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James Swallow on Maintaining Momentum in a Series

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Shadow, available on August 3rd, is the 4th book in James Swallow’s Marc Dane Series! Since he’s a seasoned series writer, James joined us on the blog to share some writing advice on how to keep ideas fresh and, as he says, “maintain your dramatic momentum across multiple novels”.


By James Swallow

I’d love to say I started writing my Marc Dane action thrillers with a grand plan for an ongoing series, some gigantic conspiracy wall of narrative filled with f-tons of material… But the truth is, back when I sold NOMAD, the first novel of Marc’s adventures, I was just happy to get it published. Sure, I had some thoughts about where to take the characters, and files of half-finished ideas and story seeds – but when it became clear I had a full-blown series on my hands, I realized I was looking down the barrel of a challenge I had never faced before.

My previous writing had all been stand-alones, tie-in fiction or series works with several writers. For the first time, I had to build a coherent narrative on my own that would reward readers who bought in to the whole journey of my characters, and lay in (and pay off) plot threads that would unfold from book to book.

But how do you maintain your dramatic momentum across multiple novels? How does a writer keep the work fresh and interesting, not just for themselves but for their readers?

The first thing I did was go back to the series written by the writers who had inspired me. How did Ian Fleming evolve James Bond? How did Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan grow? What did Robert Ludlum and Eric Van Lustbader do with Jason Bourne? And I looked to the big screen too, to blockbuster franchises like the Fast Saga, the Marvel cinematic universe, Bond movies and the Mission: Impossible movies.

As I write this piece in the late summer of 2021, my third Marc Dane novel GHOST is out in paperback and the fourth book SHADOW is about to release in hardcover across North America. Writing the Marc Dane novels, my goal was to create a fast-paced, tech-savvy espionage thriller for the digital age, set in a post-Snowden, post-WikiLeaks world where private military contractors, agile terror cells and corporations wield as much power as national intelligence agencies.

Marc is an MI6 field operative accused of betraying his country who uncovers a horrific conspiracy. Relying only on his skills and his wits to stay one step ahead of those hunting him, Marc joins up with ex-Special Forces sniper Lucy Keyes and her boss, the enigmatic African billionaire Ekko Solomon, who funds his own private team of vigilante black ops specialists. In each novel I feature a new threat and a key antagonist, but I also evolve the abilities and relationships of my main characters – and the plans of a shadowy cabal of over-arching villains, whose influence is felt throughout all of the books.

The key lessons I learned from experience and from my favorite books and movies came down to six key points:

1: Don’t give it all away at once

You can understand the writer’s urge to put everything they have into the first novel in a series – after all, it might be your only shot, what if it’s not popular and you never get to go the distance? But revealing every last detail of your characters and their world is like filling in all the blank parts of the map. Once you’ve done it, it becomes progressively harder to find new ground to explore.

So keep a few cards in your hand, hold on to a little doubt and uncertainty. Drop hints about unseen, unknown bits of backstory that you can revisit in future books. Set up questions in the mind of the reader that will bring them back for the next installment. But if you do so, make sure you pay it off.

2: Give your characters somewhere to go

If your heroes are the best at what they do right at the start, it will be hard for you to find antagonists who can match them in future stories. Give them space to learn and develop, make them a little fallible, then let them grow.

And this goes for the ‘scale’ of your narrative as well. If Hawaii sinks into the ocean in book one, how do you top that for book 2? Or top the next thing for book 3?

I think of this one as the Predator Rule: back in the 80’s, Arnold Schwarzenegger was the biggest, toughest action hero in movies – so much so that there was no screen villain that audiences would accept as realistic threat to him! So producers literally had to create an inhuman antagonist from another planet in order to present a believable challenge.

3: Hit the reset button

As your characters move through the series, they’ll gather things around them – a home and a family, a great job, a nice car, a heroic reputation – but the savvy author always remembers that all is fleeting.

Growing and evolving characters means giving them things, but it is important to remember those same things can be taken away, by happenstance, by deliberate choice or a tragic turn of events.

Don’t allow your heroes to get too comfortable in their lives. Maybe they’ve worked hard to earn that Ferrari and the penthouse in Monaco – but oh no, someone just blew them up and now they have nothing but the clothes on their backs. And all the cool gadgets and resources your spy agency has on tap mean nothing if you just got a burn notice and your access has been revoked.

4: Shake up the status quo

Point #4 is a direct follow-on to Point #3, but it has a specific quality that I think deserves its own entry – and that is, don’t be afraid to swing the executioner’s axe now and then.

No character should ever be invulnerable. Jeopardy is part of drama, and in order to make the stakes feel authentic, there must be loss.

But don’t make this choice lightly – remember, even Conan Doyle grew to regret killing off Sherlock Holmes and retroactively brought the great detective back to life. Think carefully when you consider a character’s final fate, and make it meaningful as well as painful. Because like the gunslingers of the Old West would say, if you pull it, you better use it.

5: Visit new places

The world is a vast and fascinating canvas, and there’s so much of it to see and experience. Keeping your characters in just one part of it might allow you to heavily detail that background, but ultimately familiarity breeds contempt. New locales put different stresses on your narrative.

If the only limitation is your imagination, why not venture far and wide? Travel broadens the mind, as the saying goes, and it can also broaden the experiences of your characters, and create new challenges for them to face.

6: Have an endgame in mind

There has to be an ending, and in the author’s ideal world that ending should be one of their choosing, a way to run down the curtain in a manner that serves their characters and brings closure to their narrative. Even if you have enough ideas to fill a hundred novels, it helps to have a sense of how you might conclude things.

And also remember that an ending doesn’t automatically mean “the end” for all time; it can be the completion of a story arc, the final pay-off for something set up in a previous novel, or the closing of a narrative ‘phase’. One arc concludes, but another one begins – and your heroes, refreshed and renewed, carry on to their next adventures…


James Swallow is a New York Times, Sunday Times and Amazon bestselling author, a BAFTA nominee, a former journalist and the award-winning writer of over fifty-five books, along with numerous scripts for video games, radio and television.

His latest novel SHADOW is the fourth in a series of fast-paced action thrillers featuring protagonist Marc Dane, out now in hardcover; the previous novels in the series – NOMAD, EXILE and GHOST – are available in paperback from Forge Books.

You can also follow James on Twitter at @jmswallow or visit him on his website at www.jswallow.com, which features free downloadable fiction, including the original Marc Dane novelette ROUGH AIR.

