Soul Eater | Thaddeus Ezax

Last but not least, we have Mr Thaddeus Ezax. Thad is a useless mage. He should be powerful. He’s an Ezax, one of the most powerful wizard families in the world, and yet he can’t perform spells even a five-year-old master. When a case takes him to the black market, his life changes forever.

Thad is a mage, his parents are mages, so spirits mean nothing to him – nothing. You have to be a sorcerer to call a spirit, and yet he ends up stealing a werewolf skull from the black market because the spirit inside it makes his blood sing.

Thaddeus

As he rounded a corner, he came into the main cavern. Table after table were filled with anything a magic user could need. Herbs, potions, knives, stones, and a lot of things he didn’t want to acknowledge.

The howl of a cat in a cage had blue sparks rain from his fingertips, but he tried to suppress it as he hurried past the traders.

Pickering had the last table in the row—of course he had. By now, Thad should have learned nothing ever went quick and easy. He held his breath as he stopped by the table.

“Thaddeus.” Pickering had short, red hair, and his face was filled with freckles.

“Einar.” Thad nodded at him.

“What can I do you for? Looking for a familiar?” He grabbed a cage with the largest toad Thad had ever seen.

“Ah… Eh… no. I was wondering—”

“A love potion?” He held up a tiny, red flask with a skull painted on it, and Thad almost laughed.

“No, thank you. Have you heard about—”

“Shrunken head?” He bent down behind the table.

“No!” Thad hoped he didn’t have a shrunken head back there. Could he ignore a shrunken head or did he have to report it at work? If a raid came out of his visit here, he’d be hunted for the rest of his life, and he did not want the wizards running the largest black market for miles and miles on his tail.

“This then?” Pickering tossed something at him, and Thad caught it. A buzz spread into his fingertips as he held up the…skull. Swallowing hard, he studied the sharp canines. The dog must’ve been massive when it had been alive.

“W-What is it?”

Pickering looked nervous as he leaned in closer and lowered his voice into a whisper. “Werewolf skull, very powerful. But I guess it’s wasted on you, mage.”

Werewolf? Was someone killing werewolves now or was it an old skull? Thad swallowed hard.

“Yes.” Why did it buzz? Thad was a mage, everyone in his family was a mage. Spirits meant nothing to him.

“A hundred and fifty.” Pickering raised one red, way-too-bushy eyebrow at Thad.

“A hundred and fifty dollars?” He could almost pay that to be able to bring it to work and have it analyzed. If someone was targeting werewolves, they had to be stopped.

“Thousand. A hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Do you think they’re easy to come by?” Pickering’s blue eyes were wide as they searched the shadows around them.

Thad’s hands shook as he placed the skull on the table. “No, I guess—”

“I can get you another animal if you want? Lion shifter? I know where there’s a pride. I need your order by the end of the night, though. There isn’t much time left to get it set up. Samhain is the only day a harvesting ritual works, and special orders increase the price, so you know…” Pickering shrugged.

Thad nodded. Coming here had been a huge mistake.

Pickering narrowed his eyes. “So what do you want?”

“I wanted to ask you a—”

“This more your price range perhaps?” He held up four black candles. “Blood candles. They’ll help you call forth the spirits. A hundred dollars.”

Thad nodded. He’d heard of blood candles, never owned any. Warlocks made them—a blood sacrifice to increase the power of the candles. When they were lit in a circle, they’d enhance the power…or something. Thad didn’t do circles. He was a mage, he had the power at his fingertips and not contained in a circle. Not that sorcerers and warlocks couldn’t bring their powers outside their circles—they could—but all their big, powerful magic work required a circle. But if it would get Pickering talking…

“Okay.” He grabbed his wallet and handed Pickering the money he’d budgeted for groceries.

“Excellent.” He turned to a side table to wrap the candles in paper. Thad must’ve lost his mind, but the skull vibrated.

“Have you heard of any…” Thad cleared his voice before hissing, “…soul eaters in the area?”

