well-cared for, hardly something a common criminal would carry. “You were right. He was mad.” Winter made a grimace. “Somewhat like our king, I suppose.” It wasn’t openly discussed in Society, but King George III had become “unwell,” as it was politely said. His son had been given most of the king’s power, his royal purse and the title of “Prince Regent”—all of which he used more to pursue pleasure than to govern.

        “The murderer or your English king—beyond my poor skills. But I am pleased I could assist with your case. Can I find you something to eat before you go?”

        “Thank you, but I should be getting the body back to Bow Street. Someone is probably looking for her.” And hunger was the only thing keeping him awake.

        “Very well, but as your friend and doctor, I ask you to take care of your health.”

        #

        Winter and the Runner drove back to Bow Street, where the body was placed, and Winter arranged to be informed if anyone inquired after a missing woman. He thought finally to get back to his lodgings for food and sleep, when he received another surprise: Sir Alston Tenebrac himself. Winter had rarely seen him outside of chambers at Whitehall, but even in Bow Street’s rough quarters he looked much the same. He wore plain but beautifully tailored clothes that suited his short stature. His pale face, which rose to a perfectly bald head, was dominated by two small eyes, as dark and sharp as obsidian, and they darted around, missing nothing.

        “Sir Alston. A pleasure to see you here.”

        “And a great surprise, I am sure.” His voice was just over a whisper, but it caught your attention. Sir Alston was a lawyer, and they taught you those tricks of the voice, Winter had heard. “I hear you caught the man responsible for those dreadful murders of prostitutes. Slitting their throats and stuffing bible verses into their mouths. How did you catch him? I look forward to your report, but surely you can give me a précis now.”

        Winter didn’t ask how Sir Alston had found out so quickly. It would’ve been impertinent, as well as pointless—Sir Alston seemed to hear everything.

        “The bible verses stuffed into the girls’ mouths, in the opinion of a physician I consulted, suggested a madman, sir. One with a peculiar religious bent. I inquired at various churches to see if the ministers had been visited by anyone displaying unseemly religious fervor and found something else—someone had disturbed a different church near each murder on each night. But nothing was stolen or damaged, so no reports were made. It seems he went to pray after each killing. I mapped the murders and churches and could draw a line from the fashionable neighborhoods deeper into the poor areas. After each murder, he had to descend deeper to find a new victim, but he never was far from a church. That pointed to a gentleman—”

        At that word, Sir Alston raised an eyebrow but said nothing.

        “Also, the weapon was an expensive blade. He was clearly not a resident of the area. Knowing he had to be near a church but not far from an area prostitutes walked, and that he had to travel a little further each time, I narrowed down the places.”

        Sir Alston nodded. “It sounds like you planned a military campaign.”

        “That was my training, sir.”

        “Of course, of course. I am pleased at the resolution. The matter was becoming increasingly gossiped about by the servant class, and when that happens, it’s only a matter of time before their masters hear about it. But to new matters. On arriving here for a discussion of the case with the magistrates, I heard you have deposited another body. A woman apparently from a good family.”

        “That is the only aspect that is apparent, sir. I don’t even have an identity. I assume you want me to investigate, sir?”

        “That would seem advisable, Captain. But with tact and discretion. I want to be kept closely informed on this.” He looked Winter up and down. “You might want to refresh yourself first, though.”

        “My thoughts exactly, sir.”

        “Then I will wish you good day.” He took several steps, then turned. “Tact and discretion, Captain.”

        #

        Winter’s timing was fortunate—breakfast was just being served at the Cravell house. Violet, the little maid, was racing around the table with hot toast. Mr. Cravell sipped tea sparingly, as if he was afraid to spill on drop on his unfashionable but extremely respectable suit. Mrs. Cravell’s eyes looked for any sign of imperfection, from the table settings, to the position of the teapot, to the behavior of her two boys.

        “It’s not polite to whisper,” she admonished them.

        She stopped searching when Winter walked in. “Bless me, Captain Winter, I said to Mr. Cravell, I hoped Captain Winter would make it to breakfast. We have set you a plate. You look like you need a good meal.”

        “Yes, bless you, Mrs. Cravell, you are correct. I trust I will not offend you, but I was traveling extensively tonight and am still in my riding clothes.”

        “Nonsense, Captain. You were working hard on the King’s business. Take a seat and think nothing more of it.”

        He looked around the table, and his eye landed on a new occupant, a young woman with an outdoor complexion and the peculiarly rich flaxen hair you found in the old Saxon families. Her dress was plain, but suited her nicely rounded figure. This girl is a dairy maid, concluded Winter. He had known such girls in his boyhood, with their strong hands and creamy cheeks, and he remembered the songs they sang with their gentle voices while they worked.

