Glowing Halo
Portrait de Reverend Robbie

About the author
Reverend Robbie
Novel: The Res
Genre: Fantasy
8,777 words so far  

About Reverend Robbie

Location: Bryan, TX USA

Home Region:
USA :: Texas :: Bryan-College Station

Age:44

Website: http://robbietaylor.net

Favorite novels: Sea of Glass, the Amber Chronicles, World War Z, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance

Favorite writers: Barry B. Longyear, Roger Zelazny

Favorite music: Celtic

Non-noveling interests: Karaoke, cooking, gaming

Joined: octobre 20, 2004

This Year: Official Participant

NaNoWriMo History:
'04 '05 '06 '07 '08

NaNoWriMo posts: 23

NaNoWriMo buddies: 1

 

Brief Author Bio:

This year, the Reverend is facing some major changes, all in November - loss of job, addition of a daughter and NaNoWriMo! Will he crack, or will love and writing see him through?

Synopsis: The Res

A spellcaster in the employ of the FBI investigates a murder that leads him back to the reservation he grew up in - and revelations that will threaten his life

Excerpt: The Res

It was dark in the room. A little light spilled in from the one window, but it wasn't enough to illuminate anything but the dead body on the floor. The old woman looked as if she had been placed strategically just to take advantage of the tiny ribbon of radiance shining down from the outside.
The door swung open silently, and two men entered slowly. One bent down immediately next to the woman's body, while the other flipped the light switch on and off. "Power was cut," the kneeling man said. "Electric company says that no juice has gotten to the apartment since Tuesday."
"They couldn't turn it back on for us?" The man at the switch sounded annoyed. He was tall, with muscles that spoke of casual acquaintance with a gym, and his face was easily readable, even in the dark.
With a shrug, the kneeling man looked over at his companion. "They haven't been able to turn it back on at all. The effect that hit the room is something like an EMP - fried all the wiring." He was smaller than the man at the door, and his expression betrayed little of what was in his thoughts. This was mostly due to the paralysis that afflicted the right side of his face, but part of it was a guardedness in his manner. He seemed unwilling to show the world more of himself than he needed to.
He reached into his jacket and pulled out a thin, dark stick of hard wood. At a glance from his companion, he looked down apologetically. "So," the man at the door began in a light manner, "you knew her?"
"A little. She was my second cousin."
The man at the door nodded. "Forensics works best when the spellcaster's related by blood to the victim," he recited.
"Or the perpetrator," the man with the wand continued. He pointed the tip of the stick at the woman and whispered to it, "Show me the past."
A shadow of the woman lifted slowly from her body, reversing the fall she had suffered as she died. The tall man stepped toward her, taking note of her face as the shade shuddered through the bright flash that had killed her. "Looks like a hell of a way to go."
"That's what they say," the spellcaster murmured, stepping around the woman's body to get a better look at the events being played backwards. She was speaking now, but he would have to get her words with another spell. She looked more angry than frightened, which made the left side of his mouth lift in a small, tight smile. He hadn't seen her since his childhood in M'Quetsuway, but he'd liked her then. She'd had the fight that was in all the women on his mother's side of the family.
The spellcaster looked in the direction that his cousin was facing, and saw another figure forming. It was the image of a stocky man of average size. His hair was steel-gray, and he had a mature but well-preserved look. His left hand was curled into a fist, which was aiming a golden ring at the woman. On the ring sat a star-shaped diamond, which glowed with a deep crimson fire. A necklace flew back onto the woman's neck as the fire died.
The tall man walked up to the old man's image and regarded it carefully. "Do you know him, too, Bill?"
"You could say that," Bill said, looking into the old man's eyes. "He's my grandfather."

Reverend Robbie's Writing Buddies

garilynn
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