Why should I provide my email address?

Start saving money today with our FREE daily newsletter packed with the best FREE and bargain Kindle book deals. We will never share your email address!
Sign Up Now!

Free Kindle Nation Shorts — March 12, 2011: An Excerpt from Qi (Book of the Baba Yaga) by Elizabeth A. Svigar

 

This is something you know, if you’ve ever experienced the pleasures of returning to one of your favorite books from childhood:
the best YA novels are often among the best novels, period.

By Stephen Windwalker

Editor, Kindle Nation Daily
©Kindle Nation Daily 2011

QiMy son Danny is 12, on the edge of so many things. Most of them will be wonderful, because he is a wonderful kiddo. A few will be daunting, more perhaps for me than for him.

It’s not so much that there’s anything to fear about the years ahead as that there are so many things I would be so sad to let go of. And here is one: we have a wonderful Friday night ritual of reading aloud together. xBox 360 and all of that kind of thing is out of sight, out of mind, and we share the world of whatever we are reading. Right now it’s The Hunger Chronicles, and during the past couple of years there have been all kinds of things. He’s smart and cool at school, but as we’ve read The Little Prince and Alice in Wonderland and Percy Jackson and Lemony Snicket he’s just been Danny, my very good and very imaginative son.

Next up? I’m going to suggest Qi (Book of the Baba Yaga), because I’m enthralled by what Elizabeth Svigar has done here, and I think Danny will be, too.

Think “The Hunger Chronicles meets Percy Jackson“, and then — and I hope I don’t lose anyone here — throw in a little bit of The Firm, because I was reminded of the greatest accomplishment of that first big hit of Grisham’s, which was the way he created, twice in that novel, a totally alluring fictional world and then allowed a sense of doom and danger to overtake that world, both in Memphis and in the Cayman Islands.

But of course Qi (Book of the Baba Yaga) is no legal thriller. It’s just a chance to share Sam’s journey, and a thoroughly engaging, fully imagined, and often very funny “young adult” novel … for all ages.

Click here to begin reading the free excerpt
 

Here’s the set-up:

Thirteen-year-old uber-archer Samantha is thrilled to qualify for Xenith, the most prestigious – and mysterious – Olympic training facility in the world. Much more than an athletic camp, it’s part fantasyland where living dolls and the Baba Yaga abound. Then there’s Dr. Nine, a master alchemist whose laboratory is very well guarded indeed. But not all that glitters is Olympic gold. When dangerous secrets begin to surface, Samantha must fight her way through Xenith’s sinister underworld to save her friends and family – if she survives herself.

Qi is a fast-paced young adult fantasy that will appeal to fans of strong but conflicted protagonists as well as fans of mythological adventure tales. It draws influence from Slavic mythology, Dante’s Inferno, and contemporary villains and heroes. Recently, it was selected for the second round in Amazon’s breakthrough young adult novel contest, and it continues to receive highly positive reviews from both readers and reviewers. It is currently on sale for 99 cents.

 

Click here to begin reading the free excerpt

(Book of the Baba Yaga)

by Elizabeth A. Svigar
Kindle Edition

List Price: $0.99

Buy Now

 

Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

 

UK CUSTOMERS: Click on the title below to download   

Qi

excerptFree Kindle Nation Shorts – March 12, 2011

 

An Excerpt from

Qi

(Book of the Baba Yaga)  

 

by Elizabeth A. Svigar

Copyright © 2011 by Elizabeth A. Svigar and published here with her permission

Chapter One – Winners

*
Sam peered across the meadow at the target seventy meters away. She took a deep breath and held it. Just seventy meters between her, a perfect score, and acceptance into prestigious Xenith Training Camp for field sports.

Honeybees buzzed in the summer clover and the crowd murmured behind her. She licked her lips, fingers straining against the bowstrings. Squinting down the sight, she aimed at the tiny golden circle in the middle of the target.

As always, her gut told her the exact moment to let go, and she released her grip. Over her pounding heart, she heard the arrow’s familiar whistling sound. A silver streak in the bright afternoon sun – then, as if drawn by a magnet, the arrow struck the bullseye with a satisfying thunk.

A girl’s voice rang out above the screams of the crowd. Sam turned to see her older sister, Abby, darting across the field. She was still wearing her white fencing uniform. The first place medal she’d won earlier bounced against her chest, flashing gold in the sun.

Sam ran to meet her. “We’re in.” She threw her arms around her sister.

“Yeah!” Abby jumped up and down, pulling Sam with her. “We get to be with Mum. We’re the best in Salem. We could be the best in the world!” She whipped her long, blonde hair behind her head. “Let’s find Dad.”

Sam and Abby pushed their way through the crowd, acknowledging good wishes on all sides. A judge slipped a medal just like Abby’s around Sam’s neck, and the weight of it felt wonderful – the weight of success. Sam’s teammates hugged her so tightly that even the three bands she’d wrapped around her dark curls weren’t enough to keep them under control. They popped out all around her face in a messy halo.

Sam laughed, fighting her way out of their embrace. “I can’t breathe.” She tried to gather her hair back but soon gave up. Who cared what she’d look like in the photos, anyway. She was going to Xenith, where the best athletes in the world prepared for the Olympics. And Mum would be there.

Finally, Sam spied their father standing alone at the edge of the field. “There he is.”

They scrambled over to him.

“We made it,” Abby crowed, grabbing his arm. “We’re following in your footsteps, Dad.”

“Congratulations, girls.” Their father smiled at them, but only with his lips. Behind his wire rimmed glasses, his gray eyes looked sad. Sam’s heart deflated. She knew why. Mum.

Abby must’ve caught on too, because she linked her arm through his and rested her head on his shoulder. “You’ll come too, right?”

He didn’t say anything for a moment, but then he smiled again and this time it looked genuine. “Of course. I’ll arrange a sabbatical. I wouldn’t miss it for the world.” He brightened. “I’m thirsty. And how do we celebrate after winning?”

Sam laughed. “Three fresh-squeezed lemonades coming on the double.” She hugged him, breathing in the clean scent of his aftershave. His jacket button pressed into her face. She’d been only five when her parents divorced, and she’d probably never know the details. But now that they were going back to Fletching, the town where Xenith was located and where their mother still lived… well, maybe her parents could put the past behind them and their lives back together again. After all, it had been eight years.

“Hurry back, the photographers are here.” Abby finger-combed her hair and adjusted her collar so her medal shone in the sun.

“Will do.” Sam ducked around folding chairs and small clusters of spectators, looking for Mr. Scott’s lemonade stand, which was always somewhere at these tournaments. The smell of popcorn drifted by and made her thirstier. She craned her neck. Where was it?

“Good work, Samantha,” said a deep voice behind her. She spun around. A tall, very thin man was standing there, smiling uncertainly. His closely cropped silver hair contrasted sharply with his unlined face. His hands holding the program trembled.

“Um, okay, thanks.” She was well known in the community. Surely, that must be how he knew her name. “Have we met?” He didn’t look familiar to her at all.

“Not since a long time ago.” The man studied her face, then took a step toward her and held out his hand. “I’m-”

“Sam, over here!” Her father thundered. “The stand’s over here!”

The man’s face twisted into a grimace, and he turned on his heel. He strode away so fast it seemed like he’d simply vanished. Sam blinked and looked around. Everyone was acting exactly as they had before, like nothing unusual had happened. She shook her head. He’d probably just seen her name in the program and wanted to talk to her. It happened all the time with fans.

“We got the lemonade!” Abby yelled. “Get over here, it’s photo time.”

Sam shook off her jitters and pushed her way back through the throngs of people. Her father and Abby were talking to a woman wearing a crisp blue suit and carrying a professional-looking digital camera.

“Ah,” she said when she spied Sam. “How wonderful. The Liffey sisters, winning again – what a headline for the Daily. Our own future Olympians. How about you stand in front of the high school sign?” She pointed.

Sam and Abby strutted over to the sign and put their arms around each other. Sam smiled into the camera, forgetting all about the strange man. She’d never felt so happy in all her life.

***
Later that night, they sat around the dining room table. Sam picked at the last slice of pizza, wishing she wasn’t too full to eat it. Her medal lay on the table, its blue band intertwined with Abby’s as though in an embrace.

“So, when can we go?” Abby asked for the hundredth time, drumming her fingernails on the table and jiggling her knee up and down. Sam hoped her sister wasn’t going to get snitty with their father – it happened too often lately now that Abby was fourteen and thought she knew everything.

Their father took a long drink of soda and took his time swallowing it. “Soon,” he said vaguely.

Sam didn’t remember moving to Salem, and for the first six or so years of their parents’ divorce, Mum had visited them once a month. Her visits had been woven into the fabric of their lives, unquestioned, like how you get up, eat breakfast and head out to school every day. But then she came once every two months, then once every three. This year, she’d only visited them once, and here it was August. They’d never visited her.

“Would we have to go to school?” asked Abby. Sam could tell her sister was hoping the answer would be no.

Their father smiled. “Of course. You’d go to the local school, Fletching Academy. It’s right on the grounds. Most of the kids who go there are also in Xenith.”

“Oh,” said Abby, and she slouched back in her seat.

“How do we get there?” Sam asked. She had faint but happy memories of Fletching. She’d had two good friends there, identical twins named Eli and Jonah. She wondered if they were still there. Wherever “there” was – she’d never seen it on a map.

Their father tugged at one of his earlobes. “How do you get there… well, it’s complicated.”

“Why don’t we catch a plane like Mum?” Abby furrowed her brow.

Their father shook his head slowly, as though chasing away a thought. “That’s not how it’s done.”

“What does she do, teleport?” Sam fought a chuckle as she pictured her mum vanishing, bit by bit, like a Star Trek character.

“Not exactly,” replied their father, running his hands through his light brown, wavy hair. He took his glasses off and rubbed his thumb over his nose.

Abby dropped her glass on the table with a thud. “Why are you being so weird, Dad? Whenever she came you went and got her at the airport.”

Sam shot her sister a glare. She didn’t want to deal with an argument, not on their glorious day. She wished Abby wasn’t so impatient and that she held her tongue better when she was mad. But that was how her sister had always been.

Their father stared at the wall for a moment. “I suppose you girls are old enough to know some things.” He seemed to be choosing his words carefully, like someone picking through rotten fruit at the grocery store, trying to find something useful. “How much do you remember about Fletching?”

“Not much,” admitted Sam. “I remember those twins and going down to the beach in the summertime. Mum was always practicing archery so it was just us.” Sam had loved those days by the water with the twins. Once, her precious stuffed bunny Sunny had gotten caught in the tide and Eli dove in to rescue her, even though it was dangerous. His mother and father shouted up a storm, despite the fact they were champion swimmers and had taught Eli themselves. Once they stopped yelling, Sam had given Eli a hug. She hoped he was still there.

“Yeah, your mum really wanted that gold medal.” Their father jolted Sam back into the present. “Too bad she never got it. But she tried hard, that’s the important thing.”

“We’ll get it for her,” Abby said, touching her medal. “She’ll be proud of us.” She sat up straight in her chair. “It’s the best training in the world, isn’t it, Dad?”

Their father nodded. “It’s a pretty special place. Heck, it almost got me the world championship.” He took a deep breath. “I’m about to let you in on a secret, so listen carefully. You see, Dr. Benjamin Nine, the president, discovered how to make gold some years back. It’s how they fund Xenith.”

“Wow,” said Sam. She leaned forward. What a weird name. Plus, she’d never heard of such a thing, except in some magic books. “Really?”

Abby seemed skeptical. “Impossible, Dad. No one can do that.”

“It’s fantastical, but it’s true,” said their father. “And it’s pretty amazing. Dr. Nine’s a genius alchemist. He’d been working on it for years, and then he figured it out. But he doesn’t tell anyone the secret, mind you, so don’t go snooping around.”

Abby shook her head. “This makes no sense, Dad.” She played with her napkin, watching him like a hawk. Sam could tell that even though her sister was doubtful, she wanted to believe this fantastic story as much as Sam did.

“Dad wouldn’t lie to us, Abby,” she said.

“I don’t think I can explain this to you in a way you can understand,” their father said softly. He stood up, almost knocking his chair over in the process. He gripped the edge of the table, and Sam noticed his knuckles were white. “All I can do is show you. I can take you there tonight.”

Sam and Abby leaped to their feet.

“Seriously?” Abby squealed, grabbing Sam around the shoulders in a big hug. “Does Mum know?”

Their father shook his head. “No. But she’ll be happy for the surprise. Go upstairs and pack your things. Remember your sports gear. Meet me in my study when you’re ready.”

“Yay!” Abby shouted, pulling away from Sam. She pushed her chair into the table with a bang and her medal slipped away from Sam’s, falling to the floor in a whirl of gold and blue.

***
Upstairs, Sam threw some jeans, shirts, socks and underwear into her backpack, then ran to the bathroom and grabbed her toiletries. She jammed them all in with her clothes and looked around. If Eli was still in Fletching, she’d love to show him she’d kept Sunny all these years. Spying a small foot sticking out from under her bed, she giggled. She snatched the bunny and shoved her in on top of everything else, then pulled the straining zipper closed. She caught up her quiver and bow and darted into the hallway, where she almost crashed into Abby.

