Good news, I've received the cover to Midnigt's Emissary. To celebrate, here is the blurb and the first chapter. Happy reading!
Midnight's Emissary
Aileen
has a few rules for her life. Do her job and go home safe. Keep the
supernatural world away from her human family. Stay off the vampire radar. And,
above all, don’t get involved in spook politics.
But
when Liam comes back into town bringing her sire and a mystery that threatens
the life she’s built, she finds every closely guarded rule flying out the
window as she sinks ever deeper into the supernatural world.
Ultimately,
it may be the people she loves the most who pay the ultimate price in the high
stakes game that vampires call life.
Chapter One
No matter how many times I visited the Book Haven, I always
had trouble believing it was a hub of supernatural knowledge. It just seemed so
unassuming. A book lover’s paradise sure. With thirty two rooms crammed full of
books, it was a maze that any Columbus dwelling book nerd would be overjoyed to
disappear inside.
It was even popular with the out of town crowd since it was
also one of the largest independent bookstores in the U.S. still in business.
It didn’t hurt that it had that old world charm that made German Village
popular with tourists and hipsters. The building started life as a saloon
before at some point being taken over by word loving entrepreneurs. Since then
it had grown and assimilated the neighboring general store and cinema to become
the unnavigable monstrosity that it was.
I nearly tripped on the uneven brick path that led to the
alleyway entrance. The path was lined by bushes and trees. Spring had come
early this year and some of the plants were already beginning to bloom way
ahead of schedule. Daft things didn’t realize in a day or two the weather would
flip, as it always did in Ohio, and the frost would kill everything but the
hardiest.
“Welcome to the Book Haven,” a man greeted me as I stepped
into the tiny nook serving as the store’s entrance.
I waited as he checked out a woman and her two kids. Then I
repressed a sigh as a tall man in t-shirt and shorts stepped into the already
cramped space. The guy looked like his frat days weren’t far behind him.
The greeter looked at me expectantly as the woman and her
horde filed past me. I gestured to the other man and said, “You can help him
first.”
“Are you sure?” the frat boy asked. He had dark hair,
muscles bulging out of his body like they were trying to multiply, and towered
over me by a foot.
No, I just said it because it’s the exact opposite of what I
want. I fought to keep the snarkiness off my face and nodded. Why do people
always ask that? I wouldn’t have offered if I wasn’t sure.
I waited, semi impatiently as the man checked out, and
stepped up to the counter as soon as he left. The cashier pushed a map toward
me. I glanced at it briefly and smiled. Wasn’t that cute? Not what I was here
for but ok.
“I’m looking for the section on feline behavior,” I said
with the politest smile I could muster.
The man paused and looked me up and down, his thin face a
little skeptical at what he saw.
At five feet seven inches, I was just above average height.
My grayish, blue eyes, while not a common color, were not memorable enough to
stand out. If a group of people tried to describe me later, half would say my
eyes were blue and the other half gray. Dark brown hair with red undertones
framed a face full of angles and hard edges. The uncertain description worked
in my favor as I was trying to get into somewhere I wasn’t exactly supposed to
be.
I waited, hoping the code was still good from the last time
I was here. Technically, I didn’t have the credentials to get into the hidden
sections of the bookstore. The parts the normal public didn’t know about. The
ones where people like me could find answers to their every question.
I knew I didn’t fit the profile of someone who normally
requested that room. For one thing, to most of the supernatural world, my aura
was too closely aligned to that of a human’s. Baby vamps barely registered on
the power scale, and I was so new to the fanged ranks that I was practically in
diapers.
I’d made sure to dress casually in jeans and a fitted blue
t-shirt I’d gotten at a Colorado beer festival. My one nod to the slightly
chilly weather was the rust colored leather jacket.
I arched one eyebrow at the man, letting him know I wasn’t
pleased with the delay. He gave me a sidelong, suspicious look even as he drew
a map from under the counter and handed it to me.
Some of the tension gathering at the base of my neck leaked
away.
I snatched the map and turned away, not bothering to thank
him. People in this world rarely said thank you, and I didn’t want to give him
one more reason to think I didn’t belong.
It worked. I couldn’t believe it, but it worked.
I headed up the rickety, wooden steps and waited on the next
landing until the couple descending had passed before heading up the next set
of steps.