Pre-order a Copy of Shadow—available August 3rd!

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Excerpt: Shadow by James Swallow

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James Swallow’s New York Times bestselling The Marc Dane series continues with Shadow.

A ruthless far-right terrorist has broken out of captivity.

A mysterious bio-scientist with a terrible secret is abducted.

A lethal virus threatens millions of lives across Europe and the Middle East.

Ex-MI6 officer Marc Dane and his partner, Lucy Keyes, are bound together in a desperate search for the sinister organization plotting the release of a deadly virus on the world. In their frantic race against time, Dane and Keyes will be tested more than ever before as they seem to find themselves one step behind at every turn. It will take everything they have to expose the evil forces lurking in the shadows and put a stop to this unstoppable pathogen … and even everything might not be enough.

What price would you pay to stop a global catastrophe?

Shadow will be available on August 3rd, 2021. Please enjoy the following excerpt!


 ONE

Through the window of the carriage, the close ranks of the fir trees crowded in along the sides of the railway line. The green of their foliage was dark enough to be almost black in the splash of light spilling from the fast-moving train. They blurred into a single mass, a wall of gloom supporting a heavy night sky that threatened rain.

Jakobs turned away, rubbing the bridge of his nose, deliberately blinking to force away his growing fatigue. The repetitive pattern of the view would have a soporific effect if he allowed it, lulling him, robbing him of his necessary edge.

It was important to stay absolutely focused. Too much was at stake to let his attention slide now, even for the briefest of instants.

He rocked with the motion of the train, standing in the vestibule that connected this carriage to the next. He considered the locked door in front of him and the cargo in the compartment beyond it.

How long had it taken to get to here? How many man-hours, how many  false leads and failures, how many deaths? The bill coming due was lengthy and Nils Jakobs knew every last detail of it by heart. He carried those losses on his shoulders—not that he would ever have been allowed to forget them. His commanders in the Federal Police, in their comfortable offices in Brussels, would not permit that.

For years, they had said that the singular dedication Jakobs showed toward his quarry was barely on the right side of obsessive, but they tolerated him because he got the job done. His fixation meant that he would never rise above the rank of aspirant-inspecteur principal, but the men in Brussels told him that as if they thought it was a criticism. Jakobs didn’t care. All he had ever wanted was the job, and his job was to catch the worst men in the world.

The one Jakobs wanted the most was on the other side of that door, in manacles. Marking off the hours until they crossed into Belgian territory and he became property of the nation he was born in. The nation he had shamed.

The quality of the light through the window changed suddenly as the train thundered through a rural station—Jakobs caught sight of the name Východná as it flashed past at speed—and then the dark treeline was back in place. The train wouldn’t stop until it reached the border with Austria several hours from now, moving swiftly through the Slovakian countryside, following the northern edge of the Low Tatra mountain range and then down toward Bratislava. Jakobs would have to get a little sleep at some point, but that thought was disconnected and vague. He couldn’t shake the sense that something would be missed if he wasn’t there to observe every second of the prisoner transfer.

Without warning, the sliding door leading to the passenger carriages juddered open and a civilian was revealed in the connecting tunnel, a man of narrow build with an oily black beard and a rumpled jacket. He almost bumped into Jakobs and held up his hands apologetically.

“Sorry! Sorry! Looking for the toilet . . .”

Stale breath that smelled of cheap tobacco wafted up, and Jakobs thought of how long it had been since his last cigarette. He’d quit six years ago, on his fortieth birthday, but the urge for a smoke was suddenly right there, testing his resolve.

Jakobs deliberately stepped across to block the man’s path. He’d picked up a little Slovak during a secondment to Interpol, enough to warn the civilian that this car was off-limits. To underline the point, he peeled back the lapel of his jacket to reveal his police badge hanging from a chain around his neck. The action also exposed the butt of the Smith & Wesson semi-automatic pistol in Jakobs’ belt holster, and the man’s eyes widened as he caught sight of it.

From behind Jakobs, through the locked door, someone let out a noise that was half-laughter, half-snarl. It was an animal sound, full of threat and hate, and it startled the civilian even more than the sight of the handgun.

He made a show of looking past Jakobs’ broad-shouldered frame toward the door, giving a nervous chuckle.

“What do you have in there, a dangerous animal?” Jakobs gave a solemn nod. “In a way.”

He gestured toward the front of the train and the civilian got the message, retreating through the sliding doors. He waited until the bearded man was out of sight, then turned back and used the thick metal key the train conductor had given him to open the locked door.

His prisoner looked up at him as he entered, but Jakobs didn’t return the courtesy. Briss and Stodola, the two escorting officers from the Slovak Republic’s National Police, met his gaze and said nothing. Still, Jakobs couldn’t miss the way that Stodola was nursing his knuckles, or the new bruising on the face of the man in the steel chair bolted to the floor of the otherwise empty cargo wagon.

“I stopped a civilian coming up,” he told the two cops. “That shouldn’t happen.” He jerked a thumb at the door and nodded to Stodola. “Stand your post out there. Discourage anyone else who wants to take a look, yes?”

“Sir.”

Stodola straightened up and did as he was told.

Jakobs waited for the door to slide shut and the key to turn in the lock before he finally graced his captive with his direct attention.

“Your boy is easy to needle.” The man in the chair deliberately spoke in Dutch, a language he knew the Slovaks didn’t understand, and his face split in a wide grin.

Jakobs had always thought the prisoner had too many teeth in his head, as if it unbalanced the hard, rectangular shape of his aspect. The ones at the front were uneven, chipped in street brawls and prison fights. The man’s hands came up to run over his shorn scalp and scratch at the blue-black tattoos poking up over the collar of his featureless penal jumpsuit. The handcuffs holding his wrists together and the chain fixing them to the floor jangled with each movement.

The prisoner’s grin held firm. “Not like you, Nils. You don’t crack a smile. Not even when you and I were part of the team.”

“You were never part of the team,” Jakobs replied without thinking, then cursed inwardly, annoyed at himself for allowing the man to goad him into a reply.

“This says different.”

The prisoner pulled up a sleeve to show the tattoo of a winged dagger above a scroll that read Geef Nooit Op: “Never Surrender” in Dutch. The symbol of the Belgian Special Forces Group was surrounded by larger, showier designs, bellicose imagery of lightning bolts, lions and spindly Norse runes.

