Today, I am PROUD to hostess Rave Review Book Club's Author, Lincoln Cole, who is promoting his book "Raven's Peak." Read the synopsis and the excerpt. What a great choice for a hot summer evening's read! If you're interested in purchasing this exciting horror story, you can check out the links at the bottom, where you'll find his Amazon.com links.
Please leave comments in the comment section under the post. I'm sure Mr. Cole would appreciate it, and I certainly will.
AUTHOR LINCOLN COLE
A quiet little mountain town is hiding a big problem. When the townsfolk of Raven's Peak start acting crazy, Abigail Dressler is called upon to find out what is happening. She uncovers a demonic threat unlike any she's ever faced and finds herself in a fight just to stay alive.
She rescues Haatim Arison from a terrifying fate and discovers that he has a family legacy in the supernatural that he knows nothing about. Now she's forced to protect him, which is easy, and also trust him if she wants to save the townsfolk of Raven's Peak. Trust, however, is considerably more difficult for someone who grew up living on the knife's edge of danger.
Can they discover the cause of the town's insanity and put a stop to it before it is too late?
She rescues Haatim Arison from a terrifying fate and discovers that he has a family legacy in the supernatural that he knows nothing about. Now she's forced to protect him, which is easy, and also trust him if she wants to save the townsfolk of Raven's Peak. Trust, however, is considerably more difficult for someone who grew up living on the knife's edge of danger.
Can they discover the cause of the town's insanity and put a stop to it before it is too late?
HERE IS AN EXCERPT FROM RAVEN'S PEAK
“Reverend, you have a visitor.”
He couldn’t remember when he
fell in love with the pain. When agony first turned to pleasure, and then to
joy. Of course, it hadn’t always been like this. He remembered screaming all
those years ago when first they put him in this cell; those memories were
vague, though, like reflections in a dusty mirror.
“Open D4.”
A buzz as the door slid open,
inconsequential. The aching need was
what drove him in this moment, and nothing else mattered. It was a primal
desire: a longing for the tingly rush of adrenaline each time the lash licked
his flesh. The blood dripping down his parched skin fulfilled him like biting
into a juicy strawberry on a warm summer’s day.
“Some woman. Says she needs to
speak with you immediately. She says her name is Frieda.”
A pause, the lash hovering in
the air like a poised snake. The Reverend remembered that name, found it
dancing in the recesses of his mind. He tried to pull himself back from the
ritual, back to reality, but it was an uphill slog through knee-deep mud to reclaim those memories.
It was always difficult to focus
when he was in the midst of his cleansing. All he managed to cling to was the
name. Frieda. It was the name of an
angel, he knew. . . or perhaps a devil.
One and the same when all was
said and done.
She belonged to a past life,
only the whispers of which he could recall. The ritual reclaimed him, embraced
him with its fiery need. His memories were nothing compared to the whip in his
hand, its nine tails gracing his flesh.
The lash struck down on his left
shoulder blade, scattering droplets of blood against the wall behind him. Those
droplets would stain the granite for months, he knew, before finally fading
away. He clenched his teeth in a feral grin as the whip landed with a sickening,
wet slapping sound.
“Jesus,” a new voice whispered
from the doorway. “Does he always do that?”
“Every morning.”
“You’ll cuff him?”
“Why? Are you scared?”
The Reverend raised the lash
into the air, poised for another strike.
“Just…man, you said he was
crazy…but this…”
The lash came down, lapping at
his back and the tender muscles hidden there. He let out a groan of mixed agony
and pleasure.
These men were meaningless,
their voices only echoes amid the rest, an endless drone. He wanted them to
leave him alone with his ritual. They weren’t worth his time.
“I think we can spare the
handcuffs this time; the last guy who tried spent a month in the hospital.”
“Regulation says we have to.”
“Then you do it.”
The guards fell silent. The
cat-o’-nine-tails, his friend, his love, became the only sound in the roughhewn
cell, echoing off the granite walls. He took a rasping breath, blew it out, and
cracked the lash again. More blood. More agony. More pleasure.
“I don’t think we need to cuff
him,” the second guard decided.
“Good idea. Besides, the
Reverend isn’t going to cause us any trouble. He only hurts himself. Right, Reverend?”
The air tasted of copper, sickly
sweet. He wished he could see his back and the scars, but there were no mirrors
in his cell. They removed the only one he had when he broke shards off to slice
into his arms and legs. They were afraid he would kill himself.
How ironic was that?
“Right, Reverend?”
Mirrors were dangerous things,
he remembered from that past life. They called the other side, the darker side.
An imperfect reflection stared back, threatening to steal pieces of the soul
away forever.
