Tuesday, April 25, 2017
Book Tour + #Giveaway: BENEATH THE NIGHT by Jen Colly @collyjen @SDSXXTours
BENEATH THE NIGHT
by Jen Colly
Pub date: 4/25/2017
Genre: Paranormal Romance
Sometimes survival means surrendering
everything . . .
Lord Navarre Casteel wakes from a long sleep to
find the vampire city he rules forever changed and his future in the
hands of a mysterious beauty who offers her life for his.
Fiery-haired Cat survives his feeding, fueling Navarre’s body and
mind—as well as his suspicion that she is one of the Forbidden—a
lethal mix of vampire and human blood. Yet that doesn’t stop the
throb of Navarre’s desire, the feeling that she is destined to be
his mate, to hell with consequences. . . .
A solitary fighter sworn to protect the
children in her charge, Cat never expects to feel so much for Navarre
in the face of his savage feeding. Which is why his offer of
protection is nearly her undoing. For how can she let down her guard
when she has always walked alone? But Cat has never faced an enemy
like the one she faces now, never felt such a powerful need to
surrender to the force of love . . .
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Chapter 1
Peace. He didn’t care for the word, didn’t
believe in its existence. The
concept seemed possible, and certainly
desired, but he’d yet to witness it
in his own life. Even when Balinese had been
under Lord Navarre’s rule,
the city prospering and harmonious, Devlin
Savard had not been at peace.
Savard glanced over his shoulder for the
second time tonight. Something
had him on edge. He scanned the tree line at
his back. Nothing.
From where he stood, high on a hillside, the
impressive château below him
seemed somehow benign. Yet it concealed the
entrance to Balinese, a vast
underground city of vampires. The forest
surrounding the château took it a
step further, cloaking the stone structure
from any who might wander near.
Winter was well on the way, and though snow
had yet to fall, it would
come soon enough. The château had been sealed
and prepped months ago,
and only in the last few weeks had the chill
of the night permeated the
ground and seeped into the city below.
Savard cocked his head slightly. A low ripple
of energy in the air sent
his senses on high alert, rousing survival
instincts that had refused to fade
over time. Someone, or something, approached.
He curled his fingers around the hilt of his
sword, but then the shift in
energy became substantial and settled at his
right side. Heavy, like waves
on the ocean. Then, though the air around him
was already cold, a chilled
patch of air pushed toward him.
“Report,” Savard commanded. Keir dropped out
of his invisible Spirit
form and appeared at Savard’s right.
“You’re damn hard to sneak up on,” Keir said,
and then suddenly
thinking better of his words, he raised his
hands in mock surrender. “Not
that I was sneaking.”
Savard nodded, but said nothing. It was best
others didn’t know how
Savard’s talents worked, especially when he
knew of no other who possessed
a similar gift. In Spirit, Keir moved with a
certain high-energy fluidity,
something Savard had yet to encounter in
another vampire, and was
easily recognizable.
Finally glancing at the man who had joined
him, Savard asked,
“What did you find?”
“Nothing,” Keir said, supremely confident in
his own abilities.
Savard simply nodded.
“I give you the same answer every night. Seven
years of nothing. You’re
not paying me to say ‘nothing’ to you every
night.” Keir scratched his chin,
the goatee darkening his already sinister
look. “You bought my loyalty.”
“Have I?”
Keir cracked a grin. “Yeah, you have.”
“Perhaps.” Savard looked over his shoulder,
once again peering deep into
the forest, but still finding nothing amiss.
“One day your answer will change.”
“And when it does?”
“Then everything will change,” Savard said,
his tone even, expectant.
Savard would have been a fool to not at least
attempt to buy Keir’s loyalty,
and so far it had paid off. The man was an ace
in his pocket. While Savard’s
own ability to travel in Spirit was extensive,
Keir’s was unsurpassed.
Since the phenomenon of traveling in Spirit
only seemed to surface
when a vampire was caught in a fight-or-flight
situation, Guardians tended
to be the most likely to possess the ability.
The species had lived in peace
for centuries, and few had experienced even a
small taste of taking Spirit.
