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KND Freebies: Fresh and funny ATTICUS FOR THE UNDEAD is featured in today’s Free Kindle Nation Shorts excerpt

52 rave reviews for this
supernatural legal thriller —
now just 99 cents!
“A surprisingly fresh, funny and fiery mystery…a uniquely colorful world.”
                                                           Kirkus ReviewsIn a world where humans and “arcanes” — witches, vampires, zombies, and werewolves — uneasily coexist, attorney Hunter Gamble makes a living defending the latter.  After all, don’t they deserve their day in court too?
4.0 stars – 66 Reviews
Here’s the set-up:
Join the fight for zombie rights!

Hunter Gamble is an idealistic young attorney in a very special area of the practice: arcane defense. Funded by enigmatic billionaire Charles McClain and aided by shy-but-energetic research attorney Kirsten Harper, he’s making the world a better place–one vampire, zombie, or werewolf client at a time. After all, they deserve their day in court too, right?

When a young zombie walks into Hunter’s office accused of murder (by brain-eating), Hunter’s idealism is tested as never before as he struggles to secure the man’s freedom. To do so, he must square off against a savvy and ambitious district attorney, contend with a judge who is deeply biased against arcanes, and stand up to a human-supremacist group which will stop at nothing–not even Hunter’s own death–to see his client convicted.

5-star praise for Atticus for the Undead:

“Bloody good read!!…”

“…a fast-paced, haunting tale of unforgettable drama…”

“……not just for fans of the urban fantasy/paranormal genres…”

an excerpt from

Atticus for the Undead

by John Abramowitz

 

Copyright © 2014 by John Abramowitz and published here with his permission

Chapter 5

Sabrina’s impromptu display of magical ability put an abrupt end to the gala. The museum staff quickly announced that it was closing early and herded the patrons out into the parking lot. Hunter had intended to leave immediately, but catching sight of Sabrina’s terrified face convinced him to stay with her in the parking lot while they waited for the police to arrive. Though he found the girl annoying, he knew that it was difficult for anyone to come to grips with their new life as an arcane, and she didn’t need to face a prosecution on top of everything else. Kirsten, who felt her evening had been quite exciting enough already, opted to take a cab home.

The police arrived ten minutes later, and Hunter found it relatively simple to convince them that there were probably better uses for police time than prosecuting a seventeen year old girl over a momentary loss of control. Sabrina, still looking stricken, heaved a great sigh of relief and threw her arms around Hunter, catching him off guard. He’d never seen Sabrina be affectionate before — but then, he’d never seen her terrified before, either. Hunter did notice that, throughout the process, Mr. Orr stood several yards away, his back against a wall, watching them with a stern expression.

With all the activity, Hunter did not get home until almost midnight, and when he did, he promptly fell into bed. Given that Hunter tended to be an early riser, he was still quite tired when he showed up at work the next morning. “Hey, Kirsten,” he called, waving to her as he passed her office.

“Morning, Hunter,” she called back.

He dropped a stack of papers for an upcoming case onto his desk, then turned and walked back toward Kirsten’s office. “So,” he began, standing in her doorway, “hopefully most of our nights won’t be that interesting, huh?”

Kirsten’s lips quirked upward in a smile. “That would be nice,” she answered. “You clear things up for Sabrina?”

“Yeah, I convinced the police not to press charges. I felt bad for her,” Hunter said. “Nobody deserves to go to jail for doing something they didn’t even know they could do.”

Kirsten nodded. “Yeah.” And then a thought struck her, and with a playful grin on her face, she continued, “Just think, Hunter. Now she may become a regular client.”

Hunter looked alarmed at the prospect. “Oh God, I hope not.”

“Well, you are an arcane defense lawyer.” She grinned.

“Yes, I am, but that woman isn’t just an arcane. She’s also really damn annoying. I’d be just fine never having to see her again as long as I live.” As Hunter spoke, he could hear the door behind him open, and he saw Kirsten cover her mouth to stifle a giggle. “What?” he asked, unaware he’d said anything funny.

“I don’t think you’re gonna get your wish on that one,” Kirsten answered, pointing to something beyond Hunter. Hunter turned to see what she was talking about.

In the doorway stood Sabrina Orr, tear tracks streaking down her face.

“The whole way home he wouldn’t even talk to me,” Sabrina explained as she, Hunter, and Kirsten sat around the conference room table in the law office. Sabrina was visibly distraught, and Kirsten left the conference room for a moment to find her a Kleenex box. Sabrina accepted it gratefully, grabbing a tissue and blowing her nose before continuing. “He just had this … this horrible expression on his face.

Hunter nodded, his expression thoughtful. “What happened after you got home?” He laid a gentle hand on her shoulder.

“He … he made me sit at the kitchen table while he went and got Mom. It was a few minutes before he came back — I guess he was telling her what had happened, or whatever. Anyway, he came back with Mom, who looked like I’d just killed her pet dog or something. And he started saying all these … these terrible things.”

“Like what?” Hunter asked.

“He — he said he couldn’t even stand to look at me anymore,” Sabrina told him, visibly forcing herself to keep talking, “that he’d never been so ashamed of anyone in his life. He said if he’d known what I was gonna turn out to be, he would have encouraged Mom to —” She stopped there as fresh tears welled up in her eyes.

Hunter didn’t know what Sabrina had been about to say, and was about to ask when Kirsten supplied the next word for him. “Abort.”

Sabrina nodded, rubbing at her eyes. “He even tore up some pictures of us together.”

“And then he threw you out of the house?” Hunter asked, and Sabrina nodded again.

“Your mom didn’t stop him?” Kirsten sounded nearly as horrified as Hunter felt

Sabrina shook her head. “Not a word. She just stood there next to him.”

“What would you like us to do?” Hunter regarded her evenly.

“I — I don’t even know,” Sabrina answered. “I just — I couldn’t think where else to go.”

Something occurred to Kirsten. “Where did you sleep last night, Sabrina?”

“Best friend’s,” Sabrina answered. “But that family’s got three kids and there’s no room for me. I can’t stay there again.”

“Well, you’re seventeen, right? We could go to family court — you’re not eighteen, so your dad still has a legal obligation to support you.”

Sabrina’s expression grew terrified at the thought of being sent back home, and Hunter saw it. “Kirsten?”

“Hm?” She turned to face him.

“Can I talk to you in my office, please?”

For a moment, Kirsten looked back and forth between Hunter and Sabrina, as if she was reluctant to leave the younger woman by herself. Then, finally, she nodded, said, “Sure,” and followed Hunter out of the room.

“I think one of us should take her in for a while,” Hunter told Kirsten when they reached his office. “I nominate you.”

Kirsten’s eyes went wide. “Excuse me?”

“You’ve got a spare bedroom at your apartment, don’t you?”

“Yes, but I don’t think it’s appropriate for me to —”

“Why not?” Hunter knew he was pressing, but the terror on Sabrina’s face had left a lasting imprint on his mind. “She’s not our client anymore, we won’t get in any trouble if we give her a hand.”

“She might be our client if we’re going to family court on her behalf,” Kirsten pointed out.

“Did you see her face in there?” Hunter asked, giving his colleague a meaningful look. “She’s terrified of being sent home. Besides, even if we got the court to order her parents to take her back, who’s to say they wouldn’t just kick her out again a week later? Or she could run away.”

“Believe me, I feel for her, but I don’t think it’s a good idea for me to be taking on a roommate right now,” Kirsten said.

“Why not?” Hunter raised an eyebrow at her.

“Remember the part from last night about how I’m not good with people?” Kirsten asked.

“So it’ll be another learning experience,” Hunter smiled wryly.

“Don’t you think I should learn with someone a little less … umm … obnoxious?”

“Think of it this way,” Hunter responded. “If you can learn to deal with her comfortably, then all the people who don’t have heads the size of Texas? They’ll be a cinch.”

Kirsten chuckled, but she still didn’t seem quite convinced. “Why don’t you do it?”

“Because you’re a girl,” he said.

Kirsten stiffened and put her hands on her hips. “What’s that supposed to mean?”

“Hey, easy, easy!” Hunter raised his hands in a gesture of surrender. “I just meant that she’d probably be more comfortable with you, that’s all.”

“And also, you don’t like her,” Kirsten added.

“That has nothing to do with it.”

Kirsten shot him a disbelieving glare.

“Well, okay, maybe that has a little bit to do with it,” Hunter conceded. “Look, I can’t make you do this, obviously — it’s well outside the bounds of your job description. But —”

“No,” Kirsten shook her head. “I’ll do it. For a little while, at least. But can I ask you a question, Hunter?”

