What Are AmberPax™ Collections?

Simply put, AmberPax™ Collections are groups of five stories centered around a specific theme. Each story within an AmberPax™ is released individually, on the same day as the others, and can be purchased separately, but these five stories can also be purchased as a single unit (the full AmberPax™) at a discount, currently 25%. Generally, an AmberPax™ is similar to an "anthology" of stories, but instead of the titles being released in only a single volume (file), they are also available individually. These AmberPax™ Collections are sold exclusively through our website and only in electronic format.

THIS BLOG is for news about the Pax Collections - follow it to keep up with releases, find early news of the upcoming collections, and share Pax fun and chat with the authors!

All Amber Paxes can be bought at Amber Quill HERE.
Showing posts with label angel martinez. Show all posts
Showing posts with label angel martinez. Show all posts

Wednesday, 24 June 2015

The Pill Bugs of Time by Angel Martinez

In a bit of serendipitous lining up of things, this blog post falls on my birthday. What better day for a post about time?

I’m rather dismayed to find that I’m over a half-century old now. It sneaks up on you when you’re still twenty-five in your head. Also makes me think about the relativistic nature of time, the speed of which refuses to remain constant depending on proximity, mass and whether you’re prepared or not for a presentation. It’s an odd way to measure anything, this unreliable way we move through the fabric of the universe, not really a constant stream, but a strange knot of things that exist sequentially and simultaneously.

You know, the whole ball of timey-wimey stuff, in the technical parlance of Time Lords.

As of this writing, time travel seems unlikely, especially in the classic SF sense of inventor climbs into his machine and visits points centuries before or after his departure in his own timeline. Some scientists wonder if time travel would only be possible in an alternate timeline, assuming we could somehow slip through the walls between the endless universes existing in conjunction with our own.

Rather than write another story about external time travel where it’s impossible to reconcile the temporal paradoxes, I took a different route. Internal time travel. Travel of the mind. Hallucination? Alternate method of actual travel? Bad piece of pastrami? You’ll have to read for yourself. 


Offbeat Crimes 2
Gay Paranormal Humor


Vikash Soren, the perfect police officer except for his odd paranormal ability, never seems to lose his temper. Always serene and competent, he’s taken on the role of mediator in a squad room full of misfits. But on the inside, he’s a mess. Unable to tell his police partner that he loves him, Vikash struggles silently, terrified of losing Kyle as a lover, partner, and friend.

But life in the 77th Precinct doesn’t leave much room for internal reflection. A confrontation with a stick-throwing tumbleweed in Fairmount Park leads to bizarre consequences involving pill bugs, statues, and…time travel? If Vikash manages to survive the week and stay in one point in time, he might be able to address normal things like relationship problems. He just needs Kyle to have a little more patience. Maybe a few centuries worth.

About Angel Martinez:

Angel Martinez is the erotic fiction pen name of a writer of several genres. Her experiences as a soldier, a nurse, a banker, and an underpaid corporate drone give her a broad view of the world and a deep appreciation for the astounding variety of people on this small planet. 

She currently lives part time in the hectic sprawl of northern Delaware and full time inside her head. She has one husband of over twenty years, one son, two cats, a love of all things beautiful and a terrible addiction to the consumption of both knowledge and chocolate. 

For all of Angel’s work, please visit:
http://angelmartinezauthor.weebly.com

*_*_*

The Pill Bugs of Time by Angel Martinez is now available at Amber Allure.

If you'd like the chance to win the entire pax collection, just leave a comment on today's post, making sure to include your email so we have a way to contact you. On Saturday, a winner will be picked at random from all the comments made this week on the blog. Comment on all, and that's multiple chances to win!

Sunday, 21 June 2015

LATEST PAX RELEASE - Reeling Through the Years

Genres: Gay (M/M) Erotic Romance

The titles listed below comprise the Reeling Through the Years AmberPax™ Collection. Buy all five together and receive a 35% discount! To purchase any of the titles individually, click on the covers below to go to the books' separate pages. 

The Consigner
The Consigner
by D.J. Manly
Novella
(Gay)
Cricket and Biscuits
Cricket and Biscuits
by A.J. Llewellyn
Novella
(Gay)
The Pill Bugs of Time
The Pill Bugs of Time
by Angel Martinez
Novella
(Gay)
Right Place, Right Time
Right Place, Right Time
by K.M. Mahoney
Novella
(Gay)
Unison
Unison
by Vivien Dean
Novella
(Gay)

 
In conjunction with our newest release, we will be having a giveaway! Any comment made from today throughout the week (6/21-6/26) will be eligible to win the entire pax collection. A winner will be picked at random on Saturday from all comments received.

Wednesday, 17 June 2015

The Pill Bugs of Time by Angel Martinez

(Part of the Offbeat Crimes series)

Vikash Soren, the perfect police officer except for his odd paranormal ability, never seems to lose his temper. Always serene and competent, he’s taken on the role of mediator in a squad room full of misfits. But on the inside, he’s a mess. Unable to tell his police partner that he loves him, Vikash struggles silently, terrified of losing Kyle Monroe as a lover, partner, and friend.

But life in Philadelphia’s 77th Precinct doesn’t leave much room for internal reflection. A confrontation with a stick-throwing tumbleweed in Fairmount Park leads to bizarre consequences involving pill bugs, statues, and...time travel?

If Vikash manages to survive the week and stay in one point in time, he might be able to address normal things like relationship problems. He just needs Kyle to have a little more patience. Maybe a few centuries worth...

Genres: Gay/Contemporary/Paranormal/Time Travel/Romantic Comedy/Action/Adventure/Series
Heat Level: 2
Length: Novella (24k words) 


Read a short excerpt...


...Between one word and the next, Kyle’s voice cut off. The park vanished and Vikash stood blinking in a place of blinding light and strange sounds.

