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                      Some Like it Hotter  
                        A man out of time. A woman  out of options.  
                         Natchez detective Mike Laferty will do anything to undo his  brother-in-law’s murder. A man named Slick offers him a deal he can’t refuse—go  back to June 19th, the day before the killing. Mike strikes the deal  and wakes up on June 19th gazing down the barrel of an antique  gun held by Abigail Kingsley, who confirms it is June 19th, but the  year is 1865. Now Mike must prevent the murder from over a century in the past,  while being taunted by a shape-shifting Slick. The devil may own his soul, but  Abigail stakes a powerful claim on his aching heart. But will her darkest  secret be his ultimate undoing…? 
                        “Dirty  Harry” meets “Scarlett O’Hara” and there’s Hell to pay....  
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                  Excerpt:  copyright 2018, all rights reserved  
                  “I’ll bet Dirty Harry never had to do this,”  Mike Laferty said, leaning back against the worn vinyl upholstery. 
                  “I hear that.”  Barney aimed his  binoculars toward the three-story building again. 
                  Parked in a lonely alley behind a waterfront  warehouse, the Chevy was more like a prison cell than a car. Darkness settled  over the sleeping city of Natchez like a shroud; a thick bank of fog from the  river blotted out the stars. The streetlights appeared as nothing more than  faint golden halos in the unseasonably cool, moisture-laden air. 
                  Trying to fill the boring hours with happier  thoughts, Mike allowed himself a smile. Barney and Carrie’s great news more  than compensated for the gloomy ambiance. “Man, this is great—I’m going to be  an uncle,” Mike said, feeling himself warm from within. His sister, Carrie, had  been trying for years to have a baby. Finally, it looked as if her dream might  come true. “Let’s see, today’s June twentieth, so when’s the baby due?” 
                  “Sometime in early March, you’ll be an uncle  and I’ll be a dad.”  Barney gave a satisfied grunt, keeping his curly head  turned toward the dark building as he spoke. “I hate stake-outs.” 
                  “Yeah. Me, too.”  Mike sighed. “Having a  brother-in-law for my partner’s bad enough. I can just imagine what having an  expectant father around is going to be like.” 
                  “It’ll be far freakin’ out, and you know it.”   Barney chuckled low in his throat, never interrupting his surveillance of the  still-dark building. “You don’t suppose Milton’s men are going to let us down  again tonight, do you?” 
                  “Nah.”  Mike shifted in his seat to peer  toward the building. “If they do, it’ll be embarrassing as hell after all the  trouble we had convincing the state police this was Milton’s point of  operation.” 
                  “A little town like Natchez sure as hell isn’t  the most likely spot.”  Barney shot Mike a crooked grin, barely visible in  the increasing darkness. “Yeah, Mike, I’d say after ten days of this crap, it’s  past time for them to come out and play.” 
                  “That’s for sure.” 
                  “So, you think the kid’ll be as good-lookin’  as his old man?” 
                  Mike chuckled, ignoring his partner’s  indignant grunt as he turned to face the warehouse again. “I don’t know,  Barney. I think Carrie’d prefer he take after his Uncle Mike.” 
                  “In your dreams.” 
                  They laughed quietly, nervously, continuing  to stare in silence at the building. 
                  Nothing happened. Minutes turned into hours.  Well after midnight Mike was ready to call their shift another waste of time  when a van, headlights off, pulled into the alley adjacent to the warehouse. “Hot  damn.”  A few minutes later, light filled an upstairs window. 
                  “It’s about time,” Barney whispered, drawing  his gun from his shoulder holster and releasing the safety. 
                  Mike mimicked his partner’s actions, sharing  Barney’s obvious excitement. “This is one crack shipment that isn’t going to  find its way to the streets.”  Barney didn’t have to respond—Mike knew  they both felt the same way. Group think became automatic after all the years  they’d worked together. 
                  “Milton’s mine.” 
                  “Don’t be an ass.”  Mike reached for his  partner’s arm. “That kid’s overdose wasn’t your fault and you know it.” 
                  Barney sat quietly for several seconds, then  released a sigh. “I know, but if my last collar had stuck, Milton would’ve been  locked up...and that kid would be getting ready for his frigging prom about  now.” 
                  Mike nodded, knowing this wasn’t the time to  press. “I’ll call for backup.” 
                  “Do that.”  Barney turned toward the  warehouse again. 
