
I’m thrilled to have my guest Kymber C. Hawke writing as Unity Hayes on the blog today!
I’ve been following Kymber’s writing journey for some time now and can tell you she is creative, talented, and knows how to build complex storylines. You can read some of her work here.
Secrets in The Blood is Unity’s debut release. She’s updated to this fantastic cover and is here to share a gripping excerpt I know you’ll enjoy.
Please welcome Unity/Kymber to the blog.
Blurb:
Secrets have been buried in a steel town for many years, but someone is about to blow the lid off them and rock this little town. Cassidy loves her life just the way it is. But when mysterious and good looking West arrives, her world is turned upside-down.
West carries the secrets of the steel town. Cassidy is attracted to the stranger, but a relationship seems impossible as Westβs accusations make him appear crazy and bodies start to pile up. No one wants to believe West; can Cassidy let her feelings go and trust him?
Who is the killer?
How many bodies will pile up before the biggest secret of all is revealed?

Prologue:
The bedroom was dark except for the muted yellow glow from the hall table lamp. Although subdued, the light was bright enough to stab through the partially open doorway like a spear. It cast a pie-shaped beam just inside on the thick blue carpeting. But the rest of the room remained dim and sinister as if the light had been swallowed by it.
Thump.
The wind howled mercilessly as fat raindrops spattered against the second story window.
Eight-year-old Kenton turned restlessly in his bed, his pillow falling to the floor with a gentle thud. Somewhere, deep within the bowels of the cavernous house, a woman moaned.
Or perhaps it was only the wind again.
Thump. Thump.
Kenton awoke with a start, sitting up suddenly and rubbing the sleep from his blinking brown eyes. Had he heard something? He kicked frantically at the bedcovers, his thin legs hopelessly entangled in them during his brief and fitful sleep.
Thump.
It was louder, closer. How many times had his childβs imagination conjured up images of monsters in that house? That colossal, hulking ogre of a house. He feared that one day he would disappear; be swallowed up and forever lost in the startling noises it made at night and the menacing shadows present in every corner.
He wanted his mother. She would smile at him and tell him there were no monsters. She would look in his closet and under the bed and tousle his curly brown hair playfully as she tucked him back into bed. She would sit with him until his breathing became even and steady and she knew for certain that he was asleep again.
Finally freed of his bedding, Kenton peered through the ominous shadows at his younger brotherβs bed. Shane wasnβt there. Kenton rubbed his eyes again as if that would make Shane reappear. Dropping his bare feet to the floor, he padded cautiously to the door. The door that would either lead him to his mother…or to the terrible noise he had heard.
He wiped his sweaty palms on his pajama pants and waited a moment before pushing the six panel oak door open the rest of the way. The door squeaked lightly on its hinges, but the sound seemed to reverberate through the entire estate like an endless echo. He stood in the open doorway as if frozen, not wanting to look into the corridor. Waiting. Listening. The feeling of dread began to build in him, rolling in his stomach and threatening to explode out of his mouth into a terrified scream.
He hesitated for what seemed to be hours, and then stepped into the soft light of the immense hallway like a dead person would step toward the light at the end of the proverbial tunnel. With cold sweaty beads trickling down his back, he couldnβt shake the eerie feeling creeping over his flesh. He shuddered.
Walking a few feet down, again out of the light but toward his motherβs room, Kenton breathed a soft sigh when he saw Shane. The four-year-old was seated on the floor at the edge of the balcony, completely unmoving, even at Kentonβs approach. His feet, as his older brotherβs, were bare, his bony legs dangling through the spindle railing. As if entranced, his black-as-pitch eyes stared oddly downward into the dark, marble floored foyer below.
A chill from an unknown source prickled the hairs on the back of Kentonβs neck. Something was dreadfully wrong. Silently, his stomach tensing into a knot, he sat beside the younger boy and squinted into the murkiness beyond the balcony. He could see nothing except the faint shape of the mahogany fern stand by the powder room door. The bulky fern, barely discernible, looked to Kenton like a crazy octopus, arms waving, ready to eat them if they ventured downstairs. He looked anxiously at his brother again. Shane seemed mesmerized, watching fixedly as if he could actually see something.
Kenton tried to follow the intense stare. There was no sound now. No light. No movement in the foyer. Only silence. A frightening silence that chilled his blood.
βMommaβs gone,β Shane whispered so softly, Kenton wondered if heβd actually heard the small boy speak at all.
βWhat?β Kenton whispered back fiercely, his emotions completely unraveling by Shaneβs disturbing stare into the blackness below them. His knuckles turned white as he gripped the railing and strained once again, hoping to see what so steadfastly held his brotherβs attention.
Slowly, his pale face a mask of deep shock and horror, his onyx eyes glittering in the hall light, Shane turned to face Kenton. βMommaβs gone. Daddy killed her.β
GoodReads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18165857-secrets-in-the-blood
Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/340354
Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/secrets-in-the-blood
Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/secrets-in-the-blood-kymber-c-hawke/1116264451

Author blurb:
Unity is the author of Secrets in the Blood (mystery/romance – August 1, 2013). She has been writing since the age of 15 and has always dreamed of telling stories through the craft of writing. Unity is a Registered Nurse that enjoys small town living, antiquing, and spending time with her family.
Itβs lovely to see Kymber here, Jacquie. I love the new cover and her pen name. Wishing Kymber every success. Thanks for sharing. Hugs ππ
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Thank you so much, Harmony! I’m so excited that Jacquie volunteered to help me celebrate, as I was with you, Harmony.
Thank you, Jacquie. I’m so honored to be here.
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It sounds so good I bought a copy π
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Fantastic! Thanks, Jacquie ππ
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I just saw this on another blog and found the prologue gripping. All the best to Kymber/Unity.
Thanks, Jacquie.
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Thank you so much, Staci. I appreciate your kind words.
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Those poor kids. She definitely hooked me π
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Thank you so much for participating in my exciting day, Jaquie! You are an amazing friend!
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Love the new cover, Kymber, though the first one was nice too π
Do you plan to publish your Noble series?
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Thank you, Jacqui. I’m glad you liked both covers. π I’m not sure about the Noble series. If I did publish it, there would be a lot of work involved. My son thinks I should do it, though.
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Your son is a wise young man π
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Oh, how exciting, Kymber! And this prologue had me holding my breath. Congratulations to you! Thanks, Jacquie for sharing.
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Thank you so much, Jan! I’m glad you liked the prologue. π
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I’m looking forward to reading this one!
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I have this on my TBR list and can’t wait to read it!
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Thank you so much. I hope you like it. π
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Me, too!
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Thank you, Jacquie. I wish Unity all the best. I’m intrigued!
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Thank you so much, Gwen! I appreciate your kind words. π
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It sounds like a page-turner, Gwen π
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This really is a great cover, Jacquie. The blurb is excellent too and I enjoyed the extract. I like it when authors use onomatopoeia.
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I had to look that up, lol, but yes, I agree π
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Haha, I should have just said words that represent a sound but its such a great word. Like an oxymoron. I always remember the wedding hearse which I was taught at school as an excellent example of an oxymoron.
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A wedding hearse- ow thereβs a picture, lol
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