“Kyle?” he called out in helpless anguish, choking on his fear. Something had happened. He was hallucinating as Vance had been. Stand still. Just stand still and let Kyle come and collect you. Don’t panic. This has to be temporary.

“Greets. Do you need help?”

Vikash startled and spun toward the voice. A vision in a loose flowing robe stood beside him, smiling, green eyes gazing at him with guileless compassion. Long red hair tumbled over the vision’s shoulders and though Vikash found himself unable to parse gender, the person’s face was achingly familiar. “Kyle?”

“No. I’m Cirrus. But I could be Kyle if you wanted me to be.” Cirrus laughed, and even the low, sensual sound was like Kyle’s when he was flirting. “Are you a reenactor? Did you get separated from your vid crew?”

“Ah. Hmm.” Vikash took in his surroundings now that his eyes had adjusted, feeling stupider by the moment. They stood on a gleaming white porcelain-like surface that moved smoothly under their feet. Huge spires of glass and chrome soared overhead, occupying most of the sky. What little sky he could see was an unrelenting blue even more painfully bright than the winter sky he had just left behind in the park.

“You’re really lost, aren’t you?”

“Lost. Yes,” Vikash murmured as they passed a window display of colored, porous blocks.

“Oh, you’re hungry! That explains the glassy-eyed look.” Cirrus’s laugh was brighter this time, happy and uninhibited. He…she…grabbed Vikash’s hand and hurried down the moving sidewalk. “You don’t want to eat there. The prots are way too chalky. I know a place where the food is to die for.”

Unable to come up with a good argument, Vikash allowed the towing. Other pedestrians stared, but they seemed more intrigued than hostile and their attention focused on his uniform rather than the joined hands. “I…where?”

“Where are we going? Just around the corner. It’s not far.”

“No, where…” I don’t want to ask this question. I really don’t. “Where am I?”

Cirrus stopped and considered him a moment. “You mean what street?”

“Am I still on Earth?”

The next laugh cut off on a shocked exclamation. “You’re serious, aren’t you?” Cirrus turned his hand over, stroking the skin of his wrist carefully. “Did you take something new today? You really shouldn’t take drugs from strangers.”

“No…” Vikash took in the people rushing past, some in simple robes like his guide, many in no more than what amounted to shiny Brazilian thongs. “I think I’ve been…displaced somehow. Philadelphia. That’s where I was last.”

“This is Philadelphia.” Cirrus’s eyes narrowed. “I bet I know what this is. You’re doing a historical piece. Twentieth, twenty-first century maybe? And they have some new skin tabs that’ll get you all the way in character. But you got away from your crew. Poor thing. No wonder you’re all disoriented.”

“Historical.”

“That’s right.”

“What century is this?”

“Twenty-third, silly. No, I’m sorry.” Cirrus took his hand again and resumed their hurried pace. “That’s not fair. You don’t know that right now. Look, I’ll stay with you and if it doesn’t wear off in a couple of hours, we’ll get you to a care center. Look, you don’t have an emergency contact on your implants somewhere?”

“Implants?”

“They were thorough, I’ll give them that. I’m going to have a few words for your crew when we find them.” Cirrus flashed him another unnervingly Kyle-esque smile before tugging him toward what appeared to be a solid pane of glass.

Vikash balked, pulling back until Cirrus’s leading hand and shoulder passed through the barrier. “How…” But how did you know that was a door seemed too ridiculous a question to ask, so he shut up in favor of observing. If he truly had slipped through time somehow, he needed to learn quickly, to cling to small familiarities, or go mad...

Thursday, 28 May 2015

Lime Gelatin and Other Monsters – the horrors of gelatin by Angel Martinez

Before anyone gets all hate mail on me, I have nothing against gelatin. Really enjoyed it as a child. My mom would make different colors and cut them into cubes and we’d have these dishes of colored light. Pretty neat, and nice and cool on those muggy summer days.

But…if you’re of a certain age, born in the fifties or sixties, you know what I mean by the horror of gelatin. Every party, every gathering, every school function had one of these monstrosities. The Jello salad. The gelatin mold. The oh-my-god-what-the-hell-is-that? concoctions. You see, there were entire recipe books of this stuff and decorative molds made just for gelatin creations. You let the gelatin set in this mold in the fridge, then took it out, held it in a bowl of scalding water for ten seconds, turned it over and voila! A Jello fruit basket, cornucopia, lobster, or shamrock. Cool.

Some weren’t so bad. The ones with canned mixed fruit, okay, a kid could deal with that. But then there were the odd colored ones, the ones that looked like they’d caught some strange phlegmy disease. There were horrid things in them: cottage cheese, sour cream, coleslaw. How could adults do these things to perfectly good gelatin? How?

Slowly, over the years, this unintentional aversion therapy took hold until now it’s difficult to look at gelatin and not think of those atrocities of social engineering. So when I was planning monsters for this series, lime gelatin seemed such an obvious choice. Of course, it’s a semi-sentient, oversized, deadly blob of gelatin, because, well, even cottage cheese infused gelatin is really only mildly monstrous.


Offbeat Crimes 1
(part of Amber Allure’s 77th Precinct Pax)

Blurb:
Officer Kyle Monroe’s encounter with a strange gelatinous creature in an alley leaves him scarred and forever changed, revealing odd abilities he wishes he didn’t have and earning him reassignment to Philadelphia’s 77th Precinct where all the cops have defective paranormal abilities. 

Just as Kyle’s starting to adjust to his fellow misfit squad mates, his new partner arrives. Tall, physically perfect, reserved, and claiming he has no broken psychic talents, Vikash Soren irritates Kyle in every way. But as much as he’d like to hate Vikash, Kyle finds himself oddly drawn to him, their non-abilities meshing in unexpected ways. 

Now, if Kyle and Vikash can learn to work together, they just might be able to stop the mysterious killer who has been leaving mutilated bodies along the banks of the Schuylkill. 

