Page 1 of Slayers of Old


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CHAPTER 1

Jenny

Forty years ago, I began keeping a list of annoyances that came with being a Hunter of Artemis. I’d gotten up to two hundred and four. Being awoken in the middle of the night was number six, right after always having to replace torn and bloodstained outfits.

As a Hunter, my body reacted to the presence of unnatural threats: monsters and demons and people who hung the toilet paper roll “under” instead of “over.” My duty was to track down and end these threats.

A high school friend had dubbed it my “spider sense,” and it had saved my life more times than I could remember.

That was then. At fifty-six years old, my spider sense was just one more annoyance on my list. Number one ninety-eight, to be specific.

My pulse raced. Heat surged through my veins. Sweat dripped down my cleavage. I kicked off the twisted sheet and slowed my breathing, trying to determine if there was any actual danger or if this was just another blasted hot flash.

Wooden chimes clattered gently on the front porch. A truck with a bad muffler drove past, several blocks away.

The only light came from the numbers on my digital alarm clock—1:57 in the freaking morning—and the streetlight outside, which sliced a thin beam through the crack between the curtains. I’d left the window open an inch, and the warm breeze carried the salty, fishy smell of the Atlantic.

My sense of smell was another mixed blessing: great for tracking the forces of evil, less great when a housemate was having GI troubles. I grimaced and made a mental note to put a new candle in the bathroom. Temple knew better than to eat too much dairy. I’d tried eliminating it from our groceries, but I felt guilty depriving him of the joys of his homemade chocolate-swirl cheesecake or a fresh deep-dish pizza.

Not that I’d really stopped him. It was hard to keep a ninety-nine-year-old sorcerer from eating whatever the heck he wanted.

I sniffed again, teasing out the different scents: a trace of sandalwood from Annette’s Yves Saint Laurent perfume; the roses growing outside the house; leftover cheese and double-pepperoni pizza from Temple’s midnight snack. Layered beneath it all was the faint stink of rotting flesh.

Not a hot flash, then.

I climbed silently from the bed and crossed the old oak floor, stopping only to slip into a worn blue plush robe and my old fuzzy slippers.

My housemates were sound asleep, judging from the snoring coming from one bedroom and the low hum of a CPAP machine from the other. I heard skittering from the mice in the attic, too. Outside, the world had gone quiet.

I walked down the steps to the first floor. Past the kitchen—dark and empty—and through the open door we’d put up in the middle of the hallway to separate the front two rooms from the rest of the house.

This was the storefront for Second Life Books and Gifts. Every door and window was equipped with security systems both mundane and magical that would have alerted us if anything dangerous had gotten inside.

I checked the rooms anyway, finding nothing up front except bulging bookshelves and souvenirs ranging from tasteful to tacky.

According to Annette, tacky had outsold tasteful ten to one last quarter.

Through the leaded-glass window next to the front door I saw only darkness. Nothing had tripped the motion-sensitive lights around the house and parking lot. But the smell of death was stronger, and my muscles twitched with the need to strike and slay.

I flipped the switch for the porch lights.

Standing on the edge of the porch was a harvester. A big one, nine feet tall and almost as broad, thanks to the billowing black cloak and the smoky shadows swirling around its body. It stood with its head and shoulders hunched to avoid the overhang.

The last time I’d faced a harvester was thirty-five years ago at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in New York. That one had been eight feet, tops.

Harvesters usually fed on poltergeists and other unquiet spirits, but once in a while, they developed a taste for the living. By the time I’d gotten to Sleepy Hollow, the thing had spent three weeks nibbling on the souls of the tourists who tromped over the graves each day.

That fight had lasted ninety seconds, which was about eighty-five seconds longer than most. Harvesters were tough.

A Hunter with the power of a goddess behind every strike was tougher.

Here in Salem, we got far more tourist traffic than Sleepy Hollow, but I hadn’t heard anything about people losing their souls. Not to a harvester, at least. TV and smartphones were a whole other class of spirit killers. And I’d have bet anything there was underworld backing for some of those social media sites, even if I’d never been able to prove it.

I opened the door.

The harvester froze with its stick-like arm extended. From the angle of the bony fist, it had been about to knock.

The limb was emaciated even more so than usual for its kind, which meant it would be hungry. Maybe even starving.