Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Time Lapse: The Knox Agency Chronicles
Time Lapse: The Knox Agency Chronicles
Time Lapse: The Knox Agency Chronicles
Ebook278 pages3 hours

Time Lapse: The Knox Agency Chronicles

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Read preview

About this ebook

There are only seven soul-stones, but every time one turns up, it means trouble with a capital T.

Charlotte Knox is a newly minted lawyer who's just aced the bar exam, opened her first office, and landed her very first client. Life should be a breeze, right? Well, think again.

 

Despite repeatedly insisting that she's a lawyer, not a private investigator, Charlotte finds herself entangled in a web of supernatural affairs. Zelmara O'Connor, an extraordinary white witch and coven leader, keeps drawing her into unforeseen situations. Now, Charlotte is whisked away to Ireland on a mission to locate Zelmara's missing daughter, Ryleigh, and ensure her safety from the clutches of Drakat, the ambitious ruler of Belfast's demon underworld.

 

What begins as a straightforward missing person case quickly spirals into life-threatening complexity. Charlotte discovers that Ryleigh is on the run protecting Nate Byrne, a twelve-year-old boy with a penchant for mischief. But there's more at stake than meets the eye. Ryleigh is also safeguarding a powerful soul stone, the Caraigama, which grants its wielder the ability to travel through time — and maybe change the past. If Drakat obtains this stone, her thirst for power may lead to catastrophic consequences.

 

With the fate of Ryleigh, Nate, and Belfast hanging in the balance, Drakat will stop at nothing to control the Caraigama, even if it means murdering the innocent. But Charlotte isn't alone in this perilous endeavor. She holds her own soul stone, defended by Sasha, a formidable wyvern guardian. With the support of her boyfriend, Cole, Charlotte embarks on a race against time to save Ryleigh, Nate, and the precious stone, all while ensuring she makes it back for her next court date.

 

Fans of Kim Harrison, Lindsay Buroker, and Nalini Singh will find themselves captivated by this heart-pounding paranormal adventure, filled with shapeshifters, enchanting creatures, and chaos. Prepare for a thrilling ride as romance mingles with supernatural twists at every turn.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 24, 2022
ISBN9798201266455
Time Lapse: The Knox Agency Chronicles
Author

C.L. Roman

C.L. Roman is a writer and editor in NE Florida. She writes fantasy and paranormal YA and is currently developing several series: Rephaim and Witch of Forsythe High, among them. In between novels, you can find her on her blog, The Brass Rag. Cheri lives with her husband and Jack E. Boy, Superchihuahua.

Read more from C.L. Roman

Related to Time Lapse

Titles in the series (5)

View More

Related ebooks

Fantasy For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Time Lapse

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
0 ratings

0 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    Time Lapse - C.L. Roman

    Time Lapse

    The Knox Agency Chronicles
    An Urban Fantasy Series
    Book 2

    C.L. Roman

    Copyright © 2022 C.L. Roman

    Brass Rag Press

    All rights reserved.

    Contents

    Grag

    First Client

    Leaving Greenwich

    Belfast

    A Mixed Blessing

    Devils and Thieves

    The Unexpected

    Into the Dark

    Sanctuary

    Amaryllis

    High Risk

    Dangerous Ground

    Stalker

    Ouroboros

    Caraigama

    In the Shadows

    Break-In

    The Tower

    Unconsecrated

    Fire and Flight

    Merlin

    The Price

    Bloodright

    Epilogue

    Afterword

    Dedication

    This book is for my dad, who always told me I could do anything, including follow my dreams.

    ––––––––

    Acknowledgements

    I need to say thank you to those without whom this book would not have happened. To Laura and Erika, who helped me figure out a world that is not my own. And to Rhyannon, who encouraged and applauded me when I needed it most. Thank you.

    Grag

    Grag kept to the shadows as the dawn sun sent long black fingers poking through the broken windows of what had been a three-story brownstone in the classic New York style. The imp limped slowly around the remnants of a grand staircase, its marble steps and oak railing shattered, the rebar underpinning twisted sideways.

    Jagged holes pocked the charred walls, and broken furniture barred his path, but didn't stop his mouth.

    Burn the house down, go ahead. Don't bother warning a person. Don't worry about Grag. He isn't important, is he? His bulbous eyes narrowed as he peered into the darkness beneath the ruined stairs. What's this then? A little cave, just for Grag? A place to rest, maybe? To hide until sunset?

    The fallen staircase lay on its side, humped up in the middle to form a ramshackle haven, thick with dust, and fragile. The air smelled of burned wiring and blood, but the accidental cave would shield him from predators, at least for a time. He hoped until dark.

    The house was a wreck, but it offered shelter from the sun. Grag was a minor demon, an imp. He could tolerate Sol’s glaring eye for short periods, but preferred moonlight. Something his master, Simon Blackwell, hadn't taken into account often, if at all.