Excerpt:

Kyle sat up straighter, shifting to see between the heads in front of him. Soren looked like a poster boy for the model police officer, tall and straight, uniform crisp and sharp. He stood at parade rest beside the lieutenant, impassively surveying his new colleagues. A little knot of resentment lodged in Kyle’s stomach. At his own introduction to the 77th, he’d been nervous and fidgety, freaked out by the collection of…freaks. How can he be so calm? 

“Officer Soren transferred from the Harrisburg PD—” 

“Don’t they have enough freaky shit of their own up there?” Wolf called out in his rasping growl. 

“Since Harrisburg is in our jurisdiction,” she continued with a quelling glance. “He’ll start out partnered with Monroe.” 

“What does he do, ma’am? That it’s safe to put him with Kirby, er, Kyle?” Shira Lourdes asked as she flicked nervous glances across the room at Kyle. An empty chair slid away from her and fell over. Her partner, Greg Santos, shook his head and righted the unfortunate piece of furniture. 

“Officer Soren’s abilities are his business, which he may or may not choose to share if you ask. And don’t bully him about it either, any of you.” Lieutenant Dunfee swept the room again, pinning each of her officers with her needle-laser gaze like captive butterflies. “Monroe, my office after briefing. Info on your current case.” 

She dismissed them, stalking from the room with thunderclouds in her eyes. Kyle found himself approaching the new guy and trying his best not to be awkward. Did he offer to shake hands? Was it safe? Would the guy flinch like so many people did at the sight of Kyle’s scarred hands? Soren was even taller up close, six-foot-three of lean inscrutability, his blue eyes startlingly bright against smoky bronze skin. 

“Um, hi, I’m Kyle Monroe.” Kyle fidgeted when Soren didn’t offer his hand either. “You’re with me, I guess. I’ll show you our spot in the squad room.” 

Soren followed him silently and Kyle was starting to wonder if he was like Krisk in the not-speaking department until he finally spoke in a smooth, soft baritone, making Kyle startle and miss a step. “Why do they call you Kirby?” 

“You’d hear it sooner or later, I guess.” Kyle shrugged. “It’s this thing I do, absorbing other people’s talents temporarily. If they’re close to me. Or touch me. Like Kirby, the little pink dude in the video game.” 

“Ah.” 

Just that? Soren didn’t edge away, or change expression at all. Was he made of stone? “It’s a thing. Everyone here has a thing.” 

After a few more steps, Soren asked, “Always?” 

“What… Oh, was I always like this? Who knows? I mean, maybe I’ve picked up stray thoughts or something, but no. It’s pretty recent. Knowing that I do this.” 

Kyle took a wide arc around Vance as he entered the squad room, pointing to the double desk in the far corner, well removed from everyone else. “That’s ours. Coffee’s over there, but you might not want that coffee. Let me grab my file and we’ll go see the lieutenant.” 

“So what’s your story, Soren?” Vance called across the squad room. “What flies your freak flag?” 

“Yeah, what do you do?” Jeff Gatling stopped ’porting his banana from one corner of his desk to the other. 

“I don’t really do anything,” Soren answered as he hefted the empty coffeepot. “Guess I’ll make fresh since I’m the new guy.” 

He opened the top to remove the filter and every human voice in the squad room yelled out, “No!” 

Most people would have startled, maybe dropped the carafe. Soren just blinked at the roomful of people gesturing wildly. He took the filter out and emptied it over the trashcan. “Why not?” 

“You don’t want to do that.” Kyle stayed by his desk, a nice safe distance from the coffee station. “That’s Larry’s job.” 

“Larry’s not keeping up then.” 

The container of sweetener packets began to rattle. It shivered across the counter and leaped to a messy end, ceramic shards skittering across the floor. The desk that Krisk and Wolf shared rose from the floor several inches and slammed back down. Wolf fled with a squeaking yelp just before the desk flipped on its side. 

Soren glanced toward Kyle. “Larry’s not a cop, is he?” 

“He is…he was! A dead cop. Larry’s a ghost. He gets ticked if anyone else makes the coffee. Put the stuff back, please!” 

“Larry?” Soren raised his voice but to all appearances remained completely unruffled. “I’m new here. I’m very sorry I invaded your jurisdiction. See? I’m putting the carafe back. Closing the top. Are we good, Larry?” 

A breeze ruffled through a stack of papers, but no further mayhem ensued. The carafe slid from its pad on the coffeemaker and floated to the water cooler where Larry, who never manifested in a visible form, whistled tunelessly while he filled the carafe. 

From his dim corner of the room, Carrington said in his dry, genteel way, “Welcome to the Island of Misfit Freaks...” 

About the Author:
Angel Martinez is the erotic fiction pen name of a writer of several genres. Her experiences as a soldier, a nurse, a banker, and an underpaid corporate drone give her a broad view of the world and a deep appreciation for the astounding variety of people on this small planet. 

She currently lives part time in the hectic sprawl of northern Delaware and full time inside her head. She has one husband of over twenty years, one son, two cats, a love of all things beautiful and a terrible addiction to the consumption of both knowledge and chocolate. 

To contact Angel with praise, adulation, sarcasm, and complaints to the management (any management, she’s not picky, but it might not solve your flight reservation issue) please try these linky things:


*_*_*

Lime Gelatin and Other Monsters by Angel Martinez is now available at Amber Allure.

If you'd like the chance to win the entire pax collection, just leave a comment on today's post. On Saturday, a winner will be picked at random from all the comments made this week on the blog. Comment on all, and that's multiple chances to win!

Sunday, 24 May 2015

LATEST PAX RELEASE - Tales from the 77th Precinct

Genres: Gay (M/M) Erotic Romance

The titles listed below comprise the Tales from the 77th Precinct AmberPax™ Collection. Buy all five together and receive a 35% discount! To purchase any of the titles individually, click on the covers below to go to the books' separate pages. 

