Girl Among Crows by Brendon Vayo (with a GIVEAWAY!)

Beware the Brotherhood of the Raven
When two boys vanish from her hometown, Daphne Gauge notices uncanny parallels to her brotherās disappearance 30 years earlier. Symbols of an ancient Norse god. Rumors of a promise to reward the townās faithful with wealth and power, for a price. She warns her husband that another sacrifice is imminent, but just like last time, no one believes her.
This leaves her with a desperate choice: investigate with limited resources, or give in to the FBIās request for an interview. For years, theyāve wanted a member of the Gauge family to go on record about the tragedy back in 1988. If she agrees to a deposition now, Daphne must confess her familyās dark secrets. But she also might have one last chance to unmask the killer from back then . . . and now.
Praise for Girl Among Crows:
"Brendon Vayo has crafted a pagan potboiler that is equal parts mystical and mysterious, profane and profound, blissfully existing at the intersection of horror and whodunnits."
~ Clay McLeod Chapman, author of Ghost Eaters
"Fans of Gillian Flynn will love Girl Among Crows . . . Brendon Vayoās debut thriller is eerie, mysterious, and addicting."
~ Brooke L. French, author of Inhuman Acts and The Carolina Variant
"Brendon Vayoās Girl Among Crows is an eerie page turner rich with Norse Mythology, cult rituals, and creepy twists to rival Stephen King, Shirley Jackson and Stephen Graham Jones."
~ MQ Webb, author of When Youāre Dying and How to Spot a Psychopath
"This fresh, artful thriller, as genuinely frightening a novel as youāll read all year, darts smoothly between the decades as not one but two mysteries unfurl like stairways into darkness. Intelligent, original, audaciousāand scary"
~ A.J. Finn, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Woman in the Window
Book Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | CamCat Books
Read an excerpt:
My husband Karl shakes hands with other doctors, a carousel of orthopedic surgeons in cummerbunds. I read his lips over the brass band: Howās the champagne, Ed? Since he grayed, Karl wears a light beard that, for the convention, he trimmed to nothing.
The ballroom they rented has long windows that run along Bostonās waterfront. Sapphire table settings burn in their reflections.
The food looks delicious. Rainbows of heirloom carrots. Vermont white cheddar in the macaroni. Some compliment the main course, baked cod drizzled with olive oil. My eyes are on the chocolate cherries. Unless Karl is right, and theyāre soaked in brandy.
At some dramatic point in the evening, balloons will drop from nets. A banner sags, prematurely revealing its last line.
CELEBRATING THIRTY YEARS!
Thirty years. How nice, though I try not to think that far back.
I miss something, another joke.
Everyoneās covering merlot-soaked teeth, and I wonder if theyāre laughing at me. Is it my dress? I didnāt know if I should wear white like the other wives.
I redirect the conversation from my choice of a navy-blue one-shoulder, which I now see leaves me exposed, and ask so many questions about the latest in joint repair that I get lightheaded.
The chandelier spins. Double zeroes hit the roulette table. A break watching the ocean, then Iām back, resuming my duties as a spouse, suppressing a yawn for an older man my husband desperately wants to impress. A board member who could recommend Karl as the next director of clinical apps.
Iām thinking about moving up, our careers. Iām not thinking dark thoughts like people are laughing or staring at me. Not even when someone taps me on the shoulder.
āAre you Daphne?ā asks a young man. A member of the wait staff. No one should know me here; Iām an ornament. Yet somethingās familiar about the young manās blue eyes. Heat trickles down my neck as I try to name the sensation in my stomach.
āAnd you are?ā I say.
āGerard,ā he says. The glasses on his platter sway with caffeinated amber. āGerard Gedney. You remember?ā
I gag on my ginger ale.
āMy gosh, I do,ā I say. āGerard. Wow.ā
Thirty years ago, when this convention was still in its planning stages, Gerard Gedney was the little boy who had to stay in his room for almost his entire childhood. Beginning of every school year, each class made Get Well Soon cards and mailed them to his house.
We moved before I knew what happened to Gerard, but with everything else, I never thought of him until now. All the growing up he mustāve done, despite the odds, and now at least he got out, got away.
āI beat the leukemia,ā he says.
