Nothing beats being locked up forever in supernatural juvie, right?
If only committing murder wasn’t my only way out.
I just wanted to find my father.
When I’m framed by the head of the Seeker’s Guild and sent to Darkwater Reformatory to serve a life sentence, I know I’m doomed. I’ll never see anyone I love again. And forget trying to escape. Darkwater is located in the fae world, on an island in the middle of a forbidding sea. Wizards sent there never return.
Yet my father’s also at the Reformatory, and I’ve been desperate to find him. But he’s using a fake name, so the odds of identifying him are slim. He could be the warden, a guard, or a fellow inmate…
While I track him down, I’ll have to blend in. Seekers are the cops of the fae world, and I was their most promising Seeker. If my identity is revealed, I’m dead. Other than escape, I have two ways out. One, survive the ever-changing, magical catacombs that are the training grounds for a secret Reformatory project. Pass all the tests, and I can leave Darkwater.
Or, I could go with the second option and fulfill the bond I made with the Head Seeker. It shouldn’t be that hard to eliminate a fellow inmate.
Except he’s the wizard I’m falling for.
Wicked Betrayal is Book 1 in the Darkwater Reformatory Series. Follow Tria as she hunts down her father, falls for a hot fae wizard, and saves the world. Or something like that…
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About the Book
Wicked Betrayal
by Marty Mayberry
Series
Darkwater Reformatory
Genre
Young Adult
Paranormal Prison Fantasy
Publisher
Independent
Publication Date
May 2, 2020
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Excerpt
WICKED BETRAYAL
A Darkwater Reformatory Novel
Ā© 2020 Marty Mayberry
CHAPTER ONE
Ā
The beady glass eyes of the stone wexal cat statue watched me as I fidgeted in the front lobby of the Seekerās Guild Headquarters.Ā
At least, I thought it was a wexal cat, with its large, pointed ears, sleek face with luxurious silver whiskers, and a long, bushy tail. Three-feet tall and about the size of a bobcat, wexals had been extinct for over a thousand years. Iād only seen images of them in books. This one had an inky-ebony coat, as richly black as the magical threads my sister, Fleur, used to create power.
The cat sat on its haunches and whenever I glanced away from it, I swore it inched closer. But I didnāt catch it moving. Except for those damn glowing green eyes. They tracked my every movement. If Iād come across it in the wild, I wouldāve turned and bolted in the opposite direction.
For now, I couldnāt run.
Almost an hour ago, an assistant had admitted me into the fortress and agreedāafter some persuasionāto notify the Master Seeker I was here. Iād blurted out why Iād come, spilling my guts onto the floor like my boots shucked mud with every shift of my feet.Ā
Would the Seeker agree to see me?
A clang drew my attention to the back of the room where the assistant wheeled a small serving cart into the foyer from a door to the left of the enormous staircase. Steam wafted from the pot, and the pungent, spicy aroma of hornwit tea scented the air.
Bringing the cart to a halt in the middle of the two-story room, he studied me with one eyebrow lifted.
My stomach rumbled. Only the fae knew when Iād last eaten.Ā
His eyebrow rose higher, and his gaze dipped to my belly. Fingers tightening on the cartās handle as if he thought Iād wrench it from his grip, his lips thinned even further. If he kept at it, theyād disappear.
Hornwit tasted nasty even if you dumped in a bunch of sweetener, so Iād beg water instead if I was offered a drink. But the cardamom pinta cookies arranged neatly on the pretty plate looked as yummy as the ones my stepdad made. Those, Iād happily devour, and then lick the crumbs off the plate.
āWhen can I see the Master Seeker?ā I asked. No cringing in the corner for me. I needed the information, and Iād been told only the Master could deliver. Iād paid a stiff price for this location but coming here had put me one step closer to my goal.Ā
It hadnāt been easy to track down the Guildās hidden stone fortress high in the Icean Mountains. With only one known flit transport center in the area, Iād had to walk here from the center. Iād hiked for nearly two days, only crashing in the small tent Iād carried on my back when I couldnāt make my feet take another step farther. Iād carried water but nowhere near enough food.
Ā āRamseff will give you ten minutes,ā the assistant intoned. Tall and skinny enough you might miss him if he stood sideways, he strode behind the cart toward the parlor on my right, his long robe brushing the floor. The solitary cup and porcelain teapot on the top of the cart clinked with the movement. Without saying anything else, he entered the parlor.
An expanse of polished tenet wood floor stretched between me and the parlor. My boots, coated with muck, would leave a mess, something my mom wouldāve scowled at me for doing. It was one thing to hang out on the rug with clods of mud falling off my feet but another to mess with that pristine surface.
