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Excerpt Reveal: The Silverblood Promise by James Logan

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the silverblood promise by james logan

Set in a city of traders and thieves, monsters and murderers, this fast-paced epic fantasy debut is a must-read for fans of Joe Abercrombie, Nicholas Eames, and Scott Lynch.

Lukan Gardova is a cardsharp, academy dropout, and—thanks to a duel that ended badly—the disgraced heir to an ancient noble house. His days consist of cheap wine, rigged card games, and wondering how he might win back the life he threw away.

When Lukan discovers that his estranged father has been murdered in strange circumstances, he finds fresh purpose. Deprived of his chance to make amends for his mistakes, he vows to unravel the mystery behind his father’s death.

His search for answers leads him to Saphrona, fabled city of merchant princes, where anything can be bought if one has the coin. Lukan only seeks the truth, but instead he finds danger and secrets in every shadow.

For in Saphrona, everything has a price—and the price of truth is the deadliest of all.

Please enjoy this free excerpt of The Silverblood Promise by James Logan, on sale 5/7/24


Chapter 1

THE LADY OF LAST CHANCES

The tavern was called the Pathfinder’s Gambit, though its patrons referred to it as “the Armpit,” or simply just “the Pit,” on account of its stale odor and the fact that its interior rarely saw sunlight. The Pit had a particular reputation for violence, and tonight had proven no exception. The evening’s current tally stood at three assaults (two stabbings and an attempted strangulation), two brawls, and—so far, at least—just the one death. Still, the night was young, the drink was flowing, and half the card games taking place in the tavern’s smoke-filled common room were rigged. It was only a matter of time before someone else took a blade between the ribs.

Could be me if I’m not careful, Lukan Gardova mused, eyeing the small pile of coins he’d won over the past half hour. The Pit’s one saving grace was that it was an excellent place to win a bit of silver, and it was for this reason that Lukan found himself sitting at a table with several companions of dubious virtue, drinking gin of dubious quality, and holding two cards of dubious value. Peasant of Crowns and a Priest of Blades, he thought, studying the faded illustrations. Bloody hells. It was a miserable hand, but that didn’t matter. In rummijake you played your opponents first and your cards second.

“I’ll raise,” the sharp-featured man to Lukan’s left finally declared, after squinting at his cards for what seemed like an eternity. “Three coppers.” He scratched at his straggly beard. “No, four coppers.” He nudged the coins toward the center of the table, only to pause and glance at his cards again. “No, wait . . .”

“You know,” Lukan said amiably, “entire wars have been fought in the time you’ve been staring at those cards.”

The man glared at him, dark eyes glinting with a base cunning that hadn’t yet manifested in his cardplay. “I’m trying to think.”

“I suspect that’s the problem.”

The man muttered an insult under his breath as he turned back to his cards. Lukan took a swallow of gin to hide his smile. He’d seen this man’s type many times before: the small-time rogue who owed too much money to the wrong people and thought that gambling would be a good way to raise the necessary funds. It might have been, had he been a good player. But he wasn’t.

“Five coppers,” the rogue grunted, pushing his coins into the growing pile at the center of the table.

Lukan studied his own cards again, just for show. The only question in his mind was by how much to raise the bet. Eight coppers should do it. Hells, may as well make it a silver—

Shouting interrupted his thoughts and he glanced toward the bar, where a familiar scene was playing out: two adventuring companies squaring up to each other, the crews trading insults while their captains exchanged glares. Steel glinted in the candlelight as blades were drawn, a hush falling across the tavern as games and conversations were abandoned. The taller of the two captains, a woman who wore a wide-brimmed hat tilted at a jaunty angle, said something that Lukan didn’t catch. Her opposite number blinked in surprise, his face—already flushed with drink—reddening even further. Then he bellowed a laugh and held out his hand, which the woman gripped in her own. Blades were returned to their sheaths as the two crews exchanged smiles instead of blows, and a cheer rose to the rafters as the red-faced captain called for a round of drinks.

Lukan wasn’t surprised by how quickly the threat of violence had faded; he’d seen this sort of scene play out a dozen times in the three weeks he’d been in Torlaine. Tensions ran high among the adventuring crews who made a living scavenging Phaeron relics from the Grey Lands, a couple of leagues to the north. This sort of behavior was Just their way of blowing off steam after surviving the dangers of that shadow-haunted landscape. For those who returned, at least.

How did it come to this? He asked himself, his gaze passing over the adventurers and opportunists who packed the tavern. How did i end up in this den of rogues at the edge of the world?

He knew the answer all too well.

Agreeing to a duel with the heir of one of the most powerful families in the old empire had been a bad mistake. But not nearly so much as winning it. Memories pressed in—a cry of rage, the flash of steel, and blood spilling across pink cherry blossoms . . .

No, he thought, forcing the images aside. Not here. Not now. Such thoughts would only spark the old anger, and then he would think of her, and—

“Who’s taking their time now?”

It was the woman sitting to his right who had spoken. Another adventurer, judging by the sword strapped to her back and the old leather armor she wore. By lukan’s reckoning she had so far made at least three bluffs and had downed twice that many shots of vodka. She sank another one now, mouth curling in what might have been amusement. The scar that split her lips made it hard to tell.

Lukan glanced at his own cards again but found that his enthusiasm for the game had faded. He almost folded his hand there and then, only for the rogue’s coins to glint seductively. Might as well see this through.

“I raise,” he said, plucking a silver coin from his pouch and dropping it onto the coppers in the center of the table. The rogue hissed through his teeth and threw down his cards even though it wasn’t his turn. The adventurer did likewise, albeit with more dignity. That just left the well-dressed stranger sitting opposite lukan, whose subtle plays had revealed him as a cut above the others. His clothes were more refined too. Dust clung to his velvet jacket, and his silken shirt was badly creased, but there was no mistaking the fine tailoring. Nor was it possible to ignore the way his emerald ring flashed when it caught the candlelight. In the gloom of the tavern, the man might have been mistaken for one of the few treasure hunters lucky enough to find their fortune out in the Grey Lands, or even one of the moneylenders who financed the adventuring companies.

Lukan knew better.

“Well, isn’t this a conundrum,” the man said with a smirk that carried more than a hint of the aristocracy. “What’s a fellow to do . . .”

“A fellow could lay down his cards.”

“Oh, I think not,” the man replied, drumming his fingers on the table. “That would be so dreadfully dull. Besides”—his ring gleamed as he gestured at the pile of coins—“there’s too much of my money in there for me to walk away.”

Too much of your family’s money, you mean. Lukan could see the man for who he was: a child of privilege, a spoiled dandy, who had taken it upon himself to gamble away a sliver of his family’s fortune. And why not, Lukan thought, his gaze flitting to the two heavyset men watching from a nearby table, when you can just have your hired muscle retrieve it for you afterward. They were the only reason the dandy wasn’t lying dead in a gutter, his corpse stripped of valuables. What he was even doing in Torlaine Lukan could only guess. Perhaps he was intending to take a short trip into the Grey Lands and poke around some of the ruins, or try to catch a glimpse of a gloomfiend. Something to boast about to his friends over a brandy or two in the smoking rooms of Amberlé, or Seldarine, or wherever the hells he was from. Well, whatever his plans are, I’ll ensure his purse is that little bit lighter.

“What say we liven things up a little?” the dandy said, producing a gold ducat and sliding it into the middle of the table with deliberate slowness. Lukan heard the rogue’s sharp intake of breath to his left; no doubt that coin alone was more than enough to pay off his debts. Its value far exceeded the assembled pile of copper and silver. Which makes it more trouble than it’s worth. Lukan made to toss his cards away, only to pause as the dandy reached for his glass of wine.

A flash of white.

Well, well. That changes things. Lukan considered his options. He could still back out and walk away, but what he’d just seen now made that option harder to bear. Sometimes you owed it to yourself to do what was necessary, not what was easy.

Especially when some arsehole was cheating you at cards.

“So what’s it to be?” the dandy asked, smirking as he toyed with his ring.

Lukan laid his cards down on the table.

“Pity,” the man said, reaching out to gather his winnings. “I was hoping the two of us might go another round—”

“The three of us, you mean.”

The dandy hesitated, hand outstretched. “I beg your pardon?”

“The three of us,” Lukan repeated. “You, me and the Lady of Last Chances you’ve got tucked up your right sleeve.”