“Any idiot could get that kind of ink,” Jakobs replied. “But no real soldier ever would.”

That touched a nerve, and the prisoner scowled. But this man had been, if only for a short time, a member of Belgium’s most elite soldier corps, as repellent as that truth was. Jakobs remembered the day that Noah Verbeke had joined his unit, grinning that cocky predator’s grin, winning over the top brass with his obvious skill and cunning, even though he was a complete fucking prick.

That had been years ago, and a lot had changed since then. Now Jakobs was an officer in an anti-terrorist police unit and Verbeke . . . well, he was still a fucking prick. But no one had realized how ruthless and hateful he was until it was too late.

There was a trail of death and terror across Europe, and a slick of poisonous ideology that wound back and forth in Verbeke’s wake. Not a day passed when Jakobs didn’t wish that he could turn back the clock to that day in the barracks, to step into the moment and use it to snap the other man’s neck.

“You have always been a miserable shit,” Verbeke told him, meeting his gaze. “Even now, after your Slovak friends caught me, you still cannot be happy about something. It is not in you.” He made a back-and-forth motion with his fingers. “When this is the other way around, I will smile and smile.”

“You will not slip away this time,” Jakobs countered. He nodded toward the walls of the train carriage. “Did you wonder why we are transporting you by rail in the dead of the night, instead of by road or by plane? Interpol knows about your network of white power hooligans and alt-right sympathizers. We made sure they didn’t get word of your transfer.” He leaned in. “No one will know where you are until we trot you out like a whipped dog, in front of the General Commissioner’s office for the TV cameras.” Jakobs considered that for a second. “I might smile then.”

“That is a pretty little fantasy,” replied Verbeke. “But you and the rest of these worthless mongrels are never going to get what you want.” He snorted loudly. “When are you going to wake up, Nils? How deep does the tide of immigrant rapists and foreign parasites have to get before you finally accept that we are at war?” He jabbed a finger in his direction. “You are the whipped dog, but you will not accept it. You are a race traitor.” He shook his head. “It is actually very sad. You could be—”

Jakobs came forward and snatched at the chain, jerking it so Verbeke jolted forward, choking off his words in mid-sentence.

“If you try that we are not so different bullshit on me, you will regret it.” “My mistake.”

Verbeke recovered quickly, shrugging off the moment, but there was a murderous glitter in his eyes. Jakobs had seen footage of his prisoner at rallies, whipping up his supporters with the same words—and other images too, of him beating people with bricks and kicking a helpless man into a gory mess.

Noah Verbeke was crafty, but he had a thug’s manner and the morality of a violent child. In the end, that had been what allowed the Slovaks to arrest him. A night of sinking beers in a drinking pit in Košice had spilled out into a fight on the street, and Verbeke would have slipped away, if he’d been able to resist the urge to get his hands bloody.

But that’s not in him, thought the police officer, silently echoing the other man’s statement. He can’t see weakness without wanting to stamp on it.

“When we are done with you,” Jakobs began, savoring the thought as he spoke, “daylight will be a distant memory. You will spend the rest of your wretched life in a tiny concrete box. It will be much more than you deserve.”

Verbeke showed his teeth again. “That is not going to happen.”

Behind them, something heavy—like a body—slammed into the locked door, making it judder on its slides.

***

It had rained the night before, and the humidity hanging in the air convinced Susan Lam to wear a baggy cotton dress to work over her underclothes. Soon enough, she would be in her lab coat and work trousers, inside the perfectly climate-controlled environment of the research laboratory, but the industrial campus where it was located was a good drive from her home in Dempsey Road, skirting around the traffic flooding into the city core of Singapore.

She would be hot and sweaty if the journey caught her in the wrong place, and that was no way to start her day. Today they were going to start the trials of the newest drug batch, with the modified T-lymphocyte structure, and she was eager to get started. Months of preparation and incremental advances had brought Susan and her team to this point. If this test series performed well, it would be a major milestone in the project.

She paused over the cup of black tea in her hand, inhaling the aroma and considering the situation. A part of her—the clinical, reductionist element of her persona that was the unemotional scientist—weighed the value of her work against the rewards it had brought her. The other part of Susan Lam—the wife and stepmother, the woman in her late forties with her cozy life and her nice, colonial-era home—basked in the feeling.

A decade ago, she would have dismissed the life she had now as a foolish pipe dream. She would have rejected it outright as worthless and decadent.

So much has changed, she thought.

Bare feet slapped on the tile floor of the kitchen and Susan turned to hear a stifled yawn. Michael wandered in from the living room, the child rubbing at his face with one hand, feeling his way along the countertop with another. Her stepson had slept badly the night before, recovering from a stomach bug spread to him by one of the other boys at his school.

“Hello, drowsy,” she said gently.

He looked better, still a little dehydrated, but nowhere near the same bundle of tears and vomiting he had been a day ago. Susan boxed up the annoyance she felt and crouched so she was at eye level with the ten-year-old. For all the money they paid to that expensive private school, she expected them to take better care of the children. Susan made a mental note to talk to her husband about formulating a sternly worded complaint for the next parent-teacher meeting.

“Can I have juice?” Michael peered up at her, blinking in the morning light. “You can,” she agreed, watering down some straw-colored apple concentrate for him.

“Do I have to go to school today?” “No. Rest up.”

She handed him a plastic beaker and he sipped at it. Michael was definitely not his usual self. Under any other circumstances, such an admission would have made him clap his hands with glee.

“Okay.”

The boy shuffled dolefully back across the room, pausing to meet his father as he entered.

Simon paused to ruffle his son’s dark hair and Susan felt a pang of joy at the simple warmth of the moment. Father and son shared the same pleasant moon-face and brown eyes, the same openness that had drawn her to the man she had decided to marry. Every day she was quietly thankful that fate had fallen in her favor, that it had opened up a path to lead her to this new life. Susan never felt quite as happy as she did in Simon’s arms. And while Michael wasn’t her child, having lost his mother before he could walk and talk, the boy treated her as if he was.

“What?” Simon was looking at her, one eyebrow quirked upward. “Nothing,” she said, around a smile.

“All right.” He shrugged. “I’m going to work from home today. Keep an eye on . . .” He patted Michael’s head again. “I have some lecture notes to prepare. We don’t need to call the nanny.”

Simon taught in the degree program on Law and Life Sciences at the National University of Singapore, where he and Susan had first met at a faculty mixer event, but his son always took precedence over his job.

