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The Protagonist Speaks

Interviews with the characters of your favourite books

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Fantasy

Quinn Iremonger (of Cycled: Rebirth, by Alekz Wokal)

Dear readers, tonight with us is a man who hunts unlawful holders of soul shards — the mysterious crystals that each grant their holder a unique supernatural ability.


Tell us a little about where you grew up. What was it like there?

I’m from Overta Layartha, the busiest port on the east coast. You may have heard tales that hooligans, beggars, and thieves run the streets, and it’s true. I was one of them. My parents tried, but I was a rowdy kid. I wanted to be free, I craved the rush of street life. From stealing fruit from the market, to escaping the law. Pocketing coins from unsuspecting travelers and pilfering ships. There were many great times, but I eventually learned that life wasn’t for me. I could never bring myself to do the more heinous acts my crew did. Once that was sorted, I grew sick of the city, and all I dreamed about was leaving. Even considered asking the pirates whenever they docked if I could join their crew, but something always held me back. Like I wasn’t quite ready to leave. Then, one day, while sitting on a pier watching the vessels, a lovely lady sat with me and struck up a conversation. That’s when I knew why I hadn’t left yet. But that’s a story for another time.

Tell us what it means to be a trapper. What is it like?

We hunt unlawful shard holders, or as we like to call them, ushers. People who find a soul shard, and, instead of turning it in, use its powers as they please. Let’s say there’s a shard out there with the power to make appendages explode. Some random person finds it and decides to start popping people’s toes. Well, that’s where we come in. We go through rigorous training and develop special skills that allow us to hunt them. It takes years to master, but believe it or not, we can feel when a shard is nearby. We’ve also learned how to crack a shard from a distance, and if we can crack an usher’s shard before they do, they won’t get the power. Then, we go in and rough them up a bit. As for what it’s like being a trapper… A bit of a tricky one. Of course, you could say dangerous. Stressful. Often lonely. But where’s the fun in that? It’s exciting! Rewarding. Look, we’re catching the bad guys. Imagine you were the one who captured Aeryn the Maimer. Would feel pretty good, right? And you’d probably get lucky a time or two at your local tavern. Not that I would know anything about that, of course.

What can you tell us about your latest adventure?

Not much, I’m afraid. Not sure who all will be reading this. But what I can say is that I met Ember and Coen, and when I decided to travel with them, things got wild. Through them I’ve witnessed things I didn’t think possible. I’ve reunited with someone I thought long gone. We’ve fought side-by-side in battles where I was certain we would lose. But most of all, I’ve learned things that shook me to the core of who I am. Cryptic, I know. Let me just say this: I used to be a devout thaed. Not so much anymore.

Continue reading “Quinn Iremonger (of Cycled: Rebirth, by Alekz Wokal)”

Max (of Unfixed, by Amy L Sauder)

Dear readers, tonight with us is a young man, fascinated by historical circus wagons at the edge of town. He’s here to speak about claimed of an enchanted circus, abandoned mansions, and the blurring lines between villains and sidekicks.


Tell us a little about where you grew up. What was it like there? Any cherished memories?

That seems a bit nosy. I grew up same as everyone else, I suppose. And I cherish each memory. Why do you ask? What are you fishing for?  

At any rate, I don’t like talking about the past. The now is what matters, that and the future. The rest is in, well, the past. Let’s leave it there.

What do you do now?

I’m a private investigator, looking into the disappearance of the Circus of Strange Marvels and the night of the fire while doing simple upkeep at the abandoned Trencher mansion. My unfortunate roommate Fancy is no help, and the witnesses are unreliable and few.

What can you tell us about your latest adventure?

I’m sure you heard of it. The supposed hauntings, the claims of magic. Other than that, what else is there to say? The walls can’t talk and the people won’t. But sooner or later, something has gotta come out. And when it does I’ll be there, ready to jot it down.

What did you first think when you read about the night of the fire?

There’s so mystical an air around it that the only guesses are practically a fairy tale. Even the newspapers bought into the hype…what sort of journalist does that? And of course there’s no proof. Everyone loves a good story, but there’s a reasonable explanation underneath all the vanishing people and fresh corpses. In time, I’ll find it and watch the magic crumble.

Continue reading “Max (of Unfixed, by Amy L Sauder)”

Maru Hosokawa (of Ghost Train, by Natalie Jacobsen)

Dear readers, tonight with us is a Samurai’s daughter from the 19th century Meiji era. She is here to speak about encountering ghosts, mysteries, and a kitsune who offers her help in exchange for confronting a demon.