                  Mike reached for the radio and wasted  precious seconds waiting for the frequency to clear, then he called for backup.  Every time they were on the brink of busting Milton’s operation, something  always interfered. The drug lord had more than his share of luck, but he was  pure pond scum. 
                  “Ready?” 
                  “Yeah,” Mike whispered, climbing from the  dark car. Barney had permanently disabled the dome light to allow them to get  out of the car without tipping off the bad guys. He and Barney were the white  hats now, out to see justice done, to preserve the American way. But this wasn’t  a game like the cops and robbers they’d played together as children. 
                  This was for keeps. 
                  “Cover me, Mike,” Barney whispered over his  shoulder, breaking silently for the open alley before his partner could stop  him. 
                  “Barney, damn you. Wait for backup,” Mike  whispered fiercely—futilely—then darted from the sidewalk, adrenalin pumping  through his body. He flattened himself against the cold brick building across  the alley, squinting to get his bearings through the thick fog. Barney had  always been the brave one—foolishly so, on more than one occasion. 
                  But now Barney was an expectant father. Mike  couldn’t let anything happen to his brother-in-law. That would devastate  Carrie, especially now. 
                  One of them had to keep his head, and it sure  as hell wouldn’t be Barney. History’d proven that. Mike’s brother-in-law hadn’t  earned the status of most-decorated cop in the department from practicing  common sense. Mike had to be the voice of reason. 
                  Scary thought. 
                  Barney—the horse’s ass—was walking right  through the side entrance as if he paid the mortgage, the taxes, and had the  only key. Mike clenched his teeth, feeling his jaw twitch as he watched the  slight shifting of light near the doorway where Barney slipped stealthily  inside. 
                  With the bad guys. 
                  Cautiously, Mike scanned the street. Nothing.  Where was their backup? Damn. Releasing the breath he’d been  holding, he darted across the alley, thankful for his black athletic shoes,  dark jeans and denim jacket. He was quiet and invisible in the night. 
                  Quiet and invisible was the only way to be on  a night like this. 
                  There was an edge to the evening that Mike  had felt before, and he didn’t like it. Instincts became lifelines to cops over  the years, and separated the veterans from the rookies. 
                  Tonight, for some insane reason, Mike felt  like a rookie. 
                  Pausing outside the door Barney had slipped  through, Mike waited for his breathing to slow, listening for sounds from  inside. What the hell was Barney doing in there? 
                  Panic wasn’t Mike’s way, but tonight he had  to struggle against it. The stakes had gone up, and suddenly he almost wished  Barney hadn’t shared his good news. 
                  Why couldn’t he shake the cold sense of dread  that had crawled inside him like a deadly snake? 
                  I hate this.  
                  The door was open, allowing Mike to squeeze  through noiselessly. He had to find Barney. Some deep feeling of urgency  coursed through him, driving him to seek out his partner before... 
                  A cold sweat popped out on his forehead as he  eased his way along a dark hall toward the stairs. Weapon drawn, Mike kept his  back against the wall to guide him until he reached the metal stair railing,  then he gripped it with one hand, continuing to clutch his gun in the other. 
                  “You son of a bitch!”  The shout echoed  down the dark stairwell. 
                  Mike took the steps two at a time, reaching  the top as a gun exploded on the other side of the door. His blood turned to  ice. He froze, his free hand clutching the doorknob. 
                  Always wait for backup.  
                  Swallowing his fear, he ignored all the  standard rules of precaution as he turned the knob and opened the door. More  darkness greeted him on the other side, but he knew he was no longer alone. A  subtle alteration in the blackness divulged another’s presence. 
                  Barney? 
                  “Stupid cop,” the raspy voice—definitely not  Barney’s—taunted from across the hallway. “Dead cop.” 
                  Mike dropped to a low crouch, taking aim on  the shifting silhouette. What dead cop? Did the thug mean him? 
                  Or Barney? 
                  A flash from the man’s gun pinpointed his  location as a spray of bullets blasted into the wall just above Mike’s head.  Splintered plaster showered him as he scooted to his left, hoping to confuse  the gunman. 
                  Where’s Barney? Mike  couldn’t risk accidentally shooting his partner. He took careful aim and waited  for the man to fire another round, praying his adversary would miss again. 
                  Both guns discharged almost simultaneously,  followed by the welcome thud of a falling body. Mike lurched to the right,  coming into contact with something warm and solid on the floor. 
                  Mike’s heart hammered dangerously loud as he  remained alert to a possible counter attack from his enemy. He felt the shape  on the floor with his free hand. 
