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WILD THING
"Paradise"with Maggie Shayne, Marjorie M. Liu, and Alyssa Day $14.00 Berkley Trade May 2, 2007 ISBN 0425215164 by meljean brook Lucas Marsden has faced nosferatu before and survived, but he doesn't know how to defeat the demon who hunts the vampires in his community... But he knows exactly what he wants from the beautiful Guardian sent to protect them. Read an excerpt. ![]() Discover
more about Maggie Shayne's "Animal Magnetism"
Discover more about Marjorie M. Liu's "Hunter Kiss" Discover more about Alyssa Day's "Wild Hearts in Atlantis" |
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Will you tell the court the events
leading up
to the night of August twelfth? He
couldn't
remember. Lucas Marsden glanced from the hammer in his right hand to
the nail
through the back of his left, and had no idea how he'd managed to pin
himself
to the backstage scaffolding--or why, despite his three years of law
school and
countless hours studying proper witness examination techniques, it was
Perry
Mason's made-for-TV query that echoed in his head. Or why he answered
it. I was dismantling the set from our
latest
production at the Paradise Theater--
The wound stopped bleeding; pale skin healed over the head of the nail,
embedding it into his flesh like a round hungry tick. --The
Glass Menagerie, which
was doing well until last month, when our lead actress, Olivia Jordan,
was
murdered. And could you describe the nature of
this
murder? She was staked out in the forest,
decapitated, and left to burn to ashes in the sun. She wasn't just an actress, was she, Mr.
Marsden? And her death is the reason why you've nailed yourself to a
four-by-four-- And the reason why
he interrogating himself with leading questions. Jesus Christ. He
wasn't as
strong as he'd thought; the cow blood had already turned him into an
idiot.
With a shake of his head, Lucas focused. Drops of
perspiration gathered at the dark hair near his temples, over his brow.
The
scent of his blood lay heavy in the theater's stifling air. He'd not
yet fed
that evening; typically, the fragrance would have aroused the
bloodlust...but a
month without a living food source had slowed its response. And, apparently,
damaged his hearing and psychic senses--he did not notice the woman
until she
appeared in his peripheral view. Endless tanned legs, sun-streaked
blonde hair,
and probably not even of legal age to drink. Or to drink from. Thank God his
eyesight still functioned; Lucas wasn't as certain about his brain. He
was
suddenly grateful he was stuck to a post--the ache in his fangs told
him the
bloodlust had decided to rise, after all. Fortunately, his
flesh didn't react in the same way. She was edible, but obviously human. The last thing he needed was for the vampire
community to learn he'd lost control and taken one. His hearing worked,
too: the even thrum of her heart reverberated in his ears. Lucas frowned,
struck by the peculiarity of that steady beat, the smoothness of her
expression. She was alone in a pitch-black theater with a strange--and
by no
means small and harmless--man, and she didn't evince the slightest
fear. Nor
could he feel any in her psychic scent. He couldn't sense anything from
her. The animal blood must
have muddled his ability to read her. Or she possessed a disturbing
level of
vapidity, and there was nothing to read. "I'm sorry,
miss," he said, forcing away his unease. How many gorgeous young women
had
arrived at the Paradise since Olivia had been killed? The drama
department at
Southern Oregon University was bursting with them, and he'd received
several
inquiries from actresses up in Portland and Seattle--all eager for a
chance to
tread the boards at one of Ashland's private stages. Granted, most of
them did
not come in at midnight, but he usually wasn't impaled on a nail. "The
theater is closed until next season. We'll be holding auditions in
October." Her gaze held his
before dropping to his hand, and his apprehension returned, knotting in
his
gut. His estimation of her age increased drastically. Those quiet blue
eyes
didn't belong to an insipid young woman...and no human could have made
out his
shape so clearly in the darkness. "I'm not here
for an audition," she said in a voice made of clarified honey: thick
and
sweet, the tones golden and clear. A smile deepened the indentation in
her top
lip, emphasized the lush curve of the bottom. A cupid's bow. He'd
thought such
lips were as mythical as their namesake, but now he realized that any
vampire
who'd encountered them had likely hidden the woman away and fed from
her mouth
for eternity. She approached him
slowly, as she might have a trapped animal. She wore those strappy
sandal-things Olivia had sighed over in magazines, ordered, and then
left in
their boxes at the bottom of her closet. Wine-red ribbons wound from
ankle to
knee like a ballerina's slippers gone wild, the ends dancing the length
of her
sleek calves. Her heels clicked
against the floorboards. How had he not
heard her come in? "I'm here to
help. Though I didn't expect it to take this form, or for you to need
it so
quickly." Lucas looked up from
her feet, swallowing hard. "Psychiatric help, I hope. I apparently
suffer
from a severe self-persecution complex." "No." Her
smile widened; her teeth formed a straight white line. No fangs. Careful to keep his
own from showing, Lucas pressed his lips together, bent his head, and
concentrated as he returned the hammer to the loop in his carpenter's
pants. It
shook against his thigh before he steadied it and slid the handle
through. She wasn't a
vampire; perhaps she'd grown up too quickly, and it had left that
long-lived
patience in her eyes. He searched for
another reason for her visit, and his addled mind came up with, "The
air-conditioning system, then." It had failed earlier in the week, but
Lucas hadn't found a repairman with an open schedule in the midst of
the August
heat wave. "No." She
stood next to him now. She was tall, her chin on level with his throat.
