Round Trip Fare by Barb Taub
Round Trip Fare, the newest book in Barb Taub's Null City series, is now available on Amazon for preorder.
**Although a sequel to Book 1 (One Way Fare), this is the stand alone story of twins Carey and Connor Parker.Is it wrong that shooting people is just so much easier than making decisions? Carey wonders— and not for the first time. But the Agency claims this will be an easy one. A quick pickup of a missing teen and she won’t even have to shoot anybody. Probably. Carey knows superpowers suck, her own included. From childhood she’s only had two options. She can take the Metro train to Null City and a normal life. After one day there, imps become baristas, and hellhounds become poodles. Demons settle down, join the PTA, and worry about their taxes. Or she can master the powers of her warrior gift and fight a war she can’t win, in a world where she never learned how to lose.
And then there is… him.
For the past two months, a dark stranger has persistently edged his way onto the mental game board behind her eyelids. Well, whatever trouble he's selling, Carey Parker is not buying. Her to-do list is already long enough: find her brother and sister, rescue her roommate, save Null City, and castrate her ex-boyfriend. Preferably with a dull-edged garden tool. A rusty one. She just has a few details to work out first. Her parents have been killed, her brother and sister targeted, and the newest leader of the angels trying to destroy Null City might be the one person she loves most in the world. And her sexy new partner’s gift lets him predict deaths. Hers.
- TITLE: Round Trip Fare
- Genre: Urban Fantasy (okay and there is humor, romance, a sentient train, a great dog, and bunch of other stuff—but Amazon only gives you a couple of words to pick genre, so...)
- Series: Null City [NOTE: prequel One Way Fare is now available FREE from Barnes & Noble and Kobo, and the kindle version directly from Barb) but this book works as standalone.
- Release date: 7 April, 2016
Contact & Buy Links
Blog | Facebook | Twitter: @barbtaub | Goodreads | Amazon US | Amazon UKBarb Taub:
In halcyon days BC (before children), Barb wrote a humor column for several Midwest newspapers. With the arrival of Child #4, she veered toward the dark side and an HR career. Following a daring daytime escape to England, she's lived in a medieval castle and a hobbit house with her prince-of-a-guy and the World’s Most Spoiled AussieDog. Now all her days are Saturdays, and she spends them traveling around the world, plus consulting with her daughter on Marvel heroes, Null City, and translating from British to American.
EXCERPT:
Was it wrong that shooting people was so
much easier than finishing up the humanities requirements for her criminal
justice degree? Carey Parker sipped her coffee and—not for the first
time—wondered about herself. But the Agency said this would be an easy one. A
quick pickup and she wouldn’t even have to shoot anybody. Probably.
There were two distinct advantages to her
corner table at the rear of the self-consciously artistic coffee shop on the
edge of Seattle’s eclectic Fremont district. Nobody could see her screen,
and—infinitely more important—she had sole possession of the outlet currently
charging both iPad and phone. She checked her iPad’s video screen to make sure
the blonde teen she was tracking still had no idea she was being studied. Well,
okay—studied along with the research materials for Carey’s overdue Humanities
201 essay. “Discuss the relationship of capitalism and patriarchal post
constructivist theory. Provide data and cite literature supporting your
thesis.” She squinted at the assignment, minimized to parallel the video
window, and cringed.
Enlarging the video, Carey automatically
evaluated her target. The teenager was a few inches under Carey’s own
five-five. But where Carey’s cargo pants and hoodie hid a leanly muscled frame
and a surprising number of weapons, the other girl’s designer Goth outfit made
the most of her soft curves. Plus that pink streak in the younger girl’s hair
was a little too shiny, her dark eyeliner a bit too creamy, while her wannabe
goth leather jacket, fitted black T-shirt, and long dark skirt screamed
Nordstrom personal shopper and Daddy’s credit card.
A lifetime of
training—three years at the Academy, four more in the field—and they send me
after Goth-Barbie. Carey sighed. Is it even worth it? But a flash memory—her guardian Harry’s
blood-drenched golden hair, the almost-forgotten faces of her murdered parents,
her missing brother and sister—stopped her. If she had a prayer of finding Gaby
and Connor, she couldn’t afford to give up the all-important info access the
Agency jobs provided. And then there was…him. For the past two months, the dark
stranger had persistently edged his way onto the mental game board behind her eyelids
where her harmonia gift visualized connections only she could view. Whatever trouble Mr. Six-Feet-Plus of
arrogance is selling, I’m sure not buying.
“Excuse me. Do you need both outlets?”
Carey looked up to see the blonde standing
in front of her, expectantly holding up her power cord. “Yes.” She returned her
focus to the iPad screen, ignoring the muttered “bitch” as the girl went over
to try her smile on the men two tables over. Her reversed video window showed
the younger girl breathlessly thanking the man who leaped to free up an outlet
for her. As she leaned over their table, the men’s eyes lit with appreciation
for the way she maximized scoop-neck T-shirt, youth, and the best technology
the foundations industry had to offer. Guess
there’s all kinds of ways to say thank you.
