SHARPEN THE BLADE
THE V V INN, BOOK SIX
C.J. ELLISSON
RED HOT PUBLISHING
Contents
Preface
1. Chapter One
2. Chapter Two
3. Chapter Three
4. Chapter Four
5. Chapter Five
6. Chapter Six
7. Chapter Seven
8. Chapter Eight
9. Chapter Nine
10. Chapter Ten
11. Chapter Eleven
12. Chapter Twelve
13. Chapter Thirteen
14. Chapter Fourteen
15. Chapter Fifteen
16. Chapter Sixteen
17. Chapter Seventeen
18. Chapter Eighteen
19. Chapter Nineteen
20. Chapter Twenty
21. Chapter Twenty-one
About the Author
Acknowledgments
Glossary
Red Hot Publishing P.O. BOX 651193, STERLING VA, 20165-1193
First eBook Edition April 2017
ISBN: 978-1-938601-38-5
Copyright 2017 C.J. Ellisson
All Rights Reserved
Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.
PUBLISHER’S NOTE
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead (or undead ;-), business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
ISBN: 978-1-938601-38-5
For my adopted nephew, Pat Larson. May you continue to enjoy adventures with Eric—whether in dreams, through retold escapades, or via the pages of a book.
PREFACE
This book started as an extended epilogue. Meant as a gift to my newsletter subscribers, Sharpen the Blade was intended to fill in what occurs with our characters before they face their final V V Inn adventure in Blood Reckoning.
All of that sounds fine and dandy until the author starts writing with no direction and no clear idea of what she’s doing. Plain and simple, my life fell apart after releasing book five in the series, Blood Legacy.
When I was sick, life had a very narrow focus: family, health, and work. I struggled daily to maintain a balance. If I focused on one, the others would suffer. Pretty soon, it became painfully obvious if I didn’t focus more on my health, there would be no more books and no more time spent with family.
Right as I began to get a solid handle on my health and seemed to finally be past the worst life had thrown at me, my mother had a severe hemorrhagic stroke. At the time, I was hopeful for a close-to-full recovery. But after a while, my mother settled into her current fate and refused additional therapies.
About the same time, my father announced he was “checking out” as soon as my mom was healthier, that he’d had enough of life and was ready for it to end.
Nothing I said to either of them mattered. Nothing I did made a difference, and I slowly began to lose myself in the grief and heartache of losing two parents who were still technically alive. For the health of myself and my immediate family, I needed to pull back and allow my parents to live however they decided.
Therapy helped immensely and after a time I went back to work. But the words don’t start flowing simply because you’ve decided it’s time they do. My current manuscript was a rambling mess. It took me months to figure out the problem (after numerous re-plotting attempts), and then even longer to muster the desire to fix the issues.
How does one fix ten rotating points of view (POVs)? How do you make what was essentially an extended epilogue into a real book? You cut POVs and devise a real plot. Easier said than done.
It took a lot of work. Embarrassingly more work than any project I’ve ever done to date. I learned a lot about creating, about my processes, and about myself. Not all of it good, but all of it helpful.
It is my sincerest wish you enjoy this story. I can’t say I didn’t try with this one, because I sure as hell did.
As always, thank you for your support and interest!
Happy reading,
~C.J.
CHAPTER ONE
VIVIAN
I slip on the hooded trench coat and make my way toward the plane’s exit. Despite the danger looming over us, I’m glad to be home. The return trip from Buenos Aires was long, tiring, and filled with conflicting energies. Rafe, my human husband, could hardly sit still, and Jon, my werewolf servant and our right-hand man, vacillated from texting furiously on his phone to pacing the tight confines of the cabin.
The air in the plane seemed to vibrate with tension from the three of us—and our stress dueled awkwardly with the excited optimism from our newest employee, Justin, a magic-using wizard and a former security consultant to the Tribunal of Ancients. We hired him to install magical safety wards around the resort, similar to what he did for the ancients, in addition to having him teach my husband how to use magic—an idea I’m still not thrilled with.
All these steps and more are necessary, I’ve been assured, in the grand scheme of surviving the upcoming dangers. Rafe, Jon, and I aren’t looking forward to what’s on the horizon—hunting down the vampires I turned who have manipulator traits—but we know it has to be done. It’s the only option we have to stand against Rolando and Persephone in their quest to transform the South American city into a present-day version of the ancient, and extinct, vampire-ruled Atlantis.
“Liebling,” my husband calls before I descend to the tarmac of our Alaskan resort’s private airstrip. “Your hood.”
I nod absently and draw the lined fabric over my head. We’ve landed after nine at night, and while there’s plenty of light this time of day above the Arctic Circle in early July, I know I’m in no real danger of catching flame or burning my sensitive vampire skin. Living half a millennia as an undead does have its advantages. It would take prolonged exposure at high noon for me to be truly worried about my safety.
“Come on, come on,” Jon grumbles, every muscle in his body straining. “Let’s get off this flying tube of death already.”
