MORE PRAISE FOR IT HAPPENED ONE DOOMSDAY
“If the apocalypse is going to be this much fun, sign me up!”
—M. C. Planck, author of
the World of Prime series
“Dru’s apocalyptic adventures with demons, magical crystals, and crazy-making chaos are hellishly original and lots of fun.”
—Helen Harper, author of
the Highland Magic series
“Add Laurence MacNaughton’s Dru Jasper to the pantheon of Ree Reyes, Atticus O’Sullivan, and Harry Dresden. MacNaughton shatters his way through an apocalyptic good time, leaving a trail of broken crystals in his wake.”
—Michael Haspil, author of Graveyard Shift
“Laurence MacNaughton sends readers on a fast-paced adventure into a fascinating world of sorcerers literally dealing with problems of apocalyptic proportions! It Happened One Doomsday will keep you turning page after page up until the end of the world!”
—Richard A. Knaak, author of Black City Saint
“From zero to apocalypse in sixty seconds! A fast-paced, action-packed supernatural road rally that had me on the edge of my seat . . . when I wasn’t laughing out loud. Think Harry Dresden meets Stephen King’s Christine.”
—Mari Mancusi, award-winning author
of the Scorched series
“It Happened One Doomsday is an epic blend of magic, action, humor, and romance, delivered at breakneck speed on the road to Armageddon. Laurence MacNaughton knows how to unleash an apocalypse in style!”
—Angela Roquet, author of the Lana Harvey,
Reapers Inc. series
Published 2016 by Pyr®, an imprint of Prometheus Books
It Happened One Doomsday. Copyright © 2016 by Laurence MacNaughton. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, digital, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, or conveyed via the Internet or a website without prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
Cover illustration and design by Nicole Sommer-Lecht
Cover design © Prometheus Books
This is a work of fiction. Characters, organizations, products, locales, and events portrayed in this novel either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
Inquiries should be addressed to
Pyr
59 John Glenn Drive
Amherst, New York 14228
VOICE: 716-691-0133
FAX: 716-691-0137
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: MacNaughton, Laurence, 1975- author.
Title: It happened one doomsday / by Laurence MacNaughton.
Description: Amherst, N.Y. : Pyr, an imprint of Prometheus Books, 2016.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016007393 (print) | LCCN 2016020398 (ebook) |
ISBN 9781633881877 (paperback) | ISBN 9781633881884 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Magic—Fiction. | BISAC: FICTION / Fantasy / Urban Life. |
GSAFD: Fantasy fiction.
Classification: LCC PS3613.A276 I84 2016 (print) | LCC PS3613.A276 (ebook) |
DDC 813/.6—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016007393
Printed in the United States of America
For Cyndi.
CONTENTS
1: The Perfect Ring
2: Then There Was Greyson
3: Having Reservations
4: Ninety-Five Percent Right
5: Rat Signs
6: Strange Brew
7: Highway to Hell
8: The Devil Inside
9: Behind Red Eyes
10: Meant to Be Broken
11: How to Catch a Demon
12: The Monsters We Keep
13: Shades of Greyson
14: Heat of the Moment
15: Some Girls Wander by Mistake
16: Party Like It’s 1969
17: Mathematics of a Madman
18: Lot Six Hundred and Sixty-Six
19: Don’t Try This at Home
20: Evil in Midcentury Modern
21: Born Under a Bad Sign
22: Eve of Destruction
23: Devil in the Dark
24: Cardio for the Casual Sorceress
25: Going Nowhere
26: Last Exit for the Lost
27: Under the Milky Way Tonight
28: The Longest Fall
29: The Only Evil You Can Trust
30: Heart of the Beast
31: Fade into Darkness
32: The Doomsday Wall
33: Radioactive
34: The End of Everything
35: Speed Demons
36: Death Machines
37: Deeper Cuts
38: Unspoken
39: The Dust of Time
40: Everything Is Wrong
41: Set the World on Fire
42: Never Coming Back
43: Forever Remains
44: The Silence When You’re Gone
45: The End of the World, As We Know It
Acknowledgments
About the Author
1
THE PERFECT RING
Dru Jasper had no idea that the world was prophesied to come to a fiery end in six days. All she knew was that she had to ring up enough sales to pay the rent, or her shop, The Crystal Connection, would get evicted from its cramped storefront between the pawnshop and the 24-hour liquor store.