Tell us a little about where you grew up. What was it like there?

I live in the most beautiful city in the world: Kyoto. The homes, teahouses, and shops are all made of wood slats or bamboo and shine in the sunlight, and we have smooth stone streets. I love the willows that drape themselves over the creeks and alleys that are lit by red lanterns. However, lately, Emperor Meiji has taken away from the beauty with his western inventions. There are these ugly…electricity wires running across our sky, and train tracks cutting through our city now. I worry for our future.

Did you have any favourite toys as a child? Any cherished memories?

This is a wonderful question! It takes me back to more blissful days, when my mother was alive and my father was around – at least, when he wasn’t saving lives on duty as a samurai. He had a lot of tasks back then, and so many relied on him for help. But when he was home we would play Hanetsuki, usually under the shade of the trees away from the hot summer sun. We each had a paddle – if we had paints, we’d decorate them – and a small ball with feathers stuck in it, that we would toss between us.

With my friends at school, we sometimes ran with kites to see if we could catch the wind. I loved their bright colors. We’d paint them with figures from folklore or kabuki!

My favorite memories were enjoying each of the seasons in the mountain paths with my parents. We’d bring fruit or rice balls on our walks, and watch the sunset or pick flowers or leaves along the way. Sometimes we’d press them in mother’s poetry books – which I need to find…

What do you do now?

Frankly, I hate my job. I couldn’t ever tell my father though, or I know he would be hurt. I should be grateful for it – being an assistant in a teahouse to a prestigious geisha. Many would kill for a job like mine, with that kind of exposure to her high-level clientele and work with such an esteemed teahouse. But it is a nightmare to me. I know it’s temporary, while my father is rebuilding our wealth as a merchant, ever since being a samurai was outlawed. So we need to make money somehow! But I hate serving the men who get drunk and just want to play games or tell silly stories. They reek, and can be so rude to us. Adakichi, the geisha who runs my teahouse, is so effortlessly patient, but behind closed doors, I sometimes wonder if she is possessed by a demon… she can be so cruel, so easily.

Someday I’d love to do something else, but my destiny is likely to marry and support my family clan. I don’t know what that looks like yet. If only something could change around here, or someone could offer me a chance to do something else; I’d love to be able to help others like my father did for so many years as a samurai… I am a samurai daughter, after all.

What can you tell us about your latest adventure?

I was at one of my favorite festivals, dancing with my friends and enjoying the night of music – it was magic, if I may. But after the festival, I had the strangest encounter. The festival is popular for chasing away demons and yokai, and yet – after the festival – I met a fox. AND IT TALKED! But now stranger things are happening. Emperor Meiji is changing Kyoto every day, and my father hasn’t bene in touch at all since leaving me behind. So I am feeling lonelier than usual, and quite impatient. The fox found me at a strange time in my life, and now I can’t stop seeing…other yokai.

Continue reading “Maru Hosokawa (of Ghost Train, by Natalie Jacobsen)”

Grieve and Jana (of Wintersun, by Cindy Tomamichel)

Dear readers, tonight rather than interview we are sitting quietly at a tavern and observing a discussion between the two protagonists and their companion, as they speak about travels, adventures, and dragons.


Scene: a tavern, rough and cheap. Grieve and Jana are riding back home with Worth, a water magic bearer. It’s been a long day after escaping another city where a lot of people wanted to kill anyone with magic. Jana is a tree Druid, sister to Grieve. Grieve has no magic but gets into lots of fights protecting his friends.

A platter of dried fruit, bread, cheese, roast meat, and tankards of cider have arrived at the table.

Worth picked up a piece of roast meat and chewed hard. “It’s hard to believe you two are twins. Your village is far to the north isn’t it?”

Grieve drank deeply of his cider and wiped his mouth. “Aye. Far into the snow and cold of the ice demons winter. You have been lucky to grow up in the sun down south, even the streets would be more welcoming than the ice of our home.”

Jana nodded, leaning over to grab some bread and cheese. “We were born the same night our mother Maeve died.” She shuddered and wrapped her cloak tight around her shoulders. “She killed a pack of ice demons, then died as Grieve was born. My little brother bears the scars of more than battle, the ice death that claimed Maeve also touched him.”

Worth glanced at Grieve. He was a giant of a man, covered in the scars of battle. “The white streak in his hair, you mean?”

A cat jumped up into Grieve’s lap, curling its tail under his nose. He sneezed, and picked up a piece of meat for it, and pushed the platter to Worth. “Here, eat this. You need to put some muscle on those chicken wings you call arms.” He scratched the cat under its chin, and Worth decided to drop the subject of their birth.

