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BOOK NEWS
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The Bloody
Prince has left the building and is currently with my editor. I expect it back sometime in December and blah, blah, blah. I'll spare you all the production details. Basically it's looking like a late January/early February release.Â
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More news on that to come.Â
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In the meantime, please enjoy this snippet of The Bloody Prince... (As per usual, sorry in advance for any and all typos. It's an unfortunate hazard of a pre-edited sneak peak.)
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âAre you sure you wouldnât like to wait somewhere more comfortable, Mr Prince?â Charles, the Altar Media office manager, asked as he hovered in the doorway. âWe have a perfectly nice lobby with cold drinks and magazines just down the way.â
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âCall me, Tristan.â He flashed his best you-can-trust-me smile. It had a surprisingly high effectiveness rate on the people who didnât know him. âAnd donât worry. Iâm more than happy to wait here until Katie gets back from wherever sheâs run off to.â
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And Tristan certainly wasnât going to take a seat in the lobby and risk her sending a message via Charles that her schedule was jam-packed and that he should
have called first.
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If he stayed here, sheâd have to talk to him. Â
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To further stake his claim, he set his wicker picnic basket on the coffee table and sank into the familiar embrace of the comfortable old leather
couch.
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âOkay,â Charles said slowly. âIâll just go and let her know that youâre here.â Â
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âYou do that.â He watched Charles scurry off down the hallway with vague amusement and
then looked around his old/new editorâs office with curiosity.Â
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The space looked a lot
different, now that most the Joan-ness had been removed.Â
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It was a shock.Â
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For the twelve years Tristan had been one of Joanâs authors, this familiar room had
remained essentially the same. It was a surprise to find that his editorâs office wasnât actually a dark, musty, little hole filled with the faintly vanilla scent of decaying paper.Â
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An even more baffling realization was that the effect had apparently been intentional.Â
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Absent the towering stacks of books and godawful blackout curtains, there was a lot more light. The view down the avenue was pleasant. And what furniture Joan had left behind had a nice antique feeling, almost Hemmingway-esque.
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Honestly, the change was a profound improvement.
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Joan might be a gifted editor and have taught Tristan everything he knew. But sheâd had all the decorating sense of a bridge troll furnishing its lair.Â
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Now that her cave had been excavated, a bright airy space remained. A little soulless without art on the walls or any other markers of personality, but he could see its potential.
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Tristan got out his phone and started taking photos.
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âWhat the heck are you doing here?â his new editor's voice startled him out of his Google-induced meditative state.Â
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âI think we want this one.â He held out his phone to show her the artisanal coffee machine heâd narrowed in on.Â
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âDonât change the subject,â Katie snapped. There was a flush on her cheeks, her eyes sparkled, and she wore yet another stunning suit. This one was dark blue, slim cut, and had a blouse with silky bow knotted at her throat.Â
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It made her look like a present waiting to be unwrapped. For a brief pleasant moment, he
imagined what that would be like.
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âTristan,â Katie growled, âare you listening to me?â
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Focus, he reminded himself.Â
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âMy bad.â He flashed her the same you-can-trust-me smile that had worked so well on Charles earlier. âI was distracted. What did you say?âÂ
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Her eyes narrowed. âI told you to call, not drop by unannounced while Iâm in a meeting with my boss.â
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âWere you? Iâm sorry.â Because those two words could end so many fights, especially with women. He waggled his phone to get her attention. âNow, what are thoughts on your future coffee
machine?â
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âI donât need a coffee machine.â Her gaze dropped to his phone screen, went wide, and she choked. âWhy on earth would anyone
need a coffee machine that costs that much? My first car cost less than that.â
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âLetâs not get caught up in the price.â He rose from
the couch and went to stand in the space heâd already mentally designated. âI was thinking weâd put the coffee bar here.â
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âThe coffee
bar?â Katie rubbed her forehead. âWhat are you talking about?â
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âThereâll be a section for tea too. Oh, and maybe a prohibition style
hidden compartment for the stronger stuff. Let me talk to my custom woodwork guy.â
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âYou have a custom woodwork guy?â
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âWhat can I say? I like my built-ins.â Tristan could already see it in his mind. The gleaming wood and the polished brass accents. âBesides think
of how much time and money youâll save by making your coffee here, instead of needing to go out. And itâll be a nice way to impress all your future authors. I mean is there a writer alive whose blood stream isnât at least fifty percent caffeine?â
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She was staring at him like heâd lost his mind.