Crazy Joe
Crazy Joe
by A.J. Llewellyn & D.J. Manly
Novella
(Gay)
The Door Keeper
The Door Keeper
by Hurri Cosmo
Extended Novella
(Gay)
Eye for the Prize
Eye for the Prize
by Darcy Abriel
Extended Amber Kiss
(Gay)
Lime Gelatin and Other Monsters
Lime Gelatin and Other Monsters
by Angel Martinez
Novella
(Gay)
Scarecrows and Devils
Scarecrows and Devils
by T.A. Chase
Extended Novella
(Gay)

 
In conjunction with our newest release, we will be having a giveaway! Any comment made from today throughout the week (5/24-5/29) will be eligible to win the entire pax collection. A winner will be picked at random on Saturday from all comments received.

Thursday, 21 May 2015

Lime Gelatin and Other Monsters by Angel Martinez

(Part of the Offbeat Crime series)

What good is a squad of cops with psychic abilities if all of them are defective?

Officer Kyle Monroe’s encounter with a strange gelatinous creature in an alley leaves him scarred and forever changed, revealing odd abilities he wishes he didn’t have and earning him reassignment to Philadelphia’s 77th Precinct where all the cops have defective paranormal abilities.

Just as Kyle’s starting to adjust to his fellow misfit squad mates, his new partner arrives. Tall, physically perfect, reserved, and claiming he has no broken psychic talents, Vikash Soren irritates Kyle in every way. But as much as he’d like to hate Vikash, Kyle finds himself oddly drawn to him, their non-abilities meshing in unexpected ways.

Now, if Kyle and Vikash can learn to work together, they just might be able to stop the mysterious killer who has been leaving mutilated bodies along the banks of the Schuylkill.


Genres: Gay/Contemporary/Paranormal/Mystery/Detective/Romantic Comedy/Action/Adventure/ Series
Heat Level: 2
Length: Novella (19k words) 


Read a short excerpt...


...Kyle sat up straighter, shifting to see between the heads in front of him. Soren looked like a poster boy for the model police officer, tall and straight, uniform crisp and sharp. He stood at parade rest beside the lieutenant, impassively surveying his new colleagues. A little knot of resentment lodged in Kyle’s stomach. At his own introduction to the 77th, he’d been nervous and fidgety, freaked out by the collection of…freaks. How can he be so calm?

“Officer Soren transferred from the Harrisburg PD—”

“Don’t they have enough freaky shit of their own up there?” Wolf called out in his rasping growl.

“Since Harrisburg is in our jurisdiction,” she continued with a quelling glance. “He’ll start out partnered with Monroe.”

“What does he do, ma’am? That it’s safe to put him with Kirby, er, Kyle?” Shira Lourdes asked as she flicked nervous glances across the room at Kyle. An empty chair slid away from her and fell over. Her partner, Greg Santos, shook his head and righted the unfortunate piece of furniture.

“Officer Soren’s abilities are his business, which he may or may not choose to share if you ask. And don’t bully him about it either, any of you.” Lieutenant Dunfee swept the room again, pinning each of her officers with her needle-laser gaze like captive butterflies. “Monroe, my office after briefing. Info on your current case.”

She dismissed them, stalking from the room with thunderclouds in her eyes. Kyle found himself approaching the new guy and trying his best not to be awkward. Did he offer to shake hands? Was it safe? Would the guy flinch like so many people did at the sight of Kyle’s scarred hands? Soren was even taller up close, six-foot-three of lean inscrutability, his blue eyes startlingly bright against smoky bronze skin.

“Um, hi, I’m Kyle Monroe.” Kyle fidgeted when Soren didn’t offer his hand either. “You’re with me, I guess. I’ll show you our spot in the squad room.”

Soren followed him silently and Kyle was starting to wonder if he was like Krisk in the not-speaking department until he finally spoke in a smooth, soft baritone, making Kyle startle and miss a step. “Why do they call you Kirby?”

“You’d hear it sooner or later, I guess.” Kyle shrugged. “It’s this thing I do, absorbing other people’s talents temporarily. If they’re close to me. Or touch me. Like Kirby, the little pink dude in the video game.”

“Ah.”

Just that? Soren didn’t edge away, or change expression at all. Was he made of stone? “It’s a thing. Everyone here has a thing.”

After a few more steps, Soren asked, “Always?”

“What… Oh, was I always like this? Who knows? I mean, maybe I’ve picked up stray thoughts or something, but no. It’s pretty recent. Knowing that I do this.”

Kyle took a wide arc around Vance as he entered the squad room, pointing to the double desk in the far corner, well removed from everyone else. “That’s ours. Coffee’s over there, but you might not want that coffee. Let me grab my file and we’ll go see the lieutenant.”

“So what’s your story, Soren?” Vance called across the squad room. “What flies your freak flag?”

“Yeah, what do you do?” Jeff Gatling stopped ’porting his banana from one corner of his desk to the other.

“I don’t really do anything,” Soren answered as he hefted the empty coffeepot. “Guess I’ll make fresh since I’m the new guy.”

He opened the top to remove the filter and every human voice in the squad room yelled out, “No!”

Most people would have startled, maybe dropped the carafe. Soren just blinked at the roomful of people gesturing wildly. He took the filter out and emptied it over the trashcan. “Why not?”

“You don’t want to do that.” Kyle stayed by his desk, a nice safe distance from the coffee station. “That’s Larry’s job.”

“Larry’s not keeping up then.”

The container of sweetener packets began to rattle. It shivered across the counter and leaped to a messy end, ceramic shards skittering across the floor. The desk that Krisk and Wolf shared rose from the floor several inches and slammed back down. Wolf fled with a squeaking yelp just before the desk flipped on its side.

Soren glanced toward Kyle. “Larry’s not a cop, is he?”

“He is…he was! A dead cop. Larry’s a ghost. He gets ticked if anyone else makes the coffee. Put the stuff back, please!”

