You can take the dead girl out of the country...
Veronica Fischer, small-town bloodsucking madam, is an orphan or at least she finally feels that way. Jules, the one who made her, is gone and cleaning up after him isn't something she ever thought she'd have to do.
While her hometown seems to be turning against her, she’s forced to set off for the bright lights of the big city with a carload of her dysfunctional supernatural family, hoping not to have to face the Dragon of Chicago.
Now she has to rescue a sister she didn't know she had, keep Rachel—her adopted 8-year-old ghost—safe, and try to keep Pekin from unraveling under the onset of the coming storm.
Sex, violence, and cryptic undead
prophecy—all for fun and profit.
prophecy—all for fun and profit.
"Distant Thunder is gripping, raw, and relentless with incredibly drawn characters in life or (un)death situations. Sharpe hit the coffin nail on the head with this sequel." - Ashley Chappell, Author of the Dreams of Chaos series
Links to Distant Thunder, Book Two in the Coming Storm trilogy.
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Sample text:
The first chapter -
CHAPTER 1
JULES
IS DEAD, and there wasn’t even so much as a funeral. There were no services
or gatherings to mark his passing. I guess I should be used to things like that
by now—rituals like those are left behind when we stop breathing—but it just
doesn’t sit right with me. It just seems so weird. Clearly, I haven’t adjusted
to that part of what I am yet, even after all these years. All I can focus on
is that the man who made me is gone. He only exists in the memories of those
who knew him. For me, his loss is still so jarringly abrupt.
It’s taken Learner five weeks and my repeated requests to
call a meeting of the Council to discuss the events surrounding Jules’s death.
You’d think five weeks would be enough time for me to find some kind of
acceptance of the fact that he had passed. He hadn’t been actively involved in
my life in seventeen years. Here I am, though, still feeling like I’m in shock.
I’m like a traumatized child who just lost her only parent. Believe me, I know
what that’s like. I’d already been through it twice before Jules decided to
make me, so I’m confident I can be fair in making the comparison.
Beneath me, the worn-out bedsprings groan in protest as I
sit up and slowly stretch. Even if I hadn’t had some strange woman keeping my
dreams more unsettling than usual, my living conditions wouldn’t have let me
sleep restfully—not that I can ever sleep for long. While I may have my
complaints about it, I’m still the only one with my condition that I’ve ever
even heard of who can actually sleep at all. It’s just another curse of the
condition, something besides the avoiding sunlight and the blood drinking, to
bring on the madness, maybe. Focus on the positive, right?
At least the windows are bricked up in this room and not
just tarped over like they are in the rest of the building. If I didn’t know
better, I’d think this was a loft apartment somewhere in a larger city than the
flyspeck that is Pekin, Kentucky. There’s a starving artist charm here, not the
feel of an empty condemned building we’re squatters in.
The place really could do with a good cleaning, though. It
looks like everything might have been given a good scrub down when Garrett and
Sunny moved in months ago, and no one has so much as swept since. It’s not like
there are piles of garbage littering up every room. There’s just a dingy feel
to it all. It’s noticeably organized but without any upkeep.
Garrett’s a man built for Spartan living, one who doesn’t
seem to notice little trifles like these. Sunny, as queen of this castle, can’t
be bothered with something mundane like occasional light dusting. Garrett still
treats her like the twelve-year-old she looks like and that only serves to keep
her spoiled. She killed all the breathers who worked for them by throwing them
at Paco and his Unquiet spirits at the funeral home, and now all she can do is
constantly bitch about needing a maid.
As a guest, I’m not sure how they’d take it if I just
started tidying up. I don’t want to go all Martha Stewart on the place or
anything, but I’m afraid I might ruffle feathers if I start moving things
around to do something as simple as running a vacuum cleaner.
The room service hasn’t been bad, though. As usual, there’s
a glass of warm red liquid waiting for me on the table next to the bed when I
wake up. Even though I rarely sleep more than half an hour a day, and never on
a regular schedule, somehow, Garrett always seems to know when I fall asleep
and makes sure I wake up feeling cared for. Bringing the glass to my lips
induces an involuntary smile.
