Ninja Girl Adventures
MG Wilson, Phil Elmore
(Ninja Girl Adventures Series, #1)
Publication date: November 1st 2020
Genres: Thriller, Young Adult
Sister Power at It’s Best
Moira Mackenzie is just 14 years old. Her sister Mindy is 15, and their younger sister Marci is 9. The girls have lived their lives until now believing their father, Scottish billionaire Stephen Mackenzie, is simply a businessman whose KogaTech Consolidated (KTC) is the world’s most successful technology company. Their father was married to a Japanese woman, Kameko, whom the girls are told died in a car accident.
The girls’ idyllic existence in New York, where KTC headquarters is located, is shattered when their father disappears. He is legally declared dead by their Uncle Jiro Akiyama, Kameko’s brother. Uncle Jiro wants to possess the company for himself. What he doesn’t know is that Stephen Mackenzie changed his will so that Moira inherits the entire corporation.
An overwhelmed Moira must contend with the unraveling of her family. She has the help of Morton Gerardi, Stephen Mackenzie’s best friend, but he’s not the girls’ father and there’s only so much he can do. While Mindy rebels and Marci, a child genius, disappears deeper into her computer, Moira is further frightened by an intruder who invades the girl’s Manhattan apartment. Not long after this, Moira is visited by Uncle Jiro himself, who offers to provide for the girls financially as long as Moira signs the company over to him.
Moira considers giving in but doesn’t. Suddenly, out of nowhere, black-clad figures, who can only be the mythical ancient ninja of feudal Japan, attack the Mackenzie sisters. The girls are saved by an elderly Asian woman who heads a ninja clan of her own. That woman removes her face mask to reveal that she is Aiko Akiyama, the girls’ grandmother. Moira immediately has many questions. Why has Aiko only now revealed herself?
Aiko explains that Kameko, as Aiko before her, was a member of a Koga ninja clan of Kunoichi — a female ninja. Aiko was forced to fake her own death because of Jiro’s ambitions. She vows to teach Moira to become a ninja warrior and fulfill her family destiny. As Moira beings to learn the ways of the ninja, Aiko’s Yoda-like lessons give her greater self-confidence as well as physical martial arts skills. She passes these lessons to her sisters… but there’s more. Legends claim the ninja were shape-changing tengu, forest spirits with magical powers. Aiko reveals that these stories are true. If Moira wishes, she can learn these mystical abilities. Jiro himself can become a wolf and other ferocious beasts. Moira can learn these same skills, just as Aiko has.
As Moira trains and learns more about herself, she helps her sisters to grow more confident and more disciplined as well. Soon, Mindy is using her gymnastics skills to have ninja-style adventures of her own, as genius Marci helps both of her sisters using her knowledge of computers.
As they grow in their abilities, the girls uncover a plot by Uncle Jiro to misuse “sleep learning” technology developed by KTC. This is why Jiro wants the company. He believes the technology can be used to control minds, ultimately giving him control over the city — and perhaps, one day, even more than that. As the girls use their new abilities to chase down clues that point them to Jiro’s sinister ambitions, Jiro grows tired of holding back. He instructs his ninja to kidnap Mindy and Marci. He then tells Moira she has no choice but to sign KTC over to him if she ever wants to see her sisters again.
To get her sisters back, Moira will have to face her greatest fears. With only partial training, she must conquer her own doubts and apply the lessons of empowerment and confidence that Aiko has given her. The story climaxes in a battle between the two rival ninja clans wherein Moira must first save her sisters and then defeat Jiro himself. The fate of New York City hangs in the balance, as does the fate of Moira’s family and of her father’s company.
Excerpt:
Uncle Jiro was waiting in the lobby. Of course, Moira
thought. Who else would it be?
Sally had made herself scarce. Moira was grateful for
that. It meant she wouldn’t have to invite Uncle Jiro anywhere else. She didn’t
like the thought of Uncle Jiro making himself comfortable in an office here, or
setting foot in her father’s private space.
“Moira,” Uncle Jiro said, his smile too wide and his tone
of voice too familiar and easy. He still wore his overcoat on his shoulders
like a cape. His suit probably cost more than the car that had brought him
here.
“Uncle Jiro,” Moira said formally.
He bristled at that. He didn’t like being called “Uncle.”
She could see it in the way he tensed up. He covered it well, though,
pretending to smooth the lapels of his suit jacket. “I will not take up much of
your time,” he said.
“We both know you are ill equipped to run this company.
You expected KogaTech Consolidated to become mine just as I did. Whatever
sentimental impulse possessed your father to change his will at the last
minute, we will never know. The fact remains that he did—but you and I both
know this is a burden. I am prepared to relieve you of that burden.”
“What do you mean?”
“You fear for your well-being, which is understandable,”
Uncle Jiro said, almost as if he had not heard her.
“You may be thinking that you don’t know how you will
provide for your sisters, and yourself. There are many expenses. College.
Healthcare. Day-to-day living expenses. New York is an expensive place, and
only growing more so. But there is no reason for you to live in poverty.
