Title: Winter Wolf
Author: R.J.
Blain
Genre: paranormal
/ supernatural suspense / thriller / murder mystery / urban fantasy
The Hunted Wizard
When Nicole dabbled in the occult, she
lost it all: Her voice, her family, and her name. Now on the run from the
Inquisition, she must prove to herself—and the world—that not all wizards are
too dangerous to let live.
The savage murder of a bookstore
employee throws Nicole into the middle of Inquisition business, like it or not.
Driven by her inability to save the young man’s life, she decides to hunt the
killer on her own. Using forbidden magic to investigate the past, she learns
that the murderer is in fact a disease that could kill the entire werewolf
race.
Forced to choose between saving lives
and preserving her own, Nicole embraces the magic that sent her into exile. Without
werewolves, the power of the Inquisition would dwindle, and she could live
without being hunted.
Nicole’s only hope for success lies in
the hands of the werewolves she hates and the Inquisition she fears, but
finding someone to trust is only the beginning of her problems. There are those
who want to ensure that the werewolves go extinct and that the Inquisition
falls.
But, if she fails to find a cure, her
family—including her twin sister—will perish…
Links
Available At:
iTunes Store: https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/id912946393
RJ Blain suffers from a Moleskine journal obsession, a pen fixation, and a terrible tendency to pun without warning.
When she isn't playing pretend, she
likes to think she's a cartographer and a sumi-e painter. In reality, she herds
cats and a husband. She is currently on a quest for a new warrior fish.
In her spare time, she daydreams about
being a spy. Should that fail, her contingency plan involves tying her best of
enemies to spinning wheels and quoting James Bond villains until she is
satisfied.
Favorite
Books & Series
In no particular order:
Mercedes Lackey's Valdemar & Gryphon Series
Jim Butcher's Codex Alera & The Dresden Files
Brandon Sanderson's Elantris
Patricia Briggs' Alpha and Omega, Dragon Bones, & The Mercy Thompson series
Madeline L'Engle's A Wrinkle in Time
Book Excerpt
Almost everyone in the store had a phone. Dormant devices,
from reading lights to mobile chargers, littered the tables. One woman,
browsing books nearby, had four battery-powered devices in her purse. One was a
phone, and like mine, it hungered. Its need was strong; its battery waned to
the point of failure.
If I wanted, I could charge it for her.
No one would notice if I did. Maybe the woman would wonder
how her phone hadn’t died before she got home. It only had a few minutes left.
It’d take me all of ten seconds to fix it for her. If I did, I wouldn’t be so
aware of it. But to do so, I’d have to touch her—or her phone. Some things I
could manipulate without having a direct conduit, but cell phone batteries were
tricky, greedy things.
I cringed a little, setting the thriller book down. I
picked up the next nearest title. I flipped it over, not reading the text on
the back. Did I dare? Out of the corner of my eye, I watched the woman browsing
through the books. All it would take was a few seconds. I could charge it
without her noticing.
That was one thing I was actually good at.
I put the novel I held down and wandered to the same table,
careful not to look at her. Book by book, I investigated the titles, circling
to where she stood.
“You’re Nicole Thomas, aren’t you? The actress. You’re
her.” My quarry appraised me with a pleased expression.
People normally recognized the mainliners, people with
beautiful faces and voices to match, people who didn’t avoid crowds.
In short, people other than me.
I met her gaze, abandoning my perusal of novels. “I am,” I
replied, wincing a little at the sandpaper-rough quality of my voice. At least
I hadn’t been reduced to a whisper—yet. My fatal flaw was my rough, grating
voice. Chronic laryngitis did that to a person. It ruined careers, as it had
mine, though I hadn’t quite given up on being an actress. I’d already lost the
ability to sing.
I wasn’t going to let a stupid disease take everything away
from me.
The woman smiled, not seeming to mind talking to someone
who sounded more like a zombie than a human. “You’re taller than I expected.
It’s a pleasure to meet you.”
She thrust out her hand.
We shook.
I left her phone alone.
“They keep putting me next to giants,” I quipped. It was
true. When I did manage to get on the silver screen, I worked alongside actors
easily a foot-and-a-half taller than me. “It’s a pleasure to meet you too.” I
matched her smile. She didn’t tell me her name, and I didn’t ask for it.
It took all of my will not to fiddle with her phone. All it
would take was a murmured word and a thought, and it’d be done. It would have
been easy to charge the battery when our hands had been clasped together, but I
hadn’t dared.
If, sometime later, she noticed her phone had magically
been charged—literally—she might remember me. She knew my name.
And in true cowardice, I couldn’t bring myself to help her.
If she connected the strange behavior of her phone with me, she might tell
someone. If she did, I’d be as good as dead—or worse. I had dabbled in the
occult, and the occult had dabbled back, and there were those who didn’t like
when that happened.
The last thing I needed was them finding me.
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