“Larry?” Soren raised his voice but to all appearances remained completely unruffled. “I’m new here. I’m very sorry I invaded your jurisdiction. See? I’m putting the carafe back. Closing the top. Are we good, Larry?”

A breeze ruffled through a stack of papers, but no further mayhem ensued. The carafe slid from its pad on the coffeemaker and floated to the water cooler where Larry, who never manifested in a visible form, whistled tunelessly while he filled the carafe.

From his dim corner of the room, Carrington said in his dry, genteel way, “Welcome to the Island of Misfit Freaks...”

Tuesday, 17 March 2015

The Girl with Dragons on Her Brain by Angel Martinez

Once upon a time, long, long ago… (Hush. We don’t ask how long. That’s rude.) There once was a little girl whose mother took her to see Sleeping Beauty, the 1970’s re-release, but who’s counting? While the movie entranced the little girl, the dragon at the end stunned her. Never mind that she knew the dragon was the evil fairy. She has never forgiven Prince Philip for killing the beautiful black and purple dragon.

As she grew older, she noticed a terrible pattern in legend and myth. Everyone slaughtered the beautiful dragons and her list of heroes she could not forgive grew—St. George, Sigurd, Bard the bowman. Her favorite Brothers Hildebrandt artwork wasn’t of elves, no, no. It was Smaug, bright, terrible, and stunning. She drew dragons instead of heroes, imagining their bleached skulls beneath the dragons’ feet.

Bloodthirsty little mite I was sometimes. Luckily, I found better dragon stories as I got older, especially the Pern novels, but those older dragons, my poor, slaughtered friends, have always stayed with me. Why did the dragon have to die? And was it a true death, or something more mystical, more ritually sacrificial?

Good thing about being a writer, you get to construct your own reality frameworks, build from the blueprints you’ve approved. When Amber decided to do a Dragon Pax, I knew what I had to write.

I had to save a dragon. Seriously, what better job is there than writer? I get to right all the wrongs of my childhood.


(A Brandywine Investigations story)

The most valuable pieces of jewelry are vanishing from the god Hermes’ Manhattan stores and the security feeds only pick up clouds of smoke. While the god of thieves, messengers, and commerce doesn’t appreciate someone stealing from him, he’s intrigued by this thief’s ingenuity and skill. When he enlists his family to trap his burglar, he gets the surprise of his immortal life.

Fafnir just wants to be left alone. Doomed over the centuries to a never-ending cycle of violent death and painful rebirth, he had hoped to find an escape in the quiet life of author and illustrator. But there are forces at work he doesn’t understand, and his peace is shattered by the return to old cycles and the sudden interference of a beautiful and incredibly irritating Greek god.

Excerpt:

The last of the daytime lights shut down in succession, signaling the departure of the last employee. Velvet dark descended, with only the security lights illuminating the empty cases and the exits. The presumed target, locked away in the safe behind the case, was a marquis cut pink diamond of incredible clarity, set in a choker of white diamonds and pearls. According to Hermes’s calculations, this was indeed the third most expensive piece for sale in the city. The most expensive one left now, actually.

“I hate waiting,” Dio whispered as he hunkered down behind the screen.

Hermes shot him an irritated look. “Yeah. Big shock. Why are you here, again?”

“I think they stole your sense of humor, too,” Dio grumbled.

That hit too close to home. Hermes ran a hand over the back of his neck as he tried his best to unclench every tightened muscle. “Sorry. You came to help. That was uncalled for. There’s just something wrong about this whole thing. Has me in knots.”

“S’Okay. After we catch the creep, why don’t you bring your guitar, come jam for a few hours? I’ve got some good red stocked. We could see if Orpheus is up for it, too.”

Hermes bumped shoulders with his favorite brother. “Thanks. That might be just the thing. Let’s see what happens here first, right?”

Dark eyes huge in the dim light, Dio nodded and quieted. Yes, he was the family party boy, but he was also still half-wild. His nerves would be humming with the thrill of the hunt. There was the difference, Hermes realized. Zack, Dio, Uncle Hades, even Charon—they were all hunters and warriors. This sort of set up excited them, invigorated them. Hermes, jittery and slightly nauseous, was starting to think he should have waited in the van with Hephaestus.

An hour passed, then half an hour more. Just as he was convincing himself his thief had taken the night off, the door to the employee entrance clicked. Alarms should have sounded. Either the person had a key and the alarm codes, or the thief had disabled the system.

Or they were already in place before my staff left? But he’d still have to disable the alarm. Maybe I have to start designing magic-proof security systems. Wonder how much of a market there would be?

Dio gripped his arm and pointed. A shadow slid along the far wall, possibly a large man but the strange lighting could have added the perception of mass to a small one. The shadow stopped. Soft hissing drifted across the room, the same they had heard on the sound reconstruction the previous evening. And cue the smoke…

Creepers of gray slid along the floor toward the safe. They climbed over the cases, moving, ethereal vines obscuring the glass, and edged up the walls to block the security cameras. The soft rhythmic hissing slowly evolved into whistling, Peer Gynt again but the more haunting melancholy of Solveig’s Song instead of the Mountain King’s menace. Strange choice. The whistling became humming, the thief making no effort to hide his heavy footfalls. Hermes caught a glimpse of Doc Martens, size thirteen at least, before the boots vanished into the smoke surrounding the little room with the safe.

Tumblers clicked. The clank of a safe handle echoed through the smoke-shrouded quiet. That strange hollow laugh, bone deep and mirthless, emanated from the vicinity of the presumably open safe.

“Now, Zagreus!” Uncle Hades bellowed. A sharp snap followed, then the susurration of thousands of metallic links swiftly dragged upward. The thief’s roar rattled cases, an impotent storm of fury as Heph’s magical golden net snared him and hoisted him, struggling and snarling toward the ceiling.