Once the trick of walking in Spirit was
learned, it was simple to duplicate,
though most couldn’t advance beyond several
feet in this invisible form.
Some grew physically ill should they pass
through an object. The process
also seemed to deplete the body so extensively
that most vampires needed
to feed soon after traveling in Spirit.
Not only could Keir travel great distances and
pass through multiple
structures with ease, he could linger in
Spirit for nearly an hour. Invisible
and undetectable, he was the perfect spy.
Having Keir on his side had been
useful, and on occasion, life-saving.
“Same time again tomorrow?” Savard asked.
Keir shook his head, smiling just a little.
“And again and again.”
The radio at Savard’s hip popped with static
and Steffen’s voice came
through, sounding hollow as it floated away on
the chilled night breeze.
“Several animals were just spooked.”
Savard searched the edge of the forest
surrounding the château and
saw nothing. Whatever movement Steffen noted
had settled back into
the safety of the trees. He gripped the radio
in his hand, brought it to
his lips. “Where?”
“North forest. Deer.”
The north forest was at his left, the château
his right. A call concerning
the north forest made him nervous. The
entrance to the château, the gate,
faced north. In the recent past, his
Gatekeepers had occasionally reported
the night going silent, or animals fleeing the
woods. They’d come to
associate these signs with the presence of
demons.
“Damn it. If the deer are moving at this hour,
then something deep in
the forest disturbed them,” Savard said as he
switched radio channels.
“Briona! I have Keir. I need two more
Guardians at the gate. Now!”
“Already on their way!” the cheeky little
half-Irish dispatcher yelled.
“Move your arse, m’lord.”
Savard broke into a run, Keir at his side,
racing down the hill toward
the château. The disturbance warranted an
investigation. If demons had
made their way onto the property yet again,
his Guardians would engage,
but it was near dawn and he risked the sun,
and their lives.
He checked his watch. They’d have a tight
timeline to work within, but
thanks to Briona, they’d have a chance. A few
years ago, Briona had barged
into his office and promised she was the
answer to problems he didn’t know
he had. She’d been right. Briona was a technical
genius. Whatever it was
she did in that little room surrounded by
buttons and wires, she did well.
She’d boosted his Guardians’ response time,
increased overall efficiency,
created a number system for different
high-priority zones in the city, and
became adept at predicting situations and
reactions.
Briona listened to all Guardian radio chatter,
often making the call for
backup before a Guardian could ask for help.
She’d saved lives, and she’d
been on top of this situation as well. No
doubt the men Savard trusted at
his side would already be waiting for him.
The door to the château was in sight. His
Gatekeepers, Steffen and Ivan,
stood guarding the entrance to Balinese. As
Savard and Keir approached,
Osric and Titus emerged from the château. No
one spoke. Steffen simply
pointed to the forest where he’d seen the deer
in flight.
Savard nodded to his Guardians, and they
vanished, as did he. Moving
effortlessly up the hillside, speeding toward
the woods, Savard floated
unseen, like a ghost over the grass. He
couldn’t see his men, nor they him.
Titus would hold the west. He was young, but
the extent of his abilities
so great that his careless and cocky attitude
was rarely a hindrance. When
Titus put a man down, he stayed down.
Osric was a recluse, his main goal to hide the
rippled burn scar that ran
from high on his cheek down the side of his
face and neck, disappearing
beneath his shirt collar. He only emerged from
his home as a Guardian,
and he served his city well. Osric would take
the east.
And Keir? As a former assassin, he’d have the
north well in hand. Savard’s
personal bodyguard was without question an
exceedingly capable Guardian.
Savard took the southern position, cutting off
the direct path to Balinese.
He would stay in Spirit. An observer. As lord,
he was not to engage in
combat unless necessary.
Traveling in Spirit had definite advantages,
one of which was speed.
Savard easily raced over the dense forest
floor, through trees. His passing
startled only a few small rodents.
In a clearing just ahead, nearly a dozen men
sat in a circle and focused
on their leader with eyes glowing red in the
dark. Demons.