                  A body. 
                  Swallowing the lump in his throat, Mike moved  his hand along the supine form, finding warm, sticky blood where there should  have been a neck. He struggled against exploding panic, glancing once toward  the area where his opponent had fallen. There was no movement, no sound. 
                  Cautiously, he reached into his pocket and  withdrew the penlight hooked to his key ring. After flipping it on, he shined  the small light on the body. 
                  Barney. 
                  “Oh, God.”  Mike sucked in a breath to  kill his rising nausea as he searched his brother-in-law’ face above the wound.  Sightless eyes stared up at the ceiling. 
                  Lowering the beam, Mike confirmed that CPR  would be pointless. Barney’s throat and neck were blown wide open—no chance  that his heart would beat again. 
                  You dumb son of a bitch.  I told you to wait for backup. He sucked in a breath and struggled for  control. How the hell am I going to tell...Carrie? 
                  Barney—his childhood playmate. His partner.  Carrie’s husband. Mike’s kid sister was a widow because of Milton and his apes. 
                  A gaping wound in his own throat would’ve  been easier—better—than this. God, not Barney. 
                  The sound of running feet came from the far  end of the hall, then a door burst open. Three men carrying large  flashlights—and even bigger guns—emerged, stopping to take in the carnage. 
                  “Holy shit. Somebody got Joe,” a man said,  sweeping the floor with his flashlight. “Milton said we wouldn’t have no  trouble tonight.” 
                  “Looks like plenty trouble to me,” another  man said. 
                  This wasn’t his backup. 
                  Mike eased back against the door, reminding  himself that Barney was beyond help. Besides, Carrie sure as hell didn’t need  to lose her husband and brother on the same night. 
                  “There!” 
                  Knowing he’d been spotted, Mike leapt to his  feet. Forcing the image of Barney’s lifeless eyes from his mind, he sailed down  the metal staircase, just ahead of the bullets fired by his pursuers. He  sprinted out the side door and out into the alley. He had to get to the car.  Hell, Barney had the only set of keys. 
                  Men thundered down the metal stairs inside  the building as Mike started to run. They wouldn’t stop until they had him. 
                  Just like Barney. 
                  Barney.  
                  He ran down the street with his pistol still  clutched in his fist, sweat and tears streaming down his face. Calm  down Mike. Need to find a phone. Need to think. Let somebody know what  happened. Barney, you bastard. Milton, I’ll get you, I swear. 
                  He didn’t know or care where he ran—it didn’t  matter. 
                  They were getting closer. 
                  Mike rounded a corner on the rain-slick  street, desperately searching for a place to hide. To think he and Barney had  planned to put the biggest crime boss in the state of Mississippi behind bars  for the rest of his natural days. 
                  Now all that mattered was survival. 
                  His lungs felt as if they would burst. His  heart battered the walls of his chest. This pace was killing him. 
                  But to stop meant certain death. 
                  No matter how far he ran in the misty  streets, the footsteps were never far behind. A car joined in the chase,  careening after him through the fog. Even the cover of darkness couldn’t  protect him. 
                  Mike paused at the corner, recognizing the  huge old house across the street. No one ever went inside the antebellum  mansion on the outskirts of town. Everyone in Mississippi knew—thought—it was  haunted. 
                  The second story windows stared back at him  like harbingers of disaster. 
                  Get a grip, Mike.  
                  Barney wouldn’t have been afraid. Besides,  Mike didn’t believe in ghosts. He’d seen too much real life—and death—to start  believing in nonsense at this late date. 
                  Clenching his teeth, he looked over his  shoulder. He couldn’t see his pursuers, but he heard them. In only a matter of  minutes they’d have him, unless he could manage to become invisible. 
                  Picturing his sister’s smiling face when she  and Barney’d told him their good news, he knew what he had to do. In  desperation, he ducked beneath the board which had been nailed to the broken  gate, then darted across the overgrown lawn. When he reached the porch of the  run-down mansion, he dropped to his knees and waited in the shadows. 
                  The gang members congregated on the walk just  outside the gate. Mike’s lungs burned for air, but he denied them the luxury  awhile longer. He had to make sure his enemies were gone before he dared make  too much noise. High humidity and cool temperatures turned the air into a  conduit for sound. His oxygen-starved senses would have to wait awhile longer. 
                  Because if they caught him, he wouldn’t need  to concern himself with trivial matters like oxygen. 
