**Null and Void by Susan Copperfield**
Good Morning,
Everyone! So thrilled to see you all today! Not too long ago I featured this
author with her book, STORM CALLED, which is the first book in this very series!
Today we find out more about the next installment. So let’s find out more!
Please allow me to once again feature on the blog Susan Copperfield and her
latest release, NULL AND VOID … Plus, a GIVEAWAY!
**SUSAN COPPERFIELD**
**BIO**
Susan Copperfield is the royal romance, urban fantasy loving
alter ego of award-winning & USA Today bestselling novelist RJ Blain.
Under the super not-so-secret identity of Susan, the Royal States of America is explored, where the work of sixteen founding royal families preserved the United States from destruction and civil war when magic swept over the world.
In the Royal States, life, love, and magic always finds a way.
Under the super not-so-secret identity of Susan, the Royal States of America is explored, where the work of sixteen founding royal families preserved the United States from destruction and civil war when magic swept over the world.
In the Royal States, life, love, and magic always finds a way.
To
find out more about Ms. Copperfield, please visit:
**NULL AND VOID**
Publication
date:
November 15th, 2017
Series:
Royal States #2
Genres: Adult,
Urban Fantasy
**BLURB**
Born without magic,
Mackenzie Little has few prospects. In a futile attempt to break her out of the
null caste, her mother ropes her into participating in a charity auction, where
anything can be bought with enough money.
She never expected her ex-boss would buy her company, but for one day, she lives a fairy tale.
Nine months later, despite their precautions, Mackenzie’s little miracle is born.
Armed with Texas pride and New York viciousness, Mackenzie must fight through hell or high water to protect her family of two from a society obsessed with the magic they lack.
She never expected her ex-boss would buy her company, but for one day, she lives a fairy tale.
Nine months later, despite their precautions, Mackenzie’s little miracle is born.
Armed with Texas pride and New York viciousness, Mackenzie must fight through hell or high water to protect her family of two from a society obsessed with the magic they lack.
**EXCERPT**
If I adhered to popular belief, every living thing possessed a
spark of magic. The trick was discovering that spark and coaxing it to life.
I wanted to find the bastard responsible for propagating that load
of drivel and knee him in the groin so hard his descendants felt it while his
ancestors rolled in their graves. Giving nulls like me false hope only made
life more difficult. Without magic to ease the way, I needed pointless, wishful
thinking like I needed an extra hole in my head.
The extra hole would put me out of my misery, and some days, the
thought of escaping the incessant prejudice appealed. I always came back to my
senses, and when I did, I became even more bitter about my lot in life.
If I had possessed a spark of magic, I would’ve used it to light a
fire under my boss’s ass so he’d get back to work instead of hovering over my
shoulder watching me plug numbers into a spreadsheet. What use was magic if I
couldn’t do something productive with it? I’d already lost three hours of my
day to someone else’s accounting error, and no magic on Earth could tap into a
computer and force it to spill its secrets.
Magic could work with technology, but for whatever reason I
couldn’t fathom, no one had figured out how to use magic to populate
spreadsheets. Sitting straighter, I kept my gaze locked on my monitor to
maintain the illusion of productivity. “Can I help you with something, sir?”
“I couldn’t help but notice you’re doing Abigail’s job, Mackenzie
Little.”
I twitched at the mention of the woman, who often served as my
supervisor when my boss, one Dylan Mason, didn’t feel like dealing with me. I
really wanted to know why he always insisted on calling me by my full name. One
day, when I tired of having a job, I’d tell him exactly what I thought of him
and his obnoxious ways. I’d also give him an earful about the failings of his
precious executive secretary.
I kept working and forced a smile. “She asked for help with a
report as she has a very busy day today.”
Liar, liar, pants on fire. By help, I meant fix. By asked, I meant
demanded. Abigail thanked no one, especially not a worthless null like me, even
when I busted my ass making sure she didn’t lose her job. If I had had a single
spark of magic, I would’ve started fires to watch them burn.
Most people didn’t want fire as their element; firebugs were as common
as dirt, ranked low on the talent totem, and had a reputation of being
dangerous without true benefit.
If it meant being something other than a null, I would’ve embraced
even the weakest flame.
To cover my growing agitation over my lot in life, I hunted for
the nefarious errors in Abigail’s formulas, making my boss cool his heels.
His impatient sigh pleased me.
“I see,” he muttered, hovering over my shoulder and watching me do
his secretary’s work.
If I had possessed the power, I would’ve considered damning Dylan
to the darkest corner of hell I could find. Ignoring his presence tested my
patience, but unlike him, I showed no sign of my annoyance.
Within a few minutes, I found the problem: Abigail liked taking
shortcuts and often forgot—or refused—to double-check her work. One corrected
formula later, I emailed her the report.
