Be sure to enter the giveaway after the exerpt :)
Shattered Circle
Persephone Alcmedi
Linda Robertson
Mass Market Paperback: 384 pages
Publisher: Pocket Books
ISBN-10: 1451648936
ISBN-13: 978-1451648935
JUST YOUR AVERAGE MEGA-WITCH. . . .
It’s tough being a modern woman, but Persephone Alcmedi has it worse than most. Being the prophesied Lustrata has kicked her career as a witch into high gear, and juggling a wærewolf boyfriend who is about to become king of his kind and a seductive vampire who bears her magical Mark isn’t easy either.
Still, Seph’s beloved foster daughter, Beverley, is causing more trouble than these two men put together. The young girl’s been playing with a magical artifact that’s far more dangerous than she realizes. Now Seph must summon help from a mystical being so potent that even vampires fear him . . . and the cost of his aid may be more than she’s willing to pay. Seph, Johnny, and Menessos face threats from all sides—and a few from within. Will the forces of destiny cement their tenuous supernatural union, or shatter it forever?
Simon and Schuster Amazon BN BooksaMillion IndieBound
About the Author
Linda Robertson is the mother of four wonderful boys, owns three electric guitars, and is followed around by a big dog named after Bela Lugosi. Once upon a time she was a lead guitarist in a heavy metal cover band and has worked as a graphic artist. She still composes and creates art, when time permits. Linda currently writes and rocks in northeast Ohio. Visit her at AuthorLindaRobertson.com and @authorLinda
http://www.authorlindarobertson.com/
http://www.facebook.com/authorlindarobertson
Persephone Alcmedi
Linda Robertson
Mass Market Paperback: 384 pages
Publisher: Pocket Books
ISBN-10: 1451648936
ISBN-13: 978-1451648935
JUST YOUR AVERAGE MEGA-WITCH. . . .
It’s tough being a modern woman, but Persephone Alcmedi has it worse than most. Being the prophesied Lustrata has kicked her career as a witch into high gear, and juggling a wærewolf boyfriend who is about to become king of his kind and a seductive vampire who bears her magical Mark isn’t easy either.
Still, Seph’s beloved foster daughter, Beverley, is causing more trouble than these two men put together. The young girl’s been playing with a magical artifact that’s far more dangerous than she realizes. Now Seph must summon help from a mystical being so potent that even vampires fear him . . . and the cost of his aid may be more than she’s willing to pay. Seph, Johnny, and Menessos face threats from all sides—and a few from within. Will the forces of destiny cement their tenuous supernatural union, or shatter it forever?
Simon and Schuster Amazon BN BooksaMillion IndieBound
About the Author
Linda Robertson is the mother of four wonderful boys, owns three electric guitars, and is followed around by a big dog named after Bela Lugosi. Once upon a time she was a lead guitarist in a heavy metal cover band and has worked as a graphic artist. She still composes and creates art, when time permits. Linda currently writes and rocks in northeast Ohio. Visit her at AuthorLindaRobertson.com and @authorLinda
http://www.authorlindarobertson.com/
http://www.facebook.com/authorlindarobertson
Special Exerpt:
The main door opened and Meroveus, Advisor to the
Excelsior and currently their esteemed guest, entered the suite. “She is back?”
he asked.
“That is what I’m told,” Goliath answered. “If you’re
referring to Ms. Alcmedi, that is.”
“I am. Is she here?”
Leaning on one elbow, Goliath reclined. “She required a
shower.” He wanted to give his nose a quick pinch to indicate she’d reeked of
the scummy edges of Lake Erie, but he refrained. He was a Master now; taunting
disdain was no longer acceptable.
Mero headed for the iron-studded door. Goliath cleared
his throat.
In mid-reach for the knob, Mero stopped. His hand fell to
his side and he turned on his heel. “I have been disrespectful. Forgive me,
Haven Master.”
His sardonic grin flashed fang. “Does urgency always make
you thoughtless?”
“I assumed that Menessos was still lord of these
chambers, and that she was with him in the rear chamber.”
Goliath sat up, placed his elbows on his knees, and
clapped his hands together. “Hear me, Advisor Meroveus, and do not forget my
words: The former Haven Master may have extended you many courtesies, but
barging into his private chamber—especially if you think Ms. Alcmedi may be
attending him—would be particularly dangerous.”
Mero glanced at the main door as if he would leave, but
there was uncertainty in his expression.
“To be honest,” Goliath added as he stood, “I have not
yet made claim to these rooms, and, as you have assumed, the former Quarterlord
is in the rear chamber. However, my Erus Veneficus has
her own suite.” He used the formal title of the court witch for impact.
Mero blinked.
