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Save 75% Today on The Winner of The 2013 Best Indie Book Award: Storykeeper (Nine-Rivers Valley) By Daniel A. Smith *Plus* Don’t Miss Overnight Price Cuts in Today’s Kindle Daily Deals

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Winner of the 2013 BEST INDIE BOOK AWARD, Storykeeper is an epic adventure, based on historical sixteenth-century Spanish documents from the expedition of Hernando de Soto through the southern regions of the United States. However, the story is told from the perspective of the people of the Mississippi River Valley, who lived and survived America’s deadliest invasion.

Fading hope that the stories, the last essence of those lost nations will be heard again lies within one Storykeeper.

Reviews

“Smith has created a wealth of history and culture that will make you weep. Creating words and phrases with a poetic sense, building a feel for Native American culture that feels so genuine and, yet, is eminently readable. ” – Books, Movies, Reviews! Oh my! – Kathy Davie

“Mr. Smith has written a fantastic tale from the Native American point of view about the conquest of the New World by Hernando DeSoto. He has done impeccable research . . . made that period in our history come alive for me. I learned much more about the conquest of the New World and life around the Mississippi River that now makes me want to read even more.” – Kindle Book Review – Dawn Edwards

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Each day’s Kindle Daily Deal is sponsored by one paid title on Kindle Nation. We encourage you to support our sponsors and thank you for considering them.

and now … Today’s Kindle Daily Deal!

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Kindle Daily Deals

Are Kindle bestseller prices rising or falling?

If you’re a BookGorilla subscriber, they may be rising for everybody else, but they are falling for you

Founder of KND and BookGorilla

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There’s been plenty of commentary focusing on a recent pattern of rising prices for ebook bestsellers — even, alas, in the Kindle Store. Our colleague and friend Bufo Calvin offered some clear analysis recently on his I Love My Kindle blog, under the headline Kindle New York Times bestsellers shockingly up almost $1 a month so far this year. And if that were the whole story, it would spell bad news for the budget-conscious avid readers that make up a major part of Kindle Nation.

It mayBKG-ICON seem counterintuitive, but there’s also some great news for these ebook consumers, especially the growing number of readers who make use of free daily alerts from BookGorilla. To show you what we mean, let’s focus on the Top 100 Bestselling Books of 2013 in the Kindle Store, according to Amazon’s own full-year Kindle bestseller list.

The average prices for those Top 100 bestsellers as of their release dates was $10.08, and their average price today, now that most of them have been out for a while, is $6.64 (see table). 30 of these books were initially priced between $10.99 and $17.99 — prices that most Kindle owners, according to our surveys, consider exorbitant. No surprises in any of that.

But here’s the good news: 71 of those same 100 books have been featured on the daily BookGorilla ebook deal alert during the past year, and the average deal price for those 71 books was $3.17.

So, if you had purchased those 71 books on their release dates, they would have cost you a total of $794.50 (an average of $9.78).

But patient, budget-conscious readers could have purchased all 71 books on the days of their BookGorilla specials for just $225.31. That’s a savings of $469.19 — well over $6 per book!

And far from being limited to popular self-published 99-centers, this list includes nearly all of the biggest books of the year, starting with 25 of the top 27 Kindle bestsellers of 2013, including Dan Brown’s Inferno, Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl, Grisham’s Sycamore Row, and other blockbusters by J.K. Rowling, Lee Child, David Baldacci, Pulitzer Prize winner Donna Tartt and more.

Obviously, millions of readers paid those high, impatience-driven prices … not that there’s anything wrong with that. After all, how were they to know when these must-read titles would be available at discounts of 60 to 90 percent, especially when such deals are often available only for a day or two?

That’s where BookGorilla comes in. It’s a totally free ebook recommendation service that was launched 13 months ago by the same incredible group of folks who produce Kindle Nation Daily, an ebook community that we have been building since Amazon introduced the Kindle in November 2007. Since then, other ebook sites have jumped on the bandwagon, and ebook recommendation services, in particular, have proliferated.

But BookGorilla takes a very different approach.

BookGorilla is driven primarily by a unique ability to discover and share — in a very personalized way — the best deals every morning on the kind of top-tier A-list bestsellers mentioned above, along with very popular backlist titles and truly curated “discoveries” of the best books from small presses and independent authors.

Equally important, less than 20% of the ebooks recommended by BookGorilla are ad-supported. With a revenue model fueled by about 70% Amazon Associates fees and 30% advertising revenues, BookGorilla has a powerful incentive to deliver on one of its key slogans:

“Instead of pushing you to buy books that we want you to buy, BookGorilla shows you books that you actually want to read, at prices you never dreamed possible!”

It’s no accident that we launched BookGorilla just as a federal court brought an end to  price-fixing collusion by Apple and five of the Big Six publishers. As a result of that change, the largest publishers themselves have joined in the same fierce price competition that was previously limited mainly to indie authors and smaller publishers.

It’s one thing to compete on price, of course, and another to get the word out about your best discounts. Now the ranks of BookGorilla’s advertisers include several Big Six and other major publishers, but whether or not a title is ad-supported, BookGorilla still enforces its same stringent price and quality requirements for “deal-worthiness.”

It is likely that the major publishers, and retailers like Amazon, will continue to price most books, most of the time, at very profitable levels: $8 to $15 for new-release bestsellers, and $4 to $10 for strong backlist titles. It’s up to consumers whether they want to pay those prices, and many are driven to pay them by impatience, the next book group selection or the demands of a course syllabus.

But for the significant number of readers who want to save a few bucks, the deals that BookGorilla recommends each morning mean that, with a little patience, readers can buy just about any book they might want, including very recent bestsellers, at much, much better prices.

The average price of all books on BookGorilla for March 2014 was $1.03. Given that there are no shipping charges for an ebook, that places the cost of buying Kindle books somewhere between the cost of using a public library and shopping at a used bookstore, for BookGorilla subscribers who use the service on a daily basis. As a result, budget-conscious readers may have a little less to fear in the pattern of rising bestseller prices that Bufo Calvin has described.

Just for today, don’t miss this 68% overnight price cut so you can find… Finding Casey: A Novel By Jo-Ann Mapson, author of Solomon’s Oak & Bad Girl Creek

This deal found exclusively on BookGorilla. Join our thousands of happy subscribers and never pay full price on eBooks again. It’s FREE and EASY at BookGorilla.com.

Finding Casey: A Novel

By Jo-Ann Mapson, author of Solomon’s Oak & Bad Girl Creek
A love story, a family story, a story of searching and the bond between sisters, Finding Casey is a testament to human resilience. This completely stand-alone novel, featuring beloved characters from Solomon’s Oak, will charm Mapson’s readers and move her into a larger sphere.

Today’s Bargain Price: $1.99

Everyday Price: $6.15
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Find This Title and More Premium Bestsellers at The Lowest Prices on BookGorilla!

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★★★★★5 Star Free Romance Excerpt Featuring Edenmary Black’s Sanctum Renaissance: Shadow Havens #6

Last week we announced that Edenmary Black’s Sanctum Renaissance: Shadow Havens Book 6 is our Romance of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the Romance category: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Romance excerpt, and if you aren’t among those who have downloaded Sanctum Renaissance: Shadow Havens Book 6, you’re in for a real treat:

5.0 stars – 3 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Fortune sees everything he’s ever wished for in Rachel’s eyes and the time has come for him to tell her who he was so long ago. She sees the strong, beautiful warrior who has taken her heart, but his words may shatter them. If she still loves him after she has his truth, their lives will be perfect… or he’ll annihilate whatever stands in the way of their happiness.

Iridea’s dream is coming to life in Renaissance, a showcase of beauty and the peaceful harmony she hopes supernaturals will find there. As long as she can overcome a big obstacle with her angelic Mate, balance their baby on her hip and manage publicity with a flamboyant out-of-town guest of the Saint Rushton Demesne, she shouldn’t have any problems at all.

As love and searing passions shape the future, a strange, late-night phone call to the Maidenheart Bakery draws Miriel and Andrieu into Saint Rushton to find a desperate woman, looking for help only the fallen death angels can provide. It’s a huge risk, but they can’t chance walking away from her… or what she knows about the Sanctum.

Trouble is blowing in the wind, in the form of the Luce brothers – two vicious werewolves, looking for a home, where an occasional missing human isn’t unusual. They’re about to be swept into the bizarre schemes of a banished archangel, taking them into a violent tempest. This isn’t the kind of war the fallen angels, daemons and vampiric warriors expect, but it’ll be a fight from hell. And, it’s just getting started.

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  And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free romance excerpt:

Excerpt from Chapter Two of

Sanctum Renaissance: Shadow Havens Book 6

Edenmary Black

All rights reserved.

