The Amplifier Protocol: Chapter One, Part One

Chapter One, Part One

March 2011.

I exited the building onto the roof thirteen minutes after I’d entered via the ground floor. In that time, I had disabled all magical and mundane security, eliminated any resistance, and retrieved the package on the fifteenth floor. Now I was arriving at the extraction point, two minutes ahead of schedule.

A transport helicopter blew past, circling the building. The sound of its blades was magically dampened, but the obfuscation spell coating its black hull was doing a terrible job of obscuring it from sight. And it wasn’t going to hold in broad daylight for much longer.

Nul5 and Tek5 darted ahead. The nullifier and telekinetic systematically swept the rooftop, visually checking that the area was clear of adversaries. I could sense that it was, but relying solely on magical senses was negligent. And we were anything but inept. The black armor they wore was stark against the landscape of pale gray, blue, and white buildings that occupied the downtown core of Los Angeles. It was the same armor I wore, magically fortified and flexible, but neither of them carried the twin blades sheathed between my shoulder blades.

The sky was hazy, the temperature typical for early spring. At least that was what had been highlighted as need-to-know on the mission brief. Some spells were affected by extreme changes in temperature or an excessive amount of sunlight. 

Bristling with magic, the remainder of the extraction team flanked me, ready to protect the package at all costs. After more than two years together, we had little or no need for comms, magical or mundane. We would often move in silence, instinctively working together without the need for verbal orders. When orders were necessary, I had the final say. But I usually deferred to the commanding officer, Mark Calhoun.

We cleared the egress, hunkering down to the side of the upper stairwell to wait for a direct path to the pickup.

Jackson peeled away from the group, stepping back to the steel exterior door. She pulled a roll of red tape from the zippered pocket on her upper left thigh. Starting at the bottom right corner, she ran the tape up and then across the edges of the door, revealing a series of inked runes. Adhering the tape to the steel and concrete, she activated a barrier spell with a bluntly uttered command.

Energy flashed through the inked runes, sealing the door behind us. Sorcerer magic. Becca Jackson, aka X3, was the team’s demolitions expert, but her magic worked both ways — securing or shattering as needed.

Sunlight cut through the permanent haze that hung over the city, momentarily blinding me as it reflected off something to the west. I angled my head, clearing my sight line but sensing nothing magically amiss. Though securing the extraction point wasn’t my task. It was exceedingly unlikely that an adversary could have gotten any threat — magical or otherwise — past Cla5 or Tel5. And the clairvoyant and the telepath were monitoring the mission from the roof of a neighboring building.

The helicopter circled to set down. I reached back for the package, ready to run with him. He’d been tortured by magical means, but had made it most of the way up the stairs on his own two feet, supported between Piper and Hannigan. As a werewolf, Sasha Piper, aka X5, was the enforcer for the team — stronger, faster, and more brutal than everyone but me. The sorcerer Tom Hannigan, aka X4, was a shield specialist.

The team huddling around me were all weapon wielders, but I preferred to keep my hands free. I was more effective in close contact situations. So in corridors and stairwells, I’d lead with Nul5, who would nullify any offensive spells. But in an open area, such as the rooftop, the team would take the lead.

The package shifted closer to me. Cool fingers sought out and found the naked skin between my glove and sleeve, wrapping around my wrist. I glanced down. His own skin was medium brown, fingernails manicured into a smooth shine. A prickle of energy shifted between us — my empathy power, bringing his heightened emotions with it. I felt his lingering fear, coupled with relief. Pain and weariness. He’d been lashed to a chair, barely conscious when I’d found him.

I had drained two of his shapeshifter captors myself, taking the first before the other had even known I was in the room. The second fell while she was still staring at her partner in morbid terror as I’d incapacitated him. Or perhaps it had been specifically me who’d terrified her. Which was ironic, since she was the one who could transform into a six-and-a-half-foot-tall, razor-clawed, half-human/half-beast warrior form capable of rending someone limb from limb with minimal exertion.

In an effort to revive the sorcerer I’d been tasked to rescue, I had channeled the stolen energy from the shapeshifters into him. It wasn’t possible for a nonshifter to transform, of course. That ability was rooted in shifter DNA, in their blood. But the stolen energy was enough to get the package on his feet.

A fierce satisfaction flooded through me. It wasn’t my own emotion, though.

It was the sorcerer’s.

Touching me had been deliberate. And risky, since he’d witnessed what I could do with skin-to-skin contact. Twice.

My latent empathy picked up a smugness in his satisfaction. A possessiveness.

He knew me.

I met his dark-eyed gaze. The wind picked up from the helicopter landing on the roof, lifting the sorcerer’s dark-brown hair from his high forehead. It was silvered at the temples. Strong, straight nose. Narrow chin. The fine lines around his dark, defiant eyes had been exacerbated by dehydration and sleep deprivation.

I didn’t recognize him.

He twisted his lips into a proud sneer. His accent was lilting and precise. “You are as magnificent as I always intended you to be, amplifier.”

Shock slammed through me. My own emotion this time, triggered by a burst of adrenaline. I twisted my wrist in his grasp, breaking his hold. Even if he hadn’t been magically drained, he couldn’t have held me. Not with physical force.

