You know that thing I said I wouldn't do...? - Newsletter

The Cormorant has landed, Dear Readers!

Above, you see Mochi, looking at you with his angelic face...plotting the destruction of my guest bathroom. Haha, just kidding. He's actually saying that if you like epic fantasy with LGBT+ themes, you should give my Abigail Hilton novels a spin, starting here. This is the source of all those short stories I've been sharing.

Cormorant is the conclusion of that saga. It took 2 years to write and was a real puzzle to put together. I wrote it for you Cowry/ Refugees fans. I tried hard to give you a satisfying close to the saga and resolution for Silveo, Gerard, Gwain, Anaroo, Silas, Glossy, Marlie, and all the rest of them.

The book dropped on Wed, and I know that a few of you will have already gotten deep in the weeds. If you've reached the middle, you might be a little surprised. If you've followed me for a long time, you might notice that I did something I said I wasn't going to do.

Back in 2020, my friend Lauren visited me, and I talked about my decision to do this thing on the podcast. Recently, I made the episode public, so that people who are reading the book can listen. HUGE SPOILERS ahoy. But first...a whole lot of goofing around (about 40 minutes). You get to listen to Lauren's impression of Gullum singing "Bring me to Life" while you're waiting for us to say anything about Cormorant. You're welcome. https://www.patreon.com/posts/38185775

If you ordered a signed paper copy of Cormorant from me, I am now waiting for it to arrive from the Zon. Once it does, I will signed it and ship to you. At this moment, the ETA of those books at my house is Jan 6th.

In other news, this is your very last chance to get the retro paper version of Cormorant signed from me! This matches the old Refugees series. I will be removing this book from the store and placing orders on December 20th! If you still see the listing, you can still order. Otherwise, you snooze, you lose.

....

Did you snooze?? Alright, you've got one more chance to get the book, though not signed. The production process for this special edition necessitated an Amazon listing. So it exists on the Zon right now. I will leave it there until New Year's. Then I will take it down, because I don't want to confuse people. If you missed the window, or you're in a country where I don't ship, and you want this book, order it now. Once again, this is only for you if you bought the old Refugees series in paper and want a matching book. Otherwise, stick with the new series version.

One more time-sensitive item:

Hunters Unlucky has been in Kindle Unlimited for a while, but I'm pulling it out at the end of December. It'll be for sale on my website at that point, so non-Zon fans rejoice. However, if you have KU and you think you might want to read that book, put it in your library before Dec 29.

Other spinning plates:

  • Iben Krutt (who did the new Hunters covers) is working on some Patreon reward art of Felbane and Tzu.

  • I'm about 55K into Arcove's Bright Side. Still hoping it's around 80K and that I can finish it by New Year's.

  • Tumblr continues to be a hot spot for Hunters fan art and new readers.

  • Rish is recording the audio of Lullaby.

  • A paper version of the K&N complete series is in the works.

  • A Chinese version of K&N is in the works. It has a particularly gorgeous cover, but I can't share it yet.

  • A cover illustration for Adagio is in the works.

Yours, an author with a new book in the wild,
~Abbie

Cormorant x2 - Newsletter

Three days until Cormorant goes live, my friends!

Above, you see the official paper cover. Pretty, right?

But if you bought the old series (er, the old 3 interlocking series) in paper, you may notice that this doesn't quite match your books. I have produced a retro version of his paperback, but it will only be available for a short period of time. It looks like this:

You can order it signed from me here. It will also be on Amazon for a brief window of time, and that may be the best way for some international fans to get it. I will let you know when it's ready there. I will not be taking orders in my store past Dec 20.

One more time-sensitive item:

Hunters Unlucky has been in Kindle Unlimited for a while, but I'm pulling it out at the end of December. It'll be for sale on my website at that point, so non-Zon fans rejoice. However, if you have KU and you think you might want to read that book, put it in your library before Dec 29.

And speaking of Hunters, the new stories I've been writing on Patreon have inspired so much new fan art! Most of it seems to be on Tumblr. Check out the #Hunters Unlucky tag or just follow me. I repost it whenever I stumble across it.

Other spinning plates:

  • I'm writing on Arcove's Bright Side again. I think I can finish it before the new year.

  • I have cover art for all the new Hunters stories from the marvelous Iben Krutt.

  • Rish is recording the audio of Lullaby. I just listened to the first chapter. It'll break your heart in the best way. ;)

  • A paper version of the K&N complete series is in the works.

  • A Chinese version of K&N is in the works.

  • A cover illustration for Adagio is in the works.

Yours, an author with a book launch this week,
~Abbie

Taro and Mochi - devoted birders - Newsletter

Hello, Dear Reader who would probably like the book NOW,

Above, you see Mochi and Taro - devoted birdwatchers. Mochi is telling Taro that they are definitely looking at a Townsend's Warbler and not a Hermit Warbler. Taro says that either way, he'd like to hear it warble from between his paws.

In book news, I have finished Cormorant edits! The final ebook is uploaded, but I'd like to have the paper appear at the same time. My designer and I are very close to having the cover done, so I have not released the pre-order yet.

A couple of time-sensitive items:

Hunters Unlucky has been in Kindle Unlimited for a while, but I'm pulling it out at the end of December. I'm thinking I might release a version on my own website that includes my notes from when I was writing it. I also might try some bundling with the new novels and stories. For me to do that, it can't be exclusive to the Zon. If you have KU and you think you might want to read that book, put it in your library before Dec 29.

Item the second - If you want The Cormorant Retro paper version, you need to order that pronto. This book will match the old series. I will not stock this book. If you don't order it by Dec 20, you will not get one.

Other spinning plates:

  • I'm writing on Arcove's Bright Side again. I messed up my wrist doing all that editing, so I couldn't jump straight back into the writing, but I'm getting there.

  • Cover design/lettering for Lullaby is done. I have cover art for Bright Side. Art for Monthly Distraction is in progress.

  • Rish is about to begin recording the audio of Lullaby.

  • I just got the sketch art for the Adagio collection (this is an image of Sham and Chance).

  • I'm about to start getting inks of a new cover for the Knight and the Necromancer complete series (so it will finally have a paper edition of the enormous brick variety, heh).

  • I just heard an update from the small press that is translating The Knight and the Necromancer into Chinese. They gave me a peak at the cover, and wow! The Chinese version is going to have an awesome cover, folks.

As you can see, there's a lot of art on that list. Hopefully you get to see more of it soon.

Yours, an author with so much art on the way,
~Abbie

Pretty, Pretty Roup - Newsletter

Hello, Dear Reader who probably also likes art,

I'm sending you this missive from the depths of Editing Hell. This is the fiddly, final 10% of producing any book that is no fun. If I was a hobbyist, I would never do this part. But I am a professional (damnit), so I do this bit so that you, gentle reader, can enjoy a book that is (mostly) free of typographical errors.

Specifically, I'm about 2/3 of the way through Cormorant edits. I am desperately hoping that I can declare victory in my next newsletter. I would like to get back to writing Arcove's Bright Side, which I had to stop in order to get Cormorant completely polished.

But I'm teasing you, aren't I? Who is that beautiful golden cat at the top of the page? If you've read Hunters Unlucky, you probably recognize Roup. This is cover art from the marvelously talented Iben Krutt for upcoming new Hunters content.

You can see the full artwork here.

Finally, a time-sensitive reminder: If you want The Cormorant Retro paper version, you need to order that pronto. This book will match the old series. It is a specialty item. So far, only 7 people have ordered it, and I need 10 to actually pay for the cover. I will not stock this book. If you don't order it by Dec 20, you will not get one.

Yours, an author who would rather be writing,
~Abbie

Cormorant Retro Version - Newsletter

Hello, dear readers who may like signed books.

Above, you see Mochi smiling from the top of his favorite cat tree. Dreaming of destruction, no doubt.

Meanwhile, I begin my final edits on Cormorant today, which means we're on the last lap to a finished novel. I've got several announcements regarding signed paper books. Please read carefully so that you don't order the wrong thing.

First of all, just in general terms, NOW is the time to order signed paper books if you want to get them by Christmas. I offer all of my paper books (Abigail Hilton and A. H. Lee) in my signed bookstore. Yes, the first 4 Pirates of Wefrivain books are now in there (the re-branded series). I will be closing the signed bookstore on November 27, because I will be out of town. I'll be back on December 20th. That is too late to get you the books by Christmas, so you need to order by Nov 27 if you want them as gifts. You are, of course, free to order my paper books at any time from Amazon. Or from me in January!

Item number 2: I have created a pre-order for the signed paper version of The Cormorant (Pirates of Wefrivain Book 5). This is the new series version! The only reason I am doing a pre-order is to tell me how many books to order immediately when it's finished. I will try very hard to get these out before Nov 27, but I cannot guarantee it. There is a paper shortage right now and a delivery truckdriver shortage. I am at the mercy of Amazon's delivery process in addition to the final editing process. You will be first in line for a signed book if you pre-order. That's all I can promise.

Item number 3: I have created a pre-order for The Cormorant Retro paper version. It will say Refugees Book 3. This book will match the old series. This is a specialty item. It will only exist if enough people pre-order it to break even on the costs of the cover. (Spoiler: that's only 10 people.) If I don't get at least 10 pre-orders, I'll cancel it and refund your money. I am planning to close these pre-orders (and decide whether or not to make the book) on Dec 20th. Order it by then if you want it! It will not exist otherwise, and it will not be available later!

If you accidentally order the wrong book, email me and I'll fix it. (But please, please read the description of what you're buying!)

Below, you see the images of the new series titles. Notice the width of the spines. They're thick books. The new version of Cormorant will look like this. The retro version will look somewhat different, similar to the old Refugees books. Both versions will feature the new painting of Gerard's face.

Yours, an author who is eye-ball deep in edits,
~Abbie

p.s. I've hit 40K words on Arcove's Bright Side, and I've just started Part 2, which should be the halfway point. The plot is about to get super twisty. ;) If you don't know what I'm talking about, scroll down to the Oct 24 newsletter.

Tricks, going once, going twice... - Newsletter

Hello, fellow-voyagers through October.

Above, you see Taro asleep on a rainy afternoon. He's not going Trick-or-Treating. I'm sure he'd like to (mostly tricking), but he lost all his yard privileges after his 5-day disappearing act, so he'll just have to watch the pretty leaves and pretty birds through the window.

I, on the other hand, am going to tour a ghost town today. I hope you're doing something fun. If not....well, I'll give you something to read. :)

Just for you guys, I'm sharing my creepy, Lovecraftian romance, “Burn” [Link redacted, because you have to actually be signed up to my newsletter to get these perks.] This short novel is set in the same universe as The Knight and the Necromancer and The Incubus series. Lucy and Jacob appear in Book 2 of Incubus, so you can get more of them there if you wish. I don't usually give this book away, so this link is good for one-week only. You snooze, you lose. (If you snoozed, it's not that expensive). You can also pick up the audiobook for three bucks.

But wait, there's more! If you don't like things quite that creepy or if you have kids, I've got a little series called Eve and Malachi [Link Redacted]. It's complete at 6 books, and I'm going to share the complete series with you. (Why would I do that? Well, I clearly like you a lot.)

These books have beautiful paper versions, both individually and a complete series volume. If you have kids in your life, these books make good Christmas presents. (Christmas AND Halloween? Yes. Read them, you'll see what I mean.)

The entire series is the length of a short novel. Once again, I do not normally give these books away. The link is good for one week only. You can add the audiobook for five bucks.

Yours, an author who's about to see a ghost town!
~Abbie

p.s. Get my audiobooks for less.

Published Under A. H. Lee

The Incubus Series
Burn
The Knight and the Necromancer
Putting the Romance in Necromancy
Enthralled

Published Under Abigail Hilton

Pirates of Wefrivain The Prophet of Panamindorah
Hunters Unlucky
Eve and Malachi

Mochi the Domestic House Leopard - Newsletter

Hello, fellow cat-fiends (...er...tolleraters of cat-fiends).

Above, you see Mochi the domestic house-leopard, lounging upon his branch (chair cushion). Mochi is a Japanese Bobtail cat. They have naturally short, corkscrew tails that are as unique as a human fingerprint. Mochi's tail is shaped like a comma. Taro's (his brother) is shaped liked a question mark. You can tell if you feel the bone underneath. However, the end result just looks like a bunny rabbit pomp-pomp floof. Behold the floof!

