Cover Reveal: City of Lost Souls
Well I know that this has made its way around the book world
by now, but I couldn’t help myself! Here is the cover we have all been waiting
for!!!! The cover for the latest Mortal Instruments installment, The City of
Lost Souls features our favorite couple, Jace and Clary.
Ahhhhhh it is SOOOOOO just MMMMMMMM!!!! Here I go again, not
being to speak more than just sex noises! But DAMN!!!!! I really like the whole
wind whipping around them! Jace and
Clary look just FANTASTC and boy do I want his hands all over me! It’s a bit
dark (but maybe that goes with the book!) and different from the previous
covers, but it’s going to be SOOOOOO nice next to the rest of Clare’s
books!!! I CANNOT WAIT to put this on my
shelves!!!!!
Also released by USA Today was a teaser (I think that Clara’s
books always release the most teasers.)
Hope you enjoy!!!!!!
Prologue from City of Lost Souls
Simon stood and stared
numbly at the front door of his house.
He'd never known
another home. This was the place his parents had brought him home to when he
was born. He had grown up within the walls of the Brooklyn row house. He'd
played on the street under the leafy shade of the trees in the summer, and had
made improvised sleds out of garbage can lids in the winter. In this house his
whole family had sat shivah after his father had died. Here he had kissed Clary
for the first time.
He had never imagined
a day when the door of the house would be closed to him. The last time he had
seen his mother, she had called him a monster and prayed at him that he would
go away. He had made her forget that he was a vampire, using glamour, but he
had not known how long the glamour would last. As he stood in the cold autumn
air, staring in front of him, he knew it had not lasted long enough.
The door was covered
with signs—Stars of David splashed on in paint, the incised shape of the symbol
for Chai, life. Tefillin were bound to the doorknob and knocker. A hamesh, the
Hand of God, covered the peephole.
Numbly he put his hand
to the metal mezuzah affixed to the right side of the doorway. He saw the smoke
rise from the place where his hand touched the holy object, but he felt
nothing. No pain. Only a terrible empty blankness, rising slowly into a cold
rage.
He kicked the bottom
of the door and heard the echo through the house. "Mom!" he shouted.
"Mom, it's me!"
There was no
reply—only the sound of the bolts being turned on the door. His sensitized
hearing had recognized his mother's footsteps, her breathing, but she said
nothing. He could smell acrid fear and panic even through the wood.
"Mom!" His voice broke. "Mom, this is ridiculous! Let me in!
It's me, Simon!"
The door juddered, as
if she had kicked it. "Go away!" Her voice was rough, unrecognizable
with terror. "Murderer!"
"I don't kill
people." Simon leaned his head against the door. He knew he could probably
kick it down, but what would be the point? "I told you. I drink animal
blood."
He heard her whisper,
softly, several words in Hebrew. "You killed my son," she said.
"You killed him and put a monster in his place."
"I am your
son—"
"You wear his
face and speak with his voice, but you are not him! You're not Simon!" Her
voice rose to almost a scream. "Get away from my house before I kill you,
monster!"
"Becky," he
said. His face was wet; he put his hands up to touch it, and they came away
stained: His tears were bloody. "What have you told Becky?"
"Stay away from
your sister." Simon heard a clattering from inside the house, as if something
had been knocked over.
"Mom," he
said again, but this time his voice wouldn't rise. It came out as a hoarse
whisper. His hand had begun to throb. "I need to know—is Becky there? Mom,
open the door. Please—"
"Stay away from
Becky!" She was backing away from the door; he could hear it. Then came
the unmistakeable squeal of the kitchen door swinging open, the creak of the
linoleum as she walked on it. The sound of a drawer being opened. Suddenly he
imagined his mother grabbing for one of the knives.
Before I kill you,
monster.
The thought rocked him
back on his heels. If she struck out at him, the Mark would rise. It would
destroy her as it had destroyed Lilith.
He dropped his hand
and backed up slowly, stumbling down the steps and across the sidewalk, fetching
up against the trunk of one of the big trees that shaded the block. He stood
where he was, staring at the front door of his house, marked and disfigured
with the symbols of his mother's hate for him.
No, he reminded
himself. She didn't hate him. She thought he was dead. What she hated was
something that didn't exist. I am not what she says I am.
He didn't know how
long he would have stood there, staring, if his phone hadn't begun to ring,
vibrating his coat pocket.
He reached for it
reflexively, noticing that the pattern from the front of the
mezuzah—interlocked Stars of David—was burned into the palm of his hand. He
switched hands and put the phone to his ear. "Hello?"
"Simon?" It
was Clary. She sounded breathless. "Where are you?"
"Home," he
said, and paused. "My mother's house," he amended. His voice sounded
hollow and distant to his own ears. "Why aren't you back at the Institute?
Is everyone all right?"
"That's just
it," she said. "Just after you left, Maryse came back down from the
roof where Jace was supposed to be waiting. There was no one there."
Simon moved. Without
quite realizing he was doing it, like a mechanical doll, he began walking up
the street, toward the subway station. "What do you mean, there was no one
there?"
"Jace was
gone," she said, and he could hear the strain in her voice. "And so
was Sebastian."
Simon stopped in the
shadow of a bare-branched tree. "But he was dead. He's dead, Clary—"
"Then you tell me
why he isn't there, because he isn't," she said, her voice finally breaking.
"There's nothing up there but a lot of blood and broken glass. They're
both gone, Simon. Jace is gone. . . ."
Sometimes this is just too much to take!!!
Tara
Don’t forget to enter my Giveaway
Oooo!!! I can't wait! Loving this cover
ReplyDeleteAmy @ Following The Reader