 

Sanctum Renaissance: Shadow Havens Book 6 contains descriptive material and scenes of explicit sexual encounters between consenting male and female adult characters. It is intended for adult readers only.

Chapter Two

Roberian Nize strode through a lavishly painted hallway, deep in the Demesne, just outside of Chicago. His night had been filled with the responsibilities of running the haven and although he usually enjoyed the management of money, assets and security, he’d found himself annoyed with all of the details. He’d also seen Tula, who remained in the haven’s healing center, in the care of the daemon healers. Elegan Luce’s attack had left her with no vocal chords, but the healers told him they would regenerate, because of her daemon nature. Still, the daemon with the bandage over her throat and wide silver eyes, haunted him. He hadn’t taken time to ask for the specifics of the quarrel Luce had with her, because it didn’t matter. He was happy to see the bastard gone, along with his brother, Blacod, yet he worried about Tula. Coming to a narrow door, he tumbled the lock and stepped in quickly.

Morigean Xana stood before a canvas that had been propped against a bright, white wall. She wore only lavender panties and a white, paint- smeared tank top. He admired her mile-long legs for a moment, but he knew she painted half-naked only when she was upset. He walked to her slowly, eyeing the canvas.

Initially, there had been no difference between the surface of the wall and the canvas, but she’d created a telling image of a wolf on a crimson background with a dagger in its throat. She didn’t turn to look at him, but he knew she’d caught his vampiric scent.

Roberian slipped his arms around her from behind and dropped his face into the light hair she’d piled on top of her head. “He’s gone,” he whispered.

Morigean leaned back into the muscular chest and sighed. “You saw Tula this night.”

“As you did last night. She will recover.”

“That’s not the point.”

“You worry for her.”

Morigean shoved the paintbrush she held into her hair. “As you do.”

“Yes, I do, but it will not happen again, M’gean. Tula will be well. We have the finest daemon healers here and Elegan and Blacod are gone.”

Morigean relaxed a little. Elegan had frightened her for such a long time and the fact that he was no longer a part of her haven should have pleased her. The fact that it had taken a brutal attack to put him out the door did. Roberian Nize was formidable and led the Demesne in the style of the vampire who’d mentored him from the beginning… Sebastien Galaurus. It meant that brutality to achieve a result was the rule. “Why did you not send him from us before this attack on Tula?”

“I had no reason,” Roberian replied easily. He hadn’t liked Elegan much, on his best day, but the were had adhered to the laws… until Tula. In attacking her, he’d actually done Roberian a favor by giving him a clear reason to boot his ass out the door.

“Why did he attack her? Has she said?” Morigean asked.

“She spoke this night for the first time… to ask for water. It was nothing but a whisper and I did not think she was up for a discussion,” Roberian replied, pulling Morigean closer. “I saw her to wish her well and let her know that Luce is gone.”

“I am pleased she spoke at all. Certainly, it means the regeneration process has begun, but are you not curious, Robbie? She could, perhaps, use a pen and paper to tell us what happened between them.”

“I don’t care what happened between them, M’gean,” he answered firmly. “Why do you?”

“It’s related to his blood addiction.”

“Probably,” Roberian conceded. “This matters to you? The fact that he attacked her at all, for any reason, warrants expulsion from the haven. Only her life, has actually saved his. I would have put him down myself if she’d died.”

Morigean nodded. “I feel we should contact the other American Demesnes.”

“For what?” he asked, raising a brow. The Demesne havens were singular entities and did not generally share news or communicate regularly. To air one’s dirty laundry was considered unthinkable and to seek assistance from another Demesne was out of the question.

“Luce is a scourge. A blight on the supernatural world,” Morigean said, turning in his arms. She pulled Roberian closer to look directly into the depths of his midnight blue eyes. “Others should, perhaps, be warned. He will live somewhere, Robbie. We have friends in other havens. They should know what has happened here.”

Roberian gripped Morigean’s slender waist to make a point. “No,” he said sternly. “He will not seek a home in another Demesne. He’s done with haven living, because he hates the rules. I’m not sure why he remained here as long as he did. Elegan Luce’s addictions make him a threat, but he is no longer our problem.”

“I do not want him to be a problem for any of the Demesnes, Robbie. His addictions are hideous. We are fortunate that he satisfied his blood needs among the human dregs of Chicago and brought no undue attentions to the haven.”

“M’gean,” Roberian sighed. “Elegan Luce is not our problem now. You will not tell anyone in your world of art, at any other Demesne, what happened with the Luce brothers. That it happened at all, would make me appear weak, which is anything but truth. I simply had no proof of Elegan Luce’s addictions before this and technically I still don’t. Elegan did not tell us why he attacked Tula and Tula cannot tell us. Do you want to destroy my reputation… the reputation of this haven?”

Morigean shook her head, dropping her eyes. Her lover, the leader of the Chicago Demesne, was not being completely honest with himself or her, but he’d leveled her with a direct order. The standing of the haven would suffer if she shared what she knew of Elegan Luce, the attack or his addictions. Robbie’s status would change and not for the better, if anyone in the supernatural world thought supernaturals were attacking each other inside the haven… under Roberian Nize’s vampiric nose. The Luces were gone, Tula would recover and that would be the end of it. When she looked up, Robbie was smiling at her again. “You’re right,” she said quietly. “I would never do anything to harm the haven or you. You know this, Robbie.”

He ran his hands up and down her spine, delighted with the way her nipples hardened under the flimsy tank she was wearing. He looked over her shoulder at the canvas that was such a brutal departure from her usual style. “What will you do with that?” he asked, to move the discussion from the Luce brothers to more pleasant topics.

“I’m going to burn it,” Morigean replied, as Roberian dropped his fangs to her throat. “To cinders.”

 

 

Iridea Grey lifted her son, Keisaan, to her shoulder gently, loving the soft, small coos coming from his round pink mouth. He dropped his head to her shoulder and slipped a pudgy arm around her throat before closing his silver eyes. Iridea leaned back in the reclining chair and tugged the cotton blanket over Keisaan’s shoulder, before letting her own eyes fall closed. Only a bit beyond his first month of life, her son was twenty-five inches long, weighed about twelve pounds and had the beauty of daemon, angelic and vampiric genes. As a result, the baby had soft blond curls, daemon gray eyes that were often silver and tiny fangs. It was a wonderful mix, she thought, rubbing the baby’s back as his breathing became deep and sleep took him. His warm weight could take her right along with him, but she forced her eyes open, just as Keirc opened the door. She was in the first room of Renaissance to be finished and it served as an office as well as a nursery.

He grinned, leaning around the doorframe. “He ate?”

Iridea smiled at her Mate. Even in torn jeans, with dust through his blond hair, he was gorgeous. “Yep, he had blood from my wrist and when he wakes up, he’ll breastfeed,” Iridea replied softly, although Keisaan’s sleep was so bottomless, she suspected he might not wake even if she had a bullhorn in her hands.

“How much blood?”

“Two or three teaspoons,” Iridea answered. Keirc also fed the baby his blood to avoid exhausting Iridea, but he was taking little at this point in his life. Angelic, daemon, were and human blood carried proteins that would force the baby’s vampiric bone marrow to produce his own blood cells, which was why all vampires needed blood regularly. As he grew, he would be weaned from his parental blood and feed from the Demesne’s Basium Cruenta, all of whom were human, living at the Demesne as an elite, protected group. His need for breast milk would continue for several months.

“You should have called me for his blood feeding,” Keirc said.

“I didn’t mind,” she answered, recalling the feel of Keisaan’s tiny fangs in her wrist. In time, they’d grow, but as it was, they were no harder than a dull fingernail.  “He’s taking so little. I think your skin’s tougher for him.”

Keirc closed the door and walked to them. “Okay… you think this space is clean enough and all of that?”

Iridea smiled at her Mate’s protective nature. The room was spotless and dust free, having been outfitted with lamps, two desks, laptops, a changing table, a toy basket, a crib and a small bureau filled with baby clothes and linens. A large, marble bathroom was right next door. “Yeah, we had the whole place scrubbed and vacuumed and we have everything we need here,” she said. “I don’t think we could make it cleaner.”

The first part of Renaissance would grow around the room, as it was on the first floor. Outside the door, a reception area, a small shop, a wine bar and a bank of elevators would eventually be situated, while bedrooms and suites would fill three upper floors. Eventually, an art gallery and an art school would be added. Iridea’s attorney, a were named Anton Grear, had hired human work crews to gut the building that had once been home to one of her father’s clubs… a place developed to be an urban hunting ground for the vampires of the Saint Rushton Demesne. Iridea looked forward to the day when the clubs’ reputations were forgotten and the buildings had been transformed into showcases for art and relaxation.