Shrugging, Carey returned to her own essay
assignment. Her business partner, Marley, was pushing her to finish the degree
that would let them bill the Agency at a higher rate. But at twenty-four Carey
felt a generation older than her fellow students. With her erratic hours, she
had to take classes offering online options whenever possible, so she was
currently sentenced to Humanities 201: Postmodernist Applications for Economic
Themes in Literature.
“What took you so long? I’ve been waiting
here for ages.”
At the sex-kitten whine, Carey’s eyes
flicked back to the little video window to see the other girl pouting up at a
new arrival. But her complaints didn’t stop her from giving the young man—a
boy, really, although Marley’s data sheet said he was nineteen—a thorough
tonsil cleaning. Pulling away, he threw himself into a dramatic slouch across
the next chair, giving Carey her first good look at him. He was thin, but more
like an adolescent whose slender arms and legs had yet to develop a man’s solid
outlines. His pale fallen-angel face sulked behind long hair too carefully
slashed and tossed over one eye to be accidental. He looked, Carey thought,
beautiful and brooding and more than a little stupid. Score!
Pretending to check her phone, Carey took
a quick picture of the boy and texted it along with the address of the coffee
shop. It had only been a few days since he’d left home and stopped showing up
at his classes or part-time job. Too little time for the police to be concerned,
but long enough for his frantic parents to agree to her search fee. Setting the
phone aside, she adjusted her video window to give him a critical once-over.
But he didn’t seem any more pale or unhealthy than would be explained by
devotion to the laptop he was even now pulling out and opening.
“Get me a coffee?” He didn’t look up from
his laptop as he spoke. The girl pouted again but bounced off. Returning with a
cup for each of them, she leaned forward to lay a gentle hand on his arm. “Is
your poem cycle done yet?” The boy shook his head impatiently, fingers tapping
at his laptop’s keyboard. She smiled. “Don’t worry. Now that I’m here, it will
go so much better.” He blinked, and shivered. She breathed in and smiled again.
His typing increased, his face intent on the screen.
Carey flipped the cover down on her iPad,
rewound its power cable as well as the one for her phone, and stored them in
their specially padded—okay, armored—case. The Apple people had been incredibly
nice about that last bullet incident, but she could just hear Marley
explaining, again, how their little company couldn’t afford to keep buying her
new iPads. Setting the case into the backpack hanging behind her corner chair,
Carey leaned both elbows on the table, peering over the brim of her raised
coffee cup. Excellent coffee, she
decided. Wonder if they roast it
themselves?
Finally the two men, the only other
customers in the secluded rear room, stood up and left. She took a final look
around at the coffee shop’s rear seating area—one door, no windows or other
access—and left to talk to the barista in the front room of the coffee shop.
Twenty dollars later, Carey taped a handwritten sign—“Rear room reserved for
private meeting”—to the outside of the door. Stepping back inside the room,
empty now except for the younger couple, she closed the door behind her and
stopped in front of the boy.
“Your mother is worried about you, Will.”
His automatic sneer came a fraction too late to cover his stunned expression.
Before he could speak, she turned to the girl. “It’s time to go, Leigh Ann.”
“The name is Leannán.”
Carey laughed. “Well, Leannán SÃ…” She
pronounced each Gaelic syllable with exaggerated care, L’ann-AN Shee. “Since
you refuse to honor the Accords Agreement, the Council feels it’s time for you
to go to Null City. Let’s go. I have a class this afternoon, and I don’t want
to be late again.”
The boy started to stand, trying to look
tough, but only managing to achieve the ferocity of a puppy protecting his
favorite chew toy. “We don’t have to go anywhere with you. Get your stuff,
Leigh Ann. We’re outta here.”
“Actually.” Carey’s voice was quiet.
“You’re half right.” Her hand shot out and pressed his stomach. “You don’t need
to go with me.” His breath whooshed out, and all three looked down at the tiny
needle as she pulled her hand back. A moment later, his legs buckled, and Carey
guided his falling body back down to his chair. He slumped there, head hanging
awkwardly.
Leigh Ann stared from Will to Carey, eyes
round. “Is he…?”
“He’s fine.” Carey turned to the girl and
pointed to her corner table. “Sit. And don’t even think about talking.”
Carey checked the boy’s pulse and nodded
to herself in relief. As a young witch, her friend Claire’s sleep spells wore
off pretty quickly because she had to boil down the spelled water to make it
take effect so fast. He’d probably just wake up with a hell of a headache. She
arranged his head on his arms as if he was taking a quick nap in front of his
laptop. In an afterthought, she picked up his fedora from the floor and pulled
it onto his head, hiding his face.
Returning to the scowling girl at her
table, she took a small book of forms from her backpack and started filling out
the top page.