My cats have an instagram if you just can't get enough of them.

Did I name a creasia cat after Mochi in this ill-advised, entirely for-fun Hunters universe book I'm writing? Yes. Yes, I did. It's far from the most self-indulgent thing about that book. Sue me. Am I going to name a cat-god after Nim in the Sleipnir-verse books? Yes, I am. If you can't do these things, why be an author?

So, anyway, if you somehow missed the memo that I'm writing the third new Hunters universe novel/novella, I am. On Patreon. The first one (not explicit) is currently at the $1 level. The other two (so explicit) are at the $5 level. They're tagged. They'll come down off Patreon when I get around to publishing them somewhere else. I'm 20K words into the third one. I think it'll be about 80K words. The story has now got more of Storm than I expected and quite a bit about the highland curbs. Also Lyndi, Caraca, Nadine, Tollee, and everybody's kids. But mostly Roup and Halvery and Arcove. They are -

Lullaby
Monthly Distraction
Arcove's Bright Side

All of these build on this novel. They will not make sense to you without it.

Animal stories are a hard-pass for you? Well, here's something else. Books 1-4 of The Pirates of Wefrvain series are live as of last week in ebook and paper. Audio to follow sometime this year. (No, I can't stop you from grabbing the audio in its current form. But don't.)

This series is the source of all those short stories I posted over the last six months or so. It's a big, sprawling epic, with lots of LGBT content. It goes to some very dark places, but I promise happy endings if you stick with me. The final book, Cormorant, is currently being fumigated for typos. It will be out no later than Dec 15 and probably middle of November.

These books and stories used to be spread across 3 different series, plus my Patreon. In order to avoid confusion, I've created a helpful blog post showing the exact contents of each book in the simplified series. Everything is in these 5 books, people. Everything that used to be in 11 books.

Finally, a heads up that my Patreon reached a new reward tier, so I'm asking fans to vote on a universe for reward art. Once we settle on a universe, we'll move on to voting on specific characters. Right now, Panamindorah is winning (vs Shattered Sea or Hunters Universe).

Yours, an author with several spinning plates,
Abbie

On your mark, get set, relaunch - Newsletter

Happy (re)Launch Day, Folks!

Above, you see Mochi telling Taro, "I forgive you for leaving me for FIVE DAYS (I nearly died; never do that again)."

In book news, I am terribly excited to announce that Books 1-4 of The Pirates of Wefrvain series are now live in both ebook and paper! I had hoped to have these out before the final pre-order date (which is today), and I did have the ebooks uploaded more than a week ago. But I didn't get final paper proofs until yesterday. I know some of you like paper, and I wanted to make sure the paper was available at the same time as the ebooks. So here we are and there you go. I'm happy with the way the paper versions turned out, friends. They're very pretty and very read-able, even though they are quite thick.

FYI, the audio still needs an overhaul to match the new organization. I would not recommend buying the audio right now (although I can't stop you). I'll try to get it sorted by year-end.

So what's in these new books? In order to avoid confusion, I've created a helpful blog post. You can also see pictures of the (oh so pretty) full cover spreads.

Some of you will want to know when the books will show up in my signed paper bookstore. Answer: I've got to order them, wait for slow shipping, and also I'm about to be out of town for 3 weeks, so...in 3 weeks?

How is Cormorant (the final book in the series) coming?

Quite rapidly, considering its size! It's already come back from half a dozen beta readers. I know the pre-order date says Dec 15, but I'd be shocked if I didn't have it in your hands by mid November. If you haven't read the Cormorant excerpt on my website, it stands alone as a short story that even new readers can enjoy. It's about how Layjen met Percy (they were neither at their best).

What else have I been doing?

Item number one: guys, I am my own worst enemy. I have leapt straight into that third Hunters story, and this one will definitely be a novel, hopefully under 80K. I'm already 10K into it. I bet I'm done in 3 weeks. I think this one is called Arcove's Bright Side. As with the others, I'm posting it on Patreon as I write it. Right now, you can read Lullaby at the $1 level (I recently moved it there), and the other 2 at the $5. They're tagged.

Lullaby
Monthly Distraction
Arcove's Bright Side

Because I am my own worst enemy, ABS veers back into action/adventure. It'll still have a few explicit scenes, but a whole lot of run/fight/plot/scheme. Which means the original fanbase would love it...except that they'll have no idea what's going on without reading "Monthly Distraction," which is hell'a explicit and super gay. (Once again...see item number one.)

I swear I will get this out of my system soon and write something that 80% of you want to read. In the meantime, if you like xeno-fiction...or if you can at least tolerate it in pursuit of a good story...oh boy, do I have something for you. If your idea of fun is extremely naughty gay cat stories, interspersed with political machinations, chases that read like chess games, poignant moments between past and future generations, and lots of catty (haha) dialogue...you, sir/xer/madam are you in luck. Get on this train. (I would suggest getting on it via audiobook, but you do you.)

Off I go to finish this novel that I can't stop writing so that I can write something else,
Abbie

The Pirates of Wefrivain - What's in Each Book?

As you know if you’ve been following me for a while, I’ve reorganized this saga to make it easier for new fans to find everything. However, I don’t want to confuse existing fans, so here’s a breakdown of the contents of each of the new books:

Book 1 - The Guild of the Cowry Catchers

  • Embers, Flames, and Ashes (Books 1-3 of the original Cowry Catchers series)

  • Professionals (originally published in Secret Things)

  • Dark Heart (originally published in When We Were Young)

Book 2 - Shores Beyond the World

  • Out of the Ashes and Shores Beyond the World (Books 4 and 5 of the original Cowry Catchers series)

  • Sky Dance (originally published in Secret Things)

  • Harbor Wave (originally published in When We Were Young)

  • Quarantine (originally published in When We Were Young)

  • Chemistry (originally published in Secrete Things)

  • Taking Tricks (originally published in When We Were Young)

Book 3 - The Scarlet Albatross

  • Albatross novel (originally Book 1 of the Refugees Trilogy)

  • The Secret (originally published in Secret Things)

  • Anaroo of the Defiance (originally published in When We Were Young)

  • Lucky (never before published)*

  • Letter of Reference (originally published in When We Were Young)

  • Bad Blood (originally published in When We Were Young)

  • Fire From Heaven (originally published in When We Were Young)

  • Chimera (originally published in When We Were Young)

  • Ghosts (originally published in When We Were Young)

Book 4 - Jager Thunder

  • Jager Thunder novel (originally Book 2 of the Refugees trilogy)

  • Blockade Runner (originally published in Before the Wind)

  • Queen in the Daylight (originally published in Before the Wind)

  • Save Yourself (originally published in Before the Wind)

  • Play Date (originally published in Before the Wind)

  • Say Please (originally published in Before the Wind)

  • Fly (originally published in Before the Wind)

Book 5 - The Cormorant (on pre-order, no paper cover yet)

  • Cormorant (originally planned as Book 3 of the Refugees trilogy, never before published)

*“Luck” is a story about Percy and Silas during their school days. It was written after the short story collections were published. Consequently, it has only ever been available as a Patreon and newsletter perk.

Cormorant, etc. - Newsletter

Hello, Dear Readers,

Above, you see Gerard's full portrait for the Cormorant cover. Pretty, right? :D Like all the others, that's by Sarah (Rah) Cloutier.

The book is out to beta readers now. One person (Bess) turned it around in 4 days. 188K words. With helpful comments and everything! Geez. Obviously, Bess has a unique skill, but even speed demons don't turn books around that fast when they're not enjoying them. This is a good sign.

Tomorrow I will hopefully have the paper covers back from my designer, which means I can upload them to Amazon and order proofs.

The entire series is on pre-order here. Paper will come out with the ebooks, but I don't have a way of creating paper pre-orders, so if that's what you want, be patient. Fair warning, these books are all around 700 pages. They are chunky books.

If you haven't read the Cormorant excerpt on my website, it stands alone as a short story that even new readers can enjoy. It's about how Layjen met Percy (they were neither at their best).

What else have I been doing?

I'm now into my edit for the 2 new Hunters universe novellas/ short novels. When I finish, I get to write the third one, which will hopefully wrap up this detour. The only place you can read them right now is Patreon. I talk about them a bit in my latest reward summary.

Back to work,
Abbie

p.s. In case you missed them earlier, here are all my newsletter perks [Edit for the blog: You have to actually be on my newsletter to get these. Go to the front page and pick a pen name.]

Published Under A. H. Lee

The Incubus Series
Burn
The Knight and the Necromancer
Putting the Romance in Necromancy
Enthralled

Published Under Abigail Hilton
Pirates of Wefrivain
The Prophet of Panamindorah
Hunters Unlucky
Eve and Malachi

Cormorant Pre-Order - Newsletter

Hello, Patient Readers.

Above, you see Taro (top) and Mochi (bottom), playing in their favorite cat tree after Taro's return. They are once more like one mind with two brains - inseparable.

In other news, I finished my Cormorant edit! Now the novel is out to beta readers to search and destroy typos. Homophones are my bane. They are the blackberries of my written words. Kudzu, if you're in the south. I hates them, my precious, and rely on some helpful volunteers to weed them out. Once the blackberries and kudzu have been killed with fire, you'll get the book.

The entire series is on pre-order here.

What else have I been doing?

A lot of production-related stuff to get the Pirates of Wefrivain novels re-launched and the new one out the door.

I also updated my summary of rewards on Patreon. Among other things, you can listen to quite a chunk of that first pirates book for free, if that's interesting to you.

New Short Story

This time it's a Cormorant excerpt! But this excerpt stands on its own as a short story that even new readers can enjoy.

On the eve of his arranged marriage to a princess, a miserable Percy receives an ironic gift - a palace slave who is in love with his wife-to-be. Percy tries to free Layjen and send him away, but Layjen has other ideas.

Reading it here.

Yours, an author in the midst of edits (who WANTS to write yet another Hunters novella *weeps*),
Abbie

Published Under A. H. Lee
The Incubus Series
Burn
The Knight and the Necromancer
Putting the Romance in Necromancy
Enthralled

Published Under Abigail Hilton

Pirates of Wefrivain
The Prophet of Panamindorah
Hunters Unlucky
Awake
Water in the Desert
Eve and Malachi

Cormorant pre-order is live! Here's an excerpt.

Hello, Readers!
Cormorant pre-order is live! I’m excited to share a new excerpt from the novel. This excerpt stands on its own as a short story. so you can enjoy this whether you’re an existing fan or a new reader. Note: my typo-editors haven’t been over this yet, so you may see a few more errors than in other short stories I’ve posted.

In the novel, this chapter is called “Fourteen Years Ago.” On the eve of his arranged marriage to a princess, a miserable Percy receives an ironic gift - a palace slave who is in love with his wife-to-be. Percy tries to free Layjen and send him away, but Layjen has other ideas.

Here’s the story -

Layjen stood for a long moment on the catwalk of the airship hanger, staring at the confection that was the Ray. She had gingerbread work featuring her namesake, along with eels and sharks, chasing each other in graceful curves around her bows. Her hull was painted a deep, velvety blue. Gold leaf flashed against it like stars in a night sky. The keelhead that had stared down at Layjen as he made the ascent, looked like a string ray in flight, its body rippling in lifelike lines, its tail curving up the keel.

Layjen had always loved art. Under other circumstances, he would have been enthralled by the Ray. Now he felt only foreboding. What am I doing here?

Layjen had been aboard airships only briefly during journeys with his mistress and at parities. He’d never expected to work aboard a ship of any sort, let alone such a rarified beast. My ancestors were pirates, bred to the sea, he told himself as he stepped onto the gangplank.

But Layjen did not feel like a pirate. He felt like a pampered kitten, discarded in the jungle, and trembling in terror. He expected he looked like it, too, from the way the sailors on watch raised their eyebrows. Someone in the twilit shadows smothered a laugh. In the low light, Layjen couldn’t make out their features, but he was sure they were all grishnards. Hunti might be bred to the sea, but they’d never been bred to airships.

Layjen stiffened his spine and raised his chin. Hunti men were a bit smaller and more delicate than hunti women. He did not have an intimidating aspect, but he was very accustomed to being among grishnards, and unlike most hunti, he was accustomed to giving them orders. “I am to report to Master Percival Bellwater, curiosity of his Lordship Theodorus Haplag. Might I trouble one of you to show me the way?”

