Book Review (SERIES): League of Lords

Looking over some other reviews before starting this one – the description of a water-down X-men by way of a Victorian Regency Romance does a real good job of capturing the story. For most of the reviewers, this was a negative – for me, it’s enough of a positive that after reading book 1 (using the first one free-marketing scheme), I picked up book 2 (priced real cheap), and then onto book 3. I’ll pass book 4, since I have a high dislike of time travel – Days of Future Past and other time twisty stories annoy me. I enjoyed all three of the books I did read.

League of Lords series by Tracy Sumner

  1. The Lady is Trouble
  2. The Rake is Taken
  3. The Duke is Wicked
  4. The Hellion is Tamed (not reviewed)

 

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BOOK BLURB ON AMAZON for THE LADY IS TROUBLE

What’s a reluctant viscount to do when the woman he can’t have becomes the woman he can’t live without?

Viscount Julian Alexander works dutifully to protect London’s outcast clairvoyants. But when the woman he’s sworn to keep from harm threatens to turn his orderly life and League of the gifted upside down, he finds himself craving her above all others. And with her brash American ways driving him to distraction, he fears the ensuing chaos could expose them all to danger.

Psychic healer Lady Piper Scott is tired of being ignored by the man she desires. In an impulsive bid to draw his attention, she slips her protective leash to pose as a medium for bored aristocrats. But when an arsonist turns the séance into an inferno, her plan simultaneously succeeds and fails when Julian flies into a rage… and then whisks her away to his mansion, alone.

Confronted with the woman’s implacable persistence, the handsome nobleman worries that giving into his heart will only inch her closer to those who would abuse her power. But Piper is more resolute than ever to prove her place is by his side, opposing their enemies together.

MY REVIEW for THE LADY IS TROUBLE

First of the series: Why I like – I love friends-to-lovers troupes. The main couple grew up together. Viscount Julian is trying to distant himself from Lady Piper, stiff upper lip and all that – to protect her, of course, but the Lady is having none of that.

The women of this series are all “unconventional” – i.e. they are all very modern (as in OUR time, not Victorian England time) in their want of independence and their sexuality.

Piper starts wearing down Julian, convincing him the fortress of controlled emotions is a prison and not a defense, but then bad guys happen, proving his point. Will she be able to prove love is an even stronger fortress, especially with the love of found family to support them?

 

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BOOK BLURB ON AMAZON for THE RAKE IS TAKEN

A gorgeous psychic. An unwanted betrothal. A tantalizing compromise.

Lady Victoria Hamilton has a supernatural gift, a fiancé, and a guardian angel. She just never expected her protector to be the most dazzling man in England, a devilish scoundrel they call the Blue Bastard. Victoria has agreed to marry for duty, not love, but her unforeseen desire for her mystical angel threatens to destroy not only her plans for the future but the armor surrounding her susceptible heart.

A confirmed scoundrel, a mind reader, and the only man she desires…

Illegitimate son of a viscount and reigning king of London’s gossip sheets, Finn Alexander has spent a lifetime hiding his ability to read minds behind charming smiles and wicked behavior. No one knows the real man, and he likes it that way. Until he meets the lone woman who sees the man beneath the disguise—a blue-blooded temptress with the power to bring him to his knees.

As they embark on a journey of passion and friendship, Victoria and Finn must decide if they’re willing to risk everything for the promise of true, magical love.

MY REVIEW for THE RAKE IS TAKEN

The second book of League of Lords follows the way-Way-WAY too handsome Finn Alexander, mind-reader, dealing with the first woman in his life whose mind wasn’t an open book. How do you woo a woman when you don’t know what she is thinking, and Lady Victoria is a bit more unconventional than most, so guessing doesn’t work. He is going to have to (gasp) TALK to her and actually listen to the responses.

The paranormal activity continues to be fun in the second book, the presentation of mind-reading works well, and the extended paranormal community for the League of Lord grows in complexity and interest. For the regency romance side, we have a forced engagement, a faked engagement, and tons of other beloved troupes. A good book, more lively than the first.