    Fetch this, get me that. Don't spill things. Clean that up. Nag, nag, nag, day and night. Trying to please the man was like trying to fill a sieve with water. No matter how fast you pour, it's never enough.

    He squatted in the gravel strewn ruins, scratched his bald head with long scrawny fingers. A mouse poked its nose from between two stones and Grag struck, his skinny arm flashing out to snatch the shivering creature from its hiding spot. He didn't bother to kill it first, but shoveled the little thing into his mouth, crunching its spine with his teeth.

    Not good. Not tasty, but at least my stomach is fuller than before, Grag muttered.

    A stray beam of sunlight poked inquisitively into his hole, and Grag shuddered, moving further back into the dark as it struck something small and shiny. Intrigued, Grag inched forward, plucking the item from the dirt and turning it over in his grasping paws.

    Master's ring, aren't you? he asked the jewel. One of the poison ones, I'm thinking. Wonder what other treasures got buried in the fight. He shoved the ring in his pocket, careful not to press the tiny catch inside that would release the poison.

    A speculative gleam lit his eyes, and he looked over what he could see of the destruction from his hovel. Bits of furniture, broken statuary, shattered window glass and swathes of torn, filthy draperies lay under a thick layer of ash. The brick building hadn't burned completely, but the fight between the master and the witch had ripped it apart. What wasn't burned was broken or crushed.

    The outer shell of the brownstone remained, the walls meeting at the corners to lean against each other in a drunken stupor. His single glance into the empty rear garden revealed the broken coal door. Large sections of the house had collapsed inward, destroying the basement maze where the master had kept his menagerie. Not a snippet of magick remained to tickle Grag's senses.

    That and the eerie quiet suggested that all of the beasts his late master kept were escaped or dead, but Grag knew better. Too many of the labyrinth's inhabitants were experts in concealing themselves from prey. Grag would not become anyone's breakfast if he could help it.

    A hollow screech sounded somewhere behind the wall and Grag shuddered, his suspicions confirmed. Didn't kill all his pets, did you, witch? he muttered. No, you even let some escape on purpose, and some waited you out. Hid in the dark until you went away. He'd seen the soldiers march off, and watched from hiding as the wyvern tracked and destroyed a harpy. Was it the last? The screech came again and the imp cowered back into his cave. I don't think it was.

    As dawn brightened into morning, hunger and thirst plagued the imp, but he feared leaving the scant shelter he'd found. The stench of blood was thick in the air, and odd scrapings and clatterings broke the quiet. No birds sang that he could hear.

    The low rumble of a delivery truck shivered the air and Grag heard the engine's growl deepen, the vehicle slowing as it approached. They'd have the day's grocery order in the back. He could imagine the driver's shocked eyes as he took in the ruins. Hungry as he was, Grag wasn't stupid enough to go to the window and check. Not yet.

    The engine revved, then faded as the truck moved off down the block, delivery canceled.

    They got the right idea, don't they? he muttered to himself. I'd best be moving on before that harpy finds me. Or something worse. He shuddered as he recalled the long list of horrific creatures he'd ordered food for. But where to go? That's the question. Drakat will find out the master is dead sooner or later. Best be long gone before she does.

    In the far corner of his new-made cave, stone scraped over tile, and Grag jerked around to face the sound. A blunt nose poked out of the rubble, the forked tongue darting out to taste the air. The massive head — fully three feet across, wedge-shaped and green scaled — followed.

    Naga. The master only had one, Grag thought, horrified. But, of course, the giant cobra had survived. He always did.

    Hungry. Starved. The sibilant words issued from the serpent's mouth like venom. Where are you, little morsel? Mucalinda would dine.

    Terrified, Grag lurched from his hiding place into the wrecked front hall, leaving the snake still struggling to pull the rest of his bulk from the hole under the floor.

    Running, the imp tripped over a body, leaping to his feet even as he realized it was Bletch, the master's butler. A velvet lined box, empty now, lay near the body’s outstretched hand. Grag scooped it up without stopping, scurrying into the sitting room. The doors were twisted in their broken frames. They closed, but wouldn't lock.

    Need something to block it, don't I? he rasped, and braced his back against the doors as he scanned the room.

    Two bronze dogs lay on their sides, dented and cracked; their dead gaze still somehow menacing. Knowing they couldn't hurt him without an animation spell, Grag dragged them to the door, bracing it closed with their combined weight. If the naga got free, it might scent him above the varied stench of destruction the house carried. But it would find it difficult to push the statues aside, and the noise they caused would give Grag a warning.

    Relieved, he took a few ragged breaths and paused to look around more carefully. Overturned tables and glass shards littered the floor. A gleam of steel flashed from under the couch and Grag reached for it, pulling out a small dagger, which he tucked away in his belt.

