The Cost of Living (ARC)
Page 1
Advance Review Copy
For Personal Use Only. Not for Sharing or Resale.
A NineStar Press Publication
Published by NineStar Press
P.O. Box 91792,
Albuquerque, New Mexico, 87199 USA.
www.ninestarpress.com
The Cost of Living
Copyright © 2019 by Emilie Lucadamo
Cover Art by Natasha Snow Copyright © 2019
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any material form, whether by printing, photocopying, scanning or otherwise without the written permission of the publisher. To request permission and all other inquiries, contact NineStar Press at the physical or web addresses above or at Contact@ninestarpress.com.
Printed in the USA
First Edition
February, 2019
eBook ISBN: 978-1-950412-11-2
Print ISBN: 978-1-950412-27-3
Warning: This book contains the death of a minor character and depictions of possession.
The Cost of Living
In the Darkness, Book Two
Emilie Lucadamo
Table of Contents
Dedication
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Epilogue
About the Author
For Nicole—who could easily conquer the world if she tried, but has momentarily settled for conquering libraries…and who even had to edit her own dedication.
Chapter One
AFTER HIS FOURTH failed attempt to pull himself to his feet, Beck gives up and collapses against the pavement once more.
It’s no use. He could have the willpower of Hercules, yet he wouldn’t be able to haul himself off of the ground. His body is too strung out; his limbs are exhausted. He feels drained from head to toe. Whatever happened to lead him here, it sure did a number on him.
Here—where is here? Beck has no clue. Naked, in the middle of an unfamiliar street, with a dizzying headache and no memory of where he is or how he came to be there. That’s where he is right now.
It’s far from the best situation to be in. Not to mention the fact that the world’s biggest storm cloud seems to be focusing all its wrath on him alone. Rain lashes his skin, chilling him, and the thunder booming overhead rattles in his bones. He tries to move once more, and a fiery pulse of pain shoots through his entire body.
Beck has had better nights.
He’s wound up in some pretty undignified places over years spent growing up with his best friends, but this has to take the cake. This is a lot worse than the time his best friend James dared him to sleep on the roof in his underwear. This is even worse than the time he and his brother, Dylan got locked out of the house during a snowstorm and had to spend the night huddling for warmth on the porch. At least in those situations, he knew where he was. He had some choice in the matter, (even if it was between Dylan’s bony elbow in his side or freezing to death). This—this is a whole new level of weird.
He tries to lift his head, and a pulse of pain sends it right back down again. Thunder crashes overhead, followed by a flash of lightning. Beck swallows past his parched throat, realizing for the first time what a dangerous situation he could be in.
“Oh man,” he rasps, realizing too late that these are the first words he’s said since waking up. This absurdity is not helped by the fact that he’s scrambling around on his back like a lethargic bug. It seems like a miracle he’s able to speak at all. “Mmm…c’mon, c’mon…”
It’s no use. He can’t pull himself to his feet. Defeated, Beck collapses back onto the pavement again and closes his eyes. He’s so tired… Maybe a few moments’ sleep will give him the energy he needs.
He’s just about to drift away, when a sudden interruption startles him from his haze.
“You look like you could use some help.”
The voice is deep, clear as a bell over the roaring storm around them. Beck jumps, eyes springing open. It would take more self-control than he possesses not to gape up at the shadowy figure towering above him, silhouetted against the distant glow of a streetlight.
He blinks up at the stranger in a daze, trying to make out any features past the rain and his blurry vision. The man looming above him is slender, not too tall and not too muscular. The fact that he seems unfazed at finding a naked guy in the middle of the street probably says the most about him. Being the naked guy in question, Beck’s not about to judge.
Beck weighs his options. Common sense tells him not to trust shadowy figures in dark alleyways. Common sense also tells him not to pass out in the middle of the street naked, and not to wake up in the middle of a street with gravel digging into his back. Common sense is failing him today.