I returned to the daily grind, checking the output of scripts for
the marketing department so they could build the reports people like Dylan
would use to make deals with other companies—or swindle clients out of their
money. My boss continued to hover, leaning forward until I caught glimpses of
him out of the corner of my eye.
Were all men such children? Why did such a handsome man have to be
so insufferable?
For the sake of my peace of mind, it was a good thing Dylan
irritated me so much, else I’d spend every night fantasizing about stripping
him out of his shirt. He took good care of himself, he knew it, and he wore
clothes designed to cling to him and highlight his best assets.
I wasn’t the only woman in the office with a hobby of watching him
leave the room.
Forcing a smile, I asked, “Did you need something, sir?”
“Actually, yes. I don’t suppose Abigail told you what she’s so
busy doing today that prevented her from sending me that report I expected
first thing this morning? I really could’ve used those figures at ten. It’s now
eleven. Since you seem to have taken over her responsibilities, will there be
any more delays? There’s another report I need for my one o’clock.”
With a sinking feeling, I checked my email for additional messages
from Abigail. Sure enough, there was another demand for a fixed report. Opening
the file revealed a slew of errors. My head ached just thinking about
unraveling the disaster and correcting the damned thing. Two hours might give
me enough time to restore it to order if I worked hard and skipped lunch.
For someone in my position, there was only one answer I could give
to my boss. “I’ll make sure this is ready for your one o’clock, sir.”
“Thanks, Abigail.” My boss straightened, and out of the corner of
my eye, I watched him brush invisible dirt from his perfect suit, which clung
to his chest and did unfair things to me. He inclined his head in the barest of
nods, something he shouldn’t have done for a null like me, and marched to his
office.
Maybe Dylan lived to piss me off, but he wasn’t a slouch, and as I
had since the day I’d started working for him at Riverway Enterprises, I wished
I’d been born with a spark of magic. When I wasn’t busy resenting him for what
I couldn’t have, he had every last quality I’d ever wanted in a man.
I demonized him because I hated longing for what I couldn’t have,
including a smart man like him, a man who noticed those beneath him, even when
society told him we should be ignored.
Some things never changed. I had no idea how I’d finish my work
and hers, too, but while I’d miss lunch, I’d earn a nice paycheck thanks to the
overtime I’d have to log to keep from getting fired. Maybe if the stars
aligned, I’d get a bonus for doing what my boss’s executive secretary hadn’t.
I snorted at my misplaced optimism, shook my head, and got to
work.
* * *
Fifteen minutes before one, I emailed the report to Abigail, and
because I’d trust a cobra long before her, I also sent it to my boss. I’d pay
hell for it in one form or another later; if I let her send it, she’d be late,
which would put me in the line of fire. Sending it to Dylan directly would land
me in a steaming pile of crap with her, but she couldn’t fire me.
He could.
Aware of his meeting, I skipped out of the office to grab a bite
to eat, hoping no one noticed me leaving outside normal lunch hours.
I ran into Abigail in the lobby, and she was on her way out of the
office. Considering I hadn’t seen her upstairs since she’d dumped the first
report on my lap, I wondered what she’d been doing with her day. “Abigail?”
“I’m busy, Mackenzie,” the woman snapped, flipping her hand at me.
“Later.”
I fantasized about wrapping my hands around her pretty neck. “Have
you forgotten I work in the marketing department? I’m not Mr. Mason’s
secretary. You are.”
“Later, Mackenzie.” Abigail swept through the doors and took the
steps two at a time. It was a good thing I lacked magic, as I would’ve used it
to snap her needle-thin stilettos—or her neck.
Sometimes, I wasn’t a nice person, and I found it difficult to
care. Instead of screaming profanities and yanking out my hair, I followed. In
the time it took me to shove through the front doors out of the building,
flinching at the cooler air outside, Dylan’s secretary had climbed into a
sports car that was pulling away from the curb with a squeal of tires, getting
nowhere in a hurry and burning rubber.
The chill didn’t bother me much, although my chest felt a little
tighter than I liked, forcing me to retreat back into building.
Damn it. Was she really screwing me over again? My vantage
gave me a good look at the car, and I memorized the license plate so I could
snoop later. To make certain I wouldn’t forget, I pulled my phone out of my
purse and emailed the number to myself. The next time she hung me out to dry,
I’d remember her outing when she should’ve been doing her job and mention it to
the wrong people.
I didn’t need magic to make her life miserable, and I needed a new
job anyway. It’d been a miracle I’d stayed at Riverway Enterprises for as long
as I had anyway.
Nulls like me tended to have a year-long shelf life before we
became too expensive to keep around. Why waste good money on someone without a
talent?
