Monday, April 27, 2026

Monday Morning's Menu(Star Wars Week): Star Wars Legends - Death Trooper by Joe Schreiber




Summary:

The chilling tale of the undead in a galaxy far, far away.

This is the Star Wars of every horror fan’s dreams—gory, funny, and brimming with a blood-spattered cast of swashbucklers and space-zombies.—Seth Grahame-Smith, author of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies

When the Imperial prison barge Purge—temporary home to five hundred of the galaxy’s most ruthless killers, Rebels, scoundrels, and thieves—breaks down in a distant part of space, its only hope appears to lie with a Star Destroyer found drifting and seemingly abandoned. But when a boarding party from the Purge is sent to scavenge for parts, only half of them come back—bringing with them a horrific disease so lethal that within hours, nearly all aboard the Purge die in ways too hideous to imagine.

And death is only the beginning.

The Purge’s half-dozen survivors will do whatever it takes to stay alive. But nothing can prepare them for what lies waiting aboard the Star Destroyer. For the dead are rising: soulless, unstoppable, and unspeakably hungry.



Original Review May 2022:
This is just a tiny simple review as it's been 13 or so years since I read Death Troopers.  Since Disney scrapped years and years of stories to create their own future, this novel is part of what is now the Legends timeline, which for many of us SWEU fans is the real canon and Disney is the alternate journey.  Revenge of the Fifth seemed like the perfect day to shine a spotlight on this unusual sub-genre in the Star Wars universe: zombies!  It's great to see where Han & Chewie spent some time prior to that fateful Mos Eisley meeting, I bet you never expected them to be facing zombies?  Since you don't expect zombies to pop up in the SW universe, this might not be for everyone but if you like odd blended with "ewww" and thoughts of "I can't unsee that" then personally I think you'll find Death Troopers right up your alley.

RATING:




Purge  
The nights were the worst.  

Even before his father's death, Trig Longo had come to dread the long hours after lockdown, the shadows and sounds and the chronically unstable gulf of silence that drew out in between them. Night after night he lay still on his bunk and stared up at the dripping durasteel ceiling of the cell in search of sleep or some acceptable substitute. Sometimes he would actually start to drift off, floating away in that comforting sensation of weightlessness, only to be rattled awake-heart pounding, throat tight, stomach muscles sprung and fluttering-by some shout or a cry, an inmate having a nightmare.  

There was no shortage of nightmares aboard the Imperial Prison Barge Purge.  

Trig didn't know exactly how many prisoners the Purge was currently carrying. He guessed maybe five hundred, human and otherwise, scraped from every corner of the galaxy, just as he and his family had been picked up eight standard weeks before. Sometimes the incoming shuttles returned almost empty; on other occasions they came packed with squabbling alien life-forms and alleged Rebel sympathizers of every stripe and species. There were assassins for hire and sociopaths the likes of which Trig had never seen, thin-lipped things that cackled and sneered in seditious languages that, to Trig's ears, were little more than clicks and hisses.  

Every one of them seemed to harbor its own obscure appetites and personal grudges, personal histories blighted with shameful secrets and obscure vendettas. Being cautious became harder; soon you needed eyes in the back of your head-which some of them actually possessed. Two weeks earlier in the mess hall, Trig had noticed a tall, silent inmate sitting with its back to him but watching him nonetheless with a single raw-red eye in the back of its skull. Every day the red-eyed thing seemed to be sitting a little nearer. Then one day, without explanation, it was gone.  

Except from his dreams.  

Sighing, Trig levered himself up on his elbows and looked through the bars onto the corridor. Gen Pop had cycled down to minimum power for the night, edging the long gangway in permanent gray twilight. The Rodians in the cell across from his had gone to sleep or were feigning it. He forced himself to sit there, regulating his breathing, listening to the faint echoes of the convicts' uneasy groans and murmurs. Every so often a mouse droid or low-level maintenance unit, one of hundreds occupying the barge, would scramble by on some preprogrammed errand or another. And of course, below it all-low and not quite beneath the scope of hearing-was the omnipresent thrum of the barge's turbines gnashing endlessly through space. 

For as long as they'd been aboard, Trig still hadn't gotten used to that last sound, the way it shook the Purge to its framework, rising up through his legs and rattling his bones and nerves. There was no escaping it, the way it undermined every moment of life, as familiar as his own pulse. 

Trig thought back to sitting in the infirmary just two weeks earlier, watching his father draw one last shaky breath, and the silence afterward as the medical droids disconnected the biomonitors from the old man's ruined body and prepared to haul it away. As the last of the monitors fell silent, he'd heard that low steady thunder of the engines, one more unnecessary reminder of where he was and where he was going. He remembered how that noise had made him feel lost and small and inescapably sad-some special form of artificial gravity that seemed to work directly against his heart.  

He had known then, as he knew now, that it really only meant one thing, the ruthlessly grinding effort of the Empire consolidating its power.  

Forget politics, his father had always said. Just give 'em something they need, or they'll eat you alive. And now they'd been eaten alive anyway, despite the fact that they'd never been sympathizers, no more than low-level grifters scooped up on a routine Imperial sweep. The engines of tyranny ground on, bearing them forward across the galaxy toward some remote penal moon. Trig sensed that noise would continue, would carry on indefinitely, echoing right up until-  

"Trig?"  

