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Nevermore

by Rob Thurman

People die.Everyone knows that. I knew it intimately as everyone in my life died thanks to my one seemingly harmless mistake. I'd brought down Heaven, lifted up Hell, and set the world on fire, all due to one slip of the memory.I forgot the pizzas...Caliban is a dead man. The Vigil, a group devoted to concealing the paranormal from humanity, has decided Cal has stepped out of the shadows once too often, and death is the only sentence. They plan to send a supernatural assassin into the past to take down the younger, less lethal Cal.But things change when The Vigil makes one last attempt on Caliban's life in the present-and end up destroying everyone and everything he cares about.Now, Cal has to save himself, warn those closest to him, and kill every Vigil bastard who stole his world. But if he fails, he and everyone in his life will be history...

FORMAT
Paperback
LANGUAGE
English
CONDITION
Brand New


Author Biography

Rob Thurman is the New York Times bestselling author of the of the Cal Leandros novels, including Slashback and Doubletake, the Trickster novels, including The Grimrose Path and Trick of the Light, the Korsak Brothers novels, including Basilisk and Chimera, and several stories in various anthologies.

Review

Praise for Rob Thurman:
 
"All the great elements I've come to expect from this writer."—#1 New York Times Bestselling Author Charlaine Harris
 
"A roaring roller coaster of a read…[it'll] take your breath away."—New York Times Bestselling Author Simon R. Green
 
"A beautiful, wild ride."—New York Times bestselling author Marjorie M. Liu
 
"Thurman continues to deliver strong tales of dark urban fantasy."—SFRevu

Review Quote

Praise for Rob Thurman:

