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A Free Excerpt From Our Thriller of the Week, M.E. Patterson’s Devil’s Hand

M.E. Patterson’s Devil’s Hand:

by M. E. Patterson
4.7 stars – 45 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
A Las Vegas gambler with supernatural luck is swept into a world-ending conflict between demons, angels, and otherworldly shadow-creatures, in an action-packed, terrifying urban fantasy for readers who enjoy Stephen King, Jim Butcher, and Richard Kadrey. The lone survivor of a tragic plane crash, Trent Hawkins inherited a supernatural lucky streak that made him famous, and hated, in the poker circles of the City of Sin. It wasn’t long before the eyes in the sky threw him on the blacklist and chased him out of town. Now, after years away, Trent returns to Las Vegas, and walks right back into trouble. As a serial kidnapper terrorizes the city, Trent and his wife rescue an unusual thirteen year-old girl, only to find themselves caught in a fallen angel’s plot to cleanse Las Vegas with an unholy blizzard. The neon goes dark, Vegas freezes, and Trent is forced to make terrible sacrifices in order to protect his new charge as they run through the demon-infested shadows of a frozen city. Will Trent stand up to the monsters of a dark world he never knew existed? Or will he fail, leaving our world in ruins beneath a blanket of shadow and ice? And look for the second part of the series, Burning Cards, coming Spring 2012!
(This is a sponsored post)

The author hopes you will enjoy this free excerpt:


1

“The end times are nearly upon us! We will all stand in judgment beneath the
watchful eyes of our Lord! Come now, to the arms of the King, and repent! Repent
for your sins, and you will find everlasting love in the—”

Bullshit, thought Trent Hawkins as he punched the tuner button and
sent the radio frequency careening toward the next solid signal on the band.
End times? Who even believes that shit anymore?

He had only listened to “Eddie Palisade’s Hour of Faith” for a few minutes
out of sheer curiosity and a certain morbid fascination. Too
hellfire-and-brimstone for Trent’s taste, but the syndicated radio show was
immensely popular with the God-fearing crowd. Trent had found it on three
separate stations as he searched the band for some decent music.

Thick drops of rain splattered against the windshield of the rented moving
van. Ahead, the flat horizon glowed like a neon tube set in the sand of the
south Nevada desert, and beyond stood the hypercolor wasteland of Las Vegas, a
neon monstrosity to which Trent had no interest in returning. He looked sidelong
at Susan, asleep in the passenger seat, smiling, blond hair half-covering the
pixie-like features of her face. He would do anything for her, though, even if
it meant coming back here.

The radio hissed through a patch of white noise and then settled on an oldies
country music station, a bit weak in strength, but listenable. Johnny Cash cried
from the van’s tinny speakers, barely audible above the endless drumming of the
rain atop the metal roof. Trent smiled. To Hell with Eddie and the “Hour of
Faith.” He’d take Cash as his preacher any day.

He shifted uncomfortably in the driver’s seat as the van bounced along
Interstate 15. His right thigh ached—an old injury from the crash—the only
physical wound that had lasted. The wet-slick road trashed the van’s handling,
making every steering adjustment a nerve-wracking event. He had always hated
traveling. But after the crash, the hatred had become dread. He wondered again
why he had let Susan talk him into coming back here.

He glanced at her, and then at himself in the rearview and used a free hand
to adjust the angle of the gray cowboy hat. He didn’t think the hat looked
silly. She had said that to him a few months back, on his thirtieth birthday no
less, when he’d insisted on wearing it out to meet friends at a bar. She had
been teasing, he knew, but still…

“You look ridiculous,” Susan had said. “Like you’re trying to be that guy
from Pale Rider.”

“You mean Clint Eastwood?”

Susan frowned. “No, the character, not the actor.”

“The Preacher?” Trent laughed. “You think I look like an old-west preacher?
I’m more like the guy in High Plains Drifter.”

Susan had smiled at him then, one of her smiles that made him feel weak and
strong at the same time. She leaned in and kissed him on the forehead. “You’re
not that guy,” she whispered. “That guy’s pure evil. He only looks out for
himself. And that’s just not you, honey.”

Trent smiled at the memory and turned his attention back to the road, fingers
drumming on the steering wheel.

Johnny sang out from the radio, “Well, there’s things that never will be
right I know—” And then an intense, screeching burst of static, timed perfectly
with a shuddering thump upon the roof of the van that set the entire vehicle to
ringing. The noise dashed Trent’s smile and he ground his teeth together in
surprise.

Susan sat up, alert and confused. “Wha—?”

Trent gripped the steering wheel even tighter as another massive impact
dented in the roof above him. The van skidded wildly on the road. He peered
through the window, up at the sky, and saw white dots growing larger and larger
until one of them resolved into a chunk of ice that slammed into the windshield
right in front of him and exploded, sending icy shards in a radial spray across
the glass.

Trent snapped back in his seat. His foot hit the brake. The cowboy hat
flipped backwards off his head. The moving van squealed and fishtailed, the
popping coming faster now, rapid-fire against the metal panels, a tumultuous
barrage of softball-sized hail.

“Shit!”

He over-corrected and the vehicle swerved on the two-lane interstate and
crossed over the middle before he managed to bring it back into its original
lane. Balls of ice smashed against the road and the van. It was all he could do
to keep the tires tight against the pavement. Out of the corner of his eye, he
could see Susan, fully awake now, gripping the door handle in frozen panic, her
lips moving. Trent couldn’t hear anything except the pounding hail.

He turned his full attention forward again. Something in the road. A tire? A
hubcap? No, green and rigid, like a piece of a highway sign. Trent threw the
wheel to the left, desperate to avoid the debris, but too late. The broken sign
jumped halfway up onto the hood, then screeched back down, gouging the paint,
until it vanished beneath the tires.

The van screeched, swayed, and veered off into the left lane again. Then
Trent heard the loud pop and felt the sickening sideways drift. The van careened
out of control.

He jammed the brake to the floor and squeezed the wheel in a death-grip,
gritting his teeth as the van pitched off the left shoulder and headed for dirt.
He wrenched his right hand free of the wheel, threw his arm across Susan’s
chest, and felt her slam against it as the vehicle dove into the muddy desert
and slid to an awkward stop.

Everything went quieter for a moment, save the hail, which continued its
staccato rhythm in time to Cash singing, “Well I know I had it coming, I know I
can’t be free—”

“Susan, baby, you alright?” Trent leaned across the cab, arm still pinning
his wife to her seat.

She looked up at him, eyes wide and mouth agape. She blinked, coughed, and
then formed a weak smile. “Holy shit,” she said.

Another massive ball of hail exploded against the windshield. They both
jumped.

They looked at each other for a silent moment and then began to laugh,
quietly at first, inaudible above the din, and then louder, until they were both
cackling, foreheads pressed together. Trent kissed her and could feel her
shaking with both laughter and adrenaline overload. He pulled back, looked at
her with a crazed grin on his face, and shook his head.

“I think we blew a tire,” he yelled, gesturing behind him with his thumb.

“Holy shit,” she said again, still chuckling.

Trent looked around the cab for something—anything—that he might use as a
shield against the falling hail. He thought about waiting the storm out, but it
didn’t look like it intended to let up soon. He needed to get the van moving, or
they might end up stuck in the gathering mud. He couldn’t see anything useful,
just the old gray Stetson behind his seat—the hat the hospital staff had given
him from the wreckage of the plane. They had thought it was his but he never had
the heart to tell them it wasn’t. He grabbed it and put it back on his head,
covering up his short black hair. He shrugged and kicked open the driver-side
door with his foot.

“Trent!?” shouted Susan.

He turned to look at her. “What?”

She gave him one of those you’re-doing-something-stupid-again looks that
both infuriated him and made him smile. Susan had an arsenal of those kinds of
looks; it was part of what made him love her. And Trent had a history of doing
stupid things since the crash. Maybe it was facing certain death and winning
that had left him dull to the sense of threat. Or maybe the impact with the
ground had just knocked a few screws loose. He wasn’t quite sure.

“It’s too dangerous!” she shouted. Another icy softball punctuated her
statement by smashing against the windshield right in front of her. She
winced.

“Gotta change the tire!” Trent replied. “Or we’ll get stuck in this mud!”

She stared at him for a moment and then, with a determined look, she grabbed
the hardcover novel in the passenger-side floorboard, lifted it above her head,
and popped open her door.

“Wait—” said Trent, but she was already out, yelling at the top of her lungs,
the book barely covering her head.

He stared for a moment, irritated but not surprised. Susan was like that.
Farmer’s daughter, never one to stand by while others worked. He shrugged and
leapt out the driver’s side and into the pounding hail, expecting that he could
make it to the back of the truck without any major damage. After all, he was the
luckiest man alive, right?

The first ball smacked against his arm, bringing up an immediate welt and
intense, stinging pain. The second smacked against his denim-covered thigh as he
dashed toward the back of the van. The third chunk of ice crashed down atop his
head. The sudden shot of pain was like a hammer blow, blinding, and he reeled
and barely caught himself on a handhold at the back of the U-Haul as the cowboy
hat tumbled to the ground.

Susan was there and already had the back of the van open and had jumped
inside. She was rummaging through the few pieces of furniture and boxes. Trent
grabbed the fallen hat and then managed to climb gingerly in next to her. He
slumped down in a beat-up old recliner they had taken from her apartment. Most
of the stuff in the van had belonged to Susan. After the Gaming Control Board
blacklisted him, they needed money. Trent’s expensive items brought in more cash
at the pawn shops. Pawn shops and the GCB—two more reasons he hated seeing that
glowing city on the horizon again.

“Yes!” She held up an old whiteboard she had used while studying for her
nursing exam. It was large enough for them both to hide under if they crowded
close.

“That’ll work,” said Trent. He reached up to touch the sore spot on his head.
His fingers came away with sticky blood. “Dammit.”

“Oh, honey, are you okay?” Susan set the whiteboard down and rushed over to
him.

He waved her off. “No, no, don’t worry about it. It’s fine.” He jammed the
Stetson back onto his head and grinned at her, but her expression still showed
worry. “I’ve had a lot worse.”

She gave him a plaintive look.

“Come on,” he said and got up from the recliner. He walked over to the spare
tire hanging on the inside wall of the van, next to a hand-crank jack. “Let’s
change a tire.”

The off-road jaunt had sent the front driver’s-side tire across a jagged
chunk of rock, cutting its rubber flesh like a knife. No way would this roll any
further. Trent brought the new tire over, trying his best to avoid the crashing
hail as Susan struggled to keep them both beneath the whiteboard.

They worked as a team, Susan holding the flashlight and whiteboard as Trent
worked to break the lug nuts on the ruined wheel. Every few minutes, he heard
her yelp as a ball of ice crashed down on some part of her that had snuck out
from beneath the rectangular shield. He wanted to tell her to quit—to get back
inside the truck and let him handle this—but he knew better. She wouldn’t leave
him here by himself, even if he told her to.

Trent forced his weight down on the tire iron, struggling to break the last
nut. “Dammit!” he swore, as the hail battered the whiteboard over his head. He
summoned as much strength as he could find and gave the tire iron a powerful
shove. The lug nut broke with a pop, nearly sending Trent pitching forward to
the ground as the tire iron started to spin. He dropped to his knee, removed the
final nut, and pulled off the useless tire.

The hail stopped, as sudden as it had come.

Susan looked up at the sky and then down at Trent with a quizzical look on
her face. He shrugged. The rain had not abated, but at least the pounding hail
had quit. She hesitantly lowered the whiteboard. A sudden, sickening
thwack startled them both. They looked at the top of the van as Susan
shone the flashlight on it. A thin stream of—blood?—was running in a rivulet
down the white side-panel.

Trent dropped the tire and stood up. “What the—?”

Another splat as something landed on the van’s hood and they both jumped
again. A fish? Another slammed down next to it, splattering Trent with blood. He
grimaced and leapt back, away from the van.

Susan screamed as a sudden multitude of fish began to rain down. Panicked,
she dropped the whiteboard and ran for the back of the truck, still shrieking,
hands covering her head.

Trent watched her go, astounded. He had never seen her so terrified, not once
in the years they had been together. She usually had a remarkable fortitude and
a stern strength in the face of obstacles. But this… He looked up as dead fish
began bouncing off the top of the van.

Fucking Eddie is right, he thought.

He grabbed the fallen whiteboard and sprinted for the back of the van. He
reached it and found Susan curled up inside the truck, tears streaming down her
face.

“You okay, baby?!” he shouted.

“Jesus Christ!” She looked at him with tears in her eyes. “What does it look
like?”

Trent climbed in and put an arm around her. “It’s just fish.”

She sobbed. “It’s not about the fish, Trent.” Tears streamed down her face.
“It’s everything. Everything’s gone wrong. We shouldn’t have come back here. The
job at the hospital and fucking James and you didn’t want to be here anyway and
your head. This place fucking hates us both—”

Trent grabbed her by the shoulders and kissed her on the lips. She kissed him
back, hard.

After a moment, they pulled away and Trent looked her in the eyes and smiled.
“Come on, babe,” he said, gesturing toward the storm raging around them. “It’s
just fish. Happens sometimes. Bad storm, tornado picks up some garbage from a
lake and throws it a few miles. It’ll be over soon. Least it’s not hail.”

They stared at each other for a moment. Finally, Susan cracked a tentative
smile.

Trent laughed. “You gotta find the humor in this, right?”

Susan nodded and took the whiteboard from hand. “”Okay,” she said, smile
widening. “Thanks.”

After a minute, the rain of fish lightened, and they made their way to the
front of the van, to the ruined tire. Susan lifted up the whiteboard, just in
time to catch another bloody slap on top of it. Trent dove under the shield and
grabbed the spare tire. Something about fish dropping from the sky encouraged
him to work harder. Then the pace picked back up again, as another wave of slimy
bodies splattered against the van and the pavement and the muddy shoulder, some
still alive, flopping and writhing as they died.

“This is awful!” shouted Susan, struggling to be heard over the thumping
sounds of flesh against the metal van.

“At least it doesn’t hurt as much,” Trent replied without looking up from his
work. He had two of the lugnuts back on the new wheel; two to go.

Susan stumbled as a particularly hefty fish slammed down atop the whiteboard.
Blood ran off the edges in glimmering red streams. “Hurry up!” she yelled.

“Okay, got it!” Trent torqued the final nut down and kicked the release on
the jack. The van slumped back down, mud squelching from beneath the shiny new
tire. “Let’s go.”

They dove into the cab and slammed the door shut. Susan scrambled across the
center into the passenger seat. She dumped the whiteboard into the space behind
them.

She looked at the windshield, now nearly opaque with fish guts and bloody
smears. The periodic thumping against the roof seemed to have a predictable
rhythm. “What the fuck?!” she exclaimed, laughing. “This is
insane!”

Trent looked at her wryly. “You never been in a fish-storm before?”

She punched him in the shoulder.

He chuckled. “Well we better get this thing out of the mud. Hope it can still
move. You need to be at work in the morning.”

The statement made him feel worthless. He had no job. It had only taken a
year of unbeatable pro gambling before they blacked him out. A lot of money
gained and a lot of money lost; now he did odd jobs if he could find them, and
those rarely lasted long. Bad things happened at job sites when Trent was
around. After the crash, when the swelling had gone down and his spine turned
out to be intact, the doctors called him the ‘luckiest man alive,’ but he didn’t
really feel it, not anymore at least. Except at the poker table, he felt just
the opposite.

He glanced at Susan, who had pulled her blood-smeared rain slicker around her
shoulders. The storm had brought an unusually cold chill with it. She grinned at
him, still shaking her head. He smiled back. Well, mostly unlucky, he
thought.

A trio of fish smacked wetly on the glass in front of him and then slid
slowly down onto the hood. He flicked on the wipers, creating a transparent pink
window amidst the blood, illuminated weirdly by the coruscating shafts of
colorful light from Las Vegas in the distance.

He gunned the engine. The wheels spun in the mud, but eventually caught, and
the van hauled itself back onto the road. The hail chunks had nearly all melted,
but the dead fish were not going anywhere, making driving even worse than
before. It felt like riding on grease.

Trent eased the vehicle back into the proper lane and gave it just enough gas
to set it trundling down the Interstate, barely topping 10 MPH. Only twenty
miles to go, but he figured it would be near-morning before they made it to the
new apartment.

“Hey, hon?”

Trent glanced at Susan. “Yeah?”

“Thank you.”

Trent nodded, then ran his hand through his hair, matted and wet with
rainwater and blood. He winced when he touched the spot where the hail had
struck.

“It’s okay,” he said.

But he wondered at the truth in that. It didn’t seem like Vegas wanted him
back any more than he wanted to be there. It definitely did not seem okay.

2

The rain sluiced down out of a concrete sky onto concrete earth, cold needles
pricking at the old man’s skin. Neon of every conceivable color filled the
firmament with a gray-brown sludge, like the puke-stained parking lot in front
of a strip club. It was a place, he thought, where no one ever looked up. There
is no night sky in Las Vegas; only a dull smear of a ceiling where the tallest
building ends.