Hunter’s expression invited her to do so.

“Why is this so important to you?” she said. “You just said you don’t like her much, and it’s not like she’s the only homeless arcane out there ….”

For a moment, Hunter considered telling her that he wanted to help Sabrina out of his own sense of good fortune. That he wanted to do it because, much as he and his father locked horns, he had never for a moment wondered if he might end up on the street, unsure where he would sleep or what he would eat that night. What he actually said, however, was, “There are a lot of homeless arcanes out there, you’re right. But we’re lawyers. We take the case in front of us.” Then he turned, and headed back toward the conference room.

“All right, Sabrina, tell you what,” Hunter said as he pushed open the conference room door. Her eyes fixed on him. “Kirsten’s agreed to let you stay with her for a little bit, just until we can find something more permanent for you. Okay?”

Sabrina’s face immediately filled with relief and gratitude. Then she frowned. “I — I don’t think I can impose on you that way.”

Hunter regarded her skeptically. “Would you rather sleep in the street?”

“No, of course not,” Sabrina said in a rush, “but … I wasn’t raised to be a freeloader. You carry your own weight, I was taught.”

“Well, I have a few succinct opinions right now about how your parents raised you, but that’s for another time,” Hunter said. “For now, let’s focus on getting you out of the ranks of the homeless.”

Sabrina nodded, but she still looked uneasy.

Hunter thought for a long moment. “Well, I’m sure Kirsten would appreciate any help you felt like giving her with keeping the place clean.”

“Or she could work here,” Kirsten said.

Hunter whirled around so quickly he almost fell down. “What?” he asked, eyes wide.

“She could work here,” Kirsten repeated, “for a few hours every day after school. Her salary could go to help with my rent.”

“I, uh —” Hunter squirmed, “I’m not sure this is the best time to be taking on a new person ….”

“Think of it as a learning experience,” Kirsten said icily, giving him a significant look.

Hunter gave her an answering look that suggested he was contemplating the most painful method by which to kill her, but pressed his lips together and turned back to Sabrina. “This sound like a plan to you?”

Sabina nodded. “I could handle doing that. Not like homework takes up very much time.” Her tone gave a clear idea of how challenging she found her homework.

“All right. You know anything about legal stuff?” Hunter asked.

Sabrina shrugged. “I was cast as Demi Moore’s character in a production of A Few Good Men once.”

Hunter sighed again. “I can see this is going to go brilliantly. Okay, we’ll give you the tour of the office today, and you can start tomorrow after school’s out. All right?”

Sabrina nodded. “Yes. Thank you.” The gratitude in her eyes seemed entirely sincere.

“Don’t mention it,” Hunter answered. Mentally, he added: Please. Ever again.

It was after dark when Kirsten pulled her car onto the street where she lived, Sabrina in the seat next to her. She slowed down as she passed her apartment complex, and swore under her breath. Sabrina turned to her. “What’s wrong?”

“No parking,” Kirsten muttered. As usual.

Sabrina looked out the window. “Is this where you live?” she asked.

Kirsten nodded. “That apartment complex right there.” She pointed to a brightly lit high-rise apartment complex. Sabrina gave her a surprised look. “What?”

“Well, it’s just, from dealing with Mr. Gamble, I expected you’d be more … .”

“What?” Kirsten arched an eyebrow at Sabrina.

“Poor,” Sabrina said candidly, without embarrassment.

Nothing fazes her, does it? “You don’t think Hunter’s a good lawyer?” Kirsten asked, resisting the urge to point out that it was rude to imply that the person who’d just taken you in was not professionally successful.

Sabrina shrugged. “He’s all right, I guess. He handled my case okay. But he … I guess he doesn’t seem to take it very seriously.”

Now Kirsten was the surprised one. “What makes you say that?” she asked, pulling into a parking space several blocks from her apartment building. The meters didn’t run this late, so she didn’t need to worry about getting a parking ticket.

“Well, like, the first time I met him,” Sabrina said, “he showed up dressed in clothes like you’re wearing now.” She pointed to Kirsten’s green Tulane sweatshirt. “He looked more like one of my dad’s poker buddies than a successful attorney.”

Kirsten laughed knowingly. “Yeah, that’s Hunter. He hates dressing up — or anything else that smacks of taking himself too seriously.”

“Doesn’t that cost him clients?”

Kirsten raised an eyebrow. “I don’t think so. Why would it?”

“Appearance is three fourths of reality. That’s something my Dad always —” she broke off, her expression growing somber for a moment. “Anyway, don’t they end up thinking he’s a … well, a slob, and leave?”

“A few of them might,” Kirsten said, “but you don’t have to know Hunter long to see that while he may not take himself very seriously, he takes his clients’ lives and rights very seriously. This job is like a mission to him, or a crusade, and most of them find out pretty quickly that they’ll never find a more dedicated or harder-working lawyer.”

Sabrina regarded Kirsten closely enough that she began to feel uncomfortable. “You certainly think highly of him,” she commented.

Oh boy. This conversation was rapidly heading in a direction that Kirsten didn’t like. She shrugged, hoping casual indifference would make Sabrina lose interest in the subject “He’s my first employer,” she said. “He gave me my start. Come on, let’s get your bag out of the trunk.”

She got out of the car without giving Sabrina the chance to say another word. She walked to her trunk, popped it open and slung Sabrina’s duffel bag over her shoulder. Inside, according to Sabrina, was everything the young woman had been allowed to pack before her parents had thrown her out. It was surprisingly light.

“Come on,” she said, beckoning the younger woman to get out of the car and follow.

Kirsten didn’t initially give much thought to the two large men in hooded sweatshirts that approached them as they walked, coming from the opposite direction. It was quite common in Austin for people to walk the streets long after the sun set, especially when the university was in session. But when one of them catcalled, “Look at the little witchy!” from two blocks away, Kirsten took notice.

“Where’s your pointy hat?” crowed the other one.

Kirsten didn’t look at Sabrina as she whispered, “Just walk on past them.”

Sabrina’s face showed the barest traces of fear, but she nodded, pressing forward. She and Kirsten walked side by side, acting as if they hadn’t even heard the calls. But when they were within arm’s reach, the man on the left reached out suddenly, grabbing Sabrina by the forearms. “Now,” he said, voice frighteningly calm, and slammed her roughly against the wall of the nearest building. “Let’s see if witches squeal when they die.”

Sabrina cried out as her back hit the wall. Her eyes went wide, and she trembled slightly in her attacker’s grasp.

Let her GO!” Kirsten shrieked, taking a defiant step toward Sabrina’s attackers as the wheels in her brain turned furiously. Adrenaline coursed through her as her survival instinct screamed at her to run away, far away, as fast as she could. She forced herself not to listen.

The other man tsked at Kirsten, wagging his finger at her. “Now, now, honey, no need for you to get involved.” A combination of the hood over the man’s head and the night sky made his face invisible, but somehow, Kirsten could tell he was smirking. “This is between us and the little witch over there — unless you guys travel in packs?”

The man holding Sabrina snarled, pulled back one arm, and before Kirsten could even react, punched Sabrina in the gut. “Dirty little whore.” She doubled over, and he spat in her hair. “Freaks like you got no place in this world!”

“Stop it!” Kirsten grabbed the man’s arm at the elbow as he pulled it back to punch Sabrina again. The man threw Kirsten backward, and she landed on the concrete as Sabrina took advantage of the distraction to claw free of him and scurry away.

“You stickin’ up for this freak show?” asked the man Kirsten had just attacked as he rounded on her, radiating menace. “The hell kinda traitor are you?”

The other man stalked toward Kirsten. “I’ll take care of ‘er.” He drew a pocketknife A knot formed painfully in Kirsten’s gut, and Sabrina looked almost nauseous. The man stopped in front of Kirsten, leaning downward and thrusting the knife toward Kirsten, not even particularly aiming, but simply trying to hit any part of her that he could. And as he did, she let her reflexes take over, her leg lashing out and striking at her would-be assailant.

Kirsten was aiming for his crotch — the classic move — but she missed, striking him in the gut instead. He still doubled over, his pocket knife clattering to the concrete as his hands flew involuntarily to his gut. As he gasped, trying to recover the wind her kick had knocked out of him, Kirsten screamed “Go!”, shooting a desperate look at Sabrina, who needed no telling twice. Sabrina took off running toward Kirsten’s apartment building, and Kirsten quickly scooped up the fallen pocket knife and followed.

