Tag Archive: Guardians Inc.


“Dubious Rescue” – Excerpted from Guardians, Inc: NIGHT WATCH

copyright 2007 by Esther Mitchell

            Maya Guardian sat half in the shadow of the ballroom, trying to pretend she didn’t see the speculative looks, or hear the cruel whispers of her colleagues.  It was a curse, the Guardian gift she received.  Hearing the unspoken, and the barely whispered, was more of a curse than a gift – as much of a curse to Maya as inheriting the Maxwell genes was.

            Maya winced inwardly.  Her mother called her robust, and she was her father’s princess.  She barely held in her derisive snort.  Like she believed that.  Cinderella never wore a size eighteen ball gown.  Maya knew the truth.  She was fat – it was that simple.  That her bone structure was more dense than her siblings’, or that she spent at least an hour every day in the gym of her building, or even that she obsessed away her teenage years trying to starve herself to normal, didn’t make a lick of difference.  She was apparently doomed to her overabundance of curves, and she saw the looks, heard the thoughts of everyone whenever she entered the courtroom.  How could a woman who’d clearly let herself go make such a formidable attorney?

            Angry with herself, Maya took a healthy slug of wine, and told herself she wouldn’t regret either the calories or the hangover, in the morning.

            “May I remove you from your drink, before you drown in it?”

            Maya’s attention jerked around at the Old World cadence of those words, and her throat stalled mid-swallow, leading to the most unladylike coughing fit.  She winced, aware of what society’s elite, all around them, thought.  Slob.  Cow.  She wished she could just close her ears to them all.

            “What matter are they?”  Those smooth words, touched with the hint of an accent she couldn’t quite place, murmured near enough to her ear that Maya gasped, shaken to the core.  She turned her head, and found herself face-to-face with a man who put her most vivid fantasies to shame.

            This close, she could see the slight imperfections – the scar on his temple, the slight bump that indicated his nose had been broken more than once, the thin lines that feathered his eyes and mouth.  Somehow, though, they all worked.  It just plain wasn’t fair that wrinkles made men distinguished, and women old, she thought perversely.

            He chuckled, as if he could somehow read her thoughts.  Her mental snort of derision at her own whimsical nature was cut short when, without missing a beat, he murmured, “Why worry about wrinkles?  I am certain you will age with as much beauty and grace as your sainted mother.”

            Her eyes narrowed.  “She’s not dead.”

            He inclined his head in apology.  “I know.”

            Dread crawled along her spine.  The only people in this miserable city who would know about Eryn Guardian were Para and… “Are you Crucibani?”

            That earned her a deep, rumbling chuckle, and his oddly teal eyes sparkled with mischief.  “My dear, dear lady!  If I were to cross their threshold, those so-called holy men would see me strung up by my own entrails.”

            Maya winced at the graphic description, but refused to be distracted.  “Which means you’re…”

            One sandy blond brow raised, and his mouth quirked in amusement.  “Indeed.”

            She waited silently, but he never showed so much as a single nerve.  Instead, he merely inclined his head and intoned, “Conner Shaw.”

            Her eyes widened.  She’d heard his name, before.  Her brother, Jason, claimed Shaw was the only blooded, living vampire he’d ever trust at his back.  Still… “What brings you to me, Mr. Shaw?”

            “I need some… very delicate legal advice.”

            Given what that usually meant for vampires, Maya resisted the urge to bury her face in her hands and groan.  The last thing she needed right now was some renegade vampire with a lust for blood, energy, or whatever the hell he lived off of, making a mess of her life.  She was handling that just fine, thanks.

Flash Friday: “A Dangerous King of Help” – excerpted from Guardians, Inc : DOUBLE TAKE

copyright 2007 by Esther Mitchell

Jesse paused in his office doorway, not sure if he was more surprised that Analeise was talking to thin air, or that she was actually there. His wry glance passed over the clutter of books that hadn’t been there when he left, either. Apparently, she raided Jason’s archives. Wonder if Jason knew.

Damn it!” The sudden oath, punctuated by the sharp sound of flesh striking wood as she slapped the desk – hard – snapped Jesse from his musing. She looked pissed, and the furious light in her eyes shouldn’t turn him on, but damned if it did. Lust surged toward his groin, and he stifled his groan only through sheer force of will. So he had a thing for bad girls. No surprise there; Natalya had been as bad as they come, and he fell head-over-heels for her.