The summer had been spent rebuilding the Demesne and the Sanctum, following the attacks that had nearly ended them. It was a laborious task, but the four clubs had been invaluable as temporary refuges where homeless supernaturals had found shelter, where once depravity had reigned. As the last families had been moved home to the havens, the time had come to turn their eyes to the future.

Keirc dropped to a knee to peer at Keisaan’s face. “You’re gorgeous,” he whispered. “Like mommy. Ilea and Xavier are coming to take you home tonight.”

“Is it evening already?” Iridea whispered.

Keirc smiled at her, loving the peace in her eyes, as she cuddled their tiny son. “The sun set about an hour ago. The days are getting shorter, now that summer’s over.”

“Why aren’t you taking us home?” she whispered.

“I want to stay here to meet with Anton Grear,” Keirc said. In the human world, Grear’s law firm owned the clubs. One document, held by Grear and Iridea, established her as the true owner, but that document was not available to any human or in any database. “I want to double check the accounting for the crews of humans who’ve been working here to gut the building and clean.”

“Right,” Iridea said, sitting up carefully. “The human crews did a great job, taking us to the bare walls. Grear’s been really helpful.”

Keirc nodded, stroking the baby’s tiny bunched fist, as he turned in Iridea’s arms. “Yeah, he has. I like the idea of having more security here too… supernatural security.”

“We don’t have enough?” Iridea whispered, knowing that several Demesne warriors were just outside the door of the nursery office.

Keirc sighed. Iridea never seemed to understand the need for as much security as possible, in spite of all they’d been through. “I’m bringing more warriors in on this, Iridea. Pria never saw the dangers with the Maidenheart either… and we’ve been to hell and back. This place could attract attention… supernatural and human, sooooo…”

“Okay, I understand, Keirc,” she said quickly, keeping her voice soft. She still felt guilty for not having included him in her initial plan. He had every right to be pissed at her about that, but she’d noted that since Keisaan’s birth, her beautiful angelic Mate had mellowed in some ways, even as he’d become more ferociously protective in others. “Do what you think is best, but we’re going to have warriors and work people tripping over each other.”

“I don’t give a shit if they’re running into each other,” he said meeting her gray eyes.

“Are you worried about something specific?”

“No. I just don’t want any problems. The best way to avoid them is planning for all possible scenarios.”

“I love you. You’re the best at that kind of thing. Do what you need to.”

As Keirc’s cell chimed, he grabbed it from his pocket. When he ended the call, he smiled again. “Xavier and your mother are about two blocks away.”

“Excellent,” Iridea said. “She hasn’t seen this place since it was a supernatural refugee camp.”

“There’s nothing to really see yet, except bare walls.”

“Yeah, but they’re our bare walls… our future.”

Keirc kissed her quickly. “Yep,” he said, with an odd edge in his voice. “Ours.”

 

 

Kell shoved his hands into his pockets, closing the leather jacket across his wide chest. His back was to the brick wall of Saint Rushton Providence Hospital and the view he had of the city street was pure drab. In a few minutes, Christine Adeon would walk out of the building into the dusk, after her ten-hour shift. She’d link her arm in his and his heart would brighten.

Christine been a nurse at the Saint Rushton Shelter and Health Center for years, but after initiating divorce proceedings that would legally separate her from an abusive husband, she’d needed a job that paid better, in spite of Kell’s offers to help her financially in any way possible. In Kell’s opinion, Saint Rushton Providence Hospital was lucky to have her, but the nursing recruitment office had been as generous as he could have wished. The hospital was not as sprawling as the other hospital in town, Saint Rushton University General, but it was known for never refusing care, a fact that appealed to Christine.

As the wind went from cool to cold, Christine appeared in front of him, smiling at the way he turned his face to the breeze. “You should have worn something heavier, Kell. It’ll be cold tonight.”

Kell stepped forward and took her into his arms, without a word. He’d come to love her concerns for him, although she knew he was an outcast from the angelic realm and would never feel physical discomforts as she would. The tiny nurse was swimming in scrubs and the pea coat she wore and he was filled with an inexplicable urge to stuff her into the SUV and take her somewhere warm… some place where they could fall asleep on a beach, where no one knew them. He shook himself mentally as her strawberry blond hair blew against his throat.

He’d been her guiding angel before being taken away from her, after he’d interfered with her free will to protect her. His shunning from the angelic realm had happened because he’d killed. Again, it had been to protect someone and the truth was he’d do it all again. Circe, the insane vampiress who’d attacked the Sanctum, the Demesne and the Maidenheart Bakery had died when he crushed her heart, but he’d also killed Sebastien Galaurus, although he hadn’t meant to. He’d made matters worse by killing a French warrior, who would have driven a knife into Joe Cafaris’s back, when the Maidenheart Bakery had been attacked. The kills would have been viewed as justifiable or even accidental if he’d been a human, but the powers of the angelic saw no comparison. The memory was raw even though months had passed, but having Christine in his life eased his pain at being shunned from the realms where he’d been created thousands of years ago. His home was the Sanctum now and he divided his time between Christine, the haven and Monroe’s kitchen at the Maidenheart, which was turning out to be… not so terrible at all. Inhaling, he sighed, rubbed Christine’s shoulders and looked down, just as she turned her face to his.

“What is it?” she asked.

“Nothing,” he said quickly. “Let’s get you home and I’ll fix something to eat. Did you have a good shift?”

Christine nodded, as she stepped out of his arms and slipped her hand into his. “Do you mind if we made a quick stop first? I need to pick up a few things for Skip.”

Skip was Christine’s golden retriever and a light in her heart. The dog had defended her, loved her and demanded her attention shamelessly. Kell had come to enjoy the lovable blond beast as much and spoke with him telepathically often.

“Sure,” he said. “Where are we going?”

“Azalea’s Emporium,” Christine replied. “Ever heard of it?”

“Can’t say I have, darlin’. What do they sell?”

Christine tugged his arm as they started walking to his SUV. “Not they. She sells great stuff for dogs,” she explained. “Well, she sells great stuff for all kinds of pets… not just dogs. It’s owned by a woman named Azalea Kindeath.”

“Friend of yours?”

“Friend of Skip’s,” Christine confirmed. “I take him there sometimes, which is kind of hilarious, but Azalea is a big fan of his, so she lets him mooch treats and pretty much anything else he wants.”

Kell nodded, enjoying the happiness in her eyes. “Okay, let’s go get stuff for Skip,” he said as they approached the SUV.

Christine gave him directions that led to a side street a few blocks away. Fifteen minutes later, he parked the SUV under the bluish haze of a streetlight, in front of a red and purple awning hung over a bright yellow door. A small bronze-plated plaque on the door read, ‘Azalea’s Emporium.’ The store might have appeared garish to some, but Kell immediately liked the way the colors pulled the eye, against a drab urban background.

Christine grabbed for the door’s handle inside the SUV, but Kell reached for her arm. “Stay here,” he said firmly.

The street was deserted and dark, except for the eerie glow from the streetlight. The buildings were three stories, built with joined walls and looked like they might be elderly homes built at the turn of the century or tiny businesses that had been shuttered for the day. Azalea’s Emporium featured two paned windows, glowing brightly on either side of the door, an island of bright color in a sea of dusk. The sound of soft music and rushing water filled his ear from inside the shop, as he scanned the doorways, up and down the deserted street. Sensing nothing amiss, Kell ushered Christine to the door.

Inside, the store was bright and welcoming. The soft music entwined with the sound of a waterfall was a bit louder, but soothing. The store was narrow and long, with dark wooden floors. With no other customers or their pets, Kell was able to take in the wide array of merchandise. One wall was devoted to every kind of pet toy imaginable, from stuffed frogs to hard rubber bones. The shelving units were carved wood, painted in bright turquoise, magenta or gold and displayed gourmet treats for dogs, birds, fish and cats. In a corner, several bean- bag chairs in a variety of sizes and colors had been arranged over shaggy purple rug. A pretty, dark-haired woman in jeans and a bright yellow sweatshirt stood behind a long antique counter, smiling as Christine walked to her. The women hugged over the counter.

“Kell, this is Azalea,” Christine said shyly. “Azalea… this is Kellan.”

Kell stepped behind Christine and extended a hand to the brunette, noting the dark circles under her eyes and her pale complexion. “Hey,” he said, inhaling quietly. She was coming down with a cold or something, which dampened her scent. He also guessed that she hadn’t been sleeping much or eating too well, but her smile was genuine and he could see that her affection for Christine was authentic.