Salvatore Cortina shuffled wearily along the sidewalk, as he did night after
night, his brain churning through the memories that always threatened to slip
away and be lost forever.

Aldzheimer’s, the doctor had said years before. Salvatore remembered that the
man had refused to make eye contact as he delivered the bad news. It was the
tiny, sour memories like that that always remained. And the big, awful ones.

He walked past the Luxor hotel, tattered shoes slopping through puddles of
ice-cold rain and sidewalk grease, in which swirled endless parades of naked
women on soggy paper cards. The usual men who lined the sidewalks handing out
the cards had retreated for the night to wherever they go when the weather turns
foul. It was, thought Salvatore, a small blessing. The weather could not stop
the gamblers, though, who still filed in and out of the casino entrances like
drowned rats. A soaked, over-endowed prostitute stood upon a street corner, no
umbrella, rain soaking her bleach-blond hair as her trembling hands fumbled to
light a too-wet cigarette. This is the Hell that I have chosen, thought
Salvatore, and not for the first time. This is my penance.

And one of those huge, terrible memories came rushing back.

He snarled and coughed and tried to force the images of fire and sounds of
screaming from his mind. There was nothing I could do, he thought.
Nothing at all. God took them. It was His will, not mine.

He cracked his knuckles and then pulled his threadbare long coat tighter
around his shoulders in a futile attempt to stave off the waves of chilling rain
that were coming down now at an angle, blown by sudden gusts of wind. The sheets
of cold sent young women in skimpy dresses into laughing shrieks as they
sprinted inexpertly from one casino entrance to the next, stilettos
clip-clopping. One of the women, tall and thin, twisted her ankle as her high
heel snapped in half; she went down with a huff and a childlike cry and laid
there in a puddle, looking pathetic. Her friends stood under a casino awning,
pointing and laughing. Salvatore shuffled past, and couldn’t stop himself from
mumbling, “whore” as he did so. The woman was too preoccupied to hear.

Past the jet-black Luxor pyramid and the Excalibur with its gaudy castle
facade, past the New York-New York and then down an alley between it and the
Monte Carlo. Salvatore had made this trip many times. He needed an ingredient,
and with the tunnels flooded for a few hours, there wasn’t much else he could do
other than forage.

Salvatore Cortina lived in the drainage tunnels beneath Las Vegas. Built over
a number of years, and stretching well beyond the city proper into the desert
beyond, the tunnels were a means of channeling rain from torrential
downpours—like the one ongoing—into the desert rather than into the streets and
casino lobbies.

But Las Vegas was not a place where rain fell often, so the tunnels remained
mostly dry. Squatters, bums, and junkies set up camp when they could,
occasionally shooed out by the LVPD, only to return in a few days time to a
different section of tunnel where the police would leave them alone.

Salvatore had a fairly permanent residence there, with an assortment of
propane tanks, gas burners salvaged from turkey-frying kits, and odd pots and
pans pulled from dumpsters behind hotel kitchens. It was another sort of
penance, a Purgatory that he shared with those cast out by the surface-dwellers,
the underclass of the weak and ruined and addicted. And Salvatore was their
preacher.

His sermons came weekly, as they should, on Sundays in a large cross-connect
between several tunnels. His was not the only ‘church’ in the tunnels, but he
had a reasonable congregation; a dozen or so broken souls hoping for salvation
in their lucid moments and hunting for their next fix anytime else. If Salvatore
could lengthen the former and diminish the latter, he considered it God’s work
being done through his voice. If he could fill their bellies with something more
than despair and alcohol, he knew that God was directing his hands.

He reached the back alley behind the Monte Carlo’s first floor kitchen, now a
swamped, gravel-strewn resting place for several green metal dumpsters and an
assortment of loose beer bottles and the ever-present escort service flyers.
Under an awning, a fat Hispanic man with a goatee, face tattoos, and white line
cook’s uniform was taking a smoke break. He looked up as Salvatore approached,
smoke curling from his nostrils.

“Whatchu want, Sallie? I ain’t got no more tonight. You already picked me
clean, bro.”

Salvatore did not recognize the younger man, but knew that he had allies in
the kitchen here, once-members of his flock that had escaped the tunnels and
found gainful employment, willing to part with kitchen scraps and mostly-empty
jars of spices, tomato pastes, and olive oils. With the basics and some
scavenged, uncooked pasta, Salvatore could work miracles.

“Seriously, man,” said the cook, “I’m out. Whatchu looking at me like that
for?”

It was the day-to-day memories that disappeared. The recognition of someone’s
face or name, the hourly sequence of events in his life, the things said or
unsaid—those were the casualties of Salvatore’s disease.

The doctor had proclaimed, matter-of-factly, that Salvatore wouldn’t even
know his own name in six months. That was eight years ago. He had beaten the
odds. His mind still felt sharp and clear. He had no confusion, just holes where
bits should be. Things forgotten. He could probe the empty spots with his mind,
like fingers probing a bloody wound whose edges were well-defined, but the more
he did, the more it brought on migraines. He had, instead, learned to accept the
forgetting and forego the pain.

“I don’t remember you,” said Salvatore, his voice quiet and trembling from
the cold. “Did we meet recently?”

The Hispanic looked shocked. “What the Hell, Sallie? You known me for two
years. George Rodriguez. I helped with your church until I kicked the crank and
got this job. You been getting food from here every week.” He gestured at the
kitchen door behind him and took a long puff from the cigarette with his other
hand. “Come on, Sal, you never forgot me ‘fore now.”

Salvatore shook his head. “I’m sorry, I have a rare form of—”

“Yeah, yeah, you got the old timer’s. My uncle got the same thing. I know
that. But you forgetting me now? You must be getting worse, Sallie.” He
took another drag on the cigarette.

“I was here recently?”

George nodded and blew out a big cloud of smoke that was quickly torn apart
by the falling rain. “Last night. You was looking for some stuff for an
arabiatta.” He shrugged. “Gave you all I had. I’m tapped out.”

Salvatore felt his shoulders slump. Had he forgotten the sauce he had been
making? He had left his ersatz kitchen ahead of the coming storm, knowing that
the tunnels would likely flood. Had he secured his equipment to the tunnel
ceiling to keep it out of the floodwaters? He couldn’t remember, and the probing
was threatening to bring on a new migraine. He pictured his favorite sauce pot,
boiling away above a propane burner as the tunnel waters rose up and carried it
off. There would be no meal for the congregation this week. And had he really
known George for two years? Maybe the forgetting was growing worse.

“So you have nothing,” he tried, hoping to salvage what would be a
disappointing Sunday with no food. “Nothing at all?”

George frowned and flicked the remains of his cigarette into a puddle.
“Nothing, bro.” He stood up. “Hell, I gave you more last night than I probably
even shoulda. I get caught given stuff to bums and the owner’ll have my ass.” He
made a shooing motion with one hand and then turned to open the kitchen door.
The smells of high-end cooking spilled out into the night. “I can’t help you no
more. I could lose my job.” Then he stepped into the kitchen and let the metal
door slam shut behind him.

Salvatore’s stomach rumbled in response to the kitchen smells. His head
ached. Had he not been through this a dozen times or more already, he might have
cried.

 

The next two visits went no better. At the rear of one restaurant, he knocked
and had the door slammed in his face moments later. At the other, the
speed-addicted line cook that talked with him gave him a single dinner roll and
told him not to eat it all at once, laughing. It was the stop after that where
Salvatore finally scored some provisions.

The giant black man that answered Salvatore’s knocks looked him up and down
and then said something inaudible back into the kitchen. A reply came, the black
man nodded, and then turned and said, “hold on,” in a gravelly voice. He shut
the door.

Salvatore had almost given up and turned to leave when it creaked back open.
The black man appeared with a plastic grocery bag full of jars and cans, topped
by two half baguettes, obviously going a bit stale, but still good. “Here you
go,” said the man. “Don’t tell nobody.” Then he shut the door.

The old man’s heart danced in his chest. Enough for at least a halfway decent
Sunday meal. The congregation would get something, rather than nothing. He
stared at the restaurant’s kitchen door with its tiny, faded sign that read:
Antonio’s. Italian restaurant. Salvatore had no recollection of the place and
that made him worry. How could he not remember an Italian restaurant? The wash
of joy faded from him before the reality of his deepening memory loss.

He sighed, clutched his plastic bag tighter inside his coat, and left back
down the alley by which he’d come. He was nearly to the street when the
coked-out mugger stepped into his path.

The man was jerky and highly agitated and waved a trembling knife at
Salvatore. “Empty your pockets, gimme the bag.” Just for good measure, he made a
mock thrust with the knife and added, “now!”

Salvatore stood frozen, his brain confused by the unexpected situation. What
to do? He had no money. Would the thief stab him for being poor? At first, his
arms clutched the bag tighter to his chest, as if it were the only thing left
that mattered to him. But then, a quiet, defiant voice rose up in the back of
his mind, deep beneath the years of memories, sliding through the mists of
forgetting.

“No,” he said, voice quivering.

The mugger let out a weird little shriek. “Dammitdammitdammitdammit just
gimme the shit, man! Just gimme the shit!” He took another step forward and
threatened a few more stabs with the blade.

Salvatore felt his bladder loosen and warmth trickled down his left leg. The
defiant voice was drowned out by feelings of anguish and embarassment. He was so
old, too old for this sort of thing. He just wanted to go back to the tunnels,
where he could be alone, where it was quiet and the smells of his junk kitchen
were all that mattered.

“Please.” He shook his head. “I don’t have anything. I’m just homeless.”

A look crossed the mugger’s eyes, a look that suggested a moment of clarity,
but it was quickly replaced by rage. He rushed forward, knife outstretched.

Salvatore fully evacuated his bladder then and his arms went weak and the
plastic bag fell to the ground, spilling its contents into the grime. The loaves
of bread went immediately soggy. Glass jars shattered and splashed their
contents onto his feet. The provisions were lost. But no matter. Salvatore knew
that he would be dead in minutes.

The knife was inches from Salvatore’s throat when the mugger’s eyes suddenly
went wide, a grimace of pain struck his face, and he dropped the knife and leapt
backwards. His feet went out from under him and he fell, landing ass-first in a
puddle on the cement. Salvatore could see blood soaking through the pants over
his right ankle. Beside the mugger’s feet was a long, gray snake, fangs
bared.

The mugger saw it too, let out a scream, and began crab-walking backwards,
hands and feet scuffling against the soaked concrete as he desperately tried to
put distance between himself and the creature.

A voice rang out in the alleyway. “Hey, fucknut. Mugging a bum? Really?” A
short, scrawny man in a hooded sweatshirt stepped up beside Salvatore from
behind. He gave the old man a glance and a wink. “Heya, Z.”

Salvatore had no idea what that meant, and simply watched in awe as the
snake, and three more like it that had appeared from behind piles of trash in
the alley, began chasing the thief out of the alley. The man finally managed to
stand, hopped a few times on his injured foot, and then ran sidelong, letting
out a series of whooping shrieks, while never turning his gaze from the oncoming
snakes.

Still shrieking, he reached the end of the alley and stumbled out into
street. There was an ear-splitting screech. The smell of melting brakes. A
delivery truck moving at high speed. One second there, standing frozen against
the headlights. Next second, a stomach-churning thump and the mugger went from
vertical to a tumbling pile of pink and gray under the tires. The driver
fishtailed, stopped, and then laid on the horn.

The short man in the hooded sweatshirt looked at Salvatore with a surprised
grin on his face, looked back at the mess in the street, let out a sharp, ‘Ha!’
and then whistled appreciatively. “Shit yeah!” he exclaimed. “Gotta love the
timing.”

“Y- you-,” stammered Salvatore. “You killed him.”

The short man shrugged. “Snakes were poisonous. Would’ve died anyway in a few
minutes. Better than a crack addiction for the next ten years, if you ask me. I
did him a solid.”

Salvatore’s mouth opened, but he couldn’t find the words.

The short man gave him an ear-to-ear grin. “So how you doing, Z? Took me a
bit to find you.”

“My- my name is Sal—”

“Salvatore Cortina,” interrupted the short man in the hood. “Sure, I know.”
He nodded. “Interesting choice by the way. Feeling poetic, are we? Fire and
ice?” He walked a few feet down the alley so he could get a better view of the
truck driver, now panicked, bending over the corpse-heap of the would-be mugger.
The driver had a cellphone to his ear.

The man in the hood turned back around to face Salvatore. “Smart, really.
Made it harder to find you, but it’s gotta diminish you some.” He walked back
and poked Salvatore hard in the chest. “This guy really want you hanging
around?”

Salvatore shook his head. He hadn’t the slightest clue as to what the short
man was talking about. Fire and ice? And it seemed like the man was talking to
someone else. Salvatore turned to look briefly over his shoulder, hoping to see
another person that could clear up the confusion.

“Huh,” said the man. “You’re really out to lunch right now, aren’t you?
Aldzheimer’s, right?”

Salvatore turned back and nodded.

The man laughed. “Right.”

He reached under the hood and scratched at his head, then reached into his
sweatshirt and removed a manila envelope. He thrust it toward Salvatore, the
motion making the old man stumble back a step. “Here,” he said. He shook the
envelope as if to make the point. “Take it.”

With a trembling hand, Salvatore reached out and took the envelope.

“I think you’ll find it interesting. You’ve been looking for what’s in
there.” He paused. “Well, ‘you’ is a relative term here. Just hold onto it for
now.” He turned to leave, watching the commotion in the street, which had now
grown to several people. Sirens wailed in the distance. “Oh,” he said, without
turning back around. “And you should probably check up on your hidey-hole. Some
pretty bad floods tonight.”

Salavatore could only mumble, “ok” at first, as he watched the hooded man,
hands in his pockets now, walking slowly down the alley toward the
commotion-filled street. Finally, Salvatore regained enough composure to shout
out his questions.

“Why are you doing this? Who are you?”

Without turning, the man in the hood replied, “Just a messenger.” And then he
rounded the corner beyond the alley and disappeared from Salvatore’s view,
leaving him standing in the rain in a dark alley, feet covered with ruined
tomato sauce and bits of soggy bread, leg soaked in urine, clutching a manila
envelope in both hands. Police sirens screamed in the distance, growing closer
by the second. Salvatore stood there wondering just what the Hell was going
on.


Devil’s Hand (Drawing Thin)

M.E. Patterson’s Devil’s Hand Is Our New Thriller of the Week!

M.E. Patterson’s Devil’s Hand is here to sponsor lots of free Mystery and Thriller titles in the Kindle store:

by M. E. Patterson
4.7 stars – 45 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
A Las Vegas gambler with supernatural luck is swept into a world-ending conflict between demons, angels, and otherworldly shadow-creatures, in an action-packed, terrifying urban fantasy for readers who enjoy Stephen King, Jim Butcher, and Richard Kadrey. The lone survivor of a tragic plane crash, Trent Hawkins inherited a supernatural lucky streak that made him famous, and hated, in the poker circles of the City of Sin. It wasn’t long before the eyes in the sky threw him on the blacklist and chased him out of town. Now, after years away, Trent returns to Las Vegas, and walks right back into trouble. As a serial kidnapper terrorizes the city, Trent and his wife rescue an unusual thirteen year-old girl, only to find themselves caught in a fallen angel’s plot to cleanse Las Vegas with an unholy blizzard. The neon goes dark, Vegas freezes, and Trent is forced to make terrible sacrifices in order to protect his new charge as they run through the demon-infested shadows of a frozen city.Will Trent stand up to the monsters of a dark world he never knew existed? Or will he fail, leaving our world in ruins beneath a blanket of shadow and ice? And look for the second part of the series, Burning Cards, coming Spring 2012!
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“The police have received a phone call about a body. A young woman.”Press photographer Jude Baxendale lives a perfectly normal life in a perfectly normal town. Her son is about to go to university and has a lovely girlfriend, she has time to work on photography outside of work, and generally...
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If It Bleeds (Ravenbridge Trilogy Book 1)
By: Bernie Crosthwaite
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Beth Bryson lives quietly and contentedly in the small seaside town of Bride's Bay. Her life revolves around Nell, her niece; close friends Gina and Carol as well as her part-time job. Two new-comers move to the town, causing interest; particularly the vivacious Melissa, who has moved to the area...
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Art theft. Coded messages. A high-level threat. Despite her initial disbelief, Doctor Genevieve Lenard discovers that she is the key that connects stolen works of art, cyphers and sinister threats. Betrayed by the people who called themselves her friends, Genevieve throws herself into her insurance...
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Brews, baked goods, and bump-offs… After celebrating her dreaded fortieth birthday, Piper is finally ready to get back to her cafe. Not to mention the steamy vampire she's gotten nice and cozy with lately.Unfortunately, a knock on the door ruins it all.Before she knows it, Piper is stuck...
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Finding something interesting to do during the holidays can be hard.How about unearthing a terrible plan that could destroy everything you know, and a secret society hidden throughout history?Or meeting new and unusual friends that will stay with you for the rest of your life?Ghost stories and...
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A little getaway takes a deadly turn, and everyone has something to hide...Morgan Murphy has always longed for a romance for the ages. And she’s found it with the love of her life, husband Kyle Murphy—until their spicy marriage suddenly starts to cool off.Is Kyle preoccupied and distant because...
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A Little Getaway: A Spicy Suspense Thriller
By: Bonnie Traymore
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Meet Max Donovan, a man who was kicking butt when Jack Reacher was still in diapers...Vietnam veteran Max Donovan is in Bangkok, and very hungover, when his friend “Fat” Freddie Fields is arrested in San Francisco for the murder of an Australian diplomat.He knows his old buddy would never hurt a...
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Vampire private eye Samantha Moon is hired to track down a purported lake monster that could wreak havoc on local tourism.But when she delves deeper into the sightings that have spooked the residents of the lakeside community, she crosses paths with the case of two missing boys.And with one...
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One werewolf wants her as his mate. The other will do anything to protect her.In the blink of an eye, 17-year-old Demi's entire world changes forever when she learns that the father she never even knew is really a werewolf, which makes her half-werewolf. And he's not just any werewolf, but the...
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Half-Wolf (The Alpha's Daughter Book 1)
By: Nicholas Jordan
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A Free Excerpt From Our Thriller of the Week, Megan Nafke’s The Puzzle Keeper

Megan Nafke’s The Puzzle Keeper:

by Megan Nafke
3.8 stars – 10 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
The announcement that the plague has left some survivors with paranormal side-effects, has left the world reeling. You’d think solving murders would be easy for Claire, a telepath, and Colin, who can turn into a spirit wolf, but you’d be dead wrong. Not everyone is willing to talk to Survivors so it is a good thing you can’t tell who’s normal and who isn’t.
(This is a sponsored post)

The author hopes you will enjoy this free excerpt:


Prologue

I died five times as a child from the Watkins plague that killed a third of the world’s population twenty years ago, yet I can’t remember being as scared as I am right now.  I stared over the ‘Closed for Private Party’ sign posted on the door to the Red Lion Pub, trying desperately to see if my friends were inside.  After some time I peered to my side without moving and saw my boss, Gail Lewis, a large woman with short wispy brown hair and large bright brass earrings standing next to me.

