Error message

  • Deprecated function: implode(): Passing glue string after array is deprecated. Swap the parameters in drupal_get_feeds() (line 394 of /home1/montes/public_html/books/includes/common.inc).
  • Deprecated function: The each() function is deprecated. This message will be suppressed on further calls in menu_set_active_trail() (line 2405 of /home1/montes/public_html/books/includes/menu.inc).

Authors

Galadon is now available in Kindle Unlimited

Susan Illene - Sun, 04/27/2025 - 16:32
Galadon is now in Kindle Unlimited!
Categories: Authors

Comment on A Beginner’s Guide to Drucraft #35: Introduction to Essentia Capacity by Skeeve

Benedict Jacka - Sun, 04/27/2025 - 10:17

In reply to Benedict.

I presume theres a way to keep a drucrafter personal level lows by external means – to limit their action potential – when holding someone against their will?
And knowing the wickedness of the world this can evolve into torture?

Or is it purely up to the person themselves?

Categories: Authors

Schooled in Magic – Kindle Unlimited

Christopher Nuttall - Sun, 04/27/2025 - 08:25

Over the last few weeks, the rights to the Schooled in Magic books has started to revert to me. This is an ongoing process, at least partly because I’m trying to line up the old reviews and audiobooks with the new e-books, but I have uploaded the first six to Amazon and placed them all in Kindle Unlimited, in hopes of attracting more readers <grin>.

If you haven’t seen or tried the series, why not try now?

But what is the Schooled in Magic series about, you might ask?

Imagine a person swept into another world, where she discovers she has magic and goes to a magic school; imagine that same person having the historical insights and technological knowledge to trigger an industrial revolution, a revolution that both allows magic and science to interact in ways previously considered impossible and also unleashes social change, from empowering peasants and commoners to demand better treatment to giving them the tools they need to demand freedom, liberty, and self-determination. In this series, Harry Potter meets Lest Darkness Falls: the war is not just against the forces of darkness, but also against everything that is held back the development of human civilisation and threatened the rights of man.

And in the first six books, Emily sows the seeds that will become a tidal wave of change.

Categories: Authors

Comment on A Beginner’s Guide to Drucraft #35: Introduction to Essentia Capacity by Kevin

Benedict Jacka - Sun, 04/27/2025 - 06:14

In reply to Benedict.

Huh I guess Scar and Diesel were somewhat competent, it seemed kinda of odd that they were with House Ashford… unless Charles knew they weren’t that effective and did it to undermine Lucella seems like something he would do.

Did William, Stephen’s Dad get training and sigls from House Ashford despite his young age? If so I could see why Charles took him marrying his daughter so badly for some reason I got the feeling they saw each other as a surrogate father/son relationship for some reason.

Categories: Authors

Comment on A Beginner’s Guide to Drucraft #35: Introduction to Essentia Capacity by Bill

Benedict Jacka - Sat, 04/26/2025 - 20:36

In reply to Benedict.

Many thanks for that – Doh! I was thinking it was more complex – somewhat like that Tier specialist used.

Categories: Authors

Comment on A Beginner’s Guide to Drucraft #35: Introduction to Essentia Capacity by Benedict

Benedict Jacka - Sat, 04/26/2025 - 16:46

In reply to Bill.

It’s pretty much exactly the same as making sigls. Anyone with basic shaping skills can take the essentia from a Well and crystallise it into a piece of aurum. And even if you can’t shape, there are sigls that can do the job instead.

Categories: Authors

Comment on A Beginner’s Guide to Drucraft #35: Introduction to Essentia Capacity by Bill

Benedict Jacka - Sat, 04/26/2025 - 16:29

In reply to Benedict.

Oh! That sound both interesting and very useful for Stephen!
At the moment I’m still not understanding how essentia gets taken out of wells and stored – perhaps you need an engineer and a machine as per the Tier raid…

Categories: Authors

Comment on A Beginner’s Guide to Drucraft #35: Introduction to Essentia Capacity by Benedict

Benedict Jacka - Sat, 04/26/2025 - 12:58

In reply to Bill.

Depends on the armsman. New recruits don’t have sigls at all. Higher-ranked ones have continuous sigls that operate automatically. Elite, long-serving armsmen might eventually get tapped for drucraft training and would get active sigls that they could use on their own. This puts quite a lot of power (and wealth) into the hands of the armsman, though, so this is something you only do if you trust the person.

Categories: Authors

Comment on A Beginner’s Guide to Drucraft #35: Introduction to Essentia Capacity by Benedict

Benedict Jacka - Sat, 04/26/2025 - 12:55

In reply to Jim Sackman.

Yes, there are Primal sigls that do exactly that.

Categories: Authors

Comment on A Beginner’s Guide to Drucraft #35: Introduction to Essentia Capacity by Benedict

Benedict Jacka - Sat, 04/26/2025 - 12:54

In reply to Allan.

Pretty much, yes. There are some bad consequences that come from running too low on personal essentia for too long, but that’s a topic for another article (and it’s quite rare for that to happen unless you’re doing it deliberately for some rason).

Categories: Authors

Comment on A Beginner’s Guide to Drucraft #35: Introduction to Essentia Capacity by Bill

Benedict Jacka - Sat, 04/26/2025 - 11:28

Do the Armsmen actually have any drucraft skill or are their protection/attack sigls set on “automatic” and operate unconsciously?

While one can’t change ones personal essentia capacity by very much perhaps skilled drucrafters are able to design sigls that, while doing the same job, have a lower Lorenz rating? I’m thinking, for example about the Slam Sigl, where it could be set on continuous charge-up and only require attention from the drucrafter to activate the stored charge in a fight. Might this lower the Lorenz rating?

Categories: Authors

Comment on A Beginner’s Guide to Drucraft #35: Introduction to Essentia Capacity by Jim Sackman

Benedict Jacka - Sat, 04/26/2025 - 05:16

Since we know that essentia can be stored at least temporarily from the draining of wells, is it possible to provide a short term boost of essentia capacity using some sort of storage device.

Clearly this would be for a triggered effect but just thinking that this might be a way to boost an effect for a short period of time. Think of an extra strong push or light.

Categories: Authors

The Inheritance: Chapter 3 Part 1

ILONA ANDREWS - Fri, 04/25/2025 - 15:52

I opened my eyes. A jagged stone ceiling spread above me, glowing softly with swirls of alien growth.

I hadn’t imagined the nightmare. It happened.

I stared at the ceiling for a long breath and checked my watch. The digital skin was dark, with a spiderweb of cracks across it. Must’ve happened when I smashed into that rimstone after the blast.

Lying here would accomplish nothing. I had to get out of this hellhole.

I sat up slowly. The generator was still going, and three of the five floodlights had survived, illuminating the cavern with bright puddles of electric light. The inside of my head burned, my back throbbed, and my right leg felt like someone had rolled an asphalt compactor over it. But I was still breathing.

“Is anyone alive?”

Silence. Just me and the corpses.

“Anyone?”

Something nudged my side. I whipped around. Bear sat next to me, her smart brown eyes focused on my face with unwavering canine intensity.

I wasn’t by myself. The dog was with me.

“Hi Bear.”

Bear tilted her head. Her left side was dark and wet. Blood. It started near her shoulder and bled down over her leg onto the paw. Shit.

“Hold on, girl.”

I pushed to my feet. My right leg whined but held my weight. Oh good. I took two steps before I remembered the bone sticking through my skin.

I pulled my right pant leg up. An angry red welt marked my calf, smudged with dried blood. That was it. The wound was gone.

I’m losing my mind.

My leg was broken. I had looked at it and then hid it with my coveralls. The pant leg was stained with dark red, the result of a massive bleed. I’d left a blood trail half across this cavern. I looked up. There it was, a ragged chain of dark smears.

I felt the edge of rising panic and shoved those thoughts right down before they dragged me under. It didn’t matter right now. I had to see what was going on with Bear’s shoulder.

I made my way to the nearest pond. A bright turquoise hard hat lay on the rocks. I had a sick feeling that Stella might have been wearing it.

Nope, not going to think about that either.

“Come here, Bear.”

The shepherd padded over.

“Stay.”

Bear sat.

I needed to clean the blood off her, but who knew what the hell was in this water. 

I flexed.

The water looked perfectly clear to my enhanced vision.

My talent pegged it as clean, but there were limits to what I could sense. If Bear had an open wound and I dumped a bunch of alien bacteria into it… But then I crawled all over in that water with an open wound – which was mysteriously not open anymore, and yeah, not thinking about that – and I almost drowned in it. I was pretty sure I’d swallowed a bunch of it. Which was neither here nor there, except if there was some vicious pathogen in it, we were both fucked.

There was water in the canteens. All miners carried some. We would have to save that for drinking. There was no way to tell how long it would take us to get out of this cave.

Suddenly my mouth was dry.

I dipped the hat into the stream, scooped some water, and gently poured it over Bear’s flank, half-expecting the dog to bolt. Bear sat like a rock.

“Stay. What a good girl. The best girl. So good.”

Three hats later, the water ran mostly clear. A gash carved Bear’s skin over her shoulder. It was shallow and not too long. Most of the blood must have come from somewhere else. Someone else.

I exhaled. One of those carts should have a med kit on it.

“Let’s get some antiseptic on that.”

I needed to get across the stream and the slight wobble in my leg said that if I fell, I would regret it. The best place to cross was still the same – the shallow part where Aaron lay in two pieces.

I picked up Bear’s leash and made my way to the crossing. If she yanked me off my feet, there would be hell to pay. I waded into the stream, ready to drop the leash at the slightest tug. Bear whined and followed me. I slowly shuffled across the stream bottom.

“Slow is smooth and smooth is fast.”

The words came out like a curse. Melissa’s face was branded into my memory. I could replay it in my head like a recording. Six years. I couldn’t even remember how many breaches together. She knew my children’s names. She looked straight at me and yelled at London to throw the grenade.

“I thought she was my friend, Bear.”

Bear didn’t answer.

“I saw Melissa push Anja out of her way. And that over there is Anja’s body. She was twenty-six years old.”

Sanders, Hotchkins, Ella Gazarian, they were in front of me when I was sprinting for that exit. My memory served up Sanders being swept away by the blast.

“They were her guildmates. They trusted her, and she fucking left them, and worse, trampled over them trying to escape. Sanders is probably the reason I survived. He took the brunt of that aetherium grenade.”

We cleared the stream and carefully went up the shallow slope to where the carts waited. Water sloshed in my boot. The other one was wet, too.

I tied the leash to the cart, found the first aid kit, and flipped the heavy latches open. A nice big bottle of antiseptic rinse. We were in business.

“Stay, Bear.”

The shepherd sat.

I opened the antiseptic and poured it over the wound. Bear shook but stayed.

“You are so good. Such a good dog.”

I capped the bottle and grabbed a tube of antibacterial gel.

“Melissa’s priority was the mining crew. But London’s priority was keeping everyone safe, and if that failed, keeping me alive.”

