Weekend Briefing: Synopsis Release
Welcome back, agents. Just a short post for you this week to give you a taste of the next release in the Summer's of Yesteryear trilogy, Echoes of Summer.
The back is beautiful, and I love the little image. I just need to update my synopsis:
Violet is only just now acclimating team when
she's assigned her first solo mission. Which is good, because she and
Alex need some distance.
She has no time for her newly re-instated best friend's worries about the possibility that she may or may not have been attacked by Dr. Earnestine and injected with something that could possibly alter her DNA. Violet is ready for some time away to focus on a mission and not on her own confusing feelings. But her mission unearths a different set of feelings.
She has no time for her newly re-instated best friend's worries about the possibility that she may or may not have been attacked by Dr. Earnestine and injected with something that could possibly alter her DNA. Violet is ready for some time away to focus on a mission and not on her own confusing feelings. But her mission unearths a different set of feelings.
Assigned to
protect a
recently orphaned young heiress, Violet must ensure that nothing happens
that will send the money to the next in line- namely, the nefarious Mr.
Columbus. Who has sent his son to 'pay his respects' - and woo the girl
whose stipulation to inheritance is marriage. But the presence of
Jeremy makes things a bit more complicated for Violet, since she's
supposed to be in deep cover, and they've locked lips more than once.
Also making it a bit awkward is the possibility that another Peacemaker
may also be undercover as a potential suitor on a different mission. Oh,
and there's also a wannabe killer on the loose who could be anyone.
But it's nothing that Violet can't handle. That is, if she can figure out exactly what it is Dr. Earnestine did to her, and why he's always in her head . . .
But it's nothing that Violet can't handle. That is, if she can figure out exactly what it is Dr. Earnestine did to her, and why he's always in her head . . .
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