Feature Post: Save Your Breath by Melinda Leigh (Morgan Dane Series)
About the Book
Title: Save
Your Breath
Author: Melinda Leigh
Release Date:
September 17, 2019
Publisher: Montlake
Summary
When true-crime writer Olivia Cruz disappears with no signs of
foul play, her new boyfriend, Lincoln Sharp, suspects the worst. He knows she
didn’t leave willingly and turns to attorney Morgan Dane and PI Lance Kruger to
find her before it’s too late.
As they dig through Olivia’s life, they are shocked to discover a connection between her current book research on two cold murder cases and the suicide of one of Morgan’s prospective clients.
As Morgan and Lance investigate, the number of suspects grows, but time is running out to find Olivia alive. When danger comes knocking at their door, Morgan and Lance realize that they may be the killer’s next targets.
As they dig through Olivia’s life, they are shocked to discover a connection between her current book research on two cold murder cases and the suicide of one of Morgan’s prospective clients.
As Morgan and Lance investigate, the number of suspects grows, but time is running out to find Olivia alive. When danger comes knocking at their door, Morgan and Lance realize that they may be the killer’s next targets.
Author Interview: Melinda Leigh
1) Your newest release features
two of your most popular characters, attorney Morgan Dane and P.I. Lance
Kruger. While this couple has a habit of getting involved in difficult (and
dangerous) criminal cases, the mystery in this book is much more personal for
them.
In Save Your Breath,
Morgan and Lance aren’t working for a client. They’re looking for Sharp’s
girlfriend, Olivia Cruz, who vanished from her home in the middle of the night.
After Olivia goes missing, Sharp realizes his feelings for her run much deeper
than he’d thought. As the investigation continues, with no trace of Olivia, the
usually calm and centered PI begins to unravel. Morgan and Lance had always
depended on Sharp for his insight and stability. Save Your Breath reverses
these established roles.
2) How does the personal nature of the
crime affect the other characters?
Morgan and Lance are also thrust into
unaccustomed roles. In the previous five books, Sharp has been the source of
stability. He is their rock. Now Morgan and Lance have to step up and help him
hold it together. The book deliberately challenges the cohesiveness of the
team.
3) The story starts with a terrifying
scene where Olivia is kidnapped. It is raw and visceral and plays on everyone's
worst fear—being unsafe in our own home. How do you get into the mindset for
crafting this kind of scene?
I close my eyes and envision the scene
in my mind from beginning to end. Everyone has been woken by a strange noise in
the middle of the night. We’ve all stared at the ceiling, listening for the
sounds of a stranger moving through the house. Being attacked in our sleep is a
basic, primal fear. That’s the vulnerable feeling I wanted to generate in the
reader, so I imagined it happening to me. Basically, I’m channeling the
overactive imagination that got me into so much trouble as a child.
4) Morgan and Lance are planning a
wedding and solidifying Lance's place as a step-dad to the Dane girls, all the
while dealing with terrible crimes around them. How do they disconnect from the
violence around them in order to create a space just for themselves and their
family?
The family demands their full
attention, and in their world of chaos and crime, their home is what keeps them
sane. Both Morgan and Lance operate best when they have the support and love of
their family to return to at the end of the day.
5) Can you give readers any hints of
what's next for Morgan Dane and her crew?
I wrote Save Your Breath as
the final book in the Morgan Dane series, but my next project is a spin-off.
The Bree Taggert Series will take place in Grey’s Hollow. Morgan and the crew
will likely make appearances.
Excerpt: Save Your Breath by
Melinda Leigh
Her weekly dinner with her
family had distracted her earlier in the evening. Her mother had served frijoles
negros, Olivia’s favorite traditional Cuban dish. Olivia had overindulged, and
the minute she’d left her parents’ house in Albany to make the hour drive back
to Scarlet Falls, her true crime research had flashed right back into her mind
and unsettled her stomach.
Chewing an antacid, she
mulled over her stunning discovery. The implications of what she’d learned
further stirred the black beans and rice in her belly. As a journalist, her job
was to seek the truth, not play judge or jury. But should she choose to pursue
and publish this truth, other people could pay the price for her
revelation—possibly with their lives.
Her new book proposal was
overdue, but Olivia’s predicament felt like a no-win situation. Ignoring the
truth went against all her principles. Then again, so did putting other people
in danger.
But how much risk was
involved? Could she live with being responsible for even a single innocent
person’s death?
Obsessing about her book
research had translated into three consecutive nights of insomnia. Enough was
enough. Olivia didn’t need to make this decision alone. What she needed was
outside perspective. She brought the antacids with her into the bedroom, picked
up her phone from the nightstand, and checked the time. Eleven o’clock. She
sent a CALL ME IF UR UP text message to Lincoln Sharp, her . . .
The word boyfriend
seemed silly at their ages. She was forty-eight. Lincoln was fifty-three.
They’d been dating for several months, and they spent the night together once
or twice a week. She assumed their relationship was exclusive, although they
hadn’t specifically discussed it.
Labels weren’t important
to either of them, but when she saw him or he called unexpectedly, the
stirrings of excitement and joy in her blood made her feel like a teenager. Beyond
her attraction to him, she respected him both personally and
professionally.
So why had she been
stewing over her decision instead of asking for his opinion?