Few people could hold me, even with my magic at normal levels. And despite what I’d shared with the sorcerer, the act of draining two shapeshifters of their magic had let me momentarily harness their innate strength on top of my own permanently stolen power. Power that amplifiers didn’t simply inherit. At least not other amplifiers, even as rare as they might be among those who possessed magic. The Adept.

I wasn’t just an amplifier, though. I’d been genetically constructed. I was the result of over a century of magical and scientific experiments. And over the past twenty-one years, I’d been forced to siphon magic from others. Forced to claim strength, heightened healing, and other abilities for my own — and often killing those I plundered in the process. 

The empathy I’d inadvertently stolen from my birth mother — my first victim — never allowed me to become fully numb to the process.

I focused on the present situation. The sorcerer knew me.

He claimed responsibility for me.

So he was one of the Collective.

I’d been sent to rescue a nameless asset, though obviously one of high value. And I had wound up retrieving one of the architects of my conception — the Collective who had begot the Five.

A chill ran down my spine that had nothing to do with the warmth of the day, and everything to do with the disconcertion of meeting — 

Incoming! Tel5 screamed through the telepathic connection that bound the core team together.

A deafening roar accompanied by a bright wash of light — some sort of magical, mental backlash — assaulted all my senses, sending me face first toward the concrete roof. Tel5’s near-constant presence in my mind was wiped away, leaving me mentally shaken in a way I’d never felt before.

“Calhoun!” I barked. I managed to hold myself upright, but just barely. “Do you have comms?”

Mark Calhoun, situated to my left and slightly ahead, flicked his hazel eyes my way briefly, shaking his head sharply. The commanding officer’s automatic weapon remained raised and ready, scanning the rooftop. “We’ve been cut off,” he said, referring to the electronic comms he and most other members of the team carried. None of them were mentally linked and bound to the telepath as Nul5, Tek5, and I were through our blood tattoos.

Like the weapons the others carried, Calhoun’s was modified to shoot magically imbued silver rounds. The extraction team had been well briefed about what and who we’d be facing. We had armed ourselves accordingly. Unfortunately, there was a new adversary on the field. An Adept who was capable of knocking out magical and electronic communication with equal ease. Or perhaps more than one Adept.

The exterior door blew open, taking Jackson with it and nearly decapitating the members of the extraction team on my right.

Shapeshifters in warrior form swarmed the roof. Six-and-a-half-foot-tall half-human/half-beasts with three-inch-long claws and deadly sharp teeth. Physically stronger and faster than over two-thirds of my team, and with an innate resistance to magical assault. Thankfully, the specialty rounds we were carrying would even the odds.

Flynn and Hannigan raised their weapons, taking the first three shifters down with headshots.

I grabbed the package, heaving him across my shoulders, and ran toward the helicopter. Leaving Jackson to fend for herself, the core of the extraction team moved with me, systematically taking down any targets that attempted to impede our progress.

Sasha Piper was ripped away into a swarm of claws and teeth on my right. Even magically muffled, the gunfire was compromising my hearing. But I didn’t need to be able to hear to reach my objective.

As I moved, I felt the magic of the sorcerer across my back collecting, coalescing as he readied some massive spell with the last vestiges of his power.

Tek5 stood with her back to the open side of the helicopter, its rotor blades whirling overhead. She flung her hands out, stretching toward a rooftop ventilation unit to my left. Her dark-brown skin glistened, glints of her telekinesis seen in the sheen of sweat that slicked her face from having stood in the sun for too long.

Nul5 was down, sprawled at the telekinetic’s feet, but shaking his head. The psychic blast had apparently hit the nullifier much harder than it had me or Tek5.

That was unexpected.

The ventilation unit ripped free from its bolted base, metal twisting, denting. With a flick of her hands, Tek5 launched the unit across my path, slamming it into and clearing any combatants that had gotten ahead of my charge.

With the first wave knocked off the field, the shapeshifters tearing at the edges of the extraction team changed tactics. Moving as if they were also telepathically linked, they swarmed to intercept Tek5 and the helicopter. They instinctively perceived her to be the biggest threat.

And they weren’t wrong.

They were simply ignorant, placing themselves between me and my goal. It was always foolish to get between me and an objective.

I ripped my left glove off with my teeth, reaching over my shoulder to press my hand to the sorcerer’s face. He wrapped both of his hands around mine, giving me permission just by touching me.

Just by knowing what I could do.

That thought, that development, would have to wait to be explored until I had the package safely on the helicopter and my team back at base.

Flynn fell, leaving an opening at my left flank that Calhoun immediately filled. The commanding officer’s shift of position opened me up to a frontal attack. But whatever I faced directly would always go down, so guarding my rear was the priority.

I took the sorcerer’s magic. I took the spell he murmured against my ear. I harnessed the power he’d called forth, conducting it as it willed. I thrust my free hand forward. A spiral of darkly tinted energy flowed down my arm.

“Your left!” I screamed. Then I pumped my own power into the sorcerer’s casting to double it … to triple it in strength.

Ahead, Tek5 and Nul5 dropped to the concrete, each rolling to their left.

I released the spell. A spell I had no actual ability to call, command, or control. Dark energy streamed from my splayed fingers, hitting the five nearest shapeshifters. They dropped, writhing and howling in pain.