“Mmmm…Fresh squeezed. Not from concentrate,” I mumble the
words aloud. On some level, I expect to hear one of my girls laugh at my odd
sense of humor. I miss having them around. I need to be back in my own house.
Frank assures me this is the last day we’ll have to spend
living on Garrett’s generosity at the old Masonic Lodge. The Jefferson House is
supposed to be ready for us to move back into tonight and sleep in tomorrow.
I could have gone back to the ranch house, but the memories
there are a little too thick. I don’t even want to look at the clothes in the
closets there. I’ve been living out of suitcases and bags for more than a
month.
Clothes have always been one of my eccentricities. They’re
more important to me than they are to most people. Not only do they carry the
memories of the places they’ve been and times they’ve seen, but they help set
an emotional tone and showcase an attitude.
Frank spoiled me long ago by taking over all of my clothes
shopping. I was resistant to him doing it at first, but over time I came to
trust that I wouldn’t be disappointed. Having them bought for me also came with
an unexpected bonus—the excitement of getting presents regularly. Who doesn’t
love presents? Even if they happen to be bought with your own money, they’re
still presents.
Since Frank’s now acquired my aversion to sunlight, I had to
send someone else to L.A. to replace my whole wardrobe. Piper got saddled with
the task, and she more than exceeded my expectations. While it’s true that I’ve
always adored Frank’s taste in elegant formal wear and clubbing attire, Piper’s
taste trends more toward the bitch end of the spectrum. I can appreciate that a
lot, things being how they are these days, not to mention that a completely new
wardrobe has done wonders for keeping forward momentum, emotionally anyway. Keep your mind on where you are and your
eyes on where you’re going, right? Jesus, I sound like my shrink.
The sound of rushing of water tells me Garrett has beaten me
to the makeshift shower set up in the next room. It’s probably for the best. I
should just wait and get cleaned up in my own bathroom later. Something tells
me that after meeting with Learner and the Council, I’m going to need an
extra-long relaxing shower for an hour or five.
I rub my eyes as I cross the room to the garment bag hanging
on the dark red flannel sheet serving as a curtain that divides the room in
half. Dividing the room was Garrett’s idea. He thought giving me more privacy
would make me feel more at home. While I appreciate the sentiment, it honestly
just serves to make this place look tackier.
Pulling back the zipper, I go over each article of clothing,
considering it carefully, even though I already know what I’m going to wear.
Pulling out the slinky black number, I run my hand over the fabric and ponder
what memories tonight will attach to this dress.
Hanging the dress next to the garment bag, I take off my
sweatshirt and fling it in my laundry basket. Walking around naked in seedy
places is just one of the many natural talents that the life I’ve lived has
fostered. Modesty is for sheltered young girls with fleeting lives. I have no
use for it.
Overall, Garrett’s done his best to be a sweetheart. He’s
tried so hard to make Frank and me as comfortable as possible. I’ve had a hard
time with the fact that he looks so much like Jules, but he’s done a million
little things to try to comfort me. Julie, Leslie, and Piper are all convinced
he’s in love with me or crushing really hard, at the very least. They don’t
understand how different emotions seem when viewed through the prism of a dozen
lifetimes.
If age were a thing that was strictly measured in the years
we’ve been alive on this rock, I’d be in my sixties, but I can tell from
conversations we’ve had that Garrett’s likely got a century on me, minimum.
Physically, he looks about ten years older than me and my literally Forever 21
body that stopped aging when Jules infected me. I want to believe Garrett cares
about me, but a voice in my head that sounds suspiciously like Frank’s keeps
telling me he has to be too old for love. Even if he isn’t, he’s probably old
enough to be the grandfather of the man who built the cradle he would be robbing
me from. That’s something that, despite how much I try not to think about, I
can’t seem to keep completely out of my mind.