“Isn’t this exciting?” Abby danced around, her hair flying everywhere. “We’re finally going back, and this time to Xenith, too, just like Mum and Dad. I wonder what it looks like now.”

Sam could still smell the pine trees and the summer grass, and see the stone cabin where their parents had lived in the woods. It had been beautiful.

Abby waved her hand in front of Sam’s face. “Yoo-hoo. Anybody home?”

Sam laughed. “Sorry. I was thinking about the last time we were there.”

“I know.” Abby picked up her bag in one hand and her long, silvery foil in the other. “I can’t wait to get back.”

“Well, let’s go.” Sam ran down the stairs. She didn’t know how they were going to get there tonight, but she didn’t much care. One thing she did know: Xenith produced more Olympians than any other training facility in the world. And even that paled to having her whole family in one place for the first time in eight years. All thanks to archery. After checking to be sure Abby wasn’t looking, she kissed her bow.

A sliver of light from the partly open door to their father’s study lay on the wall of the hallway. They headed toward it, Sam’s bow and quiver bouncing as she walked. Her stomach tensed. The Xenith kids would be in a whole new league. They were the best in the world. Would she measure up? Or would she let her father down, embarrass him in front of their mother?

Inside his cavernous study, their father was sitting behind his mahogany desk. The messy stacks of books all around him made him seem oddly dwarfed, even powerless.

When he saw them, he smiled grimly and clicked off the lamp. “Well, this is it.” He pulled a chain from under his shirt. On it was a tiny silver key. He pushed himself up and walked across the room like an old man, wearily and slowly, as though life has pressed him down. Sam gripped Abby’s hand. It was damp, but she didn’t let go.

Their father twisted one of his old fencing trophies and Sam nearly fell backward as the bookcase slid open with a hiss to reveal a second, smaller room. It was like something out of a spy movie, but in her own house. She clutched Abby’s hand as if it could save her from drowning. Nothing was normal about this.

Their father reached inside the room and turned on a light. The room was tiny, more like a walk-in closet, and was nearly completely filled by an ancient, busted up black trunk.

“What is this?” Sam whispered to Abby, shuffling closer to her.

“I have no idea.” Abby’s voice trembled. “I’ve never been in here before.”

“Come here,” their father said in a solemn voice, gesturing toward the trunk. “I don’t want you to be too alarmed by what happens next, so stand behind me. Take a deep breath, and get ready.”

Slowly, he slid the key into the lock on the trunk. He shifted it back and forth a few times, and with a dull snap the lid parted with the bottom. Dust filled the air as he opened it all the way with a screech. Sam coughed as a vile scent like rotting leaves hit her nostrils. Whatever this was, it was disgusting for sure, and she couldn’t see what it had to do with Xenith. Maybe he was about to give her some kind of enchanted bow and arrow. Or a talisman. Something to prove they were good enough. But they’d shown that already, today at the match.

Their father turned, his glasses gray with dust, obscuring his eyes. “Come closer,” he whispered. For the first time in her life, Sam felt afraid of him. But she edged forward, still gripping Abby’s hand. When they reached him, their father stepped aside to let them see inside the trunk.

On a maroon velvet cloth, a skull with deep-cut, glowing red eyes and diamond-like teeth lay next to a golden necklace with a blood colored charm. Something was weird about them – they seemed alive, or like something was alive inside them. She shook her head. What a ridiculous thought. She stole a glance at her sister and saw Abby was transfixed, staring at the skull.

Their father reached into the trunk, and Sam bit back a protest – for a second, she’d imagined the skull would attack him. But nothing happened. He moved the skull and the charm out of the way and pulled up the cloth.

Underneath, a yellowed doll lay wrapped in a cloth of gold. Their father picked it up, unwrapped it, and winced. It had messy, black hair that fell to its waist. It wore monk’s robes, tied at the waist with a rope. Its round, black eyes were set above a nose so crumbled and misshapen it could hardly be called a nose at all. Instead of a mouth, it had a crude, red slash.

I know him.The thought came to her out of nowhere. Ridiculous. She’d never seen it before in her life, and anyway, how could she know a doll? That moldy smell… it was making her feel drugged.

The doll winked at her.

Her skin crawled as she stared at the doll. She ran her hand over her forehead and down her face. This doll was no Sunny, that was for sure.

It opened its gash of a mouth.

Abby screamed. Sam jumped to the side and her father steadied her.

Yellow teeth gleamed. “Hello, Samantha. Hi, Abigail. And Mr. Liffey, of course. My… you’ve kept me waiting for a long, long time.”

Chapter Two – A Living Doll
*
Sam put her hands over her mouth and stared at her father. Of all the things she thought might be in that trunk, a talking doll was the last. Her father wasn’t a practical joker, but this couldn’t be real.

“Well, hello to you, too,” said the doll, standing up in a cloud of dust and peering over the edge of the trunk at Sam. “Where are your manners? Sure, I’m a bit rough looking – but I have been locked up for eight years. You wouldn’t look like a beauty queen either.”

“Wh-what are you?” Sam glanced at Abby’s pale, big-eyed face. If this was a hallucination, her sister was having one too.

“Wh-what are you?” mocked the doll. “Isn’t that kind of obvious? I’m a laughing, crying, moving, living doll. I can do everything you do… well, most of it anyway. I don’t, for example, use the bathroom. Thank goodness.” He tittered.

Sam frowned. Since when could dolls come to life? She thought of Sunny again. Maybe her bunny could be like the velveteen rabbit. She shook her head. Why was she thinking about such stupid things at a time like this?

The doll stretched his arms, his joints popping. “Ahh, that feels good. Too long in one position, you know?” He looked at Sam’s dad. “Mr. Liffey. Tut tut. Was keeping me under wraps part of the divorce agreement? Even so, you could’ve let me out every now and then.”

“What if the girls had found you?” their father retorted. “Given the circumstances…” His voice trailed off and he stared miserably at his feet.

Sam bit her lip. So, this had something to do with Mum and the divorce. But her mother had never said anything about a living doll either. Nice family secret: a wacko doll hidden in an old trunk in a secret room in her dad’s office. She sighed. Other people had barrels of money or famous ancestors. Not the Liffeys. They always had to be different.

The doll furrowed his tiny brow. “I suppose it was a sticky situation, to put it mildly.” His dark, beady eyes focused on Sam for a moment before turning back to her father.

Sam folded her arms across her chest defensively. “What’re you staring at me like that for?” Whenever people talked about her parents’ divorce, they always gave Sam the same odd look. Now she was getting it from this bizarre talking doll, too.

Abby put her hands on her hips. “Sam, not right now, for crying out loud. Dad, what exactly is this all about?”

The doll didn’t give their dad a chance to answer. “I’m William Poppet. But you can call me Will.” He grabbed the side of the trunk, lifted his body over it, and fell to the floor with a thump. Some of his dark hair came loose and floated about his head. “You wouldn’t remember me, naturally.”

Their father’s face turned ashen. “I’m sorry, Will. But that was part of the agreement. You knew that.”

“So you kept this doll a big secret. Why?” demanded Sam.

“I’d’ve thought you’d trust us a bit more than that,” Abby snapped. “Did you think we’d go blabbing to the neighbors? I mean, honestly. I can’t see them caring much about some freaky toy.”

The doll wagged his little index finger at Abby. “I’m no plaything, Missy. Do you see strings? Do you see batteries? Humans. Always limited. Everything has to fit into their little world.” Then his finger fell off and dropped to the ground with a clatter. Sam scrunched up her face. Gross. But at least he didn’t bleed.

“Ooooops.” Will picked up the finger with his other hand. “How embarrassing. You see what happens when you lock me up for so long? I’m falling apart here. You might want to grab the superglue if you don’t want my head to fall off next.”

Sam squirmed, her stomach twisting. This was too much. She darted over to her father and tugged on his arm. “What’s going on? Just tell us.”

Her dad wrapped his arm around her. “You know Xenith’s a special, secret place, right? Well, they have things like Will there. You’re too young to remember, but he brought you girls here when your mother and I ended our marriage. And he’s the only way to get back.”

Abby pushed between them. “I wouldn’t be too young to remember, Dad. But I don’t. And who could forget something as crazy as this? I’m not stupid.”

Sam wished her sister would be nicer, but she had to admit Abby was right. Sam might have been only five, but she was sure she’d have some recollection of something so weird. After all, more and more other details were coming back to her about Fletching, things she had previously thought were dreams. A storybook village at the top of a mountain. You rode a cable car down to the crystalline, jewel-like water as aqua as her sister’s eyes and as warm as a bath. It could change in an instant when a storm blew in, turning grey and angry and wild. She had loved it, even as a young child, for its moodiness and beauty. But she didn’t remember anything at all about magical, talking dolls.

Will chuckled. “Okay, you got us. We made the journey at three in the morning. You girls were passed out sleeping.”

Abby glared at him.

He raised his eyebrows. “What? Don’t you think if you saw me, you’d flip out at that age? It was for your own good.”

“True.” Their dad nodded. “We had to be careful. There are a lot of people in the world who would want to hurt us for the things that go on in Fletching. Like the gold making – everyone would want in on that. Having that technology creates danger. People will stop at nothing for the sake of greed.”

“Do you know anything about how they do it?” Sam asked.

Her father smiled. “They take just a tiny bit of your qi, your soul energy, when you’re initiated and at various other points during your time there. I don’t know how, but they make gold from it.”

“What?” Sam tore herself from her father’s grasp. She didn’t want anyone taking part of her soul. “No way I’m doing that!”

“It’s not a big deal, Sam,” her father responded. “I did it, so did your mum. Many times. They know how to use that energy, that pulse of your being, to make things happen. It’s sort of like electricity, but more special.”

Sam scowled. It sounded freakish to her, no matter what he said. Abby curled her lip.

Their dad seemed to notice their expressions. He smiled. “Don’t worry, girls. Qi gets replenished in forty-eight hours. It’s not like you get diminished by it or anything.”

“I thought it was blood that replenishes in forty-eight hours.” Abby studied his face skeptically.

“So does soul energy, according to Dr. Nine.” Will stretched. “Owww, every time I move a joint… well, anyway, I’m pleased to make your acquaintance again, misses Liffey, and while I’m loving hearing about my beautiful village and honorable school, we need to begin the work.” He headed over to where they stood, walking like an old person, stiff and with his arms out as though he might fall over. Bits of ragged clothing fell from his body. “Pick me up.”

Sam shrank back against her father. “Ewww, no.” She didn’t want to catch some horrible disease from this ancient doll. Who knew what kind of mold was growing on him?

Will scowled, holding his broken finger and tapping it on his chin. “Don’t be ridiculous. It’s the only way I can recover. Gold’s not the only thing that needs qi.”

Sam tucked her hands under her armpits. No way was she giving anyone any of her soul, no matter what they said about it being replenished.

“I’ll do it.” Their father reached down and picked the doll up. As he brought Will close to Sam, she caught a faint but powerful rancid stench, like rotting potatoes. She pinched her nose, revolted. But when she breathed through her mouth she could taste the smell. She gagged and put her finger under her nose instead. Her coconut lime lotion helped to block the horrible stink.

Her dad took a deep breath, closed his eyes, and waited. The seconds hung heavily in the air. Sam tried to stand completely still, not wanting to mess up whatever was going on. Her father scrunched up his face and seemed to be making a huge effort to do something.

But nothing happened.

“It’s not working,” Will said in a peevish tone. “I think you’re all tapped out.”

Abby clenched her fists. “What exactly is supposed to happen here, may I ask?”

“Will needs more than I have to give.” Their dad frowned. “Sam, you have to take him. If you don’t, we won’t get to Fletching. Abby, you too.”

Abby pressed her lips together in a thin line. But she reached for the doll. Sam winced. She really, really wanted to go to Fletching. Maybe giving up some of her qi wouldn’t be so bad. And if Abby was willing… slowly, Sam reached down and grasped one of the strange doll’s small arms with the tip of her thumb and forefinger.

He felt cold at first, but after a moment a warm sensation slipped from her heart down her arm. Her head grew heavy and she closed her eyes. A dim memory – or was it a dream – teased her. A large stone pyramid. A room of gold. The dead. The Olympics. Blood…

Abby’s shriek shattered Sam’s vision.

Sam opened her eyes; her sister’s face was stark white and she looked as though she might faint. Sam felt dizzy and weak herself. She took in several deep breaths, choking a little on the dust that still floated around the room. “What just happened?” she spluttered.

“I saw terrible things… blood…” Abby whispered. Then she shrieked again and pointed at the doll with her free hand.
Chapter Three – A Cabin In A Tree
*
Will had changed. The moldy skin Sam had found so disgusting now lay taut against his face. His nose, still misshapen, was no longer crumbling, and his hands were whole. The monk’s outfit looked crisp and new, the rope tied smartly around his waist. A pleasant aroma like fresh lemon permeated the air.

Sam and Abby let go at the same time and Will fell to the floor with a grunt. But he smiled as he picked himself up. “Thank you, my misses. It is much appreciated.”

Sam shook her head. She had to be going crazy, having visions. Maybe they’d put her in a mental hospital. She took a few steps back, pulling Abby with her. “Dad, this is too freaky!”