Calhoun and Hannigan eliminated the last two shifters between the helicopter and our charge. But there were still a half-dozen or more behind us. Shifter magic was difficult to distinguish when they were grouped together, and I couldn’t take my focus off my objective to glance back.

Nul5 darted around the helicopter, wrenching open the pilot’s door and yanking him out of his seat. A prudent decision. We’d been telepathically cut off from Tel5 and Cla5, as well as from the comms. That was a feat I would have declared impossible — if I ever entertained the notion of impossibilities. Which I didn’t.

There was no way of knowing who was loyal, except for the Five. And two of us were already unaccounted for. Not knowing what had happened to Cla5 and Tel5 meant that everything and everyone but the package was expendable.

But that had always been the case.

It would always be the case.

The Five were an arm, a weapon, of the Collective. We went where we were ordered, did what we were told to do. And the team of specialists backing us was even more expendable than we were.

The pilot rolled to his feet, palming a weapon and firing at the nearest shifter as he ran toward us. Also a prudent move. Even if he wasn’t a regular team member, there was strength in numbers. And the extraction team was the second-largest grouping on the roof.

Tek5 appeared out of nowhere, perched suddenly on the edge of the helicopter’s side door. She had triggered her short-range teleportation ability to move into place swiftly. She kept her gaze glued to me, ready to grab the package.

The space between us was clear of adversaries.

To my immediate right and without any warning, Hannigan turned his automatic weapon on me. 

Tom Hannigan. Shield specialist. He’d been with us for two years.

Unfortunately for him, he wasn’t fast enough to both aim and pull the trigger. Not even at point-blank range.

Still running, still carrying the sorcerer, I grabbed the weapon, smashing it back into Hannigan’s face and dropping him. The harsh double bark of a weapon behind me informed me that Calhoun had finished off the would-be traitor without even pausing.

Steps away from Tek5, I shifted the sorcerer from across my shoulders. The telekinetic grabbed his arm, hauling him up into the helicopter.

I followed, getting the sorcerer settled in a seat and belting him in as quickly as I could without hurting him.

Calhoun and the pilot stayed on the roof, guarding our backs.

“Took you long enough, Socks,” Nul5 shouted from the pilot’s seat. His hands were flying over the controls, double-checking everything. A sensible precaution, since some sort of betrayal was apparently in the process of unfolding.

Tek5 laughed wickedly, flush with energy and magic as she tugged on a headset.

I ignored them both.

The sorcerer’s fingers ghosted my cheek.

I met his dark-eyed gaze.

Tek5 caught the exchange. A deep frown instantly replaced her former playfulness.

The sorcerer held a headset in his other hand, having already put on another pair. I took it from him and put it on.

“Socks?” The sorcerer’s tone was weary but amused, even through the headset speakers. He touched my face again. “Is that your name, amplifier? I’m Kader Azar. I would have you know me.”

“I have no name, Sorcerer Azar. I am simply a designation. Amp5. As you well know.”

He dropped his hand, but not before I’d felt a spark of his anger.

***

Buy links: The Amplifier Protocol (Amplifier 0)

The Amplifier Protocol: a brief explanation

The first chapter of the Amplifier Protocol (Amplifier 0) releases today on my blog at 8:01am. I’ll be posting a new chapter at 8am PST every Tuesday and Thursday from January 8 to March 14, 2019. At which point, the entire novella (40k) will remain on the blog for one week, then be taken down and put up for sale on all retailers.

When I came up with the idea for the Amplifier Series, I knew that the main character had a deep background that would need to be explored as I was developing the core, present day story. And if I was going to do the work busting it all out anyway I decided I would write a prequel and share it with my readers for free – as a thank you for reading this far along in the Adept Universe with me, but also as an introduction to a new character.

Things you might like to know:

The prequel is set in March 2011 seven years before the main series – over two years before Dowser 1 in the Adept Universe timeline. The first book of the series is set in September 2018, after Dowser 9. I’m anticipating publishing book one in April 2019, and there will be a short story available for those who preorder.

The series and the prequel are definitely PG-13. Warning for fairly mild profanity (in my opinion, though Michael says sometimes I swear like construction worker) and violence in the novella.

The Amplifier Series is completely standalone for the first three stories – Amplifier 0, Amplifier 0.5, and Amplifier 1. Some crossover might happen in Amplifier 2, but only for readers who know the Adept Universe characters (as in they will be reintroduced from the Amplifier’s POV)

Each chapter/part will be paired with an oracle card meme. The oracle cards were designed by Elizabeth Mackey and will be further explained in the next books/stories.

Please feel free to comment and discuss the chapters/parts in the blog comment section. Please feel free to share the blog posts and/or the memes. I’m hoping that gathering to read the novella and discussing the story as it releases will be part of the fun!

The blog posts are shared on my Twitter and Facebook feeds but you might wish to also follow the blog itself so you don’t miss a post.

Okay, without further ado, here is The Amplifier Protocol (Amplifier 0) Chapter One, Part One.

I hope you enjoy the read!

Are you new to the Adept Universe? The Amplifier Protocol can be read separately, but the first book in the universe, Cupcakes, Trinkets, and Other Deadly Magic (Dowser 1), is currently free as well! Click here for the reading order of the Adept Universe.

