It’s all Elemental:

Earth Reader (The Elemental Voice Book 1)

Police consultant Sara Phillips reads the earth like a medium hears the dead. When a killer’s dump site is discovered, the FBI is called in, but the lead agent Nick Issaro, who has a secret of his own, seems more interested in Sara than the dead bodies.

While they work the case their attraction for each other grows. This puts both of their lives in danger when the killer develops a strange attachment to Sara.

Will they both live through the ordeal, or will the killer win the hand he deals them?


Fire Walker (The Elemental Voice Book 2

FBI Consultant Sara Phillips reads the earth like a medium hears the dead.

When suspicious fires break out in a rural community that resemble a strange blaze that took an FBI agent’s life, Sara and her FBI boyfriend Nick Issaro investigate.

Over the next few days the couple piece together the case and discover the arsonist’s deadly secret–a secret so unusual it defies belief.

Will they survive or will one of them go up in flames?


Water Ferrier (The Elemental Voice Book 3) 

When a body washes up on a beach, it leads to the discovery of more human remains just off shore. FBI consultant Sara Phillips realizes the murders resemble another FBI open case file and recognizes the killings to be sacrifices. Gifts to the Water aspect Tiama.

Though the FBI is called in late, due to a jurisdictional dispute, Sara and her partner Nick Issaro move forward, but Sara is taken aback when, at the crime scene, she is greeted by the very elemental the killer is pursuing.

While she tries to rein in the capricious element, she’s being stalked by the murderer. She’s not sure if he wants to court her or kill her? Will she and Nick be able to figure it out before the killer has his way?


Wind Whisperer

(The Elemental Voice Book 4)

FBI consultant Sara Phillips’ old mentor calls her for help. Someone is killing men using their gift, literally taking their breath away.

Once Sara and her vampire FBI agent fiancé are on the case they learn it might have a disturbing personal connection to them.

Can they stop the killings before more gasp their last breath or have the finally met their match in this killer.

https://amzn.to/3M796JT


This is a box set of the first three books of the Elemental Voice Series

Earth Reader

Police consultant Sara Phillips reads the earth like a medium hears the dead. When a killer’s dump site is discovered, the FBI are called in, but the lead agent Nick Issaro, who has a secret of his own, seems more interested in Sara than the dead bodies.

While they work the case their attraction for each other grows. This puts both of their lives in danger when the killer develops a strange attachment to Sara.

Will they both live through the ordeal, or will the killer win the hand he deals them?

Fire Walker
FBI Consultant Sara Phillips reads the earth like a medium hears the dead.

When suspicious fires break out in a rural community that resemble a strange blaze that took an FBI agent’s life, Sara and her FBI boyfriend Nick Issaro investigate.

Over the next few days the couple piece together the case and discover the arsonist’s deadly secret–a secret so unusual it defies belief.

Will they survive or will one of them go up in flames?

Water Ferrier
When a body washes up on a beach, it leads to the discovery of more human remains just off shore. FBI consultant Sara Phillips realizes the murders resemble another FBI open case file and recognizes the killings to be sacrifices. Gifts to the Water aspect Tiama.

Though the FBI is called in late, due to a jurisdictional dispute, Sara and her partner Nick Issaro move forward, but Sara is taken aback when, at the crime scene, she is greeted by the very elemental the killer is pursuing.

While she tries to rein in the capricious element, she’s being stalked by the murderer. She’s not sure if he wants to court her or kill her? Will she and Nick be able to figure it out before the killer has his way?


Deadly Sands (An Elemental Voice Companion)

Book 1 of 2: Elemental Voice Companion Series

Police consultant Sara Phillips accepts her new FBI boyfriend’s offer of a joint vacation. The couple wants to get to know each other better but a dead body interferes with their quality time and turns the beginning of their trip into a manhunt. It’s revealed that the killer is part of a vampire cult that buries its victims alive. Will Nick and Sara solve the case before their time runs out?