It was Kale's voice behind him, unexpected, and Trig flinched a little at the sound of it. He looked back and saw his older brother gazing back at him, Kale's handsomely rumpled, sleep-slackened face just a ghostly three-quarter profile suspended in the cell's gloom. Kale looked like he was still only partly awake and unsure whether or not he was dreaming any of this.  

"What's wrong?" Kale asked, a drowsy murmur that came out: Wussrong?

Trig cleared his throat. His voice had started changing recently, and he was acutely aware of how it broke high and low when he wasn't paying strict attention. "Nothing."  

"You worried about tomorrow?"  

"Me?" Trig snorted. "Come on."  

" 'S okay if you are." Kale seemed to consider this and then uttered a bemused grunt. "You'd be crazy not to be."   "You're not scared," Trig said. "Dad would never have-"  

"I'll go alone."  

"No." The word snapped from his throat with almost painful angularity. "We need to stick together, that's what Dad said."  

"You're only thirteen," Kale said. "Maybe you're not, you know..." 

"Fourteen next month." Trig felt another flare of emotion at the mention of his age. "Old enough." 

"You sure?"  

"Positive." 

"Well, sleep on it, see if you feel different in the morning..." Kale's enunciation was already beginning to go muddled as he slumped back down on his bunk, leaving Trig sitting up with his eyes still riveted to the long dark concourse outside the cell, Gen Pop, that had become their no-longer-new home.  

Sleep on it, he thought, and in that exact moment, miraculously, as if by power of suggestion, sleep actually began to seem like a possibility. Trig lay back and let the heaviness of his own fatigue cover him like a blanket, superseding anxiety and fear. He tried to focus on the sound of Kale's breathing, deep and reassuring, in and out, in and out.

Then somewhere in the depths of the levels, an inhuman voice wailed. Trig sat up, caught his breath, and felt a chill tighten the skin of his shoulders, arms and back, crawling over his flesh millimeter by millimeter, bristling the small hairs on the back of his neck. Over in his bunk the already sleeping Kale rolled over and grumbled something incoherent.  

There was another scream, weaker this time. Trig told himself it was just one of the other convicts, just another nightmare rolling off the all-night assembly line of the nightmare factory.  

But it hadn't sounded like a nightmare.  

It sounded like a convict, whatever life-form it was, was under attack.  

Or going crazy.  

He sat perfectly still, squeezed his eyes tight, and waited for the pounding of his heart to slow down, just please slow down. But it didn't. He thought of the thing in the cafeteria, the disappeared inmate whose name he'd never know, watching him with its red staring eye. How many other eyes were on him that he never saw?  

Sleep on it.  

But he already knew there would be no more sleeping here tonight.    

Meat Nest  

In Trig's old life, back on Cimarosa, breakfast had been the best meal of the day. Besides being an expert trafficker in contraband, a veteran fringe dweller who cut countless deals with thieves, spies, and counterfeiters, Von Longo had also been one of the galaxy's greatest unrecognized breakfast chefs. Eat a good meal early, Longo always told his boys. You never know if it's going to be your last.  

Here on the Purge, however, breakfast was rarely edible and sometimes actually seemed to shiver in the steady vibrations as though still alive on the plate. This morning Trig found himself gazing down at a pasty mass of colorless goo spooned into shaved gristle, the whole thing plastered together in sticky wads like some kind of meat nest assembled by carnivorous flying insects. He was still nudging the stuff listlessly around his tray when Kale finally raised his eyebrows and peered at him. 

"You sleep at all last night?" Kale asked.  

"A little."  

"You're not eating."  

"What, you mean this?" Trig poked at the contents of the tray again and shuddered. "I'm not hungry," he said, and watched Kale shovel the last bite of his own breakfast into his mouth with disturbing gusto. "You think the food will be any better when we get to the detention moon?"  

"Little brother, I think we'll be lucky if we don't end up on the menu."  

Trig gave him a bleak look. "Don't give 'em any ideas." 

"Hey, lighten up." Kale wiped his mouth on his sleeve and grinned. "Little guy like you, they'll probably just use you for an appetizer."



Monday Morning Menu




Joe Schrieber

I was born in Michigan in 1969 and lived all over: Alaska, California, Wyoming, all before age 10. The restlessness sank in -- after graduating from the University of Michigan, I just kept moving. I've lived in LA, New York, Philadelphia, Portland, Oregon, and Martha's Vineyard. Constant relocation forced me to be creative in my employment: I've been a pet-sitter, an office boy in a DC law office, waited tables and worked at something like six different Borders Bookstores...which has to be a record. These days I work as an MRI tech at Hershey Medical Center in Hershey, PA.


BLUESKY  /  iTUNES  /  AUDIBLE
CHIRP  /  KOBO  /  WIKI  /  WOOKIEPEDIA
B&N  /  AMAZON  /  GOODREADS



Death Troopers

Red Harvest


Sunday, April 26, 2026

🎭Week at a Glance🎭: 4/20/26 - 4/26/26

















Sunday's Safe Word Shelf: On Guard by JR Gray & Andi Jaxon



Summary:

New York Gods #1
Selling my virginity wasn’t how I saw my first week of college going.

But after my parents cut me off, an offer from a gorgeous rich stranger doesn’t sound so bad.
It’s only twenty-four hours and I’ll never have to see him again.
Wrong.

Much to my horror, the stranger is Oliver Godfrey, the captain of my fencing team.
And as if that isn’t bad enough, his parents own half the city.
There is no escape from him or the way he makes me feel.
He’s everything I don’t want.
And everything I need.