Hermes uncoiled from behind his screen, prepared to confront this being who dared to steal from a god, even indirectly. He strode toward the center of the showroom while Dio called a breeze to clear the smoke. Flashes of black clothing and dark red hair flickered through the gold mesh as the captive thrashed, his large frame only hampering his struggles.

Hands on his hips, Hermes shouted up to the net, “Give me one good reason I shouldn’t call the c—”

Another roar deafened him, vibrating through the floor tiles. The body in the net began to expand. Instead of glimpses of black cloth and red hair, now gleaming red-gold hide sparked in the mesh. A huge claw poked through the side of the net and sliced the links open as if the magically forged gold were nothing more than pudding. Hermes could only watch in horror as a sinuous head emerged from the opening, followed by yard-wide, scaled shoulders and…wings.

The thief leaped free, plunging, then rising in the air as his wings unfurled. With one final roar, he arrowed toward the windows at the front of the shop and crashed through, leaving a dragon-sized hole in his wake.

*_*_*

Dragons, Diamonds, and Discord by Angel Martinez is now available at Amber Allure.

If you'd like the chance to win the entire pax collection, just leave a comment on today's post. On Saturday, a winner will be picked at random from all the comments made this week on the blog. Comment on all, and that's multiple chances to win!

Sunday, 15 March 2015

LATEST PAX RELEASE - Kiss of Fire

Genres: Gay (M/M) Erotic Romance

The titles listed below comprise the Kiss of Fire AmberPax™ Collection. Buy all five together and receive a 35% discount! To purchase any of the titles individually, click on the covers below to go to the books' separate pages. 

About a Dragon
About a Dragon
by A.J. Llewellyn
Extended Amber Kiss
(Gay)
Dragon Herder
Dragon Herder
by K.M. Mahoney
Extended Amber Kiss
(Gay)
Dragons, Diamonds, and Discord
Dragons, Diamonds, and Discord
by Angel Martinez
Extended Novella
(Gay)
Pandemonia: Combustible
Pandemonia: Combustible
by Darcy Abriel
Novella
(Gay)
Trailing Air
Trailing Air
by T.A.Chase
Extended Novella
(Gay)

 
In conjunction with our newest release, we will be having a giveaway! Any comment made from today throughout the week (3/15-3/20) will be eligible to win the entire pax collection. A winner will be picked at random on Saturday from all comments received.

Monday, 9 March 2015

Dragons, Diamonds, and Discord by Angel Martinez

(Part of the Brandywine Investigations series)

The most valuable pieces of jewelry are vanishing from the god Hermes’ Manhattan stores and the security feeds pick up only clouds of smoke. While the god of thieves, messengers, and commerce doesn’t appreciate someone stealing from him, he’s intrigued by this thief’s ingenuity and skill. When Hermes enlists his family to trap his burglar, he gets the surprise of his immortal life.

Fafnir just wants to be left alone. Doomed over the centuries to a never-ending cycle of violent death and painful rebirth, he had hoped to find an escape in the quiet life of author and illustrator. But there are forces at work he doesn’t understand, and his peace is shattered by the return to old cycles and the sudden interference of a beautiful and incredibly irritating Greek god.

Genres: Gay/Contemporary Fantasy/Shapeshifter/The Arts/Action/Adventure/Suspense/Thriller/
Series
Heat Level: 3
Length: Extended Novella (39k words) 


Read a short excerpt...


...The last of the daytime lights shut down in succession, signaling the departure of the last employee. Velvet dark descended, with only the security lights illuminating the empty cases and the exits. The presumed target, locked away in the safe behind the case, was a marquis cut pink diamond of incredible clarity, set in a choker of white diamonds and pearls. According to Hermes’ calculations, this was indeed the third most expensive piece for sale in the city. The most expensive one left now, actually.

“I hate waiting,” Dio whispered as he hunkered behind the screen.

Hermes shot him an irritated look. “Yeah. Big shock. Why are you here, again?”

“I think they stole your sense of humor, too,” Dio grumbled.

That hit too close to home. Hermes ran a hand over the back of his neck as he tried his best to unclench every tightened muscle. “Sorry. You came to help. That was uncalled for. There’s something wrong about this whole thing. Has me in knots.”

“’S’Okay. After we catch the creep, why don’t you bring your guitar, come jam for a few hours? I’ve got some good red stocked. We could see if Orpheus is up for it, too.”

Hermes bumped shoulders with his favorite brother. “Thanks. That might be just the thing. Let’s see what happens here first, right?”

Dark eyes huge in the dim light, Dio nodded and quieted. Yes, he was the family party boy, but he was also still half-wild. His nerves would be humming with the thrill of the hunt. There was the difference, Hermes realized. Zack, Dio, Uncle Hades, even Charon—they were all hunters and warriors. This sort of set up excited them, invigorated them. Hermes, jittery and slightly nauseous, was starting to think he should have waited in the van with Hephaestus.

An hour passed, then half an hour more. Just as he was convincing himself his thief had taken the night off, the door to the employee entrance clicked. Alarms should have sounded. Either the person had a key and the alarm codes, or the thief had disabled the system.

Or they were already in place before my staff left? But he’d still have to disable the alarm. Maybe I have to start designing magic-proof security systems. Wonder how much of a market there would be?

Dio gripped his arm and pointed. A shadow slid along the far wall, possibly a large man, but the strange lighting could have added the perception of mass to a small one. The shadow stopped. Soft hissing drifted across the room, the same they had heard on the sound reconstruction the previous evening. And cue the smoke…

Creepers of gray slid along the floor toward the safe. They climbed over the cases, moving, ethereal vines obscuring the glass, and edged up the walls to block the security cameras. The soft rhythmic hissing slowly evolved into whistling, Peer Gynt again, but the more haunting melancholy of “Solveig’s Song” instead of the Mountain King’s menace. Strange choice. The whistling became humming, the thief making no effort to hide his heavy footfalls. Hermes caught a glimpse of Doc Martens, size thirteen at least, before the boots vanished into the smoke surrounding the little room with the safe.