Lincoln owned and operated
a private investigation firm. As a retired police detective, his practical
experience with the legal system—and his knowledge of criminal
behavior—exceeded hers. She valued his insight and trusted him to keep her
research confidential. If she decided to pursue the story, she would hire his
firm to help with the investigative legwork anyway. She may as well bring him
on board now.
She burped. Her
indigestion began to burn its way up her esophagus. She chewed a second
antacid, the chalky taste coating her mouth. She reached for the glass of water
on her nightstand and sipped.
A few seconds later, her
phone rang, and she pressed “Answer.”
“Is everything OK?”
Lincoln asked in a worried tone. Her late-night text was unusual.
“Yes,” Olivia assured
him.
“I’m sorry I missed dinner
with your parents again,” he said. “I wrapped up my case tonight. I should be
able to make dinner next week.”
He didn’t talk much about
work, which was fine. She understood his professionalism and appreciated his
need to maintain client confidentiality. But he had mentioned the case had
involved a great deal of evening surveillance.
“They understand,” she
said. “I called because I’m stuck in my research, and I’d like your opinion.
Are you free sometime tomorrow afternoon? I can come to your office.”
“Sure.” Interest
brightened his voice. “How much time do you want me to block out?”
“An hour should do.” She
considered his associates. Lincoln’s business partner, PI Lance Kruger, and
Lance’s fiancĂ©e, defense attorney Morgan Dane, could also provide useful
insight on Olivia’s dilemma. Morgan’s legal advice might be particularly
helpful. “I’d like Morgan’s and Lance’s thoughts as well. Could you see if
they’re available?”
“Hold on. Let me check
their digital calendars.” The line went quiet for a few breaths. “Lance should
be here in the afternoon. Morgan has a client meeting at nine a.m. Her calendar
is clear the rest of the day. How about I put you in the one p.m. spot?”
“Perfect.” Olivia lowered
the phone and made a note in the calendar app. “I’ll see you tomorrow
then.”
“You know, when you
texted”—Sharp’s voice deepened—“I had hoped this was a booty call.”
A little thrill rushed
through her, followed by another burp. Olivia rubbed the fire behind her
breastbone. “Tonight isn’t a good night. I ate way too much of my mother’s
food.”
He snorted. “That happens.
She’s an incredible cook. Get some rest and feel better.”
“Good night.” Olivia
lowered the phone.
Satisfied he would help
her make her decision, she slid into bed and picked up a book. At midnight, she
still wasn’t sleepy. She set down the book and redirected her mind. Lincoln was
teaching her to meditate. Closing her eyes, she concentrated on her breaths.
She conjured a mental image of the beach in her mind and synced her breathing
to the ebb and flow of the imaginary waves. At first she had trouble
concentrating, but eventually her body felt heavy.
Olivia jolted, her
heartbeat quickening, sweat dampening her T-shirt.
What was
that?
A glance at the clock on
her nightstand told her hours had passed. It felt as if she’d just closed her
eyes, but she must have fallen asleep. She scanned the darkness of her bedroom.
Her gaze passed over her dresser and chair. Had she heard something real, or
had it been a dream?
She concentrated,
listening hard to the sounds of her house, but she heard nothing unusual. A
thunk and hum signaled the heater switching on. Hot air blew out of the floor
vent and moved the sheers that hung over her windows.
The alarm hadn’t sounded.
She reached for her cell phone. It was far too early to rise for the day. She
double-checked the security system app on her phone. The house was secure. She
needed to go back to sleep.
She shifted her legs under
the covers, closed her eyes, and tried to get comfortable.
Something whooshed. Her
eyes snapped open. A large shape rushed toward her. A heavy body landed on top
of her, pinning her to the mattress. The weight and size of her attacker felt
male. She flailed and tried to push him off, but her arms and legs were trapped
as he straddled her. She was cocooned in her comforter like a swaddled baby.
Her throat constricted. She couldn’t scream.
Panic sprinted through her
bloodstream as she stared up at the dark assailant looming over her. His face
seemed distorted, his features brighter and flatter than normal. He was wearing
a mask.
With a bolt of
gut-twisting horror, she recognized the character as Michael Myers from the
movie Halloween.
A flash of terror shot up
her spine. She inhaled, preparing to force a scream out of her tight
throat.
He slapped her across the
face. Pain, bright and sharp, sang through her cheekbone but faded in seconds
as her adrenaline surged. The scream died in her chest.
Author Biography
#1 Amazon Charts and Wall Street
Journal bestselling author Melinda Leigh is a fully recovered banker.
A lifelong lover of books, she started writing as a way to preserve her sanity
when her youngest child entered first grade. During the next few years, she
joined Romance Writers of America, learned a few things about writing a novel,
and decided the process was way more fun than analyzing financial statements.
Melinda’s debut novel, She Can Run, was nominated for Best First
Novel by the International Thriller Writers. She’s also garnered Golden Leaf
and Silver Falchion Awards, along with two nominations for a RITA and three
Daphne du Maurier Awards. She holds a second-degree black belt in Kenpo karate;
teaches women’s self-defense; and lives in a messy house with her husband, two
teenagers, a couple of dogs, and two rescue cats.
Social Media Links
Website: http://melindaleigh.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MelindaLeigh1
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