I find my perfume in the overnight bag next to the bed and
spritz myself. Two hundred dollars a bottle and worth every penny. I consider a
thong for a moment and then look back at the unforgiving fabric of that dress.
I’m not going to let panty lines ruin the particular brand of sexy man-eating
monster look I’m going for.
The knee-length sheath dress comes off the hanger and drops
over my head before I notice Garrett standing by the bed. He’s looking at me
smiling and shaking his head. An involuntary shiver spills over me. I must have
forgotten to close the curtain…again.
He’s already changed to meet with the Council, and he looks
hot. His strategically messy short brown hair, precisely trimmed shadow of a
beard, and deceptively expensive, slightly tight-fitting suit are impressive.
There’s something about the way his perfectly toned, six-foot-three-inch body
moves, though…no matter what he’s wearing. He’s just got something, a quality I
can’t describe. My words could never do him justice. He’s masculine beautiful,
not an easy thing to pull off.
He exudes a chaotic blend of modern fashion and classic
sophistication that would turn any girl with a heartbeat into a gushing,
stuttering idiot. I look back into the mirror and begin to pull my dress down
in place slowly, instinctively putting on a show for him. I blame it on too
many years in a sexual career field. You can’t work in or run a brothel for as
many years as I have without it having some lasting effects.
As the fabric stretches down over me, gripping me like a
glove, I being to worry that the seams will split. If it fit any tighter, I
believe they would. Piper said she thinks skintight and black is what’s best
for me right now. I don’t know if she thinks I should look like I’m in
mourning, semiprofessional, or just slutty.
Looking back toward the bed, I find Garrett digging through
a leather bag filled with antique bobbles and trinkets. It’s a real shame dead
men aren’t as impressed with tits and ass as living ones. Everything in my life
would be so much simpler if they were.
He walks up behind me and slips a diamond necklace over my
head as I’m facing the mirror. It’s old. Older than me. I can tell just by
looking. It’s more expensive than anything I’d normally wear to meet the
vultures, but it’ll do just fine for tonight.
I have to move Rachel’s new chapter books off of the shoe
boxes in the corner to locate the right heels to complete my look. The books
remind me how much I owe her as well. Having a daughter to raise has kept me
from dwelling too much on death, even if she happens to be dead herself. She
may be a ghost, but she’s still a precocious eight-year-old with a voracious need
for time and attention.
I’m really not thrilled with the idea of Rachel being
exposed to Sunny any more than absolutely necessary, so Lucy has been looking
after her during the day. At least that buys me more time to try to sleep, even
if I do generally just spend the time working out elaborate plots for revenge
on Paco or Learner. Besides, Sunny’s out-of-control addiction to pornography,
her foul mouth, and her contempt for me are all good enough reasons to keep
Rachel away from here as much as possible.
Having Lucy for a best friend has certainly proved
invaluable. There’s nothing quite like having a ghost sitter on call for my
ghost daughter when I need her. Yeah, even for me, life has gotten a little
strange.
I strap on my heels and examine myself in the full-length
mirror. Everything below the neck seems passable—hot, if I do say so myself. I
look at Garrett, and he gives me a nod of approval. I’m not so much nervous
about how things are going to go as I am just anxious to get it over with.
“You gonna be ready to go in twenty?” Garrett asks, stopping
in the doorway and looking back at me.
“Give me thirty. My hair needs help, and I need to paint my face.”
Tonight, I go to war.
* * *
“You’re dead.” Marcus Learner’s
voice booms with as much satisfaction as anger. He runs his hand over his head,
a nervous habit, smoothing down his thick bramble of salt-and-pepper hair. “All
those you care for are dead. Everyone who calls you friend or ally is dead. The
Council will follow the procedures laid out to try you and prove your guilt,
but Jacobi’s blood is on your hands. Trying to kill the investigator gathering
evidence against you won’t go unnoticed by this Council either.”