“Just making sure someone was inside.”  I pointed at the sign on the door, as my lips stretched reluctantly into a smile.

“I’m assuming that they are inside?”  Her pudgy nose flared slightly in a sigh.

“Yes, Mrs. Lewis.”  I opened the door and she strolled through slowly.  I took a deep breath and followed her into the pub.

The small pub was filled with Survivors, which was the name given to the lucky people who had the illness during the plague but survived.  Most of the people here either helped Trevor with his research on the long-term side effects of surviving the Watkins plague, or knew that he was about to make his research public.  My adopted sister, Molly, loved him and his work, so I grew to tolerate him despite my knack for finding faults with anyone who dated her.

I had always known that the illness gave us some sort of side effects.  Shortly after I was revived from cardiac arrest for the last time due to the plague, I started to pick up on other people’s emotions, which I mimicked to my mother’s frustration.

My mother thought I was simply reacting to the trauma of the illness, but then I started to see scattered images.  At first the images were like trying to watch a TV show when it is flickering in and out of reception, but as the images became clear it was obvious that I was seeing other people’s memories and thoughts.

Once in the bar, it didn’t take long to spot Trevor, the lead researcher and Molly’s fiancé.  He was hard to miss since he was close to six and a half feet tall and wore oversized black retro glasses.  His long, bony arms wrapped around Molly, as a crowd hovered around them.  She looked up at me, her eyes hopeful, but I shook my head.  I wanted to go in but I was having trouble blocking other people’s thoughts and emotions; I needed to sit as far away from the crowd as possible.

My body trembled as I walked along the wooden wall filled with dart boards and ale advertisement, I could see that my body was moving down the hallway, but I didn’t feel as if I was present; exhaustion was flowing through every part of my body.  I fell like a lifeless rag doll into the first empty seat at the bar, and buried my head in my bare arms.

My nose twitched as I caught the strong, bitter smell of freshly brewed coffee, and saw Colin refilling a man’s coffee cup a few seats down from me.  From his appearance, you would not guess he was working at the pub.  All the workers were required to wear a uniform consisting of a dark green shirt and black slacks, and keep their hair neatly combed.  Colin, however, had on his favorite light leather jacket, tee shirt, and slightly wrinkled jeans.  His chestnut brown hair was styled in a mass of unruly wave, and he always seemed two days late for a shave.

“I can’t tell you how happy I am to see you,” I smiled and eagerly turned over the mug in front me.

“Are you talking to me or the coffee?”  Colin asked.

“You, of course,” I laughed, “though coffee would be nice.”

“Uh huh,” His left eyebrow rose slightly as he poured the java into my small cup.

“I didn’t know you were helping out tonight,” I said between sips.

“Only way Dad could close the bar for tonight.”  He nodded his head towards the end of the bar, where his dad was in the middle of pouring drinks.

“I can’t believe Sean agreed to closing his bar,” I said.

“Yeah well he’d do anything for you two,” he said.  Colin, Molly and I had shared a hospital room when we had the plague.  Our parents became close and we grew even closer after losing four of our six parents.  The two surviving parents, Colin’s dad and my mom, took it upon themselves to raise all three of us.  My mother even adopted Molly after her parents died, and Colin’s dad tried to fill in as a father to all three of us.

“How’s your day been?” Colin asked.

“Long,” I took long sips of the hot coffee.

“I think we’re all going to be having long days for awhile.”

“At least the anticipation will be over soon.  Today reminds me of being at the dentist waiting to get my wisdom teeth pulled.  You can’t leave.  You know it’s going to be incredibly painful.  All you can do is sit by the clock and wait for the inevitable.”

“Look on the bright side.  We all have each other.  Some people might be going through this alone.”  He patted my wrist softly and looked around the room.

“True,” I smiled.  “I can’t image how people cope with this alone.”

“I can’t imagine how people will feel when a tall nerd outs them on national television without any warning.  I’ll be back,” he said strolling down to a redheaded waitress that was waving him over to the other corner of the bar.  I didn’t recognize the waitress and wondered if it was business or pleasure.

“Claire?”  Molly asked as she slipped into a seat next to me.  Molly was tall and curvy.  People were drawn to her large dark eyes and winsome smile.  Seeing us together most people could tell one of us was adopted.

“How’s the big night going for you two?” I asked.

“It‘s just been the best.  I’ve never seen him so happy.”  Her eyes lingered on Trevor.

“I’m glad,” I said.

“You should come and watch the interview with us.”

“I think I’m going to stay here and drink my coffee and watch the interview with Colin.  I’ll stop by later to congratulate him.”  Her eyes followed my gaze as I looked at Trevor.  “When the crowd thins out a bit.”

“Well, you do look like you need a cup.”  Molly put a hand on my shoulder, which felt more patronizing than sympathetic“You look fine, sweetie.”  She wrapped her arms around my shoulders briefly then walked away.  “I’ll save you a seat at our table if you change your mind.”

“You already drank your cup of coffee?” Colin peered at my cup and shook his head.  “I was only gone for a minute.”

“I could use another,” I said.

“You’re addicted to the stuff.”

“I’m not addicted, I simply need to drink a certain amount of coffee a day to avoid debilitating headaches,” I grinned.

“Uh huh,” His deep laughter caused small ripples in the coffee pot.

Everyone stopped talking but the thoughts in the room buzzed too loud and chaotic to focus on any one thought.  I turned and found everyone straining and contorting their bodies to see the screens that were placed on top of the bar.

A brunette woman in her thirties with her hair tied up in a bun was on the screen sitting across from Trevor.

“I’m here with Dr. Trevor Harris to discuss his recent findings in his work with the Survivors,” the woman said.

“Thank you, Jane.” Trevor stared at something just beyond her and nodded his head.  “It’s been twenty years since the epidemic that killed one third of the population and left another third of the population hovering between life and death started.  During the four years between epidemic cycles of the Watkins plague, most researchers have been so focused on the people that died and preventing the illness that they neglected the Survivors.  In the five years since a cure has been found, most researchers have been focused on discovering how Dr. Watkins created and spread the disease.  However, I have been working with the Survivors to find any long term effects of the illness.”

“And?” She asked wrinkling her brow.

“Yes, I found that certain Survivors had what I will call side effects of the illness.”

“Why did only certain Survivors develop side effects?”

“I found that the majority of the people who developed any side effects were very young children at the time they contracted the illness.  All the people who have side effects had cardiac arrest at least once.”

“I’m not surprised that having your heart stop would cause complications, but what type of side effects did these people have?”

“That is the interesting part.  As far as I can tell the side effects range in type and intensity.  I’ve seen people who can read thoughts and emotions and people who can communicate with animals or spirits, and I’ve found people who can travel with their spirit.”  Jane looked puzzled and turned to look at something off camera.

“Those claims seem a little far fetched.”

“My findings have been well documented and reviewed by the scientific community.”  His thin lips smiled showing his crowded front teeth.  “However, I can give you a quick demonstration.” He nodded his head and his research assistant came on camera.  “This is Bill Mason, we’re both Survivors with side effects but his is more convincing.”

“What do you mean?”  She said but then grew very pale as the note cards in her hand started to pull away from her even though no one else was touching them.  Jane jerked back and the cards hovered over her head before zooming to Bill’s hands.

“Bill is telekinetic; he is able to move objects without touching them.  He can give you another demonstration if you wish.”

“That was enough of a demonstration for me.”  Jane crossed her arms and sank in her chair.  “Thank you very much for coming on the show.  To find out more about the research findings on the Survivors, read Dr. Harris’ paper that is posted on our website.”

The silence at the pub was broken when a man stood up and started clapping.  I shook myself and turned my eyes away from the TV screen.  The clapping was contagious and died down only as people started grabbing glasses of champagne.  It’s amazing how the presence of alcohol will distract people from almost anything.  The tension in the room had calmed down but all I could think about was how everyone else in our town was going to take the news.

CHAPTER ONE

A tall Hispanic police officer stopped me at the gates to the mansion perched on the Santa Cruz Mountains.  “I’m sorry Ma’am but I can’t let you in here.  This is a crime scene.” He spoke as if speaking to a child.

“Yes, I know.” I indicated the police tape that was only inches away from me.  I handed him my badge.  “I may be short and blonde but that doesn’t make me a child.”

“Oh, sorry.  Detective Moseley told me you’d be coming.”  He coughed.  “I just thought you’d be, older.”  Actually, his thoughts reflected that I would be just about anything but a petite blonde.  Although he didn’t mind that I was one because he was thinking about asking me out.  That is until he realized from my badge that I was a Survivor.  I considered reprimanding him for the political incorrectness of his thoughts but I didn’t want to reveal that I could read them.

“It’s all right, Officer.”  I signed the clipboard he was holding, and grabbed some gloves and a pair of booties.

“You made it here fast.  Didn’t your plane just land?” Colin asked greeting me at the gate.

“What can I say?  I’m an efficient driver.”

“I think police officers have another word for that: speeding.”

“That’s such a negative word.  I prefer mine.”

“I’m sure you do.”

Gargoyles on the edge of the roof watched me as we walked along the stone pathway leading up to the house.  Two men in casual slacks and button up shirts stood at the metallic looking front door.  Their professional appearance contrasted sharply with Colin’s.  Colin, as usual, had on his favorite light leather jacket, tee shirt, and slightly wrinkled jeans.  His chestnut brown hair was styled in a mass of unruly waves on the top of his head, and he always seemed two days late for a shave.

When we got closer to the two men, I recognized one of them as Detective Austin Hughes.  My heart raced.  I struggled to keep walking, as if I was wearing cement shoes.

“You could have told me he was the detective,” I straightened a loose blonde curl behind my ear.

“I didn’t know.” Colin shrugged.  “I must have talked to his partner.”

I glanced up at Austin, he was still as handsome as the last time I saw him.  He had broad shoulders and a short hair cut like you would expect from a police officer.  When I caught his gray eyes, the color of a storm cloud, searching my face, I looked away.

“Hi, Claire.”  Austin smiled at me.  I could feel my cheeks growing hotter.  “Colin.”  He nodded his head at Colin.

“I see you made homicide detective.”  I could see out of the corner of my eye that he was staring at me, but I kept my focus on the door.

“Yes, it’s my third case.  This is my partner, Detective David Moseley.”  He nodded his head towards the man next to him.  He didn’t look like a man who could make it as a cop, or even a round of dodge ball against a girl scout.  His bones showed clearly through the skin on his face, giving him an appearance of being ill.  He was no taller or wider than a typical twelve-year-old boy.

“Nice to meet you both.”  His voice matched his boyish size.

“It’s nice to meet you, Detective Moseley,” Colin said reaching out to shake his hand.

“Better not,” He said showing us his gloves.  “You don’t want to know what I have been touching.”

“Fair enough,” Colin said.  “Can you give us a rundown of what you already know?”

“We figured you’d want to see the scene so we haven’t moved the body,” Austin said as he stepped into the house.  Detective Moseley shrugged and followed him.  Colin and I put on our gloves and booties and followed the detectives.  Despite the house being filled with oversize windows and indoor light, it appeared dark.

Our footsteps echoed throughout the house as the two detectives led us up the long staircase.  I hugged my bare arms against my chest as we walked down the chilly hallway.  It felt like someone had the air conditioning on way too high.  I unclenched when we stopped at a doorway.

The bedroom looked rustic like an interior of a lodge.  An antique bed with maple posts took up more than half the room.  A woman with long blonde hair and a white summer dress was lying across the top of the bed.

“This is Mrs. Eileen Cooper,” Austin said.  He indicated her open mouth.  “We found what appears to be some type of material and stuffing lodged in her mouth.  We haven’t found the object, but we believe it’s a pillow.”

“What makes you think it’s a pillow?” I asked.

Detective Moseley straightened.  “I figured it out.  There should be a pair of decorative pillows with initials embroidered on them.  We found one with “BC” on it but the one with “EC” is missing.”

“That’s impressive,” Colin said.

“Our theory at the moment is that the killer covered her mouth with a pillow to keep her quiet, and then stabbed her multiple times in the chest and abdomen.”   Austin indicated the stains on the top of her low cut, cotton dress.

“Wait a minute.  We’re in the middle of the woods.  The nearest house to here is almost a mile away.  Why would the killer need to keep her quiet?”  Colin asked.

“That’s a good question.  The only explanation I could think of is that someone else was on the property or expected back,” Detective Moseley said.

“What is that?” We all looked down.  The word traitor was carved into the bare skin that was exposed on her chest.  Each letter was deep with jagged edges.

“Traitor to whom?”  Colin asked.

“We found this next to the body.”  Austin picked up a plastic bag with a flyer in it and held it so we could read it.  It was a Brotherhood of Humanity flyer with bold lettering at the top reading, Top Twenty Most Dangerous Survivors.  It was no surprise that my future brother-in-law, Trevor Harris, was number one.  After all, it was his research that exposed the paranormal side effects caused by the Watkins plague.  A few pictures down was a picture of Mrs. Cooper with her name written underneath.  An “x” was over her picture in what looked like blood.

“Was she a Survivor?”  I asked.

“No way to really tell without medical records.  The husband says no, but who can tell?” Detective Moseley asked.  That was true; on the outside there was nothing to distinguish us from the rest of the population and not everyone who survived the plague had paranormal side effects.

“Her son Russ is a Survivor.  Poor kid’s had a rough week.  He was in a fight after school yesterday afternoon,” Austin said.

“Where is the son?” Colin asked.

“At the hospital with his father.  He had … well I really don’t know what happened to him.  One minute he was crying but behaving in a normal way after losing a parent and then the next minute he completely snapped.  Couldn’t even understand what he was saying.  We had to have an officer ride with him to the hospital to get their statements,” Austin said.

“That seems understandable considering …” I started to say.

“Trust me this was not normal,” Detective Moseley said.

“We will stop by the hospital after this.  Any other evidence?” I asked.

“We collected what we could.  We just wouldn’t know until the lab runs everything,” Detective Moseley said.

“Heck, we haven’t even been able to find the murder weapon.  Though we think it’s some type of kitchen knife,” Austin said.

“Who found the body?” Colin asked after a long moment of silence.

“Mr. Cooper found the body when he came home from work, around 5:30 this evening.  No one else was in the house,” Detective Moseley said.

“Is there anyone else living here?”  I asked.

“Her sister, Nadine, and her brother-in-law, Mike, live here as well.  Mike was at work with Mr. Cooper during the time of the murder.  Nadine claims she was running errands.  She had a gas receipt on her with a time stamp of 4:20.  She also had a receipt from Target with a time stamp of 4:50, which proves she was out of the house.  We don’t have the exact time of death but we do think it’s around the time she was out,” Austin said.

“So basically we have a town full of suspects, with no leads and no witnesses?” I asked.