Azalea held her smile, staring up at the guy, who was drop- dead gorgeous. His shoulders were as wide as a football field and his rugged features, long dark hair and mesmerizing hazel eyes were hot with a capital ‘H’. “Hey,” she said, before looking back to Christine. “I have everything for Skip… oatmeal shampoo bars… chicken toothpaste…a new toothbrush… liver bacon treats and two bags of the organic kibble he likes. Did I miss anything?”

Christine shook her head. “Skip thanks you,” she said chuckling. “I do too.”

“You’re welcome, honey,” Azalea said, glancing back and forth the between Christine and Kell. “Skip’s a great boy. Call me when you’re low on anything.”

“Will do,” Christine replied, reaching into her bag for her wallet. “What do I owe you?”

“One sixteen, forty two,” Azalea answered, as she rang the purchases through on her cash register. “I tucked samples of oatmeal conditioner in the bag and a few extra treats for his royal blondness.”

“That’s kind of you,” Kell said, as the brunette lifted three large bags from the floor behind the counter. He reached for a bar of canine shampoo, wrapped in neon blue paper and held it to his nose to take a whiff. The aroma was oddly familiar … something he felt he should recognize.

“It’s organic,” Azalea said quickly. “I make the soaps myself, so I really know what’s in them.”

Kell dropped the bar back into the bag. “It smells good. Where did you learn to make soap?”

“Long story, but I inherited a journal after a relative died and there were recipes in it for soaps and a lot of other things. Her recipes were for people, but I modified them so they could be used for animals.”

“Humans…” Kell murmured, as something weird skittered along his spine and the scars he wore from having his wings amputated. He’d smelled something very similar in the boxes of soaps and lotions Miri sent to sell at the Maidenheart.

“I adapted the recipes so they’d be good for pets. You’d be amazed at the common things that can make a pet sick or even kill them. I’m very careful.”

“I’m sure you are,” Kell said. “I’m sure Skip likes it.” Turning to Christine, he said, “I’ll take this stuff to the car. Wait for me here.”

As Christine counted bills and handed them to Azalea, Kell took all three bags from the counter and disappeared through the door.

The moment he was gone, Azalea leaned toward Christine. “Good God, is he hot! When did you meet him?”

Christine felt her face warm, as Azalea raised a brow and grinned. “We’ve known each other for… well, we met a few months ago,” she lied, ruffled at not being able to really describe their relationship at all. He’d been her guardian angel for most of her life, had saved her, become a friend… and then become something more in a part of her heart that she’d thought dead. “Yeah, a few months,” she said, still flustered.

“Impressive… and he’s even protective,” Azalea said conspiratorially, just as Kell came back through the door. She counted change for Christine, without looking up, but she was pleased the nurse had found someone. She’d seemed so lonely in the past… so haunted… although Azalea knew very little about her, beside the fact that she adored her golden retriever.

“You’re here alone?” Kell asked, looking around the colorful shop.

Azalea nodded. “I’m closing now. I only stay open this late once a week. After you go, I’ll close and head for my dinner.”

“Where do you live?”

Azalea pointed to the ceiling. “Third floor. I own the building. My apartment’s upstairs.”

Kell nodded, still looking around. “Got a security system?”

“No,” Azalea replied, as a frown formed on her face. “I’ve been meaning to look into one, but I’m not sure I can afford it.”

“This is a nice area… during the day. Night’s a different story, sweetheart,” Kell said firmly.

“I know,” Azalea admitted. “I inherited the building with my sister and business is growing, but not everyone is willing or able to pay for the stuff for their pets. If we hadn’t inherited the building, we wouldn’t have had the money to open. I love finding amazing things for our customers. And, our customers are really the pets. Their humans pay the bills, but the cats and dogs and birds… well, that’s who we’re trying to please.”

Kell slipped an arm around Christine. “No insult intended. I see what you’re going for here. Security’s sort of a special interest of mine. So, your sister’s upstairs?”

Azalea shook her head, as a private pain took hold of her heart. “She’s out.”

“I see,” he said frowning. The woman’s sister was a problem… or had a problem. The pain was evident, yet he hated having struck a nerve. “Sorry,” he said immediately. “I didn’t mean… I tend to speak before thinking. Just wanted to make sure you’re okay here.”

Azalea put her hands on the counter and forced a smile. “No harm done.” She leaned forward and kissed Christine’s cheek. “Kiss the gorgeous blond for me,” she whispered, meaning Skip. “Bring him in next time and he can curl up on one of the bean bags for a quick massage.”

Outside, Kell opened Christine’s door and waited as she got into the SUV, before jogging around to the driver’s side. As he got in, a brunette, a dead ringer for Azalea, rounded the corner, walking briskly toward the pet shop. She has the same long dark hair, the same height and curvy build, but the resemblance ended there, as she was dressed in black leather jeans and a matching jacket with long fringe hanging from her sleeves. Her heels were high enough to be a health hazard and her face was heavily made up. She hit the door to the shop and bounced in, closing it behind her.

“Guess that’s her sister, huh?” Kell observed.

“I’ve never met her,” Christine said. “They look alike, but she seemed angry.”

As Kell let his hearing expand, he picked up the discussion inside the shop. “Yep,” he said, listening a moment longer, as he started the SUV. “You’d be right about that, honey.”

The shadow formed at the corner, just ahead of the SUV. It wasn’t something Christine would notice at all, but the form was bright as a beacon to Kell and not unexpected. He straightened behind the wheel, as his eyes hardened. “Let’s go home,” he said tightly, as Christine sensed his immediate tension.

“What’s wrong?”

“Nothing, beautiful,” he replied, pulling his gaze away from the one he knew so fucking well. “It’s late. You must be tired.” Kell hit the gas, as he pulled away from the curb and passed the corner, not giving the shadows another glance.

 

 

“A wine bar?” Ilea asked, as Iridea walked to a bleak corner of the first floor of Renaissance. “I recall you mentioning this.”

Keirc stood, with Keisaan in his arms, at the top of a short staircase that led to a hallway, which in turn, led to the nursery and office, where he and Iridea conducted most of the transactions of their new business. Anton Grear, the imposing were attorney, stood next to him, along with Xavier, Diamond, Fortune and the other Demesne warriors. The large barren room that had once been one of the hottest bars in Saint Rushton was lit with hanging halogen lanterns draped over exposed beams that ran along the ceiling. Everything that had once made the club Sebastien Galaurus’s pride and joy and then a makeshift home for supernaturals was gone. Laid bare, the former club was even more expansive.

“This will be the wine bar,” Iridea explained. “And, that area where you’re all standing will be the registration desk. We’ll have rooms on the floors above us for a total of twenty-five suites, but they’ll be large.” Crossing the floor to her mother, she spread her arms to encompass bare walls. “This area is where I want to have a display of the soaps and lotions that Miri makes and over there,” she said, pointing to an empty, far corner, “is where I want to have a pastry bar… with stuff from the Maidenheart.”

“It will be quite unique,” Ilea said.

“Yeah, there’s nothing like it for supernaturals,” Iridea said, walking back to her mother. “I’m really jazzed. It’s all in my head, but it’s going to come together and we’re going to have a really grand opening… and…”

“And, we’re going to need a lot of warriors,” Keirc interjected. “Don’t forget that.”

Iridea grinned as she wrapped her arms around her Mate and her son at the same time. “Of course. I know that.”

Anton Grear cleared his throat. “I believe you wanted to go over the accounting, Keirc. I have everything in my briefcase. Are you happy with the work that’s been done by the humans?”

Keirc nodded, as he settled Keisaan into Iridea’s arms. “Yeah, we have no complaints, but we’re ready to start the reconstruction, so I have questions.”

Grear nodded. “The crews that gutted the place do the kinds of work you’ll be needing… electricians… plumbers… carpenters…etcetera. The rates differ because of their unions and the companies they work for, but I’ve used them before. I can handle all of that for you or I can provide whatever information you need to hire directly. They’re very discreet.”

Keirc kissed Iridea’s forehead. “Why don’t you go home with your mother and Xavier and I’ll go over everything with Grear? I’ll tell you everything later tonight.”

“I’ll see you later tonight, baby,” Iridea said, before turning to Ilea. “I’ll just get our things.” She turned to head back to their office with Ilea.

“I have a question,” Diamond said firmly, stepping to Keirc and Grear. “You said you need warriors and I agree… you do. What kinds of security are you planning for this place? It’s a great concept, but it’s bound to attract attention… perhaps, not the best kind.”

Fortune stepped to Diamond and clapped his shoulder, as he turned to Grear and Keirc. “Forgive him. His manners are appalling.” He leaned to Diamond. “They’ll have the kind of security we have at the Demesne. I volunteered you.”

