GAME OF THRONES meets THE DIVINERS in this
thrilling fantasy — the highly anticipated final book in Amanda Foody’s THE
SHADOW GAME series.
Return to the City of Sin, where the perilous final game is about to begin...The players? Twenty-two of the most powerful, most notorious people in New Reynes.
With no choice but to play, Enne and Levi are desperate to forge new alliances and bargain for their safety. But any misstep could turn deadly when a far more dangerous opponent appears on the board — one plucked straight from the city’s most gruesome legends. While Levi hides behind a mask of false promises, Enne is finally forced out from behind hers and as the game takes its final, vicious turn, these two must decide once and for all whether to be partners or enemies.
Because in a game for survival, there are no winners...
There are only monsters.
Return to the City of Sin, where the perilous final game is about to begin...The players? Twenty-two of the most powerful, most notorious people in New Reynes.
With no choice but to play, Enne and Levi are desperate to forge new alliances and bargain for their safety. But any misstep could turn deadly when a far more dangerous opponent appears on the board — one plucked straight from the city’s most gruesome legends. While Levi hides behind a mask of false promises, Enne is finally forced out from behind hers and as the game takes its final, vicious turn, these two must decide once and for all whether to be partners or enemies.
Because in a game for survival, there are no winners...
There are only monsters.
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Excerpted from Queen of Volts by Amanda Foody © 2020 by
Amanda Foody, used with permission from Inkyard Press.
HARVEY
It was early morning when Harvey Gabbiano dug the grave.
Harvey didn’t like the cemeteries in the Deadman
District, precisely because they were cemeteries. Most people didn’t
know it, but there was a difference between a cemetery and a graveyard—
graveyards were connected to a church. But the only place to find devotion in
this neighborhood was at the bottom of a bottle.
This cemetery was a bleak, soulless plot of land, made
bleaker by the drizzle that had soaked through Harvey’s clothes. Rusted
industrial plaques marked each of the graves. There were no f lowers anywhere,
not even weeds, and the unkept grass grew patchy and brown.
“It would’ve been easier if you’d burned it,” Bryce told
him. He’d watched Harvey work all morning, but not once had he offered to
help…or even to share his umbrella. Bryce didn’t see the point in helping with
tasks he disapproved of, even if this task was important to Harvey.
“It’s holier to bury him,” Harvey repeated yet again.
Even though Harvey was Faithful, he wouldn’t have gone to all this trouble had
the deceased not been wearing a Creed of his own. He didn’t know many others
who practiced the Faith anymore—it had been banned for so long now. “You don’t
have to stay.”
“I’m staying. You’re funny, you and those superstitions
of yours. I could use a laugh.”
Harvey didn’t know how Bryce could find humor in the
situation. The November weather was cold. The cemetery was irreverent and
depressing. The dead had not deserved to die.
But Bryce had come with him, and so, no matter the circumstances,
Harvey couldn’t help but feel a little bit pleased.
“I’m not doing this to be funny,” Harvey responded, forcing
his voice into a grumble. He pressed his bulky leather boot against the step of
the shovel. The mud he lifted glinted with green shards of broken bottles.
“My mistake,” Bryce said dryly. “You’re doing this to be
decent.”
Harvey absolutely was doing it to be decent. To be good.
Because Harvey might not have been the person who killed this man or any of
the other hundred who’d perished two nights ago at the party in St. Morse
Casino, but as long as he remained hopelessly in love with Bryce Balfour, he
would always have blood on his hands.
It was hard not to glance at his friend as he worked.
Harvey hated to look at him. But he didn’t need to—he had long ago memorized
every agonizing detail of his face, his figure, his posture. Bryce could be
absent and still be Harvey’s distraction.
Harvey hated himself for it.
The body made a thump when he pushed it into the
hole.
Harvey straightened, his back aching from the exertion,
his fingers blistered even through his gloves. The hours of rain had made the
dried blood on the body and clothes run again, and the flattened brown grass it
had been lying on moments before was now flooded with red. Harvey watched as
the puddles washed the blood away, and he murmured a silent prayer that the
rain would do the same for his immortal soul.
“Harvey,” Bryce said sharply.
Harvey’s gaze shot toward him, and he flinched. Bryce
hadn’t worn his brown-colored contacts since that night at St. Morse, when he
revealed himself to be a malison, someone with the talent to create curses
known as shades, a talent the world feared but hadn’t believed to truly exist.
And despite always knowing what Bryce was, Harvey wasn’t used to this
adjustment.
Bryce’s malison scarlet eyes were a reminder of how low
Harvey had fallen.
But Harvey’s gaze didn’t stop there—of course it didn’t.