I remembered the cold calculation in London’s eyes, too. The way his face iced over when he hurled the grenade. The set of his mouth. I squeezed the gel onto Bear’s wound.

“He was looking straight at me, and his eyes said, ‘Fuck you. I’m not dying here today.’ I was halfway across that stream when he bailed. Five more seconds. That was all I needed. Five seconds, and I would’ve been on the other end of that cave in. What was left of the mining crew would’ve been on the other side. They weren’t even paying attention to us. We could’ve ran all the way to the gate.”

Bear tilted her head, looking at me.

“You know what he said to me? He said, ‘I’ll get you out of here in one piece. The only way you go down is if I’m down, and I’m really good at surviving.’ Well, we know he didn’t lie. That fucker is excellent at surviving.”

I screwed the cap back onto the gel tube.

“The Cold Chaos assault teams are good at clearing the prospective mining sites before moving on. I’ve never seen their escorts deal with anything more serious than a skirmish. The most London had to do was to cut down an occasional left-over creature popping out of its hiding place. This – everything that happened – was the reason why Cold Chaos sent him into the breach. When the worst-case scenario hit, he was supposed to step in. He was supposed to protect us. All those people…”

A sob choked me.

I shut up.

Being an escort captain came with a lot of responsibility, and you didn’t just become one. It wasn’t enough to be powerful or trusted. The position required experience. London had put in years with the primary assault teams. He was seasoned. He looked at those hostiles slicing people like cabbage in passing, and in a split second he knew that he had never encountered anything like them and nothing he had in his arsenal could stop them. He saw death, and he made a deliberate choice to save himself.

He could’ve waited. He could’ve stood in that gap for another ten seconds and let the rest of us escape, but it was a risk, and he chose his life over ours. The only reason Melissa made it out was because she happened to be close enough and he would need a witness to back up his story. When your job is to put yourself between noncombatants and danger, coming out of the breach alone wasn’t a good look.

Even if they fired him, he would live. That’s all that mattered to him. And if he had been one of the ordinary miners I wouldn’t have a problem with that, but he wasn’t a miner. He was a high-ranking combat Talent. We trusted him. I trusted him, and he threw an aetherium grenade in our faces and ran.

“When death stares people in the face, they revert to their true self, Bear.”

London’s true self was a cold, calculating coward.

I checked myself for scrapes and bruises. I didn’t find any. I had some red welts here and there but no broken skin. I’d crawled on my hands and knees across a rough cave floor dragging my broken leg behind me. My hands and knees should’ve been raw, but I didn’t find any abrasions. I rubbed some gel over the red mark on my leg just in case.

Don’t think about it. That was best.

The generator was next. The industrial model was rated for 7-9 hour run time. The fuel indicator was almost empty. I’d been in this cave for at least 7 hours.

If London made it out of the gate, he would immediately report what happened to the guild. London and Melissa didn’t stay long enough to see how the fight turned out, so for all they knew, there were still active hostiles in this cave. Bodycams didn’t work in the breaches. They still recorded, but you only got static. Cold Chaos would have to rely on London’s testimony, and I was sure that Melissa would confirm whatever he said. She wouldn’t just suddenly grow a heart and admit that she climbed out of the cave over her guildmates’ bodies. As she so often told me, she had mouths to feed.

This was going to go one of three ways.

One, London made it out and reported that I was dead. This was the most likely outcome, because otherwise he would have to own up to leaving me behind.

Two, London made it and reported he left me behind. Not likely. If the DDC found out that he bolted out of the cave abandoning me, Cold Chaos would face heavy sanctions.  There would be a fine at best and revocation of gate access at worst. The guild would cut him loose and blacklist him. He would never work for any of the main guilds again.

Three, London and Melissa died enroute. Like Elena said, this breach was a maze, and we had hiked for quite a while to get to this cavern. It was possible that something equally terrible burst out of a side passage and killed those two. The mining crew was required to report back every hour.  At least seven hours had passed without check-in.  Even if London and Melissa didn’t make it, the guild knew that the mining crew was either in trouble or dead.

No matter which of these three outcomes happened, protocol required the assault team to abandon their progress and address this mess. By now they should have been here to neutralize the threat and retrieve the bodies. Nobody came for the corpses or for the incredibly valuable adamantite, and the breach was still active. That meant only one thing: the assault team was dead.

Bear whined softly. I reached out and petted her back.

Right now, Cold Chaos was likely pulling a new assault team together. The level of threat in this breach was beyond anything I had seen. They would need their top Talents for this, and those people were usually occupied. High ranking guild members made more than celebrity actors, and the guilds worked them to the bone for that money. Getting them all in one place could take days.

The gate opened for entrance twenty-four hours ago. Judging by the power readings, Cold Chaos had anywhere between four to eight weeks to clear it. They thought everyone was dead, so they wouldn’t be in a hurry.

There was another unpleasant possibility. If London did own up to leaving me behind, Cold Chaos could choose to deliberately delay. If I was alive, they would face intense scrutiny. Things would be a lot simpler for them if I was dead. Given enough time in the breach, I would be.

There would be no rescue. I was on my own. If I died here, the kids would be alone.  Roger would let them go into foster care. I was sure of it. They were living reminders of his failure as a father, and he had very little tolerance for being held accountable these days.

I’d made a promise to my daughter. I would keep it.

Digging through the cave-in was out of the question. The integrity of the cave ceiling in that passage was shot, which meant moving any of the rocks risked another collapse. No, I would have to go around, through one of those passageways.

I glanced at the end of the cavern. The tunnels stretched into darkness. I would have to go into that darkness, make my way through the breach filled with monsters, ones that probably killed an entire assault team, find the gate, get out, and make sure Cold Chaos didn’t have a chance to stop me. Too easy.

I would need supplies. And a weapon. In a few minutes, the generator would die and take the lights with it.

I had to act fast.

The post The Inheritance: Chapter 3 Part 1 first appeared on ILONA ANDREWS.

Categories: Authors

Recommended Reading List: January 2025

Kristine Kathryn Rusch - Fri, 04/25/2025 - 06:33

I read a lot in January and liked a lot of it as well. Some truly marvelous books (which is not what I could say for February & March. More on that in those lists). I also finished my reading for the in-person space opera workshop I was conducting in the middle of the month. Honestly, I didn’t like much of what I read in the brand-new anthologies I found. The stories had no depth or no ending or both. So I don’t have a lot to recommend from those books. Usually I can at least recommend the introductions, but one stunningly left out all the great female space opera writers of the 1990s and barely mentioned the ones in the 2000s. I realize that bias happens, but that one stung on a bunch of levels. (I guess I expect it from old timers, most of whom are not with us anymore, but not folks who were active in those time periods.)

I haven’t yet finished reading  The Best American Sports Writing of the Century, because I needed to take a break. The book has a slant that is very white-male oriented. It’s also filled with some challenging pieces that aren’t holding up to the 26 years since the book was printed. (I swear, New Journalism is soooo self-involved.) But some of it is good and interesting and I’ll come back to it when the mood suits me. I doubt I’ll ever recommend the book, but watch: there will be a time when I recommend more essays from it.

I read one of the best novels I’ve seen in years and some great articles. So January was quite a success…which is why this list is so late. It took a while to chronicle my reading.

 

January 2025

Anders, Charlie Jane, “A Temporary Embarrassment in Space Time,” New Adventures in Space Operaedited by Jonathan Strahan, Tachyon, 2024. I absolutely love this story. It’s everything a certain kind of space opera should be—fun, preposterous, believable, tense, and adventurous. All wrapped into a neat and well-written package. A wonderful gem of a story.

Crais, Robert, The Big Empty, Putnam, 2024. The best book I’ve read all year, maybe in the past few years. I love Robert Crais’s Elvis Cole and Joe Pike. Pike doesn’t show up until halfway through this book because Bob is so dang good at point of view and the way a story should flow. I don’t have a lot of time for leisure reading, and right now, my lack of time is significantly worse. So I did the readerly thing. I stayed up past my bedtime, and Dean literally had to pull the book from my hands. I still read it in two days. Fantastic. And no, I’m not going to tell you much more than “fantastic” because, as with all of Bob’s books, to say more is to ruin a surprise. (I might have already said too much, in fact.)

Deaver, Jeffery, and Maldonado, Isabella, Fatal Intrusion, Thomas & Mercer, 2024. Yep, I have an Amazon link only for this book, because I just discovered something very unpleasant. This book (and a bunch of Deaver novellas) are only available in ebook on Amazon. Sorry about that! I read the book in paper, which is how I prefer to read, so I had no idea that this had happened until the moment I was putting the book on the list. Sigh. It makes me, as a reader, more than mildly pissed off.

The book is good enough. It’s not as good as most Deaver books, but it’s better than a lot of thrillers. I’ll read the next book in the series, and if I like it, I’ll pick up one of Maldonado’s books. Collaborations are a difficult animal. They can be something better than both writers, especially if the book is something they wouldn’t have written without the collaborator. I suppose Deaver could argue that he wouldn’t have had a character like Carmen Sanchez, but except for a few chapters that I suspect were all Maldonado, she felt very generic. So I don’t think this collaboration enhanced the two writers’ work (I’m saying this without having read hers). But this is a good way to while away a few hours.

Fekadu, Mesfin, “The Loophole That Landed Muni Long a Grammy Nom,” The Hollywood Reporter, November 20, 2024. The online version of this article has the title “Muni Long Explains How She Made It,” and I think that is a better title for the content here. Muni Long has been around for awhile, and she has followed her own path. There are some great quotes in here, but the best was her response to how she got paid for her streaming content:

Sometimes you look at your quarterly statement and you’re like, “Oh wow, $1,000 for 500 million streams. Great. That’s awesome.” The sheer volume that I have to write in order to make an income that makes sense [is insane]. What saved me is that I have quality and quantity, whereas some of these people, all they have is one or two records.

Quantity and quality. She’s right. We’re doing the same. Take a look at this one, even if you’re new to Muni Long.

Harris, Robert,Vintage Books, 2016. I really like Robert Harris’s writing, although his topics don’t always interest me. I picked up Conclave after seeing a review of the film. A lot of my favorite actors are in it, and since I like Harris, I thought I should give the book an eyeball before watching the film. Glad I did. There’s a nice moment toward the end of the book, something completely unexpected and yet set up. It worked for me, and might not have worked in the film (which I have not yet seen). Of course, that had me looking through more Robert Harris for the books I’ve missed. I mostly didn’t order the ones on the topics that I don’t care about, but I did preorder the next. I love his courage as a writer. He’s always doing something interesting. This is a novella, filled with his great characters and marvelous writing. Oh, and for the interested: I am not Catholic, although I was in and out of Catholic churches as a kid because so many of my friends were Catholic. So I have a passing familiarity with some of the rituals, but no great interest in the church or its habits. I still found this fascinating.