Sitting in the center of
the horseshoe-shaped table on a chair that’s a good foot shorter than everyone
else’s, I am surrounded by pallid faces, drawn and emotionless—all, that is,
save one. Next to Learner’s right hand on the table rests a silver mallet. I
would give anything for that mallet to rest by the side of anyone but him. The
air still hangs thick with his accusations. I’m seriously feeling that the
point of this meeting—the very reason I asked that it be called together—is
being overlooked.
I expect nothing less
from Learner. We have a history. There is no love lost between us. He’s a
spoiled, self-serving prick who only has power because of who he’s related to.
He’s one generation removed from inbred, illiterate, racist trash. Rather than
trying to better himself, he simply tries to cover up inadequacies with
expensive clothes and by showering himself with luxuries. Somehow, that is
supposed to make others revere and respect him. Right.
His uncle, Adrian Jacobi,
was our eldest. He was an aberration in his family. He was a good man. His
uncle is dead. Now Learner sits at the head of the Council’s table clutching
and grasping to hold onto the power and position his uncle held. The fear
wafting off him is almost as thick and fragrant as the humans we drink from.
“Paco is far from an
investigator. He’s the one who actually killed Jacobi! That putrid cadaver’s
plans to kill us all failed, but it’s only a matter of time before he regains
strength. We’ve got to act quickly! We have to kill him now!” My voice is
shrill and far too loud. I could almost kick myself. I let him get to me. I provided
him with the latitude he needs to try to turn the Council against me. The
almost imperceptible smirk on his face makes me nauseous.
“My uncle afforded you a
voice in this room. He showed you kindness despite the fact that you’re nothing
more than an orphan whore. You don’t belong among our kind. Now you stand here
peddling your lies and expect us to stomach your impudence. Is it not enough
that you’ve killed your creator and likely our eldest as well, but do you have
to parade it in front of us and…and…try to have us believe that my personal
agent, the agent of our family mind you, is somehow to blame for your…”
“Marcus!” I’m almost as
shocked as Learner is that I’d raise my voice to him at this table. Fuck it, I think. I have to make them see the truth, even if they won’t ever accept it.
“The repulsive creature that actually killed your uncle is wounded but still on
the loose. He has to be put down once and for all! I’m begging you.” My eyes
dart from face to face around the room. “All of you! That thing killed Jules as
well. I don’t have the power to destroy it by myself. Not without your help!”
I look to Serena for aid.
She met with Jules the night we went to battle that rotting fiend. With her
silver blonde hair and prudish white on white suit, she could just as easily
pass for a fifties schoolmarm as a member of this Council. She remains
completely silent and withdrawn, careful to reveal nothing. Big shock.
“Just how stupid do you
think we are? Paco knew about your involvement in Jacobi’s disappearance. I
told you he was going to bring us proof.” Learner raises an eyebrow and looks
around the room for grandiose effect thinking he’s somehow just proven my
guilt. “You summoned your creator and had him help you attempt to slay my agent
before he could give us the evidence of your guilt. This misdirection will not
save you.” Learner’s glowing with glee as he speaks, knowing that my outburst
has cost me dearly with the Council. He looks back into my eyes, and I can feel
his delight. I hate that he’s loving this.
“No, idiot girl,” Learner
continues, “We will not assist you in hunting and killing my servant. I have
already sent for a reader. In one month’s time, we will hold Council
specifically to sentence you for your crimes. You’re dead, you stupid twat. Ready
your affairs for the end.”
“Okay, I’ve heard enough
of this bullshit!” The youthful passion and indignation in Sunny’s voice
guarantees that no one here will take her seriously, though that does
absolutely nothing to stop her, “Captain Douchebag here is trying to blame V
for doing things that she—all of us in this corner, for that matter—tried to
stop from happening. Have you all gone retarded? You’re not buying into what
this assface is saying, are you? I mean, really?”
For a moment, there is
silence as all eyes look at Sunny in shock.
“You will muzzle your
bitch, or I’ll see to it she doesn’t live to disgrace you further!” Learner’s
hate-filled eyes flash at Garrett, sitting next to Frank and Sunny by the door.