The weight of the catās gaze cut through me as I shucked my boots and, on stockinged feet, scurried after the assistant. I paused in the arched entry. The room was made up of one wall with a bank of curtained windows, another with a huge granite fireplace, and the final two with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves.
An older guy sat on a green sofa, squishing back on the cushions. Like the cat, he watched me; a common theme in this place.
The assistant settled the teapot, cookies, and single mug onto the low table in front of the man I assumed must be the Master Seekerāthe most powerful Seeker of us all.Ā
What to do? Should I stride into the room or hover here and tell the assistant Iād made a mistake and Iād come back later?Ā
No. The assistant had said I had ten minutes. Iād be a fool to waste them.Ā
My shoulders collapsed when I contemplated how challenging it had been to get here only to be told I had mere minutes to plea my case. Weeks searching for any scrap of a clue had been followed by my deal with Katya then flitting to the base and hiking through dense woods to get to this location. In minutes, Iād be standing outside, dreading the long walk back to the flit center. Worrying about the eyes that had tracked me as I hurried up the forest path.
Need made my back stiffen. With a lift of my chin, I walked as calmly as possible over to a high-back wooden chair that had been placed opposite the sofa. I dropped down onto the hard surface and met the intense, milky blue gaze of the Master Seeker.
The assistant wheeled the cart from the room, leaving us alone in ticking silence.
āMy assistant filled me in on why youāre here.ā Ramseff scratched the side of his neck and then tugged on the hem of the black tunic down over his matching pants. The dark, seamless material was broken only by the white embroidered heron on his left pocket. āWhat can youāa lowly apprentice Seekerāoffer me in exchange for this information?āĀ
So much for the social niceties like, how are you, let alone, would you like a cookie? The glare he shot me twisted his elderly face.
It looked like my odds of convincing him to help me were dropping by the second.
My body twitched, but I kept my face neutral. Yes, I needed the information. And yes, Iād pay almost any price to obtain it. But the last thing I needed was for him to catch a whiff of my desperation.
āIām a Level Five Seeker, now,ā I said, hoping only I heard the shake in my voice. āNo longer an apprentice.ā
āTria, Tria, Tria.ā His snort cut through my confidence, and he lowered his head and slowly shook it. āAt best, youāre a Level Three, child.ā Leaning forward, he poured hornwit tea into the mug and lifted it. His long gray hair brushed his shoulders as he pressed back into the sofa. Examining me over the mugās rim, he sipped his drink. āToying with a Level Five does not make you a full Seeker.ā He lowered his cup back onto the table with a dull thud.
Dragging my gaze from the cookies and hoping I wasnāt drooling, I steadied my feet on the hardwood floor. āIāmĀ closeĀ to a Level Five,ā I offered reluctantly. Levels were fluid, meaning on one day I might generate a Level Five spell only to find it impossible to go higher than a Level Three after that. But I studied all the time and was determined to solidify the highest Level as soon as possible. Only with endless practice would I be able to consistently create a Level Five spell and be able to say Iād mastered the Level.
Movement out of the corner of my eye drew my attention. I jolted and couldnāt hold in my gasp.
The wexal cat sat on the granite slab in front of the fireplace, its green eyes trained on me.
I turned back to Ramseff to comment, and he stared past my shoulder blankly, as if his mind had left the room already. Another peek toward the fireplace showed the cat was gone. Had I imagined it being there?
āWhat are you looking at?ā the Master Seeker growled. āYou seem distracted. Is our conversation too boring for you?ā
āNo! Itās justā¦āĀ
Ramseff brushed my sputtering aside like a pesky nat. āSpit it out, girl. Just what?ā His chest rose and fell as he heaved out a sigh.
āI need to find my birth father, Bastian Spires.ā It felt odd to speak his name out loud, as if I revealed something I shouldnāt. For my entire life, Iād kept my true parentage a secret, claiming the sketar witch whoād raised me was my blood father. When Iād transferred to Crystal Wing Academy and met my grandfather and half-sister, Iād hoped my grandfather could tell me where Bastian might be hiding, but most believed he was dead.
Iād been unconvinced. If he was dead, Iādā¦know.
In exchange for a few rare trinkets, Katya had verified BastianĀ wasĀ alive. But the sorceress had been unable to reveal anything else, stating only the Master Seeker could pinpoint my birth fatherās exact location.