Pickering froze. “Jesus, Thaddeus. If that’s what they have you working on, you need to quit. Right away.”

“There is someone?”

Pickering shook his head, almost dropping the candles. Thad’s core filled with ice. There was a soul eater? He’d hoped he was imagining the signs.

The skull moved.

It couldn’t have, and yet Thad saw it turn.

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souleater

Detective Thaddeus Ezax is in over his head. He’s the only wizard in Rockshade’s Paranormal Investigations Department, and it was his name that got him the job. The Ezaxs are known as some of the most powerful wizards in the world, but Thaddeus isn’t your average Ezaxs. Is it any wonder his family shuns him?

When a kidnapping case is dropped into his lap, Thaddeus must act fast. While most five-year-olds can cast a location spell, Thaddeus can’t and is forced to get creative. When he finds himself in possession of a black market werewolf skull with a ghost trapped inside, accidentally releases the spirit, and somehow forms a connection with it, things get even crazier.

Sandulf Hunter doesn’t remember dying, but he remembers the last thing he saw before everything went black—a wizard. All wizards must die! The only problem is, the wizard standing next to him smells too damned good, so good Sandy thinks he might have to keep him.

And since wherever Thaddeus goes, Sandulf finds himself yanked along, he might not have a choice in the matter anyway.

Soul Eater | Sandy Hunter

The man, the wolf, the ghost – Sandy Hunter!

Nine years ago, Sandulf Hunter was murdered. He doesn’t remember much about it, but as he’s yanked out of the darkness, he knows one thing – all wizards must die.

That the wizard who brought him back smells too good to kill was not part of the plan. Sandy would rather be without a mate than be mated to a wizard, and if he can’t kill him himself – killing your mate is difficult – he’s sure his brother Ric will do it for him… maybe.

Things don’t turn out the way Sandy planned though, and soon he snarls at his brother for so much as looking at Thaddeus wrong. Too bad no one but Thad can hear him snarl.

Sandy

Standing, he shifted into his human form. The wizard had forced him into his wolf form and had kept him there no matter how much he’d struggled to shift back.

A whimper had him whirling around. There, by one of the candles, was a man. He had his back to Sandy, swaying where he stood. Sandy didn’t recognize him, but it didn’t matter. All wizards needed to die.

His teeth grew, claws formed at his fingertips, and he relished having the power to change at will again. He leaped, ready to snap the man’s slender neck.

Right as he was about to make contact, the man turned. His chestnut hair falling into his eyes, his face contorted in pain.

Sandy didn’t care. He opened his mouth to tear out the man’s larynx and placed his clawed hands on his shoulders, only to fall through. The impact never came, and one confusing second later, he was sinking his teeth into thin air.

The man fell to his knees, screaming.

Had he bitten him? There was no taste of blood. He pulled in a breath, trying to scent blood—there was no blood, no fresh blood at least. Those candles smelled disgusting.

He scented the man again—divine. No!

The world spun around him. Clouds twirled on the night sky. His blood was on fire, but not in a painful way anymore. Instead, he was pulsating with need. He needed the wizard; the wizard was his.

But all wizards must die.

It didn’t matter what he smelled like. It didn’t matter who he was. Sandy pulled in another breath and groaned. His. The murderous little wizard was his. His cock grew hard and his teeth ached with the need to mark him.

The man cradled his head and sobbed.

What the fuck?

“Stop it.”

The wizard flew to his feet, his mouth agape as he stared at Sandy. He shook his head. “No.” The shaking increased. “No. It’s not true. It’s all a dream.” He looked around as if he hoped he was elsewhere. It had Sandy’s brain short circuiting.

He wanted the wizard dead; he wanted the wizard to never leave his side. He wanted the wizard gone, but he didn’t like it when it looked like he wanted to be elsewhere.

How had they gotten here?

Sandy could have sworn he’d been underground the last time he’d been conscious. Had this wizard stolen him from the other wizard while he’d been out cold? But could he have carried him all the way outdoors?