“Afraid so,” Austin said.

CHAPTER TWO

I was on the last few sips of my cold coffee, when I heard my name being called from the nurses’ station.  The waiting room was filled with a sea of patients.  I tried squeezing myself through a tiny gap between two tall women, but they simply pressed their hips together.  Colin growled, “Move.” His voice was deep and loud and made the hair on the back of my neck stand up straight.  The crowd quickly moved to either side like Moses parting the Red Sea.

An elderly nurse was furiously typing on the computer in front of her.  She held out her hand to the side of the computer.  After a moment she sighed and looked at her empty hand, then looked up over her glasses at us.  She stretched her hand closer to us and said, “Patient’s card.”

“I don’t have one, but I think this will do.”  I showed her my badge and she withdrew her hand.

“What can I do for you, Agent Bennett?

A tall, curvy nurse stepped up to the counter and said, “I’ll take this one.  Agent Bennett is my sister.”  The elderly nurse looked at both of us and shook her head.  I didn’t have to read her mind, it was a familiar reaction to hearing we were sisters.  It was obvious that one of us was adopted, since I was about as far from tall and dark as you can get.  We moved out of line so we could talk privately.

“I didn’t know you were back from your trip.  Why didn’t you call me?”  Molly asked twisting the locket around her neck.

“I just got home, haven’t even picked up Rosie yet.  Besides, I figured you were busy moving in with that fiancé of yours.”

“You know I’m never too busy for you, sweetie.”

“It seems we are both busy these days.  You move out to be with Trevor, and I spend my time cleaning up his messes.”  The image of Mrs. Cooper’s body popped into my head.

Molly ignored me and turned to Colin and pointed her finger at him, “speaking of work.  She just gets back and you put my sister to work.  Can’t you do a case without her?”

Colin stopped playing with his cell phone and looked up, “When has she ever listened to me?  The words ‘No’ and ‘can’t’ are like catnip to her.”

“I know, I’m just teasing.”  She gave him a quick hug.  “I don’t get to see you much anymore so I need to get in as much teasing as I can.  I know this isn’t a social call, what are you guys doing here?”

“I think the more important question is what are you doing in the E.R.?”

“No, choice.” She shrugged.  “The whole hospital has turned into one big emergency room.”

“Is it safe for you to work here?  What if someone dies near you?”  I asked.

“I’ve been careful.  My boss is working here tonight, too.  She’s aware of my problem.  She has assigned me to work triage.”

“Still seems rather risky,” I said.  Molly normally works in a clinic, where the chance of being around when someone died was slim.  The closer she is to a person when they die the better the chance a ghost will know she can see them and the more they stick around and bother her.

“We are here checking on a patient.  Was Russ Cooper seen here?” Colin asked.

Molly scanned the computer screen and then said, “Yes, he was moved to a room for the night.”

“How is he?” I asked.

“We talked about this.  You know I can’t tell you,” Molly said.

“I’m sorry.  I know.  Can we speak to him?” I asked.

“Depends.  It’s up to his doctor and his father if he is up to talking.  Let me give them a call,” she said.  After a short phone conversation, she said that Russ’ father agreed to speak to us and gave us the directions to his room.

We made our way to Russ’ hospital room on the eighth floor.  A large bald man who resembled a short tempered nightclub bouncer stood outside room 305.

“Mr. Cooper?” He nodded and I shook his hand “I’m Agent Claire Bennett and this is my partner, Agent Colin O’Connor,” I said as Colin shook his hand.

“I don’t understand.  Why are you here? The cops have already been here to talk to us.” His voice reminded me of a drill sergeant.

“We work for the Bureau of Survivor Affairs.  You probably haven’t heard of it.  It’s a relatively new agency that deals with cases that involve the Survivors.  We have been assigned to your wife’s case because some of the evidence points to it being a Survivor related crime,” Colin said.

When Mr. Cooper didn’t say anything I added, “We are very sorry for your loss.  How is your son?”

“It took two hours to calm him down,” he said.  “It was so bad they’re making him stay the night, just in case it happens again.”

“Losing a parent can be very painful,” I said.

“No, it was different.  It wasn’t just sadness from losing his mom although that is bad enough.  I haven’t seen pain like that since the army.  Let me tell you, nothing in the world is worse than seeing your child in pain and not being able to do a damn thing to make it better.” Mr. Cooper took a seat on a tiny chair propped against the wall and buried his head in his hands.  “I think he blames himself for the murder.”

“Why do you think that?” Colin asked.

“My son has always been,” he paused and scratched the small bald spot in the back of his head and finally said, “Different.  I always liked that about him.  Since the news came out, he has been more different than usual.”

“Is different bad?” Colin asked.

“Now it is.  Haven’t you seen the papers?” Mr. Cooper asked.  We nodded.  The image of the bombing of a Survivor support center in upstate New York popped into my head.  It didn’t take much to provoke violence.  Being different right now was dangerous if not deadly.  “He is a walking target, from the costumes he wears to telling everyone he meets that he has ‘magical powers’.”

“I could see how that’d be a serious problem,” Colin commented.

“You don’t know the half of it,” Mr. Cooper said.  “Can you imagine being at the grocery store and having your son tell the teller, a complete stranger mind you, that he is able to steal memories?”

“That would be a bit awkward.” I swallowed a laugh.  I liked the boy already.

“Is he really able to steal memories? Or is he just a telepath or something?” Colin asked.

“Just a telepath?” His face stiffened.  “Oh God, I hope not.”

“Excuse me?” I asked.  “What’s wrong with being a telepath?”

“There’s a difference between someone that does not like telepaths and someone not wanting their loved one to be one,” Colin said.

Mr. Cooper nodded in agreement, but by his thoughts he wasn’t entirely sure why I was angry.  Colin put a hand on my shoulder.  I looked up at him and relaxed.  He was right.  For the most part I liked being a telepath, but I wouldn’t like someone else using it on me.

“Just tell us what you do know about Russ’s abilities,” Colin said.

“Russ says he sees things when he touches objects.  Things that aren’t really there.  To be frank, He doesn’t talk about this stuff to me and I don’t ask.  Maybe I should have.”

“How has he handled being so open about his side effect?” Colin asked.

“He found out the hard way why it was a bad idea.  A group of kids jumped him on his way home from school.  It was so bad I had to take him to the hospital for stitches.”  I noticed his neck muscles twitching just above the collar of his white polo shirt.  “Ever since then he has locked himself in his room glued to the computer.”

“Did you try talking to him?” I asked.

“I tried.  I really did.  My wife was the one he talks to.  I mean talked to,” his hazel eyes became red and glossy.  “Eileen would’ve known what to do.”

“You’re not alone.”  I put my hand on his thick shoulder.  “We will find a way to help him.”

A croaking voice called “Dad?” from inside Russ’ room.

“We can talk about this later.  Come see us when Russ gets released.” Colin handed him his business card.

Thankfully, my apartment wasn’t far from the hospital.  I could hardly wait to see my dog Rosie, take a shower and get the stink of the airport and crime scene off of me.  From first glance the boutiques and restaurants that line my street, Cherry Blossom Lane, look like stylish cottages from some small European village, each painted a different pastel color.  The upper stories of each building had apartments.  Light glowed ahead, leading me to the one store still open.  My eyes blinked as they adjusted to the light as I gazed into the Wonderland Bakery.  It was aptly named.  The walls had murals of scenes from Alice in Wonderland, and the tables and the chairs were funky enough for the Mad Hatter’s tea party.

I could see Alice’s frizzy black hair bounce as she danced from the oven to the counter with a batch of cupcakes.  Alice froze when she saw me.  Redness spread across her creamed coffee skin.  She gestured at a plate of frosted sugar cookies shaped like bunnies.  My stomach growled at me to take the offer.

It had become a test of wills to live over the bakery, the smell of chocolate flowing through the apartment.

“Glad to see you back, girl,” Alice said opening the door to her shop and embracing me with a hug.  “Rosie’s been missing you.  I never knew a dog could pout that much.”

“Thanks for watching her.  Would have asked Molly but you know ….”

“I was glad to do it.  How was the trip?”

“It was another case of a neighborhood overreacting to the discovery of a Survivor with side effects in their midst.  By the time I got there the murderer had pretty much identified himself by bragging to anyone who’d listen how he got rid of ‘that freak down the street’.  Not much need for a telepath there.”

“Now don’t go making me sorry I made that appointment with that reporter.”

“What reporter?”

“While you were gone, the local news team decided to do a series of stories about the Survivors and they asked for volunteers.  So, I volunteered.”

“Why would you do that?!”  I shook my head in exasperation.  “Have you not been listening to the kind of problems Colin and I have had to deal with since the news came out about our existence?”

“If all people hear is what’s wrong with us how will anything ever change?”

“Well, yes, but your timing couldn’t be worse.  I’m on another Survivor related murder and this time it’s local.  And it looks like we’ve got an active anti-Survivor organization calling themselves ‘The Brotherhood of Humanity’.  Can’t you postpone it?”

“You worry too much.  I’m a baker; who would hurt a baker?”

“When is the interview?  I want to be there to scan the crowd for problems.”

“It’s Friday night.  I appreciate you coming down for it.  Speaking of my special goods, I have some dream cookies all ready for you to take home.”  She disappeared into the kitchen.

Alice’s side effect centered around baking.  She made many types of cookies with various effects, but my favorite was the dream cookie.  It allowed you to take complete control of your dreams.  You could relive memories so vividly it was hard to separate the true memory from the dream or allowed you to make any dream scenario feel real.  Although you had to be carful to eat them before bed, or you risk dreaming while awake.  For that reason she only sold or gave her special baked goods to a select few.

Alice reappeared and handed me a pink box.  “I’d better get back,” Alice said over the oven buzzer.

“Thanks again,” I said.

Alice nodded and gave me a quick wave as I walked alongside the building to the door of my apartment.

Rosie, a border collie with German shepherd coloring was pouting in the living room when I opened the door.  It would have made me feel guilty but her bushy tail was wagging behind her.  When she decided I’d suffered enough, she got up and walked over so I could pet her.  I noticed a light was on in Molly’s room.  For a moment I had a jolt of happiness and went to look for her.  When I got to her room, it was empty except for the furniture and I remembered that she moved out while I was gone.  It was the first night Molly has lived away from me since we shared a hospital room as kids.  Rosie and I curled up on her mattress and we fell asleep.


The Puzzle Keeper

Megan Nafke’s The Puzzle Keeper Is Our New Thriller of the Week!

Megan Nafke’s The Puzzle Keeper is here to sponsor lots of free Mystery and Thriller titles in the Kindle store:

 

by Megan Nafke
3.8 stars – 10 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
The announcement that the plague has left some survivors with paranormal side-effects, has left the world reeling. You’d think solving murders would be easy for Claire, a telepath, and Colin, who can turn into a spirit wolf, but you’d be dead wrong. Not everyone is willing to talk to Survivors so it is a good thing you can’t tell who’s normal and who isn’t.
(This is a sponsored post)

Free Contemporary Titles in the Kindle Store

Welcome to Kindle Nation’s magical and revolutionary Free Book Search Tool — automatically updated and refreshed in real time, now with Category Search! Use the drop-down menu (in red caps next to the menu bar near the top of the page) to search for free Kindle books by genre or category, then sort the list just the way you want it — by date added, bestselling, or review rating! But there’s no need to sort by price — because they’re all free!

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“The police have received a phone call about a body. A young woman.”Press photographer Jude Baxendale lives a perfectly normal life in a perfectly normal town. Her son is about to go to university and has a lovely girlfriend, she has time to work on photography outside of work, and generally...
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If It Bleeds (Ravenbridge Trilogy Book 1)
By: Bernie Crosthwaite
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Beth Bryson lives quietly and contentedly in the small seaside town of Bride's Bay. Her life revolves around Nell, her niece; close friends Gina and Carol as well as her part-time job. Two new-comers move to the town, causing interest; particularly the vivacious Melissa, who has moved to the area...
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Art theft. Coded messages. A high-level threat. Despite her initial disbelief, Doctor Genevieve Lenard discovers that she is the key that connects stolen works of art, cyphers and sinister threats. Betrayed by the people who called themselves her friends, Genevieve throws herself into her insurance...
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Brews, baked goods, and bump-offs… After celebrating her dreaded fortieth birthday, Piper is finally ready to get back to her cafe. Not to mention the steamy vampire she's gotten nice and cozy with lately.Unfortunately, a knock on the door ruins it all.Before she knows it, Piper is stuck...
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Finding something interesting to do during the holidays can be hard.How about unearthing a terrible plan that could destroy everything you know, and a secret society hidden throughout history?Or meeting new and unusual friends that will stay with you for the rest of your life?Ghost stories and...
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A little getaway takes a deadly turn, and everyone has something to hide...Morgan Murphy has always longed for a romance for the ages. And she’s found it with the love of her life, husband Kyle Murphy—until their spicy marriage suddenly starts to cool off.Is Kyle preoccupied and distant because...
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A Little Getaway: A Spicy Suspense Thriller
By: Bonnie Traymore
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Meet Max Donovan, a man who was kicking butt when Jack Reacher was still in diapers...Vietnam veteran Max Donovan is in Bangkok, and very hungover, when his friend “Fat” Freddie Fields is arrested in San Francisco for the murder of an Australian diplomat.He knows his old buddy would never hurt a...
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Vampire private eye Samantha Moon is hired to track down a purported lake monster that could wreak havoc on local tourism.But when she delves deeper into the sightings that have spooked the residents of the lakeside community, she crosses paths with the case of two missing boys.And with one...
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One werewolf wants her as his mate. The other will do anything to protect her.In the blink of an eye, 17-year-old Demi's entire world changes forever when she learns that the father she never even knew is really a werewolf, which makes her half-werewolf. And he's not just any werewolf, but the...
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Half-Wolf (The Alpha's Daughter Book 1)
By: Nicholas Jordan
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Here’s a Free Excerpt From Our Thriller of the Week, Mainak Dhar’s Vimana

Mainak Dhar’s Vimana:

by Mainak Dhar
3.9 stars – 98 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
AMAZON.COM TOP 5 SCIENCE FICTION BESTSELLER! To be published in paperback by Penguin India, early 2012′Gods’ fought a terrible war in our skies 15,000 years ago. They have returned to finish it.Ancient texts refer to ‘Gods’ flying in craft called vimanas and waging war with what sound like nuclear weapons. These accounts are today classified as myth or legend.What if they turned out to be real?Vimana is an edge-of your seat sci-fi technothriller about a young college student who stumbles upon an ancient war between good and evil. A war that we thought was merely a part of our ancient myths and legends, but unknown to us, is still being waged everyday in our skies. As the forces of darkness conspire to unleash worldwide devastation to coincide with the End Times prophecies in 2012, he discovers his hidden destiny is to join the forces of light in bringing this war to a conclusion. At stake will be the continued existence of the human race.Star Wars meets Transformers in this exciting new thriller that will keep all science fiction fans satisfied. BONUS CONTENT:First two chapters of Heroes R Us, the new superhero thriller by Mainak Dhar.
(This is a sponsored post)

The author hopes you will enjoy this free excerpt:


 

“The Pushpaka vimana that resembles the Sun and belongs to my brother was

brought by the powerful Ravana; that aerial and excellent vimana going everywhere

at will…that vimana resembling a bright cloud in the sky…and the King got in, and

the excellent vimana rose up into the higher atmosphere.

 

The earliest written account of a flying vehicle called a vimana. This is found in the

Indian epic the Ramayana, which was written at least 5000 years before the Wright

Brothers made what we widely believe to be the first manned flight on Earth in 1903.

 

PROLOGUE

Western India, 13000 BC

The old hunter cursed his son for what would have been at least the tenth time that

day. He needed help to carry back the deer he had killed, and with the darkness soon

to be upon them, he wanted to get back to the relative safety of their group well

before the Sun retired for the night.

As he skinned the deer, he smiled as he remembered how he had brought it down

with a single arrow. He may have been an old man, but his eyes were still sharp. It

was a pity that his arms did not have the same strength they did forty summers ago,

otherwise he would not have had to depend on his lazy son to help him carry the deer

back.

He soon saw the boy cresting the top of the hill and coming towards him. He seemed

to be excited.

‘Father, do you know what I saw?’

‘I know that you certainly didn’t see any other animals to hunt. So, my observant son,

what did you see?’

The boy sat down on his haunches next to his father, barely able to conceal his

excitement.

‘Father, today I saw three vimanas fly over the coast. You know what Kalindi has

been saying, right? About the Gods fighting amongst themselves, about their war

across the oceans?’

The man shook his head in disapproval at his son believing the words of that accursed

wandering storyteller. He still remembered what it was to be young, and to be excited

by such fantastic tales, but he also knew that he needed to focus on providing for his

family, and not worry about what the Gods were doing.

‘My son, the Gods have been around since before my forefathers were born. They

have their own ways, their own lives, and we have ours. Now, help me gather the deer

and carry it back. Or do you want to repeat what happened three moons ago?’