Tumblers clicked. The clank of a safe handle echoed through the smoke-shrouded quiet. That strange hollow laugh, bone deep and mirthless, emanated from the vicinity of the presumably open safe.

“Now, Zagreus!” Uncle Hades bellowed. A sharp snap followed, then the susurration of thousands of metallic links swiftly dragged upward. The thief’s roar rattled cases, an impotent storm of fury as Heph’s magical golden net snared him and hoisted him, struggling and snarling, toward the ceiling.

Hermes uncoiled from behind his screen, prepared to confront this being who dared to steal from a god, even indirectly...

Tuesday, 11 June 2013

New reviews

New reviews for recent pax releases!

Canines, Crosshairs and Corpses by Angel Martinez received 5 Kisses from Alison at Top 2 Bottom Reviews, saying "the characters are well-written, flawed, and real."

Chocolate Minx at Literary Nymphs Reviews gave Getting Real by Christiane France 4 Nymphs, calling it a "charming new beginnings story."

At MM Good Book Reviews, Tams gave The Beat by D.J. Manly 3 Hearts and said she was "wiping the steam off my Kindle by the end."

Serena Yates at Rainbow Reviews said By a Thread by L.A. Witt was "intensely emotional" and a "hot, sweet read."




Monday, 20 May 2013

Will the real Hades please stand up? by Angel Martinez


I always felt the God of the Underworld got shortchanged in pop culture and needed a press agent. That horrible portrayal of him in Disney’s Hercules? Really? He came off as a parody version of a grasping business tycoon, the jealous little brother who never got any attention. The portrayal in the Hercules series on television was better, but not nearly as interesting as some of the other gods on the show.

When we try to find the real Hades, we run into roadblocks, holes in the mythical record, things left unsaid but several bits and pieces do make it through the mists of time. We know he was the oldest brother of the three original Olympians. We know he fought fiercely in the war against his father. We know that at the end of the war, when the brothers drew lots to divide the world, Hades got the Underworld and Zeus got all the glory.

That’s always been the most telling bit for me. He agreed to let chance decide rather than insisting on his right to rule as the eldest. When he drew the short straw, he accepted his fate. He always struck me as the responsible brother, the one concerned with justice. His brothers ran around making as many babies as possible. He stayed home and made sure his slice of the world ran properly.

This is the god I fell in love with when I was young – the strong, steady, serious god – and this is the Hades I’ve chosen to portray in my new Immortals story. It’s all about life after the Underworld. And why some gods might have an atrophied sense of humor.

A little excerpt exclusive (Hades is in the modern world, going by the name Aiden Plouton)– you’ll see what I mean:

*_*_*_*

When he cracked one eye a few minutes later, Mr. Plouton hadn’t moved, his eyes tracking something outside. “What’re you watching?”

“Dogs.”

“Dogs?”

“People walking their dogs on the other side of the river. Quite a variety of breeds.”

“Yeah? Like what?”

Mr. Plouton nodded toward the window, one corner of his mouth tipping up. “There’s a borzoi passing now. There was a foxhound, a pair of akitas, a Tibetan mastiff, a pomerian and a chow chow.”

Careful. That’s almost a smile. “You like dogs, huh?”

“Yes.” The word sounded so sad, so wistful, Ti had to wonder if there had been a canine death recently. He was about to ask when the big man’s eyes lit up. He motioned to the window. “What a lovely Samoyed. Come see.”

Ti managed a dry chuckle. “I’ll have to take your word for it.”

“Ah.” Before he could protest, Mr. Plouton strode over, scooped Ti up in his arms, and carried him to the window. “There. Now you can see.”

“Um…thanks?” The casual ease with which the man held him was scary as hell. Sure, Ti knew he didn’t weigh too much after the past six months on the streets, but he was over six feet tall for pity’s sake. No one should be able to carry him like a rag doll. To be polite, he looked out the window at the dog and found he had to agree. If someone told him he had to have a dog, then that white bit of fluffy pretty would have been high up on the list of candidates. “Nice.”

“Very intelligent dogs. Highly energetic.”

Maybe not then. Ti risked a glance back at his host and transport. The unguarded sorrow in his eyes yanked at his heart. Damn. “So this mangy mutt moves into a really high-class neighborhood, right next door to a couple of snobby poodles.”

Mr. Plouton gave him a noncommittal grunt, so he forged on.

“Okay, so the poodles aren’t real pleased with their new neighbor and they decide that they need to march right over there and put this lop-eared, flea-bitten mutt in his place, right? So the first poodle turns up her nose at him and says, ‘My name is Fifi. F-I-F-I.’ And the second snooty poodle chimes in, ‘My name is Mimi. M-I-M-I.’ And then the mutt looks at one and then the other. He sits up straight and declares, ‘My name is Fido. F-I-D-E-A-U-X.’”

Deep blue eyes stared at him nonplussed. “Dogs don’t speak to each other like that.”

“No, I know. It’s a joke. The plain, ordinary dog knowing French. Funny? Haha? You’re supposed to laugh. Or at least smile politely.” Still nothing. “Um. Never mind.” Ti heaved a sigh. “Mom and Dad didn’t hug you much, did they?”

He heard an odd grinding sound and realized it was Mr. Plouton’s teeth. “My father tried to kill me. Several times.”

*_*_*_*

Canines, Crosshairs and Corpses by Angel Martinez is now available at Amber Allure.

If you'd like the chance to win the entire pax collection, just leave a comment on today's post. On Saturday, a winner will be picked at random from all the comments made this week on the blog. Comment on all, and that's multiple chances to win!


Sunday, 19 May 2013

LATEST PAX RELEASE - Immortals



Visit the links to take advantage of our

Special Price

Immortals

An AmberPax™ Collection of
Gay Erotic Romance 
by Various Authors 
Genre: Gay (M/M) FantasyRomance 
Cover Copyright ©2012 by Trace Edward Zaber
Included in this collection of erotic romance...
(For more information on each title, or to purchase separately, click on the book covers below!)