Her
gauzy white sleeve brushed his forearm as she lifted his hand from the
hammer
and studied the tremor in his fingers. His palm was cool,
and in the stagnant theater a light film of perspiration had settled
over his
skin. A human would call his touch cold, clammy; this woman didn't give
any
indication that she found it disgusting. "How long have
you had the shakes?" Dark beads circled
her neck, dripped between her breasts to her waist. Her burgundy shorts
tied
closed below her navel with a large bow; a wide satin band around the
hem of
each leg held them tight against her upper thigh, the material between
billowing slightly like a pair of old-fashioned bloomers. But there was
nothing old-fashioned or prudish about the long stretch of bare leg
beneath. "They started
two days ago." He closed his eyes. Her skin was warm; lifeblood pulsed
just beneath the surface of her upturned wrist. "You have to leave,
miss.
Now." "You can't hurt
me." A gentle prick at the flesh covering the nail in his opposite hand
accompanied the statement. Tepid crimson blood trickled from the
reopened
wound. Surprised, he looked up again. A dagger glinted in
her hand before disappearing. Lucas blinked, certain he'd been
mistaken. "What would you
say your mental faculties are at? Sixty percent? Seventy?" She pinched
the
head of the nail between her forefinger and thumb. The wood screeched
as she
pulled. Quick, merciful--he barely felt the rip of the flesh that had
healed
around it. She slanted a glance up at him and dropped the nail to the
floor.
"Are you typically so unresponsive? You haven't completely descended
into
'big dumb ox,' but hammering yourself to scaffolding doesn't venture
into
genius territory, either. What has it been: two weeks or so that you've
been
drinking the animal blood?" He must be
hallucinating. First Perry Mason, and now a ridiculously strong,
impossibly
perfect human who knew far too much
about vampires. "A month." Her head tilted as
she regarded him; her lashes were thick and black. He couldn't smell
any
mascara. She didn't have any odor, except the light scent of sunshine
and heat
and blood. "A month?
That's an extraordinarily long time for a vampire to--" A crease formed
between her dark golden brows. "Are you nosferatu-born?" Nosferatu. A white naked hairless
figure. Enormous and skittering out of
nowhere in the depths of the cave: pointed ears, gleaming fangs. The
tearing of
flesh--Olivia's screams. A teenager in a monk's robe, wielding a sword.
The images flashed
in front of him; this time Lucas was certain they didn't exist. It was
a
memory, a nightmare. One he'd had far too often in the twenty years
since his
transformation. "Lucas? Are you
well?" Her frown disrupted the bow of her lips. "Where's your
partner?" Dead. Grief and
remembrance centered him. He wasn't a dizzy, drooling boy faced with a
sexual
fantasy come-to-life; he'd stop acting like one. The pale skin on the
back of his hand closed again. He wiped the blood onto his navy t-shirt
and
said flatly, "You know who I am. What
I am." She nodded slowly.
She slid her thumbs into the front of her waistband; her fingers fanned
across
her lower abdomen. Her weight rested on her right leg, her hip cocked.
Her
relaxed posture didn't indicate wariness, but he could almost feel the
speed
and readiness coiled within that lithe frame. "Yes. Lucas
Marsden, formerly an officer with the Salem Police Department. A
graduate of
Willamette University's law school, and a prosecuting attorney for
Marion
County, but after two years, you gave up your position in the DA's
office. Now,
you are the owner of the Paradise Theater, and head of the vampire
community in
Ashland, Oregon." Probably not either
for much longer. "But you aren't here looking for a role. Are you
searching for immortality?" If so, she'd arrived
at exactly the right time; he was almost desperate enough to be
reckless in
selecting his new consort. And if desperation
weren't enough, the temptation in the slow curve of her lips might be.
"No. I found that several centuries ago." She untucked her right
thumb, held out her hand. "I'm Selah. I'm a Guardian." "A
Guardian." Lucas clasped her hand briefly before letting it go. "And
what is it you guard, Selah?" "Humans,
usually. But a lot of things have changed of late." He arched a brow.
"You protect vampires now?" "Typically, I
slay those who end up crossing my path." Before he could respond, she
shook her head and continued, "Typically,
those who cross my path are not part of a community, but are
endangering
humans." His tension eased.