Worth, trying to lighten the conversation. “Jana, as the big sister, did Grieve have any favourite toys as a child? Any cherished memories?”

Jana smiled. “Toys? No more than you did growing up on the streets. The village was clinging to existence and Osric our uncle was hard pressed to keep us fed. But Grieve made snares in the forest and caught us rabbits to eat, and I foraged for herbs and any greens that survived the endless winter.”

“Osric had magic too?”

Jana said “Yes, his magic was that of stone. He taught me all he could, but I would need to find one of the elders of the forest to learn more tree magic. Our father, who died before we were born, had the magic of beasts. Learning of magic was the best times growing up.”

Grieve grunted as the cat bunted his nose. “I learnt how to do chores. Osric made me help the villagers cut wood and all sorts of jobs to earn our keep.”

Jana chuckled. “Well, and also to pay back when you fought someone for insulting me or Osric.”

Worth offered the last piece of cheese to Jana. “So magic was not a blessing up north either?” He sighed. “It is a dangerous business being born to magic, yet none of us would give it up.”

Jana asked, “What are our plans for tomorrow?”

Grieve gestured to the platters which only had crumbs left. “That was the last of our coin. We sleep under the stars and either Ringbalin provides, or we work for our next meal.” He gave the cat a last scratch and nudged it to the floor before standing.

Worth glanced around the tavern. Several grim looking men had been eyeing Jana, but they suddenly lost interest as Grieve stretched to his full height and rolled his shoulders.

Worth stood. “At least there are no wraiths. Did we tell you about them, Jana?”

Jana: “Wraiths? No. We’ve already fought off ancient mages, sentient apes, and those damned mermaids.” She frowned up at Grieve. “Something you aren’t telling me, little brother?”

Grieve laughed, picking up the saddlebags and blanket rolls. “Just another creature trying to eat me. There’s a lot of that about, I’ve found.”

Jana smiled. “What about all the women you have fended off as well, hmmm?”

Grieve rubbed the back of his neck and mumbled. Worth couldn’t quite see in the fading light as they left the tavern, but he thought Grieve was blushing. The giant barbarian he had seen take down a dozen creatures at a time and moved faster and more ferociously than any man he had ever seen, was blushing. He smiled in the dark as they reached the stables.

Jana giggled and grabbed his hand as Grieve strode ahead and started working out the reins. “He is very popular,” she whispered. Worth could say nothing, he was overwhelmed by the feeling of Jana’s hand in his. A beautiful woman with such magic would never look at a beggar boy from the streets. But for a little while, the night did not feel so cold.

They rode out of the small village and into the forest, settling down for the night.

Worth helped Grieve take their saddle bags off the horses. “What was the scariest thing in your adventures?”

Grieve looked into the darkness, facing north, and sighed. “The moment I woke when the ice demons captured me. I could face being a slave, face the gladiatorial games where they bet on our lives… “

“But…” Worth asked.

“I never knew where Jana went, or even if she was alive.” He hobbled the horses and threw Worth a blanket. “Here, now go to sleep. I’ve never known anyone like magic bearers for asking questions and giving answers that have no meaning.”

“I was going to ask you what the worst thing you faced was, but perhaps the dark of night is not the best time for such talk,” Worth replied. Grieve grunted a response and headed out into the forest.

Grieve stared into the forest, looking north. Behind him, Worth and Jana practiced some magic, holding hands while Worth focused on making water fountains.

What was the worst thing? Being alone, he thought to himself. Jana and Worth curled up together, close to the fire. All his boyhood he had fought the suspicious glances at his hair, then at his strength. Demonspawn, they had named him. He looked up at the sound of a leathery flapping and braced himself.

Ringbalin the dragon landed close by, ramming into his legs. “Alone?” he heard the dragon speak in his head. “You have friends, many friends.”

Grieve smiled, reaching to scratch the dragon behind the ears. The dragon was shedding again and loose scales fluttered in the air.

“Yes, I am lucky to be friended by a dragon, even one as smelly as you.” Ringbalin turned and licked his face with a long slorpy tongue. “Blerrghh, turkey again? You can bring us a couple for breakfast.”

The dragon flew off into the night, silhouetted against the near full moon. “Another month gone. How are they fairing north, I wonder? He had left friends behind when he escaped and could do no more than hope they survived. Logar the soldier who had trained him, Mem the clay man who died at the hands of the Ice Lord. Grieve clenched his fists and felt the ice cold anger rise within him. Too many friends had died already in this fight against the demons – how many more would he lose?