The words hung in the air between them.

“You dare accuse me?” the dandy said, with an edge to his voice that might have sounded threatening if used by someone else. “Do you have any idea who I am?”

“A dead man if you’ve cheated us,” the adventurer replied.

“Enough!” the dandy snapped, rising from his chair. “I don’t answer to gutter scum like you—” He gasped as the rogue hauled him back down. “Get off me, you filth—” He fell silent as the man pressed a dagger against his throat.

“You don’t have to answer to them,” the rogue said, nodding at Lukan and the adventurer, “but you’ll damned well answer to me.”

He’s not much of a cardplayer, Lukan thought, but he knows how to handle a blade. And make a threat.

As the dandy squealed for help, his guards decided they should probably intervene—after all, neither of them was going to get paid if their employer was busy choking on his own blood. They rose from their table, hands reaching for their weapons.

“One more step and I’ll open his throat,” the rogue announced, the cold gleam in his eyes more convincing than any bluff he’d made at cards.

“Do as he says,” the dandy squeaked.

The two guards traded glances and remained still.

“Now,” the rogue said to the dandy, “let’s see about this lady friend of yours, shall we?” He nodded at the adventurer, who slid her fingers under the man’s lacy cuff and withdrew a dog-eared card that bore a depiction of a woman with her arms spread wide, a wry smile on her lips.

“Well, would you look at that,” the rogue said, applying more pressure with his blade.

“P-please,” the dandy stuttered, his earlier bravado leaking out of him along with the blood now trickling down his neck. “I-I can explain—”

“Not without a tongue you can’t,” the rogue snarled. He rose to his feet, dragging the dandy up with him, and glanced around the tavern, clearly sensing the opportunity to make a statement. “No one crosses Galthan Adris and lives,” he said loudly, drawing nothing more than a handful of stares and a snigger.

“Idiot,” the adventurer muttered.

“The hells did you say?” the rogue demanded, clearly ruffled that his grand announcement hadn’t had the effect he’d desired. Sensing that his captor’s attention was elsewhere, the dandy chose that moment to try to struggle free.

“Stay still, you dog,” the rogue hissed, a rather unfair request to put to someone whose tongue you’d threatened to remove. As the two men struggled, the rogue’s foot slipped in a puddle of stale beer, and he fell, dragging his opponent down with him. A ragged cheer rose from the handful of patrons who had been watching the little drama unfold, causing others to turn and stare.

“A fight!” someone shouted, quite unnecessarily, and suddenly everyone in the tavern was crowding around the two figures flailing at each other on the floor. The dandy’s two guards strode over to the struggling pair and tried to separate them, while the crowd shouted insults. Someone hurled a bowl of soup, which struck one of the guards on the shoulder and exploded all over the side of his face. The guard spun round, eyes blazing as he wiped the crowd’s laughter quieted as the guard drew his sword.

Time to get out of here.

Lukan opened his money pouch and swept the pile of coins— including the dandy’s gold ducat—inside. As he pulled the drawstrings he caught the adventurer looking at him, one eyebrow raised. “I won the hand,” Lukan said. “The pot’s mine.”

“You folded.”

“So did you.”

“He cheated us both.”

True enough. Lukan dug a silver coin out of his pouch and flicked it to the adventurer. “If we’re being fair,” he said, “we ought to give our friend down there his share.”

“I don’t think he’s in a position to accept it,” the adventurer replied, pocketing the coin. “Do you?”

“No,” Lukan replied, watching as the rogue snarled in his frustrated attempts at opening the dandy’s throat. “I don’t think he is.” While the soup-drenched guard continued to bellow at the increasingly unruly crowd, his comrade was trying his best to stop their young charge from meeting a messy end on the tavern floor. He grabbed hold of the rogue’s jerkin, only to lose his footing and fall back against a table, spilling beer everywhere.

Another cheer rose to the rafters.

“Good luck,” the mercenary said, lips curling in what might have been a smile.

“You too.”

With those words Lukan slipped through the crowd and out of the tavern.

Copyright © 2024 from James Logan

Pre-order The Silverblood Promise Here:

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Monster Crush: Bookly Beasties We Love!

Heartsongheartsong by tj klune by TJ Klune is on sale now and we’re all just over the (full) moon (awoo) about it! We love thinking about werewolves and other monsters, and that got us thinking about this list we put together last year with all our literary monster crushes… If you missed our heartfelt confessions, check them out, and then check out Heartsong!

Monsters evoke a lot of emotions in us. In many ways they are fragments of our vulnerabilities and our fears, given shape and story by artists brave enough to dream them up. They’re also sometimes the object of our affections—fear isn’t the only emotion at play, folks!

We’ve compiled a list of monsters, deities, and mythical creatures we love. Enjoy 😈


The Thousand Eyes by A. K. LarkwoodZinandour, Dragon of Qarsazh — The Unspoken Name & The Thousand Eyes by A. K. Larkwood

She is the flame that devours and definitely a bad influence—a profoundly tragic force of banished calamity. Her magi are infinitely suspicious of her, and they should be, because Zinandour is the intrusive whispers in their minds, the little voice that wheedles wouldn’t it be nice to burn everything and languish in the heat of the inferno? She’s scary, and what’s scarier: you’re starting to think she might be right…

a cat, Assistant Marketing Manager


wolfsong by tj kluneThe Bennett Family – The Green Creek series by TJ Klunes

Do we really need to explain? THEY ARE WEREWOLVES. Werewolves. As they say, packpackpack. Sometimes they will leave a dead rabbit on your doorstep. Other times they really need a good tackle hug to get their scent on you. Every so often, one will lose control and you’ll be there to guide them back to who they are at heart. It’s a lifetime commitment, but with a giant wolf by your side, what more could you want?

Becky, Senior Manager of Ad/Promo & Marketing


book of night by holly black trade paperback[REDACTED] – Book of Night by Holly Black

I can’t really describe the character because it’s such a spoiler! But shadowshadowshadow! I think anyone who has read the book will know what I’m talking about, and if you haven’t read the book then you need to.

Julia, Marketing Manager


somewhere beyond the sea by tj kluneArthur Parnassus —The House in the Cerulean Sea & Somewhere Beyond the Sea by TJ Klune

This man is on fire. As the loving caretaker for a motley crew of magical children, Arthur screams family material. Hello, daddy. He is kind and wise and determined to protect his kids. So, what’s so monstrous about a middle-aged chap with impeccable dad energy? He’s a literal phoenix. So, if you’re into fiery birds, Arthur is The One for you.

Burns Alike


the monster of elendhaven by jennifer giesbrechtJohann – The Monster of Elendhaven by Jennifer Giesbrecht

Johann, the titular monster of this dark little novella, commits brutal crimes aplenty and yet he still has my heart. He’s a pale, slinking thing that creeps through the shadowed streets of Elendhaven murdering with abandon, but frankly, he has his reasons, and at the end of the day, he just wants to be loved. I spent the whole book rooting for this depraved creature of the night to find his happy ending.

Merlin Hoye, Marketing Assistant

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Twistory: History with a Twist

‘The past is in the past’ is a saying that, presumably at some point in the past, was said by somebody. But the past isn’t just in the past—not really. It’s also in a space outside of time, and even outside of actual space. It’s in books, and ironically, it’s not pre-written.

Novels twist the past into new stories, and we’ve got a list of great ones right here.


Kinningkinning by nisi shawl by Nisi Shawl

In her novel Everfair, Nisi Shawl imagined a new history, where technological innovations in the Congo gave a fledgling nation the resources and strength to challenge the tyrant Leopold II, a Belgian monarch and one of history’s bloodiest colonizers. In an alternate world where barkcloth airships soar through the sky, the nation of Everfair grapples with its identity in the wake of the Great War. Kinning chronicles the fight for the soul of Everfair to remain a beacon of hope and progress in the face of resistance both external and internal.


She Who Became the Sunshe who became the sun by shelley parker-chan by Shelley Parker-Chan

A reimagining of the rise of the Ming Dynasty, She Who Became the Sun follows a young girl whose brother is destined for greatness. Her brother is also dead, so in defiance of fate, she steals his identity, and his destiny. This is a story of betrayal, destiny, love, and lots and lots of betrayal. In the previous sentence, betrayal was mentioned twice. That was not a mistake. It’s the only way to properly evoke the potency of this book.


