Author Name: Kayla Bashe
Book Name: Graveyard Sparrow
Publisher: Torquere Press
Cover Artist: BSClay
Release
Date: July 22, 2015
Blurb:
Katriona Sparrow, dubbed the Mad Heiress
by London's upper class, is the deceptively fragile ward of a foreign nobleman.
She can't stand making small talk with strangers, but she's unparalleled when
it comes to deciphering the dead.
On a routine investigation, something
goes horribly wrong, leaving Katriona catatonic in an upscale hospital and a
serial killer with an artistic bent stalking London's most vulnerable.
Enter Anthea Garlant, a young witch and
academic ostracized from polite society for traveling the world without a
chaperone. She devises magical treatments to protect Katriona from the side
effects of her abilities, but as she grows more and more attached to Katriona,
her professional façade begins to slip.
Will they be able to stop the man who
turns beautiful dead women into works of art before he turns his attention much
closer to home?
Previously published through Kindle
Unlimited.
Pages or Words: 84 pages, 33,700 words
Categories:
Alternate
Universe, Bisexual, Crime Fiction, Fantasy, Historical, Lesbian Romance, Romance
Excerpt:
She was so beautiful that she looked as if she was only sleeping, but clearly she'd cried tears of blood. She was dressed in clothing that appeared expensive but was cheaply made; a poor girl wanting only for a day to live beyond her means. From far away, she seemed to wear pearls and sapphires. Up close, the pearls were her teeth, and the sapphires were her plucked-out eyes. And the golden sash around the waist of her plum-colored taffeta gown? It was made of hair. She also wore a heart-shaped locket, clearly her own. Although tarnished somewhat, and made of much cheaper material, it was of a similar design to Anthea's, provoking an odd frisson of familiarity. Whatever our profession, whatever our station in life, we're all women, Katriona mused as she crouched beside the corpse. And if one of us is in danger… then we all are.
She was so beautiful that she looked as if she was only sleeping, but clearly she'd cried tears of blood. She was dressed in clothing that appeared expensive but was cheaply made; a poor girl wanting only for a day to live beyond her means. From far away, she seemed to wear pearls and sapphires. Up close, the pearls were her teeth, and the sapphires were her plucked-out eyes. And the golden sash around the waist of her plum-colored taffeta gown? It was made of hair. She also wore a heart-shaped locket, clearly her own. Although tarnished somewhat, and made of much cheaper material, it was of a similar design to Anthea's, provoking an odd frisson of familiarity. Whatever our profession, whatever our station in life, we're all women, Katriona mused as she crouched beside the corpse. And if one of us is in danger… then we all are.
"The
gloves are made from his previous victim's skin, by the way," pointed out
a constable. "At least, they're the same color."
The
girl's mouth had been filled with dirt; the sort of unremarkable dirt that
could have come from anywhere in London. Some of it was smeared across her
chin. In her lap, she held another girl's head.
"Salome
and the head of John the Baptist." That came from Anthea, who was tilting
her head at the scene.
"Sorry,
what?" Inspector Claybrook looked up from the body.
"The
sash, the gown… if you look at the pose and jewelry alone, it's an exact
replica of one of the paintings in the Louvre." Before anyone asked her
how she knew that, she added "When I'm in Paris, I go there often to clear
my mind."
"This
is his art," Katriona murmured thoughtfully. This woman would offer her
another piece of the puzzle, she was sure of it.
"I'll
hold your gloves for you," Anthea said in an undertone.
Katriona
removed them and held them out with an almost imperceptible nod. Anthea
transferred them to her reticule.
There
were still other people around, but for all intents and purposes, it had become
just Katriona and the corpse. This small, powerful figure was radiating
something inexplicable—still delicate, but somehow frightening. Her eyes were
so blue that they could drown a man.
She
touched the decapitated head first. I had
a dog. I had a dog. Who will feed my dog?
"I'm
sorry, but that's all I can get. She's been dead for days. She's
well-preserved, but I can't read her. I suspect it's from the same woman we
found the other day, but…" If I died, she thought, I'd be so afraid for
Sentinel. She felt closer than ever to this dead girl, the one whose name she
did not know.
"At
least it was only a whore," a constable murmured behind her. Instantly
Katriona wanted to tear off his head and eat him whole.
Men! They visit prostitutes, yet they look down on them.
None of these girls deserve to be told "Your friend is dead" by an
uncaring and contemptuous man.
Katriona
made an impulsive decision. She crouched further over the corpse, using her
body to shield her movements, and ripped the heart locket from her neck,
tugging until the cheap chain broke. Surreptitiously, she dropped it into her
white kid boot. Next, she ran her hands through the woman's curly dark hair.
Her voice changed, becoming noticeably less cultured; now there was a rich
warmth to it and a Cockney accent.
"I'm
really excited because I'm getting paid extra to spend the night with a man
where he lives instead of where I live. Maybe I can pocket something good on
the way out. He's real handsome. Smooth hands, long fingers... so then I said,
do you want a brush, then? And he said, he said, 'Have a drink'. He offers me…
something. Dunno what it is, never had it before, but I'm excited. When I wake
up, I'm—"
Katriona
wavered, but held her grip on the memories. She would follow this to the end.
"—I
can smell earth. 'Run, little rabbit,'
he says. 'Run away from the hunter's horn.' But I'm not running; it's too dark.
Blacker than night. Rather die than be in the dark, than lose my way in the
dark down in the earth. I fight like a tiger. I try to scratch his face but he
grabs my wrists and—God, he's strong! Kick him in the jewels and he moves out
of the way—too damn fast, too damn fast—where'd he go? Hands around my
neck—squeezing the life out of me—I can't breathe! Please don't kill me.
Please, no, no, no… Now I'm afraid but I'm angry, and I hold his gaze until my
eyes roll back. He told me I made a mistake, I deserved to die because he
couldn't have imagined the girl he loved saying such dirty things.
"'You're
too wildly sexual.' That's what he said. And he beat me where the bruises
wouldn't show. I fought like a tiger; tell them I fought. Salome with her head
in her hand and her mouth full of dirt—this is his art!"
All
at once, Katriona's aura of power seemed to startle back inside her skin. Her
eyes opened. She lurched backward, wide-eyed and pale. Anthea was at her side
at once, and Katriona held onto her for stability.
"Are
you going to be all right?" Anthea's voice was as low and mesmerizing as
ever—as beautiful as a hypnotist's—and Katriona followed the sound of it as it
led her out of her fear. She buried her head in Anthea's neck, taking in the
twin fragrances of jasmine and bergamot. Anthea made her feel like the best and
strongest version of herself, a little less neurotic and a little more
rational. She thought she wanted Anthea around for the rest of her life.
A
flash of thought: If she holds onto me
any longer, people will think we're betrothed. Did it come from Anthea or from her? She
couldn't quite care, couldn't tell. Reluctantly, because Katriona knew what it
was like when people held onto her too tightly or for too long, she let go.
Anthea
repeated the question. "Are you going to be all right?"
"Yes."
Now that you're here.
Sales Links: http://www.torquerebooks.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=200&products_id=4435
About the
author:
Kayla Bashe is a
literature/theater student at Sarah Lawrence College. She has previously
self-published several novels, and her story A Muse Afire was featured in the
first issue of Vitality Magazine. Her passions include Shakespeare, feral cats,
and answering “If you want more diversity, write it yourself!” with a variety
of snark.
Where to find the author:
Facebook: Kayla Bashe
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