A thump as he rested against a tree, two dead turkeys landing at his feet. Curling up in the grass, Ringbalin rested a taloned foot on his leg, so that human and dragon could hear each other’s thoughts.

“Worth and Jana? It is good, she was alone for many years, and she needs someone with magic.”

Grieve frowned. “Yes. I guess I just found her, and now feel like I have lost her already.”

“She is not lost to you, not ones of the same birthing. The bond between dragons of the same hatch is strong, but not as strong as two that shared a womb. She will always be there when you need her, as you would for her.”

Grieve sighed and nodded, absently picking up the turkey and starting to strip it of feathers.

Ringbalin nudged him, almost knocking him over. “We will find a lady friend for you.”

Grieve pushed the dragon off him and snorted. “We have to deal with the ice Lord and his demons first. They have taken everything from this land. Spring, magic, my friends, and my parents.” He clenched his hands and his eyes iced over. “They came out of the depths, pouring forth in their thousands. The Druid Cain told me we have only a few months to defeat them, or the world will never see another Spring. They do nothing but gamble with human lives and kill us for sport.” He turned to the dragon. “How can one man defeat them?”

Continue reading “Grieve and Jana (of Wintersun, by Cindy Tomamichel)”

Felicity Brockenhurst (of the Mon Dieu, Cthulhu! series, by John Houlihan)

Dear readers, tonight with us is a British lady from the time of the Napoleonic wars, who — quite unlike other ladies — is one of Sir Arthur Wellesley’s renowned spies and assassins. Call her a love-interest at your peril, but we did interview the protagonist from these books before.


Tell us a little about where you grew up. What was it like there?

My name is Felicity Brockenhurst and I was born in British India in 1789. Sadly, my mother died giving birth to me, so I was raised by my father who provided me with the best private tutors, and an all around education which was quite unconventional for young ladies.

Did you have any favourite toys as a child? Any cherished memories?

Toys? No, there was very little time for such frivolities. My tender years were spent in training and preparation. Riding, hunting, fishing, shooting, handling all forms of weaponry like knives, guns, swords and even lances. I am quite fond of the custom pepperbox revolver my father gave me aged seven though.

What do you do now?

Well, normally I am not so indiscreet, but since you asked so nicely. By day, I am a… I suppose what you might call an operative, an instrument, one of Sir Arthur Wellesley’s most renowned spies and assassins. The French call La Rosignol, the Nightingale and have all manner of wild tales of my accomplishments. It is said I smuggled Trouvier out of the Bastille hidden beneath my skirts, liberated the plans for invading Iberia from a locked strongbox under the Empereur‘s bed, and even eliminated the unfortunate General Lanoir through the sheer vigour of my lovemaking…  Modesty forbids me telling you which of these contain more than a grain of truth.

What can you tell us about your latest adventure?

Ah, the affair of the Shadow of the Serpent? It is Gaston Dubois’ tale truly of course, that brave, foolish, hot-blooded chap. He’s an absolute clod sometimes, but a brave one and an undeniably handsome one with those moustaches and cadenettes. He is one whom I must confess, I have more than a trifling affection for.

In this tale from his memoirs, Dubois is drummed out of this beloved hussars over a foolish duel and sent in disgrace to the “Accursed 31st” Dragoons who he is charged with turning into a proper fighting force (accompanied by his loyal sergeant the redoubtable Bastien Sacleaux, of course). There he earns the enmity of the countryside and a local bandita by the name of La Espina, the Thorn, who seems determined to have this head. While it is a trying experience, it is also an instructive one, for it is during this epic travail and through the battles he fights, first against La Espina’s wiles and then against the Spanish army, that he first begins to learn the real truth behind the Eternal Struggle which governs the age of Napoleon. It is where he is first set on the path that will bring him into the light to become a Keeper of the Hidden Flame, as am I.

Continue reading “Felicity Brockenhurst (of the Mon Dieu, Cthulhu! series, by John Houlihan)”

Byron (of the Vampires and Spies series, by Taggart Rehnn)

Dear readers, tonight with us is an undead space-time traveller, who likes to hunt monsters, explore worlds, and do some light archeology in his spare time.


Tell us a little about where you grew up. What was it like there?

I was conceived in the altar of a blood god in Mexico, born in a castle in Northern Provence, and spent my life in ICUs, protected and controlled by my paternal grandmother, Countess Chloé, the matriarch of our family.