The tittering stopped at once. Layjen had been raised in the Haplagian court among the royal family, and his accent was unmistakable. None of these sailors had ever heard such sounds come out of a hunti’s mouth. They were struggling to not to gape. They must surely guess that he was a slave, but a slave who probably outranked them.

One of the sailors cleared his throat. “This way, sir.”

The ship was beautiful both above and below, but so strange. Layjen followed the sailor’s lantern through latticed tunnels and over catwalks that spanned dizzy heights until they reached the captain’s cabin in the stern. Too soon, they were at the door and Layjen thought, I’m not ready for this. “Has he taken dinner? I don’t want to interrupt—”

“Oh, I expect he’s taking dinner now,” said his guide in a tone that was not altogether respectful.

In spite of his anxiety over meeting Percival Bellwater, Layjen frowned.

The sailor shook his head. “He’ll just throw you out if he doesn’t want to see you, probably forget about it in the morning.” He raised his voice as he opened the door and called, “Someone to see you, Skipper!”

Layjen thought his knees would buckle as he crossed the threshold. I am really not ready for this.

The room into which he’d been ushered was a softly lit study with a desk in one corner and delicately carved wood furniture scattered over plush rugs. The upholstery was picked out in greens and blues with gold stitching. The ceiling was carved, and it continued the theme of rays, eels, and sharks, diving and twisting in beautiful patterns.

Percival Bellwater sat behind the desk. Layjen had seen him before, although they’d never been formally introduced. Layjen’s general impression had been of a garrulous lordling, always surrounded by friends and impeccably dressed.

He was alone tonight, though, and wearing shirtsleeves. His blond hair gleamed in the soft lamplight. A glass of dark wine stood at his elbow, the bottle beside it.

Several sheets of paper lay scattered over the desk, which Layjen, in his distraction, did not attempt to decipher. “Sir, I’ve been ordered to report to you, curtesy of the Haplagian crown.” He came forward and handed over the slim roll, tied with a blue ribbon and stamped with the royal seal. Layjen felt dizzy for a moment as the pages left his fingers. He watched with a ringing in his ears as Percival took it, broke the seal, and unrolled it carelessly. These were Layjen’s slave papers and references, including an estimate of his value in cowries. It was quite high—a fact that should have pleased him.

Instead, he felt sick.

“Yes, I was told to expect you,” said Percival, glancing at the papers so quickly that he could not possibly have read them. “You were a companion to my lady?” The disgust with which he said “my lady,” made Layjen’s fur bristle against his clothes. A new sort of anxiety squeezed his chest. Is it possible that he knows?

“Personal secretary,” said Layjen too quickly, “a childhood companion, and then…I kept her books.” Stupid, stupid, whispered a voice in his head. Tell him you can read in four languages and manage a staff of two hundred. Tell him you have kept accounts for all five royal children and never failed an audit. If he thinks you’re just a secretary, he’s likely to sell you to some wretched workhouse.

But Layjen stood mute. He did not want to work for Percival Bellwater, and that was the truth of it. No matter how poor his prospects beyond the walls of this airship, he did not want to have to look at the person, day after day, who would share a life and a bed with Melwa Haplag.

That is what the king intended, of course. That is the punishment. For her, too, I suppose. Surely Bellwater doesn’t know…

Percival took a swig of his wine with a slightly off-balance motion that belied his spotless silk shirt. Is he drunk? thought Layjen in astonishment.

To his horror, his new master smiled brightly at him and said, “Well, this is awkward, isn’t it? Whose idea was it to give you to me, do you suppose?”

 Layjen wondered if he was about to be killed. “Lord Haplag,” he managed. He knew that he should say, “Lady Melwa,” but the lie was too much insult to injury. Mellie would be crying in her pillow about now. Crying, said a nasty voice in his head, but not sacrificing any of her precious dignity to get you back. Not daring to lose any bargaining chips with daddy dearest.

Percival’s slightly slurred voice brought him back to reality. “I can see you hate me. Fortunately for you, I have an adequate supply of people who hate me. No need for another one. Here.” He held out one of the sheets at his elbow, fumbling it over the side of the desk, so that Layjen had to scramble to catch it.

Layjen stared at the sheet of parchment. It was simple and direct, clearly written by Percival himself and not a secretary. It was a release of services. Freedom, in fact. Unconditional, unqualified freedom. Layjen looked in vain for some catch, some requirement—the sort of life-threatening task often built into such contracts.

There was nothing.

Percival had already turned away to gaze upon the parchment lying at his elbow. “Don’t worry,” he murmured as he sipped his wine. “I filled it out several bottles ago. It’s legal.” He had, too. The signature was bold and straight, the stamp from his signet ring, precise. The document had been witnessed.

Almost absentmindedly, Percival reached out for Layjen’s slave papers and ripped them apart. Then he went on drinking.

“Why?” was all Layjen could think to say.

Percival gave a brief, undignified giggle. “Because it wasn’t Lord Haplag’s idea. It was my father’s. I’m sure he heard some rumor that you were a bit too fond of your mistress and demanded a sop to the family honor.” He snickered again. “He’s going to be so angry when he finds out I let you go.” He looked up and gave a smile that would have lit up a room under other circumstances. But here is just looked fragile and bitterly sad. “So you see, you don’t owe me a thing. This isn’t about you at all. Go on, get out. Have a good life.”

Layjen’s mouth moved automatically. “My clothes…” he stammered. “My jewelry.”

“Keep it.” Percival waved his hand. “You’ll need something to set yourself up. Should be enough.”

It certainly would. Layjen’s reeling brain was already doing the math on the value of his jewels and finest court clothes. It would be enough to take him far away, to Maijha or Mance, where the laws were kinder. He could set himself up as a fine copyist or accountant. Run, he thought. Before he comes to his senses, before Melwa does something stupid like try to rescue you. Just take your freedom and run!

Percival stood up, swaying a little, and Layjen got a whiff of the wine he was drinking. Good gods. “You’re drinking poppy wine on the night before your wedding to a princess?” he exploded.

For the first time, Percival looked a little irritated. “I don’t remember asking your opinion. Also, why are you still here?”

Layjen glanced behind the desk and saw two more bottles on the floor. Seven hells. “He is going to kill you!”

“Oh, he’ll beat me, certainly,” drawled Percival. “If he can. I’m pretty good with a sword these days.”

Layjen was lost. “Who?”

“My father.”

Layjen huffed. “Whatever your father does to you will be mild as milk compared to the way Lord Haplag will react if you insult him by showing up drunk to his daughter’s wedding. Do you aspire to end life as a temple sacrifice, Master Bellwater?” Layjen knew he was being staggeringly impertinent, but his mouth kept moving. “Where are your friends?”

It suddenly seemed very odd to him that the son of a fabulously wealthy silk mogul was drinking alone on the night before his wedding to a princess.

Percival did not answer, and Layjen finally looked down at the parchment on which he seemed so fixated. It was a sketch of the type done by street artists. The scene showed a group of laughing young people, two of them in sharp focus. One was recognizably Percival in patterned waistcoat and fitted overcoat, the other a freckled lad with a sailor’s que, wild hair curling out of its braid. They had their arms around each other and seemed to be in a state of tearing high spirits.

Against his better judgement, Layjen asked, “Who is that?”

“A lie,” said Percival softly and took another sip of poppy wine.

Before he thought about it, Layjen moved around the desk and plucked the glass neatly out of his erstwhile master’s hand. Percival stared at him stupidly as Layjen examined the bottle and saw to his relief that it wasn’t quite half empty. He then made a quick inspection of the bottles on the floor. As Layjen had hoped, these turned out to be ordinary alcohol. Very few people would have been upright after multiple bottles of poppy wine. Even a single bottle in its entirety would have likely made the situation a lost cause. But it’s still early evening, thought Layjen. He can sleep this off before the ceremony.

“Right, sir,” said Layjen briskly, and hauled a dazed Percival to his feet. “Up you get. Where’s your bed? Ah, through here, I expect. Gods, what beautifully carved doors you have on this ship.”

There was already a lamp turned down low in the bedroom, and this was fortunate, because Layjen had his hands full of Percival. Like many lordlings of Layjen’s acquaintance, he was adept at hiding his level of intoxication. His cool demeanor belied the fact that he could barely walk.

“Why are you still here?” moaned Percival, his voice plaintive as Layjen sat him down on the edge of his bed and briskly pulled off his boots. He was still clutching the parchment drawing in one hand.

“Because you just freed me,” said Layjen.

“I know I’m very drunk, so perhaps I’m not making the connection—”

Layjen stood to look him in the face. “You just freed me, Master Bellwater. And maybe you did it for petty reasons. Maybe you don’t appreciate what freedom means, but you just gave me my life, and now I am going to save yours. Because I was not exaggerating when I said that my lord the king will feed you to a wyvern if you arrive at the temple in this state.”

Percival blinked at him. “Am I not marrying the girl you love?”

Layjen felt his jaw clench. “Yes.” He swallowed. “But she was always going to marry someone who wasn’t me.”

Percival’s big, golden eyes watched his face. He seemed to be the sort of person who became searingly honest under the influence of alcohol. “I’m likely to be a terrible husband.”

“Likely, but possibly not predestined. Do you intend to sleep in these trousers, my lord? Because I can’t make sense of the laces.”

Layjen thought for a moment that Percival would refused his help, might throw him out of the cabin, and continue his course to suicide-by-wyvern. But in the end, he fumble his own clothes off and allowed himself to be folded into bed.

He was still clutching the parchment sketch, and Layjen reached to take it from him. Percival’s free hand shot out and closed on Layjen’s wrist with remarkable coordination. He twisted, and Layjen realized in astonishment that Percival was both aware of how to break someone’s wrist and capable of doing it, even in his current state. “Don’t,” breathed Percival.

“I won’t harm it,” said Layjen, a little shaken. “Do you want to destroy it by sleeping on it?” Indeed, if the sketch had not been made on sturdy vellum, it would already have been crushed.

Percival looked at him narrowly, then released his wrist.

Layjen stumbled back, staring and rubbing his arm.

“Sorry,” muttered Percival.

Layjen shook his head. After a long moment, he ventured, “Where is your valet?” He’ll need to be told to expect a bit more work getting you ready tomorrow.

“Gone,” murmured Percival. His voice was growing dreamy, the poppy having taken hold. “I was sleeping with him, and then I said some unkind things, and he told me to go fuck myself and buggered off.”

Layjen stared at him. “You were—?” He glanced down at the sketch. The freckled fellow in the picture was certainly not a valet. You have a rather complicated love life, my lord. And very little in the way of discretion.

Layjen turned down the lamp. He knew he should leave. Instead, he sank heavily into a chair beside the star-studded window, facing the bed. The court will eat this fellow alive!

Layjen watched the gently rising and following mound of bed linens, thinking. He tried to process the conflicting sides of Percival Bellwater that he’d just witnessed—staggering generosity, an inclination to self-destruction, honesty, violence, grief, promiscuity, poor-judgement, loneliness…

“You are a disaster,” whispered Layjen.

Percival’s half dreaming voice floated out of the bed linens. “Whatever you say, Silas.”

Who is Silas?

Layjen stared down at the parchment sketch. He’d known that Percival had a reputation as a rake with unconventional tastes, but the idea that he was hopelessly in love with someone who, for whatever reason, he could not have—this had never occurred to Layjen. He leaned back and gazed, unseeing, at the carved beams overhead. An image of Melwa Haplag leapt before his mind’s eye—her black hair gleaming with bands of gold, her blue eyes snapping as she climbed down from her griffin after a hunt.

Forget the court. She may eat him alive. She certainly wouldn’t value him in his present state. Melwa was not a patient creature.

But she’s stuck with him, thought Layjen, based on everything I’ve heard about the Bellwater fortune and the state of the crown’s coffers.

“What if I stayed?” wondered Layjen aloud.

This time, Percival did not volunteer a response. A soft snore issued from the blankets.

“What if I stayed,” repeated Layjen, “because truthfully, I don’t know how else you’re going to get ready and out the door on time tomorrow morning. It sounds like you’ve driven your personal servants away, and your ship’s crew doesn’t entirely respect you. If I… Gods, I suppose I’d have to accompany you to this wedding.” Layjen grimaced. And yet some bitter part of his brain wondered whether Melwa’s discomfort might make him feel just a tiny bit better.

