Blood Victory - Christopher Rice Page 0,30

simple. Angry people, she would have said if pressed, were childish and spoiled and masking those truths with aggression. She wouldn’t have used the words childish and spoiled, of course, because she wouldn’t want to make the person she was talking to angry. But as far as Zoey was concerned, if you stomped your feet and slammed doors, it didn’t matter how old you were—you were throwing a tantrum, plain and simple.

And Zoey didn’t throw tantrums.

But she wasn’t exactly the sweetest of girls, either. Her friends thought she was a good listener, but her friends also knew that on most days she preferred books to people. She was different from her sister, or so she thought. Rachel could be a ferocious loudmouth when the situation called for it. Just the other day, in fact, over drinks at the little dive bar down the street from the dental office where they both work, her big sis had implied that Zoey’s lack of anger might be a weakness. That wasn’t the extent of what Rachel said, of course, but that was the part that kept ringing in Zoey’s ears afterward.

How had Rachel worded it exactly?

Zoey had recently accomplished something “pretty f’in’ monumental” and she wasn’t celebrating herself enough. Worse, she was probably staying fairly quiet for one reason. If she spoke up about her new success as an author, it would draw attention to the fact that her boyfriend of one whole year was staying pretty damn quiet about it, too.

If only she could call Rachel right now—she’d be so proud of her—but Rachel’s on a flight over the Atlantic with her husband, an anniversary trip to Paris. So, for now Zoey’s best option is quality time with her thoughts, awaiting the emergence of her jittery cat, and wondering whether she had a right to read her boyfriend for filth because he insulted the realization of one of her lifelong dreams.

Sex books, Zoey fumes, bracing herself against the doorframe because the memory of Jerald’s words is that powerful. Just don’t talk about your sex books in front of my mom next week.

A year of seeing each other exclusively, the first ever visit to his parents, and his main concern was that she stayed quiet about the first major accomplishment of her adult life. They weren’t sex books, for Christ’s sake. They were romance novels. And while she hadn’t expected Jerald to become a Harlequin junkie just because she’d made some Amazon bestseller lists, she’d expected him to give her a little more credit for all the time and hard work she’d put into them.

True, he’d thanked her for the new laptop she’d bought him with some of the royalties, but that was about it.

She’d spent ten years of her life outlining the backstories of the Roark sisters, plotting out various versions of the ancient legend that was the source of their shared supernatural abilities. She’d drawn dozens of maps of Fog Harbor, the picturesque town on the Oregon Coast that was home to their compound, written three different books in the series, all of which were rejected by a slew of New York agents for reasons ranging from the condescending to the cutting. Then one day, her online author friends in her various Facebook groups encouraged her to “go indie,” as they put it. She’d scraped together the money for editors and a cover designer, and then the miraculous happened.

Not long after she released all three books, people started reading them. And liking them. And reviewing them. Some people were nasty, of course, the internet being the internet. But only one of the one-star reviews managed to really stick in her craw. It was from Bored Reader, and the headline read, Hopefully this writer can be good at other things because it’s not writing stuff. The review’s grammatically incorrect headline was just the tip of the iceberg. The review itself didn’t have any specifics about the book. Just a string of book review clichés that could have easily been cut and pasted from another romance novel’s sales page.

But it didn’t seem to matter what any of the negative reviews said—the damn things kept selling, and the checks kept coming.

And while Rachel was right, Zoey hadn’t exactly gone around crowing about it, she hadn’t kept any of it a secret from her boyfriend, either. But now that she thought about it, his insulting words that night at dinner—if a last-minute trip to the food court at the Woodland Hills Mall because “I could

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