By Jamie K. Schmidt
Genre: paranormal romance
ISBN: 1534805680
ASIN: B0177E5Z8S
Book Description:
Erotic, Sexy and Sweet tales of
vampires, ghosts, mages, shifters and dreamers of dreams.
In this story collection, you will enter
an adult bookstore run by two vampires and partake in the bloodletting and sex,
see a witch accidentally summon a vampire who gains power through love making,
and then go clubbing with an urban vampire.
However, vampires aren't the only
supernatural beings in this compelling collection of stories. Ghosts jam with
their favorite rock bands. A Grail Maiden helps protect Arthur's cup, and a
paralyzed cyber mercenary finds love inside virtual reality.
Excerpt:
Deirdre was a European princess whose
lineage, no one dared question too closely.
She kept close companionship with Viola, a dark Countess of equal renown
and deadly beauty. In a time where the
night was feared, they flourished and fed at all the best parties of the
nobility.
The Princess was as fair and fey
as a moonbeam with silver hair and cerulean eyes. She lived for excess and to play with her new
found friends.
The Countess was the opposite
side of the coin. With raven locks and
soulless black eyes, she was a lithe viper who struck quickly and gleaned minions
from the throngs of addled noblemen.
But good times always end, even
for immortal royalty and when the church's mercenaries, The Prophecy of the
Eye, became too interested in the beautiful thralls encircling the Princess and
the Countess, the parties suddenly stopped.
This cycle continued for many
centuries. Deirdre and Viola graced
Czarist Russia, continued on to Gay Paris and finally to the New World in gin
joints and sleazy jazz dives of the Big Easy.
While America lacked the polished
old world charm and the distinct respect for one's betters, it also provided
more of everything else, from money and thrills, to gambling and illegal
liquor.
Its wide terrain allowed the
Princess and the Countess to move from state to state until technology caught
up with them and they learned the value of keeping a low profile. They were able to exploit the innocence of
the forties and fifties, but were swept away into a drunken frenzy of Free
Love.
By the late seventies, they
reached a rhythm that was blown away by the "Me" generation of the
eighties and the cynical creep of the 90's that exposed the world's monsters in
vivid detail across television screens and eventually the Internet.
Now in the new millennia, there
is nowhere to hide and no other frontiers to explore. They found out the luxuries of the day could
be gone in an instant. Swiss bank
accounts could be seized and the Princess and the Countess could be among the
nouveau poor, scraping their living feeding off homeless and runaways. They have become merchants, biding their time
and hoping for another renaissance of excess.
An ignoble end for two from the
finest Carpathian bloodlines.
Perhaps a fitting end some may
say, for however pretty the monsters are, they are still creatures of the
night— or from hell as the church's mercenaries proclaim.
The church's vanguards have also
migrated from Europe. And like the Princess and the Countess, they have morphed
and remade themselves to fit the times.
Always hunting, they are similar to the women they chase, although they
would balk to see the comparison. The
church mercenaries seek to destroy magic and any evil that lives outside their
doctrine.
Whether their victims deserve
their fate or not is irrelevant.
It was so much easier for both
during the simple times, where murder was accepted and random acts of violence
and carnage need not be explained for helicopters with news teams or amateur
videographers. They've learned a new
dance for the modern world and it is kept to a very fine line. Like the sword of Damocles, the truce poises
hair thin. It is not a matter of if that
strand will break, but when.
And darkness save the innocents
caught between.
Dream Killer
Flash Fiction By
Jamie K. Schmidt
I
swore I was going to do it. And this time, I meant it. He had finally gone too
far,
pushed
my last button, and said the unforgivable.
“When
I married you my dreams died.”
The
fight ended quickly after that. In the vacuum silence of words that can’t be
taken back, he looked as stunned as I felt. But he put up his chin with false
bravado and waited for my one-two riposte. I merely left the room.
The
apartment shook when he crashed the door open. He peeled out of the complex
driveway in a puff of smoke and burned rubber. A huge belch came from the
living room and the stench of burning sulphur wafted into my study. I came out
to investigate. My husband’s words had summoned forth a creature that was too
small to be a demon, too malevolent to be an imp. The creature was straddling
the couch. Its
yellow
eyes were narrowed at me. It hissed, showing pointy teeth. I crept closer and
it swiped out at me, its bony arms like broomsticks. His scissor bladed claws
cut the sleeve of my robe. I backed away, threw a pillow at it. It caught it
and shredded it into confetti. What was warlock born could not be witched away
but it also could not harm me. I hissed back at it and cast a protective spell
around my cat, whose back was arched like the letter A.