It seemed to Goliath that the other vampire had not
considered that in declaring this the Cleveland haven and Goliath the master of
it, Persephone would by default become Goliath’s court witch. Her services were
now his to command.
--------------
There were many prophesies concerning the Lustrata. The
one that the vampires were most concerned with claimed she was incredibly
valuable to them. Because of this, they could not dare to kill her. But they
could do much without killing her. The question was: What would interfere with
her destiny, and what wouldn’t?
Menessos would know the most about it, so Goliath
resolved to follow his Maker’s lead. “Dabbling in the destiny that Menessos,
the witch, and the Domn Lup share is a hazardous pastime, Mero. I strongly
suggest you stay the hell out of their way.”
Mero quoted the prophesy:
“Lustrata walks,
unspoiled into the light.
Sickle in hand,
she stalks through the night
wearing naught but her mark and silver blade.
The moonchild of ruin, she becomes Wolfsbane.
“According to my interpretation,” Mero concluded, “she must be marked.”
Menessos breathed deep. Releasing it, he said, “Your
interpretation is bullshit.”
Mero’s brows rose in surprise.
Goliath struggled to keep a laugh from getting out.
“The Witch Elders Council will not stand for their
Lustrata to be marked by the Excelsior,” Menessos said. “Would you risk a war?”
--------------------
Opening the closet there, Beverley dug straight to the
back where the item she wanted was stored. Her little hands grasped the cold
sides of the rock-board and she pulled. It was heavy and the cast on her arm
made the task more difficult. She lost her grip on the slate—the bottom edge
dropped onto the top of her foot.
Stifling her yelp of pain, she regained her grasp and
silently laid it flat on the floor before shutting the closet door. Crouching
between the bed and the wall so she couldn’t be seen from the doorway, she
studied all the strange symbols painted across the surface. She’d heard Seph
and Celia talking about this. Great El’s
slate.
They’d said that a person could talk to ghosts with this
. . . and that Seph had used it to find her mother.
But how does it work?
Beverley ran her hands over the surface. Her fingers
traced the lines of a symbol here, there. They tingled like the fine lines of
her fingerprint weren’t so fine after all.
She studied her index finger, then compared it to her
other hand’s index finger. If one tingles
. . . what does two do? She picked two
symbols she liked that were side by side and put her fingertips to the slate.
Carefully, slowly, she traced both. The tingling began immediately and
resonated through her hands and into her wrists. Suddenly, some force grabbed
her hands. She gasped and tried to pull away, but it just squeezed tighter.
It dragged her fingers along to one symbol, then on to
another. She watched in horror as all her fingers were pulled across the board,
each finger moving independently. The more symbols she traced, the more the
tingling increased. It became like a fire inside her skin, swelling up through
her thin arms, crackling through the broken bone.
It hurt. It hurt so bad. She drew a breath
to scream—
—and then it felt good.
It wasn’t hot, merely warm. It wasn’t warmth like summer,
though, not something a thermometer would show. This was warmth of another
kind. The kind only a heart could feel. She felt so . . .
Loved.
A shimmer flashed across the surface of the board.
She whispered, “Mommy?”
---------------
Excerpt from SHATTERED CIRCLE:
Liyliy, a vampire-harpy, had tried to kill me a few hours
ago, and the struggle left me exhausted and sore. That was the reason I was
still abed at nearly two in the afternoon. When my satellite phone blared the
opening riffs of Ozzy Osbourne’s “Bark at the Moon,” it startled me, instantly
reminding me about all the sore muscles I had.
Mid-reach, I stopped. That was Johnny’s ringtone.
He had tried to kill me, too.
My hand shook as my finger jabbed the Answer button.
“Hello?”
“Red . . . I’m so sorry.” Johnny’s voice was barely
audible.
I sat up and deliberated whether to play deaf and repeat
my “hello” as if I hadn’t heard him. I considered being a jerk and hanging up.
I even contemplated ripping him a new one.
Instead, I remained silent.
Two days before, minutes after I’d performed the
forced-change spell on him and his loyal pack mates, Johnny had attacked me.
He’d always retained his manmind while transformed, but that last time he
didn’t—he’d been pure animal. The only reason I was still among the living was
because I’d pumped ley line energy into him like a human Taser.
“Red?”
He’d frightened me to my core. The unshakeable faith I’d
had in him had been shattered by an emotional earthquake. Damage was done. My
fear felt like betrayal.
But . . .
Could going through the
forced-change spell repeatedly have an undesired effect?
No. I was sure the whole terrible incident could be
pinned on the fact that my mother, Eris, had revoked the tattooed bindings
she’d placed upon Johnny eight years ago. He suddenly had access to all the
power and potential she’d locked away from him. That was surely a disorienting,
difficult situation.
