The Cursed Satyroi: Volume One Collection
Page 1
Table of Contents
Title Page
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Bonus Scene
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Epilogue
About the Author
The Cursed Satyroi
Volume One
Rebekah Lewis
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
Copyright © 2015 by Rebekah Lewis
Wicked Satyr Nights and Under the Satyr Moon
Edited by Leona Bushman & Kelliea Ashley
Midnight at the Satyr Inn edited by Jayne Wolf
Cover Design by Victoria Miller
Logo Design by Happi Anarky
Stock Photography (Under the Satyr Moon) by Jenn LeBlanc
All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Printed in the United States of America
www.Rebekah-Lewis.com
Dedication
For Kat, Mia, and Jordy for taking time out of your busy lives to be my betas. You rock! And for Jenn, Hailey, Lana, Mel, and Dawn for being my support group and helping me pick the title of this book.
For my family: I love you.
Wicked Satyr Nights
Book One
Chapter One
Kat’s life had become a circus. Not just because she worked with animals for a living, but because the people who meandered their way into it were bizarre. With that thought in the back of her mind, she took a seat across from the business tycoon she had never met. She straightened her posture and forced a smile on her face, even though the reason for her requested attendance was just as mysterious as the man in front of her.
Mr. Dion Bach steepled his fingers together on the glossy mahogany desk. The very picture of wealth, he wore a crisp black suit and shirt with cufflinks glistening of onyx and diamonds. His tie, however, stood out in a pop of deep burgundy, the silk of which rolled over the button line of his shirt like the richest wine. “You’re probably wondering why I called you in, Dr. Silverton.”
“I must say I was a little surprised when I received your phone call.” More like his secretary’s phone call, but Kat wasn’t one to argue the small details.
With a smile that seemed more habitual than genuine, Mr. Bach opened the manila folder lying neatly in front of him. While Kat sat in the waiting room for the past thirty minutes, she’d spent the time counting the mosaic tiles on the floor and imagining what Dion Bach looked like. She’d pictured a ruddy old geezer, but that was way off. His hair was thick and tawny, closely cropped. He was attractive, about thirty, give or take, with a cleft chin, an athletic build, and skin so tan it put her Irish complexion to shame.
His bulky leather and wood chair had a high, carved back that made it look more similar to a throne than office furniture. It resided along with the enormous wooden desk upon a raised marble slab. Two Corinthian-style columns stood on either side. Small alcoves lined the shockingly white, portrait-less walls, with mythological busts displayed upon pillars. Ivy plants were placed in the corners of the room, yet the air smelled woodsy, reminiscent of evergreen. Regardless, she felt like she was in a courtroom or a museum.
Mr. Bach was the CEO of Bach Industries, a company known to invest in film, television, science, music, and just about anything which took to the elusive owner’s fancy. He was as wealthy, but remained out of the spotlight. He likely paid several hundred people to stay that way.
As though sensing Kat’s scrutiny of him and his surroundings, he glanced up through thick, dark lashes and resumed the smile from before. It didn’t meet his eyes. “I was sorry to hear of your unfortunate accident last summer. You are very lucky you had a crew member with you who scared the mountain lion away before the attack turned fatal.”
He didn’t waste any time. Kat nodded once, but she was used to hearing the same comments about the attack. She had grown weary of all the apologies by people who felt obligated to say something about it. Since the encounter with the cougar, she’d been the recipient of a lot of pity—not all of it genuine. Kat doubted this man was any different.
He continued, barely looking up to catch her nod. “As I understand it, you were called to the location in West Virginia to give your professional opinion to the authenticity of a supposed black panther which was sighted in the area where the cat attacked you.”
“Yes, sir. We were gathering evidence in the forest when the cat came out of the bushes. Took me down between my left thigh and hip, clawed me up a bit. Luckily, we had someone in our group who was licensed to carry a firearm in case something like that did happen. He was able to run it off with a shotgun blast, so the cougar never managed to go for the kill.” Had she suffered the same wounds to her throat, she’d have been dead before she registered what had her in its jaws. Kat knew she’d been extremely lucky, but it didn’t help in the long run. She’d made a horrible judgment call that day, and it had cost her.
“Very fortunate indeed.”
Absently, Kat found herself gazing into Mr. Bach’s dark brown eyes. They were almost full black, and she couldn’t distinguish where the pupil ended and the iris began. No warmth there, no welcome. Only the uncomfortable twinge of judgment made her avert her gaze and suck in a calming breath. Different from the cat in the forest, Mr. Bach’s eyes seemed to hold knowledge that she was inferior to him in every way, and should he deem her unworthy, she’d be dead. Kat reached down to grasp the leather strap of her purse in a tight fist. It would be rude to bolt from an interview that could put her back to work again. Work she wanted to do, anyway. Perhaps the strain of recalling the accident was making her delusional. A sort of post-traumatic shock?
