Saturday, February 9, 2013

Guardians Inc.: The Cypher. Book Blog Tour




Follow the tour HERE


Summary:
A chance reading of a newspaper ad will send 16 year old Thomas Byrne into the world within our world.

Following the ad he will find Guardians Incorporated. A seven thousand year old organization charged with protecting the balance between Magic and technology.

Through their guidance technology has kept Magic at bay since the Renaissance, but the balance is shifting and soon all those creatures we've driven into myth and legend will come back with a vengeance.

To protect the present, Guardians Incorporated needs to know the future and to unlock the future they need a cypher.

Julian Rosado-Machain has enjoyed pizza in three continents, BA in Graphic Design, worked building armored vehicles, handcrafted alebrijes, owned a restaurant and swears that he has seen at least one ghost.

A Mexico City native he now lives in San Diego, California and enjoys the sun with his wife, three children and cat.

Guardians Inc. The Cypher is the first book in a series that describes the creatures and powers that live in the world within our world.

Social Media Links:



The Guardians Inc. Blog: http://guardians-inc.tumblr.com

Buy Link:
Amazon: 
Get Book One on Amazon for FREE!!! 

Book Two is only $3.99


B&N: http://bit.ly/129DJCt (ebook is free throughout the tour)



GIVEAWAY!!!!


Tour Schedule:
Feb. 4 Alli's World http://mrscaptkirk51.blogspot.com/ Author Guest Post

Feb. 5 Living, Learning, and Loving Life http://www.livinglearninglovinglife.com Author Guest Post

Feb. 6 Library Girl Reads & Reviews http://librarygirlreads.blogspot.com Author Guest Post

Feb. 7 Bookshelf http://riviebook.blogspot.com/ Review & author guest post

Feb. 8 Trendy Mom Reviews http://www.trendymomreviews.com Author Guest Post

Feb. 9 Mrs Mommy Booknerd's Book Reviews http://mrsmommybooknerd.blogspot.com Excerpt

Feb. 10 Java John Z's Giveaways and Reviews http://javajohnz.blogspot.com/ Review & character guest post

Feb. 11 Girl Who Reads http://www.girl-who-reads.com Meet the Author Monday

Feb. 12 It's About Time Mamaw http://itsabouttimemamaw.blogspot.com/ Character Guest Post 

Feb. 13 LIVE SOCIAL MEDIA EVENT

Feb. 14 lindsay and janes views and reviews http://lindsayandjaneviewsandreviews.blogspot.co.uk/ Review & Author Interview

Feb. 15 Pulling Down Books http://pullingdownbooks.com Review

Feb. 16 KY Bunnies  http://blog.kybunnies.com

Feb. 17 Cabin Goddess http://cabingoddess.com Review & Excerpt

Feb. 18 The Oaken Bookcase http://www.oakenbookcase.com Review & Excerpt

Feb. 19 Classic Children's Books http://familyliteracy2.blogspot.com Review

Feb. 20 Keeping Up With The Rheinlander's http://mnmrheinlander.com character Guest Post

Feb. 21 Larkin's Book Bloggers http://blogs.ellingtonschools.org/larkin/ Review & author guest post

Feb. 22 Recent Reads http://www.recentread.com Review & Excerpt

Feb. 23 http://logaslocoreads.blogspot.com.au/ Review & character guest post

Feb. 24 Tamara's One Stop Indie Shop http://theindieshop.blogspot.com/ Excerpt


Guardians Inc.: The Cypher Book Excerpt.

Here is where Thomas gets his first Real sample of what awaits him as an employee of Guardians Inc. I hope you enjoy it!