My parents, both archaeologists, were rarely home. No matter how hard they tried, they couldn’t conceive. So they traveled a lot, and became workaholics. But then, alien ‘visitors’ only Chloé ever saw, told her how my parents could have a child. My parents did it, and it worked. From then on, Chloé made everyone follow their instructions. Since ‘the visitors’ said I shouldn’t be ‘eugenized’ in utero, I was born with severe congenital disorders.

Beside our castle in Provence, we had many vacation homes, but I spent more time intubated in clinics and ICUs than enjoying any of that. So, after reaching adulthood, pumped full of any drug known to man or monkey required to do it, I traveled far and wide, and became a ‘French Indiana Jones’.

Did you have any favourite toys as a child? Any cherished memories?

Not favorite toys per se, but a sort of playhouse the size of a hangar, representing the 42 tasks ancient Egyptians believed a soul must perform to get into their ‘Paradise’. There I felt both scared of, and protected by, Egyptian gods—scared I might offend them if I did something wrong, and sheltered from a world where I was a bullied weakling with mild Asperger’s.

Fond memories from trips all over the world with Chloé, I have too many to count. My parents died when I was in my teens, and Mamie Chloé when I was in my early twenties, leaving behind a bevy of lawyers and wills—and Severian, the ‘real Dracula’s grandfather, who kept our family’s fortune in tiptop shape, even after everyone on Earth thought I was dead and gone, buried alive during an expedition.

What do you do now?

I hunt down monsters, explore worlds, and work as an archaeologist in my spare time. Since I shall live forever and often travel through space-time, I guess I’ll keep doing it.

My gradual transformation, molting like an insect, from one kind of undead to another, seems now complete. At least, I hope it is. Each time I feed, the resulting massacre makes the news; and, with each molt, those massacres get bigger and gorier. But there’s someone who should know how to control this: Ukko, an Ancient who left Kemet (the world where I became an undead) for Earth about a thousand years ago. Since we must find him to defeat our nemesis, I hope he will help me with this as well.

What can you tell us about your latest adventure?

‘The Visitors’ tells the story of my life, my mysterious disappearance and my first years in Kemet, when I became this ‘creature’. But my life’s story starts with ‘Freer of Souls’, which describes how my family and Severian prevented the Apocalypse when my parents were still working hard to conceive me—alas, in vain. ‘The Visitors’ comes after ‘Freer of Souls’, ‘Catatumbo’ and ‘Vyrus’, followed by ‘The Revenants’—the story of our arrival from Kemet and our fight against ‘varjugga’, a ‘dark energy demon’ that fled our world. We were never able to destroy it, and I’m not sure we can trap it either. That’s why, although we’re still fighting it, we need Ukko. Alas, he’s now in stasis, slowly dying. If ‘varjugga’ finds him first, it will create an army of enslaved humans and undeads, conquer Kemet, and end all life everywhere—your ‘Apocalypse’.

Continue reading “Byron (of the Vampires and Spies series, by Taggart Rehnn)”

Benedict Shade (of Claws of the Collector, by Douglas Lumsden)

Dear readers, we tried to schedule an interview with the protagonist of this exciting new series, to ask him about shapeshifters and life under the dragon lord, but unfortunately he was detained by the police. So, instead, we bring you the transcript of his police interview.


Police Interview Transcript. Subject: Benedict Shade, aka “Shade the Collector”

Date, October 16. Time is eight-oh-five. Present in the interview room are Officer Julio Gutierrez of the New Helvetia Police Department and Benedict Shade. Mr. Shade has waived his right to have an attorney present.

Mr. Shade, you are a person of interest in an official police investigation. You are not under arrest, and your presence here is voluntary. Could you please state your occupation for the record?

Certainly, Officer Gutierrez. I collect and sell magical artifacts, the more exotic and unusual, the better.

Are any of the objects in your collection dangerous?

Many of them are potentially lethal. The more dangerous the artifact, the more valuable it is.

You realize that selling lethal magical objects without a license from the Realm of Tolanica is illegal.

Of course! I would never think of selling a truly dangerous object without a permit.

Your reputation suggests otherwise.

Please, Officer. You shouldn’t believe every stray rumor you hear from the street. The NHPD has never found evidence of my involvement in a single illegal transaction.

You’ve been lucky so far.

