INVISIBLE PRISON (INVISIBLE RECRUITS) (11 page)

BOOK: INVISIBLE PRISON (INVISIBLE RECRUITS)
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FROM THE AUTHOR

 

Thank you for reading my books! I hope you enjoyed this novella and, if so, will post a review for me.

~
Mary B

 

 

INVISIBLE RECRUIT Urban Fantasy novels coming soon from

Mary Buckham

 

Invisible Magic: Book 1-Alex Noziak (February 28, 2013)

Invisible Power: Book 2-Alex Noziak (May 2013)

Invisible Fate: Book 3-Alex Noziak (September 2013)

 

 

 

Please enjoy the following

Sneak Peek from

 

INVISIBLE MAGIC

 

 

INVISIBLE MAGIC

Alex Noziak – Book One

 

CHAPTER ONE

 

First demon you summon, it’s kind of scary. After a few hundred, it becomes just another job. Unfortunately I hadn’t reached that point.

My name’s Alex Noziak and I’m one of the five sorry-assed members of a team called the Invisible Recruits that are supposed to stand between the world’s humans and the rising population of non-human bad guys. One of the team was here voluntarily, and it wasn’t me. But that wasn’t my biggest problem right this minute; wrestling with an echo-demon that look mostly like green slime and a smattering of the living dead was.

I’m part shaman, part witch, not a card-carrying Wiccan but a blood-born witch, and one of my abilities was to summon others to me, both human and non-human, but only within a limited range. Sounds useful, but how many times do you really want to invite a Were, or vamp, or foul-mouthed dark angel to a party? Exactly which is why this particular summoning spell was a little rusty. Okay, a truck that sits on the back-forty for twenty years is rusty. I was in the what-the-hell-am-I-doing category.

Embracing magic was not a piece of cake, because it came at a cost. Always. My last summoning here at the IR (I for Invisible and R for Recruits) compound was coming back to bite me now. Sort of like an athlete who was a star performer one day but a dud the next. So now I was more witch-wanna-be who had to produce something, and fast, to keep my spot on the team.

A thought one of my team members actually voiced just about then. “You going to make this demon appear sometime in this millennium, Noziak?” Mandy Reyes snapped, standing kitty-corner from me across the training gym at our Maryland facility.

Mandy had hot Latin blood, a mouth like a stevedore, the patience of a gnat, and was one of the four non-voluntary members of the team. I wasn’t sure what was being held over her head to work this gig, but I knew it couldn’t be pleasant. I also knew her talent-she was a spirit  walker. Which meant she could walk between the spirit world and the real world. Again, sounds cool but the price for that specific ability was to be soulless. Which meant when you were on the spirit side, or when spirits crossed over or remained on our side, she was an empty vessel with a neon For Rent sign flashing. Any spirit looking for a new home, she was the perfect candidate.

Right now though roving spirits weren’t our issue; a missing echo-demon was as four of us maneuvered in a gym that looked like an average high school holding cell. Nothing fancy for our group. Mandy and fellow team members Jayle
ne Smart and Kelly McAllister formed a triangle around an X-marked-the-spot circle. A circle that was outlined in salt for protection once I called forth the demon as training for taking one down in real life.

Our instructor, M.T. Stone and our team leader, Vaughn Monroe, the only one of us not coerced into being on the team as far as we could tell, were watching this exercise from a room near the rafters. Smart people.

Not that an echo-demon was all that threatening; they were nuisances more than deadly as they had earned their names based on their willingness to make a lot of high-volume screams that could scare the willies out of people and echo in a person’s mind long after the demon had departed. At least when the demons traveled alone. In packs, they could turn really nasty, really quick.

The intention of this little training session was to make sure I knew what the hell I was doing, which I didn’t. Get some practice in whipping demon butt before we left the safety of the compound. And learn to work as a team.

That last was the biggest challenge. All five of the IR members were not even trained to fight
human
bad guys yet. We were just humans who had a little extra, extra to our genetic make up which would made us freaks among humans,
if
the humans knew what we were. The four of us had spent most of our twenty-some years hiding our talents  unless we really needed them, like I had when a rogue Were was about to kill my brother.

So I used a summoning spell. That was the first mistake. Second was I summoned a death demon who made such a mess of the Were that I faced life in prison for murder. Try telling a lawyer or judge there were extenuating circumstances, like the victim was a Were and my brother was a shifter who was caught turning, which meant he was too vulnerable to defend himself. I was damned lucky I hadn’t killed my brother along with the Were.