Mr. Bach cleared his throat. If he was aware of her distress, he didn’t point it out. “Nevertheless, you discovered an existing population of mountain lions in an area which had not seen scientifically proven evidence of their presence in over a decade. It may not have been a black panther, but the cat was still considered a cryptid in the scientific community, was it not?”
It was. Cryptozoology was the study
of creatures never proven to have existed. Yet, in some cases, the animals, or cryptids, had actually lived at one point, just not in the time or area the various sightings occurred. Certainly black panthers existed. Both the jaguar and leopard often bred all black, or melanistic, variations rather than the familiar golden felines.
However, only a small population of wild jaguars not in captivity or owned by exotic pet owners were ever found in the United States. They were the common variety, and a far cry away from West Virginia. And that was only one location where sightings had occurred.
The scientific community generally snubbed the very idea of cryptids unless something could be substantiated, and that was rare. In most cases, the sightings were proven as hoaxes or mistaken identities. Or they were considered the results of a superstitious mind.
She let go of the purse strap and clutched both hands together in her lap to keep from fidgeting. “Yes, sir. My group got lucky.” But the poor cougar was still put down afterward. Kat had been distraught. She’d begged them to catch it and take it to an animal sanctuary and not to kill it since there was evidence of a possible litter nearby. The mother cougar, considered a danger due to the attack, was hunted and shot. Kat had been furious. The four cubs were captured and taken to a nearby refuge. So far they hadn’t located the cat that fathered the young, and she hoped they never did. It didn’t do much good to find an existing population if they were going to remove the entire lot of them. If humans allowed their cities to continue growing and expanding, there wouldn’t be anywhere left for the animals to live outside of captivity.
“Let’s jump to the chase, shall we?” Mr. Bach turned a sheet of paper over with a barely audible swoosh and placed it on the left side of the small stack of documents in the folder. Kat wondered what he had on her and why. He picked up the next page and studied it a moment before he spoke again. “I am invested in a series of documentaries based on popular figures of cryptozoology in the States and over the globe. The scientist I had wrangled to work one of the most anticipated segments bailed out last minute. I hoped, even though I’m fully aware this isn’t the area of your expertise, that you would be willing to take on this project.”
Okay, vague much? “That would depend on what the project is exactly. I’m a zoologist with a specialty in big cats. I’m not a cryptozoologist and wouldn’t know where to start with something outside of felines, so I would be little help if the project has to do with Bigfoot.”
He smiled again, and this time a spark of amusement flashed in his eyes. Why did Kat feel like it was the smug look of a hunter about to go in for the kill shot?
“Ah, but that is the beauty of cryptozoology. If a creature is not an established member of the animal kingdom, has never existed in the eyes of science, how in the world could anyone become an expert on the thing? There are those with merely the knowledge of the facts at hand, those who are obsessed, and those that have a general knowledge of animal species and can use it to their advantage in seeking out clues to the possible existence of such a being. And that last kind of person is what I need you to be.”
Being? Did he say being? Oh, Christ. It was Bigfoot, wasn’t it? Kat looked around the room, waiting for a person to leap out, point at her, and laugh hysterically.
“Mr. Bach, I’m still not following. What exactly is the cryptid you want me to try to locate?”
“Oh, I didn’t tell you?” He was the very picture of innocence. The type of innocence the serpent in Eden would have been if it had taken on a human figure. Those dark pits of his eyes held her reflection within them, sealing her fate.
“N-no, sir,” she squeaked out, cheeks heating at her less than confident reply.
“My apologies. I have a terrible habit of getting ahead of myself.” Another piece of paper was set on top of the overturned pile. He picked up the next page, glanced at it with a smirk, and placed it in front of her. He tapped it lightly with the tips of his fingers before pulling his hand away and revealing the picture printed there.
Kat stared down at it, glanced back up in disbelief, and quickly looked again. She had to have imagined it. Nope, there it was. It appeared to be a bipedal horse with scrawny stork legs, a forked tail, and bat wings. It was as though she found herself trapped in an episode of Looney Tunes with the word SUCKER printed across her head in all capital letters. At any second, the ground would fall out from under her.
“Pardon me, but what the hell is this thing?” She kind of wished it had been Bigfoot. At least a new species of primate walking on two legs was conceivable, even if the legends were fantastical. This thing was a nightmarish monster out of a storybook.