[Laughter] Maybe so. Say, officer, any chance you could send for a cup of tea? Plenty of cream, please. The tea you have around here is probably domestic swill, so make it half tea and half cream. Real cream, please, with all the calories. And for Lord’s sake, heat the water in a kettle. Boiling water with radio waves is barbaric. And a teaspoon of vanilla bean if you have it. If you don’t, I carry a shaker of ground vanilla bean with me wherever I go. The desk sergeant impounded it when I came in, so you can get it from him.

Does this look like a restaurant? We don’t have tea. I can get you coffee if you want it. Heated in a microwave.

Ugh. Unless it’s imported from the rainforests of northern Qusco? I might be able to tolerate some of that with plenty of cream and sugar. No? Well, never mind. I’ll get by.

Let’s move on. You’re a shapeshifter, right?

That’s right. I am able to transform into twelve black cats.

You seem remarkably stable for a shifter. In my experience, most shifters are at least borderline insane.

What can I say? Imagine you are a normal young human, somewhere between the ages of twelve and fifteen, and you wake up one morning with the realization that you have become something… different. Something both more and less than human. It’s bad enough when you are suddenly and randomly gifted—or cursed—with the ability to transform into a single beast, like a wolf or a cougar, but most of us find our entire self fragmented among a number of smaller animals, such as foxes, crows, or, in my case, cats. I was lucky. Imagine what it must be like to discover that you have become a were-rat, or a were-slug? When the change comes, it’s totally unexpected, and it’s always traumatic. It changes your entire life. Even more than the onset of puberty, which occurs at roughly the same time!

How did your family take it when they discovered you had become a were-cat?

My father was already gone. He’d been disappeared by Dragon Lord Ketz-Alkwat’s secret police. You know how it goes. The “gray-ties” came knocking at our door at two in the morning. My mother told my brother and I to stay in our room. Then she went to my older sister’s room and told her the same thing. A few minutes later, Mother told us that our father was gone and would never be coming back. By the time I came down for breakfast, all traces of my father were gone. I was twelve years old. I still don’t know why they came for him, and I have no hope of ever finding out. But that’s life under the Dragon Lord, and it’s been going on for centuries. Nothing unique about my story. I was just another boy whose father or mother, or big brother or sister, or aunt or uncle, or grandparent or cousin disappeared suddenly, without warning, taken by the Lord’s Investigation Agency and erased from our memories.

What about the rest of your family? How did they take it when you became a were-cat?

The same way most families do when they discover their son or daughter, or brother or sister has become a freak. My mother was a strong woman. She accepted what she called my “affliction” and thought I could be tamed through drug therapy and the force of her will until it was time for me to enter into my three-year mandatory government service. I put up with that for about a year before I ran away and changed my name. I avoided government service, too. I decided no one was better suited to help me cope with my affliction than myself. Also, I had a little supernatural guidance.


What do you mean?

After a few years engaged in a lifestyle I’m certainly not going to talk about with a policeman—hey, you never caught me, so there’s no point in rehashing it all now, right? Anyway, at some point I was visited by Coyote.

The Coyote? The trickster spirit?

The one and only. But he’s a lot more than a trickster. He’s the father of every living thing on this planet. His companion, Kodoyanpe, built the earth, but it was Coyote who filled it with blood, because red is his favorite color. And with blood came life.

And Coyote came to you?

That’s right. He provided me with the guidance I was rejecting from everyone else. I accepted his counsel because he was willing to give me some useful things. For example, he made me more sensitive to the presence of magic. He also taught me some occult magic and granted me some minor hexing powers. None of this was free, of course. It cost me the ring finger on my left hand, but I wasn’t using it all that much anyway. It also cost Lucky, one of my cats, his tail. He’s not too happy about that, but he copes.

Was it Coyote who taught you to use your shapeshifting ability to steal valuable artifacts?

Who says I steal those artifacts? I collect them from people who had no right to own them in the first place. Rich parasites, mostly. They’re the real thieves, not me.

Tell it to the judge.

I will in the unlikely event you ever catch me in the act or find any stolen goods in my possession.

It’s only a matter of time. Are you ever afraid that your cats will scatter to the winds and take pieces of your personality with them?

I have to admit it’s my greatest fear. Every shifter has to deal with the possibility. It’s why many of them are so mentally unstable. Each of my cats is a distinct piece of me, and if I were to lose one, I’d lose the part of me that it embodies. If I lose any, I lose some of what makes me who I am. If I were to lose half of them, the human part of me would dissolve into the ether. But I’ve got a handle on my cats, and I haven’t lost one yet.

How do you keep them under control?