Despite the cool factor inherent in having a book store in a
bunch of old buildings, it was a pain in the ass maneuvering through this
place. I felt like an elephant in a china shop. The place was narrow, and in
many spots you had to wait until oncoming traffic passed before proceeding.
Forget trying to sit in an aisle while you read. You’d be
buffeted by the continuous coming and goings of every person tramping through
this place.
A chain bookstore this was not. There were no comfy chairs
to sit and peruse. No fancy coffee shop connected. And it smelled faintly of
unfinished wood, mold and paper.
Still, it had been in business for a long time. Even longer
if you took into account the hidden face of the book store. The one that served
people like me. Or rather, people like who I was pretending to be. Powerful,
connected, dangerous.
I took a look at the map and followed the blue line through
one section after another until I stood in front of a roped off staircase. It
had an exit sign that said “In case of emergency.”
Got to hand it to these guys. They had a sense of humor.
I tucked the map into my back pocket and glanced both ways
to make sure I wouldn’t freak any unsuspecting normal out when I disappeared
down the staircase.
Coast was clear. I threw one leg over the chain and stepped
onto the top stair. Or at least that was my intention.
Instead I ended up tripping and falling when my foot landed
much sooner than I expected. I landed on all fours on the other side of the
chain, staring down at red carpet with gold and cream detailing.
I climbed to my feet and looked around the cavernous room.
It certainly wasn’t the Book Haven, or maybe it was and the other place was
just a pale imitation of this.
The ceiling towered several stories above me, so high that
its depths were shrouded in shadow. Every wall was lined with row after row of
book cases. So many and so high that there were ladders climbing the walls,
kind of like what you’d see in a pretentious, rich person’s library.
Unlike the normal store where the book shelves were fairly
worn, thin scraps of wood only one step up from plywood, these shelves had the
deep red gleam of high quality oak that had been cared for by overworked
apprentices who’d no doubt spent most of their lives shining it until you could
see your reflection out of the wood’s depths.
It wasn’t my first time visiting this place, but I’d never
been in this room. Normally someone like me, someone low on the totem pole
wouldn’t have even known this place existed, but Hermes, the courier service I
worked for, had sent me on several deliveries for the hidden bookstore. I
wasn’t quite sure what he was to the bookstore.
The entrance to the hidden bookstore changed constantly. As
far as I could tell this place existed in some kind of pocket realm. That’s why
I needed the map. It was the only way I could find a way inside.
The only thing I hadn’t been sure of was the code phrase. It
seemed to change every time I came here. My last delivery to the caretaker was
four days ago so I figured it would be good still. And I was right.
My footsteps were muted as I moved into the depths of the
bookstore. It was like walking through a tomb and reminded me of some of the
battlefields I’d visited with my parents as a child. It had that same quiet
that seemed to shout without ever making a sound. The kind that said you were
risking life and limb bringing the noise of the living into a place where only
the dead should walk.
I rubbed my arms, suddenly freezing. This place hadn’t had
this kind of unsettling feeling the last time I was here, or any of the times
before that. I pushed forward, telling myself that I was letting my imagination
run away with me.
The only thing this place seemed to have in common with the
human side was the maze like labyrinth that its rooms formed. The passageways
twisted and turned, narrowing unexpectedly before opening up into great rooms
full of books and other items.
I paused by a table with a gold shield displayed on it.
There was a great oak tree embossed on the metal, the fine detailing catching
and sending the light rippling along the branches.
I drew closer, wondering what type of tools the maker used
to give it such a lifelike look. I reached out to touch, almost anticipating
the feel of live wood under my fingers.
“I wouldn’t,” a voice said from behind me.
I jumped and snatched my hand back, straightening from where
I’d bent closer to examine the shield. I hadn’t realized I’d crossed the room
to examine it until now.
“That thing has a habit of bespelling people. It’s quite
dangerous. If it likes you, it’ll draw you into its internal world. If it
doesn’t, you’ll just stand there and starve yourself to death. End result is
the same either way. You die.”
A man with curly brown hair and skin the color of walnut
gave me a friendly smile as if he told people about the dangers of the
homicidal shield all the time.
I stepped back from the item in question, not wanting to
test my luck.
The man watched me with a bland gaze. Friendly, but not too
friendly, as if he had all the time in the world to wait for me to do whatever
it was I was going to do.
