The Dead Series Book 1
Paranormal Romance / Urban Fantasy / Ghost Fiction
The Wild Rose Press, Inc
May 7, 2018
332
New Release Giveaway
DEBRIEFING THE DEAD, The Dead Series Book 1
By Kerry Blaisdell
3 Lucky Winners Will Recieve:
First Place: ebook + $10 Amazon gift card
Second Place: ebook + $5 Amazon gift card
Third Place: ebook
**Giveaway Eligible in US Only**
Book blurb:
The only thing Hyacinth wants is her life back. Literally. She and her sister were murdered by Demons, leaving her young nephew, Geordi, to his father’s family in the brutal Sicilian Mob. Then Archangel Michael offers her a deal: recapture a powerful rock the Demons stole, and she can live long enough to find Geordi a safe home. Refuse, and she’ll continue up (or down) to the Afterlife.
So, slightly more alive than dead, she heads for Turkey and the Demons, taking Geordi, her mysterious neighbor Jason, and a sexy dead guy only she can see with her. But the hardest part won’t be battling Demons, meeting Satan, or dodging Middle Eastern customs—it will be later, when Geordi is settled, and Michael rips her away again. How can she abandon her nephew? Or can she outwit the Angel of Death himself, and stay with Geordi forever?
Excerpt:
I suppressed yet another twinge at the memory of yesterday’s interview. Especially Jacques, sitting still and spider-like across from me. I had a feeling he didn’t miss much and wondered what I might have unconsciously revealed while Claude distracted me.
I pulled into a parking space near my unit, and my cell rang, the cheery notes of Beethoven’s Für Élise telling me Lily was calling for our weekly chat. For a second, I thought about answering. Lily might be Geordi’s mother, but I have to say, he’s pretty much the light of my life. Certainly, the best male relationship I’ve had, even counting Jason and Vadim. Who wouldn’t love a guy who brings you dead bugs he’s found in someone else’s yard, then offers to split the last éclair because you’re his “favoritest tata ever”? He’s a smart kid, too. I’m his only auntie, and the flattery still works.
I sent the call to voicemail. It almost killed me, but it’d be hard enough opening the crates, knowing how excited Vadim was when he landed this catch. You can’t get much fresher than an unexcavated site. If I spent even a half hour catching up with Lily and Geordi, I’d chicken out. And I had to know what was in those crates, or I’d never be able to let them, or Vadim, go.
I screwed up my courage, got out of the car, and unlocked the unit’s roll door. Yep. Three large crates.
Very large.
I went back to the Peapod, opened the hatch, and extracted the paltry pile of produce boxes I’d scrounged from my favorite markets. I’d have to empty them again at the store for subsequent trips, or else go beg more boxes. This was ridiculous. But necessary.
Must let go. Must move on.
****
As is so often the case, once I got going, it wasn’t so bad. Opening the first crate was tough, and I won’t say I didn’t cry at all. Vadim was a good partner, and a better friend. At least he’d died doing what he loved—sailing the Mediterranean, with a drink in his hand and two beautiful women at his side. He was a devout atheist, but if there’s any kind of afterlife, I’d like to think he’s still sailing and drinking, and looking for the next big catch.
I found a roll of paper towels on a shelf and blew my nose, then metaphorically rolled up my non-existent sleeves and dug in.
The more valuable items were wrapped in acid-free paper and sealed in airtight containers, which I didn’t bother to open, because Vadim had helpfully labeled them. His clear, bold printing noted statuary and relics, both Pagan and Christian, from the ancient Phrygian city of Colossae, near what is now Denizli, in southwestern Turkey. The general period was the first century, so any Christian items were very early. While this fascinated me intellectually, and I did have some experience with artifacts from Turkey, it was mainly because Vadim brought them to me. My own interests lie more in the Egyptians, one of the reasons we’d complemented each other professionally. But it meant I had little personal experience with anything of this kind.
It took several trips to move the best items, and a few more for the midlevel stuff, plus getting more boxes. By the time I got to the third crate, the sun was well past its zenith, but I’d reached the dregs. Items down here were either unwrapped, loose in the packing straw, or else carelessly covered with rough cloth to prevent scratching.
This crate wasn’t as full as the others, and it looked like I was on my final trip. Thank God. I’d had a quick lunch—veggies, hummus, cheese, and bread—but otherwise worked straight through. Lily’d called twice more, but I didn’t pick up. I’d call her back over dinner, when we’d have time to chat, and I could tell her of my sudden windfall.
