Deceptive dime store dem.., p.1

Deceptive Dime Store Demons, page 1

 

Deceptive Dime Store Demons
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Deceptive Dime Store Demons


  Contents

  About the Book

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Also by Shawntelle Madison

  About the Author

  About the Book

  Conniving creatures and their exorbitant prices are coming out of the woodwork in South Toms River, New Jersey.

  Werewolf Natalya Stravinsky has stepped up to the plate as alpha female of the South Toms River Pack and defended her loved ones. While She Who Always Walks the Path is still a looming threat, another problem arises. Nat must fulfill her debt to some shifty demons who own a ceramics mart in town. A mysterious thief has appeared, stealing powerful weapons. Now, Nat must discover the culprit before the demons unleash their fury on the pack.

  Will Nat be able to uncover the thief and restore balance, or will the delicate facade keeping the human world from the supernatural one come crumbling down?

  This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons living or dead is purely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2021 Shawntelle Madison

  eBook ISBN: 978-1-7344510-2-3

  Print ISBN: 978-1-7344510-3-0

  eBook Version: 1.8

  Natalya Christmas Artwork Copyright: Kate Sherron

  Heart and Pile of Ornaments Artwork Copyright: RC

  Editing by: MK Books Editing, Editing720

  All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without prior written permission of the author.

  Chapter 1

  “All the world needs is more donuts,” my best friend Aggie told me as we headed up the stairwell to her new apartment. “There’s something for everyone. Bear claws, cream-filled, gluten-free, and those pyshki ones your mom bakes.”

  I wrinkled my nose as Aggie cradled a sack of groceries in one hand and a box of donuts in the other.

  If only those custard-filled, happiness-in-a-bite confectionaries had such power. Donuts were notorious for being gooey, germ-laden morsels or rock-hard lint traps.

  “Just you wait.” She adjusted her goodies. “I heard that Bashful Brownies Baking Company has a new selection of enchanted cake donuts. Just one nibble and you’ll forget carbs or calories even existed.”

  I balanced the boxes in my arms and kept smiling. If one of those donuts could magically haul her stuff up these stairs, I’d be game. “Where did you find the furniture for the place?” I asked.

  “Actually, like the humans, I used my persuasive personality to get a deal at Furniture Mart.”

  “That’s good.” We made it up yet another flight of steps before I said what was truly on my mind.

  “How come you don’t want to live in my old house?” I said, only a little hurt. “Is it the plastic bins I store there?”

  Aggie never minded my collecting—well, hoarding habits —before. Just mentioning my stuff brought the tidy rows of packed away holiday cheer to mind and shame followed.

  She carried the bag of groceries up the steps, and I hurried behind her. “You know it’s not that. I need a fresh start. Your old house has got too many memories of him.”

  I sighed, knowing by him she meant Will, her former boyfriend. Aggie had returned to South Toms River a couple of weeks ago, then her ex-husband had kidnapped her. Will swooped in, kicked some ass, and rescued her. I still hadn’t asked Aggie about what had happened the night Will had saved her, but that conversation would happen sooner or later.

  Maybe a pizza, donuts, and ice cream night at Aggie’s new place would lighten her mood.

  We finally made it to Aggie’s new apartment on the fourth floor. I dropped my box off to the side and sucked in the cool air. June had come to a roaring end this past weekend, and now we were into the first week of July. This month promised sweaty armpits, incessant mosquitos, and burnt toes on pavement. A delightful summer, I say.

  I swept my gaze over Aggie’s home. She had a top floor studio apartment with a bunch of nice perks: skylights, an open floor plan, oak floors, and a fresh coat of white paint. (Give me the clean slate of a painted wall any day.) The faint scent of cigarette smoke lingered near the balcony, but other than that, I liked the place.

  While Aggie hefted sacks of groceries onto the kitchen island, I couldn’t help but ask, “So is there a reason you’re in the same apartment building as Erica?”

  Aggie snorted. “South Toms River is a tiny town even for New Jersey. The selection left little to be desired.”

  With the hum that only a mother carrying her children would make, Aggie stuffed four to five servings of food into her fridge. I held in a laugh. I didn’t bother griping about her overeating habit, and she supported me while I worked through my obsessive-compulsive disorder.

  “Does she know you’re moving in?” I asked.

  “She’ll know when she comes home from work.” Aggie winked at me.

  I gave her a wary look.

  “Chill, Nat, chill. People change. Erica might be ready to change, too.”

  “Maybe.”

  “Are you worried Erica and I are going to become BFFs? Maybe we’ll polish our nails and binge Netflix variety shows?”

  That got a laugh out of me. “That doesn’t sound like your kind of thing.”

  “Maybe not now, but who knows? You really need to learn how to trust others.”

  I rolled my eyes.

  “Yes,” Aggie admitted, “she tried to force Thorn to marry her.”

  My eyebrow rose at the mention of my husband, and I waited for her to keep going.

  “And she mocked you five ways from Sunday.”

