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  Dagger

  A Crimson Daggers Novel #1: Little Red Riding Hood

  Emma Savant

  Copyright © 2018 Emma Savant

  All rights reserved.

  Cover design by Dan Van Oss, Covermint Design

  Editing by Emmy Ellis, Studio ENP

  Additional thanks to Marita and Charmaine for beta reading and proofreading

  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 publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

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

  www.EmmaSavant.com

  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

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  A Note from Emma

  Also by Emma Savant

  About the Author

  1

  I swung my leg and knocked my mother off balance.

  She leaped backwards, stumbled, and found her footing. A second later, I had to duck to keep her fist from connecting with my nose.

  Her black eyes flashed, and I felt the next blow coming before I saw it. I raised my arms to block the punch, then swung my own fist around. It missed, only making contact with her shoulder, but it was enough to distract her.

  I kicked her in the stomach and shoved her back. Her body slammed against the wall, and I was there in an instant, my blade drawn and held to her throat.

  She breathed hard, watching me closely. Then her face broke into something that could almost pass for a smile. She slammed both hands back up against the wall.

  “Not bad,” she said. “That was better than yesterday.”

  “It really was,” someone said from the other side of the ballroom.

  I knew that voice, and it made me falter. I looked over at my cousin, Sienna. She was leaning against one of the ballroom’s columns, her pentacle-covered tank top clinging to her muscular figure and her dark-brown hair pulled up in a high ponytail that showed off its red ombre tips. She offered an encouraging smile. “Your form is really getting better, Scarlett.”

  I set my jaw and turned back to Mom, but it was too late. She’d already taken advantage of the distraction, and the next thing I knew my dagger was skittering across the polished stone floor and she had me in a headlock. I struggled, trying to break out, but Mom’s arms were like iron.

  I’d gotten distracted, again.

  I’d failed to take my shot when I had it, again.

  I’d failed to finish the job, again,

  Sienna pursed her lips into a sad expression. I tapped out. Mom pulled back.

  “You’ve got to stay focused,” she said. “Nothing can take your eyes off your target. Where should you be looking when you’re fighting?”

  “My opponent,” I said.

  “And where should you be looking when you think you’ve won?”

  “My opponent.”

  “And where should you keep looking if a six-hundred-pound giant from Bolivia comes crashing through the wall and starts to tap dance?”

  “My opponent, presumably,” I said. “Unless she’s just as freaked out as I am and we decide to fight the giant together.”

  Sienna laughed. “You train us for the kinds of situations no other Dagger would ever consider,” she said. “That’s why you’re my favorite, Aunt Ruby.”

  Mom pointed at her. “You think I’m making this up, and you’ll keep thinking that until the day a vampire on a unicycle tries to distract you from your objective with the offer of free cotton candy.”

  “I forgot about that story.” Sienna laughed, lightly, the way only someone already on top of the world could laugh.

  “Yeah, well, then, try to remember it the next time you’re stuck at a cursed circus,” I muttered. “Since that’s a situation we’ll all find ourselves in.”

  I wiped a bead of sweat off my forehead. Sarcasm aside, it was a situation I might find myself in one day, assuming I ever passed enough tests to join my mother and grandmother as one of the Crimson Daggers. I’d been eighteen for months already, and Mom still hadn’t decided it was time to induct me as a novice Dagger—even though she was second-in-command of the whole coven, following in the footsteps of her own mother. Their roles should rightfully pass to me.

  But no, I’d screwed it up during those last few months of training, and Sienna had been named the future Stiletto instead.

  It wasn’t right, and there wasn’t a damn thing I could do about it.

  I pulled my hand guards off and fixed my ponytail.

  “I’m going to go see if Grandma needs help,” I said, avoiding Mom’s eyes.

  Sienna stepped forward, as if to take my place on the sparring floor. “Ruby, if you have a minute, I’d love to work on my blocks some more. I’m just not getting them as quickly as I should.”

  Mom waved her in, and I left them both behind as the sound of Mom’s hands striking Sienna’s forearms filled the echoing ballroom.

  In the shower, with the cool water pouring down my shoulders, I tried to rinse off my anger the same way I rinsed off the sweat that coated my skin.

  It wouldn’t do any good to stay angry at Sienna, or Mom, or Grandma, or any of the other Daggers who’d been involved in the decision. The future Stiletto had been chosen. She’d be my leader someday. I had to make peace with it.

  I turned the shower off so hard the faucet squeaked.

