Elysian Fields
Sentinels of New Orleans Series
Sentinels of New Orleans Series
Book Three
Suzanne Johnson
Genre: Urban Fantasy
Publisher: Tor Books
Date of Publication: August 13, 2013
ISBN: 978-0765333193
ASIN: B00CQY7TOI
Number of pages: 352
Word Count: approx. 102,000
Cover Artist: Cliff Nielsen
Book Trailer: http://youtu.be/2NskZi9B0gU
Book Description:
The mer feud has
been settled, but life in South Louisiana still has more twists and turns than
the muddy Mississippi. New Orleanians are under attack from a copycat killer
mimicking the crimes of a 1918 serial murderer known as the Axeman of New
Orleans.
Thanks to a tip
from the undead pirate Jean Lafitte, DJ Jaco knows the attacks aren't
random--an unknown necromancer has resurrected the original Axeman of New
Orleans, and his ultimate target is a certain blonde wizard.
Namely, DJ.
Fighting off an undead serial killer as troubles pile up around her isn't easy.
Jake Warin's loup-garou nature is spiraling downward, enigmatic neighbor Quince
Randolph is acting weirder than ever, the Elders are insisting on lessons in
elven magic from the world's most annoying wizard, and former partner Alex
Warin just turned
up on DJ's to-do list. Not to mention big maneuvers are afoot in the halls of
preternatural power.
Suddenly, moving to
the Beyond as Jean Lafitte's pirate wench? It could be DJ's best option.
Excerpt:
By
midafternoon, I was out of ideas and full of nervous energy that finally sent
me out of doors, catching up on yard work I’d neglected all season, raking the
small, crunchy leaves from the live oaks into piles a kid would love to play
in.
“Need help?”
I ignored the voice and counted to ten,
hoping it would go away. Instead, Quince Randolph knelt next to a tall pyramid
of leaves I’d erected and took the lid off the big green trash can he’d brought
with him. He began scooping up armfuls and piling them in the can. “You should
compost this down. It would make a good mulch for flowerbeds. Plus you need
more color in your landscaping.”
“Whatever.”
I didn’t know what mulch was, didn’t care enough to ask, and had such a brown
thumb that flowers never survived my gardening efforts.
Rand wore a chocolate-brown sweater
almost the same color as mine, with jeans in a similar wash. With our
comparable shades of long blond hair, we resembled grown-up Bobbsey Twins,
except he was prettier. Freddie and Flossie do New Orleans.
“Are you here for any particular
reason?”
He squinted up at me against the soft
afternoon sunlight. “I just want to get to know you better.”
Uh- huh. “Tell me what you are, and then
we’ll know each other better. I’m betting elf or faery.” I was kind of betting
elf— it might explain his interest in me although, thankfully, he’d never shown
any inclination to plunder my brain.
He grinned. “Go to dinner with me and I
might tell you.”
I noted the return of his peridot
earrings. Big liar. Super-big cheater. “Where’s Eugenie? You know, your
girlfriend?”
A flash of irritation spoiled his
perfect features a half second before he answered. “Working. Can we—”
What ever he planned to ask, my answer
would be no, but he didn’t get a chance because a clomping noise reached us
from the direction of Prytania Street. Rand and I both were stricken speechless
at the sight of Jean Lafitte sitting like royalty in the back of a gold and
white French Quarter tourist carriage. It was being pulled by a light- gray
mule wearing a hat festooned with
fake
flowers and driven by a smiling guy who had no idea how many daggers his undead
pirate passenger had hidden on him.
The ornate carriage rolled to a stop,
and the mule flicked an ear at the passing traffic. Those animals pulled tourists
around the French Quarter all day, and it would take more than an impatient Toyota
driver to rattle one of them. The carriages were also ridiculously expensive if
one commissioned a ride outside the Quarter.
Then again, Jean Lafitte was loaded. The
driver probably had a reason to smile.
Jean exited the carriage with
extraordinary grace for such a large man. He was tall, powerfully built,
black-haired, cobalt-eyed, a shameless flirt, and talked with a raspy French
accent that made me swoon even though he was technically dead. In other words,
I had a bit of a problem with Jean Lafitte and my own common sense being
present at the same time.
Jean said a few words to the carriage
driver, then turned to prop his hands on his hips in a broad pirate-like stance,
giving Rand a disapproving visual once-over. The mule backed up a
few
awkward steps before pulling the carriage into my driveway.
