The
Casquette Girls
By
Alys Arden
Paranormal
Teen Romance
Seven
girls
tied by time
Five powers
That bind…
One curse
To lock the horror away
One attic
To keep the monsters at bay
tied by time
Five powers
That bind…
One curse
To lock the horror away
One attic
To keep the monsters at bay
SYNOPSIS:
After the Storm of the century rips apart New Orleans, Adele LeMoyne
wants nothing more than for life to return to normal, but with the silent city
resembling a mold-infested war zone, a parish-wide curfew, and mysterious new
faces lurking in the abandoned French Quarter, normal will have to be
redefined.
Mother Nature couldn’t drain the joie de vivre from New Orleans,
but someone or something is draining life from its residents. Events too
unnatural—even for New Orleans—lead Adele to an attic that has been sealed for
three hundred years, and the chaos she unleashes threatens not only her life
but everyone she knows.
Caught suddenly in a hurricane of eighteenth-century myths and monsters,
Adele must untangle the web of magic that links the climbing murder rate back
to her own ancestors. But who can you trust in a city where everyone has
a secret, and where keeping them can be a matter of life and death – unless,
that is, you’re immortal.
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EXCERPT:
I
threw my arms over my head, determined to pull it together.
The imposing concrete wall surrounding the old
Ursuline Convent was directly across the street, which meant I was on Chartres
Street, only about six blocks from home. My hand throbbed, and I felt liquid
dripping down my arm, but before I could inspect it, a rattling noise caught my
attention. I held my breath to create perfect silence, and heard the noise
again.
From
my vantage, all I could see were the five attic windows protruding from the
slope of the convent roof – two left of center and three on the right. (Blame
my father for teaching me to always notice symmetry.) One shutter had become
detached and was hanging loosely, rattling in the wind.
I
watched the shutter methodically flap open and snap shut again, but the man’s
dead blue eyes stained my mind. What had happened to him? A car accident? The
rhythm of the knocking wood put me into a meditative state. My tears stopped,
and my breathing evened. The claps gradually became louder and louder, drawing
my focus back to the window.
A
rusty smell pinched my nostrils, and only then did I realize the cut in my palm
was now bleeding profusely. I untied the sash from around my waist and wrapped
it tightly around my hand. Back less than a day and I already have two
injuries. Dad is going to freak. I silently mourned the death of the Chanel as
the blood soaked through it.
Sweat dripped down my back. Gross. I tugged at my
now-damp dress and wiped the tears from my face with the back of my bandaged
hand, all the while watching the attic window. The heat was incredible,
rippling down my torso in waves, almost feverish. Was it wrong to pray for a
cool front, I wondered, staring at the convent. Maybe just a little breeze?
The
shutter snapped back shut. Something bothered me about it... and then I
realized what it was.
I stopped and stood perfectly still. There was no
breeze; the air was dead. The shutter flapped back open and snapped shut again,
as if demanding my attention.
My
pulse picked up.
I
squinted up as the shutter flapped open again – there was a flash of movement
behind the panes before it swung shut again. What the hell? I blinked the
remaining water from my eyelids.
When
I looked back up, the shutter swung open.
Faint
clinking sounds came from the convent courtyard, like metal raindrops hitting
the pavement. Curious, I crossed the street and approached the convent’s iron
gate, trying to keep my eyes on the dark window behind the shutter.
Through
the bars, the overgrown garden looked as if it had been abandoned years ago,
but then again, that’s how most of the city looked presently. I reached for the
ornate handle, but the fixture turned downwards before I touched it. The loud
clank made me jump back, and the gate creaked open just enough to let me pass
through.
A
little voice inside pleaded with me to bail, but instinct led me through the
maze of overgrown hedges as if I’d been there a hundred times before. My eyes
went back to the window and refused to look away. As I drew closer, the wooden
shutter continued to open and close – slowly and precisely. Once I was directly
underneath, I could see the nails popping out of the matching shutter, which
was still closed. I glanced at my feet. The ground was covered in long black
carpenter nails – clearly the work of a blacksmith, not a modern machine. Had
it really been necessary to use so many nails to secure the shutters? A tiny
raindrop hit my face.
The
shutter flapped twice more, faster and faster.
It
was slowly pulling itself off the building. Only a single stake in the center
hinge kept it from falling, but it, too, was protruding, as if being pulled by
some invisible force. The cut on my hand throbbed; the blood had soaked
completely through the sash.
A
loud clap of thunder made my pulse race, but my feet still wouldn’t carry me
away. I stood motionless, neck craned, watching the shutter wrench itself free
until it was suspended by just the very tip of the stake.
For a
brief moment, the world seemed to freeze.
Then
gravity prevailed.
My
arms flew over my head as the dangling shutter crashed three stories to the
ground – just a few inches from my feet.
The
speed with which the sky became dark felt wholly unnatural. Bigger droplets of
rain began to fall. Too stunned to move, I tried to make sense of what had just
happened.
Suddenly,
the remaining wooden shutter slammed open, and the window pane blew outward in
an explosion of showering glass. I fell to the ground and curled into a tight
ball, shielding my face. A whoosh of wind whipped around me, and there was a
loud whistle that faded into what sounded like sardonic laughter.
This
is not happening right now. This is a dream.
The
clank of metal nearby forced me to release my tense muscles and unwrap my arms
from my head. I peeked out with one eye. The thick iron stake that had held the
shutter was rolling along the cement towards my face, as if pulled by a
magnetic force. It stopped right before it touched my nose.
I
quickly sat up and grabbed it. The metal felt strangely powerful in my hand,
and looked like a giant nail, thick and twice the width of my palm.
My
eyes told me I was alone, but my gut told me I wasn’t. Every ounce of my being
screamed, Get out! Now I really was trespassing, and on the private grounds of
the archdiocese.
Another
loud crack of thunder made me scramble to my feet.
The
wrought-iron gate banged shut behind me, just as the chapel bells began to
clang in the background.
EDITORIAL REVIEW QUOTES:
“Debut author Arden offers readers a full plate of Southern
gothic atmospherics and sparkling teen romance in a patiently crafted tale that
will best reward careful readers... Satisfying teen entertainment but also a
cathartic, uncompromising tribute to New Orleans.” — Kirkus Reviews
"In the way that it fuses the experience of
adolescence, the city of New Orleans, history, magic and vampires, THE
CASQUETTE GIRLS can't help but be a fun adventure, but more than that, it's a
smart story with a surprising amount of emotional depth." – IndieReader
AUTHOR INFO:
Alys
Arden grew up in the Vieux Carré, cut her teeth on the streets of New
York, and has worked all around the world since. She still plans to run away
with the circus one day.
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