“Come on!” Kirsten heard one of the men scream. “You wanna get aced by a goddamn witch? We gotta finish this!” She didn’t even look behind her, just continued to run, picking up speed.

Sabrina reached the front door of Kirsten’s building first, and made no attempt at subtlety, flinging the door open and running through it to the elevator. “Which floor are you on??” Sabrina called desperately to Kirsten, her finger jabbing the “up” button repeatedly.

“The fifth!” When no elevator had arrived by the time she reached Sabrina, Kirsten grabbed the younger woman by one arm and took off for the stairs. Their pursuers couldn’t be far behind.

Sure enough, one of the men called out “There they are!” a moment later.

Kirsten and Sabrina scrambled down a side hallway, flinging open the door at the end of it. Sabrina bounded effortlessly up the stairs, but somewhere in the run, Kirsten’s shoelace had come untied. She tripped and fell forward, dropping the pocket knife as her face impacted painfully against the stairs. Before she had a chance to pick herself up, she felt hands grabbing her arms, hauling her to her feet, pressing her roughly against the wall.

One of the hooded goons picked up the knife she’d dropped while the other held an identical weapon mere inches from her stomach. In the light, with him standing this close to her, Kirsten could see white skin, stubble, cold grey eyes. His companion joined him, holding his own knife in a threatening gesture toward Kirsten, leering at her beneath his hood.

“Where the hell do race traitor rats like you get off, sidin’ with unnatural scum against your own kind?”

“For all you know I’m one of them,” Kirsten answered, voice trembling in a way she was sure her attackers could hear. “I’m a witch just like her. I’ll cast a spell on you!”

“Uh huh,” said the man, his tone making clear exactly how seriously he took that threat. He moved closer to her, leaving their bodies only centimeters apart, and she could feel the edge of his knife against her sweatshirt. “Well, why don’t you do it, then?” he taunted. “Go on, hex us.”

A moment passed in silence. Nothing happened. They’d called her bluff, and she knew it. “Only question to me,” sneered the other man, looking Kirsten up and down with a leering glare, “is whether we just kill her, or have a little fun first.”

Tears welled in Kirsten’s eyes. “Please …” she whispered, not even trying to conceal the hint of a plea in her voice.

One of the hooded men looked at the other. “How many of our kind d’you suppose sounded like that right before they got sucked dry of blood?”

“Good question,” the other one smirked.

The questioner turned his pitiless eyes to Kirsten. “I hear it’s a slow process. Slow and painful. I think we oughta show you what that feels like.”

The other man nodded. “Turnabout is fair play, and all,” he said. He put his knife to the neckline of her sweatshirt and began to cut it open.

“Please,” Kirsten repeated, a tear falling down one cheek as the man began to cut into her sweatshirt … .

And then he disappeared.

It took Kirsten a moment to realize what had happened. At first, it seemed that her tormentor had simply vanished, disappeared into thin air. It was only when Kirsten heard a low “Ribbit!” at her feet that she looked downward — and saw a small, dark green frog there. The other man apparently heard it too, looked down, saw the frog, looked back up at Kirsten in anger …

And before he could do or say anything more, she punched him in the face.

The man staggered backward, moaning in pain. Then, visibly frightened by the unexpected reversal of fortune, he turned and ran away at top speed. When he was gone, Kirsten ran up the stairs to where Sabrina stood, an embarrassed look on her face. “Sorry,” the younger woman blurted out.

Sorry?” Kirsten asked, incredulous. “For what? You probably saved my life.”

“I did the spell wrong,” Sabrina muttered. “I was trying to say ‘toe of frog,’ not ‘turn to frog.’”

Kirsten actually laughed, in spite of herself. “You’re forgiven,” she told the younger woman dryly.

“So, where’d you learn to kick like that?” Sabrina asked, looking impressed.

“I’m a five-foot-four woman,” Kirsten shrugged. “You think I’ve never taken a self-defense class in my life?”

Both women laughed.

Then there was a moment’s silence.

And then they threw their arms around each other, each unbidden but both at the same time. Kirsten and Sabrina stood there like that for several long minutes, tears rolling down their cheeks.

Chapter 6

Hunter barely even stopped for red lights on the way to Kirsten’s apartment. Kirsten had been close to hysterical when she’d called him, so much so that all he could make of what she was saying was that there had been some sort of emergency and that he needed to come over right away. In two years of knowing Kirsten, the closest he’d seen her come to losing her composure was at the museum gala, and this was clearly far worse than that.

So he was already more than a little worried when he knocked on the door, and the sobbing he could hear through it didn’t help. It took a moment for her to answer the door, and in that moment, he could hear sobbing from behind it. Then the door swung open, to reveal Kirsten standing in the doorway, dressed in a tank top and jeans. She wasn’t crying, but her face was flushed and tear tracks were streaked down her cheeks. Beyond her, Hunter could see Sabrina curled into a ball on Kirsten’s couch, her head on her knees, sobbing.

He looked back and forth between them for a moment and asked, “What happened?”

“Salvation Alliance,” Kirsten croaked out, voice practically a whisper. “They were waiting … I think … they …”

“You were attacked?” Hunter asked, eyes widening in shock and horror. Then he noticed the marks on Kirsten’s bare upper arms. Angry red blobs, with a few splotches of purple and black. It took Hunter a moment to realize what they were. Hand prints. The fingers of his left hand clenched into a fist so tight that the fingernails pressed painfully into the palm, but Hunter didn’t care. He stepped closer to Kirsten, taking one arm gingerly in both hands and examining it. “Are you all right? Are you hurt?”

Kirsten shook her head. “I’m — I’m all right,” she said slowly. “More shaken than anything.”

“I bet you are.” Without even thinking about it, he pulled Kirsten into an embrace, and they held for a long moment before she spoke again, voice just above a whisper.

“Sabrina’s worse,” she said.

Hunter looked over and realized that, in his concern for Kirsten, he’d completely forgotten about the young woman curled into a ball on the couch. His usual irritation with the girl did not even enter his thoughts as he walked over and sat down next to her. “Sabrina?” he spoke to her quietly. She did not immediately respond.

“Sabrina?” he tried again.

She looked up, though she didn’t seem to actually see him. Her eyes merely looked ahead as she said, “They … the way they acted … it was like I was some kind of … like I was an animal …. “

“I know.” Hunter reached out and tentatively put a hand on her shoulder. She recoiled, and he removed it immediately.

“What did I ever … what did I ever … “ she said, her face flushed bright red and her eyes still unfocused.

“You didn’t do anything, you didn’t do anything,” he said softly, soothingly. “Some people are just … well … bullies,” he finished, the words sounding pathetic and lame even to his own ears. They did nothing to change the look on Sabrina’s face.

Hunter’s mind cast about desperately for something he could do or say to bring the girl a measure of peace. Unable to think of anything, he scooted away from Sabrina on the couch and beckoned for Kirsten to come sit between them. She did, and when she put an arm around Sabrina, the younger woman did not reject it, instead leaning against Kirsten for support. An unpleasant feeling stirred in Hunter’s gut, and it took him a moment to recognize it as jealousy.

That doesn’t make sense. Sabrina was a pain — why should he care if she liked Kirsten better than him?

Shame burned in his gut, replacing his confusion. His closest colleague and a former client had been attacked, and he was indulging petty jealousies? What was wrong with him? And yet he could think of nothing useful to say, so he sat there in silence while Kirsten held Sabrina, stroking the girl’s hair and trying to calm her. Not that he felt like he was doing anything particularly useful, but Kirsten clearly wanted him here, so he stayed.

Finally, Sabrina fell asleep, still leaning on Kirsten, and Kirsten gently eased the younger woman off of her, then put a hand on Hunter’s arm with a grateful look. “Thank you for coming. I’m sorry I dragged you over here on a Friday night.”

“I’d be mad at you if you hadn’t.” Hunter smiled at her warmly. “I’m just glad you’re okay. And that she is.” He looked down at Sabrina for a moment, and it struck him that the girl’s sleeping face held an innocence that belied her recent experiences. He glanced back up at Kirsten. “You think you’ll get any sleep tonight?”

Kirsten shrugged. “No idea. I hope so, but …” She didn’t need to finish the sentence — he’d still be shaken too, in her shoes.

“Well, hopefully you’ll be fresh in the morning.”

“Why?” she asked, raising an eyebrow at him. “You want me to work?” She did not sound particularly upset at the prospect of having to work on Saturday right after having been attacked. It was typical Kirsten, and that brought Hunter some relief from the evening’s tension.

