Book Read Free

Modern Magic

Page 67

by Karen E. Taylor, John G. Hartness, Julie Kenner, Eric R. Asher, Jeanne Adams, Rick Gualtieri, Jennifer St. Giles, Stuart Jaffe, Nicole Givens Kurtz, James Maxey, Gail Z. Martin, Christopher Golden


  The Demon You Know (short story)

  Carpe Demon

  California Demon

  Demons Are Forever

  Deja Demon

  Demon Ex Machina

  PAX Demonica (coming soon!)

  Learn more at DemonHuntingSoccerMom.com

  The Protector (Superhero) Series that RT Book Review magazine raves are true originals, “filled with humor, adventure and fun!”

  The Cat’s Fancy (prequel)

  Aphrodite’s Kiss

  Aphrodite’s Passion

  Aphrodite’s Secret

  Aphrodite’s Flame

  Aphrodite’s Embrace

  Learn more at WeProtectMortals.com

  By J. Kenner as J.K. Beck

  Shadow Keepers Series (dark paranormal romance)

  When Blood Calls

  When Pleasure Rules

  When Wicked Craves

  When Passion Lies

  When Darkness Hungers

  When Temptation Burns

  Shadow Keepers: Midnight

  As J. Kenner

  New York Times & USA Today bestselling Stark Trilogy (erotic romance)

  Release Me (a New York Times and USA Today bestseller)

  Claim Me (A #2 New York Times bestseller!)

  Complete Me (A #2 New York Times bestseller!)

  Take Me (a Stark Trilogy novella, coming soon)

  Thanks again, and happy reading!

  J.K.

  DAYS GONE BAD

  Eric R. Asher

  www.daysgonebad.com

  Copyright © 2013 by Eric R. Asher

  All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  Printed in the United States of America

  First Printing, 2013

  www.daysgonebad.com

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

  Produced by ReAnimus Press

  www.ReAnimus.com

  Edited by Laura Matheson

  ~~~

  For my eighth grade self, who thought about writing a book, but never did.

  ~~~

  Acknowledgements

  A special thanks to all who inspire a love of fantasy in those around you.

  An enthusiastic thank you goes to my beta readers, Amy Cameron, Jason Cameron, Angela Shafer, Ron Asher, and Matt Fischer.

  Thanks to the Critters.org workshop and their superb critiques.

  Thank you to Travel Channel and the Toy Hunter crew:

  Chris Wood

  Tara Boneillo

  Michael Covino

  Shiloh Crawford III

  Sidharta Pascual

  Candace Corey

  Adrian Moran

  Z Jadwick

  and

  Jordan Hembrough

  Happy Hunting!

  (hollywoodheroes.com)

  Chapter One

  You are cordially invited to the wedding of

  Elizabeth Berry

  and

  Michael William Wagner

  On the twenty third of April, two o’clock

  The Jewel Box in Forest Park

  RSVP …

  “Blah, blah, blah …” I groaned and set the invitation down. “Sam’s going to have an aneurysm over this one.”

  I walked to my old green fridge, popped the cap off a bottle of ale, and started scrounging for some food. I pressed a few buttons on my personal chef, a.k.a. microwave, and turned on the television. It was depressing. Every station was running the latest Amber Alert, flashing the picture of a missing girl with huge blue eyes and the devil’s smile. Hopefully this girl gets a happy ending. The last two sure as hell didn’t. I turned the set off and waited for my gourmet dinner to finish cooking. My phone rang about ten minutes later, interrupting a freshly microwaved chimichanga.

  “Damn, that was fast.” I let the phone ring a few times while I shoveled in a forkful of chimichanga and leaned back on my battered leather couch. My eyes passed over the outdated wood paneling on my ceiling and walls, taking in the meager light from two small lamps while I swallowed my dinner.

  “Hello?” I said with the phone a good four inches from my ear.

  “That, that, that … bitch!”

  I stabbed the fork into my chimichanga and set the plate on my oversized oak coffee table. “Hey, Sam. You got Beth’s invite.”

  She snarled something I couldn’t quite make out.

