Title: Testament
Author: Jose Nateras
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: December 30, 2019
Heat Level: 2 - Fade to Black Sex
Pairing: No Romance
Length: 51400
Genre: Paranormal, LGBT, Chicago, paranormal, supernatural, thriller, Latinx, #ownvoices
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Synopsis
Gabe Espinosa, is trying to dig himself
out of the darkness. Struggling with the emotional fallout of a breakup with
his ex-boyfriend, Gabe returns to his job at The Rosebriar Room; the fine
dining restaurant at the historic Sentinel Club Chicago Hotel. Already haunted
by the ghosts of his severed relationship, he’s drastically unprepared for the
ghosts of The Sentinel Club to focus their attentions on him as well.
When a hotel guest violently attacks
Gabe, he finds himself the target of a dark entity’s rage; a rage built upon
ages of racial tension and toxic masculinity. Desperate to escape the dark
spiral he’s found himself in, Gabe flees across the city of Chicago and dives
into the history of the hotel itself. Now, Gabe must push himself to confront
the sort of evil that transcends relationships and time, the sort of evil that
causes damage that ripples across lives for generations.
Gabe must fight to break free from the
dark legacy of the past; both his own and that of the hotel he works in.
Excerpt
Testament
Jose Nateras © 2019
All Rights Reserved
I pulled out my phone and checked the
time. I needed to be at work at six thirty, and unless the train started moving
within the next five seconds, I would be late. A commute that usually took
thirty minutes, door to door, was stretching closer and closer to taking forty
minutes. Still, the train sat there, idle in its dark underground tunnel.
There’s nothing worse than being late and getting stuck on a delayed train car
at six fifteen in the morning. Fuck.
I rocked back and forth impatiently, a
loose rivet in my seat clicking arrhythmically in its socket. Most of the
Chicago Transit Authority’s train cars were in some state of disrepair. This
car in particular had maps of the train lines missing overhead, cracked
lighting fixtures, fractured chrome, and unsecured hardware. The homeless man
stretched out asleep across the seats at the other end of the car didn’t seem
to care. Neither did the middle-aged nurse sitting kitty-corner from me,
listening to music on her phone through bright-pink earbuds.
I took a deep breath to stop my agitated
rocking. The thick smell of synthetic flowers wafted along the length of the
train car. An otherwise pleasant smell, in the enclosed space of the train car
the scent was overwhelming, almost sickening. It had to be coming from the
nurse. How’d I not notice the strength of her perfume sooner?
It occurred to me, if I puked on the ‘L’
right then and there, I’d have no excuse but to call in sick. It wouldn’t be
the first time someone threw up on the Blue Line. I wouldn’t even have to
actually vomit. I could just call in, hop off the train at the next stop, and
grab the next one headed back toward my apartment. Tempting, but I could
practically hear the voice of my manager Leslie. “Really, Gabe? What the fuck?
Aren’t you just coming back from an extended leave of absence, Mr. Espinosa?”
With the sound of metal grinding on
metal, the train started to move. I closed my eyes, allowing the momentum to
build and hurdle me toward the misery of employment in the service industry.
Maybe misery was an exaggeration. As the
train came to an abrupt stop at the Monroe station, I tried to remind myself
there were worse fields to work in. Six blocks stretched between the train
platform and the Sentinel Club Hotel. More specifically, six blocks stretched
between me and the hotel’s restaurant, the Rosebriar Room, where I worked as a
host. Walking so far would typically take around nine minutes, and at 6:25
a.m., I only had five minutes to do so. Officially late, I somehow found the
energy to hustle up the stairs from the underground train platform and race out
into the November chill.
I found myself caught behind a herd of
Chicago commuters: business-bros and cubicle drones trotting to their
respective jobs scattered across the Loop. Dodging between the office workers
drowsily heading to work, I sprinted through the concrete canyon of downtown
skyscrapers.
It was still dark. Only after I made it
to Michigan Avenue, across from the green expanse of Millennium Park, could I
see the first streaks of orange in the dark-gray sky. I pulled out my phone
again. 6:31 a.m. “Shit.”
Speeding through the front doors of the
hotel, I hurried to the service elevator. With no time to stop at the staff
locker room down in the basement, I headed straight up to the thirteenth floor.
People often say hotels are naturally
creepy places. I hadn’t really thought about it one way or another until I
started working in one. It was true. The Sentinel Club Chicago was creepy, and
being one of the oldest buildings in the city only made it all the more eerie.
Before becoming a boutique hotel, the SCC was a historied private men’s club,
and the Rosebriar Room, now the hotel’s wood-paneled fine-dining restaurant,
once served as the private dining room for the club’s most elite members.
I’d been working there for a year and a
half or so, and things I hadn’t noticed at first had started to weigh on my
mind. More and more I found myself aware of the creepiness of the place. A
laugh echoing in quiet, empty rooms. A flicker of movement out of the corner of
an eye. A shadow on a wall with no one there to cast it. The feeling of being
watched.
The prospect of spending my morning in
such a place sounded pretty miserable. Perhaps I hadn’t been so far off in
describing my job as a “misery” after all.
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