“You’re not going crazy,” said Will with maddening calm. “You’re not seeing things at all. This is part of your heritage and history. It’s time you knew about it.”

Electricity ran up and down Sam’s spine. Had he read her mind? She was just thinking she was crazy, and then he said it. Maybe it was coincidence. It had to be coincidence. She needed it to be coincidence.

Their father pulled them into him. “Listen, I can explain this. But let’s just go to Fletching, now that Will’s strong enough. You’ll see your mother. It’ll make sense, I promise.”

The doll grinned. A mouthful of bright white teeth gleamed in the blinking florescent light. “The Baba Yaga has been waiting patiently these eight years.”

Sam moved as close to her father as possible. What kind of weird language was this? “What’s a Baba Yaga?”

Will hopped from foot to foot. “That’s Dr. Nine’s sister. She’s the chair of Fletching Academy. Get it? He runs the training camp, she runs the school. Lordy, how much your father has kept from you.”

“I did what I had to do. You know that.” Their father’s voice cracked and his arm sagged on Sam’s shoulder. A sharp pain cut through the confusion brewing in Sam’s heart; she hated to see her father sad. He’d never do anything to hurt her. He’d been there for everything – every lost match, every painful practice, every long drive. He’d held her hand when she was ill and put bandages on her bruises. She loved him with all her heart.

Will shrugged and said nothing.

“I don’t get what’s going on at all,” Abby said with a scowl. “Dad, you said Mum wanted to visit us here and we couldn’t go there. That we left Fletching for good, unless we got into Xenith.”

A muscle worked in her dad’s jaw. Sam knew she had to change the subject – and fast. “Mr. Poppet, can you get Mum and bring her here? We need to talk to her.”

“Will.” The doll chuckled. “Call me Will. I can’t bring her to you, but I can take you to her. You’ve been trained as well as possible here in Salem, but you’re not world class. There’s still so much to do! You can bring honor to your people and to your country with your talents. Dr. Nine will be most pleased with how far you’ve come and most interested in where you need to go.” He clapped his hands, the sound sharp in the small, dusty room. “We’re wasting time here. Tell them the deal.”

Their dad took a deep breath. When he spoke, his voice was steady. “Girls, you deserve this opportunity. I know it seems odd, but it’s truly the best training in the world. Just one thing: stay near me or your mum or another adult at all times and do not leave camp, town or school. Do not go wandering off by yourselves, ever. Is that clear?”

Sam hesitated. This sounded a bit dangerous. But then she pictured her bow and quiver, and her thoughts shifted as though a breeze had changed direction and taken them with it.

This was what she’d been training for her whole life. Up at 5 AM, then school, then more training. Never like the other kids, always working twice as hard, no time for video games or television. But she’d wanted it, wanted it like when you find something elemental in your being and know it belongs to you to shape and mold and let flourish. She was meant to be an Olympian. So what if this whole thing was a little, well, unusual? She trusted her father – trusted him completely. If he said this place was safe, then it was. And of course they would follow the rules.

Will suddenly leaped up and down in place. “Come on, already! Girls, it can’t be that bad if your mother’s there, right? You’ll be fine. And you girls’ll be good. Right?”

Sam nodded. Yes, overall, she was good. Sure, she’d snuck out of school a few times with her friends to get ice cream sodas at lunchtime, but that was nothing compared to what other eighth graders were doing. And her grades were all As. She even got an A+ in Honors Biology. She studied as hard as she practiced.

“Get your bags,” said their father, injecting a note of cheer into his voice. “You’re going to be thrilled. Remember, Xenith’s the gateway to the Olympics!”

“Come on, already!” Will jumped in place again. “I’ve been locked up way too long. I can’t take another five minutes in this place!” He rushed out the door and into the study.

“Go on,” said their dad, lifting his suitcase. “Follow him.”

Sam grabbed her bag and gear from the study. The doll was waiting for them at the end of the hallway, bouncing impatiently on his toes. He beckoned them out the back door and pointed toward the dark forest that stretched for miles past the gate at the end of their garden. The sun was setting beyond the trees and the evening was warm and humid. Somewhere, a lone robin sang a cheerful song that seemed like an affront to Sam’s apprehension.

“What’s back there?” she asked her father as Will scampered across their yard with surprising speed for his tiny size.

“You’ll see.” Her father shouldered his bag as they crossed the yard. Sam clutched her bow and quiver, her arm still aching from the match earlier that day. She’d been back in that forest thousands of times and had never seen anything unusual. Maybe they were going to have to walk all the way through it. She dreaded the thought – her feet ached, too.

The doll was waiting for them at the gate with a broad smile. “Watch and be amazed.” He pulled it open with a long, rusty squeal, and darted through.

Their dad paused, then stepped through the gate, leaves crunching under his feet. He gestured for Sam and Abby to follow. The temperature dropped a few degrees and Sam’s eyes took a moment to adjust to the dimmer light. A squirrel chattered at them from a nearby tree. Sam drew her bow closer. She didn’t like the woods in the evening. What seemed normal and cheerful during the day took on an eerie feel, like ghosts were hiding behind the trees, waiting to snatch her up and run away.

Will waved his arms in the air. With a rustling sound, the trees bent left and right as if pulled by ropes, forming a trail between them. Sam’s jaw dropped. What was this? She drew an arrow from her quiver and held it ready, just in case.

“Come on,” said the doll. Without looking back, he scampered down the newly formed trail.

“Dad, are you sure we should do this?” Abby asked, grasping her foil.

“Yes,” replied their father, his tone resolute. He straightened his back and held out his arms. “Just stay with me. Sam, put that arrow away.”

Sam did as he asked. She snuggled into his comforting grasp and together the three walked down the trail.

After a bit, Sam glanced over her shoulder. Behind them, the trees were springing back upright as though the invisible rope pulling them downward had been released. A great, howling wind stirred, causing leaves from the forest floor to whirl all around them. Sam’s hair came loose from her ponytail and whipped all around her face.

“Keep going,” said their dad, raising his voice to be heard above the wind. “It’s fine!”

Sam blinked as stirred-up dirt threatened to fly into her eyes. She hunched over and pressed against the wind, and it pushed back like a living thing. Through her narrowed gaze she could just make out the darkened form of the tiny doll ahead of them.

They went on, struggling to walk through tangled roots and slippery leaves. Sam wondered how this place had been there all these years, buried in the familiar forest of her childhood, never discovered.

Soon the trees vanished and a high, white fence bordered the trail instead. A jolt shot through Sam’s stomach: the fence was made of bones – human bones. Skulls with glowing eye sockets capped each post, casting eerie, reddish light onto the path. She huddled closer to her father, feeling his heart beating a rapid pulse. What kind of awful place was this?

“I don’t like this!” she shouted, the wind taking her voice so it was barely audible. Dust flew into her mouth and she spit it out.

“Just keep going!” Her dad yelled. “They won’t hurt you!”

Sam decided not to look at the fence. They stumbled along the path for what felt like miles, the relentless, roaring gale pounding more heavily on her body with every step she took. It seemed to be blowing right through her, wrapping around her insides like she had no skin. She wished she’d brought her down coat. Her already sore muscles ached even more as she fought to hold onto her bag and her equipment. She was certain the wind would blow her backward, right down the path, if it wasn’t for her father’s arm across her back. Then she’d be eaten by whatever demons lived in this wild place. She wondered how Will was moving so easily, tiny as he was.

Up ahead, Will came to an abrupt halt next to an old tree trunk in a small clearing. When they caught up with him the wind died out completely and stillness fell like a curtain. Sam held her breath.

The doll waved his hands in the air and sang a low, sweet melody.

Their dad pulled them closer. “Be brave. This is going to seem a bit strange.”

Sam barely had time to doubt anything would seem strange after what they’d just been through when a low rumbling broke the stillness. She clutched onto her father as the ground stirred beneath her feet. Under the grass, long lines like roots stretched away from the tree trunk, moving, shifting and shaking the ground.

Abby yelled as the tree trunk began to grow and widen. Will jumped back just in time. Higher and higher it grew until it was just about the height of a three-storey building. Branches sprang out all around the tree and stretched toward the sky. Leaves uncurled from the branches, covering them with a brilliant, emerald green. Sam squinted as the hazy outline of a cabin appeared among the leaves. Slowly, it became more solid until Sam could no longer see through it. With a popping sound, a chimney appeared among the leaves and a long line of smoke grew out of it.

Sam’s heart skipped a beat as Will went up to the tree. The doll lifted his hands, humming another capriccio, cheerful tune. A small, round door with a golden handle appeared in the tree’s bark.

Will turned to face them, the melody dying on his lips. “Welcome to the house of the Baba Yaga.”
Chapter Four – The Baba Yaga
*
Rubbing her neck, Sam stared up at the cabin in the tree. Light flickered in the small windows and she caught a mixed smell of wood smoke and lavender. She glanced back at the pathway, but it was gone. The fence had closed around them in a perfect circle. Her skin crawled at the sight of the skulls’ red eye sockets, still glowing red in the darkness. Her father let out a long sigh, but whether it was born of relief or fear she wasn’t sure.

“Well, come on,” said Will, opening the circular door in the tree. “No use dallying out here.”

Sam turned to her father. “Are we really going up there?

Will peered over his shoulder at her. “No, you’re just going to stand out here and Xenith’ll come to you.” He cackled. “Relax. You’re not gonna die.”

“It’ll be fine.” Sam’s father squeezed her hand, but his voice shook. The flames from the skulls cast shadows across his face, making his nose appear elongated and his eyes dark, incomprehensible. Sam swallowed. Maybe he was into some creepy cult. She’d heard of such things. But, no. She shook her head. She trusted him, though this was the most bizarre thing she’d ever experienced. He gave her a gentle push toward the door.

Sam stumbled over a root and her father caught her arm. “Careful,” he said, helping her pull her bag back on her shoulder. The root had a long, pointed toe on it, like that of a chicken.

Inside, an impossibly tight spiral staircase wound up the inside of the tree. Fiery torches on spikes stood every few feet along the handrail and smoke stung Sam’s eyes. Without a moment’s hesitation, Will clambered up the steps to a platform at the top. Then he hoisted himself onto the handrail and waved at them. “Hurry!” His voice echoed around the tree, as if a chorus of tiny dolls was yelling down at them.

“Go on,” encouraged her dad as Sam paused with her foot on the lowest step. “I’m right behind you.”

Sam let out the breath she hadn’t realized she’d been holding. Gripping the handrail, she climbed, hearing the soft footfalls of Abby and their father behind her. The staircase groaned as they went higher and higher. Sam fought to keep her head clear and willed herself not to look down. She’d never been a fan of heights. Three years ago they’d gone on holiday to Toronto, and up in the CN Tower Abby had jumped around on the glass floor, laughing, while Sam hovered in the corner trying not to puke.

When they finally reached the platform, Will hummed again. Another round door appeared and sprang open. He scampered inside, waving them to follow.

Sam forced her trembling legs to move, ducking to avoid the low overhang on the door, and entered a small room mostly filled by a large wooden table. A fire crackled merrily inside a stove, scenting the air with cedar. A pot bubbled and a wide assortment of dried herbs and flowers hung from the ceiling. Despite her nerves, Sam felt somewhat comforted. It was like a rustic cabin in the woods, not nearly as unfamiliar and scary as she had expected. As long as, of course, it didn’t fall out of the tree. Abby and their father crowded in behind her and she shifted to give them room. Abby’s hot breath hit the back of her neck.

“Who’s there? Declare yourself!” A man’s voice cut through the air.

Sam jumped, clutching her chest, and dropped her bag, bow and quiver. Her father stepped forward, pushing her behind him with Abby. His eyes were wide behind his glasses and he stared at a door on the opposite side of the room as if he could break it with his gaze.

The door burst open with a squeal. The metal tip of a pistol appeared, followed by a tall, silver-haired man. Sam yelped. He was the man she’d spoken to earlier at the competition. She ducked into Abby, trying to make herself as small and invisible as possible.

“Michael!” Their father put his arms out to the sides, shielding Sam and Abby. “Put down that gun. You idiot!”

Abby made a high-pitched mew like a kitten and pushed herself closer to their father. Sam peeked around him, her palms sweating.

The man’s gaze fell on Sam and his hand holding the gun fell to his side. He backed up against the wall. Sam dug her fingers into Abby’s arm, wanting to pull away from his stare, but was unable. Time hung, frozen and thick. Then the man dropped the gun to the ground with a clatter.

“You idiot!” Sam’s father yelled again, his skin mottled. “It could’ve gone off. What’s the matter with you? God, I could kill you… if you hurt my daughters… haven’t you done enough damage in your miserable life?” Sam and Abby stared at each other, astonished. Their father was always so gentle. He didn’t even kill insects; he sucked them up in a special bug wand and released them outside.

The man slid down the wall and grabbed the pistol with trembling fingers. His sleeve slipped back, revealing a white, jagged scar. Seeing Sam’s father’s gaze on it, he shook his sleeve down quickly and stood. “Believe me, if I knew you were coming tonight, I’d’ve left town.” He tucked the pistol into his belt and appeared to regain his composure. “Well, Daniel, you’re back. After the competition, I can’t say I wasn’t expecting it. But I thought you’d wait a bit. Or send notice.”