Diamond grinned. “You should have said something! This place will need warriors like us. I feel much better.” The vampiric warrior walked to the area where Iridea had said she wanted a wine bar. “I think this space would be better suited for the pastries. The wine bar should be larger and go over by the entrance,” he said grinning at the others. “I will let you know if I have other suggestions.”

 

 

Pria’s hand was warm in Miri’s, as she led her stepdaughter through her newly rebuilt home in the Sanctum to a small bedroom. The attacks that had almost leveled the Sanctum had completely destroyed her home, as she and Andrieu had been specifically targeted. The rebuilt space was beautiful and welcoming, but she feared her discussion with Pria would not be relaxing. Stopping at the bedroom’s door, she gave Pria a smile. “Just take off your jeans and top, my dear.”

Pria’s eyes were wide and her features were tight. “Okay,” she mumbled, stepping into the room with Miri. After toeing her running shoes off, she discarded her jeans and the light, blue top she’d worn to the Maidenheart that morning and stretched out on the bed.

“Would you like a coverlet?” Miri asked.

“No… just tell me what you think.” Pria sighed, as she stared at the pale green ceiling. The room was lit with small, ginger jar lamps and the rose and pale green comforter was soft under her, but all she could focus on was what Miri was doing… or would tell her.

Miri, who’d touched so many supernatural females, hesitated for just a moment, before pulling Pria into a seated position to run her hands through the length of her dark, wavy hair. She pressed Pria backward on the bed and ran her hands over her shoulders. “Relax, love,” she said, noting the tension she found in her stepdaughter’s limbs.

Pria sighed. “I’m trying.”

Miri dropped her palms to Pria’s abdomen, just above the band of her white, silk bikini panties. She closed her eyes and dropped her head, willing herself to forget who she was touching and how much fertility meant to her.

It was a rare state for supernatural females. Unlike women, supernatural females only became fertile a few times during the course of their lives which could extend hundreds of years. Miri herself had only been fertile once since her fall from the angelic realm in 1416. Keircnan had been born in 1714, when she was two hundred, ninety- eight years old, but she’d never become fertile again. Although the Sanctum was home to roughly two thousand vampires, weres and daemons, only one hundred and two were children and Miri had attended all of their mothers during the births. Pria, who wanted a child so much with her Mate, Joe, was two hundred and twenty, young by supernatural standards, but she’d never been fertile.

When Iridea was at the beginning of the physical storm that brought Keisaan into the world, Miri had advised Pria to sit with her for a time to encourage her own fertility. As Iridea’s body began the process that would birth her son, her supernatural pheromones caused their own storm, as hormones raged in her bloodstream. The hope was that Iridea’s pheromones would interact with Pria’s hormones to bring about fertility, that unpredictable, brief state which could allow Pria to become pregnant. Iridea had given birth weeks ago, but Pria hadn’t bled, as supernaturals would before becoming fertile. When she’d called Miri, asking to be examined, Miri had begun nursing a guarded hope for the daughter she’d adopted hundreds of years ago.

Pria’s midsection was warm and smooth under Miri’s hands. She pressed her fingertips down against the wall of Pria’s belly, feeling the flow of blood, the muscle and sinew under her touch… and a faint firmness that gave her pause. Pressing a little deeper, she felt more of what she sought. Added with the heavier texture of Pria’s hair and the minute change in her scent, it could only mean one thing. After a moment, she raised her head, lifted her hands and said, “You can dress now.”

“What do you think?” Pria asked, without moving.

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Ever Shade (A Dark Faerie Tale #1)

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Alexia currently lives in Las Vegas, Nevada- Sin City! She loves to spend every free moment writing, or playing with her four rambunctious kids. Writing has always been her dream and she has been writing ever since she can remember. She love Alexia currently lives in Las Vegas, Nevada- Sin City! She loves to spend every free moment writing, or playing with her four rambunctious kids. Writing has always been her dream and she has been writing ever since she can remember. She love's creating paranormal fantasy and poetry and loves to read and devour books daily. Alexia also enjoys watching movies, dancing, singing loudly in the car and Italian food.
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Probability Angels

by Joseph Devon

 

Copyright © 2014 by Joseph Devon and published here with his permission

The patterned wallpaper, the waist high molding, the chandeliers every ten feet, the glass covered wooden tables with overly ornate vases stuffed with flowers, everything in sight screamed out that this was a place designed to look nice with no thought given to whether or not someone would want to live there. Matthew walked along as quickly as he could in his tuxedo, wondering why hotels always had to look like this.

Matthew was a short man but not so short that people noticed that about him, his thinning hair made him look in his thirties while the glint in his blue eyes put him closer to twenty. A pair of thin rimmed glasses sat on his face like a statement of health. His tuxedo was well cut and lacked the rumpled shininess of a rental.

He passed an intersection of hallways, glancing to his right and seeing the elevator bank he continued on. Then he passed the vending machines. Then he made it to the bathroom.

Entering the bathroom he slowed down, the door eased shut on its spring behind him and Matthew stood there listening. He could hear him, softly, somewhere past the row of sinks. As Matthew trod through the bathroom, which itself was an orgy of overly ornate decorating, he glanced in the corner at the gold mesh wastebasket. There was something there that shouldn’t be, or at least he saw something there that shouldn’t be, and for the first time since he had walked out of the grand ballroom Matthew broke stride, his casual cool bounce faltering as he closed his eyes hard and shook his head. When he opened them again the wastebasket was empty.

He turned to face forward and picked up his stride again, turning the corner to where there was a row of stalls with beautifully stained wooden doors. Matthew walked down the row, glaring at the doors one after another. He finally crept around one and looked in to see a man sitting on the toilet with the lid down, the door open, his face in his hands as he sobbed.

“Excuse me?” Matthew said gingerly. The man looked up. “I was just looking for the cigar bar when I got lost and wandered in here and then I heard you from over by the sinks and I…well…I mean what’s wrong, pal?”

The man looked up, all elbows and knees from how he was folded onto the toilet seat. Matthew caught his eyes and smiled. “Come on,” Matthew said, “let’s go over by the sink, you can splash a little water on your face, talk it out, maybe I can help. At the very least,” Matthew looked around and smiled a good-natured smile that oh so delicately pointed out the absurdity of a grown man sitting alone in a toilet stall crying by himself, “I can definitely listen.”

Matthew coaxed the man out, led him to one of the sinks, turned on the tap for him, patiently listened as the man told his story, which Matthew already knew. Matthew nodded, one ear open in case there was anything new he should know, he reached into the breast pocket of his jacket and withdrew a cigar, spent time enjoying its aroma while he waited for the man to finish his tale of heartbreak and fear and unrequited love.

Matthew hopped up onto the counter, using only his legs, his hands never getting involved. He landed between sinks in what he somehow made look like a comfortable position. Through the whole leap the only thing he seemed intent on protecting was his cigar, which he held between thumb and forefinger of one hand. As he sat listening to the man’s speech wind down he rolled the freshly cut cigar gently, feeling the moist tobacco leaves giving slightly under the pressure of his fingers.

Matthew glanced over and saw that the man had finished and was looking at him with a face that was still damp from a few splashes of cold water. Matthew knew he was ready.

“Look,” Matthew started, leaning back into a position that should have been ten times more awkward but that he managed to make look ten times more comfortable. “I’m no expert on these things. I’m just here for this wedding as a distant uncle. Just wanted to find the cigar bar is all. But I see a fellow man sobbing himself to pieces in a toilet stall over a girl, and there isn’t any question in my mind as to what I should think. You, my friend,” and Matthew stared hard at the man, “need to go after this girl.”

“But she’s married,” the man said.

Matthew continued to stare, the man’s eyes drawn to his like something deeper was passing between them. “Doesn’t matter,” Matthew said. “A love that can make a man sob in a toilet…that’s a love that you’ve got to at least give a chance to, isn’t it? You said yourself; you knew she was having doubts about her marriage.” Matthew stared.

Finally the man broke eye contact and turned to face himself in the mirror. “Yeah,” he said, “she has doubts.”

“Okay then,” Matthew said, smiling like a high-school football coach after a particularly good pep talk. “Then go get her.”

The man looked at himself in the mirror for a few more seconds; doing something to his face that Matthew could only assume was some form of courage gathering. Then he said, “Thanks,” and turned and walked out of the bathroom.

Matthew continued sitting on the counter, his legs dangling like a little child’s, kicking happily back and forth. There was a beep and he reached into his pocket and withdrew a cell phone. Flipping it open he glanced over a text message, surprise registering on his face. All thoughts of the man and the conversation were gone as he pondered the text message, gone until he looked down at the counter and saw a neat stack of twenty dollar bills sitting there. “Hm,” he said, “quick work.”

