Dark Stars of Dallas
By A.M. Burns
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About this ebook
When Alex Carlson and Tal O'Duirwood are called to Dallas to investigate a series of magically related deaths, they find more than they bargained for. Dark magic wells up through the city. And when an ancient primitive dragon mysteriously awakens to complicate things, it takes all their skills to find out what is going on, uncover who’
A.M. Burns
A.M. Burns started writing in high school for a way to pass the time. Over the years his writing and imagination have developed to the point where he was ready to share his stories with the world. He has a vast love of nature, and hopes that is conveyed in his writing. In his adult life he has lived in California, Colorado and Texas. He is a member of the Colorado Springs Fictions Writers Group. A lifelong love of birds, lead him to become a falconer and he currently enjoys hunting with his tiercel red-tailed hawk Zephyr. In addition to his hawk he shares his home with several dogs, a couple of cats, various rodents, a pair of horses and his loving partner.
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Dark Stars of Dallas - A.M. Burns
Dark Stars
of Dallas
Yellow Sky Coven Book 2
by A.M. Burns
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
Except where actual places are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious; any resemblance to living persons or places is purely coincidental.
Copyright 2016 © MysticHawker Press
http://www.mystichawker.com/
ISBN: 978-1-945632-09-9
Cover design by Melissa Kary
Chapter One
SOMEWHERE AHEAD of me, a snake slid silently through the murky, waist-deep water. A slight ripple moved against me. The active nightlife of the Louisiana swamp acted in ways I’d never imagined. Even in the middle of October, the heat and humidity made the air almost as thick as the water. For several nights I’d been wondering what a good-ole’ boy from the Texas panhandle was doing trudging through a swamp. A few years ago, I, Alex Carlson-O’Duirwood, would’ve never imagined I’d be wading through a swamp, searching for the source of magical chaos. Pushing my senses, both magical and physical, out for what felt like the hundredth time, I scanned the night. I wanted to ensure there wasn’t something dangerous and deadly closing in on me. I also wanted to make sure I didn’t trip over something unseen in the dark waters that enshrouded my lower body as I waded slowly through that forbidding forest. I sensed Tal O'Duirwood, my dragon husband, ahead of me. In his human form, he was keeping dry by staying in the tops of the trees. Behind me, Charles Colfax, a vampire and long-time friend, lurked in the boat, ready to come to my aid.
We were here on assignment for the Coalition of Magical Creatures. One of the local voodons had been practicing the ancient and highly illegal art of raising zombies. We had no problem following the trail of rotting corpses through the swamp to the man's hovel. All in all, when compared to some of the things we’d dealt with over the past couple of years, this had been an easy job. The man went down without too much of a fight. Night of cleanup followed.
Everything okay down there?
Tal asked across our mental link.
I had to smile at the concern in his mental voice. At nearly two thousand years older than me, Tal often worried more about me than I did. Once I got over being touched by it, it was more than a little irritating, until Geri, my teacher in many things magical, explained that Tal had lived a very long and lonely life and his concern was only natural. Now that I appreciated the concern in his voice again, it gave me a warm feeling all over.
I’m fine,
I replied. Just tired of being wet and dirty.
I'll make sure you get all clean and dry when we get back to the hotel,
He gave me a slight mental chuckle as well as an image of us in the big whirlpool bath.
You guys do that. I'll just take myself out for a quick drink all by my lonesome,
Charles chimed in. Charles and I ribbed each other a lot. Hell, we'd been friends for years. I was the one that discovered him and his twin sister Bernadette and introduced them to Geri. He studied under her for a couple of years before we all got caught up in the schemes of some unknown manipulator trying to use a sorceress, a vampire and a bunch of wer-creatures to take over the world. Tal's assignment was to help us take out the underlings. We still haven’t gotten a good lead on the Big Bad. Charles ended up being captured and turned into a vampire. We took out the sorceress and stopped the wers, along with the fledgling vampires. The universe took care of the master vampire. When it was all over, I’d found my life mate and Tal took Charles as his vampire-mage apprentice. Hopefully, we’d all make it back to Yellow Sky in time for Charles’s twenty fifth birthday in November. If we’re lucky, it’ll even be snowing while we’re there. The snow sounded so good. I bet snow already coated the valley outside of Tal’s library deep in the Colorado Rockies.
I shook the thought of it out of my mind, and brought myself back to the steamy swamp. Any sign of this thing?
I carefully climbed over the slimy roots of a tree.
Not yet,
Tal replied. But it should be around here somewhere. The last couple of nights its trail has led this way. If it’s not here now, it should be before the end of the night.