Excerpt from Book

Praise Books by Rob Thurman Title Page Copyright Dedication Acknowledgments Epigraph Prologue Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapter 10 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13 Chapter 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapter 17 About the Author Prologue People die. All the time. Everyone knows that, right? The world is dangerous. Existence is precarious, the footing beneath you shaky. Your first breath isn''t a guarantee and if you get that, your next breath is the same. Touch and go. Life doesn''t come with a warranty. It''s something to be snatched, clawed for, and held in the tightest of grips. Life cuts you no slack, doesn''t care if you''re around or not, but death . . . death can''t wait to drag you to his party. And once he does . . . you know that old song is as true as they come, "It''s hard to leave if you can''t find the door." People die . . . but they usually don''t die over something so meaningless. Me? I was the exception to that. I was the trigger. At least thirty people died all thanks to my one seemingly harmless mistake, one trivial, overlooked chore. I forgot the pizzas. Insane, right? That the world should end because I forgot several boxes of cheese, pepperoni, and grease. They weren''t even the best pizzas in town. But that didn''t matter. I''d brought down Heaven, lifted up Hell, and set the world on fire, all thanks to one slip of the memory. How''s that for the worst fuckup of all time? One casual everyday event like forgetting my phone and running back a block to our place for it. That meant a five-minute shift in my routine, just enough to sidetrack my brain to revert to my normal schedule. I unconsciously skipped over the irregular task of the pizza pickup I''d been stuck with at the last minute, and that was it . . . the world ended. Not with a whimper or a thousand radioactive mushroom clouds. No, it ended because I was an idiot. It ended because I''d forgotten I''d lost a coin toss. The only reason I didn''t end with it as well was just dumb luck. I''d remembered at the last second fifteen feet inside the bar, cursed, and left, annoyed and impatient enough to use the "emergency door" to get them. I should''ve been there when it all ended, but, again, dumb luck. No. Not true. It wasn''t dumb luck. It was bad luck. Worse luck. The darkest of goddamn fucking fortune. Hell, wasn''t that the story of my life? There was a certain grungy bar, cramped, but popular among a certain crowd, that I''d been standing in less than three seconds ago when I remembered the pizzas. The name of the bar didn''t matter. That I worked there most nights didn''t make a difference either. What did matter was that the building where it squatted on the first floor slinging alcohol right and left was hit by an eye searing blast of light. It was as bright as it was incomprehensible. It was barely dusk. What could be that bright? I''d seen the flash from the corner of my eye as I stood at the pizza truck parked at the other end of the block. I turned to see what it was, not where it was. I should''ve known the where was what mattered, but I didn''t have a flicker of suspicion that it was the bar, my bar. The one full of people, my people. It was one of those things you can''t think. You can''t know, as once you do you can''t unknow it. That part of your brain shuts down. If it didn''t all of your brain would stop . . . stop thinking, stop feeling, stop everything, and chances were good it''d never start again. It was too late for all that now. I had turned. When I did, I wished I''d been smart enough to not turn, and when I had, then to not look, to live in blissful ignorance a few seconds more. But I wasn''t that smart, never had been. I didn''t register that it was an explosion, one that temporarily deafened me. In that silence I had turned. I had seen. I had seen it all. It was as if the sun had plunged from where it hung bloodred and low to crash down on top of the city. It was all it could be. The sun had fallen from the sky, I thought numbly as the money drifted from one hand as the pizzas slipped off the balancing palm of the other to tumble through superheated air to the street. The sun had fallen and we were all on fire--not the city alone, but everything. It was early evening with thin stripes of twilight purple clouds, and we should''ve stood in shadows, but we didn''t. It was bright as day on the street and we were on fire. The entire world was on fire. I fucking prayed the way atheists like me do when the sky falls and their world is ripped away. I prayed that it was a lie. But I got what prayers gave you when you need their help the most. A kick in the gut and a spiteful laugh in your face as it was granted. Because the world wasn''t on fire. It would''ve been better if it were. No, the world didn''t burn, I knew, only a small piece of it. That I''d had the thought at all--the whole world burning to a cinder--had been shock and despair tearing my brain to shreds--not for thinking that it was true, but because I knew it wasn''t. The world gone with a fiery snap of some child-eating pagan god''s fingers, all of us . . . to the very last of us, dying with the earth, I could take that. I could take it with a, yes, sir, may I have another. But being left behind, a survivor who had no fucking desire to survive? That was the true nightmare. That I couldn''t take. I stared at the inferno that raged; it already had consumed the first floor front of the building. Gobbled up where I''d worked and drunk for years and had just stood heartbeats ago. I hoped with everything in my tarnished soul that its appetite would spread to at least the city if not to everything flammable on the planet. I hoped that it would roll over me like a wildfire and take me along with the rest of what it had already stolen. It didn''t happen. What you want the most hardly ever does. What you need the most never does. Instead, it concentrated on my handful of the world, small as it was, with more inescapable flame than could remotely be needed for one small bar. The fire had grown before I could take a single breath. It was a breath I didn''t want to take, knowing that the Auphe in me, compared to the human, would sharpen every scent a hundred times over. I didn''t care if I took another breath again, for that reason and a thousand others, but your body overrides your wishes, no matter how desperate. Lungs rebelling, I gasped, pulling in that unwanted breath. I smelled ammonia, nitrate, other chemicals I didn''t bother with. . . . And flesh. They smelled different, the roasting scent of several Wolves from the lesser number of peri, and both distinct from the crowd of vampires. Every group similar but not the same as the other, but soon to end as identical charred fumes. Above them all, I caught the smell of two others. Not a group--just two. The two that mattered most. Until now one had smelled of grass, fallen leaves, loamy earth, and musk. The other of sweat and weapon oil for cleaning every type of blade at the end of sparring, of goat milk soap and unbleached cotton from the shower that followed, of the clean bite of a chill wind only truly found on the top of a mountain where the air grew thin. One puck. One human. Neither would give off their born scent again, the way they once had. Not in reality, and not in my memories that would be as blackened as the mound of rubble that would act as the tomb that covered them when the fire eventually died. Not that I would be around to see their makeshift grave in the aftermath and not that I would have memories of any kind. The smallest sliver of a second later there came a second explosion, a massive fireball ten, twelve stories high erupted, though the building itself was only four stories tall. It came close to incinerating anything left of the brick and metal of the bar and the bodies inside. The backwash of incredible heat and a concussive wave threw me flat, knocking the air from my lungs before I was able to vomit at the stench that had crawled inside me to stay. An infinity of fire: Hell couldn''t have claimed it all. I sat up slowly and painfully to the sight of what the second one had birthed, a Jacob''s ladder of fire that stretched up to touch the sky, maybe Heaven itself. It made the first look like an amateur attempt at a Boy Scout campfire. It burned with the rage, flame, and heat of a hundred phoenixes. Yet when it finally would burn down, hours maybe days--ashes to ashes--no new phoenix would rise from it. Nothing would. The reaper owned this place now and everyone who''d been in it. One swipe of a scythe hotter than the sun had taken it all. Now I am become Death. Something that had been said in history a time or two. Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds. I didn''t think about who had done it--who was Death. I already knew the answer to that. I didn''t think about how it had been done. I didn''t think why. I knew the why was a who. And I was still here as the fuckers had missed.

Description for Sales People

The new book in the bestselling Cal Leandros series (ROC) about two brothers fighting supernatural enemies. A clever, snarky and hugely entertaining contemporary fantasy series. Will appeal to fantasy lovers and fans of Jim Butcher and Simon R. Green.

Details

ISBN045147340X
Author Rob Thurman
Short Title NEVERMORE
Language English
ISBN-10 045147340X
ISBN-13 9780451473400
Media Book
Year 2015
Series Cal Leandros Novels
Series Number 10
DEWEY 813.6
Imprint ROC
Subtitle A Cal Leandros Novel
Country of Publication United States
UK Release Date 2015-12-01
US Release Date 2015-12-01
Narrator Matthew Beard
Birth 1927
Affiliation Lecturer, University of Fort Hare
Position Professor
Qualifications J.D.
Publisher Penguin Putnam Inc
Format Paperback
Publication Date 2015-12-01
Audience General
NZ Release Date 2017-01-14
AU Release Date 2017-01-14
Pages 352

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