“None of you have earned a voice in this room yet. Don’t forget your place.”
“What about me?” Frank
blurts out with contemptuous anger almost as childish and insolent as Sunny’s.
“My family and friends are under attack here. I think that entitles me a right
to speak, doesn’t it? Jules is dead. Paco killed him and your uncle, too. Why
aren’t you listening? You said he was working for you? Does that mean that both
their murders were your idea?”
Outside on the street I
know that I can always count on Frank’s level head. I just hadn’t considered
how he’d behave here. This is really not going how I need it to.
“You will leave now!” I
bark at Frank, shocking both him and Learner. It’s far better that I reprimand
him for his breach of protocol than let Learner kill him for it. “Until you
learn how to conduct yourself in the presence of your elders and betters, you
will not be permitted to approach this Council!”
The silence in the room
is deafening. Every eye is on me, and every face is as emotionless as chiseled
stone. None of them know how far my abilities to read their minds actually go,
but none of them are willing to give me anything I don’t already have. It’s
likely they would be equally stoic if I weren’t here, not wanting to betray
themselves to Learner either.
Standing on display in
front of these vacant faces is like the dream I used to have about being naked
in public. I seriously doubt I get to wake up from this one though.
Frank rises from his seat
quietly. I can feel his eyes burning a hole in me. He shakes his head a little,
swinging his long mane of auburn hair before turning to leave. He’s going to be
a loud, prissy diva and horrible to deal with later, but at least he’ll be
alive. Garrett keeps his poker face and Sunny squirms in her chair as Frank
exits. Sunny’s clearly nervous, but she still glares at Learner with palpable
loathing.
From across the table,
Gus Edelmann slides Learner a slip of paper. He’s clearly aware of it but holds
his eyes fixed on Sunny’s. He makes a show of attempting to cow her down. The
unabashed defiance on the face of the would-be twelve-year-old schoolgirl is
lost on no one. Her dark red-black pigtails tremble from rage. I have been
trained to show deference to how the system functions. It’s clear that Sunny
has not.
Learner finally looks
down and retrieves the scrap, scanning it quickly. He looks from Gus to his own
family, Preston, sitting to his right, before addressing us all again. “We’ll
take a recess to discuss the issues at hand within our individual families and
return to order in closed session, with only Ms. Fischer, in thirty minutes.”
He smacks the silver mallet on its block dismissing us. I can’t help thinking how much I’d love to see how far down his throat I could force that symbol of his superiority.
* * *
Garrett tries to ride down with me,
but I tell him it would be better if he stays with Sunny. He considers it for a
moment before agreeing with me. I just have to get outside and light a
cigarette. I don’t need the nicotine, but the relaxing routine of the habit
might help calm my nerves.
I’m shaking as I step out of the elevator into the
glass-walled lobby. It’s all I can do to hold my composure for another fifteen
paces. I know there are cameras on me, and I will not give Learner the
satisfaction of seeing me lose control again.
Two security guards open the doors for me while four more
watch my every move. Each of them has a hand on their side arm as though
bullets would do something other than annoy me if I decided to attack them.
They fear me, and I must admit I like that. It doesn’t make up for the way
things are going, but it does afford me a slight smile.
Once I’m outside, it becomes painfully clear that Frank
didn’t just leave the room like I told him to. He left the premises. That’s
going to be so much fun to deal with later. Likely, it will be even more fun
than I’d originally thought. Great.
I pace up and down on the sidewalk several times before
noticing that Serena Carlson is standing in the shadows of an alley off to the
side of the building. I didn’t even see her come outside. She discreetly
gestures for me to join her. Despite my better judgment, I step out of the
streetlights’ glow and into the darkness beside her.
“I thought you…,” I start to ask, but she cuts me off.
“I know you weren’t involved in Jacobi’s death.” She hisses
the words at me trying to sound forceful and quiet at once.
“Wait, what?”
“Paco killed him as you say he did. I know that.”