āIām so glad for you, Gerard.ā
If thatās the appropriate response. The awkwardness that defined my childhood creeps over me. Of all the people to bump into, it has to be David Gedneyās brother. David, the Boy Never Found.
My eyes jump from Gerard to the other wait staff. They wear pleated dress pants. Gerardās in a T-shirt, bowtie, and black jeans.
āI donāt really work here, Daphne,ā says Gerard, sliding the platter onto a table. āIāve been looking for you for a while.ā
The centerpiece topples. Glass shatters. An old woman holds her throat.
āGerard,ā I say, my knees weak, āI understand youāre upset about David. Can we please not do this here?ā
Gerard wouldnāt be the first to unload on what awful people we were. But to hear family gossip aired tonight, in front of my husband and his colleagues? I canāt even imagine what Karl would think.
āIām not here about my brother,ā says Gerard. āIām here about yours.ā His words twist.
āPaul,ā I say. āWhat about him?ā
āIām so sorry,ā says a waiter, bumping me. Another kneels to pick up green chunks of the vase. When I find Gerard again, heās at the service exit, waiting for me to follow.
Before I do, I take one last look at the distinguished men and a few women. The shoulder claps. The dancing. Karl wants to be in that cliqueāI mean, I want that too. For him, I want it.
But I realize something else. Theyāre having a good time in a way I never could, even if I were able to let go of the memory of my brother, Paul.
The catering service has two vans in the alleyway. Itās a tunnel that feeds into the Boston skyline, the Prudential Center its shining peak.
Gerard beckons me to duck behind a stinky dumpster. Rain drizzles on cardboard boxes.
I never knew Gerard as a man. Maybe he has a knife or wants to strangle me, and all this news about my brother was bait to lure me out here. Iām vulnerable in high heels. But Gerard doesnāt pull a weapon.
He pulls out a postcard, its edges dusty with a white powder I canāt identify. The image is of three black crows inscribed on a glowing full moon.
āI found it in Dadās things,ā says Gerard. āPlease take it. Look, David is gone. Weāve got to live with the messes our parents made. Mine sacrificed a lot for my treatment, but had they moved to Boston, I probably wouldāve beat the cancer in months instead of years.ā
āAnd this is about Paul?ā I say.
āWhen the chemo was at its worst,ā says Gerard, āI dreamed about a boy, my older self, telling me I would survive.ā
I take my eyes off Gerard long enough to read the back of the postcard:
$ from Crusher. Keep yourself pure, Brother. For the sake of our children, the Door must remain open.
Crusher. Brother. Door. No salutation or signature, no return address. Other than Crusher, no names of any kind. The words run together with Gerardās take on how treatment changed his perspective.
Something presses my stomach again. Dread. Soon as I saw this young man, I knew he was an omen of something. And when is an omen good?
āYour dad had this,ā I say. āDid he say why? Or who sent it?ā
An angry look crosses Gerardās face. āMy dadās dead,ā he says. āSoās Brother Dominic. Liver cancer stage 4B on Christmas Day. Whatād they do to deserve that, huh?ā
āThey both died on Christmas? Gerard, Iām so sorry.ā First David, now his dad and Dominic? He stiffens when I reach for him, and, of course, Iām the last person he wants to comfort him. āI know how hard it is. I lost my mom, as you know, and my dad ten years ago.ā
The day Dad died, I thought Iād never get off the floor. I cried so hard I threw up, right in the kitchen. Karl was there, my future husband, visiting on the weekend from his residency. I didnāt even think we were serious, but there he was, talking me through it, the words lost now, but not the comfort of his voice.
I looked in his eyes, daring to hope that with this man I wouldnāt pass on to my children what Mom passed down to me.
āMomās half-there most days,ā says Gerard. āBut one thing.ā
The rear entrance bangs open, spewing orange light. Two men dump oily garbage, chatting in Spanish.
āCheck the postmark, Daphne,ā says Gerard at the end of the alleyway. He was right beside me. Now itās a black bird sidestepping on the dumpster, its talons clacking, wanting me to feed it. I flinch and catch Gerard shrugging under the icy rain before he disappears.
The postmark is from Los Angeles, sent October last year. Six months ago, George Gedney received this postcard. Two months later, heās dead, and so is another son.
What does that mean? How does it fit in with Paul?
Though heās gone, I keep calling for Gerard, my voice strangled. Someone has me by the elbow, my husband. Even in lifts, Karlās three inches shorter than me.
