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Dark Days (Legions Book 1)
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Dark Days
Copyright © 2016 by Sarah Hall
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are
either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
Cover Artist: Rue Volley
Edited by: EAL Editing Services
Published by: CHBB Publishing LLC.
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by
any means without written permission of the author.
Prologue: The City of Orphans
Asire
I pulled my truck around Regalia Gallery’s back, and parked it under one of the security lights. There weren’t many people back there, but I still zipped up my oversized hoodie and popped the hood over my head. Only after dragging my hair around front, so that the sides of my face were covered. It might look suspicious, but the constant rain in Seattle kept me safe.
Just before getting out of the truck, I threw out my senses and relaxed when only two legion signatures came back at me. I could only sense race, not individuals, but if there was danger in the building, there’d be way more than two signatures for me to worry about.
I popped the car handle and exited into the lazy, snowy slush that was falling. It was a good excuse to keep my head down as I made my way to the back door. The building was locked back there with a security code that I typed in quickly, and slipped into the warm, dry building. Then it was down a long hallway, a turn to the left and I found myself in the lobby. It was five in the morning, so there wasn’t anybody there and the only light was from the displays around particularly good paintings and a handful of modern ‘art’ sculptures that were supposed to sell fast.
I hit the button on the elevator and it came quickly. I went inside and finally managed to relax. Nothing dangerous in here and if it crashed, I didn’t have to worry about surviving. I dropped my old backpack at my feet and unzipped my jacket, throwing the hood back. The lighting in the elevator brought my injuries out in stark relief, according to the mirrored doors.
My hair was dark brown and hung straight, down to my hips and my eyes were black. My skin was extremely pale and popped greatly against my dark hair and eyes. A contrast that worked most days, but today was something different. There were cuts all over my left side. Small little scrapes that traveled from the crown of my head, down my neck and bare arm. They covered my shoulder and my entire side, down my leg and all the way to my foot. Most of the cuts were hidden by my t-shirt and jeans, thankfully. Some showed down my chest, and curved over what little cleavage my shirt showed. If this was anywhere but Seattle, I’d be getting sideways glances. As it was, most people ducked their heads and kept moving.
The elevator dinged at the top floor and the mirrored doors slipped away, taking my injured image with them. I stuffed the hoodie into my bag and started walking down the hall at a brisk pace. There were two doors up here. One that led into the office and the other that led into an apartment occupied by the owner of the gallery. I went to the office, because there was no way she was sleeping right now.
I was right.
I didn’t bother knocking, but went right into the space. Reggie stood behind her desk with Henrik. They were both reviewing something, probably a visual of all the attacks we’ve had in the last week. She raised her head and her dark eyes tightened at my appearance.
“Asire? Jesus Christ, what happened to you?”
“Thrown through a window,” I said.
“When? Where?” Her voice was tighter than normal, but she wore the stress well. Her body was relaxed and she looked as put together as always. Her medium blonde curls were arranged to be aesthetically pleasing, even though they were untamable. Her chocolate colored eyes were clear and intelligent. She was dressed in a suit, skirt down to her knees, jacket carefully buttoned closed, heels high and matching, the whole outfit designed to complement her body, which I always described as being pinup worthy. Her nails were manicured and unbroken. Yep, she looked like she was keeping it together. It was only that tightness around her eyes and the way her dusky skin looked a little paler that gave it away.
“This morning,” I said. “Walking back to my truck after work.”
Reggie blinked. “Damn it.” She yanked out another pin and marked something on the map she had in front of her. Yeah, GPS was a wonderful thing, but sometimes paper maps were the only way to go. “That’s one a day,” she said. “And we haven’t even seen them.”
Henrik rubbed his eyes and didn’t say anything. He was a bear of a man. Broad shoulders and chest. Brown hair and eyes. Scruff.
The phone on Reggie’s desk went off and she grabbed it and— out of habit —said, “This is Regalia Torres, how may I help you?”
I heard a familiar voice on the other end. “Everything seems calm tonight. Are you sure they’re going to try something again?”
I raised my eyebrows.
Reggie sighed. “They already did. With Asire. She seems fine. Superficial injuries.”
A curse. “What the hell are we supposed to do then?”
“Go home for now, stay by the phone. I might have instructions for later,” Reggie ordered, and then dumped the phone in the cradle without waiting for a reply. She stood to her full height, which was several inches shorter than my six feet and one inch, and put her hands on her hips. “This is getting ridiculous.” She turned to me and her dark eyes crinkled in worry. “You are okay, right?”
“Yeah,” I said without hesitation. “I’m fine. Just scrapes. Landed on a bunch of broken glass.”
“Did they get away?” she asked.
“Some of them,” I said darkly. “There were four of them, two who attacked and two who watched. They popped out of an alley and threw me through a shop window about a block from the pawnshop. Landed on some mannequins. That’s uncomfortable, by the way. For any future reference you might need.”