Deadly Flames (Elemental Voice Companion Series Book 2)

Psychic Consultant Sara Phillips and her Vampire boyfriend FBI Agent Nick Issaro go for a relaxing vacation in Maine. But when they arrive at the secluded resort they find it under siege by fire trucks. It seems an arsonist has been at work for the last several days.

Unable to let this go, the couple decides to help the local authorities. Meanwhile, Sara’s romantic rival shows up to disrupt the supposed romantic vacation. Will Sara and Nick be able to catch the arsonist before he burns everything to the ground? Or will they lose a life and love this weekend?


Elemental Voice drabble “Meetings”

This drabble is my backstory for Sara:

Meetings

Sara Phillips watched the nurse inject something into the IV, too sick and tired to ask what was in this batch. She had arrived at the ER four hours earlier and they had only gotten to her forty-five minutes ago. This was her third time here in the last month since her treatments had begun months ago. She wished she could just go home but knew she would just be sick there if she didn’t get help here.

She had just closed her eyes when she heard a commotion. It was coming from the cubicle next to hers. The doctors and nurses were yelled something about the patient convulsing and shouting to each other for drugs and machines. Sara kept her eyes closed. She tried not to listen because it reminded her too much of her own mortality. 

The commotion suddenly ceased. It was eerily quiet for a few seconds before she heard a doctor pronounce the time of death. A tear rolled down Sara’s cheek and she sent a silent wish for peace to the poor soul that had just departed this world.

A light touch brushed over her hair just then.

Dust to dust

Startled she opened her eyes. However, there was no one standing over her. She dismissed it as illusion and closed her eyes again. They opened again seconds later though when the curtain between her cubicle and the next was shoved aside. An older woman was standing there.

She was dressed in jeans and a button down shirt. Her long black hair was braided and she wore a leather band around her head. Her complexion marked her as Native American.

Sara and the woman stared at each other for a moment before the older woman spoke. “My name is Maramee Brown. Come find me when you need help.”

With that the older woman turned and left the cubicle.

Why would she need Maramee’s help? Sara sat confused for a moment before shaking her head. This was too much.

A nurse appeared just then with a young Native American man. She left him with the covered body next door. He was dressed similar to Maramee and could have been her son. Once he was ‘alone’ with the body, he pulled down the sheet to reveal the face of an elderly Native American man.

Sara pretended to be asleep when he glanced her way. She watched him through her eyelashes. There was something ‘wrong’ about this man.

“You should have just givin’ me what I wanted, old man.” she heard him whisper. “I wouldn’t have had to take it.”

The younger man put his left hand over the body’s face and settled his right hand over the heart, closing his eyes. He stood there for a few seconds, then frowned and opened his eyes. “What did you do, old man?!”

He nearly shouted those words, which caused a nurse to appear.

“Sir, this is a hospital.” She frowned at him. “You will keep your voice down.”

“Was there anyone else here earlier?”

“No.” The nurse looked at him sternly. “If you are staying, you will behave yourself.”

“It doesn’t matter.” The man dismissed her words. “There’s nothing here I want now.”

“Then I’ll escort you out.” The nurse gestured. “Right this way.”

The man allowed the nurse to escort him out without a backward glance. From his words Sara assumed he had something to do with the old man’s death. She didn’t know if she should tell someone or not.

A few minutes later the nurse returned and covered the old man’s face again.

“Who was that man, Beth?” Sara asked the nurse as she turned away from the body. “Was he his son?”

“Did he bother you?” Beth frowned

“I thought I heard yelling.”

“He won’t bother you again.” The nurse’s frown deepened as she moved to check Sara’s IV. “The doctor said when this is done you can go home if you’re feeling better.”

“The pain and nausea is gone,” Sara told her after a second. She hadn’t realized they had left her with all the excitement. “I still feel light-headed though.”

“You can stay for a few more hours if you need to.” Beth paused as two orderlies entered the other cubicle to remove the body. “Do you need anything?”

“Do you have any juice?” She was suddenly very thirsty. “Or even water?”

“I’ll be right back.” The nurse hurried away. She followed the orderlies as they wheeled the body away.