He isn’t about to get up without assistance, anyway, so yeah, he probably could use some help. “Wow, you figured that out?” he croaks, and tries for a laugh. It comes out as a wheeze. Beck is left choking when he attempts to take in a breath. He collapses again onto the street, landing hard on his side. His chest convulses with each ragged cough. By the time he is able to breathe again, he’s quaking like a leaf in a thunderstorm. Hell, that’s just about what he is.
“Easy…” The figure is kneeling by his side now and has a hand on his back. He’s warm; subconsciously, Beck leans into the touch. The smooth hand runs along the curve of his spine, leaving a trail of tingling heat in its wake. The pressure in Beck’s lungs slowly ebbs away, like water receding after high tide.
“Feels like you’ve got a pretty bad fever,” the man says, his strange, precise accent twisting the words until they sound more like a melody. “This rain can’t be helping. Wanna get out of it?”
“Yeah…” Beck nods hazily. “That’d be real great.”
Hands grip his biceps, helping him to his feet. Beck’s legs feel like noodles. He stands up, wavers, and would have fallen back down were it not for the grounding presence keeping him upright. He tries to straighten up, and his stomach does a perilous somersault. Hot bile rushes up his throat, and he only has time to double to the side before he’s heaving up acid.
By the time he straightens up again, he’s trembling from the exertion. He feels dizzy enough that he’s afraid to close his eyes, doubting his capability to open them again. When he tries to turn to his good Samaritan, he finds himself confronted with a sharp-featured face, dark eyes studying him and brows creased in concern.
“Sorry,” Beck tries to say. It comes out garbled. Fortunately, the guy doesn’t seem to care.
“Come on,” he urges, hooking an arm around Beck’s waist. “Let’s get you someplace warm and dry.”
Needless to say, Beck’s in no state to argue. Besides, he isn’t sure he wants to. The guy’s being nicer than he has any obligation to be, and it’s probably the fever talking, but his touch is the most soothing thing Beck can remember in a long time.
They don’t walk far. The stranger leads a stumbling Beck down the street, and they pass only a few shops before coming upon one with its windows piled high with books. A sign above the door reads Lehexe’s Books in spindly hand-painted lettering. The shop is dark enough that Beck can’t make out much through the window, but Beck’s new friend—Lehexe, presumably—doesn’t hesitate to open the door. He hus
tles them both inside and shuts out the storm behind them. No sooner are they standing in the middle of the shop floor than Beck finds rain pooling at his feet, soaking into the wooden floor. He sways in an effort to keep from dripping, and nearly overbalances again.
Lehexe—busy fumbling with a set of keys near a door behind the counter—casts a look over his shoulder and huffs. “Try to keep upright for two seconds. You can do that.”
Beck definitely can. He’s not an infant. (If he maybe has to grab hold of the counter to keep his balance, well, he thinks the other man is too preoccupied to notice.)
The right key finally slips into the lock, and Lehexe opens a door to a darkened hallway. He turns to look at Beck, raising an eyebrow as he gestures to him. Beck lets go of the counter, takes a step forward, and gets blindsided by a head rush that sends him falling on his face.
Being naked on the floor of some poor guy’s very nice bookshop is better than being naked on pavement in the middle of a storm…but only just. There’s a lot more indignity to his situation now that Beck is actually trying to keep himself upright. He can’t. It’s not just his legs refusing to cooperate with him. His entire body feels sluggish, achy and weighed down. His veins feel like they’ve been pumped full of lead. His skull is throbbing, stuffed with cotton and running with all the efficiency of a dying engine.
“I’m really sorry about this,” he manages to slur into the nice stranger’s woodwork. “’S not my day.”
“I figured,” Lehexe says as he helps peel Beck off the ground—and he is really being much nicer than Beck deserves. “I hope stuff like this don’t happen to you often.”
“It really doesn’t.” This is the weirdest thing Beck can remember happening to him in, well, ever. He’s not handling it well.