Perhaps she’s hoping that I’ll just disappear and she’ll never have to look me in the eye again. No such luck, my lady. Because your husband clearly needs someone to look after him, and that might be… He swallowed. It might be the only thing I can do for you…little as you’ll appreciate it.

Layjen got up and paced around the room. I’ll need to learn about this blasted ship. And make your crew respect me. I can’t be the only hunti aboard. That will never do. In fact… This might be an opportunity to reconnect with the culture and heritage that had been lost to him. Layjen considered. He recalled vaguely that a hunti pirate ship of some renowned had been recently captured. She had a hunti name that, he was ashamed to admit, he could not pronounce. Around port, they’d simply been calling her the Shark.

Sharks and Rays are cousins, aren’t they? He struggled to remember her captain’s name… Padeen? No, Padmay.

The crew were in jail and likely to hang…unless someone bought them. The local merchants certainly wouldn’t do it, no matter how skilled the pirates might be as sailors. The Shark had cost them a lot of money by all accounts. Besides, hunti from the Lawless Lands were always the least likely species to be purchased out of a noose. They did not take well to servitude, and grishnards didn’t trust them.

Layjen judged that the cost of his jewels and clothes would be sufficient to buy the whole company. I’ll set them free immediately, of course. Will they feel enough gratitude to crew an airship for me?

He chewed his lip, thinking. Surely some of them will. After all, their own ship is gone, they’ve got no other prospects, and the local merchants hate them. If nothing else, the airship is a quick ticket off the island.

Are you out of your mind? howled another part of Layjen’s brain. Without money, you’re trapped here. What if Percival Bellwater turns out to be as bad at sailing as he is at self-preservation? What if the violence and the poor judgement win out over the honesty and generosity? What if he won’t let you hire a hunti crew? And you’re just assuming he’ll make you a ship’s officer, but he’s been telling you to go away since you walked in the door!

Layjen wandered back to the bedside table, where he carefully rolled the parchment sketch and placed it in a drawer. He sat down again and watched the mound of blankets for a while. I guess I’ll see what he says in the morning when he’s sobor. Make my decision then.

The chair was comfortable, but Layjen doubted he’d be able to sleep. Red moon was peeking through the window now, and it provided enough light for keen hunti eyes to read. Layjen plucked a book from Percival’s bedside table, and was pleased to see that it was about airships. Maybe you’re not incompetent regarding the sailing, Master Bellwater. You study, at least.

Layjen thought ruefully that there was something appropriate about a grishnard airship being his first connection to the sea. My ancestors were pirates, but this may be as close as I get. He opened the book and began to read.

Percy and Layjen are part of the Pirates of Wefrivain series. All 5 books are on pre-order now. They will get paper versions at launch, but I can’t do paper pre-orders.

The Horrible Thing was Undone - Newsletter

Hi, guys.

Last week when I emailed you, I was pretty low. The reason was that Taro had disappeared and seemed likely to have been a coyote's lunch. I am ecstatically happy to report that this was not the case. You can see him in the picture above, telling you all about it. I will translate for him, but first, some book news.

Cormorant Pre-Order is Up!

I got my new ebook covers, guys! Which means I can finally put up pre-orders!

Don't let the Dec 15 launch date fool you. Amazon has big penalties for missing a pre-order date, but none at all for moving it forward. Consequently, when an author is not 100% sure when a book will be ready, it's makes more sense to create a pre-order that's farther out than expected and then just move it up when the time comes. I expect Cormorant will be out before Dec 15.

And if you were waiting for the whole series to relaunch, all the rest are up, too! I've set an Oct 15 pre-order for them. Again, I'll probably pull the trigger sooner. Here's the series page.

Paper versions will be up by the time the ebooks go live. Audio is a bit trickier. Cormorant audio will not be ready before next year. All the rest have audio versions, but I need to reformat them to match the new arrangement of the novels. It will take a minute.

Related: Blockade Runner is up on my website for one more week and then it comes down. It's an airship adventure from the height of Silas's career sailing The Scarlet Albatross. Guaranteed to leave you in a good mood.

Stories that are not Panamindorah

There's nearly 60,000 words of new Hunters Unlucky-related content at the $5 level on Patreon. It's 2 novellas, and they are tagged to make them easy to find. The first novella, Lullaby, is appropriate for all ages like the original novel. The second one, Monthly Distraction, is for grown-ups only. I wrote these because I wanted to write them, not because I thought anyone wanted to read them. But a few of you will love them. ;)

So, Taro...

Taro disappeared on Thursday 9/9 about 4 PM. My mom was home and began looking for him about 5:30. She looked until 10 PM. She got my brother and sister-in-law involved. No Taro.

He and Mochi get backyard privileges during the day when someone is around. My yard is fenced and also has a dense hedge. The neighborhood is quiet and has no throughway, no busy roads, dogs always leashed. There are other cats about.

Taro and Mochi are capable of going over the fence, but I'd never seen them more than a few feet from my yard. They are always put up at night, and they look forward to bedtime, because that's when I play with them. Taro was particularly fond of bedtime. The fact that he didn't come home implied some disaster had befallen him.

None of this was my mom's fault. She didn't do anything out of the ordinary. Taro has been a bit overconfident lately. He is the equivalent of 21, with adult capabilities and a teenaged brain. I should have told her to keep them locked up.

I was on a 3-week anesthesia assignment in AZ when this happened. My family waited until Friday afternoon to tell me, hoping he would come home. By the time I found out, he'd been missing for 24 hours. Taro has never been outside at night in his life. There are always coyotes around in this part of the country, no matter how urban the setting.

So I spent the week-end in my hotel room in Yuma, losing my mind. I posted on all the lost pet groups, reported his chip missing, reported him to the humane society, called vet clinics, posted on Nextdoor (reviewed all of the horribly close coyotes sightings), cried a lot, etc. My Mom looked and called, made posters, talked to neighbors. No Taro.

Mochi and Taro are very smart and very bonded. They are twins, never separated in their lives. It's a small miracle that Mochi wasn't with him when he disappeared. I have a motion sensor camera on the cat door. There is video of Mochi coming in and out repeatedly right after Taro disappeared, before my mom even realized he was gone. Mochi had obviously started searching for him. He got locked up the second she realized Taro was gone.

The next day, Mochi stopped eating. He didn't eat very well during the following days. My mom said he would purr as she called for Taro. He would look around every time you said Taro's name. He went from room to room, searching. Of course, he lost his backyard privileges at the same time as he lost his brother, so he had fewer distractions.

I had to put babies (human babies) to sleep on Monday. I got through it, but by the end of the day, with night #5 approaching, I realized I couldn't continue doing my job. I called the agency and the hospital, told them I had a family emergency, and canceled the week's assignment. I have never done that in 10 years of locums. I canceled operating room days (they did find coverage; I don't think anyone's surgery got canceled). I bought a last-minute ticket out of pocket, and flew home to help look for Taro.

I knew he had probably already entered the food-chain via coyote, but I just wasn't going to ever have peace with this horrible thing if I didn't try while there was still a chance. I also thought I might be able to get Mochi to eat. I am Mochi's second favorite person. His brother is his favorite. I really cannot lose both of them.

I flew 1200 miles home, including a 20 minute connection, so that I could get there by 2:30 PM of day #5. I went all over the neighborhood calling him.

And guys...two hours later, he was at my front door, balling his head off.

*lots of happy crying*

The little monster has figured out how to make me come home from states away. His brother took about 12 hours to forgive him. Taro wanted to cuddle immediately and Mochi was like I HAVE BEEN MOURNING YOU, A*HOLE!

Taro has lost a pound or two, but otherwise unharmed. He is a poorly camouflaged cat, who somehow survived 5 nights in coyote country, having never spent a night outdoors in his life.

Someone may have taken him into their house and tried to keep him. He is beautiful and unusual looking. But, folks...he is NOT easy. If that is what happened, I hope he drove them bonkers. This is a cat who dismantles disposals, steals jewelry and electronics, checks inside purses for interesting objects, takes keys, chews through plastic packaging, opens doors, breaks remote controls by shoving them off countertops, and is quite vocal.

If someone took him, I hope he made their life a living hell for 5 days. And I'm so glad, because I would have done almost anything to get him back.

He's very chatty now. He's telling the story of his exploits to anyone who will listen. He wants to do all his favorite things at the same time. Mochi is giving him kisses again.

These guys are now indoor-only cats. That's a dice I'll never roll again. I'm screening in my back porch.

I wrote a poem for Taro when he went missing and a poem when he came home. I am not a poet, but sometimes it helps to package my feelings in the little box that is a poem.

From 9/12. He'd been missing 3 days -

I've swallowed something, and it's you. Too big and too bright.

I'm choking. You won't go down. This won't go down. I keep swallowing.

My little lead cat, my little boy,

dirty feet and water and teaching your brother bad habits.

You loved countertops and plastic and my bed and your grandmother.

You loved your brother like he was part of you, two brains, one mind.

Here's hoping you're somewhere else, turning on faucets and opening doors.

He's looking for you, purring every time we say your name.

I'm swallowing. It just keeps coming back up. You keep coming back up.

You knew when the credits rolled, and yours rolled much too soon.

I'm not there yet, baby boy. I can't accept it. I'm choking. I'm drowning.

There are no words. I miss you.

______________

From 9/15 -

You were out past your bedtime, little boy, when Death came walking.

You chased his trailing robes, because of course you did.

He turned and smiled at you with coyote teeth.

He looked at you with eyes made of cars and dogs and lawnmowers.

"What a pretty little cat. What a perfect short story."

Death loves short stories. Death loves micro-fiction.

He offered you dice and he offered you bones, and you played, baby boy, because you can't resist a game.

Death loves games. "Heads I win, tails you lose."

You amused him, so he plucked you up and took you home, gone without a trace.

While we called your name, he dumped you among his collections and went off to work.

While your brother looked for you and mourned, you roamed among the bones.

You found his watch. Death has so many watches, but you found his favorite.

When you'd lost it under the refrigerator, you dismantled his garbage disposal.

(Oh, the things that have gone down that drain.)

You hid his socks and broke all of his remote controls.

You turned on every faucet and sampled the Styx.

You opened every door. (Death has so many doors.)

You found his jewelry--all of it made from gold coins--and you danced and sent them flying.

You found his messenger bag, and you stole the keys to Hell.

You became bored at last and sang the song of your people outside his office.

When he saw what you'd done, he was angry.

He swung his scythe, but you danced across his kitchen table. (He thought you knew better; he was right.)

You knocked over your own hourglass (tails, you win).

And as the sand ran backwards, he opened the front door, screamed, "Get out!"

and you came home.

You can see lots of pics of Taro and Mochi on instagram.

Yours, an author who still has two Japanese Bobtail cats,
Abbie

In which I am exceeding non-commercial - Newsletter

Hello, My Friends.

You may have noticed that I sometimes get pretty personal in my newsletter. Something bad happened this week. Something awful. I'm not ready to talk about it yet. I will eventually. I'm having a hard time right now.

What's New?

Before the Bad Thing happened, I was on an absolute tear with new writing. Because my muse is contrary, I picked the least commercial thing possible - new Hunters Unlucky novellas, the second one very adult and super gay.

There's now nearly 60,000 words of new Hunters content at the $5 level on Patreon. It's 2 novellas, and they are tagged to make them easy to find. The first novella, Lullaby, is appropriate for all ages like the original novel. The second one, Monthly Distraction, is for grown-ups only. It builds on Lullaby. I'll be posting the final piece of that second one tomorrow. Thank goodness I had it pretty much finished before the Horrible Thing happened. I was having so much fun until then.

I know, I know. It's as though I said, "What can I write that will be utterly un-marketable? Is there a way that I can offend absolutely everyone?" But a few of you will love it. You're welcome. I wasn't really planning to write anything else in this world anyway, so I can't ruin it, right? Right...?

FYI, if you've never read my drafts on Patreon, they do include notes about what I was thinking as I wrote them and why I arranged the scenes the way I did. I typically take all this stuff down when I officially publish books or stories in their final form. If you like that kind of thing, it's there.

Yes, I will get them cleaned up and on sale eventually. Cormorant comes first. Hopefully now I can settle down and write Sleipner-verse books. Once I somehow come to terms with the Horrible Thing. Right now, I have no muse and no rudder.

