Book One
Victoria Danann
Genre: Paranormal Romance
Publisher: 7th House
Date of Publication: January 18, 2016
ISBN:
ASIN:
Number of pages: 428
Word Count: 97k
Cover Artist: Victoria Danann
Book Description:
Ram’s book is partly My Familiar Stranger retold from his unique point of view with chapter insights from other significant characters. The story begins the first time he runs away to the New Forest at age ten, follows his recruitment by Black Swan along with his training to be a vampire hunter, and tells the story of the death of his first partner.
Set in the world of the Knights of Black Swan.
Excerpt:
Lan
(narrated by Ram’s first partner, Sir Lansdowne)
I had finished
my education and chosen to sign on with Black Swan. The ink wasn’t dry on the
paper before I was out the door. First assignment was Grunewald, the unit that
serviced Berlin. It was close enough by whister to patrol, but far enough away
to be secluded. The building was a renovation, or adaptation really, of an
eighteenth century grand house, set in the middle of a forest preserve that was
off limits to anyone not Black Swan.
I had seen a lot
of the world by then, but had never been to Berlin. I knew why we had a unit
there. Because wherever you find prevalent nightlife, you find active nests of
vampire. I didn’t have any personal experience with leeches at that time. But
you don’t have to experience a thing personally to believe people when they
tell you it’s nasty.
I had never heard
anything about vampire until six months ago. They trained our minds and bodies
to be precision instruments and occasionally said something vague about
protecting the innocent. But crap on a croissant. We had no idea we were
preparing to be the only barrier between humanity and monsters that turned out
to be real. Our story when we met civilian juvies was that we were in military
school. Hel. Close enough. Right?
Anyway, six
months ago they clued me in. There are vampire out there. I had two choices
when I turned eighteen. I could sign on as a vampire hunter or go home and keep
my mouth shut about everything I’d learned. I was told that, if I chose the
first option, I’d find that my training hadn’t even begun. I didn’t believe
that. I mean how much harder could it be? Really.
They said they
took the mouth shut part of option two very seriously. No threat was spelled
out, but it was certainly implied. I had six months to decide. So. Sure. I
thought about it. A lot.
The day before I
turned eighteen I still hadn’t decided. I returned to quarters around ten
o’clock, closed the door, switched on the light and nearly jumped out of my
skin.
My uncle was
sitting there in the dark waiting like some creeper from a film noir movie. He
laughed when I jumped.
“Right. Real
funny. What are you doing in this part of the world?”
His smile slowly
faded away. “Sit. I want to say something.”
Uncle Al wasn’t
the sort of guy you said no to. I sat in the chair closest to the sofa where
he’d parked his overbearing ass. He didn’t speak at first, just stared at me,
and I have to tell you it took every bit of the self-discipline I’d learned to
keep from squirming under that kind of scrutiny. But I knew it was some kind of
test. I was supposed to be patient and wait it out. So I did.
“You’re going to
be eighteen tomorrow.”
I smirked. “So I
hear.”
He nodded. “Are
you decided?”
I looked away.
“Honestly? No. I’ve been hoping for a sign.”
“A sign, huh?”
My uncle didn’t
seem to think that was a reliable approach to decision making.
“Well, I don’t
know what kind of sign you’re expecting. I thought I’d stop by. Won’t be here
tomorrow. So happy birthday.”
“Thanks.”
I stood when he
got up to leave. He turned toward the door, but turned back like he’d forgotten
something. I could almost see him mentally patting his pockets.
“Anything you
want to ask me?”
I wouldn’t have
thought so, but since he put it that way. There was something.
“I guess it’s
clear what choice you made. Any regrets?”
He grinned. It
was a thing so rare I couldn’t think if I’d ever seen him look pleased before.
“A good question
for a seventeen-year-old.”
“Almost
eighteen.”
“Indeed.” He
nodded. “The answer is no. Not one. Hope that helps.”
I thought about
it for a second. “Would you feel the same way if you died tomorrow?”
His grin got
even bigger. “Definitely.”
With that he
left without looking back and, in fact, it did help. Immensely.
Teachers are
known to go on every year about how you’d better get ready because the next
year is going to be so much harder. But it never is. It’s always the same
thing. So when I signed on to Black Swan for life and they told me it was about
to get real, I just smirked on the inside and thought, “Yeah. Yeah. I’ve heard
it before.”
Looking back now
I could slap my little bratty self for acting like a punk. Even if I kept it on
the inside. For once the future of dread hadn’t been overstated. It had been
understated.
The next four
years were rigorous enough to make the first five look like a glide on a paddle
board over a smooth-as-glass lake. Naturally, once we understood that we were
going to be vampire hunters, and what that meant, we began to pay attention in
earnest. But here’s the bare truth of that. Nothin’ they can do or say can
truly prepare you for what it feels like the first time you are face to face
with a pale-eyed leech who wants to rip you apart with virus-dripping fangs.
My internship
was mostly served as backup to the Grunewald Unit knights. I went to Brazil for
a few months and did an awful rotation in Central America looking for
Chupacabra. Ew. Things give me willies when I think about them. Yeah. They’re
even worse than vampire.
