Born Of Treasure By Jordan Elizabeth *Cover Reveal
BORN
OF TREASURE
Clark
used to be a miner, until he drank from a vial he swore was absinthe
but was actually an invention to give him the ability to raise the
dead. Now Clark seeks to fulfill his father's wishes to keep
inventions away from Senator Horan and his beloved Amethyst is along
for the ride. Deceit, drama, romance, the insidious underbellies of
gangs...How can she not be involved?
Clark can't hide behind the Treasure name forever and the army still wants him for his secret abilities. If Captain Greenwood can't snare Clark, then he'll use the Treasures as collateral. Saving his
father's inventions will just have to wait, especially now that the Treasures have been kicked off their ranch and driven into exile. Clark knows how to survive on the run, but that’s not the fate the Treasures deserve. He can surrender to the army or fight for his freedom, but Amethyst has other plans for fixing their troubles.
She’s come across another one of the vials that gave Clark his abilities, and it looks mighty tasty.
Clark can't hide behind the Treasure name forever and the army still wants him for his secret abilities. If Captain Greenwood can't snare Clark, then he'll use the Treasures as collateral. Saving his
father's inventions will just have to wait, especially now that the Treasures have been kicked off their ranch and driven into exile. Clark knows how to survive on the run, but that’s not the fate the Treasures deserve. He can surrender to the army or fight for his freedom, but Amethyst has other plans for fixing their troubles.
She’s come across another one of the vials that gave Clark his abilities, and it looks mighty tasty.
BORN
OF TREASURE, book 2 of the Treasure
Chronicles
This
young adult fantasy turns the Wild West into a steampunk adventure.
It is released September 12, 2015, but in the meantime, enjoy the
stunning cover, a contest, and an excerpt!
Enjoy
the following excerpt…
Clark eased the door open enough to peer into the closet. Scratch
that, make it a ballroom. Faded curtains with moth-chewed holes were
fastened to the walls to display a stage. Forgotten props leaned
against the back, a mixture of painted shrubbery and constructed
balconies, as though the musty room couldn’t decide what it wanted
to be.
This would be fun. He’d never come across a rundown, exotic hideout
in the desert. Clark tucked his lock-picking kit into his jacket
pocket and nudged the door shut behind him. His breath sounded too
loud in the still room, but no ghosts appeared to haunt the memories.
Dust motes floated in the sunbeams coming through the windows near
the ceiling. One window, of stained glass, sent a distorted image of
the late king onto the hardwood floor. He pictured the theater where
he’d grown up back in Tangled Wire, a space in the corner of the
saloon where alcohol hadn’t puckered the floorboards too much.
Sometimes, the saloon owner had made his mother dance with the
younger Tarnished Silvers.
“Mum would’ve shone on this stage,” Clark whispered. She
could’ve worn her favorite green dress, to go along with the
emerald shade of the curtains.
Tables covered what remained of the room, littered with piles of
gears and cogs. Broken clocks glared at him through their cracked
faces.
“Check near the stage.” The spirit of Clark’s father appeared
beside him. Perfect, the ballroom needed a ghost. Black holes peered
out instead of eyes, matching the space in his chest where a bullet
had stolen his life. At last, a ghost to match the dismal space.
“Your inventions show up in the weirdest places.” Clark stepped
over a heap of clock keys, but one crunched beneath the heel of his
riding boot.
“Senator Horan never got this one, and he’s looked. Trust me,
he’s looked. See, it was stolen right from my jacket! Never trust a
girl wearing too much lip paint. She’ll slip her hand in your
pocket and you’ll never see your watch or billfold again.”
This had to be the point where a son grew tired of his father’s
rambling and zoned out. He’d seen it enough on ranches, especially
when the father wanted the son to follow in reluctant footsteps.
“Senator Horan wanted to buy the pocket watch right after I
finished it.” Eric waved his hands. “Nope, I told him. You’re
too late. A pretty Tarnished Silver made off with it. He didn’t
believe me, swore I was lying. He tried to pay me another small
fortune in land.”
Clark grinned. He could
listen to his father, Eric, all day and never grow weary of his
words. His mother must’ve felt like that, getting lost in Eric’s
passion.
Clark lifted the corner of a striped sheet thrown over a table,
revealing glass plates for clock faces. “Don’t worry, your time
travel device is safe.”
Eric floated closer. “I told you, son. It’s not time travel.”
“Right,” Clark teased, drawing out the word. At least if the
pocket watch had to have been stolen, it hadn’t been tossed down a
privy with other garbage. A clock collector—obsessed fellow, more
likely—turned out to be a great alternative. “If I was going to
collect something, I would definitely keep it in an old railroad
station.” Not that he’d ever had the luxury of collecting
anything. If he managed to own a second pair of shoes, he felt like a
king.
“It’s a magnificent workspace,” his father said. “Pity I
didn’t think of using an old ballroom. Perfect light from every
angle, lots of room to spread-out.”
Clark studied the table closest to the stage. Pocket watches of
various sizes ranged from thumbnail small to fist-size large, most
dented. A polishing cloth had been thrown over a triangular-shaped
one.
“This was the first train station in Hedlund,” Eric rambled. “All
they had here was a mission and a few shacks. The mountains were just
starting to be mined and the king was encouraging farmers to come out
here to the land. They wanted this station to be the hubbub of life.
A great encouragement to the weaklings back east.”
“Like you?” Clark lifted an oval pocket watch with diamonds on
the front. The spaces of missing stones reminded him of a face
scarred by the pox.
“As the rest of Hedlund built up and the main cities extended to
the ocean, this little town became quite little. It’s still a stop
on the main railroad, but people don’t want to stay for dancing or
a show. Did I tell you I wanted to be a professor?”
The other gang members might not laugh if they knew Clark’s father
was loaded—lots of the wealthy slept around with Tarnished
Silvers—but they’d have a good roar over Brass Glass Clark having
a professor for an old man. Univeristy brats hid behind books in
shadowed libraries. They didn’t run around the desert with
steamcycles and pistols.
They didn’t get shot by mercenaries hired by a senator, either.
Clark spotted a pocket watch with the Grisham family crest on the
front: a swan with a key hanging from its beak. “Got it.” A tiny
diamond winked from the swan’s eye.
Jordan Elizabeth, formally Jordan
Elizabeth Mierek, is the author of ESCAPE FROM WITCHWOOD HOLLOW and a
contributor to GEARS OF BRASS, both available from Curiosity Quills
Press. GEARS OF BRASS includes a short story featuring Amethyst
Treasure, one of the main characters in the Treasure Chronicles.
Check out Jordan’s website
for contests and book signings. Jordan is represented by Belcastro
Agency and President of the Utica Writers Club.
Don’t
miss any of the Treasure Chronicles. Book 1, TREASURE
DARKLY, is on sale for 99 cents this week only!
Mark
BORN OF TREASURE to read on
GoodReads and check out the Facebook
Release Party.
Don’t
miss your chance to win a heart-and-key necklace with matching
earrings worthy of Amethyst Treasure. Enter here:
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Comments
Post a Comment