God help me, I hoped Alex
didn’t get home in time to see this. I’d never hear the end of it.
“Do you wish me to rid you of this
intruder, Jolie?”
Sentinels of
New Orleans
Book Two
Suzanne Johnson
Suzanne Johnson
Genre: Urban Fantasy
Publisher: Tor Books
ISBN: 978-0765327802
ASIN: B00842H5VI
Number of pages: 336
Word Count: approx. 92,000
Cover Artist: Cliff Nielsen
Book Description:
Hurricane Katrina is long gone, but the preternatural
storm rages on in New Orleans. New species from the Beyond moved into Louisiana
after the hurricane destroyed the borders between worlds, and it falls to
wizard sentinel Drusilla Jaco and her partner, Alex Warin, to keep the
preternaturals peaceful and the humans unaware. But a war is brewing between
two clans of Cajun merpeople in Plaquemines Parish, and down in the swamp, DJ
learns, there’s more stirring than angry mermen and the threat of a were-gator.
Wizards are dying, and something—or someone—from the
Beyond is poisoning the waters of the mighty Mississippi, threatening the
humans who live and work along the river. DJ and Alex must figure out what
unearthly source is contaminating the water and who—or what—is killing the
wizards. Is it a malcontented merman, the naughty nymph, or some other critter
altogether? After all, DJ’s undead suitor, the pirate Jean Lafitte, knows his
way around a body or two.
It’s anything but smooth sailing on the bayou as the
Sentinels of New Orleans series continues.
Excerpt:
The
minute hand of the ornate grandfather clock crept like a
gator stuck in swamp mud. I’d been watching it for half an hour, nursing a
fizzy cocktail from my perch inside the Hotel Monteleone.
The plaque on the enormous clock claimed it had
been hand- carved of mahogany in 1909, about 130 years after
the birth of the undead pirate waiting for me upstairs.
They were both quite handsome, but
the clock was a lot safer.
The infamous Jean Lafitte had
expected me at seven. He’d summoned me to his French Quarter hotel suite by
courier like I was one of his early nineteenth-century wenches, and I hated to
destroy his pirate-king delusions, but the historical undead don’t summon
wizards. We summon them.
I’d have blown him off if my boss on
the Congress of Elders hadn’t ordered me to comply and my co-sentinel, Alex,
hadn’t claimed a prior engagement.
At seven thirty, I abandoned my
drink, took a deep breath, and marched through the lobby toward the bank of
elevators.
On the long dead-man-walking stroll
down the carpeted hallway, I imagined all the horrible requests Jean might
make. He’d saved my life a few years ago, after Hurricane Katrina sent the city
into freefall, and I hadn’t seen him since. I’d been desperate at the time. I
might have promised him unfettered access to modern New Orleans in exchange for
his assistance. I might have promised him a place to live. I might have
promised him things I don’t even remember. In other words, I might be totally
screwed.
I reached the door of the Eudora
Welty Suite and knocked, reflecting that Jean Lafitte probably had no idea who
Eudora Welty was, and wouldn’t like her if he did. Ms. Welty had been a modern
sort of woman who wouldn’t hop to attention when summoned by a scoundrel.
He didn’t answer immediately. I’d
made him wait, after all, and Jean lived in a tit- for- tat world. I paused a
few breaths and knocked harder. Finally, he flung open the door, waving me
inside to a suite plush with tapestries of peach and royal blue, thick carpet
that swallowed the narrow heels of my pumps, and a plasma TV he couldn’t
possibly know how to operate. What a waste.
“You have many assets, Drusilla, but
apparently a respect for time is not among them.” Deep, disapproving voice,
French accent, broad shoulders encased in a red linen shirt, long dark hair
pulled back into a tail, eyes such a cobalt blue they bordered on navy. And
technically speaking, dead.
He was as sexy as ever.
“Sorry.” I slipped my hand in my
skirt pocket, fingering the small pouch of magic-infused herbs I carried at all
times. My mojo bag wouldn’t help with my own perverse attraction to the man,
but it would keep my empathic abilities in check. If he still had a perverse
attraction to me, I didn’t want to feel it.
He eased his six-foot-two frame into
a sturdy blue chair and slung one long leg over the arm as he gave me a
thorough eyeraking, a ghost of a smile on his face.
I perched on the edge of the
adjacent sofa, easing back against a pair of plump throw pillows, and looked at
him expectantly. I hoped what ever he wanted wouldn’t jeopardize my life, my
job, or my meager bank account.
