Saving
the Hero
Book
One
by Sabrina
Sumsion
Genre: Urban Fantasy
Publisher: Sanguine Publishing
Date of Publication: 8-8-2014
ISBN: 9781500569693
ASIN: B00LWTO9K0
Number of pages: 248
Word Count: 67,000
Cover Artist: Victorine Lieske
Buy Link: Amazon
Book Description:
Two and a half weeks. That’s all
the time he has left.
When loner vampire hunter Kassy
is interrupted by nosy veteran, Mike, he ends up bitten, and infected with the
vampire parasite. The warrior becomes her prey as she fights to find him before
powerful vamps. A couple kidnappings later, she’s hiding in a cabin with him
chained to the floor, and an eight-year-old girl in her care.
Death? Inevitable. When the
parasite takes control, he’ll do or say anything to get non-infected
blood—including seducing her. But, as they spend time together, she finds her
resolve weakening. A kiss won’t fix him, but it might mend a deep hole in her
heart.
Kassy is too practical to believe
in miracles, but if he survives eighteen days without ingesting human blood,
there is a chance he could be the hero she's been looking for.
Odds are he’s a dead man.
Excerpt:
Chapter 1: Bite, anyone?
“Vampires don’t lose their souls after
turning. That folklore is easy to disprove without venturing into religious
debate. In the days of medieval medicine, doctors wouldn’t have known how to
find or identify the vampiric parasite.”
Journal Entry, Mark McDougal:
April 3, 2005
I stalked a woman through side
streets and dimly lit alleyways. Her name wasn’t important. I preferred not to know
what to call the victims just like I don’t want to know a rabid dog's name.
It’s easier to stay unattached that way. Easier to do my job.
Keeping up with the vampire in
the making wasn’t hard. She meandered. The problem was the heat wave and the
black trench coat I wore. Noticing it, a few people shook their heads as I
passed. They probably thought I was a little crazy, but harmless. Without it,
people would call the cops when they spotted my gear.
A bead of sweat slid from my
hairline behind my ear, tickling my skin and irritating me. I brushed it away,
my fingers momentarily tangled in my frizzy locks, the strands I was chewing on
yanked out of my mouth. Once again, I considered shaving the mop I called hair.
It wasn’t the lovely auburn tresses that men fantasize about. Mom used to call
the orange-red jarring. I’d been told that my hair made me too memorable. Maybe
that was so, but it took attention away from the scar that ran from my top lip
to my temple. Besides, if I hacked it all away, I wouldn’t have anything handy
to gnaw on. I snagged a new small curl and pulled it to my mouth. Mom used to
bat my hand away. Now, there was no one to stop me.
Half a block behind the woman,
she set the meandering pace. Normally, I’d keep more distance between us. I’d
be concerned about the still air making me into an olfactory billboard. I could
almost hear Uncle Mark’s voice in my head. “Kassy, the new ones can smell you
even if they don’t know what they’re smelling. Keep your distance.” Tonight,
this woman was blinded by her hunger. I could have hung back farther, but I
didn’t see the point.
Around a corner, garbage cans
lined the street. Good for hiding behind; bad for breathing. The muggy weather
made the smells more pungent. Who was I to complain? The odor would mask my
scent.
The sound of a group of people
chatting and laughing echoed down the street. We’d passed a club two blocks
back with bass so loud my chest vibrated. By the group’s outfits, I guessed
they were heading there to dance. The woman I followed turned her head as they
strode by. Her right hand reached over and unconsciously rubbed her left
shoulder. The shoulder some psycho had bitten three weeks before. It had healed
quickly. Miraculously fast according to doctors.
One of the guys stumbled over a
trashcan, knocking my prey against the side of a brick building. She inhaled
deeply as he apologized. He and his companions watched their step to avoid the
trail of refuse he’d strewn. No one noticed her wrapping her arms around
herself, her steps following them, or her abrupt turn into the alleyway. No one
but me.
Wisps of steam from storm drain
vents filled the narrow passage with an eerie aura. The dim lights reflected
off the suspended water, creating a halo around the vampire’s head. The irony
wasn’t lost on me. One could argue that she retained her innocence – for now.
I slipped behind a commercial
dumpster filled with decaying Italian food and spotted a large box farther on
that would be my next hiding spot. Before I moved, she stopped in the middle of
the alleyway about thirty feet away. She squeezed her head between her hands. I
sucked in a quick lung full of rancid air and waited. She paced, kicking
bottles, cans and other debris in her path. She walked over to a wall, rested
her head against it, and then hit a few times with her palms. I could almost
see the cracks forming in her self-control.
She stopped, sniffing the air.
Busted. The billy club strapped
to my right thigh reassured me and I brushed my fingers along its length to
find the handle. Muscles taut, I waited for her to draw near. I still had the
element of surprise and she had no clue what she could do.