Attacking a group while in Spirit was
underhanded, and in most cases,
a guaranteed win. The expertise in this sort
of warfare belonged to
the assassin. Without making so much as a
whisper of sound, his men
surrounded the demons and waited for Keir’s
command.
Savard kept his distance from the demons, as
would the others, until
signaled. He had no problem holding his Spirit
this night, and Titus never
wavered, but Osric couldn’t linger in this
state for much longer. They
needed to attack soon.
What does Keir wait for?
Then Savard felt a ripple as the assassin
passed near, or maybe through,
his Spirit. It was Keir’s way of pinpointing
their locations, confirming they
were in position. Seconds passed. Still, Keir
waited.
“We enter through the front gate at dawn. Only
two guard the door,”
one of the demons said, its red eyes
glimmering oddly in the night. “Even
if we catch them in the middle of switching
shifts and their numbers are
doubled, it’ll be easy to get by such a small
group.”
Grunts followed, acknowledging their leader.
Suddenly the blond demon sat tall and rigid,
its eerie red eyes searching
the surrounding trees. “I feel…”
Several other demons stilled, shared glances.
The man in charge finished
the sentence. “Like the night air has
changed.”
“It has, demon,” Keir said, his body still
invisible, his distorted words
floating through the cold night, everywhere
and nowhere.
The assassin appeared behind the blond demon.
Keir’s wild, curly hair
and goatee lent him a wickedly sinister look.
And that smile of his. That
nasty gotcha smile. In one quick, clean
motion, Keir sliced the demon’s
throat, then disappeared again.
Demons scrambled to their feet, drawing
swords. Osric dropped from
Spirit first, drove his shoulder into the
nearest demon like a linebacker,
and knocked it to the ground. He ignored the
downed demon, bent on
sinking his sword into the next, much larger
foe.
Titus appeared beside the demon Osric had just
knocked down. Flipping
his grip on the hilt of his sword, Titus took
only a moment to jab the blade
through the fallen demon’s chest, barely
sparing it a glance. Ducking
under the sweeping blade of an approaching
demon, he spun to catch it
across the torso, then left it incapacitated
on the ground to search for a
more active target.
Keir was surrounded, but he seemed to like it
that way, taunting those
red-eyed creatures. He’d leave himself open to
their attack, then move with
an uncanny speed to slice through major
arteries left and right, weakening
those he didn’t have time to kill.
Titus took on two, using anything at his
disposal, be it sword, elbow,
hilt, or head. The vicious physicality of his
fighting style made Savard
wonder why the young vampire never brought his
teeth out to play.
Savard scanned the scene before him, desperate
to remain in the here
and now, to be mentally present for his
Guardians. The chaos of swords
hitting in repetition, of men grunting and
yelling in the throes of battle
messed with Savard’s head, threatened to throw
his mind back to a different
time and place. Making a sincere effort to
block the sounds, he focused on
movement instead. Short, contained blows from
his Guardians suggested
everything was well in hand.
Then a demon broke away from the center of the
battle and threaded
through the melee, its sights set on Osric.
The Guardian’s sole focus was on
the big bastard he was trying to take down. He
didn’t see the demon coming.
Savard, still in Spirit, moved to intercept.
He appeared, sword drawn
and braced for impact. Clotheslined, its head
nearly severed, the demon
never saw Savard.
Now visible, Savard turned to fight anyone
left standing. Only two
demons remained, each engaged with a Guardian
and fighting for their
lives. Keir stalked through the battlefield,
checked the downed bodies for
signs of life, but suddenly he stopped, stood
motionless. Savard felt it too.
The telltale tingle at the back of his neck
signaled the rising of the sun.
Savard assessed their now-urgent situation.
Osric had taken down his
demon. Titus battled the last. Weapons lost,
the two were face-to-face,
throwing punches, wrestling for higher ground.
Keir was on the move before Savard could say a
word. Knife bared,
Keir came up behind the last demon and sank
his blade deep into its back.
Titus shot Keir an angry glare. “What gives?”
“We don’t have time for this. Not anymore.”
Keir stepped back and the
demon slipped off his blade, crumpled to the
ground.
“He’s right,” Savard said, sending a short nod
in Keir’s direction. “Drag
the bodies east, outside the tree line.”
