Today, HJ is pleased to share with you Kate Posey’s new release: Serial Killer Games
What would you do if you thought your coworker was getting away with murder—literally?
Dolores dela Cruz has been dying to spot one in the wild, and he fits the mold perfectly: strangler gloves, calculated charm, dashing good looks that give a leg up in any field . . . including fields of unmarked graves.
The new office temp is definitely a serial killer.
Jake Ripper finds a welcome distraction in his combative and enigmatic new coworker. He hasn’t come across anyone as interesting as Dolores in a long time. But when mere curiosity evolves into a darkly romantic flirtation, Jake can’t help but wonder if, finally, he’s found someone who really sees him, skeletons in the closet and all.
Until Dolores asks Jake’s help to dispose of a body . . .
A morbidly funny and emotionally resonant novel about the ways life—and love—can sneak up on us (no matter how much pepper spray we carry).
Enjoy an exclusive excerpt from Serial Killer Games
Jake
My life is like this:
My alarm clock says 4:00, or 3:47, or 5:10, or something like that, when consciousness stitches itself together. I never actually rely on my alarm clock to wake me. I don’t sleep well. I don’t think people tend to sleep well when they’re living with the sort of things I am. Thoughts that go bump in the night. Secrets that scratch away in my head.
Sometimes I drink my coffee in the dark living room while watching the news. The housing crisis. The climate crisis. The crisis crisis. Luckily none of it affects me. Sometimes I watch the sleeping neighbourhood from the balcony. Sometimes I stand in my roommate’s doorway and watch him snore as Verity lies unnaturally ramrod-straight beside him. No normal woman sleeps like that, although it’s been a while since any woman has slept next to me, normal or otherwise. I stand there and wonder what I’ll do with him. I wonder what I’ll do with her, when the time comes. We’re going to run out of rugs.
The apartment building grumbles to life, radios and TVs flick on, cars outside start, and I come alive by proxy, a robot humming awake from a pulse of ambient electrical power. When my roommate comes out, I fire a bright shit-eating grin at him, because that is what humans are supposed to do.
“Good morning, Grant,” I say.
#
The morning traffic squeezes my bus down Main. I offer my seat to the elderly and pregnant women and mumble “sorry” and smile self-effacingly when someone steps on my foot. I’m the perfect extra in the background with my messenger bag and glasses; my hair and clothes neat, appropriate, forgettable; a free city newspaper folded in half in one hand—which I never read. When the credits roll, my part will be Morning Commuter #6. My bus spits me out at Richeson and I catch the SkyTrain to Bylling, then walk the remaining five minutes to one of a hundred skyscrapers rearing up like late-stage capitalism’s middle finger held up to humankind. I’m a cog in the corporate machine. I’m one of a billion fruiting bodies on the capitalist fungus that permeates the globe with a fine, hair-like mycelium. I’m no one. A non-entity. I like it that way.
I work for a temp agency, which means I’m a warm body for hire. As long as I have a pulse, I have a job. At the moment, I’m a placeholder for a human with actual value. Harriet is on unpaid leave, and so that some bean counter doesn’t decide that her position can be cut since no one is performing her job or taking her salary, her supervisor, a man called Doug, who has been promoted several strata past his zone of competency, has hired me to fill her spot. Her tasks were redistributed to her team members, so my job is to sit at her desk and keep her chair warm. I am given work to do: I have an intimate relationship with the photocopier, the coffee machine, the collator, and the rooftop, where I take about twelve breaks a day.
People call me “Jake,” and “Jack,” and “Jonathan.” Quite a few people don’t bother with my name at all, although I make a point of learning everyone’s. I always do. A few busy bodies patted me down for gossip about a week after I arrived, found me empty-pocketed, and have left me alone since. I’m a little friendless island in the workforce sea. I prefer it. I’d rather watch, and listen, and work on my list to pass the time and ease the boredom. Adding names, removing names. Adding them back again.
At the end of the day, I take public transportation home with my fellow hollow-eyed survivors of the downtown commercial hell zone. I smile vacuously at them. Good job, team! Same time tomorrow? I let myself into the apartment and find Grant and his latest consort, Verity, sprawled on the sofa watching reality TV. He cradles her against the side of his body and absently strokes her hair. I know better than to be envious of what he has.