Heinz, W.C., “Brownsville Bum,” The Best American Sports Writing of the Century, edited by David Halberstam with Glenn Stout, HarperCollins, 1999. I had never heard of W.C. Heinz before reading this book. Yet many of the other writers in the front half of the book (at least) mentioned him as the best of the best. Well, this is my favorite piece in the book so far. It’s a 1951 piece about someone named Bummy Davis who was a fighter back in the day when fighters could kill each other in the ring. This one reads like a short story—the life and death of kinda thing. The writing itself is sharp and crisp, the events breathtaking. The murder, at the end, shocking because it happened in a bar, not in the ring. If you find the book, read this one first.

Rose, Lacey, “Selena Gomez is Waiting For Your Call,” The Hollywood Reporter, November 20, 2024. Last fall and early this year, there were a lot of interviews with Selena Gomez as the Oscar and Grammy hype heated up. She has a good team. But she’s also a great interview because, as young as she is, she’s had an amazing career. She knows who she is, and she’s blunt about it. I can’t encapsulate this long piece in any coherent way, except to say all writers (and Selena fans) should read it.

Royko, Mike, “‘A Very Solid Book,'” The Best American Sports Writing of the Century, edited by David Halberstam with Glenn Stout, HarperCollins, 1999. A lot of the work in this book is dated. So dated, in fact, that I had to look up some of the rivalries just to see what was going on. But this piece by Mike Royko from 1987 is familiar. I was 27 at the time, and aware of the Mets/Cubs rivalry.

Some idiot at some NY publishing house asked Royko to review a book about the Mets. And oh, did he. This piece is not dated, once you knew about the rivalry, and it is one one of my favorites. I just read it again, out loud this time to Dean. It’s a very short piece that is, ostensibly, a review of a book by Mets first baseman (at the time) Keith Hernandez. And Smith was a Cubbies fan through and through. The book is solid, you see, because it can survive being thrown against a wall…

Really worth reading

Score, Lucy, Things We Never Got Over, Bloom Books, 2022. Okay, this is annoying. As I set up this post, I discovered that Lucy Score’s ebooks are exclusive to Amazon. Same thing as the Deaver/Maldonado above. Grrrr. You can get the paperbooks anywhere you want, but to get the ebook, you have to go to Amazon. You can’t even go to her own website/store to get the book. Sorry about that. Get the paper. She has some lovely deluxe editions.

However, I did find the book on Amazon. I had just finished something else (what I can’t remember) and the algorithm suggested this book. I did what I often do and read the first chapter. And wowza is it good. Seriously, this first chapter is worth reading even if you don’t pick up the book. The chapter is a masterclass of information flow. The chapter title is Worst. Day. Ever. The first paragraph is a perfect hook:

I wasn’t sure what to expect when I walked into Café Rev, but it sure as hell wasn’t a picture of myself behind the register under the cheery headline “Do Not Serve.” A yellow frowny face magnet held the photo in place.

Each paragraph builds on that. With each page, the situation gets worse and worse and worse. You—well, I—had to go to the next chapter immediately. The book ends up being a tiny bit long, and for a moment verges on “if you two only talk to each other, this would end” but by then I didn’t care. The book is fun, the writing is great, and the characters are a hoot. So pick this one up…or at the very least (writers) read that first paragaph.

Smith, Red, “Next To Godliness,” The Best American Sports Writing of the Century, edited by David Halberstam with Glenn Stout, HarperCollins, 1999. My father, who was born in 1914, used to talk about the great sports writers and announcers from his life. He also talked about great players, so many of their names are familiar to me. Others, not quite as much. But Red Smith was quite familiar. His name was in the air all the time in our family, and also in the various writing classes I had. Red Smith was one of those writers even non-sports fans enjoyed.

Back when my father imprinted on baseball, there was radio, but it was local only. So games played outside of the area weren’t aired. The readers had to rely on the print media.

“Next To Godliness” describes an entire game in maybe 1,000 words. It also describes the reaction to that game from Smith himself. It’s lovely and well done. There’s a reason this man’s work was remembered—at least for another 50 years.

Smith, Thomas, Dua Lipa Talks 2024,” Billboard, December 14. 2024. I love Dua Lipa’s stuff. I run to it. I also enjoy how she’s running her career, in the same way that I admire the way Taylor Swift is. These women are taking charge in a way that most musicians do not. So read this. She’s interesting and what she’s doing with her business is also great.

Verhoeven, Beatrice, “John M. Chu,” The Hollywood Reporter, November 13, 2024. Fascinating interview with John M. Chu, released just before Wicked came out. (If you haven’t seen Wicked, oh, you must! It’s marvelous.) Lots of great material here, mostly about being courageous. Lots of behind the scenes on his various movies as well. In The Heights, Crazy Rich Asians, and more. Read this one.

Weir, Keziah, “Give And Let Give,” Vanity Fair, October, 2024. I’ve been thinking about this interview ever since I read it, particularly as one particularly nutty billionaire chainsaws his way through American government, another sends his fiance into space, and the rest don’t seem to give a rat’s banana about actual human beings.

Melinda French Gates, former wife of Bill Gates, is also worth billions, and she’s giving it away, systematically, to charity after charity. She says it’s not easy, because she had to have the right organization in place to help funnel the money, and then she has to figure out where she can do the most good. Note the difference: Do The Most Good. Yeah, she’s not the only ex-wife of a billionaire doing this.

It’s fascinating to me that the wealthy women understand their social responsibility and the bulk of the men…do not.

 

 

Categories: Authors

Can I Pet That Dawg?

ILONA ANDREWS - Thu, 04/24/2025 - 20:47

Ada before the gate dive. (Link for those of you getting this in your newsletter.)

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Whistle (@whistlesports)

I’ve had a rough night. It stormed very heavily, and Sookie the Old Bulldog decided to hide by my side of the bed breathing heavily. Between that and deafening peals of thunder, I must’ve woke up 5 times. ::looks at a cup of black tea:: Work, damn you.

And I am posting this much later and now the above paragraph makes it seem like I slept past noon. If only. I actually had to get up very early and go to the airport to apply for TSA PreCheck.

Mod R sent over a list of questions.

When will we be able to buy The Inheritance? (this year, this summer, even general estimations would be appreciated)

Should be this summer. I’m annoyed with it right now, because we were trying to finish it before the vacation next week, but doesn’t look like that’s going to happen. We may need another week. The Inheritance will be available in ebook, either by itself or as a part of a collection.

What is the release schedule?

A scene will be posted every Monday and Friday. Meaning that if Chapter 3 has two scenes in it, one will be up on Monday and the other on Friday.

Will it be a series? This is less a question and more an emphatic declaration…BARSA BARSA

I swear, Mod R is the worst series rumor enabler. Right now it is planned as a standalone.

Do I need to read other LitRPGs to get this?

I don’t think so. The Inheritance uses LitRPG tropes, but it interprets them in its own way. It doesn’t hit some of the more genre-specific LitRPG milestones such as system, levels, numerical stats, level overseers/observers, and so on. You should be safe.

So is Ada a pink lantern now?

Everyone by now knows about the Green Lanterns, which are a group of guardians policing the Galaxy in DC comics. They get their powers from a magic green ring. At some point DC decided to add more colors. There are Red, Orange, Yellow, Blue, Indigo and Violet, Black, White, and Ultraviolet powered by Emotional Electromagnetic Spectrum (???). Pink lanterns are part of the Violet Corps, and they are powered by love.

This is what happens when you try to squeeze as much out of a franchise as you can by writing too many sequels.

Ada is not powered by a pink lantern.

Does Bear die?

Read on to find out.

How long with this novella be?

Not sure yet. Maybe 35 K or so. We really do not want to cross into short novel territory. It does have its own folder now. It was in Short Stories folder, but now it has its own Dropbox folder, which is a sing that it’s turning into a bit more of a project. We will see. 35K for now.

A small note, because it’s been a little bit since the last serial

Mod R is there for when BDH needs real life help like when you are having technical difficulties. Please respect her time. If you have a story-related comment, please use the comment section instead. In other words, please do not email her to complain about fictional people.

But what about the theory I posted in the comments? Are you not going to say anything about it? It was a good theory!

Given that when BDH was presented with two men and a daughter, they defaulted to magical male pregnancy instead of adoption, nothing surprises me anymore. Bring it on!

Click this line to read spoiler responses to some interesting ideas.

No, London wasn’t saving the Earth, because the monsters cannot exit the gate and are trapped there. Melissa does not have telepathic powers. Being handsome does not make you a good person, and at the end of the last scene, there was only one being left alive in the cave who saw Ada being kind and could’ve said anything to her. You guys are so much fun. You think of so many interesting things.

Admin note:

We are going on vacation next week, if everything goes well. The Inheritance will continue while we are off. All of the story segments are already uploaded to the site, and Mod R will publish them on schedule.

Love you, BDH! You are still and always the best readers an author can wish for.

The post Can I Pet That Dawg? first appeared on ILONA ANDREWS.

Categories: Authors

Galadon book release day!

Susan Illene - Thu, 04/24/2025 - 12:15
Ready for more dragon action with a spicy romance story? Check out the details about Galadon with retailer links included.
Categories: Authors

This Kingdom Is Up for Preorder

ILONA ANDREWS - Wed, 04/23/2025 - 17:33

Tor released This Kingdom for preorder and did not warn us. We found out 30 minutes ago, and Mod R tells me that the links are already up in Discord and fan groups. BDH: zero chill.

Zero.

The EBOOK is up everywhere.

The PRINT EDITION is up at other places but not up on Amazon US because Amazon US only allows hardcover preorders in 300 day window before release. Oher country Amazons already have it (UK, Canada, Germany etc). It should be up everywhere some time in the summer. We will remind you again when we have the cover. THERE WILL BE A PRINT EDITION.

The AUDIO is not up anywhere except BN because it has not been recorded yet. The book is still being copyedited. THERE WILL BE AN AUDIO EDITION.

If you are ordering from BN: Members Save 25% Off Pre-Orders With Code: PREORDER25.

BOOKSHOP

Synopsis, once again:

Outlander meets Game of Thrones in this blockbuster new epic fantasy series from the #1 New York Times bestselling author duo Ilona Andrews.

When Maggie wakes up cold, filthy, and naked in a gutter, it doesn’t take her long to recognize Kair Toren, a city she knows intimately from the pages of the famously unfinished dark fantasy series she’s been obsessively reading and re-reading while waiting years for the final novel.

Her only tools for navigating this gritty world of rival warlords, magic, and mayhem? Her encyclopedic knowledge of the plot, the setting, and the characters’ ambitions and fates. But while she quickly discovers she cannot be killed (though many will try!), the same cannot be said for the living, breathing characters she’s coming to love—a motley band that includes a former lady’s maid, a deadly assassin, various outrageous magical creatures, and a dangerously appealing soldier. Soon, instead of trying to get home, she finds herself enmeshed in the schemes—and attentions—of dueling princes, dukes, and villains, all while trying to save them and the kingdom of Rellas from the way she knows their stories will end: in a cataclysmic war.

For fans of Samantha Shannon, Danielle L. Jensen, Sarah J. Maas, and isekai and portal fantasy, This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me is the beginning of the most epic adventure yet from genre powerhouse author duo Ilona Andrews.