Great and maybe we'll meet the mother of all these mosquitoes while we are at it,
I snapped, as I slapped the latest annoying bug and tried not to fall into the water.
As I scrambled over the next set of roots, my foot brushed something as it sank into the murky water. It rapidly moved away, but felt bigger than any snake I’d ever seen or wanted to deal with and it had somehow managed to elude my scans.
Guys, I think-
I started to call, then something slammed into the back of my legs throwing me forward into the warm, muddy swamp water.
Both of them shouted in my mind as they came charging to my rescue, but I was too busy to respond. The coils of the snake wrapped around me and pulled me deeper into the water. I fought back the fear and tried to focus. I laid my hands on the scaly hide and unleashed a magical leven bolt directly into the serpent. It flashed brightly as it bounced off the snake's natural magical protections. Yep, this is definitely the Naga. I tried calling out to the water spirits to help me but water has never been one of the elements I could easily call on and they didn’t respond.
My mind raced as we plunged deeper into the water. My strength, even augmented as it was by my bonding with Tal, wasn’t going to be much help without proper leverage to bring it into play. I was surprised the leven bolt hadn’t worked and now my mind scrambled for another option.
Shift!
Tal screamed.
I remembered that we discussed how the Naga would need to be attacked on two planes at the same time. Tal was to attack on the astral plane and Charles and I were to attack in the physical world. I called to mind the image of the perfect predator for these muddy waters.
When Tal and I bonded, we opened up an incredible link that allowed us to see all the information the other possessed. For him, that wasn’t a lot to take in. I mean I was only twenty-five at the time. For me, it had been very different. Tal was nearly two thousand years old. That’s a lot of knowledge to take in. Luckily for me, he helped me select some of the info and, on that first night of the bonding, he showed me how to shape shift. It’s totally cool and one of the things I found very easy to do. Tal and I sometimes take moonlit runs through the mountains as wolves. Tonight, however, I needed a different form.
The Naga's grip slipped slightly as my body was suddenly not as solid as it had been. I grew longer and larger while I called on magical energy to shape change. As my newly aligned senses came into focus, the Naga pulled away and tried to move off through the water. I swung my head quickly and grabbed a mouthful of tail. My new body’s instinct urged me to spin in the water. The Naga thrashed in my hold, but my jaws held tight. My new long, sharp teeth sank deeper into the scales. Warm, foul blood flooded my mouth. I fought back the urge to let go and spit out the awful taste. Somehow, I held tight.
Then Tal was there. His astral body engaged the Naga on the higher plane. The heat from his flaming sword, as he brought it to play against the giant snake spirit, felt like it could boil the swamp water.
Faced with two strong opponents, the Naga tried to flee. I clamped down tighter and tried to locate a purchase with my hind feet in the slick, algae-coated swamp bottom. I found a fallen log partially buried in the mud and held on, trying to anchor myself and the struggling serpent in the muck. Even with a good hold, it was tough going. Every time Tal brought the flaming sword down on the astral body of the Naga, the snake spirit smashed me in the head trying to free itself from my jaws.
Above me, the water moved, sending ripples through my aquatically-sensitive skin. The boat came to a stop. Charles dove into the water. He wielded a large machete. We’d looked for a proper sword for him for years, but so far, he hadn’t found anything he liked well enough to use. He grappled the Naga’s head, managing to keep it off me for a couple of moments. Somehow, he managed to get his legs wrapped around the upper body of the thing and was able to bring the machete into play. Although the water softened the blows, with his vampire strength, he was still able to inflict deadly damage in the real world while Tal hacked away at it in the Astral.
When its struggles lessened, I released my hold on it by severing its tail. I then worked my way up the thrashing body toward Charles, taking chunks out of it as I went. I looked up in time to see Tal's astral body, in perfect mirror to Charles' physical one, strike the head of the thing. It gave a final shudder and then stopped moving. The magical glow was gone, seeping away into the Astral plane as its blood washed down the bayou.
My work done, I shoved off from the bottom of the swamp and swam toward the humid air above me. I reassumed my human form as I broke the surface. Charles' head appeared through the chickweed near the boat as I started swimming. While we’d been fighting, the naga had pulled us farther from shore than I’d realized.
You okay?
he wiped the water and small leaves from his eyes.
Fine, as soon as I get this swamp muck off of me and the taste of snake out of my mouth.
As I swam toward the boat, I paused to spit a small piece of naga, which I had not managed to lose on the way up.
Charles laughed as he hauled himself out of the water and into the boat. That's right, always remember to spit not swallow.