Worn out from a long day of cataloging rocks and hoping that one of her scarce customers would actually buy something, Dru pulled her brown hair back into a ponytail and carefully cleaned her thick-framed glasses.
The crystals, ancient artifacts, and leather-bound books lining the shelves of her shop all seemed to accumulate dust that had an obnoxious way of clinging to everything. Especially her glasses.
As she misted her lenses, a rumble of thunder rolled down the street. Which was odd because although the sunny Denver afternoon seemed unusually bleak, there was no sign of rain. A moment later, looking out her front windows, she realized it wasn’t thunder at all.
With a snarl of exhaust, an old muscle car pulled up to the curb. Every inch of it glistened black and smooth as volcanic glass, from the sinister point of its long nose to the spoiler wing that rose up in back. The car rolled to a stop behind the old purple Lincoln Town Car belonging to Dru’s sole employee, Opal.
At that moment, Opal got out of her car, a heavyset black woman in an orange-crush-colored knit top and a necklace of polished crystal tiger’s-eye beads big enough to be actual tigers’ eyes. When she stepped up onto the sidewalk in gumdrop-red platform sandals, one of them wobbled, and she accidentally dropped her paper cup of coffee, spilling it everywhere.
Opal paused in the process of picking up her now-empty cup to stare at her car’s back tire. Which was slowly going flat, a nail sticking out of its sidewall.
Inside the shop, Dru winced in sympathy. She came out from behind the counter to help, quickening her pace when she saw the guy get out of his black car and approach Opal. With his thick dark hair, sunglasses, stubble, and black motorcycle jacket, he looked like nothing but trouble.
But much to her surprise, Mr. Motorcycle Jacket actually made Opal smile brightly. He walked back along the length of his long black car, opened up the trunk beneath the tall wing, and brought back a lug wrench and a jack. Without preamble, he got down and proceeded to change Opal’s flat tire.
Through the shop’s scratched front windows, Opal made eye contact with Dru. Her lifted eyebrows and pur
sed lips clearly expressed that she thought this guy was fabulous.
Then something around the corner, outside of Dru’s line of sight, spooked Opal enough to make her hustle in through the front door of the shop. The bell jingled.
“Is that guy fixing your tire?” Dru asked in disbelief. She hurried to follow Opal toward the back room.
“Yeah, if I was single right now, we’d already be making plans, him and me. But whatever. You can be jealous later. You’ve got bigger problems.” Opal turned and pointed outside. “Here comes your friend.”
Dru’s customers were mostly furtive sorcerers who shunned attention. But Rane was impossible to miss in a crowd. Six feet tall, built like a professional athlete, with a high blonde ponytail that bobbed with every stomp of her feet. Even when Rane was in a good mood she looked ready to smash something.
Rane marched straight toward the front door of the shop. And she was obviously not in a good mood.
“Oh, fudge buckets,” Dru whispered. “Quick, hide anything fragile.”
Opal rolled her eyes. “Everything in here is fragile. Including me.”
In fact, nothing about Opal was fragile. Loud, sarcastic, and voluptuous, maybe. At least voluptuous was the current word she used to describe herself, formerly full-figured, fluffy, and (briefly) goddess. But certainly not fragile.
“She breaks anything?” Opal said. “I’m not the one cleaning it up this time. Thought you should know that.”
Outside, Rane marched past Mr. Motorcycle Jacket, close enough that she nearly made him drop Opal’s newly removed tire. She banged through the door the way she always did, the force threatening to tear off the bell that hung from the wall. It jangled in protest.
