Dead Girls Don’t Cry
The Undead Space Initiative
Book 1
Casey Wyatt
Genre: Urban Fantasy/Paranormal Romance
Date of Publication: August 18, 2016
ISBN-13: 978-1534902718
ISBN-10: 1534902716
ISBN13: 2940153402147
ASIN: B01HUFDDT2
Number of pages: 410
Word Count: 83,000
Cover Artist: Kim Killion, Inc.
Book Description:
Cherry Cordial, vampire stripper extraordinaire, spectacularly messes up her life with a single act of kindness. How could she have known when she rescued gorgeous rogue Ian McDevitt that she would be implicated in the vampire queen’s murder?
Soon, she faces the wrath of the entire vampire community. To escape retribution, she joins a settlement program to colonize Mars. Her choices are grim: hurtle through space to the red planet to face the unknown and possible death, or stay on Earth and face certain annihilation.
To make things even more complicated, a certain gorgeous rogue seems to be shadowing her every move...
Excerpt:
Suddenly, I
wasn’t the biggest, baddest thing on the block.
Revenants.
They always
traveled in packs. Enough of them could take me down. Revenants were cousins to
vampires, undead beings with too much spirit. Essentially ghosts with physical
reality.
I picked up the
pace, steering toward the middle of the street and well away from dark corners.
If I had a heart rate, it would have been pounding. My blood was rare and
prized. One sip and the revenants would keep me alive to serve as a drink
dispenser.
I fished through
my bag. Where was my cell? Jonathan would come. Provided I could find the damn
phone.
Meaty thwacks
rang out in the alley as I passed by.
Do not look.
A soft oomph,
followed by a clipped English accent, “Try that again, bastards.”
I looked.
Shit.
A lone and
gorgeous male vampire had been captured. Three revenants had him pinned against
the wall. Two held his arms and one pinned his legs. Three more surrounded him
like a pack of knife-wielding hyenas.
The vampire
snarled. Long fangs bared, presumably pissed off at his capture. With his
sculptured physique, he could handle the situation. Right?
None of the
baddies had noticed me yet. I could leave.
Another punch
landed, connecting with the vamp’s mouth. The crack echoed in the alley. Liquid
splattered, followed by cruel laughter.
The vampire
hottie spat, his lip broken. Blood trickled down his jaw, seeping into the
stark white collar of his button down shirt. “Think twice before you cut me, mate.
I’ll smash all of your fucking heads in.”
“Shut up, meat.”
One added, “I’m
so scared,” before swinging his knife and tearing a gash in the vampire’s
chest. The pack laughed. A revenant approached the vampire with IV bags.
Crap-a-roni, now
I had to get involved. They planned to bleed him out. That’s what revenants
did. They took a vampire’s blood and drained him or her dry. The blood was then
sold to the highest revenant bidder. They believed our blood could remove the
excess spirit from their bodies, returning them to their true vampire form.
Problem is—it’s
a myth. There’s no way for a revenant to become a vampire, any more than I
could become a zebra if I wanted to. These guys were zealots. Deranged
lunatics.
“This is your last warning, blokes,” Mr. Sexy
English accent said. I tried not to shiver at the sound of his rich voice.
Heady whiffs of his sweet scented blood drifted my way. Like a fine wine, the
smell promised a delicious and satisfying taste. Saliva pooled in my mouth. My
fangs dug into my bottom lip.
“Well lookee
here!”
Damn. I should
have run when I had the chance. The pack turned in my direction, their faces
eager for more blood. I cringed under the gaze of the hollow-eyed, pale-skinned
nightmares who all wanted a piece of me.
The nearest one
licked his gray, rubbery lips. “Yum. Dessert.”
I was too stupid
to live. Why didn’t I run? My feet were frozen to the spot. I did the lamest,
girliest thing possible. I swung my purse. And connected. A solid hit to the
nuts.
The revenant
shrieked, clutching his junk. “Bitch!”
The male vampire
bucked, tossing the revenant off his left arm. Partially free, he ripped the
arm off the other revenant before the thing could even react. With balled
fists, Mr. Hottie crushed the skull of the captor holding his feet.
“Don’t stand
there like a daft pony!” the vampire scolded. He snapped the neck of the
nearest revenant, then motioned. “Get out of my way!”
“What? Without
my help, you’d still be trapped against a wall!” I ducked and stepped aside,
narrowly avoiding the gray-lipped revenant who had thought I was dessert.
“The rubbish bin
would be more help than you!” Mr. English silenced two more revenants with
brutal, neck-twisting efficiency.
“Oh really?”
What a prick.
The revenant
recovered from the nut bash and charged me again. His fingertips knocked off my
ball cap. I kicked him in the stomach, grabbed the garbage barrel and slammed
it over the revenant’s head as he honed in on me. The plastic bin wouldn’t kill
the thing, but he couldn’t see either.
“Pathetic,” the
vampire said.
Mr. English and
I watched as the last revenant bounced against a brick wall before falling
over, his legs scissoring.
“Time for this
one to bugger off as well.” Mr. English yanked off the barrel and snuffed out
the revenant with a bone-shattering blow to its head.
One by one the
corpses disintegrated into dusty husks. A breeze blew through the alley and
scattered the remains. Gray vaporous clouds floated around before dissipating
into the air. To a passerby, the revenants’ final passage would look like dirty
car exhaust.
“Well, I’m off
then. Have good evening.” He brushed dirt off his tailored trousers. “Sod it,
they scuffed my shoes. And this shirt is ruined.”
“Yeah. What a
tragedy. You’re lucky. You could have been a revenant Slurpee.”
He sniffed at
the suggestion. “I was never in any real danger.”
“You could have
fooled me,” I retrieved my ball cap from the grimy sidewalk.
A late afternoon
sunbeam penetrated the alley, illuminating the vampire’s blue-green eyes and
highlighting the fine bone structure of his face. I tried not to gawk.
I gathered my
tangled hair and mashed it under the hat. “Looks to me like they had you pinned
against the ropes.” Did I mention he was gorgeous? Like a cover model. An
underwear cover model. I cleared my throat. He was a total stranger, and while
I bet he looked divine in only underwear, I needed to stop ogling him.
When he stared
at me and didn’t reply, I lamely added, “You know? Down for the count.”
“I understood
the reference, luv,” he said in his damn fine accent.
A man-shaped
shadow shifted from across the street, forming a dark blot in the alley’s
entrance. We weren’t alone.
About the Author:
Casey Wyatt grew up in a mid-size Connecticut town where nothing exciting ever happened. To stem the boredom, she spent plenty of time reading fantasy and sci-fi novels and imagining her own adventures in her head. Not much has changed since she’s grown up, only now she shares those made up stories with her readers and earns a coin or two.
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