Tag Archives: Melody Wiklund

Heart Stealer Blitz

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Fantasy

Date Published: 12-08-2023

 

 

Without a heart, death and love are equally impossible.

James’s heart has been stolen. He knows because he got stabbed in the chest
and didn’t even bleed. On the plus side, he isn’t dead! On the minus side,
whoever has his heart can control him, and until he gets the heart back, he
is incapable of feeling love for anyone but the thief. Whoever that may
be.

He has to get the heart back, and quickly. But with an assassin in the mix,
and a vengeful ex-lover, and a suspicious fiancée, and no idea who to
trust or where to look, the task won’t be easy. Especially when, with a
stolen heart, he can’t even really trust himself.

 

About the Author

Melody Wiklund

Melody Wiklund is a writer of fantasy and occasionally romance. In her free
time, she loves knitting and watching Chinese dramas. And she’s never
summoned a spirit or an assassin… or at least so she claims.

 

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Heart Stealer Virtual Book Tour

Heart Stealer banner

Heart Stealer cover

Fantasy

Date Published: 12-08-2023

 

 

Without a heart, death and love are equally impossible.

James’s heart has been stolen. He knows because he got stabbed in the chest
and didn’t even bleed. On the plus side, he isn’t dead! On the minus side,
whoever has his heart can control him, and until he gets the heart back, he
is incapable of feeling love for anyone but the thief. Whoever that may
be.

He has to get the heart back, and quickly. But with an assassin in the mix,
and a vengeful ex-lover, and a suspicious fiancée, and no idea who to
trust or where to look, the task won’t be easy. Especially when, with a
stolen heart, he can’t even really trust himself.

 

Heart Stealer paperback

 EXCERPT

When the dance ended, James headed for the edge of the ballroom with great relief.

Genevieve grabbed at his shoulder, and it so startled him that he almost fell on top of her. She started back, embarrassed, and he said, “Sorry—I’m a little dazed.”

Too dazed. What had been in the punch? Was it more spiked than usual? But Genevieve had drunk as much as him, and she seemed fine. If it was just nerves getting to him, because of Genevieve and his engagement, how on earth would he get through the party where his engagement was announced?

“Are you feeling all right?”

“I might need some fresh air.”

“We could go out on the terrace,” Genevieve suggested.

It was a good idea. A romantic idea, and the cold air really might help. But with his head this fuzzy, James couldn’t help but think he’d end up saying something to offend her once they were alone. He shook his head. “I’ll just step into the hallway. Maybe sit in the library for a bit. Clear my head. I think I should be alone.”

“Oh. All right.”

“Sorry,” he said. “I’ll be back. Just, for the moment… I’m sorry. Could you tell my parents where I am if they ask? They worry when I vanish on them.”

“Certainly.”

“Great. Thank you. I’m sorry.” And with this apology, James made his way out of the ballroom and into the hall. There were still people there, and his head was still buzzing. He kept walking until he found an empty corridor, in a corner near a set of stairs.

He breathed in. Breathed out.

His head wasn’t clearing in the slightest.

His parents really would be wondering where he was. He was trying to be a more responsible son. When he thought about the kinds of fights they’d been having last month, he really felt like an idiot. Rejecting a marriage with Genevieve Hunt because of some deluded infatuation, when they’d been right all along: She was the perfect woman and he was lucky to have her. He’d acted like a child throwing temper tantrums. Now he was trying to be more reliable, and running off in the middle of a party wasn’t reliable behavior, and he needed to get back there, show himself to the crowd, make more conversation with Genevieve, but his head still felt like it was full of cotton, and his chest…

His chest felt tight and empty at the same time. But that wasn’t exactly a new thing. He’d been anxious all week.

A sound in the hall behind him. He turned, readying himself to greet an acquaintance, but was brought up short by the sight of the young maid who had been staring at him in the ballroom.

She was looking at him as keenly now, if not more so.

“Do I know you?” he blurted. Which was stupid, because why would he know a maid? And he was sure he didn’t recognize her.

She shook her head solemnly. “We’ve never met before today, sir.”

“Oh.” His face heated. “Never mind, then. I just thought, perhaps…”

“But I know an old friend of yours.”

“…ah?”

She stepped closer, up into his space. “Charlotte Taylor sends her love.”

He stiffened. “Charlie? You know Charlie?” As for her love—“Listen, if she sent you, I can’t—I’ve spoken to her about this already. We’re through.”

“You’re not through, James,” the maid said. “That’s what she sent me to tell you.”

She was close enough to whisper in his ear. There was a dizzying scent of lilacs on her, and he had begun to lean away when he felt something like a punch in the ribs. He stumbled back, gasping and clutching at his chest. His hands folded around warm metal, warm from where the maid had been holding it, tucked behind her back. The handle of a knife.

The knife was sticking out of his chest.

He gasped, staring at it. But it didn’t hurt. The puncture, the stab itself, had hurt, but the wound did not. And no blood was coming out of it either.

A prop knife?

Then the maid grabbed his shoulder and yanked the knife out of him. It came out clean, not a trace of blood on it. Nor did blood well up from the wound when it left him. No red stained his shirt or jacket. Not a drop fell to dirty the recently-polished cream-tiled floor.