“You can’t just—” Leigh Ann sputtered.
Without looking up Carey showed her the hand.
“What did I tell you not to do?” The girl fidgeted for another minute as Carey
frowned at the form in front of her. Finally she looked up. “How old are you
again?”
“Nineteen. And
I don’t…”
Carey shook a warning finger without
looking up. “I hate these Accords forms. You have to make sure you fill in
every last blank or those badgers in accounting will hold up your check.” She
made a final note, put the notebook away, and pulled out her phone to check the
time. “They should be here by now. Must be that damn bridge traffic.”
“Who?”
Carey jerked her head toward the next
table. “Sleeping Beauty’s parents. I’ve found it best to collect my fee on the
spot. People’s memories tend to…fade…otherwise.”
“Wait.” Leigh Ann sounded indignant. “You
were hired to find Will?”
“Nah, he was just a bonus. One of his
friends told the Agency that he’d disappeared with a Leannán SÃ. I used him to
find you because I have an authorized ARC warrant for you.”
“ARC?”
“Accords Recovery and Capture.” When the
girl still looked confused, Carey sighed. “Amateurs. I’m an Accords Warden
licensed for paranormal recoveries, and I’m serving an ARC warrant in your
name. That reminds me.” She rooted through the pocket of her backpack for the
laminated card and set her phone camera to video. Centering the camera view
screen on Leigh Ann’s face, she pushed record, and began to read the card. “By
the authority of Accords Agency warrant number 110309A57, I charge you, Leigh
Ann—” Pausing, she looked over to the form she’d filled out before returning to
the card. “—Leigh Ann Shay, a practicing Leannán SÃ, to accompany me to the
Council Headquarters. If you request a hearing, you are entitled to
representation. Otherwise, you are sentenced to five years of Null City
residency without an amnesty day. This recovery and your rights are specified
in Amendment 3, sections 7-18 of the Accords Agreement of 1998. The current
time is 15:57 on March 7, 2011. Carey Parker, Accords Adjunct Warden License
07823 class 3, submitting authorized Accords Recovery and Capture statement.”
She turned off the camera and played back the recording. Satisfied, she
uploaded it to Agency servers, put her phone and the card back into her
backpack, and faced the girl.
Leigh Ann looked uncertain. “Null City?”
Carey looked at her curiously. “You don’t
know about the City?”
“Yeah, and I know about the Tooth Fairy
and the Easter Bunny too. Come on. You really believe there’s a city you get to
on a magic train, and after a day there you become a normal human?”
“Since my family founded it, yeah. I kinda
do believe it.” She leaned back in her chair to consider the teenager in front
of her. “You could have killed that boy, Leigh Ann. What could be worth his
death?”
The girl widened soft blue eyes at her.
“I’m a Leannán SÃ. He’s a writer, and I would have given him an intense,
brilliantly inspired life of creating masterpieces. So what if it would have
been a short one? It’s got to be better to go as a blazing star than stay as
a…” Her voice trailed off as a snore filtered from beneath the fedora.
“Did you give him a choice? Did you say to
him, ‘Will, I’ll be your muse and give you lots of coffee-shop kissing although
the actual sex won’t be that great, and there’s the whole die young thing… But
you won’t mind because it will all be for your Art’?”
Leigh Ann frowned. “The sex wouldn’t have
been that bad.”
Carey snorted. “And actually, that
masterpiece he was producing?” She reached over to snag Will’s computer and
pulled it around to face Leigh Ann. “First thing I did was put a keystroke
tracker onto his laptop. And believe me, reading that drivel was almost as bad
as my humanities essay. He copied most of it from last month’s Poetry!Slam
online. Here’s what he was actually writing.” She selected Recent Documents on
the laptop and opened the top file listed.
The younger girl’s eyes widened.
“Fanfiction?” She peered at the screen and looked like she might be sick. “One
Direction fanfiction?”
“Nothing wrong with fanfiction.” Carey
raised an eyebrow. “We’ve all done it. But Will’s was…” She shuddered. “Really,
really bad.” She looked curiously at the younger girl and waved at the snoring
boy. “Why did you do it?”
Leigh Ann looked down at her clasped
hands. “My parents were killed just before the war ended. When Haven and Gifts
signed the Accords in 1995, I was sent to live with my father’s cousins. They
had a little apple orchard up on the Olympic Peninsula, and there wasn’t much
money. Everyone had to work pretty hard all the time, just to get food to eat
and a few clothes. But I knew there was something different inside me.
Something that would inspire beauty and genius and glorious creativity.”
Carey stared at her. “Well, that’s an
entire pickup truck full of prime-quality manure.”
“Was it the farm?” Leigh Ann frowned. “The
orphan bit?
Thanks so much for the spotlight, Diane. I really appreciate your help!
ReplyDeleteAlways a pleasure, Barb.
ReplyDelete