āI must say, I admire your ingenuity,ā Ramseff said. āFew are capable of locating our headquarters. Of those who find their way here, only one or two are able to get past my assistantās wards. But youāre the first who dares come to beg a favor. Because youāve impressed me with your efforts, and to prove how kindhearted I am, Iāll give you the information you seek at no cost.ā
My spine perked up. āYou will?ā Iād thought Iād search for years before I got the chance to confront my father.Ā
āHeās at Darkwater Prison.ā
āMy fatherās in jail?ā Darkwater had been built on a remote island in the middle of a fathomless sea. In the fae kingdom. I stifled my groan. Only those with authorization or special magic were allowed to part the veil separating Earth from the fae kingdom. Ages ago, the fae had split rather than go to war, and many of them had come here to settle. Theyād created the veil to keep the two groups from crossing over and killing each other. Sure, some SĆdhe were allowed to travel to the fae kingdomāmostly for diplomatic missionsābut the opportunity was rare.
I did not possess special magic. I was no diplomat. And it was doubtful anyone would authorize my passage.
āYour father is in the youth section of the prison, known as the Reformatory,ā Ramseff said.
āYouth?ā I wasnāt sure why I focused on that word alone.Ā
āEighteen to twenty-year-olds are permitted to apply for admittance.ā
āI see.ā From what Iād heard, the Reformatory and main prison were located side-by-side on the island. The Reformatory was believed to be a school, though I didnāt know what they taught. Maybe the usual subjects like at the Academy.Ā
It couldnāt be for rehabilitation purposes. Criminals arrived to serve their sentences, but from what Iād heard, the only way off the island was in a coffin.
āHeās a teacher in the Reformatory?ā I said. āOr is he the warden, the janitor, or a guard?ā Maybe he worked in the kitchens. A prison would employ a large support staff like the Academy.Ā
āIām afraid Iām not feelingĀ generous enough to share further information with you.ā Ramseff lifted his mug and calmly drank. āYou asked for your fatherās location, and Iāve given it to you.ā His gaze flicked to the foyer. āYou may leave now.ā
āBut, but,ā I spat out. āHow will I get there?ā It was vital I talk with my dad.
He smirked. āSurely a Level Five Seeker such as you can arrange this on your own.ā
It was impossible. Iād never get through the veil, let alone to the island.Ā
Anger and frustration dueled inside me. My hands clenched at my sides, and I gnawed on my tongue to keep from hurling the wrong words out. That would get me nowhere.
Hold on a sec.
I pulled my cointage from my pocket and dropped it onto the table with a clang. The disc didnāt grant unlimited spending, but I should have enough credit, courtesy of my generous parents, to satisfy Ramseff.
His low growl rumbled through the room, and florid color rose in his cheeks. He slammed his mug on the table and hornwit tea slopped over the sides. It sizzled when it hit the surface. āYou hope to bribe me?ā Clouds of rage arcing with lightning stormed around his head. Did he possess a weather skapti in addition to a Seekerās? Skaptis were inherent skills we used magic to enhance. Few had more than one ability to develop.
āHow else can I pay?ā I asked with a shrug I hoped came out casual. Inside, I alternated between quivering and fuming.Ā
His head tilted as if he was unsure what to make of my response. Or maybe he was evaluating my worth. Would I come up lacking? āIn order to reach the Reformatory, youāll need to explore different options.ā
In other words, there was no monetary price I could pay for transport. Despair rose inside me. Iād come so close. Iād found my birth fatherās location but he was no closer to me than heād been the moment I verified he was alive. Yet Iād come all this wayā¦
My spine stiffened. āIsnāt there anything I canā?ā
āLeave!ā
I suppressed a growl. Snapping and snarling would get me nowhere. What could I do to convince him toā
He flicked his hand in the air and bellowed. āSeredon.ā
The assistant stepped into the room. āSir?ā
Ramseffās hand flicked to me. āShow her out.āĀ
āOf course, Sir.ā
āOkay, then.ā Standing, I swiped my palms on my thighs. āThanks.ā Not really, but Iād remain civil. He had shared where my dad was and that detail was important. I swallowed past the lump in anger my throat and strode toward the foyer, my stockinged feet swishing on the polished surface. My head remained high. Iād ask my grandfather. He might be able toā
āPerhaps we neednāt be hasty,ā Ramseff said. āThere might be a way. Ifā¦ā
I turned and supported myself with my hand on the terat wood trim outlining the archway, to keep my shaky body from giving me away. āIf what?ā
āI need a small favor. In exchange Iāll arrange for your transportation to Darkwater.ā
I could finally confront my father.Ā
My legs trembled, threatening to dump me on the floor. I returned to the chair and sank onto the hardwood surface. āWhat kind of favor are we talking about?ā
In my experience, favors came at stiff prices.