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âItâll be amazing,â he said. âOh, and what are thoughts on art? Are we going modern or classic?â
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âArt?â she repeated. âCoffee? I donât care about art and coffee. My thoughts are about my job. Do you have any idea whatâs going on here right now?â
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He faltered. âUh, no? Do you want to tell me?â
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âI was just pulled into a meeting with my boss. He
wanted to make sure my coming back to work a week early wasnât a sign of some kind of interpersonal disaster.â She gestured between them. âBecause every department has been put on red alert since Mr Wertheim came to town.â
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âWertheim?â A distant bell in the back of Tristanâs head had started ringing.
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âAltar Mediaâs owner.â
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And the sound became clear.Â
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âHans Wertheim?â Tristan grinned. âGerman guy? Looks a little like Captain von Trapp from
the Sound of Music?âÂ
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âYouâve met him?â Katie asked.
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âHeâs a friend of my fatherâs. Great poker player, lousy golfer. Theyâll probably have drinks, if heâs in town. Do you want me to put in a good word for
you?â
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âNo.â She sounded horrified. âI donât want your father putting in a good word for me. I donât want him to know my name. I donât
want to exist to him at all.â
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He could see this was getting her worked up. But he didnât know why. âWhy not?â
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âBecause heâs so far up my chain of command, heâs practically in outer space.â She sucked in a deep breath. âHalf my office already thinks weâre having some
kind of torrid affair. Do you have any idea what that could do to my career?â
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âI doubt Hans would have any strong opinion on it. I
think his second wife was his secretary.â
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âTristan.â
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âWhat? Thatâs what they called personal assistants back then. She wasâŚâ He did some mental math. âThree wives ago? I think?â He shrugged. âThereâs a reason Hans and my father are friends.âÂ
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âThatâs not the point,â Katie snapped.
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âThen what is?â
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âThis is serious to me.â Her glare was so intense it burned. âThis is my job, where I have just been promoted, where there are already some serious doubts as to whether Iâm up to filling Joanâs shoes. And that was before the companyâs owner flew into town like the sheriff in a western
looking to clean up trouble. Can you see why I donât want to be the saloon madam caught having an affair with the local golden boy?âÂ
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âUh.â Heâd been following along right up until the saloon madam comment. Then an image of Katie in a corset and himself in nothing but a cowboy hat had derailed his train of thought. âThatâs quite the scenario you just painted. Are we talking high society madam or running the local ladies of the night madam?âÂ
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Katie stalked toward him. âThatâs what you're focusing on?âÂ
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âIn my defense, it was a very distracting metaphor.â He shook his head, trying to dislodge the image. But nope it was still there. âYou do know Iâd never let you be fired.â
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Katie went stock still. âLet me?â She rolled the words around her mouth. âLet me?â Her voice dropped to a dangerous whisper. âYou wouldnât let me be fired?â
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Tristan knew heâd made a misstep. He just wasnât quiet sure how. âYouâre saying that like itâs a bad thing?â
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âMy career should not depend on you protecting me.â She poked him in the chest. âYouâre not my boss, youâre not my knight in shining armor, and youâre
definitely not my boyfriend. At best, we might be dating. And Iâm not inclined to hang my future on a man who might lock me out of his house if he loses interest.â
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âI wouldnât.â Tristan protested.
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Her expression turned to something darkly amused. âYou already
have.â The curve of amusement faded from her pretty mouth. âEverythingâs a game to you. But this is serious to me.â
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That was
unfair.Â
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He couldnât remember the last time heâd worked this hard to please a woman.
Dozens of 'not'-dates, meeting his family, an hours long midnight car ride and they werenât even having sex yet.
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âItâs serious to me
too,â he protested
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âIs it?â She lifted an eyebrow. âYou turning up to my work without calling and carrying a picnic basket is you
taking the position Iâm in seriously?âÂ
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âItâs a seriously good picnic?âÂ
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Admittedly heâd been focusing more on the romantic side of their relationship. But, damn
it, Jean-Georges didnât pack picnic baskets for just anyone.
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Katie let out an involuntary snort of laugh and backed up a step, shaking
her head. âI donât need a picnic basket from you. I needâŚmore.âÂ
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Tristan wasnât sure
he trusted that calculating look. âMore, how?â
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âTalk is cheap.â Her smile was wicked. âIâm going to need you to put your fingers into
it.âÂ
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He choked. The images that conjured were even less helpful than the saloon girl
comment.
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Down boy, he told himself. She didnât mean it like it sounded.
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At least⌠she probably hadnât. With the way she was smirking at him, he couldnât be entirely sure.
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âIâm going to need more context.â
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âYou want a date?â She cocked one hip against her desk, leaned back, and folded her arms. âI want your first draft.â Â
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