  The water dripped from the tap for a moment. Most of Grandma’s Victorian mansion had been renovated, and she’d replaced all the old pipes a few years back, but the house still had the odd tap that dripped or window that wouldn’t close all the way. It gave the house charm, Grandma insisted, and I was willing to take her at her word. My grandma was an expert in a lot of fields, but knowing how to kill monsters and maximize aesthetic appeal were probably at the top.

  I dressed quickly in a maroon tank top and black jeans before leaving my attic suite. I’d had my own rooms since I’d turned eighteen, which seemed like a small consolation prize for losing the Stiletto title. Still, they were mine, and they had the added advantage of a window that opened onto a slope of roof that was perfect for lying on and stargazing.

  Grandma Nelly’s workshop space took up most of the second floor, with show rooms and the ballroom on the first floor, an expansive gym in the renovated cellars, and Dagger quarters filling the third floor and attics above. It was a lively house, and Grandma was its beating heart. She sat cross-legged atop a table filled with fabric scraps. Her head was tilted, and she had one eye closed behind her stylish black glasses as she stared at a half-clothed mannequin.

  “You okay there?” I said.

  Only her eyes moved. She glanced at me, then back at the mannequin.

  “I’m waiting for inspiration.”

  “Do you need a muse?” I said. “I could invite Sherry back over.”

  “Goddess, what a magnificent idea,” Grandma said dryly.

  Sherry was a wealthy, eccentric muse who lived in the neighborhood. She was eternally eager to help Grandma, both through her patronage of the House of Carnelian and copious offers to shower Grandma with the magical inspiration only a muse could provide. Grandma had accepted the offer exactly once and, after designing twenty-six separate gowns with neon-pink fur trim over the course of one manic night, had written Sherry off as being past her sell-by date and had given the Daggers strict orders to keep her away from the studio at all costs.

  I lifted myself onto the table, too, and waited for Grandma to stop squinting at the mannequin. It took a few minutes, but then she sat up straight, shook out her short, silver-white curls, and raised a hand. A length of cream silk from a neighboring table floated through the air and draped itself across the mannequin’s shoulder, forming itself into a pleated sash.

  Grandma made a disgruntled noise and threw the silk back onto the table with an irritated flick of her wrist.

  2

  “I thought it looked nice,” I said.

  “Too safe,” she said. “All wrong.” She sighed and turned to me, and squinted again, this time with concern. “Are you all right, darling?”

  I knew I didn’t look upset, but that didn’
t matter around Grandma. She was a witch armed with grandma’s intuition, as she’d informed me more than once, and not to be trifled with.

  Not that anyone would dream of trifling with Carnelian Hunter. It didn’t matter whether they knew her secret identity as the Stiletto or just saw her as the powerhouse behind the House of Carnelian’s fashion empire: she was the same tough, focused woman either way.

  I looked from her to the inspiration boards set all around the room on easels. Cool sunlight filtered in through the windows, and it was almost tranquil in here, except for the intense energy that always radiated from Grandma like heat from a fire.

  “I am totally fine,” I said.

  “That’s a very convincing lie, dear.”

  “Thank you,” I said. “I practiced.”

  “Perhaps you can practice helping me figure out what to do with this gown,” she said, pointing at another mannequin. “It appears tedious no matter what I do to it.”

  The sleeveless gown was a soft, peachy pink, with the flowing material gathered into a knot on one hip.

  “Beads?” I said. “Just a light scattering down the skirt? The kind of thing you’d only see in the light?”

  We stared at the gown, but Grandma was right. It was pretty, but it wasn’t spectacular—and spectacular was Carnelian’s calling card.

  “Why this?” I said.

  She tapped her manicured nails on her knee. “Don’t know. Maybe that’s the problem. I keep thinking we need to go more conservative with our look. It feels wrong. But the Faerie Queen needs clothing suitable for state functions.”

  “Which describes pretty much nothing in Carnelian’s history,” I said.

  We were one of the more daring houses in the Glimmering fashion scene. Ours was a hidden world of faeries and witches and magicians and characters from fairy tales, and I couldn’t think of one of them that might want a plain pink dress like this.

  “You’re trying to dress her like a Humdrum politician,” I said.

  “That’s exactly what I was trying to do,” she said. “And it’s terrible, isn’t it?”

  I made a face. “Kind of.”

  “Well, damn.”

  Grandma flicked a hand at the gown, and it promptly disassembled itself and fell to a heap of fabric and thread on the floor. I hopped off the table, crouched at the materials, and pointed. A spark shot out of my finger and sent the thread spooling neatly back onto a bobbin.

