Everyone in Dahlia’s world knows when they’re going to die. Except her.
Her father has never shown her the pocket watch counting down the days she has left to live. When he sacrifices himself to save her from her scheduled death, Dahlia abandons her comfortable home and sets off after his murderer to uncover the secrets her father died to protect…and the time research that could bring him back to life.
Then she meets Farren Reed. She should hate him. He’s an enemy soldier, a cowardly deserter, and the most insufferable man Dahlia’s ever met. Still, she needs all the help she can get, and Farren is the only chance she has to find the man who murdered her father. But Farren has only twenty-seven days left on his watch.
In that time, Dahlia must recover her father’s time research, foil a psychotic general’s plot, and learn to survive in a world that will never be the same. But the research holds secrets more dangerous than she had ever imagined. She will have to choose what is most important: revenge, Farren’s life, or her own. And time is running out.
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About the Author
Kristine Kruppa is a mechanical engineer, writer, and world traveler. Her days are spent
designing cool new car parts, but her evenings are filled with writing and cats. She has traveled solo to seventeen countries on five continents. Her other hobbies include hunting for the perfect cup of coffee, exploring used book stores, and accidentally climbing mountains. To keep up with her adventures, follow Kristine on Twitter @kskruppa.
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Excerpt From Chapter 1The sky was bright and clear on the day of Dahlia Walker’s death.Morning sun shone as she strode down the road, smiling andhumming to herself. It was her eighteenth birthday. The paper bagtucked under her arm held a new dress for the occasion. Her stepsclicked along the sidewalk in time to a quick, jaunty tune in her head.Her watch hung in its locked case around her neck.People streamed in and out of shops arrayed in neat lines on eitherside of the cobblestone street. Clockwork horses drew carriagestransporting chau)eurs, ladies in ru*ed skirts, and straight-backedgentlemen. The occasional blue military airship patrolled overhead ona pleasant breeze. It was a bustling, wonderful day. A cake waited backat Dahlia’s house, and she knew the mechanical servants wouldalready be setting out the silver and chilling the birthday champagnefor her party.“Get your news! Get your daily news!” A young paperboy stood onthe corner, brandishing copies of the Sainsbury Herald. “Anglianairships sighted over the Hattaran Mountains! Is Sainsbury their nexttarget? Get your news, be ready!” A clockwork monkey crouched on hisshoulder, its exposed gears whirring contentedly.Dahlia paid them no heed; lately the papers reported on nothingbut the war with Anglia, and she’d just about had enough of it. Underher breath, she sang along to the cheerful little tune in her head.“Help, please!” A voice from a nearby alcove snapped the songaway.A hand snatched her sleeve and Dahlia spun.“Let me go!” she shouted, jerking her arm back.An old woman, wrinkled and gray, clung to Dahlia’s carefullypressed blouse. Dirty hair curled in wisps around her head, and grimestreaked her shapeless dress. Crooked yellow teeth peeked into viewlike rotting daisies. A pair of broken auto-focusing spectacles dangleduselessly around her neck. Dahlia coughed against the pungent smell:a combination of sewer water and unwashed skin.“Please,you’ve gotta help me,” the woman croaked, panic in hereyes. “Look…look at me watch!”The misshapen crone thrust her watch in front of Dahlia’s face. Ittook a moment for Dahlia to notice there were only three minutes left
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