A playboy like him shouldn’t look at me twice, so why is he ruining my life?
But what Oliver wants, Oliver gets, and he wants me.
He’s arrogant, possessive, and infuriatingly obsessed with me.
This can’t work.

His parents want him to marry an heiress so I can’t keep him.
All I can have is stolen moments hidden in the dark.
He's going to break my heart and I'm going to let him.






PROLOGUE
Isaac
The hot August night sticks to my skin as mosquitos bite every inch of exposed flesh they can find.

“Come on, babe,” Tim whines. “It’s been two years, and I leave for school next week. We aren’t going to get any more chances.”

With my wrist trapped in his grip, he rubs my palm against the bulge in his jeans, and I jerk back.

“Stop it. I’m not ready.” I wrap my arms around myself, clutching at my ribs like it’ll stop him from reaching for me again.

I hate how he’s pushed this since we graduated a few weeks ago. Like there’s a time limit on our virginity, and we have to have sex right now or miss out forever. We’ve been dating for two years and really only kissed. Why would that change now?

Voices carry on the humid breeze from the front of the church. Wednesday night is bible study and youth group. That hasn’t changed my entire life.

Timothy has been part of the church as long as I have, and since we started dating, we sometimes sneak out early and hide in the shadows behind the sanctuary to make out or just hold hands and talk. It’s the only time we get a few minutes alone.

“We don’t have time for you to get ready. I don’t want to go to college a virgin,” Tim hisses at me, crowding me against the wall.

My stomach twists, and I fight back the tears threatening to fill my eyes. Who the hell is this Tim?

“I promise it’ll feel good.” He smiles at me and dips his head to press his lips to mine. It doesn’t feel the same, though. It’s tainted now, dirty, like he’s just trying to distract me long enough to say yes.

If only I wasn’t so desperate to be held.

I give in a little, wrapping my arms around his waist so he’ll pretend to care about me for just a minute. He groans into my mouth and runs his hand up my neck and into my hair. A spark of arousal shoots through me when he pulls on the strands, changing the angle of the kiss, and taking control.

Tim’s free hand slides under my shirt, and I shiver. A part of me wants to be touched, wants to know pleasure, craves the physical affection, but I don’t want my first time to be a rushed groping while he hurries not to get caught. Both of our parents are inside and will kill us if they find out.

“My parents are here. We can’t.”

“I’ll come over tonight. They’ve let me stay before. They won’t know. They think we are friends.” Tim grabs my belt, and I try to shove his hand away, but he kisses me again.

I give over to the kiss, whining softly. “Tim . . .”

“They won’t know.” He shoves me back, putting his arm across my chest while his other hand works open my belt.

My heart hammers in my ears, but I don’t stop him, torn between what feels good and what I know is wrong. I’ve pushed it too far. Let this thing with Tim go on too long. I know it’s wrong and what my father will do if he finds out.

“We can’t.” I try again as Tim lowers my zipper.

Tim pulls my belt from the loops with a triumphant smile. His lips part, and he’s about to say something⁠—

“Isaac Mathew Becker!” My father’s voice booms in a terrifying snarl.

I startle and shove Tim away from me while fear and shame leave my body quaking. Oh god, what’s he going to do?

I don’t dare look at Tim. Maybe he can back away into the shadows and make a break for it. Maybe he can tell his family it’s all a misunderstanding when my father calls his, because I know he will, and they can laugh it off.

“Mr. Becker.” Tim takes a step forward, all cowering shoulders and trembling hands. “He told me to meet him back here, that he wanted to show me something. I think he has the devil inside of him.”

The blood drains from my face, hearing the lies falling from my boyfriend’s mouth. What little pitiful hope I have falls to ashes at my feet. Quickly, I scan the crowd, looking for my little brother, Noah. I find him peeking around our mother, the horror I feel reflected on his face, but he doesn’t condone it. He’s the only other person who knows. The only person I’ve trusted with my deepest, darkest secret.

I can barely breathe through panic. Can hardly think past my instincts that have me frozen in place as my father storms over and lifts his bible in the air. I can’t move my arms or turn my back to protect myself as he hits me with the holy doctrine that tells of love and acceptance from a forgiving God.

But that’s not what they preach here.

Over and over, he hits me while my heart breaks and my world crashes down around me. I don’t notice the tears running down my cheeks or the body-wracking sobs as my parents scream scriptures. My skin burns. The sting of every impact taking all my focus.

I deserve this punishment for the sins I’ve committed.

The other members of the church hear the commotion and come to investigate, witnessing the worst moment of my life. Timothy’s parents rush him off, out of the spotlight, while my mother pours holy water over my head and prays for my eternal soul.

I’m humiliated.

Ashamed.

Terrified.

I’ve known since I started high school I’m not interested in girls like the boys I’m friends with and that I have to hide it from everyone around me. For years, I’ve played the part they forced me into. I didn’t choose any of this, yet they will punish me like I did. The mold they expected me to fit never did, but I’ve tried every single day to make it work. Finally, that perfect impression they thought I would become has shattered, and there’s no faking it anymore.

No one chooses to live a harder life.

No one chooses to live in fear of being hated by everyone around them.

No one chooses to look over their shoulder constantly, waiting for someone to attack them for simply existing.

My knees give out, and the rough, pebble-strewn asphalt digs into my hands and scrapes my shins. The fall makes my body ache, but no worse than the emotional pain my father is causing with his damnation.