But working on Saturday wasn’t what he had in mind. “No,” he said, setting his jaw. “I want you to come with me. We’re gonna go see Chief Garrison.”

… Continued…

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by John Abramowitz
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KND Freebies: Intriguing sci-fi fantasy WEAVER is featured in today’s Free Kindle Nation Shorts excerpt

“…one part science fiction, one part paranormal fantasy, and a whole lot of fun!…”

Travel into the wild world of John Abramowitz’ imagination with the first book in his compelling Weaver Saga sci-fi/fantasy series…

Weaver (The Weaver Saga)

by John Abramowitz

3.9 stars – 26 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Fifteen-year old Alex Cronlord just met the boy of her dreams. Literally. Unfortunately, the dream involved him killing her. When she encounters him at her school the next morning, Alex understandably freaks out and her mother’s bizarre behavior only makes it worse. What Alex doesn’t realize is that she can see the future — which will get her into a whole lot of trouble.

Across town, FBI Agent Moira McBain and her partner Andy Hall investigate a series of house burnings in Dallas, Texas. When a clue leads them to the Cronlords, Moira discovers a disturbing link between Alex’s family and her own — a link which opens an old wound Moira has spent years trying to ignore.

Something is rotten in Dallas, Texas — something involving a secret society, children with extraordinary powers, and human-looking creatures who might literally be out of this world….

Welcome to a different kind of world-wide web.

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Page Turner
“…captured me from the opening paragraph and sustained its tension throughout….The characters are rich, the plot engrossing. I heartily recommend to anyone who likes a good science fiction yarn.”

Great read! I can’t wait for more
“…Mr. Abramowitz has done an excellent job of pacing both story and character development so that the two are intertwined. There is no extra fluff in Weaver, each and every page advances the story and our relationship with the characters…”

an excerpt from

Weaver

by John Abramowitz

Prologue

Alex ran frantically over the uneven ground, her feet seeming to almost have a mind of their own as she raced desperately, not in any particular direction, but simply away. The first beads of sweat broke out on her forehead beneath the crown of golden-blonde hair, but Alex didn’t care, couldn’t care about that, nor about the burning feeling starting to blossom in the pits of her lungs. All she could think about was keeping as much distance as possible between herself and what was chasing her.

Snick! came the soft noise as one of her tennis shoes collided with a branch on the ground in front of her, snapping loose a twig from the branch as she fell forward, her face hitting the dirt. Alex cursed herself even as she fell – she’d been so focused on the simple act of moving ahead that she hadn’t thought to watch what was ahead. Always were a clumsy bitch. She rolled onto her back as fast as possible, scrambling to her feet as she saw the dark streak swoop ever closer to her.

It moved with almost inhuman speed, closing a full third of the gap between them just in the time it took her to get to her feet. Alex shrieked and leapt to one side. It was a wooded area, so there were plenty of trees to hide behind. She scrambled behind a trunk and hid. The black thing raced forward, stopping a mere few feet from the tree behind which she hid.

Alex’s heart raced, a pounding in her ears that she was sure her pursuer could hear. She waited a few moments in the barest silence, the only noise being a slight breeze rustling the leaves above her head. A brown leaf fell across her nose and cheek. She struggled to resist sneezing as it tickled her sinuses.

What seemed like eternities passed in utter silence.

CRASH. CRASH. CRASH. Alex’s heart continued to pound in her ears, intermixed with the soft squeak-squeak-squeaking sound of her pursuer’s shoes against the dirt and grass as he searched for her. Unable to bear it any longer, she risked a glance over her shoulder – and her heart nearly stopped as she saw him.

Her eyes followed his frame from the beaten-up tennis shoes, up the slender legs covered in the black denim pants, past the torso in the black t-shirt, with sleeves just short enough to show hints of his muscular upper arms, to the sculpted face and short, close-cropped brown hair. There was something almost angelic about his features, even now, as he hunted her. Slowly, his head turned in her direction, and she jerked her own head back behind the trunk, actually holding her breath to avoid detection.

“I know you’re here, Alex,” came his baritone voice, at once lilting and lethal. “I can feel you. I can smell you.”

Another eternity-long silence in which Alex heard nothing – not the wind, not her heart, not his voice. It was the space between heartbeats, but it felt like a lifetime.

And then he found her. “Gotcha!” he roared, starting for her as she squealed in fright and tried to run away.

She could feel him closing the distance between them, but dared not look back, dared not put any of her already-exhausted body’s energy into anything but propelling herself forward, forward, forward. Adrenaline pushed the ache out of her muscles and the burning out of her lungs as she ran –

And then he was on her – one arm like a vise around her stomach, and his breath on her cheek and in her ear told her that he had brought their faces close. She looked over, trembling and whimpering, and saw the cool, predatory smile, the soft brown eyes gleaming with delight. And then, for just a moment, the eyes flashed blood red.

“I’m gonna enjoy this,” he whispered.

And then all she knew was a world of pain.

Chapter 1

Monday, 7:25 a.m.

Alex Cronlord trudged down the stairs of her family’s two-story house, yawning sleepily and rubbing at her eyes. Leave it to her body to sleep poorly and fitfully the night before her first day of school. Tenth grade.  The first thing she saw was her father – or rather, his posterior, as he stood hunched over his briefcase near the front door to their house.

“Honey!” he called loudly, in his chipper voice. “Have you seen my office key? I’m closing the Barov deal today and all the paperwork’s still in my office, being late would not look go – whoa!”

He stopped in his tracks as he turned around, nearly colliding with Alex as he started walking toward their kitchen. “Hi, honey,” he beamed, gray eyes twinkling behind the rectangular glasses as he folded her in a tight hug. “Tenth grade, huh? Can you believe it? You’re practically a woman,” he chirped. “Do well at this, and you’ll have a corner office and a Mustang convertible in no time.”

Alex outwardly laughed and inwardly sighed. This was typical of her father, to get this worked up about this development. He had gotten this excited about every development in her life since she was very young – from learning to ride a bike to starting kindergarten to surviving her first filling at the dentist’s office. As a young girl, Alex had found this endearing, but as she grew, she increasingly began to find it annoying.

But of course she said none of this to him. “Office right next to yours?” she asked, her typical reply to his academic-related kudos.

Her father smiled, the expression lending a bit of curvature to his square face. That was honestly how she thought of her father – very square. “I don’t think you’d want to be an insurance salesman, baby. It’s pretty frustrating work –” Here, he tilted his head to one side, “Especially when you can’t find your office keys! HONEY!” he called to Alex’s mother, who was presumably in the kitchen making breakfast.

“I do your laundry and cook your meals,” came a rich, thrumming voice from the adjacent kitchen, as Ainsling Cronlord swept into the room. With a frame that was curvy while staying just shy of overweight, Alex’s mother was a much more commanding physical presence than her father, who was slightly taller, but lanky. Whereas her father had a chipper, exuberant personality, her mother simply radiated unspoken authority wherever she went. Her green eyes narrowed beneath the aquiline brow as she completed her thought, “Why on Earth should I keep track of your keys, too?”

Alex’s father shrunk back a bit from the unspoken power in her mother’s voice. “…Err,” he replied, somewhat meekly. “I’m just stressed, that’s all.”

Ainsling nodded curtly, then turned a serious expression on her daughter. “Alex, dear, go eat your breakfast.”

Alex nodded and walked past her mother into the kitchen. She could hear their two voices continue to talk as she sat down to a plate of French toast, though she could not discern any words. Thus went the perpetual tug of war between her parents — her mother sometimes found her father’s perpetual optimism and energy irritating, and felt that he needed to be more down-to-earth with a greater sense of personal responsibility; her father, meanwhile, sometimes felt that Ainsling was overly joyless and did not give him sufficient credit for his accomplishments.

And yet, despite their frequent minor (and occasional major) disagreements, the two invariably found their way back to what appeared, to Alex, to be a loving relationship that benefitted them both. Alex chuckled slightly to herself around a bite of French toast drenched in maple syrup, and wondered if her own married life would be such a rollercoaster.

“Alex?” came her mother’s voice from the kitchen counter behind her, interrupting her thoughts. Alex turned with a start – she had not heard Ainsling re-enter the room.

“Hmm?” Alex asked, eyes still wide from her surprise.

“Are you feeling all right, dear? Ainsling asked, in her rich tones. “You don’t look well.”

“Huh? Oh,” she answered, realizing that her mother was referring to the bags under Alex’s eyes and the slightly pale tint to her skin. “Yeah, I’m fine. Just… didn’t sleep well, that’s all.”