                  He listened while the threesome compared  notes with the driver of the Thunderbird that had stopped beside them. “Where  the hell’d he go?” one voice demanded. 
                  “Man, Milton’s gonna have our asses for this.” 
                  “More’n our asses.” 
                  “Shit!  We gotta find this dude.” 
                  “We gotta go back and get rid of the other  one.” 
                  “Yeah, get in. The fish are hungry.” 
                  Barney. Mike  closed his eyes. Even if he managed to escape from Milton’s goons tonight, they’d  catch up with him sooner or later. Every thug in town knew Laferty and Sloane.  As soon as the killers figured out Barney’s identity, they’d know exactly where  to look for Mike. 
                  He was as good as dead right now. 
                  Fish fodder.  
                  “One of us has gotta hang around here,” the  driver said. “Just in case he’s hidin’ out, waiting for us to leave.” 
                  Great.  
                  “I ain’t stayin’ here by myself, man.  Everybody knows that old house is haunted.” 
                  “Haunted?”  The driver chuckled, a  menacing sound on the night air. “You’re full of shit, Billy. Now stay here and  keep your eyes open. We gotta take out that piece of shit or we’ll be feedin’  the fish. Got it?” 
                  “Yeah.”  The man ordered to remain  grumbled incoherently as the others climbed into the car and it sped away. 
                  Mike glanced behind him at the dilapidated  house. He had to get inside and rest for a while. The guy thought the house was  haunted. Perfect. For tonight, it would be haunted. 
                  By Mike Laferty. 
                  Once the sun came up, he’d find his way to  Carrie. 
                  He watched until the man crossed the street  and vanished into the alley, then Mike crept quietly around to the side of the  house. He passed by a few boarded windows, hesitating to jiggle a couple of  doorknobs. No luck. Everything was locked up tight, though he couldn’t imagine  why. It wasn’t as if the place was on the hit list of any local burglars. In  fact, no one ever went near the place. 
                  Except maybe on Halloween. 
                  When he found the French doors on the west  side, his luck changed. The old lock was easily picked and soon the right side  swung open on squeaky hinges. 
                  Mike held his breath—what little he  had—wondering if any of Milton’s men might still be in the area. Every sound  could be the last one he ever made or heard. He had to be more careful; his  sister needed him. 
                  Once the door closed against the damp outside  air, he heaved a sigh of relief and gulped precious, dusty air into his starving  lungs. Regaining some of his strength, he walked across a broad expanse of wood  flooring, forcing the image of Barney’s face from his mind with every step. The  place was huge. 
                  Looking up, he realized the area he now stood  in must be at least three stories high. Dark shapes defined what he suspected  were doors and stair rails as he turned in a circle. 
                  Yeah, like I care.  
                  Brushing cobwebs from his face and hair, he  sought a place where he would be able to see all the possible entrances, then  lowered himself to the dirty floor to lean against the wall. A deathly silence  permeated the huge structure, making him shudder as he waited for his pulse to  slow to something the normal side of critical. He shoved his weapon in its  holster. 
                  “Dammit, Barney.”  A lump formed in Mike’s  throat, threatening to gag him if he didn’t release the grief boiling inside  him. His gut burned as he struggled against the stinging tears behind his eyes. 
                  A faint sound drifted to his ears,  momentarily distracting him from his misery as he gazed around the dark room.  It was distant, muted. He strained to listen more closely, trying to identify  the sound. 
                  Music. 
                  Yeah, right. Maybe a  funeral dirge.  
                  Insistent tears pricked his eyes again. He  hadn’t cried since second grade, when he and Carrie’d first learned about their  parents’ car accident. 
                  They were dead—just like Barney. 
                  All he and Carrie had now was each other. 
                  He closed his eyes against memories of the  night he’d just survived. Remembering the blood, his partner’s dead eyes, bile  again rose in his throat. He’d seen more than his share of mutilated bodies in  various stages of decay in his life, but this was different. Barney’d been more  than a brother-in-law—he’d been like a real brother. A soul  mate. 
                  How was Mike ever going to break the news to  his sister? He should never have let her marry a cop. 
                  Barney was dead. Gone. No amount of  hindsight, twenty-twenty or not, would bring him back. 
                  The music suddenly ended as mysteriously as  it had begun. An awesome silence filled the old mansion, crawling right inside  Mike to incite his agony. The only sound he heard now was the heavy thud of his  heart, beating out the tempo of sadness and dread. Fear. Terror. 