        This particular girl had soft grey eyes that looked at him with curiosity and perhaps some amusement.

        “I haven’t had the pleasure,” he said, gravely.

        “I am sorry, Captain,” said Mrs. Cravell. “I was going to make an introduction after you had had a little tea. Miss Charity Thorne, may I present Captain Edmund Winter, who works with Mr. Cravell at Whitehall. Miss Thorne is my niece, my brother’s daughter.” She paused for full effect. “Captain Winter is foster brother to the Earl of Rockland. He is originally from Rockland Court, and now the Earl and Countess are up for the Season, aren’t they, Captain? They are no doubt with the Hon. Miss Charlotte Fitzhugh, the countess’s niece, daughter of the late Viscount Devereaux, and granddaughter of the Duke of Vale.”

        There would be no changing the words to that song. It was Mrs. Cravell’s favorite.

        “Your servant, miss,” said Winter. Yes, that must be amusement in those eyes. “I hope your journey up to London was pleasant.”

        “Very much so, Captain. It’s my first visit to London, and I am finding it most interesting.”

        “No one can help but find London interesting,” he said, and started to eat. Mrs. Cravell was beaming at him, for some reason. “Mr. Cravell, I met with Sir Alston at Bow Street. I expect he may be there for some time. So don’t be surprised if he is not in the office when you arrive.”

        “I have been in Sir Alston’s service for 20 years, and have ceased to be surprised at anything he does,” said Mr. Cravell, in his usual somber tone. It was as if he had gone into mourning when Queen Anne had died a century before and still hadn’t come out. He was Sir Alston’s chief clerk, which is how Winter had come to rent a room in their house. “I thank you, though, for the information. I trust your meeting at Bow Street was due to a successful conclusion in your task?”

        “Very successful, thank you, Mr. Cravell. Sir Alston seemed pleased.”

        “Very good, then,” said Mr. Cravell. The boys glanced at Winter, who was a figure of romance and mystery to them and resumed whispering. Mrs. Cravell’s eyes darted to Miss Thorne, who spoke. “May I inquire about the nature of your work for Sir Alston, Captain? I understand from my uncle that you work in a bureau of the Home Office.”

        Winter, happily in the middle of a sausage, had to think. Mr. Cravell looked like he was going to answer the question, but a furious look from his wife silenced him.

        “My particular bureau is concerned with curbing the criminal classes, Miss Thorne, as the Home Office overall is concerned with upholding the law. My military experience and travels abroad have given me some peculiar knowledge, and I advise their lordships in government as best I can. I file reports for the most part; it’s rather dull.”

        He didn’t think to say more, but Miss Thorne continued to look at him expectantly, as if he were in the middle of a story she wanted him to finish, so he continued. “You may not be aware, but London does not have a professional police force—that is, men who are trained and paid to prevent crime and catch criminals, unlike Paris, which has had such a body for many years.”

        “That’s very interesting, Captain. We hear so little of the world outside of Cheshire back home.” Winter could think of nothing else to say, as he became acutely aware of his clothes, inconsistent with the rather clerkly job he had just described. He felt her intelligent eyes on him; this young woman knew he didn’t spend his days behind a desk, or his nights riding a horse. She probably didn’t believe he was an earl’s foster brother either.

        She spoke again. “So, Captain, if I understand you rightly, Paris has a—what you called a ‘professional police force.’ And London—well, London has you.” There was merriment in those eyes now.

        Yes, Miss Thorne was definitely laughing at him.

        ***

        Excerpt from Winter’s Season by R.J. Koreto. Copyright 2026 by R.J. Koreto. Reproduced with permission from R.J. Koreto. All rights reserved.

         

         

        Author Bio:

        R.J. Koreto

        R.J. Koreto is the author of the Historic Home mystery series, set in modern New York City; the Lady Frances Ffolkes mystery series, set in Edwardian England; and the Alice Roosevelt mystery series, set in turn-of-the-century New York. His short stories have been published in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine and Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, as well as various anthologies.

        Most recently, he is the author of “Winter’s Season,” which takes place on the dark streets and glittering ballrooms of Regency-era London.

        In his day job, he works as a business and financial journalist. Over the years, he’s been a magazine writer and editor, website manager, PR consultant, book author, and seaman in the U.S. Merchant Marine. Like his heroine, Lady Frances Ffolkes, he’s a graduate of Vassar College.

        He and his wife have two grown daughters, and divide their time between Paris and Martha’s Vineyard.

        Catch Up With R.J. Koreto:

        www.RJKoreto.com
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        Instagram – @rjkoreto
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        Facebook – @rjkoreto

         

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