Runners & Riders
Companion
to the Treasure Chronicles
A
young adult novel of gangs and love in a steampunk world.
Juliet loved growing up at the seaside, although it meant
lonely hours chasing after the other beach rats while her mother worked as a
seamstress. Juliet never expected her seaman father to inherit a fortune and
move the family to New Addison City. Suddenly her mother is a socialite and
Juliet is best friends with a strong-willed girl who actually likes her. When
Juliet’s new friend welcomes her to the Runners, a gang that has plagued the
East Coast for years, Juliet sees it as the opportunity to fit in, learn
tricks, and make eyes at one of the hottest members. What the gang does isn’t
really wrong…right? She’s used to being a pawn for the Runners, but she starts
to question what she sees as harmless fun when the gang uses her to attack a
young officer.
Jonathan Montgomery vowed to end the Runners after they murdered his family. He
joined the Riders, an elite police force dedicated to stopping the Runners’
crime spree. They have put him in New Addison City, but rookie mistakes follow
Jonathan as he struggles to accomplish his goal, until a young woman feeds him
inside information to bring down the Runners.
Between murders and secrets, Juliet will need to find her strength to help
Jonathan, before the founder of the Runners crawls up from the sewers amongst
her inventions to burn down the city.
#
RUNNERS & RIDERSis available nowon Amazon from Curiosity Quills Press.
Check out early reviews on GoodReads!
#
Can’t wait to read the next
installment in the Treasure Chronicles
world? Check out the first chapter:
A
figure ducked behind the work shed where the glow of the back porch gas lamp
didn’t reach.Jonathan shielded his eyes so
he could see more clearly through the bedroom window, but the
backyard lay still.The white sheets the maid had hung fluttered in the evening
breeze.
His
uncle would have a ghost story to tell about those.
Another
dark shape bolted across the yard; this one crouched in his mother’s flower
garden.It might have been one of the boys from school come to throw pebbles at
the pale blue siding until Jonathan sneaked out, but they seemed too tall for
eleven-year-olds.The one in the flowers crept closer to the house.
Movement
in the woods drew Jonathan’s attention farther across the yard, where two more
shapes lurked.They had to be grown men.He gulped as he crawled away from the
window to the hallway where the light from the living room glowed up the
stairs.
“Found
you.”The maid grinned from his parents’ bedroom, a stack of table linens in her
arms.“When we play hide-and-seek, you ain’t supposed to come out till I call
for you.We gotta practice the rules again?I was gonna come looking soon as I
put these cloths away.”
He
grabbed the railing.“There’s people out in the yard.”
Her
eyes widened before she clicked her tongue.“Ain’t nobody out in this cold.I’m
dreading my own walk home.Bless your father if he gives me a ride.”
“I saw
them.There had to be ten, at least!”Jonathan took the stairs down two at a
time.
His
uncle sat in front of the living room hearth, the fire crackling to stave off
the autumn chill, with Jonathan’s sister nestled in his lap.“The old king rose
up tall as that old oak out by the water pump, and he waved his scepter as if he was a wizard.”
“Uncle
Henry,” Jonathan interrupted.“There are people out back.”
“What’s
that?You get to bed already?”
“What?”His
uncle never made them sleep as early as his mother did; they usually got to
stay up until their parents came home from the opera house.
“You
must have had a nightmare.”Uncle Henry chuckled, and the little girl giggled
from his lap.
“No, I
saw them.They were slinking through the yard.”Jonathan pointed toward the rear
of the house.His uncle would appreciate “slinking,” as if the word had fallen
from one of those mystery novels he read them.
Uncle
Henry glanced at the clock on the mantle.“Your parents shouldn’t be much
longer.It must’ve been them you saw.”
“There
were a bunch of people.Lots of them.Fifteen at least!”Jonathan’s heartbeat
increased.Some of the natives – those Bromi warriors – from out west might have
crept across the country.Pirates might have invaded from the sea.His parents
whispered about those when they read the newspapers.
“Fifteen,
huh?Well, you keep an eye on them for me.If they come too close, we’ll build a
fort around the house.”Uncle Henry adjusted the pink afghan wrapped around the
toddler.
The
doors were locked, but the enemy might break through the windows.Jonathan’s
father kept the guns sealed in a case, but he did have an emergency pistol in a
box under his bed.They’d be proud if he protected his family.
As
Jonathan reached the top of the stairs, someone knocked on the front door.He
froze, one sock-clad foot on the landing and the other on the top step.Pirates
and natives didn’t knock.They invaded; they were evil.
