Uncovering Cobbogoth (Cobbogoth #1)
Release Date: 05/13/14
Summary from Goodreads:
Norah Lukens needs to uncover the truth about the fabled lost city
of Cobbogoth. After her archaeologist uncle’s murder, Norah is asked to
translate his old research journal for evidence and discovers that his murder
was a cover-up for something far more sinister.
When she turns to neighbor and only friend James Riley for help, she realizes that not only is their bitter-sweet past haunting her every step, but James is keeping dangerous secrets. Can Norah discover what they are before its too late to share her own.
When she turns to neighbor and only friend James Riley for help, she realizes that not only is their bitter-sweet past haunting her every step, but James is keeping dangerous secrets. Can Norah discover what they are before its too late to share her own.
Excerpt
James
hadn’t always had the power to break my heart. In the beginning, things had
been simpler between us—we were only friends, and having never had a friend
before, I was perfectly content just being there for him during Gram’s illness.
But one
day, out of the blue, it all changed.
James
had asked me to stay with Gram one night toward the end of July. Uncle Jack was
on a dig, and James had a shift at the fire station. I was supposed to stay up
with her through the night, but around midnight she was sleeping peacefully.
I’d decided to lie down for a few minutes in the guest room. I even left the
door open so I could hear her if she needed anything, but it turned out that I
was more tired than I’d realized.
The light of the morning woke me
up. I jolted forward, horrified. The door to the bedroom was closed. Why was
the door closed? Had Gram needed me in the night? Or worse, had she passed away
with no one there to send her off?
With no other thought than getting
to Gram, I ran to the door and flung it open. I had to make sure she was still
breathing.
When I stepped out into the hall,
I didn’t see the long, knobby bundle sprawled across the threshold.
“What the—?” I tripped, heading
for a face-first tumble down the stairs, when hands reached up out of nowhere
and caught me by the waist. Before I knew it, I was pulled back into cradling
arms.
“Let go!” I struggled to get away.
“Morning to you too, sunshine.”
The hall light burst down on me, and I squinted up into a familiar face.
“James?” I panted. “What are you
doing here?”
Lowering his arm from the light
switch, he shifted in his sleeping bag, stifled a yawn, and grinned at me
sleepily. “Well, right now I’m cuddling a gorgeous girl on my lap. Aren’t you
gonna thank me for that extremely chivalrous catch?” He rested his chin on my
shoulder and playfully batted thick brown eyelashes at me.
I flushed, feeling the panic drain
away only to be replaced by something equally unsettling. Knowing it was
somehow connected to the way James was holding me close, I struggled to get to
my feet again.
“Whoa there! Where ya going?”
James groaned. “I was just getting’ comfy.” He tightened his hold on me, and I
was forced to stop wriggling.
“I—well, I just—I need to check on
Gram.” James’s breath was tickling my neck. I swallowed a mass of butterflies
threatening to burst from my stomach. What was happening to me?
“I-I’m so sorry, James.” I managed
to scrape my thoughts together. “I totally fell asleep, and I didn’t hear
anything in the night. And then—” I shook my head. “Wait. Why are you home?” I
finally asked. “I thought you didn’t get off until ten or so.”
“It’s eleven.” James pushed his
chocolate-brown curls out of his eyes and reached for his baseball cap, which
was resting on a nearby chair. “But don’t worry about it. They let me off early
’cause it was a slow night.” He shrugged. “When I got home, you and Gram were
both sleeping, so rather than take you home, I thought I’d just wait ’til
morning. I stayed out here in case she woke up.”
“Oh.” His gaze was making me
jittery. I glanced down at my hands. “Did she need anything?”
James leaned his head against the
wall, watching me with a dreamy sort of half smile. “She slept through the
night—first time in weeks. I think you’ve got a magic touch.”
I smiled, a strange warmth spreading
through my chest.
“So how’d you sleep?” he asked,
returning his arm around me as if it belonged there. Then he reached up and
pushed a wispy strand of silver-blonde hair off my face.
My heart went berserk. The
confusion mixed with pleasure coursing through me was powerful to the point of
painful. “I slept good. Pretty deeply too apparently.”
James didn’t seem to hear; he was
busy twisting my hair around his finger. “You know, I don’t think I’ve ever
seen your hair down like this. It’s usually in that tight braid,” he mumbled,
not meeting my eyes. “Jack’s right. It really does look like vanilla ice
cream.”
My throat constricted as I
swallowed hard. “Um . . . thanks?”
He grinned and again pushed my
hair back from my face. This time, however, he let his palm linger against my
cheek, then trail down my neck. It came to rest on my shoulder.
James looked at me with his blue
eyes. They were deeper somehow.
And then all of a sudden, the
recognition of my feelings floored me. I liked James! He was more than just a friend!
I’d wanted to look away, but I
couldn’t. I was trapped in his gaze. I was no match for this new side of James.
Up to this point he’d been all friendliness and easygoing comic relief.
“Nor,” he whispered, his own rapid
breathing making his voice sound a little strained.
“Hmm?”
“There’s something I need to—”
“Jimmy?” Gram’s weak voice trailed
down the hall. “You’re home early?”
He hesitated a moment, his eyes
not budging from mine. Then he sighed. “Yeah, Gram. I’ll be there in a sec.”
The moment was gone, and James
helped me to my feet. He didn’t say anything more. I was okay with that; I
convinced myself that whatever it was wasn’t important. Then I let him lead me
down the hall toward Gram’s room. My skin tingled with a strange heat when he
placed his hand at the small of my back.
“What are you involved in, James?”
I whispered, looking around the Rileys’ guest room and wishing with all my
heart that I could have the old James—my James—back.