“How many escaped?” Reggie asked, grabbing different pins from a box by the map.
I walked closer and saw the basic streets of Seattle. There were about three dozen white thumbtacks around the map, four red ones, two yellow and eight black. The black ones were in an almost perfect circle around an orange one, placed at a familiar address. I racked my brain and realized which house it was.
“Two,” I said.
Reggie nodded and put a black thumbtack in. It was the only one that deviated from her others. The pawnshop I worked nights at was about as far from the ritzy neighborhood that Reggie’s gallery was located as it could possibly be. That lone tack was far from its friends.
“Shit,” I groaned.
“Yep,” Reggie said.
“Have you called the others?” I asked. All the orange tacks were where the other legions in the city were living at the moment. The white were crimes committed by humans, spell-casters or soul-reapers. The red were vampires. Yellow, werewolves. Black were the recent attacks from outside legions.
“Not yet,” Reggie said, reaching for her phone already. She typed in a number and waited patiently while Henrik took the map and moved it to a side table. He examined it with his arms crossed over his chest. As Reggie started talking, I went to stand beside him.
“This the last week?” I
asked, though I already knew the answer.
“Yes,” he said.
“I saw the two that escaped. They both had blond hair and blue eyes, so that’s not helpful… Have they been leaving behind any calling cards?” I asked.
Henrik sighed and a tiny line appeared between his brows. I left him to think while Reggie told the others not to go to our meeting space. A little house on the edge of town that we rented one week a month so all the legions could get together and talk.
Finally, Henrik said, “There has been one thing. They don’t clean after themselves. We haven’t lost any numbers, but there have been human and spell-caster deaths. And they leave the bodies.”
I stared at him for a second and then looked away. I pulled up my outdated mental list of Annihilists and thought hard. What Family didn’t have a cleaner? It took a second or two, but the information finally popped into my head. “The Martinson Family didn’t have a cleaner when I was younger.”
Reggie dropped the phone in its cradle again and approached me. “What’s their MO?” She slid in between Henrik and me to stare down at the map as well. In her hand was the box of tacks and she set it next to the map. It was strangely ominous.
“They never did much when I was a kid,” I said. “They held a small town in Pennsylvania and kept to themselves. They weren’t very interested in fighting in the war as long as their city was clear of Open legions.”
Reggie snorted. “So they’re having their coming out party in Seattle. Great.” She rubbed her eyes. “All right… I have to open in five hours, which means I need to be up in three. Asire, head home, prepare for possible houseguests. Are you working tomorrow?” she asked before I could leave.
“Well, tomorrow’s Christmas, so no,” I said.
“Don’t make me hurt you,” she responded without missing a beat. “So you can patrol with me?”
“And Henrik?” I asked, having seen Reggie get into a fight before. She wasn’t terrible… But she was not great either.
Her hip cocked and she looked like she wanted to throw something at me. “Yes. And Henrik. Are you coming or not?”
“I’ll go,” I told her. I would have gone if Henrik wasn’t there, too, because I couldn’t let her die. “I’ll try to get here by six, okay?” That was the time I usually started my shift at the pawnshop, Captain Awesome Pawn. That wasn’t a joke. The owner was somewhat…eccentric.
“Good,” Reggie said. “Now go away before I throw the stapler at you.”
“I’d just catch it,” I told her before turning my back and leaving.
“I’m tempted to do it!” she called after me, as the door was closing.
Outside, the rain had turned to snow that was just as lazily falling as the slush had. It wasn’t until I was in the cab of the truck that I realized my hoodie was still in my bag. I debated not putting it on, but the cops in the city had a tendency to pull people who look suspicious over. For no reason. So I yanked it on and left.
The drive home wasn’t long. The neighborhood I lived in was the kind that could afford to buy art from Reggie’s gallery. Thankfully, the roads were fairly clear, it being early in the morning, and there weren’t any policemen to pull me over. Most of the cuts were covered, but driving with a hood on looked more suspicious than being injured did. Things to watch out for in the City of Orphans.
I pulled up to the gate and rolled down my window. There was a small metal box with buttons and I typed in the code quickly. The gates swung open with the kind of slowness horror movies adored. And closed the same way. If something could move really quickly, they might be able to slip inside behind me. The gates were tall enough that climbing them wasn’t an option, and for those adventurous few that would try, we had metal spikes at the top.
Since I hadn’t been home while it snowed, the long driveway was covered in the fluffy stuff. My truck, a large beauty, didn’t have too much trouble with it, but I went slowly. Just in case. I didn’t feel safe until the garage door trundled down behind me and I was within the house.
Which was good, since this was the safe house for the city’s legions. I didn’t technically own it, but I maintained it for the day it might be used. There were about forty Orphan legions in the city and each one contributed money to the safe house. It was large and ritzy, but big enough to house everyone and it came with a security system and the gate. Whenever a new Orphan arrived, they stayed here until they could get a job and live on their own.