“Girl’s got issues. Good luck with all that,” Opal whispered. “And let me know when Mr. Hunky is done with my tire. I want to thank him properly.” She ducked into the back.
Dru took a deep breath and slipped behind the counter again. “Hi, Rane,” she sang out, trying to sound cheerful. And failing.
“Dude. You should totally tighten up that bell before it falls off. You don’t want it beaning some jackwad on the head and getting you a lawsuit.” Rane marched up to the counter and planted both palms on it. “Listen. I’m in big trouble.”
Dru’s smile froze. Rane had the singular ability to stir up trouble anywhere, even where there wasn’t any. And she had a tendency to bring it into the shop with her. “What kind of trouble, exactly?”
“I need a new ring.”
“Come on, Rane, give me a break—”
“Don’t give me any crap, D. I had to try like fifty different rings last time before I found this granite one.”
“It’s flint, actually.”
Rane propped one fist on her hip and shot Dru a dark look. “Seriously? This is flint? Like the sparky rock?”
“Well, yes. Although we, um, we don’t usually call it that.” Dru pointed to the mottled brown-and-gray stone ring. “Flint enhances strength and healing. And it’s been used since prehistoric times to make tools and weapons. Considering how you spend your days, you know, hunting monsters and all, I figured it was apropos.”
“Ugh.” Rane rolled her eyes. “Well, that explains it.”
“‘It’ what?”
Rane planted both palms on the counter again and leaned across it. Dru pulled back in wide-eyed wariness.
“Dude,” Rane said somberly. “I’ve been fighting this infestation of little stinky gremlin types down by the river.”
“Stinky?”
“Some kind of gas they put off. Nasty, slimy little beasties. But when they all jumped on me, and I punched one, super hard, it made sparks. And these guys lit up like the Hindenburg.”
“That must’ve been . . . disturbing.”
“Almost burned my face off. Not cool.” Rane said it in a way that indicated she clearly blamed Dru. “So I need something a little less sparky and a lot more kick-ass.”
“You’re putting out a lot of magical energy when you transform. Probably too much for just one little ring. Out of all those rings we tried, this is the only one that really seemed attuned to you,” Dru said.
“You mean the only one that didn’t blow up in my face?”
And it was the only one that Rane had actually paid for. An important line item in Dru’s bookkeeping universe. She folded her hands in front of her and forced a smile. “I’m thinking maybe rings just aren’t your style. How about a nice amulet instead?”
Rane let out a long sigh. She stared deep into Dru’s eyes, as if to let her know what a vast disappointment she was. In her flat monotone, Rane said, “It’s like this. You know my transformation power only works if I’m actually touching something. If I want to turn into rock, I have to be touching rock. If I want to turn into metal, I have to be touching metal.”
“Yes, I know, so—”
“So if I get grabbed up by some gi-normous creature and I’m hanging upside down by my ankle and this amulet is dangling over my head and it’s not touching my skin? I’m totally hosed.” She stared harder. “Get it?”
Dru nodded. “All right. I get it.”
“Don’t hose me, Dru.”
Dru solemnly shook her head. “I would never hose you.”
“Good.” Rane clenched her right fist, the one wearing the flint ring. With a faint stone-grinding sound, patches of her skin took on the mottling of the polished stone ring, growing and merging until Rane’s body had transformed into solid rock.
“You know, one of these days, someone is going to see you do that in public,” Dru said. “You really want to end up on YouTube?”
“Already on there. No one cares. Help me out, Dru,” Rane said, her voice coarse and hollow, as if it echoed up from a deep cave. “Seriously. I don’t know who else to go to. You’re my best friend.”
Two incompatible thoughts competed for Dru’s attention. One, that no one had called her a best friend since grade school. And two, if this was what it was like to be Rane’s friend, what was it like to be her enemy?