New Short Story

This week I'm bringing you another appetizer story for my upcoming Pirates of Wefrivain relaunch. This one is called "Blockade Runner" and it is an exciting, action/adventure story about Gus and Silas at the height of their career with the Scarlet Albatross. They take a dangerous assignment to bring supplies to a blockaded island fort. These stories come down after 2 weeks, so read it now.

Yours,
Abbie

p.s. In case you missed them earlier, here are all my newsletter perks [Redacted. To get these, you have to actually give me an email address. Scroll down from the front page and pick your favorite of my pen names.]

Changes Ahoy - Newsletter

Hello, Lovelies.

Above, you see Taro, sleeping in extended pretzel mode. He's no doubt dreaming of how to turn on the guest bathroom sink. Because he did...turn on the sink. It was running for a day before I found it. Taro and Mochi were taking joyful hourly birdbaths. They love water so very much. (And that's how they got shut out of the guest bathroom.)

What's Changing?

So, guys, I've grown weary of playing cat and mouse with email filters. Many email providers seem hellbent on preventing newsletters like mine from reaching you. After a lot of painful deliberation, I've decided to begin posting my newsletters to my blog as well as sending them the normal way. Here's the actual URL - https://www.abigailhilton.com/abbies-blog

If you prefer old-fashioned RSS and/or browser bookmarks instead of email, you're in luck. Before you unsubscribe, however, let me say that I will still keep the newsletter perks exclusive to email. I value your email addresses. Giving me an email address that you actually check is an act of trust. I want incentives to remain in place for people to do that, so I will redact newsletter perks from the blog.

Another advantage of posting newsletters to the blog is that you can easily check if you think your email provider might have gobbled up one of my emails. If you haven't heard from me in a while, drop by the blog and see whether you missed something.

Finally, I'll try to reenable comments. Someone asked me about that recently and I was like, "Only bots comment; I disable comments." But that might change if I start posting there a lot.

Fiction - How's it Coming?

Like a hurricane. I finished my new Hunters Unlucky-related novella, "Lullaby," and immediately started into another. This one is way too racy for the primary novel. It's about Roup and Halvery. I can never post it on Amazon. I am clearly insane to be writing it, but it's too much fun not to. "Lullaby," along with the first two installments of the next novella are currently lurking at the $5 level on Patreon. (The racy ones are called "Flirt" an "Dissemble.") You need to actually be familiar with the novel for these to punch properly. "Flirt" and "Dissemble" build on "Lullaby," so read all the pieces in the order they were posted. All the content warnings, folks. Seriously, you have been warned.

If you read and liked Hunters novel, but are not down for racy content, no worries. "Lullaby" is one of the better things I've written in a while and it's same "heat level" as the novel. It'll be part of a collection hitting stores in the next couple of months. As for the other one (OMG, why can't I stop writing it?), that will end up in my online store.

But, Abbie, I hear you say, I do not care about your animal epic or any of the poignant or naughty stories you care to spin off of it. I only care about Pirates of Wefrivain. When is Cormorant coming?

I'm about 20% done with my edit! I'm working on it daily (I promise. In addition to the...other thing). As I hoped, this one does not need a ton of work. I expect to start getting it out to copyeditors in something less than 2 weeks. I will also have pre-orders up for the relaunch of the whole series within that timeframe. If you are patiently waiting for those...you're so good. Seriously, you're so very patient. Thank you. I will get them up soon.

And a few of you are saying, "I do not care about any of your Abigail Hilton books. I only want more A. H. Lee content." That's the Sleipner-verse. It's coming, too, but probably not before the beginning of next year. In the meantime...try some of this other stuff? All of them have some LGBT themes.

New Short Story

This week I'm bringing you another appetizer story for my upcoming Pirates of Wefrivain relaunch. This one is called "Bad Blood." It's got Gus from the previous story, running into one of Percy's crew (Padmay) while they're both in port. We get a bit of triangulation on what Silas and Percy are doing from the point of views of their crew members. We also get a blossoming friendship between these two that plays a significant role in the novels.

Padmay is a hunti. These are my hyena people. If you've never read about spotted hyenas...boy, have you got some interesting googling ahead of you. Seriously, just read their Wikipedia article. I'll wait.

So anyway, yeah. Spotted hyenas are the trans guys of the animal world. Their biology is super interesting. Having a race like that in my stories lets me play around with gender in interesting ways.

Read "Bad Blood" here.

Yours, An author who is just going to keep writing this oh-so-wrong story until she gets it out of her system,
Abbie

p.s. In case you missed them earlier, here are all my newsletter perks [Redacted. To get these, you have to actually give me an email address. Scroll down from the front page and pick your favorite of my pen names.]

Bad Blood - Available for a Limited Time

Dear Reader,

For more than 10 years, I’ve been writing books in the Cowry Catchers/Refugees saga. This year, I will bring the entire epic tale to a conclusion with The Cormorant. At that time, I’ll be rebranding the books and stories as a single series (Pirates of Wefrivain), so that the reading order will be more obvious. I can’t tell you how excited I am to reach the end of such a long-running project!

In preparation for this event, I’m releasing entry-level short stories every 2 weeks for the next few months. This story will come down on Sept 12 and be replaced with another. I hope you enjoy the story.

~Abbie


Bad Blood

Padmay slunk into the dockside pub with a sense of mingled guilt and relief. She sat down against a wall at the very end of the bar as far as she could get from other patrons, and ordered a drink from a bored looking grishnard kid who didn’t give her a second glance.

Good. That was good.

Any port town would surely have hunti passing through from time to time, but this pub was high in the cliffs where the airships moored. Padmay had not felt like walking all the way down to the river at the bottom of the valley just to get a drink.

Not a lot of hunti in the airship crews. Padmay hadn’t worn any of her traditional gold or bone jewelry. She was dressed just like the other sailors in the pub, but her mottled skin and hair were impossible to hide. Hunti were known to be ferocious fighters, and they were rarely attacked in port in spite of the general distaste for their species.

However, it was also true that hunti traveled in packs. Where you found one, you were likely to find half a dozen. Any friend would have told Padmay not to go into a pub in a strange port alone. And any friend would have made me regret it immediately by airing their grievances.

Padmay took a grateful gulp of her ale. I just need a quarter watch without anyone complaining at me. Or pointing out yet another way in which airships are different from waterborne ships. Or giving me meaningful looks. She took another gulp. Starting with Layjen.

Padmay felt she’d made a mistake with that one, but she’d be damned to the seventh hell if she could figure out how. She was grateful to him; of course she was grateful! Her whole pack would have been in nooses were it not for Layjen. But, as her grandmother would have said, “A cup of water in the desert does not buy a well in the jungle, no matter how kindly given or received.”

And even if his saving us did create some sort of lasting obligation, we still seem to be speaking two different languages.

Although he was a hunti, Layjen had been raised by grishnards—the royal family of Haplag, no less—and Padmay thought privately that he was more grishnard than Captain Bellwater. Percival Bellwater had his faults—a multitude of them in Padmay’s opinion—but at least he did not try to push his way into pack dynamics. As long as the hunti followed orders and sailed the ship, Bellwater was content.

Layjen, on the other hand, was trying to keep a foot in both worlds. In addition to going among the grishnard sailors as though he were one of them, Layjen was forever trying to save the captain from himself—dining with him, attending his family gatherings, coming and going from his cabin at all hours. You’d think they were lovers. And wouldn’t that solve so many problems?

Hunti thought of grishnard men as women, so if the captain had taken Layjen into his bed, that would have tied everything up with a bow. Unfortunately, this was not the case. Layjen was an unclaimed male hunti, second in command of the ship according to Bellwater, and this created instant problems for Padmay as the leader of her pack. Of course, she had bedded Layjen. She couldn’t have done anything else and maintained order.

She’d fucked him and claimed him. Problem solved. The grishnards could call the ship’s hierarchy whatever they liked, but from the point of view of the hunti pack, Layjen’s position had been established.

Except he didn’t seem to understand. In fact, Padmay had gotten the bizarre notion that he was becoming jealous of Hosoli and Kurcsh and any other lower ranking male that she took into her hammock. Worse, she’d gotten the impression that he thought he’d laid some sort of claim to her. It was as though he didn’t understand a dominance display when it was right in front of him. Right on top of him, for godsakes!

Does he think that when a woman beds with a man, he owns her? Padmay felt foolish for not seeing this earlier. Maybe the alcohol was helping. Do grishnards think so? Well, it’s the other way around for hunti, you idiot. I own you. Get that straight. I’ve done you the favor of claiming you myself and not letting one of my subordinates do it.

More startling still, Layjen had made it clear that he was interested in fathering children. His arrogance was breathtaking. If any other man had said such a thing to her, Padmay would have put him abruptly and painfully in his place.

Hunti had a great deal of sex, but very little of it was reproductive. The choice of whether to get children with any particular partner lay entirely with the woman, both socially and biologically. Reproductive rape was impossible for hunti. Childbirth through a pseudo-penis was quite dangerous, so it wasn’t a decision that a woman made lightly.

Hunti were well aware that other shelts found them strange, even repulsive, and they rarely mated outside their species. There was no need, as any hunti with a pack had ample opportunities. Hunti used sex to establish social hierarchies, to smooth over disputes, and to strengthen bonds within a pack. Sex as dominance display was common. That did not mean that it wasn’t pleasurable for all parties involved, but any hunti understood what it meant.

Except, apparently, Layjen.

Ursul was already smarting because Layjen had rebuffed her advances. He had a right to do so as the claimed mate of the pack leader, but it was still rude, especially to Padmay’s beta. Layjen could easily say no to the lower ranking women, but the pack beta? And him an outsider? Padmay massaged her temples. I am going to have to have a blunt conversation with him. She wasn’t looking forward to it.

Because she liked Layjen. He tried so hard, and he was attractive. He did have many of the qualities Padmay looked for in the fathers of her cubs—intelligence, strength, patience, and he was kind in so far as he understood what that meant. He was absurdly proud of having made a connection to his own species across the gulf of his grishnard upbringing. Padmay had a soft spot for him. It’s going to feel like kicking a cub when I have to set him straight.

Ursul… She was a good beta, but she was constantly testing the limits of what Padmay would allow. If she decides to set Layjen in his place herself, there will be trouble. There was always trouble when pack dynamics came into conflict with a ship’s hierarchy aboard a grishnard vessel. If Ursul believes that a hunti man is showing her contempt, she’ll attack him, and Bellwater will interpret that as mutiny, because Layjen is his lieutenant and his friend.

The problem was that hunti who thought like grishnards were so rare. If Layjen had been any other species—hells, if he’d just been female—the trouble would not have existed. But he was a male hunti, and it was impossible for the pack not to see him as a creature bound by their rules.

I can maintain control of this situation, Padmay told herself. As long as Ursul does not sense weakness or indecision. Padmay finished her ale and ordered another.

The alcohol was working. She was beginning to feel a little better. Ursul will be fine. She’s just struggling like everyone else to learn her way around an airship. She takes out her frustration on the lower ranking males, and she tests me. But the work is becoming easier every day. We can do this. It’s better than being hanged as pirates. In a year, we’ll say it’s the best luck we ever had.

Padmay was startled out of her reverie when a big grishnard sat down heavily on the stool beside her. He called out cheerfully to the bartender to order his drink and then turned to Padmay. “Well, I hope you’re having a better day than me, friend, although you certainly don’t look it.”

Padmay was too surprised to respond. Grishnards did not usually speak to unknown hunti unless they were telling them to clear out. She peered at her seatmate out of the corner of her eye. No direct eye contact. Not here. This was not her territory. She was alone. Definitely no direct eye contact.

The stranger was a big, broad-shouldered mountain grishnard with dark wavy hair and a pleasant face. Padmay thought that other grishnards probably considered him handsome, although it was difficult for her to tell grishnards apart, let alone have an opinion of their relative appearances. She did find things a little easier with mountain grishnards. They were less delicate than their lowland counterparts and physically powerful in a way that Padmay admired.

The stranger drummed his fingers while waiting for his drink. He continued talking in a cheerfully annoyed tone. “Can I tell you a story? You won’t tell anyone else, I’m sure.” He wasn’t looking directly at Padmay, and she realized that he was doing this on purpose. Because he was aware that hunti considered direct eye contact from strangers either threatening or overly familiar? How refreshingly perceptive from a grishnard.