He laughed. He had a jolly, infectious laugh that made her want to join in. She began to smile foolishly, but then she remembered the horse-headed, bat-winged, demon thing and sobered up.
“That, my dear Dr. Silverton, is the most common depiction of the Jersey Devil. It’s a creature that has supposedly been sighted off and on in the Pine Barrens of New Jersey for over three hundred years.” With a grin, he added, “They named a hockey team after it.”
Kat blinked.
“Well?” Mr. Bach’s face went stoic. At least on the surface. His eyes had more of a twinkle to them than Kat appreciated. Is he enjoying my confusion? Kat crossed her arms and rubbed the skin exposed under the short bell sleeves of her white dress shirt. Gooseflesh met her touch, and she shivered.
“I really don’t know what to say.” And she didn’t. Was he serious?
“Say, ‘Why, yes, Mr. Bach. I will take the job.’” He examined another page in the folder. Kat inwardly groaned. What next? “Bach Industries will supply film equipment, pay for hotel costs, gas, and meals. You have two to three weeks on the location to handle the project however you feel works best, beginning in two weeks’ time. I would only advise you to try to look like you believe in at least the possibility of the creature’s existence. You want to sell the footage, not make a mockery of it.”
There was actually a way to make more of a mockery of it?
She studied felines, not crazy hybrid urban legends. There was a high chance the creature couldn’t even have the precedence to exist—unless it was a freak show like the platypus, which also was said not to have existed at one point. But the platypus was tiny. This thing looked huge. And it flew!
Then again, people repeatedly reported the existence of pterosaurs in New Guinea, among other places. Either there were too many skeptics and no one took it seriously, or those creatures were really good at staying hidden even though they soared around all day, hunting whatever they made a diet of. They must have a grand ole time of causing hapless witnesses to run about in a tizzy, trying to make someone believe they saw what they saw.
Or there was that other crazy theory. The one where they don’t exist and people let their imagination run wild. Kat put her money on that one. The way she saw it, animals that went extinct within the last century had a better chance of existing than something that had died out millions of years ago. And a black panther in an uncommon region could be an escaped exotic pet no one had reported. It was a small possibility, but a plausible one. Unfortunately, mistaken identity—an average cougar, a large Labrador, or a black alley cat that looked like it was a big cat from far away but really wasn’t—ruled out most sightings.
Kat was a skeptic. She’d own up to it if challenged. She was a product of the stuffy scientific community, after all. Until proven, it didn’t exist. Though it was fun to daydream about discovering a new or previously extinct species, she knew the chances of such a thing occurring were slim to none. People wasted their lives hunting for monsters and rarely found a single piece of compelling evidence to make it worth their while.
“If you don’t mind me asking, why would you consider me for this particular project? I’m sure there are several cryptozoologists who would die for a chance like this. Not to mention how far outside of my field of expertise this is. If you’re familiar with my accident, then you likely know I’ve had difficul
ty regaining my footing because of my mishap. A project like this one could ruin me, if I haven’t accomplished that feat already.”
“Everyone makes mistakes. You survived yours, and the majority of your problems stemmed from dealing with recovery and physical therapy rather than not having work. You’ve been in and out of the Florida research facilities. I’ve done my homework. In fact, it was while researching scientists to bring onto this project that I came across your previous work. The documentaries you did for National Geographic on the African leopard were phenomenal.” He paused. “You blush, Dr. Silverton? Are you not used to praise?”
From a wealthy, attractive icon? Hell no, she wasn’t. Though she didn’t miss the fact Mr. Bach hadn’t voiced concern over endangering her career by sending her out to chase urban myths.
He continued, “I figured a woman who takes her research and projects seriously would be a very nice investment into my documentary series. The fact you are accomplished in your field at only thirty-two is also a good sign. It’s a bonus to have an attractive woman with beautiful red hair and bright blue eyes in front of the camera as well. Helps market to the shallow crowd and not only to those who are interested in science or the paranormal.”
Because of her pale skin there was no hiding the blush that scalded her face and neck at his compliments. There was truth to what he said, but it still made her uncomfortable when people in the industry labeled her as beautiful. She was a scientist, not a movie star. Lately, the lines between the two had been thinning, even before the accident, as finding work in the current economy became more difficult than ever. She used the money from the films she’d made toward field research assignments. While she didn’t mind lab work and researching from home, she preferred to be in the middle of it all. She loved being engulfed by nature. The sights, sounds, and smells...they were a wonderful escape from city life. She never thought she’d be on television, but she welcomed the opportunities when they presented themselves.