By some miracle, Lehexe manages to get him back on his feet again and leads him out of the shop. The hallway behind the door is small, narrow, with several doors lining the walls. One clearly reads Bathroom; the other, Beck suspects is a closet; as for the third, he doesn’t have a clue what could be behind it. (His half-delirious mind flashes back to the vintage game shows his grandma used to love, where shoulder-pad-flaunting contestants chose between Door One, Door Two, and Door Three for the chance to win “the prize of a lifetime!” Lehexe doesn’t make a good game show host, and Beck’s hairstyle isn’t nearly exciting enough for 80s television.)
There’s a final door at the end of the hallway, styled differently from the others. This one is great mahogany, with a firm frame, and another lock just beneath the knob. Lehexe turns to his set of keys yet again, and in seconds he has the door open to a set of stairs that tower over Beck’s head, making him feel dizzy.
His heart sinks. His stomach drops. He feels himself slump further to the floor, until Lehexe stubbornly hoists him back up again. Just looking up there makes his head spin, and the notion of dragging his noncooperative body up the stairs is nothing short of a pipe dream. There’s no way he can do it—just no chance.
“Yeahhh,” he groans. “Dude…don’t think that’s gonna happen…”
“You gotta try for me,” Lehexe says. “Can you do that?”
Beck considers this. “If I pass out, will you catch me?”
“I’ll try my best.”
Well, that’s good enough for him.
They’re about a quarter of the way up the stairs (a big accomplishment, in his opinion) before Beck starts really feeling like he’s going to wind up spread across Lehexe’s stairs like an unconscious, human-sized welcome mat. The other man still has a vice grip on his arm, but that’s all that’s keeping Beck moving. As he struggles up one stair after another, his vision begins to black out.
“Hey, hey, stay with me,” Lehexe says, shaking him back to consciousness again. Beck lets out a whimper, slumping over sideways, but Lehexe rights him before he can tumble down the stairs. It seems like the other man is determined to drag Beck up there by sheer force of will, and Beck thinks he could do it, too. “What’s your name?”
“Mmm. My last name…” He can answer that much at least, even if focusing on anything is really difficult at the moment. “’S Murray.”
“Great. You got a first name?”
He stumbles over the word a few times before he just gives up. Hauling himself up these stairs is draining too much energy, and it takes all of his effort to stay on his feet. There’s a few seconds of silence—he almost forgets that Lehexe is here, forgets he’s walking instead of climbing a mountain or swimming through a roiling sea—when he hears a huff of breath. “You’re not light, Mr. Murray.”
Beck’s hand reaches out blindly and catches upon something solid. He isn’t sure what he’s holding until he feels a muscle flex under his grip. He must be holding a bicep, then. “Wow. Okay. Had no idea we were that friendly already,” Lehexe remarks.
Beck makes the mistake of opening both eyes at the same time. Maybe that’s his big mistake. One second Beck is standing upright, and the next second he’s just too dizzy to stay up any longer.
He’s so tired, and everything hurts. All he really wants to do is put his head down for a second—is that so bad? The stairs are a lot nicer than the street anyway, a lot drier and less cold, and Lehexe is here with his low voice and warm hands, prodding him, “Get up, come on!”…
It’s not a bad idea, but Beck just can’t do it right now.
He has a brief flash of guilt for passing out in the middle of Lehexe’s stairs, as well as for how much trouble he knows his unconscious body will wind up being, but it’s not enough to keep him awake. He slumps against his arm and is out cold before he even realizes he’s laid his head down.
WHEN BECK REGAINS consciousness, things are a lot…softer.
He knows he’s in a bed even before he opens his eyes to see the dark comforter engulfing his body. The mattress beneath him creaks when he moves, though the persistent heaviness in his limbs prevents him from doing much. He knows even before he remembers where he is that he will not be able to get out of bed. His head pulses with what feels like the worst hangover he can remember. His stomach is still churning, and his body aches like he’s been crushed by a steamroller.
He is able to turn on his side, attention lured by the warm light shining from the corner of the room, and can’t help but groan at the head rush this gives him. Even lying down he shouldn’t be so dizzy—what’s wrong with him?