“You are as lovely as ever, Jolie,”
Jean said, trotting out his pet name for me that sounded deceptively intimate
and brought back a lot of memories, most of them bad. “I will forgive your
tardiness— perhaps you were late because you were selecting clothing that I
would like.” His gaze lingered on my legs. “You chose beautifully.”
I’d picked a conservative black
skirt and simple white blouse with the aim of looking professional for a
business meeting, part of my ongoing attempt to prove to the Elders I was a
mature wizard worthy of a pay raise. But this was Jean Lafitte, so I should
have worn coveralls. I’d forgotten what a letch he could be.
“I have a date after our meeting,” I
lied. He didn’t need to know said date involved a round carton with the words
Blue Bell Ice Cream printed on front. “Why did you want to see me?”
There, that hadn’t been so
difficult—just a simple request. No drama. No threats. No double- entendre.
Straight to business.
“Does a man need a reason to see a
beautiful woman? Especially one who is indebted to him, and who has made him
many promises?” A slow smile spread across his face, drawing my eyes to his
full lips and the ragged scar that trailed his jawline.
I might be the empath in the room,
but he knew very well that, in some undead kind of way, I thought he was hot.
I felt my face warming to the shade
of a trailer- trash bridesmaid’s dress, one whose color had a name like raging
rouge. I’d had a similar reaction when I first met Jean in 2005, two days
before a mean hurricane with a sissy name turned her malevolent eye toward the
Gulf Coast. I blamed my whole predicament on Katrina, the bitch.
Her winds had driven the waters of
Lake Pontchartrain into the canals that crisscrossed the city, collapsing
levees and filling the low, concave metro area like a gigantic soup bowl.
But NBC Nightly News and Anderson
Cooper had missed the biggest story of all: how, after the storm, a mob of old
gods, historical undead, and other preternatural victims of the scientific age
flooded New Orleans. As a wizard, I’d had a ringside seat. Now, three years
later, the wizards had finally reached accords with the major preternatural
ruling bodies, and the borders were down, as of two days ago. Jean hadn’t wasted
any time.
Royal Street
Sentinels of New Orleans
Book One
Suzanne Johnson
Genre: Urban Fantasy
Publisher: Tor Books
ISBN: 978-0765327796
ASIN: B006OM459U
Number of pages: 337
Word Count: approx. 94,000
Cover Artist: Cliff Nielsen
Book Description:
As the junior wizard
sentinel for New Orleans, Drusilla Jaco's job involves a lot more potion-mixing
and pixie-retrieval than sniffing out supernatural bad guys like rogue vampires
and lethal were-creatures. DJ's boss and mentor, Gerald St. Simon, is the
wizard tasked with protecting the city from anyone or anything that might slip
over from the preternatural beyond.
Then Hurricane Katrina
hammers New Orleans' fragile levees, unleashing more than just dangerous flood
waters. While winds howled and Lake Pontchartrain surged, the borders between
the modern city and the Otherworld crumbled. Now the undead and the restless
are roaming the Big Easy, and a serial killer with ties to voodoo is murdering
soldiers sent to help the city recover.
To make it worse, Gerald St.
Simon has gone missing, the wizards' Elders have assigned a grenade-toting
assassin as DJ's new partner, and undead pirate Jean Lafitte wants to make her
walk his plank. The search for Gerry and the killer turns personal when DJ
learns the hard way that loyalty requires sacrifice, allies come from the
unlikeliest places, and duty mixed with love creates one bitter roux.
Excerpt:
Friday, August 26, 2005
“Once [Tropical Storm Katrina] moved over the gulf
today, it was expected to wheel north, pick up speed and hit the Florida
Panhandle on Sunday.”
A secluded Louisiana bayou. A sexy pirate. Seduction and deceit.
My Friday afternoon had the makings of a great romantic adventure, at least in
theory.
In practice, angry mosquitoes were using me for target practice,
humidity had ruined any prayer of a good hair day, and the pirate in question―the
infamous Jean Lafitte―was two-hundred years old, armed, and
carrying a six-pack of Paradise condoms in assorted fruit flavors.
I wasn’t sure what unnerved me more—the fact that the historical undead had discovered erotic
accessories, or that Lafitte felt the need to practice safe sex.