Officer Gutierrez, you obviously don’t know many shifters. If you did, you’d know that the question you asked is in poor taste. How I deal with the pieces of myself is personal, and I won’t speak about it with anyone who isn’t a shifter or someone I know a lot more intimately than I know you.

My apologies, though if you were under arrest, rest assured I’d require you—compel you, if necessary— to answer my question. Now, I understand you were out of town recently. I’m sure you had an innocent reason.

It’s no secret. I went to Yerba City with my friend, Dwayne, to collect an artifact.

This would be Dwayne Buckler?

That’s right. He and his wife, Salamander, own some land by the river, along with a few trailers. I rent one of their trailers, and they live in a doublewide in the same court. Sal’s a river spirit, by the way. Dwayne makes pots and sells them. He’s quite the character and a real stand-up guy. I’m sure you have a file on him, but he’s clean these days. I trust him with my life, or at least enough to gather up my clothes when I transform into cats, and bring them to me when I need them. Anyway, I heard from my sources that an enchanted dagger was on its way to Yerba City, and Dwayne and I went there to collect it.

From its owner?

Right of ownership was an open question. It was being delivered to a private investigator, but he didn’t know anything about it and didn’t know it was coming. In the end, he and his were-rat friend helped me collect it. We got some help from a sorcerous goat-creature and a really powerful and scary witch.

A dagger, you say? From what I hear you’re quite an expert with blades.

Well, far be it for me to boast, but I can put a put a throwing knife into an eyeball from twenty paces. Not that I ever would, of course. But I didn’t want this dagger because it was a weapon. I wanted it because I heard that it contained a spirit of some kind. As it turned out, something was trapped inside, but it wasn’t the spirit I’ve been searching for.

What spirit is that?

Kodoyanpe, the Earthmaker. He was trapped in something long, long ago, and finding the artifact that imprisons him is the dream of every collector on the planet. I’ve been looking for the Earthmaker for years, and I intend to be the one who finds him, whether he’s indeed confined in an object, or in a tree, or a body of water—or even in another living being! Whoever finds the Earthmaker will be celebrated till the end of time.

You say the Earthmaker wasn’t trapped in this dagger. Who was?

I’m not at liberty to say. If you want to know, ask the Lord’s Investigation Agency.

Right. No thank you. That’s above my pay grade. Was this enchanted dagger dangerous?

More than I can possibly tell you. It could have instigated a major war between the Seven Realms. A lot of people died because of it, but it could have been worse. Much worse.

Were you responsible for any of those deaths?

Me? Of course not. And I find that question offensive.

Right. Maybe an investigation by the realmers would tell us a different story. Where is it now?

That’s none of your business.

We’ll see about that. Now that you’re back in New Helvetia, I hope you’re planning to keep your nose clean. We don’t want to hear about any black cats sneaking into gated communities, hexing the residents, and walking off with any enchanted gemstones or statuettes.

Please, Officer. I’m hurt by your low opinion of me. There’s no way you’d ever catch any of my cats walking away with anything valuable. If I were inclined to commit burglaries, I’m far too skilled to allow anyone to catch me in the act. Can I go now? I’m dying for some tea. Especially some red bush tea from the western cape of southern Ghana.

The transcript ends at this point with a note stating that the interview was interrupted by a representative from the Lord’s Investigation Agency, who took Shade into custody. The LIA agent, a dwarf who identified herself as Dallin Streete, offered no explanation. The note indicates gratuitously that Ms. Streete was remarkably beautiful and dressed as if she were stepping out of a limousine onto a red carpet. The note ends with this brief statement: “When Officer Gutierrez objected to the intervention of Agent Streete, he was seized by convulsions. He was taken to New Helvetia General Hospital where he is currently under observation.”


Douglas Lumsden earned a doctorate in medieval European history at the University of California Santa Barbara. He taught world history at a couple of colleges before settling into a private college prep high school in Monterey. Now retired, he writes an urban fantasy series featuring hard-boiled private eye Alexander Southerland as he cruises through the mean streets of Yerba City and interacts with trolls, femme fatales, shape-shifters, witches, and corrupt city officials. Douglas and his wife Rita can be found most days pounding the pavement in our running shoes, or with their cat named Cinderella who is happy to stay indoors.

You can find Shade on the pages of Claws of the Collector.

Browse our archives for past interviews, or follow the site by email (bottom-right) to know immediately when your new best-book-friend makes an appearance.

Rav’Orn aka Raven (of The Death Bringer, by J. Scott Coatsworth)

Dear readers, tonight with us is a man defending his planet from an alien invasion. He’s here to tell about his friends in this, and about being a half dragon.