 

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BOOK BLURB ON AMAZON for THE DUKE IS WICKED

~FINALIST: HOLT Medallion 2022
~WINNER: MAGGIE Award 2022
~Best Reads of 2021 – Lady With a Quill Reviews

He’s harboring a fiery secret….

The Duke of Ashcroft is determined to keep the League of Lords under wraps. After all, the group’s supernatural gifts brought the mystical misfits together and nobody is going to tear them apart. Intelligent and wily, Sebastian knows better than to trust anyone–especially an impulsive and intrusive American woman.

She’s looking for answers…

Competitive and confident, Delaney Temple is hellbent on uncovering the truth about the League. She’ll stop at nothing to unearth the secrets they’re burying. But when Sebastian is in trouble and Delaney comes to his rescue, their contempt turns to a burning desire. Suddenly, with their passion ignited, they can no longer deny their attraction.

A wicked duke. A troublesome beauty. And the forbidden desire they can’t deny.

MY REVIEW for THE DUKE IS WICKED

Our fiery Duke meets his match in an America woman, who makes the unconventional women who married his friends look normal. Struggling with class and culture is a battle the Duke is willing to face, but can he keep Delaney’s interest on him instead of on the books inside her head?

This third book of the series is both stronger and weaker than the first two. Delaney’s power is interesting, but not as visceral as the rest of the members of the League. The familiar characters from the past stories continue to fill out the larger world, but the best Big Bad so far facing off against our League of Lords happened in book one – and a superhero series is only as good as its villains.

A good read, better than average, especially if you like romance and superhero mixes.

Book Review (SERIES): Fleet of Malik

 

Fleet of Malik by Liana Brooks

  1. Bodies in Motion
  2. Change in Momentum

Another series from one of my favorite authors. A perfect marriage of future-humanism sci-fi, romance, and mystery-thrillers. Plus people of color in the mix. These are complicated so it takes her a while to write them. Fingers crossed that she will be a bug to write a bunch of them soon!

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BOOK BLURB ON AMAZON for BODIES IN MOTION

Selena Caryll lost everything in the war—her ship, her crew, her family. Although technically on the winner’s side, her lack of crew makes her easy pickings in any fight—and any bar brawl. But she never goes down without swinging.

Titan Sciarra, on the losing side of the war, brokered a kind of peace with the winners, enough to let him live as the fragile bridge between the two sides. As a Fleet Guardian, he deals with the day-to-day operations of the fleet—and breaks up bar brawls when necessary.

As a Guardian, obviously he should walk the fired-up Selena home. Make sure she gets there safe.

Definitely without flirting. That could bring his delicately spun balance crashing down, dragging the fleet with him.

If only a way existed to get the bodies of the fleet into motion again.

An action-packed enemies-to-lovers romance in a world drawn with stunning vision and depth—don’t miss this fantastic series from Liana Brooks.

MY REVIEW for BODIES IN MOTION

This sweet science-fiction romance-thriller is more science-fiction than romance, creating a complicated culture of grounded spacers living in an uneasy-truce with the colonists they transported. The romantic interests were on opposite sides of the spacer war – now cold war on the ground – and all that feeds into the thriller aspects.

Ms. Brooks does it again! If you loved her Time series (Discoherence, etc), you will love this.

I admit, it took me a few chapters to grasp how the tech-enhancements created the psi-powers the spacers use. Actually, I read the chapters and took a nap – after sleeping and letting my brain short it out overnight, everything made sense.

But WOW – my friends who talk about “enhanced humans” will LOVE this series. This is exactly where people hope that technology will take us. And Ms. Brooks mashes up the enhanced human but claustrophobic culture required by spacers and their ships with the less-enhanced grounders but more-versatile culture allowed by being on planet and not worrying about where your next breath will come from if the environmental machines will fail.