Jesse heaved a silent snort of disgust. Natalya should be all the warning he needed to stay away from Analeise. Tangling with another bad girl was liable to get him killed, even if that was more difficult these days. His eyes fixed back on her, and the rush of heat was instantaneous at the memory of her hot, welcoming body and eager responses. Both heat and memory were expected, though neither was appreciated. Still, it was the tiny twist in his gut at the layer of vulnerability beneath that anger that bothered him most. She looked innocent, and that was such a contradiction he wanted to grin, but his swollen, split lip protested the attempt, and he hissed in pain.

Analeise’s head jerked up, a gasp of surprise flying from her, and she stared at him as if he was a ghost. The irony of it was, without Victor, he would be – twice, now. He uttered a bitter laugh, but it ended on a groan as his bruised ribs protested. Good thing he was a fast healer, these days. A year ago, a beating like that would have laid him out for a good week, if he survived it. Now, a good night’s rest, and he’d be right as rain, as he mother put it; or, as right as a man under a vampire’s curse could be, anyway.

“You’re bleeding!” He didn’t realize she moved, but her hand was suddenly there, a cotton handkerchief in it, pressed against his mouth. He jerked away with a surprised hiss as the thrum of the pulse in her wrist filled his ears.

Goddammit! Jesse clamped down on the impulse that urged him to take her arm, and sink his teeth into her soft, warm flesh. Strong as the urge was, he wasn’t an idiot. He knew the ritual of Turning – he burned it into his brain those first few months after Victor’s impromptu gift, terrified he had no choice but to become a monster. He couldn’t begin to describe his relief when he discovered that wasn’t true.

Turning a living human being into a living vampire was an elaborate ritual, full of ceremony and magic. At least, most of the time. Problem was, there was no recorded precedent, no history for cases like his, where a vampire essentially gave a life-saving transfusion. It just wasn’t done. The closest Jesse could find, in a year of desperate searching, was the mention of a young girl from the fourteenth century who was miraculously restored to health after a terrible fall, by a nameless traveler. Unfortunately, the story didn’t leave him with much hope. By the account, later the same year the girl accidentally swallowed some blood while tending to an injured family member, and became an unnatural creature. She was eventually burned as a witch, for her thirst for human blood. Jesse’s stomach had plummeted after reading that. One taste was all it took to Turn her. One accident. How many bloody scenes did a cop – particularly a homicide detective – see in a week? Too many. So he quit the force, unwilling to take that chance. It didn’t even matter that he knew better, now – that drinking blood was useless to a living vampire.  It didn’t even matter to know that it was the energy in the blood, not the blood itself, that he would really be absorbing. Whenever his adrenaline surged, the urges were there, and they terrified him. He feared it was only a matter of time.

No. He dragged his mind from the thought with a shudder. It wouldn’t happen. Not to him. Jesse Guardian would not become a damned monster. Hell, he was probably damned anyway, but at least he could still make a conscious choice. He could choose to avoid temptation, to not take that first taste. He could choose to avoid the subtle scent, the rich, sweet wine of blood, the siren pulse of energy…

He yanked his mind from the thought with a muttered oath. He wasn’t about to go that route, damn it all. Especially not with this woman; she already fascinated him too much. He blinked, and found her watching him with worried mocha eyes. “Are you okay?”

“I’m fine,” he rasped, and focused beyond her, on the desk where she’d been sitting when he came in. “What are you doing here?”

Her brows knit as she backed off a step, and her dark eyes searched his face. “Helping you. I think you should go to the hospital and–”

“I’m fine,” he repeated sharply, with one upraised hand when she would have continued her protest. “Really. And I didn’t expect you to stay here all night.”

That flash of vulnerability was back, and something else that tugged him toward her like an invisible guide wire. She met his gaze, and the smoky quality of her eyes sucked the breath from him. Her tongue darted over those lush lips, and he could barely focus on the words that followed, through the lust roaring in his ears. “I… I wanted to help.”

“Help?” Was that croak really his voice? He swallowed hard, even as a hundred images of how she could help him right this moment cascaded through his mind.

What happens when an immortal creature supposed to be nothing more than myth takes human form to escape total annihilation?  … Meet Ryan Jaspar – the last of his kind.  He’ll do anything to stay hidden from the Crucibani, a secret religious order determined to see him dead.  But when he meets up with Guardians, Inc.’s spunky receptionist, he’ll have to do something that’s totally against his nature – he’ll have to learn to trust a human, again.