Osric and Titus shared a concerned glance, but
it was Titus who spoke.
“You want them to burn in the sun? Let their
ash become part of our earth,
their evil seep into our lands?”
“Do you know how long it will take the four of
us to drag twelve men
back to the city, remove their heads, encase
them in coffins, and bury them
deep?” Savard didn’t wait for an answer. He
grabbed a demon’s ankle and
began hauling it through the forest. “We have
no other options, no time
to appease an ancient superstition, and it
doesn’t take long for demons to
come back after they’ve been killed. I, for
one, prefer them as ash and dust.”
The four men hauled the bodies, and the
occasional detached head,
out into the open. Vampires didn’t care to
admit they shared several base
similarities with demons, but they did. One of
which was their inability to
dwell in sunlight. Direct exposure would cause
cells to destroy themselves,
slowly at first, but once the chain reaction
began, the body would combust.
A few demons still lived. Barely. The sun
would finish what the
Guardians had begun.
When the last demon was dropped at the east
edge of the forest, Savard
turned to his men. “Get home. Now.”
Titus vanished, as did Keir, but Osric ran.
After holding his Spirit for
so long initially, Osric had nothing left to
give. Damn it. He’d never make
it back before the sun claimed him.
Savard didn’t know Osric’s story, or how he’d
gained those burn scars,
but being vampire there were only two
possibilities: trapped by a fire
below ground or burned in the sun. If Savard
didn’t help him, then the
final moments of Osric’s life would be spent
burning, reliving the fear, the
pain he’d already suffered to a point of
leaving him crippled inside and out.
There was no decision to make. Savard couldn’t
allow Osric to die this
way, even if it meant exposing one of his
unknown abilities.
Savard disappeared into Spirit and was at
Osric’s side in seconds. He
released his Spirit, became corporeal just
long enough to take hold of
Osric’s arm and drag the Guardian into Spirit
with him. He raced home,
speeding through the trees and down the
hillside, Osric in tow.
They made the shelter of Balinese just before
the sun brightened the
east sky. Once inside, Osric stumbled as he
fell haphazardly out of Spirit.
Savard appeared a dozen feet away from him. They
shared a glance, and
for a moment Savard thought Osric would say
something, point out the
impossible feat. The marred Guardian only
nodded, a quick and silent thankyou.
Then all four were on the move again, headed
through the kitchen,
down the back stairs, into the cellar, and
through the door to Balinese.
When their feet touched the corridor that
encircled the city, the men
scattered. Each went a separate way, never
saying a word, and acting as if
the entire event had never happened. Unless Savard
decided the skirmish
would go on public record, it hadn’t happened.
He trusted these men, and
his Gatekeepers, to keep quiet and never
acknowledge the incident unless
directed otherwise.
If the citizens of Balinese knew how many
demons had been found
above ground on their land, or how many had
entered the city, they’d never
sleep. Unless a citizen witnessed a demon, any
encounters the Guardians
had with demons never officially occurred.
Savard walked alone now, taking the back route
to his home. He needed
to clean up. Black demon blood had spattered
across his face, dotted his
shirt. Thankfully, these exterior corridors in
Balinese tended to be empty,
lit only by sconces hung high on the wall.
“M’lord?” Briona chimed through the radio.
Savard scanned the corridor. Empty. “We’re
clear. Go ahead.”
“Bravo, then, you lived.” She took a breath,
then pushed on as if
his survival was expected and his response
unnecessary. “You wanted
notification if anyone was scheduled to enter
the royal storage. Why am
I still doin’ this? Isn’t this Soren’s job,
since, I don’t know, he has the
keys to the room?”
“It is. I’m just overcautious when it comes to
safeguarding Navarre’s
possessions. What is Soren having removed?”
“He just sent two Guardians to collect a
golden birdcage.” There was a
pause, but Savard knew better than to think
Briona was finished talking.
“We’ve a birdcage?”
“No. We do not. The Casteel family was
gifted with the large golden cage
from a Chinese ambassador in the late 1600s, along
with an assortment
of birds. Did you fail history class?”