Hopping off the counter he grabbed the bills and placed them in his pocket then popped the cigar into his mouth. He looked at himself in the mirror, hands in his pockets, the cigar clenched between his teeth off to the side of his mouth, and took a pull, only sucking air through the unlit end. He looked disappointed and concentrated harder. His cheeks formed small hollows in his face as he took a more determined draw, the unlit cigar bobbing between his teeth, once, twice, three times until, during the fourth pull, the end suddenly burst into bright red flames, catching the cigar alit before residing and leaving only a perfectly glowing red ember. Matthew smiled at himself, taking his hands out of his pocket he smoothed down his jacket as he took a few puffs, then he turned and walked out of the bathroom.

—–

Matthew walked down 72nd street underneath the modern-gothic windows of the looming apartment building on the corner. He stopped at the edge of the sidewalk, taking a pull at his cigar, now mostly gone, enjoying the warm summer midnight. It had rained earlier and the streets were damp. He waited on the light, then crossed over Central Park West and followed the double-wide 72nd street into the park. He turned off the street about twenty yards in and followed a path up a gentle rise, a canopy of trees closing in around him.

Matthew walked further and further into the park, following path after path, cursing more than a few times as branches he hadn’t noticed swatted at his face. Then, through the darkness, he saw a thin band of yellow hovering in the air. As he drew closer his eyes recognized it as a strip of tape, like the kind used to mark off crime scenes, only different, strung across the path. Matthew paused and looked around, looked at the darkness that was behind him, then looked at how the light on the other side of the tape was different somehow. He smiled, a little laugh coming out of his mouth, then with a touch of nervousness he ducked his torso and stepped onto the other side of the tape.

The first difference was as immediate as it was obvious. All noise ceased. As Matthew straightened himself up there was no more wind in the trees, no more muffled sounds of traffic from Central Park West, there was only silence. He continued walking down the path, the second change slowly sinking in as he realized he was no longer walking through a post-midnight darkness. The air was now mellower, lighter, like it was only a little past dusk. Then he stopped short and walked a slow circle around a single point of light, smiling as he recognized a firefly, its bottom flashing electric green, frozen in time, hovering in the air. He reached a finger up and slowly pointed it towards the glowing beetle, was about to tap it to see what would happen when a voice spoke up behind him.

“Please don’t.”

Matthew jumped and turned, then smiled and shook his head. “Jesus, Epp, you scared the hell out of me.”

Epp walked over, his face lit by the firefly’s light. His skin was sable black, the color of an exotic hardwood, and he was a good head taller than Matthew, although due to a complete lack of anything but muscle on his body, he probably weighed the same.

“What happens if I touch it?” Matthew asked, looking back to the firefly.

“Just more work for me,” Epp answered, the calm undertone of his voice making Matthew’s easy confidence seem like a bad case of nerves. Epp looked Matthew up and down. “Nice tuxedo,” he said.

There was honest appreciation for good tailoring in Epp’s voice, but Matthew found himself unable to accept it as a straight compliment considering that Epp was wearing a suit that seemed more like a symphony composed of charcoal threads than mere clothing.

“I was working some adultery at a wedding,” Matthew said to explain his clothes.

“Adultery?” Epp asked turning and walking away. Matthew started walking with him, the idea of not following never crossing his mind. “At a wedding? With your skill? Seems a little beneath you, Matthew. You might as well tailgate at the political conventions with the rest of the newbies.”

“Well,” Matthew said, not letting himself get rankled, “the woman in question was the bride.”

A slow exhalation of breath through Epp’s nose was all Matthew got, but he knew enough to know that this was as close to laughter as he was likely to get. “I suppose that does contain a certain amount of flair worthy of you, Matthew.”

“Yeah?” Matthew said, a touch of haughtiness in his voice. “The guy involved was the priest.”

A smile spread across Epp’s dark features and as his eyes softened Matthew knew that he had redeemed himself.

“You know, it’s been twenty-two years,” Matthew said, “you think it might be time for you to give me a little credit?”

The smile disappeared from Epp’s face. “Not a chance.”

“Yeah, yeah, yeah,” Matthew said, “so why’d you text me?”

“Come,” Epp said, and Matthew followed him off the path into a patch of lawn, more trees popping up between them and the views of the city. Not much farther in, at a secluded area, they came upon a frozen couple. The woman was in the process of saying something with strong emotion to the man. The man was stuck with a panicked look on his face, his body lurching forward as if he was trying to break into a run. There was a large knife in his hands. Matthew bent down and examined the knife, saw the red sheen covering it, the blood frozen in the air spraying off the blade, could imagine the man’s arm moving fast, the knife whipping around as he panicked. Matthew straightened up. The man was running…he turned…he saw a form lying on the grass not far away and gathered easily enough that this was the victim.

Matthew turned back to Epp. “I’m still not used to murders.”

“I don’t know that we ever get used to them.” Epp was looking down at a clipboard.

“Still though,” Matthew walked over to him, “I don’t get it.”

Epp looked up from his clipboard. “It’s an insurance thing.” He pointed to the couple, “These two need a body. Don’t worry about that, it gets complicated.”

“But,” Matthew was looking around at the coverage, more trees than you’d normally get in Manhattan, that was for certain, but it was still awfully thin, “I mean, it’s 2007, who the hell dies in Central Park anymore? And what time is it, actually?” He squinted, trying to read the frozen light level. “It barely looks like the sun has set.”

Epp flipped a page, studying something, flipped another page. “We are here to test their spirits, Matthew. Their intelligence is out of our hands. This isn’t even my work, to tell the truth. Someone else started it. It’s not bad. A little sloppy, definitely not great, but not bad. I just took it over recently.”

“Really? You can do that?”

“These are special circumstances.”

“Well whoever set this up must have been pretty angry when you took over. You’ve got a knife murder, by a couple, in Central Park? How much is this worth?”

“For me? Nothing,” Epp shook his head. “You don’t get to jump in this late and gain any currency. And as for the guy who started this in motion, he’ll be fine. He’ll wind up making double what this is worth. We’re sending him to Hollywood for a week.”

“Yeah,” Matthew said, his tone not fading, “but you’ve probably had a hand in a dozen of these types of headline cases. I’ve never wondered but how much are cases like this worth?”

Epp shrugged, cool eyes never leaving Matthew. “They keep me in Zegna.” Epp extended a hand with the clipboard in it.

Matthew took it and glanced down. “Plus you get to use all the neat toys.” He began flipping through the sheets. “These are probability photographs, aren’t they?”

Matthew turned page after page, each one showing a possible outcome, most of them involving the couple being herded into a jail cell, or a police car or a courtroom. Each photo had a graph in the lower right-hand corner containing simple probability waves of varying heights. Matthew stopped at a photo of the couple sitting happily at home; he glanced at the graph in the corner and saw that the curve was barely more than a straight line. Matthew chuckled. Then he handed the clipboard back.

“I still don’t get it. Why bother with the,” he circled his finger in the air, looking around, “you know, the time tape stuff?”

“Special circumstances,” Epp said, reaching a hand out to take the clipboard back.

“And what might these special circumstances be, Epp? And what am I doing here?”

Epp paused. Matthew was struck by the fact that Epp seemed unsure of how to continue. Epp took a deep breath, his lips pursing in thought. Then he pointed. Matthew turned and looked at the form on the ground. “She’s a jogger. She wound up being their choice for victim. Like I said, it’s complicated. It’s also just awful bad luck.”

“Why?” Matthew asked, taking tentative steps towards the form lying on the ground.

“Matthew,” Epp paused again, the rarity of Epp being unsure was making Matthew’s nerves start to sit on edge. “Matthew, she’s yours.”

“Yeah?” Matthew asked, curious. He was creeping around now, moving very low to the ground, the back of the woman’s head the only thing visible. “I don’t remember doing her,” he said puzzled, “but it’s been a long time. I guess she could be one of mine.”

“She wasn’t a case of yours, Matthew.” Epp looked around, as if hoping for some help in saying what he had to say. When no help came he continued speaking. “She was your choice.”

Matthew’s body reacted before he did, his legs giving out as he leaned over the body so that he fell kneeling into the grass. “No,” he said in a whisper. He looked up at Epp, eyes stunned, his face showing nothing but denial. “NO,” he said, his voice rising in a shout. Shaky hands reached out and rolled the body over with a thump, her hair falling off of her face. Matthew sucked in a stuttering breath and looked down at the blood covering her shirt. He ran hands over her body, smoothing out her shirt, trying to wipe away the blood; he looked up at Epp again. “Fix her.”