I was always
sent back to Berlin though. Like it was home base. That was okay with me. There
was a lot of action and the Grunewald knights were good solid teachers. They
taught me about slaying vampire and they taught me about camaraderie.
Then, of course,
there were German girls. I mean, you’ve gotta love girls who have beer with
breakfast. Right?
It was a good
place to pay my dues and hone my skills.
Three years
later, I was told that I was being sent to Jefferson Unit. Rumor had it that I
was going to be a vampire slayer in New York, New York.
I wasn’t very
impressed when the jeep stopped in front of J.U. It was the farthest thing from
Grunewald Castle. A plain brick building with not a single window showing.
Looked more like a prison than a Black Swan facility.
Don’t get me
wrong. I don’t require frills to complete me. It was just an observation. I
stopped at the intercom.
“Knock. Knock.”
“Who’s there?”
“Landsdowne.”
“Just a minute.”
I heard the
buzzer and pushed on the door. My first thought was that there was an awful lot
of activity for a place that looked so quiet on the outside. I hoisted my
duffel up higher on my shoulder and stopped a kid going by.
“Sovereign’s
office?”
“Down one level
and turn right.”
I nodded my
thanks and headed toward the elevators. The central area was impressive with
its three-story ceiling, modern gleam and polish. The place looked like a
prison from the front, but once inside it was open and light with a view to
what appeared to be a park on the other side of tall windows.
When the
elevator opened, I checked to make sure the down arrow was lit, stepped inside
and pushed S1. A couple of girls, well, young women I guess you’d say, got in
after me in workout clothes. One of them looked me over, taking in the duffel,
“Transferring in?”
“Yeah.”
She smiled. “I’m
Ellsbeth. I work in medical.” The elevator opened. When I realized they weren’t
getting off, I finally got the hint and exited. “See you around.”
The sovereign’s
office wasn’t hard to find. The reception area was glass to the hallway, but I
checked the plaque just to be sure. Sol Nemamiah, Sovereign.
There was a kid
at the desk, young enough to be a student. He looked up when I walked in and
dropped my duffel.
“Transfer from
Berlin,” I said.
“Go on in.” He
pointed to a closed door.
I opened the
door, hoping the instruction wasn’t a new-guy-hazing prank.
The first thing
I saw was a mess of blond hair. I knew he was an elf because he had some of
that hair tucked behind the ears. I guess he could have been fae, but I didn’t
know of any fae knights.
When he turned
around, I had three thoughts. That he was just about my age. That his eyes
sparkled with elf mischief. And that the only word to describe him was
beautiful.
Now don’t get me
wrong. I have a strong preference for the opposite sex and don’t usually think
about whether other guys are attractive or not. But this elf had it going and I
would have had to be blind to not notice.
I looked past
him to the man behind the desk. You could tell it was the Sovereign by the way
his jaw seemed permanently clenched. He pointed at the elf. “Rammel Aelshelm
Hawking, meet Basil Rathbone Landsdowne.”
The elf stuck
out his hand. I took it and shook. That’s when it registered. I laughed and
blurted out, “You’re P.P.”
“Excuse me?” he
said, with his brow knitting.
I looked at the
Sovereign and thought better of saying more. “I’ll explain. Later.”
“You two are
getting a try out as partners, attached to B Team, starting,” he looked at his
monitor, “Thursday. Mr. Hawking, Mr. Landsdowne’s quarters are next to yours.
Show him the way.”
“Aye,” said the
elf as he moved toward the outer office. He held the door open to the hall and
gestured toward the elevator. “Welcome to worm patrol.”
“Worm patrol?
Sounds like I should turn around and ask for reassignment.”
He laughed.
“I’ve been told that’s what they call rotation in the Big Apple.”
“Oh.”
Once inside he
pushed the third floor button and leaned back against the wall facing me. “So
what was the peepee thing?”
I grinned. “Not
peepee! P. P. Your reputation is widely known. Parties and pussy.”
He cocked his
head and gave a tiny smile. “’Tis what they say about me?”
“Yeah, man. It
could be worse. They could be sayin’ you’re a limp dick wanker who’s scared of
girls.”
He combined a
grin with a sly look that I’d come to think of as Ram’s trademark smile. “Spent
a lot of time alone as a kid. I suppose there was some pent-up party in me.
Maybe I’ve over-compensated. I would no’ want P.P. on my tombstone.”
About the Author:
New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of eleven romances. Victoria's Knights of Black Swan series won BEST PARANORMAL ROMANCE SERIES TWO YEARS IN A ROW. Reviewers Choice Awards, The Paranormal Romance Guild.
Her paranormal romances come with uniquely fresh perspectives on "imaginary" creatures, characters, and themes. She adds a dash of scifi, a flourish of fantasy, enough humor to make you laugh out loud, and enough steam to make you squirm in your chair. Her heroines are independent femmes with flaws and minds of their own whether they are aliens, witches, demonologists, psychics, past life therapists. Her heroes are hot and hunky, but they also have brains, character, and good manners. **Usually.
Victoria lives in The Woodlands, Texas with her husband and a very smart, mostly black German Shepherd dog.
Website: http://www.VictoriaDanann.com
Mailing List: http://bit.ly/1IfByBg
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