Announcing a New Fire Story & Boxed Set Collection: Midnight Magic!

I have collaborated with 16 other fabulously talented authors to bring you this collection of urban fantasy novellas. The story I have written for it is entitled HEAT, and is a (you guessed it) Fire Novella!


Remember Chad Wendig from Returning? You liked him so much (funny, because he was the antagonist in that story) that you asked me to give him his own story! So that’s what I did. Angelica Butterfield, the antiques collector from Returning is also in this story. Unsurprising, since she is Chad’s love interest. You’ll also get to meet (face to face this time) the mysterious Basil Chaplin, the fire magus that Enzo tells Saxony she needs to train under in Born of Fire. The events of Heat take place ten years before Saxony was born, though, and will give you a bit of a taste of who will be featuring in her life in future stories.


Here is a sample chapter to whet your appetite! Midnight Magic: An Urban Fantasy Novella Collection[image error] is on preorder and will be delivered to your device automatically on April 25, 2017!


PS, in case you’re wondering why Chad refers to himself as a mage and not a magus, the answer is that they mean the same thing. Magus is the Italian word for it, mage is the english word.


 


HEAT, A FIRE NOVELLA


CHAPTER ONE


November, 1990. Sedgley, England.


Templeton’s pub would be heaving soon. It was nearly eleven pm. Chad looked over his shoulder from his post by the open door. Already the floor had multiple wet patches from spilled drinks, and a spray of broken glass, which Archie wouldn’t bother to clean until morning. There was no point. The eighties metal-playing jukebox attracted toque-wearing black-leather clad customers like flies. Motorcycles clustered on the curb outside the doors.


“Close the door for now, Chad,” Archie called as he sent a pint of lager sailing down the bar toward a patron. “It’s brass monkeys tonight.”


Chad shrugged and closed the door behind him. It smelled better outside anyway. Cold had never bothered him. How could it, when he had a fire constantly burning in the pit of his stomach? Literally. You’re a fire mage, Wendig, he thought. Surely your talents are worth more than a hundred quid a week? Surely you can find something better than bouncing? Chad watched his breath fog in the air and turned the steam into smoke just for the fun of it. The little opaque cloud drifted away and slowly evaporated.


A figure materialized at the end of the street. Delicate footsteps drew Chad’s attention. A tall, slender shape stepped into the circle of light under a streetlamp. Young, female, and alone. Tight-fitting denim, tall tan leather boots and matching leather jacket and bag. A white scarf was snugged up to her nose and a matching thick-knit toque with a ball dangling from the end bobbed as she walked. A blond curl blew back from her cheekbone. She defined ‘legs for days.’


Chad tucked his hands into his jean pockets and watched her approach through half-closed eyes. Was she actually intending to enter Templeton’s? Chad raised his eyebrows. Templeton’s hadn’t hosted a patron like her in…well, ever. It was a watering hole for the sludge of Sedgley.


She reached the door next to Chad and put her hand out for the door handle. She didn’t look a day over eighteen.


Chad fought the urge to direct her to The Bat & Ball two blocks over. She wouldn’t find any trouble in a theme pub frequented by retired cricket players. But Archie would kill him if he turned a patron away, especially a pretty one.


“ID, miss,” he said.


“Oh, aren’t you sweet,” she said in a North American accent. She pulled off her white mittens, shot him a dizzying grin, and rummaged in her tan leather bag. She produced a wallet and then a driver’s license.


He held the ID up under the single bulb hanging on a wire over the door. Angelica Butterfield. Twenty-two. A Canadian address.


“You’re a long way from home, Angelica,” Chad said, handing the ID back and swinging the door open for her with one arm. Why any tourist would ever visit the hamlet of Sedgley when London was less than an hour away was beyond him.


“Yes. In town on business,” she said, dropping her wallet into her bag. “Brrrr, chilly tonight, isn’t it?”


Angelica sailed past him, leaving behind a vanilla-scented cloud. Chad watched as she doffed the toque and approached the bar. A cascade of blond curls tumbled down over her shoulders. Every scarred face in the place turned.


Templeton’s was poorly lit, and every one of the dozen customers were men in black leather. They looked more like wraiths than people: hollow-eyed, used up, worn-down. Against the dark wood paneling, cracked floor tiles, and chrome-rimmed bar stools, Angelica stood out like a lighthouse on a stormy night.


Archie threw his bar towel over his shoulder, placed his hands flat on the top of the bar, and leaned forward to listen to her order. Chad strained his ears but couldn’t make out their words. Archie gestured towards the rear wall of the pub. Angelica moved away from the bar and Archie’s eyes swept her from head to toe. He tugged on his beard, flipped a half-pint glass in one meaty hand, and placed it under a tap.