  I put the phone between my shoulder and ear, and slowly persuaded the coffee table to come closer. “Can I get the English translation on that?”

  Sam puffed into the phone and said, “Don’t start.”

  It was impossible to stifle a chuckle. I could just see her lips curling back and her black hair framing the rage on her face as she yelled into the phone.

  “Thanks, Damian. Some brother you are.”

  “I’m getting the guilt loud and clear. Where’s the spite?”

  “Ah ha … ha … ha. Ass. I just can’t believe it. She was my best friend! She sent the invite less than a week before the wedding! I can’t believe that bitch is marrying my old boyfriend.”

  “You did die, you know.”

  “Not. Helping.”

  “Sorry, sorry. Look, I never had any real issues with Beth, she was always nice and–”

  “Shut. Up. Damian. You’re just saying that because she slept with you.”

  My jaw slackened in mock offense. “Oh, come on sis, it was only one time and–”

  “I repeat, she slept with you.”

  I took another oversized bite of chimichanga before I said, “Comf omf Samf.” I swallowed. “I was a teenager, what was I supposed to do?” Beth was, well, she was a valley goth girl when we were kids. Total wannabe, and the instant my sister told her I could see the occasional phantasm and sometimes hear the dead talk, Beth was all over me.

  Sam’s exasperation came over the phone in a puff of static.

  “I take it you won’t be giving a toast?”

  Sam’s breathing evened out. “Maybe, maybe I’ll tell the guests about the time Beth accidentally slept with Mister Brown–”

  “The math teacher?”

  “–right before I turn the whole effing wedding party into vamps, or, or, give me a minute, I’ll come up with something good. I’ll do something horrible to her wedding. I’ll make it the worst wedding day anyone could imagine. I want it to rain frogs while zombies rise up behind the wedding party and, hell, you just better buy the tux insurance.”

  I choked on a mouthful of ale and blinked at the phone a few times through watering eyes. “You want to know something, sis?”

  “What?”

  “Ale burns like a bitch when you shoot it through your nose.”

  She burst into laughter.

  “Glad I could help.” I rubbed my cheek while my brain scrambled for a way to defuse my sister, the vampiric time bomb. I knew she wasn’t going to let it go and I couldn’t even nudge her mind in a different direction over the phone.

  “So, Demon, are you in? You could bring some zombies. It’ll be a whole new spin on wedding crashers.”

  My eyes glanced down at the invitation as I wiped the ale off my nose. Forest Park, eh? There were a few interesting things I could do there. Art Museum, Zoo, pigeons, all kinds of trouble. I grinned, and I’m sure it was an evil grin. “Tell you what, leave everything to me. I’m not going to kill her husband to be, much to your disappointment, I’m sure, but I’ll make it memorable. Consider it an early birthday present.”

  Silence.

  “How about it, Sam?”

  She sighed. “Alright, but if you don’t make it good, I’ll wrap that bitch up as a present for my new brothers to eat.”<
br />
  I stared at the receiver and wondered for a second if my sister was joking. I laughed nervously as my chimichanga curdled in my stomach.

  Chapter Two

  My eyes focused on the red smear of the clock face, reading 10:10 AM. I was sure it was a barefaced lie, but the clock stared back in intractable silence. I muttered a curse at the traitorous thing. It looked like the shop was going to be opening a little late … again.

  I jumped out of bed, pulled on my jeans from the day before, and a shirt from—well, best not to think about that. I was impressed with myself. It was only five minutes from ‘oh crap, I’m late’ to running out the door armed with keys and a healthy breakfast of beef jerky and Frappuccino.

  Traffic was light. Of course, it was after ten in the morning, so you’d kind of expect it to be light. My knees kept the car from running over any unsuspecting tourists while I quaffed the Frappuccino and chased it with half a bag of beef jerky. In retrospect, breakfast may have worked out better in reverse.

  My shop is Death’s Door on Main Street in Saint Charles. My master, at some point in time, had the wisdom to change the name and the sign to a gothic looking DD, or the Double D, as the regulars call it.