At some point, it ends, and Father grabs my arm in a bruising grip, yanking me from the ground, and drags me across the parking lot. He throws me into the car and slams the door behind me with a rage so hot on his face it may leave blisters. I cover my face in my hands and bend in half, but all I want in this moment is to disappear or to stop breathing. Noah gets in next to me but doesn’t say anything, doesn’t reach for me.

He has to protect himself, too. I understand.

“You are not going to college this year,” my father shouts. “You’ve managed to stray too far from the path we raised you to follow! You’ve let the devil corrupt you and tempt the Roberts boy to follow you to hell!”

Mother sniffles in the front seat. “I thought we raised a good boy,” she cries. “What have we done to deserve a homosexual as a son?”

“And to force your perversion onto a good, God fearing boy is unacceptable!” Father roars, taking a turn too sharply, and my head slams into the door. The pain barely registers.

My father continues to berate me, telling me what a horrible person I am, how I’m going to hell unless I beg God for forgiveness and promise to never even look at another boy. My stomach twists into a knot, and my head swims. I feel like I’m going to pass out or throw up, maybe both. Maybe then he’ll leave me be. Just for a minute.

We squeal into the driveway of the home I grew up in, and before the car has come to a complete stop, the doors open, and Father grabs a fist full of my hair to yank me out. Mother is quietly sobbing as she unlocks the door and steps aside to let us pass. Using the hold like a handle, he throws me to the floor in the living room and stands over me. I curl into a ball to try to protect myself, but it doesn’t work. It never does.

“Get up!” he demands, but the fear coursing through me makes me stumble. When I fall back to my knees, he kicks me over and yells again at me to stand up. With trembling knees, I make it to my feet this time, and he smacks my cheek with his bible before shoving it at me. “You’re going to stand here and read Leviticus out loud until you can recite it from memory.”









JR Gray
Gray is a cynical Chicago native, who drinks coffee all day, barely sleeps, and is a little too fashion obsessed. He writes romance sprinkled with kink, and hot as hell, dark and angsty characters because everyone deserves a happily ever after.











Andi Jaxon
Andi is a Northern California girl transplanted to the PNW and loving the change. Foggy mornings, coffee (hot or iced), with a hoodie on are the days. When not corralling her kids, she’s annoying her friends with random messages and memes or ghosting everyone. There is no in between. Andi has no volume control and laughs loud enough to be heard across a busy room. She writes stories that typically hurt because there’s beauty in pain and no life is exempt from it. 




JR Gray
FACEBOOK  /  BOOKBUB  /  FB FRIEND
WEBSITE  /  NEWSLETTER  /  CHIRP
FB GROUP  /  TUMBLR  /  INSTAGRAM
AUDIBLE  /  AUBIOBOOKS  /  TANTOR
LINKTREE  /  BOOKBUB  /  TIKTOK
PATREON  /  AMAZON  /  GOODREADS

Andi Jaxon
FACEBOOK  /  BLUESKY  /  WEBSITE
AUDIBLE  /  AUDIOBOOKS  /  CHIRP
BOOKBUB  /  AMAZON  /  GOODREADS
EMAIL: authorandijaxon@gmail.com



On Guard #1

New York Gods Series


Saturday, April 25, 2026

Saturday's Series Spotlight: LA Storm by RJ Scott & VL Locey Part 2




Shield #3
Summary:
Can Jackson ensure the safety of his loved ones when the darkest elements of LA's underbelly seek retribution?

Oliver knows the clock is ticking on his dream of winning the Stanley Cup. After fourteen years playing for New York, he’s beyond frustrated to leave friends behind when traded to the LA Storm. As a widower and father of two girls, he’s facing the twilight of his career, and, worst of all, he’s lonely. Making friends is easy enough, but he craves someone to hold him at night. When Jackson, equal parts grumpy chaos and charm, lands in his life, friendship turns to lust, and love isn’t far behind. He finds himself drawn to Jackson, and as their relationship deepens, they become each other’s haven amidst the chaos of their lives. However, danger from Jackson's work threatens their peaceful world, challenging their relationship and forcing love to take a backseat to survival.

After bringing down a notable money launderer, Jackson's small team receives orders to delve deeper into the world of organized crime in Hollywood. His early success quickly spirals into an overwhelming web of criminal intrigue. In this new, uncharted territory, he feels increasingly isolated, both personally and professionally. The more issues he uncovers, the less he seems to close. Meeting Oliver shakes his world even more, especially when he accidentally falls for the widower and father of two little girls. A few nights of fun is one thing, but deeper feelings and kids are something he is not at all prepared for. Yet, despite his reluctance, he becomes deeply attached to the little family who has embraced him with so much love. Now, he just has to shield them from the dangers that have followed him to their doorstep.

This opposites attract romance features a single dad hockey player grappling with personal loss, a grumpy detective entangled in the complexities of organized crime, and a love story that happens despite the odds.






Spiral #4
Summary:
When the worlds of academia and sports collide, a doctor of math and a dyslexic hockey star find that love has its own perfect equation.

