A Soul for Trouble

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Authors: Crista McHugh

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A Soul For Trouble

by

Crista McHugh

Book 1 of the Soulberer Trilogy

A Soul For Trouble

Copyright © 2012 by Crista McHugh

Digital Edition

Edited by Rhonda Helms

Copyedits by Nicole Dyakanoff

Cover Art by Kim Killion of
Hot Damn Designs

Formatting by
Ironhorse Formatting

All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the author or publisher except for the use of brief quotations in critical articles or reviews.

This is a work of fiction. Names, places, businesses, characters and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, actual events or locales is purely coincidental.

ISBN-13: 978-1468158748

ISBN-10: 1468158740

Aknowledgements

Thank you to Sherry and Cate, the first crit partners who took a peak at my crazy chaos god and the lives he tormented.

Thank you to Nonny for helping me push the edges on my antagonist to make him more creepy.

Thank you to all the readers who offered suggestions on how to improve Arden, Dev, and Kell.

Thank you to Rhonda for helping me polish this novel and smooth out the rough edges.

Thank you to Nicole, a generous reader with an eagle eye for fiding all the typos I miss.

Thank you to Kim for coming with a gorgeous cover.

Thank to Lee at Iron Horse Formatting for doing a fabulous job on the ebook version of this novel.

And thank you to my family for not thinking I was insane when I walked around the house, muttering to myself about chaos gods and necromancers.

Table Of Contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Epilogue

Coming Soon:
A Soul For Chaos

Author Bio

Praise For Crista McHugh

Other Titles By Crista McHugh

Bonus Chapters:
The Tears Of Elios

Chapter 1

“Trouble, you have a special customer,” Hal said as soon as he entered the kitchen.

Arden Lesstymine, known to everyone in the village as Trouble, slid a sheet of freshly baked meat pies onto a cooling rack. “Please don’t let it be Conn again. My ass is still sore from his pinching.” She peered out of the cracked door, praying the lecherous blacksmith wasn’t sitting in the main room.

“No, this one’s a stranger, and a real kook at that.” The beefy innkeeper leaned against the door frame, pointing him out. “You must be some kind of magnet for the crazies.”

“Why do you think I ended up here?” She smoothed her apron and shoved the swinging door open.

Arden approached the table and studied the new customer. His frail body trembled like the last leaves on the branches outside, and his snow-white hair stuck out in every direction. What troubled her the most, though, was his constant muttering. She waited for a lull in his private conversation with himself, but when it never came, she cleared her throat. “Can I get you something?”

His body jerked at the sound of her voice, and he lifted his head. Feverish bright blue eyes ringed by a yellow-green halo stared back at her so intensely, she took a step back. Yep, definitely crazy. And definitely a foreigner based on his coloring. Most of the natives of Ranello had dark hair, dark skin, and dark eyes. “Yes,” he whispered before resuming his low, incomprehensible ramblings.

She flicked her thick braid over her shoulder and went back to the kitchen. Hal and Jenna, the other barmaid, stifled their laughter as soon as she entered. “Let me guess—you led him right to my table, didn’t you, Hal?”

He shook his head. “He walked straight past me as if I wasn’t there.”

“Besides, you know how to handle his type better than me,” Jenna added. “He probably wanted to stare at you or something.”

Arden’s jaw tightened. Every time she walked in a room, she felt dozens of eyes on her.

Her golden hair stood out in the sea of brunettes that surrounded her, along with her blue eyes and delicate features. All gifts from her father, according to her mother. Unfortunately, she’d never had a chance to meet the man who sired her and thank him for making her the only freak in the kingdom.

“I think he’s too busy talking to himself.” Arden filled a tankard with ale and placed one of the meat pies on a plate. Maybe the aroma of rosemary and mushrooms that rose from the meal would pull him back to reality. “Here’s to hoping he pays.” With her chin held high, she marched back into the main room and set the meal in front of the old man.

“Thank you,” he said and reached a shaky hand for the pie.

She paused for a moment to take a good look at him. His threadbare cloak hung limply off his bony shoulders, and the skin on his hands wrinkled like onion paper when he moved his fingers. How old was he?
Poor man. He probably has no idea where he is.
“I’ll come by and check on you later.”