“If you know that, and excuse me for being impertinent here,
then why the hell didn’t you open your mouth when I was being roasted by Learner
in front of the assembled Council?”
“Timing,” she says, staring blankly at me. We stand in
silence for a moment, and I’m almost convinced that she’s telling a joke I
don’t get.
“Learner’s family is our concern here. They control
Nashville and St. Louis, and they’re powerful. None of us have any desire to
deal with the consequences that simply ridding ourselves of him would bring. We
let him ‘take charge’ of the Council for now. He’s contacted his family to
bring in a reader who will investigate and find the truth of the matter. He’s
destroying himself for us. It’s the only way to truly be rid of him. You
suffered a little, and you’ll suffer more before it’s done. That doesn’t
matter. What matters is the end result. Learner will have killed himself, his family
will have nothing to say to protect him, and I will take his seat. Hold your tongue for now and abide his slings and arrows. That might make me more affable toward orphans and their kin in the future.”
It takes every precious ounce of self-control I have left to seem unfazed by the thought of Serena running the Council. With a moron like Learner in charge, I know that I’ll never have a problem outwitting his attempts on my life even if they are annoying. Serena, however, is devious, calculating, and unabashedly evil. This development is truly disturbing and not at all what I want to think about right now.
* * *
The
silver mallet strikes the block officially bringing us back to order. Learner
stands at the head of the table and slowly looks from face to face,
ham-fistedly attempting to reassert his dominance over the Council. I can feel
how smug he is from here, and it’s far too much for my taste. While we’ve been
in recess, he’s undoubtedly met in private with those whose opinions he feels
are the most important and made sure he had their support. Now emboldened, this
vainglorious dick shows no sign of letting me speak again. At this point, I’m
only here for show, to be ridiculed publicly for his amusement. It comes as no
surprise when I’m ordered to stand and face the Council.
“We’ve reached the point
now where decisions must be made. This Council can no longer sit idly by and
entertain wild accusations or misleading calls to action. As I said before
recess, I have called for a reader to investigate this orphan and prove her
guilt beyond question. We will plan to reconvene on that matter in one month’s
time. Any objections?” He looks around the room pretending the issue is still
open to discussion.
“None?” With no voice
raised in dissent, he nods his head. “Excellent!”
He taps the block
gleefully with his little hammer again, giving his most repugnant smile. This
would almost be funny, if it weren’t such a blatant mockery of even the
horribly draconian system of justice we’re supposed to operate under.
“In the interim, this
Garrett will be required to stay in Pekin and make himself available to our
reader. After that, he may remain here on a temporary basis only, provided he
keeps his yipping dog restrained and their feeding is only done within
guidelines arranged by Preston Warner. Objections?”
Again, the room drowns in
silence until the hammer falls.
“Excellent. Now, on to
other matters. Veronica’s newest little loudmouthed orphan friend. I believe
you said his name was…Frank?” His voice is almost dripping.
“His name is Frank, yes.”
I have managed to focus my hate into a calming force and my voice remains even.
“You, Ms. Fischer, will
keep this Frank with you. He will also be made available to the reader if
necessary—not that I believe we’ll need to investigate that deeply to prove
your guilt. It’s better for our region, I believe, that we try to keep these
two unfortunate orphans housed together for now. What say you all? Objections?”
I am so overcome with
rage that I don’t really hear anything else. I sit and simmer until I see the
hammer in his hand rise and fall again bringing this torture to an end for the
evening. I walk out of the room with my eyes on the floor as those around me
begin to engage in pleasantries. I cannot wait to be on the elevator and out of
this building.
I don’t know where
Garrett and Sunny have gone. They were waiting by the elevator when the meeting
came back from recess. I don’t see them now, but I’m certainly not going to
take the time to look for them. I can only focus on leaving before I do
something else I’ll regret.
I am joined for the ride down by Gus Edelmann and his cousin Carson Dwight. I expect that this will be the disavowal conversation from them—the end of our on-again, off-again working relationship.