While she waited for the nurse to return Sara realized that her fiance hadn’t visited her. She checked her phone and noted that John hadn’t tried to call her either. Of course, he could be busy at work still but he had been growing distant with her since her diagnosis. Something else her cancer had caused.

The nurse returned with both a small can of juice and a bottle of water. Sara gratefully accepted both and opened the water first. She wanted to be able to savor the juice. While Sara sipped the water, Beth checked her IV again before leaving.

Tiredness hit her hard and Sara screwed on the cap of the water bottle. She was still thirsty but she couldn’t keep her eyes open much longer. Her body sagged into the bed and her eyes slid shut, but instead of sleep she seemed to enter a strange dream state.

She was standing in a field of green, even the sky was green. There was no one around, yet she did not feel alone. She did a 360 but still didn’t see anyone so she just stood there and looked out over the field. It was peaceful here. Nothing seemed to mar that peace.

You will do, came a woman’s voice as a warmth flooded her body. Rest now.

How long Sara stood in the field she didn’t know but the next thing she knew the nurse was removing her IV.

“I didn’t mean to wake you,” Beth said. “How are you feeling?”

“Better.” She still felt tired but she was no longer feeling sick.

“Good.” The nurse reached above the bed and pulled down a blood pressure cuff. “Since you’re awake I’ll take your vitals.”

“Alright.”

Beth wrapped the cuff around Sara’s arm and reached into her scrub top’s pocket to retrieve a stethoscope. She took Sara’s vitals, rechecking the temperature before she stepped back.

“Will I live?” Sara gave the nurse a half-smile.

“They’re better than when you came in.” Beth grabbed the IV pole. “Do you want to stay for awhile longer?”

“No.”

“Okay. I’ll get your papers ready.” The nurse left the cubicle with the IV pole.

Sara swung her legs over the bed’s side and paused as the room spun a bit. Her head settled quickly and she reached down for her shoes. She would have to take a taxi back to their apartment because she didn’t think John would pick her up or even answer the phone. He probably wouldn’t even be home.

“Ready to go?” the nurse enter the cubicle with a handful of papers and a wheel chair.

“Yes.” Sara finished putting on her shoes and stood. She accepted the papers from Beth and sat down in the wheel chair. “I need to call a taxi.”

“I took the liberty of doing so when I got your paperwork.” Beth told her as she pushed her out into the hallway. “You arrived in one so I figured you’d need one to return home.”

“Thank you.” Sara gave a nod and relaxed in the chair as the nurse wheeled her toward the side entrance. She and John would have to have a talk, but not tonight. If he even came home tonight since it was Friday and he had been spending the weekends with his buddies recently.

Beth parked the wheel chair to the side of the glass door with a good view of the circle drive in front. “It should be here in a few minutes.”

“Thank you again.”

“Will you be alright here?”

“I’ll be fine. Go on back to work.” Sara watched the nurse walk away then turned to look for the cab.

The distinct yellow and black taxi pulled in seconds later and Sara hurriedly stood and moved to open the door. She couldn’t wait to get out of here since she spent more than enough time in the hospital when she had her treatments.

“Where to, Lady?” The driver looked at her through the rear view mirror as she slid in the back.

Sara paused as a yearning for greenspace flickered through her, and she heard herself say, “Jackson Park.”

The driver gave a nod and pulled out of the drive.

Jackson Park was the oldest park in the city and cover over three acres of grass and trees with a small pond that had benches lining several gravel paths through out. It was smack dab in the center of the city. Of course it hadn’t started that way but when the city grew, the planners had made it so.

With the typical ease of long time drivers, the taxi man got her to the park in just a few minutes. “That will be twenty dollars.”

“Will you come back in an hour?” She gave him a twenty and a five from her wallet. “I should be ready to go home then.”

“One hour.” the man nodded.

“Thanks.” She slid out of the taxi and closed the door, watching him drive away. Once he was out of sight, she stepped off the sidewalk onto the gravel walkway and stopped as whispers teased her hearing. Though after a moment she realized the voice was in her head, not in her ears.

“I thought so,” came a voice from behind her.