His brain feels muddled, and he’d kind of like to go back to sleep again—but his mother’s many lectures on being aware of your surroundings kick in, forcing him to try to take in his location. It’s clear that he’s in someone’s bedroom; the room seems lived in, clothes hanging off the back of a chair and a desk messy with paperwork. There is a closet at the far end of the room, and a round window over Beck’s head, giving him a front-row seat to the storm raging furiously outside. Every so often, lightning will flash, illuminating a bit more for Beck’s roving curiosity to take in: several framed pictures hanging on the wall, a towering bookshelf at the far corner of the room, a laundry basket on the floor. The bedroom door is closed, but golden light streams in from beneath the doorframe, drawing Beck’s hazy attention.
For a long moment, all he can hear is the storm. Then, in a brief lull in the rain, voices become audible from the next room over.
“Whatever is happening,” an unfamiliar voice says, light and high in a way that denotes it as female, “is far more serious than that. Magic like this…” Beck furrows his brows as he struggles to make out the rest of the words, but her voice is soft and fades in and out of his hearing. “…nothing we’ve seen…a war below…could get involved…this boy…dangerous.”
“You don’t know that,” another voice—Lehexe’s voice, and Beck realizes with embarrassment that this has to be his room—says. “He seems harmless…needed help…sick…”
“…reeks of magic,” the woman says. “…nothing you’ve heard of?”
There is a pause, as if Lehexe is hesitating (or maybe Beck just can’t hear him).
When he speaks again, he sounds reluctant. “Never seen…back to life…spells like that…”
“Could it be—” the woman says, and whatever follows Beck really doesn’t get to hear. A crash of thunder booms overhead; he is ashamed to say he jumps, arms flailing out wildly. Something from Lehexe’s night table hits the floor with a clatter.
That’s all it takes to cut the voices off. Having given himself away, Beck sinks into the bed and waits for the inevitable. Sure enough, it’s only a few seconds before Lehexe is sticking his head through the bedroom door.
“Mr. Murray,” he says when he sees that Beck is awake and opens the door wider. “Glad to see you’re up.”
Beck hums, sluggish tongue struggling to form words. “Gotta say,” he mutters, “this’s the worst hangover I’ve had in a while… ’N it’s not even mornin’ yet…”
He’s sure he sees something flicker in Lehexe’s expression, but it’s too dark for him to make out. The man moves toward the bed, and Beck realizes what he’s got in his hand only when it is unceremoniously shoved under his tongue—a thermometer. He tries to make a noise of protest but is hushed with a roll of dark eyes.
“If you’re well enough to talk, you can be quiet and hold still,” Lehexe says. “Give it a minute.”
Begrudgingly, Beck does as he says. It’s only a minute before the thermometer beeps again, and Lehexe withdraws it with a frown. “One hundred and three,” he declares, shaking his head. “We gotta get that fever down, Mr. Murray.”
“Beck,” he corrects before he realizes what he’s saying. Lehexe quirks an eyebrow at him. “’S my name. First name. ’S what people call me.”
Lehexe looks pensive. “Is that your real name?”
“Nah. ’S Thomas.” Beck makes a face and feels victorious when he sees Lehexe crack a smile. “But nobody calls me that. Just my ma, when she’s ticked off.”
“It’s a nice name.”
“’S a horrible name. Like an old man.” Beck’s head lolls against his shoulder, and it feels too heavy to pick up again. He settles for studying Lehexe sideways; when the man adjusts the blankets around his shoulders, he can’t help huffing out a soft laugh. It’s been a while since he was looked after like this when he was sick. (Beck doesn’t get sick much—he gets hangovers a lot, but his roommate James’s usual method of “taking care” of Beck involves throwing aspirin bottles at him while he’s lying on the bathroom floor and laughing when they hit him in the head.) This is nice. His new friend is nice, he can’t help but think, and notices once again how good-looking the other man is. He’s handsome, in a quiet way, with strong features that underscore deceptively gentle black eyes. His skin is a rich sepia, and dark hair is cut close to his head. Beck can read the exhaustion on his face and feels a pang of guilt for stealing his bed.