His fingers tapped steadily on his leg, and he wouldnāt meet my eyes. āI have a minor problem. Itās almost not worth mentioning. But someone with your unique set of skills might be able to help me bring about a solution.ā
āWhat would I have to do?ā There was no hiding the eagerness in my voice. Despite my reservations, excitement burst through me. Close. I was so close!
āYou may leave, Seredon,ā Ramseff told his assistant.Ā
āVery well, Sir.ā Seredon backed from the room.Ā
Ramseff stared at me while a clock somewhere nearby ticked an entire minute.Ā
Despite my urge to push him to tell me what he needed, I remained patient.Ā
Ramseff cleared his throat. āBefore we proceed further, Iāll need your bound promise youāll do as I ask and not speak of this to anyone else.ā
I reeled back, banging my shoulder on the upper edge of the chair hard enough I winced. āYou need a bound promise before youāll tell me what I need to do?ā A bonded promise required blood. My blood. It could only be broken when the promise was fulfilled. Or the person making the promise died. It might be best not to think about that part of the clause.
āA favor for a favor, shall we say? Do this one little thing for me, and Iāll send you to your father.ā His voice deepened. āI believe you need something from him.ā
How had he found out? Iād told no one.
I was desperate to talk to my dad, but how high a price was I willing to pay?
āDecide,ā he said, his fingers tightening on his legs. āA chance like this wonāt come again. My offer will be gone in three, two, oāā
āIāll do it.ā Whatever he asked. IĀ hadĀ to. Otherwiseā¦I shook my head. Do not think about it here. He might somehowā¦know.
A conniving smile flittered across his face before it smoothed, making me wonder if I was already too late.Ā
āHold out your hand,ā he said.
I extended it forward, palm exposed. He mumbled a string of fae words too quickly for me to translate, and my blood pooled, forming a small circle in the depression of my hand. Ramseff suspended a triangular, silver pendant over the blood and it disappeared, sucked up by the cloudy stone in the center of the pendant.
āLovely,ā he said as he hung the pendant on a chain around his neck. āYour promise to complete this task is now unbreakable.ā The slick satisfaction blooming on his wrinkly face sent fear bolting through me. I wanted to run but there would be nowhere to hide from a bond made with a Master Seeker. Heād be able to track me beyond death.
Heād own me until Iād fulfilled my part of the bargain.
A wave of his hand, and a large gold ball with a glossy, opaque surface appeared to hover between us.
āIād like you to eliminate someone for me,ā he said as if discussing the pinta cookies heād consume with his mug of hornwit tea.
I blinked. āYou said a small favor. You canāt mean murder.ā I couldnāt do it!
āThis person is essentially a criminal already. Heāll soon be slated for death.ā
āThen why do I need to hasten that along?ā This didnāt make sense. What wasnāt I seeing here? āHeāll die anyway.ā
āI want it done as soon as possible, not after his relatives host multiple appeals.ā
I held up my hand that still stung from the blood-letting. āHold on. Youāre saying he hasnāt committed a crime yet?ā
āNo more than you.ā
The Master Seeker knew the crime this person would soon commit. Did he also possess a divination skapti? Only rare SĆdhe could harness more than one ability. But this man was the leader of all the Seekers. No one rose to this high a position without considerable power and cunning.
If he could do divinationāalthough no one could see everythingāI didnāt stand a chance of outwitting him.
Unease prickled along my spine, making me itch, and a bitter flavor pooled in my mouth.
āCome,ā he said, waving toward the ball. āSee.ā
A dark gray mist swirled inside the ball. The fog slowly cleared, and a picture formed of the Academyās eastern pasture, with the forest behind. Someone walked there. Oh. Professor Trarion. My sister, Fleur, had taken Magical Creatures and How to Tame ThemĀ with the fae teacher. She was sweet and kind and a lot of fun. I liked her.
I leaned forward, watching as another person slunk behind the Professor, picking up speed. Theyā¦My breathing shuddered to a halt.
It wasnāt just any personāit was me. Sheād removed the jacket I still wore and had knotted the sleeves around her waist, but otherwise, she was even dressed the same, right down to my Seekers do it better t-shirt.
My jaw dropped, and I turned to Ramseff. āHowā¦?ā
āCareful,ā he said in a cheery voice, but his eyes⦠They were sharp enough to slice open a vein. āWatch or youāll miss the best part. Itās about to happen.ā
The person following Professor Trarionāno,Ā Iāpulled a knife from a sheath on her calf. She rushed toward the Professor and sunk the knife deeply into the Professorās back. No sound was released into this room, but I felt the Professorās death shriek as if I stood right behind her. In some ways I did stand behind her.