It traveled across Bryce’s face, down concave cheekbones and lips chapped from
kissing someone who wasn’t him. Down bony shoulders and a tall, skinny frame,
over threadbare clothes and a black wool coat that draped shapelessly over him.
Harvey lingered on the places he had kissed, on slender fingers and narrow
hips and the smooth pale skin between. Those memories haunted him.
Bryce didn’t pay Harvey’s staring any attention. He never
did. His concentration was focused on the card in his hand. He ran his thumb
over its foiled gold back.
It was a Shadow Card, one of the cursed cards the Phoenix
Club used to play the Shadow Game. Except it wasn’t. Shadow Cards were silver.
This one belonged to a different game, one Bryce and his girlfriend, Rebecca,
had devised themselves, one they had set in motion at St. Morse two nights
prior. Harvey had helped them deliver golden cards to every designated
“player” across New Reynes, and now all that remained was to wait for the star
player to make a move.
“They’re here. I can feel it,” Bryce said hoarsely,
squeezing the card so hard it bent.
By “they,” he meant the Bargainer. The City of Sin
treated all of its legends with a hallowed reverence, and this one was the
oldest, most famous of them all: the wandering Devil who would bargain for
anything. Bryce had been obsessed with the tale for a year, ever since Rebecca
had fallen sick. Despite every effort—ethical or otherwise—Rebecca wasn’t
improving, and Bryce had convinced himself that her last hope for a cure was
the Bargainer’s power. It was why he’d murdered all those people at St. Morse—a
desperate, ruthless attempt for the Bargainer’s attention.
I’ll sell my soul, if that’s what it takes, Bryce
had once confided in Harvey, back when his smiles weren’t so much like sneers,
when he looked more like the boy Harvey used to love—the kinder version of
himself, the one Harvey couldn’t manage to let go of. Though Harvey had never
voiced his opinion, Bryce had lost his soul the moment he’d formulated this despicable
plan.
They all had.
Harvey tried to ignore Bryce’s words. In the legend, the
Bargainer approached people of their own choosing. The only way to summon them
directly was through chaos.
Surely Bryce wouldn’t attempt such evil, Harvey
had once told himself.
But he had, and since that night at St. Morse, all of New
Reynes seemed ablaze. The Scarhands, the largest gang in the seedy North Side,
had crumbled, their lord executed. Séance, the notorious assassin of Chancellor
Malcolm Semper, had been unmasked as both the last surviving Mizer and, to the
city’s shock, a seventeen-year-old girl from finishing school. Mafia donna
Vianca Augustine had been shot dead, and her son had won his election.
Luckluster Casino had burned, and the Torren Family empire along with it.
Thanks to Bryce, the City of Sin was in a state worse
than chaos—it was in hell.
And now the Devil had returned home.
Even though Harvey was an accomplice in Bryce’s plans,
the thought of all that had transpired—and all that was still left to
unfold—filled him with dread. He tried to focus on the shovel and the dirt and
the grave, on this one good thing, but his sins weighed heavy on his
soul.
“Harvey,” Bryce snapped again. He never tolerated being
ignored.
Harvey sighed. “How can you be certain the Bargainer is
in New Reynes now?”
“I told you. I can feel it.”
At that moment, the rain began to fall harder, shifting
from a drizzle into a downpour. Harvey’s brown corkscrew curls stuck against
his fair skin, and he wiped the water from his eyes.
“Why haven’t they come to me yet?” Bryce rasped, his
hands trembling while he clutched his umbrella. “I’m the one who summoned them.
I deserve my bargain.”
“The legends never mentioned whether the Bargainer was
prompt,” Harvey pointed out. He dumped another pile of mud into the hole.
Bryce’s lips formed a thin line. He trudged over to the
grave. The body was now entirely covered with earth, but the plot was only
half-filled. “That’s good enough. We should go back.”
“You can go. I’ll finish,” Harvey told him.
Bryce nodded and fiddled with his card anxiously. It was
moments like these, when he looked so young and vulnerable, that made Harvey
weak. Because even if Bryce Balfour had lost his soul, Harvey still kindled a
hope that it could be found. That he could be the one to find it.
“Never mind,” Harvey murmured. “I’ll go with you.”
Harvey heaved his shovel over his shoulder, said a final
prayer for Jac Mardlin and his unfinished, unmarked grave, and followed his
friend home.
About the Author
Amanda Foody has always considered imagination to be our best attempt at magic. After spending her childhood longing to attend Hogwarts, she now loves to write about immersive settings and characters grappling with insurmountable destinies. She holds a master's in accountancy from Villanova University and a bachelor of arts in English literature from the College of William and Mary.
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