Amazing worldbuilding, great characters, complicated story, murder, theft, possible political coups, … just wow.

And if you just want a sweet sci-fi romance, you got that too.

Received from publisher for an honest review.

 

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BOOK BLURB ON AMAZON for CHANGE IN MOMENTUM

Rowena Lee lost the man she was supposed to marry and with him any hope for a happy future in the war. Now, five years later, with a suspicious kind of peace brokered between the sides, Rowena lives a half-life in emotional isolation. Neither her former enemies nor her crew have any use for her, and her only joy comes from her new job training cadets—something made difficult lately by Commander Silar’s constant, irritating presence. If he got out of her way for just THREE SECONDS, she could actually DO her job.

Commander Hollis Silar came out of the war a hero, the golden boy who could do no wrong. Romance came easily too: easy come, and easy go. But Rowena? Challenging. Like trying to flirt with a rock. Especially since he shouldn’t associate with her in the first place.

As politics heat up on Malik IV and factions begin to draw battle lines, an unknown enemy forces Rowena and Hollis into an uneasy partnership. Love is a battlefield, and on Malik IV, war is in the air.

A sensual enemies-to-lovers romance for everyone who believes in the power of one strong woman to change the world.

MY REVIEW for CHANGE IN MOMENTUM

An enemies-to-friends science fiction romance follows a couple who trained together as children in a generational-spaceship navy, like all members of their community, then ended up on opposite sides of the war. They were both VERY good at being soldiers, leaving a wake of unforgivable actions ordered by their superiors.

Then the navy got grounded and everyone in the civil war had to live together again. Ms. Brooks has created a fascinating society of spacers who are grounded, military who are now forced to live with civilians, warriors acting as police, etc. The tech the spacers produces results that look like teleporting, telepathy, quick healing, and other psychic powers.

This series is the best futurism, altered-humans I have ever read in a sci-fi setting. You aren’t hit over the head with it, but the enhanced human capabilities are integral to the story.

Back to the romance/thriller part of the sci-fi – an complicated political plot, with spies and terrorists, is investigated by the friend-enemy couple. During the investigation, the will-kill-each-other-someday military officers are forced to work together again and again. I love the slow reveal of how people can overcome the past.

One of the best books out there on many different levels: enhanced human sci-fi, friend-enemy romance, exploration of what happens when divergent cultures meet, and political intrigue. Five star all the way.

Disclaimer: Received an Advance Reader Copy (ARC) for an honest review.

SECOND READ THROUGH REVIEW – So my book club picked up the book on my recommendation and, of course, I had to read it again even though it had only been a few months. But in those months the world has changed and the rowdies being get up to be a flashpoint of riots to overthrow the government so that they can be changed from paid individuals to slaves again, with confrontations where the leadership tries to make it look like the poor people did the property damage has very different connotations than when I first read the book in Feb 2020. This very secondary part of the story strikes me hard and fast now in the middle of the civil disobediences of the Summer of 2020. The story still amazes and I have to remind myself this isn’t a story written in response to what is happening now, just in response to what has always been happening.

The relationship is between an Asian woman and red-head white man (previous book of this romantic series was between a white woman and a black man – Ms. Brooks often goes for PoC choices).

Still amazing, maybe even more amazing, during the second read.

Flash: Transport to Equity Part 1 – Eleven

Photo by Joel Filipe on Unsplash

“They’re at it again.” My brother said through a downturned grimace and a glance at Jordan cradled against my shoulder. He slipped into our room, leaving the door partly open – it couldn’t be fully closed thanks to lowest bidder government contracts on the platform. Front door seals fine, as required for all space habitats, but the doors within the units, not-so-much.

Wiping the baby’s mouth after he finally released a hearty burp, I responded with a raised eyebrow and a half-shrug. “When aren’t they?”

Holland tucked his tablet away before whispering in my ear. “This one feels different.”  He lifted Jordan out of my arms and grabbed the burping cloth. With a quick meeting of eyebrows and a light touch to the three-month-old’s mouth, he asked if dad had feed him at all today.