“Oh really?” Ainsling asked, raising the eyebrow over one of her piercing green eyes as she regarded Alex curiously.

Alex did not answer for a moment, sure that her mother was going to suggest that it was mere anxiety about starting tenth grade, and then tell Alex that it was nothing to worry about, and she’d do fine.

But Ainsling did not.

“Alex?” she snapped, after a few seconds silence. “You know it’s rude not to answer someone when they speak to you. I asked you a question!”

Alex shrugged it off, cringing inwardly at the rebuke. “Just… bad dreams, that’s all.”

She started to turn back to her French toast. While she’d always admired her mother’s ability to exude authority, it had always made Ainsling a source of greater fear for Alex than her more easy-going father.

But Ainsling still was not finished. “Oh really?” she asked, leaning over the counter, putting her elbow on it and propping her chin in her hand. “Dreams about what?”

Alex truly did not feel like discussing her sleeping problems with her mother. “I – I don’t remember, okay?” she asked, irritated by her mother’s persistence.

The eyebrow went up again, and an incredulous expression came over her mother’s features. “You had frightening dreams and you don’t remember what they were about?”

“I didn’t say frightening, I said ‘bad,’” Alex answered, surprised that her mother had not upbraided her for her tone. “I just… I dreamed I showed up to my first class without clothes on,” she told her mother, and then, for extra flair, added, “And spent the whole period sitting at my desk waiting for someone to notice.”

Ainsling gave her daughter a long, skeptical look. Then, finally, she shrugged, waving a hand in the air dismissively. “So you’re nervous about starting school. Stop being silly. Go in, work hard, and you’ll be fine.”

Alex nodded, turning back to her food at last. This was closer to the response she expected from her tough-love mother. When she finished eating moments later, she grabbed her backpack, and headed off to school.

***

Ainsling Cronlord went at once to her phone, as soon as Alex and her husband were out of the house. She picked it up, poised a finger like a claw over the touchpad to dial. There was a strange feeling in her throat, in the pit of her stomach – excitement, certainly. The moment she’d long expected had arrived! But also a sort of sadness, or at least regret. What this would do to Alex….

And yet this did not stop her, nor did it delay her for even a fraction of a second as she began to dial the number, put the receiver to her ear. Too much was at stake, she reminded herself, and too many people had given up too much, to let some silly sentimentality get in the way. She was amazed that she even had such feelings – there was no reason to, she reminded herself. She swallowed, quashing those feelings down as she did so. By the time the phone stopped ringing, they were gone.

“Switchboard,” came a clipped voice from the other end of the phone.

“Yes, this is Ainsling Cronlord to speak to Dr. Rickston, please.”

“May I tell him what this is regarding?” asked the monotone voice.

Ainsling hesitated ever so slightly, before delivering the long-anticipated news. “Tell him I believe we’ve just had First Instance.”

That ended the talk. “Please hold….”

***

7:50 a.m.

Alex arrived at school just shy of eight o’clock. Like all the other students, she stood outside in the yard, since the school did not open its doors until eight a.m. sharp. Several of her friends passed her and waved as they headed toward the larger clumps of kids engaged in animated conversation. Alex waved back, smiling, as the light early morning breeze played with her long, blonde locks.

She stopped well shy of the large groups of congregating students. Alex had never been the most extroverted person, and her current tiredness made her even more reticent than usual. She tended to get lost in big groups, and she hated that feeling. So instead she leaned back against the fence and stood there, pulling her jean jacket tighter around herself as the breeze picked up.

It’s August, she thought. What gives?

“What up, girl?” came a familiar voice from behind her. Alex beamed as she turned and saw Tyler Emmonds coming up the yard behind her. He held up his dark-skinned fist in their usual greeting, and she bumped her own against it.

“Hey, Tyler,” she grinned at him, her mood instantly lifting. Ever the jokester, Tyler was far more extroverted than she, and the two had struck up a fast friendship in early junior high which had endured since then. Classmates had often suggested (some teasingly, others not) that the two should date, but there had never been any chemistry between them.

“You don’t sound so hot,” Tyler said. “Everything okay?”

“Yeah,” Alex answered, less-than-convincingly, “Just….”

“Your mom causin’ you problems again?” Tyler asked her, raising an eyebrow knowingly.

“Little bit,” Alex replied, laughing at how easily he’d guessed that part of it. There was more, of course, but she felt sure that even good-natured Tyler would think she was crazy if she told him what was really on her mind. “I had a bad dream last night, and she gave me the Spanish Inquisition over it.”

“Man, who put the honey in her shampoo bottle?” Tyler asked.

This brought a smile to Alex’s lips and a laugh from her throat. She was reminded instantly of why she liked her friend – his demeanor was almost imperturbable, and he had a talent for bringing humor to the most frustrating of situations. “I don’t know,” she answered finally, “But she was on the warpath this morning. Gave me and Dad the business.”

Tyler shook his head, and the two stood in a comfortable silence for a long moment.

“Tyler?” Alex finally broke the silence, speaking up hesitantly.

“Mmm?”

“Have you ever –“ Alex started, hesitating. She was sure he would think she was crazy, and Tyler was one of the few people in her life that she would be truly sad to lose, but she felt that she had to get this out, to tell someone, or she would go crazy. “Have you ever felt… like you’re gonna die soon?”

“What?” Tyler asked, and, sure enough, his expression told her that she’d managed to startle the usually-imperturbable young man.

But she’d locked herself in. She had to go on. “I had this dream last night, and….”

“Wait, wait, wait,” Tyler stopped her, holding up a hand. “You think you’re gonna die because of a dream? Alex, I’m your friend an’ all, but that’s whack.”

“I know,” Alex protested, her anxiety about this whole conversation rising. Tyler did not seem to think she was crazy yet, but she had no way of knowing how much damage she had done. “I know how it sounds, but there was this guy chasing me through a woods or a forest or something, and –”

She stopped as he appeared at the gate to the yard. Short, close-cropped brown hair over a sculpted face with soft brown eyes. Black t-shirt revealing hints of muscular arms, black denim pants, somewhat worn tennis shoes. Exactly as he’d been in the dream.

“Alex, what’s wrong?” Tyler asked, seeing his friend’s wide eyes and rapidly paling face as she stared straight ahead at the new entrant. As always, he tried to bring a humorous note to the situation. “That doesn’t look like your usual ‘crush-on-a-boy’ look.”

“That’s him,” Alex gasped, pointing at him before she even thought about it. “That’s the guy who’s gonna kill me. The guy from my dream.”

Now there was no mistake – Tyler was incredulous. His eyebrows shot up as his eyes bulged. “You saw that guy in a dream last night? Alex, are you sure you’re feelin’ okay?”

“No, and that’s just the point,” she answered, a touch of desperation creeping into her voice. As she spoke, the young man saw her point at him, and gave her a broad, picture-perfect smile. This sent a chill up Alex’s spine. “Either I’m going crazy, or I’m gonna be dead in a few days. I don’t like either choice.”

Before either of them could say more, the door to the school opened and Mr. Abernathy, the crotchety old vice principal, stood in the doorway, beckoning the students inside.

“You’ll be fine,” Tyler told her, starting to head in. “I’ll see you in second period, okay?” He flashed her a big smile, which cheered Alex slightly.

“Sure,” Alex answered. But I’m not talking to Goth Boy.

***

1:50 p.m.

As it turned out, Goth Boy decided to make the first move. When Alex turned from her locker to head to her sixth period class, she found him standing there, just inches away. She shrank back instinctively in surprise, her eyes rising from his black clothing to the sculpted face and finally meeting the brown eyes. What do you want?, she intended to say. What actually came out, though, was, “Oh, hi,” as she self-consciously ran a hand through her blonde curls.

The young man’s lips turned upward in a warm smile, and he spoke in a soft voice: “I’m Lucian Hunt.”

The smile and comforting tones sent a visceral excitement through Alex’s gut, where it warred with a powerful feeling of revulsion. What the hell are you doing? she asked herself inwardly. The Goth look has never been your thing, plus, there’s a decent chance he’s gonna try to kill you. Blow him off and walk away. Or better yet, run away. “Alex,” she replied shyly, hesitantly. “Alex Cronlord.”

“That short for Alexis or Alexandra?” he asked in the same soft, comfortable tones, leaning against the locker next to hers.

“Alexis,” she answered. “According to my mom, it was either that or Wilhelmina, and my dad talked her out of that one.”

“Probably a good call,” Lucian laughed gently. “So, any advice for the new kid? I just transferred here from San Antonio, and ….”