That brought a sudden flush of fear to the boy’s face. He remembered only too well

how another clan had attacked them and taken all their skins and meat. They had been

lucky to escape alive. The boy was just twelve summers old, but he already knew that

he lived in a world where life could be brutal, and short. He started to help his father

pick up the deer when they heard loud crackling noises, like that of thunder. They

both looked up to see that there was not a cloud in the sky and no signs that the Rain

God was going to vent his fury on them. The father watched the sky for some time

and then started to pick up his bow when they heard three more thunderous cracks.

This time, they saw what was causing the sound. High above them in the sky, where

only the birds and Gods flew, they saw three vimanas streak by. Even at this distance,

the father recognized the round shapes of the Vimanas that Kalindi claimed were

flown by the Dark Ones. One of the vimanas separated from the others and dove

towards the ground, seeming to the hunter’s eyes like a bird of prey diving for the kill.

He ran to the edge of the cliff, followed by his son.

They watched as a small object separated from the vimana, and sped towards the

ground, with smoke and fire trailing it. The hunter had heard of the Gods firing

their divine flaming bolts, but this was the first time he had witnessed the awesome

power of the Gods. He watched the object fly towards the ground, almost beyond the

horizon, and then there was a mighty roar that was louder than anything the hunter

had ever heard. He felt his son’s hand clutch his in fear, but he had no reassurance to

offer. He watched in mute horror as a giant fireball covered the horizon. He stared at

the light that seemed brighter than the Sun on the hottest day, and then looked away

as the fireball seemed to expand. His son was screaming.

‘Father, I am blind!’

The hunter felt strong gusts pummeling him and his son a few moments later and they

were thrown to the ground. There seemed to be ash everywhere around them, and

his skin was burning. When the hunter gathered up the courage to look up, he saw a

gigantic pillar of smoke rising above the world.

The Gods had indeed gone to war, and it seemed they were going to set the world on

fire.

 

ONE

New Delhi, India, the present day

Aaditya Ghosh watched as the enemy surface to air missile tracked in on him. He

estimated that he was no more than a few seconds away from a fiery death.

As the smoke trail got closer and closer, he was tempted to turn his jet away, but

he knew that keeping a cool head was the best way to evade the missile that was

reaching out towards him. When the missile was just a few hundred meters away, he

released some flares to distract it and then put his fighter through a punishing turn.

For a second, he could see very little as the world spun around him. When he was in

level flight again, he breathed a sigh of relief as he saw no sign of the missile. But the

battle was far from over. He was cruising at thirty thousand feet when he picked up

the first enemy jet on his radar. Fifty kilometers out and ten thousand feet below him.

A quick glance at the top right hand corner of his display told him that the intruders

were two F-16s. He messaged his wingmen to cover him and then swooped down

to intercept the enemy planes. Having chosen a Su-35 for his mission, he knew that

he would likely have an edge when it came to locking on and firing his long range

missiles first, but with two enemies and wingmen he was not sure he could count on

to cover his back, it would be tight.

He slowed down to Mach 0.8 and armed his radar homing missiles as he watched

the F-16s come closer on his radar scope. The two red dots were now barely thirty

kilometers away, and Aaditya noted with some dismay that his wingmen, indicated by

blue dots on his display, were not quite doing much to cover him. In theory, they were

to operate as a team, but in reality, he knew that he was very much on his own.

At twenty seven kilometers, Aaditya’s radar emitted a whistling tone that indicated

that he had locked in on the first F-16. He waited for the triangle to appear over the

enemy jet on his Heads Up Display that indicated that he had a solid lock before

he fired a missile. A second later, he fired another. It was a bit of an overkill, but

carrying a huge load of missiles, he had more than enough, and he had long learnt

that rankings and honors were conferred based on the number of kills, not on

efficiency. He watched both missiles streak across the sky towards their quarry as he

switched focus to the next enemy. The range was now less than twenty kilometers

and he watched as the enemy jet fired a missile at him. The red arrow shape rapidly

approached on his radar display, and Aaditya reacted with no trace of panic or alarm,

his reactions honed by countless hours of practice. He deployed some chaff strips to

confuse the enemy radar guided missiles and put his jet through a series of punishing

9G turns. When he had stabilized, the enemy missiles were nowhere to be seen, and

the first enemy jet had disappeared off his scope, having been obliterated by one of

his missiles.

Without waiting to celebrate his kill, Aaditya selected his short ranged heat seeking

missiles and turned towards the second F-16. He accelerated to over Mach 1 and at a

range of less than ten kilometers, he fired two missiles at the F-16.

That was when his mission was ended abruptly by a tap on the shoulder.

‘Dude, Donkey’s coming this way.’

Aaditya quickly slid the PSP into his backpack as Professor D.K.Kumar, known with

much mirth and little affection among his students as Donkey, walked over to his

desk.

‘Mr.Ghosh, you seem to be preoccupied today. Perhaps you could tell the class a little

more about the impact the colonial system had on the Indian economy.’

Aaditya looked at the Professor, a smile on his face, as if he were about to answer. In

reality, his mind was blank. Blasting enemy fighters while playing Ace Combat 6 on

his PSP was about all he had remembered of his Economic History classes till now.

He kept looking at the Professor, hoping he would find a new prey, but he persisted.

Someone coughed, a few notebooks were slammed shut, and Aaditya found himself

being rescued by the fact that the period was over. He heaved a sigh of relief and

looked at Samrat, who was sitting behind him.

‘Sam, thanks for the heads up.’

Samrat smiled, but behind his eager, bespectacled eyes, Aaditya could detect a trace

of disapproval. Oh well, everyone could not be a bookworm like Samrat. Aaditya

was about to leave the class when the Professor called him over. Fearing that he was

in for a lecture, he braced himself, only to be shocked when the overweight, balding

Professor smiled at him.

‘Play your video games all you want, just not in my class.’

Shit, he knew.

Aaditya wondered what he could possibly say in his defense when the Professor

continued, this time, his smile taking on a sad tinge.

‘I know it must be difficult for you. The Principal had told us, but do try and adjust

and let me know if I can help in any way.’

Aaditya mumbled his thanks and left, but was fuming inside. The last thing he wanted

from anyone was sympathy. He barely noticed Samrat walk up next to him.

‘Hey, what happened? Did you get into trouble?’

Aaditya looked down at Samrat and just shook his head. They wandered over to the

basketball court where several boys were locked in a frenetic game. They sat down

near the court, Aaditya wistfully looking at the game. When the ball bounced over to

them, Aaditya picked it up, and was about to hand it back, when an urge came over

him. He looked at the basket, and sent a looping shot that went cleanly through the

basket. Several of the boys on the court whistled and one of them asked Aaditya if he

wanted to join them. Aaditya said he had something else to do and rejoined Samrat, a

smile on his face.

For old times sake.

‘Shit! That was some shot. Why don’t you try out for the college team or something?’

‘It’s nothing. Come on, let’s go grab a bite to eat.’

They sat down at a corner table at the cafeteria, eating their sandwiches when they

were joined by another boy.

‘Hey Sam. Hey Ghosh.’

The newcomer was Deepak, thin and wiry, and with his customary iPod earphones

plugged into his ears.

‘Hey iPod.’

Samrat’s calling him by the nickname always made him laugh, and Deepak grimace.

Deepak sat down and if Samrat could be summed up in one word as a bookworm, the

word for Deepak, not to put too delicate a point on it, would be a lech. The unlikely

couple had been the best of friends, and in the two months that Aaditya had been in

the college, they had become the closest things to friends he had in his new home.

Deepak immediately began scanning the cafeteria for likely objects of his attention.

Aaditya heard him whisper, ‘She’s looking at me!’

The ‘she’ referred to Surpiya, resident heartthrob of most of the boys in their college.

Supriya of the long legs. Supriya of the impish smile. Supriya of the cute accent.

And also, Supriya of the impossibly rich father and expensive tastes. That was a

combination which put her firmly out of the league of her many admirers.

‘In your dreams, iPod. She’s looking at our own Mister Tall, Dark and Handsome

here’, said Samrat, gesturing towards Aaditya. Aaditya tried to change the topic-

almost the last thing on his mind was flirting with some girl in college. But then when

Samrat nudged Aaditya again, he couldn’t resist but look at the three girls sitting

about a dozen feet away. Supriya was sipping a cup of coffee, but over the rim of the

cup, she was definitely looking at him. Aaditya stared right back. Their gazes met

for a few seconds, and then she turned away. Aaditya smiled to himself, correcting

himself that flirting was almost the last thing on his mind, but certainly not at the

absolute bottom of the list. As on the basketball court, memories came flooding back.

Memories he would rather not have dealt with right now. Standing well over six

feet tall, with the physique of an athlete, he had always had more than his fair share

of female admirers in school. The one thing he hated with a vengeance about his

appearance, his mop of unruly hair, somehow seemed to only enhance his appeal, and

so over time, he had learnt to make peace with the fact that he could never keep his

hair in place.

But that had been seemingly a different life. He had never imagined then that he

would be studying Economics at a Delhi college, with not the foggiest idea of what

he was going to do with his degree, if indeed he ended up getting one. Life had

seemed so certain, so simple, but as the last few months had taught him, just when

you thought you had things totally under control, life threw you a googly you couldn’t

possibly have anticipated.

‘Dude, you lost in thinking about her or what? Come on, we need to hurry, otherwise

we’ll be late for Macro class again. I do hope you’ve done your assignment.’

Just a few months earlier, Aaditya would have laughed at the thought of rushing from

class to class, being harangued for not doing homework. No, his place was in the

sky. Soaring above mere mortals, kissing the clouds. The only uniform that he had

considered worthy of wearing was that of a fighter pilot, the only worthy assignment

being a sortie with a fighter jet at his command. But for now, he would have to settle

for not being chewed up by the Professor for not having bothered to read up about the

Reserve Bank of India’s monetary policy.

***

Aaditya was still thanking his stars that the Professor had not picked on him, and did

not notice Supriya standing in the corridor till he almost bumped into her.

‘Hi. Aaditya, isn’t it?’

Aaditya had never seen her this close before, and he quickly saw that both her

reputation and her legion of admirers were well deserved.

‘Hi. My friends call me Aadi, and you must be the Supriya that half the college tries

to impress.’

‘Only half?’ she said, jokingly.

‘I was referring to the half that is made up of every boy in college.’

She smiled, and Aaditya could sense Samrat shuffling behind him.

‘Supriya, this is Sam. He’s in my class.’

‘You’re the one who came first or something, right? I’ve heard of you, Sam.’

Aaditya was beginning to wonder what Supriya wanted with him when two more girls

joined them.

‘Aadi, this is Anu and this is Suchi. Girls, this is Aaditya. I guess you’ve just been

here for a couple of months, right?’

Aaditya nodded and smiled at the two girls as Supriya continued.

‘Hey, we were going to grab some coffee. I figured since you’re new in college, you

may want to join us and get to meet some of the gang.’

Aaditya was thinking of what to say when he heard Samrat hissing in his ear.

‘Say yes, you moron.’

Ten minutes later, they were in front of a nearby coffee shop and as they entered,

Aaditya looked at Samrat and Deepak, whom they had called over. Both had wide

grins plastered on their faces.

‘Sam, you look you’ve won a lottery.’

‘Dude, she knows who I am!’

Deepak scowled and playfully punched Samrat on the shoulder.

‘Dork’.

When they entered and joined Supriya and her friends, Aaditya saw Sam and

Deepak’s expressions change to one of dismay. He realized that his friends had

perhaps imagined this to be a date with Supriya and her friends. Instead there were

four boys with the girls inside.

Samrat and Deepak had been planning all through the short walk to the café how they

would be at their charming and witty best. They had no idea of just how much their

new friend could turn on the charm. Having grown up literally among officers and

gentlemen, Aaditya knew well how to literally charm the pants off someone. Right

from the time he stood up to pull the chairs back so the ladies could sit, to the way

he insisted on starting his responses to them with a ‘Ma’am’. When Supriya heard of

Aaditya’s background, she leaned over and smiled.

‘An Air Force kid. I should have figured. Most guys are not so chivalrous nowadays.’

When Anu asked if the gang would like to meet up later in the evening to go dancing,

Supriya enthusiastically agreed, and before Aaditya knew it, plans had been made to

go to a disco.

Sam caught the look on Aaditya’s face, and was about to say something when Aaditya

motioned for him to stop.

‘I have a long day tomorrow, so sorry to be a spoilsport, but I need to get home early

guys.’

Supriya protested, but as much as Aaditya wanted to spend more time with her, he did

not want to tell her why he could not go dancing, and he most certainly did not want

the pity and platitudes that he knew would be forthcoming if he did tell her the real

reason. Perhaps on any other day, he would have tagged along, but tonight he was in

no mood to be reminded of his shortcomings. So he excused himself, and said that he

could not join them.

When they walked out, Samrat caught up with him.

‘Man, you should have come along. It’s no big deal.’

Aaditya stopped and looked at him.

‘That’s easy for you to say.’

Samrat looked at him apologetically.

‘Sorry, dude, you know that’s not what I meant. Look, screw them. Why don’t you

me and iPod meet up at my place. I’ve got the new Medal of Honor on my PS3, and

we can go and blow up some Taliban.’

Aaditya smiled. So far only Samrat and Deepak had learnt his full story, and he

was beginning to realize that of all the things that had gone wrong over the last few

months, he had at least been lucky to get a couple of really good guys as friends.

‘That sounds like a plan.’

***

Aaditya returned to his apartment just after ten o clock. On balance it had been a fun

evening- they had played on Sam’s PS3 for a couple of hours, and then Sam’s parents

had joined them for dinner. His father had asked the boys what they planned to do

after college. Samrat had already decided on an MBA, or rather, Aaditya thought, his

father had decided that for him. And so, even though they were only in First Year,

Sam had started planning on joining tutorials the next year to prepare him for the

admission tests. Deepak was nowhere as certain of what he wanted to do, but given

that every second person in their class was planning to try for an MBA, he replied

with a shrug of his shoulder that he guessed he was also going to join Sam for his

classes.

Then came Aaditya’s turn, and when he answered that he really did not know what he

wanted to do, he almost heard an audible gasp from Sam’s father. The awkwardness

had been defused by Sam’s mother who wheeled in dessert. As Aaditya listened to

Sam’s father talk about how important it was to have a plan for life, it kept reminding

him of how different his life may have been if he had been able to follow his plan. To

be honest, he knew he had a lot to be thankful for, but Aaditya hated having to live

with the regret of not being able to do what he had always dreamed of doing. And it

wasn’t just his career. He wanted to meet someone like Supriya without cringing at

the pity that he knew was inevitable when she got to know him better.

He sat down on the sofa in his living room and turned on the television, not to watch

anything in particular, but just trying to divert his mind. He willed himself to not think

too much about the things he didn’t have.

Please don’t go into a self-pity trip again. We’ve been there before and it is not a

pretty place.

When he realized that there was little else on offer other than the usual soaps, he

turned it off and got up to change. As he passed the side table outside his bedroom, he

paused to look down at the photo frames on it.

For most people, photographs are a way of preserving memories. A way of freezing in

time moments that have passed. For Aaditya, they served an additional purpose- they

acted as a constant reminder of the life he could have had if only a couple of things

had turned out differently.

There were a few photographs of Aaditya and his father. The elder Ghosh was as

tall as Aaditya, and Aaditya paused before the photos as he remembered his earliest

memories being that of looking up into his father’s smiling face. There were a couple

of photos of his father with his mother, but honestly Aaditya remembered nothing

of her. The woman who had given birth to him was no better than a stranger, having

shared less than three hours together in this world. She had died soon after giving

birth to him.

He showered and changed, and before he threw his clothes into a corner where the

cleaning lady would pick them up in the morning for washing, he remembered to

take out his good luck charm from his pocket. He ran his hands over the raised edges

of the round, embroidered patch of cloth. He felt the outline of the Hawk, soaring,

its talons bared, two crisscrossing lightning bolts below it. And then just four words

embroidered underneath.

No return without conquest.

The words mocked him now. There certainly had been no return. Not that evening.

Not ever since.

He put his father’s old squadron patch on his bedside table and then booted up his

computer. The wallpaper on his computer desktop was a collage of photos- all

showing his father in uniform. Most of them had Aaditya standing beside him, and

most showed them next to fighter planes. Aaditya smiled as he saw one photo- of him

and his father in the cockpit of a Sukhoi 30. He had sat in the back seat, devouring

every detail, imagining what a joy it must be to fly such a beast every day for a living.

Then there was a photo of him receiving the Silver medal in the National Cadet Corps

Flying Wing. His father stood a few feet away, pride apparent in his eyes.