I nodded to the single empty bottle, answering the question. Yesterday, there had been one empty and two filled ones on the box we had between our bunkbeds and the crib. With only one, that meant our stay-at-home dad had actually done some his official job as caretaker and managed a couple feedings today.

Now my brother and I don’t actually talk much. We are twins and have our own twin-speak. Facial expressions, body placement, long stares. The words just leap between us without talking. Strange, I know, for fraternal twins, but we developed it out of self-preservation before we even started talking. For him to actually speak, in hearing range of our parents, about our parents, indicated how shook he was.

I’m better at reading our parents, so I go to the door and watch.

In the background, I feel Holland rocking Jordan, talking to him with our twin-speak, keeping the kid quiet so he wouldn’t have our scars. Internal, not external. Our parents don’t abuse us, just yell and scream a lot.

At eleven, we are learning in our Ed civics courses that scars and abuse comes in all shades, but Holland and I agree we aren’t ready to report our parents because if we do, they’ll separate us. All of us. Jordan, Holland, and me, Georgia. Flung from one end of the solar system to the other getting therapy and new life assignment tracks. Never to cross paths or connect each other again. And that isn’t going to happen. Not ever. It’s the three of us against the world, starting with our parents.

They are arguing about rent. Mother’s job as an asteroid mineral assessor puts her toward the top of the food chain. Earth is mined out and needs everything it can get from its solar system colonies. Plus the pressure value to release humanity to the stars also needs a ton of substance. Between those two source demands, the asteroid belt had been getting a workout for decades. Mother and dad met while working on the same team. Dad is only so-so at finding things, but Mother was the second best in the solar system hence all our family’s special privileges.

The Population Center okay’ed them for unlimited children in the hopes her skill could be passed down. Both Holland and I have half our Ed track devoted to a life assignment as mineral assessors, and we are already showing “promise”. Based on what Holland and I can read off our evaluators, our “promise” has them crossing their fingers and toes that when our mental flip-flops to abstract thinkers happens during our teenage years, nothing will break in our heads. They have our life planned out for us.

Mother hated being pregnant and was thrilled to have twins for the first one, figuring she met her quota of replacement and then the extra the Population Center wanted. Dad wanted more, especially since you can’t be a primary stay-at-home caregiver once a minor reaches twelve, so he turned off the family’s contraceptives without telling mother last year.

That was a huge blowup. Holland and I didn’t speak a word at home until Mother’s morning sickness ended.

Dad wants better quarters; he always wants better and more. He thought with the baby we would upgrade to four rooms. With a three-room quarters, we rub elbows with other people who can have more than one child. All the gifted. The desired. The wanted. With a four-room quarters, we would be in the middle of the higher administrative crowd. Management. Dad is the child of management and wants that level of respect and power again. He also doesn’t want to work for it.

Our Ed civic courses has a lot to say about social responsibility. Having only one child until the population is under control. About not wasting resources. And working for the betterment of everyone.

Dad wants to be the everyone that everyone else is working the betterment for.

Mother is lying about not having the money to get better quarters. Since I feel the breath of a baby sleeping, I wave Holland to come over. My older brother, by nineteen minutes, puts the baby into his crib and joins me.

I motion with a sidetwist of my hand, Mother’s lying.

The two of them hate each other. A lot. But they hardly every lie to each other. They can’t keep their stories straight when they are screaming at each other, so they don’t bother with falsehoods.

But mother is lying.

“They didn’t give us a raise this quarter.”

“They didn’t give you a raise for the last four quarters!” We don’t have anything to throw in the family room, otherwise dad would have tossed something. “And yet they gave Kesha and Merick raises.”

Dad kept up with everyone from his old unit. He networks hard, even now, in the hopes of making management when he is required to return back to work.

“Because their unit found some gold needed for the breathing modules.” Mother bit her lip.