Going Goth is a good way to get beat up around here, she thought. And being late to class is a bad idea, too. She planned to say all of that, before turning on her heel and leaving him behind. She planned to say that, she wanted to say it, she fully intended to say it. And yet, somewhere between her brain and her lips, the message was lost. Instead, she felt her face warm, and she twiddled with her hands as she said, “Umm … not really. Just … keep your head down, I guess. Nothing really comes to mind.”

“Well, I’d really like to do well here,” he told her, his voice silken. “So, I tell you what – how about you think about it, and we can go have coffee on Wednesday and talk about it?”

No no no no NO, went the little voice in the back of her head, the one that had been advising her all along to blow Lucian off. And yet she found it increasingly difficult to listen as she felt herself drawn in by the brown eyes and the soft voice, the chiseled features and his relaxed demeanor.

“Sure,” she answered, sounding as if she’d wanted him to ask since she’d first laid eyes on him that morning. “I’ll see you then.”

***

2:04 p.m.

“So, lemme get this straight,” Tyler whispered to her as he and Alex sat next to each other in history class. “He just walked right up to you and asked you out?”

Alex started to reply, but saw the teacher turn her head toward the class, and did not want to get called out for talking on the first day of classes. So, instead, she simply gave a quick nod, trying to look as focused on the lesson as possible, which was difficult when the teacher was discussing pre-Revolution colonial America. Alex found the subject unbelievably dull.

As soon as the teacher was facing the board again, Tyler continued. “An’ you said yes?” he whispered incredulously, eyes roughly double their normal size.

“Yeah,” Alex replied, shame rising to her cheeks. Now that she was out of Lucian’s immediate presence, it was much easier to wonder why she hadn’t simply blown him off as she’d originally planned to do.

Tyler was silent for a moment. And then: “High school girl has flirtation with tall, dark, and handsome boy who may or may not want her blood. Didn’t I read about this somewhere?”

Alex made a face, but Tyler did not relent. “I don’t know what’s crazier, girl,” Tyler whispered skeptically. “That you think this guy’s gonna try to kill you, or that you agreed to go on a date with him anyway.”

“You’re right,” Alex answered, feeling sick to her gut now at having acquiesced so meekly. “You’re right, I don’t know why I did. I’ll catch him after class. Tell him it’s cancelled.”

Tyler smiled and patted her arm understandingly. “Don’t worry about it, Alex. Everybody does stupid stuff sometimes. Especially when it comes to dating. I mean, this one time, I ….”

Alex laughed gently. “Thanks, but if it’s you and your dating life, maybe I’m better not knowing,” she teased.

Tyler looked for the barest moment as if he might be ready to take offense, but as usual, the young man was absolutely imperturbable. A moment later, he gave an easy-going smile and whispered. “Yeah, you’re probably right.”

Chapter 2

Tuesday, 9:55 a.m.

Moira McBain stalked through the halls of the Dallas County Correctional Facility, led by a police officer escort. The two walked with brisk efficiency, rounding one corner, then another, Moira’s heels clack-clack-clack-ing against the tile floor. Finally, they stopped in front of the door to an interrogation room. A few feet away stood a tall, earnest looking man in a suit, wearing a name tag with the FBI logo on it, but Moira ignored him for a moment. She turned to the cop, pointed with her thumb to the holding room they stood in front of.

“That him?” she asked briskly.

The cop nodded. “Yup, that’s him. Jack Dunnell. Best of luck to ya,” he told her, shooting her a sympathetic look, and then walked off.

“Hey, partner,” came the suited man’s gentle voice, as he flashed her a smile that she did not return. “You ready for this?”

“I’m always ready,” Moira replied humorlessly, pushing her long, red hair behind her shoulders as if she were getting ready for a job interview. “Dunnell’s a violent psychopath, Andy, narcissistic personality disorder with homicidal ideations. No different than any other skel we’ve busted.”

Andrew Hall gave an ever so slight laugh, taking a step closer to Moira and putting a supportive hand on her upper arm. “This freak show kidnapped little girls and cut ‘em into pieces. This is the kind of case that agents fifteen years on the job need help dealing with, Moira. It’s okay.”

“But I don’t,” Moira replied, giving him a cool smile. “I’ll be fine.”

Andy’s face betrayed a hint of sadness, but he smothered it quickly, removed his hand. “All right. I’ll be right there if you need me.”

The smile warmed a few degrees. “Thanks,” she told him genuinely, her grey eyes growing a bit friendlier.

The moment of warmth passed quickly, and Moira grabbed the door handle and pulled the door open. With Andy a step behind her, she strode toward the table on the other side of which sat Jack Dunnell. He was a large man, with a bald, watermelon-shaped head with a scar near one temple. He sat back in his chair, looking carefree and relaxed, handcuffed hands resting in his lap.

“Well, well,” came his low, rasping voice, which sounded as if someone were rubbing sandpaper against his vocal cords as he spoke. “The welcoming committee’s here.”

“Hello, Mr. Dunnell,” Moira nodded to him, regarding him neutrally. “I’m Moira, this is my partner Andy. We’d like to ask you some questions.”

“’Course you would,” Dunnell replied, a grin breaking out over his face, seeming as calm as if he were meeting the two agents for coffee. “But I always got time to talk to pretty ladies, so go right ahead. By the way,” he added, as if it were an afterthought, “Your accent … Scottish?”

Moira hesitated only slightly as she sat down, Andy sitting in the chair next to her. “… I’m from the Scottish Highlands, yes.”

“Not the point, Dunnell, and you know it,” Andy Hall interjected. “Tell us what you did with the bodies.”

“Mine’s right here,” he pointed to himself with the thumb of one hand. “But, uh, not for you, though. I don’t swing that way. Your partner, though….” He turned his eyes slowly to Moira, let out a wolf whistle.

“The bodies you killed, Dunnell,” Hall replied testily. “You know, little girls. Little pieces. You hid them. We found one of your human remains dumps. What’d you do with the other four bodies?”

Disappointment crept into Dunnell’s features as his eyes remained fixed on Moira. “You need your white knight to protect you all the time?” he asked, rolling his eyes derisively at Andy before returning his glance  to her. “Gotta tell ya, not so fond of weak women.”

“You liked weak women well enough when it made them easier for you to cut ‘em up an’ hide ‘em,” Moira replied, trying to quash down the feeling of irritation that she felt rise up in her. Dunnell was trying to get her goat, and she knew it. Any sign that it was working would only encourage him.

Dunnell waved a hand dismissively. “Pffft,” he snorted. “You’re really gonna let the fact that there are a few dead girls out there stand in the way of what we could have together?”

Moira reached a hand into her suit jacket, pulled out a photograph. A young boy, perhaps ten years old, smiling that wide-eyed smile that only children can, before the realities of life set in. She held it at Dunnell’s eye level. “This is Troy Smith,” she told him, voice cold and hard. “His sister, Alice? You killed her. Troy’s an only child now, thanks to you.”

Dunnell once again regarded this assertion dismissively. “Even if I did, what’s it to ya? Not like it’s your sister, or anything.”

It was an off-hand comment, of course. There was no way that Dunnell could have known about Ian, and Moira knew that. And yet she couldn’t stop her face from twitching, just for a moment, eyes threatening to moisten and a lump forming in her throat.

And Dunnell saw it. “Or is it?” he asked, leering at her now like a predator savoring its cornered prey’s fear. “What’s the matter, girl? You think I killed one a’ yours too? You’re a bit old to have one that young….”

“That’s because I don’t,” Moira replied, voice and face now perfectly even, neutral, dispassionate. “You’re imagining things.”

“Maybe,” Dunnell answered, leaning back. “But I don’t think so. I think someone’s mixing business and pleasure. What happened, little girl? House burn down? Kid get into the medicine cabinet?”

Moira sat there, her mind split between thoughts of Ian, and desperately trying not to think of him, because that would make her expression change, betray some emotion, give this madman something to latch onto….

“Or was it worse than that?” Dunnell continued. “Maybe not so much an accident. Maybe something happened while you were left home on watch…?”

Before she even knew what she was doing, Moira was out of her seat, grabbing Dunnell by his orange jumpsuit and slamming him up against the wall. Her vision was red as pure, blinding rage exploded inside her “The only pleasure I’m gonna take is in watching you fry for murder, you sick pile of piss….”

Somewhere behind her, she was sure Andy was calling to her, pleading with her to stop, but she did not listen, could not even hear it. Her entire concentration was focused on the desire to pummel this man into oblivion, to kill him herself in ‘self-defense,’ and it was only the barest measure of self-discipline that prevented her from doing so.