“Matthew, that’s not how this works. She—”

“Fix her!” Matthew yelled. He stumbled up and began walking towards Epp, who held up his hands, trying to calm Matthew down. “You fix her!” Matthew said, his finger jabbing out behind him at where she lay. “You fix her right now!” Epp lowered his hands as Matthew approached.

She doesn’t die!” Matthew yelled in Epp’s face. One hand rose up and shoved Epp’s shoulder hard, “that was the deal,” he screamed, his eyes stinging now. “The bullet changed paths and went into me and she gets to live and I die. I die!” Matthew shouted, slapping his own chest. “Me! Not her!” And he pointed another finger back at the body.

“You chose life for her, and she’s had a decent one, as per the deal,” Epp said, calm enveloping him, “but immortality for her was never part of it. Her time has come.”

“Fix her,” Matthew said. Epp remained impassive. “Fuck you!” Matthew screamed, and he stormed off past Epp.

“You go blow off steam, Matthew,” Epp yelled out after him. “You walk this off and I’ll clean up here and I’ll meet you at the usual place.”

Before Matthew disappeared into the dark Epp saw him walk past the firefly and with one angry hand reach up and swat it out of the air.

—–

Matthew fumed down the street. His hands were in his pockets, his bowtie unstrung and dangling from his collar. He wasn’t sure where he was going; he barely recognized his surroundings. He was breathing heavily through his nose, the hot summer air pumping in and out of him like fuel. He spotted a couple walking towards him and he lowered his shoulder and walked into the girl, with a hush like a steam vent he wafted through her, eyebrows angry. “He’s cheating on you,” he thought, and then he was through her, past her, and two steps later he heard her turn and start cursing off the young man with her. A handful of coins appeared in his pocket and he ran his fingers through them.

Another pedestrian came into sight, a lone woman, and he never broke stride, just ducked his head and plowed through, baring his teeth as he went, and he heard the woman burst into sobs behind him and more change appeared in his pocket.

His cheeks were moist and with the flat of his hand he tried to wipe the tears away but they kept coming and he was walking through a group of street dwellers and drug dealers and behind him he heard a fist fight break out and the change in his pocket bulged then flattened into a couple of bills and he thumbed at the corners.

His eyes stung and his nose was running and now he tried the back of his hands but he couldn’t keep his cheeks dry and he heard someone calling his name. He spotted a group of tourists and thrust both hands into his pockets, angling his walk so he’d catch all of them square on. His lip curled up and his teeth were bared and he was only a few steps away from them when an arm caught him across his chest and he was being restrained.

“Matthew!” someone was shouting in his ear and he turned and saw Benjamin with his jowly face and rough beard. Benjamin’s clothes were burly, if not disheveled, and the belt of his trench coat never seemed to hang right. “Matthew, leave some for the rest of us, here,” Benjamin was laughing.

“What do you care about them for?” Matthew was staring at the family of tourists.

“I don’t care about them, I care about you.”

“Lemme do ‘em,” Matthew said, his body practically going limp under Benjamin’s restraining arm, as if he wasn’t even able to hold himself up anymore. “I got a good one for ‘em.”

“Okay, but then we go get a drink at the place, right? Maybe get your head back together?”

Matthew nodded and Benjamin let down his arm and gave him a shove. Matthew teetered on one foot, hopping along, passing through the family of tourists who began pointing at a map and arguing. Matthew looked at Benjamin from over the father’s shoulders. “Arguing over a map?” Benjamin said. “That was your big idea?”

“I don’t…” Matthew stopped talking, looked around confused. “This isn’t helping.”

“Come on,” Benjamin said, and they walked towards the street. “You have a fiver?”

“Yeah.”

“Okay then.”

Benjamin held up his hand with a five dollar bill in it and Matthew stood next to him doing the same. There was a whir and Matthew felt the wind in his hair as the five dollar bill vanished and then he was standing next to a statue of Ralph Kramden and looking up at steel girders painted aqua-green. Benjamin was over by a row of double glass doors holding one open. Matthew walked through into the Port Authority Bus Terminal.

They walked through the long hallway, mostly empty at this time of night, ugly brown brick walls rising up to the ceiling three stories above them, their feet stepping on tiling that looked like it had been decorated with a can of glue and the contents of a well used three-hole punch. They rode up an escalator and continued towards the back of the building until they reached another set of double glass doors. They walked through into the Port Authority bowling alley. On the right was the arcade, down the hall straight ahead were the lanes, Matthew and Benjamin turned left and walked into the bar.

“What do you think?” Benjamin asked, looking around at the bar half full of college students, bus drivers getting off their shift, bowlers, and anyone else sucked into drinking at the Port Authority. The bar was an island in the center of three walls of booths, most of which were full.

“I don’t know,” Matthew said, running the back of his hand over his forehead like he was testing to see if he had a fever. “You mind clearing a few seats? I think I’m through bumping skin tonight and I certainly don’t feel like going visible.”

“Sure thing, buddy,” Benjamin said and he walked to the farthest corner of the bar where a man was sitting between two empty stools. Benjamin leaned towards him and whispered something in his ear and the guy stood up and stormed out, a half drunk pint glass still sitting on the bar.

“Cheating wife?” Matthew asked, watching the guy leave.

“Thieving brother,” Benjamin said.

“Interesting,” Matthew said, sitting down.

Benjamin was fishing in his pocket as he pulled back the barstool next to Matthew. He put a stack of twenties on the bar as he sat down and with a wave of his hand a couple of cheap rocks glasses appeared filled with flat ice cubes and pale scotch. They sat in silence, sipping their drinks, listening to the bar around them. One drink finished, Matthew threw a twenty on the bar and another round appeared.

“It was 1985,” Matthew said, apropos of nothing. “We had married the year before when everyone said we weren’t ready. We knew we were ready. We thought we were ready, anyway. Who the hell is ever ready for marriage?” Benjamin nodded, sipping his drink, staring straight ahead, listening but not intruding. “Anyway,” Matthew went on, “we were living in Brooklyn in some god-awful apartment complex where the noise of the train was a welcome distraction from the mice in the walls. But, you know, we loved it. And we weren’t going to stay there forever of course. We had big plans.” He took a gulp of scotch, holding it on his tongue before clenching his teeth and swallowing it down.

“We went to a Mets game one night. Neither of us were fans or anything, that was the funny part. It was sort of a, ‘We’ve never done anything like this so why don’t we give it a try,’ kind of thing.” He shook his head. “I mean we didn’t know what the fuck we were doing and we left in the middle of the game and wandered down the wrong street and…well it was New York in the eighties.” His glass came up and a couple of ice cubes went into his mouth, he chewed them awhile.

“Anyway, there he was…I can’t even remember really what he looked like, but the gun I remember. And there were some words, it all gets a little jumbled and then the gun went off,” Matthew mimicked a gun with his thumb and forefinger, his thumb dropping, his mouth making a little “pow” sound. “And all I really remember is this rush of thought chased with pure adrenaline and all that was going through my head, over and over was, ‘Please be me not her, me not her, me not her, me not her…’” He sucked another ice cube into his mouth, got a good hold of it between his back teeth and crunched it down with a laugh.

“And then things get hazy,” Benjamin said, recognizing the laugh.

“And then things get hazy,” Matthew said with slightly drunken camaraderie and the two raised their glasses and clinked them together.

“Next thing I know,” Matthew went on, “I’m standing at my own funeral and this preposterously well dressed black man is talking to me about things I in no way understand. And he says his name is Epp. And he takes me under his wing.” Matthew breathed out a sad sigh and it came rushing back. He put his glass down on the bar with too much force and liquor splashed over his fingers. “And twenty-two years later she dies anyway.”

“It’s not Epp’s fault you know.”

“I know, I know,” Matthew held his alcohol soaked fingers up and looked around, then settled on wiping them off on his pants. “But you can’t really blame me for my reaction. I never gave this a whole lot of thought, I guess. It’s all sort of jumbled in my head.”

“Of course,” Benjamin said as if Matthew was blaming himself for things that he shouldn’t. “If you don’t think things through, things stay jumbled. That should be our motto.” Benjamin caught sight of a friend on the other side of the bar and he gave a smile and a nod of his head. “Anyway, the deal was never for our choice’s immortality, just that you’d go instead of them, and they’d have a shot at a decent life.”

“Is yours gone yet?”

“Mine? No, forty years later and she’s still puttering on, god bless her.”

“Yeah. Well I still feel like Epp could have filled me in a little better.”