“Nah, slept through it. Want me to send a
couple extra Guardians up to help?”
“No, I’m sure they can handle it. Make sure
Soren has them log out the
cage when they return the keys to him. Thank
you, Briona.”
“And now I’m your wee secretary,” she mumbled
before the radio died.
Savard shook his head, almost entirely certain
she’d left the radio channel
open a second longer on purpose.
He continued past the corridor leading to his
home and stopped a good
four feet before the next. Taking Spirit once
more, he floated up through
the ceiling. When in the room above, a large
attic with angled ceilings, he
released his Spirit. This was the royal
storage, and the Guardians would
be here any moment.
Treasures from all over Europe had been
covered, hidden from view,
while others lay exposed, collecting layers of
dust. A gold, jewel-encrusted
urn half the size of a man glinted in the dim
light seeping from beneath the
door. A golden yellow chaise in Greek styling
was half hidden beneath a
sheet, the craftsmanship elaborate. Yes, he
grew nervous when Guardians
were scheduled to enter this room, but theft
was not his fear, nor was the
handling of such priceless artifacts.
He’d have given his life to protect what was
beyond the row of five
large French curio cabinets in the corner of
the attic. Savard slipped into
Spirit long enough to move through a curio,
and once inside the makeshift
seclusion, returned to his true form. Here,
easily hidden behind the towering
cabinets, was the most priceless treasure in
Balinese.
Navarre Casteel, the true lord of Balinese,
lay motionless on a small
bed, trapped in a deep healing sleep. Not
waking, not dying.
Navarre had fallen in the demon attack nearly
seven years ago. A demon’s
blade had pierced his chest, and from what
they could tell, nicked his heart.
Navarre had slipped into a healing sleep, his
body shutting down to repair
from the inside out. After that point, nothing
could be done to help him.
Their lord would have to heal on his own, or
not at all.
Every day since, Savard expected his lord’s
death, even planned for
the loss. It never happened. Months had
passed. Years. Seven years of
total stillness.
Savard blamed himself. He never should have
set foot inside Balinese.
Decades ago Lord Navarre had taken him in, and
the people of Balinese
had hatefully labeled Savard “the stray.”
They’d watched him, judged him,
from the moment he’d stepped foot inside their
grand home. While the
people of the city suspected he did not belong
in their rich and secluded
world, Savard knew for a fact that he did not.
Navarre seemed not to
notice. Or care.
Months into his tentative stay, Navarre had
placed him in command of
the city’s Guardians. Savard had objected,
along with Navarre’s council,
but the lord would not be swayed.
Savard had reluctantly taken the position, and
for the first time in his
life buckled his sword to his hip with a great
deal of trepidation. Becoming
captain to such a great lord and legendary
city had felt wrong.
Every night Lord Navarre had proudly said,
“I’m glad you’re here.”
Savard’s consistent response? “It’s only a
matter of time before I’m gone.”
Navarre would nod, and they’d move on with
life. The same conversation
repeated. At first once a day, then as time
went on, once a month. After
five years Navarre had stopped triggering the
conversation altogether,
never believing his captain had any intention
of leaving.
Leaving was no longer an option. He had a responsibility,
not just to
Navarre, but to the city Navarre loved. Savard
had done everything in his
power to keep the city functioning smoothly,
and to keep threats away.
But if Navarre died? If his friend left this
world, then there was no reason
to care for the things Navarre had held dear,
and Savard couldn’t live
surrounded by memories of yet another massive
failure.
The padlock outside the door rattled, the
heavy hinge laid back against
the door. Then the large wooden slide latch
was moved, wood scraping
wood, until the handle hit the end of its
range with a solid thud.
Savard knelt beside the bed and took his
lord’s lifeless hand in both of
his, ready to weather the brief intrusion,
prepared to Spirit Navarre away
should it become necessary.
The hinges on the thick door creaked as it
opened. The Guardians
stepped inside, flipped on the lights. Boots
scuffed the uneven floorboards
beneath their feet, and long, purposeful
strides quickly carried them deeper
inside the room.
“There it is,” Dyre said, his young, smooth
voice trapped in the low
ceiling of the attic. “It doesn’t appear
heavy, only awkward.”