He and Sam’s father glared at each other with a dislike so intense it was palpable – foul, stagnant and heavy like the air in summer before a thunderstorm.

Will jumped out in front of their dad. “Michael, I brought the girls. As you know, they qualified for Xenith.” He raised a finger as if in warning.

The man cleared his throat. “Yes. I saw the competition. It’s Samantha… Liffey, is it?” His mouth opened and closed; he seemed to be fighting some internal force. “How – interesting – to finally meet you.”

Sam scowled. Anyone her dad hated, she hated too. “Who are you? Why’d you come to my match?” She knew she was being rude, but she noticed her father said nothing – usually he would upbraid her for being impolite to a stranger. But this man was clearly no stranger. He was an enemy.

“I’m Dr. Michael Erik Dante.” The man spoke slowly. “You can call me – Dr. Dante, I guess. Through I think-” He stopped talking as though someone had flipped a switch.

Sam felt small under his stare, so she pulled Abby out from behind her father. Safety in numbers. “This is my sister, Abby.”

Dr. Dante grunted, keeping his eyes on Sam. He seemed to be examining every feature on her face. “You look like your mother,” he said finally.

Sam squirmed, wishing he would look somewhere else or, even better, that he’d go away completely.

“They’re going to be champions, like their parents,” Will piped in. He seemed to be trying to dispel the tension. “If I’d known you two were going to act like teenagers, I’d’ve sent a warning, though.”

Dr. Dante heaved a sigh. “It’s not like they wouldn’t run into me eventually. Fletching’s not exactly New York City.” He laughed, but it sounded high and false.

Sam’s father put his arm around her shoulders, his nostrils flaring. “Don’t forget our deal. Don’t you ever approach her again. That was some trick, sneaking into the competition.”

Dr. Dante flinched. “You can’t deny me -”

“I can deny you anything I want.” Sam’s father snarled. His arm tightened on Sam’s shoulder, mashing her face into his coat. She had to fight to breathe. “Don’t push me on this. You know what I can do.”

Sam’s palms began to sweat again. Her dad never talked like this. He was always so gentle and kind. Even when their teenage neighbors back in Salem had sideswiped his car, he’d been calm. And he’d never yelled at her or Abby in their whole lives, no matter how bad they were.

Dr. Dante again seemed at a loss for words, and if Sam hadn’t decided to hate him she might have felt a little sorry for him. His hand moved to the pistol in his belt, tightened on the handle, and then released. “I know,” he said in a low voice. “God, do I know what you can do. But a devil’s bargain, when anyone can see -”

The door creaked open and Dr. Dante stopped speaking. A tiny, ancient looking woman with a hooked nose walked in. She wore a purple cloak that draped over her head and fell to her feet. It was clasped in front with a skull-shaped pin. She carried a wooden staff but didn’t seem to need it for her step was spry and lilting. Bangles and bracelets hung on her arms. She smiled and hurried across the room.

“Daniel,” she said warmly, hugging Sam’s father. “I’m so glad you’re here. I knew you’d put them first.” She touched Abby’s chin. “Ta, a beautiful young lady you are. You’re so like your father.” She reached out and embraced Sam. “And this is Samantha. Girls, I am the Baba Yaga.” She smiled again, revealing crooked yellow teeth, one missing from the front.

Sam thought she should be scared of this tiny, ugly old woman, but she wasn’t. She looked like the witches Sam had read about in fairy tales, but she didn’t seem wicked at all.

The old woman turned to Dr. Dante. “I shall expect better from you in the future. Drawing your weapon on a pair of young girls. And you’re an Elder.” She clicked her tongue.

Sam gaped. “How did you know he did that?”

The Baba Yaga’s eyes twinkled. “I have a helpful little friend. Who I am so very happy to see again.” At this, Will puffed with pride and grinned widely. Sam was amazed. Apparently, the doll and the Baba Yaga could communicate telepathically.

Dr. Dante folded his arms. “I had no idea who they were. All I heard were intruders. I was protecting your home, and Xenith.”

“Always so impulsive. That’s your downfall.” The Baba Yaga tapped her foot. “It’s gotten you into a peck of trouble and you’ve not learned a thing. At the very least, understand I do not need your protection.” She smiled ruefully at Sam and Abby. “I’m sorry you had such a poor welcome to my home. From here on out, I hope you will be comfortable.” She gestured toward the table. “Sit. Let me fix you a snack.”

Will bobbed over. The Baba Yaga picked him up and gave him a big hug. “It’s nice to have you back.” She glanced at Sam’s father. Her mouth twitched like she was going to say something, but she didn’t.

Dr. Dante dropped into a chair at the end of the table. He pulled a pipe from his pocket and lit it on the candle. Sam, Abby and their father took seats as far away from him as possible. Their dad adjusted his chair so it was facing away from the man, as if looking at him was distasteful. The Baba Yaga filled four bowls with stew and brought them over on a wooden tray along with tumblers of cider. She sat in the remaining chair and Will clambered into her lap.

Sam stirred her stew, inhaling the delicious smell of venison and potatoes. But she was too nervous to eat. She pictured Fletching again as she remembered it. It had definitely felt modern, unlike this cabin, which seemed like something from the frontier days. Like Laura Ingalls Wilder, but in a tree.

“When do we start training?” Abby demanded, also not touching her stew. “I don’t want to lose a minute.”

“As soon as you’re initiated, my dear,” replied the Baba Yaga. “Which will happen tonight. You can start your training tomorrow.”

“Great.” Abby leaned closer to the old woman, her blue eyes eager. “So where’s Mum? I want to see her, now.”

Sam dropped her spoon. Abby was being pushy, but Sam wanted to see their mother too. The question was, how to do it without upsetting their father – usually when their mother visited in Salem, he disappeared into his study so he wouldn’t have to see her. It used to hurt Sam when they acted like that, but she’d grown accustomed to it over the years.

The Baba Yaga took a drink of cider, her brow furrowed. “We’ll get her after you eat, how about that? Daniel, would you like to speak with her alone before she meets with the girls?” Her tone seemed laced with meaning, and Sam’s father nodded, seemingly catching the unspoken message.

He pushed away his bowl. “Honestly, I’m not hungry, Baba. Can we go get this over with?”

The Baba Yaga smiled sadly. “Yes, certainly, dear.” She stood.

Dr. Dante jumped to his feet. “I’ve got something to say to Emma, too.”

Sam’s father slammed his fist on the table, making Sam flinch. “No you don’t. Not now.”

“Michael, stay here.” The Baba Yaga’s voice was harsh, like sandpaper. “Control yourself.”

Dr. Dante fell back as if pushed.

Sam’s father hesitated, his hand on the back of Sam’s chair and his gaze fixed on Dr. Dante’s face. “Give me your pistol.”

“What?” Dr. Dante seemed stunned.

“I said, give me your pistol. I’ll not leave you armed with my girls.” Her father stretched out his hand.

“Give it to him.” The Baba Yaga tapped her cane on the ground. “He has that right.”

“I wouldn’t-” Dr. Dante began, clearly affronted, but Will cut in.

“Michael Dante, you’re a fool. A fool!” The doll hopped over to him. “You know he’s got a right, Mister Usurper.”

Dr. Dante passed a shaking hand over his eyes, then took the pistol from his belt and handed it to the doll. “Take it,” he said bitterly. “Why not, Daniel, you got everything else.”

“Liar.” Sam’s father spoke flatly. “You took more from me than I could ever take from you.”

Will gave Sam’s father the pistol. Sam caught her breath as he pointed it at Dr. Dante, closing one eye. But he didn’t take the safety off and after a minute he stuck it in his belt. “Will stays. And you remember our deal.”

Dr. Dante gave a curt nod. Sam’s father gave her a brief pat on the back and then headed out the door with the Baba Yaga at his heels.

Bewildered, Sam met Abby’s eyes. Never in a million years would she have imagined her father was capable of pointing a gun at someone. Abby shrugged, looking as stunned as Sam felt. Sam twisted her hair. She didn’t know if she wanted to figure out what was going on. Something about it made her deeply uneasy.

Dr. Dante took a long drag from his pipe and blew it out, filling the room with the scent of rum-flavored tobacco. He stared at Abby, one eyebrow raised and his eyes glittering with malevolence.

Sam adjusted her back in the hard wooden chair. More to avoid having to talk than for actual hunger, she took a bite of the rich stew and choked it down. She looked around the room. No television, no stereo, no computer in sight. Just a thatched rug and a tiny tabby cat curled up on a quilt-covered rocking chair. It stretched, yawned, then lightly kneaded the cushion and settled back down to sleep.

Curiosity overwhelmed Sam’s fear. “I thought you had electricity. I thought this place was modern.”

“Of course we are,” said Dr. Dante. “Baba wishes to live without it, close to the earth. Or something like that.”

“It keeps her connected to the natural and spiritual.” Will grinned. “Like me.”

Abby smirked. “Must be pretty boring.”

“Baba has more important ways to fill her time than by watching television or playing video games,” Dr. Dante said with a sneer. “You’re such a child of entertainment, coddled from the minute you’re born. You can’t even think of more important things.”

“I can think of plenty,” snapped Abby. “We don’t exactly come from the middle of nowhere.”

Dr. Dante glowered at her. “Just like your father.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?” Sam sat up straight in her chair. She wasn’t going to let this awful man insult her father and sister. No one got away with that.

“Your sister is like your father,” Dr. Dante spat. “Everything handed to her. Rich.”

“Ach, Michael.” Will groaned. “Hush, for once in your life. The girls did grow up in the same house. You recognize that, right?”

Sam’s fists clenched. “Our dad has money because he’s a great professor. He even has tenure.”

Dr. Dante sat back in his chair. “Rich is a state of mind. Your sister and your father’s state of mind, to be more precise. Privileged. You’re different.”

“What are you talking about?” Abby lost control and banged her tumbler down on the table. “You just met us!”

Dr. Dante rolled his eyes and said nothing.

Will cocked his head to the side. “Michael, give it a rest. Show us you’re a man, eh?”

Sam opened her mouth but before she could say anything the door creaked open again. Her heart quickened – her mother? But a boy was standing in the doorway. Tall and reedy, he wasn’t exactly handsome. But he had an incredibly interesting face, with the high cheekbones, dark skin and black eyes of his Kenyan ancestors.

Sam jumped to her feet and covered her mouth.

He was Eli – Elijah Fawke, her childhood friend, rescuer of Sunny the stuffed rabbit, grown now. But she’d know him no matter how many years separated their contact, know him in a way she could never explain. Just as she knew he was Eli and not his twin Jonah, despite them being identical. Would he remember her?

Her legs trembled and she forgot all about Dr. Dante, the pistol, and even Abby. “Eli.” Her voice came out in a croak.

He moved across the room and for a heart-stopping moment Sam thought he would hug her, but instead he held out his hand. She took it. It felt warm and soft.

“I ran into your father,” Eli said, gripping her hand. “He said you were here, so I came as quickly as I could. I can’t believe it, after all this time. Do you still have that rabbit?”

Sam’s heart thumped in her chest and with her free hand she pointed at her bag. “She’s over there.” She had missed him and hadn’t even realized it until now. He had been her earliest, dearest friend – the only person who seemed to get her, even when they were so young. And he remembered Sunny.

“And here I thought you might not recognize each other.” Will chortled. “Guess I was wrong on that count.”

“You can let go of her hand now,” said Abby in an amused tone. She came around the table and grinned at Eli. “Nice to see you again. Where’s Jonah?”

Eli dropped Sam’s hand like a hot potato and the color drained from his face.

“Jonah went out exploring on his own in places he was not authorized to go.” Dr. Dante stood and pushed his chair in with a scrape. “He was kidnapped two years ago and we haven’t seen hide nor tail of him since. So it would behoove you to keep in mind Fletching can be a very dangerous place.”

And with that, he stormed out of the room, leaving a cloud of acrid smoke in his wake.

 

… continued …

Want to continue reading? Click on the title below to download

Qi (Book of the Baba Yaga) on Kindle for just 99 cents!

 

by Elizabeth A. Svigar
Kindle Edition ~ Release Date: 2010-10-31

List Price: $0.99

Buy Now

by Elizabeth A. Svigar
Kindle Edition ~ Release Date: 2010-10-31

List Price: $0.99

Categories free kindle nation shorts Tags , ,

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert, Sunday, March 13: A New, 30-Chapter James Patterson Preview Tops 5 Brand New Additions to a Spruced-Up, Freshly Updated Listing of Over 200 CONTEMPORARY Free Titles, plus … The Judging by Ellen C. Maze, the tale of a vampire priest (Today’s Sponsor)

 
Good news for followers of our Kindle Nation Free Book Alert listings! Our ace partner, programmer, and general wizard Christian H. has installed a fix to keep those bothersome public domain titles from popping up in the middle of our fresh, magical, daily updates of over 200 free contemporary titles in the Kindle Store!

But first, a word from … Today’s Sponsor
 
 
With the stab of the demon’s fangs, the priest is transformed from a servant of good to an unwilling agent of evil. Four centuries later this vampire priest grapples with love and and righteousness… 
 

 “This is a super Christian vampire tale.”