Craig learned to skate as soon as he could walk, moving from figure skating to excelling in hockey and succeeding in both despite the challenges of his dyslexia. Visual aids, practical, hands-on learning, and the support of friends not only helped him in school but also honed his skills on the ice, making him a versatile and intuitive player. When he meets Jamie at a team party, Craig is instantly captivated by the handsome professor. Despite the lasting effects of a former abusive relationship that’s still haunting him, they end up in bed. Craig’s insecurities drive him away—after all, what can a professor possibly see in someone like him? His past relationship makes trusting Jamie hard. Thankfully, Jamie is not only persistent but also understanding, and despite his worries, Craig can’t help but say yes. Falling for Jamie is as easy as slipping on fresh ice.

After his ex from hell stole his research and made him the academic community's laughingstock, Dr. Jameson “Jamie” Hennessy decided to reset his life and moved across the country to live with his best friend. With everything he worked so hard for now gone, Jamie needs funding to stay on the West Coast, and for that, he needs a new approach to his research. After one too many drinks at a team party, things heat up with a sexy hockey player he can’t take his eyes off, but after the most incredible sex of his life, Craig leaves him alone in a cold bed the morning after. When Jamie’s admiration for Craig and his obsession with mathematics collide, a new hypothesis about movement in sports is born. Could Craig be the answer he wasn’t even looking for?


Shield #3
Original Review June 2024:
I just knew we'd see Jackson again after he was introduced in Second(ironically the 2nd entry in the LA Storm branch of the Scott/Locey Hockey UniverseπŸ˜‰) and I was not disappointed.  You couldn't help but feel he was straddling the line between good cop/bad cop(or perhaps good cop/overworked-potentially-leading-to-bad-decisions cop) and yet you also knew his heart was always on the good side of that thin line that is too often overlooked these days.

Again, I was not disappointed.

What is there not to love about Oliver?  You just want to wrap him in the tightest Mama Bear Hug to protect him from the hurt he's dealt with but also to reassure him that this new start is truly that "a new start".  Athletes who spend most of their career with one team and find themselves being traded as their career reaches the later stages can't help but have conflicting and crippling moments of doubt.  Those crippling doubts can manifest in multiple internal questions: "how could they toss me away after all the years I've given them", "did they see something in my performance that I didn't",  and "can I actually make a positive contribution to the new team" just to name a few.  Oliver has to deal with that as well as being a single parent after the death of his wife and doing it in a strange city.  Don't get me wrong, yes these raw emotions are there and important but Oliver doesn't let it bog him down, he's prepared to do what he must for his girls, for his team, and for himself.

Then a big monkey wrench is thrown in and he finds himself dealing with an attack to a friend and that's where Jackson enters the picture possibly complicating things even more.

Jackson, what can I say? As stated above he's overworked but good at his job and as for after hours Jackson time, well let's just say he has his fun when and where he can. When thrown together at a crime scene sparks may not beam but they definitely do more than flicker.   Both men are ready and/or willing for a new start but just how bumpy or smooth that road is . . . well that's where the fun lies. There is no secret that both RJ Scott & VL Locey are all about the HEA so the end result is really never in doubt(and that's no spoiler).  These authors are all about the journey and boy what a journey they bring to life in Shield.

I love when a book has more than one sub-genre and Shield is definitely first and foremost: romance, yummy, yummy, yummy romance.  But in Shield we also get a little mystery and I can never say no to a good who-done-it?.  Add in a little friendship, family, hockey(can't forget the hockeyπŸ˜‰), and what you have is a lovely entertaining piece of reading magic.

How could I forget little Scarlett & Daisy? Oliver's little girls are a pure delight, they may not have a lot of page time but every scene they are in they completely own it.  I loved how there is no accepting or not accepting when it comes to Daddy's first date with Jackson, it's just how it is and I firmly believe one day all of society will be in frame of mind but unfortunately we aren't there yet but having Oliver's daughters be there gives a sense of hope for the future. Maybe I read more into that scene than the authors put in to it but that's what I took from it.
 
 What about Jamie? Oliver's old nanny-turned-BFF comes for a visit but stays when his occupational situation changes and from the looks of it, we'll get to see loads more of Jamie in the next Scott/Locey Hockey Universe LA Storm  installment, Spiral and I for one can't wait.



Spiral #4
Original Review September 2024:
I have to start off by saying how much I love the fact that so many of the amazing characters created by Scott & Locey for their ongoing hockey universe have flaws(I don't really like that word but can't think of a better one to encompass so many hurdles they find before them).  Some are physical, others are emotional, but none of them are just thrown in for dramatic content.  It just really makes them all so much more real, makes the reader feel as if they could run into them on the street, picking up toilet paper at the grocery store, or filling their car up and grabbing a gallon of milk at the gas station. Some might have an ego due to their talents on the ice but they don't look down at the non-athletes they come in contact with so thank you, ladies for creating athletes we wish we saw all the time.

Okay, so on to Spiral.

When we met Jamie in Shield, it was pretty clear he deserved to have his story told and we were not disappointed.  His professional reputation has been tested due to his former boyfriend stealing his research so he moved across the country to stay his with his best friend Oliver and return to helping him with his girls.  (Side note: we discovered Oliver's story in Shield so I highly recommend reading that entry before Spiral to fully understand the chemistry between not only Jamie and Oli but also Oli's boyfriend Jackson) Oli and Jackson are having a party for the Storm during which Jamie meets Craig, despite mutual attraction it takes a few too many drinks for a bedroom connection to occur.  With everything surrounding Jamie's professional life in the fire his attitude is uplifting, no doubt Oli, the girls, and Jackson(though Jamie would hate to admit itπŸ˜‰) play a huge role in keeping the man sane.