I’d helped him dig up the clues, helped him achieve that
goal. Hell, I’d even been a part of the reversal spell. So some responsibility
for the consequences was mine to bear.
“Persephone?”
He rarely used my full given name; he usually called me
Red, as in Little Red Riding Hood to his Big Bad Wolf. Or Seph like nearly
everyone else. I had to respond.
“I’m here.”
“Then say something.”
Pushing back the covers, I stood and began to pace. “I
don’t know what to say.”
He paused. “Can you forgive me?”
I wasn’t sure.
Part of me said I couldn’t allow his attack to be a
personal issue because of the fateful trio that Johnny, Menessos, and I forged
by binding ourselves magically. The other part argued that no matter the circumstances,
attempted murder was very damn personal.
It all happened because Johnny had surrendered to his
destiny. His unique ability to transform at will made him the Domn Lup—king of
the wærewolves. It was a position with power, prestige, and perks such as a
Maserati Quattroporte. Johnny knew his royal place was unavoidable, but he’d
fought it and hid from it a long time. He’d finally pushed forward because it
was beneficial to our triple union, but kinghood was costing him his dream of
being a rock star.
It had been my fear that he’d lose who he was in the
course of this alliance of ours. More than ever, it seemed this fear was being
borne out.
On the other corner of our triangle was Menessos. He now
bore two witches marks—mine, of course. That made him my servant. When
Heldridge, his former right-hand man, learned of my authority over Menessos, he
tattled to the highest vampire authority, the Excelsior. To protect us against
the personal grudge of the truthseeing vampire-harpies sent by VEIN to make formal
inquiry, Menessos had allied himself at great personal expense with someone
dangerous—a “nameless” guy I had aptly dubbed Creepy.
The secrets he’d wanted to hide from VEIN—secrets even I
didn’t know—were apparently safe, but our little who-marked-whom secret was
out. Menessos lost his haven and his status as Northeastern Quarterlord. Johnny
had accepted great power and lost a lifelong dream. Menessos had lost great
power and accepted serious personal risk. It didn’t seem fair.
And what about me?
In the last several weeks I’d learned that I was the
longprophesied Lustrata, the Witches’ Messiah, She Who Walks Between Worlds,
She Who Will Bring Balance, blah blah blah. As this news spread throughout the
nonhuman communities, some scoffed and some believed. I was fine with the
scoffers; it was the believers who were dangerous. They wanted to know if I
truly possessed the power that accompanied those titles. Yeah, I was a magnet
for nasties who either a) wanted me dead to be sure I didn’t have that power, or
b) wanted to try to force me to wield power for their gain.
I guess I’d accepted the endless complications of my
status and was well on my way to losing all scraps of naïveté.
At that thought, I stopped pacing. As I stared into the
nothingness of a darkened corner, it felt like my innocence had slipped from my
grasp and I was watching it skitter across the floor, waiting for it to come to
a stop so I could reclaim it.
I wasn’t sure it was worth the effort to look for it. Or
perhaps it would be impossible to find if I made the effort. Maybe it had
rolled into some crack, never to be seen again.
I heard Johnny breathing through the phone.
It wasn’t Johnny who had rescued me last night.
When I defeated Liyliy, Menessos had been there to bring
me to the haven. Sure, Menessos had a hand in creating the monster she now was.
And it was he who had imprisoned her, creating her need for revenge. But it was
me and my marks upon him that had brought her to Cleveland. When she pursued me
from the haven—according to the Offerling I’d spoken to—Menessos had sent
everyone out to search for me.
Had Johnny even known I was
missing?
It was shitty of me to compare the two men in my life,
but I couldn’t help myself. Though Menessos had drunk my blood numerous times,
he hadn’t tried to kill me.
Yes he did! He nearly killed you
not long after you first met.
We were strangers then, I argued with myself. Now, we know each other well.
Better, perhaps, than you should. .
. .
Defiantly, I ignored my conscience’s scolding. I will not regret what I did last
night. During the predawn
hours, reeling from my encounter, I’d kissed Menessos.
Fine, but clearly you were able to
forgive him.
That was true. Considering this, I felt hope. I sighed
heavily into the phone. My whispered answer was, “In time.”
“There’s so much I need to tell you.” Johnny’s voice was
raw, and the rev of an engine punctuated his words. I wondered where he was
going. And I wondered if I should tell him about kissing the vampire.
It hadn’t been a peck.
When our lips had touched, I felt the promise and power
of a more intimate union. He’d definitely felt it. It wasn’t only the power of
the marks between us that had been kindled.
“I don’t know where to begin,” Johnny said.
His voice drew me out from my memory of a passionate
moment with another man. Guilt swelled around my heart . . . but not remorse. What am I going to do?
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