Growing up among fighter planes and pilots, there had never been any real question

of what Aaditya would do when he grew up. It wasn’t that his father had ever pushed

him to follow in his footsteps, but for as long as he could remember, Aaditya had only

one dream- to be a fighter pilot. Growing up in various airbases, surrounded by pilots,

the dream of flying a fighter had long come to define his life. He had done everything

he needed to do to make that dream come true- join the NCC, fly as much as he

could- often accumulating more hours in the NCC Flying Wing’s gliders and light

planes than many active duty pilots did, and keeping himself supremely fit through

sports and martial arts. It had seemed like a no-brainer for him to join the National

Defence Academy straight out of school, and then make his dream come true by

joining the Indian Air Force.

But ultimately none of that had mattered. And here he was, with little left to show for

the life he once dreamed of, other than a collection of old photos, and the squadron

patch he kept with him at all times. He didn’t want to think about the past, but perhaps

today, there was no way he could avoid it. If his father had still been with him,

tomorrow would have been his birthday. When Aaditya had been growing up, an Air

Force officer’s salary may not have allowed his father to always shower him with

extravagant gifts, but his father had always made sure that Aaditya never felt the

absence of a mother. Every birthday was magnified into a memorable event, including

that one unforgettable time when, on Aaditya’s birthday, his father had allowed him to

sit in the back seat of a Sukhoi.

But while Aaditya had not been able to follow his dreams, he could still live them

vicariously. So, for the next hour, he expounded on the relative merits of the various

contenders for the Air Force’s new fighter contract on an online forum where he had

long come to be recognized as the resident expert when it came to anything to do with

fighter aircraft. He then logged onto his favorite air combat sim and flew a mission

where he obliterated an enemy nuclear plant and shot down a handful of fighters, once

again firmly establishing himself at the top of the Leaderboard, and more than making

up for the afternoon’s aborted mission.

At midnight, Aaditya lay down on his bed. In the drawer of his bedside table was the

letter that had changed his life.

We regret to inform you that Squadron Leader Mayukh Ghosh…

For three days after his father’s jet had gone missing during an exercise over the

Arabian Sea, Aaditya had kept his hopes alive. His father’s squadron mates and their

families had closed ranks around him, ensuring he was never alone, ensuring he had

food, ensuring that the young motherless boy whom they had collectively adopted

as their own never felt abandoned in this moment of need. Aaditya had then truly

appreciated what his father had told him about the Air Force being one big family,

and he was grateful for all the support he had got. But none of that could change the

fact that his father was not going to come back home again. After three days of frantic

searching in shark-infested waters, and with even the wreckage not recovered in the

deep seas, he had been given up as lost.

In one stroke, Aaditya’s life had been turned upside down. And if fate had left the

door even slightly open for him to continue with his life the way he had dreamed, he

had himself slammed it shut with what he had done in the following days.

Aaditya came to realize that perhaps his father had always known, with the instinct

of a career fighter pilot, that one day it might come to this. And so, he had prepared

meticulously- the apartment in Aaditya’s name, the family inheritances invested

in fixed deposits in Aaditya’s name, and a list of contacts, including a good friend

in Delhi who had helped Aaditya get into college and into his new life. His father,

Aaditya thought, even in death, had proved to be the best father in the world. It was

he who had thrown away all the dreams his father may have once had for him.

But tonight was not the time to think of that. Tonight was a time to remember all the

good times he had shared with his father. As he drifted off to sleep, he whispered to

himself, ‘Happy birthday, Dad.’

He dreamt of flying a Sukhoi, streaking through the skies at supersonic speed, the

world and worldly worries left thousands of feet below. But for a change, he did not

dream of flying alone. In the back seat was his father.

***

 

TWO

Aaditya barely made it in time for his first class the next morning, a combination

of having woken up late and also having decided to ride his bike to college. He had

bought his bike just a month ago, and was still getting used to it. At the time, it had

seemed like a bright idea, but now that he was faced with the practicalities of kick-

starting it, he was yet to work out a routine that did not leave him looking like a circus

acrobat, or gasping in pain as he put pressure on his right leg.

Transfemoral prosthesis. Trust the doctors to come with such a fancy word to

describe chopping off your leg and sticking an artificial and inconvenient contraption

in its place. As Aaditya entered his class, he reminded himself that he should

not really be blaming the doctors for chopping off his leg- he had been the one

responsible for that. And as for the contraption he now had attached below his right

thigh, it may not have been a real leg, but it sure beat hobbling along on one foot and

carrying crutches, as he had done for the first three months after the accident. More

than a year later, when he walked, nobody could tell that he had an artificial leg. That

was of course, unless they wanted to see him in shorts or, indeed, go dancing. The one

legged hop- now that would be a sure way to impress Supriya, wouldn’t it?

‘You seem to be in a good mood. So, did you catch up with Supriya later at night?’

As Aaditya sat down at his desk he just gave a look of sheer exasperation at Sam’s

comment. Sam reached over and whispered into Aaditya’s ear.

‘Take it from someone who’s neither older, nor much wiser, but you need to stop

thinking of what you don’t have and think of what you do have. You’re tall, fair and

good looking- short of casting you in a bloody fairness cream ad, I don’t know what

else I can do to cheer you up.’

Aaditya grinned. Trust Sam to break the ice like that.

After classes, Aaditya had been invited for tea to Wing Commander Asthana’s house.

He had been a batchmate of his father’s and had helped Aaditya settle down in Delhi

when he had moved back to Delhi from Pune after his father’s accident, both for his

treatment and also to move into the apartment his father had left for him. Aaditya

always felt a bit uncomfortable meeting his father’s former colleagues. They both

brought back memories of the life he had left behind, and even if he was imagining

it, he always thought their eyes reflected the unasked question of how he could have

thrown it all away.

An hour later, Aaditya was on his bike, riding home. While he had not shown much

interest to Sam, he had not told him that he had already taken Supriya’s number,

either. He may have been missing a leg, and he certainly did not want any woman to

go out with him out of pity, but he retained enough sense to know that he would be a

fool to not call Supriya again. She was a looker for sure, but more importantly, he had

really been comfortable with her, so there was really no harm in going out with her

and seeing where things went from there.

His bike was almost halfway home, threading through the dense traffic near the

Delhi Zoo, on his way to cross the bridge across the Yamuna river and then on to

Mayur Vihar in the suburbs, where his apartment was. Suddenly, he saw a bus careen

towards him from the opposite direction. The bus driver was either drunk, or didn’t

know how to drive, or both, because he was weaving in and out of his lane. At the last

minute, Aaditya swerved his bike away to avoid the bus.

‘Bastard!’ Aaditya screamed over his shoulder as he continued home, trying to think

of what he’d say to Supriya when he call her, but the bus bearing down at him had

brought back other, less pleasant, memories.

BK or AK?

That mystifying question had been the first words he had heard when he had

awakened to find himself on a hospital bed. The day after the search for his father had

been called off, he had pleaded with the authorities to keep looking. Perhaps his father

had just drifted away. Perhaps he was unconscious and had not seen or heard any of

the helicopters. The officer in charge of the search, a man who had known Aaditya

since he had been in diapers, had looked to be on the verge of tears, but said that there

was nothing more to be done. Aaditya should have known better, but then he had

been only seventeen, and had just lost the only family he had ever known. So he had

helped himself to his father’s stash of Scotch, and then screaming out his rage at the

unfairness of it all, had gone roaring down the highway on his bike.

By the time he saw the bus, it had been too late.

Below the knee or above the knee? That was what the doctor had been asking, as

Aaditya realized later. There perhaps is no good way to lose a leg, but as Aaditya

was to learn, if you do lose one, pray it’s BK. An amputation above the knee makes

recovery much tougher. The Air Force had paid for the best care available, and he

had been fitted with a state of the art prosthetic leg, but as the doctor told him, with

an amputation above the knee, the average patient needed 80% more strength to carry

himself along than a normal person. Aaditya had beaten those odds, turning to the

gym with a frenzy, building his already strong physique into solid muscle, but he had

not been so lucky when, after six months, he had worked up the courage to ask his

father’s Commanding Officer whether he still had a chance to be a fighter pilot.

Chopra uncle, as Aaditya had known him for most of his life, had looked up Aaditya

nearly every day since his father had been lost. He had told Aaditya that he could

certainly still join the Air Force, provided he could pass the fitness tests. That had

been the good news. The bad news was that the doctors had recommended that even

if he were to be accepted into the Air Force, it be ideally for ground duties, since they

were not sure his leg could take the strain of flying. At best he could be allowed to

pilot helicopters, but fast jets were out. The strains of pulling high G forces could be

dangerous, and if he ever had to use an ejection seat, his leg would never be able to

withstand the force.

Aaditya had wondered if he had made the right decision in giving up on joining the

Air Force. He knew the answer. No matter how much he regretted not joining the

Air Force, working in it every day, next to fighters and fighter pilots, yet knowing

he could never be one of them was far worse than being in a world far removed from

it all. Still rattled by the near accident and by the memories it had brought back, he

stopped his bike near the Old Fort, wanting to grab some fresh air and clear his head.

And perhaps call Supriya.

It was now almost nine at night, and while a few hours ago the grounds would have

been full of families strolling or taking a ride in the boats on the small lake in front of

the fort, at this hour it was totally deserted. There were a few food stalls open outside

the front gates, and he picked up some chips, and munching on them, walked towards

the lake. He had been lost in thought and soon realized just how far he had ventured

when he turned to see the traffic in the distance behind him, their lights dimly lighting

up the darkness. Oh well, he was in no hurry to go anywhere, and the cool October

weather in Delhi was perfect, so he walked some more and entered the main fort

premises, walking through the ruins till he found a secluded spot near a large tree that

was just a few meters away from the pond. He sat down there to call Supriya.

She picked up on the third ring.

‘Hey Supriya, it’s Aadi here.’

‘Hey there! So did you decide to make up for ditching me last night?’

Aaditya smiled. Good looking and nice. So they did still make girls that way.

‘Here’s a deal- don’t ask me to dance, and if you’re free tomorrow, I’ll treat you to

dinner anyplace you like.’

A brave offer since he heard she came from a pretty rich family, but he hoped that she

would not ask for the Taj. And if she did, what the hell, Aaditya was feeling happy

and reckless enough.

Before she could answer, someone stumbled into Aaditya, sending his phone flying

onto the grass.

‘What the…’

Before he could complete his sentence, he looked up to see a very large man, dressed

in black. Aaditya could not make out many of his features, but saw that his face was

as black as the night. Figuring that this did not look like the kind of man to get into a

tangle with and not wanting any trouble, he got up and moved out of the man’s way to

pick up his phone.

That was when he heard the scream.

***

The scream that pierced the night was high-pitched and shrill, but the moaning

that followed left no doubt that it was a man in utter agony. The man who had just

bumped into Aaditya raced towards the sound, moving at a speed faster than Aaditya

would have believed someone his size capable of.

Probably some gang related violence.

Not wanting to get caught up in it, Aaditya started to turn towards the pond and make

his way back to the gate, which was a few hundred meters away. That was when he

saw a struggle in the distance. He could not see too many details in the dark, but what

was obvious was that a large figure, likely the man who had just bumped into him,

was grappling with a much smaller person. Her long hair made it obvious that she was

a woman.

Aaditya never liked getting into fights. Always more trouble than they’re worth,

his father used to say. Walk away if all you’re fighting for is your ego. Defuse the

situation if you can, and only then fight if you’re left with no option.

Walking away was not an option, not when it looked like there was a woman in

trouble. However, Aaditya had every intention of settling this with little or no

fighting. He figured it was a local goon who was taking advantage of the darkness

and the secluded location to get frisky with a woman. Most likely he would just scoot

when he saw that there was someone else there.

Aaditya rushed towards them. With his leg, he could no longer sprint like he once

did in school, but he moved as fast as he could. When he was closer, he saw a man

sprawled on the ground, but the other man and the woman were still locked in a

struggle.

‘Let her go!’

He screamed at the top of his voice, and the man turned to look at him. He was now

close enough to see the man more clearly. He was huge- at least a few inches taller

than Aaditya and much broader across the chest and shoulders. His forehead seemed

to have a prominent ridge above the eyebrows, and Aaditya was wondering what that

could be, when the woman struck.

She was small, perhaps no more than five feet six inches and looked thin, almost

waiflike, but she struck with a speed and precision that shocked Aaditya. Her hand

snaked out and hit the large man on the neck, sending him down in a heap, grabbing

at his neck and gurgling in agony.

Aaditya stopped in his tracks.

What the hell had he got into?

The woman looked at him for an instant, and he could now see her long, flowing

hair, cascading down to her waist, and she seemed to be wearing a fitting white suit,

similar to what divers wore. But what struck him the most was her face. Her eyes

were blazing as if on fire, and she had a dark red smear running down the middle of

her forehead. Even though she was much smaller than him, Aaditya felt truly afraid as

her eyes bore through him.

He was about to back off, when four more men suddenly appeared, seemingly out

of nowhere. They looked to be carbon copies of the men the woman had already

dispatched- large, well built, and dressed in black. Two of them took out what looked

like curved blades and lunged at the woman. Aaditya wasn’t sure what to do- the

woman certainly looked like she could take care of herself, yet he didn’t want to just

walk away, leaving her facing these four new attackers. His choice was made for him

when one of the men saw him and rushed at him.

Aaditya was in great physical shape, having been an athlete for most of his school

years, and had a Brown Belt in Karate to boot, so he certainly knew how to take care

of himself. As his attacker came closer and reached out to grab Aaditya, he side-

stepped him, grabbed the man’s wrist, and using the larger man’s momentum against

him, sent him sprawling to the ground. Aaditya turned to see that the woman had sent

one attacker down, but was now trading blows with her other attacker, a blade in her

own hand. The two of them moved in a deadly rhythm, circling each other, looking

for an opening, and striking and blocking with lightning fast speed. Aaditya would

have kept watching, but he now had big problems of his own. Two big problems.

Two men, including the one he had sent down, were now running towards him. As

tough as he thought he was, he wasn’t sure he could take on both of these giants, and

not having any way of backing off now, he decided to use surprise to his advantage

and struck first. His feet couldn’t move as fast as they once could, and he certainly

was limited in his ability to kick, but he moved towards the nearer man, and landed

a series of two quick punches- one to the solar plexus that winded the big man, and

as he doubled over, a second blow to the temple that sent the man staggering back.

Aaditya had put most of his strength into the blows and was shocked when the man

stood up a split second later and grinned at him, baring a mouth full of yellowed and

deformed teeth.

Now I’m in deep shit.

The second man struck out at Aaditya with a punch. Aaditya saw it coming and

blocked it, his right hand coming down in an arc to deflect the momentum of the

man’s blow, and followed through with a kick to the man’s shin. The blow jarred

Aaditya’s right leg and sent pain shooting through his body, but the metal and carbon

fibre artificial leg did much more damage than his real leg would ever have. The man

grabbed his shin and staggered down on one knee. Before Aaditya could do anything

else, total pandemonium erupted around him.

He felt a gust of wind blow around him, and sand being blown across his face, before

he heard the humming noise behind him. It was no louder than a vacuum cleaner, but

when he turned to look, he saw a large flying vehicle land just next to the pond. He

could not make out too many details in the dark, but it was easily as large as a fighter

jet, and seemed to be white in colour. It had a raised canopy, and a nose that was split

and curved upwards, like a bull’s horns. As the vehicle landed on the sand, the canopy

slid open, and a man jumped out.

He was tall, perhaps as tall as the four men in black Aaditya and the woman had been

grappling with, but while they looked like gym-buffed bodybuilders, he was all lean

muscle. He wore a striped bodysuit, and as he came closer, Aaditya thought they

looked like tiger stripes. His hair was matted, almost in dreadlocks and he carried

what looked like a small trident in his hand.

If the woman had looked like she could dish out violence, this newcomer took it to

a whole new level. He rolled on the ground, evading a blow from one attacker and

casually slashed him in the back with the trident, sending him down, and even before

he had fully gotten up from the roll, he had implanted the trident in another man’s

stomach. In no more than a couple of seconds, he had killed or maimed two of the

giants, and stood facing the remaining two, a smile playing at the edges of his mouth

as he said.

‘Want to dance, dear daityas?’

The two men rushed at him, blades glistening in the dark. The woman intercepted

one, sliding on the ground, her legs wrapping around his, sending him down, as she

gracefully rolled onto one knee, and before Aaditya’s astonished eyes, brought her

blade down in one smooth move. When Aaditya looked up, he saw that the last man

in black was also down, lying at the feet of the man in matted hair. He felt a surge of

panic as the man walked towards him, bloodied trident in hand, but the woman came

between them, gently shaking her head. The two of them entered the flying vehicle

and in an instant, it had taken off and disappeared from view.

Aaditya moved to a corner of the grounds and slumped behind a fallen oak tree.

Getting into the odd scrape in school was one thing- the violence he had witnessed

was of a totally different nature. Sitting there among six dead or dying men, he

fumbled for his phone, wondering if he should call the police.

What would he tell them? How could he explain what he had just witnessed? That

was when he saw the glowing cylinder lying a few feet away from him. He picked it

up gingerly and was about to take a closer look when he heard another flying vehicle

approach. He looked and saw it in the distance- it was a different ship- black in colour

and shaped like a saucer. One of the men writhing on the ground seemed to be in

contact with the pilot and said, presumably into some communication system.

