Description:
When seventeen-year-old Matt Archer set out on his last mission in the Australian Outback, he thought it would be like every other hunt.
Not even close.
After only two days on the ground, his best friend is possessed, a long-lost family member has returned and hidden truths have come to the surface. Add in a coven of witches bent on bringing about the end of the world and, well, this trip has started to suck. Badly.
As his power and strength continue to grow, so does Matt’s concern that he’s becoming more and more like the creatures he’s been charged to hunt: a monster.
Faced with some of his biggest challenges to date, Matt has to decide what he needs to protect most—his family, his team…or himself.
GUEST POST
Character Development: A Musical View
It’s no secret that I’m a huge music lover. I listen at work, in the car, while folding laundry…and especially while writing. I need a soundtrack for every book, and the Matt series is no different. What I’ve loved is watching (or maybe listening) how Matt’s “sound” has changed from book to book. Book 4, Bloodlines, was no exception. It’s harder, more driving.
So what songs fit Matt in book Bloodlines? Check out the list below:
1. “Kill Your Heroes” AWOLNATION
2. “Buried Alive” Avenged Sevenfold
3. “The Growl” Conway
4. “Ready Aim Fire” Imagine Dragons
5. “Some Kind of Joke” AWOLNATION
6. “New Divide” Linkin Park
7. “Monster” Imagine Dragons
8. “Radioactive” Imagine Dragons
9. “How Do You Like Me Now?” The Heavy
10. “Demons” (Ella’s Song) Imagine Dragons
11. “Building a Mystery” (Mamie’s Song) Sarah McLachlan
I guess you could say I find myself a big Imagine Dragons fan now. I didn’t even hear of them until about four months ago, and now they are a staple of my writing music…to the point that I name-drop the band in Bloodlines. Two of my favorite bands—Coldplay and U2—are putting out new albums next year. I can’t wait to see what I can write to that!
EXCERPT
“I’ll
kill you! I’ll kill all of you and drink your blood!”
My
best friend was in rare form this evening. Will had been ranting like that ever
since he managed to spit out the bandana we’d gagged him with. No one felt like
dealing with him,
though,
so we didn’t bother shoving the gag back in.
Still,
I felt responsible for his well-being, even if Will was possessed by a demon
and not his usual happy asshat self. I grabbed an MRE—a hamburger patty for the
entree—and ducked inside the command tent, one of the few left standing after
last night’s monster attack. The interior smelled like sweat, piss and…burned
bacon?
“Gross,
dude,” I told not-Will. “You smell like a prison latrine.”
Not-Will
spit at me. His face was pale in the dim light, but his eyes glowed a brilliant
jade green. “You’ll beg for mercy before the end.”
“That’s
getting really old. Why don’t you give your voice a rest, okay?” I held up the
MRE.
“I’m
guessing that even demons have to eat. You hungry?”
Not-Will
shut up for a moment, but his muscles still strained against the towing cable keeping
him tied to his cot. My best friend, at six-four and two-hundred-forty pounds,
was pretty strong on his own. Add in a little dark magic, and he was like a
tank with legs. It had taken three guys to tie him up, and the Humvee’s towing
cable—one end still attached to the vehicle—had been the only thing hefty
enough to keep not-Will chained.
“I
would appreciate a meal,” he said in a formal, polite voice.
That
wasn’t like the real Will, either.
“Okay.
I’ll feed you and bring you some water, if only to keep your mouth full so you
can’t scream at us for a while.”
I
opened the MRE, discarding anything not-Will could use as a weapon if he got
loose.
Because
his hands were tied behind his back, I had to feed him.
“Seriously,
man, if you remember any of this after we exorcise you, you’ll never live it down,”
I muttered as not-Will chomped up his food like a rabid dog.
“I’ll
kill you soon, so none of that matters,” not-Will said, smiling and showing me
bits of carrot in his teeth.
In
any other situation, I’d have laughed. This evening, I had too much on mind to
find any of this funny.
Badass
Aunt Julie poked her head in the tent while I attempted to shovel applesauce
into not-Will’s mouth. She wrinkled her nose at the stench. “Poor Will.”
“Hello,
gorgeous.” Not-Will leered at my aunt, and his eyes roamed every part of her
body.
Even
wearing desert print battle-dress uniform, Aunt Julie was gorgeous…and no one
but my
Uncle
Mike had license to look at her that way. My fists clenched as he said, “Think
I’ll keep you around a while after I’ve killed all the men. We could have a
little fun.”
Aunt
Julie gave not-Will a dangerous smile. The demon must not know who he was
dealing with. “I’d like to see you try. I could kill you with a nail. Or a
spoon.” Her smile faded into a scowl. “Or a tire-iron. I’m not picky.”
“Captain,
did you need something?” I asked, not in the mood to break up a tent brawl.
When in doubt, interrupt.
“Sorry,”
she said, rubbing her eyes. “The major got worried so I came to check on you.”
I
shrugged; Major Tannen—also known as my Uncle Mike and Aunt Julie’s husband—had
reason to worry. Right now, it seemed like this day would never, ever end.
I’d
gotten most of the food into not-Will’s mouth and I was ready to escape. “Will,
if you’re in there, kick that demon’s ass, okay? See you later.”
We’d
barely cleared the tent before he started screaming threats again. Every muscle
in my back tensed up. “Tell the major I’ll be at the other end of camp.” I
jabbed a thumb at the command tent. “I don’t think I can handle listening to
that anymore.”
Aunt
Julie patted my shoulder. “We’ll fix it. Agent Archer thinks his contact with
the local Nocturna Maura coven can help displace Will’s demon.”
Agent
Archer…maybe if I called him that—instead of Dad—this whole situation would be
a little less weird.
I
doubted it, though. “I need some air.”
I
stalked to the far end of camp and settled down facing west. The sun was
beginning to set, and I needed its warmth and protection for as long as it
lasted. Night would bring horrors, and I had to be prepared to fight them.
I
reached into my left jacket pocket and pulled out the St. Christopher medal my
girlfriend had given me more than a year ago. I turned it over and over in my
hand. I missed Ella like crazy, and the medal gave me hope that I’d live to see
another dawn.
Dad
came striding out of the HQ tent and headed my direction. He didn’t see Uncle
Mike step out behind him, his right arm bound up in a sling. Not-Will had
dislocated Uncle Mike’s shoulder in addition to breaking my nose last night.
Mike watched Dad’s progress with narrowed eyes. I let out a long breath. As if
I didn’t have enough to deal with; now I was caught in a tug of war between the
guy who fathered me and the man who raised me. My life could easily be a three-ring
circus for all the chaos and drama going on around me.
“Tink,
think you could, I don’t know, teleport me somewhere?”
No
answer.
“Crap,
now I’m missing you and Ella. How’s that for irony?”
Still
nothing. Yeah, Tink was well and truly gone. Our knife-spirits had been
banished
somehow.
Not-Will had told us his mistress had sent them away. As angry as I’d been with
Tink when we left on this mission, the absence of her presence in my head left
an echoing emptiness.
And
despair, too. How could we complete this operation without the spirits’ help? I
had to get her back somehow, if not for me, for Will. I’d seen Tink save
someone else from a demon possession—maybe she’d be able to help Will, too.
If
only I could find her.
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About the authors:
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.
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.
Chips
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