Michael wandered away, out into the cavernous hallway, as Simon came to Susan’s side, offering her a good-morning kiss.

“He’ll be fine,” she told her husband.

“I know.” Simon rolled his eyes. “Such drama.” He poured himself a cup of tea. “Today’s the new trial set, right? Are you going to celebrate?”

“It’s just test tubes and Petri dishes. It’s not a party.”

She automatically downplayed the importance of the work. It was a reflex she had never been able to break.

He smirked at her, trying to draw her out.

“Are you kidding? You keep telling me, if MaxaBio make this work it could mean—”

“Don’t jinx it.”

The words came out more harshly than she intended them to. But that non-scientist part of Susan Lam didn’t want to say it aloud, in case the act of doing so changed the way everything would play out.

Simon hugged her.

“Things aren’t as fragile as you think they are,” he said, with a baseless confidence.

“Hey . . .” Michael called from the hallway, his voice echoing, and a note of worry in it. “C-can you come here a second?”

“I’ll go,” she said. “He might have thrown up again.”

“I can call the maid in early,” Simon said, smiling widely. “It’s fine.”

But as it turned out, that was a long way from the truth. Susan was three steps into the hallway before she saw what the problem was.

“What’s the matter . . . ?”

She never finished the sentence, the words turning to bitter ash in her mouth. Michael was frozen, shrunk up against the dresser by the wall like a cornered cat, still clutching the plastic cup in his hands. He was staring fixedly at the intruder standing inside the front door, who held it open a few degrees.

The stranger was a white woman. Very white in fact, to the point that she seemed to have deliberately enhanced her paleness through the use of cosmetics. Slender and angular, she wore a simple black pantsuit, matching flat shoes and matte gloves. She was in the process of pulling down a dark muslin scarf to the neck of her collarless jacket, as if she had been wearing it like a mask before Susan appeared. Her lips were red like fire and she had hard, searching eyes that swept over Susan in an instant, measuring her for purpose.

That was a familiar look, an experience Susan knew too well from her old life. Through the half-open door she could see movement out in front of the house, men in black outfits similar to the woman’s emerging from a pair of windowless blue vans, walking up the drive. They carried guns and their heads were lost under shapeless muslin masks that stole away every definition of their features.

All the hope and joy and goodness in Susan’s life dropped out of her in a single bleak instant, swallowed into the earth like floodwater rushing down a sluice.

How many times had she dreamed of this, or something like it? How many times had she bolted awake in the darkness, her heart thudding against her rib cage? How many times had Simon held her as she cried, as she lied to him about the reasons for her nightmares?

The white woman raised a gloved finger to her lips.

“What happens next,” she said quietly, the words issuing out in a French accent made of brittle glass, “that’s up to you.”

Copyright © 2021 by James Swallow

Pre-order a Copy of Shadow—available August 3rd!

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Marc Dane is a MI6 field agent at home behind a computer screen, one step away from the action. But when a brutal attack on his team leaves Dane the only survivor—and with the shocking knowledge that there are traitors inside MI6—he’s forced into the front line.

Matters spiral out of control when the evidence points toward Dane as the perpetrator of the attack. Accused of betraying his country, he must race against time to clear his name. With nowhere to turn to for help and no one left to trust, Marc is forced to rely on the elusive Rubicon group and their operative Lucy Keyes. Ex US Army, Lucy also knows what it’s like to be an outsider, and she’s got the skills that Dane needs.

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Excerpt: Ghost by James Swallow

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The Marc Dane series from James Swallow continues with the Dark Web cyber thriller, Ghost.

A terrible threat from the depths of the dark net.

A devastating betrayal at the heart of a covert strike force.

A deadly pursuit across a digital battlefield.

A ruthless terrorist fueled by revenge.

As devastating attacks unfold across the globe, Marc Dane must call on all his skills and ingenuity to track down the mysterious figure behind it all – a faceless criminal known only as “Madrigal”.

Before they plunge the world into war . . .

Ghost will be available on November 10, 2020. Please enjoy the following excerpt of the first two chapters!


One

The panic filled him. It was fluid and heavy, choking his lungs and pooling in the pit of his stomach, weighing him down. As Lex walked, the hazy, midday air turned into a tidal drag and his knees weakened. He had to stop to catch his breath, so he lurched toward a pharmacy closed for the siesta, ducking out of the high sun and into cooler shadows.

He hid there for a few moments, trying to moderate the fear and failing. He ran a hand through the hair framing his corn-fed features. His haunted, terrified eyes blinked behind his glasses as he fiddled with them, smearing the lenses.

Lex looked down at himself, and for the first time he saw the tiny dots of rust red that speckled the white T-shirt beneath his baggy black hoodie. The vise clamped around his heart tightened a little more. He touched his cheek and it came away smeared with flecks of crimson. Quickly, Lex rubbed his face clean with the hoodie’s sleeve and fumbled at the zipper, pulling it all the way up to hide the rest of the spatter.

It was the Greek guy’s blood. Lex didn’t even realize that it had got on him. His mind was so focused on running away.

It all happened so fast. They had set the meet for a wide piazza on the outskirts of the old township of Rabat, toward the southern end of Malta. Lex had been on the Mediterranean island for days and it seemed to be getting smaller with each passing hour. He wanted to be gone. When the message came, he was falling over himself to get to the rendezvous.

The information arrived in a chain of digital text, filtered through the encrypted Tor server Lex had set up on the day he started running.

Decoded, it was a promise from the Greek smuggler to get him out of Europe and on a plane to Canada. Kyrkos, that was the man’s name. The deal had been agreed. It was going to happen.

It was supposed to play out with them connecting in Rabat and then driving down to Valetta, where Kyrkos had a boat moored. Lex had planned to end this day on the waves, watching the sun set over the ocean. He was going to have a little ritual, where he would have burned the identity documents he was carrying and toss the ashes into the water. Start anew.

Lex Wetherby would be buried at sea and gone forever. That was how it should have happened, because no one knew where he was. He was safe.

But after he had sat down across a café table from the Greek, the burly bodyguard positioned nearby did a weird double take. He moved like he’d seen something wrong, something dangerous. In the next second, the big man jerked backward as if he’d been kicked by a horse.

Lex had seen people get shot before, but there had always been noise, the thunderous crack of a gun. This time he’d heard nothing, and it made everything strange and unreal.