Nothing
about the pirate looked safe. Tall and broad-shouldered, he had dark blue eyes
and a smile twitching at the corners of his mouth as he watched me set two
glasses and a bottle of dark rum on a rickety wooden table. A tanned, muscular
chest peeked from his open-collared shirt, and shaggy dark hair framed a
clean-shaven face. A jagged scar across his jaw reminded me the so-called
gentleman pirate also had his ruthless side.
He’d
arrived by way of a stolen boat at this isolated cabin near Delacroix, a
half-hour outside New Orleans, to pursue two of the world’s most timeless
pleasures: sex and money. I’d met him here to play the role of a gullible young
wizard falling under the spell of the legendary pirate, at least for a while.
Then I’d do my duty as deputy sentinel and send his swashbuckling hide back to
the Beyond, where he could rub shoulders with other undead legends and
preternatural creatures unfit for polite human company.
My
hand shook as I poured the rum, sloshing a few drops of amber liquid over the
side of the glass. I’d finally been given a serious assignment, and I needed it
to go without a hitch.
Lafitte’s
fingers brushed mine as he took the drink, sending an unexpected rush of energy
up my arm. “Merci, Mademoiselle Jaco—or
may I call you Drusilla?”
Actually, I’d
prefer he didn’t call me anything. Despite his obvious hopes for the evening,
this wasn’t a date. “Most people call me DJ.”
“Bah,” he said,
taking a sip of rum. “Those are alphabet letters, not a name.”
From beneath the
red sash that accented his waist, Lafitte pulled a modern semiautomatic handgun
and set it on the table next to the rum bottle. I knew how he’d gotten it—he’d
rolled the Tulane student that summoned him, lifted the kid’s wallet and iPod,
rode the streetcar to Canal Street, and made a trade for the gun. Enterprising
guy, Lafitte.
I pondered the
odd spike of energy I’d gotten from his hand. Touching increases the emotional
crap I absorb from people as an empath, but Lafitte was technically a dead guy.
Still, I’d like to say if he touched me again, I’d demand double pay from the
wizards’ Congress of Elders. Triple if it involved lips.
But who was I
kidding? My bargaining position was nonexistent. My boss Gerry only sent me on
this run because he had something else to do and knew Lafitte might respond to
my questionable seduction skills.
I’d pulled my
unruly blonde hair out of its usual ponytail for the occasion, loaded on some
makeup to play up my teal eyes, and poured myself into a little black skirt,
short enough to show off my legs while not offending Lafitte’s
nineteenth-century sensibilities.
It must have
worked, because the pirate was giving me that head-to-toe appraisal guys do on
instinct, like they’re assessing a juicy slab of beef and deciding whether they
want it rare, medium, or well-done.
“You really are
lovely, Drusilla.” The timbre of Lafitte’s voice shivered down my spine, and I
fought the urge to check out the biceps underneath that linen shirt.
Holy crap. This
was just wrong. I
should not be absorbing his lust.
About the Author:
On
Aug. 28, 2005, Suzanne Johnson loaded two dogs, a cat, a friend, and her mom
into a car and fled New Orleans in the hours before Hurricane Katrina made
landfall.
Four
years later, she began weaving her experiences and love for her city into the
Sentinels of New Orleans urban fantasy series, beginning with Royal Street (2012), continuing with River Road (2012), and now with Elysian Fields (August 2013).
She
grew up in rural Alabama, halfway between the Bear Bryant Museum and Elvis’
birthplace, and lived in New Orleans for fifteen years—which means she has a
highly refined sense of the absurd and an ingrained love of SEC football and
fried gator on a stick.
As
Susannah Sandlin, she writes the
best-selling Penton Vampire Legacy paranormal romance series and the recent
standalone, Storm Force.
The Sentinels Of New Orleans is one of my favorite series. Recommend these books whenever I can. Next = Pirate's Alley. Read Royal Street and you will enjoy this wonderful New Orleans of Wizard D.J..
ReplyDeleteJean, a carriage ride and New Orleans-nice setting for romance. Rand is so creepy! Can't wait for Pirates Alley!
ReplyDeleteThis series is a fabulous adventure and i keep being surprised by each book so next one Pirate alley can't arrive enough ( though we need to let Suzanne the time to write it ;) ) one that recommend whole heartely
ReplyDeleteI love the Sentinels of New Orleans! Thanks for sharing the series and the giveawaway.
ReplyDeleteI loved the first in this series! I can't wait to read the rest!
ReplyDeleteI've never heard of this series untill today, it sounds great.
ReplyDelete