Padmay surprised herself by saying, “Only if I can tell you one.” Gods, the alcohol must be having an effect. Shut up, Padmay.

The grishnard slapped the bar and cackled. “Deal.” His drink had arrived. He took a gulp and said, “My captain is my best friend. Truly. Dinner every night, cards, books. I think I might be his only friend. I’d get between him and a charging griffin.”

Padmay smirked into her drink. “I sense a ‘but.’”

“But,” continued the stranger, “if I don’t get away from him for a day, I am going to kill him. I swear I’d like to turn him over his desk and spank him right now, and not in a sexy way.”

Padmay nearly choked on her ale. She hadn’t laughed so hard in a while.

“I mean,” continued the stranger, enjoying her amusement, “I’m not saying it couldn’t be sexy. What I’m saying is, he is being an arse, and I’d like to throttle him.”

“Hunti might settle that with a spanking.”

“I know,” said the grishnard. “It is really too bad that he is not a hunti.”

“What did he do?”

“Oh, he got us involved in a bidding war over a cargo that is not worth what we’re going to end up paying for it. We’ll have to do part of the Harcover Run at night, and I know he loves a challenge, but this isn’t even about that. He’s got some private feud with the other captain and he hates to lose! He simply must win every godsdamned thing if it kills him. If it kills us!”

Padmay rolled her eyes. “My captain was also engaged in a bidding war recently. He did not win, but he has consoled himself by taking a troop of actors aboard. Actors, for all love.” She used the phrase, not because it was common among hunti, but because she thought it would make the grishnard laugh, coming from her. She was correct. He had a pleasant laugh.

Padmay continued speculatively. “I’m sure he’s fucking one of them. I don’t know which, nor do I care. They all look the same to me. But I am sure they will all be a tremendous nuisance. Have you ever heard of such a thing aboard ship? Actors!” She drank her ale and listened to the grishnard chuckle.

He held up a hand. “Wait, wait, I can top that. My captain will not simply fuck an actor like any reasonable person. Instead, he has taken up insect collecting.”

Padmay raised one eyebrow. She was looking at him now—not head-on, but with both eyes. He was glancing at her between sentences, matching her degree of eye-contact. He has definitely spent some time around hunti. He could teach Layjen a thing or two. “Insect collecting?” she said aloud.

“Yes, yes, I’m sure you’ve never heard of such a thing. I know I hadn’t. Last yellow month, we anchored on Maijha-184 in the dead of night. Because why? Because there is a green beetle that flies at dawn. He spent a quarter watch down there. My captain, in his shirt sleeves, running around a numerary in the mud with a glass jar. A quarter watch! For three beetles!”

Padmay was laughing so hard she could barely breathe. “Well,” she gasped, “at least as soon as you got into port, I bet you didn’t—”

“Oh, but we did!” said the stranger.

At the same time, each trying to be a little louder, they said, “spend half a day looking for coffee beans!”

Their laughter stopped abruptly. Coffee was a rarified beverage in Wefrivain—a drink favored by the elite, much less common than tea. Ships who went looking for it frequently ran into each other on a recurring basis. Suspicion crept into Padmay’s voice as she said, “What’s your ship?”

“Scarlet Albatross,” said the grishnard. “Yours?”

Padmay looked directly at him. She did this instinctively, because she’d just realized she was facing an enemy. “The Ray.” Both of them scooted back a fraction. “You’re right about one thing,” spat Padmay, “Silas Ackleby is certainly an arse!”

Silas?!” snarled the grishnard, suddenly bristling to his tail tip. “He didn’t even start it this time! I swear Percy follows him around bidding on our cargoes just because he knows Silas can’t resist!”

“Good luck with that night run to Harcover,” snapped Padmay. “I hope the downdraft sends you right into the canyon.”

“Fuck you!”

Padmay was dimly aware that they were shouting at each other, that she was too drunk to be doing this, that she was alone, that she should not call attention to herself.

“Hey!”

Padmay looked up to see a new bartender—probably the kid’s father—looking a lot less bored, a lot less friendly. The bar had gotten fuller and noisier since she’d sat down, but not full enough or noisy enough to drown the argument between Padmay and her seatmate. The bartender’s eyes skipped over Padmay’s mottled hands, face, and hair. You couldn’t hide as a hunti, couldn’t pretend to be anything else. “We don’t serve mud skins in here.”

“Well, you did an eighth watch ago,” snapped Padmay. Shut up, shut up, shut up.

“Get out,” growled the bartender. He slapped her bill down on the counter, and Padmay saw, with a sinking feeling, that is was three times what it should have been. She also sensed, more than saw, a couple of hired peace-keepers edging around behind her—grishnards as big as the one from the Albatross.

Well, this evening is certainly going to take my mind off my troubles. Perhaps permanently.

Padmay put the correct amount of money on the counter and stood up.

The bartender didn’t miss a beat. “That’s not even half your bill, Mud.”

“It is my entire bill,” snapped Padmay. The peace-keepers were right behind her. They were taller. They were bigger. This is going to be ugly.

She forced herself not to look at the grishnard from the Albatross. He’ll have a great story when he gets back to his ship—how he got one of the Rays nearly beaten to death. And all he had to do in order to win was sit there and be a grishnard.

Padmay couldn’t have paid the bartender’s outrageous bill even if she’d wanted to. She didn’t have that much money in her pockets. She concentrated on what she could see of the peace-keepers out of the corners of her eyes. They’ll drag me outside before they really lay into me. If I elbow the one on the right and break the other one’s nose, I might get to the door first.

“Excuse me.” The grishnard from the Albatross spoke in a carrying, on-deck voice. Padmay finally glanced at him. He was glaring at the bartender. “Do I look like a maiden in distress to you?”

“No, sir,” said the bartender guardedly. “You look like a patron.”

“Are you planning to charge me three times what my drinks are supposed to cost?”

The bartender crossed his arms. “No, sir. You don’t incur a mud skin tax.”

“A mud—skin—tax?” The grishnard repeated the words slowly, as though each one had a different flavor of feces.

The bartender rolled his eyes. “You’re drunk, sir.” He jerked his head at the peace-keepers, and they pinned Padmay’s arms. Too late, Padmay realized she’d become distracted by the grishnard’s display. She’d missed her chance to bolt. She also realized that there were more than two peace-keepers. Three at least, maybe four. They were going to pick her up bodily, carry her outside, and beat her until no one could see her mottled skin past her bruises.

I should go limp. They’ll get bored sooner. She wouldn’t though. Padmay wasn’t a hunti pack leader for nothing. I am going to break a few heads. I am too drunk for this. They may kill me. Ursul and Layjen will just have to sort it out.

She looked up in time to see a fist coming at her. No, not at her. Past her.

The grishnard from the Albatross hit the peace-keeper behind Padmay so hard that he stumbled backwards and fell across a table full of drinks and cards. The party at the table gave a roar of outrage. They began shouting at the bartender, at the peace-keeper, at the grishnard from the Albatross.

Padmay took the opportunity to ram her elbow into one of the goons behind her, following it with a toss of her head that caught another in the face. She felt his teeth tear into her scalp, but as she ducked and spun away, she had the satisfaction of seeing him careen into one of the already angry patrons from the interrupted card game.

Padmay vaulted over a table, knocking drinks everywhere, and reached the door in another bound. She whirled to look back and saw that one of the peace-keepers had tossed her former seatmate down across a table and pulled out a dagger. Oh for fuck’s sake.

Padmay knew she should just run. They won’t hurt him. He’s a grishnard.

He started a bar fight, argued another voice in her head. For you.

Fuck.

Padmay glanced around and saw a broom beside the door. She picked it up and hurled it handle first like a javelin. Padmay was fairly good with javelins. The handle hit the attacking peace-keeper in the face. He reeled back with a screech, and her seatmate shot out from under him. He caught sight of her as he bounded for the door and gave her a dazzling grin. Padmay rolled her eyes. They both hurtled through the entrance, along with every other patron who didn’t want to lose an eyeball or a kidney.

Padmay didn’t know this port well. When she started to go left, the stranger grabbed her arm, and said, “No, this way.”

They ran for at least four blocks before he stopped and ducked into an alley. They stood there, catching their breaths. The grishnard was laughing as he panted. Padmay was not laughing, but she did feel a little giddy. The grishnard stuck out his hand. “Gus Creevy.”

Padmay looked at him. She looked at his hand, but did not take it. “Padmay.”

“Can I buy you a drink in a better pub, Padmay?”

She said nothing. We compete with the Scarlet Albatross more than any other airship. There’s bad blood between Bellwater and Ackleby. I should walk away.

“Come on,” said Gus gently. “I shouldn’t have started yelling back there. That pub isn’t friendly to non-grishnards; I should have known better. Let me show you a place to get a drink that isn’t run by assholes.” He smiled. “You can complain to me about actors if I can complain to you about beetles. And maybe you can tell me where to find the good coffee, because I have looked and looked.”

Padmay could feel the corners of her mouth tugging up. Fuck it. Bellwater and Ackleby could feud all they liked, and Layjen could go along for the ride. It wasn’t her fight. Padmay shook Gus’s hand. “We found good coffee across the river. Nothing on this side is drinkable according to Bellwater. The actors are worse than ocelot kittens. Where on earth does Ackleby keep all these beetles?”

If you walk with me into the dark...

I’m about to finish my longest running series. When I do, I’m going to rebrand/renumber it in order to make it less confusing. Unfortunately, there is no way I will avoid confusing some people, but I’d like to confuse as few as possible. So let’s walk back in time…

In the misty pasts of 2007, when the internet was still a teenager, and the all the artists were still on DevientArt, and the first iPhone had JUST been released, I started a book called The Guild of the Cowry Catchers. It was set in the same world as my Prophet of Panamindorah novels, but intended for a more adult audience. I thought it would be about sixty thousand words. *insert hysterical laughter*

Three hundred thousand words and one year later, I had a 5-part epic - a high fantasy, action/adventure story, wrapped around a gay/bi romance, featuring an entirely non-human cast. As you may have guessed, the market was not begging for this at the time (or ever). Nevertheless, I released the books in 2010, first in podcast form, then in ebook and paper. The story attracted a small, but fiercely devoted audience. These are my oldest fans (hi, guys!).

I wrote quite a few short stories for those fans. The short stories filled in gaps and provided additional insight above the characters. Sometimes they spawned new plot lines. I began packaging those stories into collections. The first collection was actually about the Prophet of Panamindorah characters. Put a pin in that for later.

Around 2014, I had an idea for an airship story, and I wanted to set it in Panamindorah. While Cowry Catchers gives a reasonably happy conclusion for our main (MM) couple, the broader world is in chaos when the story ends. There's clearly a long road ahead to peace, and some readers found that fact unsatisfying. I thought I could use my airship story to show how things wound up for the broader world.

That book was The Scarlet Albatross, and it was intended to be an entry point into the setting. For this reason, I called it Book One of a new series (Refugees). However, the book ended up containing tons of call-backs to Cowry Catchers. While it is a new cast of characters, they have many personal ties to the Cowry cast. At the end of Albatross, the two groups run headlong into each other.

The next book, Jager Thunder, is one of the most difficult novels I've ever plotted, because I had lots of smart characters with strong opinions meeting, interacting, and bouncing off each other as they tried to solve difficult problems. In addition, the book showcases big, sweeping changes in the larger world. I was happy with the results, though, and the readers seemed to like it.

In between each of these books, I kept writing short stories to showcase interesting tidbits (and occasionally significant details) that didn't make it into the novels proper. By this point, there were 4 volumes of short stories. And, I remind, you long-suffering reader, that the first volume of short stories is about Prophet, which is barely related to Cowry Catchers. Confused yet?

Now we come to the present. I have ambitious plans to wrap up this entire saga in one novel - The Cormorant. It will give satisfying conclusions to all of the major players. The novel has been challenging, but the end is in sight.

At this point, I'm thinking about how I want to present this series when it's finished. I know I need to do some renumbering/rebranding. Originally, I had hoped that people would arrive through both Cowry Catchers and Albatross. I also intended many of the short stories to be entry points into the series. In actual fact, most people start with Cowry and read straight through. Some of them stop after Cowry because they don't realize there's more story. Many of them skip the short stories because they think they're optional. It's kind of a mess.