Kyrkos had bolted from his chair, knocking over a glass of wine. He had enough time to swear at Lex before a second silent round hit him in the face. The Greek tumbled over in a heap and some tourist on a nearby table saw the blood. A child screamed.

Lex fled, an innate sense of self-preservation making him flip the table aside as he dashed away. A third shot had splintered a corner of the wooden tabletop. Unable to help himself, he’d thrown a look over his shoulder as he sprinted toward the mouth of the nearest alleyway, toward the faint promise of safety.

Tourists and locals stood frozen with horror, hands to mouths, faces lined with shock. The only ones who’d looked his way were a man and a woman of average height, their identities hidden beneath identical light-colored baseball caps and big black sunglasses that covered half of their faces. He’d glimpsed the dark, angular shapes of compact pistols hidden in their hands and all reason in him dissolved. Up came the oily panic, like a boiling flood head.

He’d raced through a narrow, airless passage full of stale odors which spat him out on to Kbira Street a few blocks north of the piazza. He’d followed the old road, moving without thinking, skirting around the dusty flanks of the church of St. Augustine. Rabat stood atop a hill, and there was a steady breeze through the medieval streets that plucked at his hair and pushed bits of litter along the gutters. On all sides, terraces of sun-bleached buildings crowded in on one another, most of them closed up for the afternoon.

Running on autopilot, Lex almost doubled back before he realized he was on the verge of making a fatal mistake. He staggered to a halt in the pharmacy doorway, trying to catch up with himself, concentrating on what he could remember about the town. He knew there was a coach terminus not far from here, where Rabat met the walls of Mdina, Malta’s ancient fortress capital. All he had to do was slip aboard a local bus and get away, lose himself among the other passengers. The rest he could figure out en route. For now, he was trying to concentrate on not dying.

The red ruin of the Greek’s face flashed up in his mind’s eye, and Lex gagged as he tried to blot out the image. Nestor Kyrkos was connected and the man had enemies,  he knew  that. He wondered  if maybe the man and the woman in the baseball caps had come to end the Greek’s life for some infraction that he wasn’t even aware of. Maybe they weren’t interested in him at all.

But then, reflected in the pharmacy’s window, Lex saw an olive-toned face half-concealed by dead black lenses on the other side of the street, and he knew that he was the real target. Kyrkos and the bodyguard were just collateral. Their deaths had been the shooters clearing the field of anyone who could be a threat, before turning on their true quarry.

Lex slipped out of the shaded alcove and pushed through a group of aging English tourists coming the other way. Over their muttered complaints about his rudeness, he heard the low drone  of a subsonic bullet a split second before a sand-colored block in the wall near his head grew an impact crater. The tourists reacted with mild surprise at the sound of splintering rock as Lex left them behind, hugging the yellow stone of the surrounding buildings, putting them between himself and the killers until he turned the corner.

No sound. Whatever weapons the two assassins were using, they were practically silent. No one else seemed to be aware of what was going on.

Lex moved as fast as he could without actually breaking into a run, afraid that giving in to the panic would result in his death. In his haste to escape, he had left his messenger bag behind at the café, but there was little in there that he couldn’t replace. The most important thing, the invaluable thing, he had on him. The prize for which he had betrayed his comrades had not been out of his reach since he’d left Berlin.

His hand twitched and tightened as this thought ran through his mind, and nervously Lex ran his other fingers over the scars on his palm, picking at the old, healed wound. His right leg was starting to hurt, like it always did when he was stressed, but he pushed the phantom ache aside by patting himself down, taking inventory of what he still had on him in the pockets of his cargo trousers and hoodie.

Not much. Adrenaline soured in his mouth, leaving a metallic taste. This wasn’t like the kind of fear he was used to, the rush of speed that washed over his body when he base jumped or rode a curl on a surfboard. That he could manage, because in those situations Lex was always in control. This was raw and hard and overpowering, and he was struggling to keep his head straight.

These people want to murder me. The reality of it finally hit him full-on, punching the air out of his chest.

The fateful choice Lex had made weeks ago, while in Germany, had come back to bite him. The people he lived with, partied with, the people he thought he had known . . . Now he wondered if he had never really understood them. He’d been willfully ignorant of what was actually going on, of the plans being made. He had deliberately looked the other way and ignored the hard questions that threatened to spoil the fun of it all. Until the day had come when he couldn’t gloss over it anymore.

Lex hated himself for that. When it got too much, when he couldn’t sleep at night for all the fear in him, he ran. He ran to here, into this. And now the killers his former friends had sent to deal with him would do their jobs, and Lex’s too-late attack of conscience would be rendered worthless. He cursed under his breath and tried to shake  off the sick dread that threatened to choke him.

He started to jog, deliberately going around the ornamental gardens at the north end of Rabat and through the parkland. He slipped behind the trunk of a large carob tree to catch his breath, and dared to take another look back in the direction he had come.

The man in the cap and glasses was close, a few hundred meters away in the shade of a road sign. He was looking in the opposite direction, scanning the street for any sign of his target. Lex saw his mouth moving, but couldn’t hear any of the words. The man had two fingers pressed to his neck, as if checking his own pulse. When his fingers dropped away, Lex saw what looked like a nicotine patch on the assassin’s throat.

The man glanced in the direction of the bus terminal and nodded, listening to a voice that only he could hear.

Lex followed the line of his gaze. His gut twisted as he saw the second shooter, the woman, emerging from between two white-roofed single-decker buses. She had her hands clasped together, holding her gun out of sight under the folds of a light-colored jacket.

Her head turned, dazzling sunlight flashing off those big glasses, and she looked right at Lex. Her body language changed in an instant, as if a switch had tripped inside her. She started walking his way, slow and unhurried. She had the same kind of patch on her neck as the other guy, and her mouth shaped more words that Lex could not make out.

The matter of his survival collapsed down to one single option. Lex couldn’t head for the bus terminal, he couldn’t go back the way he had come or down the road that descended the hill. Those routes would take him right across the paths of the assassins.

But there were clumps of people going in and out of the old walled city, more groups of tourists crossing the stone bridge that led to the historic gate into Mdina, enough of them for Lex to use as cover. He moved as quickly as he could, the old pain in his leg biting anew, and screened himself behind a clutch of laughing sightseers busily taking selfies.