Sandy must outweigh the man by quite a lot, and while looks could be deceiving, he didn’t look very strong.

Memories of a narrow stair and dark tunnels flashed before his eyes. The wizard was on the small side, Sandy was not. He was big for a shifter. Maybe he’d used some spell to make him lighter…or smaller. He glanced down at himself and frowned at the black T-shirt. Hadn’t he been wearing a shirt, a charcoal dress shirt?

Studying the wizard with narrowed eyes, he tried to remember. He’d been on a date, hadn’t he? But not with the wizard. No, he’d have known if he’d met his mate on a blind date—right, it had been a blind date. Ric had set it up. He couldn’t remember who he was supposed to meet, though.

“Who are you?” Sandy crossed his arms over his chest and glared at the wizard. His mate couldn’t be a wizard.

A quick look around told him they were alone. He couldn’t see anyone and there were no scents other than the repulsive candles. Hadn’t there been another man?

“Thaddeus Ezax.” Thaddeus followed his gaze and looked around the circle too, then he waved his hand and extinguished the candles. “You’re…eh… Ric.”

Ric? Wulfric? What did this Thaddeus wizard know about Ric? “Yes, I’m Ric.” They looked about the same, so it wasn’t the first time someone had mistaken their identity. Sandy, Ric, and Ulf were triplets, and while they’d grown less identical with age, people still confused them with each other.

Thaddeus narrowed his eyes. “You’re not, but we need to go to Ric. Now.” He looked at the ground, and Sandy was about to throw up when he bent to grab a skull. His skull?

His hands flew to his head. Oh thank God, it was there. His skull was there, all his bones firmly in place.

Pre-order in the JMS-shop (20% off)

books2read.com/SoulEater


souleater

Detective Thaddeus Ezax is in over his head. He’s the only wizard in Rockshade’s Paranormal Investigations Department, and it was his name that got him the job. The Ezaxs are known as some of the most powerful wizards in the world, but Thaddeus isn’t your average Ezaxs. Is it any wonder his family shuns him?

When a kidnapping case is dropped into his lap, Thaddeus must act fast. While most five-year-olds can cast a location spell, Thaddeus can’t and is forced to get creative. When he finds himself in possession of a black market werewolf skull with a ghost trapped inside, accidentally releases the spirit, and somehow forms a connection with it, things get even crazier.

Sandulf Hunter doesn’t remember dying, but he remembers the last thing he saw before everything went black—a wizard. All wizards must die! The only problem is, the wizard standing next to him smells too damned good, so good Sandy thinks he might have to keep him.

And since wherever Thaddeus goes, Sandulf finds himself yanked along, he might not have a choice in the matter anyway.

Soul Eater | Captain Kol Jaecar

Today, you’ll get to meet the man in charge, Captain Kol Jaecar. I’ve stared at the screen for a while now, trying to figure out what I can and cannot write. I’ve already written Mind Scrambler, which is the sequel to Soul Eater, and there Jaecar is one of the main characters. In this story, we don’t know what’s going on behind the facade, though.

He is Thaddeus’ boss, and he is the only one who can control Ric. Little by little, he realises he’s underestimated Thad and Elora and that he can’t solve the case without their input.

Jaecar

Sandy grew cold, as if someone gulped down everything that kept him warm, in deep swallows. One moment, he was fine, the next, ice clogged his veins. With one last gulp, Sandy lost his shape. He could sense part of himself being sucked into Thaddeus right before Ric was shoved off him by invisible hands and held there. He struggled in the hold, growling, and snarling, blood smeared over his half-shifted face.

Sandy sank down on the floor next to Thaddeus. Blood seeped steadily from Thaddeus’ shoulder, but he’d managed to keep Ric from his throat. He was pale and the scent of panic was almost as strong as that of the blood.

“What the fuck, Ric?” Sandy didn’t remember moving. One second he was by Thaddeus’ side, the next he was snarling in Ric’s face. “Have you lost your mind?” It wasn’t until Sandy raised his hand he noticed he was see-through, hardly holding his shape at all. What the fuck? “Thaddeus, what’s happening?” He didn’t look away from his arm.