Truth. One of her biggest tells. She bites her lips while trying to think of a way to present something in a better light.

“But I did get a raise. The cost-of-living. And that extra bonus for the pregnancy.”

She’s hiding something about that extra bonus. She pressed her hand against her stomach.

Holland points out she pressed her hand against her stomach starting with the cost-of-living increase.

I agree, both of these things are being hidden on some level. Is she hiding extra income from dad? Like Holland and I do with the odds-jobs we do around the station. “Possible.” Holland nods strongly.

“Which barely paid for the twins extra Ed classes.” Dad got us into some beginning management courses; ones where we taste every job on the station, from the air scrubber rebuilding to the food vats. I go in two hours early for my internships and Holland stays two hours late; that way dad is only left with Jordan for six hours.

I still haven’t figured out how my brother and I survived our infancy; maybe dad and mother were less crazy back then?

Dad’s arms swing wide. He isn’t hearing anything right now. “Nothing for me. For us, I mean. We need you to get more bonuses.”

He switched on the charm.

For him, it is a full-on switch. Holland and I are trying to master that technique having seen several of the management instructors use it too. Only theirs is warmer, more continuous. But somehow lesser. Dad’s is a bright, room-filling, monstrosity. Behind me, I feel Jordan stir – be still – Holland and I motion and think toward the baby until he settles.

Dad grabs mother’s hands and she lets him. She always gives in when he smiles instead of yells. Everyone does. He just can’t control his temper and keep the charm up long enough to be successful at management.

“You can do it. You are the best.”

Mother licks her lips instead of biting. A grown-up seduction thing where they are going to go to their room or one of her lying tells?

“I can’t, Manny.”

Not a lie. Not exactly.

“Of course, you can. Do your magic, get Withrow to help, he is the best with the scopes.”

“You don’t understand Manny, there isn’t anything left to find.”

“What?” Dad strung the question out.

“I mean there still is, but there isn’t much left. Green sector, where Kesha is assigned, is maybe a decade out from the rest of the belt.” Mother shrugged her pulling-herself-together-and-being-determined-shrug. “We need to switch to the Oort’s to get any new big wind-falls.”

“I am not moving to that cold, light-forsaken nightmare. None of the stations there have more than five dozen people.”

“I’m not really interested either. It is a temporary solution.” Oh, mother is making eye contact, hard, sustained eye contact. This is what Holland was feeling that was different. Mother has a plan. “I’ve been looking around there, after hours, just to see. Aside from the planets and dwarfs, I’m not finding much. Maybe four decades at the rate humanity is chewing through stuff.”

“That should be fine. You and the other assessors will have plenty of time to find more stuff.”

“You are not listening Manny. There isn’t anything left to find. It’s all trash. Dross. A missed rock here and there, maybe. Our lifetime, what is already in the production line will keep things going, but not for our children.”

Wait, is that mother caring about us? Considering us? Holland and I stare at each other for a moment before returning to watching our parents. We had agreed that mother is giving all sorts of parental vibes, her standing between us and the monsters of the world.

No one besides her and dad is allowed to harm us.

“What are you saying?”

“If we want to protect our children, give them any future whatsoever, and especially our children’s children, we are going to have to immigrate, and immigrate really, really far, because Earth is going to implode in sooner than later and take anything within reach down with it.”

Dad shook his head. He is looking for a lie in her eyes and is not finding one.

There isn’t one to find. Mother is as truthful as she ever gets.

“No. That isn’t going to happen.” His deep voice rumbles firmly, trying to make his own truth.

“Manny, it is. I turned in my first ever report today that my sector is cleared. Completely cleared. As time goes by, more of these reports will accumulate. Withrow gives management about five years before they start to collate the metadata into the doomsday document.” Mother pulled her hands out of dad’s. “He applied to immigrate two years ago, about the time we stopped getting all those bonuses you liked so much. He is leaving next month.”