He felt a strange moment of dislocation as he threaded his way toward the baroque portal rising up in front of him. He knew little about Mdina’s real past, but he remembered that this place had doubled for mythic castles in television fantasy sagas, shows that Lex had binge-watched on long and lonely nights as he waited for his code to compile. He half-expected the people on the bridge to draw swords and come at him; it felt like the whole world wanted him dead.

He tensed with every step he took, waiting for another silent shot to strike him between the shoulder blades, but it didn’t come. As he passed into the shadowed streets of the medieval fortress, he shivered involuntarily.

On the far side of the gate, the road split into three, and the milling tourist crowd went straight ahead, following Villegaignon Street past the entrance to St. Agatha’s Chapel, the first of half a dozen churches crammed inside Mdina’s millennia-old ramparts. Lex broke off from the group, slipping away into the side street that followed the line of the fortress’s southern wall. There was another entrance into the old city that he had seen from the taxi which brought him here, to the west. If he could reach it and double back, he still had a chance to get away unseen.

He started sprinting, but the pace didn’t come easily. With each slap of his trainers on the cobbled street his bad leg jolted him. Soon the walls began to close in, near enough that he could have reached out his arms and touched both sides at once. The narrowing passage captured some of the daylight, reflecting off the sandstone walls and casting precious few shadows where he might have halted to get his bearings. Off the main thoroughfare, Mdina seemed deserted, reinforcing the strange movie-set aura of the place, but Lex couldn’t afford to stop, not when the assassins were so close on his heels.

He skidded around a shallow corner and spotted the arch concealing the western gate. The locals called Mdina the “Silent City” because of a preservation edict that forbade the use of cars inside the walls for all but a few residents, but there was more to it than that. The old battlements seemed to channel sound into odd, ghostly echoes or soak it up entirely. Lex couldn’t be sure if the rapid steps he heard behind him were his own footfalls reverberating back at him or those of a killer, and he didn’t dare to slow his pace to find out.

He made it to the gate and dashed though, emerging once more into the full brightness of the day at the top of a ramp leading down to the highway.

The woman in the cap and glasses had anticipated him. She was coming up the ramp to the western gate in quick runner’s strides, her face flushed with effort. She held her gun close to her waist. They both stopped short in surprise as they saw one another.

She recovered first. Her weapon came up, the blocky black shape of the revolver seeming too large for her long and delicate fingers. Lex was briefly dazzled by something—then saw that the pistol had an integral laser sight beneath the barrel, sending a crimson dot dancing down his face, across his throat and chest.

He threw himself back toward the gateway as she fired twice. The pistol let out a low metallic clatter, more like the sound of jangling keys than the thunder of a gunshot. Divots of yellow stone splintered out of the arch, hot fragments nicking Lex’s cheek as a bullet almost struck him.

He veered back the way he had come and ran deeper into the city, jackknifing into the first side street he found to get out of the woman’s line of sight. A third bullet cracked into the flagstones at his feet as he lurched around the turn. The narrow thoroughfares of Mdina had been designed to be no longer than the length of an arrow’s shot, so that invaders couldn’t get the drop on local soldiers, but against modern firearms that conceit counted for little. Lex’s headlong flight took him up a shallow rise, beneath lines of colored glass lanterns hanging out over the street, past windows barred by iron grates and locked doors. He saw the red splash of the laser off the wall ahead of him and dodged aside again before the assassin could draw a bead.

Lex skidded into a piazza, the wide-open space dominated on the far side by the bright frontage and bell towers of the Cathedral of  St. Paul. More clumps of tourists were dithering here, groups of elderly folk up from the cruise liners moored in Valetta or parents with their animated children in tow, snapping pictures or listening to fast-talking guides leading them about on walking tours. Lex looked past the travelers, trying to find another escape route.

The few cars that were permitted inside the city walls were parked here, and he scanned them, desperately looking for one he could steal. His gaze caught on the other assassin. The man halted across the way from him, pretending to be interested in the complex ironwork of an ornate second-floor balcony. One hand curled across his belly, hidden under his jacket. The man rocked off his heels and turned in Lex’s direction, the motion calculated to look casual and non-threatening.

A fresh surge of panic came over Lex and he searched the faces of the oblivious holiday makers. He wanted to shout at the top of  his lungs, scream for help. But if he did that, what would happen? In his mind’s eye he could see the two killers firing wildly into the crowd, slaughtering people in a mad rush to end him.

Lex started walking, quickly and purposefully, pulling his hoodie tighter around him. He did have one last card to play, one final risky gambit that might get him out of this. But he needed height and distance to make it work.

He passed a boutique selling expensive ornamental glassware, on the ground floor of what had once been a medieval hostel. He looked up, briefly wondering if he could access the building’s roof from within. Outside the boutique stood a life-size mock-up of a Maltese Hospitaller Knight. Without warning it was thrown back, slamming against the wall, falling into pieces at Lex’s feet. He saw the bright silver edges of a bullet hole through the knight’s chest plate and staggered back, catching sight of the woman standing at the mouth of the side street. She had her gun concealed in the same way as her partner, and the shot she fired had passed through the gaps in the crowd and nearly struck its intended target. All the tourists were looking  in Lex’s direction now, surprised by the commotion but still utterly unaware of the assassins in their midst.

At last, Lex’s reserve snapped and he gave up all pretense of trying to blend in. He started running again, weaving through the people ambling along the main street, ignoring the curses and shouts left in his wake. He gambled that his hunters would follow him at a more careful pace, knowing that the narrow road he followed only ended in one place. Lex was deliberately boxing himself in, cutting off other avenues of escape.

The street emptied into the Piazza Tas-Sur, an open space more commonly known as Bastion Square. Around the edges, restored palazzos with red-fronted doors had been turned into museums or terraced restaurants, making the most of the superlative view out across the northern ramparts of the city. Visitors stood on the broad steps that led to the top of the battlements, taking in the sheer drop down the side of the hill to Mdina, the outlook over the village of Ta’ Qali and the vineyards beyond. On a clear day like today, it was possible to see out to St. Paul’s Bay and the resort town of Buggiba on the northern coast.

The pain in Lex’s bad leg collected around the knee joint and he winced as he slowed to a walk. He started checking the zips and fasteners on his clothing, making sure they were secure. Under different circumstances, what he planned to do now would have excited him. He would have a GoPro clipped to his shoulder, and the action camera set to record everything. But here and now he was more afraid than he had ever been in his life, driven by abject terror instead of a thrill-seeking impulse.