I was tempted to try and pull Charles back into the water but Tal levitated down from the treetops and landed lightly in the boat. He reached down and offered me a hand up. Here, let's get you out of there.
He pulled me free of the dank water and into his strong arms. He started to kiss me and then pulled back in mock revulsion. You stink.
Thanks,
I snarled, pulled him close and kissed him anyway. "Charles, can you please get us back to the motel now?" Like most of his psi skills, Charles’ innate ability to teleport had increased when he became a vampire and now we relied heavily on him to get us around most nights, as long as we knew where we were going.
The humid swamp disappeared replaced by the cool interior of our suite. I learned early on in our relationship, Tal never travels cheap. Luckily, when we were on assignments, the Coalition paid for everything. It had not taken him long to find the best casino in Shreveport, Louisiana for us to stay in during this job. Although we didn’t visit the gambling floor, the accommodations were top of the line and as far as I was concerned, the food was great.
As soon as we oriented to the fact we were now standing in our rooms, I grabbed Tal's hand and dragged him off toward the master bathroom. I washed most of the muck off in the shower while Tal filled the large whirlpool bath for us with warm, clean water and just a bit of bubbles.
He may be nearly two thousand years old, but Tal stopped aging on his twenty-first birthday, the first time he changed into his dragon form. To say he’s well preserved is an understatement. He’s the epitome of Celtic good looks. I never tire of looking into those dark blue eyes under his bushy black brow. I love the way that the short dark hair covers his firm, well-defined, but not excessively-muscular, chest and nicely-contoured stomach. I could lie for hours just touching him lightly and often did. The gentle play of those short soft hairs against my skin was both soothing and arousing all at the same time.
But that night he had other ideas. The adrenaline from the hunt and kill charged through him as it always does at the end of our adventures. I had no urge to fight him. So once I felt clean and had made him wait just long enough, I surrendered to him and the soothing jets of the tub.
I don't exactly remember getting into the bed but I was roused a couple of hours later by the phone ringing. Tal rolled over and picked it up before I could reach across his broad back.
Hello.
He looked over at me and flashed me one of those smiles. Some of our friends say I taught him to smile like that. I don't know if I did or not but it was real sexy. Sure J.P., the Naga’s been dispatched from this plane and should be recollecting itself in its home dimension.
He reached over and ran his hand across my chest, his fingers playing in the dense red hair traveling down to the patch of black that appeared after our bonding ritual. He had a patch of red in the same spot on his chest.
J.P. Montgomery’s a wer-bear. He runs the enforcement division of the Coalition and calls Tal when there’s someone he needs to have returned to the wheel of life for their next spin. Charles and I tag along on most of the hunts. Tal says it gives us good experience. That’s what he tells J.P. anyway. I know he loves me; he can’t bear to be away from me, even for a little while. I guess he drags Charles along so he can get experience in the ways of the magical world.
You've got what happening?
Tal sat up in bed, his hand trailing off me. Okay, get me the details. Is the safe house open?
Tal looked worried as he listened to the reply. Good, we can be there by noon….Yes, J.P., of course Alex and Charles are still with me.
Tal rolled his eyes. It was a good thing he wasn’t on a vid-phone or magic mirror. Okay J.P., but I'll wait to call in the troops until I assess the situation. I'll check email on the way. Get me those files and make sure intelligence is up to date this time. Thanks, talk to you soon.
He lay back down as he put the cell phone back in the charger.
For a moment, Tal remained motionless, staring at the ornate ceiling above us. I reached over and took his hand in mine. Like everything else about him, it fit me perfectly. What's up? New assignment already?
Yeah. We're off to Dallas.
He sounded weary. Since we had been together, we’d been on a number of assignments for J.P. Tal claimed he was busier than any time since World War Two. We had a sneaking suspicion it had something to do with whoever pulled the strings back on the assignment when we met, but we still had no clue who that had been. It was like they’d crawled back under whatever rock they’d crawled out from, but we stayed on alert just in case something was bigger than it seemed. The largest problem we had was we were getting tired. Downtime always seemed an assignment away.
What's up in Dallas?
Dallas was a little too crowded for my taste but it could be a fun place to party. One of those nice places to visit, but I wouldn’t want to live there.
Someone or something is targeting Wiccans there. This week alone there have been three killings that we know of. All of them were Wiccan High Priestesses.
That’s not good,
I said softly as I lay my head down on his shoulder and wrapped my arm around his chest. We settled in for a little more quiet time before we started for the next assignment. But I knew it wouldn’t last.
