I've been busy the last couple of weeks with book signings for WHEN FALCONS FALL plus struggling with the editorial revisions (i.e., the revisions suggested by my editor) to #12, which is probably going to be titled WHERE THE DEAD LIE. I have some exciting news I still can't talk about, but hopefully soon (I should hasten to add that it doesn't have anything to do with the Sebastian St. Cyr series). I'm still working on getting my first historical novels up as ebooks--oye, but it's a lot of work and aggravation. But for those of you who are curious, here's a sneak peek at the first chapter of Where the Dead Lie, coming March 2017:
Chapter 1
Monday,
13 September 1813: hours before dawn
The boy hated this part.
Hated the eerie way the pale, waxen faces of the dead seemed to glow in the
faintest moonlight. Hated being left alone with a stiffening body while he dug
its grave.
He kicked the shovel deep
into the ground and felt his heart leap painfully in his chest when the scrape
of dirt against metal sounded dangerously loud in the stillness of the night.
He sucked in a quick breath, the musty smell of damp earth thick in his
nostrils, his fingers tightening on the smooth wooden handle as he paused to
cast a panicked glance over one shoulder.
A mist was drifted up from
the Fleet to curl around the base of the nearby shot tower and creep along the
crumbling brick walls of the abandoned warehouses beyond it. He heard a dog
bark somewhere in the distance and, nearer, a soft thump.
What
was that?
The boy waited, his mouth
dry, his body tense and trembling. But the sound was not repeated. He swiped a
ragged sleeve across his sweaty face, swallowed hard, and bent into his work.
He was uncomfortably aware of the cloaked gentleman watching from the seat of
the cart that waited at the edge of the field. The gentleman had helped drag
Benji’s body over to the looming shot tower. But he never helped dig. Gentlemen
didn’t dig graves, although they could and did kill with a vicious delight that
made the boy shiver as he threw another shovelful of dirt onto the growing
pile.
The hole was beginning to
take shape. Another six inches or so and he’d—
“Hey!”
The boy’s head snapped
around, and he froze.
A ragged, skeletally thin
figure lurched from the gaping doorway of one of the tumbledown warehouses.
“Wot ye doin’ there?”
The shovel hit the ground
with a clatter as the boy bolted. He fell into the newly dug grave and went
down, floundering in the loose dirt. Feet flailing, he reared up on splayed
hands, found solid ground, and pushed off.
“Oye!” shouted the ghostly
specter.
The boy tore across the
uneven field, his breath soughing in and out, his feet pounding. He saw
the gentleman in the cart jerk, saw him gather the reins and spank them hard
against his horse’s rump.
“Wait for me!” screamed
the boy as the cart lurched forward, its iron-rimmed wheels rattling over the rutted
lane. “Stop!’
The gentleman urged the horse
into a wild canter. He did not look back.
The boy leapt a low,
broken stretch of the stone wall that edged the field. “Come back!”
The cart careened around
the corner and out of sight, but the boy tore after it anyway. Surely the
gentleman would stop for him? He wouldn’t simply leave him, would he?
Would he?
The boy was sobbing now,
his nose running, his chest aching as he fought to draw air into his lungs. It
wasn’t until he reached the corner himself that he dared risk a frantic look
back. That’s when he realized the skeletal figure wasn’t following him. The man—for the boy saw now that it was a man
and not some hideous apparition—had paused beside the raw, unfinished grave.
And he was staring down at what was left of Benji Thatcher.