Seattle was unofficially known as The City of Orphans. A term adopted from legions. It’s where the world sent their unwanted people. It started with legions, a race that had been created when all the other races’ blood had been mixed. Legions were in a civil war with our own race and had been our entire existence. Annihilists wanted to destroy all the other races, because they were inferior and didn’t deserve the land they walked on. Open legions didn’t agree and protected them. But some Open legions weren’t to be trusted. Like me. Those were legally Orphaned. Basically it was a document saying we couldn’t join a Family, which is what we fought in. How we grouped together. Vampires had clans. Werewolves had packs. Legions had Families.
When legions started this practice, other races followed suit. Sending their vampires who were too bloodthirsty, their werewolves who were too violent to allow into a pack and so on and so forth. All the misfits were in Seattle.
So the safe house was just good thinking on Reggie’s part. It seemed like a bad idea to assume everything would be okay, all the time.
Upstairs in my room, I dumped my bag and jacket in the closet, and pulled my phone out. The screen informed me I had missed a couple of calls. I switched over to voicemail and listened.
“Hi, Asire!” a chipper voice said. My cousin, Billy. “I know it’s not Christmas yet, but Merry Christmas. I sent you a package, have you gotten it yet? It’s not that big and they wouldn’t let me decorate it like the Hulk, but I’m sure you’ll know which one I mean. I’m watching The Nightmare Before Christmas right now, because I believe it’s a Christmas and a Halloween movie. I don’t care what anyone else says! Sally’s song is on right now and it made me think of you. You were always better at singing it than the Claymation character. I should let you go. Call me back! Bye!”
The next message started. It was another from Billy. “Done with The Nightmare Before Christmas and I got bored. I also just got your package! It’s big. I’m opening it now because I’m an adult and I don’t need to wait till morning,” she said. There was the sound of tearing paper and then a squeal loud enough that I had to pull the phone away from my ear and put it on speaker. “I love it, I love it, I love it!” she screamed.
I could picture her so clearly, ripping away the brown paper and revealing the original poster for one of the first Superman movies. I worked at a pawnshop. Sometimes interesting things came in.
“Oh my god, I have to put it up!” A brief pause. “I wonder if Regory will let me put it above our bed. Do you think—” She got cut off by the phone’s limit.
The third message. “Stupid fucking phone! The call is over when I say it’s over!” There was the briefest pause as she set something down on the other side, then, “I didn’t actually have anything to say. I just don’t like the way your phone booted me out. Call me. Love ya. Bye.”
I smiled and the last message started. This one wasn’t from Billy, but from her mate. Regory.
“Hey, Asire,” he said solemnly. “Just wanted to say Merry Christmas. I miss you. Call me back when you can. Bye.”
The call ended and I sat on my bed, staring at the other side of the room. Since I was the only one who lived here permanently, I got the master suite. There was the bathroom, the bedroom with the walk in closet and a sitting room that I used for my art supplies. I had canvas and paints and sketchpads, pens, ink and paintbrushes all over the place. Staring at it, I could practically see Regory moving around the space, trying to put some order to my chaos. I could hear Billy saying he was being silly. And my chest opened up in a gi
ant void.
How long had it been since I last saw them? Seven years… Seven years. Billy, Regory and I had grown up together and splitting up had been hard. There were reasons to do it. Lots of really sound reasons. One of which being we didn’t think it’d be permanent. Neither of them suspected that I’d get Orphaned at sixteen and moved to Seattle.
I remember standing on the side of the road, looking down at the paper my aunt had handed me. Reading the words that told me I was to be a prisoner within this city. And none of it mattered except for one line: The subject of this Orphaning is not allowed to be in the presence with one Wilma Thomas or one Regory Pence. That one line had taken away my entire future.
Shaking off the dark feelings, I glanced at the clock. It was almost six here, which meant it’d be almost eight there. They’d both be getting into their Christmas celebrations right about now. Their phones would be off, but I didn’t want to risk not getting back to them. I called Regory first. His phone rang only twice before I was dumped into voicemail. “Hey, Regory,” I said, “It’s Asire. Merry Christmas to you, too. Sorry I didn’t back to you sooner. Busy at work.” My stomach hollowed out as I said the words. I loved my cousin and her mate, but I couldn’t bring myself to tell them when things were bad here. They’d only feel guilty for something they couldn’t stop. “You know, holiday season. Lotsa people need to pawn and buy and sell. I got a guy in the other day who, no joke, had a beard down to his belt buckle with a guitar. He wanted to sell it because he needed warm wine. I didn’t know what to say, so I just took the guitar and gave him the money.” I stopped talking because I felt like I was rambling. “Okay… Well… I miss you too. Talk to you later.”
I hung up quickly because my eyes stung and I couldn’t let those tears fall. I might be by myself, but if I let the dam crack, then everything would come out. It wouldn’t be pretty.