  “Carnelian’s look is sexy,” I said. “It’s bold. It’s gothic.”

  “Which begs the question of why I’m trying to dress a faerie,” Grandma said.

  I glanced over my shoulder at her. “Faeries aren’t all pink and gossamer these days,” I said. “Queen Amani’s a modern woman. You can do Carnelian’s aesthetic and still win a few contracts with the Waterfall Palace.”

  The Waterfall Palace was the home of the Faerie Queen. The Faerie Queen was the ruler over every coven, sorcerer’s order, faerie agency, and vampire brood in our world. And the Faerie Queen was going to be at the upcoming Glimmering Fashion Week, choosing the star designers who would dress her for the next year.

  Grandma was determined to be among them.

  She pursed her lips. “You’re right. I’m overthinking it. What would you do, darling? Imagine you’re trying to dress Queen Amani for an evening reception with the High Wizard from Tokyo.”

  “Are cherry blossoms too obvious?”

  “Depends on the gown,” Grandma said.

  “I’ll light a few candles for focus, and we can get to work,” I said.

  I roamed through the stacks of fabric, running my fingers across the different textures and picking up anything that spoke to me. Grandma and I designed together for the next few hours, pinning fabric and stitching makeshift blossoms and then throwing everything away again.

  A few of the Daggers stopped in to ask Grandma questions or say hello, but no one offered to help. They all had their own lives and their own jobs and covers. Only a handful lived here, like Mom and me, and I was the only one out of the whole coven who seemed interested in Grandma’s dreams of fashion domination.

  For the other Daggers, their day jobs were just a way to distract the world from their real calling as underground monster hunters. For Grandma, the fashion house was as much a part of her life as leading the coven.

  The gown slowly came together. Designing was all about listening to the fabric, Grandma always said. The gown knew what it wanted to be, and our job was to create a space for it to come into being. After a while, we had an elegant white sheath dress with a sweeping train covered in watercolor cherry blossoms.

  Well, it would be eventually. Right now, it was a cobbled-together piece of muslin that had flowers sketched all over the train in pink and black marker. But soon, after the seamstresses had worked their magic, it would be everything the Faerie Queen might need for an evening reception.

  Grandma leaned back against one of the tables, folded her arms, and looked at the mocked-up gown for a long moment. Finally, she nodded.

  “It’ll work,” she said. “And if the blossoms hint toward red, they’ll coordinate with the cape collection. Everything needs to be unique, but it all has to coordinate. It’s about the show, not just the individual pieces.”

  “I know,” I said.

  She reached out and pulled me toward her. She might look like an elderly woman, but her thin arm around my shoulder was strong as steel. She kissed the top of my head.

  “You did good, mon petit sabre,” she said. “I’m so glad I’ll have you backstage during the show. You’re the only one who understands this business.”

  “I wish I understood it,” I said. “I don’t know how you manage all this plus the Dagger stuff. You run this whole empire and the coven, and meanwhile I can’t even get through a sparring match with Mom without getting distracted if someone walks into the room.”

  “Someone, or Sienna?”

  I shrugged, which was answer enough.

  “I know it’s hard, love,” Grandma said. “But the Stiletto title doesn’t always pass from mother to daughter. You know that.”

  “Doesn’t make it better,” I said. “I’m just crappy at everything to do with being a Dagger. I don’t have whatever it is you and Mom have.”

  “You’re not crappy,” Grandma said. “But the Stiletto role requires something extra. Maybe it’s not your path.” She patted my arm. “I know you, though, and I know you’ll find your way just fine. You have to be patient.”

  “You know me,” I muttered. “Super good at patience.”

  My mom would have gotten after me about back-talking, but Grandma just laughed. “Not everyone gets to be a Stiletto,” she said. “But you’re still a Dagger, and not everyone gets to be one of those, either.”

  “I’m not a real Dagger,” I said. “I keep screwing up during training. Everyone else in my age group got initiated right away.” Anger and frustration churned inside me like a living creature. I picked up a loose strand of thread and threw it down again. “What’s wrong with me that I can’t do this?”

  “We all struggle with different things,” Grandma said. “Autumn’s spells still backfire as often as they work. Rowan’s been a Dagger novice for half a year now and still can’t swim two lengths of the pool without panicking. Even Sienna has her challenges.”

  “Name one.”

  She adjusted her glasses. “Comparing yourself to Sienna is not productive.”

  “Only because I come off worse than if I compare myself to Autumn or Rowan.”