  Main Street is a time capsule; it’s an old world, small town that hasn’t changed much since a modern city sprang up around it. Rows of historical brick buildings are still framed by cobblestone streets. My shop wasn’t in the main strip; it was on the far northern end of Main Street. The location put it within walking distance of the Missouri River, Oh Fudge (to keep me in my tenants’ good graces), and the local hospital. My master gave me the shop as a graduation present of sorts when she disappeared on a mission of her own in years past. She didn’t tell me a damn thing about what she was doing or where she was going. I often wonder what she’s up to, or if it will be her ghost I see next. Zola left me with an inventory made for sorcerers, Wiccans, and even a smattering of tourists. Everything from texts and spell-craft supplies to crystals and antiquated artifacts lined the aisles.

  I pulled in behind the shop about ten thirty, rattling across the cobblestones. The back door’s lower deadbolt grumbled at me as I approached. I unlocked the upper deadbolt, and then delivered a swift kick to the gargoyle-like face of the lower deadbolt to unlock it. He’d been a particularly nasty Fae at odds with one of my tenants, who’d transformed him into a rather effective lock. I pushed my way through the door and walked onto the small landing just inside. The old staircase to my right led to the second floor, but I hopped down a shorter set of stairs into the back room, and made my way to the front of the store.

  We were on the corner of Main Street, with the door stuck at a forty-five degree angle in front of the u-shaped counter of display cases. The old glass in the front windows distorted the view slightly, but I loved the history of the glass more than a clear view. While admiring the ripply view of the street, I tripped over a blur of green barking fur. I debated on cursing Foster for his pets or playing with the cu sith puppies as I laid there with my nose on the not-so-clean, but vintage, wood floors.

  From what I understood, which wasn’t much, cu siths were bred to drag fertile human women into fairy mounds to provide milk for the fairy children. That would make a fantastic infomercial: Tired of hunting down sources of milk for the kids? Call in the next half hour and we’ll give you two, that’s two cu siths for the price of one. Don’t want to drag those screaming women home all by yourself? Call now!

  Of course my boarders just keep saying cu siths make the best guard dogs. I was still convinced my neighbor’s two-year-old made a more terrifying guard dog.

  I felt a tug on my shoelaces and said, “Oh no you don’t!” His fur was soft, but still bristly as I turned over, dove forward, and grabbed him. He ran suspended in mid-air by my grip, furiously pumping his green legs and black paws for a good minute with a tongue lolling about that was entirely too long for his body. His head looked more like a wolf than any domestic dog, with a black nose and yellow eyes. I yelped and dropped the first dog as the second “playfully” sunk her teeth into my shin, wagging a furry braided tail. I growled and both dogs hauled ass to the back room in a clatter of toenails. Smart dogs.

  There was a light breeze as a small fairy landed on the wooden shelves behind me. He had a sharp nose and incredibly fine eyebrows, with a slight slant to both of his crystal blue eyes. “Greetings, Damian.”

  I groaned and stood up, bracing myself on one knee as I straightened out. “Hey Foster, is your friend coming to pick up the dogs?” The bastard laughed at me. “You know, since you’re just watching them for a friend. For what? Two months now?”

  Foster smiled slightly and flexed his wings.

  “They’ve been here for two months,” I said.

  He shrugged and his narrow lips pulled up in a grin.

  “They could reach pony size, not that I need to tell you that.”

  Foster shrugged again, bowed, and took off with one graceful flap of his pale white wings. “You know how it is. Aideen wants to keep them. You’ll thank her one day. Cu siths make the best guard dogs.” He laughed again as he flew to the back room in pursuit of the green blurs.

  I glanced at the holes in my jeans from the cu sith teeth and the small trickle of blood staining said holes. “Oh yes, thank you. Thank you.” My confidence in Foster’s judgment went down a few notches. “You’d better rent a storage space, Foster. They’re not staying here!”