–EE Little

The Judging 
by Ellen C. Maze
5.0 out of 5 stars   17 Reviews
Text-to-Speech: Enabled 
Don’t have a Kindle? Get yours here.

A perfect 5.0!
Seventeen five-star reviews



Here’s the set-up:

What happens when you want to do the will of God but are cursed for all eternity?


What the Reviewers Say

Hungary, 1640. A village priest, enamored with his God and loyal to his sheep, awakens to find the village on fire. Searching for survivors, he is confronted by a dark creature with sharp teeth and red eyes. With the stab of the demon’s fangs, the priest is transformed from a servant of good to an unwilling agent of evil.

Present day. Four centuries pass, and Dr. Mark Corescu, that same village priest no longer recalls his origins. Corescu uses his position in the medical community to maintain a mortal façade as he pursues his true calling. Corescu seeks out evil men and women in a ritual he has dubbed the Judging. He condemns and kills them, one a night, feeding his lust on their blood. He feels neither guilt nor remorse. He believes he is serving a Higher Purpose.

Artist and equestrian hobbyist Hope Brannen falls for the doctor at first sight. He feels the same, believing that she has been sent by God to aid him in his divine calling. Hope knows deep down he is not an agent of God but rather a real-life vampire. She turns to her seminary-going pal Tony Agricola for advice.

As the story’s only truly righteous character, Tony recognizes immediately that the doctor has incorrectly discerned the will of God. He agrees to speak to him about the matter, discovering that the doctor has suppressed his past. Slowly the doctor is reminded of his days as a humble village priest, as well as the time he spent in the clutches of the darkest creature imaginable. Steering the vampire down memory lane is difficult and risky but Tony does his best to correct the doctor’s faulty theology. At the same time Corescu’s perfect world is falling apart.

Persevering through dangerous and perilous encounters with the vampire’s immortal contemporaries, Tony shows the vampire the error of his ways. But just because his eyes are opened does not necessarily mean that his ways are easily changed.

“Kudos to author Ellen C. Maze for a rich, fully developed, and uniquely delivered storyline, prompting one’s mind to pause and consider important aspects of life.” 
–Teric Darken, Bestselling author of K-I-L-L FM 100 Music to Die For
 

“Fabulously frightening! Insanely imaginative!… Ellen Maze delivers an intriguing plot with captivating characters and an extremely natural writing style… I give The Judging a recommendation of Excellent and will certainly look forward to reading the next installment in the Corescu Chronicles, Damascus Road, as well as Ellen’s earlier work.”
–Rev. Steve Wilson

This book gives us “self-reflection and a sense of hope within the reader, and a call to re-examine the way one views the judging of others and what God really asks us to do in the face of evil in the world.”

–Krisi Keley, Author of On the Soul of a Vampire


About the Author


Ellen has been writing since she could form sentences. Her earliest works are tucked away safely in her mother’s files, but now, her current work is published for the world to see. Her subjects range from vampires to angels to demonic powers in dark places; but her goal is to entertain the reader while sending a message of redemption that is only apparent between the lines. Pitching faith and bloodlust into a battle to the death, or oftentimes, to the life; Ellen always finds a way to balance the two in a fascinating and intriguing way.

Ellen graduated cum laude from Huntingdon College in Montgomery, Alabama with a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Psychology and a minor in Sociology. She has been a licensed non-denominational minister and still teaches Scripture to teens and adults. She has also been a professional artist, specializing in custom pet portraits and equine art.

Ellen’s faith plays an important role in her life and although her novels are written for all people, they are often carried in Christian Markets. She lives in Historic Montgomery, Alabama with her husband, daughter, four cats and one spoiled dog.



Click here to download The Judging (or a free sample) to your Kindle, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, BlackBerry, Android-compatible, PC or Mac and start reading within 60 seconds!

UK CUSTOMERS: Click on the title below to download
Each day’s list is sponsored by one paid title. We encourage you to support our sponsors and thank you for considering them.
 
Authors, Publishers, iPad Accessory Manufacturers:
Interested in learning more about sponsorship? Just click on this link for more information.

Free Contemporary Titles in the Kindle Store 
HOW TO USE OUR NEW FREE BOOK TOOL:

Just use the slider at right of your screen below to scroll through a complete, updated list of free contemporary Kindle titles, and click on an icon like this one (at right) to read a free sample right here in your browser! Titles are sorted in reverse chronological order so you can easily see new freebies.

 

If you don’t think a New Age healing book could be your next great read, maybe you haven’t checked out this free sample of Meredith Kendall’s Reiki Nurse: My life as a nurse and how reiki changed it

Bouncing from Maine to Hawaii and back again, Meredith Kendall shares a natural storyteller’s flair in this tantalizing, insightful and often hilarious glimpse into the worlds of lay midwifery, herbal medicine, and natural healing. Reiki Nurse Just $2.99 on Kindle!



Maine perches at the end of the continent and conjures solid images of rocks, lobsters, and Yankee farmers, but there’s nothing “solid” about this book. Meredith Kendall bounces from Maine to Hawaii and back again, from hospital deathbeds to homebirths, Pleiades, and The Other Side in Reiki Nurse. It’s a fascinating tale of Kendall’s experiences as a nurse and reiki practitioner in rural Maine. It’s a page-turner: staccato chapters read like intimate conversations. You’ll get sucked in from the start and won’t want to stop as Kendall hitchhikes around the country, moves into a cabin in the woods, and becomes a nurse.
Read what nurses do behind the scenes. Her conventional nursing job includes forays into lay midwifery and herbal medicine, but takes a sharp turn when she starts speaking with a medical intuitive.
And that’s just the beginning!
“Mr G. told me he’d had painful spasms all over his body, every five minutes, all day. He’d received reiki before, and wanted another session. I focused on the reiki symbols, and began channeling the energy. I felt the familiar tingling starting at the top of my head, and progressing down both arms. Gradually the sounds of the noisy ICU faded away. It felt like my ears were muffled.

“I felt myself pulled into the reiki symbol; Mr G. was there too. We went down and around the loops of the symbol. The symbol was three-dimensional, and we were inside. It glowed neon green, pulsed with energy, and moved through space.

“We curved around the spirals of the symbol, until suddenly we were spit out among the stars. We floated amid the bright stars. A beautiful lady appeared. Huge. I could see just her face and shoulders. She had a shawl around her head. Shawl wasn’t the right word, I thought, but it was the word that came into my mind. She smiled at us with infinite love and kindness.

“Slowly the vision faded, and we were back in the ICU. About twenty minutes had passed. Wow! Nothing like that had ever happened to me before.”

About the Author:

Meredith Kendall received her bachelor’s degree in nursing from the University of Southern Maine, and her master’s degree in nursing education from St Joseph’s College of Maine. Kaimora attuned Kendall to Reiki Master at Tangwala in Oquossoc, Maine.

Kendall is a nursing instructor and reiki practitioner. She lives in rural Maine where she enjoys spinning wool, snowshoeing, and gardening.

Reviews and Commentary:

According to author, crime reporter, and columnist Mark LaFlamme, Reiki Nurse is:
“A tantalizing and insightful glimpse into the worlds of nursing and alternative healing. Kendall has a natural storyteller’s flair: her tales from the nursing front are at times somber, at others, hilarious. The author seems to examine her own inner workings as much as that of the profession that has consumed her life. An honest and open examination of a profession none of us care to know very personally but one that we will all need. Whether you’ve watched a loved one spend final days in the care of a medical professional or laid healing hands yourself, you will dig the voyeuristic view of the inside offered by Kendall’s debut book.

“I was a fan by page two and will no doubt read the book again.”

From Vine Voice Top 500 Reviewer Linda Bulger:

“When people choose to write honestly about their challenges and passions, there is always something to be learned in the reading. Since REIKI NURSE: My Life As a Nurse, and How Reiki Changed It is set largely in the rural county where I live, I was eager to read it. 


And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample:


“Kendall’s style is conversational and refreshingly random as she tells stories of her early nursing days. She provided home care to patients for fourteen years, driving 500 miles a week through the Maine forests. Her stories of the patients she cared for and the impact they had on her are fascinating snapshots of a nurse’s life.

“Leaving the home health field, she worked the night shift in a small hospital. During this time she began exploring the spiritual side of her work as a healer, and getting in touch with her personal energy sources. After reading a book on reiki, which she explains as an ancient tradition that channels healing energy from the universe, she began to study reiki.

“Many of the ideas presented in “Reiki Nurse” are not usually “dreamt of in our philosophy,” but this immensely readable book will make you glad that modern medicine makes room for the spiritual aspect of healing–and that committed nurses like Kendall are there to lead the way.”

From the Kindle Nation Mailbag: A Fly in Amazon’s Free-Book Ointment

Thanks to Kindle Nation citizen Nancy for an eagle eye and a natural question:

Hi there,

I was just wondering why all the “freebie” classics that are from the early 1900’s and even the 1800’s are showing up on the Contemporary Book List as of yesterday.

Thanks,

Nancy

Thanks for the question Nancy, and yes, Amazon changed something in the metadata for these titles’ listings in the past few days, and I’m following up with contacts there in hopes that it was simply a mistake by some new Amazon staffer there, or that sort of thing. The first thing I checked was whether older public domain titles had been let in, and they weren’t so, I’m hopeful that it is a human-error glitch.

Cheers,

Steve

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert, Saturday, March 12: Over 250 Freebies, plus … Great 99-Cent Deals on LK Rigel’s Spiderwork and her entire Apocalypto Series (Today’s Sponsor)

 
  
Lately Amazon has been making a bit of a mess of its “contemporary” free book listings, but while they sort that out the list continues to grow with over 250 free titles….

 
But first, a word from … Today’s Sponsor
 
 

In this apocalyptic paranormal romance, her fate was to hold the world together while his destiny was to tear it apart. Discover how Durga saves the world from sterility and extinction — for just 99 cents…
  

In flagrante apocalypto: When the veil drops between life and oblivion, only love can save them from the abyss.”


Text-to-Speech: Enabled
Don’t have a Kindle? Get yours here.  

Now all three Apocalypto titles
for just 99 cents each!


1.
Hero Material, a Sci-Fi/Fantasy Romance (Apocalypto 1) by LK Rigel and Anne Frasier (Kindle Edition – Sept. 2, 2010)Kindle eBook
4.3 out of 5 stars (15)
2.
Spiderwork, A Paranormal Romance Fantasy (Apocalypto 2) by LK Rigel (Kindle Edition – Jan. 1, 2011)Kindle eBook
5.0 out of 5 stars  (1)
3.
Blue Amber (Apocalypto 3, Part 1) by LK Rigel (Kindle Edition – Feb. 15, 2011)Kindle eBook

Here’s the set-up:

An apocalyptic paranormal romance. The sequel to Hero Material (formerly Space Junque). 


 
Reviewer B. Tackitt says: “I was enthralled.”

Her fate was to hold the world together. His destiny was to tear it apart.

As a child, Durga was chosen by the goddess to save the world from sterility and extinction. Now her eighteenth birthday approaches, and Durga must take her place among the chalices, women blessed by the goddess with fertility to ensure more souls for the universe. Durga’s mission does not include love … but Khai, the scion of Luxor, is unlike any man she’s ever met.

Char Meadowlark once played a role in the goddess’s plans. Now her lover, Jake Ardri, heads an emerging city-state whose enemies covet everything Jake has built. As Jake navigates the uneasy waters of political intrigue, his very existence is threatened. To save him, Char must share him with a chalice … one trained to take him to the heights of sexual ecstasy.

In flagrante apocalypto: When the veil drops between life and oblivion, only love can save them from the abyss.

 

“After reading Space Junque by Ms. Rigel I have been eagerly awaiting more of the story. Spiderwork delivers! I enjoyed reading about how the new world’s customs, policies, and politics are formed. It’s interesting to be “in” so to speak, on planet building. 


About the Author

LK Rigel lives in California with her cat, Coleridge. She wrote songs for the 90’s band The Elements, scored the independent science fantasy karate movie Lucid Dreams, and was a reporter for the Sacramento Rock ‘N Roll News. Rigel received her BA in humanities from CSU, Sacramento. Her work has appeared in Literary Mama and Tattoo Highway. Her short story “Slurp” will appear in Anne Frasier’s 2011 Halloween anthology published by Nodin Press. Her novel Space Junque was edited by USA Today bestselling author Anne Frasier/Theresa Weir.

Ms. Rigel did a great job following up with the characters of SJ, and though I understand it is the end of the story for some of them, I am interested in reading someday how the world continues to progress. Especially Durga, I’d love to know how the goddess continues to deal with her.”

Click here to download Spiderwork, A Paranormal Romance Fantasy (Apocalypto 2) (or a free sample) to your Kindle, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, BlackBerry, Android-compatible, PC or Mac and start reading within 60 seconds!

UK CUSTOMERS: Click on the title below to download
Each day’s list is sponsored by one paid title. We encourage you to support our sponsors and thank you for considering them.
 
Authors, Publishers, iPad Accessory Manufacturers:
Interested in learning more about sponsorship? Just click on this link for more information.

Free Contemporary Titles in the Kindle Store
HOW TO USE OUR NEW FREE BOOK TOOL:

Just use the slider at right of your screen below to scroll through a complete, updated list of free contemporary Kindle titles, and click on an icon like this one (at right) to read a free sample right here in your browser! Titles are sorted in reverse chronological order so you can easily see new freebies.