    A small sack, smelling of magick, lay in a corner. Grag snatched it up, dropping it into his pocket. A few other artifacts found their way into his hands before he stopped searching to rest, all the while listening for sounds of the naga's approach.

    The fire hadn't reached this room, but looking up, Grag realized he could see through the holes in the ceiling to the second floor. Light streamed in from the left, and a breeze frolicked through, kicking up dust and teasing the draperies.

    Dingy color faded from the imp's cheeks. A window up there was broken. He knew it. The harpy could get in.

    She hasn't yet, though, he whispered to himself. Cause if she could, I'd be dead by now.

    On the far wall, the drapes hung askew, one end of the rod high, the other low, revealing a dark space beyond. Darkness was no barrier to Grag. In fact, he considered it a friend, his night vision better even than an owl's. The crunching hiss of scales over rubble sounded in the hall, pushing him to scuttle behind the drape. He found himself in a long hallway, one he hadn't known existed.

    The far end curved out of sight while three doors, one to his right, the other two on his left, marked the passage. He rushed to the first door, but it wouldn't open. He pushed harder, and was rewarded as it scraped along the floor, the weight behind it releasing suddenly with a mighty crash.

    Grag's eyes widened as he stared around the small room. A spindle legged desk had fallen over, blocking the entrance. Thin tracks on the dust strewn floor showed where he'd shoved it out of the way.

    The ceiling was cracked and bulging, but intact. The space held a narrow cot and decrepit dresser, as destitute and threadbare as the rest of the house was opulent.

    Shouldn't be surprised, he muttered. My quarters ain't exactly the Peabody, are they? Would have thought Bletch had better, though.

    Quickly, he rummaged through the dead half-troll's belongings, coming up with little of value beyond a tarnished silver flask and a few coins. These disappeared into another pocket as a scratching sound drew his attention upward.

    Frozen by terror, he watched bits of plaster drift down, slowly at first, but then in larger, quicker chunks until a single, sharp talon poked through. He backed toward the door, tripped over the leg of the desk and went down hard. His arms splayed behind him as the plaster fell in, and the harpy shoved her head through.

    Found you! she screeched gleefully.

    How did she find me? As a rule, harpies have excellent eyesight, courtesy of their eagle forbears. But their sense of smell and hearing was no better than that of an ordinary human.

    No time to worry about that now. She glared down at him through the hole she'd made. Another breath and she'd be through.

    Tanchra, don't kill me, please. I— I can pay you! Arms and legs stretched out, his hands under the bed, Grag scrabbled for anything he might use as a weapon. But there was nothing but dust.

    The harpy dropped on top of him. The lower half of her body was that of an eagle, with sharp-taloned feet. Her upper torso and head were those of a human female. Wings sprouted from her back, folded tightly against her body at the moment. Her arms were short but well-muscled, her three-fingered hands sporting long, thick claws.

    Pay me? the harpy screeched. You was supposed to free me. That was our deal! I give you my grandeagle's necklace, and you LET ME GO! But did you keep your word? No. Left me in the dark to die, is what you did.

    Her sharp-nailed, stubby fingers scrabbled beneath his shirt, drawing blood and screams from him until she found the necklace. Shrieking in triumph, she hopped up onto the bed, scowling down at him as she slipped the gem-strewn gold around her neck.

    Now I have the necklace and my freedom. Now you die for your betrayal! Tanchra pounced, missing Grag by a talon's width as he rolled under the bed. Come out here and die like a demon, imp!

    You've got what you want. Leave me alone, Grag howled.

    Not on your snot-soiled life. She poked under the bed as far as she could with her foreshortened arms, her nails grazing his toes as he squirmed deeper into the dusty dark until his back pressed against the wall. Come out now and I'll give you a clean death. Tanchra's voice took on a persuasive lilt, as if she was offering a treat to a small child. Quick and painless, I promise.

    The last word came out a harsh screech, and Grag scuttled along the wall until he came to the corner, stopping with a sharp gasp as something poked him in the shoulder. Twisting around, he scrabbled under himself until his fingers grazed metal. The object was small, round and hard, with a sharp spike thrust through it. He pulled the article from under him and held it close to his bulbous eyes.

    The bed lurched away from the wall, removing his safe haven. Tanchra shoved the furniture to the opposite side of the tiny room with a triumphant cry.

    He was going to die. He knew it.

    I wish I had more time, he cried, sobbing as he curled in on himself, clutching the artifact in his grubby hand.

    Very well.

    Silence and misty half-light settled over him.

    Tanchra was gone.

    So was the ruin of his master's house.

    Grag sat up and looked around, blinking at the predawn dimness. The moon floated only a foot or two above the roofline of the brownstones across the street, shedding her milky light over a street that looked both familiar and strange.

    What the hell?

