Blood and Magic: A Surefire Binding for Darn Near Anything
Blood and Magic
Ann Gimpel
Taliesin Publishing
Can Luke conquer his past and claim the only woman he's ever loved?
Blurb:
Magic didn’t just find Luke Caulfield. It chased him down, bludgeoned him, and has been dogging him ever since. Some lessons are harder than others. Luke survives by embracing danger and upping the ante to give it one better. An enforcer for the Coven, a large, established group of witches, his latest assignment is playing bodyguard to the daughter of Coven leaders.
Wraiths,
wolves, and humans with dark magick attack. Unpleasant truths surface about the
child and Abigail’s well-ordered world crashes around her. Luke’s so attracted
to Abigail, she’s almost all he can think about, but he’s leery too. In over
his head, he summons enforcer backup. Will they help him save the woman he’s falling
in love with, or demand her immediate execution?
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Excerpt:
…It wasn’t Luke but a
long, drawn-out shriek that brought Abigail thumping back to consciousness, her
heart hammering triple time in her chest. Eyes wide and staring against the
darkness, she warded herself just in time. Strong magic battered her. She tried
to sense Luke, but that was the problem with wards. They protected by forming
an impenetrable barrier and corralled her magic inside.
Whatever was pummeling
her seemed to have given up. She risked chinking enough of a hole in her
warding to send a tendril of magic outward because she needed information. When
it came, it terrified her so badly, her heart stuttered. Dark things surrounded
them: wraiths, mad wolves—those who’d been turned to serve the other side—and humans
who’d sold their immortal souls for forbidden knowledge. Had the girl rallied
them? How could she possibly be that powerful? Luke didn’t seem to be anywhere.
Abigail hoped he’d concealed himself out of harm’s way, because the two of them
couldn’t make the slightest dent in the dark horde outside. The stagecoach rocked
and she realized someone was climbing onto the roof. Throat so dry she could
barely breathe, she mended her warding.
The books. That’s what they want… Let them haul the miserable things
out of here. She knew she should risk heaven and hell to keep such
knowledge out of dark hands, but Abigail didn’t see how throwing her life away
would alter the outcome. She heard voices speaking the Satanic tongue, and then
dragging sounds as someone transferred the trunk to the ground. Luke shouldn’t have bothered to put it back up top, she thought grimly.
What had the Girauds been
doing with such arcane tomes in the first place? She supposed there was the
slightest chance they’d been protecting them from falling into the wrong hands.
Yes, by all means, let’s give Coven
members the benefit of the doubt. Except it was a struggle, and she didn’t
know who the hell to trust anymore.
She waited until it was
absolutely still outside, and a tentative scan told her the dark host she’d
sensed earlier had moved on, before loosing her wards. The minute she did, she
felt Luke’s energy. He pulled open one of the coach doors. “I scared up a
couple of horses from a nearby farm. We need to go after those books—and the
girl.”
She fought down the
protest that rose to her lips, but it slid out anyway. “There aren’t enough of
us.”
“Fixed that problem too.”
He smiled grimly. “I can ward you if you want to stay here, but if you’re
coming we need to get moving. Don’t want to let the trail get too cold.” From
the smirk in his voice, she knew he was being sarcastic.
She sent her magic
spiraling outward and felt the books pulsing with evil. No way that path would ever get cold. “Why
couldn’t I feel them this strongly before? I know the trunk had to have been
spelled, but still…”
“The trunk was spelled,
and by someone with magic to burn. It’s over in those trees. I guess Carolyn’s
minions were in a hurry and didn’t have a wagon.”
Abigail felt like a rube.
The book trunk had already been packed and sealed when she’d picked Carolyn up
in New York. She’d never even thought to examine it. “Did you see Carolyn?”
“Yup.” His upper lip
curled into a sneer. “Caught a glimpse of her riding a mad wolf.”
“Do you suppose there’s
some way we could separate her from Goody Osborne?” Abigail bit her lip
nervously.
Luke shook his head.
“Even if we could—and I don’t think it’s possible—there are too many unknowns.
Her parents might have been turned. If that happened, the kid could have
embraced evil before it entered her body. By the time we sorted all that out,
the dark would have had one too many chances to kill us.”
Abigail winced at the
unvarnished truth in his words. Any residual doubts she held about the
necessity of destroying the girl melted away. “Yes,” she said through clenched
teeth. “I’m coming with you.”
Luke boosted her onto one
of the horses. She pulled her skirts out of the way. It was a normal saddle and
this was scarcely a time for modesty. Luke vaulted onto his horse, kneeing it,
and they took off up the Overland Stage Road at close to a full gallop. “We’re making too much noise,” she sent.
“Doesn’t matter. They’ll expect us to come after them.”
She clung to the horse
with her legs, enjoying the feel of not having to ride sidesaddle. Luke’s horse
was larger, faster, and soon pulled so far ahead she could barely see him. She
kneed her horse, urging it to greater speed, but the animal shied, and then
reared. Abigail struggled for balance and called magic to calm the spooked
animal. Something sprang at her and knocked her to the ground. She sent killing
magic to stop its heart, before realizing what it was. Panting, she crawled out
from under a black and gray mad wolf with blood dribbling from its nostrils,
and glanced warily about. Were there more of them?
Carolyn stepped from the
shadows. It looked as if she was alone, but Abigail suspected otherwise. “What
do you want?”
“Simple enough. I plan to
use you to get rid of Breana Giraud—and others.” A sneer twisted the girl’s
features into something unpleasant. “You think people don’t know you’re part of
Coven government?”
Abigail set her mouth in
a hard line. “Fine. So the other side knows about me. Question is, who are you
really?”
“Don’t you recognize me?”
Carolyn stepped closer and turned her face from side to side as if posing for a
photographer. “I gave you my name, but I am far more than that.”
She’s arrogant. Perhaps I can use that in some way. Abigail spread
her hands in a placating gesture. “Because I’m used to seeing you as Carolyn
Giraud, I’m not certain who you are.” She paused for emphasis. “I’d like you to
tell me.”
“Certainly.” A feral grin
made the child look like something out of a nightmare. “It is always better to
know who your adversary is.” Her voice became soft and silky. “I have access to
magic you would kill for. You may not know it, but you’d like to work for us.”
She laughed, but it sounded more like broken glass shattering against itself,
than a twelve-year-old girl’s mirth. “We have real power, not that paltry tripe
the Coven settles for.”
Abigail waited. When
Carolyn didn’t say anything else, she said, “I’m listening…and considering your
offer. Life is always better than the alternative.”
“Ha! They said you
couldn’t be turned, but I told them they were wrong. I am The Promised,
resurrected out of legend. Goody Osborne was but a start, and this little girl
is merely a convenience.” Something like an outraged squawk followed the words,
but Goody silenced Carolyn almost immediately. “What I really want is you,
Abigail Ruskin.”
Shit! She couldn’t be The Promised… “You mean the Dark Messiah?”
Abigail scrunched up her face and held her breath, hoping against hope she’d
gotten it wrong.
“The same.” A
supercilious expression etched into the girl’s features. “At least the other
side has heard of me. Warms my black, black heart.”
“The books—?” Abigail
hunted for a connection while she rode herd on terror that threatened to
immobilize her, and clouded her judgment. If ever she needed a clear head, it
was now, but her mind raced feverishly.
“They weren’t doing the
girl’s parents any good moldering away in that underground chamber. I’d
actually been searching for them for years.” She flashed a sly smile. “They
used to be mine…”
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