84 Five-Star Reviews for Our EBook of the Day, a Unique Vampire Novel About a Vampire Novelist! Read a free sample of “Rabbit: Chasing Beth Rider” without leaving your browser!

Rated over 4.6 stars with 84 Five-Star reviews out of 98 total, our Kindle Nation eBook of the Day is definitely worth a look for readers seeking an adventurous new take — one that will entertain you and make you think — on Vamp-Lit!

 What if your novel attracts the wrong kind of attention and an age-old evil turns out to be all too real?

Author Beth Rider’s second vampire novel has hit number one and she is flying high on her new-found fame. But at a fated book signing that runs late into the night, Beth is confronted by an evil she’d only experienced in nightmares. Jack Dawn, a supernatural monster belonging to an ancient race of bloodthirsty immortals known as the Rakum, vows to track down and kill the young writer because of the vile redemptive message her book is bringing his people.

The Rakum have spread evil among mankind since the Beginning, growing in strength and influence with every passing century. A respected Elder among his brethren, Jack recognizes the novel’s destructive potential and his duty to destroy her before the book’s promises annihilate his Kind. His method of subduing the novelist is an ancient punishment perpetrated against humans who bring them the ultimate displeasure; Jack marks her as a Rabbit. By forcing her to ingest his poisonous blood, Beth’s body now regenerates endlessly and she is set free to be tracked by his hungry brethren. The plan? His people will torture her, slowly, night after night, until she goes insane. Marking her was easy – now Jack only has to sit back and wait for the Rakum to do their worst.

Jack’s proselyte Michael Stone was brought up from his youth to be strong, sensible and oftentimes, brutal. But at one 130, Michael is old enough to appreciate the quiet and ordered life he’d carved out for himself over the years. Aware that his Elder has marked a human for death, Michael is on the lookout as he leaves work late one night. When he stumbles upon the beautiful and apparently innocent Beth Rider, he is instantly smitten, despite the fact that a few seconds later he realizes that she is the target of his Elder’s fury. Puzzled by Jack’s unreasonable condemnation, Michael takes it upon himself to protect the lovely author from the limitless lust of his brethren.

Facing the most terrifying trial of her life against creatures known only in fables, one simple woman will unintentionally threaten the very existence of a powerful and accursed people. In the climactic mêlée, it is a race to the death, or if Beth has her way, a race to the life-of every Rakum who makes the choice.

Reviewers say:

“Rabbit: Chasing Beth Rider” is one of the most original and courageous novels I’ve read in a long time. There’s no way around it, so I might as well just spit it out: this is a Christian story about vampires. Or possibly it’s a vampire story about Christians.

If that offends thee, you might as well stop right here!

I was rather blown away by the book and the way the author intertwined scripture and Biblical teachings with the horrors facing Beth Rider and those she became involved with at the hands of a supposed mystical race (or would that be mythical?)


Ellen’s subjects range from vampires to angels to demonic powers in dark places; but her goal is to entertain the reader while sending a message of redemption that is only apparent between the lines. Pitching faith and bloodlust into a battle to the death, or oftentimes, to the life; Ellen always finds a way to balance the two in a fascinating and intriguing way.

A recovering vampire/horror fanatic, Ellen uses her experience in that subculture to bring the Light into the vampire genre. Addicting and delicious, Ellen’s brand of story-telling is rife with deep character study and honest emotion. Building characters that she loves deeply, that sentiment carries to the reader as well. Many readers feel that her writing reads ‘like a movie in their heads’.

Ellen graduated cum laude from Huntingdon College in Montgomery, Alabama with a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Psychology and a minor in Sociology. She has been a licensed non-denominational minister and still teaches Scripture to teens and adults. She has also been a professional artist, specializing in custom pet portraits and equine art.

Ellen’s faith plays an important role in her life and although her novels are written for all people, they are often carried in Christian Markets. She lives in Historic Montgomery, Alabama with her husband, daughter, four cats and one spoiled dog.

And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample:
 
IF YOU ARE READING THIS POST ON YOUR KINDLE, JUST ENTER
INTO YOUR COMPUTER BROWSER TO READ YOUR FREE SAMPLE

Free Kindle Nation Shorts — March 10, 2011: An Excerpt from The Big Wake-Up, “An August Riordan Mystery” by Mark Coggins

Are you ready for some smart, sexy, stylish, hard-boiled fun?
Wisecracking San Francisco PI August Riordan parlays a run-in with a machine-gun-toting cable-car brakeman into a guided tour of the city’s cemeteries, hunting for … wait for it … Evita Peron’s perfectly preserved corpse. His deadly cat-and-mouse game involves surviving both the murderous intentions of some shady members of Argentina’s ruling class and the seductive advances of several beautiful Latin American women.

By Stephen Windwalker
Editor, Kindle Nation Daily
©Kindle Nation Daily 2011
 

The Big Wake-Up

Do you miss the late Robert B. Parker and his Spenser novels?
Me, too. In fact, if you’re like me, you may not be above going back and reading some of the best Spensers a second or third time. There’s no shame in that, really.
But sooner or later we have to move on, and I’m here to propose what the helping professions sometimes call a geographical cure.
How about a trip across the country?
Fly first class, and it will only cost you $2.99 a trip. Because I’m going to introduce you to a new friend, August Riordan, a San Francisco Shamus who is every bit as funny, as august, and as tough an Everyman PI as his Boston counterpart Spenser.
Where to begin? Novelist Mark Coggins makes it easy for us by providing an action-packed 13,000-word free excerpt for us right from the beginning of The Big Wake-Up, the fifth book in the Riordan series.
If you’re enough of a suspense fiction fan to begin reading the free excerpt, I’m pretty sure you’ll keep going right to the end of this novel, and then it’s up to you. You can go 5-4-3-2-1, or you can go 5-1-2-3-4, it doesn’t matter.
But don’t be surprised if by the time you finish all five you’ll be asking me for Coggins’ email address so you can write to him begging him to put on some speed in delivering #6….
Here’s the set-up:
The odyssey of María Eva Duarte de Perón–the Argentine first lady made famous in the play and the movie Evita–was as remarkable in death as it was in life. A few years after she succumbed to cervical cancer, her specially preserved body was taken by the military dictatorship that succeeded her deposed husband Juan. Hidden for sixteen years in Italy in a crypt under a false name, she was eventually exhumed and returned to Buenos Aires to be buried in an underground tomb said to be secure enough to withstand a nuclear attack. 

Or was she?

When San Francisco private eye August Riordan engages in a flirtation with a beautiful university student from Buenos Aires, he witnesses her death in a tragic shooting and is drawn into mad hunt for Evita’s remains. He needs all of his wits, his network of friends and associates, and an unexpected legacy from the dead father he has never known to help him survive the deadly intrigue between powerful Argentine movers and shakers, ex-military men, and a mysterious woman named Isis who is expert in ancient techniques of mummification.

The fifth novel in the August Riordan series, The Big Wake-Up plunges everyman PI Riordan and his sidekick Chris Duckworth into their most terrifying and anguishing case ever.

From Publisher’s Weekly (Starred Review):

Coggins’s outstanding fifth mystery to feature San Francisco PI August Riordan (after 2007’s Runoff) successfully blends an over-the-top premise with an unrelentingly grim plot. Soon after flirting with an attractive young woman in a Laundromat, Riordan watches in horror as an apparently deranged cable car operator guns her and an older woman down at a cable car stop. Riordan pursues the killer and stops his bloody rampage. The Argentine family of the first victim, 23-year-old Araceli Rivero, hires him to investigate an unrelated matter, the location of Araceli’s dead aunt, whose body was transferred from a Milan cemetery to somewhere in the Bay Area. After quickly getting a promising lead, Riordan learns that his clients have been less than straight with him-the missing corpse is actually that of Evita Perón. Coggins pulls no punches as the suspenseful action builds to a violent act of vigilantism.

 

(August Riordan Series)
 
by Mark Coggins
Kindle Edition

List Price: $2.99

Buy Now

Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled  

(UK CUSTOMERS: Click on the title below to download The Big Wake-up)
Six for the Kindle by Mark Coggins
  
6.
Free Kindle Nation Shorts – March 10, 2011
An Excerpt from
The Big Wake-Up
“An August Riordan Mystery”
 by Mark Coggins
Copyright © 2011 by Mark Coggins and published here with his permission