At the Publisher’s request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.

Also, different retailers are showing different page count. Nobody has the manuscript yet. These are placeholder page numbers.

The post This Kingdom Is Up for Preorder first appeared on ILONA ANDREWS.

Categories: Authors

Free Fiction Monday: Body Parts & Bathtub Rings

Kristine Kathryn Rusch - Mon, 04/21/2025 - 21:00

A desert lake. A severed arm. A thousand questions.

Las Vegas summer sun bakes Metro Detective Sofia Herrara as she carefully steps her way to solving this murder mystery, while protecting herself, her partner and the department.

From water wars to the mob, good guys to bad, she’ll follow the clues to answer these pressing questions:

Whose arm? Who died? And—most importantly—why?

Body Parts & Bathtub Rings is available for one week on this site. It’s available in Crimes Against Nature, edited by Robert Lopresti. The ebook is also available on all retail stores, as well as here.

 

Body Parts & Bathtub Rings By Kristine Kathryn Rusch 

The skin on the hand remained intact, although it was pale and bloated. Black hairs curved out of the base of the fingers and along the wrist. The body was missing, but the wedding ring studded with three visible diamonds wasn’t. The diamonds sparkled.  This hand hadn’t been in the water long, which was both good and bad.

Las Vegas Metro Detective Sofia Herrara pulled gloves onto her own hands, the heat of the day making the task harder than it should have been. Her own hands were slightly swollen and just a little bit damp. Sweat trickled down her back despite the loose weave long-sleeve shirt she wore. Her dark khakis were probably sweat stained as well behind the knee. Part of the problem was her heavy boots, which required thick socks just to keep the blisters away. Her feet were hot, she was hot, and it would only get worse.

She was crouched in the midday sunlight at the edge of Lake Mead. Her wide-brimmed hat cast shade over the rocks of what had once been the lakebed. The water pushed against larger rocks about a foot away.

The water glistened as if the sunlight made it happy. Sunlight in July did not make Sofia happy. She had given her standard issue water bottle to her partner, Zach Gelb, to hold while she examined the crime scene. If, indeed, this could be called a crime scene. The crime had clearly happened elsewhere.

Zach had taken a few steps away from the scene to talk on his cell. He had his back to her, but he was standing still, not pacing, trying to act like this was a crime scene as well.

The sun was so high that Zach didn’t leave much of a shadow. There was, essentially, no escaping the sun out here at this time of day, which was usually when the lake was the emptiest—at least of locals. Tourists, on the other hand, had no idea what they were facing when they encountered the desert sun, the water, and the increased elevation.

The third person in their group knew that better than she did. The park ranger who had called the hand in, Roberto Bonetti —Call me Berto— had been out here for most of the morning as he waited beside the hand to preserve the scene.

He wore the National Park Ranger’s standard summer uniform, a tan shirt with tan slacks and boots as heavy as hers. His hat wasn’t thin and floppy like hers and would have made her head sweat.

Maybe he was used to this heat, although she had no idea how anyone could be. He did have two water bottles attached to his utility belt, along with some hydration packs and a small emergency kit. She hadn’t asked him how many times he had found dehydrated tourists suffering from heat stroke, but she suspected it was quite a lot.

The three of them were now waiting for the Clark County Coroner’s Office to send someone here. Technically, the ranger should have contacted them immediately, but this wasn’t Berto’s first rodeo. He could see that the hand was suspicious. Or rather, what was visible of the arm was suspicious.

The wrist was intact, but the forearm wasn’t. And it hadn’t been cleanly cut. It had been ripped through. The bone, which was what she had to go on, was jagged.

Which made it suspicious, and because it was, Berto knew that a detective would be needed. So he had called Metro first, and then called the coroner.

Sofia was grateful for that because the faster they all moved on this the better. The last thing she wanted was for the media to get wind of a severed hand discovered at Lake Mead.

As Lake Mead’s water levels had dropped due to the drought conditions of the past twenty-plus years, more and more bodies—or parts of bodies—got discovered. The national press corps went nuts a few years back when a body in a barrel turned up. That body was at least forty years old and most likely the remains of someone who had run afoul with the Las Vegas mob.

Since then, every single grisly discovery on the shores or sticking out of the water got the press’s attention. It would only be a matter of time before someone heard of this one.

Thank heavens, though, this hand had been discovered by a ranger and not a tourist. At least Sofia wasn’t dealing with social media postings and the hasty arrival of the local news channels. She’d faced that last fall when a skull was discovered by a couple hiking the lake bed. Turned out that skull belonged to a local man who had drowned while jet skiing in the 1990s, but it took a while for the DNA testing to come back, which meant she had to endure weeks of speculation and interviews about contract killings and the violence that was part of Las Vegas’s past.

She always tried to steer the discussion away from that and toward the changes in Lake Mead. The lake she remembered from her childhood was gone; what she saw was a tiny expanse of water revealing more and more of its lakebed.

A white “bathtub ring” encircled everything, marking where the waterline had been when she was a little girl. Even back then, though, Lake Mead was considered the deadliest national park in the United States. There had been more deaths at Lake Mead in the past two decades than at any other national park. She had actually looked that statistic up because she’d gotten so many questions about the deaths and discovered that Lake Michigan was the deadliest lake, but it wasn’t a national park site.

And when the deaths were put into a context, such as the number of deaths versus the number of visitors, the deaths were a tiny tiny tiny percentage. Last fall, she’d had all of those numbers at her fingertips, because she was so annoyed by the discussions of the mob and the murders and the deaths. She’d actually snapped at one reporter: How come you care so much about these so-called mob murders and not the bathtub ring around the lake? That’ll lead to hundreds if not thousands of deaths in the Las Vegas Valley if the drought continues

She got pulled off of media duty after that, and no one sent her to Lake Mead again. Until now.

Although, to be fair, she wasn’t even sure this was a homicide. Not yet. For all she knew, the arm could have been severed in a boating accident. If someone got too close to a boat propeller or maybe got their arm entangled in an anchor chain, the force might sever the arm.

She was going to have to find out if local hospitals had treated someone with this kind of severed limb. If the arm’s owner had assistance from someone who knew what they were doing, the owner might’ve made it to a hospital before bleeding out.

Might was the operative word, though. The chances of surviving a severing like this would take skill and luck. There were ambulances parked in strategic areas around the lake, but a bleed-out like this one would need attention immediately. Just getting from one part of the lake to another might take five minutes, and then there’d be a hike to the water itself.

She didn’t really expect to find the owner of the arm alive, but she couldn’t rule it out.

She felt a half second of irritation. The coroner should have been here by now, considering the fact that Berto had called them right after her. But she knew it could sometimes take a while for the coroner to free up enough staff for an investigation. The last time Sofia had responded to a case out here—a case of simple murder, it turned out, one fueled by beer and fisticuffs—it had taken the coroner’s office nearly ninety minutes to arrive.

She braced her gloved hands on her knees and stood up. Her calves ached from the crouch. She used to be able to hold that position for an hour or more. Now, fifteen minutes nearly wrecked her.

Berto was standing near the shore—if one could call it that. He was staring at the other side of the water, where a couple of people—teens maybe?—were playing on the large rocks near the waterline.

“Berto,” she said.

He turned. His face was ruddy, his skin leathery from too much time in the sun. He had old eyes, which relieved her. She hated dealing with people who had not been on the job long.

He walked over, glancing at Zach, who was still on the phone. That did not bode well for the coroner’s arrival.

“I need to ask a few baseline questions,” she said, removing her small notebook from her pants pocket. The leatherette cover was damp. She clicked the pen attached to the notebook with a small plastic cord. Usually, Zach gave her crap about that.

He looked over, waved his phone at her as if to say, I can’t come yet, and grimaced in annoyance. She gave him a tiny nod. They’d worked together for years, so she didn’t have to tell him to get to her side as soon as he could.

Berto waited patiently.

“Tell me again how you found this hand.” She asked the question a second time for two reasons. The first was simple; she hadn’t had her notebook out when she originally spoke to him, although she suspected Zach was recording the encounter.

The other reason was she wanted to make sure that Berto gave her the same story, with few embellishments.

“I was walking my beat.” He had already warned her he used a lot of police shorthand because he found it more convenient. He had worked as a police officer back in the Midwest, so he knew procedure—and apparently liked the lingo. “I saw something white and flat on the rocks there. It looked organic, but I couldn’t be sure. And I didn’t smell it. Normally when you see something that white, the smell of decay hits you first.”

She waited, pen poised. He hadn’t given her this much detail before, but it was consistent with what he had already told her.

“I walked down to it, saw that it was a human hand, and called it in.” He nodded toward that hand. “You know the rest.”

She didn’t, though. He had spoken to dispatch, then to Zach, and then to her when she had arrived. The story probably seemed like old hat to Berto already.

She needed to move him off of that, distract him a bit. “When was the last time you were in this part of the park?”

He blinked, tilted his head just a little, clearly considering the question.

“Had to be a week ago,” he said. “We try to see everything, keep track of it all, but we’re dealing with a million and a half acres. We can’t monitor all the changes, especially not with visitors.”

“How early in the morning do you walk this?” she asked. Because it had to be morning; every local knew that this time of day could prove deadly quickly.

“In the open like this?” he asked. “As early as I can. Usually sunrise.”

“You called us at nine,” she said. It had taken her a while to arrive—first because of the drive and then the walk to this part of the park. She had given Berto permission to leave the area, but he hadn’t. He had been in this sun for hours now.

He didn’t even look wilted. She was becoming a puddle.

“I did,” he said. “I was just finishing up the rounds. I was planning to go to the station for a while, maybe have some ice coffee, maybe something to eat before I handled whatever crises arose for the day.”

“Ice coffee,” she muttered.

“It’s not as good as it sounds,” he said. “We just pour brew coffee over ice. Nothing fancy.”

“I’ll take not fancy at the moment.” She smiled at him. Then she let her smile fade. “You haven’t found other body parts, have you?”

“No,” he said. “Not recently, and not, y’know, something like this one that hadn’t been in the water long.”

She nodded. She had had Zach dig into recent findings at Lake Mead while they drove here. There had been a lot of body parts—apparently, the lake released its bodies in chunks—but nothing in the past few months. So, this confirmed what Berto was saying.

Now she got to the question she wanted to ask.

“The hand’s a yard or more from the water line,” she said. “How do you think it got here?”

He glanced at the water, the reflection of its surface lightening his skin just a little. Then he shrugged.

“It could’ve washed up in a boat wake,” he said. “Lots of speed boats create their own waves. Or it could’ve been a bird.”

“A bird?”

“They find all sorts of things. Then, if something startles the bird, it’ll drop whatever it’s carrying. I’m surprised there haven’t been any birds around this. But, I guess, there’s no soft tissue—eyeballs, whatnot. That’s less interesting to them.”