The First Bright Thingthe first bright thing by j r dawson by J. R. Dawson

Rin is a professional ringmaster who can jump through time, and her circus is a haven for the outcast and the magical. In the aftermath of World War I, times are tough, and the Circus of the Fantasticals is a welcome respite to audiences across the American midwest.But the present is not safe: There’s war in the future and Rin’s past stalks them in the form of a malevolent shadow circus.


Trouble the Saintstrouble the saints by alaya dawn johnson by Alaya Dawn Johnson

“Juju assassins, alternate history, a gritty New York crime story…in a word: awesome.” — N.K. Jemisin, New York Times bestselling author of The Fifth Season

In the dark glamor of New York city, an assassin tries to change her fate on the cusp of World War II. She was drawn from Harlem, bringing her knives to glittering Manhattan for work. She fell in love. She gave up on everything. The ghosts of the past never leave her side.

Ten years later, they show up on her doorstep.


The Frugal Wizard’s Handbook for Surviving Medieval Englandthe frugal wizard's handbook for surviving medieval england by brandon sanderson by Brandon Sanderson

Hard to twist history more than dropping a cost-conscious magic-user into the medieval past.

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Tor’s February eBook Deals of 2024

February might be month number 2, but Tor’s eBook deals are number 1!

Check ’em out!


stan lees the devil's quintet the shadow society by stan lee & jay bonansinga

Stan Lee’s The Devil’s Quintet: The Shadow Society by Stan Lee & Jay Bonansinga — $2.99

Ever since The Armageddon Code, the Devil’s Quintet have been using their demonic powers to fight evil and protect the world, while remaining nothing but an urban legend to the general public. But the Devil is not about to let them keep using his powers for good. Created by Satan himself to counter the Quintet, the Shadow Society are five saintly men and women that have been secretly (and strategically) possessed by five of Hell’s most powerful demons. Granted supernatural powers of their own, they are part of a literally diabolical plot to strike at the very heart of the Quintet—and destroy humanity’s last hope!

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mystic skies by jason denzelMystic Skies by Jason Denzel — $2.99

The world is Changed. Fifty-four years have passed since Crow Tallin, the catastrophic celestial event that merged Fayün and the human world. One devastating result of that cataclysm is that most human babies are born fused with fay spirits. The Mystics of Kelt Apar, once beloved, are blamed for this worldwide phenomenon. On the island of Moth, the Barons have declared the Myst illegal and imprisoned all Mystics under house arrest. Under the watchful eyes of deadly Hunters, a much-older Pomella AnDone now lives as a prisoner at Kelt Apar with her granddaughter and apprentice Mia, as well as the rapidly declining High Mystic of Moth, Yarina Sineese. When the time comes to conduct the ceremony intended to pass the title of High Mystic from Yarina to her successor Vivianna, something goes horribly wrong, leaving the lineage of Mystics in doubt. With new rivals seeking to claim Moth for their own, Pomella must undergo a dangerous dreamwalk into the mind-bending and heart-wrenching Mystic Skies in order to learn the mystical name of the island itself.

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The Atlas Paradox: Who’s Your Nemesis??

The Atlas Paradox by Olivie BlakeIn the not-so-distant past, we employed a Handy Quiz to help fans of Olivie Blake’s tantalizing / adrenalinizing The Atlas Six identify the perfect S-tier medeian to watch their back.

Today—in celebration of the paperback edition of The Atlas Paradox (now available!)—we utilize the same Quiz Science to determine which magician will be stabbing it 😈🔪

After all, the only things you should keep closer than your friends, are your enemies ❤️

Check it out!



Buy The Atlas Paradox in Paperback Here:

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Excerpt Reveal: A View from the Stars by Cixin Liu

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a view from the stars by cixin liu

“We’re mysterious aliens in the crowd. We jump like fleas from future to past and back again, and float like clouds of gas between nebulae; in a flash, we can reach the edge of the universe, or tunnel into a quark, or swim within a star-core. . . . We’re as unassuming as fireflies, yet our numbers grow like grass in spring. We sci-fi fans are people from the future.”—Cixin Liu, from the essay “We’re Sci-Fi Fans”

A VIEW FROM THE STARS features a range of short works from the past three decades of New York Times bestselling author Cixin Liu’s prolific career, putting his nonfiction essays and short stories side-by-side for the first time. This collection includes essays and interviews that shed light on Liu’s experiences as a reader, writer, and lover of science fiction throughout his life, as well as short fiction that gives glimpses into the evolution of his imaginative voice over the years.

Please enjoy this free excerpt of A View from the Stars by Cixin Liu, on sale 4/2/24


“We’re Sci-Fi Fans”

We’re mysterious aliens in the crowd. We jump like fleas from future to past and back again, and float like clouds of gas between nebulae; in a flash, we can reach the edge of the universe, or tunnel into a quark, or swim within a star-core . . . We’re now as weak and unassuming as fireflies, yet our numbers are growing like grass in spring.

Chinese sci-fi has peaked twice, once in the 1950s and again in the eighties. But no clear boundary then existed between sci-fi and main- stream literature, so no legitimate fan base formed around the genre. After sci-fi came under siege in China in the eighties,* it was abandoned by science and literature alike and left for dead. Then, in an incredible turn, a sci-fi fan base quietly emerged in China. We gave shelter to that half-dead outcast and kept it alive. It went on to sever its umbilical cord to literature and science, establishing an independent identity for itself. This happened in the early nineties, when sci-fi fans were still few and far between.

The third bloom of Chinese sci-fi is currently underway, and though our fan base has expanded dramatically, we’re still much smaller than other, comparable communities. Science Fiction World, which most of us read, sells between four and five hundred thousand copies each month, which are read by somewhere between one and fifteen million people. Excluding casual readers, we can put the total number of sci-fi fans in China somewhere in the range of five to eight hundred thousand people. This figure includes its share of senior citizens, but secondary school and university students make up its vast majority.

We scrupulously follow the Chinese sci-fi endeavor and hope for it to thrive and achieve liftoff. Many of us read each new story as soon as it’s published, regardless of its quality, as if we were duty-bound to do so. Such a phenomenon is rare for other forms of literature. In this regard, we’re a lot like China’s soccer fans—except they seldom kick a ball themselves, whereas most sci-fi fans, at a certain point, feel com- pelled to write stories of their own. Very few of us are lucky enough to have our work published; we post most of our stuff online. In dim internet cafés, we type word after word of our very own works of sci-fi, some of which are as long as War and Peace. We’re the bards errant of the electronic era.

But what’s truly essential about our group is this: To us, sci-fi is not merely a genre of literature, but a cohesive world of the spirit—a way of life. We’re an advance party, a team of explorers; we travel ahead of oth- ers to all manner of future worlds, some foreseeable, others far beyond humanity’s potential. We begin with what’s real, and from there, our experience radiates outward to every possibility. We’re a lot like Alice, there at that convoluted fork in the road: She asks the Cheshire Cat which road to take, and he asks her where she wants to go.

I don’t know, she says.

Then it doesn’t matter.

Twenty years before all the hype around cloning technology, we’d already tracked down twenty-four young Adolf Hitlers in the world of sci-fi. Now, the sort of life that interests us exists in the form of force fields and light. And it was as many years before nanotechnol- ogy entered popular consciousness that a nanosubmarine in sci-fi took its fantastic voyage through the veins of the human body. Now, we’re occupied with whether each fundamental particle is its own universe, replete with trillions of galaxies—or whether our universe itself is a fundamental particle. When we’re at a newsstand, deciding whether to spend our five yuan on breakfast or a copy of Science Fiction World, our spirit has gone to a world of infinite abundance, where each household has a planet of its own. When we’re cramming for our final exam, our other self in the spiritual world is on a hundred-billion-light-year expe- dition into the deep end of the universe. The spiritual world of sci-fi fans is not that of scientists, whose feelers stop far short of where we go. Neither is it that of philosophers, whose world is much less vivid and dynamic than ours. And less still is it the world of myth, as everything in the spiritual world of sci-fi fans might someday come to pass—if it hasn’t already, somewhere out there in the far reaches of the universe.

Other people, they don’t care for us aliens. When one of us gradu- ates and enters society, we find ourselves surrounded at once by for- eign gazes. In this increasingly practical world, lovers of fantasy inspire intense loathing in others. We’re forced to hide ourselves deep inside shells of normalcy.

