Grounded – Countdown and Sneak Peak

For all of you who’ve been following the adventures of Mark and Angie and that peculiar belt, here it is:

September 30th. That’s the day that the final book of the Spellkeeper Flight series will be out: Grounded.

What can I say about the end of a series that’s been keeping me up for so many years? I could show you the cover—it is gorgeous, and it includes someone I’ve wanted to have on the front for two books now—and that will certainly be in another post soon. Or I could write about just how tangled and exciting the story becomes with its final race to the finish line.

Or I could show you a different kind of scene. In the middle of secrets, arguments, battles, and heartbreaks, this is actually one of my favorite chase scenes.

[bctt tweet=”The lighter side of antigravity. #Grounded” username=”TheKenHughes”]

It’s also from relatively late in the book, so it can’t avoid a few SPOILERS ahead. As to whether anything leading up to these spoilers is what it seems, you’ll have to decide for yourself.


A small door stood in the middle of the back wall. Mark felt his father’s talisman moving closer behind him, and grabbed the door. Dodging him is only putting this off, but do I have to deal with everything at once?

He stepped out into the morning sun. A wide, half-full parking lot spread around him, and he felt Angie launching from the roof as he moved. Her magic did feel thinner, the price of all the messages she’d given him. The silver in his hand was the answer to that.

His father neared the door behind him. Mark lunged across the lot with a magic-light stride over the slush, and Angie swept down the air ahead of him.

Faces turned toward him, up and down the lot. He held his pace down to a gliding sprint as his father moved to follow.

Angie twisted ahead, a shape of brown and gray veering toward the back corner of the next building. Mark realized his feet had already fallen into a path behind her.

Around the corner lay a small pocket between buildings, only half-open to the street, where not a single person stood to see them. Angie beat at the air and flew almost straight up along the wall. Mark flung himself to the rooftop after her.

Below he glimpsed his father stopping at the corner. Running from that man was only temporary as long as they could sense each other’s talismans… but just for now, there was so much more satisfaction in staying out of his reach.

Angie perched on the roof’s rim, just a few steps away.

“I brought some power for you,” and he held up the mind talisman. “We can finally keep you as strong as you need. Oh, and your mother wanted to apologize, for… everything.”

At least Kate was doing more to back that up than the man down below was. His father was already turning away.

He reached the talisman toward Angie. “We’re all working on this, on how to get you a real body. I swear, we can do it. And we really can make Winton pay—”

Kee-yak!

The owl twisted from his hand with a quick flap. She sailed just above the rooftop’s open space, an easy speed for her. Mark raced after her. Her cry had sounded, what, eager?

Her head twisted once to glance back, then she shot toward the roof’s edge.

If it’s a race— Mark hurled himself at the edge and the next roof across, magic’s power blasting him past beating wings. In midair he stole a moment to look down to the ground and around the streets; only a few people stood in view, and none of them looked up. But I just took that leap in broad daylight before I thought of being seen.

He didn’t feel the lightheaded madness of magic getting in his head. Only…

Angie chirruped and darted across the roof’s left. He leaped after her, with soft skips and minimal weight to keep from skidding on piled-up snow. She dived down between two huge air-conditioner blocks, but he sensed her twisting left behind them and he leaped across ahead of her.

“Bring it on!” He held up the mind talisman. “I can keep up, like I can save you—”

She rushed straight by him. Her claws plucked the silver from his hand.

He lost a moment in shock before he thought to follow. But this wasn’t like when she grabbed that talisman he almost gave Nolan… it felt nothing like it, not with her playful calls buoying him up. He dashed after her.

Roof after roof shot by. In scattered moments he thought of the faces that might look out through those windows, or the people on the street—but of course each building she picked was only a short distance from the last, a leap that a human could have cleared.

Angie’s dodges used every scrap of cover, every foot of space a roof gave her to double back on a wingtip. Mark leaped and skittered and caught at gravity to lock himself in place for instants before rushing on. Anything to keep his human bulk keeping up with the owl that moved like a part of the air.

Danger and regrets fell away. He was simply nineteen… or somewhere younger.

Then—

“I said I can!” He saw her start to spin and read the angle she’d have to take, and dove across ahead of her. “I know I—” She flipped away behind his back, still easy to sense and move ahead of. “I can save you—”

She swung out over the open street. After so many moves staying out of sight on the roofs, she changed the rules and ventured where he couldn’t go.

A flash of silver, arching high up and away from her. She’d thrown the talisman away?

Mark stared. He couldn’t see it now, couldn’t sense it from here, couldn’t leap out over the street even if he did, why would she…

Angie swooped down. He saw, felt, the streak of gray rush across the sky to scoop down and spin away, in a move that could only be catching the talisman as it began to fall.

He couldn’t move. He stood frozen on the edge of the roof, breath gasping, for the endless instant it took her to arch around and reach the roof. At the last moment she braked, and dropped lightly onto his arm.

The talisman slid back into his palm. And he finally had the words to share its power, because she’d found those too.

With his softest breath, he whispered “Tomishua zazda tomi zazda shua.”

Magic wakened. The energy roused at the words, loosened, and his thought sent it flowing—not gathering power from the air or draining another talisman, but this time streaming from his into the bit of silver on Angie’s foot. That magic swelled, pooled…

The thought-space opened between them.

Their breath and pounding pulses should have faded away—but instead they surged through the void like a message, her message. Soaring, twisting, the thrill she’d led him through, that had to mean flying.