Three
days of silence passed. My husband was grumpy and sullen, rattling the paper
and slamming dishes to fill up the emptiness and the quiet. I moved like the
walking wounded. There was a hole in my soul where happiness once lived. I was
numb.
The
creature would appear and disappear. Always watching, never attacking us. It
played
with itself, picked its nose. But for the most part was content with existing
in the silence of our world. If my husband noticed it, he gave no sign. I
ignored it.
After
a week, things gradually started returning to normal. I still pretended to be
asleep when he came to bed, when I wasn’t in my office all night staring at the
world map and wondering if anyone out there hurt as much as I did. We didn’t
talk, but I found I could meet my husband’s eyes. I saw no apology in them, but
I really didn’t expect to. The creature faded slightly, became translucent.
But
as I became angrier at the unfairness, the creature fed on my emotions. As I
thought, “Did he think that he was the only one who sacrificed, compromised?”,
it solidified again. Its teeth and claws elongated and curved into Kris
daggers. The creature followed me around and would preen when I clenched and
unclenched my fist.
Back
in our routine, my husband would go to work and come home. I stopped making
supper or cleaning the house. He could do his own laundry and fend for himself.
I made phone calls and robotically did what I had to do. He would stay in
watching television or stay out late in bars. I didn’t care either way. The
creature would curl up on the couch beside him or swing from the drapes, depending
on our moods.
Today,
I heard my husband in the shower and I walked over to the window of my study
and laid my forehead against the window pane. The sensation was like eating ice
cream too fast and I had a giddy recollection of summer time. The door slammed
and jolted me away from tire swings and seagulls. I sipped my coffee as I
watched him get into his car and drive to work. He never looked up. I wonder if
he even thought of me.
The
creature plastered its tongue on the window, making huge streaks. Shortly after
ten, the movers arrived. I sat on my kitchen counter and watched them
professionally pack up my things. The creature, hidden by my invisibility
spell, danced around them and jumped from box to box.
“No,
that stays.” I said when they started towards the TV set. I directed them to my
office and went back to my perch, slowly stirring a head ache relief potion.
The
movers were expensive. But if I had to carry box after box into my car all by
myself I never would have left him. It wasn’t the first time, I sat
contemplating leaving. I would grab a handful of clothes from the closet and
got as far as the bed with them. I’d sit and wonder if I should donate most to
the Salvation Army before packing. Then I would chide myself for giving up. And
I would talk myself into staying. It was harder to leave than in was to stay.
We had been playing at being happy for a long time.
I
received my power from my dreams and prayers. If I had made him impotent by
marrying
him, then I could rectify that by leaving him. I picked up my cat and my purse
and walked out to the car.
When
my husband came home tonight, I wanted him to see the living room as it always
was. He wouldn’t notice that my books or my knitting would be gone. Maybe he’d
watch TV for a bit. Maybe he would go into the kitchen to raid the leftovers or
to pop a frozen dinner in the microwave. He wouldn’t notice my coffee mugs were
missing or that my teapot collection had been lovingly removed.
But
he would see the creature, formed out of his belligerence and sustained by our
negative
emotions. I looked up from the parking lot to see it rubbing its butt cheeks
against the study windows. They would make a good couple.
The
End
About the
Author:
USA Today bestselling author, Jamie K.
Schmidt, writes erotic contemporary love stories and paranormal romances. Her steamy, romantic comedy Life’s a Beach
reached #65 on USA Today, #2 on Barnes and Noble and #9 on Amazon. Her Club Inferno series from Random House’s
Loveswept line has hit both the Amazon and Barnes and Noble top one hundred
lists and the first book in the series, Heat put her on the USA Today
bestseller list. Her dragon paranormal
romance series from Entangled Publishing, has been called “fun and quirky” and
“endearing.” Partnered with New York Times bestselling author and former porn
actress, Jenna Jameson, Jamie’s hardcover debut, SPICE, continues Jenna’s FATE
trilogy.
Facebook: www.facebook.com/jamie.k.schmidt.1
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