How could she? It’s not like
someone had handed her a pamphlet that said, “You’ve been infected: 10 ways to
survive turning into a monster.” She didn’t know what her cravings were. She
didn’t know why the pickle jar lid popped off so easily. She couldn’t
understand why she healed quickly. The guy who had bitten her hadn’t whispered
in her ear the secrets to avoiding a guard like me.
She stumbled more than walked to
a pile of boxes against the wall across the alley. A drunk or homeless person
was trying to sleep there. With her attention averted, I crept closer. The
timing had to be just right. I couldn’t let her bite her prey, but she needed
the chance to resist the siren call of blood coursing through the body in front
of her. Uncle Mark insisted. “Kassy Lassy, they’re still human. Just infected.
We have to find one who can survive without human blood. It’s humanity’s only
hope.” It was his last request, so I honor it.
He would have tried to take this
woman in. Tried to save her. How many people had he tried to help over the
years he cared for me? Twenty? Fifty? He’d failed every time. The parasite
always ravaged the host body without human blood. I couldn’t stand the sight of
the emaciated remains. I figured that a quick death was less cruel. I didn’t
kill the newly infected right away, just in case the magical immune savior
would appear, but mostly I grant them death. An escape from the monster they
will become.
The woman dropped to her knees,
sobs echoing through the alley. Legs stuck out of an old dishwasher box before
her. The odor of piss and alcohol gagged me. Maybe the stench is what helped
the woman hesitate.
Maybe, but not for long. The sobs
stopped and I moved closer.
No one ever made a sound before
their first kill. None of them ever thought to bring a knife the first time
either. She knew what she wanted. I could almost see her thought process
written out like a thought cloud in a comic book. How do I get a taste? How do
I get to the blood?
I pulled the billy club out of
its holster. We hovered at the point of no return. My silent steps drew me
closer as she lowered herself down. Brown roots showed against her dyed blonde
hair. My heart thumped. Another human, lost to the parasite. One quick crack to
the skull and I could drag her off somewhere secluded then finish disposing of
her body in peace. One breath, then strike.
“Hey!” someone shouted from the
end of the alley.
It startled me. Threw off my
rhythm. She looked up. Crap. There went my element of surprise. I swung down,
but she ducked out of the way. Adrenalin surged through my body. She needed to
go down fast. I put too much into the swing, and stumbled off balance. She
leapt at me, her face set in a determined grimace. I matched it with one of my
own. Did she have any clue what she could do? I raised my billy club and
deflected her to the side. She spun and lunged again. She was fast, but that
time, I was ready. I smacked her in the head while stepping to the side. She
fell hard and didn’t get back up. I hefted the billy club again to crack open
her skull.
A body crashed into mine from
behind and hammered me to the ground. I tried to counter with ground fighting
tactics, but my lungs were screaming for my attention. All I could do was suck
air in. For some reason, my body was stuck and refused to exhale. I’d never
felt that sensation before. Normally, I’d tell myself to take deep breaths to
calm down. That was worthless advice when you can’t breathe out.
A masculine voice shouted in my
ear. “Leave her alone!” This guy was a special kind of stupid. Trying to play
the hero. Probably saw a pretty blonde and hoped to score her phone number.
I squirmed under his weight and
managed to flip myself onto my back and gasp for air. He grabbed both of my
hands and held them above my head. That made breathing even harder.
“Police are on their way. Stop
fighting me.” His face was close to mine, a hint of alcohol drifting by. Just
what I needed, an inebriated do-gooder poking his nose where it didn’t belong.
My wind wouldn’t come back, so I
couldn’t yell at him. The air would only go one way. I needed him off. The
idiot was in danger, and I was flopping on the sidewalk like a fish – as
helpless as when Uncle Mark died. I stared into his black eyes and wished I
could communicate telepathically. He wouldn’t like what I would say, but maybe
we’d both survive the night.
The blonde’s face came into view
over his shoulder. Fear stilled my struggling against the man. I’d had a
feeling she wouldn’t be out for long since the vampire parasite caused elevated
adrenalin levels. A smile crept up at the corners of her lips. Crap. The look
in her eyes. She figured out a little of what she could do. She was committed
to biting, and the fool on top of me would be her first meal if I don’t do
something.
The guy looked over his shoulder.
“I’m glad you’re okay miss. I have her pinned. The police are on their way. Can
you go flag them down at the end of the alley?”
There was no fighting him even
while his attention was diverted. Sure, he was strong, but it was the effort to
breathe that crippled me. He turned back, and I shook my head, eyes wide,
trying to choke words out.
The monster behind him put her finger to her lips
in a silent gesture for me to be quiet. She tip toed up behind him. I fought
the man, trying to get him to pay attention.