Tell us a little about where you grew up. What was it like there?

That’s a loaded question. I lost my mother when I was six in a fire. Talk about things that will fark you up. When Mim’Aza took me in, I did okay for a while. We lived in a run-down neighborhood just outside of the five Spines of Gullton. I had a huge crush on Jimey, her son, but it never went anywhere—we were basically brothers, so that would have been weird. *shudders* But soon enough I left and moved out on my own, finding a hidey-hole cavern under the city to make my own.

Did you have any favourite toys as a child? Any cherished memories?

I try not to think about that time too much. It reminds me of the fire. My mother… well, she was a drunk and her carelessness started the fire, but still… she was my mom. All right? And living with Mikm’Aza, we were always dirt poor. But there was this one thing. Lean in. Closer. It’s a secret. See, one time, out in Lander’s Field, I found this… well, not thing. More of a him. This little talking sphere who told me his name was Spin. I know. Weird, right? But on a thief’s honor, I swear it’s true. And now he’s one of my best friends. Does that count?

What do you do now?

Well… that’s also a bit sketchy to answer. Why are you asking so many questions? Are you with the city guard? You know you have to tell me if I ask, right? No? All right. So… yeah, I was a thief. For a long time. And I was really good at it. But then the whole steal-a-package and swallow-a-dragon thing happened, and everything changed. I guess I’m a dragon rider now? Or a world saver? That will really piss Silya off, even more than when Aik chose me over her. But I’m keeping my options open. Once a thief, always a thief. Right?

What can you tell us about your latest adventure?

Let’s catch you up. I swallowed a dragon. Silya became the Hencha Queen, and talks with the plants, or something like that. Aik… well, Aik found a gauntlet, and he’s been weird ever since. Oh and he kissed me (and more) but then I took off with a couple of dragons to Mountainhome – think of it as Dragnlandia. Only we call ‘em Verents around here. Then the world went sideways, these weird alien fireflies showed up, and Silya and I got caught up in the whole saving the world business. Only, neither of us knows what happened to Aik. I’m pretty sure he’s my soulmate, and I’ll do whatever I have to, to get him back. Even if it does mean saving the world from fungus-like alien invaders. So I have a lot on my plate.

Continue reading “Rav’Orn aka Raven (of The Death Bringer, by J. Scott Coatsworth)”

Borax (of In Victrix, by Assaph Mehr)

Dear readers, tonight with us is nominally the bodyguard of the protagonist — proving once again that everyone is the hero of their own story. He’s here to talk about gladiatorial games, about childhood in the forest vs life in the big city.


Tell us a little about where you grew up. What was it like there?

I grew up in the forests of Arbarica, under evergreen trees. We lived in a remote village, only a few families, and my father and brothers hunted for furs and meat. At festivals, we went to the oppidium to trade the furs for tools, jewellery, and other things, and then stayed the nights for celebrations. The bards sang, and the druids dispensed law and lore, enthralling everyone with feats of magic.

Did you have any favourite toys as a child? Any cherished memories?

All the memories I have are cherished because there are so few of them. I was barely thirteen when the legions came. I took up a sword and stood with everyone I ever knew and more besides against the invaders.
It didn’t help. I have no idea how I survived. I don’t even recall the actual battle. Then I was chained and marched day after day to Egretia. I was a big one, even as a child, so a lanista from a gladiator school bought me. That was the end of my childhood.

What do you do now?

My dominus is a kind master, and I owe him my life. Gladiators don’t always die on the sands and the retirement options are limited, often reduced to begging. What else is there for someone who only knows how to fight, but can no longer do it once he’s too scarred and disfigured? Even those who survive the six years or thirty bouts to earn their freedom, find it hard to get a job.
Felix took me in when I had no prospects, gave me this metal hand you see, and now I protect his life. I go wherever he goes, to make sure he comes back.

What can you tell us about your latest adventure?

You’d have to ask the master about that. My dominus is very strict about client confidentiality. Without betraying any names… well, I got to mix with gladiators again, and got a much better view of the chariot races. There were things going on — with secrets and gods, and sacrifices and religion, and rich people tampering with things they shouldn’t — and I have no idea what they meant. I wasn’t privy to those conversations. I was just there for when the going got rough.

When it did! Now, that is something that gets the blood roaring in your ears. Not like the adulation of the crowds in the arena, but real fights in dark corners with real stakes. Makes you appreciate being alive.

Continue reading “Borax (of In Victrix, by Assaph Mehr)”
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