‘They got away. We need help.’

If help was what they were looking for, they did not get it. Some sort of beam flashed

from the ship, and one by one, the men lying on the ground were incinerated, reduced

to ash in an instant.

Aaditya lay hiding behind the tree, not daring to breathe. When he heard the sound of

the ship receding, and got up to see a clear sky, he ran faster than he had in years to

his bike and sped home.

***


Vimana: A Science Fiction Thriller

Mainak Dhar’s Vimana is our new Thriller of the Week!

Mainak Dhar’s Vimana is here to sponsor lots of free Mystery and Thriller titles in the Kindle store:

 

by Mainak Dhar
3.9 stars – 98 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

 

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AMAZON.COM TOP 5 SCIENCE FICTION BESTSELLER! To be published in paperback by Penguin India, early 2012’Gods’ fought a terrible war in our skies 15,000 years ago. They have returned to finish it.Ancient texts refer to ‘Gods’ flying in craft called vimanas and waging war with what sound like nuclear weapons. These accounts are today classified as myth or legend.What if they turned out to be real?Vimana is an edge-of your seat sci-fi technothriller about a young college student who stumbles upon an ancient war between good and evil. A war that we thought was merely a part of our ancient myths and legends, but unknown to us, is still being waged everyday in our skies. As the forces of darkness conspire to unleash worldwide devastation to coincide with the End Times prophecies in 2012, he discovers his hidden destiny is to join the forces of light in bringing this war to a conclusion. At stake will be the continued existence of the human race.Star Wars meets Transformers in this exciting new thriller that will keep all science fiction fans satisfied.BONUS CONTENT:First two chapters of Heroes R Us, the new superhero thriller by Mainak Dhar
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“The police have received a phone call about a body. A young woman.”Press photographer Jude Baxendale lives a perfectly normal life in a perfectly normal town. Her son is about to go to university and has a lovely girlfriend, she has time to work on photography outside of work, and generally...
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If It Bleeds (Ravenbridge Trilogy Book 1)
By: Bernie Crosthwaite
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Beth Bryson lives quietly and contentedly in the small seaside town of Bride's Bay. Her life revolves around Nell, her niece; close friends Gina and Carol as well as her part-time job. Two new-comers move to the town, causing interest; particularly the vivacious Melissa, who has moved to the area...
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Art theft. Coded messages. A high-level threat. Despite her initial disbelief, Doctor Genevieve Lenard discovers that she is the key that connects stolen works of art, cyphers and sinister threats. Betrayed by the people who called themselves her friends, Genevieve throws herself into her insurance...
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Brews, baked goods, and bump-offs… After celebrating her dreaded fortieth birthday, Piper is finally ready to get back to her cafe. Not to mention the steamy vampire she's gotten nice and cozy with lately.Unfortunately, a knock on the door ruins it all.Before she knows it, Piper is stuck...
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Finding something interesting to do during the holidays can be hard.How about unearthing a terrible plan that could destroy everything you know, and a secret society hidden throughout history?Or meeting new and unusual friends that will stay with you for the rest of your life?Ghost stories and...
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A little getaway takes a deadly turn, and everyone has something to hide...Morgan Murphy has always longed for a romance for the ages. And she’s found it with the love of her life, husband Kyle Murphy—until their spicy marriage suddenly starts to cool off.Is Kyle preoccupied and distant because...
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A Little Getaway: A Spicy Suspense Thriller
By: Bonnie Traymore
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Meet Max Donovan, a man who was kicking butt when Jack Reacher was still in diapers...Vietnam veteran Max Donovan is in Bangkok, and very hungover, when his friend “Fat” Freddie Fields is arrested in San Francisco for the murder of an Australian diplomat.He knows his old buddy would never hurt a...
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Vampire private eye Samantha Moon is hired to track down a purported lake monster that could wreak havoc on local tourism.But when she delves deeper into the sightings that have spooked the residents of the lakeside community, she crosses paths with the case of two missing boys.And with one...
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One werewolf wants her as his mate. The other will do anything to protect her.In the blink of an eye, 17-year-old Demi's entire world changes forever when she learns that the father she never even knew is really a werewolf, which makes her half-werewolf. And he's not just any werewolf, but the...
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Half-Wolf (The Alpha's Daughter Book 1)
By: Nicholas Jordan
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A Free Excerpt From Our Thriller of the Week, Jens E. Huebner’s The Mummy Maker’s Daughter

Jens E. Huebner’s The Mummy Maker’s Daughter:

by Jens E. Huebner
4.4 stars – 5 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
The Mummy Maker’s Daughter returns us to a land steeped in mystery and magic. The detailed storytelling paints a picture of ancient Egypt in all its glory. Jens E. Huebner has woven a delightfully dark tale around what must have been the most remarkable period of Egyptian history…So stoke up the fire, draw the curtains and put your feet up in order to enjoy this delightful tale of love, intrigues and mummies in old Egypt.
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Prologue 

iteru (Nile) 

Big Boney, an ancient Nile crocodile named as such  by the locals because of its deformed spine and protruding vertebrae, had a hard time fitting the  torso of a man into its extra wide mouth.  A few large teeth had broken off through the years but there were plenty enough left for it to keep itself from starvation. This family of reptiles often live a hundred years or even more, and Old Boney had seen a good number of Nile floods pass by.  It even survived several severe inundations, after finding refuge in a winding cave where the floodwaters weren’t able to climb any higher than its perch.

 

As soon as the conditions were more suitable for hunting and the Nile waters became calmer, it ventured out into the wide expanse of the mighty river.  There were a lot of animals which had succumbed and it always eagerly anticipated the Nile flood season each year.

 

The decayed body part it was concentrating on now, was still strong and sinewy even though it was putrid, and the remaining flesh, soft.  In the early morning light, the Nile’s riverbanks were peaceful, except for this black lump of rotting flesh providing contrast to the lush backdrop of papyrus reeds and water lilies.  Black and white mottled Egyptian geese flew overhead to their morning feeding grounds – their red beaks providing a stark contrast to their bodies.

 

A flock of Ibis waded in the mud, stabbing at various frogs and other things they saw in the muddy water, while trying to get vegetable matter from the bottom, and keeping a wary lookout for the crocodiles which reigned supreme in the Nile.  A hippopotamus and her baby were nearby, creating a large mud puddle as they waded along the bottom of the river.  The sun was just at the horizon and as soon as it appeared, everyone and everything seemed to spring to life.

 

Clearly evident in the remains of the man which Old Boney was eating, was an enlarged hole in the torso where the heart had been.  This hole had  ragged edges which were still visible, even though the torso was badly decomposed.  After using this body part as its main course, Old Boney moved sluggishly along the rich soil of the river’s side, swishing aside papyrus clumps with its massive and tail, as it discovered a few more remains lying close by. There was a human leg minus a foot, and then another a few yards further along the bank.

 

Hidden under some bushes were the two arms and hands, and buried in a shallow grave was the man’s head, which it uncovered last by poking a long and tooth-filled snout into the mud and after making a satisfied grunting sound, the croc tossed the head into the air then swallowed it whole.  Old Boney raised up on his legs to look across the expanse of mother Nile, as puffs of moisture – visible because of the cooler morning air along the river – emerged from nostrils at the end of his elongated head.

 

This particular human head had been there for some time and there was much decay and a certain grotesqueness about the flesh, which had distended and turned purple and black and slimy, like forgotten meat.

 

Breakfast complete and eyeing the competition which had smelled the croc’s meal and were headed its way, the reptile slid into the warm Nile waters and swam off, weaving its enormous tail, half sunken into the mud-swirled warm water, back and forth for navigation.  It would not need to eat again for weeks.

 

Right after the croc’s departure, a few locals came down to the riverbank to wash clothes and bathe.  They yawned and stretched out their arms, and spoke softly with neighbors who were also arriving at the edge of mother Nile.  Far off, someone was playing a morning hymn on a lute and the soft sounds floated over the early bathers and washer women, combining with the amber dawn light to create an Old Masters  painting.

 

A light mist rose from the warm waters of the Nile, and this hid the surface of the water, as well as the bathers’ legs.  One woman waved to a passing fisherman who was pushing his boat along close to shore, looking for a few fish who liked to make their homes in the weeds close to the bank.  He stopped for a few moments, cast his net, then brought in three fish and held them aloft proudly.

 

Shading their eyes, the group looked to the pyramids and as the sun rose, its brilliant rays hit the white limestone covering and golden cap, sending beams of light across the Red and Black Land.

 

“I see Ra is about to Go Forth By Day,” commented an old woman.

 

“Let’s do the same, daughter.”  They all moved on to the day’s business, as life in Ancient Egypt resumed its vibrant rhythm.

 

_________________________________________________________

 

Chapter 1

(It begins and ends)

 

Mery

I am this pure lotus which

went forth from the sunshine,

which is at the nose of Re;

I have descended that I may seek it

for Horus, for I am the

pure one who issued from the fen.

 

 

My name is Meryneith and my father is a great maker of mummies.  He was the best mummy maker in the whole of Egypt and he has shown me many things.  Father and mother called me Mery, because they said I made them smile. I loved them so much, with every part of me.  It has always been so, except for the dark time which I remembered only in my dreams, and which came a very long time ago when I was four Nile floods old.

___________________________________________________

 

I wanted to learn everything I could about what father did, because one day, I wish to perform the same rituals – so our citizens may enter the afterlife and enable Anubis to weigh their hearts against a feather lighter than a desert breeze.  I wanted to become a doctor, too, and help the sick – especially the children.  I loved children!

 

Even though I am already eight Nile floods old this day, father said it will take a good while to learn everything about preparing my people for the afterlife.  He also told me that there has never been a woman mummy maker before this, but this knowledge does not draw me away from my chosen profession.

 

“When the time comes,” I told him fiercely, “I’ll write to the government department in charge of mummy makers and get my permit.  You’ll see!”

 

Father just smiled and patted my short, black hair.

____________________________________________

 

“Yes, yes, daughter.  When the time comes we shall apply for the permit so you can perform the rituals,” father told me.  “I know you can do anything your little heart wishes.  You were always that way, and may you remain in the gods’ favor for your entire life.  As well as getting the permit you need, I’ve no doubt you’ll tell those old blowhards in the government just how much  you need that permit and where to go to get it, as well!”

 

That made me laugh.  I thought about everything that was around me constantly, and about wanting to do so many things that sometimes, I couldn’t fall asleep at night. I thought about when I grew up and who I would marry and who my friends would be, and about our country of Egypt.  I would even thought about how people would live in Egypt many lives into the future, after perhaps, the Nile has grown wider and even after it didn’t flood anymore. That our mighty river wouldn’t flood every year was a horrific thought to all of Egypt’s citizens.  It was our lifeline to food and transportation and everything we needed to live.

 

The annual inundation was at the core of every citizen’s life and I had a hard time imagining what it would be like without it.

____________________________________________________________

 

We often sat in granduncle’s garden and when he spoke the words, he would guide my hand so that I could learn how it was put onto paper.  He told me that making the hieroglyphics correctly was so important because later, I would try and read them and be unable to remember what on earth I had written, and that would be a big waste of time!  Granduncle had a fountain in the garden and I felt the cooling spray on my face as we sat there and I studied and practiced for hours and hours at a time.

____________________________________________________________

 

Granduncle said that those who came after us could learn from our mistakes, but unless we were able to let them know how we came to do what we did, that our great Egyptian civilization would come to an end!  I cried when I heard this but he told me quickly, “Not right away, my child.  It won’t happen immediately.”

______________________________________________________

 

Father did not share the mistrust, even hatred, which most Egyptian citizens had against Nubians.  Kemsa’s skin was the rich color of ebony wood and Thoth’s was like mine – a shade lighter than my parents and much lighter than most other Egyptians.

Father also told me that he doesn’t know why people are different colors.  He supposed that is was so in all of nature, and forever will be until the end of time, and that Ra designed everyone and every creature that way, because each of them has a purpose in Egypt and each had to make its own way in the world.

 

Father also told me that it doesn’t matter what your skin  color is and that it’s very important to live a pure life, and be fair and just and kind, and respectful in all of your actions.  He told me that if a person does that, when they are ready to cross over the river Styx, Anubis will be able to weigh their heart justly, and they will join those  who have passed before them.

_____________________________________________________

 

I wrote down everything I listened to and looked at and learned about, in one of my books, so that I remembered every word mother and father taught me.

 

Then, I imagined that perhaps, far in the future when the Nile has flooded hundreds of times, someone will find my papyrus scrolls and books, and wonder who wrote about such important subjects such as mummification and the afterlife, and how a mere girl would know such things!

 

Father says that even the knowledge we have now about the cosmos and death and life and love is a mere sliver of our knowledge.  He said that what we know now, just leads us to the future and so much more.  My father was a great man and I loved him so much!

_______________________________________________

 

As I was thinking about all of this, I figured out how to make a new thing to store my own stories and knowledge in.  I called it a book and the name came to me suddenly as did the idea, when I decided to cut pieces of papyrus into squares, lay them on top of each other, and then bind them with a couple of thongs of leather, one on each end of the stack of papyrus sheets.  It took up a whole lot less room than rolls of papyrus scrolls and it was easy to write in,  as well.

 

When I first showed this to father he told me he had never seen such a place to keep words before!  People may use my ideas to store their knowledge and I could be famous!  Perhaps pharaoh will invite me to court to read my stories!

 

__________________________________________________

 

I wanted to  teach so much that I would set a few stools outside when Ra started to go down each day and before supper, and with my book on my knee, would tell the other children stories as they gathered around, often squatting down onto the sandy soil of the alleyway or on lintel stones in the doorways of their nearby houses, as children often do.

 

The houses which surrounded us were owned by other mummy makers, as we had our own special neighborhood. A few of the children would come into our neighborhood, but I didn’t know where they lived.

 

Sometimes my friend Thoth was there, but a lot of times he was not.  I couldn’t tell if he wanted to learn to read, or if he just wanted some company and a friend to talk to.  I loved to talk!  That older boy Kemsa was always there.  A few times a girl whose skin was the same as Kemsa, showed up, but she only stayed for a while, then would disappear.  Perhaps her family took her away to another nome in Egypt.

 

One day, after the other children had left, Kemsa brought me a beautiful flower.  I looked at him in awe as it was the first time we had actually been face to face.  When my skin started to feel clammy and my heart beat faster, I told myself that perhaps he was attracted to me as I was to him,  and that this must be the ‘alluring’ that mother told me about.

 

He was as shy as I was when he handed the beautiful flower to me. His smile was so infectious that I smiled, too.  Finally, he introduced himself as Kemsa, and I, making a short bow, said ‘Meryneith’, but I then added that ‘my friends call me Mery.’

 

‘Well, little one,’ he had told me – ‘I shall call you Mery.’

 

After a quick salute, he ran off but looked back before disappearing around the corner.  My heart raced and I made a short prayer to Isis that I would keep Kemsa as my friend for all eternity.

 

I remembered that time how my other friend, Thoth, got jealous at this and jumped on Kemsa’s back when he passed by Thoth, and they fought.  I tried to break them up by pulling Thoth away from Kemsa because I didn’t want either of them to get hurt, but couldn’t, and my dress got ripped.

 

When I asked mother about it later she just told me it was the way of boys, and to not worry about it.  We sat together afterwards and talked about boys and girls, as she helped me to repair the hole in my dress.

 

______________________________________________

 

Suddenly, father coughed to catch my attention, and I looked up.  “Watch, Mery.  See how this heart is the center of a man’s soul and the seat of his intelligence.”

 

“Is it the seat of a woman’s intelligence, too?”

 

Father gave me a stern look.  “Yes, child, now help me with the herbs and linen and sawdust so we may make our neighbor look good for his family.”

 

I picked up a sweet smelling jar of herbs and took it over to father, after laying down my stylus and book and getting up off of the low stool.  The herbs were made by a group of women who lived close to the temple complex, but I had never seen them because father told me one day that mummy makers were not welcomed by the priests there.

 

I asked him why and he told me ‘because I think that they want to get as much money from the grieving families as they can, first.’  Then he just shook his head and pretended not to care about the subject.

 

At one time, I tried my own mixture of herbs at home and pounded and pounded them with a pestle and mortar.  When father was in the mummy room one day I carefully took the jar in to show him, but he sniffed it then stepped back, with his eyes watering.

________________________________________________

 

Chapter 2

 

Kemsa

Hail to you, you having come as Kehpri,

even Khepri who is the creator of gods.

You rise and shine on the back

of your mother, the sky, having appeared

in glory as king of the gods.

Your mother Nut shall use her arms on

your behalf in making greeting.

 

Mery and Kemsa – the latter having achieved the status of police chief and prefect of a city quarter because of his popularity with city officials and most police officers, along with his officers and a couple of government officials, were all huddled around a narrow, dark alley located in the dingier part of the neighborhood.