This group of ours may be weak today, but whoever underestimates it is taking their life in their hands. These kids and teenagers are grow- ing up fast. Already, there are Ph.D.s from Beijing and Tsinghua Uni- versities in our midst. More importantly, ours are the most vivacious intellects in society. Ideas that might blow a normal person’s mind are nothing but insipid old clichés to us. No one is better prepared than we for the shocking concepts the future holds. We stand far off in the dis- tance and wait impatiently for the world to catch up—and we’ll create more astonishing things yet, things that will shake the world.

We sci-fi fans are people from the future.

Copyright © 2024 from Cixin Liu

Pre-order A View from the Stars Here:

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Excerpt Reveal: Necrobane by Daniel M. Ford

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necrobane by daniel m. ford

“Omigosh! I’ve just found an author to put on my list of I’ve got to read everything they ever wrote! The Warden is a gem of the first water. Aelis is my hero.”Glen Cook, author of The Black Company

Aelis de Lenti, Lone Pine’s newly assigned Warden, is in deep trouble. She has just opened the crypts of Mahlgren, releasing an army of the undead into the unprotected backwoods of Ystain.

To protect her village, she must unearth a source of immense Necromantic power at the heart of Mahlgren. The journey will wind through waves of undead, untamed wilderness, and curses far older than anything Aelis has ever encountered. But as strong as Aelis is, this is one quest she cannot face alone.

Along with the brilliant mercenary she’s fallen for, her half-orc friend, and a dwarven merchant, Aelis must race the clock to unravel mysteries, slay dread creatures, and stop what she has set in motion before the flames of a bloody war are re-ignited.

Please enjoy this free excerpt of Necrobane by Daniel M. Ford, on sale 4/23/24


Chapter 1

The Flight

“Crypts?”

Aelis’s own voice rebounded against the stone walls of the crumbling watchtower. It echoed even more loudly in her mind. Hurriedly, she threw her gear into her rucksack as she tried to process what that might mean. Doors all over Mahlgren like the one before her, with its blood bowl fastened into a skull with the jaw wide open, swinging open to reveal row after row of animated skeleton soldiers. Barracks-crypts emptying, releasing who knew what kind of spectral or corporeal undead mayhem into the wilderness, and more importantly, onto the farms, villages, and orc bands scattered throughout it.

These thoughts gave Aelis a burst of energy that could only be born of fear. She tightened her belt, lashed her stick to her pack, and ran.

In retrospect, she should’ve rested and then set off at a vigorous but manageable pace.

Aelis quashed her growing panic. She did not let herself try to count how many sites Duvhalin had marked for her on the map that led her here. She set out exactly on the trail she’d left, pumping her legs. For the first hour, she maintained a good pace. Certainly she’d eaten up a few miles at least.

But the exertions of the day had been the equal of many of her hardest days training at the Lyceum. And while Lavanalla and Bardun Jacques were perfectly capable of making a student feel like the threat of imminent death was real, it never truly had been.

Aelis was learning, quickly, that the heat of combat was a very different thing from any kind of training. The energy that had bloomed in her when the crypt’s watch-spells had delivered their chilling message quickly dissolved.

The result was that an hour or so after setting out, her legs growing increasingly leaden, Aelis kicked one foot into the back of the other with a misstep and catapulted herself forward onto the muddy, foul-smelling ground.

“Onoma’s frigid tits, I’m glad no one was around to see that,” Aelis said around a mouthful of cold, brittle grass.

She pulled herself into a sitting position, yanked the walking stick Tun had made her from its lashings, and used it to lever herself to her feet. Aelis sighed as her feet took her weight; her right ankle protested. It wasn’t badly hurt, but she’d kicked it hard when she went down, and an ache was settling in. She had a lingering suspicion that walking on it all the way back to Lone Pine wasn’t going to do her any favors.

There also isn’t any other way to get there, so start walking. Make a brace tonight.

So, shifting her stick to her right hand and matching every swing to her left foot, Aelis began walking—much more sensibly—south by southeast.

She made it another hour before the combination of the cold, the oncoming dark, and the ache settling into her ankle forced her to a halt.

A rising wind whipped her hair across her face, and she found herself wondering, not for the first time, why anyone lived this far north. And it’s not even properly winter yet, she reminded herself. She was able to crest a small hill, thick with pine trees, and secure herself some shelter from the worst of the wind. With teeth gritted, Aelis remained on her feet as she dug a firepit and cleared it of needles.

“Setting the entire forest ablaze might slow down any oncoming dead,” she murmured. “But thinking like an Invoker is not going to get me anywhere.”

When she had a small and properly contained fire lit, she dug out her lantern and anatomist’s bag and set them on her lap. Gingerly, she eased her right foot up into her lap and began probing the ankle.

“Not broken,” she muttered. But it hurt, and it had stiffened, and it was going to hurt more after a few hours’ rest.

“Nothing for it but a brace.” Other options floated across the surface of her thoughts, half formed. She shoved them away before they turned coherent. There wasn’t time, not here: not for alchemy, not for a serious crafting of a brace, not for any more significant Necromantic interventions. She briefly wondered if she could Enchant herself into simply not feeling the pain, but the anatomist in her knew that would lead to far worse damage in the long run. Pain was a warning, and a teacher.

Aelis pulled some cloth strips and some pieces of flat, stiff steel from her travel medical case. With the cloth she quickly bound the steel splints to either side of the sore parts of her ankle, her trained anatomist’s fingers tying quick, secure knots. Then she wound more cloth around the initial strips, till her ankle was tightly bound and the steel pressed cold against her skin through her stockings.

“It’ll do.” Aelis dug deep into whatever reserves of energy she had left for one final ward; Bayard’s Wakefulness. She was only able to extend it in a ring that barely went beyond herself and her fire, but if anything larger than a small dog crossed the space as she slept, it would wake her.

A bear would probably have the time to eat me before I woke, she thought, but before she could summon the will to argue with herself, she had already drifted off.

━━ ˖°˖ ☾☆☽ ˖°˖ ━━━━━━━

Aelis’s dreams were troubled. There were skeletons with points of all-too-bright fire in their eyes wielding swords that hadn’t rusted away. There was Maurenia fighting them with her until the half-elf ’s own enormous green eyes had turned to ice-blue flame and the flesh over her cheeks sloughed away.

There were other animated corpses, driven by more than magical power, but by some inner force, like the one Aelis had put down at her Necromancer’s test. She imagined she saw Archmagister Duvhalin looming over the shapeless battlefield, as if she were a game piece and he the player.

There were others in the battle, if that is what it was; the Dobrusz brothers, Otto, Elmo, even Pips. It wasn’t quite a nightmare. Aelis had never been given to those; even in her dreams her power exerted control over her surroundings. But this treaded close.

Aelis woke startled. She had felt nothing and seen nothing to indicate that her Wakefulness had tripped. The sky was lightening, but only just.

With half a mind to look around her camp for tracks—animal or otherwise—she levered herself to her feet. Then Aelis imagined Tun’s disapproving glare if she voiced such a thought.

“As if I’d know what to look for anyway,” she muttered as she gathered her gear and shoveled dirt over her already-dead fire. When it came to the heavens, however, she did know. The sun wasn’t visible over the treeline, but the green moon was a sliver high in the sky. Still probably an hour till dawn, she thought. Nothing for it but to get walking.

━━ ˖°˖ ☾☆☽ ˖°˖ ━━━━━━━

The next three days were much the same, only colder. Though Aelis already wore the heaviest garments she had—and had slipped on what extra she had packed—she wished she had at least one more coat or another scarf to wrap over her ears and head. Or a horn of fire, or a brick set before a fire wrapped in a blanket and slipped into her pocket.

Wish in one hand, shit in the other, Bardun Jacques’s voice sounded in her head. And a handful of shit is the last thing I need, she thought, as she pushed on. She was forced to stop more often than she would’ve liked to adjust the brace on her ankle. It had swollen considerably with all the work she’d put it to.

“This is going to require a week of light duty and careful healing, with pain management achieved via regular ingestion of fermented grape analgesic. Perhaps even distilled grape analgesic,” she said. As if I can even get drinkable brandy in Lone Pine, she chided herself. “Not that it’s going to matter,” she added, going back to voicing her thoughts out loud, if only to hear something spoken. Aelis didn’t much like silence, and there’d been almost nothing but for days now. “Because there’s not going to be any light duty.”