The maid stared at the knife, then at him, somehow even more intensely than before, eyebrows furrowed. “What are you?”

“What are you doing?” James gripped his chest, hands folded over the tear in his shirt. “You stabbed m—”

The maid’s hand clamped down on his mouth as he began to yell. She shoved him against the wall, then frowned. “You don’t have circulation.”

James screamed against her hand. He tried to push her back, but the dizziness was still there, and his arms were weak and useless.

“Sleeper hold’s a bust, then,” the maid said. “Sorry about this.”

She slammed the hilt of her knife against his head, and the world went black.

About the Author

Melody Wiklund

Melody Wiklund is a writer of fantasy and occasionally romance. In her free
time, she loves knitting and watching Chinese dramas. And she’s never
summoned a spirit or an assassin… or at least so she claims.

 

Contact Links

Website

Facebook

Twitter

Goodreads

Instagram

 

Purchase Links

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

Kobo

iBooks

BookShop

 

 

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A Wound Like Lapis Lazuli Blitz

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A Wound Like Lapis Lazuli cover

Fantasy

Date Published: 4/15/2023

 

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Ricardo Montero is a painter of great repute, favored by the king of
Salandra and chosen by him to paint the ceiling of a temple dedicated to a
sea goddess. When he mysteriously goes missing, his friend Beatriz enters a
competition to paint the temple in his stead. But when the sea goddess
herself gets involved in Beatriz’s painting, and in her life, Beatriz finds
herself in over her head. Hopefully the woman she’s falling in love with can
help keep her afloat.

Meanwhile, Ricardo has been kidnapped by one of the king’s enemies, a woman
who claims the kidnapping is purely to spite the king but who seems obsessed
with Ricardo himself. Under pressure and learning secrets he never wanted to
know, Ricardo fights to maintain his loyalty to the king and control over
his feelings and his life.

Excerpt

He’d blacked out in a stable the stranger had led him to, as near as
he could remember. The night was all a bit of a blur. The next thing he
knew, he was waking up to the jolting rhythm of wagon wheels, unkind to a
pounding headache. Where… what…

And something scratched at his wrists and ankles when he moved, trying to
stretch out. He groaned, trying to find a comfortable position. The only
bright side was a dark side—there was a blanket over his body,
including his head, and from what he could tell it was blocking out a lot of
sunlight which would not have been kind to his hangover.

“Juan?” he muttered.

No one responded.

Still dizzy and not entirely sober, he’d fallen back into a light
sleep, waking now and then at being jostled against other items in the cart.
There was a chest of some sort, that was the biggest thing, but also a
couple of smaller boxes, and a length of rope. Half-asleep, he felt the
oddest thing about his situation to be a lack of hay. When he was young, he
used to sneak into hay wagons and hide under the stacks. You could catch a
ride that way, at least until the farmer caught you. He felt that he was
hiding from someone now but couldn’t remember who or why. And there
wasn’t any hay, no hay at all.

It was only after a good long while—maybe half an hour or maybe a
couple hours even, hard to tell half asleep—after a thousand bumps in
the road and a few muffled overheard conversations and a whole lot of
confused pondering about the lack of hay—that Ricardo realized the
source of discomfort on his wrists and ankles was rope. He’d been
bound hand and foot, and he was in a strange cart with no memory of how he
got there. This realization demanded some action.

“Hello,” he called out. “Excuse me. Who’s out
there? What are you doing? What-what is this?” He kicked at the bottom
of the cart too, though he doubted that would be heard over the rattling of
the wagon. His voice was a bit raspy too, as his throat was almost as sore
as his head, and he wondered if that would be heard either. After a couple
minutes, however, the wagon slowed to a stop, and the blanket was lifted off
his head, exposing his eyes to sunlight. He winced, groaned, and then slowly
processed the face he was seeing, the face of the stranger who’d been
drinking with him at the bar last night. What had been the man’s
name… It had started with a D. Oh, right, Diego.

“Diego,” he said, “What the hell is this? Get me out of
these ropes and this damn wagon. Gods, what time is it?”

“Almost noon,” the man said. “And I’d prefer you
call me Captain Alban. Not that I didn’t enjoy drinking with you, but
I wouldn’t say we’re on first-name terms, Montero.”

“I really don’t care,” Ricardo said. “Fine,
Captain. Am I under arrest, then? This is a fine way to go about it. If the
king hears…”

“You’re not under arrest. I’m kidnapping you,”
Captain Alban said far too calmly. “As for the king, I don’t
really care what he’d have to say about it. I’m part of the
guard of the countess of Suelta. As you mentioned last night, we don’t
get along well with the king.”

 

About the Author

Melody Wiklund

Melody Wiklund is a writer of fantasy and occasionally romance, including
the YA novel Eleven Dancing Sisters, published in 2017. In her free time,
she loves knitting and watching Chinese dramas. Sometimes she draws, more
rarely paints. She is a big fan of baroque art, particularly that of Diego
Velasquez.

 

Contact Links

Website

Twitter

Instagram

Goodreads

 

Purchase Links

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

Kobo

 

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

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Comments Off on A Wound Like Lapis Lazuli Blitz

Filed under BOOKS