“Sorry…had to… borrow… power.”

Sandy looked over his shoulder at Thaddeus. He was paler than before, his face drawn, and the blood kept seeping out of him. Why wasn’t he healing?

The cat man—Jaecar? Leo?—cleared his throat. “What’s going on?”

Ric snarled.

“Calm down!” Sandy hadn’t meant to roar at him, but he was…see-through, Thaddeus was hurt, and Ric wasn’t acknowledging him. It was too much to handle all at once.

Cold pierced his soul as the captain stepped right through him. Sandy moved away, his lips clamped shut so he wouldn’t whimper at the sensation. Ric calmed as the captain’s eyes turned yellow and massive canines moved closer to Ric’s neck.

Jaguar? Sandy wasn’t sure, but he believed… maybe… Thaddeus’ boss was a jaguar. Shit. You did not mess with a jaguar.

Sandy increased the distance a little more.

Ric stopped struggling and the captain turned to Thaddeus. “You can release him now.”

Thaddeus struggled to sit up. “I think not. I’m not done talking.”

The blood didn’t stop. Why didn’t it stop? Why didn’t he heal?

“Do you need to go to the hospital?” The captain frowned at Thaddeus.

“Ah… eh… I don’t know.” Thaddeus looked at himself and winced. “Maybe it can wait?”

“It can’t wait!” Sandy might want him dead, but he didn’t want him to…die.

“Easy.” Thaddeus held up a hand to him.

“Who are you talking to?”

Sandy snarled at the other shifter who was walking closer to Thaddeus. Was it Leo or Jaecar? There were too many names spinning around in his head.

* * * *

Thad flinched when Sandulf turned toward Leo, looking ready to attack. “Stop it!”

Leo gave him a wide-eyed look and held up his hands. “I wasn’t gonna attack.”

“No, I know, but… Can everyone calm down?” He sent a pleading look at Elora despite knowing she couldn’t do a thing to help the situation. “Everyone, have a seat.”

Jaecar flashed teeth at him, but he was too tired to care, which should have given him pause.

“You’re ordering me around?” Yellow crept into Jaecar’s eyes and Thad sighed. Fucking shifters. They always had their posturing going on and it was getting tiresome.

“Look. Jaecar.” He got to his feet, hissing as the room spun around him. Shit, there wasn’t a part of him that didn’t hurt. Elora grabbed his elbow and Sandy snarled.

“Maybe I should see a doctor.” He hadn’t noticed how mangled his shoulder was, and his right hand didn’t respond when he tried raising it. Shit, he couldn’t be on sick leave now.

“I think it would be for the best since you aren’t healing.” Jaecar nodded.

“I’m not a shifter. I don’t heal like you guys do. But, before I go, I did something bad and it might mess things up for us.”

“Bad how?” Jaecar crossed his arms over his chest.

Pre-order in the JMS-shop (20% off)

books2read.com/SoulEater


souleater

Detective Thaddeus Ezax is in over his head. He’s the only wizard in Rockshade’s Paranormal Investigations Department, and it was his name that got him the job. The Ezaxs are known as some of the most powerful wizards in the world, but Thaddeus isn’t your average Ezaxs. Is it any wonder his family shuns him?

When a kidnapping case is dropped into his lap, Thaddeus must act fast. While most five-year-olds can cast a location spell, Thaddeus can’t and is forced to get creative. When he finds himself in possession of a black market werewolf skull with a ghost trapped inside, accidentally releases the spirit, and somehow forms a connection with it, things get even crazier.

Sandulf Hunter doesn’t remember dying, but he remembers the last thing he saw before everything went black—a wizard. All wizards must die! The only problem is, the wizard standing next to him smells too damned good, so good Sandy thinks he might have to keep him.

And since wherever Thaddeus goes, Sandulf finds himself yanked along, he might not have a choice in the matter anyway.