“Do you work here?” I asked. “I’ve never seen you before.”
“Nor I you.”
There was an awkward pause. Awkward on my side at least. The
silence didn’t seem to bother him in the least. It was like being watched by a
cat, one that was utterly disinterested in your future or past because your
actions had no bearing on its feline superiority.
“Um, I’m looking for something. Perhaps you could help me.”
The man waited.
This guy was definitely a little weird, but then I was in a
supernatural library with a moving entrance. I couldn’t really expect anything
less.
“I’m looking for a book.”
The man smiled, his light brown eyes warming with laughter.
“Well, we are in a book store.”
Ah. That’s right. Stupid statement.
Looked like the guy had a sense of humor. It was a relief
actually. Made him seem slightly more human, which when standing in a
supernatural book store next to a shield that ate people was surprisingly
reassuring.
I gave him a strained smile. “I’m not really sure what I’m
looking for. I mean I don’t have a name or anything to give you.”
This was a lot harder than I thought. For some reason, I
thought I could just waltz in, find what I was looking for and then waltz out.
No interaction with other people necessary and no one would be the wiser about
my visit.
That hadn’t happened and now I was awkwardly explaining
myself to the man with the enigmatic gaze.
I took another step away from the shield. You could never be
too careful with magical artifacts that might eat you. I meandered toward another
table, taking the time to get my bravado back.
This plan would work or it wouldn’t. If it didn’t, they’d
throw me out of the store. Probably ban me for life, which would affect any
runs that might end here. They’d probably let my boss, Jerry, at Hermes know,
in effect guaranteeing my subsequent firing.
I needed to stop thinking about everything that could go
wrong. It was too late to turn back and I didn’t have time to have a panic
attack now.
I met the man’s eyes again, aware that they hadn’t budged
from me during my whole internal motivational speech. That was alright. It was
creepy, but who wasn’t a little creepy among the spooks.
“I’m hoping you can point me to a book that might have a
rundown of who’s who on the supernatural side of things. If it has anything to
say about the inner politics of the different factions that would be great
too.”
“That’s a big request.”
Hence the reason I was essentially breaking into this place.
I’d looked everywhere else. No one had anything that could act as a primer of
the different species and factions making up this magically fucked up world. Or
at least no one who was willing to deal with me, the no-power baby vamp who was
marked by a sorcerer and at odds with the vampires.
“I’m aware.”
He finally looked away, his focus turning inward as he sank
into thought.
“There might be something.”
Really? Hell yes. Maybe this hadn’t been such a bad plan
after all.
“That’s great. Where is it? How much will it cost?”
I didn’t have much money, but perhaps I could put it on a
layaway plan or something.
His lips took on a sly quirk.
I paused, not liking the way he suddenly looked like the cat
who caught the canary.
“The where is simple enough, you just have to find it. As
for the cost, that’s another matter. Some might say it will cost you nothing.
And everything.”
Was that a riddle? It certainly sounded like it. I hated
riddles. My thought patterns were too linear, and I rarely guessed the correct
answer. Maybe I should start looking for this thing on my own. No way did I want
to accidentally promise my first born and be stuck in a rumplestilkin
situation. Not that, as a vampire, I could even have a first born, let alone a
second.
“What would I do with a first born?” the man asked in a
bemused voice.
I narrowed my eyes at him. A mind reader. Must be pretty
powerful to get through my internal defenses. I’d thought they were pretty
secure after the incident with the draugr. The one that landed me in my current
situation.
Guess not.
In my distraction, had I dropped some of the layers?
The man gave no visual reaction at my reinforcing my mental
defenses. Had what I done worked? I couldn’t tell. I couldn’t slam shut a door,
effectively kicking the mental peeping tom out. The defenses were more organic
and relied on confusion and misdirection as they created a mazelike forest in
my mental landscape.
Aiden, a vampire I had met briefly during the incident, told
me it was rare for someone to create a fortress based on nature. He said it
like it made me rare, the kind of rare that might be referred to as a freak in
ruder company. But I might have been reading into that.
“Maybe this book isn’t for me,” I said.
His smile was sweet and innocent, not the sly one of before.
No way was I buying what he was selling. This had devil’s bargain written all
over it. The last thing I needed was to get sucked into another situation that
was well over my head. I was barely treading water as it was.