                  His Dirty Harry Callahan imitation only went  so far, then the real Mike Laferty came out to play. 
                  God, not now. He  had to be superhuman. 
                  Mike blinked, trying to focus in the dusty  darkness. No sound, no movements. He was alone. Then what had he heard? Where  had the music come from? As if on cue, muted sounds again drifted to his ears.  Closing his eyes for only a moment, he focused on the noise. Definitely  music—no doubt about it. A piano. 
                  Was he losing his mind? 
                  The music continued, fluctuating from faintly  distinguishable to almost silent. It was real. 
                  Breathing very slowly, Mike suspected he inhaled  more dust than oxygen, but it didn’t matter. He’d erupt internally before he’d  let himself sneeze. 
                  Seconds ticked by as he continued to search  the room. The only distinguishable shapes were the French doors, where faint  surreal light came through. His gaze was drawn to that light, where the gray  fog played tricks behind the dirty glass. 
                  What was that? 
                  His heart pounded louder, faster as he  watched the minimal movement of light and gray outside the doors. A darker,  more solid shape stirred beyond the glass, then paused to turn toward him. 
                  A face—a man—stared through the French doors. 
                  They’d found him—he was a dead man. 
                  Milton’s flunky had mustered his courage,  after all. Slowly, Mike reached across his chest and inside his open jacket.  The hard butt of his gun offered a false sense of security. Mike knew he couldn’t  possibly win against all of Milton’s men. 
                  Still, he’d die trying. 
                  The doorknob rattled, then the French doors  slowly squeaked open. Mike swallowed hard, preparing himself to do battle  again. 
                  “Come on out, Mike,” the man said in a deep,  self-assured voice. “I mean you no harm. I’m here to help you.” 
                  Help, my ass. That  voice couldn’t possibly belong to the one Milton’s men had left behind. True,  Mike had called for backup, but they wouldn’t be looking for him in this dump.  Besides, he knew everyone on the force and, despite the darkness, Mike felt  positive this guy wasn’t one of them. 
                  “Hiding is pointless. I can see you.” 
                  It was a trick. Mike ground his teeth  together, itching to pull the trigger. Suddenly, the need for revenge  overpowered common sense. Mike felt a rush of hatred, so powerful it overtook  all sense of reason. Like a slow but insidious poison, revulsion seeped through  his veins. 
                  Scrambling to his feet, he lunged toward the  silhouette in the darkness, still clutching his weapon in his right hand. With  lightning reflexes, the man gripped Mike’s wrist with one hand. 
                  “You ready to talk now, Mike?” 
                  The man’s bone-wrenching grip dug through  Mike’s skin and straight to the marrow. Forced to his knees, then immobilized,  Mike clenched his teeth, struggling against the urge to drop his gun in  surrender to this strange and powerful enemy. “Who the devil are you?” 
                  The man chuckled—the sound echoed mockingly  through the vast emptiness. “Ah, now that’s an interesting choice of words. I  probably should thank you for the promotion.” 
                  Mike shook his head, trying to determine  which words the man found interesting. “Go ahead and kill me—get it over with,  you bastard.” 
                  “Oh, rest assured, I’ve been called worse.”   The man sighed, then jerked Mike’s wrist until his gun flew across the room as  if propelled by some invisible force. “Your weapon is useless against me.” 
                  “Oh, yeah? Why don’t we give it a try? I’d  like to see for myself.” 
                  The intruder laughed again, a sick, menacing  sound that made Mike shudder. “There isn’t enough time for that.” 
                  “I’ve got all night,” Mike said steadily. 
                  “And I have tonight and eternity.”   The man sounded bored with life. “Trust me, even that isn’t enough time.” 
                  Mike shook his head as his own mad laughter  consumed him, shaking the foundations of his sanity. This was too damned much.  Why the hell didn’t his captor just kill him and get it over with—put him out  of his misery? 
                  What about Carrie?  
                  “Yes, what about your darling sister, Mike?” 
                  Mike’s laughter died an instant death as he  jerked his head around to stare through the darkness at the creep who still  imprisoned his wrist. He blinked several times, continuing to gape at this  strange man. “How—” 
                  “There’s something you want. My boss sent me  here because I know there’s some way I can be of...service to you,” he said in  an infuriatingly calm voice, though there was an intensity to it that belied  his more obvious attempt at sincerity. “All you have to do is name it, Mike,  and it’s yours.” 
