Welcome to my stop on the book blast for All Signs Point to Murder by Connie di Marco. This book blast was organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. On my stop, I have an excerpt from the book. There's also the blast wide giveaway for a chance to win a $20 Amazon or Barnes & Noble gift card. Be sure to visit the rest of the stops on the book blast for more content. Enjoy!
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Title: All Signs Point to MurderSeries: Zodiac Mystery #2
Author: Connie di Marco
Publisher: Suspense Publishing
Publication Date: December 1st 2020
Print Length: 233 pages
Genre: Contemporary Mystery
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Rob Ramer was the perfect husband until he committed the ultimate family faux pas—he shot his sister-in-law to death. Believing himself under attack by an intruder in his home, he fired back. But when evidence is discovered that Rob’s wife, Brooke, was plotting his murder, Brooke is charged with conspiracy in her sister’s death. Geneva, a third sister, is desperate for answers and seeks the help of her friend, San Francisco astrologer Julia Bonatti. Geneva’s lost one sister and now it seems she’ll lose the other. Was this a murder plot or just a terrible accident? Julia vows to find the answer in the stars.
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EXCERPT:
The same headlights stayed behind me for several blocks, remaining about two car lengths behind. I’m very careful about locking my car doors, especially at night. I look over my shoulder when getting into my car too. I clicked the door locks again for good measure. Two cars passed me in the next lane, but the car behind remained at the same distance. When the next light turned green, I accelerated quickly and kept my speed up for the next few blocks, hoping a police cruiser wasn’t waiting in an alleyway speed trap to ticket me. The car following matched my speed. Why would anyone be trailing me, and if so, how long had I been followed?
I cast my mind back, trying to remember if I had noticed anything outside Macao or earlier. No one had been around. I hadn’t seen any cars pulling out behind me. But then, it was the last thing on my mind. I was only intent on meeting Tony.
After the next light, I slowed to a crawl, watching to see if the driver would become impatient and pass me. Again, the car matched my speed. A chill ran down my spine. Someone was definitely following me and they didn’t care if I knew.
I quickly reviewed my options. I had no intention of leading a stranger to my apartment. Of course, after my wallet was left open with my exposed driver’s license that night in Moira’s apartment, my follower, if he were the same person who attacked me, would already know where I lived. I nixed the idea of heading for my grandmother’s house. I didn’t want to bring any trouble to her doorstep, nor to Gale’s. Even so, that would involve driving back toward Russian Hill. I could return to Cheryl’s but didn’t like the thought of being unprotected on a deserted downtown street when I got out of my car. Whoever he, or she, was, I had to lose them. On the off chance they didn’t know where I lived, I had no intention of leading them to my apartment.
When I reached Divisadero, I turned left and headed for a neighborhood that I knew was a warren of intertwining streets. I made a fast turn heading west on Turk and an even faster right on Baker, leading me up Terra Vista. By now I was too frightened to even look in the rear view mirror. I raced up Terra Vista and took the corner on two wheels. I didn’t see car lights behind me as I turned the corner, only the ambient glow of headlights down the hill. I drove halfway down the block and spotted a long driveway leading to a garage at the rear of a house. I pulled down the driveway and parked behind the house. I doused my headlights and turned off the engine. My hands were sweating and my heart was pounding.
I hadn’t imagined the black sedan following me. I had no idea what kind of car it was, only black, late model, could have been a Mercedes, a Cadillac, I honestly wouldn’t know the difference unless I saw an insignia. My engine made small metallic pinging sounds as it cooled. I waited but heard nothing. I carefully rolled down my window and listened. A glow from headlights highlighted the tall tree branches in the next yard. I heard a car moving slowly down the street. The motor was almost silent, but I could hear the crunching of dry leaves under tires. He was searching. I had temporarily lost him, but now I was trapped in a driveway behind a private home. I prayed no one in the house would turn on outside lights or do anything to signal my presence. How long would he cruise the street?