Let's talk Craig.  Many of us(perhaps I'm dating myself here and really it isn't so many of us but I'll say it isπŸ˜‰) have seen the 90s rom-com The Cutting Edge where the hockey player transitioned to figure skating after an eye injury and here we have Craig going the opposite route, skating to hockey.  Personally I think it would be harder to go from skating to hockey, to put it bluntly: to go from delicate moves to hard hitting but maybe I'm wrong.  Either way I think it brings a special extra something to his style, on and off the ice.  Throw in his dyslexia and you have a man who has fought to get where he is and that isn't even taking into account his former abusive relationship.  Add it all up and Craig is a fighter and though he may not always see it, he's a winner.(BTW: I am not comparing Spiral to Cutting Edge in anything other than the change of sport for the athlete)

Put the two gentleman together and you not only have an adorable couple but you have two men who have fought uphill to be where they are and their chemistry is off the charts but will it be enough to keep them together? Well, you know the answer to that: you have to read for yourself but as we all know that Scott & Locey are all about the HEA so I think you guess where they end up but the enjoyment, the meat and potatoes, the reader's adrenaline rush is riding along with the duo as they get from point A to point Z.  You won't be disappointed.

RATING:




Shield #3
I parked my Ducati in a small lot next to the clinic, the familiar sounds of the neighborhood enveloping me as I dismounted. The laughter of children as they played on the sidewalks, the distant buzz of traffic, and the occasional shouts from windows were more real to me than the place I’d grown up in affluent Dallas suburbs where money was king. I could do some good here.

As I walked into the clinic, I immediately felt at home. There was a warmth and bustle to the place, volunteers chatting, trying to make a difference, kids crying, parents in groups. I waved to Lazlo on reception. He’d changed the color of his hair again—now blue from green—and he grinned at me.

“Yo, Cowboy,” he called.

I headed that way. “Hey Laz, is Joe in?”

Lazlo frowned, leaned closer, and lowered his voice. “He gone all do-not-disturb, not seeing patients, and he’s losing his shit with everyone who knocks on his door.”

That didn’t sound good. Joe was former military, a medic, and the guy who ran this place on nothing but fluff and buttons. He was ruthless at recruiting volunteer doctors and nurses, an expert at guilting big pharma to donate, rough and ready, and dragging this entire community to good health one case at a time. But he was also a gentle giant, loved people as much as they loved him, and losing his shit didn’t sound like him at all. Maybe it was a money thing? I could help with that. I saved money every year for my girls, a trust fund that would see them happy and settled with a good start, but after that and my sole luxury—the Ducati—everything else I gave away.

Not that anyone knew, and they never would.

“Had a couple of referrals for you,” Lazlo said, slapping some files down. “Why don’t you take them, and this…” He placed a coffee next to it, “… see if you can cheer Joe up.”

Referrals were about moms with breast cancer, the same cruel disease that had taken Melissa, or those newly diagnosed with diabetes in fact, any families who struggled where Lazlo thought I could help I picked up the files, headed through the door to the consultation rooms, passing walls adorned with handmade posters and kids’ art, and finally through the last door, marked staff only, with my key card

I knocked on the door, juggling paperwork and the coffee, using my elbow on the handle, and tumbling inside with a grin on my face, all ready to cheer Mr. Grumpy up.

Only to find him at the wrong end of a gun, bleeding from a head wound, and barely able to move.





Spiral #4
Chapter One
Jamie
I carefully placed the last mini sandwiches onto the colorful platter, stepping back to admire the spread of finger food that Scarlett, Daisy, and I had managed to whip up. The table was an artful mess of snacks created by me. I’d channeled my British father and my mom, former Miss Maine, who’d taken to living near London and being a Brit with extreme enthusiasm. They’d given me a mathematical brain, dual passports, an English accent, and a love of afternoon tea. I’d made tiny sandwiches, cruditΓ©s, dips, small cakes, and, of course, scones and all the extras—ready for the afternoon crowd of ravenous hockey players and their families.

“Looks like we could feed an army, huh?” I chuckled, glancing down at Scarlett, who meticulously rearranged the carrot sticks.

She beamed up at me, her blue eyes sparkling with pride. “Dad’s going to eat at least half of these,” she declared confidently, her gaze sliding over to the sandwiches.

With her light blonde hair bouncing as she nodded vigorously, Daisy added, “And Jackson likes the sandwiches best. He told me last time!” Her tiny finger pointed toward the pile of sandwiches adorned with various toppings.

I smiled at their excitement. “Well, then, I think we’ve done a stellar job. High five, team!” I raised my hand, and they both smacked it with giggles.

Loud clattering on the stairs announced Oliver and Jackson’s arrival from upstairs. I turned to see them descending the staircase, ready with a joke about a herd of elephants, Oliver’s hand briefly clasping Jackson’s. The two men, hopelessly in love, shared a quick, tender kiss at the bottom—a simple moment of affection that sent an unexpected twinge of envy through my chest.

I turned back to the table, arranging the LA Storm napkins to distract myself—I’d spent two hours sourcing the perfect purple for the table and the balloons. It’s not that I expected people to notice this, but as my dad said, if something is worth doing, then it’s worth doing right. I’d chosen an afternoon tea motif. I’d even hung bunting over the counters, and there were sandwiches, proper crisps I’d found in a trendy shop in Santa Monica, plus scones with pots of jam and cream. Or jelly, as Oli liked to call it, which is weird given that jelly is what I used to have as a kid. Back in the UK, our jelly was wobbly and sweet, unlike what Americans called jam. There was also a barbecue, but that was for later. First, the heathens making up the LA Storm would be introduced to the more sophisticated side of British cuisine—the perfect scone.