The
maid swept past him, lifting her ankle-length brown skirt.“I hope that’s my
dear papa come with the pony cart.He won’t let
his little girl walk home in the frost.”She winked at Jonathan, but he
gulped.She wouldn’t know to be afraid.Even though she played games with him,
she was sixteen, old enough to think the world was perfect.Only he knew enough
to find danger in shadows.
“If
that’s your father, invite him in for some coffee,” Uncle Henry called.
“Will
do, sir.”
Jonathan
crouched beside the railing and clutched the rungs.If he bent his head enough,
he could see the front door.The maid wiped her hands on her apron before she
opened it.
“Oh,
hello.Can I help you?”Her final word fell away in a scream as a man shoved her
inside.His black coat buttoned to his chin and a black knit cap covered his
head.
Jonathan’s
own scream strangled in his throat.
“This
the Montgomery residence?” the man barked.Three more men shoved into the foyer,
all of them dressed in full black.The tallest of the bunch seized the maid by
the shoulders and slammed her into the wall.
“Y-yes,
sir,” she stammered.
“What’s
going on here?”Uncle Henry burst in from the living room while two more
assailants stepped inside.Jonathan’s sister started to wail.
One of
the men drew a handgun from his belt and aimed it at Uncle Henry’s
chest.“Where’s the laboratory?”
“Get
out of this house,” Uncle Henry said.Jonathan had never heard him speak with
such calm finesse, the laughter gone from his voice.
Jonathan’s
hands trembled where he gripped the polished wood.His uncle would handle
everything.Take that, bad guys.
“Well
now,” the attacker drawled, “that wasn’t the answer I was looking for.”
“How
about you, girl?,” the man yelled at
the maid. “Take us to the lab.”
As
soon as the man released her, she sank to the floor, her shoulders shaking with
sobs.
The
man crouched in front of her to grip her chin.“What’s your name, girl?”
“R-Rose.”
“You
the scientist’s daughter?”
Jonathan
stiffened.Uncle Henry would protect them, and
if Jonathan needed to, he could leap over the railing onto the man’s back.
“N-no,
sir.I’m just the maid.It’s a common name here.Rose.We have that rose festival
and all.We have the famous rainbow-colored rose.”
He
slapped her across the face and jerked her to her feet.“Shut up, bitch.Get us
to the lab or you won’t be making no more noise.”
“You’ll
release her now.”Uncle Henry lunged forward, and a crack split the air.He
staggered, rasping, and dropped to his knees. Blood appeared on his chest, the
circle growing, morphing into something that dripped and twisted without
pattern.
“Mack,
what was that?You shot him.”One of the men chuckled.
“No,”
the maid shrieked.
Jonathan
squeezed his eyes shut.Perhaps he had fallen asleep waiting for Rose to find
him.It had to be a dream.Uncle Henry is
fine. We’re all
fine.
When
he opened them, his uncle lay on the hardwood floor in a pool of red paint. Red
paint. No, not paint. Blood.
The
men stomped through the house toward his father’s laboratory off the kitchen,
and the maid’s sobs mingled with his sister’s cries.He had to protect his sister.He’d get the pistol, grab
her, and he’d run for the neighbor’s farm.
Jonathan
ran for their bedroom, the door still open from when the maid folded away the
tablecloths.With only the light from downstairs, he crawled to the bed and lay
on his stomach to reach the box.Nothing should have invaded his perfect house,
with its two chimneys and dark blue shutters, with the flower garden and those
ghost sheets flapping on the line.
He
pulled out the box and flipped the hook on the lid to remove the pistol.He’d
seen his father polish it, but he’d never known it could be so heavy.How do I hold it?
A door
slammed below him.He would have to point the gun and pull the trigger, like
what the villain had done to his uncle.The bullet would save him and his
sister.It would save the maid.If he found her, she could use it better.
He
crept back downstairs, but the commotion came from the laboratory.Glasssmashed
and heavier things crashed.Another gunshot seared through the house.
Jonathan
ran for the armchair where his uncle had left the toddler.“Rosamund, be
quiet.”Her pale hair stood out against the seat’s green velveteen.“Please,
Rosamund.”
“Well
now, who’re you?”
Jonathan
twisted around and did his best to aim the silver weapon at the man lounging in
the doorway.He couldn’t be much older than the maid; how could someone so young
do such evil?Jonathan couldn’t picture
the boys at his school shooting anyone with anything more than a slingshot.