“Ah. You can’t blame him. That’s just how he is, all impassive and what have you. You know why he’s like that don’t you?” Benjamin looked around like he was worried he was being watched. “It’s because he was a slave.”

“No shit? He’s been doing this for more than a hundred years?”

“That’s why he’s got the rank.”

“And we get cheap whisky.”

“Amen,” Benjamin raised his glass and held it towards Matthew who obligingly gave it another clink with his. “Anyway,” Benjamin placed his glass down and looked past Matthew, “oh shit.” There was a change in his demeanor, a straightening of his back and a quickening of his pulse. “He’s here.”

Matthew looked around and saw Epp coming through the bar towards them. “Yeah, he said he might drop by.” They watched Epp walk the bar, those who could see him giving curt nods like they were afraid to display any emotion around him. He was courteous in turn, waving and greeting those who he passed, but there was an aloofness about him that kept him detached.

“Hello, sir,” Benjamin said with a little nod of his large head as Epp came over to them.

“I don’t outrank you, Benjamin,” Epp said as he slid into the barstool on the other side of Matthew. “I keep telling you that.”

“Yes, sir,” Benjamin said. “Let me buy you a drink.” He threw another twenty on the bar and watched as it broke into a ten and some singles and another rocks glass appeared in front of Epp.

Epp picked up the glass slowly, turning it in the light, he swirled it gently under his nose and breathed in. Then he took a sip, letting it slide on his tongue, and then swallowed. He put the glass back down. “I don’t outrank you, Benjamin, but tonight I’m going to insist that you drink what I drink.” He reached into his coat pocket and pulled out a crisp stack of bills held together by a paper band. Two of these dropped on the bar and Benjamin stared at them from the corner of his eye, frozen in mid-drink. Matthew looked at Epp, then down at the two stacks of money.

The bands across the packets had “Five Thousand” written on them in orange letters and as Matthew watched they began to shake and shrink, depleting in size as three new crystal rocks glasses appeared on the bar in front of them. The glasses filled up with a new type of scotch. When Matthew looked back at the stacks of bills, there were only a few left.

“Sir, I can’t let you…” Benjamin started, but Epp waved him silent.

“Even for the immortal, Benjamin, life is too short to drink bad scotch.”

Matthew picked up his glass, amazed at how heavy it was and how cool the crystal felt. He smelled the liquor inside and just closed his eyes, enjoying it. Benjamin only stared down at the bar, afraid to go near it. Epp took a sip and smiled, then looked over and saw all of this. “Don’t worry. Next round’s on me as well.” He threw another two stacks of bills onto the bar.

Matthew dared a sip and Benjamin dared to pick his glass up. Much the same as before, the three sat drinking in silence, letting the whisky do the talking. More rounds came, and the conversation started up again, nothing important being said, just words being exchanged over a shared drink or two. After a few more Benjamin pushed his chair out and stood up a little wobbly. “I think I’m done for the night,” he said. “Want to come down to the East Village, Mattie? We’ll fuck with the hipsters and scrounge for change. It’ll be fun.”

Matthew laughed. “No, thanks, I think I’m just going to sit tight for awhile.”

“Suit yourself,” Benjamin said, easing his weight off his barstool. He caught Epp’s eye. “That’s some good scotch,” he said, stifling a burp, “I thank you for that, sir.”

He gave a couple of slaps on the shoulder as he walked past them, then exited out of the bar. Epp watched him go. “That guy will not listen to me when I tell him I don’t outrank him.”

“Don’t you?”

Epp turned to look at Matthew and Matthew instantly regretted what he had said Epp’s look was so disappointed. “Don’t tell me you think like him.”

“Well you do get to do a lot of pretty neat things that we don’t get to do.”

“It isn’t rank, Matthew. I can do those things because I have learned how to do them, not because some sanctioning body allows me to do them. I don’t get to use the tape because someone says I get to, I can use the tape because I’ve come to learn a few things about space-time. The elders meet together not to decide the rules for everyone else but because we like meeting together, we like exchanging ideas and lessons. But the pool of knowledge is open for anyone to drink from. We have no control over that. You should know that by now.”

“I feel like there’s a lot I should know by now.”

“It takes time,” Epp said, his voice soft and understanding after his small tirade. “You’ll get there. But the first thing you should do is stop listening to people like Benjamin. I know, he’s fun to share a drink with and I’ll stand him a round anytime, but he’s got a lot of things backwards. Like most newbies he seems to think that we’re in control here. They make their first choice and they get a taste of this new world and they think the meat bags are somehow below them.” Epp looked around at the regular people drinking in the bar all around.

“We do seem to hold a lot of the cards,” Matthew said, and to illustrate his point he waved a hand through the head of a guy walking past his stool. The guy decided then and there to cheat on his taxes.

“But it’s a lot more give and take than most newbies ever care to realize. They have their fun and then their choice straight-lines and then they’re gone. But we share this world, and we use what the mortals come up with. I mean, take the tape again. Do you realize that when I first learned that trick the tape didn’t even exist yet? I mean I had to pound wooden stakes into the ground, and then spool this spindly twine around them to mark off an area. But then tape comes along and I get to use tape. You know? Or take the money,” Epp dropped another two blocks of cash down on the table. “We use money because a symbol for our currency is damned handy but it’s only a symbol. Most newbies never bother to question that.”

Epp looked over at Matthew, who was watching the cash shaking on the table, slowly depleting itself as his glass filled again with scotch. “Look at you,” Epp said. “I forget sometimes how far along you aren’t. You’re picturing some lady at a desk somewhere tallying up what’s been spent and what’s been earned. You think the elders run the money, don’t you?”

“Well,” Matthew said, clearly thinking something along those lines but also not sure he was so crazy for thinking it.

“It’s just the easiest way for us to visualize what is happening, but there is no bank of accountants somewhere that cuts your paycheck when you do a meat bag, Matthew. It’s just how we come to express the notion of how much you’ve pushed and how much they’ve pushed back. I mean, do you think there’s an exchange rate?”

Matthew’s face was a wrinkle of puzzlement that was part him staring at the money and part scotch. “It doesn’t matter what it looks like, Matthew.” Epp reached a hand out, he flexed his fingers a few times, then made a fist and pounded down on the bar. At first Matthew didn’t notice what was happening, the sound that came out of the bar was so booming, so unnatural, that the sound was all he could focus on, but before Epp’s fist came down again he caught a glimpse of the pile of money and saw that it was now some form of large silver coin he had never seen before. Epp banged the bar again and the coins jumped and Matthew was pretty sure he was looking at Spanish Doubloons. Epp pounded, the coins jumped and Matthew caught sight of something that must have been Chinese, then a coin that looked vaguely familiar but he couldn’t place, then something he’d never seen before, then back to a stack of crisp $100 bills.

“Neat trick,” Matthew said.

… Continued…

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Probability Angels
(The Matthew and Epp Stories)
by Joseph Devon
4.2 stars – 53 reviews!
Kindle Price: 99 cents

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“A super sweet read full of fun, flirty romance….Lucas is the YA dream boyfriend of the year!” ~ Caisey Quinn, best selling author of the Girl With Guitar series

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My Not So Super Sweet Life is the third book in this wildly popular young adult series. A special digital edition prompted by fan request.Cat Crawford just wants to be normal—or at least as normal as a daughter of Hollywood royalty can be. And it looks like fate is granting her wish: she’s got an amazing boyfriend, Lucas; her fabulous cousin, Alessandra, living with her; and her dad planning his second marriage to a great future stepmom. That is, until her prodigal mother reveals on national television that she has something important to tell her daughter…causing a media frenzy.

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Well, and the stalkerazzi.

Reviews

“My Not So Super Sweet Life is a great conclusion to Cat and Lucas’s story. This trilogy is a must read for time travel fans!” ~ Michelle Madow, author of The Secret Diamond Sisters

“Fun, funny, and very romantic, My Not So Super Sweet Life sparkles from start to finish.” ~ Joanne Rock, national bestselling romance author

About The Author

Rachel Harris grew up in New Orleans, where she watched soap operas with her grandmother and stayed up late sneak reading her mama’s favorite romance novels. Now a Cajun cowgirl living in Houston, she still stays up way too late reading her favorite romances, only now, she can do so openly. She firmly believes life’s problems can be solved with a hot, powdered-sugar-coated beignet or a thick slice of king cake, and that screaming at strangers for cheap, plastic beads is acceptable behavior in certain situations.

When not typing furiously or flipping pages in an enthralling romance, she homeschools her two beautiful girls and watches way too much reality television with her amazing husband. She writes YA, NA, and Adult Fun & Flirty Escapes. She loves talking with readers! Find her at www.RachelHarrisWrites.com

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