Cable Car Crunch

ARE YOU HOPING FOR A SOUVENIR or checking to see if they’re your size?”
The woman doing the talking was holding a towering stack of pastel-colored panties. We were the only two in the Missing Sock Laundromat. I was there because doing my own laundry in the middle of the workday seemed the best investment I could make in my flagging private eye business. She was there-apparently-because even Victoria Secret underwear models have to do the wash.
There’s no question I’d been staring at her. I don’t usually associate tweed with sexy, but she’d shoehorned her extravagant curves into a vest and jacket made of the stuff and on her it was positively prurient. The jacket just came over her hips and then a pair of clingy jeans took charge and traveled the length of her long-stemmed legs to some pointy brown boots. Given the alternative between watching my Fantastic Four bedsheets go through the spin cycle and taking her in while she folded and stacked her unmentionables, the question of eyeball allegiance was never in doubt.
I sat up straighter in the plastic lawn chair I’d been camped in. “Doesn’t matter what size they are. They’re not my color.”
A smile pulled at the corners of her mouth and she leaned down to put the stack of panties in the nylon duffel bag at her feet. When she had them situated just so, she yanked the draw string closed and swung the bag over her shoulder. She flipped back apricot blond hair, then reached into the open dryer.
Mirth and green light shone in her eyes. She gestured for me to hold out my hand and pressed something warm and spongy into it. “Well, here’s your souvenir, then.”
A fabric softener sheet.
I laughed and watched as she plopped a tweed newsboy cap onto her head, collected an oversize umbrella from near the door and went out onto Hyde Street and a driving San Francisco rainstorm. She gave me a two-fingered wave through the plate glass and then jogged across the street to stand with an older woman at the cable car stop on the corner at Union in front of the Swensen’s ice cream parlor.
That particular Swensen’s was the original-opened in 1948 by Earle Swensen himself-and the promise of a couple of scoops of Cable Car Crunch after I finished my laundry was the main reason I picked this place over the laundromat in my apartment building. The pantie girl had been an unexpected plus.
Sighing, I pocketed the fabric softener sheet and let my gaze return to the bank of Speed Queens in front of me. The machine on the end was shaking violently due to my decision to throw a pair of dirty Converse Chuck Taylors in with my sheets. I moved to rebalance the load, then heard the deep, coffee grinder rumble of an approaching cable car. It pulled in front of the ice cream parlor, blocking my view of the girl and the older woman. It looked completely devoid of passengers and I thought how lucky the girl had been to catch an empty car so quickly.
I’ve never been more wrong in my life.
On sleepless nights, I can still see the next five seconds replay when I press my face into the pillow. The cable car seemed to pause on its tracks, there was a harsh unzippering noise synced to lightning flashes, and the car accelerated from the corner. By the time I thought to look to the gripman, his face was turned away from me, but I could just make out two pug-ugly Uzi machine guns dangling from leather straps that crisscrossed his chest. I yelled something inarticulate and plunged across the room to the door.
It was a short, drenching sprint to the cable car stop. The girl and the woman lay in a jumble with packages and bags in the gutter, their open umbrellas twitching and rocking in the rain like things possessed. There was no question of either being alive. The 9mm slugs had stitched a slashing line across faces and chests, and although there was relatively little bleeding, the damage was horrific. The older woman, in particular, simply had no forehead. The pantie girl had less damage to her face, but the tweed fabric of her vest was chewed to shreds and bright red arterial blood welled in shallow pools across her throat, sternum and breast. Both women peered up into the downpour with unblinking eyes.
The awful transformation from teasing, flirtatious girl to broken rag doll left me vapor locked. I didn’t know what to do. I sat on my haunches in the street, my hair plastered to my scalp, my fingers squeezed against my kneecaps, swaying from side to side. I might still be there if an aproned teenager hadn’t poked her head out the door of Swensen’s and let off a strangled scream.
I blinked, then blinked again. I squeegeed hair and water off my face with my palm and reached across to close the eyes of the dead women. By the time I stood up, the teenager had retreated into the store. She tried to block me from entering, but I bulled my way through to stand dripping on the tiled floor while she scampered back behind the ice cream freezer. “Go away,” she squeaked.
“Call 911,” I said. “Tell them that a gripman on the Hyde cable car line is shooting people with machine guns.”
Whatever response she made to that was lost in the sound of me flinging open the door again with the little bell attached to it caroming wildly off the glass. I ran across Hyde to the alley that bordered the laundromat. I had parked my 1968 Ford Galaxie 500 halfway on the sidewalk in an illegal spot near the corner. I dove onto the bench seat, shoved the key in the ignition and cranked the starter while I worked the gas pedal. The car shook while the starter turned, but the engine didn’t catch-an all too common occurrence with the Galaxie. I wrung the steering wheel in frustration, pumped the pedal some more and forced the starter into an extended series of arias. The engine still didn’t join the performance.
The smell of raw gasoline wafted into the car: flooded. Hissing a rosary of curses, I laid my hand flat on the dashboard in a kind of anti-blessing, pressed the gas peddle all the way to the floor and twisted the key. The Galaxie shimmied in an off-kilter rhythm, fired once, missed a beat, then fired again. Finally all the cylinders caught and the engine rumbled to life. A cloud of blue gray smoke that not even the driving rain could knock down billowed up behind me. I yanked the transmission into gear and jolted off the sidewalk in a squealing left turn onto Hyde.
The maximum speed of a cable car is ten miles per hour. That was still enough for the car I was chasing to travel six blocks to Washington where the tracks turned left to go down the hill to Powell. It was just making the turn as I gave the Galaxie all the gas I dared, winding the car up to 50 miles per hour by the time I hit the depression in the roadway where Hyde roofed the Broadway tunnel. The Galaxie bottomed out, scraping up yards of asphalt and swamping the aged shocks. We bucked in a seesaw oscillation that, combined with the fogged front windshield and the wheels slipping on the slickened steel of the cable car tracks, made controlling the car an iffy proposition at best.
The turn at Washington proved the point. I pressed the brakes to slow for it, but hydroplaned on the tracks. I torqued the wheel over anyway, provoking a skid that snapped the rear end wide and knocked over a scooter that was parked at the corner. I turned into the skid to regain control and side swiped two more autos. By the time I had fishtailed into the middle of Washington, the cable car had crossed Levenworth and was approaching the crest of the hill at Jones.
Then came the bullets. I had hoped the gripman would be unaware of my pursuit but the orchestra of crashes accompanying my turn must have alerted him. He swung wide out of the cable car, clinging to a white pole on the side while squeezing off a long, stuttering round from one of the Uzis. The slugs tattooed the hood of the Galaxie, then flew up into the windshield, chiseling a constellation of starburts in the glass. I tried to crawl into the dashboard ashtray, but flying glass sliced my right cheek before I could take cover.
The cable car rolled over the edge of the hill and the gripman lost his sight line. He swung back inside the car just as it slid from view.
Up until that point, the Galaxie had had little to recommend it as a pursuit vehicle. It was old, mechanically unreliable, hard to control and not particularly fast. All of that changed now. A two-ton hunk of 1960s Detroit iron makes an excellent guided missile.
I slapped the gearshift into low and tromped hard on the gas pedal. The rear wheels chirped and the car shot forward with a jolt that knocked more of the fractured glass from the windshield. In an instant, I was at the top of the hill. In another, I was sailing over it.
Any worry about how the shocks would handle another hard landing was misplaced. The Galaxie pancaked onto the back of the cable car-flattening the panel with the car number and the Rice-A-Roni ad-and firmly embedding the front end at a height that didn’t permit the wheels to touch the ground. My forehead punished the steering wheel, and by the time I unstuck my frontal lobe from the inside of my skull, we were barreling down Washington as a conjoined unit at a speed much greater than the nineteenth-century cable car designers had contemplated.
Not that the gripman wasn’t doing his damnedest to stop us. Plumes of sparks flew up from beneath the car where he’d employed the emergency break-basically a steel wedge that is crammed into the slot between the tracks-and I could smell and almost taste the acrid wood smoke coming off the old fashioned wooden track brakes. When the brakes didn’t seem to be working he resorted to the Uzi. Bullets nickered overhead, but I put a stop to that by tromping even harder on the gas.
We shot past Taylor and then Mason. I realized I had a death squeeze on the steering wheel even though there was no steering to be done and I was screaming at the top of my lungs. The tracks turned right abruptly at the next street-Powell-but I didn’t think we would be joining them.
There was a hard jolt at the intersection and I felt the cable car wrenching away from the Galaxie. My front wheels bounded onto the ground. The last thing I registered before slamming on the brakes and bracing myself for the inevitable was the cable car heeling over like a yacht-the grip beneath the car still attached to the cable, which was being pulled from its slot like a gigantic rubber band.
The back end of the Galaxie spun around to the left and I skidded kitty-corner across the intersection to broadside a street lamp, and when that didn’t hold, the storefront of a Chinese market. I heard the light pole crashing down, glass from the storefront shattering, and above it all, a tremendous snap and an awful whipping sound.
I rattled around the interior of the car like a bean in a rumba shaker. I must have lost consciousness for a moment because the next thing I remembered was the near zen-like sound of rain water dripping through the broken windshield onto the dash. Then a whispered, “Are you okay?”
Okay I was not. I sat up in the seat and immediately discovered about ten places where I hurt, including a stinger to my neck that made my left arm feel like it was on fire. Outside the driver’s side window, next to a store display of ceramic figurines, was the person inquiring about my health: an old Chinese man in a sweat suit and a Cal Berkeley baseball cap. The way out to the left was blocked, so I crawled across the seat, encrusting my knees with a mosaic of broken glass and ceramics as I went, and pushed open the passenger door. I lumbered out and stood on trembling legs by the base of the felled street light, transfixed by what I saw across the way.
“Hey,” said the Chinese guy, no longer whispering. “You smashed my store.”
I didn’t answer him because I had already broken into a shuffling, windmilling trot to get to the far corner. The cable car was flipped over on its side, part on the roadway and part on the sidewalk. The gripman was on his back in the street, lying parallel to the overturned car. As I got closer, I could see that he was alive and conscious, but given his injuries, I doubted he wanted to be either.
This was my first good look at him. He was young, red-haired, and probably had a last name that started with O’. He had a bandanna tied around his head that matched his brown SF Municipal Railway uniform, with a special cable car division insignia embroidered over his chest. I reluctantly abandoned my theory that he was a random crackpot who hijacked the car.
It was no theory that he was suffering. The skin on his face was so pale and so wet that it appeared almost translucent. His eyes were marbles of agony. He watched as I approached, then gasped, “I can’t feel my feet.”
I wasn’t going to make it easy for him. “That’s because you don’t have any.”
He nodded like I’d passed along a ball score, then closed his eyes. “The cable,” he mumbled.
“Yeah. The cable. But you won’t need your feet for the gurney ride to the lethal injection chamber. Now shut up while I save your miserable life.”
I yanked off my belt and leaned down to cinch it above his left knee as a makeshift tourniquet. The first cop car showed up as I was tugging at his belt for the other leg, my fingers slippery with blood.

A Universe of Stars, a Galaxie of Dents

THE GRIPMAN TURNED OUT TO BE A GUY named Darragh Finnegan, which is about as Irish a name as you can get without starting the last part with O’. He had been caught up in a sting involving undercover security guards who were put on cable cars to find crews pocketing fares from tourists. Finnegan and the conductor from his crew had been suspended for allegedly skimming over $25,000, his girlfriend had dumped him and-thanks to his high profile from press coverage-he was also under investigation by the INS for being in the country illegally. And he was pissed.
On the day of the shooting he donned his Muni uniform and met his old cable car at the second stop up from the turnaround at Beach Street. He shot and killed the replacement crew and three passengers who had waited in the rain to ride a cable car on a miserable February afternoon. Two of the three were tourists from Germany and the other was the undercover security guard who caught him skimming fares. Finnegan then rode the car to the stop across from Lombard-the “crookedest street in the world”-and critically wounded another tourist from Lawrence, Kansas. The next stop was the one in front of Swensen’s, where the two women waited.
The pantie girl’s name was Araceli Rivero. She was twenty-three, a native of Argentina, and was in the U.S. on a visa to study pharmacology at UCSF. The older woman was the organist at the New Korean Methodist Church and was known to her friends as “Snowflake.”
The only thing that wasn’t known was where exactly Finnegan managed to get hold of the machine guns. There were dark rumors about connections to the Irish Republican Army, but since Finnegan wasn’t talking the rumors came to naught.
That left yours truly. The cops weren’t exactly ready to pin any medals on me-I caused an estimated $100,000 worth of personal and municipal property damage for starters-but there was no denying that things would have been a whole lot worse if I hadn’t shown up. The cable car was due to pass through the popular Union Square shopping district, and rain or no rain, there were plenty more people in the line of fire. Finnegan was ready for them, too. A duffel bag full of loaded magazines was found dangling from one of the control levers of the wrecked car.
I got kicked loose from the Bryant Street station well after midnight. One of my few friends in the department-a lesbian beat cop-helped me sneak out the employee exit to avoid the feverish piranha school of reporters who were waiting to interview the only guy who could add a little color-if more color was needed-to tomorrow’s lead story: “SF Muni Gripman Goes Postal; Hijacks Cable Car for Death Tour.”
I shared a cab with a released prostitute who wanted to be dropped off on Polk near California. After the driver and I both politely declined to join her in a nearby alley for reduced cost favors, we continued to my apartment at the corner of Post and Hyde, where I promptly hid under the covers of my unmade bed and remained there for three days, not answering the phone or the door buzzer, or paying attention to the TV, the radio or the transmissions from Alpha Centauri that I sometimes received from the fillings on my back molars.
The thing that finally roused me was a pounding that sounded like someone using my apartment door for serve and volley practice. Theoretically it could only be a neighbor or the apartment manager since the lobby door was on a buzzer system, but the occasional wastrel had been known to make it through. I padded up to the door in my bathrobe and looked through the peep hole. I nodded to myself. It was one of the biggest wastrels I knew: Chris Duckworth.
Duckworth and I had met on a case several years ago, and although it surprised me to admit it, he had probably become my best friend. It surprised me because I doubted that in a hypothetical survey of our eHarmony “29 dimensions of compatibility” we would come up with a single match. Not that Chris would be allowed to use the service in the first place since, to quote one of the many pithy expressions he used to convey his sexual preference, he was “gay as a fondue fork.”
I slipped off the security chain, undid the locks and pulled open the door. He stood in the hallway with two packages carefully wrapped with butcher paper and string. He was slight man-barely five foot and a half-and the packages came up nearly to his chin. But to the casual observer, details about height and what he was carrying would hardly have rated a mention. What could not have gone unremarked was the fact that he was dressed as a French maid-a very sexy and convincingly female French maid.
“I didn’t ring for service,” I said with mock severity.
“There’s no service in this dump, much less a place to ring for it. I’m doing the early show at Aunt Charlie’s.”
Aunt Charlie’s Lounge had a drag queen revue where Chris sang torch songs under the stage name of Cassandra. I often played bass in the band that accompanied him. “Why are you here then?”
“I’m just checking to see if you’ve grown out your fingernails or started collecting your urine in jars.”
“Fingernails take time, but I’ve been doing the urine thing for years. It’s best to go with pickle jars because of the wide-“
“Spare me.”
“You started it. What’s in the packages?”
Chris sauntered into the room and dumped the packages on the folding card table I use for dining (if consuming TV dinners and burritos could properly be referred to as dining). He pulled off a cashmere top coat, folded it carefully and set it down on the arm of my ratty sofa. After brushing a few Oreo cookie crumbs from a cushion, he perched on the edge of it and surveyed the room. “I like how you’ve remained true to your original artistic vision. The bowling pin lamp, for instance, is a nice touch.”
“Yeah, well, the lava one fell off the cinder block.” I shoved the door closed and walked over to the card table. “So, what’s in the packages?”
“See for yourself.”
I yanked the cord off the top one and tore open the paper. A pair of Converse Chuck Taylors with new white laces were inside. My Chuck Taylors. The bottom one had my sheets and towels from the laundromat neatly folded and pressed. “Wow. You didn’t have to do that, Chris-but thank you. How’d you even know where to find them?”
He reached up to resettle the headpiece of his costume atop his blond wig. “Well, while you’ve been playing the Howard Hughes recluse, the rest of the world has been busy broadcasting stories about the ‘Cable Car Hero’-meaning you. Most of them mentioned that you were doing your laundry when the whole thing started. I found everything in a big pile on the folding table.” He looked down at his hands. “Did you really see those two women get killed?”
I slumped into one of the rickety chairs that went with the table and pushed the laundry to one side. “I couldn’t actually see it. The cable car was in the way. But it was certainly one of the worst experiences of my life. One second they were there, and the next they were lying on the ground. The arbitrariness of it was what got me. It reminded me of the Flitcraft story-only with a bad ending.”
“The Flitcraft story?”
“It’s a sort of parable from The Maltese Falcon. The point is that there is no master plan in the world. No karma. Your actions on this earth have no bearing on what happens to you.”
“Jeez, August, I didn’t realize we were going to be diving into metaphysics here. Is that why you’ve been holed up for the past three days?”
I picked at the wrapping paper from one of the packages, then forced a grin onto my face. “That, and I was waiting for the maid to bring me my damn laundry.”
Chris smiled back at me-more, I suspected, from relief at having the subject changed than amusement. “Well, it wasn’t just your laundry you abandoned, you know. And this maid can’t help you with it. You need a wrecker.”
“What are you talking about?”
“Your car-or what’s left of it. They’ve got it at the impound lot. Gretchen told me they’re towing it to the junk yard unless you claim it by this afternoon. I didn’t think you’d care, but-“
I jumped up from the table. Gretchen was my admin, so they must have called my office when they didn’t get hold of me here. “Did you drive?”
“Y-e-s. I checked out one of those car share Priuses. Why?”
“You’re taking me to the impound lot. Hold on while I get changed.”
Chris started to say something about missing his rehearsal, but I closed the bedroom door on him before he could finish.
WE GOT TO THE IMPOUND lot just as the “Pick Your Part” tow truck was hooking up the Galaxie. I told the driver he wouldn’t be picking any of my parts and sent him and the Galaxie to Cesar’s Garage on Turk instead.
Cesar did a brisk business in fixing German makes that were out of warranty or whose owners refused to pay full boat for dealer repair. He’d arrived in San Francisco from Ecuador in 1971, penniless with almost no friends, but thanks to a burning sense of entrepreneurship, had worked his way up from a tiny two-man car repair shop to a multi-story garage that now occupied the whole block in the admittedly seedy Tenderloin neighborhood. Since my own apartment was right on the fringes of that same neighborhood, I rented a parking spot from him and used him for the limited amount of maintenance I saw fit to underwrite on the Galaxie.
It was late in the day and no one was at the customer entrance of the garage when we arrived. Chris barely managed a full stop, hustling me out of the Prius and humming the opening bars of “Falling in Love Again” under his breath before he yanked the door closed and sped off to Charlie’s.
The tow truck driver just chuckled as he lowered the Galaxie onto the concrete ramp. Both doors and both quarter panels on the left side were smashed, the hood was crumpled and the bumper was tied on with rope. The capper came when the front end hit the ground and the left wheel canted out thirty degrees. “Good luck, chief,” said the driver, and drove off whistling an out of tune rendition of “Turkey in the Straw.”
I heard steps echoing down the ramp from upstairs and gradually Cesar came into view. He was dressed in the garage uniform of navy blue pants and shirt, both of which were spotless and crisply pressed in spite of the hour. His shoes were shined to a high gloss and his jet black hair was combed back, accentuating the gray wings at his temples. Give him a corn cob pipe and a few inches and he could have been the MacArthur of garage mechanics. “Your parking space is downstairs, Señor,” he said.
“Yeah, I know. The thing is, I’m having a little trouble making it there.”
He grinned at me. “Did you run out of gas?
“I might have, but there seem to be contributing factors.”
He made a slow circuit around the car, touching dents here and there and finally stopping in front of the hood. He laid a pair of latex-gloved hands on one of the few uncumpled spots and pressed down. The car yielded only an inch or so, making a terrible grating noise as it moved. “That will be your tie rods or your axle or both.”
“Can you fix it?”
“I’ve seen the news stories about the cable car, Señor. What you did was very brave.”
I felt heat rise in my cheeks. Cesar and I rarely exchanged words-and most of those were taken up by the good-natured jokes he and the other mechanics made about my car. I wasn’t exactly comfortable incorporating hero worship into the relationship at this point. I made a show of straightening the radio antenna. It didn’t straighten worth beans. “You would have done the same,” I said finally.
“I don’t know. I think that is one of those things you can only know when it happens.” He peeled off his gloves and put them in his back pocket. “The car is totaled, Señor. There is no point in repairing it. Get a new one. I have a nice Mercedes I can give you a good price on.”
“Totaled just means it costs more to fix than the car is worth for resale. By that measure it was probably totaled before the crash. But as much as I’d like a Mercedes, this car has sentimental value to me. I want to repair it.”
“Even if I fixed the front end and all the body damage, it still has a forty-year-old drive train. I’ve seen the exhaust rolling out of this thing. Every time you came out of the garage, you nearly gassed us to death. I’d be surprised if half the cylinders have compression.”
“Then rebuild the engine-and the transmission if you have to.”
He shook his head. “That is silly. If you really want to drive around in a 1968 Galaxie 500, you should buy one that has already been restored. It will be much cheaper.”
“Are you saying you won’t do it even if I pay you the money?”
“No, I’m saying that it doesn’t make sense. Perhaps you are a little rattled from the-from the accident. Anyone would be.”
My hand closed around the Saint Apollonia medal I carried in my pocket and I squeezed. I strained to keep my voice level. “Look, this was my father’s car. It’s the only thing I have from him. I don’t want to lose it.”
“Oh. That is different. Why didn’t you say so?”
“I just did.”
He nodded like someone trying to be reasonable when the other party wasn’t. “I’ll run an estimate and call you tomorrow. But I have to close now.” He came up to where I was standing and reached over to touch my shoulder. “You know the girl, Araceli Rivero?”
My mouth went dry. “Yes?”
“She was a member of our church, Mission Dolores. There are many people from Central and South America in the congregation. They are holding a vigil for her this evening. I think you should come.”