“Agent McBain?” came the unfamiliar voice from behind her. “Agent McBain?”

Moira’s head slowly turned – one of the jail’s guards was calling for her. Slowly, her fist unclenched, she released Dunnell. “Yes?” she asked.

“There’s a phone call for you from the Federal Building, ma’am,” the guard told her, looking dismayed at what he’d just seen. “Are you all right, sir?”

“Fine,” Dunnell answered, licking his lips. “She was just giving me a kiss, that’s all. No need to worry.” He flashed Moira a predatory look, rubbing her nose in it.

“A – all right,” Moira replied. “I’ll be right there.”

She could not get out of the room fast enough.

***

When Moira reunited with her partner ten minutes later, Andy’s face was full of worry. She noticed it, of course, but pretended she didn’t, stopping at a professional distance away from him and speaking in clipped tones, her grey eyes steady on his face. “We’re up early tomorrow, Andy.”

“Oh?” he asked, banishing the worry from his face for a moment. “What’s the word?”

“That was Assistant Director Pileggi. He wants us in on a raid going down at nine a.m. sharp.”

“Raid of what?”

“You know all the house fires we’ve been having recently – the ones the Bureau and local police think are arson?” Moira asked.

“You mean the ones that are apparently completely random and have no apparent pattern?” Andy retorted.

“Well, apparently one of the analysts found a pattern, and then some, because they think they’ve found where the perps are holed up. Old abandoned glue-making factory. We’re doing a joint op with the Dallas P.D.”

Andy nodded. “I love the smell of arrest warrants in the morning.”

Moira cracked a very slight smile as a moment’s silence fell between them.

“Moira?”

“Hmm?”

“Who was she?”

“Who was who?”

“Your sister. I didn’t know you had one.”

The first hints of anxiety, even of panic, crept into Moira’s gut, but she covered them with cool confidence. Raising an eyebrow at Andy, she replied calmly, “That’s because I didn’t.”

Andy seemed skeptical. “Well, something Dunnell said shook you up, and it started right about the time he asked if he’d killed your sister. What’s goin’ on here, partner?” he asked, with a warm smile and a gentle hand on her arm.

You should really tell him, came a small voice in her head. He cares about you. He’s never been anything but good to you. She felt herself tempted to obey the voice as she stood there for a long moment, frozen in indecision.

Neither was Ian, she answered the voice with finality, easily silencing it. At least, not until he –

No. If she let her brain go further down that train of thought, if she let herself remember what Ian had done, it would break her composure and bring her to tears. Crying in front of her partner was the last thing she needed to be doing. “You’re imagining things,” she told him simply, brusquely.

“No, I’m not,” he replied, in an even tone that held complete confidence that he was right.

“I never had a sister, and Dunnell certainly didn’t kill anyone related to me. He just – I guess he just spooked me, okay?” she asked, a bit more aggressively than she needed to.

“All right,” he replied, clearly not believing it but knowing better than to press the issue. “I’ll see you back at the office?”

“Yeah, sure,” she replied, giving him a quick smile before turning on her heel and marching toward the exit to the prison.

She waited until she had shut herself in her car before she cried.

Chapter 3

Wednesday, 8:59 a.m.

Moira crouched behind a dumpster, muscles tensed, senses alert. Her eyes were fixed on the building across the street – the abandoned glue factory, their target – but her ears focused on her radio, waiting for the team leader to give the order to move in. Andy crouched next to her, and she could feel the nervous energy flooding from his body.

Sure enough, a moment later, her headset exploded with chatter. “Team One, are you set?” came the leader’s voice.

“Ready,” came the reply.

“Team two, are you set?”

“We are.”

“Team three, are you set?”

“Ready,” Moira answered.

“Team four, set?”

“Yes.”

“Go!”

Moira sprang forward like a predatory animal, stalking toward the building and beckoning for Andy to follow. She reached one of the doors, old and wooden and even rotting in places. It was no trouble at all for Moira to kick it in. Gun out and pointed straight ahead, she stalked into the glue factory. At the other end of the room, one of the other teams kicked in another door, and several more agents came flooding through another.

The room they found themselves in was large and cavernous. It was devoid of people and furniture, but that did not mean it was empty. There were sleeping bags and mattresses strewn about the floor, along with plastic food wrappers and soda cups and cans. The corners of the immense room were a mess of spider webs. “Not just arsonists and murderers, but slobs, too,” the team leader intoned. “Fan out, search the adjoining rooms.”

Moira did so, breaking into one side room, then another. They told the same story – no people, lots of trash. In the second room, however, she spied a piece of paper amid the burrito wrappers and soda cups. Moira approached it slowly, raising a curious eyebrow, and picked it up. Scribbled on the page was a list of names. Names, addresses, and phone numbers. Most of the names were crossed out, but a few were not.

“Whoever was here, they’re not here now,” came Andy’s voice from behind her. She turned with a start, cursing herself for letting her guard down, even for a moment. She put a hand to her mouth and her cheeks flushed as she saw that it was only her partner, not a threat. “… Oh, I’m sorry,” he told her, looking mortified at having startled her.

“It’s all right,” she replied, with a calming smile. “What’ve we got?”

“Perps bugged out,” Andy repeated. “Looks like recently, too. Team Leader thinks they knew we were coming.”

Moira raised a startled eyebrow. “How could they have known?”

“Dunno,” Andy shrugged. “Good question. What’s that?” he asked, pointing to the piece of paper she held.

“A list, apparently,” she replied, handing the paper to him. “Of people. What they have in common, I’m not sure.”

Andy squinted as he scrutinized the page. “I recognize some of these names. They’re previous victims.”

“Yeah? So maybe the ones that aren’t crossed out –“

“People they’re planning to attack,” Andy caught on instantly. “We can warn them.”

“Slow down, partner,” Moira held up a hand to forestall his optimism, though she had the same thoughts. “Let’s get this back to the FBI building and cross-check the names against past arson victims with this group’s MO to make sure this really is a list of targets.”

Andy gave her a wry smile. “I’m pretty sure your picture is next to the word ‘anhedonia’ in the dictionary.”

It was a joke, and she knew he meant it that way, but it still stung. Moira didn’t let that show, of course. “Obsessive compulsive and anal retentive, that’s my middle name.”

“Long middle name.”

“My parents didn’t like me.”

Andy gave a brief laugh. “Good job on finding this,” he told her, then turned and walked from the room.

***

3:45 p.m.

“Alex!” came Lucian’s voice from behind her as she headed out of the school. Somehow, even when raised, his voice came across calm and non-threatening. He made his way through the throng of students heading toward the exit, and she found him at her side, the brown eyes fixed on her. She had seen little of him in the last two days, and so had not had any chance to cancel their  date, which she realized belatedly was supposed to be this afternoon. She opened her mouth to do so, but before she could, he spoke.

“How’s it going?” he asked, smiling warmly at her.

“Oh, you know,” she shrugged, feeling the warmth in her stomach and wishing it would go away. That would make it very difficult to say what she wanted to say. “School is school. I’m just glad the homework hasn’t really started yet.”

“Sooo…” he began  coyly. “That means you have some time to hang out with me, then, right?”

“Oh, yeah,” Alex began, gathering her courage to tell him she’d changed her mind. Why was it so hard to do? “About that…” She fidgeted with her hands as she prepared to deliver her message.

But Lucian took advantage of her hesitation. “Don’t tell me you’ve found someone better?” he asked, facial expression fearful, as if he was dreading her answer.

“Well…” she began, feeling like maybe, just maybe, she could do it now.

Apparently seeing that he had only a split-second window, Lucian spoke again, giving her an ironic smile. “Come on,” he intoned. “It usually takes at least two dates before a girl decides they want nothing to do with me. Don’t set my new record.”

There was a quality about it all – his speech, his words, his manner – that was aloof while at the same time commanding her sympathy. The words were detached, but his inflections (as well as the gleam in his soft brown eyes) somehow told her that her answer actually mattered to him. The exchange made her feel special. It melted her heart a bit, and robbed her of the conviction to say “no,” as she had planned.

“Well … all right,” she replied shyly.

Lucian beamed at her – and was it just her imagination, or was there a predatory quality to the grin? The question was forgotten in the electric tingle as he took her hand, and the two of them headed out together into the clear, sunny afternoon.

***

4:00 p.m.

Moira McBain and Andy Hall pulled up in the driveway of the Cronlords’ two story house, the afternoon sun beaming down on their small golden car. “Y’know,” Moira remarked to Andy as the car slowed to a stop. “This is the part of the job I’ve never gotten used to.”

