Published: June 17th, 2013
Description:
When Matt Archer was
fourteen, he was chosen—by a magic, spirit-inhabited knife—to hunt
monsters with a special paranormal division of the Army. When he was
fifteen, he was thrown into a global war the rest of the world didn’t
know existed.
Now Matt’s sixteen and the war has cost him more than he ever thought it would. He’s also learned that the knife-spirits have an agenda he doesn’t totally agree with. The only problem? The spirits have the upper hand, and they plan to control the fight—and Matt.
Then things get worse: the next lunar eclipse cycle is starting, a prominent physicist has gone missing, and Matt’s best friend is thinking about quitting the team. If he loses Will—after everyone else he’s lost—Matt’s not sure how he’ll fight alone.
As the source of his nightmares starts to creep out of the shadows, Matt knows he’ll need all the help he can get…because being alone could prove deadly.
Now Matt’s sixteen and the war has cost him more than he ever thought it would. He’s also learned that the knife-spirits have an agenda he doesn’t totally agree with. The only problem? The spirits have the upper hand, and they plan to control the fight—and Matt.
Then things get worse: the next lunar eclipse cycle is starting, a prominent physicist has gone missing, and Matt’s best friend is thinking about quitting the team. If he loses Will—after everyone else he’s lost—Matt’s not sure how he’ll fight alone.
As the source of his nightmares starts to creep out of the shadows, Matt knows he’ll need all the help he can get…because being alone could prove deadly.
EXCERPT:
Matt Archer: Legend
“Ouch! Man, that
hurts,” Will whined.
Built
like an Abrams tank, six-four and weighing two hundred-thirty pounds, you
wouldn’t necessarily think my best friend was a wuss. Especially since he made
his high-school football career out of slamming opposing quarterbacks to the
turf.
He just hated needles.
“You’re awful big to be
scared of a little tat,” the tattoo artist said. He shook his head in disgust.
“I’ve inked little old ladies who complained a lot less than you.”
“Well, good for them,”
Will said.
“Dude, chill,” I said,
trying not to laugh.
He pulled at his hair
with his free hand, his face scrunched up. “Chill? I’m getting stabbed with an
ink-filled needle, you butthead! You were unconscious when you got yours done.
You chill!”
Then I did laugh. I
held out my right hand. Just below the wrist joint was a tiny, silver
pentagram. It was the symbol for the military unit we served with…and much,
much more in my case. Mine had been inked by a Peruvian medicine man and had mystical
properties. Will’s was a more mundane copy.
“Seriously, mister, are
you trying to engrave this thing onto my arm bone?” Will howled.
I grinned at the tattoo
artist. “Sorry, Jimmy, Will’s a pansy.”
Jimmy grunted, his head
bent over Will’s meaty forearm as he worked. “You don’t say.” A few buzzes
later and the job was done. “Look here, big guy.”
He set down the needle
and raised his t-shirt, revealing a scrawny chest covered in a collage of body
art from his neckline to his belly button. Will recoiled and I started laughing
again.
“See? You don’t gotta
be big to be a man,” Jimmy said, a hint of a smile twitching at his mouth.
“Now, do you need some ibuprofen for that little boo-boo on your wrist, or can
your friend walk you out?”
“I’ll be fine,” Will said,
sounding humiliated.
I whacked him on the
back. “Sure you will. Thanks, Jimmy.”
“Don’t mention it. Let
me know if you blokes come back to Ottawa. Maybe I can stencil a few more items
for you, eh?” He turned to clean his equipment, missing Will’s blanched face.
I led Will outside and
we headed across the long parking lot. We’d told the team we were going to
dinner, but took the bus here after a Google search described Jimmy as one of
the best tattoo artists in Ottawa. As soon as Captain Parker saw Will’s wrist,
we’d be in for some trouble but I doubted he’d come down hard on us. All five
blade-wielders had the special pentagram tattoo, and several of the guys on our
team had gone to get one, too. Will wasn’t the only one who wanted to fit in.