He'd had to do the same to several rogues; and in the last three
months, more
than the past twenty years combined. "If you aren't
here to kill us, then--" He stopped himself. Was he truly having this
conversation? With a warm sun-kissed woman possessing a vampire's
strength? But her touch had
been real; so was the unwavering blue stare she leveled at him. "I
believe
you have a demon in Ashland, Mr. Marsden, and I have every intention of
slaying
it." Her gaze swept his length. "But you won't be much help to me
like this. Where's your partner, or someone you can feed from?" A demon? How many
holes did she think the animal blood had riddled in his brain? Lucas
clenched
his jaw, embarrassment and frustration rising hot within him. And
anger,
though--like the bloodlust--it was slow to respond. "I'll show you." # He didn't believe
her. Selah followed Lucas
Marsden through the sleeping city. She'd
scented his odor coming from a Jeep parked in front of the theater, but
they
traveled on foot. Was he testing her?
If so, she was probably learning more of him than he did of her. He must be nosferatu-born; though tall and
broad-shouldered, with a lean swimmer's build, those physical traits
were only
indicative of his human life. Normal vampires--those transformed by an
exchange
of blood with another vampire--couldn't have moved as swiftly as he
did, no
matter their shape. And it was a fine
shape indeed. Selah watched it as she jogged along behind him, not
bothering to
conceal her appreciation. She hated walking, loathed running, and if
she had to
follow him at this between-hate-and-loathing pace, she might as well
get as
much pleasure as she could out of it. If she teleported
them there, it might have persuaded him that she spoke the truth. But
Lucas was
at the stage where he was aware he wasn't thinking clearly and so
doubted his
perception; such shock-and-awe tactics could push him over the edge and
convince him she was nothing but a figment of his imagination. Taking more time
wouldn't hurt, and considering the direction they were heading, she
suspected
she wouldn't like what he had to show her--and the farther they went,
the more
certain she became of their destination. She shook her head
as they left the smooth pavement behind, entering a wooded area north
of the
city. The sharp fragrance of pine sap, the sweetness of ripening
blackberries,
and the rich scent of volcanic soil rose around her. Her heels would
catch on any protruding root; she vanished her shoes with regret, and
created
boots that matched his. They clomped, though she tried to keep her
steps light.
God, she despised jogging. Lucas turned to
glance over his shoulder, his dark brows lifting in surprise. He no
longer
radiated anger and shame, but curiosity. Good. He wouldn't be difficult
to work
with, once he'd fed. A month of animal blood, but his shakes weren't in
the
advanced stages, his verbalization coherent--it should only take one or
two
feedings for him to return to normal. But no matter how
handsome his face and figure, Selah hoped it wouldn't have to be from
her. The
last time she'd been a beautiful vampire's meal it had ended...badly. Lucas came to a
sudden halt, scenting the air. Tension gripped his form. Drawing up
beside him,
Selah caught it on the faint breeze, metallic and dark: vampire blood. She focused,
performed a psychic sweep of the forest around them. Only the Gate,
resonating
its soothing hum within her--and tinged by sulphur and rot. Nothing
unexpected. But a demon could
hide its psychic presence from her. From both of them. "Stay
here," Lucas said softly. Without much apparent effort, he suppressed
the
trembling. His palm rested steadily on the hammer at his thigh. He must be
accustomed to his orders being followed; assuming her compliance, he
took a
step forward. "Lucas."
Selah stopped him with her hand on his forearm. The muscles were cool
and hard
beneath her fingers. She brought in a sword from her invisible cache of
weapons; his breath caught when it appeared in her grip. "Have you any
fencing experience?" He stared at the
sword for a long moment. His throat worked, and he swallowed before
saying
hoarsely, "I had to take on the part of Laertes for an evening." "Stage
fighting?" She smiled. How was it that almost everyone she
knew--vampire,
Guardian or halfling demon--had such a dramatic streak? "We don't want
to pretend to hurt him." A
semi-automatic pistol replaced the sword. "Can you shoot?" He recovered
quickly. "It's been a while, but--" He took the gun from her,
efficiently chambered a bullet. "--yes." "Aim for the
head, especially the eyes. Shooting him won't kill him, but it will
slow him
down. Don't hesitate to use it. It might keep you alive until I can get
to you.
Go ahead; I'll be at your back." She could still watch for an attack
from
the front, and protect them both if it came from behind. Armed now, his
attention never strayed from his search of the forest ahead of them.
She'd
always liked that in nosferatu-born vampires: their predatory instincts. The crunch of pine
needles was loud beneath their feet. There was no possibility of hiding
their
location with silence when they had to walk--he must have realized it,
too. "What are you?
What's a Guardian?" he said quietly, just as they came upon break in
the
trees, allowing a glimpse of a small clearing. A body lay in the
center. The odor of blood was overpowering. A vampire who hadn't
yet fed might be distracted by such a strong scent; no vampire could
control
the bloodlust. And already, she could feel the hunger and need
heightening
within him. With barely a
thought, Selah formed her wings. The white feathers shone beneath the
silvery
moonlight, increasing her mass and providing a bright target.
Hopefully, it
would divert attention away from Lucas. "We're
like
angels--" She slanted Lucas a quick glance, found him staring at her.
His
emotions slid from disbelief to wonder and fascination, underscored by
wariness
and the nascent heat of his bloodlust. "--only much better." |
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| Excerpt from "Paradise" © 2006, 2007 Meljean Brook | ||||||||||||||
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