Oblivious to the stares, Angelica moved past the pool tables to take in Archie’s prized possession: A 1929 Military Scout motorcycle. Poised beneath the neon glow of beer signs, the Scout was cast in a mythic green glow.


Archie followed her with a half-pint. Chad’s mouth twitched. Archie never delivered drinks to anybody. To Chad’s surprise, Archie and Angelica stood and talked animatedly for more than a few minutes. Angelica gestured to several of the bike’s parts and Archie nodded enthusiastically. Archie squatted to point at the main stand. Angelica crouched along with him and the two of them looked like a couple of frogs on lily pads.


When they finally stood and Archie turned away, he had a look of amazement on his face. He shook his head as he made his way back to the bar.


Chad closed the door before Archie had a chance to yell at him, and nearly bumped into Mickey Pickett. Mickey was a regular who took up more room than three regulars. He was Sedgley’s only claim to fame – a champion bare-knuckle heavy-weight boxer, well known in the underground.


“Wendig,” Mickey nodded his massive head at the bouncer.


“Pickett,” Chad returned. He held the door open and sucked in his stomach so the giant could pass.


A dozen more patrons arrived over the next twenty minutes and the small bar became hazy with smoke and loud with talk. The temperature rose. Chad propped the door open. From his post, he watched Angelica out of the corner of an eye. So far she’d struck up six different conversations and had shaken multiple hands. If he wasn’t mistaken, she’d also handed out a couple of business cards. She sent a couple of smiles Chad’s way, but her gaze never lingered. What did a lady like her want in a place like Templeton’s?


Shortly past midnight, the sound of breaking glass jerked Chad’s attention away from Angelica.


“You gonna pay for that?” Mickey’s voice carried over the din.


“Come on, Pickett. It was an accident,” wheedled a voice from someone Chad couldn’t see behind the giant. “I got laid off this week.”


“What’re you doing here then? You’ll pay for my next drink, and then you’ll go home where you belong.”


“A man’s got a right to…”


“Don’t push me, Sykes.” Mickey reached out a meaty hand and dropped it on the little man’s greasy forehead. He pushed enough to make the short guy stagger back into a circle of other patrons.


Beer splashed on the floor, shortly followed by cries of anger. Shoving commenced.


Archie looked for Chad over the crowd and summoned him with a jerk of his chin. Chad elbowed his way through the crowd as more bodies crashed into one another.


“Hey now, Mick. Not in my bar…” Archie’s voice rose sharp and blunt over a Whitesnake song blaring from the jukebox.


A sharp elbow caught Chad in the cheek as he pushed through the stinking crush. A circle had formed, and a little too eagerly, Chad noted. Mickey and the little man who looked more weasel than human faced off.


The fire crackled in Chad’s belly, ready to be called on. It hurt, like always, and Chad tried not to wince outwardly. He put a hand on Mickey’s elbow, hoping to coax him down with talk. That’s when he saw the blade in Sykes’s hand.


“Even a meathead boxer like you can’t win against a blade,” Sykes hissed as he snapped open the butterfly knife.


Mickey laughed and pulled out his own long, two-edged blade from somewhere near the vicinity of his hip, holding it low and hard. It gleamed in the light.


“No knives! No! Knives! Chad?” Archie waved his arms and the crowd shoved back, out of reach of the blades. Chad got pushed back along with the crowd.


“Coming through,” Chad bellowed, and the men nearest to him parted.


“Easy, Sykes,” Mickey said. “You really want to dance with me?”


“You’ve always acted like you own the place,” seethed Sykes.


The crowd inhaled, so did Chad. Mickey raised the blade, a good twelve inches. Even at a distance, Chad could see the distinct pattern on the steel. It reminded him of flowing water, which reminded him he needed a drink.


“That’s a Damascus blade,” cried a woman’s voice.


The sound was so jarring against the backdrop of men’s voices that everyone froze.


Chad tracked a head of blond hair as Angelica wound her way through the crowd. She ducked under raised arms and curled around pot bellies. She entered the circle, as if oblivious to the danger. She peered up at Mickey, her face alight with wonder. She looked at the blade deliberately and pointed to it. “That’s Damascus steel!”


Mickey looked down at her, his jaw agape. “Damascus…” he trailed off.


“Where did you get that? May I see it? Sorry to interrupt,” she threw the words over her shoulder at Sykes, who’s jaw hung stupidly. He put his palms up, butterfly knife held light and loose. The tension in the room eased.