“Stop struggling!”
He thought I was the bad guy. If
I could have, I would have laughed.
She leapt on his back. Her eyes
gleamed in the dim light, face contorted in a wild expression of glee. My
stomach churned. Let me go and pay attention to her!
He tried to shrug her off and
hold me at the same time. The ineffectual move appeared to delight her.
“What the hell are you doing?”
The timbre in his voice belied his wavering confidence. Finally, this guy was
getting a clue that the blonde was not all she seemed.
She giggled in reply then bit his
shoulder near his neck. He bellowed in agony, but her sucking noises were
louder. Now, she had his attention. He let go of me and pried at her head. Her
death grip wasn’t loosening, so he punched her in the face. At the third blow,
she fell back. Blood sprayed from her mouth onto my jacket and the ground. She
crouched, a grin on her face, scarlet rivulets running down her chin. She ran
her finger along her cheek and lips, wiping the blood into her mouth. “You are
delicious,” she said with a satisfied moan. She had watched too many vampire
movies. I hated the ones who thought they had to fit the stereotypes.
I scooted back, finally exhaling.
Although my heart raced, I forced myself to take even breaths, changing from
desperate gasps to a quick, adrenaline-driven pace. The woman loomed over the
man, whose hand was clamped over his wound. I grabbed my billy club, hoping she
was too blood-crazed to notice me. The iron scent of the man’s blood filled my
nostrils. I’d have to go past him to reach her, but he made a good distraction.
When she lunged again, I aimed my
billy club at her forehead. With a satisfying crack, the blow landed. She fell.
I was pretty sure she would be out for a while, but I wasn’t taking chances. I
smacked her on the top of the head again. It wasn’t a death blow, but if I let
her live, she would probably have brain damage.
“What is she on?” The man’s voice
shook as much as his hands. After a few deep breaths, he looked as though he
might be okay again. Most people would have been on the ground crying. He
warranted a second glance.
He was taller than my five-foot,
ten-inch frame, muscular and dressed as if to pick up women at a bar. He had
almond-shaped eyes, dark hair and a slight yellow hue to his skin. His rugged
good looks convinced me he would have been successful picking up a woman had he
not seen the altercation and come to investigate. Now, he was infected with the
parasite. He was another vampire in the making. I would have to kill him, too.
I pushed my hair from my face,
wiping the perspiration away –trying to drag my ugly reality with it. My
fingers wrapped around a lock and pulled it to my mouth. The chewing helped me
relax. Would gum have the same effect? I wished I had money for a luxury like
that. I felt stupid with hair in my mouth in front of him. A glance revealed he
wasn’t even paying attention to me. He was staring at the blonde.
What was going through his mind?
I don’t remember my thoughts from the first time I’d witnessed a vampire
succumb to the blood lust. Probably best I didn’t. I doubted that people stayed
sane if they lingered in that moment. I stuffed those memories back and focused
on the matter at hand.
Time to get out of here. I
grabbed the woman’s arms and start dragging her down the alley.
“Where are you going?” he
demanded, following.
Not only does he mess up a clean
vamp hunt, he has to ask questions. I ignored him. It was easiest to do what I
did when I didn’t talk to them. When I knew a victim, it made it harder to
remember that they were turning into vicious killers. The last thing I needed
to know was if he had a family or even his name. When they had names, it was
harder to put them down. I dragged the woman another ten feet.
“You can’t leave. The police will
be here any minute!” He shouted as if the police could fix the situation. Poor
fool.
We stood about three quarters of
the way down the alley. I knew the guy had been traumatized, but he didn’t know
what he walked into. It was better for me to leave with the vampire and let the
authorities spin this however they might. The headlines would probably say
something like a drug crazed female attacked him. The real story would never
come out. The government wouldn’t let that happen.
He grabbed my arm, putting his
face in mine. “Stop, now!” My muscles tensed. I forced myself to relax. He was
obviously used to being obeyed. His grip was strong, and I could tell through
my jacket that his hands weren’t soft and manicured. This guy worked hard and
gave orders. Military maybe? Possibly a boss at a construction company?
I had a spark of admiration for
him that I immediately tried to stomp out. I couldn’t respect him. He was going
to become a killer. I’d be back to stalk him after I finished dealing with her.
Right then, if he made much more
noise, there would be more spectators. Ones that weren’t hurt. Ones without
alcohol on their breath. The authorities who weren’t in the know could write
off this guy as in shock and a poor witness. Any more people telling the same
story and I’d have a harder time evading the cops.
I dropped the vampire’s hands and
faced him. He had a look in his eyes like he was thinking “finally, she’s come
to her senses!” The guy’s shoulder wound was bad. His hand was firmly clasped
over it, but the blood seeped past his fingers. When I reached for it, he
jerked his shoulder back like I would hurt him more.