I smile to myself and purposefully take the short staircase one step at a time, slowing down to irritate the powerful werewolf. “Are you anxious to see someone, Jon?” I say while looking over my shoulder at the man. His broad chest, straining the buttons of his customary flannel, tapers to a flat waistline. Which draws the eye down to his muscular legs hugged by faded jeans. Short brown hair is styled back, off his forehead, exposing his rugged good looks, and his hazel-green eyes appear to be searching the distance for something, or someone—an eagerness almost burning in their depths.
“What?” he stops, his expression freezing. “No, nothing like that.” A quirky grin spreads across his face. “I need to use the bathroom, that’s all.”
My high heels meet the ground and I immediately step to the side, allowing him to rush past me. “Uh-huh. Sure.” I know he started seeing someone last month, but for whatever reason, he’s decided to hold back from sharing the details with Rafe and me. Maybe this one is becoming serious and he wants to make sure before telling us.
Rafe’s mental voice reaches out to me through our mate-bond connection. Or maybe he’s afraid of how you’ll react.
Nonsense, I respond telepathically. I’ve given him no reason to think I’d handle it poorly if h
e were to start dating someone.
Rafe mentally projects a shared memory to me, one of me ripping the head off Vikram, a vacationing vampire, when he dared to feast upon my werewolf servant. Not one of my finer moments, as far as leaping first and looking later, but Jon is my responsibility and I had to act quickly or the fang head would have drained him. In Vikram’s defense, he’d had a new addiction to werewolf blood to contend with and I could have handled the situation a little better.
You think? My husband interjects into my thoughts.
A frown mars my face as I watch Jon stride swiftly toward the airplane hangar. It was extenuating circumstances. And Vikram wasn’t trying to ‘date’ Jon, but suck him down like a supernatural juice box.
Still doesn’t mean Jon would feel comfortable telling us. Rafe stops next to me, draping an arm across my shoulders. “Let’s go in.” He glances up at the sky. “God, I’ve missed this place in the summer. The abundance of light feels intoxicating.”
“It’s greener than I expected,” Justin says, joining us on the tarmac. “And more flat.” His tall, lean frame is draped all in black, from his button-down shirt, an undershirt peeking out of the neck, to pants, heavy boots, and light jacket. Some of the fabrics appear faded and frayed at the edges, but the monochromatic color scheme affect is still the same. A hawkish nose and dark blue eyes dominate his facial features with dark, longish hair falling over his brow.
I smile and gesture past the spindly trees lining the runway. “We’ve got our share of hills and mountains, don’t you worry. The resort property straddles tundra, a ski-worthy mountain, and denser forest near the national park border, too.”
“Yeah, I noticed the terrain when we circled to land. I saw a lake and several streams from above. How’s the fishing?”
Having never fished up here, I’m at a complete loss on how to respond. I look to my capable husband with a raised eyebrow.
“Most of our employees take advantage of all the area has to offer as far as hunting and outdoor sports,” Rafe answers. “They’ll be the best ones to let you know if there’s any good fishing. But—most of them aren’t on the property during the summer off-season. Maybe someone in the apartments can help you—or maybe Miranda, our human resources person. You’ll meet her soon.”
Justin nods and meanders after Jon, his head moving from side to side as he takes everything in. “Peaceful and quiet. I think I’m going to like it here.”
Rafe lowers his voice and leans in to speak after the younger man walks away. “How do you want to handle the introduction of him to Asa and Eric?”
I squint in the bright light and shade my eyes. “I’m not sure. Is there ever a right way to spring a surprise like that on someone? But I do think we should tell the boys before they run into him unexpectedly.”
“What if we’re wrong and they aren’t related?”
“True, that very well could be the case. And I admit, I don’t see much of a family resemblance between the three, but the coincidence with the last name is too great. I know I recall hearing Asa say his parents divorced and his mother left the country with their older brother. How common is the surname Monson? It’s got to be him.”
“We’ll just have to see, won’t we?”
We walk together to the corrugated steel building, the scent of fresh forest growth heavy in the air. “Too bad we won’t be here long,” I say, my gaze touching on the greenery of the resort in the summer. “It’s so pretty with all the flowers in bloom.”
“Yeah, that pesky manipulator-vampire problem we have to deal with,” my husband says with a sideways grin that quickly slides off his face and turns into a grimace. “When do you want to be back on the road?”
“In a few days, a week tops, if we can swing it. Really depends on how long it takes to find the information we need.”
“How many journals did you fill?”
“I can’t recall. Maybe fifty.”
“Fifty? Geez. I might read fast, but not that fast,” he says as we step into the shade of the hangar. “We need to find a way to quickly comb through the data contained in the pages.”
“We’ve already talked about this—I’m not open to the idea of letting more people read my personal history contained within those pages. The knowledge could be dangerous.”
“No, I figured you wouldn’t be. How about we talk to Asa and see about scanning the pages into a computer? Then we could search the contents easier.”
Before I can answer, Jon’s raised voice booms from the hangar and a moment later a sleek, muscular, reddish dog bounds from the building and rushes toward us, tail wagging, head down, and ears pinned back in a show of excited submission. The wiggling mass of happiness pauses at our feet and looks up at me with golden-hued eyes.