She whirled around and took a few steps back when she saw that the young Native American from the hospital stood on the sidewalk. “What are you doing here?”

“Retrieving what is mine.” The man took a step forward, causing Sara to move a few steps back. “You might as well give up now.”

The lawn, the whisper said in her head. Get him off the stone.

“I don’t know what you’re talking about.” While she was talking she stepped off the pathway and took a few steps onto the grass. A warmth touched her mind and the whispers got louder. They were telling her that she would be okay, that no one would hurt her–and that she needed to draw him towards her. She figured whatever was whispering to her wanted the man off both the sidewalk and the pathway. “Who are you? What do you want?”

“I am to be the new shaman and as to what I want–Your death.”

“What?” Sara took a few more steps back at his words. The whispers reassured her that she would not be hurt, and urged her to keep him moving.

“You stole something that was not yours to take.”

“Isn’t that what you were doing?”

“The old man wasn’t using the gift like he should.” He stepped further onto the pathway.

“What do you mean?” She felt a tension growing under her feet and pressure in her head. “What gift?”

Was he talking about the whispers?

Anger and apprehension swept through her suddenly as the man stepped onto the grass and she took another step back. The emotions seem to come from him, yet there was a separate feeling of warmth underlying everything.

Forfeit, came the whisper in her head.

Before she could do or say anything energy rushed through her and out toward the Native American. The man stumbled and fell to his knees. It was as if a great force washed over him, overcoming any resistance.

“Stop it!” the man screamed.

“I’m not doing anything.” She told him as she took another step back. The tension and energy built higher, releasing at it’s peak, and she watched as the man grew paler and suddenly fell forward. As the energy just as suddenly dissipated Sara sagged with tiredness and stared numbly at the man. “What am I going to do now?”

“Leave.” The elderly Native American woman from the hospital came up behind her.

“What was this all about?”

“The student trying to become the master through murder.” Maramee moved to the body and glanced down at him before looking at Sara. “Take the left fork at the tree line. There’s a cab waiting.”

Go.

“I don’t understand any of this.”

“Come visit me in two days and I’ll explain everything.”

“And how will I find you?”

“The Whispering Pines.” She looked back down at the body. “Now go.”

Sara too glanced at the body then moved back onto the pathway, following it toward the patch of trees. Once at the tree line she paused and looked back before taking the left fork.

The last view she had of the field was of Maramee kneeling beside the body.


The Elemental Detective’s World

 Science rules this world, more than religion but some ‘religious’ fears are still strong. Mainly that anything smacking of ‘witchcraft’ still genders fear of the unknown. If science can’t explain it the people fear it.

When the vampires, shifters, and immortals introduced themselves they brought with them new sciences including DNA and medical advancements. Of course it was mainly to explain themselves to the masses. They didn’t want to be hunted or misunderstood. Legends had already maligned them and they were tired of hiding.

Vampires had a virus that was a mutation of rabies. It also had RNA strands that halted aging and sped up healing using blood as energy source. 

Shifters had mutated RNA strands which were linked to animal DNA. They aged normally, but they too had sped up healing. It was also inherent in their DNA so they could pass it on to their children.  

Immortals had mutated DNA which stopped the aging process at the person’s peak age and sped up their healing processes. 

This is how they explained themselves. They were not demons or devils or evil creatures, no more than mundane humans themselves were.

Charters were made with the Others to have a common law and each city had its own special Charters with the Other communities. Special divisions in the police forces were created to enforce those Charters.

As the Others settled in more of their past became known and humans learned of the Elementals, beings that could control the elements.  Vampires painted them as evil creatures. But the shifters and immortals explained that the Elementals were the ones that united the Others, made the Universal Laws, and set up the Masquerade, curving both the vampires and shifters blood-thirstiness and arrogance. All of the immortals and most of the shifters realized it needed to be done, but a lot of the vampires did not like being told they couldn’t do as they pleased.

Humans were ambivalent about Elementals, especially since the shifters and immortals said that they had faded away over the centuries. Though they thought it more to do with the vampires hunting them than anything else. Elementals could still be around, just doing their own version of the Masquerade.

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