“You’re bleeding.”
He sneered. “You think?”
“You need to apply pressure.” I
reached into my Sash purse hung underneath my leather jacket and found the
medical pads and tape I kept there. He snatched them out of my hand and slapped
them on the wound. “You were going to drag her away and not give these to me?”
With a shrug I said, “You look
big enough to handle yourself. I didn’t realize you would be an idiot and
follow me while bleeding everywhere.”
A glare was his only reply. Maybe
it wouldn’t be so hard to kill him after all.
Retrieving the woman’s hands, I
dragged her further away from him.
“What the hell are you doing?”
Man, he irritated me. “Walk away.
You don’t know what you’ve gotten yourself into.” We were almost to the end of
the alley. There was a sewer access by my foot, but I couldn’t go there with
him watching. He’d rat me out.
He grabbed my arm again. “She
attacked me. She needs to be arrested. I don’t know what the heck you were
doing in this alley.” He pointed his finger in my face. “But you tried to
attack her. You should probably be in jail as well.”
Obviously, he wasn’t good at
convincing people to turn themselves in. I stared at his bandages. His
efficient wraps told me he probably had field medical training or something.
However, blood was still seeping through. I pointed to his shoulder. His glance
was the amount of time necessary to catch him flat-footed. I used my billy club
to pop him with a brachial stun, and he went down with a groan. The strike had
been careful since I wasn’t ready to kill him, yet. He wasn’t unconscious, but
I was sure he was seeing stars. Too disoriented to notice where I was going. I
only needed a minute to disappear.
I didn’t like to attack people when they were
still in control of themselves, but time was running out. Police response
wasn’t fast in this neighborhood, but we’d been dallying about 15 minutes. I
needed to leave.
I flipped my jacket back and
grabbed the pry bar hanging from my belt. A quick jab and tug later, I had my
escape route. I shoved the woman’s limb body through the hole. She slid over
the lip and crunched onto the cement below. If she wasn’t dead before, she was
now. Her body lay in a crumpled mess below. The dry spell in the city helped me
with my job. No slogging through cesspool tides and a quick way to end things.
One bright side to my dark task.
The next tool I pulled from under
my coat was a whiskbroom. Sweeping back and forth, I obscured the drag marks
starting ten feet from the manhole and moving towards my escape. I went around
the vet. As he struggled to recover, he’d conceal everything beneath him. When
I reached the hole, I scrambled half way down the ladder. The lid was heavy and
awkward as I dragged it back to the opening while balancing precariously.
I heard the guy moan again. He
rolled a bit as though he was trying to regain his feet. Luckily, he rolled
away from me. He didn’t see as I nestled the lid back into place.
The thought of returning to pick
up his trail caused my stomach to drop. If my life had been normal, maybe we
would have gone to the same club. I’d have spotted him and tried to catch his
eye. Probably would have danced too close and drunk too much, then woke up at
his place in the morning. Now he was another prey to stalk and kill when he
succumbed to the parasite.
About
the Author:
I’m a ninja disguised as a
homeschooling mom, former literary publicist, craft-aholic and all around
reading diva. Really, I kick down doors
–no, wait, that was my husband when I locked us out of the house . . . Well, I
engage in combat on a regular basis –online when I play MMORPGs with my
children . . . OK, maybe I’m not a real ninja but my husband says I stole his
heart. Does that count? No?
Shoot. Well, I love reading and I love writing. I think imagination is the biggest advantage
a child can get in life and I try to allow my children many opportunities to
expand theirs every day.
I love teaching authors how to
avoid publishing traps and scams as well as how to market themselves and their
works. There is nothing better in life
than giving someone information that helps them become successful.
I also take a few hours each week
and create jewelry, make lotions or paint something. I have little creation stations scattered
through the house. My daughter gets into
it a lot and scatters things which drives my husband crazy but remember how I
mentioned that he says I stole his heart?
Yeah. I’m not giving it
back. He’s stuck with me forever. Bwah ha ha ha!
Schedule Saving the Hero by Sabrina Sumsion
September 22 Interview
The Creatively Green Write at Home Mom
September 22 Review
Paranormal Romance and Authors That Rock
September 23 Interview
Kim Mullican
September 23 Guest blog
Roxanne’s Realm
September 24 Interview
Deb Sanders
September 24 Spotlight
Lisa’s World of Books
September 25 Guest blog
Fang-tastic Books
September 25 Spotlight
Sizzling Book Blog
September 26 Guest blog
Mom With A Kindle
September 26 Interview
Darkest Cravings
September 29 Interview
Pembroke Sinclair.
September 29 Spotlight
Booklover Sue
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