Progress on all things Sons of Rome has been snail-slow thanks to other projects, obligations, and a lack of proper research and story-mapping time. But I did decide last year that it simply wasn't possible to include every story thread I wanted into Lionheart. Thus, an in-between novella was born, one that will follow along with Nikita's pack that will run concurrent with the first part of Lionheart. Given lots of memory, allusion to the past, and Alexei coming a bit more into his own, it's titled The Winter Palace. I don't know when it will be available, but goodness, I've missed my grumpy Captain Baskin.
From The Winter Palace
Copyright © 2022 by Lauren Gilley
Nikita lit a
fresh cigarette off the butt of the old one. He dropped the last bit of the
filter and crushed it beneath his bootheel. Took a long, long drag off the
fresh one, and blew the smoke in a hard plume up into the air. The wind swirled
it into tattered gray ribbons, carrying them off between the trees.
The familiar,
acrid stink of Marlboros couldn’t cover the scents that clung to the sable
collar of his coat: blood, old and new; wolf musk, Sasha’s. He imagined he
could smell Dima’s cologne, and pastry flakes from a pirozhki someone had tried
to press on him. Fancied Moscow still clung to this coat…that coat. The
long black leather one that had kept him warm when he’d worked for men he’d
hated; the coat he’d then hated in turn; the coat that Sasha loved, and that
Nik himself was, slowly, embracing again.
He tipped his
head back, cig held away, coat collar no longer tickling his chin, and inhaled
deeply. Scenting. The wind wasn’t in his favor, was in fact carrying his own
scent downwind, but he was old and discerning enough that he could catch the
smell of them, faint though it was: fine threads in the tapestry of the
forest’s snow, and pine needles, and squirrels, and rabbits.
There were
three of them. Vampires all, smelling of blood and youth. Newly made, at a
guess – and his guesses usually proved fact.
Nikita
propped a shoulder against a birch trunk and took another drag, settling in to
wait.
A bright red
cardinal landed on a branch just beside his head, and gave its particular,
pealing cry, before fluttering off, a flash of berry-bright in the black and
white of the late afternoon forest. He took another drag and swore it smelled
of burning flesh and hair; only memory pressing up too close for comfort.
He hadn’t
thought much of the snowy Buffalo landscape when they’d first arrived more than
a month ago. They’d been exhausted, nursing wounds, and praying that Rob
Locksley came through on the promise to keep the feds off their backs. Then had
come the settling in phase. Then getting married. He still marveled that
he’d had the balls to ask, and every time he glanced down at his left hand, and
the white gold band there, his mind filled with the image of Sasha, snow
melting in his hair, smile bright enough to drive back the darkest of clouds.
God, but he
was sappy. Newlyweds were allowed a little of that, right?
But when
things had finally, truly settled, and he’d had a chance to go traipsing
through the deep snow, sometimes with Sasha beside him, sometimes with Sasha
running happily ahead on all fours, and sometimes alone, he’d begun to feel the
touch of the past. Not a tug – it didn’t drag him back into a dark headspace,
not now, after everything, after allowing himself to be happy – but a light
weight, like a cool hand pressed to the back of his neck. A reminder. Snow in
NYC had just been snow, but here, hemmed in on all sides by wilderness, with
views of frozen ponds, and dirty slush lining the walkways, he kept expecting
to turn his head and find the pack – the original one – following along at his
heels, man and wolf both.
But he was
the only one wearing a long, black leather coat now.
And he was
expecting company.
cant wait
ReplyDeleteI am finally caught up on this series and I cannot WAIT to read more!!!!
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