Dark magic, unknown enemies, monsters of every stripe-FBI profiler Jace Valchek has seen it all. In this bizarre parallel universe, shape-shifting werewolves and blood-thirsty vampires don't even warrant a raised eyebrow. That is, until Jace has to face what life might look like as one of them . . .
It starts off as just another run-of-the-mill assignment: to track down the rogue don of a mafia werewolf family before he upsets the delicate balance of the underworld. But Jace wasn't counting on being bitten . . . and soon she's fighting the growing wolf inside her with a startling antidote-vampirism. Stopping a bloody gangland war won't be easy when Jace is feeling some new, and very inhuman, desires . . .
Release date:
October 4, 2011
Publisher:
St. Martin's Publishing Group
Print pages:
336
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ONE
There's something about being driven to prison that makes you think about the past.
The bad parts, especially: lost loves, mistakes you made, chances you never took, choices you came down on the wrong side of. Me, I'm thinking about a werewolf physician named Dr. Pete who saved my life on two separate occasions and got himself killed on attempt number three.
Well, not so much killed as erased, replaced by an alternate version of himself--a version with a different history, a different past in which he'd made some bad decisions. Hard to believe that gentle, caring Dr. Pete could ever have been a member of a crime family, but we all have skeletons in our closets, don't we? If I hadn't gotten a degree in criminal psychology and joined the FBI as a profiler, my own violent youth could have progressed into me becoming the kind of person I now hunt.
Okay, maybe not the people I hunt now, more like the perps I used to catch in my native reality--the one with M*A*S*H reruns and butterscotch ripple ice cream and thrift-store silver jewelry. Here, nobody even knows whata gun is, silver is a controlled substance, and butterscotch--for some bizarre reason--hasn't been invented. Here being a parallel world, an alternate version of planet Earth that exists in a dimension right next to the one I came from. I didn't travel here willingly, either; I was yanked out of my own apartment in a dreamlike stupor, with nothing more than my laptop, a large handgun, and a crate of ammunition for company. Seems the residents of this reality had a problem with a crazed human psycho killing them off, and they needed an expert to deal with it.
I call this world Thropirelem, because the word neatly encapsulates the three main types of citizens: werewolves (thropes), vampires (pires), and golems (lems). Human beings make up a meager 1 percent of the worldwide population, less than a million people, and I'm one of them.
So far.
I now work for the National Security Agency, based out of this world's Seattle, and I've largely adapted to my new existence. My current employers keep insisting they'll send me home one day, just as soon as I catch one Aristotle Stoker: descendant of the infamous Bram, leader of the Free Human Resistance, and prolific serial killer. Hasn't happened yet, though I've come close a few times.
In the meantime I'm being kept busy. The supernatural races are immune to most diseases including mental illness, which means they have very little experience with full-blown crazy. That is, they had little experience--until Stoker circulated a subliminal message buried in an Internet video, footage of an Elder God designed to make everyone who saw it into two things: (a) living mummies, trapped inside their own immobile bodies for all eternity; and (b) nuts.
With Dr. Pete's help I managed to reverse the first condition, but the second one has proven more pervasive. Since millions of thropes and pires worldwide saw the video--humans and lems couldn't perceive it--insanity has become a booming industry. Many, many fanged or furry lunatics, and just one person who understands how the homicidal ones think.
Me.
All of which is weighing pretty heavily on my mind as Stanhope Federal Penitentiary gets closer. I've accomplished some good since I got to this world, but I've screwed up plenty, too--and right now it feels like I'm heading straight for my biggest mistake of all.
"Nickel for your thoughts?" my partner says. That would be Charlie Aleph, a golem composed of three hundred pounds of black volcanic sand poured into a transparent plastic skin and wrapped in a seven-hundred-dollar double-breasted suit with matching fedora.
"Where I come from it's a penny."
"Same here. You just look like you might have more than one." He pauses. "Could be wrong, though."
Charlie owns the copyright to the word deadpan, and he's filed an application for wiseass. Think Humphrey Bogart by way of the Terminator and you'll have an idea of his style. But he dresses better than either of them.
He's the one driving me to Stanhope, where I have an appointment with a lycanthrope named Tair. That's what he calls himself these days--but when I knew him, his name was Adams. Dr. Peter Adams.
"Thinking about Dr. Pete," I say.
"He was good people."
"I know. My fault he isn't anymore."
"No, it's not. You didn't stab him with the Midnight Sword."
"He shouldn't have even been there."
"His choice. Gotta respect that."
"Me and respect aren't exactly best buds, Charlie."
He nods, one glossy black hand on the steering wheel. "You got me there."
"More like Facebook friends. You know, the kind that lurks in the background and never posts anything."
"Right."
"Then you unfriend them and they send you an angry three-page e-mail demanding to know why you think you're better than them and that they've never forgiven you for stealing their boyfriend in the fourth grade."
"Sure."
I sigh. "Tell me I'm doing the right thing, Charlie."
"Why? You suddenly gonna start listening to me?"
"No, but it's a good starting point for an argument."
"Like that's a requirement. Most people need a reason to argue--you just need a place."
"I do not."
"Yeah, you're right."
"You call this an argument?"
"If I do, will you disagree with me?"
"Probably."
He shrugs. "What the hell. You're doing the right thing, Jace."
"I sure hope so ..."