A Night Shift Novel
Only fifty years left before vampires rule the world.
When Dallas police detective Cami Davis joined the city's vampire unit, she planned to use the job as a stepping-stone to a better position in the department.
But she didn't know then what she knows now: there's a silent war raging between humans and vampires, and the vampires are winning.
So with the help of a disaffected vampire and an ex-cop addict, Cami is going undercover, determined to solve a series of recent murders, discover a way to overthrow the local Sanguinary government, and, in the process, help win the war for the human race.
But can she maintain her own humanity in the process? Or will Cami find herself, along with the rest of the world, pulled under a darkness she cannot oppose?
"Hey, Bradley." I beckoned the crime-scene tech, who had finally arrived and was snapping on gloves. "Is that a piece of paper under the vic's head?"
He bent down over my shoulder to get a clearer view from my line of sight. "Looks like it's tangled in her hair," he said. He pulled a pair of long tweezers out of his kit and snagged the sliver. "Yep. Looks like it has a word written on it . . ." We both peered at the brownish, spidery writing.
"Sanguinary," I said. "Is that written in blood?"
"Maybe. I'll get the lab to run a basic analysis on it. If it's blood, we'll be able to let you know pretty quick if it's human and if so, what type. DNA will take longer."
"Sounds good." I stared at the woman a little longer. Her dark hair-almost the same color as mine-spilled out around her, matted with dark, coagulating blood. The two bloody marks on her neck shone like black stars on a white background.
Vampire.
I knew that if I lifted her dress, there would be other puncture wounds all over the body, and strange symbols carved across her skin-pentagrams within circles and other ritualistic signs. Exactly like the others. Ten murders in the four weeks since the beginning of September-all centered in downtown Dallas, and many with affluent victims whose families demanded action.
The department had been in a barely suppressed uproar.
I stood up, my knees popping a little. Five years ago, they wouldn't have done that.
And five years before that? Vampires hadn't existed, except in books and B-movies.
It took time for the world to believe. We hadn't even realized how to fight back when they'd first shown up.
This victim's ragged, bloody fingernails suggested that she had tried to resist, but obviously failed.
The red dress she wore would have originally matched the color of the relatively scant splashes of blood surrounding her, but those stains had dried to a muddy brown, the same color as the writing on the paper caught in her hair.
Her clothing suggested that she'd been at the opera that evening, though the manager, roused from her bed, swore that the building had been cleared and empty when she left.
One black, high-heel shoe lay several feet away, toppled over onto its side, the heel broken, as if she had stumbled out of it when it failed her as she ran from a pursuer.
Sanguinary.
I'd heard the word before from vampires I had taken down-whispered as a threat, shouted as a warning: the Sanguinary is coming, the Sanguinary will kill you all.
The Sanguinary is here.
It was why I was about to go undercover among the vampires.
What gave you the idea for this book?
Where do you write and what do you use: PC, laptop or MAC?
I received a free copy of the book from the author for my honest opinion.
Cami Davis is detective for the Dallas police department; she works on their Sucker Squad. This just means that she is a vampire hunter. Someone is going around Dallas killing women and leaving them lying out on a pentagram. Cami gets a lead that it is probably a vampire that is killing all those women. Her partner Garrett is a vampire junkie which means he likes to be bitten by vampires. But he is supposed to be on the wagon at the moment. Garrett has set Cami up with a cowboy vampire, Reese, he is the only contact he has that knows about the Sanguinary; the vampire government.
Reese was a cop before he was turned eight years ago. So he still has a lot of his human traits. Reese wants to put a stop to all of the killing as well. Cami is going to become Reese's claimed. If a human has been claimed then another vampire cannot feed from them. Cami has to let Reese feed from her or the other vampires will not believe that she is his pet. Cami and Reese is in for a big surprise after his claiming ceremony at the Blood house. They never expected the connection that was between them afterwards. I don't think Cami was to upset about her connection with a hottie like Reese. Besides all that she gets to go to a Halloween ball and dress to the nines.
I love vampires I don't mind if they sparkle or not but they are a lot better if they are hotties like Reese though. I loved Sanguinary it was over flowing with action, vampires and a whole lot staking going on. Cami is one tough girl who knows how to use a stake on a vampire but of course she can kick butt without a stake just as well. She is one fast chic and with her and Reese working together they make one h3ll of team. I can't wait to read more about Cami and Reese and their partnership.
About the Author Margo Bond Collins is the author of urban fantasy, contemporary romance, and paranormal mysteries. She has published a number of novels, including Sanguinary, Taming the Country Star, Legally Undead, Waking Up Dead, and Fairy, Texas. She lives in Texas with her husband, their daughter, and several spoiled pets. Although writing fiction is her first love, she also teaches college-level English courses online. She enjoys reading romance and paranormal fiction of any genre and spends most of her free time daydreaming about heroes, monsters, cowboys, and villains, and the strong women who love them-and sometimes fight them.
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