
Murder Feels Bad
Empath Detective, #2
Empath Detective, #2
by Bill Alive
Publication date: October 24th 2017
Genres: Mystery, New Adult
Publication date: October 24th 2017
Genres: Mystery, New Adult
BLURB
He can feel people’s emotions.
And murderers feel super bad.
Mark Falcon, an aspiring detective and (for now) reluctant web developer, has a secret. He can “vibe” other people’s emotions. And when a wedding gets crashed by a seeming suicide, Mark vibes that there’s one aloof groomsman who wasn’t surprised at the death. Problem is, this guy’s also the only current lead for Mark’s website business. And both Mark and I (his trusty sidekick/housemate) are dead broke.
Then, we get our first-ever real
detective client … and she’s afraid the wedding killer wants to kill her next.
Exciting, right? Except her
reason sounds … delusional. But Mark does vibe that she’s in real danger. Also,
she’s super hot. And possibly into me…
Meanwhile, the cops tell us to
back off the whole thing, or else. Even when more people in our small Virginia
town start dying.
With the cops threatening jail
(again), quirky locals turning lethal, and a spiritual crisis on my part which
has really bad timing, Mark and I are racing to catch a killer
who seems ready to murder anyone…
Including us.
Murder Feels Bad is
the second novel in the Empath Detective mystery series, a new cozy mystery
series that totally really happened, but is officially fiction. If you like
Janet Evanovich, M. C. Beaton, Deb Baker, and long lists of famous author
names, you’ll love this new series that has it all — amateur detectives you’ll
love, zany small-town characters, sparkling wit, and a cold-blooded killer
you’ll never even suspect.
Buy Link: Amazon
EXCERPT:
…
But you do at least know about the empathy thing, right?
Okay.
Super fast, so we don’t bore all the organized readers … my friend, housemate/landlord,
and sidekickee Mark Falcon (I’m the sidekick) is the world’s one and only legit
empath detective.
He
can feel other people’s emotions. Even when he doesn’t want to.
Which
is crazy awesome, but on top of that, Mark has chosen to use this superpower to
fight crime, vibing the innermost secrets of real-deal murderers and bringing
them to justice. So far we’ve been at it for a solid month.
And
there were these two suspects, Dr. Jivanta Kistna and, um, this other guy I
won’t name in case you didn’t read Book 1 (Murder Feels Awful) yet, and they
did a bunch of crazy stuff I can’t tell you about here but the upshot was, they
decided to get married.
Like,
right away. I don’t know how they pulled that off, since Jivanta’s family
turned out to be Catholic and I thought they had rules about that. I think
Jivanta wanted to get the wedding in while the Blue Ridge Mountains were still
at Peak Autumn Gorgeous.
In
a good year, the view out here in rural Virginia is continuously breathtaking.
You can’t even (for instance) be running late for a wedding without a lush
distant backdrop of mountainous fall foliage, serene in every direction.
Unfortunately,
if you are running late for that wedding, the fantastic scenery on a crisp
sunny morning just seems wildly inappropriate, even sinister…
[Mark,
Pete (the narrator), and Pete’s plus-one, his nurse friend Ceci, barely make it
to the wedding on time…]
We
grabbed a pew, just as the music fired up and the first awkward couple started
the long march.
I
didn’t know any of these people, but Ceci was craning to see the entire wedding
party with endless enthusiasm. She’d probably know half of them by the end of
the reception.
I
caught her eye and grinned. She grinned back, sparkling and happy.
Then
Jivanta made her entrance.
I
hadn’t seen Jivanta since the “suspect party”, weeks ago. Even in civilian
clothes, Jivanta’s eyes and smile can induce a mind-altering state. Now, maxed
out in makeup and a bridal gown…
…
I kind of blissed out.
Except
the bliss was steeped with pain, because how could I ever really have a woman
like that?
When
my trance faded, Ceci was staring ahead, obviously hurt.