Yeah, so that’s why I was here, sweat pouring down my face, my arms shaking from holding them straight before me for the last thirty minutes and my throat getting hoarse from repeating a summoning spell that wasn’t working.

Instead of telling Mandy can’t-you-do-more where to shove her comment, I was saved by Kelly. “Leave her be, Mandy. You can tell she’s trying.”

That was Kelly all over. Raised in the flat farm country of Iowa and a former kindergarten teacher, Kelly could make muggers melt with kindness. She was our team placater, the rah-rah cheerleader and the let’s all-play-nice playground monitor. She’d never said what had landed her here, but it was probably because she had sweet-talked someone to death. Nothing else made sense.

Kelly’s ability was
to disappear. Which sounds uber cool, but that too came with a price. She could remain truly invisible for only a few minutes at a time and when she reappeared she was blind for about ten minutes for every minute of invisibility. Which made her really vulnerable to attack if all the bad things were not vanquished. Another downside to her ability was she wasn’t very good with it, so when she was frightened she could wink out of sight unintentionally.

But then who was I to talk about being proficient?

Kelly stood braced just to my right, and though I couldn’t see her except out of the corner of my eye, I could feel her gripping a sword with a white-knuckle death grip. Echo-demons hated metal, as did a lot of the non-humans, so this late afternoon’s session was steel vs. demon blood. If I ever called the freaking monster forth.

I glanced at the observation room window and caught M.T. Stone eyeing his watch. But what did he expect? We were barely three weeks into our regular training and only just started flexing our other abilities earlier this week. That was after one of our fellow recruits tried to kill me and wasn’t too picky who else she took out at the same time. That’s when I began to wonder if prison might not have been the safer option.

Then we’d gone on one official mission, but that was mostly a babysitting session when Vaughn went up against the son of a Russian mob lord, a guy she had known in her previous life as a debutante. It wasn’t a picnic, but it wasn’t demon baiting either.

Talk about neophytes. Most of us rarely if ever voluntarily used our gifts in the world we came from and some, like Jayle
ne and Mandy, had skills that didn’t directly translate to taking down anyone. Jaylene was a psychic, or had visions. A fat lot of good it did to hang out with visions when monsters were out for blood. Human blood. Even I could guess at what the future held in that situation.

M.T. Stone’s voice broke over the loudspeaker making all of us jump. “This is a no show. We’ll call it a night. Try again tomorrow.”

“No,” I shouted back. I’d been raised with four older brothers; I could hear his tone if not his thoughts. Wimp. Lightweight. Poser. No one called a Noziak a loser and got away with it, even if it was my own inner voice. “Give me one more minute. Let me take this up a notch.”

“You sure that’s a good idea?” Jayle
ne asked.

“Yeah.” Though I wasn’t really.

I heard Mandy and Jaylene groan, which only helped me go deeper. I could do this. I would do this.

 

Here in this place and before the eyes of the unbelievers, come forth.

 

I call the creatures of the elements. The seekers of release who wish to walk amongst the humans.

 

I bid you to destroy the binds holding you in thrall.

 

Come. Prove yourselves.

 

Salty sweat seeped into my eyes. I bit my lip till I could taste blood.

Of course. There was no human blood. What an idiot I was. That was the missing piece.

“Jaylene, cut your finger and squeeze a few blood drops into the inner circle?” I shouted, holding my pose. This was blood magic, second cousin to black magic, but just a smidge might help. White magic sure wasn’t doing squat.

“No way am I cutting myself,” came
the bullet-fired retort. Jaylene might be six feet tall and built like an Amazon, with looks that could earn her a fortune as a model, but growing up alone on Chicago’s south side had made her very wary of sticking her neck or a bloody finger, out for anybody.

“I’ll do it,” Kelly offered and stepped forward.

“No.” She’d probably cut a vein with her sword and then disappear on us before we could stop the bleeding. “I’ll do it myself.”

I dropped my arms, swiping one bare arm across my forehead to wipe the sweat as I reached with the other toward Kelly. “Put your sword out here.”

She did as I asked even though the blade shook. It was wicked sharp, the better for demon killing, but instead of a paper cut I dug a pretty deep slash into my right finger. “Ouch.”

I swear I could hear Mandy snicker so I shot her a glare, cupping my right hand with my left to make sure I didn’t leave a trail of blood for the demon to escape the inner containment circle. Just in case my teammates were not quick enough, or skilled enough to kill him.

That was one of the sucky parts of being the one doing the summoning. I couldn’t be holding a weapon of any kind, no matter how deadly the non-human being called. If this echo-demon found a way past the containment area, I was sorry out of luck. Except for my anathema dagger I had stashed against the nearest wall. Noziaks came to a rumble prepared to fight.