Words flickered too. Unclear sounds, but he caught glimpses around them of daylight streets, windows by night, spreading from early autumn to biting winter air. Too much too fast to follow the language, but the tones were uneasy, worried, angry—all the shades of trouble and discontent around the city, plucked and gathered out of the months by her restless mind. She saw so much, followed it all.

The voices changed. A new flood of memories poured out from her—a smiling face, a woman running with smooth steps, a family looking up wistfully at the sky they’d never touch. Faces of joy.

Like our chase.

The world of the mind fell away. An owl’s pale face hung just before him.

“We can…. we can fly for real, once you have a real body…” he said, from a hollow throat.

She dropped off to soar away.

Mark shivered, slumped, sat clumsily down in the snow.

They’d been fighting to set Angie free. But what if…

 

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Photo by Narshada

Freefall in February — Launching

Happy New Year!

It’s the traditional day for reflecting, plannning, and promising… followed by the traditional month of backsliding, of course.

In the spirit of breaking that cycle:

FREEFALL, Book Two of Spellkeeper Flight, will be launched on February 5th. After long months of tweaking, the book is ready, the cover’s being set up (stay tuned!), and I’m looking forward to sharing it with the world.

In fact, I have a total of three things to share for the new year:

  • First, I will soon be offering THE HIGH ROAD for free, to help new readers find an easy start into the series. (Though I have to say, you’ll find it’s the only thing that’s “easy” for Mark and Angie.)
  • Second is that news about FREEFALL, complete with a sample below that takes up right after THE HIGH ROAD’s closing excerpt cut off. (I’ve cut out one name, for readers who haven’t discovered who “the killer” is yet.)
  • But also, there’s another excerpt here and another announcement: Book Three, GROUNDED, will be released this summer as well.

Now: the FREEFALL sample at the end of THE HIGH ROAD had left Mark diving back into his enemy’s building at the moment the police turned away, hoping to seize the computer in the office. So:

Sample from FREEFALL

The power lay behind him. His head twisted around, he saw the cop sitting up, gun swinging up in her still-possessed hands.

Too late. Mark tumbled through the office doorway and bounced off a desk, careening to a stop against the wall. He tottered sideways, trying to find cover, but the room barely gave him a few steps either way. No other doors, and no windows.

He waited, trapped. And yet… the cop didn’t close in. He could hear her shuffling to her feet, and felt the puppetmaster’s magic starting her toward the door, but so slowly. She could have put a bullet in him by now, or called for other cops.

He thought of how fast the killer’s control had jumped between the two police officers before, too quick for either of them to realize what had happened… and, he was always trying to spy out the secrets of the belt’s magic…

“You can’t shoot me, can you?” Mark laughed. The sound came out hoarse, and he still moved aside from the doorway. If he was wrong, if the killer was ready to explain away Mark’s body and find other ways to learn their magic—

He sensed the cop still edging toward the doorway. Mark flexed his fingers, praying he could grab and strike before the enemy jumped through that touch. The smell of paint pressed at his nose.

The lights went out.

A flash of memory came: Nolan outside another of these offices, promising If you need a distraction, I’ll freeze the power lines. He blinked wildly, fighting to push the flood of shadows back and make out where the outlines in the room had been.

Over what had to be the police radio came a sharp “What the hell? Bennie?”

“I’m alright!” the possessed woman answered.

Mark blinked harder. His enemy was giving him a moment to work, not calling in the other cop. But that other cop could decide to rush in at any moment. So… there, that blocky shape sitting beside the table’s leg would be the computer he’d come for.

One quick step and he reached behind the box to rip a handful of cables from its back, then snapped the last wire away, half-expecting to hear sparks popping.

Behind him, the cop moved in.

Mark twisted around to glimpse the woman stepping toward him, her empty hand reaching out—closing in to touch, ready to grab my mind! He flung himself backward, and his arm swung out into a scooping motion and slammed into the table.

Pain shot through his knuckles and his injured shoulder, but his magic surged, and he heard the whoosh and the clamor of flying objects and a great crash as he flung the near-weightless table at the cop and it glanced off her to clatter against the wall.

It did little more than make her flinch back, but that gave him the moment he needed to stumble to his feet and snatch up the desktop computer, lightening it too. She was already turning back toward him, still blocking the doorway.

He raised the computer like a shield and charged.

He slammed into her and flung her back, and burst on through the doorway to finally stretch his steps into a leaping run that swept him away from her across the room and barely aimed low enough to slide his head under the front doorway to dart through and out.

Sample from GROUNDED

Mark Petrie took another glance back up the police station corridor, but with all the cops moving about he couldn’t even see the door they’d taken Olivia Nolan and her lawyers through.

He reached out with the magic in his belt again to search for her. The weather energy Nolan carried was a primal force his gravity power could barely feel at the best of times… and using any magic now stretched his frayed nerves and made the dull, shifting roar of the police station’s daily crowd beat against his head. At least he could sense Henry’s own gravity belt up in the room they’d taken him to.

“We should be done with him soon.”

Mark snapped his head forward again. Was that satisfaction in the rail-thin detective’s voice, about how Mark’s cousin had been shaken by all the treacherous power that he had to hush up? Shh, don’t say it.


–That’s as far as I can take Chapter One without veering straight into spoilers. But there’s a reason the chapter is called “Nine Points of the Law.”

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