How to subscribe to MCD’s blog

Just one last administrative post before The Amplifier Protocol (Amplifier 0) launches at 8:05am PST tomorrow! I’m so excited, but I’m trying to make sure I have everything set up and sorted. To that end, I need to link to a ‘how to subscribe to MCD’s blog’ for the new release newsletter.

So here, with pictures, is how to subscribe.

On a computer/desktop. Type your email into the box on the top right hand corner of your screen. You can unsubscribe at any time. You’ll need to confirm your subscription. If you can’t find the email in your inbox, check your spam/junk/promotions folders. If you find the confirmation there, please drag it into your inbox to ensure that future emails arrive directly in your inbox. After you subscribe you will get an email each time I blog.

On a mobile device. Scroll all the way down past the blog posts. Type your email into the box situated between the ‘older’ button and the cover image for Dowser 9. You can unsubscribe at any time. You’ll need to confirm your subscription. If you can’t find the email in your inbox, check your spam/junk/promotions folders. If you find the confirmation there, please drag it into your inbox to ensure that future emails arrive directly in your inbox. After you subscribe you will get an email each time I blog.

There you go!

MCD: 2018 in retrospect and a glimpse into 2019

For most of you who read the blog this is doubled (or even tripled) information but I’m about to launch what is called a reengagement campaign for my new release email list – culling the non opens – and I wanted to have a post on the blog for anyone who wishes to remain on my list to click through to.

So! Things I published in 2018:

The third (and possibly final) Dowser trilogy, including Dowser 7, Dowser 8, and Dowser 9. I also published three novellas that fill in the few days between Dowser 8 and 9, and those stories can be found in Dowser 8.5. These books are available in ebook and paperback.

The audiobooks for Oracle 1 and Oracle 2, narrated by the wonderful Jennifer Grace, are now available as well.

Looking into 2019:

The Amplifier Protocol (Amplifier 0) will begin releasing on this blog on January 8, 2019. This short novel (40k) is set seven years before the events of the main series and I thought it might be fun to release parts weekly for free and read along together. The book will be made available on all retailers in March 2019.

Amplifier 0.5 (novelette) will be available as the preorder giveaway for Amplifier 1. Amplifier 1 should release in April 2019, though that is subject to change.

Amplifier 2 will follow Amplifier 1 within 90 days (unless something goes wrong).

And then! Well, there are three possibilities: Amplifier 3, or Jasmine 1, or Misfits 1. Or ideally all of them in some order by the end of the year.

Audiobooks: Oracle 3 will release in January. The Reconstructionist trilogy should release in February, March, and April, followed by the final three Dowser books.

Places to find me:

I’m rejigging my newsletters, etc, to focus more on blog posts, so make certain you subscribe to the blog. On your computer, you will see the subscribe window on the top right. On a mobile device, you will need to scroll down through the blog posts. You will find the subscribe option after the ‘older’ button but before the image of the book cover for Dowser 9.

You can also find me on Facebook (mostly writing related posts), Instagram (mostly food, cats, knitting, and sunset posts), and Twitter (a combination of posts).

On a personal note, we are still recovering from the crazy windstorm but every much looking forward to 2019. Thank you for reading this far and I hope you enjoy how the Adept Universe unfolds over the next year and beyond.

A bookshelf of 'proof' paperbacks.
Not including novellas, I added my 18th novel to my bookshelf of proofs in December. Crazy!!

Amplifier 0: cover reveal

Book cover from the crazy talented Gene Mollica Studios. Model: Devon Ericksen.

Chapter One, Part One releases on January 8, 2019

They called me an amplifier. And they had bred me, raised me, and trained me to be a killer with preternatural precision. I was capable of taking, holding, and transferring power that wasn’t my own with a simple touch. Skin-to-skin contact. Along with four others of my generation, I could infiltrate any magical organization, extracting whoever or whatever I’d been ordered to extricate. Then I could destroy all evidence of our passing presence.

They had made me. They directed me. Controlled me.

Then they tried to kill me.

***

This short novel (40k) will be shared with readers through the blog every Tuesday and Thursday starting Tuesday, January 8, 2019. Subscribe to the blog so you don’t miss a single post!! The book will then be released on all retailers.


Happy Holidays 2018

This 50-foot fir tree fell perfectly between our little cabin and our Jeep last Thursday afternoon. Michael was signing Christmas cards and watched it fall.

If you haven’t been following the drama of #windstorm2018 via my Facebook or Twitter feed, the short version is that we are now on day five of a massive power outage and the holidays don’t even remotely resemble our regular traditions – absolutely no baking has been done!! We will attempt to make seafood chowder and garlic bread on the wood stove tonight. And it looks like – barring a Christmas miracle – that we will also be roasting the turkey on the barbecue tomorrow. Michael wants our Christmas morning blueberry cinnamon buns despite the lack of a mixmaster and the need to bake on the BBQ. We shall see.

Thankfully the tree missed the chicken run/coop as well!!

So! Normally to celebrate the season I would have shared a new recipe, a holiday favourite, on my blog, but I will have to make do with a short list of recipes shared from other years:

What are your favourite holiday baked goods?

Since I’m not in the position to be shopping/wrapping gifts/baking/hosting a holiday party (we had to cancel ours) this year I decided to top up our charitable contributions with a couple of our favourite organizations and one new one. We tithe monthly to the Covenant House and Make A Wish Foundation (BC chapter), as well as a few others through the year, but I just made extra donations to the SPCA (BC chapter) and Knitters Against Malaria.

