Dead First: A Novel - Hardcover

Compton, Johnny

 
9780593854310: Dead First: A Novel

Inhaltsangabe

From the Bram Stoker award-nominated author of The Spite House comes a bone-chilling new novel about a private investigator hired by a mysterious billionaire to discover why he can’t die.

When private investigator Shyla Sinclair is invited to the looming mansion of eccentric billionaire Saxton Braith, she’s more than a little suspicious. The last thing she expects to see that night is Braith’s assistant driving an iron rod straight through the back of his skull. Scratch that—the last thing she expects to see is Braith’s resurrection afterward.

Braith can’t die, it turns out, but he has no explanation for his immortality, and very few intact memories of his past. Which is why he wants to pay Shyla millions to investigate him, and bring his long-buried history to light. 

Shyla can’t help but be intrigued, but she’s also trapped by the offer. Braith has made it clear that he knows she’s the only person he can trust with his secret, because he knows all about hers

Bold, atmospheric, and utterly frightening, Johnny Compton’s Dead First is spine-chilling supernatural horror about the pursuit of power and the undying need for reckoning.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Johnny Compton is the author of The Spite House, which was nominated for a Bram Stoker award, and Devils Kill Devils. His short stories have appeared in Pseudopod, Strange Horizons, The No Sleep Podcast and several other publications. His fascination with frightening fiction started when he was introduced to the ghost story “The Golden Arm” as a child.

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As Shyla Sinclair approached Saxton Braith's manor, which was not atop the hill so much as it was the hilltop, she could not decide if it looked like it was too much of or apart from the world. With its stony façade and unevenly parapeted roof, it looked like a floodlit fort.

The car Braith had sent for her rounded a turn, and as it came closer the home's shimmering black windows and superficially burnt, tall double doors told a different story. That this place turned into a dark church after sundown, one large enough to keep you lost and trapped inside until it decided you were faithful enough to be shown an exit.

It was a place made for someone who did not have to choose between extravagances, who might pick luxury over taste ten times out of ten just to make a point. I don't need taste. I don't need to be discerning. I don't have to have a "good eye" for anything. Whatever I choose and whatever I do is automatically the best because I bought it and I paid for it, the end.

Now, again, she tried to weigh whether the security holstered beneath her light, red jacket would be enough, should this meeting-this incomparable opportunity-turn into something else. Said security, a subcompact Glock situated comfortably against her ribs, would prove especially ineffective if it was confiscated.

Shyla had expected the driver who came to pick her up-a tall, auburn-haired woman in her late thirties or early forties who introduced herself as Remy-to frisk her before welcoming her into the back of the relatively unassuming silver Lincoln, but that didn't happen. Maybe after the Lincoln pulled to a stop in the arched driveway leading to the front of the manor. Which would leave Shyla with only the backup security of having told a friend where she was going, as well as the instruction to follow up with her first thing in the morning if she hadn't heard back. This wouldn't be much good to her if Braith-along with Remy, and anyone else who might be present in the house-planned to do anything that would take fewer than eight or nine hours to finish.

Her past gave Shyla cause to be paranoid, and vigilant, and a glance at current world events or a general understanding of history could give anyone reason to believe a billionaire might be capable of anything, but Braith's invitation worked both to fuel and to dispel her paranoia. It was disconcerting, delivered as it was by hand to the mailbox hanging beside the door of her newly purchased cottage-style house. No postage, no return or mailing address, just her first name written in black ink. The envelope hadn't even been sealed. A small, folded letter, handwritten, was inside, telling Shyla that Saxton Braith was aware of and impressed by her work, and was interested in interviewing her for a job. It ended with a phone number, and a code she could use in a private message to any of his verified social media accounts if she needed proof that this wasn't a scam or prank. She'd used that code, sent a message, and received a simple response: Hello, Shyla. Looking forward to speaking with you.