 

Thebes was one of the largest cities of its time and neighborhoods varied between old and rundown, all the way to middle class and beyond, to pharaoh’s Ramesseum and a multitude of palaces.  The Valley of the Kings lay across the Nile.

 

In this particular alleyway in Thebes, garbage lay in heaps in various corners and the fine dust and sand had blown in and covered it all.  Very old stones form the walls of homes and buildings along the narrow street.

 

Even though she’s intently focused on the two bodies sprawled awkwardly halfway up a wall, Mery looked up at the surrounding adobe and stone bricks of the old building and then at the ground below the two men, slumped above their own blood which had slowly seeped into the hard-packed sand and dirt of the street.

 

She’s a young woman now, as eight years have passed since she started to study the rituals of her father the mummy maker, and she remained intensely involved in why death occurs, and why people kill other people.  Mery’s goal is to become a mummy maker or a doctor, because why death and sickness happen, fascinated her.

 

While she studied the scene clinically, Kemsa split his attention between the active crime scene,  his officers, the investigation, and Mery – who for the moment remained unaware that he’s looking at her.  Kemsa was a few years older than Mery and has grown into his manhood well, and he’s both handsome and fit.  He wore his Nubian-styled linen kilt at a jaunty angle – a fact which hasn’t gone unnoticed by Mery, throughout their childhood years and into adulthood.

 

A banner showing his rank is slung across one shoulder, making him look like a Phoenician pirate.  He loved to wear a couple of gold earrings and this made him even more like  a rogue in her eyes.

 

Kemsa inched towards Mery, but very focused, she wandered off to study a patch of the sandy-colored wall and her attention was drawn to an oddly-shaped pattern of blood.  Some of the blood had dried differently and there were various parts of the victims’ skulls embedded in it in a circular pattern.

 

It looks just a circle of stones, she told herself.  I’ve heard sailors tell stories of a far Northern land that has many circles of large stones. Using a pair of tweezers, she picked up the fragments and deposited them carefully in a finely-woven piece of linen and after twisting the white cloth, now rapidly turning pink, she put it in a satchel slung over her shoulder.

 

Mery’s satchel had become part of her being, now she’s an adult, and it rarely left her shoulder or side.  This is my fifth one and I’ll need another soon, she told herself as she looked at the battered one she’s currently using.

 

Major Aapep gestured with his hands towards Mery, who had squatted down and was digging in the hard-packed sand and dirt of the alleyway with a small, copper-bladed trowel.  Aapep was Kemsa’s second in command and works, albeit grudgingly, under Kemsa’s command.

 

Mery kept a lot of implements neatly tied into a roll of cloth like a surgeon and frequently changed out one for the other throughout her investigation.

 

The major was loud and obnoxious, covered with blotches like a lizard, and sweat ran down his forehead like tributaries of the Nile.  Every now and then he wiped a filthy cloth over his face and neck and head, trying to rid himself of these odorous patches of dampness.

____________________________________________________________

 

Mery moved closer to Kemsa and whispered into his ear.  Her five feet didn’t match up well to his six plus height.  “Would you like to come over to my house tonight?  I think I can persuade mother and father to go to bed early.  We can sit on the roof and I’ll cut some barley bread and feed it to you, because mother makes the best barley bread in the city, and she makes it with honey and sesame and…”

 

“Stop!  My stomach is rumbling enough already!  Can I bring some barley beer?”

Mery kissed him quickly and shyly on the cheek.  “As long as you don’t bring the major, too.”

 

“I promise.  No major. I’ve had enough of him for the day.”

 

“If you can stay awhile, we can talk about some of your unsolved cases.  Perhaps…”

 

“Little one, I can most assuredly tell you that if I bring some barley beer and we sit on your roof until we’re stuffed with your mother’s bread and baked fish, and linger in the embrace of the moonlight and who knows what else, that I will definitely not be talking about unsolved cases!”

 

He turned with a smile and saluted her, just as he did when they were children, and Mery watched him until his strong and muscular back disappeared around a corner.  She blushed as her gaze hung on to the last possible glimpse of his back, and then she blushed even further as her gaze slipped to his lower torso and legs.

 

________________________________________________________

 

About a half hour later, she turned right, then left, and is at her front doorway.  Entering the house, which is in a tidy and middle class neighborhood, she immediately plopped her satchel onto the floor, turned to a burnished copper mirror hanging in the entryway, then made a small blessing and offering of fruit to the gods.  An intricate and beautifully-carved statue of the ibis-headed god Thoth sat on a small table.  The body was dark wood carved into a feather pattern and the head and legs were made from antiqued bronze.  She fingered it tenderly, then returned it to its rightful place.

 

Almost next to this table was another, where Mery and her mother kept their cosmetic pots.  They were all knocked over and powder and oil were stuck to the table.  In the half light, she peered at the copper mirror on the wall.  There’s a crude and badly written message on it and she could barely make it out.  She peered closer.  “Only gods…may… enjoy eternal…love.”

 

“What in Egypt…” she asked herself, as she continued to look for her mother.

She called out to her parents, but when there’s no reply, Mery wandered through to the back part of her house where her mother had her ceramics studio.  It’s almost dark and Mery turned the corner to the pottery kiln and stumbled over something which was sticking out from a corner.

 

She looked down and saw that the object on the floor was her mother’s leg.  She screamed, and pulled her mother’s body out from behind a cabinet.

 

Her father was behind her mother, so she screamed again and pulled his body out as well.  It’s a struggle, but in her grief she has found superhuman strength.  Both of her parents had been horribly murdered.  Their hearts had been gouged from their bodies and blood had spurted up the walls as far as the ceiling, and across the room in a eerie but unusual pattern similar to shooting stars.

 

Her analytical side was already thinking about the scene, while her emotional side poured out scream after anguished scream, over and over again.  After lighting an oil lamp to search the area, her screams settle into a ragged sobbing.

 

Don’t worry, beloved mother and father.  I’ll find your hearts so you can find joy with Ra in the afterlife.  There’s no doubt that after Anubis weighs your heart against the lightest of feathers, that you will be able to enter into your new lives over the river Styx.  I promise you –  I’ll search for your killer until the day I die.

 

Then, she collapsed over her parents and their coagulating blood started to seep into her clothing. After a few minutes she revived, composed her parents’ bodies, straightened herself up and walked out of the door like a zombie, heading for the police station.

 

Mery looked down and noticed in a detached way, that her dress was no longer a transparent white linen, but soaked with a sticky red gore – and that it’s turned into a horrific pink color, as the stain spread out and took on a life of its own.

 

______________________________________________

 

Chapter 3

 

Thoth

O my heart which I had from my mother!

O my heart which I had from my mother!

O my heart of my different ages!  Do not

stand up as a witness against me!

 

Meryneith sat restlessly at the home of her mentor and granduncle, Suten Anu.  The first room of his house had a couple of settees and a chair, plus a desk where he conducted his business.  They sat in the second room, which was usually the living quarters in a family’s household.  Her granduncle was the one who had taught her to read and write since she was a child, and who had stimulated her interests in the sciences, along with her deceased father who showed her many mummification rites and rituals and methods.

 

Mery put her head in her hands frequently and sobbed loudly.  Her eyes were reddened with tears and she hadn’t slept in many hours.  She picked at the cloth covering on the ottoman which she was sitting on and occasionally looked around the room.

 

A tall and wiry young man – with uneven dark hair which had been hacked off raggedly as if by a mad barber, and who was covered with bruises on the backs of his legs, and whose disturbed eyes constantly followed Mery, sat off to one side and slouched against the adobe wall.  This was Mery’s childhood friend, Thoth, who was slave to merchant Quasshie.

_____________________________________________________

 

“Is that a new scent?”  The wax cone maker was already absorbed in her work and didn’t reply.  Mery’s voice wavered, then disintegrated into sobs.

 

Thoth reached out and placed his hand on her arm.  His whole body leaned towards her and as well as comforting his friend, Thoth was also in love with her.  This was evident in the way his eyes often seemed to bore into her very soul, to the exclusion of everything else.  At first, Mery let Thoth’s hand rest on her arm for a few moments.

 

She looked at Thoth and noticed his bruises, both old and new.  They seem to be weeks, if not months old.  I hope he’s all right.

 

The young man was tall, but not quite as tall as Kemsa was, and his shoulders were perpetually stooped.  “My master says I’ve been bad, so I deserve punishment every day.  I’ll learn, I know I will!” he often told her in their rare moments alone together.

 

Thoth reacted to loud sounds instantly, like an abused animal.  When Anu’s wife reentered to gather up the teacups and plates and makes a clatter, he shook and looked up with fear in his eyes and this gradually subsided into a smoldering resentment, seemingly burning deep within his thin body, because he frequently showed this by a shaking rage.

 

He inched his chair a little closer to Mery and put his arm around her shoulder.

 

Thoth and Meryneith were the same age  and a couple of Nile floods previously, on one hot and long summer evening, they made love in a cool grove of palm trees on the edge of the city.  It was right after a festival and Thoth was both drunk, and drunk with love.  They had exited right before curfew and found themselves wobbling around outside in the desert, and then collapsing into a heap, with Thoth on top.

 

Mery was laughing because she was  also drunk on too much flavored beer. I drank beer since I was very little, but none like that. She suspected that the vendor had spiked the beer so that his customers would keep coming back for more of ‘that better brew for a cheaper price’.  A crudely written sign stated that, anyway.  Mery had pulled Thoth up as they were looking at which beer to buy, read the sign to him, then taken out  a few coins as Thoth, being a slave, rarely had any money.

 

__________________________________________________

 

Mery, Thoth, Suten Anu and Asim, the mummy maker friend of Mery’s parents, were at Suten Anu’s house the next day as there’s to be a will reading.  “I’m glad you could be here, friend Asim.  I feel like you represent my father, because he’s…gone.”  Mery’s eyes well with tears, almost to overflowing.

 

Thoth had more fresh bruises on the backs of his legs.  And, for the first time in a long while,  there are severe ones on his back, and these appeared to be raw lash marks.  Mery touched them softly and taking a damp cloth, sat down beside him and patted the soothing coolness onto his skin.

 

After shaking uncontrollably at Mery’s first touch, Thoth calmed down quickly.  He remained jittery though, and constantly scanned the room, the ceiling, his fingernails, and his battered legs.  He nervously raked his fingers through his patchy hairstyle over and over until Mery put her hand over one of his to make him stop.

 

Suten Anu coughed and unrolled the papyrus scroll containing Mery’s parents’ will.  He read part of the will first which deals with inheritance and it gave Mery, because she was the sole child in her family, all of the family’s money and possessions and home, plus the mummy making business.

 

She and Thoth appeared very pleased.

 

Thoth even smiled.  Perhaps now she’ll be able to love me.  Perhaps now she can even buy my freedom with her wealth.  What’s it like to live in a real home and be loved by a wife and real family again?  Perhaps we can take the oath of marriage together, he told himself.

 

Mery and Thoth’s expressions changed rapidly when Anu read the next part of the will.

 

“I hereby declare that Meryneith shall be married to merchant Quasshie, and therefore, find the contract signed by both parties below.”  Suten Anu looked up as he read the marriage contract part of the will, and found both Thoth and Mery frozen in shock.

 

Thoth got up angrily.  “Bastard!  This cannot be!  I won’t let it happen.  That monster won’t have Mery.  I won’t let him have her…”  He choked off his last words and hobbled from the room.

 

Mery was surprised at the suddenly violent outburst from Thoth, who had been reticent to say almost anything since they were children.  She got up to go after him, but Suten Anu restrained her gently.

 

“Child, let him be.  Prepare your household for your marriage.  I’ll do my best to help you try and rid yourself of the obligation, but I cannot promise anything.”

 

Asim muttered to himself, but not loud enough for Suten Anu and Mery to hear.  “She’ll need someone to run her father’s mummy making business.  Mery will never get that mummy maker permit.  No one will give such an important permission to a mere woman.  This could work out for all concerned.  I’ll talk to her when she’s in a better frame of mind.  There’s no dealing with a woman who’s both angry, and sad.  Perhaps I need to see merchant Quasshie and discuss this marriage contract further.”

 

He wrung his hands indecisively, then said his goodbyes and left the room.

 

Mery and Suten Anu were busy consoling each other and barely noticed.

 

Outside, Asim ran into Thoth who’d been listening to Mery and Suten Anu inside.  Asim bumped the broken young man, muttered ‘sorry’, and tried to move off.

 

Thoth grabbed Asim by his arms and held the shorter man off the ground.  He shook him like a dog does with a bone, then let him fall back with a thud.

 

“Don’t you ever help that bastard, Quasshie.  Understand?”

 

Asim quivered with fear because Thoth looked like he wanted to heave Asim against the hard wall of the building.  With a parting kick to the older man, Thoth stormed off.

 

 

Chapter 4

 

Quasshie

Hail to you, Bull of the West.

I am the great god, the protector.

I have fought for you, for I am one of

those gods of the tribunal which vindicated

Osiris against his foes on that

day of judgment

 

______________________________________________________

 

Mery sat on a stool next to Kemsa’s table which was in a corner of the simple police station, her elbows on it when not gesturing about her mother’s lapis amulet.  The police station contained several rooms – one in the front was where the public could come in and complain, or report problems in their neighborhood.  A few middle rooms were for the officers, and Kemsa had a tiny apartment there.  Suspects were kept in the back in a secure area until they were dealt with. There were none in the cells at the moment. The stables adjoined the police station and because Kemsa had a small precinct, there were only four horses and a beaten-up old chariot in there – which he’d mooched off a lower-ranked aide to the pharaoh.

 

Kemsa’s falcon, Horus, perched on the back of a chair and looked around with his intelligent raptor’s eyes. He’s a beautiful animal and Kemsa made use of his rodent-catching talents to keep the police station vermin free.  Horus would only let Mery and his owner hold him, and Kemsa’s officers keep their distance from the small bird with large talons.

 

Kensa cannot keep a smile from his face when he looked at Mery, and was, if anything, overly attentive almost to the extreme.  Whenever he talked to her or looked at her, he radiated a sensuous energy.  “Would you like some pomegranate juice?  There’s a vendor in the market that I get it from.  They say it gives you energy.  I keep it in the cellar, in one of the dark cells, and the taste is quite refreshing.  It also keeps the drink cool.”

 

He stopped for a moment and stuck out his hand with the cup of juice in it.  “Look at me, I’m babbling and sound like the vendor himself trying to sell it.”

 

Horus the falcon screeched, because he saw someone passing by  the street through the open door of the police station.  Kemsa looked up.  “He’s a great help in letting us know when  a stranger enters.  Plus, he’d caught more than his dinner of mice.  I have to patrol the station every now and then in case there are any ‘leftovers’.

Mery took the drink offered by Kemsa, looked at the hieroglyphics on the cup,  and after chugging it down, continued on with her lost amulet saga.  “And I know mother had it on right before she died.”  She looked up at Kemsa then blurted out,  “You should take that cup back to the vendor. Instead of ‘to your good health’ it reads ‘to your good foot’.”

 

Switching gears without missing a beat, Mery continued on but lost color suddenly.  “What if the killer took it?  What if mother’s killer has it right now?  I hope he burns in all of the fires in the River Styx!”

 

She got up and paced for a moment, as Kemsa followed her every move.  “What if one of the mummy makers took it?  What if one of them did it!”

 

“My little crime solver.  You have some great ideas, and most are better than my officers.”  Mery has gotten Kemsa as fired up as she, and he got up from his chair and gave orders to the officers who were in the room trying to look busy, to go out and bring in all of the mummy makers in the area.  When they started to mumble and complain that it’s too hot to go out looking for results of a girl’s random musings, Kemsa stretched taller and simply pointed to the door.

 

“By Pharaoh, if you aren’t all out of here in a few moments, I swear, I’ll drag you all down to the Nile and leave you for the crocodiles.  Old Boney will call in his friends and there will be a banquet!  Now, go!”

 

Horus got agitated and flapped his wings and then flew onto an officer’s head.  The other officers stopped and laughed at the situation but Kemsa scowled at them and they ceased immediately.  The man with the falcon on his head tried to bat the bird off, but did so very carefully.  Revered by Egyptians, both Horus the falcon and Horus the god were protected by ancient laws and conduct.  Kemsa went over to his bird and took it carefully onto his arm.  Horus screeched for a few minutes, just to show who’s in charge.

 

After that, the officers scattered as quickly as  lightning over the dessert, because it’s just about as rare that Kemsa showed any kind of temper.

 

The men have gone, leaving Mery and the police chief all by themselves.  He leaned down suddenly and kissed her, then caressed her breast.  “I thought they’d never leave.  Now, tell me more about when you last saw your mother wearing that lapis lazuli amulet.  I want to know everything.”

 

Kemsa put the falcon onto its perch and the bird, duty done, fell asleep.  As he asked Mery to tell him more about her mother’s amulet, he traced over the top of her dress with his finger and made her blush.

 

When he touches me like that it’s all I can do to not drag him into his apartment and make love.  How long can I bear it, not being married to Kemsa?