Life would be a lot easier when I accepted what I couldn’t change.
* * *
Most people ate out at our office, a badge of pride among the
employees privileged to work for a corporation run by platinums, the
higher-ranked elite. I hiked the ten minutes home, swearing to submit my resume
to any company needing a gopher capable of generating reports, operating
computers without breaking them, and putting up with pain in the ass CEOs. My
lack of magic wouldn’t endear me to many employers, but with four years under
my belt at Riverway Enterprises and a business degree, I’d get interviews.
While I should’ve dug something out of my refrigerator, I wasn’t
up for the hassle of dealing with its chill. The last thing I needed was to
return to the office wheezing because I’d flirted with disaster. A can of soup
made with warm tap water would do, and while I ate, I submitted my resume to
several companies and eyeballed my savings account, calculating how long I’d
last if I snapped and quit before I could be fired.
A smart null always quit; being fired served as a big black mark
for future employment, and I’d reached the highest pay bracket I could without
magic. I wouldn’t lose it being an idiot.
The laws didn’t protect me from being fired without reason, but
those same laws didn’t prevent me from quitting without notice. I had options.
They weren’t pleasant ones, but if someone crossed my last line, I’d do what I
should’ve done years ago.
Fifty-five minutes after leaving, I slipped into the cubicle farm
which served as an office for me and six other support staff for the real
marketers. No one paid any attention to me, which I expected.
No one wanted to lose the little magic they had, and they all
feared exposure to me might infect them and transform them into a null and void
existence, too. My nearest neighbor, Marco, flinched whenever I got within five
feet of him, something I found amusing considering he could barely light a
candle with his talent. Firebugs incapable of controlling their abilities also
got short-shafted.
Of all my co-workers, he should’ve understood what it was like to
walk in my shoes.
Sitting down and leaning back in my chair, I checked the reception
area adjacent to Dylan’s office; Abigail hadn’t returned yet.
“Boss was asking about you,” Marco barked, and his nasally rasp
made my skin crawl. “Finally going to get fired for slacking off?”
“You’re in a bad mood today,” I muttered, shaking my head and
settling in to start my day rather than pretend my name was Abigail. Given a
few minutes, I’d be in a bad mood, too. I could do her job better than she
could, and we both knew it. “If you must know, maybe I’m looking for a new job
so I can work with people who have balls. If I’m going to get fired anyway, I
guess I don’t have to worry about your delicate little feelings anymore, do I?”
Stunned silence spread through the cubicle farm, and heads popped
up over the dividers, my co-workers eager for a show to break the daily
monotony, perfectly imitating curious gophers.
“Mackenzie Little, my office. Now!” Dylan barked.
I hadn’t noticed him lurking in his reception, and I grimaced.
Marco smirked at me and waggled his fingers in a mocking wave.
* * *
Of the men to occupy the role of Chief Marketing Officer, Dylan
had lasted the longest, having joined the office at my one-year anniversary.
Five others had preceded him, earning the position due to their platinum rank
rather than their skills. His spacious office felt like a tomb to me, with the
worn oak desk serving as the sarcophagus where my career would rot. During my
boss’s tenure with Riverway Enterprises, no one had witnessed him using magic.
Every office gossip believed his talent was linked to his temper, and no one
was brave enough to test him.
Whatever his power was, it was strong enough to grant him the
right to wear a platinum pentagram tie clip, proclaiming his status as a member
of a strong bloodline. As far as I knew, the pentagram served as a warning: if
anyone touched Dylan, retribution would be swift and lethal. If he didn’t kill
his attackers, his family would, and the sigil declared he possessed a lethal
power and had royal blessing to use it.
Dylan circled his desk and sat, crossing his arms and drumming his
fingers against the perfect sleeves of his suit. “Care to explain what that was
about?”
I took a moment to think. If I quit or got fired, I’d have one
month, two weeks, and three days to find a new job, accounting for the two
weeks it would take to receive my first paycheck. If asked, I could easily
claim discrimination as the cause of my departure from the company.
No matter how I looked at it, I had nothing to gain or lose. If I
stayed, I faced legalized harassment from Marco and his posse of petty friends.
If I left, I’d be challenged to find new work, but I might be able to salvage
something of my career.
I drew a deep breath and lifted my chin. “Didn’t you know lacking
magic’s a contagious disease? I regret to inform you Mr. Farren’s balls haven’t
dropped yet. I’m sure it’ll happen eventually. Did Abigail forward the report
she couldn’t be bothered to finish without me fixing it for her, as she can’t
count to five without stuttering? Oh, right. She was too busy going to lunch to
do her job for a change.” Without referencing my phone, I described the car
she’d left in, gave Dylan the license plate number, and held my hands up in
helpless surrender. Quitting would put me ahead of the game, and I wouldn’t
need to explain why I’d gotten fired. “I quit, Mr. Mason. I’m sure you can
locate someone from a useful bloodline to cover your secretary’s pretty ass,
since she can’t seem to keep it covered herself.”