She spun on her heels and collided with a hard mass behind her. A hand grabbed her arm to steady her. “Excuse me,” a voice said from under a heavy brown hood.

The warmth from his touch spread through her body like a wildfire. A soft, musical accent marked him as a foreigner as well, along with the bright green eyes that burned from under the hood. When did this little village on the remote edge of Ranello begin to attract so much attention? Not that she minded meeting new people, especially ones who spoke like the new stranger. She’d much rather listen to his ramblings than those of the old man’s.

She tried to peer past the shadows and catch a better glimpse of his face. “Can I get you anything?”

The stranger sat at a nearby table and focused his attention on the old man. “I’ll have what he’s having.”

Coarse fur grazed her fingertips, and she looked down at the large red wolf that brushed past her and settled down at the stranger’s feet. She resisted the urge to bolt for the door, as did just about every other patron nearby. Everyone, that is, except the old man, who continued muttering to himself while he ate.

“And for your wolf?” she asked in a slightly higher pitch than normal.

The stranger chuckled. “He’s already had his fill.”

Arden backed away slowly and waited until she was about ten feet away from the wolf before she turned and ran back to the kitchen. “What is going on tonight? Did the moons line up in some unusual formation?”

Hal glanced up from Jenna’s overflowing cleavage. “What do you mean?”

“Now we have another foreigner with a wolf in the main room.”

“A wolf?” Hal’s heavy feet thumped across the wooden floor. “Not in my inn.” The kitchen door swung open with a bang, and he stomped toward the hooded stranger. “Sir, I don’t know how things are done where you’re from, but we do not allow creatures like that in public houses.”

The wolf lifted its lips and growled.

“I suggest you remove the finger you’re pointing at him before he removes it for you,” the stranger replied in a low, even tone.

The color drained from Hal’s face. “But I have to worry about the safety of my customers.

A wolf is a wild beast.”

The stranger ruffled his pet’s fur with his hand, and the wolf lowered his head. “I have him under perfect control. So long as no one provokes Cinder, you won’t have to worry about the safety of your customers.”

“I can refuse to serve you.”

“It seems like you’re a bit late for that.” He nodded toward Arden, who’d been watching the entire exchange with a tankard and plate in her hands.

“Trouble, I forbid you to serve him.”

The clank of coins on the wooden table sounded behind them, and Hal’s eyes grew large enough to reflect the gold in front of him.

“This should cover the inconvenience.”

Hal scooped up the coins and retreated to the kitchen without another word.

“You could’ve bought the entire inn for a few coins more,” Arden said to the stranger as she set the meal on the table.

He shrugged. “What would I want with it?”

“No idea. Burn it to the ground so I could leave this town and wouldn’t have to deal with Hal anymore?” Even though she was trying to make a joke, the words hit a little too close to what she desired. She knew there had to be a place where she wouldn’t draw stares and pointed fingers, but she feared what could happen to her if she dared to strike out on her own. She saw what happened to her mother when she tried it.

His fingers wrapped around her wrist when she tried to leave. Again, the warmth from his touch both soothed and excited her. “You’re not from here, are you?”

“I was born here in Wallus.”

“You don’t look like a Ranellian.”

She jerked her hand free.
Just what I needed. Someone else reminding me that I didn’t
belong here.
“Sometimes variety is a good thing.” The stranger chuckled again. “Perhaps, Trouble.”

Damn, she wished she could see his face to know what he found so amusing about her. His rumbling laughter sent shivers down her spine.
Stop it
, her mind ordered.
You’re all wound up
because he’s new in town and doesn’t immediately cross the room to avoid you
. Of course, imagining the lean-muscled body under the cloak didn’t help matters. Blood rushed into her cheeks, and she returned to the kitchen before he could ask any more questions.

Ale foam coated Hal’s upper lip. He wiped it away when he saw her. “As soon as he’s done eating, get him out of here, Trouble. You got that?”

“He paid you enough money for a month in your best room. Let him and his wolf eat in peace.”

“It’s more than the wolf that bothers me. He ain’t from around here, and strangers who don’t show their faces are usually bad news.”

Arden peeked out the door at her customers. The stranger picked at the meat pie and tossed bits of it to his wolf. His attention never wavered from the other foreigner, who remained completely oblivious of anything around him. “I think he’s looking out after the old man.”

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