                  “Something I want?”  Mike swallowed  hard, feeling strangely desperate to reveal his need. It was a need more  powerful and insistent than any he’d known in his entire life. It was almost as  if this man drew it from him—reached right inside his core and yanked the truth  from him. 
                  “Yeah, there’s something I want, but you can’t  give it to me. Nobody can,” Mike confessed before he could stop himself. “I’d  give anything...”  What the hell did he have to lose? 
                  “Anything at all to—shall we say—turn back  the clock?”  His voice took on a mesmerizing song-like quality, luring  Mike into a trusting state. 
                  “Turn back the clock?” Mike echoed, trying to  resist being sucked in by this guy’s hypnotic voice, but it was a constant  battle. There was an odd, powerful presence about him, more significant than  the superhuman strength which enabled him to hold Mike powerless at his feet. 
                  “Of course.”  The peculiar man gave a  dramatic sigh. “Really, Mike, how else can we undo all that’s  happened tonight?” 
                  “What...?”  A cold sweat popped out on  his forehead. “You’re frigging nuts, man.” 
                  “Let’s see—today’s June twentieth, so all we  have to do is make it June nineteenth. Right?” 
                  “Sure. Just snap your fingers and make it  yesterday.”  Mike squeezed his eyes shut for a moment. God, how he wished  he could really do just that. If only he could go back in time to stop what had  happened, to make Barney live again. 
                  “So be it.” 
                  Fool! he  chided himself, trying to regain control of his thoughts and actions. No one  could undo the horrible events of this night. Not even God. 
                  The man suddenly threw his head back and  laughed out loud. It was a terrifying sound. Monstrous. 
                  A streak of lightning illuminated the  mansion, sending dancing sparks to the tips of the man’s fiery hair. For a  brief moment, Mike’s gaze locked with his. The man’s eyes were— 
                  Impossible. 
                  Another lightning bolt revealed the truth.  The man’s eyes were red, glowing with a feral power that left Mike paralyzed.  The flesh around his mouth tingled and he felt hollow inside. Now, even in darkness,  those red eyes glowed, holding Mike prisoner in his own body. 
                  He had to fight this, whatever it was. This  madman wanted something, and every instinct in Mike’s body screamed in favor of  escape. 
                  Every instinct but one. 
                  His need for revenge. 
                  Common sense rallied, trying to seize control  for a flickering moment. Mike jerked his wrist, but the stranger held him fast. 
                  “I don’t know who the hell you are or what  you want, and I really don’t give a rat’s ass,” Mike lied, unconvincing even to  his own ears. 
                  “Mike, Mike,” the man said with that same  taunting, strangely soothing tone. He was like a used car salesman moving in  for the kill. “I’m here to give you your heart’s desire—what you want more than  anything else. I’m going to allow you to go back in time.”  He chuckled  quietly. “You said you’d give anything...” 
                  A sense of foreboding filled Mike, but he  forced it into submission. “Yeah, anything. Everything.”  His voice  sounded hoarse, barely more than a strangled whisper. Why was he buying into  this jerk’s sick game? Then the brilliance of those red eyes intensified,  forcing Mike’s doubts to whither beneath an onslaught of fierce hunger. 
                  Blood-lust. 
                  He would have his revenge. Satisfaction. And  more importantly...Barney would live to raise his child. Madness claimed him  and Mike barked a derisive, and strangely victorious, laugh. Though the bastard  hadn’t yet spoken the words, here it was, out in the open at last. Mike knew. 
                  “Yeah, hotshot. Even my worthless, fucking  soul!” 
                  
                    
                  A Few Reviewers' Comments: 
                  “EXTRAORDINARY!!!! Deb Stover is a master  dream-spinner! A haunting, heart-wrenching, utterly beautiful example of time  travel romance at its very best!” 
                    ~ Bestselling author, Maggie Shayne 
                  “An exciting page-turner from a talented  author. In addition to suspense, romance, and humor, this book has a heart of  pure gold.” 
  ~ #1 New York Times Bestselling  author, Susan Wiggs 
                  “5 Stars!  A tremendous time travel  romance...brilliantly crafted...great work from a rising star!” ~ Affaire  de Coeur 
                  “With a number of wonderful surprises and  startling revelations, Some Like It Hotter sets Deb Stover  apart. She is truly an original writer of remarkable talents and you'll be  delighted with her sexy, creative, humorous and poignant trip back in time!” 
  ~ RT Book Reviews 
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