“It’d be a pity if
you walked away. The piece I have in mind would be perfect for your purposes.”
I gave him a tight smile. “Somehow I think the price is a
little steeper than I want to pay.”
“Hm,” he said, his eyes blank.
I finally placed what it was about him that was making me
uneasy. It was like his expressions were only surface deep. As if someone had
taken clay and begun to make the facial expression that matched the feeling but
forgot to make the rest of the features reflect that feeling. His lips smiled
but the skin around them stayed still, no dimples or wrinkles. The skin around
his eyes and on his forehead remained smooth and unmarked.
Yeah. I didn’t know what this guy was, but he definitely
wasn’t human.
Time to carefully extricate myself from this conversation
and make my way towards the exit.
“The cost is not high.”
I stuffed my hands in my pockets, fingering the silver knife
in there. “You know what they say, ‘beware things that sound too good to be
true.’”
His expression registered only slight surprise, as if he was
no longer making the effort to appear human.
He could definitely still read my mind, or else he was
really good at reading the situation.
“I have never heard that saying before.”
I bet he hadn’t heard a lot of sayings.
“Not true,” he said. “I’ve heard this one – ‘There are more
things in heaven and earth.’”
Shakespeare. Lovely. I hated reading that play in high
school.
I opened my mouth to respond and stopped, studying his
inquisitive expression. He seemed awfully invested in me taking whatever it was
he was trying to sell. It put me even more on guard.
I wanted knowledge but not at the expense of my life.
“You’re right. You do know human expressions, but I’m afraid
I’m just not interested in this amazing book of yours.” I pointed behind me as
I backed up. “I think I’ll just be going now.”
I started for the door.
“But you haven’t found what you were looking for yet.”
This guy just wasn’t giving up.
I gave him a strained smile, not pausing as I headed for
room’s exit. “Thanks, but that’s life.”
His lips frowned. I say his lips because the rest of his
face didn’t move. This was really starting to creep me out. I was beginning to
realize why only certain people were allowed into this place. Only the powerful
and dangerous could make it in and out without death stalking every movement.
I tried not to think of the weapons I was carrying on me,
not certain that I could fight him off if he attacked.
He started forward as I neared the door and I bolted,
darting over the threshold and down one twisting hallway after another. I shot
a glance behind me, cursing when I saw him keeping pace with me, not getting
closer but also not falling further behind.
I had no idea where I was or how to get back to the
entrance. This was bad.
I rounded the corner and stumbled over a book lying in the
middle of the floor. I barely caught myself from falling.
“What are you doing here?” a querulous voice asked. The tone
said the owner wouldn’t accept any half ass excuses either.
I looked up to find a pair of bright blue eyes looking out
at me from a face so lined with wrinkles that it was hard to believe the owner
had ever been anything but ancient. He looked like a sharpei. Even his wrinkles
had wrinkles.
“I’m not talking to hear myself speak,” he snapped.
“Uh.” I glanced over my shoulder to find the other man had
disappeared.
“Oh, good lord, it’s like talking to a brick wall. No, I
take that back. A brick wall would have a more intelligent conversation.”
My stomach sank. I recognized him. He was the shop keeper I
usually dealt with when making my deliveries. Talk about out of the pan and
into the fire.
“I was just trying to find the exit,” I said. Maybe he
wouldn’t recognize me. It’s not like we’d had a lot of conversations in the
past. He’d barely deigned to acknowledge me on the rare occasions I stopped by.
“Your other shop keeper was showing me the way.”
“Other shopkeeper? What shopkeeper? I’m the only one who
carries that title.” The man’s eyes narrowed. “Wait a minute. I recognize you.
You work for that upstart Jerry.”
Damn. Guess he’d paid more attention than I thought.
“Yeah. You work for his little company. What was it called?”
He looked around as if the name was just lingering in the air, waiting for him
to see it.
“Hermes,” I said. No point denying it now. If he knew
Jerry’s name, he’d eventually be able to tie it back to me.
“That’s it.” He pointed at me. “It still doesn’t explain why
you’re inside the store.”
I shrugged, feigning nonchalance. “I was looking for a book.
Why else would I be here?”
His laugh was a cackle suited to any movie villain. “There
are more reasons than there are stars in the galaxy. How did you even get in?”
