"Rogers writes with confidence and authority about everything from African politics to Houston police procedure to Mexican drug gangs. There's plenty of action, and the book is populated with interesting characters from political figures to tattoo artists. Check this one out when you're looking for a real slam-bang change of pace."
-Bill Crider, author of the Dan Rhodes mystery series
EXCERPT
Synopsis
-Bill Crider, author of the Dan Rhodes mystery series
EXCERPT
Gunfire! Longshadow’s heart thundered, urging him toward the core
of the problem, toward the sonofabitch shooter. He resisted turning to see.
Resisted drawing his weapon.
His focus had to be here,
on the crowd.
He glanced at the other
two officers maintaining the barricade. They looked rattled, too. He inhaled
deeply to counter the adrenaline pumping through his veins. Judging by the
number of shots, and their sudden end, Secret Service had already secured the
situation.
The crowd exploded in
chaos. Some pushed to break through the barrier. Others scrambled away.
Longshadow grabbed his baton.
“Who got shot?” shouted
the vet in the wheelchair. “The president?”
“No-no-no-no-no!” a woman
screamed.
“She can’t be dead. No!”
Words bled into a wail.
“Maintain your
positions,” the chief barked over the radio.
Behind him, Longshadow
heard only confusion. In the agitated crush of spectators milling near the
barricade or hastening for shelter, a group of young men, all in green polo
shirts pressed close to the barrier. Longshadow scrutinized their faces. No
obvious ethnic affinity or gang affiliation. No placards. No slogan embellished
the preppy shirts. He couldn’t match their features with any of the terrorist
suspects he’d studied in preparation for this event. The men lined up along the
barrier, silent and still. Oddly, their stillness seemed to calm people nearby.
Dismissing them
temporarily, Longshadow continued scanning, memorizing faces. Searching for
signs of trouble. Considering the direction of the inciting shots—a handgun,
judging by sound—the shooter had maneuvered near enough to the president that
agents were able to return fire without hitting innocent bystanders.
Longshadow recalled the
unmarked car that broke from the motorcade to move ahead. Not unusual, security
vehicles moved in and out of the motorcade constantly according to radio
instructions. So why had he noticed it? And there was something else, something
that didn’t quite fit.
Strangely, despite the
adrenaline rush, he felt no panic. The city had geared up to contain a hostile
situation. Trained personnel were performing their assigned duties.
Longshadow’s bit filled one miniscule place in the matrix. So far, his portion
of the crowd appeared shocked, frightened, angry but not hostile.
A siren announced the
arrival of an ambulance.
“It was a cop!” This came
from a man two rows back in the crowd. “Got a picture of it right here with my
zoom. A motorcycle cop shot President Hale! Secret Service blasted the crazy
bastard.”
No! Not a cop. Not one of us.
Longshadow exchanged a
glance with the officer nearest him. The man’s mouth turned hard. Misinformation, the look said. A fucking lie.
The car that exited the
motorcade—hadn’t a motorcycle also moved out just before the unmarked car? It must
have been the timing between the two vehicles that struck him as odd and caused
him to notice.
Today marks the start of a new world. The placard-waving woman was
gone. Had she known this shooting would happen? Was she involved? He recalled
the details of her face to relate later during debrief.
Scant minutes had passed,
but in slow motion. Longshadow felt numb. A blank book, nothing inside. Addison
Hale was more connected to his personal life than any president, any national
figure, any politician national or local. Terry had worked so hard with Forward
America to help get her elected. Now Terry was dead. Hale was possibly dead.
He felt a dull disconnect
from the reality that surrounded him. Maybe he’d lost his ability to respond to
tragedy.
What was that flash? Camera, probably. Everyone behind the barrier
seemed to have a camera or videocam, or at least a cell phone, talking on it or
snapping photos.
The flash came again,
this time as bright as a flame yet as tiny as a dust mote, and it flew straight
into his eye before he could turn away or blink. No pain. No sensation at all.
He dismissed it with
scarcely a thought.
***
Ruell dimmed his spark a
fraction too late. The new host had sensed his presence.
Wrenched from his former host
despite his resistance, Ruell had deduced that his self-preservation reflex
must be stronger than his desire to retreat with Addison Hale into death. Once
ejected, he resorted to instinct. Thinking had brought him one failure after
another, so he relied instead on sensory direction and searched out the calmest
mind within the sea of Human anger and fear. He wanted only to lie undetected
and dormant.
This new emotional
landscape, a flat, mist-shrouded lake, void of emotional coloration, offered
the most placid escape from the chaos surrounding the conference center. He
instantly constricted his spark to escape detection, wrapped his tiny bead of
diminished energy in the color of despair, and slid deep into the least active
tissue of Kirk Longshadow’s neocortex.
Synopsis
On a desperate mission to save his entire race from
extinction, Emissary Ruell travels to Earth equipped with his two most powerful
bargaining currencies -- health and longevity -- hoping to convince the most
powerful leader in the free world that collaboration can save both of their
civilizations. Having no way to communicate directly with humans, Ruell must
inhabit President Addison Hale's body to carry out his mission.
He quickly discovers, however, that humans are more complex
and volatile than anticipated. Only after admitting defeat does he encounter
Kirk Longshadow, and ordinary cop who might be Ruell's last chance.
Where to Purchase Emissary
The Author
Chris's Website / Goodreads / Facebook
Chris Rogers was born in Texas and raised in the days of EC
Comics and B horror flicks that could chill you down to your funny bones. She resides
in a small community within commute of the four major Texas metropolises, where
she ghostwrites business books and memoirs while turning out her own novels and
short stories. Chris has taught mystery writing at the Rice University School
of Continuing Studies, the University of Houston and in private master classes.
Her students have received numerous awards and acknowledgements for their
works. After a career in graphic design, Chris became a writer the easy way:
She read voraciously and filled blank pages with drivel until her fingers
cramped and her brain defected. Eventually, she learned to craft a decipherable
sentence. Author of the Dixie Flannigan series, Bitch Factor, Rage Factor,
Chill Factor and Slice of Life, Chris has published stories and essays in,
among others, Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine and Writer s Digest.
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ReplyDeleteNEVER GO HOME
Twenty-two emissaries have been posted in this sector, as yet without success. Of the four who have returned, not one survived without impairment. And now there is so little time. Does Earth offer a better chance of refuge? Or will the chaos tear an Emissary apart?