“Leap of Faith”  — excerpted from Virtual Darkness

copyright 2007 by Esther Mitchell

            “We have to jump.”  He grasped her hand securely and drew energy for the descent.  A few more moments, and the Crucibani would realize where they’d gone.

            “Jump.”

            Her disbelief was emphasized by the way she dug her heels in and refused to move.  For such a waif, she was suddenly a completely immovable object.  And he didn’t have time for her stubbornness.  Already, he could feel the energy dissipating.

            “Yes, jump.”  He glanced toward the stairwell door again.  “And quickly.”

            “We’re twelve stories up!  Are you serious?”

            “Very.  Kylie—”

            “You’re crazy!”  She tugged backward, and they were playing tug-of-war with her arm.  Their eyes met, and he read fear in her grey-green eyes.  And suddenly, he saw the drop through her eyes.  She was afraid of dying. 

            He focused his energy as he stared into her eyes until the crackle of energy rose around them both, and her eyes widened as a small gasp flew from her lips.  His mouth curved up at the edges, seductively persuasive.

            “Trust me, Kylie.”

            Her expression was dubious, and she eyed him warily.  “Who are you?”

            His brow furrowed.  He wanted to avoid this; especially now.  She wouldn’t believe the truth if he told her.  “You already know me.”

            He tugged her hand to get her moving again, but again she resisted him, her narrowed eyes full of accusations.

            “No.  I mean, who are you really?  Why are there Crucibani chasing us?”

            It was his turn to freeze, as surprise gripped him.  How did this waif of a human know about Crucibani

            “How—?” he picked up the sound of feet pounding on the stairs, two floors below them.  “Never mind.  Now isn’t the time.”

            “Actually,” she eyed to edge of the building again, and the empty air beyond.  “If you expect me to throw myself off of a twelve-story building, your timing couldn’t be more perfect.”

Happy New Year!  :)   As 2010 rolls in, I have a good feeling about this year.  In the spirit of turning old negatives into new positives, here’s a little treat for you from a Work-In-Progress of mine.  Enjoy the excerpt, and your New Year! :)

“Unholy Blood” – excerpted from DOUBLE TROUBLE

copyright 2008 by Esther Mitchell

            Jason blinked in the dim lighting of the warehouse.  He could hear breathing, and he knew the Crucibani was in here.  He resisted the urge to swear.  He didn’t need this.  He needed to be out there, looking for the chalice, not dealing with religious fanatics.  If he didn’t have a feeling the two were interlinked…

            “Jason!”

            Shit.  That was Mari, her voice thin and frantic. As his vision adjusted to the lack of light, he saw her, and his blood ran cold.  The man he followed in here was nothing more than a lure.  There were four Crucibani in a half-circle in the center of the building, and one of them held Mari motionless, a knife pressed to her throat.

            “Let her go,” he commanded, taking a step forward.  Mari sucked in a loud breath and stiffened.  Jason froze at that sound, as the knife at her throat drew a trickle of blood.

            The black-clad man who held her only laughed, the sound a sinister echo in the empty warehouse.  “You have no authority here, Guardian.”

            “She’s not involved in this.  She’s not the one you want.”

            The Crucibani’s eyes narrowed, and he tightened his grip on Mari – Jason could tell by the tiny, stifled cry she made.  “Oh, I want the bitch.  I want to slit her foul little throat right here.”

            “She’s not—“

            “She’s not human.  She’s an evil creature, a daughter of the Devil.”

            Mari drew herself up at those words, and Jason had never loved her more than when he saw the trembling courage on her face.  Yanamari Durango was no daughter of the Devil, but Ana – Ana claimed dominion over the demons of the Romany.  There was some part of Ana in Mari, the memory of another lifetime, a piece of her demonic essence.  But Ana was not Mari.  Not the Mari he knew, who nursed wounded animals, refused to eat animal flesh of any kind, and took in stray people and animals.  And all he could do was plead for that woman’s life.

            “Mari isn’t evil –“

            Another of the men stepped forward, brandishing a cross and a sword.  “You will bow to the power of the Lord, or suffer His wrath!”

            Dark humor edged through Jason.  This was an old argument – one he was several decades tired of.  “Not today.”

            “By the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ, the power of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, I deliver God’s justice.”  He turned toward Mari, the sword at the ready, and pressed the crucifix to her forehead.  Mari stilled, and Jason barely resisted the urge to laugh.  Didn’t these idiots know Mari wore a Romany cross around her neck?