If he was trying to gross her out, he had failed. She’d probably seen everything he had and more. She had no idea where he had worked with the police in the Midwest. That covered a lot of ground, from small towns to cities like Chicago or Detroit.

“I was thinking the hand looked pretty fresh,” she said. “You think maybe someone dropped it here so that we could find it?”

“No.” His response was swift. “If they wanted someone to discover the hand, they would have gone to, say, Echo Bay. It’s the boat launch with the fewest restrictions right now, so too many people frequent it.”

“You think someone would know that?” she asked.

“Detective,” he said, with just a tiny hint of contempt, “if you came up here for something other than bodies, you’d know it too. We deal with a lot of complaints about the declining water level and the restrictions on people’s boats. We encourage everyone to come, but we really can’t accommodate them anymore.”

By the end of that little speech, the contempt had vanished. Maybe she had misread it. Maybe she was hearing frustration or anger.

“Talk to me about emergencies,” she said. “What happens with the serious ones?”

“Well,” he said, “we can’t help with most of those. The drownings are usually over before we’re notified. And if someone tries to kill themselves, we find out when the family realizes they’re missing. Usually we don’t learn someone’s a danger to themselves until deep into the investigation.”

“What about something like this? Something that involves a serious wound or a broken limb or a heart attack?”

Berto tipped the brim of his hat back just a bit. “If they call us, we can dispatch one of the ambulances. If the ambulance heads to Boulder City, it might be a while before another arrives to replace it.”

“Does that happen a lot?” she asked.

“Mostly in the spring,” he said. “It’s our busiest time. I’ve been lobbying for more medical services. But you know the whole drill about funding.”

“I do.” She looked down at that hand. “An ambulance couldn’t come down the path we walked.”

“No,” he said. “But a stretcher could. We’ve done it countless times.”

She crouched again, and tried to peer under the hand. If an ambulance had responded to something near here, the EMTs would have put the hand on the stretcher to cart it back. Once at the ambulance, they would have put the hand on ice.

Not to reattach the limb, should they locate the owner, but to take DNA and fingerprints off it, if possible.

Zach half-walked half-slid his way toward them. He was wearing dress shoes instead of his normal boots. He had initially thought he was going to be in court this morning. Considering the sweat stains on his white shirt and the fact that he was using his hat as a fan, he probably would have preferred testifying to this.

“Coroner’s assistant got lost,” he said. “I had to talk them through the directions. They should be here at any moment.”

“Good,” Sofia said, “because I was just beginning to wonder if we could find something to shade this hand from the sun.”

Something that wouldn’t contaminate it further.

A clatter sounded behind them. Sofia turned. A coroner she didn’t recognize was coming down the path sideways to accommodate the slight decline. Behind him was another person, wearing light clothing and a hat with a brim so low that Sofia couldn’t really see who that was either.

Both were carrying equipment. The person in the back had a white-and-blue cooler that was reflecting sunlight.

Zach went up to greet them. He had been talking to them on the phone, so he would handle it from here.

Sofia looked at Berto. “You feel like sharing some of that delicious ice coffee?”

He smiled at her, surest proof that he had seen everything. No newbie smiled like that over body parts.

“I’d be happy to,” he said, “if only to see what a glutton for punishment you really are.”

***

The ice coffee left her a little too jazzed, but it was not the highlight of the ranger station. The highlight was the aloe cream that she apparently needed despite her sunscreen and warm-weather gear. She had been in that sun too long.

All she ended up with, though, was a slight headache that lunch would cure. Zach didn’t stay long with the coroners and met her at their car.

He was already inside, AC running, when she approached. When he saw her, he scooted to the passenger side, and grabbed his laptop.

“We have an I.D.,” he said.

She handed him aloe. He lathered his skin while she backed the car out of the lot.

“Fingerprints?” she asked.

“Yeah, they were able to get some.” He grimaced. He hated watching the techniques that the coroner’s office used. If Zach could avoid working with the bodies, he would. “His name is Elias Venegas. He was reported missing three days ago by his wife.”

She pulled out of the lot and headed back toward Boulder City, taking her time because she knew that some drivers—usually tourists—were all over these roads.

“Why was he fingerprinted?” She pulled off her hat and tossed it in the back seat, then set the AC on frigid. The aloe had helped, but she was definitely burned. The touch of the sun through the window was irritating.

“He was bonded and certified. He went through all kinds of vetting.” Zach stared at his computer screen. “He was a well-known landscape artist who specialized in creating desert gardens.”

She glanced at Zach sideways. He was frowning. She was frowning.

“So, you’re thinking, accident?” she asked.

“I don’t know,” Zach said. “It’s weird. The wife reported him missing when he didn’t come home from work a few days ago.”

“Where’s work?” she asked.

“His offices are in downtown Summerlin.” He tapped the laptop. “Looking at the missing persons filings now. The intake officer said the wife was adamant that her husband wouldn’t disappear on her.”

A four-by-four passed her on a narrow corner, a boat attached to the back swinging into her lane. She barely had room to get out of the way and stay on the road.

“Jeez,” Zach said, sounding panicked. But Sofia’s heart rate hadn’t even gone up, which was why she was driving, and he was not.

“The report?” she asked.

“The intake officer was pretty diligent, even though he didn’t believe the wife,” Zach said.

Years ago, Sofia had worked Mis-Pers. Nearly everyone claimed that the person wouldn’t disappear without telling anyone, and usually they were wrong.

But to go from Summerlin to Lake Mead was a deliberate trip.

“Was he entertaining clients?” she asked.

“No,” Zach said. “He’d gone to visit a client.”

“Who?” she asked.

“The wife didn’t know but said the client was a really important one.” Zach scrolled along the laptop’s pad. “No one asked or explained what ‘important’ meant.”

So now the question became, should they call the wife and tell her about the body part just to get answers? Or did they leave that part out of this?

Sofia wasn’t ready to tell anyone yet about the hand.

“Contact his office, find out where he went,” she said. “And check the hospitals, see if this Venegas guy is in any of them.”

“The report says the wife already did,” Zach said.

He hadn’t worked Mis-Per, so he didn’t know that sometimes people called in a missing person’s report after killing someone, just to cover their butts.

“Start with Boulder City,” she said, “and then go to Kingman, Laughlin, Bullhead City. Places the wife wouldn’t have thought to check, if she had no idea he was at Lake Mead.”

“Hospitals first?” Zach asked. He sounded irritated, but he didn’t say anything. After all, she couldn’t check any of this, since she was driving.

“Yeah,” she said.

He tapped on the keyboard of his laptop, then picked up his cell with a sigh.

She dodged another four-by-four with a boat behind it, shaking her head as she did so. Who came out here in this heat? It had to be tourists.

An ancient RV weaved across the road before her, and she leaned on the horn, hoping to get their attention. She did. They snapped to their lane.

But as they went past, she frowned at it.

Trucks, RVs, boats. Lots of equipment, lots of empty spaces. No one thought twice about all of those vehicles heading to the lake. No wonder so many bodies turned up.

It wouldn’t be hard to transport them from somewhere else.

She didn’t say anything about that, though, because Zach was deep in his conversation with the hospital in Boulder City. He wasn’t having any luck.

She doubted he would.

Something about Venegas’s job and the fact that he worked in Summerlin made her think he was dead before he got to the lake.

But she would wait on what the coroner had to say. Sometimes cases surprised you. She hoped this wouldn’t be one of those.

***

They stopped at a local fast-food chicken place in Boulder City. She promised Zach a milkshake. He’d contacted all the hospitals in the area, and none had any record of an Elias Venegas, nor did they have a record of a John Doe who had come in missing a hand.

As she and Zach headed inside, they saw a sprinkler head near the edge of the door, leaking water all over the parking lot. She sighed and signaled Zach to get lunch while she asked for the manager.

When an older woman with a manager’s tag stuck her head out of the back area, Sofia said, “You know you have a leaking sprinkler, right?”

“Yeah,” the woman said. “People’ve been telling us.”

Which meant it had been going on for a while. “You realize you can be fined for excess use, right?”

I won’t be fined,” the woman said, and walked away.

Sofia sighed again, knowing she couldn’t let that go. Too many people failed to report. She went back outside, took a picture, and sent it to the Southern Nevada Water Authority. They would know what to do.

Then she joined Zach at the table. He’d already picked up the food.

“This guy, he’s a big deal,” Zach said in between bites of a chicken tender. “The mucky-mucks in town, they all hire him to transform their lawns into a desert oasis.”

He had to be half-quoting some promotional something or other. Sofia took her orange tray and pulled it toward her, grabbing a fry as she did so.

“His fees are astonishing,” Zach said. “I mean, hell, I’d just lay ratty Astroturf instead of pay for this.”

“Or pull up the grass yourself,” she said.

“Yeah,” Zach said with a grin. “Desert landscaping done easy.”

Nevada had passed a law as the drought crushed everything, forcing residents to get rid of what the state termed “decorative grass” by the end of 2026. Some people were doing that already. Others were pressing for a variance.

She tried not to follow any of that because it irritated her too much. What was wrong with people? They lived in a desert, and water had been scarce from the start. In the 1990s, predictions were that Las Vegas wouldn’t make it another ten years because of a lack of water, so the city embarked on a recycling program.

Now, all water used indoors was recycled. The problem was things like that broken sprinkler. Outdoor water was one-time use only, although there were measures trying to reform that as well.

“Lemme see what he charges,” she said.

Zach spun the laptop around. Venegas’s website was beautiful, high-end, and filled with lovely pictures of various landscapes. He hadn’t called himself a landscape artist. Architectural Digest had.

This guy was one of the top landscape designers in the country. A guy like that didn’t go on a jaunt to Lake Mead in the middle of the week.

“Find out if anyone is actually in the office,” Sofia said.

She had a feeling, but it wasn’t something she could articulate. Not yet.

Zach looked at her measuringly. He had worked with her long enough to know that she wasn’t going to share her thinking yet. He respected the hunches, but he always wanted to know how she got there, which led to irritated discussions, which neither of them needed right then.

He spun the laptop back toward himself, glanced at the number, and dialed with his thumb. Then he grabbed the milkshake and stood up, heading toward the car.

He had finished eating, and she had just started. She finished in a hurry, headed outside, and slipped into the car’s air conditioning, which was fighting a losing battle with the heat. Records every day this July, and it looked like today would be no different.

“We’re in luck,” Zach said. “One of the associates is waiting for us.”

“Did you tell them why we’re coming?” Sofia asked as she put on her seat belt.

“Didn’t have to,” Zach said. “When she found out who I was, she said, ‘I hope to hell this is good news about Elias.’”

“Did you tell her the bad news?” Sofia asked.

“I didn’t,” Zach said, “because we still don’t know. I mean, maybe…”

Sofia gave him a knowing nod. They did know; they just couldn’t prove anything. And an excess of caution was always the best.

“I just told her we were investigating the missing person report,” he said.

“Was she surprised?” Sofia asked.

“Are rich people ever surprised that someone is doing something for them that doesn’t happen for anyone else?” he asked.

“She’s probably not rich,” Sofia said. “She works for someone.”