  I folded my arms. Might as well accept the reminders and let them bounce off.

  “But in the end, you came out top dog.” She tapped my shoulder. “You’re alpha female and you have Thorn. It’s time for you to move on. Make peace with those who have wronged you.”

  I snorted. She had a point, but what could you do when a shit-ton of people pissed in your backyard, walked away with a middle-finger salute, and then you’re stuck in the aftermath?

  Speaking of hands… “Have you ever painted your nails?” I asked.

  She opened a bag of dill pickle chips and tossed one into her mouth. “When I got married,” she said dryly. “So, when do you have to report in at the demon’s store?”

  “Don’t remind me. I can’t believe I got myself into this mess.” Back when the Basilisk King wreaked havoc on the town, I broke into a rival flea market to buy—yes, I broke in and left money—an item crucial to uncovering who was behind the attacks. In the process, I angered the flea market’s owner, a goblin named Kramkar, and I became indebted to him for a favor: a limited employment agreement.

  But that wasn’t the fun part.

  I learned I wouldn’t work at Kramkar’s store; he made another deal and hurled me toward another store. Good God, these supernatural creatures tossed around deals like Halloween candy.

  I glanced at my watch. “T-minus six hours until I have to show up. This is my first job at a twenty-four-hour shop.”

  Aggie’s reddish-blonde eyebrows rose. “Feeding the shopaholics all night long, huh? Sounds like the perfect place for you.”

  “The prospects of getting my shop-freak on whenever I want sounds divine, but I’m not so sure about demons. Have you ever met one?”

  “Probably. A lot of the ladies I’ve met on the Upper East Side are probably demons. They raise hell if little Johnny or Jenny don’t get into one of those upper-crusty boarding schools.” She offered me a chip, but I passed. “Look, the Basilisk King isn’t a threat anymore. Just put on your big-girl panties, march on in there, and sell some shit.”

  All that sounded easier said than done. Less than a month ago, Thorn had left town for a conference. Not long into his absence, all hell broke loose as mysterious trunks showed up around town. My friends and I learned that the trunk hoarder, the Basilisk King, was a part of a magical shift happening. The Great Northern Fairy Path shifted southward and brought magical mayhem of epic proportions to our doorstep.

  Even with the Basilisk King gone, I’d learned the hard way that when you think you’ve cleaned the dog shit off your shoe, there are more piles out there to step in.

  At least all I had to do was work at another supernatural store for a while. A week should be easy-peasy.

  “You’ve faced some pretty crazy shit,” Aggie said with her mouth full. “I’m betting you’ll either make some extra cash on the side, or you’ll buy half their stock.”

  I flashed her an I-doubt-it look. As tempting as shiny, holiday-oriented treats could be, many of them might be possessed or something. The last thing I needed was a haunted pair of Chr istmas shears cutting holes through my Santa Loves Me sweaters.

  All my goblin boss, Bill, had given me through a text message was an address off Crabbe Road next to the Lighthouse Point Marina. I’d passed by the open fields filled with tall grass and burnt orange arrowleaf balsamroot flowers countless times, but the only shops I’d spotted were a beat-up bait shop and a shabby ornamental stone outlet. My gaze swept over the tranquil Toms River. Farther east, the river led to Barnegat Bay then the Atlantic Ocean. The familiar sounds of water lapping against the banks made me smile.

  My home is a beautiful place.

  Back when I was a kid, my dad and uncles often took my brother, Alex, and me on fishing trips. Uncle Boris loved fishing trips on the Toms River. We never caught anything—Uncle Boris was too busy talking his head off. He’d sit there with a half-inch lit cigarette dangling from one hand and a beat-up fishing pole in the other. His advice about life, women, and buying a trust-worthy truck made little sense, but our time with him left feel-good memories of sunshine, rampant bug bites, and laughter.

  Time to check out the stone and ornament outlet.

  From the outside, the store looked like any other. In front, the place had stone ornaments like lawn gnomes, fawns, ornate pagodas and even an elaborately carved dragon or two. A chain-link fence surrounded the more expensive items like marble slabs or cut sandstone for pathways and landscaping. But none of those things interested me. What I needed to find was the entrance and determine what I’d face today.

  So far nothing smelled amiss here. Matter of fact, the wind carried the decadent scents from the nearby Bashful Brownie Baking Company.

  This late in the day, I expected fewer customers in the parking lot. At least a dozen cars, from a rundown-looking Chevy to five pricey-looking Town and Country vehicles, filled the spots closest to the door.

  The building itself was nondescript. The single-story brick structure had a few rectangular windows in the front. The front door was left ajar, perhaps beckoning customers inside to see what treasures they’d uncover.

  I don’t mind if I do.

  After I walked across the parking lot to the concrete sidewalk leading up to the store, I hurried along a path lined with stone carvings of nymphs and seahorses. I wondered why the owners protected the marble, yet their fencing didn’t surround the figurines and statues in front. Maybe they had enchantments to keep happy thief fingers at bay.