            When Mari failed to respond the way he expected her to, the man backed off, glaring.  “What witchery is this?”

            “It’s not witchery.”  Jason took another step forward.  “You don’t have the authority to take her life.  Can’t you see?  The Crucible Society doesn’t deliver God’s justice.  They maintain some warped theory of the Church’s supremacy.”

            “Blasphemer!”  One of the other men moved forward, his dark eyes crazed with religious fervor.  “The Crucibani deliver the will of God.”

            Jason resisted the urge to sigh.  He was so tired of this game.  “Only if you’re a brainless moron who sees bloodshed as a holy crusade.  This isn’t the will of any god, or even of the Catholic Church.”

This week’s Flash Friday is the culmination of two of my favourite areas – history, and the paranormal.  Opening in Rhode Island shortly before the start of the Revolutionary War, the Work-In-Progress this passage is taken from, LADY’S LAMENT, it absorbs all the history of the period, and the danger of being a privateer in an age of upheaval.  Then, it fast-forwards to modern day, as a paranormal investigator takes on a challenge she never saw coming – tangling with the ghost of a man determined to make her remember.

“Love So Deadly” 

copyright 2009 by Esther Mitchell

            “The Cap’n, he be acomin’, Mistress!  An’ he look fit for the storms of Hell, he does!”  The brogue-laden words of Brigit, Caroline’s Irish lady’s maid, reached Royce’s ears, even as he mounted the stairs, and his lips twisted in a dark smirk.  Oh, aye, he was in a fit, and his lady-love should well know why, if the rumors he heard were true.

            Ah, Caro, how could you?  Cold comfort enough, the news borne by the Continental Congress, that the Colonies were to go to war.  Normally, war would profit him most fortuitously.  Hadn’t he procured the funds for this lavish estate from the war between England and France, ended just twelve years ago?  Even as young and new to the fine arts of the privateer as he’d been, back then, he secured his fortune in those turbulent waters of the channel, and then added to them by plundering French merchant vessels from the West Indies in the name of King George, in the years since.  And still, Caro would not marry him.  Though he gave her lush estates, and provided her with everything she could want, she claimed she could not marry a man who made his fortune on the blood of another.

            She was returning to Boston.   His scowl returned in force, and rage prowled his soul.  He gave her everything, squandered his immortal soul at the Devil’s table, for nothing more than her love.  And now he learned she could not be bought.

            “Damnation!”  He spun on the stair, his fist flying of its own will, to crash against the timbered walls with a terrible splintering of wood.

            “Royce!”  The voice from above him on the stair was sweet, and laced with shocked disapproval.  Ah, how he wished to truly offend his lady’s delicate sensibilities!  Images flooded his mind as he stared up at her, standing at the top of the stairs like a goddess over her erring petitioner.

            “You’re leaving.”  He spat the words out in a fury as he lunged up the remaining steps between them, heedless of the mud on his boots upon the expensive carpeting.

            She stood her ground, which drew a grudging smile from him.  That was one thing he loved most about his Caro.  She never backed down.  “Yes.”

            A simple enough statement.  Another man might have taken it at its worth.  But he was not another man, and he already made a bargain with the Devil, to have her here.  Without Caroline, he was already damned.

            “No!”  He roared the word as he covered the final inches between them, and yanked her hard against his body.  “You belong here.”

            “Unhand me, you beast!”  She shoved at his chest.  “How can you say I belong here, when here I am nothing but miserable?  I am not your property, and you cannot buy me – not with coin, and not with demands.”

            “Have I not given you everything I have to give, ungrateful wench!”  He could not control his tongue.  After weeks of fear, terror that he would arrive to find her already gone, his temper ran unchecked.  “Perhaps I should just take what I have already paid for, then!”

            He would not harm her.  It was not in what little remained of his soul to ever cause her harm.  Yet, he craved one taste of her, and the chance to convince her to stay.  Yanking her hard against him, he slanted his mouth over hers, and plundered willfully, the pirate he truly was. 

            Caroline’s body went rigid against his, and he heard a soft snick, like a knife loosed from its sheath.  Breaking his hold, he barely heard her soft whisper, before heat pierced his chest, and the world began to darken.  But, as he stared up into her tear-filled eyes, he knew he was betrayed, and her words were his last companion into the darkness.

            Forgive me, my love.

            He would not.  He could not.  She had consigned him to the Devil, but as life ebbed away from him, he made a promise to them both.  One day, he would return.  And she would pay for what she did.