Chapter Two
WE LEFT Shreveport just before dawn. Surprisingly, Tal let me drive. Charles rode comfortably in the sun-proof compartment hidden in the false bed of the Pathfinder. Although Tal was trying to teach him some useful spells to protect himself from the sun’s deadly rays, he hadn’t mastered them. Sunlight is one of the most powerful forces in the world and he just couldn’t muster the strength he needed to fend it off. He could move around during the day, he just had to be careful of the sunlight. Charles was frustrated with the slowness of mastering the spells but Tal assured him that it was only a matter of time before he’d be able to walk about in the sunlight and not worry about being flash fried.
As we settled into the drive, Tal opened up his laptop and called up his email. We rode in silence while the swamp gave way to the tall piney woods. I couldn't say that I was sad to say goodbye to the swamp.
Okay Alex, give me your opinion here.
Tal looked up from his laptop.
What's up?
More and more Tal was asking my opinion on situations we encountered. It made our relationship feel more like a partnership.
J.P.'s initial call said there had been three High Priestesses killed in the past week. We're saying killed, even though each one of them looked like natural causes.
Okay, but it’s real easy for magic to make murder look like nature,
I replied. Even before I’d met Tal, I’d worked a couple of cases in Yellow Sky with Geri where magic had been used to look like natural causes.
Exactly, so I've run the list of recent deaths in the Dallas area and compared it to the list of known Wiccans, High Magicians, and the shifter community and found five more matches. They were all Wiccans and didn't set off any alarms because they weren’t very far along on the coven hierarchy ladder. My question is, how many more have died that don't show up.
At the rate the Wiccan community is growing, I'd say there’s a really good chance of there being more,
I said, keeping my attention on the road. Until we get there and ask around, we'll never know. Not to mention the number of solitary practitioners who don't show up on any coven list.
Exactly what I thought,
Tal agreed. Now what’s interesting is there haven’t been any deaths among the High Magicians or the shifters.
Should we start there with our questioning?
Our main Coalition representative in the area is a human mage. So, in effect, we will.
I set the cruise control so I would not have to concentrate on my speed. My foot has a tendency to get heavy when I get involved in a long conversation while driving. Will he be meeting us at the safe house?
No. His file says he lives in Garland, a small suburb, on the east side of the Dallas area. J.P. said he'll contact the guy and let him know we'll be looking to talk to him tonight.
What we’ll need to do is find someone who knows everybody. In Yellow Sky, we have a couple of people who everybody knows and few people like, but they know everything that’s going on with everybody.
Exactly.
Tal absentmindedly tapped his laptop. It was a thoughtful gesture. In addition to that, we’ll need to find out what or who the dead people have in common.
Anything in the database?
The Coalition had an extensive database on the magical community across the world. It was a tad Big Brotherish, particularly when you realized they could update their files with just a bit of scrying and astral projection. Tal repeatedly assured me the files on the wer, shifter and undead communities were more complete that those on the magical human. For some reason the human groups didn’t pose as great a threat as the more innately magical ones. All things considered, it might be good, but I thought it was a strategic mistake and one that might come back to bite the Coalition.
Several of the people were trained by the same person but then, she was one of the first to die. From initial appearances, this area appears to be as inbred as a small town in Arkansas or Middle Ages European royalty,
Tal said as his fingers clicked on the keyboard with a bit of purpose. Everybody seems to take classes from everyone else. The majority of the community can trace itself back to a single couple who started the whole thing in the sixties. There are a handful of bookstores people frequent as well as a couple of bars but other than that, nothing that shows true community among the pagans there.
Witch bars?
I’d never even heard of a witch bar. Back in Yellow Sky, my little indie bookstore, the Halfling Hideaway, was the center of the magical community. There were occasional meetings at the Unitarian Church, when we needed somewhere out of the elements to meet and still hold most of the solitaries in town. I thought for a moment about my little shop. It seemed I spent less and less time there. Luckily Mom and Martin, my younger brother, could handle things with just a little help from Geri and the gang while we traveled. They kept things going. But was it time to hand it over to someone else? It wasn’t like I need the little bit of money it made.
Tal sighed slightly, with a bit of disdain in his tone. Yeah, they’re trying to call themselves Witch Community Centers or Pagan Community Centers. Most of the ones I've been to, have been a cross between a church and a bar. Give me a good old vampire bar any day. They don't bother trying to cover up what they are. It’s a bar, a social club. You go there to meet people and get a drink. Now their drinks may vary a bit from your normal mortal bar, but then most humans don't know that and couldn’t tell the difference if they wandered into one.