Even on day five of a power outage with a rather large tree blocking our front door, a second tree threatening to fall on my tiny office shed, and wires down all over the street, we are still lucky enough to have each other and a roof over our heads. Many are much less fortunate than us this holidays season. So a few donations always makes me feel a bit better about being so blessed.

Thank you so much for spending time with me in 2018 – reading my books, as well as chatting on the blog or in the fan group or on social media. January 2019 is going to be packed full of goodies – including Amplifier 0, a fun book bundle, a BIG sale on the first Dowser trilogy, etc. It all starts on my blog on January 8th! I hope to see you here!!

Happy Holidays!!

Amplifier 0: synopsis

A page from MCD’s notebook …

They called me an amplifier. And they had bred me, raised me, and trained me to be a killer with preternatural precision. I was capable of taking, holding, and transferring power that wasn’t my own with a simple touch. Skin-to-skin contact. Along with four others of my generation, I could infiltrate any magical organization, extracting whoever or whatever I’d been ordered to extricate. Then I could destroy all evidence of our passing presence.

They had made me. They directed me. Controlled me.

Then they tried to kill me.

The Amplifier Protocol (Amplifier 0)

Coming January 8, 2019

The day after releasing Dowser 9.

The day after releasing Gemstones, Elves, and Other Insidious Magic (Dowser 9). My 18th novel.

The sun is shining (though it is chilly) and I’m back in my writing shed, treadmill rolling underfoot, hot chocolate in hand, to write an utterly thankful post to all of you who have supported me, my work, my dreams, and the words that haunt me until they make it onto the page and are released into the world.

I am utterly blessed.

Tired, drained, but completely content this morning.

It’s been slightly difficult year. Things are shifting in the indie publishing world, sales are down across the board for any author who is unwilling to play in the Kindle Unlimited pool, and it is getting more and more difficult to reach even the readers who have indicated they want to be notified of new books, etc, let alone building up a readership. So I am also shifting, trying new things, and in 2019 I’m going to be expanding – via the audiobooks and launching two, possibly three new series, as well as trying a few new ventures – giving Amplifier 0 away for free on my blog chapter by chapter (starting Jan 8), being part of an author bundle (also in January), going more ‘traditional’ with some new book covers, attending the Nebulas in May, etc.

But yesterday and this morning, I know that no matter what I have planned for the future, I have already found a lovely, supportive reader base. And I’m so thankful that you are on this journey with me. So, so thankful.

Today, I have this blog post to write, and nine giveaways to package up – from the release day party yesterday – but I might actually take it easy for the rest of the day. Some reading and knitting sound perfect.

Tomorrow I’ll dig into the third draft of Amplifier 0.5 (preorder novelette) and Amplifier 1. And hopefully I’ll get my hands on the proof of the paperback for Dowser 9 soon because I have some swag boxes to fill!!

And after that?

The Amplifier Protocol (Amplifier 0), Chapter One, Part One, drops HERE on January 8, 2019. Yep. As a thank you and a way of introducing you to the Amplifier herself, I’m giving away the prequel novella (38K) for free over a series of weeks on my blog. It will be available on stores after that, of course. But I’ll thought it might be fun to build to the release of book 1 and hopefully have a conversation about the world and the characters along the way. I promise to post (and email if you are on either of my mailing lists) about it in more detail closer to the date.

In 2019, I’ll be releasing Amplifier 1 and 2, along with prequel short stories. Then in some order (depending on what I write and when I write it) Misfits of the Adept Universe – Mory’s 1st book, Jasmine Bytes – Jasmine’s first book, and Amplifier 3. And maybe, just maybe … I’m toying with an idea for Oracle 4, but I need to have conversation about how to launch it (it might actually be better combined into the Misfits series because of the jump in time since Oracle 3), so this might not happen, or it might just be a passion project … We shall see!!

But for now, thank you, thank you, thank you – for buying the books, yes. But also for reviewing and sharing and reading through your library, for talking about them with your friends and family, and all your interactions with me online.

You all completely rock!

December 5, 2018 – the view from my office window – feeling very blessed.

 

Dowser 9: Chapter 1, Part 1

A man hung suspended in a whirlwind of magic above me.

No … not just a man.

A dragon.

I crouched on the back edge of a six-foot-wide, three-foot-high white platform set above the elven tech I had been tasked to repair, fiddling with a gemstone I’d previously removed. Pretending to work while peering through the maelstrom of golden-tinted magic that fueled the gateway.

The gold of the dragon’s magic.

Of his life force.

Energy … magic … life … that was slowly being siphoned away through the elven tech.

Something was wrong with that … scenario. That situation. Terribly, terribly wrong. But whenever I tried to grasp that thought, to fully articulate it in my mind, it hovered just beyond my understanding.

I glanced to my right, then my left. The center section of the stadium grew smaller and smaller each day as the elves erected sections of walls, closing in on the gateway. If I tilted my head, I could still see the upper rows of seating that climbed almost all the way to the domed ceiling. There were fewer rows than there had been the last time I’d counted. Not that I could remember the exact number. Or why that even mattered.

We — the dragon and I — were surrounded by elves, including my liege.

But … we weren’t a ‘we.’

Were we?