On the prior two days of her walk, Aelis had avoided running through the treatments she had for her ankle. As was typical with that kind of injury, the only true treatment was immobilization and rest, and neither of those was going to be possible. She knew that she could make a more effective brace with some of the tools in her tower. She could distill some potions and refine them effectively now that her calcination oven was operable.

The problem there, of course, was that she’d need a steady stream of painkillers, strong enough to keep her on her feet yet not dull her senses or her power. And such action was likely to compound the original injury.

“Can’t perform surgery on myself, unless it comes to something really desperate,” she muttered. Another option did occur to her. An extremely short-term solution, at best. But she was already trying to recall which chapter in Advanced Necromancy covered the deadening of flesh. She shoved the thought away as quickly as it came, or tried to.

With gritted teeth and a firm grip on her walking stick, she trudged on, feeling every patch of frozen mud and every cold, hard rock in the heel and up the back of her complaining foot.

She caught sight of the dim lights and chimney smoke of Lone Pine as the sun was setting on that third full day of walking. She had approached from the northwest and skirted her tower. As much as she wanted to head immediately for its familiarity—and the full range of medical options at her disposal there—she decided the inn was more warranted.

While she most wanted to tell Maurenia and Tun—in what order she couldn’t quite decide—Martin and Rus had the pulse of the town and the measure of the folk in it.

“I can’t tell them the whole thing, so I’d better start thinking about what I can tell them.”

It was, of course, entirely possible that Lone Pine would face no threat. “But it’s entirely possible that any further animated corpses, hybrids, constructs, or bound spirits will have some method of tracking an incursion or an enemy, and Onoma knows I did sweet fuck all to hide or disguise myself. Not that there was much I could do.”

Bardun Jacques’s words came to her in a flash. Never stop in the middle of a fight or an investigation to start doubting yourself or second-guessing the action you’ve already taken. “Don’t be impulsive. But once you act, don’t stop to think what you could’ve or should’ve done differently until your action is over. Dedicate your mind to what remains in front of you, not distracting it with what lies behind.” Aelis muttered the words as she hobbled down the hill and prepared to dance lightly around the truth of where she’d been and what she’d been doing.

She tried to minimize her limp as she slowly made her way. It was late enough at night that only travelers and serious drinkers and layabouts, of which Lone Pine had few, would be up and about.

And she was right. As she swung open the inn’s door, most of the lamps and rushlights had been doused. A few shapes huddled near the hearth, where even now another one—Rus, she was sure—was smooring the fire. As one, everyone silhouetted before the dim flames turned toward her, and their relative heights made it clear that she was looking at the Dobrusz brothers and two taller folks. Unless other dwarves have come to town, she thought.

“Warden?” Rus came forward, wiping his hands on his apron. “I’m afraid we’ve not got any hot food. Martin’s already off to bed, but . . .”

“That’s quite all right, Rus,” Aelis answered, conscious of the constant ache in her ankle and the way it made her whole leg feel wooden. Rather than come forward, she stood in place. Let them come to me. Command the room. “I’m not hungry.” A bald-faced lie; she was starving for something other than the dried rations she’d survived on for the past six days. “But I do have some news to pass on.”

The Dobruszes—it was them, she could tell by the rumbling from Andresh, the dwarfish words she could never make out—came rolling up toward her. Maurenia, the tallest shape in the dim taproom, stayed a few paces distant.

“Something bad?” Rus’s face came into focus. A bit sad, a bit worried, as it always was, but it was a determined face, too. A lived-in face.

“Well, it’s not a parade of fairies farting gold and pissing ale into every pot that’s held for them,” Aelis said. “I don’t want to get anyone too alarmed, but if the folk have got procedures for threats, they should start engaging them.”

“You don’t want folks to get alarmed, but you are telling them there’s a threat? That’ll alarm them a hell of a lot more than if you just tell us what’s what, Warden,” Rus said, rubbing a hand against his forehead.

“These folk aren’t children,” Timmuk said, while Andresh muttered behind him.

They’re right, Aelis thought. I’m going to have to tell them something. “Rus, what I mean is, I’ll lay out some steps folk should take. It’s probably nothing to worry too much about. But if I could, I’d like to stay in the village tonight.”

Behind him, Maurenia stirred. Rus made as if to speak, paused, and simply nodded.

“Of course, Warden, of course. No problem at all. I don’t know that you’ll be able to address the whole village at once, different folk going all about the place, but Martin and I’ll try to gather what ears we can to listen to what you have to say.”

“That would be a help,” Aelis said. And it allows me time to think of just how I’m going to lie to them, which is nice.

“I’m off to bed then, unless anyone needs aught else?” Rus looked down at the dwarves and back over his shoulder at Maurenia, and when no answers were forthcoming, darted off to the dark kitchen and beyond.

“I’m going to assume,” Timmuk began, “that you bear ill news that we will all be loath to hear. Is it best to save it for the morning? Will it keep, or must it be whispered in the dark around cold coals?”

“I think I need sleep if I’m to tell it correctly, Timmuk. But I am glad to find you here. I may have work for you.”

“We are warranted to return south before too much longer, but exceptions could be made, at need. The morning, then.”

And with the heavy footfalls of the dwarves receding, Aelis was left alone in the dark taproom with Maurenia, who moved to her side and took her hand. “How bad? Don’t try to distract me with nonsense, either.”

“Bad,” Aelis whispered. “I think.”

“On a scale from ‘someone could get hurt’ to ‘it’s the end of all things, so let’s get drunk in bed’?”

Aelis chuckled ruefully. “Bad border skirmish,” she said, after some thought, resisting the urge to lean against Maurenia’s shoulder.

“A bad border skirmish might as well be the apocalypse to this village,” Maurenia said. “Are there troops nearby that can be sent for?”

“Might be,” Aelis said. “And if there are, I’ll look for volunteers to go get them.” She shifted her weight, and Maurenia’s elfish eyes read her wince too well.

“You’re hurt,” she said, frowning.

“Nothing a bit of rest won’t cure,” Aelis said. Fatigue and hunger clashed in her, and with a different kind of hunger as Maurenia slipped an arm around her waist.

Going up the stairs was more of a chore than it should’ve been, and she found herself leaning on Maurenia despite her determination not to. Standing still had given her ankle time to stiffen and swell and generally become a bastard thing, and Aelis was keeping her foot clear of the floor by the time they made it into Maurenia’s room.

Her impulse was to dump her stick, her pack, and all her other gear in a heap in a corner, as she would’ve done in her tower if no one was near. But Maurenia kept her spaces tidy as a rule; Aelis knew that much for certain. So, leaning against the wall, she set her stick in the corner, unslung her pack, and began fumbling at her swordbelt.

Before she got it off, Maurenia was behind her, encircling Aelis’s waist with her arms. She dealt with the swordbelt first, laid the tooled calfskin with sword and dagger carefully on her small footlocker, then she was behind Aelis again, her hands strong and careful, urgent without being demanding or forceful. Before Aelis knew it, she was down to her chemise and her stockings and socks, and Maurenia was leading her to the bed. She sat down, quiet and unprotesting. Her skin felt warm despite the cold drafts in the room. Maurenia’s hands lingered in places. Aelis’s breath caught in her throat. She felt Maurenia’s fingers stop at the strips of cloth bound over a brace around her ankle.

“I suppose prolonged bed rest is out of the question for this?”

“Afraid so,” Aelis answered, her voice turning distant.

Maurenia made quick work of the brace. Aelis exhaled sharply as the half-elf ’s fingers probed the swollen skin. “This looks bad.”

“I’ll examine it in the morning. A few hours of sleep in a bed will set me right,” Aelis murmured.

Maurenia prodded the ankle again. It was all Aelis could do not to yank her leg away from her touch. “Please let the medical professional deal with that.”

Maurenia stood, her nose wrinkling, and leaned in close, her face inches from Aelis’s. “I don’t suppose there’s any chance of getting a tub dragged out and water heated before you sleep tonight.”

“Rus and Martin will hop if I call, but I won’t,” Aelis said. “Because I don’t want to abuse their trust, and because if I sit in a tub with more than three inches of water in it right now, I will certainly drown.”

“Drown?” Maurenia tilted her head to one side.

“I am going to fall asleep in a very short while whether I’m in a bath or otherwise.”