Julian


PERVAGUS LIBRARY

Mrs. Pianova stared at Thomas. “Mr. Byrne,” she said rigidly. “I am Mrs. Pianova, head librarian of the mansion and your immediate superior.”
       Thomas took her hand and tried to shake it, but she pulled it back immediately.
       “I'm Thomas,” he said with a smile but her stern face remained unchanged. She wore a grey dress and her white hair was weaved into a tight bun. At least seven pairs of glasses hung loosely around chains from her neck — some were tinted and the crystals in others looked cut in different angles.
       Thomas felt a little apprehension setting in. He’d only had to work for a woman once before in Fullton and it was one of his mother’s friends. She always received him with a warm smile and lemonade.
       This lady seemed tough.
       Maybe he’d rushed his decision. Maybe working for this woman would be the deal breaker. Doctor Franco had told him that he could quit anytime, but right after meeting your boss? What would grandpa say?
       “Follow me,” she said, entering the mansion and taking the left hallway. “Your hours are from four to eight, Monday through Friday, additional hours, if required, will be paid as overtime. This…” she said handing him a black tag with a green stripe on a chain, “is your security pass. Wear it at all times inside the mansion. Doors will not open without it, computers will not work, and you might find yourself surrounded by mansion security if you lose it. Understand?”
       “Yes, ma'am,” he answered as he slipped the tag over his head.
       “Doctor Franco told me that you are allowed to use our library and computers to do your homework during spare time.” She turned to face him. “Research of our books and Internet is allowed only for that purpose. I regularly check logs and accessed web pages, and I’m not amused by finding games or other questionable sites. Do you understand, Mr. Byrne?”
       She accentuated many of the words as she spoke and lifted her left eyebrow at the end of a question. Thomas found both things intimidating. “Yes ma'am,” he said.
       “This is the reading room.” She tapped a door on the left and then turned to the door on the opposite wall. “And this is the entrance to the library. Twelfth door on the right. Remember that. Most other doors are restricted to you and I don’t want to hear reports that you’ve entered those rooms by mistake.”
       The door opened to a huge room filled with bookshelves from floor to ceiling. The room was at least three hundred feet long and thirty feet high. At the front of the room was a desk with a modern computer, a printer, and a comfortable swiveled chair.
       Thomas felt a current of air moving through the library. He couldn’t hear the air conditioning, but he felt a draft on his arms and hair. The temperature inside the room had dropped and he shuddered involuntarily.
       “The cold helps preserve the collection,” Mrs. Pianova told him. “Humidity is also controlled. Do you have any known allergies to chemicals?”
       Now that she mentioned it, Thomas perceived a faint smell of leather and a more distinct smell that he couldn’t quite place, like when entering a hospital. It was chemical, but he didn’t know what it was.
       “Mr. Byrne?” she asked when he waited too long to answer.
       “No, ma’am,” he said. “Not that I know of.”
       “Good, this is your station,” she said pointing at the desk. “The computer already has your clearance, but to use it you need to be wearing?” She paused and lifted her eyebrow.
       “The tag?” he offered.
       “Correct.” She pointed at the screen. “Some days one or two people will come in, some days fifty or more, and some days you'll get someone screaming at the top of their lungs about a life or death situation. Don’t get nervous. Just punch the information into the program and the computer will tell you which aisle to send them to. You can cross-reference any way you like, words, titles, authors or by need. You’ve used the Internet before?”
       “Yes ma'am,” he said. Suddenly his head pounded and he felt overwhelmed. Was he cut out for this job? He swallowed the lump in his throat and meekly asked, “Life and death?”
       “Those books will appear on this tray.” She pointed to a drawer on the right side of the desk. “All others on the aisles. Follow me.” She walked through the middle of the hall. The bookcases were arranged alphabetically. Each had a golden letter on the sides and tags on each shelf.
       As they reached the end of the hall, she stopped in front of a wooden wall etched with thick concentric circles. The circles covered a full quarter of the wall and extended all the way to the ceiling.
       “Some books will not be readily available to you. If such is the case, you can contact me through the computer and I will search for the book in the library.”
       It was Thomas's time to lift an eyebrow. “Isn’t this the library?” he asked, and Mrs. Pianova adjusted the pair of glasses she was wearing.
       “No, Mr. Byrne, this is your station.” She paused. “I don’t need to remind you of your Non-disclosure agreement. Do I?” she asked.
       “You just did Ma’am,” Thomas answered with a playful smirk that made Mrs. Pianova purse her lips unnervingly.
       “Welcome to Pervagus library Mr. Byrne,” she said pressing a panel on the wall. There was a short hum and a mechanical sound as the wall with the etched circles began to rotate, disengaging internal locks, the circles moved to the sides inside each other. The wall became a set of double doors that opened to a hall beyond what Thomas could describe as immense.
       The ceiling was at least ten stories high and the bookshelves disappeared in the distance. A clear crystal floor and metal beams supported each row of shelves. Robotic arms and elevators loaded with books ran on rails above the bookshelves loading and unloading their cargo into them. Thomas had been to a football stadium before, but he was sure that this room dwarfed that.
       “I don't know how many books there are, so don't ask,” Mrs. Pianova said as soon as the question formed in his head. “The best answer I can give you is that we probably have at least a copy of every book ever written after the year 269. Before that, well… a lot of things happened.“ 
       The mind reading trick again! “How did you... ”
       “Everyone asks the same thing,” she snapped, cutting his question short. “I even know how to answer the next one.” She stared at him as if daring him to ask it.
       Thomas pursed his lips, “Very well then,” he said. “What’s the answer?”
       “We do have them in electronic format too, but we need them in print for a very specific reason.” She raised an eyebrow at him, his face betrayed that she had answered correctly.
       Behind her, a glass elevator appeared on a rail from the left.
       “You don’t need to check out with me, Mr. Byrne. But if I need you to stay longer I can notify you up to five minutes before your shift ends.”
       “So you work here alone?” he asked as she entered the elevator.
       “Not anymore. Apparently.” The elevators doors closed. “Bathroom is on the left. I’ll see you tomorrow. Won’t I, Mr. Byrne?”
       “Definitely,” he answered but saw the eyebrow lifting. He added, “Mrs. Pianova.” The librarian nodded approvingly. Apprehension or not, now that he saw the library he wanted to work here.
          He wanted to know more.

1 comment:

  1. Thank you very much for hosting Guardians Inc: the Cypher in your wonderful Blog!

    Julian Rosado

    ReplyDelete

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