Still, Dru couldn’t help but feel just the tiniest bit warm and fuzzy inside. Even if Rane was more than a little scary as a living statue, and probably Dru’s only paying customer today.
“Okay.” Dru smiled. “Let’s get you back into the storage room and see what we can find.”
Rane turned human again with that stone-grinding sound and shot Dru a bright smile. “Thanks, D.” She punched Dru in the shoulder and headed into the back room.
Dru was still rubbing her shoulder when the bell jingled up front. The solidly built guy in the motorcycle jacket pushed his way inside and took off his sunglasses. He had a swagger that some women might find cute. Or so she assumed.
But here in this shop, he looked completely out of place.
“Hi,” she said when he got close enough. “Did you just change Opal’s tire?”
He nodded dismissively, as if it were nothing. Puzzled, he frowned around him at the tall shelves crammed with minerals and crystals, charms, statues, candles, rare herbs, and everything else her supernatural-oriented customers wanted.
“Um, what kind of car is that?” Dru asked, not out of any particular interest, but just to avoid having to explain her shop to someone who was so clearly not a customer.
“A 1969 Dodge Daytona,” he said. When she didn’t reply right away, he seemed to mistake her silence for encouragement. “It’s basically an aerodynamic, Hemi-powered Charger. When it was built, it was so fast NASCAR outlawed it. I restore old cars, especially Mopars. That’s what I do.”
“Hmm.” She nodded, trying to look fascinated.
“Sign outside says ‘The Crystal Connection.’” He looked around again. “What’s with all the other stuff?”
Inwardly, Dru sighed. Anytime someone had to ask, the conversation never went well. “It’s a shop for people who know magic.”
“Card tricks, coins behind your ear, that sort of thing?”
“Not exactly, no.” This was the part that alway
s got awkward with people who wandered in off the street. “Mostly, this is a very specialized store. We help people who have unusual problems that can’t be solved any other way.”
Much to her surprise, he turned and looked directly into her eyes with a warm intensity. “Then maybe you can help me. I’m Greyson, by the way.”
“Oh. Um, Dru.” Trying to mentally reclassify him as a customer caught her off guard. “So, okay. Absolutely. What seems to be bothering you?” She pulled out her notepad and reached for a pen, but she accidentally knocked it across the counter.
Greyson caught it at the same time she reached for it, and when her fingers brushed his, a spark flashed between them, like static electricity, only brighter and shockingly cold.
The jolt of energy made the fluorescent lights above them sizzle and flare. Then a pop echoed from the breaker box in the back room, and all the lights went out, plunging them into deep shadow.
The only light came from Greyson’s eyes, which glowed like red-hot coals as he gazed down at her. “I guess you could say I have an unusual problem.”
2
THEN THERE WAS GREYSON
Dru had cured plenty of mystical ailments at The Crystal Connection, but she usually had at least some warning. A little time to prepare, research the right crystals, brew up a potion, braid a healing circle out of copper wire, that sort of thing. It wasn’t often that a customer strutted in through the front door, shorted out the lights, and made the hair stand up on the back of her neck.
Never, in fact.
In the spirit of being prepared, Dru kept a flashlight under the cash register. But in the case of magical sparks and red glowing eyes, she needed something stronger. She reached for a crystal.
Her own magical power lay in the ability to enhance the inherent spiritual properties of crystals. Make them more potent than they were in nature. Powerful enough to fight the forces of darkness.
So her first instinct was to reach under the counter for a finger-length crystal of purple amethyst, which helped protect against any kind of psychic attack. But in the sudden electrical outage, she couldn’t find the amethyst. Or her smooth, egg-sized whorl of iridescent tiger’s-eye, which warded off curses.
Her fingers closed on a dagger-shaped wedge of spectrolite. In full daylight, it would have shimmered like oil on the surface of deep water, but in the gloom of the shop, she could only go by feel. At any rate, it was a good, basic, soul-protecting crystal, and it had saved her life before.
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