I clean. I restore order. And then I cook. Healthy meals with expensive ingredients—organic vegetables, grass-fed meat, and things like saffron salt and truffle oil—carefully and thoughtfully prepared, all at Grant’s request and on his dime. If it were just me, it would be a bowl of cereal. I’m not planning to live to a hundred. I make a show of inviting Verity to join us, because Grant likes for me to be polite, but of course she never accepts. Grant doesn’t date the sort of woman who eats. Instead she watches us with wistful eyes too large in her perfect, sculpted face.
Rinse, repeat.###
Until Dolores.
It isn’t easy figuring out her name. My new place of work is a massive termite colony, each department compartmentalized and unto itself, and it’s difficult to find anyone who knows anything about the woman dressed like Satan’s shadow, always in black, with long-sleeves and high collars; the one with the vibrant lipstick and the cruel heels, who swirls through rooms without others registering her presence. Purposeful but aloof, like a malevolent spirit with shit to do.
“Who was that?” I ask Tricia-from-marketing after another spotting in the breakroom.
“Who was what?” Tricia-from-marketing asks, attempting to eat her yoghurt daintily, not realizing she has a smear on her chin.
I trail the shadow down a hallway, round a corner, and she’s gone.
Another time, she materializes in a packed elevator next to me. She doesn’t acknowledge my existence, and I don’t say anything. I watch to see which button she’ll push, but she doesn’t so much as glance at the numbers. She steps off at the sixteenth floor when it opens to let someone in, and I watch, waiting to see if she’ll go left or right, but she does neither. She dawdles, looking at her phone, and just as the doors slip shut, she looks left, then right, and ducks into the stairwell.
“Who was that?” I ask Brennan-the-intern.
“What was who?” Brennan-the-intern asks, swiping right ten times in a row on a dating app while waiting for his floor.
Whoever she is, she acts like a secret agent. She gets off at the wrong floor and uses the stairs to throw off anyone who might be watching. She always has her phone out, or pressed to her ear, to deflect conversation. There’s no way to figure out who she is. I decide she must be a consultant, or a freelancer, or maybe even a client representative. Not a Spencer & Sterns employee at all.
Several days go by without any sightings, and then at the end of the day one Thursday, later than usual, I catch the elevator by myself, down, down, down, until it stops at the fifteenth floor. The doors yawn open like the gates to hell, and there she is.Excerpted from Serial Killer Games by Kate Posey Copyright © 2025 by Kate Posey. Excerpted by permission of Berkley. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpt. ©Kate Posey. Posted by arrangement with the publisher. All rights reserved.
Giveaway: 1 finished copy of SERIAL KILLER GAMES (U.S. only 18+)
To enter Giveaway: Please complete the Rafflecopter form and post a comment to this Q: What did you think of the excerpt spotlighted here? Leave a comment with your thoughts on the book…
Meet the Author:
Kate Posey lives in British Columbia with her family. Serial Killer Games is her debut novel.
https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/762641/serial-killer-games-by-kate-posey/
Diana Hardt
I liked the excerpt. It sounds like a really interesting book.
debby236
I enjoyed reading the excerpt and would like to read more.
Crystal
The excerpt was intriguing and interesting and really looking forward to reading book in print format so I can read & review
glendamartillotti
Oooo. This sounds different and interesting! Thanks
Amy R
What did you think of the excerpt spotlighted here? Sounds good
Daniel M
looks like a fun one.
Mary C
Looks nteresting.
Dianne Casey
I really enjoyed the excerpt. Looking forward to reading the book.
Nancy Jones
I enjoyed the excerpt.
Shannon Capelle
This sounds like a edge of the seat book so exciting!!
Marie
Love, love!
cherierj
Sounds intriguing with its unusual plot.
bn100
cool
Patricia B.
This is intriguing. It is hard to tell If he is the only one who is someone to be worried about. Are they made for each other?
T Rosado
I’m intrigued but also hesitant. Can I like this character? I loved the recent It Had to Be You, a dark romantic comedy about a hitman/hitwoman. I’m willing to give it a chance.