Excerpted from Guardians, Inc: Double Trouble

copyright 2008 by Esther Mitchell

         “Jason?  You have a visitor.”

            Jason Guardian lifted his head in lackluster interest toward the sound of his assistant’s voice, and gave Kylie a vague nod, his mind a million miles away from what she said.  The information his mother e-mailed him this morning on ancient writings about the Ra Chalice filled his mind, instead.  Supposedly, the chalice was blessed by an ancient Egyptian priest to carry the power of the sun-god, Ra.  It could raise the dead, reverse the ravages of disease, even reverse the effects of the Undead Curse.  Of course, how much of that was real remained to be seen, but—

            “Jason?”

            Jason’s attention snapped up at the soft, lightly-accented sound of that voice, and his lungs stalled halfway through a drawn breath as he belatedly registered that he did, indeed, have a visitor.  And not just any visitor.  “Yanamari.”

            It’d been a lifetime since he uttered that name.  Even longer since he last held her.  Yanamari Durango was the reason he joined the Church, the reason he fought demons, and, ultimately, the reason he lost the faith that held him to the Church.  And now she was back.  Bitter memory settled over Jason, and he swallowed it back with difficulty.

            “What can I do for you?”

            The sadness in her dark eyes was familiar, and it roused an old feeling within his chest.  They were kids when she disappeared on him without even a good-bye.  How could she still have any effect at all on him?   But she did.

            He could blame it on her witching ways, her Gypsy charms and spells, but he knew that wasn’t all of it.  His eyes skimmed her, taking in everything that had changed, and everything that hadn’t, in eighteen years.   Still willowy, her body had the shape of a woman, now, rather than that of the girl she’d still been when he last saw her.  That body made him hungry for things he couldn’t have, and all of them started and ended with Mari, naked in his arms.  Her midnight hair was shorter now, shorn to just below her shoulders, and he briefly mourned to loss of that glorious hair he spent so many hours tangling around his hands.  She was his Mari, and yet, not.  Her eyes were more wary than he’d ever seen them, and devoid of the guileless optimism that was the heart and soul of the girl he knew.

            Now, she perched on the edge of the chair opposite him, her shoulders tense and her back straight, like a frightened bird prepared to bolt with the slightest provocation.  And something in him rebelled at that image.

            “Jason, I need your help.”

            Her words yanked his attention back to her face, and what she was doing in his office after disappearing on him eighteen years ago.

“Confessions with the Devil”  – Excerpted from DOUBLE TAKE

copyright 2007 by Esther Mitchell

The confessional door creaked closed behind him, and Jesse smirked.  This ought to be good.  He hadn’t been inside a confessional in over a year.  The light came on above him, and Jesse leaned forward and lowered his voice.  “Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned.  It’s been over a year since my last confession.”

             Silence reigned for a full minute, before a familiar, reedy voice replied, “We all have crises of faith, my son.”

             Jesse laughed quietly.  He didn’t just have a crisis of faith.  He had a crisis of life.

             “What sins bring you here today, my son?”

             Jesse settled back.  “I don’t know, Father.  Which ones would you like to hear about?  That I’ve tainted my blood with that of the eternally damned?  That I help the creatures of darkness against those who’re trying to exterminate them?”  He leaned forward again, as the devil gripped him and he gave into the need to bait this man.  “Or that I’m confessing to a priest even more tainted than I am.”

             A shifting noise, and then a throat cleared.  “For those since which you ask forgiveness, I grant you in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.”  There was an instant of silence, and then, “This is highly inappropriate, Detective.”

             Jesse chuckled.  “Yeah.  But you’ve been dodging me, Father.”

             A sigh.  “Meet me in the vestibule in one hour.”

             Jesse rose to his feet and reached for the door.  Donovan’s voice stopped him with his hand against the warm wood.  “You know God loves you regardless of what you’ve become.”

             Jesse closed his eyes, and gritted his teeth.  “I haven’t become anything, Father.  That’s the whole problem.”

             And, before the priest could continue, Jesse pushed out of the confessional, barely missing plowing over a little old lady with her rosary clutched tightly in her hand.  Jesse resisted the urge to laugh as he sidestepped and held the door open for her.  If only she knew she was about to tell her sins to the Devil.

“Sun Spot”

copyright 2008 by Esther Mitchell

Cherish Beauricard ran a light touch over the silver pistol tucked into the holster nestled beneath her jacket – a motion meant to comfort herself – as she stepped out of the cab before Sun Spot, one of the country’s hottest nightclubs.