Ten minutes elapsed but it felt like an hour. I twisted in my seat and once again saw the same glow of headlights. Again I heard the crunching of leaves and small branches under tires. The car came to a stop directly in front of the driveway. Its headlights were fixed against the wall of the house next door.
My mouth was dry and I could barely swallow. If the driver found me, what would he do? What could I do? I could lean on the horn and hope to wake the occupants of the house. The arrogance of following me in such an overt manner was more frightening than an attempt to track me covertly. Was someone trying to discover where I lived, or did they already know? Did someone wish me harm or were they only trying to frighten me? If so, they were doing a damn good job of it.
My heart was racing. I closed my eyes and deliberately slowed my breathing and prayed. Then I heard an engine rev and tires squeal. The sedan barreled down the street as if angry to have lost me. I was too afraid to turn the car around and pull out. It could be a trick. He could be waiting at the foot of the hill. I was cold now and shivering. I wanted to be home in my own bed more than anything in the world. I had to take a chance. I turned on my parking lights and saw that the driveway continued on past the garages. A narrow space next to the last garage led to an alley behind the homes. I started the engine but left my headlights off. I followed the concrete path along the side of the garage and through the opening to the alleyway. It led to an intersecting street. At the corner, I hit the brakes and looked around carefully. Nothing moved. I glanced up at the street sign. Fortuna Street. I almost laughed with gratitude at the name. I wiped tears from my eyes and took a deep breath. Following Fortuna I reached Turk again. No other cars were on the street. I turned west toward the Avenues keeping a lookout, but didn’t spot the black sedan again.
When I reached home, I pulled the car into the garage, made sure the heavy door was properly locked and climbed the back stairs to my kitchen. Wizard padded out to greet me. He tried to make a dash for the yard, but struggling to hold on to my purse and keys, I grabbed him at the last moment. I didn’t want him out this late at night, and I was too tired to have to call him in later. I reached down and closed the hatch on his kitty door before he could get free. He looked at me and uttered a low growl in his throat.
“No. Sorry. It’s been a rough day and a rougher night. You’re in.” I doled out a couple of kitty treats and dropped them in his plate. He attacked them at once. I turned off the kitchen light and in the dark, peeked out the living room windows to the street below. I saw no cars that seemed out of place. Then I walked down the stairway and shoved the bolt across the front door. Wizard eyed me strangely, sensing something was out of kilter. Upstairs, I shed my jacket and poured a glass of wine. The light on the answering machine was blinking. Gale had left a message reminding me of the open house on Sunday. Cheryl hadn’t spoken of it earlier and I suspected she might bail on the whole idea. Then I kicked off my shoes and shed my clothes. I slipped into my flannel pajamas, propped some extra pillows on the bed and settled in.
I thought about the couples I knew. Cheryl dealing with a divorce, Brooke in jail accused of planning her husband’s death, Moira dead, and forced to turn over information on her boyfriend to the police. David and Geneva seemed the only happy people in the world, in spite of their family difficulties. Only Gale was completely content as a single woman. Maybe I was better off in my alone state than I knew.
Wizard climbed onto my lap and started kneading the comforter furiously. Was Cheryl right? Was it was time to consider dating? The thought of it brought no joy. If someone told me to climb Mount Everest with no equipment, it would seem an easier prospect. But if I didn’t take a chance, I’d be a woman alone with her cat forever. I finished the wine, turned off the bedroom lamp and snuggled down under the comforter. I heard the foghorns in the distance as my eyes closed involuntarily.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Connie di Marco is the author of the Zodiac Mysteries featuring Julia Bonatti, a San Francisco astrologer who never thought murder would be part of her practice: The Madness of Mercury is the first in the series. Writing as Connie Archer, she is also the author of the national bestselling Soup Lover’s Mysteries from Penguin Random House. You can find her excerpts and recipes in The Cozy Cookbook and The Mystery Writers of America Cookbook. Connie is a member of Mystery Writers of America, International Thriller Writers, The Crime Writers Association and Sisters in Crime.