I
gave an inward sigh. Even though we were totally here as friends, it couldn’t
feel great to have your dude gawking at another woman … especially the bride. I
realized I’d have to show some finesse here. Not only is Ceci one of my best
friends, but I’d been racking up karmic debt to her like crazy, especially
lately. The last thing I wanted was to make her feel bad.
I
leaned toward her to whisper some smooth reassurance.
Oops.
Wrong sight line.
Because
in the next pew over, the hottest blonde I’d seen in months stood alone.
She
didn’t just stand, she had that curvy lean thing going on, relaxing on one black-hosed
leg, where a woman has so much pent-up curvaceous goodness in so many ways that
she can’t even stand up straight, she has to slow burn in a sinuous stance of
sensuality.
Even
as I looked, she turned right toward me, locked my gaze in her own mascara-ringed
infinities, and smiled. At me.
And
I thought I’d been blissing over Jivanta.
Ceci
groaned.
I
startled, panicking that I’d been caught again. “What?” I whispered.
“Female
emergency,” Ceci hissed.
“What
is it?” I whispered. “You can tell me.”
“No
I can’t,” she snapped. “Save my seat.”
She
slipped out and clacked away down the aisle. She always wobbles a little on
those unfamiliar high heels.
With
Ceci gone, the pull of the blonde amped up like crazy. I was terrified to look
back, terrified not to look back. At the front of the church, the wedding had
already begun, but I was in another world entirely.
Beside
me, Mark grunted. “Seriously, Pete? Now?”
Have
I mentioned that Mark and I have this weird connection? And it’s getting worse.
I wouldn’t mind so much if I could vibe his thoughts once in awhile.
“Dude,”
I whispered. “Look at her.”
Mark
flicked her a glance. “So?”
“So?”
I said. “Can you see if she likes me?”
“WHAT?”
he snapped. “Did you not hear anything last night from my Akina disaster?”
Oh
right. The night before, we’d stayed up too late doing this whole interview
thing that turned into a novella. Like, literally, it’s a novella now, you can
read it. And it’s free, it’s a mailing-list-only thing — but don’t go get it
now if you haven’t read it, I’ll put the link at the end.
All
you need to know here is that in Mark’s distant past, trying to vibe whether
women liked him had led to, um … problems.
“That
was different!” I said.
“Sure
it’s different,” he said. “You’re fricking here with Ceci.”
“As
a friend! And I’m not going to ignore Ceci, I could just get the girl’s
number—”
“No!
Besides, I’ve got my shields maxed out.”
You
remember shields, right? In theory, an empath can reduce the constant emotional
onslaught by visualizing some kind of shield. A castle wall, a glowing force
field, whatever. But it takes a lot of concentration, and it’s not super
reliable, especially (apparently) at keeping out me.
“Why
would you have your shields up?” I said. “It’s a wedding!”
“Are
you kidding? Weddings are worse than funerals. Every woman’s comparing herself
to the bride, every dude’s wishing he could have the bride—”
“Okay,
okay, TMI!” I said. “But can’t you just do a quick check? It’ll only take a
minute.”
“No.”
“If
you don’t, I’ll just be wondering the whole time.”
Mark
eyed me. “You’re going to regret this,” he muttered. “At least try to calm
down, you’re causing major interference.”
He
closed his eyes and looked focused.
I
strained to be calm. I tried to focus anywhere but the woman … anywhere at all…
The
priest at the front was super young. He was cracking awkward jokes about him
being a new priest and this being his first wedding, and hoping he could say
the same for Jivanta and the groom. That one didn’t land so well.
I
was trying so hard not to look at Mark and guess what he was reading.
Then
he gasped.
And
not just any gasp. The kind that made the skin of my neck start to crawl.
I
looked. He was darting gazes in every direction like a bloodhound.
“What
is it?” I whispered. “Does she secretly hate me?”