“Fine. Into the bed with you then.”

Maurenia gently pressed Aelis back upon the bedclothes. The rough mattress and homespun blankets felt as soft and luxurious as the finest sheets in her father’s best palace. For a moment, she was dimly aware of Maurenia sliding in beside her, and then she was asleep.

Copyright © 2024 from Daniel M. Ford

Pre-order Necrobane Here:

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Excerpt: One Wrong Word by Hank Phillippi Ryan

One Wrong WordA heart-racing new psychological thriller from USA Today bestselling and multiple award-winning author, Hank Phillippi Ryan. Coming February 6th, 2024!

One Wrong Word stars crisis management expert Arden Ward. And here, in her beloved office, she is about to get a surprise from her boss, Warren Carmichael. This scene picks up in the middle of the chapter.


Warren actually gulped. She’d never seen his face so ashen.

“Listen, Arden. I don’t like this any more than you will. But understand.

The Swansons are major clients. Lucrative clients. Company-supporting clients.”

“Well, I know. I brought them to you. When we met at my Saving Calico childhood leukemia fundraiser. Remember?”

“Oh. Right.” Warren picked up his glass, rattled the ice. “I didn’t think anything could make this more difficult.”

“Make what?”

“So Patience Swanson thinks you and her husband have a . . . thing. That he gave you the Joy.”

“The perfume?” Arden clapped a palm to her chest. “She’s insane.”

“Possibly. Probably. But that doesn’t change anything. She demands that we let you go.”

“She? Demands? You let me go?” Every nerve cell in Arden’s brain burst into flames.

“I have no choice.”

“Choice? Of course you do.” Arden took a step toward him, arms spread in exasperation and disbelief. “Who does she think put her husband where he is today?”

“I’m sorry, Arden. It’s a situation. I don’t know what to say.”

“You don’t? Well, I do.” She jabbed toward him with a forefinger. “You can say ‘she’s lost her freaking mind.’ You can tell that woman I’m a valuable employee who brings in big bucks, and new clients, and will continue to do so. And who, it goes without saying, is not having some sort of sordid affair with her vile entitled husband who clearly she has problems with. But the ‘problems’ are not me. A situation? It’s my life!”

“I’m sorry, Arden. Unless you can prove he didn’t give you perfume. Unless you can prove he didn’t—”

She rolled her eyes to the heavens, then harnessed her outrage. “I’m not going to prove one thing on this planet. Ask him, right? First of all, I can’t prove something that didn’t happen, that’s through the looking glass, and I cannot believe you’re even asking me that. Is that what you think of me? Let me ask you that. That this is true?”

“No, of course not, no.” Warren lurched to his feet, turned away, not looking at her, looking at every place else but her. “He’ll deny it. So I can’t force him to—”

“Ah. I see. Warren. Look at me. So you believe her, not me? Is that what you’re saying? Because if that is what you’re saying, Warren, I could file so many lawsuits it’d make your head spin. Hey. You’re a pro.Imagine the headlines. Blame the victim? Or wait, would you paint me the vixen, the temptress? Oh, yeah, do it. Please do that. I’d love that. Bring it.”

Warren had to know this was bull. “Are you hearing me?” she persisted.

“Are you ignoring me? Look at me. I know the rules. I know the deal. You cannot do this. I’ll go to HR so fast it’ll—”

“Be careful, Arden.” Warren interrupted her. “Take a beat. If you sue me, well, that’s not gonna help you, is it? Suddenly you’re . . . a problem employee. A liability. On the defensive. It’s not a good look. You know that.”

“What I know—and what you know—is that it’s not true.”

“What I know is that if the Swansons leave us, if they take their billings, I’d have to fire three other people to make up for it. Do you want to be responsible for that?”

“Oh, no. No. That’s not fair.” Arden wiped away the space in front of her, erasing Warren’s words. “Do not make me feel guilty about people losing their jobs over a lie.”

“We won’t let this get out,” Warren said. “It’ll stay between us.”

“Right. Between us.” She choked down a bitter laugh, focusing her anger. “And Patience Swanson. And Arthur Swanson. And whatever gossip mongers and sycophant confidantes and social media jackals—I cannot believe I’m saying this. A secret. As if anyone could keep a secret.”

She drew in a breath, her judgment obliterated by expanding rage. Narrowed her eyes. “Unless they’re dead.”


Click below to pre-order your copy of One Wrong Word, available February 6th, 2024!

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Forge’s 2024 Winter Preview!

The year is 202FORGE and the coziest season of the year is upon us, which means we’re on the hunt for those stories that’ll warm our hearts as we read from underneath a pile of blankets on cold nights. And here at Forge, we’re pretty well-known for sharing immersive books that do just that! Read below to check out the wonderful winter lineup of all the books coming from Forge this season!


Deep Freeze by Michael C. Grumley

Deep Freeze

From the bestselling author of the Breakthrough series: In his next near-future thriller, Michael C. Grumley explores humanity’s thirst for immortality—at any cost…

Available now!

One Wrong Word by Hank Phillippi Ryan

One Wrong Word

A heart-racing new psychological thriller from USA Today bestselling and multiple award-winning author, Hank Phillippi Ryan.

Coming 2.06.24!

Such a Lovely Family by Aggie Blum Thompson

Such a Lovely Family

The cherry blossoms are in full bloom in Washington, D.C., and the Calhouns are in the midst of hosting their annual party to celebrate the best of the spring season. With a house full of friends, neighbors, and their beloved three adult children, the Calhouns are expecting another picture-perfect event. But a brutal murder in the middle of the celebration transforms the yearly gathering into a homicide scene, and all the guests into suspects.

Coming 3.12.24!

And coming in paperback!

Love, Clancy by W. Bruce Cameron

Love, Clancy

From W. Bruce Cameron, the internationally bestselling author of A Dog’s Purpose and A Dog’s Way Home, comes Love, Clancy: Diary of a Good Dog, a deeply moving story with a brand-new cast of characters, including one very good dog.

Available now!

Broken Ice by Matt Goldman

Broken Ice

In the words of Lee Child on Gone to Dust, “I want more of Nils Shapiro.” Emmy Award-winning author Matt Goldman happily obliges by bringing the Minneapolis private detective back for another thrilling, stand alone adventure in Broken Ice.

Available now!

An Irish Country Courtship by Patrick Taylor

An Irish Country Courtship

Patrick Taylor returns to Ballybucklebo in An Irish Country Courtship, a charming and heartfelt entry in the Irish Country series.

Available now!

A Dublin Student Doctor by Patrick Taylor

A Dublin Student Doctor

The beloved Irish Country series continues in A Dublin Student Doctor, a moving, deeply human story from New York Times, USA Today, and Globe and Mail bestselling author Patrick Taylor.

Coming 3.12.24!

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Excerpt Reveal: The Infiltrator by T. R. Hendricks

The InfiltratorT. R. Hendricks’s Derek Harrington returns in The Infiltrator, an adventure of man vs wild—and the domestic terrorists hidden there.

One year after the clash with his former students in upstate New York, retired Marine Warrant Officer and SERE instructor Derek Harrington is the tip of the FBI’s spear in their mission to eradicate the domestic terrorist group known as Autumn’s Tithe. After several successful operations, intelligence points to one final camp in the remote Kentucky wilderness, and Derek prepares to take down Autumn’s Tithe for good.

At the same time ex-FBI Special Agent Hannah Kittle, or Sarah as she is known to the group, devises a plan to meet Derek and her one-time Bureau colleagues head on. Yet her benefactor’s faith in Sarah’s ability to lead Autumn’s Tithe is waning, and other plans are being enacted. Knowing full well what it means for her should those plans succeed where she has failed, Sarah will stop at nothing to see that she is the victor.

As the competing agendas unravel, events place Derek and Sarah on a collision course, setting the stage for a confrontation that will bring Autumn’s Tithe right to Derek’s doorstep.

 The Infiltrator will be available on April 23rd, 2024. Please enjoy the following excerpt!


CHAPTER ONE

The time had come to hit the hammer against the anvil, instead of just letting them feel the fire of the forge.

It’s simple. They’re not getting the picture. Not his words but they roll around inside his head all the same. Passed down from higher-ups, the sentiment preceded the new shift in strategy. A harder approach. Time for a pounding.

Easy to say when you’re in a conference room back in D.C.