Dad shook his head, no-no. He is trying to deny it, twist it. Somehow make it palatable.

Holland and I join hands. For a second our eyes met. We agree. He has to believe. Our attention, all of it, return to our parents.

“Yes, and if I could I would be on a ship beside him.”

“I knew you had an affair with him.” Dad grabbed at the thought and tried pushing anger to it.

Don’t you dare go there dad, listen to mother.

“No, Manny. Me and Withrow? Please.”

Dad chuckled, acknowledging that impossibility, his anger dissolving despite his determination to find some way to fight the truth.

“But as an assessor team, he and I could name our planet and our price. Problem is no one would take me with a divorce. They don’t allow immigration for people who can’t maintain a stable relationship.”

So that is why mother has stayed with dad. I knew dad needed mother’s skill to stay anywhere near the status he wanted, but mother? She has planned to immigrate for a long time.

“Good thing you have me then.” Dad smirked.

Oops, mother gave dad power. He is going to use it before he thinks things through.

Holland squeeze my hand. Yes, I squeeze back, we need to break them up. Now. Dinner time?

Together we move to ask for food, saying we completed our Ed work. We hadn’t, of course, but we normally did it when trading off Jordan’s nighttime feedings.

(first published 3/6/2022; words 2034)

Flash: Vision

Image from freedigitalphoto.net

“Whoa,” I say, my head spinning. Spots form in front of my eyes. I may have rocked and swayed, but hard to guess as the red, green, and blue swim and dance, circling, crossing, merging. Spiraling.

I sit hard. Ground or seat, I couldn’t tell. Black and yellow add to the party. A flash, once, twice. Not unlike some of the vision migraines I get, only clear lines instead of hazy holes.

Cinnamon. I smell cinnamon. My only connection to the world while the colors convalesce into skulls. “Pen, paper,” I say, the image finally firm.

Sound returns, and feeling in my fingers, as someone shoves the requested items into my hands. “Here you go Carla. Ballpoint, blue. It’s all I got. Pencil in your left hand.” I don’t recognize the voice, can’t even tell if it is male or female, but that is normal. “You are at a table, flat surface.”

And I draw. I can’t see what I’m drawing, but I draw. Until I’m done, I won’t see anything else. I have broken fingernails scratching what comes to me into my own flesh, lacking any other medium to use.

“You recognize that?” a different voice asks as I sketch the outline with both hands, pencil immediately followed by ink.

“No, no … wait … maybe.”

A quick pass of shading obtains a response. “Gotcha, you bastard. Duran?”

“Yeah, I know where that is, amber units, calling all amber units…”

The voice fades away. I keep drawing.

Two hours later, I see a cup of water and a sandwich beside the paper. Weirdly the yellow and green come through with the mix of pencil and ink. Looking at the police, I croak, “Any luck?”

“We got him, but the kid …” the officer doesn’t meet my eyes. They didn’t bring me in until 48 hours had passed. I wish they could use me sooner, sometimes. But this gift of mine isn’t kind. Going into whatever, wherever I go, leaves a mark. No, more like a hole. A void. I’m going to spend the next week under a suicide watch, so I’m glad for the kindness of not using psychics until all other options are closed.

I lift the stuffed rabbit from my lap, where it had fallen, and give it back to the uniform. After I stand, they put my manacles back on and return me to my cell.

(words 400; first published 9/4/2023)

Flash: Twilight Hours

Photo 241261581 © Georgiy Georgiy | Dreamstime.com

The strip mall was typical, herb seller and cigarette store anchoring one end and pizza delivery anchoring the other. Packard remembered when the food anchor had been Chinese, but COVID chased the Panjins back across the ocean. In between drugs and food were a tax prep place, cursed vacations, and a title loan store. Darkness skittered away from the police spotlights, scattered furthered by the falling rain. Flipping the metal flask in her hand, Packard tucked it unopened back into raincoat’s deep pockets on the left side; the right pocket held her wand. The apple schnapps was getting low, and she would need a drink after seeing another damn dead body today.