“Looks good, guys,” Oliver said and clapped my shoulder.

I sent him my trademark smile, the one that said I wasn’t jealous at all. It wasn’t as if I wanted Oliver. He was my best friend, and I was genuinely happy for him, but we were always going to be just that—friends. Only witnessing that moment between him and Jackson highlighted the space beside me—a space I hadn’t realized I was yearning to fill until Jackson had moved in and the four of us, Oliver, Scarlett, Daisy, and me, had become five. I couldn’t even hate Jackson. He was a hot mess, all intense and scowling at times, but Oli loved him, and his love was smoothing all of Jackson’s rough edges. I liked Jackson. I like Jackson for Oli.

But I missed holding hands, kissing, or sharing a coffee and crossword with someone.

I thought I’d had that with Sean.

Arsehole-wanker-Sean, fellow mathematics genius and my former boyfriend, who proved everyone right by not only ruining my entire bloody life but, more importantly, stealing my research and undermining my credibility.

Jackson caught my eye and smiled as they approached. “London! This spread looks fantastic!”

That was a new thing Jackson had started doing, calling me London. He gave everyone nicknames, and he’d chosen mine because of being a Brit, of drinking tea, and calling everyone a wanker.

He’sthe wanker.

Still, part of me liked the moniker, even if I sent him my best haughty Lord-of-the-manor snarl every time he used it—not that my reaction had any effect.

He wrinkled his nose at me but carried on talking. “The girls have been bragging about their chef skills all morning,” he said.

Oliver ruffled Scarlett’s hair, surveying the table. “Looks like you’ve outdone yourselves again. Thanks, Jamie.”

I shrugged, a half-smile playing on my lips. “It’s nothing. It keeps me busy, and I enjoy it.” Glancing over at Jackson, who was already reaching for a sandwich, I teased, “Make sure you save some for the others, Columbo.”

Jackson blinked at me, “Columbo? Really?”

I tilted my chin. “It was the most derogatory nickname I could think of,” I announced.

Jackson bit his lip, probably trying to hold back a laugh. “I love it,” he said and knuckled my arm, which, ouch, he didn’t know his strength. Then he laughed and popped the sandwich into his mouth. “And no promises on the food, London,” he mumbled through a mouthful, earning him an eye roll from Oliver and giggles from the girls.

The doorbell chimed, signaling the arrival of the first guests. Daisy sprinted to the door, Scarlett on her heels, their laughter trailing behind them as they raced to open it.

I gave the snack arrangement one last tweak as Oli and Jackson headed to the door. Would people hate my idea? They were here for a barbecue, and me making all of this was probably going to end up being the butt of jokes. For a moment, I panicked and thought about swiping the whole lot into the trash. The colorful food seemed small, overshadowed by the buzzing energy filling the house as big hockey players arrived, partners in tow, kids shouting, laughing. I felt a familiar pang of nerves. I liked people in general, but I wasn’t good with chaos. People streamed in, shedding jackets and greeting each other with enthusiastic handshakes and warm hugs. The room was loud, with a mixture of laughter and conversations, plus the faint sounds of a hockey game on the TV in the background. It didn’t take long for hockey to be front and center.

Oliver was already amid it all, clasping hands and giving hearty handshakes. “Hey, Ash!” he called out, drawing my attention to his defensive partner, who entered with a grin. They did the whole bro-hug thing, and then Ash hurried over to me, and we exchanged the customary fist bump, his grin contagious.

“I need one of those biscuit things,” he announced. “Oli said you have them with jelly and heavy cream, right?”

I laughed, both at his eagerness and his description. “You mean scones, Ash. They’re scones, not biscuits. And yes, we’ve got them—complete with jam and clotted cream, not jelly and heavy cream. It’s a British delicacy, not a rodeo snack.” I was lying—it wasn’t a delicacy, but it was bloody delicious.

Ash raised his eyebrows, clearly amused. “Man, you Brits have a weird way of naming your food. But if it tastes as good as it looks, you can call it whatever you want.”

He wandered off toward the food table. I shook my head, chuckling as Oliver approached me and clapped me on the shoulder.

“Your scones are a hit, Jamie. Even if half the team can’t say ‘clotted cream’ without making a face.”

“It’s the simple joys of educating Americans on the finer points of English cuisine,” I deadpanned, the snark in my voice tinged with affection. “Someone has to elevate your culinary experiences. Can’t have you living off hot dogs and popcorn forever.”

Our banter was cut short as more guests arrived, each greeted by Oliver’s booming voice and warm handshakes.

And there he was.

Craig.

I hadn’t been watching for him at all.

Nope.

He was here, a five-foot-ten-inch cute but lethal hockey player. Fast and deadly, he was feared by defensemen all over the NHL for his crafty, squirrely speed. He was dressed in slim-fit cutoffs and a T-shirt that clung to every one of his sexy lines. He arrived alone—I think—with no sign of a girlfriend or boyfriend, and he moved through the crowd with smiles and happiness. He was already halfway through his first beer, with another in his other hand.