How long have they been around?
I'd never heard of witch bars but I could see someone trying it, particularly someone just converted from Christianity who was going from tight restrictions to what they perceived as a looser moral code. I was really over those newbies that thought the entire pagan religious scene was just a hangover from the free-love, no-worries, hippie scene of the sixties. But then, those were some of the ones who never mastered any real magic and just hung out for the free and often overflowing chalice of wine and the loose sex.
Witch bars or Vampire bars?
Tal asked.
Either…both.
Well, the witch bars are a new thing that has just popped up over the past ten or fifteen years. There’ve been vampire bars for centuries. They were more or less just normal taverns where vampires could stop in and get blood as needed without having to hunt for it. They remained unchanged until recently. Several rouges have tried opening places catering specifically to their kind and any unlucky human who wondered in was put on tap for the patrons. I had to shut one down in San Francisco a couple of years before we met. So far, the Coalition has managed to close down all the ones that opened, before they could bring any unwanted attention to the community.
Okay, so what more do we have on the situation here?
Tal could go on for hours about things that had happened in the past and I loved hearing his stories. They helped me sort out some of the more confusing memories I absorbed when we bonded. And some of them got kinda sexy once in a while. He could be a stodgy old sage a lot of the time, but he had a wild side that a tale like this could bring out real easy. But, we had a job to do. I could get him to tell me the good stuff later.
Not a lot,
Tal said with a sigh. Once again, J.P.'s intelligence gathering people are asleep at their crystal balls. He's promised to go growl at a few of them and see what more he can find out.
I’d heard stories of J.P. and having only met the man once, believed most of them. I knew he had a way with his people. He either got results or got new people. He was that kind of wer-bear. Unfortunately, getting new people for him, also involved a cleaning crew to remove blood on the walls.
Anything else interesting in the email? Anything for me?
Most of my email forwarded to Tal's address when we traveled. It was how a lot of my friends kept in contact with me.
Nothing just for you, but we received a note from Suzzy. She wants us to come out to their solstice celebration. She knows that we won't hibernate with them, but it's supposed to be a great party and J.P. has promised her he'll be there.
Suzzy was the alpha female of a bear clan in Idaho. She was also J.P.’s girlfriend. We met her on the same assignment where Tal and I met. She was there the night we first formed our link and Tal gave me some of the magical gifts I have today. Suzzy was one of the sweetest people I have ever met but not someone I would want to piss off. If J.P. told her he would be there…he would be. Tell her we'll try to come.
Tal shot me an odd look. Really
Sure I'll go. It’ll be interesting to see how the bears do their thing.
Tal laughed a good full-bodied laugh. I'm sure that Suzzy will be pleased.
We settled into small talk and sightseeing as we drove. This was a good time to get him to recount some of his bar stories while the idea was fresh in my mind. Of course, that led to talk of other things, and before long, I was glad that the windows of the Pathfinder were tinted and Charles was asleep in the vault in the back as Tal demonstrated some of the physical techniques he learned over the years to please a somewhat occupied lover. If I hadn’t had the cruise control on, I'm sure we would have gone over a hundred at one point.
We made good time and shortly before noon, the suburban Dallas traffic grew heavy enough to require all my navigational skills. Luckily, by then, we had gone back to small talk to pass the time. The GPS system built into the dashboard led us to the center of the urban sprawl.
After getting off the freeway, we followed the directions into one of the more exclusive parts of town. Tal was pretty sure he knew where he was going, but so much of the city had changed since the last time he had been through he wasn’t comfortable turning off the GPS until we got to the safe house.
I’d never been to a safe house. Tal told me they were all over the world, but since we had gotten together, he hadn’t had an assignment that took him anywhere near one. It was as if something manipulated situations outside the areas where the Coalition had a permanent presence. Of course we were in the middle of building one in Yellow Sky, but at the current rate of complicated construction, it was going to be at least another nine to twelve months before it was completed, and they’d already been working on it for nearly a year. It was a big, elegant, complex mansion.
As we turned off one of the main streets onto a quiet two-lane road, I realized we were suddenly surrounded by high stone walls. Every so often, there was a gate and you could look up past the walls and see a stately manor sitting a distance from the street. At the end of each property, the walls changed slightly, sometimes it was in size, and sometimes in construction material.
Several blocks down from the main road, the walls suddenly shot up to eight feet of a solid stone I could not identify. A large gargoyle looked down from the corner of the wall. It seemed to smile at us as we passed.
Tal directed me to pull into the next gate. It was an immense iron affair with