“Same way most do.”
“Be more specific. There are a million ways to gain
entrance.”
I’d really hoped to keep that part secret.
His eyebrows, two white caterpillars perching just above his
sunken in eyes, rose in question as if to say ‘today’.
“I asked the cashier at The Book Haven for a map to the
feline behavior department,” I admitted.
He harrumphed. “That shouldn’t have gotten you inside. The
code changed about five minutes after you dropped my package off last time.”
I blinked. On one hand, his response shouldn’t have been
surprising. It was only good security to change passwords and codes once an
unknown entity or hired errand girl was gone. I just hadn’t expected it to be
so instantaneous.
It did bring up the question of why it had worked for me.
He shuffled over to a book case and pulled down a red
leather bound book and flipped through its pages as he grumbled to himself.
He ran his finger down the page, pausing at one entry.
“Ah ha, I was right. The code changed three minutes after
you left.”
He peered back up at me, his eyes a bright spot of blue
amidst his wrinkles.
I shrugged, not knowing what response he wanted from me. I
couldn’t change the truth.
“I don’t know what to tell you. That’s the code I used with
the cashier. Maybe your system’s broken.”
“Impossible,” he snapped. “It’s never once had even a hiccup
in all the years I’ve been the shopkeeper.”
Judging by his wrinkles, that’d been a long, long time.
His eyes sharpened on the book at my feet. “What’s that?” his
voice deepened to nearly a growl. If I hadn’t been staring at the old man in
front of me, I would have sworn his voice was that of a young man.
I looked down at the book he was trying to incinerate with
his gaze. Its cover was plain leather with the title embossed in it. It was a
deep brown and the pages cream colored.
I bent down and picked it up. Out loud I read the words on
the spine, “A study of the unexplained. The uninitiated’s guide to the
supernatural.”
“Let me see it.” He shuffled forward.
I held it out to him, but he didn’t touch it, just peered at
it like it was a snake preparing to strike.
“Well, that explains that,” he murmured.
“Explains what?”
He gave me a gimlet glare. “Everything.”
He turned around and shuffled away.
Well, that wasn’t dire or anything.
“Are you going to follow me so I can show you to the exit,
or are you going to stand there looking like a great lump of clay? If it’s the
second, you won’t last long. Things roam these shelves looking for an easy
target like you to consume.”
I looked down at the book in my arms. “What do you want me
to do with the book?”
“Bring it with you,” he snapped. Under his breath, he
mumbled, “It’s not like it’d stay put anyway.”
Pretending I hadn’t heard that second part, I hurried after
him, book in tow. Staying off the dinner menu worked well for my long term
goals. The sooner I could put this place behind me the better. I never wanted
to be this deep in the book store again.
He was mostly silent as he led me through the maze-like
stacks of books. In contrast to the wide open rooms I’d wandered through
before, he led me through hallway after small hallway of claustrophobia inducing
spaces.
“Tell me about the other shopkeeper,” he said abruptly. He
sounded grim. Like he expected me to tell him the world was ending soon.
Seeing no harm in telling him about the creepy man I’d met,
I said, “He had curly brown hair, brown eyes.”
“Not that, you half-wit. I don’t care what he looked like.
Tell me what he said.”
I pulled a face behind him.
“I can see you.”
I paused, giving him a suspicious look. He hadn’t turned so,
unless he had eyes in the back of his head, I doubted that. Unless he was
another mind reader.
I visualized burning the book in my hands, frowning when it
pulsed with warmth against my fingers. If warmth was capable of giving off a
feeling, this would have felt like indignation. I put that thought aside.
The old man failed to respond to my visualization, which
meant he probably was not a mind reader. Good. Those guys always unsettle me. I
don’t like anybody knowing my most private thoughts. It’s like having a peeping
tom with x-ray vision spying on you in your most intimate moments.
The old man stopped and fixed a cranky stare on me.
“Right.” What had the other man said? “He wanted to sell me
a book.”
“What kind of book?”
I debated how much to tell him. Couldn’t hurt now. I was
already in enough trouble. “A rundown of all the supernaturals and an insider’s
guide to the politics between the different factions.”
He harrumphed again. “You wouldn’t need such a thing if you
would simply allow a clan to claim you. They would teach you everything you
need to know.”
Or only what they want me to know.