Dashing from her compact, the contracted specialist ducked under the police tape and edged into the ten-by-ten shelter the cops had placed over the body. The drenched uniform who should have been by the tape nodded at her and stepped into the downpour to make room for her. They had met this morning shortly after dawn.

The camera kids were tucking their expensive equipment into bags, leaving only chalk marks behind. The rest of the parking lot was a wash, literally, as whatever evidence remained from the killer ran into the gutters. A detective had his badge clipped to the outside of his raincoat, trying, ineffectually, to keep the water dripping from his coat outside the chalk marks.

“About fucking time,” he muttered loudly to be heard over the rain hitting the plastic above them.

“Nice to see you too, Smithers,” Sabine Packard, Magik Consulting and Investigations sole employee, nodded at the detective. “Some of us haven’t slept yet.”

“Chief is pissed the Twilight killer is doing back-to-back days.”

“I’m too.” She walked around the body, belly open crotch to midchest on the young male, crouching down, quickly measuring the tear with her hands midair above the body. “It gets bigger each time.”

“By about six centimeters according to the lab geeks.”

She nodded, having heard this from Smithers day counterparts this morning. “What’s the bets for tomorrow’s morning location?” she asked standing in the space now clear of the forensic crew. The Twilight killer always killed one person at nightfall and another in the morning. The first death nearly four months ago. Nine days of her getting a call shortly after sunset and another just past dawn.

Eighteen, now nineteen bodies. Tomorrow, twenty, unless they figured out how to stop him or her or it.

“Monroe in statistics is improving the data and says West Side.” Smithers shrugged. “My guts says the Mall.”

Packard rotated the big onyx ring on her thumb she had inherited from her father. “Mall.” She did another rotation and then another, staring at the body. “But one of the strip areas like this one across the street.”

“Treebranch or Goody Goods?”

Packard shook her head. “Don’t know. Killer hasn’t decided … no, wait, the killer doesn’t decide.” Her eyes hazed over and Smithers pulled out his notebook and turned on his recorder.

“Doesn’t decide?” All the detectives in homicide and missing persons had been taught how to deal with a tranced clairvoyant.

Packard’s hard words softened, taking on a sing-song property. “Things escape where they wilt, crawling out into the time between. A killer feeds. A hand pets. Grow monster, growing yet. Feed me belly tum tum tum, swirling world come undone.” The consultant collapsed as though someone cut her strings.

“Oh shit,” said Detective Matt Smithers, dropping his notepad and rushing forward to keep her body from tipping over onto the dead man.

The woman looked up at the man holding her head above something stinky. “Joy,” she snarked, “something finally came through.”

“Yeah, some half-assed poetry.”

She let him move her until he laid her down, rain pouring down the edge of the tent onto her shoulder and back. Packard looked him a question and he nodded, indicating she was clear of the body and evidence contamination. “Sorry, only a quarter elf. My dad was capable of whole-ass poetry.” Placing her hands on the cement parking lot, Sabine pushed herself to standing. “Did you get it on tape?”

“Everything but ‘the killer doesn’t decide.'”

“Great, because my body tape ran out of juice sometime around noon.” Sabine wiped her hands on her raincoat. “I would have had nothing.” She nodded at the body, “Let’s have the body snatchers do their jobs, forensics must be getting bored, and you can drive me to the station.”

“Can’t you drive?” The detective asked as they walked away from the murder site through the rain, waving over the morticians and indicating the uniform had the scene until the higher levels who were canvassing the area came back.

“After being up thirty-nine hours and having a trance?”

The officer looked down at her, as he opened up the passenger side of his unmarked. “You are going to be snoring before we pull out, aren’t you?”

“If you don’t like my snoring, stay out of my bed Matt.”

He closed the door and walked around the vehicle. Sabine was already snoring before the car even turned over. “I’m trying, girl. I’m trying.”

(words 856, first published 11/1/2023)