So first, I have to thank Alicia Nordwell for the awesome graphic she made. It's fantastic!
Today is the release day for Death Mask, my urban fantasy motorcycle club book. It's a fun story with a little bit of angst and some kicking butt. The blog tour starts on Monday, November 14th, where there will also be a giveaway for some paperback copies.
In the meantime, here's a little about the book. Enjoy!
Series: Black Harbingers MC
Author(s): Lexi Ander
Cover Artist: Kirby Crow
Categories: Gay, Urban Fantasy, Fairy Tales, Roughhouse Raiders
Length: 43,000 words
Release Date: November 9, 2016
Grim Misery, the President of the Black Harbinger Motorcycle Club, discovers a wounded warlock and four werepups aboard the club's LSD shipment. And the news kept getting better and better. Not only is the warlock sitting on the edge of death, he's illegally bonded to the werepups, which could trigger a war with the werewolves—and he turns out to be Misery's estranged husband.
Years ago, Griffin turned Misery away to be with another warlock by the name of Marcheso Aldo. Misery left everything behind, even his family, but couldn't shake the heartbreak Griffin caused. With Griffin thrust back into Misery's life, he discovers things aren't as they seem... and everything is about to get much, much worse.
Buy Links: LT3 Press | Amazon | B&N | Kobo | All Romance | Bookstrand | iTunes |
Excerpt:
Chapter
One
"Death is not the greatest loss in
life. The greatest loss is what dies inside us while we live." ~Norman
Cousins
"Prez,
you're gonna want to take a look at this." Nightingale, Sergeant in Arms
of the Black Harbingers MC, called to me from the tail end of the box truck
that recently arrived from the docks. The products the vehicle carried included
the much-awaited shipment of LSD for the city's elder vampires. The goods were
late by one week, and I had some agitated parasites on my hands. If someone so
much as fucked with the shite, they would be in a world of hurt, because I had
no qualms feeding the arseholes to the bloodsuckers.
The clubhouse
for the MC was a repurposed three-story library. The block had been slated for
demolition after World War II to make way for a strip mall or some such. I
loved the building, with its Grecian columns, marble floors, and the liberal
use of dark woods. She had character, and after I greased a few palms, she
became our clubhouse, our home.
On
the ground floor, to the rear of the building, were two bay doors. Semis could
back up to one of them, allowing people to walk into the bed without using a
ramp. The second bay, vehicles drove directly onto the dock. Granted, unloading
the boxes was harder, but we didn't have to worry about prying eyes and for
this shipment, we needed complete privacy.
By
the tone of Night's voice, I wouldn't like what I'd see. One of the prospects
had been sent to retrieve the truck from the docks. Not quite members of the
MC, prospects were initiates working through the probationary period. Simply
put, they were the club's gofers. They did anything and everything the brothers
asked of them. They guarded the bikes in public places, manned the doors at the
parties, and made sure no one unauthorized entered the clubhouse. If a
brother's old lady needed to go somewhere, a prospect escorted them. The list
of shitty duties was endless. At the end of the probation period, the brothers
voted the prospect in or out, but until then, the prospect did what they were
told, without complaint. Our newest prospect, Tinman, who'd picked up the box
truck, stood off to the side looking concerned, but not afraid.
"The
truck was where you'd said it'd be, Misery. There weren't any problems and no
one followed me," he said, without prompting.
When
I rounded the rear of the non-descript vehicle, the door was rolled up,
exposing the back of the compartment, stacked with boxes. Nightingale stood
with his arms crossed over his chest, his cut hidden by the muscular bulk of
his arms. At one time, he'd been a Noble Fae. From which court, I'd never
asked. When most preternaturals came looking to join the Black Harbingers, they
left behind who they once were. The brothers only cared about the here and now,
content to leave whatever hell they'd escaped in the past. We all carried
secrets best left undisturbed, and we let sleeping dogs lie, so to speak.
Those
who didn't know of Nightingale's origins wouldn't have believed he belonged to
that waif-like race. He'd shed his litheness, becoming a motherfucking
powerhouse of strength and muscle. Even his unnaturally-white hair, which many
people assumed the poor bastard had gone gray early, didn't soften his
appearance. Most bikers didn't have facial piercings because they stumbled into
too many fistfights, but not Night. He wore a ring in the right nostril and two
in his bottom lip that he fiddled with when something bothered him, like now.
When he met my gaze, his green eyes were troubled. Then the scent hit me.
Blood.
When
I went to ask what the fuck he was waiting for, Night placed a pale finger over
his lips, biding me to listen. The sound was faint, but the soft whines of some
kind of dog or… Well, fuck me sideways.
"Someone
find Hog and Lalios." My request was made in a low voice, but the brothers
jumped to it as if I'd yelled. Perhaps they felt my tension or they, too,
scented the blood wafting from the back of the truck, now that the door had
been raised.
More
than one person drew a weapon. Grabbing the handrail on the side of the door, I
readied to climb into the back.
"Misery,"
Night called to me softly, but I ignored him.
Even
if werewolves had hidden in the truck, I didn't worry about my safety. The
sound of the pitiful, tiny snarls and growls intensified when my heavy boots
struck the bed. Pausing to listen, I couldn't hear an adult voice among the
pups. With the scent of blood heavier in the confines of the cabin, I surmised
the parent was severely injured. A werewolf in pain was a dangerous creature,
more animal than man. Blinded by the agony, instinct would take over, and he,
or she, would attack first to protect their young. If that were to happen, then
I was the one equipped to handle the werewolf. Sure, I could be hurt like
anyone else, but I was hard to kill. Living for almost two hundred years had
proven that.
Listening
intently, I heard three, perhaps four distinct voices, which was surprising. Nowadays,
werewolves lived longer than they did five hundred years ago. When they became
the stuff of folklore, people stopped hunting them. Since they lived a more
peaceful existence, the number of litters they birthed dropped off to where
pups were now born singly to couples every hundred years or so. The young were
precious to the packs and there being four here made my skin crawl with
foreboding. The day kept getting better and better.
Thank you for stopping by and reading!!
Dawn, it sounds so good. I can't wait to read it, I have got to see what happens next.😲😲
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