“Get
out.”Jonathan’s voice squeaked.
The
young man chuckled.“I reckon you’re the man of the house now.Good luck with
that.”
“Get
out!”Jonathan pulled the trigger.
The
pistol clicked, but no bullet ripped through the villain.Jonathan cocked it
again, his heartbeat echoing in his ears.
The
man laughed harder.“That thing’s out of bullets, kid, but don’t worry, we’re
leaving.Runners don’t mess with kids.”
Jonathan
pulled the trigger again, but only that click answered him.Tears burned his
eyes as he threw it down.
Runners.Next time he met one
of them, he’d have a pistol full of bullets.
#
Jonathan
rested his elbows on his knees and sighed.The sun shouldn’t be so bright and
the few leaves that had begun to change to gold shouldn’t glow so much.At least
the crimson leaves fit his mood.
He
gazed at Rosamundas she sat
beside the few marigolds that hadn’t given up on summer, petting her kitten’s
gray head. She looked so happy, with her hair in two short braids.They’d let
him dress her in white – black made him shudder now.
The
Runners wore black.
“What
do you suppose will happen to the house?”Mrs. Rogers’s voice danced through the
open kitchen window.Airing out the rooms wouldn’t help banish that lingering stench
of blood.
“I
don’t know,” Miss Lea answered.He’d always loved his teacher, but she hadn’t
said much more than a few sentences, as if she didn’t know how to console.
“I
don’t suppose anyone will want a house where two murders took place.Shame,
since this place is so pretty.Biggest home in all of Rosedale.”
Jonathan
scrunched his eyes shut.How could they stand next to the laboratory where the
maid had been shot?How could they even bear to be inside?
“All
for that invention,” Mrs. Rogers continued.“You really think a motor for a ship
is worth all the trouble they went to?”
Trouble.As
if murdering his parents in their steamcoach on the way back from the opera
house counted as trouble.Trouble
meant forgetting to study for a spelling test.
“Who knows what those Runners think.”
“Blasted
Runners. Don’t they care about the suffering families?Couldn’t they have spared
all those folks?”
Jonathan
clenched his hands into fists.He’d hunt them down.They couldn’t take his family
away and laugh about it.
Miss
Lea mumbled something he couldn’t hear.
“Are
you going to keep the two mites?”Dishes rattled.Jonathan’s mother had never
trusted Mrs. Rogers; he had a feeling he would never see those porcelain plates
again.
Who
cared what happened to the belongings?
“The
neighbors will take him now that their daughter’s so far away.The Ashers are
good folk.”
Jonathan
jerked his head up.The neighbors, that old man and woman who never smiled
much?Why would they want the Montgomery orphans, as Mrs. Rogers had dubbed
them?He expected they’d live with Miss Lea since they didn’t have anyone else.
Miss Lea is nice enough; she’ll take care
of Rosamund.
“It
might do that old Rider a favor having some sprites around,” Mrs. Rogers
said.“Come help me wrap up these teacups.Wouldn’t they look darling in my china
cabinet?”
Jonathan
plodded to the water pump to see if he could spot the neighbors’ barn through
the trees.Riders hunted down the Runner gangs that plagued the east coast.If he
got to live with a Rider, he might learn some tricks.
Jonathan
sneered.
Runner beware, for the mark of the Rider
will shine.
#
Jordan Elizabethbecame obsessed with steampunk while
working at a Victorian Fair. Since then,
she’s read plenty of books and even organized a few steampunk outfits that she
wears on a regular basis (unless that’s weird, in which case she only wears
them within the sanctuary of her own home – not!). Jordan’s young adult novels
include ESCAPE FROM WITCHWOOD HOLLOW, COGLING, TREASURE DARKLY, BORN OF
TREASURE, GOAT CHILDREN, and VICTORIAN. RUNNERS & RIDERS is her fifth novel
with Curiosity Quills Press. Check out
her website for
bonus scenes and contests.
#
In
honor of RUNNERS & RIDERS, enter for a chance to win a $5 Amazon gift card!
Contest
runs from August 22 to September 1.
All winners will be notified after verification of entry at
the end of this promotion. Prizes have been supplied by and the
responsibility of delivery are solely that of the author and/or their
representatives. Blogs are not liable for non-delivery on the part of the
author. No purchase necessary.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for stopping by and for taking the time out to share your thoughts with us. We really appreciate it!