She glanced around the rundown industrial neighborhood, frowned, and looked up at the building before her.  From the outside, it didn’t look like much.  Her eyes skimmed the old, red-brick structure and she shuddered.  It didn’t look like a hip nightclub.  In fact, it looked more like an industrial slum.  Hardly the place one expected to find Hollywood’s hottest A-list stars partying.

A worried frown wrinkled her brow as she leaned into the open window of the taxi to address the driver.  “You’re sure this is the right place?”

“You wanted Sun Spot.”  The man gestured to the building behind her.  “This’ the only one I know of, lady.”

She cast a dubious glance over her shoulder.  “It just looks so… so…”

“It’s a nightclub.  Whatcha expect, the fucking Taj Mahal?”

That he even knew what the Taj Mahal was impressed her.  That he chose to reference India’s crowning jewel to this particular nightclub was irony at its best.  She offered him a bland smile as she forked over the fare – thank God for agency expense accounts – and said, “Guess not.  Thanks.”

And, as the taxi peeled away, leaving behind the scent of burning rubber, Cherish turned toward the building with a gusty sigh.

“Well, Mr. Sevastin.  Let’s hope you’ve got a better disposition than my research says.”

She winced.  Okay, so she hadn’t lost the bad habit of talking out loud to no one, yet.  Can’t win ‘em all.  And she certainly didn’t need the self-reminder of the file she spent last night memorizing.  No pictures, of course – few case files actually contained pictures of the clients, in order to help safe-guard their identities, in case the Crucibani ever intercepted a file.  Besides, she didn’t need a picture.  Everything she needed to know about notoriously camera-shy Willem Sevastin could be summed up in one word – Nr-Simha.

Everything Guardians Inc. had on Nr-Simha – admittedly, it wasn’t much – said these people were only barely tamed from their wild ancestors.  It wasn’t that Nr-Simha were rare, exactly.  According to the statistics they could find, there were at least a couple thousand half-breeds running around the world.  But a purebred Nr-Simha hadn’t actually been seen in thousands of years.  At least, not knowingly.  And Willem, to judge by his file, was as purebred as they came.

Nr-Simha weren’t supposed to be particularly social creatures, preferring the company of their own kind, which was what surprised her most about Sevastin.  He owned a busy nightclub.  Besides, it was rumored that purebreds had hair-trigger tempers and nasty dispositions.  If any of that was true…

With a sigh, Cherish pushed the club’s front door, expecting it to be locked.  Which was why she backpedaled when it flew open under the slightest touch.  Her hand flew to her weapon, before she realized there was someone there.

And what a someone he was!  Her heart took up residence in her throat as she unabashedly stared at the most delicious male form she’d seen in too many years.  He was built like a linebacker, with shoulders broad enough to make Atlas himself green with envy.  His trim, muscular body narrowed to slim hips that would have been out of proportion on any other man.  She swallowed hard as her gaze fixed shamelessly on his crotch, and every breath fled her.  God, she certainly hoped there was truth in advertising, there!

A throat cleared, and an amused bass voice intoned, “I’m up here, Ms. Beauricard.”

Mortification finally colored her cheeks as reality set in.  Oh, hell.  Was she actually ogling her client?  Sheepish, she raised her her gaze to eyes of a deep, unusual teal, framed by amazing golden skin, and hair dark as midnight and wild as the wind.

“Mr. Sevastin, I presume?”

He inclined his head, and a sinfully wicked smile crooked up his lips.  “Yes and no.”

Her eyes narrowed as she tried to assess whether he was having one over on her or not.  “Really.  Which is it?”

His laugh slid through her like warm, gooey chocolate.  She clamped her lips shut against a moan.

“Both, actually.”  He grinned at her, and winked.  “I’m a Mr. Sevastin.  My name’s Drake.”

Confusion gripped her.  The file hadn’t mentioned a sibling.  “I don’t understand—”

His grin widened.  “Come on in.  I’ll see if I can help you figure it all out.”

Cherish stepped inside the doors warily, and froze again, certain she’d been transported to another dimension.  Was this the same building?

She stared at the room before her, with its dark burgundy leather walls, broken by the golden flash of light off a series of sun-shaped art deco discs that studded the walls.  Lavish, velvet-covered booths lined the walls, and satin-covered chairs circled tables closer to the dance floor.