I plopped my last empty box on the warehouse floor, then hung over the side of the crate to excavate the bottom. I found a few more canvas bundles and pulled them out, setting them in the box, then went back once more.
I thought I’d gotten everything, until my fingers brushed against something hard, wrapped in cloth, and oddly warm to the touch. I grabbed it and heaved myself out of the crate, then examined the bundle. It felt like a rock, heavy and solid. Most of the items in this crate were broken pottery shards, from vases and the like. Hard, maybe, but not heavy. Careful not to touch the item’s surface, in case it was valuable after all, I turned it over and shook the covering loose.
Sure enough, it was a rock. Plain, gray, ordinary. About half the size of an American football, shaped like an irregular pyramid, with jagged edges and flat-but-rough surfaces. The only unusual thing about it was its warmth. Like Claude Rousseau. Which is maybe why, against my better judgment, I reached out and touched the very tip of the rock’s pyramid.
And then it shrieked at me, the agony of centuries piercing my ears till I thought my skull would burst, electric shocks searing through my fingers, hand, arm, ripping through my whole body, gripping my lungs and squeezing until I couldn’t breathe. I flung the rock away, covering my ears and dropping to the floor, shaking, gasping for air, while still it screamed, on and on and on and on, until I lay huddled on the concrete, red fire burning in my head, blackness filling my soul.
Then everything went silent.
About the Author:
Kerry was born in British Columbia, Canada, and has since lived all over the West Coast of North America, including California, Oregon, Washington and Alaska—everywhere except Mexico! She’s a “computer industry” brat, not a military one, but moving so frequently meant she spent a lot of time reading, and later writing, (hopefully!) great books. She has a degree in Comparative Literature (French and Middle English) from U.C. Berkeley, and a Master’s in Teaching English and Mathematics from the University of Portland. She currently lives in the gorgeous Pacific Northwest with her husband, two “kids” in mid-to-late adolescence, assorted cats and dogs, and more hot pepper plants than anyone could reasonably consume.
Rafflecopter Giveaway:
a Rafflecopter giveaway
What happened?? Something good, not scary, I hope!
I do believe in ghosts but I don’t think I have experienced one. I have had a few things happen that made me think their was a ghost but not sure it actually was one I like to think it was.
Thanks for the chance.
I do believe in them. I’ve encountered a ghost, or a spirit, or at least it was something I couldn’t explain any other way.
I love the sound of this story! Also, I maybe believe in ghosts. Too much goes unexplained yo not believe in something.
I believe in ghost, why not there are worse things.
Exactly! Why not? There’s no proof they *don’t* exist! 🙂
Michel, Donna & Julie – I’m not sure what’s happening, but my replies to comments aren’t being posted! I believe in them, too, and I’ve even seen a few! But even if I hadn’t, I’d still believe. I mean, the energy in our body has to go somewhere, right? It doesn’t just disappear, so why wouldn’t it hang around for a while? 🙂
i do believe in ghosts
I do believe in ghosts
While I don’t 100% believe in ghosts, I don’t deny the possibility that they could exist. I personally don’t have a ghost encounter story but people have shared some really plausible ones!
I think it also depends on how you define a “ghost.” I’m not sure they exist in the way I envision them in my book ;), but spirit energy that still moves among us seems plausible. Like I said in another comment, something makes us tick, beyond just a collection of cells – otherwise, we’d all think, feel, BE the same. 🙂
I do believe in them
Me, too! 🙂
Exactly – fascinating, whether we have evidence, or just blind faith. 🙂
I do believe they exist, although I have never seen one. Very interesting to research!
Urgh! I tried to respond on my phone yesterday, but I think the comment vanished into cyberspace. 🙂 I’m fascinated by all this stuff (obviously!). And I think there’s a lot of stuff out there that we just don’t know about…yet… 😉
Sounds like a very exciting read. As an archaeologist, I’m looking forward to this book. Best of luck with your new release.
Thanks! I hope I got the details right! 🙂
I don’t really believe in them but I don’t doubt their existence either.
Hi Calvin! I think a lot of people feel that way – it’s hard to know what we don’t know, and without hard proof, it’s good to keep an open mind. 🙂
I enjoyed getting to know your book and thanks for the chance to win 🙂
Thanks for stopping by! <3 Good luck!!