“I am prepared to establish a fund for you and your
sisters. A very generous fund. You and your sisters will want for nothing.”
Moira swallowed. “What do you want to do for us?”
“Why, the company, of course,” said Uncle Jiro. “My
attorneys will draw up the paperwork. I will see to everything. You need only
sign them. The company will revert to me, as it should have originally. You and
your sisters will be properly provided for, and you will have none of the
stress of running a company the size of KTC. Let us be honest, Moira. You are
not prepared to take the mantle of leadership. Why subject yourself to that
sort of stress? There is no need. Your—family—is here to help you.”
“I’ll—I’ll think about it, Uncle Jiro,” she said.
Again, he stiffened, then forced a not-at-all convincing
smile. “Do not think too long,” he said. “Business does not wait for young
girls who cannot make up their minds. I need a decision so I can begin getting
the company into order. Every day wasted is money lost.”
“I’m not sure I want to sell the company,” Moira said.
“This was everything my father built. It meant a lot to him. He told me that
everything he did here, he did for my mother. And for her memory.”
Uncle Jiro took a step forward, looming over her. “Do not
speak of Kameko to me!” He hissed, almost like a large snake. “My sister was a
very foolish woman. She made poor decisions. She never should have married
Stephen Mackenzie. Had she not, she would be alive today!”
Moira stepped back as if he had slapped her. “How can you
say that?” she said. Her voice was so quiet it was almost a whisper.
“You are a child,” Uncle Jiro said. He was very angry now.
“You have no idea the matters in which you are interfering. Do not let your
father’s misguided affection make your life more difficult, child. There is a
time for sentiment and there is a time for good sense. See that you understand
the difference.”
“But —”
“I will have my attorneys call you to make arrangements,”
said Uncle Jiro. “I trust you will make the correct decision.” With that, he
swept his coat about him and stormed out of the room. Moira watched him go.
“I never liked him,” Sally said sadly as the elevator
doors closed on Uncle Jiro. She had been in the adjoining conference room. She
closed the door behind her.
“Don’t you let him bully you, Moira,” she said. “This is
your father’s company. It’s your company. It’s your family’s legacy. He can’t
take it away from you. I know that, no matter what, you’ll do the right thing.”
Moira could only nod. She wished she felt as confident as
Sally sounded.
Author Bio:
Hello! I’m Melissa G Wilson and my top passions are writing, helping new authors who want to make a difference through their writing, and mentoring women and at-risk youth to become authors.
My company Networlding Publishing, focuses on assisting thought leaders to write, publish, and launch “books that make the world better.”I’ve been growing my company for the last ten years and have helped 120 thought leaders write, publish, and launch their “make-a-difference” books.
I’ve consistently used proceeds from my authors’ book sales to help mentor new adults to help them learn this “new world of publishing.” So far, I’ve mentored more than 30 new adults through an organization called Dream Careers and I can’t wait to help more young people get better starts in their lives. My mentees have gone on to create stellar careers in publishing, marketing, and social media.
I’ve had the honor and pleasure of writing five best-sellers, one that held a #10 on Amazon for year and also had a book on Oprah that turned into an opportunity to travel the country and hold community leadership events with kids, adults, and city leaders. One other major honor was getting to be one of 70 people who helped Seth Godin, one of the best marketing leaders in the world, reinvent publishing through his initiative called “The Domino Street Team.” My goal now is to keep helping new author thought leaders get their important books out to the world and into the hearts of others, especially youth, who can use the insights from these books to make the world better for all.
—
Phil Elmore is a bestselling author, freelance journalist, and technical writer who lives and works in Upstate New York. He has contributed extensively to “Tactical Knives” and “Survivor’s Edge” magazines as well as several other self-defense and “tactical gear” trade publications. He is the Senior Editor of League Entertainment (an IP development company based in Florida) and the owner of Samurai Press, an independent small-press publisher. Through Samurai Press, Elmore has published a variety of non-fiction and self-help works, including the self-help bestseller “Ten Things Doctors Won’t Tell You About Your CPAP Machine.”
As a ghostwriter, Phil Elmore has been the author behind countless non-fiction and fiction works, including multiple action and science fiction novels, martial arts and fitness publications, survival and “prepper” ebook and print products, and even a survival-themed series of novellas. He has edited numerous novels, magazine articles, and other copy for inclusion in commercially published vehicles, as well as generating hundreds of thousands of words of content for Internet marketers across the Web.
With League Entertainment, Elmore co-created the Duke Manfist parody action series. The publisher of “The Martialist,” the online magazine “for those who fight unfairly,” Phil Elmore is also the author of twenty-one Executioner, Mack Bolan, and Stony Man novels for Gold Eagle/Harlequin Enterprises. His other work includes the “Augment,” “Monsters,” and “Detective Moxley” series, as well as the short story collection “The Thing in the Office and Other Tales of Terror” and the crowdfunded comedy-action novel “Spaceking Superpolice.”
GIVEAWAY!
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Cool cover
ReplyDeleteI really love this excerpt a lot...
ReplyDelete-Amber Terry-