“Why are we putting an empty birdcage outside
the dining hall?” Cat
said, suspicion bleeding through her tone.
The presence of these two was unexpected. As
arena Guardians, Titus
and Graydon often drew the short straw, being
sent on random missions
that sometimes involved moving furniture. Not
today. Somehow Dyre and
Cat had taken their place.
“Don’t ask, just do,” Dyre said.
“Ugh.” She exaggerated the guttural sound. “I
hate your motto. It’s stupid.”
“It’s not my motto,” Dyre said, the effort of
sliding wooden furniture
across the floor temporarily halting his
speech. “And you seem to like it
just fine when you’re the one barking orders.”
“Fair enough,” she said, relenting.
Savard smiled slightly, shaking his head. In
public those two barely spoke
a word to each other, and after the parade of
Guardian partners Cat had
gone through, he never would have thought Dyre
would be the one she’d
accept. But then, Dyre was one of the few able
to bring her unpredictable
temper down to at least a simmer.
“Here, take this end,” Dyre directed. “I’ll go
down the stairs backward.”
“You think I can’t go backward?” Cat snapped
at him, instantly geared
up for a fight, offended her partner might
find her lacking.
“No,” he said calmly, his tone hinting at
simple honesty. “I
think you’re short.”
If Cat gave him a response, Savard didn’t hear
it. Boots scuffled across
the floor, the lights went out and the door
closed, the bolt slid home, and the
padlock clunked into place. The room was left
in silence once again. Savard
peeked through a crack between the dressers to
make certain they’d left.
Turning Navarre’s hand over, Savard pressed
his fingertips to his lord’s
exposed inner wrist. As he did with each
visit, Savard searched for a pulse,
craved confirmation that Navarre still lived.
Beneath his fingers, the
normally slow, lurching rhythm of Navarre’s
pulse seemed to have sped
up. Not rapid or racing, but simply stronger.
This could be his body’s last
surge of energy before death. Savard looked at
Navarre’s face, fearing it
might be the last time.
Navarre, still deep in a healing sleep, turned
his face slightly toward
the door. He wasn’t dying. He was waking.
“Oh, God. It’s her.” Jaw slack, Savard sank
back onto his heels.
He shoved his hair off his face. How had he
not seen this connection?
When Cat had first arrived on the night of the
attack, he hadn’t known
what to do with her. He’d put her in one of
Navarre’s extra homes. That
home was on the floor beneath this attic, not
terribly far from where
Navarre lay sleeping.
Most vampires could recognize the beckoning
call of their fated mate.
Supposedly, though he’d never seen it happen,
the presence of your mate
could even negate the deadly call of the sun.
Her proximity was most likely
the only reason Navarre still clung to life.
Cat must be his mate. If so, then
she was the key to Navarre’s awakening.
Ironically, her continued presence
in the city was contingent upon Navarre
allowing her to stay once he woke.
Plans quickly took form now that Savard at
long last had a clear solution.
If Navarre’s condition was going to change, it
would happen tonight. He
would make it happen tonight.
While this new development should bring
elation, Savard’s skin crawled
with a morbid anticipation. Something
unstoppable was happening in the
world around him, a
life-altering force headed his way. He’d felt this same
unease the night he’d become lord, an
awareness that he balanced at the top
of a mountain and would soon fall. He just didn’t
know in which direction
Jen Colly is the rare case of an author who
rebelled against reading assignments throughout her school years. Now
she prefers reading books in a series, which has led her to writing
her first paranormal romance series: The Cities Below. She will write
about anything that catches her fancy, though truth be told, her
weaknesses are pirates and vampires. She lives in Ohio with her
supportive husband, two kids, one big fluffy dog, and four rescued
cats.
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4 comments:
Thank you for sharing BENEATH THE NIGHT!
A secret world is a scary thought.
Great cover and excerpt! I love Vampires but I haven't started this series yet. Obviously I've been missing out and need to correct that ASAP. Thanks so much for sharing.
In regards to an underground paranormal society? Sure! Why not?
I like to believe that anything is possible.
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