  As I passed the stone carvings their imperfections smacked me in the face. Michelangelo wasn’t making these goods. Moss grew here and there while some had hideous designs with misshapen mouths and body parts in the wrong places. But the worst travesty of them all: tiny chips—though minuscule to the human eye—marred much of the merchandise.

  I shook my head. From the mouth of one cheap goblin boss into the hands of cheap demons.

  On the way inside, I walked by a human couple. The woman clutched a sales receipt and she gabbed with her companion about how excited grandma would be once they added lawn gnomes to her bed of daisies and tulips.

  Hopefully, they don’t plan to purchase anything from the front, I thought.

  Based on the narrow front-end, I assumed I’d find a tiny store, but to my delight, the establishment stretched toward the river for at least one hundred feet or so. What smelled like humans, with their pockets lined with dirty cash, browsed shelves of ceramics along the walls and four rows along the center.

  With raised eyebrows, I assessed the goods. A peculiar odor like fermented fruit dashed around displays with teapots. To my right, mugs with garish purple, pink, and puke green designs that screamed I break easily sat next to a hodgepodge of products like ceramic thimbles, clocks, and planters. If a potter could craft a mold, these folks stocked it. God help me if I spotted a ceramic codpiece.

  A rather short clerk wearing a maroon apron around her waist approached me. Her dark-brown hair softly framed a small cherubic face. The woman’s red T-shirt boldly claimed she was a cat-lady-in-training.

  “Excuse me?” I asked. “I’m part of the evening staff for a couple days.”

  Confusion added a blush to her freckled cheeks. “Well, that’s news to me.” She quirked a frown. “As usual.”

  “I don’t understand.”

  She extended her hand. “I’m Dayla, the daytime manager. I don’t know much about your shift, but feel free to head to the back office. Mimi, the night manager, is working outside.”

  Through the windows, the sun finally set. As if right on cue, the customers ended their conversation, and with zombie-like precision, they left the store. One short woman even gently put down the vase she examined and marched outside.

  I turned around to ask Dayla what happened, and she’d vanished too.

  Was it something I said?

  A minute passed. The only movement came from a newspaper sailing across the road through the window. The dead quiet settled into my soul. Wow, that felt nice.

  My mini vacation ended as quickly as it started. The front door opened, and a new set of customers streamed inside. Fairies hidden under glamours, or spells that mask their true appearance, grabbed carts and browsed. Now fairies come in all shapes and sizes from small brownies that resemble little children to elves that vary by skin color and height. The fairy folk in this store dressed like tourists from all walks of life.

  Over the years, I’d encountered all kinds of supernatural creatures. Many of them had malicious intentions. Seeing their true nature as a mystical goods antiquarian was key. Through Bill’s enchantments, I could see through their glamours, and therefore, I had an idea what kind of bullshit I’d encounter.

  I wandered through the store, even stopping by the register to snag an apron the last clerk had left behind.

  Thanks for the latte stain on the front, Dayla.

  I needed to break in a fresh spray-and-wash pen, anyway.

  While I attacked the stain with my trusty tool, a brownie approached the counter to buy a teapot. The register from the late 2000s wouldn’t earn the owners any points, but I knew what to do—until a cold woman’s hand touched mine. I turned with a growl to see a towering, hooded figure. I couldn’t make out who lurked underneath the rough cloth garment. Only that she stank of ozone that came after a thunderstorm. With a bump of her hard hip, she shoved me out of the way.

  “Go see Mademoiselle Midnight, Wolf.” With one deathly pale hand, she pointed to the rear doorway, while with the other she completed the transaction.

  Might as well follow instructions. I ventured to the so-called back office, but the cracked-open doorway’s new location made little sense. I distinctly remembered the door sat near the northwest corner. Now it was on the other side.

  As a natural-born werewolf, I shouldn’t blink twice about this type of thing. Didn’t I shapeshift during the full moon? Hadn’t I spent my childhood having sleepovers with fairies? But the hairs on the back of my head stood on end. A new scent crossed my nose.

  Was that pumpkin spice?

  I followed the scent toward the new doorway, but I took my time. After all the adventures I’d experienced, especially with a goblin boss like Bill, I needed to protect myself.

  Beyond the exit, I didn’t find an office but a short hallway leading outside. A grassy path led to a dock out to the river. I expected to see lights from homes and businesses dotting the opposite bank, but I had a far crazier view. At the end of the pier sat a late-twentieth-century, two-story paddleboat. Damn, it was beautiful. I’d learned about them during a history course back in college. Thin lines of smoke rose from a double chimney, while lanterns scattered along the second-story iron railing cast an eerie burnt-orange glow.

  The rough wood yawned as I made my way down the dock. Fireflies in my path darted out of the way. The pumpkin-like scent strengthened as I drew closer.

  A ramp at the boat’s bow provided passage to the Main Deck. Before I could venture inside, a woman materialized in front of me.

 

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