And why would us being surrounded by elves matter?

I’d repaired the tech.

I’d created a pathway at my liege’s command, opening a rift between dimensions so that the elves could cross into the earth’s dimension from their own.

That much, I knew for certain.

That much, I remembered doing.

Except just the previous day — if my sense of time could be trusted — something else had occurred. Something that had upset my liege, disrupting our connection for a moment that lasted long enough for me to remember … other things. Other ideas.

Ideas that fluttered just out of my reach, even as I gazed up at the dragon fueling the gateway with his life force.

Though my liege’s hold on my mind kept slipping, I had come to understand through her that the witches who claimed this territory, this city, had somehow reined the elves in, curtailing my liege’s plans.

For the moment.

The stadium was slowly filling with restless warriors as one elf at a time stepped through the gateway. Then waited.

Everyone was on the edge of violence, caught up in that waiting.

Me especially.

The dragon suspended above me appeared to be sleeping. I couldn’t shake the feeling that if he would only open his eyes, I would know him. I had thought more than once that I should have been tearing the magic of the gateway down, rather than propping it open and refining it. Gemstone by gemstone, I was harvesting the dragon’s magic, his life.

But wasn’t he mine to protect?

And wasn’t I his?

My liege laid her hand on my shoulder. I returned my attention to the elven device I was still working on, not wanting to invite the pain that came with an admonishment. But her touch was … shaky. Both on my shoulder and in my mind.

She was tired.

She’d have been upset if she knew that I knew. If she understood that I could feel her emotions, even sometimes catching snippets of her thoughts through the connection we shared.

I smoothed my magic, my alchemy, across the milky-white gem I was coaxing into place on the gateway device. The two sections of that device had been reunited. The metal components slotted together in an intricate pattern to form a circle about a foot and a half in diameter. I had slowly been replacing and repairing the gateway’s cracked and shattered gemstones, but one large divot on the right remained empty. The elf tech had remained inert until I’d reawakened it with my power — as bidden by my liege. But that wasn’t enough. I couldn’t fix and fuel the dimensional gateway at the same time.

So the others had been brought in. The others who I’d taken, incapacitated, and stripped of their weapons. The dragon, the vampire, the werewolf, and the guardian.

I was the technician.

They were the power source.

I thought the gateway tech might have been killing them. Slowly draining their lives away. But my liege made certain they were left with a spark within them after each session, allowing them to recuperate so that faint sliver of magic could grow and bloom.

Only to be drained again.

And again.

Unbidden anger coursed through me, through my chest and down my limbs.

Something snapped between my clenched fingers.

The hand on my shoulder tightened.

A hurricane appeared at the edge of my mind.

I had cracked the gemstone I’d been placing in the gateway device. Not enough that I couldn’t repair it. But my liege didn’t notice. And what she didn’t know, didn’t ask, I wouldn’t tell her.

She wondered why the gateway would still allow only one passenger at a time, why it could recharge only intermittently, about once an hour. She cursed my inability to open it wider, to allow six or a dozen warriors through at once. She fought, argued with Traveler, almost constantly.

But she never asked if I was deliberately limiting the gate, trimming its magic, keeping it only half-functional.

So I didn’t tell her I was doing just that.

Though why I would have wanted to sabotage the gateway at all, I had no idea.

“Again?” a large warrior elf snarled from behind me.

Traveler. The teleporter.

He’d noticed the cracked gemstone.

Traveler always noticed, which was why my liege often sent him away, tasked with other duties. Training, organizing, readying the warriors. But what they were being readied for was unknown to me.

I kept my head bowed, even though I desperately wanted to look up again, to check on the dark-blond dragon suspended in the stream of energy emanating from the gateway. Energy that was still tinted with the gold of his magic.

If only he would open his eyes.

If only he would recognize me.

Then maybe I’d know who I was …

“She’s drained.” My liege sounded weary. Her tone was labored, heavily accented. Not English, though. Elvish. The translation came through the gemstone embedded into my forehead, anchored in my brain. Though, again, why I would have needed anything to be translated, I didn’t know. “I shall set her to sleep. More components will be delivered, and the gateway will be fully functional in a few more hours.”

“You’ve been saying as much for days,” the seven-foot-tall warrior elf sneered.

My liege’s long cloak brushed against me as she swiveled to face her second-in-command. “What care you for human time, Traveler?”

“I care about being caged in here by the witches. We hold a guardian. How long do you think it will be until the warrior with the golden sword comes?”

“We will be ready.”

“I request … again … to be allowed to summon an engineer from my realm. She will have the gate fixed moments after she steps through it.”

“The alchemist has it in hand.”

“A human,” Traveler snarled. “Your trust is misplaced. Our most-powerful monarchs grow restless. We have a chance to gain a hold over this dimension and cement our place in —” 

Then Traveler grunted, pained.

The boney hand on my shoulder tightened, as if drawing from my strength. I glanced sideways, watching Traveler fight a torment that I knew the feeling of all too well. The hulking elf fell to his knees, panting in unvoiced agony.

He placed a hand across his forehead, as though trying to shield the gemstone embedded there from my liege’s power, her assault.

He couldn’t.

As I well knew.

“I grow tired of your constant questioning, Traveler.” My liege sounded remote, unaffected. But she was holding herself upright with the strength of my back. The strength of my body, my magic.