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GIVEAWAY:
Connie di Marco will be awarding a $20 Amazon or Barnes & Noble gift card to a randomly drawn winner via Rafflecopter. Good luck!
(All the Ups and Downs is not responsible for this giveaway, its entries, or the prize. Goddess Fish Promotions and the author assume all responsibility over this giveaway.)
My brother would like this book.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the contest.
Oh, I hope he gets to read it soon!
DeleteThanks for hosting!
ReplyDeleteHi Connie. Good luck with the tour.
ReplyDeleteHi Kim, happy to 'see' you here! Happy holidays too!
DeleteI liked the excerpt.
ReplyDeleteHi RIta ~ I really love to write suspenseful scenes!
DeleteSounds like a great book.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Peg, I hope you get to read this one soon!
Deletesounds like a wonderful book
ReplyDeleteThanks so much! It is a good story (if I do say so myself)!
DeleteLove a good mystery! Thank you for sharing about your book!
ReplyDeleteYou're so welcome, Katrina! Best of luck!
DeleteLove these kinds of reads so I can follow along the clues to figure out if it was intentional or not.
ReplyDeleteAh, time will tell if Rob was really a bad guy or not! Hope you get to enjoy the read, Katie.
DeleteWhat is your favorite book series?
ReplyDeleteI have so many, but the ones that first come to mind are Jake Needham's Inspector Tay series and the Department Q books by Jussi Adler-Olsen.
DeleteThe book sound interesting
ReplyDeleteHi Deb, I hope you get to enjoy it soon!
DeleteHappy Monday
ReplyDeleteSame to you, Ed!
DeleteThe book sounds very intriguing. Great cover!
ReplyDeleteThank you! I was so lucky to find such a wonderful cover designer. I love all my covers!
DeleteWow ! This book sounds like a really good thriller-thanks
ReplyDeleteOh, I hope you get to enjoy it soon! Thanks for stopping by!
DeleteDo you have any advice for new writers?
ReplyDeleteKeep writing and polishing and believe in your story. Find a small group who can give you valuable critiques, that's important and . . . keep writing. Don't give up!
DeleteThis sounds like an interesting book and I also like the cover.
ReplyDeleteabfantom at yahoo dot com
Thank you! The cover features a rock labyrinth created by an artist at Lands End in San Francisco. I'm not sure it's still there, but I found it so intriguing. Please have proposed and had their marriage ceremony in the middle of the labyrinth. There's something magical about it.
DeleteFantastic excerpt, All Signs Point to Murder sounds like an excellent mystery for me to enjoy!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing it with me and have a magical holiday season!
You're so welcome and the same to you -- have a joyous and peaceful holiday!
Deletesounds like a wonderful book to read
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed writing this book. The story is based on a real crime that I happened to know about, but this is my version of what really might have happened. I hope you get to enjoy it soon!
DeleteI Love the title and the cover. Well done
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Amy!
DeleteWhat is your favorite book?
ReplyDeleteI can't say I have just one, David. I save books that I've loved to read over a few times.
DeleteThis sounds like a great Contemporary Mystery read. I like the cover.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Susan, I just love all my covers, thanks to a wonderful cover designer -- Hannah Linder, I have to give her credit!
DeleteContemporary Mystery - makes for a great read!
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing this.
Hi Barbara, thank you! I hope you get to enjoy the Zodiac Mysteries soon!
DeleteWhat is your favorite book to re-read?
ReplyDeleteAh . . . I love Jason Goodwin's Istanbul series with his detective Yashim. Wonderful books!
Deletelove crime/mystery books
ReplyDeleteOh me too!!!
DeleteThe excerpt is interesting. Thank you for sharing it.
ReplyDeleteThank you and thanks for stopping by today!
DeleteWhat a gorgeous cover!!