“Reverend? Can you hear me?”
The guard reached out to tap the
Reverend on the shoulder. Just a tap, no danger at all, but his hand never even
came close. Honed reflexes reacted before anyone could possibly understand what
was happening.
Suddenly the Reverend was
standing. He hovered above the guard who was down on his knees. The man let out
a sharp cry, his left shoulder twisted up at an uncomfortable angle by the
Reverend’s iron grip.
The lash hung in the air, ready
to strike at its new prey.
The Reverend looked curiously at
the man, seeing him for the first time. He recognized him as one of the first guardsmen he’d ever spoken with when placed in
this cell. A nice European chap with a wife and two young children. A little
overweight and balding, but well-intentioned.
Most of him didn’t want to hurt
this man, but there was a part—a hungry, needful part—that did. That part
wanted to hurt this man in ways neither of them could even imagine. One twist
would snap his arm. Two would shatter the bone; the sound as it snapped would
be . . .
A symphony rivaling Tchaikovsky.
The second guard—the younger one
that smelled of fear—stumbled back, struggling to draw his gun.
“No! No, don’t!”
That from the first, on his knees as if praying. The Reverend wondered if
he prayed at night with his family before heading to bed. Doubtless, he prayed
that he would make it home safely from work and that one of the inmates
wouldn’t rip his throat out or gouge out his eyes. Right now, he was waving his
free hand at his partner to get his attention, to stop him.
The younger guard finally worked
the gun free and pointed it at the Reverend. His hands were shaking as he said,
“Let him go!”
“Don’t shoot, Ed!”
“Let him go!”
The older guard, pleading this
time: “Don’t piss him off!”
The look that crossed his young
partner’s face in that moment was precious: primal fear. It was an expression
the Reverend had seen many times in his life, and he understood the thoughts
going through the man’s mind: he couldn’t imagine how he might die in this cell, but he believed he
could. That belief stemmed from something deeper than what his eyes could
see. A terror so profound it beggared reality.
An immutable silence hung in the
air. Both guards twitched and shifted, one in pain and the other in terror. The
Reverend was immovable, a statue in his sanctuary, eyes boring into the man’s
soul.
“Don’t shoot,” the guard on his
knees murmured. “You’ll miss, and we’ll be dead.”
“I have a clear shot. I can’t miss.”
This time, the response was
weaker. “We’ll still be dead.”
A hesitation. The guard lowered
his gun in confused fear, pointing it at the floor. The Reverend curled his
lips and released, freeing the kneeling guard.
The man rubbed his shoulder and
climbed shakily to his feet. He backed away from the Reverend and stood beside
the other, red-faced and panting.
“I heard you,” the Reverend
said. The words were hard to come by; he’d rarely spoken these last five
years.
“I’m sorry, Reverend,” the guard
replied meekly. “My mistake.”
“Bring me to Frieda,” he
whispered.
“You don’t—” the younger guard
began. A sharp look from his companion silenced him.
“Right away, sir.”
“Steve, we should cuff…”
Steve ignored him, turning and
stepping outside the cell. The Reverend looked longingly at the lash in his
hand before dropping it onto his hard bed. His cultivated pain had faded to a
dull ache. He would need to begin anew when he returned, restart the cleansing.
There was always more to
cleanse.
They traveled through the black-site
prison deep below the earth’s surface, past neglected cells and through rough
cut stone. A few of the rusty cages held prisoners, but most stood empty and
silent. These prisoners were relics of a forgotten time, most of whom couldn’t
even remember the misdeed that had brought them here.
The Reverend remembered his misdeeds.
Every day he thought of the pain and terror he had inflicted, and every day he
prayed it would wash away.
They were deep within the earth,
but not enough to benefit from the world’s core heat. It was kept unnaturally
cold as well to keep the prisoners docile. That meant there were only a few lights and frigid temperatures.
Last winter he thought he might lose a finger to frostbite. He’d cherished the
idea, but it wasn’t to be. He had looked forward to cutting it off.
There were only a handful of
guards in this section of the prison, maybe one every twenty meters. The actual
security system relied on a single exit shaft as the only means of escape.
Sure, he could fight his way free, but locking the elevator meant he would
never reach the surface.
And pumping out the oxygen meant
the situation would be contained.
The Council didn’t want to bring
civilians in on the secretive depths of their hellhole prison. The fewer guards
they needed to hire, the fewer people knew of their existence, and any guards
who were brought in were fed half-truths and lies about their true purpose. How
many such men and women, he’d always wondered, knew who he was or why he was
here?
Probably none. That was for the
best. If they knew, they never would have been able to do their jobs.