And I would gladly give it to her.

Wouldn’t I?

Traveler met my gaze, his green eyes glistening with rage, with pent-up hatred.

A smile spread across my face, mocking him. Sneering at his pain.

He snarled.

I could shake off my lady’s hold. I could lunge, snapping his neck before anyone would have a chance to even see me move.

He lifted his chin in a challenge.

I flipped the cracked gemstone in my hand, threading my alchemy around it and through my fingers. “Try me,” I murmured.

He sneered. “Why would I bother? Your head will soon be mine. As will those of your friends.”

Friends.

Friends?

I glanced up at the man suspended in the gateway. Was he the one who Traveler threatened? Was he my … friend? The term didn’t seem correct somehow … didn’t fit the feeling that hovered just out of my reach every time I laid eyes on him — 

The magic of the gateway shifted between the suspended dragon and the elven device. A tall, slim elf with sleek hair falling to the back of her knees stepped through the gate, pausing to cast her gaze around the stadium. And for a moment, it felt as though all the elves within viewing distance of the gateway held their collective breath. The newcomer wore a high-collared vest that fell to her ankles, and slim pants tucked into laced-up boots. The long vest was edged with multicolored gems that twinkled with magic.

Traveler scrambled to his feet.

Fear coursed through me. But it wasn’t my own. 

It was my liege’s.

The elves working on the walls returned their attention to the task.

“Problems?” the newcomer asked mockingly. “Already?”

My lady spoke a few words I didn’t understand, that didn’t automatically translate — a name and a formal greeting, perhaps — dropping her hand from my shoulder and stepping away from me. Silently, Traveler joined her.

I remained kneeling, keeping the newcomer and the dragon in sight without outright staring at either of them.

“We weren’t expecting you,” my lady said stiffly.

“I heard you had gained a hold in this dimension. A tenuous one, it seems.”

Anger filtered through my connection to my liege, even though we were no longer in physical contact. Her anger, not mine.

“I am making great headway, ward builder.” Out of the corner of my eye, I caught the sweeping gesture my liege made, encompassing the gateway and the maze of twelve-foot-high walls that had been constructed throughout the lower level of the stadium. She folded her hands before her, appearing tranquil even as I could feel her ire. “I’ve established a foothold on Earth as none have been able to do before me.”

The newcomer’s gaze fell on me. I was blocked from continuing work on the elven tech by her booted feet. “A fool’s quest, some would say. A flawed attempt to expand a territory that has only been further weakened by your absence. Your imprisonment.”

“My daughter has been ruling —”

The female elf waved her hand dismissively. “I’m not here to question you. I understand you seek a prime gem. I have brought you one.” A large snow-white gemstone appeared in the palm of her hand. Even without handling it myself, I knew it would fit perfectly into the final empty slot in the device.

Eagerness flashed through me. Not my own. My liege’s. I felt only dread. A stone like that could fix all the little things I’d done to hinder the gate’s true potential.

“You offer to join us?” my liege asked — a little too keenly.

The newcomer laughed, but the sound was flat and joyless. “I seek only news of my kin.”

My liege didn’t respond.

The new elf stepped down from the platform, slipping the white gemstone into the outer pocket of her vest. Magic glistened from every inch of the gem-crusted fabric. I curled my fingers in so that I didn’t inadvertently reach for the power as she brushed by me.

My liege had called the newcomer ‘ward builder.’ But judging by the look of her magic, my lady’s smothered anger, and Traveler’s silent deference, she was much, much more than that.

“My niece?” the ward builder asked, pausing a couple of steps to my left. Even the ends of her bootlaces were beaded with gems. “My nephew?”

“Dead,” Traveler said. “Both.”

“By whose hand?”

“She kneels beside you,” my liege said. “Cowed and entrapped by my might.”

“This … witch?”

“Alchemist.”

“She slaughtered my kin, whose safety was entrusted to you by the controller of all the territories. And you allow her to live?”

“She is the reason we were able to open the gateway.”

“And after she did so? You continue to allow her to breathe?”

Traveler snorted.

“The alchemist continues to be useful,” my liege said bitingly. “Beyond the operation and widening of the gateway. But it is not for you to question me, ward builder. Even though your kin have fallen to the enemy, our realms are allies in this endeavor.”

“For now.”

Ignoring the snide interruption, my liege continued. “Those who followed me here did so willingly. Their sacrifices were worthy of their position and heritage.”

The ward builder abruptly lunged sideways, grabbing me by the neck. I allowed her to pull me to my feet. Even as drained as I was magically, she wouldn’t have been strong enough to move me otherwise.

And though I could have held it easily, I allowed the magic that tied me to the elven tech to snap.

The gateway flickered.

The dragon held within the gate’s energy dropped, still hanging at the edge of my peripheral vision.

I met the fierce gaze of the elf as she attempted to choke me. She was a couple of inches taller than I was. Not otherwise touching her, I pressed my neck into her hand.

She gnashed her sharply pointed teeth at me. Then her footing slipped backward a few inches. As I’d assumed, she wasn’t strong enough to hold me. Not on her own, anyway.

Her magic rose, writhing along her arm, then around my neck, across my shoulders, and down my own arms, attempting to hold me at bay.

I laughed, but the sound came out as a gurgle. Then I slammed my open palm against her chest. Bone snapped.