“It’s
not her,” he snapped. His eyes narrowed. “Something is very wrong.”
The
priest made another awkward stab at humor, how he was pretty sure he was more
nervous than the bride and groom. He’d woken up that morning praying nothing
would go wrong—
CLANG.
Everyone
in the entire church jolted. What the hell was that?
CLANG.
CLANG.
The
bell. The bell in the old tower was booming, blasting through the church like
an air raid siren.
The
priest’s smooth face creased with anxiety.
Mark
shoved out of the pew and ran for the back. I stumbled after him, my heart
thudding.
As
we rushed into the lobby, a piercing wail shrieked beneath the bell.
It
was a kid, howling.
And
beneath that, a new yell of pain was stabbing us, a woman crying for help.
We
followed the cries and burst through a side door into an old brick hallway that
led to the tower. We nearly collided with the fat, familiar woman I’d seen
before, who was still clutching the cute toddler. Both their faces were
distorted with terror. The woman was fleeing, and the girl was squirming
frantic against her, trying to escape even faster, mashing her mother’s
shoulder with some old holy card. Even in that moment, I noted that the card
had a delicate border of lace. It was getting crushed.
Then
I saw behind them.
The
frayed end of a thick rope lay on the old brick floor like the rattle of a
snake. The rope wound back to what was left of a woman.
I
could only look for a split second.
The
body was crushed and obscene, like a broken deer on the side of the road, the
red half-eaten carcass stretched across the asphalt. Except this was much
worse.
Revulsion
clenched me. I could already feel the doom of my future nightmares. I had to
look somewhere, anywhere else. I looked up.
High
in the tower, in the dizzy upper darkness, the broken rope dangled. The bell
was still ringing from the force of the body’s release…
Buy Link: Amazon
Author Info
You know how you keep reading
piles and piles and piles of mystery series, and most of them are, like,
moderately okay … at least, there weren’t too many typos … and your eyes aren’t
actually bleeding …
… but then … THEN … every so
often … WOW, you’re just smitten.
The style is fabulous, the people
are hilarious, the action is fantastic and terrifying and gut-wrenching and you
just want to shout, THIS! This right here! Why can’t they all be like THIS?
The next time you find a series
like that, could you PLEASE TELL ME?
I mean, please tell this Bill
Alive author guy?
Because otherwise, he’s just
going to keep trying to write them.
Which is super fun. See that
smile? He’s clearly enjoying himself.
But still. Once in awhile, the
guy needs to see how it’s done. What’s your favorite series? He’ll probably
love it too.
Author Links:

GIVEAWAY!
Mark
Falcon, the Empath Detective, may be able to sense people’s emotions, but the
rest of us need a little help. If you win this giveaway, you’ll not only get
paperback editions of all Mark’s detective adventures so far (including his
prequel novella, ORIGIN STORY, which you can’t even BUY in print, because it’s
only a gift ebook for my email list friends) … you’ll also get the technology
to BE an empath yourself! I refer, of course, to … MOOD RINGS!
According to the happy Amazon reviews, this mood ring actually DOES CHANGE COLOR! (And does NOT turn your finger green! ) These are nice. Plus, you’ll get TWO rings … the possibilities are endless … you and your significant other could start to feel a whole new connection … or, alternatively, you could “gift” a ring to a particularly inscrutable colleague … or crush …
The rings will be available in size 7, 8, or 9 — just let me know which size you want for each of your two rings. Man, I wish I could enter this contest myself…
According to the happy Amazon reviews, this mood ring actually DOES CHANGE COLOR! (And does NOT turn your finger green! ) These are nice. Plus, you’ll get TWO rings … the possibilities are endless … you and your significant other could start to feel a whole new connection … or, alternatively, you could “gift” a ring to a particularly inscrutable colleague … or crush …
The rings will be available in size 7, 8, or 9 — just let me know which size you want for each of your two rings. Man, I wish I could enter this contest myself…
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