ReplyDeleteOh, thank you, Amy! I'm so happy with all my covers! Hannah Linder is the cover designer and you can see all the covers on my Amazon page or on my website (conniedimarco.com).
DeleteHow many books do you have planned?
ReplyDeleteHi Katrina ~ I'm thinking I'd like to get to ten, perhaps. I don't think every series should go on forever, so there may come a point when it feels right to end the series. I'll have to see when I get there. Enter a Wizard, Stage Left, is a prequel novella (ebook only) and now there are four full-length books out. Zodiac #5 is finished (The Light Beside the Sea) and I'm working on #6 (Venus Unleashed). After that, I hope to do more but I'll just have to see when I get there.
DeleteHappy Wednesday
ReplyDeleteThanks, Ed! You too!
DeleteDo you like going to the beach?
ReplyDeleteOh, yes. I love the ocean and so glad it's close by. I live in a hot climate so we tend to take the beach for granted because we can go any time. But I do love the beach.
DeleteDo you enjoy being a writer?
ReplyDeleteI do. It's so rewarding to make up my own stories and share them with readers!
DeleteDo you have any Christmas traditions?
ReplyDeleteHi Amy! I love this time of year, the lights, the decorations. We don't have any special traditions, mostly importantly is being together, eating and celebrating. When my children were little, we used to leave milk and cookies for Santa by the hearth on Christmas Eve.
Deleteare you looking forward to the holidays
ReplyDeleteYes, definitely! We're in the thick of it all now, aren't we? Trying to get ready for it all. Happy holidays to you!
Deletelooks like a fun one
ReplyDeleteWell . . . if murder can be fun . . hope you get to enjoy this book soon.
DeleteDo you like chicken wings ? and if so, whats your favorite flavor ?
ReplyDeleteWell . . . not wings really, although I do love chicken!
DeleteLove the cover!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Brenda! I love this cover too, so happy I found a wonderful cover designer. The labyrinth on the cover is real. It was created by a San Francisco artist at Lands End at the far western edge of the city. I 'borrowed' it for this cover and thought it really worked well. So glad you liked it!
DeleteWhat was your favourite toy as a kid?
ReplyDeleteI had a little record player that played 45s and I used to listen to Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer all the time!
DeleteMy daughter would enjoy this book
ReplyDeleteI hope she gets to enjoy the Zodiac Mysteries soon!
DeleteDoes your family enjoy your books?
ReplyDeleteI think they enjoy that I'm a writer more than reading the books! Just a guess.
DeleteDo you listen to music when you write?
ReplyDeleteI can't do that, can't stand any sort of distraction. I concentrate best when there's no sound or music or TV or anything.
Deletethanks again for the great giveaway
ReplyDeleteYou're so welcome! Thanks for stopping by!
DeleteThe book details sound very interesting .
ReplyDeleteThanks, Anita, hope you get to enjoy the Zodiac Mysteries soon!
DeleteHappy Friday!
ReplyDeleteYou too, David!
DeleteSounds like a thrilling read. Best of luck with the success of it.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Christy!
DeleteWhat an exciting thriller! It's so exciting that you also write cookbooks! Which is harder, thrillers or cookbooks? Do you ever get writer's block while writing a cookbook? Thanks for sharing an excerpt!
ReplyDeleteThrillers are much harder, and much longer too. All the clues and red herrings have to work out just right. With recipes, you actually have to measure everything and write it down. When you're familiar with a recipe, you don't measure anything, you just throw things in a pot, right?
DeleteHave a nice weekend.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Ed. You too!
DeleteI'm a huge mystery fan and this sounds like a great story..
ReplyDeleteThank you, Betty! I hope you get to enjoy all the Zodiac Mysteries soon!
DeleteI'm a sucker for this kind of stuff!
ReplyDeleteHi Chrysalis, I'm a sucker for mysteries and thrillers too!
DeleteOh me too! Thanks so much for stopping by!
ReplyDelete