I am stunned when Gus’s gnarled and wrinkled hand pushes a note into mine. Neither of them looks at me, so I close my hand around the paper until I’m out of the lobby and almost to my car. Now I’m even more confused. It simply says, “Meet us at the riverfront.”
* * *
The
pristine old black Lincoln slides up next to my Charger, and both Carson and
Gus get out. Unlike the rest of the pampered family elite that make up the
Council, these two had both lived lives of hard work. Their family chose who,
never more than one or two in a generation, was given the bite based on merit
not by birth order like the other families. They had to actually earn their
opulent new existence of excessive money and feeding off the blood of the
living.
Gus had been an auto
mechanic when he still drew breath. It showed on his hands more than anything
else, but his usually furrowed brow and the worry lines on his face showed the
character of a man who cared about more than his own fickle pleasures. Even
though I know I was born before him, the semicircle of grey hair around his
bald head always gives me a grandfatherly vibe.
Carson was just plain
scary to me. He’d been a roofer until he died at the ripe old age of thirty.
Because of his former lifestyle, his hair was perpetually bleached blond and
his skin somewhat tanned and leathery even though sunlight was now off-limits.
He was near seven feet tall, well-muscled, and covered in tattoos. I’d heard
the stories of the men he’d killed before he’d been made immortal. Word is it
was self-defense, but those guys must have been nuts to get in a fight with him
in the first place.
Rumors also abound that
their family has more animalistic physical manifestations from the infection.
I’ve never been bold enough to ask, but I don’t think I’d want to see Carson
any more outwardly threatening than he already is.
They were respectable
normal people once, and because of that, I’ve always felt I could actually
almost relate to them. We might not always see eye-to-eye on things, but I can
usually understand where they’re coming from.
We all stand looking at
each other for a moment.
“You gentlemen asked me
to meet you here?” I’m not even trying to hide my confusion. “Am I missing
something?”
“I’m gonna try to locate
Paco, now that I know what kinda threat he could be,” Carson says nonchalantly.
“Are you saying you
believe me then?”
“I don’t know that you’re
tellin’ the truth, but I’ve known Learner long enough to know that he’s almost
as arrogant as he is stupid. We can’t afford not to look into your side of this
story. If he’s wrong on this one, then we’re all at risk.”
“Thank you.” I can feel a
little weight lifting off of me as the words escape my lips. Carson is a pro at
finding people and things that don’t want to be found. “You should be careful,
though. He’s a whole different kind of evil than you’re likely prepared for.”
Carson nods to me and
then to Gus before walking off toward the floodwall. Turning back, he says, “If
I find out that you’re telling the truth about him…Well, he’d best just hope
he’s prepared for me.”
Gus watches him leave and
then looks around to make certain there’s no one but me to hear him, before he
speaks in muted tones. “I suggest you get ahold Jules’s family. It’s likely
that Learner or some of his kin already did. And you need to make sure they know
what happened, or your tellin’ of it, and suss out if they plan to come after
you.”
“I hadn’t even thought…”
“I’ll bet you didn’t,”
Gus cuts me off. “But if you’re gonna keep livin’, you need to play the game a
little smarter than Learner and a lot quicker.”
“Thank you, Gus. It means
a lot to me that you believe me.”
“Never said I believed
you. Just like you a hell of a lot more than I do him. That’s all.” He turns
and opens his car door then looks back at me. “I think I might know somethin’
more about who that Garrett fella is, or who his family is anyways. Gonna do
some lookin’. I’ll tell ya what I find. There’s somethin’ there. More’n he’s
sharin’ anyway.”
“You don’t trust him? Should I…”
“Never said I didn’t trust him. Just believe in knowin’ what there is to know ’bout someone ’fore makin’ any judgments. Alls I’m sayin’ is be careful.”
Links to Blood & Spirits, Book One in the Coming Storm trilogy.
Listing post
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Listing on goodreads.com
The cinematic trailer for Blood & Spirits
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