Lex closed up the hoodie and tugged a canister from the thigh pocket of his cargo trousers. The size of a large beer can, it attached to a web of expanding bungie cords that he spooled out and looped over his shoulders, snapping them together with a spring-loaded D-ring. He pulled it tight and the canister sat high on his back, between his shoulder blades.

Lex took a deep breath and climbed the stairs up to the battlements two at a time. As he reached the top, he felt the distant twitch of his stomach swooping before the sight of the drop.

If I do this wrong it will end me, he told himself. But if he didn’t do it, the shooters would put him down right here in front of everyone. He turned his head and closed his eyes, feeling the breath of the wind on his face, sensing the direction of the gusts.

Then Lex reached up his back for a red plastic toggle on the bottom of the canister, and stepped over the cautionary signs warning not to approach the unguarded edge.

Behind him, Lex’s pursuers held their guns sideways on and low. They kept them down by their hips, hidden in the folds of their jackets. Both of them fired, but even with their specialized training, their shots were off-target by too great a margin. One round blasted a discarded water bottle sitting on a step, the other blew up a puff of rock dust a few inches from the target’s feet. Again, the faces of bystanders started to turn in his direction.

He is going to kill himself, ” said the male assassin through the wireless communication node adhered to his throat. This was unexpected.

No,” said the woman, her reply tickling him through his skin. “I don’t think so . . .”

The target’s arm came down in a sharp  motion,  and the object he had strapped to his back snapped open into a blossom of bright orange fabric and fine white cords. The thin material immediately caught the steady breeze and inflated into a narrow rectangle with a kite-like cross-section.

A parachute?” The man disregarded protocol and launched forward, hoping to get to the target before he could step off the ledge.

The compact canopy filled with wind, drawing shouts of surprise from the assembled tourists in the square, and the target pushed off the side of Mdina’s battlements and into the air.

The woman grabbed her partner by the shoulder and pulled him back. “Wait.” She was already putting her weapon away.

He resisted, irritated at the idea of missing the kill. The chute was little better than a gimmick, a toy that would barely slow the target’s descent. If he got to the edge, if the woman covered him, he might still be able to hit the mark. It was galling to think that this civilian would escape them.

Both of you stand away,” said a third voice. “I have this.

 

 

Lex had half-expected the micro-chute to flop out and tangle, leaving him with nowhere to go, but the device performed better than he dared to expect. A nasty shock went through his chest and shoulders as the canopy took his weight and the cords cut into his flesh, but that was a small price to pay for getting away from the silent shooters. An unexpected thermal from the base of the tall hill threw him up and to the side, slipping him away from the edge of the fortress city, carrying him toward the farms ranged out below. Elation shocked through his body.

It would be a hard landing, he could tell from the rapid rate of descent and the fluttering of the canopy, but it would be one he could stagger away from and that was all that mattered. Lex was already thinking about what to do next—find a vehicle, get down to the coast and get off this rock—when the wind boosted him up once again in a brief rise. He caught sight of the church spires and tiled rooftops across Mdina and Rabat.

In the tallest of the towers, the light of the sun glittered in reflection. A flare off the glassy eye of a telescopic sight.

A moment later, a single steel-cored 7.62mm bullet penetrated Lex’s body a few degrees off his sternum and tumbled violently as it passed through him. In the brief instant it took to enter through his chest and burst out through his back, the round spun and ripped through the tissues of his lungs, and tore open the bottom of his heart. Blood gushed into the ragged void created by the passage of the sniper shot and his body twitched as it went into brutal, fatal shutdown.

Lex died as he sank toward the ground, his life ended in an instant. When his corpse finally crashed into a row of vines down in the valley, his clothes and the orange chute were soaked with a wet mess of dark, arterial red.

A tourist pointed over the edge of the battlements and shrieked. Others were holding up cell phones to record what was going on, and neither Cat nor Dog wanted to remain in the square a moment longer, for fear their faces might get captured on some idiot’s video footage.

Back to the rendezvous point,” Dog said, stepping back from the ramparts. He gave Cat the slightest of sideways looks as he walked away, acting as if they had no connection to one another. “Leave through the main entrance. I will go through the west gate.

Understood,” said Cat, speaking without speaking, the device on her neck sensing the half-constructed words as they formed in her throat and turning them into a droning signal. The sub-voc unit made her skin crawl and she resisted the urge to scratch her face, directing the motion into adjusting the sunglasses perched on her small nose.

I am making my way to the car,” Fox said. Cat unconsciously looked up, although from where she was there was no way to see the high roost the sniper had used. “Local law enforcement officers are at the site of the first engagement. Recommend we shift to secondary exit protocol.” Dog was team leader, so the decision was his, but both he and Cat respected the elder Fox’s field experience and the answer was as she

expected it to be. “Agreed.

She passed by the cathedral and quickened her pace. Her fellow assassin had already vanished into a side street. “What about the target?” “I saw where he went down,” Dog replied. “We must act quickly if

we are to get there before anyone else.

I had to leave the rifle behind,” Fox admitted. “You sanitized it?” said Dog.

Of course.

Then it won’t be an issue,” Dog added. “Proceed.

Cat slowed her pace as she passed through the Mdina gate and stopped at a vendor to buy a bottle of chilled water, aping the tourists congregating nearby. As she paid for the drink, the green Fiat the team had been provided with came around the corner and slowed to a halt. Cat walked over and climbed into the back.

From the driving seat, Fox gave her a nod and then drove on, halting a second time at the next intersection to pick up Dog. As they rolled away from the traffic lights, a silver police car lined with a blue checkerboard livery raced past in the other direction. As soon as it was out of sight over the crest of the hill, Fox accelerated away, aiming the car toward Ta’ Qali.

“Why was he not killed with the first shot?” Fox’s voice sounded gruff when he spoke aloud. He didn’t direct the accusation at either of them, but Dog stared out of the window and at first gave no indication he was listening.

“The Greek and his bodyguard were more dangerous,” said Cat, after a moment, as she peeled the comm unit’s self-adhesive pad from her neck. “They were armed. They needed to be neutralized first.” She always felt odd talking immediately after removing the sub-voc—she had to consciously remember not to whisper each word she said.

Fox was going to add more, but Dog turned to him. “Just drive,” he said. “If we don’t get what we came here for, then we will have to consider our alternate options. That will extend the duration of the mission.” He gave Cat a look. “None of us want to be here any longer than we must be, no?”