Dread splintered my bones, and I moaned.
Professor Trarion collapsed onto the ground, and the personāmeāfled toward the woods.
āNo,ā I wailed, my fingers knotted together on my lap. āWhat have you done?ā
āMe?ā Ramseff asked with a low chuckle. āI havenāt done anything.Ā YouĀ have.ā
āBut I didnāt.ā I cupped my cheeks as pain rushed through me. āItās not me. Iād never⦠Who is that?ā
āA wizard who needed a favor. Much like you.ā
He couldnāt have known I was coming here, yet he seemed to have arranged for thisā¦assassination while I sat across from him, salivating about cookies. Forget hunger. I wanted to throw up.
āThis wizardās payment came due,ā he said casually. āAnd now theyāve fulfilled their side of our blood bargain.ā
Waves of horror roared over me, drowning me. āIā¦Iā¦ā
āThe favor I need?ā His words pierced the flit-space yanking me away from the Guildās headquarters. āIād like you to kill a young man. His name is Brodin. Complete this task and Iāll arrange for your extraction from the Reformatory.ā He stood. āItās time for you to leave, child. Darkwater waits.ā
I gaped up at him, barely hearing his words. Professor Trarion! She needed help.
Who was this man, this Master of all Seekers? Seekers were cops, always the good guys. They delivered justice.
Not murder.
Yetā¦Iād promisedāblood promisedāto commit the same crime.
āMonster!ā Jumping up from the chair, I ran at him, my hands lifting.
Ramseff flicked his fingersĀ toward me, and I froze.Ā
The room compressed. Wavered.
I landed with a jarring thud, my knees biting into the ground on the edge of theĀ eastern pasture of Crystal Wing Academy. My gaze blurred as I rose and spun around.
The Professor lay unmoving, the blade still sticking up from her back. Slick blood pooled around her, glossy and dark. Lifeblood.
The person warded to look like me was nowhere to be seen. I stood in their place after what mustāve been a seamless switch.
āHer!ā someone shouted. āShe did it. TriaĀ stabbed Professor Trarion!ā
Run.
I raced intoĀ the forest, my stockinged feet pounding the path, and my heart slamming against my rib cage.Ā Darting around bushes and trees, I leaped over logs and aimed for the mountains. If I was lucky, I couldā
They were on me in a flash.
Whimpering, my breathing grew ragged. I was shoved from behind, and I tumbled forward. The earth slammed up to meet me.
Stupid to think Iād never outdistance centaur Seekers. Their hooves ground into the soil as they surrounded me and, when I peered up, fury blazed on their faces.
āGotcha,ā Roark said. āCaught in the act. Your Council trial will be swift.ā
One of the other SeekersāHarline and a former mentorālaughed. The harsh sound grated across my skin. āDarkwaterās the only place thatāll claim you now.ā
Of course. RamseffāsĀ favor. Iād committed a crime and would now be sent to the Prison. Once I found a way to the Reformatory, Iād be able to confront my birth father. But in exchange for my freedom, I had to kill Brodin.
Hauling me to my feet, Roark and Harline secured myĀ wrists and ankles with unbreakable, magical binds. Tenna devices. Iād learned about the fiery, magic-suppression bands in my Seekerās classes.Ā
The bindings tightened as the embedded spells bit deeply, severing through my flesh and drawing blood.Ā
It dripped on the white snow like a massacre in progress.
CONTINUE READING…
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Tour Wide Giveaway
To celebrate the release of WICKED BETRAYAL by Marty Mayberry, we’re giving away a paperback copy of the book to one lucky winner!
GIVEAWAY TERMS & CONDITIONS: Ā Open to US shipping addresses only.Ā One winner will receive a paperback copy of Wicked Betrayal by Marty Mayberry. This giveaway is administered by Pure Textuality PR on behalf of Marty Mayberry.Ā Giveaway ends 5/31/2020 @ 11:59pm EST.Ā CLICK HERE TO ENTER!
About Marty Mayberry
MARTY MAYBERRY writes young adult fiction and infuses it with suspense, romance, and a touch of humor. When sheās not dreaming up ways to mess with her characterās lives, she works as an RN/Clinical Documentation Specialist. She lives in New England with her husband, three children, three geriatric cats, and a spunky Yorkie pup who keeps her on her toes.
Marty is a member of YARWA and a PAN member of RWA, as well a four-year PitchWars mentor.
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