As they walked, the Reverend
felt the ritual wash away and he became himself once more. Just a man getting
on in years: broken, pathetic, and alone as he paid for his mistakes.
Finally, they arrived at the
entrance of the prison: an enclosed set of rooms cut into the stone walls
backing up to a shaft. A solitary elevator bridged the prison to the world
above, guarded by six men, but that wasn’t where they took him.
They guided him to one of the
side rooms, opening the door but waiting outside. Inside were a plain brown
table and one-way mirror, similar to a
police station, but nothing else.
A woman sat at the table facing
away from the door. She had brown hair and a white business suit with matching
heels. Very pristine; Frieda was always so well-dressed.
“Here we are,” the guard said.
The Reverend didn’t acknowledge the man, but he did walk into the chamber. He
strode past the table and sat in the chair facing Frieda.
He studied her: she had deep
blue eyes and a mole on her left cheek. She looked older, and he couldn’t
remember the last time she’d come to visit him.
Probably not since the day she
helped lock him in that cell.
“Close the door,” Frieda said to
the guards while still facing the Reverend.
“But ma’am, we are supposed to—”
“Close the door,” she
reiterated. Her tone was exactly the same, but an undercurrent was there. Hers
was a powerful presence, the type normal people obeyed instinctually. She was
always in charge, no matter the situation.
“We will be right out here,”
Steve replied finally, pulling the heavy metal door closed.
Silence enveloped the room, a
humming emptiness.
He stared at her, and she stared
at him. Seconds slipped past.
He wondered how she saw him.
What must he look like today? His hair and beard must be shaggy and unkempt
with strands of gray mixed into the black. He imagined his face, but with eyes
that were sunken, skin that was pale and leathery. Doubtless, he looked
thinner, almost emaciated.
He was also covered in blood,
the smell of which would be overpowering. It disgusted him; he hated how his
daily ritual left him, battering his body to maintain control, yet he answered
its call without question.
“Do you remember what you told
me the first time we met?” the Reverend asked finally, facing Frieda again.
“We need your help,” Frieda
said, ignoring his question. “You’ve been here for a long time, and things have
been getting worse.”
“You quoted Nietzsche, that
first meeting. I thought it was pessimistic and rhetorical,” he continued.
“Crime is getting worse. The
world is getting darker and…”
“I thought you were talking
about something that might happen to someone else but never to me. I had no
idea just how spot on you were: that you were
prophesizing my future,” he spoke. “Do you remember your exact words?”
“We need your help,” Frieda
finished. Then she added softer: “I need your help.”
He didn’t respond. Instead, he
said: “Do you remember?”
She sighed. “I do.”
“Repeat it for me.”
She frowned. “When we first met,
I said to you: ‘Whoever fights monsters
should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster.’”
He nodded. “You were right. Now
I am a monster.”
“You aren’t a monster,” she whispered.
“No,” he said. “I am your monster.”
“Reverend…”
Rage exploded through his body,
and he felt every muscle tense. “That is not my name!” he
roared, slamming his fist on the table. It made a loud crashing sound,
shredding the silence, and the wood nearly folded beneath the impact.
Frieda slid her chair back in an
instant, falling into a fighting stance. One hand gripped the cross hanging
around her neck, and the other slid into her vest pocket. She wore an
expression he could barely recognize, something he’d never seen on her face
before.
Fear.
She was afraid of him. The
realization stung, and more than a little bit.
The Reverend didn’t move from
his seat, but he could still feel heat coursing through his veins. He forced
his pulse to slow, his emotions to subside. He loved the feeling of rage but was terrified of what would happen if
he gave into it; if he embraced it.
He glanced at the hand in her
pocket and realized what weapon she had chosen to defend herself. A pang shot
through his chest.
“Would it work?” he asked.
She didn’t answer, but a minute
trace of shame crossed her face. He stood slowly and walked around the table,
reaching a hand toward her. To her
credit, she barely flinched as he touched her. He gently pulled her fist out of
the pocket and opened it. In her grip was a small vial filled with water.
“Will it work?” he asked.
“Arthur…” she breathed.
The name brought a flood of
memories, furrowing his brow. A little girl playing in a field, picking
blueberries and laughing. A wife with auburn hair who watched him with love and
longing as he played with their daughter. He quashed them; he feared the pain
the memories would bring.
That was a pain he did not
cherish.
“I need to know,” he whispered.
He slid the vial from her hand
and popped the top off. She watched in resignation as he held up his right
arm and poured a few droplets onto his exposed skin. It tingled where it
touched, little more than a tickle, and he felt his skin turn hot.