Necrophobia

THE LAST TIME I ATTENDED A VIGIL OR WAKE was when my great aunt died when I was five. They put her coffin on a big table in the darkened living room of her gingerbread bungalow, lit candles, turned the mirrors to the wall, and lifted me up over the satin-quilted maw of the box and made me kiss her goodbye. Afterwards I locked myself in the bathroom and used a bar of Boraxo I found under the sink to eradicate the pink powdery taste of her. I quit scrubbing only after my lips were skinned and bloodied-and have suffered from an irrational fear of embalmed bodies ever since.
The vigil for Araceli Rivero wasn’t held in a gingerbread bungalow or even a church, but in the “visitation” room of Pietro Palermo & Co. Funeral Directors. I had gone back to my apartment to change into the only black suit I owned, and by the time I pulled open the heavy, iron-bound door to the room, it was approaching 8:00 p.m. The casket was at the front in a niche lit by a pair of art deco torche lamps and two candles in tall brass holders. A life-sized crucifix yawned out from the wall above an oak and green velvet kneeler situated in front.
Clumps of people sat on pews with heads bowed or stood together holding whispered conversations. There wasn’t a priest, nor was there anybody I could pick out as family. But Cesar I spotted immediately. He was bent over the kneeler, his fingers moving ponderously through the beads of a rosary, his slicked back hair glistening under the light.
An obvious funeral parlor employee stood by the door near a podium with a sign-in book. As I came up, he handed me a memorial card with a picture of Jesus blessing a young woman. “The family appreciates your attendance. Would you sign the mourner’s register, please?”
I looked down at the book. There were spaces for name, address and an unlabeled column that people had used to write things like, “God bless Araceli” and “There is hope in Christ’s resurrection and glory.” I felt like a fraud and intruder and wished for the hundredth time that I hadn’t let Cesar guilt me into going.
“I don’t know-” I started.
The funeral parlor guy arranged his face into a look of professional concern and held out a silver fountain pen. I sighed and took the fancy writing implement from his hand, scratching out my name and address in what I hoped would be an illegible jumble. I left the final column blank.
Pietro Palermo & Co’s man leaned over the book to inspect what I’d written, and frowning slightly, relieved me of the pen. “Thank you, sir. If you’re not familiar with the custom, may I suggest that you take a seat in the pews until you have the opportunity to go up to the departed.”
I nodded like I appreciated the advice and took a seat in the pew closest to the exit, resolving to slip out the door as soon as he was distracted. To avoid catching anyone’s eye in the meantime, I made a close inspection of the card he had given me. The side without Jesus had Araceli’s full name and a birthday of December 2nd, twenty-three years ago. Her “heavenly birth date”-that is, the day she was killed-was printed below it. At the bottom came a short prayer titled “Eternal Rest” that I recognized from my Catholic upbringing. It was given in three languages: Latin, Spanish and English.
I heard the door open again and I turned back to watch the funeral parlor employee give his spiel to a pair of young women who had to be classmates of Araceli’s at UCSF. The first one had barely taken hold of the pen before her lip started trembling and she sobbed out loud. As her companion reached over to hug her, I felt a tap on my arm.
“I’m glad that you came, Señor.” Cesar stood in the aisle beside me wearing a black suit that probably cost twice as much as mine, but somehow didn’t make him look any more dressy than his smart garage uniform.
“That makes one of us,” I said.
He shook his head. “No, the family and Araceli will appreciate it, too. “
“The family maybe-and maybe for the wrong reasons. But you’re making an assumption about dead people that I can’t share.”
“Please. Now is not the time to debate the existence of the afterlife. You must do the expected thing-if only to comfort the family. Go up and say goodbye to her, and on the off chance you are wrong about God, pray for her soul.”
“I don’t even see anyone from-“
“Please.”
His hand found its way around my wrist and tugged. I gave into the inevitable. I stood like a zombie and tottered down the aisle towards the niche. The memory of my great aunt sent my heartbeat past redline and my vision darkened and narrowed. My extremities tingled. Then I caught sight of Araceli over the edge of the polished mahogany and all the anxiety seemed to lift. It’s going too far to say she looked angelic, but for the first time I appreciated why someone would ever leave a casket open.
She lay in ivory satin in an ivory satin dress with a silver-beaded rosary clasped in her hands. Her apricot blond hair was arranged carefully on the pillow and her expression was serene and composed. She wore modest silver earrings and a plain silver bracelet. Her skin was a vibrant rose-petal pink, and there was no trace of wounds, bullets or madmen who hijack cable cars. But neither was there much of the flirtatious girl from the laundromat. She’d been transformed into a sort of virginal madonna.
I stood over her, fingering the fabric softener sheet she’d given me in my pocket. I had brought it on a whim with the idea that I might return it to her, but I realized now it would be wildly inappropriate. After an awkward interlude, I sank to my knees, put my elbows on the rail and bowed my head, but I was just marking time to make it look right. Whatever small connection I had with her seemed to be lost. I had been her avenger, but I didn’t really know her. And I was hardly the one to make a case for her soul if she-or any of us-had one.
My eyes were closed, but through the sound of rustling fabric and little fidgeting movements, I became aware of someone standing off to the left. I stayed on the kneeler for another long minute, then stood and stepped back-and because I figured it had to be family-made a clumsy attempt at crossing myself.
“Mr. Riordan?” came the expected request.
It was family all right, but not the sort I expected. A taller, lither version of Araceli stood waiting: more ballerina than underwear model, but with the same hair, green eyes and cheek bones. She wore a simple black dress and plain silver jewelry that seemed to match Araceli’s.
“I’m August Riordan,” I agreed in a too loud voice.
“Melina Rivero. Araceli was my sister.”
I took her extended hand and managed to get something across about how sorry I was. Then, feeling the need to account for my presence, I blurted, “I hope you don’t mind my attending. My friend Cesar is a member of your church, and since I was-since I was involved, he encouraged me to pay my respects.”
“Did you know Araceli, Mr. Riordan?”
“I didn’t. We had just met that day. At the laundromat.”
“That is what the newspaper said, but we wondered if it could be true. We are very grateful for what you did.”
I looked down at my feet, then forced myself to meet her gaze again. “I’m afraid what I did was more of a postscript. It doesn’t change…” I gestured over to the niche.
“No, it does not change that.” Her eyes strayed to the coffin and she seemed to go away for a moment. Then she twitched her head sharply and brought her arms up to hug herself. “My father and brother are in the director’s office. When they heard you were here, they asked that I bring you back to meet them. They want to thank you and they have a question.”
“A question?”
“I am sorry. English is a second language. A better way to express it is they have a job. A job they wish to offer you.”

Cementerio de la Recoleta

THE FUNERAL DIRECTOR’S OFFICE WAS BIG, cold and Gothic-looking, and didn’t exactly convey a feeling of sympathy or desire to help you through troubled times. The ceiling was vaulted with massive oak beams running beneath it, and light came from a single lancet window and a couple of heavy plaster wall sconces that you could have fried turkeys in. Melina Rivero’s heels clicked across the stone floor as she led me to the corner of the room where a bald man with a Jimmy Durante nose and large, square-rimmed glasses waited behind a carved desk. To his left was a younger version of the same model-including the eggplant-shaped shnoz-but with more iron-gray hair remaining on top of his head. Given Melina and Araceli’s appearance, I decided Mrs. Rivero had to be a real looker because dad was watering down the handsome genes something fierce.
Both men stood, barrel-chested and stolid, and Melina introduced us. Senior was named Reynaldo and compensated for his plain looks with a grip like a crimping tool. Junior was named Orlando and reached across with his left to give me a backhanded shake. As he sat down, I noticed his right arm hung limp at his side.
There was only one other chair by the desk and Rivero senior made it clear that it would just be us boys talking when he said, “Melina, I expect you are needed in the chapel.”
She said, “Yes, father,” and pausing only to give my bicep a reassuring squeeze, turned and walked out.
Rivero didn’t waste any time. “Tell me how you knew Araceli,” he said after he nodded me into the remaining chair. His speech was clipped and precise, and like everyone else I’d met in the family, carried a trace of that not quite familiar Latin accent.
“Melina asked about that, too. We didn’t know each other. We had just met at the laundromat.”
“I don’t understand that. She had no need to wash her clothes in a public laundry, especially her intimate clothing. It seems to me that could only invite unwanted attention.”
I couldn’t stop myself from thinking about Araceli’s big stack of panties and our exchange about souvenirs. I licked my lips and hoped I didn’t look like a complete pervert. “I wouldn’t know about that.”
“Then why did you do it?”
“Why did I do what?”
“Why did you risk your life to stop the gunman?”
I shifted in my chair. I’d been off-balance and uncomfortable since I walked in the funeral parlor, playing a part that I didn’t believe, but not wanting to offend or show disrespect. I was done with all that now. “I did it for the reward,” I said snidely.