It took only a few steps to reach the crudely salted circle where the demon should appear, and only seconds to have a nice snack of fresh human blood drops scattered on the floor.

Man, a sliced finger could hurt. Sucking it as I returned to my spot I realized I was focusing on the minor pain to avoid the bigger issue. If the blood did its thing then I was about to break a promise made to my father years ago. He was a full-blood shaman, a shifter, and a wise man in his own right. Plus he loved me to the depths of his soul. He rarely punished his children, especially me, the baby, but when he did it was serious.

“Great gifts are not given lightly, Alex,” he’d said. “They come with great responsibility and consequences. Do you understand?”

I shook my head like any fifteen-year-old who wanted to get out of immediate trouble for doing something wrong.

“Then you must promise never to use your abilities for harm, of anyone or anything.”

More head shaking on my part. Right then I’d have agreed to anything he’d asked. That’s how much trouble I was in.

“Promise me as a Noziak.”

My head had started to bob when he’d raised one calloused hand. “And the love you have for me.”

That wasn’t playing fair. Especially since, after my mother had left us when I was five, my dad had been my whole world
.

“Will you promise this, Alex?”

What could I say? I nodded and meant it.

I sucked in my breath, ignoring the throbbing in my finger which I pressed tight against my thumb to make sure the blood flow was stopped. It was harder to push aside the tenseness in my gut, wondering if calling a demon to its death meant I was harming another? Or if my dad would forgive me if he ever found out?

 

CHAPTER 2

 

I ignored Kelly’s breathing next to me, Mandy’s scowl across from me, and Jaylene tightening both her hands along her sword’s shaft. The late afternoon sunlight was streaming through high clearstory windows around the gym, the hiss of kerosene lamps I’d set up for back up lighting mingling with the quiet. Demon baiting in the dark was suicidal.

My voice was calm and deep as I raised my hands and began the summoning chant once more:

 

Here in this place and before the eyes of the unbelievers, come forth.

 

I call the creatures of the elements. The seekers of release who wish to walk amongst the humans.

 

I bid you to destroy the binds holding you in thrall.

 

Come. Prove yourselves.

 

A faint wind brushed against my skin. A hot, dry wind, not from damp Maryland in March, but someplace far away. Smelling of sulfur and brine.

I squeezed my eyes shut and kept chanting, stretching my arms higher, deepening my voice, ignoring the fissure of warning along my skin.

 

There is a reason for being. Journey here. Now.

 

May your masters honor and bow before you. Sending you on your way.

 

You who laugh at the mortals. Come close.

 

Echo-demon I summon thee!

 

The wind picked up and I swore I could feel grit and sand abrading my skin. Kelly caught her breath. I kept my eyes closed.

 

We welcome you demon of the deep. Come play with us. Show us your might.

 

Demons did love a dare.

The lights in the room flickered then went out. My eyelids flew open. Fortunately the few kerosene lanterns stayed lit even as they cast long wavering shadows dancing across the room and deepening the darkness in all four corners.

Mandy was no longer scowling but sending wary glances over her shoulders. Jaylene faced where the danger was greatest, head-on, towards the circle. After her childhood what was one lone demon.

Kelly’s breathing came short and shallow. I feared she’d hyper-ventilate before I finished the summoning. But I couldn’t stop now. The echo-demon was too close. I could feel it’s presence like sharp cat claws stepping paw by paw across my exposed arms. The tensing of my neck and shoulders. The knot tightening in my gut.

“Come on,” I whispered, “show your ugly face. Come forth and die.”

 

Now! Echo-demon. Close nearby as day dissolves into night. Show us your—

 

The explosion ripped through the room. Tossing me far enough backwards I landed with a curse on my tailbone. Ten feet in front of me Jaylene and Mandy held their positions. They were no longer waiting or wary. Legs braced, swords held high, muscles tensed. They were ready for bear.

Crap. Where was. . .Kelly had winked out. Only her sword shook in the flickering light. The late afternoon sky had clouded over, as if evil brought its own darkness.

And not one but three echo-demons swirled like a bad nightmare in the middle of the gym; twelve feet tall, brackish green in color, scales covering their bodies as they materialized into more corporeal shapes. First one, with three horns sprouting from his misshapen head, then the second, with a gaping mouth of shark-like teeth, and then the third, with a double-forked tail, each ending in a knobby spike.

Oh by the Goddesses, what had I done?

 

THE END

 

***

 

Invisible Magic – February 28, 2013 –

www.MaryBuckham.com

www.InvisibleRecruits.com

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