My current suggested reading order is:

  • The Guild of the Cowry Catchers (available as 5 individual books or the complete series volume)

  • Secret Things (Stories from Panamindorah Volume 2)

  • The Scarlet Albatross (Refugees Book 1)

  • When We Were Young (Stories from Panamindorah Volume 3)

  • Jager Thunder (Refugees Book 2)

  • Before the Wind (Stories from Panamindorah Volume 4)

  • The Cormorant (Refugees Book 3)

So...this "series" is listed under 3 different series names, and one of them doesn't even start with Book 1! *weeps*

My plan to fix it: I'll rebrand the entire series as Pirates of Wefrivain. The books will be:

  • Book 1 - The Guild of the Cowry Catchers (Currently Cowry 1-3)

  • Book 2 - Shores Beyond the World (Currently Cowry 4-5)

  • Book 3 - The Scarlet Albatross

  • Book 4 - Jager Thunder

  • Book 5 - The Cormorant

I will tuck the short stories into the backs of the novels. People may still skip them, but at least they'll know how I intend for the story to be read.

Now, I know that some of you have purchased all the previous books and want a version of Cormorant that says "Refugees Book 3" and matches the old series. I have heard your cries! I will (briefly) issue a limited edition version of Cormorant that matches the old set.

In addition, some of you have partially complete paperback sets, or you just like the old covers. Folks: grab those old books in the next couple of months, because they are going away! You can get a limitless number on Amazon (obviously) until I unpublish them. But if you want signed copies, it's first come, first served, and I will not replace my stock. I only have 1 copy of some of these books, so if that's what you want, get them now!

Because I am trying to clear these books out of my signed book store, I'm offering a 25% discount. Enter this code at check out: BWXTRRG

In order to make it clear which books are discounted, I've created a category tag called "Discounted." These are the books I'm talking about.

If you're thinking of starting the Cowry Catchers/ Refugees series, you might want to wait and get the renumbered/rebranded books, particularly if you're reading in paper. However, all the same content will be in the story either way. I'm changing the presentation, not the content, so do what makes sense to you. If you want to start reading now, you might catch up with me just in time for Cormorant. ;)

Finally, a warning for those of you coming to these books from my A. H. Lee romances: this is epic fantasy. It has strong romance subplots, but the structure is epic fantasy. If you can think of a trigger warning, it probably applies. There is assault and major character death and attempted suicide and and and and. There is NOT cheating (by my definition). There is, however, quite a bit of polyamory.

Romance guarantees you a happy ending. Epic fantasy does not.

However, I will say that, if you follow me all the way to the end (and I do mean ALL the way), you will get a pretty comprehensive Happily Ever After for more characters than you will think possible at the mid point in the series. If you walk with me into the dark, I will eventually lead you back out into the light. Hard-won warm fuzzies for readers who persist.

~Abbie

Welcome 2021

I just read through my New Year’s post from last year. Wow, 2019 was a great year for me. I turned 42 and I did a bunch of special things, including a trip to Taiwan. I’m so glad I chose to do those things! That year of my life really felt like a charmed circle. The magic ended in March, on my birthday, when I turned 43. That was the week the hammer came down in Washington, travel restrictions began, I saw the videos coming out of Italy and realized what the pandemic actually meant for me as a healthcare worker. My anesthesia contracts dried up by the end of the month. Everything changed that first week of March. My magical 42nd year was over, and my 43rd year was going to suck.

But not completely. Not in every way. 2020 had some magical moments. They were just difficult to enjoy.

I keep trying to summarize this year and getting lost in the weeds. I keep deleting paragraphs. I’ll try again, chronologically –

The badness did not actually start on my birthday. That’s my brain making a story out of my life. Life is not story-shaped. The badness started in January, when I learned that my good friend and fellow creative person, Norm Sherman of the Drabblecast, was having liver trouble. Norm is slightly younger than me. Texts became increasingly dire. By February, he was in the ICU, trying to get a long-shot liver transplant. He has talked about this on his own podcast, so I’m not breaking a confidence here.

I have worked ICU liver transplant floor, so I know exactly what this looks like. It was heartbreaking. But he got his transplant. He survived. And then he didn’t die of covid (so far) as an immune suppressed person in this pandemic.

In a way, my friend’s illness was a microcosm of 2020. Terrible things happened, but the worst possible outcome was avoided. Norm beat the odds in the end. But it would have been a lot nicer if he just hadn’t had liver failure. The whole year was like that.

When the hammer came down in March, elective surgeries were canceled state-wide in Washington. I had 2 anesthesia contracts. Both were put on indefinite hold. For about 4 months, I had no anesthesia income. I was afraid I would lose my new house.

My choices for healthcare work all involved out-of-state travel, risking covid exposure. My choices were mostly limited to facilities that were playing fast and lose with covid precautions and/or facilities that wanted me to do ICU nursing for covid patients. I’ve been an anesthetist almost 7x longer than I was ever an ICU nurse. I am not currently qualified to do ICU nursing except on paper. And this would have been high stakes ICU, where a minor error in PPE usage could kill me.

Nevertheless, I would have done something dangerous rather than lose my house. Fortunately, I didn’t have to. Because of K&N. Those books may have literally saved my life.

When I realized what was happening at the beginning of March, I spend up the production schedule for those books, and I did every single correct practice I’ve learned in 10 years of publishing. Stuff I don’t usually have time to do, I did. I launched the books at the end of March, straight into the pandemic, and held my breath. It felt like tossing a sparrow into a hurricane. But I figured people were stuck at home and needed comfort.

 I was right about that. Those books soared. They quickly outsold every previous book I’ve launched by orders of magnitude. I don’t know whether they would have done just as well without the pandemic. Maybe, maybe not. They made enough money to briefly replace my anesthesia income. I didn’t have to look for dangerous work or worry about losing my house.

That was pretty magical. But it was hard to enjoy. I was completely alone for most of 4 months. Lauren Harris was able to come visit me in June. I’ve rarely been so glad to see another human. Elective surgeries began again soon afterward, and I worked through the summer at a local hospital. It was weird. I usually enjoy my day job, but this was not fun. I did a lot of work in a PAPR hood and/or N95 mask. It’s hard to hear in the PAPR, hard to breathe in the N95. I was constantly worrying about infecting myself or someone else. I was afraid to chat with my colleagues in the breakroom. People I met were distant, their normally friendlessness erased by fear. This is what my healthcare job looks like in a pandemic.

papr-660.jpg

I knew within a week of releasing K&N that I should write something else for the mm romance audience. I should write another gay romance right away! But…I have never felt less romancy. I couldn’t do it – not for all the money in the world. Instead, I started into The Cormorant, with an ambitious goal of tying up the entire Cowry/Refugees saga in a final book. It was comforting to spend time with those characters that I know so well. In a way, it was comforting to know that only a small number of people would read it. Even though I’ve given myself a hard problem with tying up two epics in one book, it was still relaxing. I’ve got 100K words, and I think it will probably wrap up around 150.

I had to stop working on Cormorant in fall, because I’d promised an mm romance story to the enormous Winter Wonderland promo for January. I wanted to do something with the K&N characters – something that would be interesting to new readers, as well as those who’d already read the novels. I wrote “Enthralled,” which came in at a respectable 25K. So far, readers seem to like it.

Towards the end of the year, I also began getting audio for K&N from Kirt Graves, and I began doing research on audio direct sales. This was pretty exciting. I tried to do direct sales 10 years ago, but the delivery tech was not there. Now it is. I launched my audio direct sales platform a couple of days ago. If this goes well, I will add the rest of my audio catalogue slowly, as they come off of Audible’s 7 year contract (several are due to come off this year). If it goes *really* well, I will accelerate my exodus from Audible exclusivity. But I need to see whether it’s worth losing Audible revenue and probably ticking them off.

Like all new books, K&N income drifted down from its launch peek over the course of the year, but it remains well above the waterline for my previous book income. I was able to contemplate not returning to the operating room at all. This could be the beginning of my fulltime author career.

Right now, that doesn’t seem as attractive as it has in the past. Sitting alone at home for unbroken months is uninspiring. I feel like I have fewer ideas and less to say. I canceled 2 vacations this year (Hawaii and Scotland). I was trapped in my house both by the pandemic, and, at one point, by deadly smoke from wildfires. It felt like my world shrank and shrank.

Around the middle of the year, I decided to get a Japanese bobtail kitten. I adopted one of these unique cats while living in Taiwan 20+ years ago. She died in 2012, and I have always wanted another one. Nim likes other cats, and the old man could use some excitement. I knew Nix would have to get used to it, but she would. I needed something to look forward to, so I signed up for a kitten, and watched via video as the litter grew up. Taro was the only one available initially, but his brother, Mochi, was relinquished by a family in ID, because pet shipping was canceled during the pandemic. The two brothers were very bonded, and in the end, I decided to go full cat lady in the apocalypse. I took both of them! They have provided something to look forward to for me, and many of my family and friends. My 93 year old grandmother gets excited about receiving pictures of them every week. Yes, I have 4 cats. Nim will be 18 this year, Nix 13. I won’t have 4 cats forever, but I’m happy with my feline family for now.

In fall, my mother came to live with me, and while that was probably the right decision, I had to make the jarring switch from constant aloneness to constant (human) togetherness. Neither is ideal. Hopefully she will find a house soon.

I keep telling myself that this is not actually what fulltime author would look like. I would be able to travel, see friends, go out to eat, shop in a store, walk downtown. My mother will not be living with me forever. Fulltime writer doesn’t have to equal sitting in my office with my days and nights blurring into each other, and no idea what day of the week it is.

Of course, my healthcare job isn’t what it used to be, either. I shouldn’t compare pandemic-authoring to pre-pandemic anesthesia. Pandemic-anesthesia isn’t fun, either. Nothing is normal right now.

I’ve got another anesthesia assignment with a new hospital starting in Feb and booked through April. I hope to be vaccinated soon. I know things will get better. I’m not making any big life decisions right now.

Some numbers –

I wrote more words this year than last year. No surprise there. I did not attain the record highs of 2016 and 2017, but I did alright - 137K words for the year. I finished the K&N second epilogue “Spring in the Haunted Forest” in January and the “Romance in Necromancy” prequel story shortly thereafter. I worked on Cormorant for most of the year (did not finish) and then wrote and finished the Merek story (Enthralled) in November. I published the paper and audio versions of “Burn,” along with the paper versions of all 3 K&N books. I also got illustrations for Malachi and the Dragon (book 6 – the final volume) from Aki in Sept and released the ebook and paper in October. I got audio from Kirt Graves for all of the K&N content, except Enthralled, which I should be receiving soon. I researched audiobook direct sales and put that research into action a few days ago.

Production-wise, that’s a fairly normal writing year for me. Here’s the startling part –

My books made nearly 4x as much money this year as in any previous year. They made a solid living wage. Not even a poverty wage, but decent money. They eclipsed my usual anesthesia income for a few glorious months, although they’re back down below that now.

Here’s a bit more breakdown.

86% of my income came from Amazon ebooks and paper books.

9% from Patreon

4% from Audible (yes, that’s pitiful, considering what I spend on audiobook creation)

1% from other sources, such as website sales

Obviously ebooks and paper make the lion’s share of my book income. I can easily break down stats from that number in order to compare pen names and series. I can’t do that with Patreon, and it wouldn’t make sense to do it with audio, since K&N isn’t there yet. With that in mind, here’s a breakdown of that 86% ebook/paper -

A. H. Lee titles made 75% of that money. For those of you who wonder why I’m focusing more on this pen name – here’s why! I have far more Abigail Hilton titles in existence, but all those books combined are only bringing in 25% of my ebook income. If you were to lump Patreon and Audible in, I’m guessing it might be 30% of the total. Maybe. Probably a little less. The audience for my Abigail Hilton books is very loyal, but much smaller. In spite of this, I’m writing Cormorant for you folks!

More details: K&N brought in 56% of my ebook/paper income all by itself. Incubus brought in 19%. And then all Abigail Hilton titles combined, 25%.