As his eyes met mine, the noise of the party faded into a distant murmur. I was so drawn to him, even though he was everything the men I’d previously dated were not: shorter than me, wiry, an air of easy confidence despite the chaos of fame hockey had thrust upon him. His relaxed demeanor here was a stark contrast to his on-ice reputation.

Despite how idiotic it would be to get physical with one of Oli’s teammates, I wanted him.

As our gazes locked, I felt something like hope that maybe he’d come over for a scone and I could dazzle him with something witty. I straightened my favorite dark blue waistcoat. I wore them as a kind of armor, a way of breaking the ice, playing into being a Brit, having something quirky and just for me, but his gaze dropped to my fingers adjusting the fit, and when he glanced up at me, something inexplicable shadowed his expression. It wasn’t discomfort, but there was a retreat, a subtle drawing back that seemed at odds with the smile he offered everyone else. He turned away, weaving through the crowd, a trail of light laughter marking his path. He was utterly unreachable, and I couldn’t help but wonder what I’d done.

Because it had to be me.

My social skills were either at the level of Scarlett and Daisy—I knew all the words to every Disney movie—or at the level of fellow academics. Every other situation was fraught with danger.

We’d spoken only once before, an encounter that had started promisingly enough. He’d teased me about my accent, and in response, I had exaggerated my Britishness, rolling out my best King’s English, which had drawn a laugh from him and a playful declaration that I was cute. Flustered, I’d returned the compliment, called him cute, and for a second, he’d frowned, then it had cleared, and he blushed. Maybe it was being called cute? He wasn’t as big as some of the other players, so was it that I implied he was small? I recall getting flustered, but the conversation had quickly spiraled into academia—with what I thought was a light, flirty discussion about Fibonacci sequences. He’d seemed interested until suddenly, he wasn’t. His words had tangled, and he’d excused himself abruptly, leaving me bewildered and concerned I’d crossed a line I hadn’t seen.

Now, watching him at the party, the ease with which he interacted with others made our previous encounter all the more confusing. Did he think I wasn’t cute after all? The thought nagged at me, a persistent whisper amidst the clinks of glasses and bursts of laughter.

I tried to shake off the feeling, focusing on the guests instead, explaining that jam went on the scone first and, no, clotted cream wasn’t a dipping sauce and needed to be spread, but my gaze was drawn repeatedly to Craig as he moved through the room. He was in the corner with Scarlett and a couple of the wives, touching his toes, everyone laughing as they copied him. He was so… bendy… and when he went into the splits, I nearly choked on a slice of cucumber.

The things I could do to a man that flexible…

Why he seemed to avoid me now, after what had felt like a connection, was a puzzle, but after the first shot of whiskey, my edges smoothed, and with the second, I felt as if I could talk to him. After the third and fourth, with him downing beer like water, I felt as if I could take on the world.

He excused himself and headed upstairs to the bathroom, laughing and joking, taking the stairs two at a time, and, bloody hell, I was after him like a dog on a bone. I found him at the top of the stairs, nowhere near the bathroom, but instead tucked into a small reading nook the kids used, his head in one hand, a beer loose in the other. He was slumped and exhausted, and he hadn’t heard me there.

“Craig?” I asked.

He lifted his gaze slowly, all kinds of resigned. “Jamie,” he said in reply.

I had a hundred things I wanted to ask him or tell him, but a whiskey brain is different from a normal brain, and I yelled the first thing I could think of.

“Why do you hate me?”



Saturday's Series Spotlight
Harrisburg Raptors
Part 1  /  Part 2  /  Part 3  /  Part 4

Owatonna U
Part 1  /  Part 2

Arizona Raptors
Part 1  /  Part 2

Boston Rebels
Part 1  /  Part 2

Chestorford Coyotes

LA Storm

Railers Legacy
Speed  /  Blitz  /  Powder  /  Fly

Hockey Universe
Xmas Edition
Part 1  /  Part 2  /  Family First

Road to the Stanley Cup Edition
Part 1  /  Part 2  /  Part 3

Father's Day Edition

Caregivers Edition
Part 1  /  Part 2

Valentine's Day Edition





RJ Scott
Writing love stories with a happy ever after – cowboys, heroes, family, hockey, single dads, bodyguards

USA Today bestselling author RJ Scott has written over one hundred romance books. Emotional stories of complicated characters, cowboys, single dads, hockey players, millionaires, princes, bodyguards, Navy SEALs, soldiers, doctors, paramedics, firefighters, cops, and the men who get mixed up in their lives, always with a happy ever after.

She lives just outside London and spends every waking minute she isn’t with family either reading or writing. The last time she had a week’s break from writing, she didn’t like it one little bit, and she has yet to meet a box of chocolates she couldn’t defeat.





VL Locey
V.L. Locey loves worn jeans, yoga, belly laughs, walking, reading and writing lusty tales, Greek mythology, the New York Rangers, comic books, and coffee.
(Not necessarily in that order.)

She shares her life with her husband, her daughter, one dog, two cats, a flock of assorted domestic fowl, and two Jersey steers.

When not writing spicy romances, she enjoys spending her day with her menagerie in the rolling hills of Pennsylvania with a cup of fresh java in hand.



RJ Scott
EMAIL: rj@rjscott.co.uk
EMAIL: vicki@vllocey.com



Shield #3

Spiral #4

Harrisburg Railers Series

Owatonna U Series

Arizona Raptors Series

Boston Rebels Series

Chestorford Coyotes Series

LA Storm Series

Sparkle #1.5(LA Storm)

Railers Legacy Series