“Yeah, maybe,” he said, “but given how much money that place brings in, she’s richer than we are.”

They were going to have to drive to downtown Summerlin, and the easiest way was to take the Beltway, which would give Sofia exactly no time to go home and clean up. Ah, well. The extra aloe had helped, as had the chocolate shake.

She drove while Zach continued to tap on his laptop, occasionally naming the very famous clients who had hired Venegas. Apparently, the pictures of their properties were gorgeous, if Zach’s enthusiasm was any indication.

She was going to have him look deep into the business’s financials when a call came into her cell. It was the coroner. She put it on speaker.

“Please tell me you found the rest of his body in your cooler,” Sofia said.

“Nope,” the coroner said. “I suspect it’s still in Lake Mead.”

“Really?” Sofia asked. “We’ve been calling hospitals to see if he’s alive.”

“The arm was severed post-mortem,” the coroner said, “and I think severed is the wrong word. I think the chain that was wrapped around it somehow twisted and snapped the bone.”

“Chain?” Sofia asked. Zach was leaning forward, frowning at the car’s speakers as if they were the coroner herself.

“Yeah,” the coroner said. “We found bits of it in the skin and the bone itself.”

“This wasn’t, say, a boating accident? Something got caught in, maybe, a propeller?”

“Well, maybe, in one sense,” the coroner said. “A propeller might’ve snagged that chain and put enough force on it to make it snap the arm.”

“And send it to the shore?” Zach asked.

“Flying to the shore, maybe,” the coroner said. “The hand was dropped from above. There were rocks in the skin, and they came from directly underneath the hand. So it landed with some force.”

“Not deliberately dropped, then,” Sofia said. She wasn’t sure if that was a question or not.

“Well, not unless it was deliberately dropped from some kind of height,” the coroner said. “And given that there was no hills in that part of the beach…”

“Yeah, okay,” Sofia said.

“I’ll have more for you as we investigate, but I thought you’d want to know that this person was dead when he went into the water. Someone wrapped him in chains and probably attached him to something they thought would sink. It probably didn’t go as deep as they wanted.”

“Or they put him somewhere a bit too shallow,” Zach said.

“Maybe,” the coroner said. “But people usually underestimate how much weight it takes to hold a gaseous bloating body underwater. Bodies like that want to float.”

Zach winced. Apparently, he could picture that. If Sofia let herself, she could smell it, which wasn’t something she really wanted to do—not even in her imagination.

“I’ll have more for you later,” the coroner said, “but I figured you would want to know that this guy was already a corpse when he was tossed into Lake Mead.”

“Thanks,” Sofia said, but the coroner had already hung up.

“So,” Zach said, “a murder then.”

“Most likely,” Sofia said.

Whether they could prove it or not would be something else entirely.

***

The offices of Venegas Landscape Artistry and Design were in one of the newer buildings in Downtown Summerlin, near the Las Vegas Ballpark. The entire development was snooty, catering to people with more money than Sofia would ever earn in her lifetime.

The building had opaque glass walls that reflected the mountains. The site looked lovely, except from the parking lot. There, it felt like she had entered a sterile office park that could be in any city.

Inside, the walls belied that impression. The doors opened onto an expensive blue and gray lined carpet. The walls were covered with murals—if one could call a black-and-white gigantic flower a mural.

The offices took up the entire seventh floor. As she and Zach emerged from the elevator, the first thing she noticed was that the art had changed. The walls were covered with photographs of the desert or desert plants. Brown and gray rocks, with a bit of green or gray or the ever-blooming flowers, something she actually loved about this city.

Those images soothed her, which was probably what they were supposed to do. There was another set of smoked glass doors, and as she was about to go through, the doors opened.

A lanky woman with skin so leathery that it looked like it had been glued to her bones came out, right hand extended.

“Officers,” she said in one of those sickly sweet voices that people used when they were uncomfortable.

“Detectives,” Sofia said, pausing between that word and the rest, “Herrera and Gelb.” She deliberately did not give the woman any clue as to who was who.

Since neither of them took her hand, the woman let it drop.

“I’m Louisa Langford,” she said, pushing the smokey door open. “We spoke on the phone.”

She said that to Zach.

“We’ve been worried sick about Elias. He missed several important meetings, and his wife has no idea where he is. I take it you do?”

She led them to a conference room, talking the entire way. The conference room was a glass box. The view was visible from the hallway, but so were the people inside.

Sofia went in and stood near the windows. The heat of the day radiated through the glass, leaving the front of her warm and her back cold in the air conditioning.

“We don’t know where he is,” Zach said, not exactly lying. Sofia could see him reflected in the glass, his body larger than the towers dotting the Strip. “When did you last see him?”

“Three days ago,” Langford said. “He was going to see one of our clients. He was really nervous.”

That caught Sofia’s attention. She turned, so she could see Langford’s face. “Why would a man with his credentials be nervous?”

Langford took a deep breath and looked over her shoulder. Then she made sure her back was to the hallway.

“Look, this client is…” She paused. “I’m not supposed to discuss him or the work, but well, Elias is missing, and I’m scared.”

“Why?” Sofia asked.

Langford gripped the back of a chair. “You know we have a lot of foreign money, billionaires, in Summerlin, right?”

Sofia blinked, trying to follow. “You’re saying your client is a foreign billionaire?”

“I’m not saying that,” Langford said. “I don’t give out client names.”

She let that hang for a moment, but neither Sofia nor Zach jumped on it. They would figure this out, with a warrant if they had to. First they needed to let Langford talk.

“We often don’t meet the actual clients,” she said after a moment, “but instead, we meet the people running their estates. Those people are…protective…of their positions. Apparently, the estate manager, in this instance, was…difficult at best. Elias wouldn’t let any of us near him.”

“Difficult why?” Sofia asked.

“Elias used the word thugs to describe the security. He was worried for anyone on our team to go up there and work. The security is armed and…his word…volatile.” Langford’s fingers dug into the back of the chair.

Interesting, Sofia thought but didn’t say. “So what did they want Elias for?”

“Apparently, someone wanted to change the estate’s landscaping to desert landscaping.” Langford raised her eyebrows. “You’re aware of the Named and Shamed List?”

“Yes,” Zach said without looking directly at Sofia. He knew she didn’t always follow the news. But she was aware of the Named and Shamed List, mostly because it frustrated her. Every year, the Las Vegas Valley Water District released the names of the top 100 residences that used too much water.

The problem was that all of them belonged to the rich, who could afford the exorbitant fines that came with excessive water usage. Sofia was of the opinion that anyone who overused their allotment—in some cases by millions of gallons per year—should have their water shut off until there were changes.

But she wasn’t in charge of that.

“Many of our clients come from the list,” Langford was saying to Zach. “But they’re usually locals who made good and want to change their behavior and cut their water footprint.”

Zach nodded.

“Someone in our current client’s compound wanted to change the behavior there or at least change the unfavorable reporting. Elias was going to essentially say he couldn’t do what they were asking, and they needed to hire someone else.” Her hands ran along the top of the chair as if trying to rub it clean.

“What were they asking?” Zach asked.

“If we could set up a system that made it look like they were using less water without changing the landscaping at all.” Langford frowned. “Of course we can’t, not legally. We’d have to shuffle the water meters and change the way that things are recorded…I’m sure someone could do it, but we certainly can’t.”

Sofia could hear the frustration in her voice.

“So, you fire the client,” Sofia said. “People do that all the time.”

Langford straightened her back. “We do that all the time as well. But this client…” She looked away as if conjuring a memory. “Elias told them he wasn’t interested in working with them. I guess it got heated. When he came back, he was really upset because we’re all about conservation here.”

“Okay…” Zach said, trying to keep his voice level as if he didn’t understand where this was going.

Langford looked at him, her gaze sharp. “Elias was afraid…well, we were afraid…that the water waste would continue. Millions of gallons wasted and untraceable. It’s just…wrong.”

Sofia didn’t see how any of that was worth killing over, though. That thought must have shown on her face because Langford squared her shoulders.

“I know most people think this is silly, but it’s not. Water waste here in the valley is a matter of life and death for all of us. For the city too.” Langford had made a fist with her right hand, and pounded it slightly on the back of the chair. “I know it’s not an immediate problem. People don’t think about the future—”

“What happened?” Sofia asked. She didn’t need the lecture. She did worry about the future, but right now, she needed to focus on the present. On this case. “He was angry. He must have done something.”

Langford nodded, just once. “Something he’d never done before,” she said. “He reported them to the Water Authority so that they could be on the lookout for any kind of tricks. And he was talking to some people with law enforcement ties—lawyers, in particular—to find out if doing such a thing would be fraud on a large scale.”

“Large scale?” Zach asked.

“A felony, to make them stop,” Langford said.

That would make no difference to a foreign national, but it might to the estate manager, if they were local.

“I’m confused,” Sofia said. “If they’re not a client, why did Elias return to the estate after reporting them?”

“They’re still on our books as a client,” Langford said. “Elias was going to give them a list of landscapers to replace him. Only he didn’t make a list. He was going to tell them off. I told him not to.”

She gave them an odd look.

“I was scared for him. I really was. These people aren’t people you cross or confront. They play by different rules.”

“Because they’re armed?” Sofia asked.

“No.” That single word had frustration in it. “Lots of our clients have armed security these days. But these guys—they seem violent.”

“You’ve met them?” Zach asked.

“No,” she said. “Violent was Elias’s word. And I was scared. But he went anyway.”

“And no one has seen him since?” Sofia asked.

“That’s right,” Langford said. “No one has seen him since.”

***

The nice thing about Summerlin was that it was a brand-new planned development. Started in the 1990s, most of the Vegas Valley’s wealthy migrated up there for enhanced security and privacy. The communities were gated, even though the homes were on multiacre estates.

Enhanced security meant cameras. It meant monitors. It meant doorbell cameras and prying eyes, even though the locals wanted privacy. They got it behind their own gates but on the way to and from the gate? They had no privacy at all.

So that was why it wasn’t hard for Sofia and Zach to trace what happened to Elias Venegas. As they drove away from his business, Zach looked up the foreign nationals on the Named and Shamed List. Most had been on the list for decades because no one had been able to shut them down. But the newcomer to the list was a Chinese billionaire who owned casinos in Macao and who had some ownership in one of the casinos on the Strip.

The billionaire had never been to Las Vegas, apparently preferring to park his money here without bothering to visit it in person. But there had been dozens of reports of late-night parties on the estate, lots of random weapons fired, and some generally out-of-control behavior that made the wealthy neighbors nervous.

A new estate manager was hired, and promises were made to the gated community’s board that the estate would clean up its act. Apparently, someone thought that included cleaning up the landscaping.

It took more than a week of careful investigation and several warrants to get information from nearby security cameras. Sofia also got permission to dredge Lake Mead near where the hand had been found.

Sure enough, Venegas’s body wasn’t that far out, in waters deep enough to boat but too shallow to really hide a corpse effectively.