My ex-boss’s eyebrows rose. He opened his mouth to say something,
but I spun and marched out of his office, closing the door behind me with a
gentle click.
Despite the rage seething under my skin, slamming doors was just
rude.
* * *
Everything I needed to take home fit in my purse, requiring only a
few moments to grab on my way out the door. Marco laughed. The rest of my
co-workers pretended to work rather than openly mock my misfortune.
They likely believed I’d been fired, and I was in no hurry to
correct them. Unless my luck continued to sour, I’d never see them again.
There’d be talk, but I didn’t care. Other jobs waited, and they’d
become murky waters within a week, too. I dumped my badge at the security desk
in the lobby without saying a word and didn’t look back. While I walked home, I
regretted every last decision I’d made in my adult life. What sort of idiot
paid for a general major in business to work as a desk monkey helping other
people with the same degree make twice as much money?
If I’d been wise, I would’ve put in extra overtime before
quitting. Then again, I would’ve talked myself out of leaving like I had every
time before. Who quit without three months of income to ease the transition?
Who quit without having already arranged a new job?
Me, that’s who.
Digging out my phone, I dialed my mother’s number, and she
answered on the third ring. “Hello?”
“I don’t suppose you or Dad happened to ditch the whole null and
void deal today, did you? I may have quit my job today and could use a
miracle.”
“Sorry, baby girl. No such luck. What happened?”
“I told a co-worker he lacked balls and informed my boss his
secretary couldn’t cover her ass without help. I got tired of being the office
scapegoat, so I figured I’d quit before I got fired.”
“I’ve done that a few times.” My mother sighed. “Let me guess. You
walked out without giving them two weeks’ notice.”
“Why should I give them the courtesy? Anyway, it’s legal. They
don’t have to give me notice, and I don’t have to give them notice, either.”
Arguing with my mother was similar to beating my head into a brick
wall; I wouldn’t get anywhere in the discussion, I’d develop a headache within
minutes, and she wouldn’t quit until she won.
My mother always won.
“It doesn’t hurt to be courteous,” she scolded.
“That’s ridiculous, Mom.”
“Being courteous is never ridiculous.”
“Why don’t we forget about it? We’re never going to agree.”
“Will you leave the kingdom?”
I staggered to a halt, my eyes widening as my mother, for the
first time in my adult life, changed the subject rather than pick a fight with
me over my latest poor life choice. “Why would I leave the kingdom?”
“There are better places for people like us, Mackenzie. You know
that. If we could move out of New York, we would. We’re too old.”
My mother was lying; she’d never leave New York as long as the
royals insisted patriots remain in their birth kingdoms—which hadn’t even been
kingdoms until twenty years ago. Generations before then, the United States of
America had been a global power to be feared, but following the outbreak, the
country had fragmented, teetered on complete destruction, and would’ve fallen
without the intervention of sixteen royal families.
It had taken decades for the continent to recover. The Royal
States of America, officially founded when I had been a child, made me a New
Yorker despite living in Annapolis, Maryland. I still didn’t understand why
Maryland hadn’t won the pissing contest for naming the kingdom.
According to my parents, Maryland was the true center of the
universe.
I sighed, forced my feet back into motion, and trudged towards my
apartment. “I’m not sure. It depends on what I find for work. Maybe I’ll head
to Canada if I can; they aren’t quite as prejudiced about us nulls. I could
claim refugee status.”
Canada had been hit hard during the outbreak, too, losing a lot of
land to the American royals, although what remained of the country, now turned
into a kingdom like everywhere else in the world, had become powerful.
Canada’s king could, if he desired, flatten mountains with a
thought, and everyone was grateful he kept his talent in check.
My mother huffed. “You’re being a child about this, Mackenzie.”
Next time, I needed to remember my mother’s sense of right and
wrong aligned with the royals and their latest vision of a perfect society. At
the moment, that meant no one left the wonderful kingdom of New York, not ever,
for no reason, not even to visit family or friends.
No wonder she’d asked; she wanted reassurance I was doing what I
was supposed to, being properly subservient to the elites who hated us for
lacking magic. Tired of being treated like the child she claimed I was, I
snapped, “Tough shit.”
I hung up.
No wonder magic had fled from my bloodline. Never had I met a less
ambitious collection of people in my life. It hadn’t done me any good during my
childhood, but I’d try to find my spark of magic. I had nothing else to do
while I waited, and come hell or high water, I’d find it.
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