Cat shook her head, and began reloading  her  weapon,  swinging out the revolver’s angled chambers to insert fresh rounds. There might be witnesses at the landing site, she reasoned, and if that were the case it would be necessary to silence them as well.

 

Copyright © 2020 by James Swallow

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5 Action Thrillers to Read This Fall

It’s finally cooling down–at least where we are in NYC, but we want to keep up our summer sense of adventure with the latest action thrillers (and one that will be here soon!)

Did you read any great thrillers this summer that should be on the list?

Nomad by James Swallow

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James Swallow begins his espionage thriller series with Nomad featuring British desk jockey intelligence operative turned active agent. Marc Dane is a MI6 field agent at home behind a computer screen, one step away from the action. But when a brutal attack on his team leaves Dane the only survivor—and with the shocking knowledge that there are traitors inside MI6—he’s forced into the front line.

Matters spiral out of control when the evidence points toward Dane as the perpetrator of the attack. Accused of betraying his country, he must race against time to clear his name.

No Good Deed by Victor Gischler

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From Victor Gischler, the author behind the high-octane, action-packed thriller Stay, comes No Good Deed, a suspenseful novel about how an ordinary man–trying to do the right thing–finds himself in an extraordinary situation.

Francis was running late for work when he found the suitcase and the odd card with an email on it. He knew he shouldn’t bother but he couldn’t resist. Now Francis is dodging bullets and doing his best to stay alive, wishing he had never bothered with that suitcase full of clothes.

Zero Sum Game by S.L. Huang

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A blockbuster, near-future science fiction thriller, S.L. Huang’s Zero Sum Game introduces a math-genius mercenary who finds herself being manipulated by someone possessing unimaginable power.

Cas should run, like she usually does, but for once she’s involved. There’s only one problem…she doesn’t know which of her thoughts are her own anymore.

Assassin’s Run by Ward Larsen

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Ward Larsen’s Assassin’s Run revives globe-trotting, hard-hitting assassin David Slaton for another breathless espionage adventure.

When a Russian oligarch is killed by a single bullet on his yacht off the Isle of Capri, Russian intelligence sources speculate that a legendary Israeli assassin, long thought dead, might be responsible. However, David Slaton—the assassin in question—is innocent. Realizing the only way to clear his name is to find out who’s truly responsible, he travels to Capri.

Every Wicked Man by Steven James

Poster Placeholder of - 25A criminal mastermind’s chilling terrorist plot forces FBI Special Agent Patrick Bowers to the brink in the latest thriller from bestselling novelist Steven James.

When a senator’s son takes his own life and posts the video live online, Agent Bowers is drawn into a complex web of lies that begins to threaten the people he loves the most. As he races to unravel the mystery behind the suicide and a centuries-old code that might help shed light on the case, he finds a dark pathway laced with twists and deadly secrets that touch a little too close to home.

 

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New Releases: 9/11/18

Happy New Release Day! Here’s what went on sale today.

The Echo Room by Parker Peevyhouse

Image Placeholder of - 98 The only thing worse than being locked in is facing what you locked out.

Rett Ward knows how to hide. He’s had six years of practice at Walling Home, the state-run boarding school where he learned how to keep his head down to survive.

But when Rett wakes up locked in a small depot with no memory of how he got there, he can’t hide. Not from the stranger in the next room. Or from the fact that there’s someone else’s blood on his jumpsuit.

Nomad by James Swallow

Poster Placeholder of - 25 Marc Dane is a MI6 field agent at home behind a computer screen, one step away from the action. But when a brutal attack on his team leaves Dane the only survivor—and with the shocking knowledge that there are traitors inside MI6—he’s forced into the front line.

Matters spiral out of control when the evidence points toward Dane as the perpetrator of the attack. Accused of betraying his country, he must race against time to clear his name.

Port of Shadows by Glen Cook

Place holder  of - 17 The soldiers of the Black Company don’t ask questions, they get paid. But being “The Lady’s favored” is attracting the wrong kind of attention and has put a target on their backs–and the Company’s historian, Croaker, has the biggest target of all.

The one person who was taken into The Lady’s Tower and returned unchanged has earned the special interest of the court of sorcerers known as The Ten Who Were Taken. Now, he and the company are being asked to seek the aid of their newest member, Mischievous Rain, to break a rebel army. However, Croaker doesn’t trust any of the Taken, especially not ones that look so much like The Lady and her sister…

State Tectonics by Malka Older

Placeholder of  -76 The future of democracy must evolve or die.

The last time Information held an election, a global network outage, two counts of sabotage by major world governments, and a devastating earthquake almost shook micro-democracy apart. Five years later, it’s time to vote again, and the system that has ensured global peace for 25 years is more vulnerable than ever.

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The Beginning Place by Ursula K. Le Guin

Image Place holder  of - 87 Fleeing from the monotony of his life, Hugh Rogers finds his way to “the beginning place”—a gateway to Tembreabrezi, an idyllic, unchanging world of eternal twilight. Irena Pannis was thirteen when she first found the beginning place. Now, seven years later, she has grown to know and love the gentle inhabitants of Tembreabrezi, or Mountaintown, and she sees Hugh as a trespasser.

But then a monstrous shadow threatens to destroy Mountaintown, and Hugh and Irena join forces to seek it out. Along the way, they begin to fall in love. Are they on their way to a new beginning…or a fateful end?

The Eye of the Heron by Ursula K. Le Guin

In Victoria on a former prison colony, two exiled groups—the farmers of Shantih and the City dwellers—live in apparent harmony. All is not as it seems, however. While the peace-loving farmers labor endlessly to provide food for the City, the City Bosses rule the Shantih with an iron fist. When a group of farmers decide to form a new settlement further away, the Bosses retaliate by threatening to crush the “rebellion.”

NEW IN MANGA

The Ancient Magus’ Bride Vol. 9 Story and art by Kore Yamazaki

Didn’t I Say to Make My Abilities Average in the Next Life?! (Light Novel) Vol. 3 Story by FUNA; Art by Itsuki Akata

Dragon Goes House-Hunting Vol. 1 Story by Kawo Tanuki; Art by Choco Aya

The Testament of Sister New Devil STORM! Vol. 4 Story by Tetsuto Uesu; Art by Fumihiro Kiso

Toradora! Vol. 8 Story by Yuyuko Takemiya; Art by Zekkyo

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