The story, as it came out, was sad and simple. Venegas had gone alone, gotten into a loud verbal disagreement with the estate manager. The fight brought in security, who saw Venegas as a threat, and shot him.

Then the guards were informed as to who he was and what they had done. That night they placed him into a van and drove it to Lake Mead. It showed up on several traffic cams along the way.

The big mistake they made, though, was driving his car along with it. That car was in the lake as well, only it hadn’t been found yet.

Sofia had everything wrapped up within the month. So many employees of the estate saw what happened or were involved, and did not want to get charged with aiding and abetting. That made them talk.

The Chinese billionaire did not help them. He fired the estate manager and put the entire place on the market.

And all of this happened before the media got wind of any of it, which relieved her. It put her in charge of the way that the story got covered.

No one mentioned the severed hand in Lake Mead. That would come out in trial.

Instead, she managed to get a friendly journalist to report on the center of the story—or at least, what she believed to be the center of the story:

Elias Venegas was a passionate defender of the future. He had just run into someone so stuck in the past that they had been willing to commit fraud to make their bad habits invisible to the community writ large.

The story had that focus for two whole days before the preliminary hearings. And then the arm and the body in Lake Mead and the stories about the lake of death began.

Two days were more than she would have gotten otherwise. Normally, she didn’t care about coverage, but in the Lake Mead cases, she did.

She wanted people to understand that bathtub ring. She wanted them to know that the drought situation had long since become serious.

The death of Elias Venegas wasn’t the first death connected to the changes in the climate, and it certainly wouldn’t be the last.

But it had been dramatic enough to catch the world’s attention—if only for a few hours.

And sometimes, that was all it took.

 

___________________________________________

Body Parts & Bathtub Rings is available for one week on this site. The ebook is also available on all retail stores, as well as here.

Body Parts & Bathtub Rings

Copyright © 2025 by Kristine Kathryn Rusch
Published by WMG Publishing

First appeared in Crimes Against Nature, edited by Robert Lopresti, Down & Out Books, 2024

Cover and Layout copyright © 2025 by WMG Publishing
Cover design by WMG Publishing
Cover art copyright © Canva

This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. All rights reserved. This is a work of fiction. All characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission.

Categories: Authors

The Inheritance: Chapter 2

ILONA ANDREWS - Mon, 04/21/2025 - 15:55
Limestone cave with flowstone and large rocks, with a turquoise stream flooding its floor. Cenote Sac Actún - Akumal, near Tulum city located in Yucatán Peninsula - Mexico

A massive cavern spread in front of us, awash in bioluminescence like some bizarre rave. It resembled an enormous egg set on its side, with the wider end to the right ending in a solid wall and the narrow end to the left splitting off into several dark passages. The cavern’s floor sloped to the center where a wide stream ran through the cave from left to right. The water was like glass, perfectly clear.

At the banks, the stream branched into several small pools bordered by rimstone dams, some shallow, others deeper. The pools flowed into each other, stretching toward a flat island on our right. The stream split around it and emptied into a lake, its waters moving slowly and disappearing under a spectacular flowstone wall where layers of calcite formed a frozen stone waterfall.

“I need lights, people!” Melissa called out.

The mining crew spread out, planting floodlights along the nearest wall. The portable generator on the central cart sputtered into life, and bright electric light illuminated the cavern. The sloping floor was ridged with calcite, and it looked slick. A good way to break a leg.

“Much better,” Melissa declared. “It’s almost like we know what we’re doing.”

London nodded to the tank. Aaron moved to the left and planted himself in the narrower part of the cave, between the dark tunnels and the mining crew. London stayed at the entrance, guarding our exit route. The three strikers fanned out along the perimeter.

It was my turn to shine. The cavern walls were awash with swirls of bright green mixed with rust-colored metallic deposits. Promising.

I took a deep breath and flexed.

The official term was talent activation, but to me it felt like flexing a muscle I didn’t normally use. The world turned crystal clear. The edges of the rimstone dams and contours of the flowstone waterfall came into sharp focus, as if I’d adjusted my eyes to higher resolution. The outlines of individual mineral deposits glowed slightly.

I focused on the closest wall, scanning and evaluating, sorting through different hues. Malachite, copper-rich chalcopyrite, decent but not exciting. Cuprite, quartz, calcite, trash, garbage, junk…

A patch of funky plants to the left glowed with dull, pale yellow. Healer Slipper. A weird variant, but definitely in the same ballpark as the more common varieties. If processed, it would yield a potent broad-spectrum antibiotic. A decent haul, if nothing else showed up.

In the wake of the gate catastrophe and the emergence of the Talents, humanity had tried to find some frame of reference. We settled on video games. A lot of the Talent classification mirrored the familiar game classes: tanks, healers, scouts, and so on. The closest video game match for my talent would’ve been appraiser, but the government nixed that one because it didn’t sound heroic enough and was too “materialistic,” which was utterly hilarious considering what I did. Unlike Melissa, who only sensed ores and only when she was on top of them, I evaluated everything in my environment, organic or inorganic.

So far, the cavern has been relatively disappointing. Usually, orange gates offered a little more. I pivoted slightly, turning away from the wall.

The inside of the stream lit up like a Christmas tree. Well, that was something.

“Gold in the water,” I announced. “Check the pools.”

“Go!” Melissa barked.

The miners scrambled over calcite walls. The pools directly in front of them ran a little deeper, and the water came up to their thighs.

Sanders thrust his hand into the pool and pulled up a tangerine-sized gold nugget. “Holy shit!”

The mining crew erupted into a controlled frenzy. Half of the miners went into the pools with buckets, while the other half positioned themselves on the shore, emptying the buckets into wheelbarrows.

I kept scanning. Gold was okay. Just okay.

“We got time, people,” Melissa called out. “Don’t hurt yourself. Slow is smooth, and smooth is fast.”

A bright swath of deep crimson flared on the edge of my vision. The colors of the glow didn’t always make sense, but red usually meant something valuable. I turned slowly, following it, and focused. A thick vein running from the center of the cavern all the way to the far wall…

It couldn’t be. I squinted at it to make sure I wasn’t imagining it.

No, it was there. And the crimson got deeper at the other end of the cavern.

“Melissa?”

“Yes?”

“Dump the gold.”

The mining crew stopped. Sanders closed his fists around a handful of nuggets and hugged them to his chest. Gold fever was a real thing. Something about the bright shiny yellow metal made people lose their minds.

I pointed to the beginning of the vein along the wall of the island, by the two pools closest to the shore. “Adamantite. From here to there. Solid, less than a foot down. We’ll need more carts.”

Melissa splashed into the stream to the adamantite vein buried under calcite deposits and put her bare hands onto the stone. She grunted, squeezed the rock surface with her fingers, shook from the strain, and stumbled back.

“Goddamn! Team One here! Team Two there! I want those drills running five minutes ago!”

The gold went flying. The mining crew grabbed their drills. Safety glasses and noise-dampening headphones went on, and they waded into the river and attacked the dams and the island.

Gold was expensive but adamantite was twelve times more valuable, because it could be refined into adamant. In the same family as osmium, adamant was incredibly durable. Adamant-enhanced armor could withstand machine gun fire. Adamant-coated blades cut through solid metal and monster bones like butter, without losing their edge.

We found it rarely and usually in small deposits. A cubic yard of adamantite was a record-breaking haul that would mean a big bonus for every guild member that entered this breach. We had a lot more than a cubic yard here. In all of my time crawling in and out of the breaches, I had never found a vein half that large.

The drills chiseled at the rock with a dull roar. The first chunk of adamantite fell free, a dark, almost black basketball-sized rock that looked like frozen tar in the crystal-clear stream. The drills stopped as everyone stared at it. Melissa tried to lift it out of the water, couldn’t – it was ridiculously heavy – and laughed.

“We’re gunna be rich!” someone yelled.

“Ada, I love you!” Melissa declared. “Marry me!”

“Sorry, I don’t want to ruin such a good friendship.”

People laughed. Next to me, London cracked a smile.

“Friendzoned,” Melissa groaned.

“It’s not you, it’s me, Mel. I’m the problem.”

More laughter.

Melissa shook her head. “Back to work, people! And someone help me with this rock.”

The miners resumed their drilling.

The vein continued under the stream, veering across the cavern floor to the left and behind the far wall. Getting adamantite from under the water would be cumbersome, and our time was short. The wall deposit lay deeper, but it was a better bet.

I went down the slope to the water. The best place to cross was to the left, by Aaron, where the stream was relatively shallow. I headed there and waded in, careful where I put my feet. The rocks were damn slippery, and the water came up past my knee. Magnaprene wasn’t the most comfortable fabric, but it was waterproof.

I hiked over the shallow calcite ridges to the wall, pulled a can of fluorescent paint from the pocket of my coveralls, and set about tracing the contours of the deposit in bright Safety Yellow. A hell of a find. Not that I would get anything out of it other than bragging rights. Government employees didn’t get gate loot bonuses, and that wasn’t why I’d taken this job.

The steady roar of the drills filled the cavern. 

I was thirty-three years old when I saw my first glow. One of the larger US guilds somehow obtained permission to sell sebrian knives to the public. Sebrian was found only in breaches, and the knife prices started at $1,000 for a tiny pocket blade. Our advertising agency had taken the contract and promptly sent it to me with the key phrase of “rugged luxury.”

I was sitting in my office staring at the knife and trying to figure out the right approach, when the blade turned pale pink. The glow refused to fade, and when I focused on it, something in my brain clicked. The weight, the density, the structure of the metal somehow popped into my mind and combined into a specific … profile was the best word.

I drove to the ER. I thought I was dying. Twenty-four hours later the DDC came calling with a contract and a patriotic sales pitch. Assessors like me were rare, and the government hoarded us, to the point of making it illegal for guilds to hire their own private assessors. The guilds had poured an obscene amount of money into lobbying against that law but got nowhere.

The invasion wrecked my life. I’d looked at that contract and realized I could do something about it. Every time I went into the breach, I found something to make us safer. Today it was adamantite. A drop in the bucket, but it was my drop.

I finished tracing the wall and set the can on a rock.

Elena crossed the stream and lingered on my left, looking toward the tunnels. She peered at the dark passageways, turned, her face sour, and called, “Stella!”

Stella, who was on the other shore watching the miners, didn’t move.

“STELLA!” Elena roared.

The dog handler spun around.

The scout waved her over. “Bring the dog!”

Stella splashed through the stream, Bear on a leash, and trekked over the ridges to us.

“I need you to check the tunnels!” Elena yelled over the drilling noise.

“Which tunnel?”

“Start with the left!”

Bear yanked at her leash, jerking Stella backward, toward the stream. Stella said some command I didn’t catch.

Bear yanked on the leash and erupted into barks.

Elena waved her arms. “Control your dog –”

Something burst out of the middle tunnel. It swept past Aaron, a vaguely humanoid shape in pale blue garments, so fast it was a blur. Four other blurs chased it, wrapped in dark gray. They tore past the tank in a flash.