Canines, Crosshairs and Corpses
Canines, Crosshairs and Corpses
by Angel Martinez
Extended Novella
(Gay)
Club Arrest
Club Arrest
by D.J. Manly
Novella
(Gay)
Mr. Wolfe
Mr. Wolfe
by A.J. Llewellyn
Novella
(Gay)
Something Rich and Strange
Something Rich and Strange
by Helen Louise Caroll
Extended Amber Kiss
(Gay)
Truth or Lie
Truth or Lie
by Lynn Lorenz
Extended Novella
(Gay)

 
In conjunction with our newest release, we will be having a giveaway! Starting tomorrow, leave a comment on any post made during the week (5/19-5/24), and you'll be eligible to win the entire pax collection. A winner will be picked at random on Saturday from all comments received.

Monday, 13 May 2013

Canines, Crosshairs and Corpses by Angel Martinez


What's a Lord of the Dead to do? Hades' bride of several thousand years has served him with divorce papers and she doesn't just want him out of her life, she wants the palace and the dog, too. Hades' nephews and his faithful ferryman, Charon, are determined to find their uncle something to distract him before he expires of brooding misery.

Tiberius Snyder had a good future, until his mother dies and his employer shuts down. When he finds himself alone with nowhere to live, he turns to panhandling and to drink, depression slowly killing him.

He just wants a place to sleep out of the cold wind, but Death finds him in a dirty alley. Odd. Ti never thought Death would be so hot... 


Genres: Gay/Contemporary Fantasy/Action/Adventure/Mystery/Detective
Heat Level: 2
Length: Extended Novella (40k words) 


Read a short excerpt...


...“My lord, I don’t think this is how it’s usually done,” Charon protested as he trailed Hades into the complex’s garage. “Client contact first. Then case. Then investigate.”

“How will clients know to rely on us if we have nothing to our credit?” Hades thumbed the button on his car remote and the Viper flashed its lights in eager welcome. “And it isn’t only the wealthy that need justice. Those who can pay for our services, will. Those who can’t, shouldn’t need to wait for the authorities to care.”

“Point taken. Just don’t start calling yourself the Dark Knight.”

He regarded Charon across the car’s roof with a puzzled frown. “Why would I?”

“Never mind, my lord. Idle chatter.”

Despite Charon’s odd, opaque sense of humor, he was a practical being and had suggested that the Viper might attract unwanted attention in places where they might not wish to be remembered.

He stroked the Viper’s hood and whispered, “Aoratos.” The metal beast obediently faded from sight.

“I do wish you would wait until we were in the car.”

“It’s not as if the door has moved.”

Charon had developed the disturbing and thoroughly modern habit of rolling his eyes, which he did just prior to fumbling the door open and vanishing inside.

The police radio, on which they had first heard the reports, had been an interesting addition to their home. Most of the condominium’s contents had been in place prior to their arrival, ordered by certain nephews and nieces who were all excited about helping Uncle Hades as if he were some sort of new challenge to their collective ingenuity.

Hermes had chosen most of the furniture, heavy, masculine pieces in dark, soothing colors. Dio had stocked both pantry and refrigerator, with as much thought to pleasing food as to drink. Hephaestus, after coaxing from his brothers, had chosen artwork for the walls and sculptural pieces both decorative and useful, some of which he had forged himself. Aphrodite had been more than pleased to be included in the boys’ project, insisting that they leave the choice of dishes, glassware, and linens to her.

But the radio, Charon had produced. Once he explained its uses, Hades found it not only a valuable addition but also a fascinating window into his new city. The codes were a bit of a mystery, at first, but Charon located information on his infernal all-knowing machine that explained them. After that, the calls served as a map and timekeeper of lawbreaking, showing where and when certain crimes happened with the greatest frequency.

At the first murder, a knifing, Charon had shrugged. “The very poor are susceptible to violence, my lord. Theft, drugs, simple bad luck. A man without a home has few defenses.”

The second murder of a homeless man, a shooting, still left his faithful ferryman unconvinced. “They hardly seem related, my lord. Different parts of town. Different methods.”

But Hades kept all the details tucked in a corner of his mind, so by the third murder in four days, a strangling this time, he was ready to act.

“You’re suggesting a systematic extermination, my lord?” Charon had asked in alarm.

“I suggest nothing on such sparse knowledge. But we need to be out there. To feel the flows of minds and hearts. Something is amiss here.”

While Charon protested, he didn’t press. They had known each other too long for that. As he eased the invisible Viper out onto the street, their first foray into investigation began... 

Saturday, 1 December 2012

LATEST PAX RELEASE - Once Upon A Fairy Tale


Visit the links to take advantage of our

Special Price

AmberPax Erotica Collection: Once Upon A Fairy Tale - Click for large version Once Upon A Fairy Tale
An AmberPax™ Collection of
Gay Fairy Tale Romance by Various Authors
ISBN-13: 978-1-61124-345-1 (Electronic Set)
Genre: Gay (M/M) Fairy Tale Romance

Cover Copyright ©2012 by Trace Edward Zaber
Included in this collection of erotic romance...
(For more information on each title, or to purchase separately, click on the book covers below!)

Beau And The Beast
Beau And The Beast
by Rick R. Reed
Extended Amber Kiss
(Gay)
Griff And Ash
Griff And Ash
by D. J. Manly
Novella
(Gay)
Hanson And Graber: The Price Of Magic
Hanson And Graber:
The Price Of Magic

by Deirdre O'Dare
Extended Amber Kiss
(Gay)
Waking The Prince
Waking The Prince
by Shawn Lane
Novella
(Gay)
Wild Rose, Silent Snow
Wild Rose, Silent Snow
by Angel Martinez
Extended Novella
(Gay)