Jon races back out and skids to a stop when he sees us with the dog. “Oh, hey guys. Sorry about that.” He pats his leg. “Come here, girl.”
The dog doesn’t listen, but continues to watch us while wagging her tail.
“She’s pretty,” Rafe says, bending to offer his hand to pet her. “Is she a red-nosed Pit Bull?”
Jon looks panicked for a second before quickly recovering. “Uh, yeah. I think so.” He gazes down at the animal with a shrewd, and angry, eye. “That sounds about right.”
I wonder what’s eating him. He doesn’t normally flounder on naming a dog breed. It’s like the man studied them as a child or something.
“Where’d she come from?” Rafe accepts a kiss on the chin from the eager dog. “Don’t you normally only have husky-wolf hybrids?”
Jon’s face becomes expressionless as he answers. “I think Asa told me he adopted her from a shelter on his last trip to Fairbanks.”
I study the animal and her gaze slides away. She quickly drops to her back and exposes her belly for a rub. A smile spreads across my face as I crouch to comply. My hand skims over her soft stomach as I note the distinct white blotch of fur under her neck. It looks like a moth or butterfly with spread wings. “She’s a sweet thing. I like the marking on her chest.”
A sigh escapes me. I forgot how much I loved having our own dog. No matter how much Rafe likes to tease and call Jon a furball, a werewolf isn’t a dog, and a grown man isn’t a damn pet.
It’s not like I can invite Jon’s hybrid animals into our bed for a cuddle on a cold night even if I wanted to. He confines them in the heated kennels after dark. And when I do see a dog on the property, most of them give me a wide berth. From past experience, I’ve found if a dog isn’t around vamps much, our scent warns them away.
My wistful gaze travels over the fine-looking animal. “Guess that means she’s staying with Asa in the basement, huh?”
“Uh… that makes sense,” Jon says, his stare fixed on the dog. “Yes, she’s probably staying with him in his suite.”
“Do you know how old she is?” Rafe asks, a smile across his handsome face. He always did love having a dog in the house, too, and we used to have a Staffie, a smaller cousin to the Pit, years ago. “I take it she’s housebroken?”
Jon shifts his weight from side to side. “No idea on the first question, and yes to being housebroken.”
Stifling my personal desire to pick her up and bring her home with me, I rise and continue into the hangar past the Pit Bull, who quickly rolls to her feet to follow. “I’m not opposed to Asa having a pet in the main building, but if she starts destroying stuff he’s going to have to move to a cabin.”
A compact man with tan skin and dark hair emerges from the shade of the building. “Good evening, ma’am,” he says, a smile splitting his face. “How was your flight?”
The man is Diego, our head pilot, mechanic, and all around fix-it-guy when it comes to anything aviation. During our trip south, we requested he stay in the States for emergencies, just in case there was a need from the employees left here.
“It was good, Diego,” I say while offering my hand in greeting. He enfolds my hand in his for a brief shake. “Thanks for asking. Glad to be home.”
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“I bet. I’m through here for the night, just wanted to see if there was anything you needed before heading home.”
A smile creases my face as the dog leans against my side and I reply, “I think we’re good to go, thank you. I’ll reach out to you in the morning if there’s anything else. Thank you for waiting to see that we arrived safely.”
“No problem. I’ll have one of the maintenance crew deliver your luggage within the hour.” He nods to Rafe, shakes his hand as well, and turns back to the way he came, heading toward the airport’s office.
Jon calls the dog again with another generic command of come here, girl, but she stares off into the distance like she didn’t hear him. She doesn’t seem very obedient, or maybe she doesn’t like Jon. I’m sure that will rub him wrong, as he’s a bit of a self-proclaimed dog-whisperer when it comes to canines.
“What’s her name?” I ask.
The werewolf’s voice sounds low and gruff when he responds. “Diablesa.”
“She-devil?” Rafe asks. “Isn’t that a bit… harsh?”
“Quite fitting,” the annoyed Were replies, “because the little bitch isn’t listening right now.”
A laugh bubbles out of me as I watch our groundskeeper try to control his anger over a dog that doesn’t immediately jump to follow his every command. “If Asa’s still experimenting with names, maybe he should try Miraposa, to match the butterfly mark on her chest.”
The dog barks at my side, her tongue lolling out as she glances up at me, looking like she has a huge grin splitting her doggie face. I’m sure the large, open jaws help to reinforce the impression that she’s smiling.
Rafe chuckles as he catches up to me. “Would you look at that. I think she likes the new name.”
“Whatever,” Jon says, stooping to remove a pile of fabric from the middle of the hangar floor. “She’s his problem,” he grits out with a sharp glare at the animal. “Not mine.”
We travel toward the exit in the rear, and join Justin waiting behind the building, then proceed toward the SUV parked nearby. Rafe pauses by the back of the vehicle, leaning down to pet the dog again while we wait for Jon to catch up. “I like her. Her fur almost matches your hair, Dria.” My husband addresses me by my real name, whereas, over the years, our employees adopted the nickname Vivian for me, as a play on words to the hotel’s name—The V V Inn.
Sharpen the Blade (The V V Inn Book 6) Page 1