Aaron’s top half – shield, armor, and body – slid to the side and fell to the ground.

For a horrifying moment, I stared straight at the stump of his torso, still standing upright. It was standing upright.

The blurs wrapped around us. I froze. They spun about me like a whirlwind, the four gray beings striking and slicing, while the creature in blue parried with impossible speed. I caught a glimpse of arms in dark armor gripping silver blades and inhuman faces with fangs bared. A second, and they tore across the cavern toward the wall and the mining crew. 

Untouched. I was somehow uninjured.

I turned to Stella on my right.

Her head was missing. There was her torso in indigo magnaprene, her neck, but no head.

The headless body crumpled to the ground.

A gasp came from the side. I turned on autopilot, still trying to process Stella’s missing head. Elena’s guts spilled out of her stomach. The scout clutched at herself. Dark blood poured out of her mouth. She made a horrible gurgling noise and fell.

This couldn’t be happening. It was a weird, horrible nightmare. I was dreaming that I found the magic motherlode of adamantite and then monsters came and killed everyone.

The air smelled like blood and bile. To the left four inhuman creatures tore at their prey in the blue robe, running on the walls and leaping in for the kill only to be knocked aside. Three miners floated in the stream, face down and the water was red, so red…

Oh God. It’s real. It’s all real.

Panic smashed into me like an icy hammer. I had to get out of here. Now.

The only safe exit was on the other side of the stream. I sprinted across the ridges to the water.

To the left, the fight swung back and forth along the lake’s shore.

I slid over the first rimstone damn, tore through the pool, climbed over the other side, and landed into the stream. Water came up to my thighs and I waded through it, squeezing every drop of speed out of my body.

Half of the mining crew was still drilling.

“Run!” I screamed, waving my arms. “Run!”

Sanders turned, plucking the headphones off his left ear, saw my face, whipped around, saw the creatures, hurled the drill aside, howled, and ran for the entrance. The line of miners broke as people charged to the exit.

Time stretched like molasses. There was only me and the water trying to stop me. I just had to make it across the stream.

At the cave entrance, Melissa was scrambling up the slope, toward London. The blade warden stared straight at me. Our gazes met.

Help me…

A door slammed shut in London’s eyes.

No. No!

Melissa shoved Anja Presa out of her way. The slender woman slid on the rocks and fell, rolling down to the stream.

I can’t die here. I have to get home to my kids!

I was running so fast. Faster than I’d ever run in my life, and I wasted precious breath on a scream. “Wait! Wait for me!”

London’s face was cold like ice. He yanked something off his belt. A grenade. He carried aetherium concussive grenades to be used as a last resort.

“Throw it!” Melissa howled and ran past him.

London looked straight at me.

Alex! No!

He dropped the grenade. It rolled toward the stream, bouncing over the limestone. The blue forcefield of his warden talent flared into life, wrapping around London. He turned and fled into the tunnel.

The world exploded.

The blast slammed into Sanders ten yards ahead of me. Water punched me off my feet. I flew like a rag doll and smashed against solid rock. My right leg snapped like a toothpick. My spine crunched. Agony splashed across my side and bit into my ribs. My ears rang, my head swam, and the air in my lungs turned to fire.

I tried to breathe and couldn’t. There was water on my face. I was in the stream face down. I had to get upright, or I would drown.

I wrenched myself up.

Bright white aetherium smoke filled the cave. I couldn’t see anything, I couldn’t hear anything, I couldn’t breathe. I could only hold still as the pain drowned me.

“Mom! Don’t die!”

I won’t. I promise.

I forced myself to take a tiny breath. It felt like jagged glass cutting its way through my throat. I coughed through it and willed myself to take another. And another, swimming through the pain, one tiny sip of air at a time.

The smoke drifted up. My vision cleared. I was sitting in one of the pools by the shore, with the water up to my armpits, with my back pressed against the rimstone wall. Next to me a severed human head rested on the pool’s bottom. The dark curly hair swirled with the current. Stella.

It should’ve hit me like a semi, but instead I simply noted it, the same way I noted the blood spreading from my right leg and the broken glass that ground in my lungs with every breath.

I pulled the leg of my coveralls up, out of the boot. A jagged bone cut through the skin of my calf. A compound fracture. Okay. I tugged my pant leg over it.

I had to get the hell out of here. Out of this cavern. Out of the breach.

The exit was no more, blocked by a wall of rubble. London’s grenade collapsed the ceiling of the tunnel. He and Melissa left me to die.

The clump of alien creatures passed along the opposite wall, all but floating over the debris that had sealed the exit. I didn’t hear any gunfire. Our escorts were dead.

The aliens darted to the right, absorbed in their fight. They weren’t targeting the humans. Aaron, Stella, Elena, they were simply in the way, cut down in passing as the four creatures in gray tried to kill the being in blue. And if their fight swung this way, I would be in the way, too. 

I had to get out of the line of fire.

The wall in front of me, where the exit used to be, was at least forty yards away and sheer. 

I looked over my shoulder. There was a niche in the wall behind me, next to my yellow paint marks, natural depression in the rock. A place to hide.

I turned around. My right leg screamed. Standing was a no go. I would have to crawl on all fours.

I clenched my teeth and crawled out of the pool.

My right leg burned, sending stabs of hot pain through my knee. I could do it. Stay low, move slowly, don’t present a threat. It was only pain. I could endure pain.

Twenty yards to the wall.

Fifteen.

I hit my knee against a sharp rock, and my weight landed on my injured leg. The world went white for a second. I sucked in a small breath and kept moving.

Ten yards. Almost there.

Almost.

My fingers touched the stone. I turned around and tucked myself into the niche, pressing my back against the wall. There was a trail of my blood across the cave floor.

The creature in blue was still moving, but only two gray blurs remained. The third lay on the rocks, a smudge of dark fabric that shifted whenever the fight drew closer, stretching toward it like a living thing. I couldn’t see the fourth.

To the right something moved by the rock.

I sat very still.

A furry head with big ears poked out from behind an outcropping. 

Bear.

I licked my lips, trying to get my mouth to work. “Bear.” I could only manage a whisper. “Come.”

The German Shepherd crawled toward me, pressed against my thigh, and let out a soft whine.

“They left you, too.” 

I hugged the dog to me. We sat by the wall and watched the fight tear across the cave. The blurs were so fast. How could anyone move that quickly? It should’ve been biologically impossible.

One of the remaining gray blurs collapsed.

The last gray attacker shot toward us. It took me half a second to realize it wasn’t a coincidence. It was aiming for me.

There was no time to run, no time to do anything. I threw my arm in front of Bear shielding her on pure instinct. The gray blur loomed above us… and stopped.

I finally saw it clearly, a tall creature with four arms, wrapped in a tattered gray cloak. Its hands had too many fingers, long and clawed, and each hand clenched a sword. It stared at me with terrifying eyes, its irises missing, its sclera a solid mass of solid black, and its mouth, on the face of white pearlescent skin, was a wide, dark slash filled with nightmarish teeth. A blue blade protruded from its chest.

This is also real.

The gray cloak stretched toward my face, like some strange amoeba, its strands long and viscous.

The blue blade turned, twisting.

The creature spat purple blood and went limp.

The sword slid back into its body. The cloaked being fell to the side and slid a few feet down the slope.

A tall figure stood behind it, clad in a shimmering, ice-blue robe. The silhouette looked chillingly human, too tall, with limbs that were too long, but unmistakably familiar. The head was a solid chunk of metal, twisted into a sleek horned shape. The same metal, blue with gold filigree, sheathed their body under the robe. No visible skin. Even the fingers of their right hand, gripping the blue sword, were coated in metal. Their left arm was missing, cut off just below the biceps, and bright red blood spurted from the cut.

None of my briefings had ever mentioned a being that appeared this human. Animals, monsters, inhuman sentients with strange anatomy, vaguely humanoid beings, yes. But never this.

The figure touched their helmet. It split apart and retracted into itself. An older woman looked at me. Her skin was a muted pastel pink in the center of the face, darkening to a vivid turquoise near the hairline. A straight nose with a blunt tip, a narrow-lipped mouth with the same pink lips, and upturned eyes with blue-green irises, slightly too large for an Earth native, but not enough to alarm anyone.

Aside from the skin color, she looked so human, it was terrifying. There were crow’s feet at the corners of her eyes and laugh lines by her mouth. Either the DDC did not know, or they’d lied.

The woman stared at me. Her eyes were sad and mournful.

I stared back.

She swayed and fell.

What do I do now?

The sound of hoarse breathing echoed through the cavern.

She saved me. If she hadn’t stabbed the gray attacker, I would be dead.

Another hoarse breath. Another.

Fuck it.

I shifted on all fours and crawled the few feet to the woman.

The arm was sheared as if by a razor blade, the cut so precise, it was like an anatomy slide. I could see the bones among the bloody muscle. Blood shot out with every breath.

“We’ll need a tourniquet. Hold on.”

I dug in the pocket of my coveralls, extracted the paracord I always carried, and pulled it loose. Paracord was a shitty way to make a tourniquet, but she was bleeding out and I had nothing else. I folded the paracord length wise until I had about three-foot stretch of cord, wrapped it around what was left of her arm, and pulled it into a knot. The blood was still spurting.

I patted myself. I needed… Here. I pulled a slim flashlight out of my pocket. I always brought one as a backup to the light in my hard hat. I pressed the flashlight into the knot and tied another knot over it.

“This will hurt, and you’ll lose what’s left of the arm. I’m sorry. We have to stop the bleeding.”

I twisted the flashlight, tightening the knot. Once, twice, three times.

The woman reached out with her right arm and touched my hand. Her fingers were cool, their touch feather-light.

“I’m sorry,” I told her.

The blood stopped spurting. Now I just had to secure this…

The woman touched her own forehead. Her fingers dipped into the skin, sinking into a seemingly solid skull. 

It had to be a hallucination. I was losing it from blood loss and pain.

The woman pulled something out of her head. It was round and glowing, like a brilliant jewel lit from within. It was so beautiful. The colors swirled and danced, a stunning, mesmerizing gemfire.

I had to look away, move, run, do something, but I had no will to move. The gemstone was too beautiful to resist. It was coming toward me, held in the woman’s long fingers. Closer. Closer.

The gem touched my forehead.

The Universe unfurled with light and color. A distant voice whispered inside my head.

“Treasure your inheritance, my kind daughter.”

Everything went dark.

The post The Inheritance: Chapter 2 first appeared on ILONA ANDREWS.

Categories: Authors

Monday Meows

Kelly McCullough - Mon, 04/21/2025 - 14:00

Da fuck?

I was born for this moment. Come at me, poultry demons!

Cluck, cluck, cluck, *******Fucker!

I’ll be under the blankets, thankyouverymuch.

Same but breathable. Some of us need oxygen for our brains.

Are you calling me stupid?!

The fact that you have to ask…

Send the chickens to me. I need blood and souls for Bast.

Categories: Authors

Pages

Recent comments

Subscribe to books.cajael.com aggregator - Authors