Derek Harrington, retired Marine Force Recon and wilderness survival expert, now press-ganged into service with the FBI, doesn’t have that luxury. As point man in the effort against the domestic terrorist group Autumn’s Tithe, not only does he have to watch the hammer fall, but he has to be the one to swing it.

Raising his binoculars, he scans the hilltop directly west of his position. He’s in a good spot. Slightly lower than the hill across from him but the difference in elevation is negligible. Derek can still observe everything. The West Virginia trees and foliage provide ample cover as he lies in the prone position, glassing the enemy’s camp.

A long, low saddle runs between the hills. Off to his left a twotrack dirt road winds its way from west to east through the forest floor. Just enough of a break in the canopy allows him to see along its length. For his part, Derek only has to turn his head slightly and he can observe the entirety of the path as it weaves past his hill and continues on. The perfect vantage point for viewing comings and goings as well as the compound.

Across the way he can see their silhouettes moving through the trees. The larger shadows of cabins and workshops fill in the spaces between the pines and oaks. It’s a clear morning and although the sun shines down, a mountain chill hangs in the air. Perhaps it’s the air, or perhaps it’s just him. Maybe he’s getting soft in his old age. These people are trying to commit mass murder, after all, but still. Some of those shadows across the way are no bigger than his boy back home.

The thought intrudes despite Derek’s operational disposition. Michael. His boy. His poor boy. A pang of heartache ripples through him. Will his son ever be the same after what happened? Michael seems to be a normal, happy kid so long as he can stay in his bed and play video games most of the time. Venturing out of his room, much less the house, could be a crapshoot with how he would respond. Getting him to school was difficult on the best of days and downright impossible on the worst. The only things that Michael regularly enjoys are playing baseball and fishing, no doubt reverting back to those activities for the comfort they brought to him before his kidnapping. Derek would need to keep easing him out there. Helping Michael to adjust to life outside the walls of the home.

They’re not getting the picture. Send them a message.

The directive pulls Derek back to the mission at hand. The intel developed from the logging camp in upstate New York had given the FBI enough of a lead to put him into the field eight weeks later, this time in northwestern Pennsylvania near the Allegheny National Forest. It didn’t take long for Derek to track down the second compound and call in the cavalry. The group there had received a lot of support staff from the first camp and had barely begun preparations for any sort of attack before HRT rolled them up without a shot being fired.

The subsequent interviews and plea deals divulged even more intel, which when processed and war-gamed by enough people in suits standing in rooms making themselves feel important, gave Derek his next foray. That time it was into a little no-man’s-land where the southwestern tip of Pennsylvania meets the West Virginia border.

Word from the mastermind still at large had reached this cell ahead of him, despite what the Feds would discover later as an attempt to alter their tradecraft and forgo the use of electronic communications. The people there were well on the way to staging their attack, but in their haste they overlooked other logistics. When Derek called it in and the FBI arrived, the entire camp threw themselves at the feet of their apprehenders, begging for food, clothes, and an escape from the brutality of winter.

Still, the correlation was apparent. Not only was Autumn’s Tithe growing more sophisticated, they were accelerating their operational timeline. Whereas that crazy old bastard, Marshal, had wanted each cell to carry out an attack every fall until he brought the United States government to its knees, it seemed Sarah—Hanna—was pushing the individual groups to launch against their targets as soon as possible. Maybe it was because of his interdiction that she felt the need to act quickly. Or maybe it’s because she’s a ruthless maniac bent on murder. Either way it didn’t really matter. After the third camp was neutralized, the Feds had her and the group on the ropes.

Or at least so they thought. Derek had felt the same way until he came upon this compound, nestled in southwestern West Virginia. If he hadn’t found it when he did it might have been too late. When word was sent back to higher-ups about the preparations being nearly complete, the reactions were furious. Hence the need.

Send them a message.

His radio earpiece crackles. “Hey, Slingshot.” Derek cringes every time he hears the call sign. It had been given to him by Jason and Rob as some good-natured ribbing, but all things considered, Derek would rather have something a bit less obnoxious. “Can we get a SITREP?”

Derek takes one hand off his binoculars and keys the button attached to the front of his tactical vest. “Grizzly 6, nothing new. Developing the situation further. Will advise. Over,” he whispers just loud enough to be heard on the other end.

“Roger that, Slingshot,” Jason replies. “Hopefully we get some movement soon. The aviation boys are getting antsy. Said they don’t think they can hold much longer.”

Derek lowers his binos altogether and slips the cuff of his Marine woodland pattern camouflage blouse back enough to expose his watch. He keys up again, not bothering to hide the confusion in his voice. “Grizzly 6, Slingshot 6. My count has Reaper time on station for at least another seven hours. You mean the Apaches, over?”

“Bingo, Slingshot,” Jason chimes back. “Flyboys getting nervous as usual.” His own voice is laced with a modicum of exacerbation. Not surprising given his Airborne Ranger pedigree. The swagger of line troops almost always led to no small amount of eye rolling when it came to the concerns of other branches. This was especially true amongst the straight-leg infantry types of the world.

Marine Force Recon wasn’t any different from the Army in that regard. Derek depresses his push-to-talk button. “If they’re so nervous, get me Marines in Cobras instead of these National Guard wannabees next time. Devil Dogs will fly those things on spit and harsh language if they have to.”

A few moments go by before the radio crackles again. Derek can make out the last vestiges of laughter dying out on the other end as Jason’s voice comes through. “Wilco, Slingshot. Oorah!” the former Army noncom adds mockingly.

Derek smiles as he scoops up his binos and resumes surveillance of the opposite hill. Despite their less than auspicious start together, a mutual respect and admiration had grown between the three former members of the military’s elite. Derek found Jason and Rob to be seasoned professionals capable of proficient operational planning and execution the more time they worked together. Likewise, the duo had expressed to him on more than a few occasions their disbelief at Derek’s survival skills, field acumen, and technical and tactical expertise.

The shared “mission first, people always” mindset set the stage for their successes. With each camp neutralized it was another notch on his handlers’ belts, so much so that Derek was helping make their careers for them. Jason was now the leadership element’s point man in the field, while Rob had been elevated to Assistant Special Agent in Charge of the entire task force. In return, they watched out for Derek, insulating him from the inevitable reach of FBI politics and logistical nonsense, while ensuring that he had every piece of state-of-the-art equipment, weaponry, and supplies at his disposal to make his time in the wilderness as smooth as possible.

Derek had to give it to the Feds on that front. His next-gen gear capabilities bordered on near-future science fiction at times. Not prototypes, mind you. Field-tested and certified equipment just waiting on budget appropriations for widespread distribution to the military. Billions will be spent fielding the gear en masse, but for a single individual the cost was negligible.

The concept for his loadout was all about combining multiple pieces of equipment into singular units to keep Derek light and mobile. His AN/PRC-177 multi-band encrypted radio with satellite uplink gives him the ability to reach the forward command center, the helicopters holding so far out that their rotor blades can’t be heard, and the drone pilot sitting in a trailer somewhere in the Arizona desert.

A specialized wrist-top computer, essentially a glorified, encrypted iPhone on steroids, sits in a camouflaged sleeve, reminiscent of what a quarterback wears to reference plays, on his left forearm. With it Derek can send and receive text messages with his command element, upload and download content like photographs or map overlays, mark his GPS position for satellite tracking, and passively transmit his vital signs. The computer even has a flora and fauna identification scanner, complete with a database of every known species indigenous to the United States.

A woodland camo boonie hat with a harness sewn into the interior lining supports an Enhanced Night Vision Goggle Monocular borrowed from the Army. Derek carries an M38 Designated Marksmanship Rifle, an upgraded version of the Marine Corps M27 Infantry Automatic Rifle, which has greater range, accuracy, and cycle rate of rounds than the standard M4 carbines that he was familiar with during his time in. A cutting-edge Leupold illuminated reticle scope combined IR beam, laser rangefinding, target designation, and live streaming capabilities into a singular optic. The enhanced rifle gives Derek the ability to see farther and shoot faster.

He only carries four magazines on the front of his vest in addition to the one already seated in the well of his rifle. The relatively low amount isn’t ideal, but Derek accepts the trade-off for the alleviation in weight. He knows that if he ever gets into a major firefight his greatest weapon will be the radio on his back, not the rifle in his hands. Strapped in the drop-down holster attached to his right leg platform is a Sig Sauer M18 pistol should shit really hit the fan.