It is very obvious that the mm romance market is the largest, and the hungriest for my work. I love writing mm, and I’ll write more of it. I have a great series in the works that takes inspiration from the Silas/Percy dynamic and allows me to return to ships (my true love, haha). But I can’t write only mm. I can’t write only romance. I’ll run out of things to say. I need variety. I don’t want to repeat myself. I don’t want writing to turn into a dreary job or a slog.

Flow state has always been my magic place, where the story unspools in front of me, and I just chase it. When the characters start talking in my head and seem to have minds of their owns – that’s magical. I can see how putting too much pressure on that process would turn into a grind. It’s important to me that that not happen.

2020 is over. It’s been a year of bright lights and dark shadows. No everyone made it. For some people, the worst happened. My colleagues in healthcare have suffered. Politics have been hell. The fallout is ongoing. But there is light at the end of the tunnel. It’s not a train. It’s daylight.

Courage, friends. Onward.

Welcome 2020

It’s the new year! Two weeks into it, in fact. Time for looking forward and looking back, regrouping and reviewing and planning. This was a weird year for me. I did a lot of things that I don’t do very often and may never do again. I did not do some of my more usual activities.

Specifically, I did not write much in 2019. I thought 2018 was bad with only 124,026 words, but in 2019, I only wrote 88,728. This is the least I’ve ever produced since I started keeping close records in 2013. I did finish some things, though, which was not true of the previous year.

I got finished the Percy story (a novelette), “Lucky,” in January, and that felt like it wrote itself. Nothing else this year came that easily. I struggled with my next big novel, The Knight and the Necromancer, until April, when I finally finished it, though it still had problems I couldn’t solve. Then I struggled with the Lucy novella, “Burn” until October, when I knocked that one out. Afterward, I was able to go back and fix the major issues in The Knight and the Necromancer without any great difficulty (weird how that works sometimes). Both “Burn” and K&N should be ready for retailers in 2020. “Lucky” will probably wait for a collection. For the rest of 2019, I worked on the book I call Christmas Werewolf (not its final title).

In addition to new work, I also finished production of older work. The audio version of Incubus Dreaming came out in January. Before the Wind came out in October. The audio version of Incubus Yule got finished in Dec. It was complete in the Patreon feed before Christmas and is just showed up on Audible a few days ago. I also published the illustrated version of Malachi and the Twilight Zoo (Book 5) in paper with a new illustrator, Aki. The illustrations look absolutely seamless with the other books, and I’m happy to have another illustrator to work with.

My writing business made about the same amount of money as last year – at the level of a modest part-time job. Not something I’d want to live on, but more than hobby money.

As I alluded to above, writing really wasn’t my focus this year. I turned 42 in March. I have this weird thing about 42. I think it’s a special  number, and I wanted to tick off some life goals. I took myself to Kuwaii for my birthday. I’ve always wanted to go there. It looks like Jurassic Park.

Additionally, in January I spotted a great deal on tickets to Taiwan for travel in Sept. I decided to take the plunge. I taught English in Taiwan when I was 21, exactly half a lifetime ago. I had always wanted to go back, but was also a little afraid, because I developed severe asthma in response to the pollute last time.

Finally, I had been planning a trip with my mom through AZ and NM. I had been promising her we were going to do it since she got sick a couple of years earlier, and now she was finally well enough.

So I spent about five weeks traveling the country and the world. The rest of the time, I really dug in with my anesthesia job. I improved the way I save for retirement and also saved for a house down payment.

I looked at so many houses!* Then on August 1st, I closed on an awesome place in Vancouver, WA across the river from Portland. It has a home office, space for guests, a walkable neighborhood, a lovely garden, and a safe and sheltered yard for my elderly cats. I joke that I bought the house for Nim, who just turned 17. He’s been all over the country, and it’s getting harder for him. He deserves a cozy retirement.

In order to do all this, I went without a fixed address for most of the year. I put my belongings in storage and lived in hospital lodging. I moved between hospital lodgings several times. Near the end of the year, I relocated my belongings from storage in FL to my new house in WA. I performed some type of move SIX times over the course of about 14 months. Nim did most of these moves with me, and it was a little tough on an old cat. But we did it! We found a home!

A couple of weeks after I bought the house, my 93 year old granddaddy died. I made whirlwind trip to Nashville for his memorial in the midst of moving into my new house.

I barely got moved in before heading off to Taiwan (recall that I bought those tickets in January). I did not get sick. My asthma was fine. I cannot say whether the trip I took would have been as fun for someone who had not lived there in their 20’s, but for me, it was magical – a combination of new exploration and nostalgia.

Then I came home and went straight back to Seattle to work. At Christmas, I went to Nashville to be with my cousins. Only now in January do I get to start living in my house. Starting next week, I am switching back to a part time anesthesia schedule, which should give me plenty of time at home. I love my new office and look forward to writing many books there while my cats play in the yard.

So that was my 2019. In 2020, I plan to refocus on my author business. I’m particularly working on building better systems and consistent habits. I’ve already finished my first short story of the year, a second epilogue for The Knight and the Necromancer called “Spring in the Haunted Forest.” It’ll be a newsletter perk once the book is published. For now, it’s on Patreon for people who read the novel there.

I have hopes of finishing the Cowry Catchers/ Refugees saga this year with two more books, as well as adding some more titles to the world of the Shattered Sea. The last illustrated Eve and Malachi volume should come out this year. I am also noodling on a super hero novel. Here’s hoping that we all have a year bursting with art and good stories!

Summary of Patreon Rewards Nov 2019

My patreon is basically the molten mouth of the story-volcano. It’s always a little chaotic, and hosts many years’ worth of back-content. I’ll try to do a better job of keeping this summary post current.

Here’s where the goodies live: https://www.patreon.com/abigailhilton

Free Stuff

You can "Follow" me without actually donating. This will give you alerts when I post free stuff. Look for the "Follow" button.

The Cowry Catchers original podcast starts here . Or you can click the "Cowry Catchers Podcast" tag. You can listen for free in a browser or with the Patreon app. Or you can subscribe at any level and get an RSS feed (regular podcast, for use with iTunes or any other podcatcher). Your feed link is in the upper right corner when you're logged into Patreon. If you have questions about the RSS feed, listen to this first before you email me.

You can listen to a sample of the Incubus sexy romance series in the free portion of the feed (pen name A. H. Lee) - Episode 1, Episode 2, Episode 3, Episode 4

$1+ Art
Incubus promo art - sketch to color progression -  https://www.patreon.com/posts/incubus-promo-24418806 

Incubus Storytime - final artwork - https://www.patreon.com/posts/story-time-art-15059777 

First Milestone Reward Chibi of Arcove and Roup teaching their cubs to hunt https://www.patreon.com/posts/first-milestone-2610213

Second Milestone Reward Chibi of Storm, Tollee, and Valla https://www.patreon.com/posts/second-milestone-2618587

Third Milestone Reward Wallpaper of Roup and Silveo examining hieroglyphs https://www.patreon.com/posts/third-milestone-3326899

Fourth Milestone Reward of Lu, Basil, and Gwain playing something like strip poker https://www.patreon.com/posts/5075942

Portrait of Silveo - https://www.patreon.com/posts/silveo-portrait-3457688

Portrait of Silas - https://www.patreon.com/posts/silas-portrait-6544563

Portrait of Gerard - https://www.patreon.com/posts/gerard-portrait-7504881 

Thessalyn Portrait - https://www.patreon.com/posts/thessalyn-8084802 

Dakar Portrait - https://www.patreon.com/posts/dakar-portrait-8136030 

Abbie's Sketch of Albatross Keelhead Basket - https://www.patreon.com/posts/keelhead-basket-8360263 

Coloring Book Page Sketches - Gerard and Silveo - https://www.patreon.com/posts/vote-on-coloring-8426662 

Gwain's Portrait - https://www.patreon.com/posts/gwain-portrait-8985338 

"Puzzle Box" - a Gerard and Silveo coloring page - https://www.patreon.com/posts/puzzlebox-page-11312233

$1+ Stories/ essays in text

Christmas Play 2016 - https://www.patreon.com/posts/christmas-play-7585622 

Hungry - a story about Roup - Text https://www.patreon.com/posts/hungry-story-7840241 

Adagio a story about Chance - text - https://www.patreon.com/posts/adagio-story-15186611

The Problem of the Peagsus's Scapula - https://www.patreon.com/posts/problem-of-16402779 

Missed You - an Incubus series story - https://www.patreon.com/posts/missed-you-short-19346379 

Azrael Cut-Scene from Incubus 2 - https://www.patreon.com/posts/couple-of-things-19420592 

$3+ (stories are all "live reads" by me, not the professional version)

This level gets weekly audio updates. The feed goes waaaaay back. These are only some highlights.

My trip to Taiwan in Sept, 2019 - daily live casts and pictures -  https://www.patreon.com/abigailhilton/posts?tag=travel 

Letter of Reference - a story about Gus - Audio https://www.patreon.com/posts/letter-of-story-6495057

Play Date - story about Belvedere - Audio https://www.patreon.com/posts/patreon-podcast-6685219

Ghosts - a story about Marlie - Audio https://www.patreon.com/posts/ghosts-story-09-6981802

Bad Blood - a story about Padmay - Audio - https://www.patreon.com/posts/bad-blood-story-7373554

Awake - a story about Keesha - Audio https://www.patreon.com/posts/awake-story-text-7526342

Hungry - a story about Roup - Audio https://www.patreon.com/posts/hungry-story-7866043 

Save Yourself - a story about Mouse - Audio https://www.patreon.com/posts/save-yourself-8432659 

Say Please - a story about Silas and Percy - Audio https://www.patreon.com/posts/say-please-audio-9278329 

Water in the Desert - a story about Valla - Audio https://www.patreon.com/posts/water-in-desert-10680993 

Blockade Runner - a story abou the Scarlet Albatross - Audio https://www.patreon.com/posts/blockade-runner-11451827 a

Queen in the Daylight - a story about Elizabet - Audio https://www.patreon.com/posts/queen-in-story-11842438

Fly - a story about Felbane - Audio https://www.patreon.com/posts/fly-story-about-14318364 


$5+ (stories are live reads) This is where I'm now putting stories written specifically for the Patreon. 

"Burn" - a novella about Lucy and Jacob

Text Part 1 https://www.patreon.com/posts/burn-story-about-31074951
Text Part 2 https://www.patreon.com/posts/burn-story-about-31113474
Text Part 3 https://www.patreon.com/posts/burn-story-about-31165787

Audio Part 1 https://www.patreon.com/posts/burn-story-about-31118768
Audio Part 2 https://www.patreon.com/posts/burn-story-about-31150282
Audio Part 3 https://www.patreon.com/posts/burn-story-about-31171664  

A little Cut-Scene from Incubus 4 -  https://www.patreon.com/posts/youre-special-25954518   

"Lucky" - a story about Percy  

Text Part 1 -  https://www.patreon.com/posts/lucky-story-part-24266243   
Text Part 2 -  https://www.patreon.com/posts/lucky-story-part-24266602   
Audio Part 1 -  https://www.patreon.com/posts/lucky-part-1-24275327   
Audio Part 2 -  https://www.patreon.com/posts/lucky-story-part-24451088

Death and Fiction - https://www.patreon.com/posts/death-and-essay-17885170 

Where Do the Stories Actually Come From - https://www.patreon.com/posts/where-do-stories-17128094

The Evolution of Gerard Holovar - https://www.patreon.com/posts/evolution-of-16405755

The Evolution of Gwain Maijha - https://www.patreon.com/posts/evolution-of-18519564

The Evolution of Ferryshaft - https://www.patreon.com/posts/evolution-of-19105577

The Evolution of Thessalyn Holovar - https://www.patreon.com/posts/evolution-of-19697080

The Evolution of Silveo Lamire - https://www.patreon.com/posts/evolution-of-20587967

The Evolution of Lu - https://www.patreon.com/posts/evolution-of-lu-21127741

A Closer Look at Jessica, Mal, and Azrael - https://www.patreon.com/posts/sept-oct-essay-22335041

The Evolution of Silas Ackleby - https://www.patreon.com/posts/evolution-of-23085955


$10+

You get my new digital books in ebook and professional audio. Right now, these two are available:

Malachi and the Twilight Zoo (ebook) -  https://www.patreon.com/posts/malachi-and-zoo-30645819

Before the Wind (audio book) -  https://www.patreon.com/posts/would-you-like-30664515

$20+ 

This level receives physical rewards. See description.