At least, she assumed it was a dance floor.  The strange chains and rigging that hung suspended several feet above it, she didn’t want to ask about.  Only one thought rolled through her head as she stared up at them.

What the hell am I doing here?

She snuck a peek at her guide, then turned her gaze back to the opulent, but strange, club again, and barely suppressed a shudder.    She wasn’t much for the clubbing scene, and this place… This was like Casablanca meets Cleopat’s.  Definitely not her speed.

Unfortunately, she didn’t get her choice in assignments, and Yasmin assured her this one was important when she voiced her initial concerns over playing bodyguard to a Nr-Simha.  Why did a shifter need a bodyguard, anyway?

“Message from the Grave” – Excerpted from SIGHT UNSEEN

copyright 2002 by Esther Mitchell

Moving to the comfortable-looking armchair, Jonathan settled himself into it and sighed with relief that it was as comfortable as it looked.  He closed his eyes and sat quietly for a few moments as his breathing evened and his mind emptied of everything except his reason for being here.  This was a different environment, and the utter stillness of it was difficult to adapt to.  Patrice said Sophia Parrish died around twenty years ago.  The longer her spirit lingered, the fainter her energy would become, unless she had a constant source of replenishment.  Contacting her spirit would require a bit more concentration than his crime scene work normally did.  Finally, when he felt suitably focused, he opened his eyes.

“Sophia,” he called out to her with both voice and mind as he felt the cold prickle of a presence dance along his arms and the back of his neck.  “I know you’re here, Sophia, and I know you can see and hear me.  I also know that you want to talk, or you wouldn’t have shown yourself to me.  What do you want to tell me?”

Something unseen pushed one of the heavy wooden chairs closer to the hardwood surface.  Papers ruffled on the desktop, and the form of a pretty woman with red hair and blue eyes materialized in front of the desk.  A sad smile curled her lips, before her voice whispered along the edges of his consciousness.

I know who killed Ramsey.

Jonathan nearly jumped out of his skin.  The last thing he’d expected to find in this place was an eyewitness, “Sophia, I want to ask you some questions.  I need your answers to be out loud, so answer me with one rap on the desk for yes, two for no.  Understand?”

Sophia nodded, before the desk rapped once.

“Good.  Did you see who murdered your husband?”

One rap.

“Did you witness the murder itself?”

Another single rap.

“Did you recognize the murderer?”

Again, one rap answered him, and pain flickered across her face.

“Was he a business associate of your husband’s?”

Silence answered him, and she looked puzzled and hesitant for the first time.  Jonathan’s brow furrowed.  Surely Sophia knew all of her husband’s business associates.  Faith claimed he was a bit of a recluse, so there couldn’t be many.  He tried again.  “Did the murderer come here often?”

A swift rap came in response.

“Count, in raps, the number of years the murderer and your husband were acquainted.”

A series of raps followed, with brief pauses.  Jonathan counted twenty-eight raps and his heart sank.  Twenty-eight years ago, Haley was still in Boston.  He couldn’t be the killer.  But the calling card, and the impressions Jonathan had… everything pointed to a man who definitely wasn’t in Bradbury over two decades ago.

“You’re sure it was twenty-eight?”

One rap answered with grim finality, and her expression was intractable.

“Were you at all acquainted with the murderer in those twenty-eight years?”

One shaky rap.  Sadness covered her features, and Jonathan could only wonder what tragedy had imbedded such sorrow into her spirit.

“Do you know his name?”

Quiet, then a short, tentative rap.

“Was he Rene Haley?”

The chair across from him toppled over as she shot up from it with incredible force.  Her fear buffeted Jonathan like a gale-force wind, and raw panic danced on her face.

“Sophia,” he said quietly, “you must help me.  Was the killer Rene Haley?”

An ominous series of raps echoed in the room and Jonathan frowned in confusion.  The fear she displayed a moment ago seemed pretty certain.  What other reason could she have to fear a man she probably never even met?

“Are you afraid of Haley?”

One rap.

“Because he killed your husband?”

Two sharp raps answered him, and the swell of her fear hit him again.  Jonathan’s brow furrowed.  There was something deeper going on here.  The dead were usually unconcerned about the how and why of their deaths.  Sophia’s spirit was terrified, as if she feared Haley could somehow reach beyond the grave to harm her.

“A Dangerous Kind of Help” – excerpted from DOUBLE TAKE

copyright 2007 by Esther Mitchell

He paused in his office doorway, not sure if he was more surprised that Analeise was talking to thin air, or that she was actually there. His wry glance passed over the clutter of books that hadn’t been there when he left, either. Apparently, she raided Jason’s archives. Wonder if Jason knew.