Losing her hold on me, the elf flew back, crashing into one of the many walls that had been creeping closer and closer to the gateway for days. Walls erected in an elaborate spiral, forming some sort of maze to protect the passageway to the gate.

Beside me, the magic of that gate collapsed. The dragon tumbled to the floor, rolling off the platform and into the back of my legs. He was heavy, knocking me forward.

Many hands grabbed for me, trying to contain me, to hold me.

I broke a few arms without even trying. The elves who had stepped forward scurried back, nursing their wounds.

The ever-present, simmering hurricane — my liege’s power — stormed through my mind.

I ignored it.

I ignored my lady’s command to heel.

Ignoring her was becoming easier each time.

To my right, the ward builder had regained her feet, crossing to join the others loosely encircling me. Me and the unconscious dragon. Traveler had manifested a crystalline knife. But I didn’t care.

I cared about the dragon. The dragon whose skin was almost the same color as mine. Neither he nor I were finely scaled. Neither he nor I had hair so pale it was almost white … or slightly pointed ears … or sharp teeth. 

I found myself wondering suddenly — if the dragon bled, would he bleed red? Red like me? Not the pale green of the elves?

Because I wasn’t an elf.

That much I remembered.

That much I knew.

A warrior elf got in my face while I was trying to look at the dragon. Trying to understand what I was feeling, to retrieve knowledge that felt just out of my reach. I took the elf’s knife, embedding it deeply within his blood armor before he’d even noticed its theft.

Just for bothering me.

He fell.

Another elf darted forward, dragging the wounded elf away.

The others waited, tightening the circle around me.

The hurricane increased. A tornado slipped through the wound in my forehead, gaining entry through the gemstone embedded into my brain. It threatened the thoughts I was trying to collect. The clues I was trying to connect.

Friend. Traveler had used that word.

Friend.

I knelt by the dragon, placing my hand on his chest. It rose steadily underneath my touch. His magic was dim when it should have been bright. Bright … and golden … and tasting like …

“Not just my friend,” I whispered. “Mine … mine.”

Two swords scissored around my neck, then forced me to my feet and away from the dragon. Traveler had appeared behind me without warning, closing the space between us before I could react. Teleporting. I should have followed up on my earlier promise and killed him.

“I’m taking her head!”

“No,” my liege shouted. “I have her under control.”

“And each time that control slips, she kills one of us!”

“When we conquer this world, those sacrifices will bring glory to us all.”

Sacrifices … I remembered a yellow jacket abandoned in the rain …

Sacrifices.

I glanced at the newcomer. The ward builder, who had tried to strangle me. She was watching my liege, rubbing her chest. Then she glanced at me, dropping her hand to her side.

“You look like … Mira,” I said, speaking to her. “And her brother. Same … nose …” I trailed off, losing track of the thought, of the connection.

“Mira?” The ward builder furrowed her brow.

My liege lunged forward, pressing her fingers to the gemstone in my forehead. A searing agony slammed through my brain.

“Who is Mira?” the ward builder asked.

I lost control of my limbs, collapsing forward against Traveler’s twin blades. They sliced into my neck, but my lady snarled a command — backed by a push of her power — and Traveler withdrew his twin crystal swords, allowing me to fall forward across the dragon.

“Mira and her brother,” I murmured, trying to speak through the hurricane still rampaging through my mind. Trying to formulate the thought out loud. “My elf … friend … Mira. Illusionist … who wanted to die on her favorite black-sand beach …”

“Sleep, alchemist,” my liege said. “You will retire to your room and sleep.”

Blackness encroached on my vision, first taking my sight, then dampening all my other senses.

I slept.

As commanded.

Gemstones, Elves, and Other Insidious Magic (Dowser 9)

Dowser 9: paperback giveaway!

GIVEAWAY CLOSED. WINNERS HAVE BEEN EMAILED.

My second of four (okay, maybe five) giveaways to help celebrate the upcoming release of Gemstones, Elves, and Other Insidious Magic (Dowser 9) is for autographed paperbacks. But! This time instead of giving an entire set just to one winner, I thought I would split the series up into its trilogies, which equals three winners!

So … if the random number generator picks your comment, you could win this trio of autographed paperbacks (and recipe cards):

Or you could win this set of autographed paperbacks and recipe cards:

Or, last but not least, this set of three paperbacks and three postcards … err, wait … I seem to be missing a book .. hmmm, how about I order an extra paperback of Dowser 9 and add that to this duo when it arrives? 🙂

Are you interested in winning one of these sets of autographed paperbacks and recipe cards?

Yes? Yes!

Well then! To enter: comment below and let me know your favourite moment from any of the Dowser books.

Fun! Fun!

Likes and shares are always welcomed and appreciated.

Notes/Rules: OPEN INTERNATIONALLY. One entry per person. Three winners will be selected by random number generator. Email addresses are not collected for any purpose other than to contact the winner. No purchase necessary.

Giveaway closes THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 2018 at 8pm PST.

Coming December 4, 2018

PREORDER NOW

AMAZONAPPLE BOOKSBARNES & NOBLEKOBO –

Are you new to the Adept Universe? Book one is Cupcakes, Trinkets, and Other Deadly Magic (Dowser 1).

Click here for the reading order of the Adept Universe.