  As evening closed in on an otherwise uneventful day, the bells on the front door jingled. A familiar balding tuft of gray hair bounced down the aisle of occult artifacts, blending seamlessly with bundled packs of pale feathers along the top shelf and contrasting with the dark wood of the shelves below. I stifled a laugh as one of the cu siths shot out of the back room and latched onto Frank’s shoelace, dragged it under his other foot and caused an impressive stumble and shout.

  “What are you doing here on a Saturday, Frank?” He was normally working at Walgreens on any given Saturday.

  Frank suddenly found the woodwork on the ceiling fascinating. His plain brown eyes, crowned by gray wooly caterpillars, rolled back down to meet my questioning look. He set a thin brown paper bag on the display case and tapped it a few times.

  “Uh-huh, and?” I said.

  “Isortaneedajob.”

  “Huh?”

  He sighed. “I sort of need a job, just part time you know.”

  I don’t think I responded right away. Frank started pacing back and forth in front of the counter, looking up every few steps while my brain worked on ways to avoid that train wreck.

  “What happened to Walgreens?” I spoke slowly, still trying to figure out how to say no.

  Frank scratched his chin. “Well, I had a disagreement with the boss and, well …”

  Silence.

  “You got fired?”

  He blew out a noisy breath. “Yeah, I sort of hit on a customer, who turned out to be a mystery shopper and some big anti-sexual harassment spokesman and–”

  “Spokesperson,” I said with a smile.

  “–apparently she complained and I got canned.”

  “Your boss had been looking for a way to fire you for a year. I’m surprised you held on this long.”

  “Thanks,” he said with a lopsided smile. “You know, if I’m here part time, you’ll have more free time to do, well, whatever it is you do outside of the shop. You know, piss off vampires, talk to fairies, track down priceless grimoires, mystical artifacts …” his laughter began to break through his own commentary.

  Maybe Frank was being sarcastic as his list went on and on, but I actually did need more time to do those, well, most of those, things. I could already piss off vampires in seconds flat and I really didn’t need more time for that.

  A moment later I noticed Cara had appeared on the counter and was staring at Frank. Cara was Foster’s mom. It is also good to note, she made our lower deadbolt. The Fae like to call normal people commoners, as all fairies and their critters are
sight unseen for most of the world, unless a fairy chooses to gift someone with the Sight. Of course, the Sight opens up some sights that aren’t really a gift at all. Unless you consider pissing yourself and running away screaming a gift, which some do.

  I picked up the bag and opened it to the sounds of crinkling paper and the sweet smell of a new book.

  I read the title of the book out loud. “Lady Cottington’s Pressed Fairy Book, hmm …”

  My lips twitched as Cara glared at the book, then at Frank. I wished Frank could see the scowl on her face as she said, “Unbelievable.”

  Frank laughed as he took the book out of my hands and started rifling through the pages. “This is my favorite one.” He held the book up beside his face. “It reminds me of the little bugs you’re always talking about.”

  “Oh, that’s quite enough!” Cara reached into a small leather pouch on her hip and held out a tiny o-shaped stone in her palm. My eyes widened as her lips moved and a thick syrupy liquid spread out from the hollow in the stone. She moved the stone to her other hand as she finished the incantation and flung the goo at Frank’s eyes.

  He yelped and stumbled backwards into a spinner rack full of tea leaves. His fists ground into his eyes as he regained his balance.

  Cara hopped forward and in the blink of an eye she mushroomed to human size, if human size is almost seven feet tall with wings brushing the ceiling. Her transformation was ringed in a shimmering explosion of fairy dust.

  I backed away from the enormous fairy. I sneezed, and then my eyes ran up and down the huge gray and white wings, patterned like an Atlas moth, right down to the snake’s head markings near the wing tips. “Holy shit.” I didn’t envy Frank. His first peek of the Fae world was going to be an unpleasant one.

  Frank lowered his fists and screamed like an adolescent girl. I was so fixated on Cara’s immense size I almost missed Frank’s expression as his eyes jumped between her chest, her head, her wings, and back to her chest. His scream died and he looked torn between admiration and utter terror. He was seeing a fairy for the very first time. Only instead of a small, docile butterfly, she was taller than him and armed with two sheathed swords longer than his arms.

 

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