“Nothing to see here,” Chad said as he passed through the crowd, patting a few backs. “Relax, guys. Break it up. Jake,” he called to the smaller man.


Jake Sykes shuffled toward Chad, his narrow eyes darting toward Mickey and Angelica.


“Get out of here,” Chad continued. “You know we don’t do weapons. Next time I search you.”


Jake sputtered, “Mickey’s got a bloody machete!”


“I know, I’ll deal with him next. Get.” Chad jerked his chin toward the door and Sykes hunched his shoulders and took his leave.


Chad approached Mickey who was now wrapped up in conversation with Angelica.


“…is a lost art,” Angelica was saying. “You see this beautiful design?” She hefted the blade in her hands and pointed her pinky finger at the sweeping lines through the metal. “It’s called pattern welding and happens in the smelting process.”


Chad was shocked Mickey let anyone touch the blade, but as he took in the look of abject admiration and excitement on Angelica’s face, he wouldn’t have been able to say no to her passion, either.


“‘Scuse me,” Chad interrupted. “No weapons in Templeton’s. Take it outside.”


“This isn’t a weapon,” Angelica said to Chad, her enthusiasm quickening his pulse. “Well, it is. But it’s art first. I’d like to buy it from this fine gentleman. He promises he won’t wield it against anyone during our transaction, don’t you Mr….?”


“Pickett,” said Mickey. “But it’s not for sale. It was my granddad’s blade.”


“Which is why I’ll pay you handsomely for it,” Angelica said, opening her purse. She opened the wallet, exposing a thick wad of cash. “How’s six hundred pounds?”


Chad cursed under his breath and moved his bulk to block the view of her money from curious glances. “We’re a bar, not a pawn shop.”


Mickey stared at the cash, his bottom lip hanging open. He gathered himself, his eyes never leaving the money. “Eight hundred pounds.”


Chad almost laughed. So much for hanging onto his granddad’s prized possession.


“Seven, and not a penny more,” said Angelica, snapping her fingers. She was enjoying this. “In cash. Today. Right now. You won’t get a better offer than that, Mr. Pickett.”


“It’s yours,” said Mickey. His tongue snaked out and wet his lips.


Angelica handed the cash to Mickey and took the blade gingerly. “Did it come with a sheath? Oh, please say yes!” Her eyes reminded Chad of a puppy. Adorable. Sweet. Did she know how irresistible she was? Probably.


Mickey whipped out his wallet and shoved the money out of view. He shook his head. “I lost it. ’Scuse me. Nice doing business with you.” Mickey moved faster than any man that large had a right to. The door slammed behind him.


More than one pair of eyes had witnessed the transaction. Angelica inspected knife, seemingly unaware of the attention she’d drawn.


“Miss?” Chad said. She had plenty of cash left, he’d seen the wad with his own eyes, and he wasn’t the only one.


“Hmmm?” She made a distracted noise.


“I’m not sure what you were thinking coming to a place like this…” He had her attention now. Her big blue eyes blinked up to his face. “…And flashing money around. But I advise you to head home, or to wherever you’re staying. And quickly.”


“Oh.” She held the knife against her heart, as though the contents of her purse were an afterthought by comparison. “Right you are, Mr…”


“Wendig.” He held an arm toward the door, inviting her to take her leave.


“Nice to meet you. I’m Angelica Butterfield.” She took off her scarf and wrapped the blade carefully, then tucked it into her purse. “Good night, Mr. Wendig.” She pulled her white toque over her curls and donned her mittens. “Oh.” She put a pound coin on the bar to cover her drink. “You’re sure you won’t sell the Scout?” she asked Archie.


“I’m sure. Can’t blame you for trying, though,” Archie said, taking the money off the bar. “Lady knows her stuff,” he said to Chad.


Chad was less concerned with her knowledge and more worried about her making it home in one piece. “Need a cab?” He didn’t like the look of the two characters in the booth nearest the door. They watched Angelica pass, looking like a couple of wax figures. Only their eyeballs moved.


“Oh, thanks. But I’m staying at the King’s Arms. I can walk. Goodnight, Mr. Wendig.”


“Goodnight, Miss Butterfield.”


He watched her stride purposefully down the street as a light autumn mist began to fall. Halos surrounded each street lamp and dead leaves rustled across the cobblestone road. She turned the corner at the end of the street and disappeared just as the two men from the booth passed Chad with a “G’night.”


A bad feeling soured in the pit of Chad’s stomach as the two men walked quickly in the same direction as Angelica.







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Published on April 04, 2017 11:43
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