Damn it!” The sudden oath, punctuated by the sharp sound of flesh striking wood as she slapped the desk – hard – snapped Jesse from his musing. She looked pissed, and the furious light in her eyes shouldn’t turn him on, but damned if it did. Lust surged toward his groin, and he stifled his groan only through sheer force of will. So he had a thing for bad girls. No surprise there; Natalya had been as bad as they come, and he fell head-over-heels for her.

Jesse heaved a silent snort of disgust. Natalya should be all the warning he needed to stay away from Analeise. Tangling with another bad girl was liable to get him killed, even if that was more difficult these days. His eyes fixed back on her, and the rush of heat was instantaneous at the memory of her hot, welcoming body and eager responses. Both heat and memory were expected, though neither was appreciated. Still, it was the tiny twist in his gut at the layer of vulnerability beneath that anger that bothered him most. She looked innocent, and that was such a contradiction he wanted to grin, but his swollen, split lip protested the attempt, and he hissed in pain.

Analeise’s head jerked up, a gasp of surprise flying from her, and she stared at him as if he was a ghost. The irony of it was, without Victor, he would be – twice, now. He uttered a bitter laugh, but it ended on a groan as his bruised ribs protested. Good thing he was a fast healer, these days. A year ago, a beating like that would have laid him out for a good week, if he survived it. Now, a good night’s rest, and he’d be right as rain, as he mother put it; or, as right as a man under a vampire’s curse could be, anyway.

“You’re bleeding!” He didn’t realize she moved, but her hand was suddenly there, a cotton handkerchief in it, pressed against his mouth. He jerked away with a surprised hiss as the thrum of the pulse in her wrist filled his ears.

Goddammit! Jesse clamped down on the impulse that urged him to take her arm, and sink his teeth into her soft, warm flesh. Strong as the urge was, he wasn’t an idiot. He knew the ritual of Turning – he burned it into his brain those first few months after Victor’s impromptu gift, terrified he had no choice but to become a monster. He couldn’t begin to describe his relief when he discovered that wasn’t true.

Turnings were elaborate rituals, full of ceremony and magic. At least, most of the time. Problem was, there was no recorded precedent, no history for cases like his, where a vampire essentially gave a life-saving transfusion. It just wasn’t done. The closest Jesse could find, in a year of desperate searching, was the mention of a young girl from the fourteenth century who was miraculously restored to health after a terrible fall, by a nameless traveler. Unfortunately, the story didn’t leave him with much hope. By the account, later the same year the girl accidentally swallowed some blood while tending to an injured family member, and became an unnatural creature. She was eventually burned as a witch, for her thirst for human blood. Jesse’s stomach had plummeted after reading that. One taste was all it took to Turn her. One accident. How many bloody scenes did a cop – particularly a homicide detective – see in a week? Too many. So he quit the force, unwilling to take that chance. Not that it mattered, now. Whenever his adrenaline surged, the urges were there. He feared it was only a matter of time.

No. He dragged his mind from the thought with a shudder. It wouldn’t happen. Not to him. Jesse Guardian would not become a damned monster. Hell, he was probably damned anyway, but at least he could still make a conscious choice. He could choose to avoid temptation, to not take that first taste. He could choose to avoid the subtle scent, the rich, sweet wine of blood, the siren pulse of life…

He yanked his mind from the thought with a muttered oath. He wasn’t about to go that route, damn it all. Especially not with this woman; she already fascinated him too much. He blinked, and found her watching him with worried mocha eyes. “Are you okay?”

“I’m fine,” he rasped, and focused beyond her, on the desk where she’d been sitting when he came in. “What are you doing here?”

Her brows knit as she backed off a step, and her dark eyes searched his face. “Helping you. I think you should go to the hospital and–”

“I’m fine,” he repeated sharply, with one upraised hand when she would have continued her protest. “Really. And I didn’t expect you to stay here all night.”

That flash of vulnerability was back, and something else that tugged him toward her like an invisible guide wire. She met his gaze, and the smoky quality of her eyes sucked the breath from him. Her tongue darted over those lush lips, and he could barely focus on the words that followed, through the lust roaring in his ears. “I… I wanted to help.”

“Help?” Was that croak really his voice? He swallowed hard, even as a hundred images of how she could help him right this moment cascaded through his mind.

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