Then she called and spoke to Remy, thinking, Well, he already knows where I live. If this was something shady, some kind of setup, he could have just sent for me instead of bothering with any of this stuff that could leave a digital and paper trail. That was encouraging in a way, although she understandably couldn't shake the discomfort of knowing someone-Remy, she presumed-had walked up the steps of her porch while she was either away or unaware, possibly at night, and left that envelope in her mailbox.

So here she was now, still thinking of how Braith had sent a silver sedan and not an unmarked black SUV. A lone driver and not a team. Someone to send a message, not "send a message." All things she could point at to reassure herself she was in no danger. Enough to make her think it was safe to make the call, accept the invitation, get in the car.

Then she'd seen the house.

That wasn't the right word. "Mansion" or "manor" felt inadequate, as well. "Estate" approached what felt appropriate, but even that felt a little too normal.

"Relic." That felt closer to what this was. Braith lived in the last-standing ruin of some ancient calamity.

Remy parked in front of it, stepped from the vehicle. Shyla got out of the car as soon as Remy opened her door, without thinking, almost as if anticipating being ordered out at gunpoint. Remy, with her dark suit and tight expression, engineered her own level of distrust. Shyla had asked Remy to keep the partition lowered during the drive, and Remy had obliged, then deftly stifled Shyla's attempts at conversation.

"Where are you from?"

"Nowhere important."

"How did you end up working for Braith?"

"I applied."

"Do you enjoy what you do?"

"I am paid very well."

Shyla hadn't really been pursuing a deep discussion. She had been assessing how disciplined, practiced, or spontaneous Remy sounded. From the moment she'd seen the square-shouldered woman standing outside her house, Shyla had evaluated all she could about her. She noted the scar on Remy's chin, almost invisible on her fair skin. The controlled gentility of Remy's handshake reminded Shyla of her jujitsu instructor, a man who'd suffered his share of "boxer's fractures" and ligament tears during his mixed martial arts career. Remy's blunt responses, wrapped in crisp, steady professionalism that almost felt like a challenge-I can outlast you, I promise-removed any doubt that she was a fighter. A proud one who might not ever look for a reason to show her skills, but was always happy when the world provided one.

Even the way she opened the door for Shyla had a strict and performative quality to it. As Shyla stepped out, she presented Remy with a fifty-dollar bill she had slipped from her inner coat pocket, opposite her gun. Remy looked at it like it was a suggestive Valentine's card from her brother.

"You're joking."

"Only a little," Shyla said, continuing to hold the bill close to Remy's hand. "If you really don't want it, just give it to somebody else for me." A few more seconds passed before Remy accepted the tip, and Shyla smiled while updating Remy's unwritten dossier.

She followed Remy up the stairs leading to the front door. Stay ready, she thought. Trust your instincts; they've never let you down. Which was true, notwithstanding one- or two-dozen exceptions she could recall offhand, ranging from "The timing is right, kiss this boy," to "You can get away with cheating on this one test," to "Dad and Momma wouldn't lie about something that serious."

Hell, overriding her shifting instincts-which couldn't decide whether to suspect or trust-and following facts and clues had brought her to the truth that altered her life.

Shyla stepped into the house, and as the door closed behind her she realized she should have turned around and asked to be taken home before coming in.

Heavy, dark sheets covered various wall hangings, as well as a few statuesque figures freestanding amidst the furnishings. She fixated on the wall décor. Portraits and paintings?

Mirrors, she thought. Covered mirrors. She'd heard of that sort of thing before, from a few family members she'd connected with in recent years, folks from Louisiana she'd met at a funeral, who told her that covering the mirrors in the house where the dead had died was a priority. One of the first things to be done, even as you grappled with your immediate mourning, almost like the deceased had a disease that would go airborne if you didn't take this step.

Not every mirror she could see in Braith's home was covered, however, which made Shyla wonder whether she was missing something or reading too much into what she saw. The latter felt impossible to her, and not just because of her previous case, the one that...

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