    He was sitting in the middle of an empty dirt lot. A trailer occupied one side, stacked a good ten feet high with lumber and brick. A sign near the sidewalk proclaimed this as a Halston-Gingerton building site.

    His internal clock told him it was somewhere around three in the morning, but that couldn't be right. It had been midmorning when Tanchra attacked him.

    He poked at his chest and thighs, wincing when he hit a tender spot over his ribs where the harpy's talons had dug bloody furrows.

    Where am I? Magick is involved, or my name isn't Grag Anuch-Drakat. He rose stiffly, the object he'd found under the bed pressing coldly into his palm. Absently, he tucked it into a pocket with the other things he'd found in the house.

    Turning in a circle, he gazed wonderingly at his surroundings. That was the Berman house to the left, with its black iron fence and giant shade tree with the first, tight leaf buds showing pale green at the branch-tips. The Quarterton place was on the other side, which meant...

    He kept turning, taking in the increasingly recognizable surroundings. They'd looked strange because he'd never seen the block without the brooding shadow of Simon Blackwell's home falling over it.

    The air was cool, but not cold. The wrong temperature for late November. Even the moon hung in the wrong place, now that he thought about it, and it was far past full, closer to new than it should have been. What happened?

    Struck by a sudden wave of terror, Grag stumbled out of the lot onto the sidewalk and headed toward Central Park. He'd try to figure this out along the way, but desperation thrummed under his ribs, urging him to escape before the harpy came back.

    Or the naga.

    He shuddered and broke into a shambling run.

    First Client

    Iignored the alerts on my cell phone and leaned back in my chair, staring at the framed degree that hung above my office door.

    I checked my desk drawer and found Doirsain, the amethyst soul stone that amplified my natural power to supernatural levels, right where I'd left her. Sasha, her silver wyvern guardian, opened one sleepy eye and looked at me before curling tighter around the stone and going back to sleep. The little dragon could become massive at need, but right now, he was less than two inches long. I grinned. I'd never say it out loud, but he looked cute.

    Mmmph. Watch your mouth. The sleepy thought snaked through my head as I closed the drawer. Anyone wearing a purple lace blouse over a white cami has no right to talk about cute.

    Stay out of my head and you won’t hear thoughts that bother you. I looked down at the offending tunic and snorted. The flowy material was soft and sheer, with a faint design you could barely see. It had a rich look to it without being uncomfortable. It was one of my favorite tops. Besides, this is business attire in Florida. And it's a lavender tunic, not a purple blouse.

    Semantics. A faint snore echoed in my thoughts and I let it go. Life was quieter when Sasha was napping.

    Working from the home I shared with Lena, and sometimes my boyfriend, Cole Delaney, certainly had its advantages. One was the ability to dress as I pleased, at least on the bottom where the Vroom camera couldn't see. I rubbed a hand over my wear-softened jeans. Not exactly professional, but I was the only one who'd know, and it was nice to be comfortable while you worked.

    Another plus was the magically constructed passageway Cole had installed between our two homes.

    Cole was a semi-famous fashion designer who lived and worked in New York City. For obvious reasons, a move to Hawthorne, Florida, wasn't in the cards for him, but we wanted the relationship to work.

    So, after our recent adventures in the big city, he'd asked Solcruth, his soul stone, to create a passage between our two homes. Now we split our time between the two places as convenience and desire dictated. Remembering some of those moments of desire, I shivered.

    Working from home also meant that instead of sedate pumps, I was barefoot, a concession to Florida's May weather.

    I checked the clock on the wall, knowing I needed to get ready for the call with my first client.

    A client I fully intended to turn down.

    Don't be so sure about that.

    I started, my gaze dropping to the chair on the other side of the desk. A chair that should have been empty, but that was now filled with the nebulous form of Neala Delaney, my deceased maternal grandmother.

    Frowning, I glanced at the sachet Aunt Shawn had given me. Made from one of Neala's handkerchiefs, it provided a focal object, which made these visits easier for Gran. I had it in a crystal bowl, so it looked less like a summoning artifact and more like a knickknack. Sort of.

    She grumbled softly, pushing me to respond.

    I turned my attention back to her. I am NOT working for Zelmara O'Connor. I passed the bar. I'm a lawyer and I don't have time to join a coven. The words bounced lightly off the oak-paneled walls, but Neala just smiled.

    As you say, dear. But I suggest you keep an open mind. The ghost tilted her head to one side as if listening. Where is Lena, then?

    Lena was out with Marcus, a nursing student at Shadow Hills University, my alma mater. Lena and Marcus had been dating for about a month, and I hoped the romance would run its course soon. Marcus seemed nice enough on the surface, but there was something about him...

    Out on a date, I said when Neala cleared her throat impatiently. Ghosts had a hard time holding a manifestation for more than a few minutes, even with a practiced medium. Not that I had called her. What do you want, anyway?

    Aware that the question would sound rude if I put

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1