“Yes, yes. I’ve already been over this with the vampires. I
don’t need to go over it with a grumpy bookseller too.”
He snorted. “Cocky and arrogant. What’s wrong? Afraid of
losing control of your life?”
I gave his back a searching look, not liking how closely
he’d guessed my motivations. Even Liam hadn’t hit the nail on the head so
aptly.
Liam was a vampire I’d met last fall. The first vampire I’d
met. Well, if you didn’t count the bastard who turned me. I didn’t. I tended to
call him Jackass in my head. Liam was also the vampire who said he would teach
me a little more about this world, and more importantly, a little more about
what it meant to be vampire.
I hadn’t heard much from him since that promise, which led
to the reason I was in a restricted bookstore trying to bluff my way towards
obtaining more knowledge.
“Sure, I guess you could say that.” There was no point in
denying it.
He gave me a gap toothed smile. “Good for you. Maybe you’re
smarter than you look.”
We turned a corner and suddenly we were back in the cavern
of the room I’d entered from. The man’s head swiveled as he took in the expanse
of books.
He cackled. “I haven’t seen this section in a while.”
How big was this place? Never mind. I didn’t think my mind
could handle the answer.
I tried to hand the book I’d been carrying to him. He waved
me off and took a step back.
“What was the price you agreed to?” he asked.
“We didn’t,” I said. “He tried to tell me it was nothing and
everything, but it sounded like it was too good to be true so I refused.”
Well that and he had seriously creeped me out by that point.
I tried to hand it back to the shop keeper again. He refused
to take it, his old man face frowning at me.
“Keep it. You’ve already paid the price, and it wouldn’t
stay with me anyway.”
My hands hung in the air, holding out the book, while I
processed what he said.
“No, I haven’t paid anything or agreed to any payment.”
He shrugged. “Doesn’t mean it hasn’t already been paid.
Look, the price really is nothing.”
“And everything,” I protested. I remembered that part. It
was the part that had tripped my internal alarms.
He waved my protest away. “That means nothing. No worries.
The book is yours.”
“But I don’t want the damn book.”
“Too late now.” He waved his hand at the door to the human
side. “Out you go.”
“Wait a minute. You can’t make me pay for something if I
never agreed to the deal.” I’d learned this much from the sorcerer at least.
My phone rang before the shop keeper could respond. I
glanced down and pulled it out of my pocket. It said ‘Hermes Calling.’
I looked up to find myself alone in the stacks of books. I
spun around. Damn it, where’d he go?
The phone rang again.
I answered, “What?”
The person on the other end sucked in a breath. “Is that how
you answer when representing the company?”
It is when they have possibly caused me to agree to a deal I
had no intention of agreeing to.
“What do you want, Janice?”
“You know my name isn’t Janice,” Beatrix snapped.
I did, but she looked like a Janice so that’s what I called
her. It didn’t hurt that I knew she hated it, which is why I did it.
“What do you want?”
“You need to come into the office.”
“It’s my night off. I have plans.” I glanced around the
empty book cases. Or at least I had before the book keeper left me standing
holding a book I didn’t pay for.
“Too bad. Jerry needs all hands on deck.”
“Can’t this wait until tomorrow?”
Even if my excursion hadn’t gone as planned, I still wanted
the rest of the night to figure out what to do next.
“It can. If you want to be fired.” Beatrix’s voice was smug
over the phone. She knew I wouldn’t risk that.
“Fine,” I gritted out. “I’ll be there in an hour.”
“Make it twenty minutes.”
“Twenty minutes? Are you crazy? I have to go home first and
grab my shit before heading to the office. No way can I get there in twenty
minutes.”
“I don’t want to hear your excuses; just get your ass here
in twenty.”
There was a click and then silence. I looked at my phone
screen. That harpy had hung up on me.
Guess I shouldn’t be too surprised. She had made no secret
from the moment we met that she didn’t like me.
I took one last glance around the empty stacks before glancing
down at the book in my hands. It looked so harmless with its leather cover and
simple design, but then I think most books had that in common.
What should I do with it? Leave it behind or take it with
me? The shopkeeper seemed adamant that I take it, even going so far to say that
whatever its price was had already been paid.
Might as well keep it for now seeing as there was no one to
hand it off to. I could always come back later to try to return it.
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