“What’s that?” Andy inquired, eyeing her curiously.

“How d’ya tell someone that some kids are gonna burn their house down?”

Andy gave her a bemused expression. “Just like that, I think. Can’t think of a lot of ways to sugarcoat that particular piece of news.”

Moira laughed softly. “All right then,” she told him, taking a breath as she pushed her car door open. “Let’s go get this over with.”

With Andy behind her, Moira walked to the doorway and rang the bell. “Just a minute!” came a thick, rich voice from the other side of the door, and a moment later, a woman stood in the doorway. Curvy and medium-height, the woman positively exuded authority, her green eyes piercing and dissecting both Moira and Andy within a second of seeing them. Even after several years as an FBI agent, Moira had only rarely met someone with whom she felt so ill at ease.

“May I help you two?” the woman asked, giving them a cheerful smile.

“Yes, I think so,” Moira answered, reaching into her jacket and pulling out her badge, displaying it for the woman. “I’m Moira McBain, this is Andy Hall, we’re with the FBI. You’re Ainsling Cronlord?”

“That would be me,” Ainsling answered in a clipped tone. It wasn’t rude, but it wasn’t particularly welcoming, either. “Have I done something wrong?”

“Oh, no,” Moira laughed briefly. “It’s nothing like that. Actually, we’re here because we’re concerned about what other people might do to you.”

“Oh?” Cronlord asked, raising an eyebrow.

Moira nodded. “I’m afraid so. May we come in? It shouldn’t take long.”

There was a hesitation, ever-so-slight, before the woman smiled and answered, “Of course, yes.” She was no doubt hoping that the two agents would not notice it, but Moira did. The woman stood aside, allowing Moira and Andy to enter, then led them to her living room. She gestured them toward the couch, while she herself took a large, cushioned easy chair to one side, her posture almost regal.

Andy’s eyes immediately fell to a picture that sat on the coffee table in front of the couch, a picture of Ainsling standing next to a tall, lanky man with a young, blonde girl in front of them. “This your family?” Andy asked, looking up at her, pointing to the picture.

“They are indeed,” she answered with a grin. “My husband sells insurance, and our Alex just started tenth grade this week.”

“You must be very proud,” Andy commented.

“Of course,” Ainsling replied. “So, you said we were in some kind of danger?”

“Unfortunately, you might be,” Moira told her. “Are you familiar with the recent rash of home fires in this area?”

“Yes,” Ainsling answered immediately, and Moira noted that she seemed not the slightest bit surprised at the inquiry. “The newspapers say the police think it’s arson. Do you believe we might be a target?”

“We raided an abandoned glue factory this morning that we think was being used by the people responsible for the fires,” Andy told her. “They weren’t there, but they left a list of names behind. A significant number of people on the list correspond with victims of the house fires. We’re sending agents to the homes of the other people on the list to warn them to be alert, since we think they may be the next targets.”

Ainsling nodded. “Very courteous of you,” she told Andy, in her clipped tone, dissecting the man once again with her eyes. “So, anything in particular we should be on the lookout for?”

“Well, we think the perpetrators are young – some adolescents, some in their twenties – so, if you see any kids lurking around that you don’t know….”

“I’ll be on the lookout,” Ainsling replied briskly, giving a perfunctory nod and seeming almost disinterested.

Andy’s eyes glanced to the picture, then back to Ainsling. “How old is your daughter?”

“Alex? She’s fifteen.”

“Do you know all her friends?” Andy asked her.

“Who ever knows all of a fifteen year old child’s friends?” Ainsling laughed dismissively, standing from her chair. “Certainly not her parents. Would you two like some tea, or something?” she asked, starting to walk out of the room, presumably toward the kitchen.

“It’s an important question, Mrs. Cronlord,” Moira put in. “We don’t know exactly how these kids are getting close enough to the houses to burn them down. For all we know, they could be getting the owners to let them in voluntarily, claiming to be friends of their kids or something.”

Cronlord turned her head, her mouth opening to reply, but before she could actually speak, she tripped over a book that someone had left on the floor. She fell with a yelp, her eyes widening in surprise, and as she did, a necklace flew out from underneath her blouse, a necklace with an intricately-carved metal symbol hanging on it. It was a symbol which, to Moira, was all-too-familiar.

“Dammit, Alex,” Ainsling grunted, anger seething in her voice. “I told you to clean up after yourse—“

But before she could even finish her sentence, Moira was up from the couch, charging toward Ainsling, grabbing her by the collar as she tried to right herself, and slamming her against the back wall with a CRASH! Moira took vengeful satisfaction in Ainsling’s expression, which betrayed the first traces of fear that Moira had seen in the other woman’s face. “Wells Society, huh?” Moira snarled at her. “What the hell are you doing to that poor girl?”

“Excuse me?” Ainsling shot back, trying to feign surprise – but to Moira, it was an obvious ploy.

“I know who you people are,” Moira growled. “Your whole game is sacrificing your children to your insane religion. Give me one good reason not to call Child Welfare right the fuck now.”

Ainsling’s fear disappeared instantly, replaced by a smug, almost predatory smile, and she replied coolly, “Because if you do, Agent McBain, you know perfectly well that they won’t find anything. If you know us as well as you claim – which you don’t, by the way – then you know we’re very good at covering our tracks. And I can assure you that, if I do get any calls from those folks, I’ll be having a talk with your supervisor at the FBI about the little assault you’re committing right now. So let’s just keep this whole thing our little secret, eh?”

Slowly, Moira released Ainsling, her face smoldering. She turned toward the door, beckoning Andy to follow her. “You’re lucky it’s my job to stop these adolescent arsonists, Mrs. Cronlord,” she told Ainsling as she headed for the door, not even turning to look at the other woman as she spoke. “Otherwise, I might just let you burn.”

… Continued…

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Hunter Gamble is an idealistic young attorney in a very special area of the practice: arcane defense. Funded by enigmatic billionaire Charles McClain and aided by shy-but-energetic research attorney Kirsten Harper, he's making the world a better place--one vampire, zombie, or werewolf client at a time. After all, they deserve their day in court too, right?

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I am a long, tall Texan (very, very tall) born and raised in Fort Worth, Texas. Educated at Grinnell College in the great state of Iowa, I consider Iowa my second home state, and keep on good terms with both by eating barbecue AND corn. When I I am a long, tall Texan (very, very tall) born and raised in Fort Worth, Texas. Educated at Grinnell College in the great state of Iowa, I consider Iowa my second home state, and keep on good terms with both by eating barbecue AND corn. When I'm not watching way too much sci-fi/fantasy TV or reading similar books (or working, obviously), you can usually find me reading the news or playing video games. I currently live in Austin, Texas, where I work as a lawyer and author. Everything I really need to know about storytelling, I learned from Joss Whedon (who influences my work), but I'm also a huge fan of suspense thrillers (which also influence my work), musicals (which, if I could write a musical novel, I'd be all over that), and parentheses (of which there are way too many in this bio).
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Allison Pierce has always had an artistic personality, but her self-doubt has continuously stalled her true passion of becoming a writer. She does everything to make the ones around her happy, but in return sacrificing her own happiness. Her life from the outside was perfect, she married a wealthy...
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Tish Thorpe’s life is starting to look up.Her dream of finally acting in a movie is coming true. She will be working with a star name - and hopefully some of that stardust will brush off on her.In celebration, her father takes her to Paris. On the journey there she meets the charming Simon Grealy...
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You never forget your first love. The way they made your soul sing. The colour of their eyes. Their scent. How they broke your heart. Love comes in as many different forms as there are lovers. Find your perfect match in this brand new collection of stories about first love, some of them sweet, some...
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Power. Lust. Demons.Maryanne has sacrificed more than she will admit to gain her throne, rank, and reign. Holding onto it won’t be easy with demanding vampire masters, traitorous courtesans, and demons nipping at her soul.When those who would undermine her rule close in on her, she will need to...
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Sit back and hold onto your seats as Mercedes take you on a wild ride of your life as she tells her story. At 15 years old, Mercedes as experienced so much. Pregnant with twins by a married man, she has HIV and she learned some very deep and disturbing secrets that her family kept from her for so...
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Orion's lost it all...As Leader of the Blue Spectrum Band, Orion has his hands full. But it's all worth it as long as Rain is by his side and the twins are thriving. When Scarlett and Eagle are kidnapped, he goes insane. Bent on revenge, Orion doesn't care who goes down in his fight to get his...
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