āDaphne, what is it? Whatās wrong?ā
āColquitt. I need Sheriff Colquitt or . . .ā Voices argue in my head, and I nod at the hail swirling past yellow streetlamps. āThirty years ago, Bixbee was a young man. He might still be alive.ā
āDaphne, did that man hurt you? Hey.ā
Karl demands that someone call the police, but I shake him.
āItās fine, Karl,ā I say, dialing Berkshire County Sheriff ās Office. āGerardās a boy I knew from my hometown.ā
Karlās calling someone too. āSome coincidence,ā he says.
Though it wasnāt. Here I am trying not to think about the past, and it comes back to slap me in the face as though I summoned it. Paul. The little brother I vowed to protect.
The phone finally picks up. āBerkshire Sheriffās Office.ā
āHello,ā I say, ācould I leave a message for Harold Bixbee to call me back as soon as possible? He is or was a deputy in your department.ā
āUh, maāam, I donāt have anyone in our personnel records who matches that name. But if itās an emergency, Iād be gladāā
I hang up. Damn. I shouldāve known at nine p.m., all Iād get is a desk sergeant. Iād spend half the night catching him up to speed.
āDaphne.ā My husband lowers his phone, looking at me as though Iāve lost my mind. āI asked Ed to pull the hotelās security feed. Youāre the only one on tape.ā
āWhat? No.ā
āIt shows that you walked out that door alone,ā says Karl, gesturing, āand I come out a few minutes later.ā
The Door must remain open.
Dread hardens, then the postcardās corner jabs my thumb. Iām about to show Karl my proof when I realize that now there are only two crows in the moon.
āHowād he do that?ā I keep flipping it, expecting the third one to return, before I sense my husband waiting. Distantly, I hear wings flap, but it could be the rain. āGerard wanted me to have his dadās postcard.ā
āSo this boy Gerard comes all the way from Springfield to hand you a postcard,ā Karl says. āAnd he can magically avoid cameras?ā
āIām not from Springfield,ā I say, shaking off a chill. Magically avoid cameras. And Gerard can turn pictures of crows into real ones too. How?
āYou seem very agitated,ā says Karl. āWant me to call Dr. Russell? Unless . . .ā Karlās listening, just not to me. āEd says the camera angles arenāt the best here. Thereās a few blind spots.ā
āI said Iām not from Springfield, Karl. Any more than youāre from Boston.ā
My husband nods, still wary. āBoston is more recognizable than Quincy. But how does your hometown account for why Gerard isnāt on the security footage?ā
I lick my lips, my hand hovering over Karlās phone.
When we first met, I wanted to keep things upbeat. Me? Iām a daddyās girl, though (chuckling) certainly not to a fault. In the interest of a second date, I mightāve understated some things.
āHere,ā I say, āitās more like Iām from the Hilltowns. Itās a remote area.ā My lips tremble, trying to force out the name of my hometown. āI was born and raised in New Minton, Karl.ā
Somewhere between Cabbage Patch Kids and stickers hidden in a cereal box, the ones Paul demanded every time we opened a new CrĆøĆønchy Stars, is recognition. I can tell by the strange flicker on Karlās face.
āThe New Minton Boys,ā he says. āAll those missing kids, the ones never found.ā Karl is stunned. āDaphne, youāre from there? Did you know those boys? God, you wouldāve been a kid yourself.ā
āI was eleven,ā I say. And I was a kid, a selfish kid. I came from a large family. Brandy was seventeen, Courtney fifteen, Ellie nine, and Paul seven.
The day before my brother disappeared, I wasnāt thinking that this night was the last time weād all be together. I wasnāt thinking about the pain Mom and Dad would go through, especially after the town gossip began.
No. I thought my biggest problems in the world were mean schoolboys. So I ruined dinner.
āDaphne?ā Now Karl looks mad. āThatās a big secret not to tell your husband.ā
If only he knew.
***
Excerpt from Girl Among Crows by Brendon Vayo. Copyright 2023 by Brendon Vayo. Reproduced with permission from CamCat Books. All rights reserved.

Brendon Vayo was born in Okinawa, Japan, and now lives in Austin, TX. He has a wonderful wife and three children. The kids keep him awake at night, so he hopes his books do the same to you.
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