The remainder of Derek’s tactical vest is outfitted with pouches containing the absolute essentials he needs should he become separated from his assault pack. A compass and maps. A trauma kit complete with hemostatic bandages and a combat tourniquet. A LifeStraw personal water filtration unit. One pocket contains tinder, lighters, and waterproof matches.

His assault pack, just a little bigger than a standard backpack, holds other items considered necessary but not essential. An insulated bivy sack to sleep in that can act as a VS-17 signaling panel if turned inside out. A larger field medical kit. A Katadyn water filtration pump to fill the integrated CamelBak reservoir. A solar recharging panel and spare batteries for his electronics. Four grenades: incendiary, smoke, fragmentation, and a flashbang. A suppressor attachment for the M38 rifle. Wire for setting snares. Tackle for fishing. Extra socks. Derek has a few emergency rations just in case, but he never starves while he is out, even in the dead of winter.

Rounding it all out is Derek’s trusted StatGear Surviv-All survival knife strapped to his left leg platform. Matched with his survival skill set, the consolidated equipment further enhances his ability to travel quickly and quietly, allowing him to infiltrate and observe the enemy with lightning speed.

The loadout was proving itself so effective that the Marine Corps procurement guys were already getting hard-ons about fielding it to larger numbers, mainly Force Recon, Raiders, and snipers.

Trucks turning over heightens his attention. Derek forgets about the equipment and focuses his binoculars. Through the trees he can see the shadows of large vehicles moving. Derek punches the button to his radio. “Grizzly 6, we’ve got movement. Going to open channel.”

He doesn’t wait for a response. Rotating the housing ring around his push-to-talk button, Derek switches his radio to the frequency dedicated to coordinating the involved parties. “All task force elements, this is Slingshot 6. Report readiness condition, over.”

“Slingshot 6, Saber 1. Redcon one.”

“Cherokee 6, redcon one.” The whir of the helicopters’ rotors can be heard in the background of the pilot’s transmission.

Jason’s voice comes over again. “Grizzly 6. Redcon one.”

“Roger,” Derek replies, “all elements redcon one. We have vehicle movement inside camp. Stand by. Saber 1, you’re on deck.”

The pilot in Arizona keys back. “Roger over. Standing by.”

Through the binoculars he can see the vehicles heading away from camp toward the west. Derek watches until the shadows and the decline of the hill swallow them from his sight but the sound of their engines never fades completely. He listens for the straining, sudden exertion of gears not meant for this mountainous terrain or navigating the steep twists and turns.

After a few moments the sounds of the engines begin to increase. Derek shifts his gaze to the base of the hill, where the dirt tracks disappear into the tree line. Sure enough, three vehicles appear. A Chevy pickup in the lead, a U-Haul box truck in the middle, and a white panel van bringing up the rear. All three amble along, rocking back and forth as they move slowly over the uneven ground.

He keys his radio. “Sabre 1, Slingshot 6. Type-three control, bomb on target. Advise when ready for 9 line.”

The drone pilot crackles back. “Go ahead, Slingshot.”

“Lines one through three, NA, break. Two eight niner eight feet. Civilian vehicles moving west to east. Grid mike lima eight four two, three niner seven, break. Slingshot laser, code one six eight eight. Northeast eight five zero meters. Acknowledge and advise when ready for remarks.”

The vehicles continue toward him as the reply comes over his earpiece. “Roger, Slingshot, ready.”

“Laser target line two three six. Final attack heading three three zero to zero three zero. Read back lines four, six, and restrictions.”

“Slingshot 6, good copy. Two eight niner eight feet. Mike lima eight four two, three niner seven.”

“Saber 1, good readback. Call in with heading.”

“Copy Slingshot. Saber 1 in, heading three three zero,” the drone pilot replies.

Derek lowers his binoculars and pulls his rifle over. Before looking through the scope he notices movement out of his peripherals. A quick glance shows the patrons of the camp coming out of the wood line to stand on the hill’s edge. They wave to the vehicles as they bounce along the road, now a little less than halfway between the two hills. “Fuck,” he mutters before acquiring the U-Haul in his scope.

“Slingshot 6, overhead. Ready for spot.”

“Proceed south. Run in three thirty to one fifty. Laser target line two three six.”

“Roger. Three thirty to one fifty for laser handoff. Ten seconds.”

“Saber 1, roger. Ten seconds.” Derek takes a deep breath.

“Slingshot 6, laser on.”

Derek steadies his aim, keeping the red dot produced by his riflemounted laser on the side panel of the U-Haul. He tracks the truck as it moves from right to left in his field of vision. “Lazing.”

After a few moments the pilot comes back. “Spot. Cease laser.”

Derek switches off the laser but keeps his scope on the vehicles so that those in the forward command unit can watch the live feed. “Saber 1, do you have contact?”

“Slingshot 6, affirmative. Contact. Three vehicles moving west to east. Box truck is center mass.”

His heart starts to thump in his chest. Despite the cool air, beads of sweat break out on his brow, and Derek can feel dampness in his armpits. “Correct, Saber, that’s your target.”

“Tally target,” the drone pilot says, further acknowledging the acquisition.

Derek has the pilot call in the attack heading again. Upon receiving the appropriate response, he pauses momentarily. Derek swallows. “Cleared hot.”

“Slingshot 6, Saber 1. Commencing engagement. Time on target, thirty seconds.”

Derek squeezes his eyes shut. He waits a few moments, letting his years and experience dictate the length of his tactical pause. A couple of counts go by before he keys up again. “All Cherokee elements, proceed to incursion points, over.”

The whir comes back through the radio. “Slingshot, Cherokee 6. Roger, inbound time now.”

Derek’s stomach gurgles. He spares a quick glance for the people watching on the hilltop. There is a steep and sudden whoosh, and then a flash. The concussive wave comes next followed by the erupting sound of an explosion.

The Hellfire missile detonates on impact when it hits the U-Haul. The contents inside, stacks of fertilizer laden with ball bearings and other forms of shrapnel, ignite immediately in a massive secondary explosion. The shrapnel and fireball produced burst through the windshield of the van trailing the box truck, engulfing it and the fully armed team riding in the back. The blast lifts the Chevy and throws it through the air like a Matchbox car, the vehicle crashing through the upper heights of the surrounding trees, severing limbs all the way back down to the ground.

Dirt and dust flies up in an all-encompassing cloud. Derek drops his head, one hand holding his boonie hat in place, the other pulling his rifle under his chest as the hot air rushes over him. A shower of shattered trees and rocks immediately follows the echo of the blast. Derek waits for the rain of debris to cease before conducting his battledamage assessment.

“Saber 1, Slingshot 6. Mission successful. Three vehicles destroyed.” He clears his throat, his mouth suddenly dry. “Estimate twelve casualties. Out.”

Derek looks over to the camp. The entire landscape is awash in gray dust save for the flaming wreckage down below. For a few moments there is absolute silence. Then the screams come.

He can’t see the families of those that were in the vehicles, but he hears their laments of shock and loss. It’s a blessing that the hum of the rotor blades from the choppers comes a few seconds later and drowns them out.

The gray dust curls away as two Apache attack helicopters race in from the west and east. They flare up to halt their speed, the pilots briefly showing the underbelly of their aircraft before leveling out. As the aircraft dip back down, rockets, missiles, and 30mm cannons are menacingly brought to bear. A moment behind them, two UH-60 Black Hawks enter the airspace and form an outer perimeter. Ropes are dropped from both sides on each chopper and members of the FBI’s elite Hostage Rescue Team begin fast-roping down to the deck.

They wear uniforms close to that of the Army. Fatigues in the operational camouflage pattern with olive drab plate carriers fastened over their chests and backs. Assault rifles and submachine guns dangle from their slings as the men zip down the lines. Once on the ground the individual teams get into wedge formations and race up the hilltop.

Derek glasses over the camp one more time. The group is in total disarray. Shock from the explosion. Staggered with their losses. Frozen by the sudden appearance of helicopters swarming all around them like a hornet’s nest that’s been kicked. As the members of HRT breach their perimeter the camp members fold, collapsing to the ground only to be put in the prone position, zip-tied, and searched. Already he can hear the sirens of the state police and fire departments making their way up the mountain road. Derek sighs.

Message sent.


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