But it didn’t burn.
He let out the shuddering breath
he hadn’t realized he was holding.
“Thank God,” Frieda whispered.
“I’m not sure She deserves it,”
Arthur replied.
“We need your help,” Frieda said
again. When he looked at her face once more, he saw moisture in her eyes. He
couldn’t tell if it was from relief that the blessed water didn’t work, or
sadness that it almost had.
“How can I possibly help?” he
asked, gesturing at his body helplessly with his arms. “You see what I am. What
I’ve become.”
“I know what you were.”
“What I am no longer,” he
corrected. “I was ignorant and foolish. I can never be that man again.”
“Three girls are missing,” she said.
“Three girls are always
missing,” he said, “and countless more.”
“But not like these,” she said.
“These are ours.”
He was quiet for a moment.
“Rescues?”
She nodded. “Two showed
potential. All three were being fostered by the Greathouse family.”
He remembered Charles
Greathouse, an old and idealistic man who just wanted to help. “Of course, you went to Charles,” Arthur said.
“He took care of your little witches until they were ready to become soldiers.”
“He volunteered.”
“And now he’s dead,” Arthur said.
Frieda didn’t correct him. “Who took the girls?”
“We don’t know. But there’s
more. It killed three of ours.”
“Hunters?”
“Yes.”
“Who?”
“Michael and Rachael Felton.”
“And the third?”
“Abigail.”
He cursed. “You know she wasn’t
ready. Not for this.”
“You’ve been here for five
years,” Frieda said. “She grew up.”
“She’s still a child.”
“She wasn’t anymore.”
“She’s my child.”
Frieda hesitated, frowning. He
knew as well as she did what had happened to put him in this prison and what
part Abigail had played in it. If Abigail hadn’t stopped him…
“We didn’t expect . . .” Frieda
said finally, sliding away from the minefield in the conversation.
“You never do.”
“I’m sorry,” Frieda said. “I
know you were close.”
The Reverend—Arthur—had trained
Abigail. Raised her from a child after rescuing her from a cult many years
earlier. It was after his own child had been murdered, and he had needed a
reason to go on with his life. His faith was wavering, and she had become his
salvation. They were more than close. They were family.
And now she was dead.
“What took them? Was it the
Ninth Circle?”
“I don’t think so,” she said.
“Our informants haven’t heard anything.”
“A demon?”
“Probably several.”
“Where did it take them?” he
asked.
“We don’t know.”
“What is it going to do with them?”
This
time, she didn’t answer. She didn’t need to.
“So you want me to clean up your
mess?”
“It killed three of our best,”
Frieda said. “I don’t…I don’t know what else to do.”
“What does the Council want you
to do?”
“Wait and see.”
“And you disagree?”
“I’m afraid that it’ll be too
late by the time the Council decides to act.”
“You have others you could
send.”
“Not that can handle something
like this,” she said.
“You mean none that you could
send without the Council finding out and reprimanding you?”
“You were always the best,
Arthur.”
“Now I am in prison.”
“You are here voluntarily,” she
said. “I’ve taken care of everything. There is a car waiting topside and a jet
idling. So, will you help?”
He was silent for a moment,
thinking. “I’m not that man anymore.”
“I trust you.”
“You shouldn’t.”
“I do.”
“What happens if I say ‘no’?”
“I don’t know,” Frieda said,
shaking her head. “You are my last hope.”
“What happens,” he began, a lump
in his throat, “when I don’t come back? What happens when I become the new threat
and you have no one else to send?”
Frieda wouldn’t even look him in
the eyes.
“When that day comes,” she said
softly, staring at the table, “I’ll have an answer to a question I’ve wondered
about for a long time.”
“What question is that?”
She looked up at him. “What is
my faith worth?”
Links:
Website: http://www.LincolnCole.net
Raven’s Peak: http://www.LincolnCole.net/ravens-peak
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LincolnJCole
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/LincolnJCole
Newsletter: http://www.LincolnCole.net/signup
Author Central: http://www.amazon.com/Lincoln-Cole/e/B00AUIOU3A
Book Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y7MhpGIAWkU
Tour is sponsored by 4 WillsPublishing.wordpress.com
Nonne Jules & Co.
Just like the wheels on a car, our strong Wills keep you moving forward.
Tour is sponsored by 4 WillsPublishing.wordpress.com
Nonne Jules & Co.
Just like the wheels on a car, our strong Wills keep you moving forward.
1 comment:
So far nobody has offered a comment. Well, it's only 9:00 am. I'm going to make a pot of coffee. When you read this, please leave a comment in the "comment" section.
Patricia A. Guthrie
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