The mid-October night
was cold and the wind had a bite to it. Nothing a couple of Montana boys
weren’t used to, but I turned up the collar of my jacket anyway, glad I’d worn
my hiking boots.
“Some fall break. Not
in Canada eight hours and I’ve got a tat,” Will said, air puffing in little
white clouds from his mouth. “Millicent’s gonna be pissed. If it wasn’t football
season, I’d be looking to run away from home before she finds out.”
“You know, it sucks
that I have to go back to school at all,” I said. “Mom’s being way too stubborn
about that. So what if there isn’t much activity right now? I could be at the
Pentagon, helping Aunt Julie research or something. School’s a waste of time.”
He snorted. “Can you
blame her? You lied to her for a year before she found out what we were up to.
Keeping you in school when you’re between ops is her way of punishing us and the Army for keeping her in the
dark.”
“Look who’s talking.” I
stopped and crossed my arms. “You ever planning to tell your parents that we travel the world, hunting monsters on school
breaks? Or do you think they’ll keep buying all that crap about the gifted and
talented program?”
Will looked away, jaw
clenched.
“Dude, sorry. I didn’t
think—”
“It’s okay.” He
wouldn’t look at me. “Millicent knows now, and that’s enough for me. She seems
to get why we’re out here. My parents wouldn’t.”
“True story,” I said. “Doesn’t
mean it doesn’t suck.”
“I know, man. It’s
just…I’m not a completely necessary part of the team; we both know that. If my
parents found out, Colonel Black wouldn’t fight too hard to keep me around.”
I shook my head. “They
would if I threatened to quit. You’re my wingman. I can’t do this without you and
the Army better keep that in mind. Besides, I’m not willing to let all that training
we did at your house the last few months go to waste. We have too many badass
tricks to try out in the field next time.” I started walking again. “C’mon. I’m
cold, and I’m sure there’s a pizza place still open somewhere in this town.”
“Good. I’m hungry
enough to eat a brontosaurus.”
“Isn’t that what Fred
Flintstone eats?” I asked.
“Yeah, but he only eats
a steak. I’d eat the whole thing, except its tail.”
“You draw the line at
eating a giant reptile’s tail? That’s your limit?”
Will shrugged. “I do
have some standards, you know.”
“Now you tell me.” I wrapped
my arms across my chest; the wind had suddenly gotten colder. Jimmy’s tattoo
shop was in an industrial park, deserted this late at night, and a creepy place
to be out walking after dark. Thin clouds, light gray in the moonlight, raced
across the sky. I started walking faster, trying to cross between the amber
circles of light from the streetlamps more quickly to stay out of the dark.
I could see the bus
stop in the distance when a blue flash came from my backpack, catching my eye
at the same time a voice crossed my mind.
Danger.
“Here?” I asked the
knife-spirit.
Look. She sounded agitated, which usually meant we were about to be
in big trouble.
The hair on the back of
my neck prickled and I glanced back at the walkway between the metal buildings.
Fog oozed from all four directions, tinged a phosphorescent green and stinking of
a sewer.
“We got incoming,” I
whispered, not like it wasn’t obvious. Monsters were rarely subtle.
Will already had his
phone out. “…Yeah, northeast corner of town…No, no idea how many….You picking
us up on GPS?...No, we didn’t go to dinner….Look, can I explain that later?”
An other-worldly
screech, like ten-thousand metal nails dragging across concrete, filled the
air. Will whispered, “Gotta go, Parker. Hurry up, will ya?”
“How long?” I asked.
“Parker said ten
minutes.” Will glanced at his watch. “No bus for the next fifteen. Looks like
we’re stuck.”
We are not stuck. We fight.
Prepare.
Why did I know the
knife-spirit would say that?
Books in series:
Kendra C. Highley lives in north Texas with her husband and two children. She also serves as staff to two self-important and high-powered cats. This, according to the cats, is her most important job. She believes chocolate is a basic human right, running a 10k is harder than it sounds, and that everyone should learn to drive a stick-shift. She loves monsters, vacations, baking and listening to bad electronica.
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