Once upon a time, I spent six months in Alaska. My job on
the railroad made me miserable. I was beaten down by bullying. I was lying
daily for the sake of my own survival. I walked around in a disguise built out
of lies, telling people my phone calls home weren’t to my mother, but to
friends, that my being all natural and homeschooled weren’t damaging choices,
but destiny deciding ones. I faced each day as if they were battles to be won
and each night as a brief reprieve.
I did, however, have a few saving graces.
(1) My
mother’s care packages
(2) My
phone calls home
(3) Reruns
of Supernatural on the hostel television
(4) The C
and M used bookshop

"Fans of Supernatural's Winchester brothers will instantly love Niko and Cal!"
It was the fourth in a series and they didn’t have any of
the others. It was an impulse buy, very unlike me.
I’ve been home two years now (how did the time fly like
that?) and just finished reading Death-wish a second time, but in order. The
twists hit me just as hard as they did the first time around, although I
noticed the signs earlier. (There are advantages to my faulty novel
memory….twists can hit me again and again!)
I wanted to share my favorite moments: (Do not read if
you’re going to read the Cal Leandro’s series)
MOMENT ONE: Monster hunting brothers Cal and Niko are just
driving along…when the bad guys stab through the ceiling of the car. In a
matter of paragraphs, we (the reader) go from reading a snippy snappy
conversation….to seeing the car rolled, the characters thrown clear and the bad
guy attempting to end their lives. This moment is a perfect example of why I
love Robin Thurman. She can throw action at you without the slightest bit of
notice….and she doesn’t save it for the stories climax. She sprinkles them
throughout and you won’t know they’re coming, until they’re slapping you in the
face!

MOMENT TWO:
Having just narrowly escaped death once again, the brothers
were laying on a field of grass, having just “transported” themselves away from
a battle they’d have lost otherwise. Niko, the elder brother that has forever
been known to never give up, finally reaches over and takes Cal’s beloved gun,
“If it comes down to those demons taking you….I’ll shoot you first, okay?
You’ll go first.” The inference that Niko would be right behind him is silent,
but very much there.
MOMENT THREE:
I try not to draw too many similarities between the Cal
Leandro’s brothers and the Winchester brothers, but this is to make an
interesting point. After the climax is over and the big baddie is dead, younger
brother Cal tells older brother Niko that he doesn’t need protecting anymore.
Cal says that Niko has done enough. If something happens someday and Cal dies,
Niko has to move on, let it go, let HIM go. After all those words, more than
Cal ever uses, Niko just looks at him…..and Cal sighs, bows his head. “We’re
screwed, aren’t we?” He says and you know what he’s saying, that no matter what
both of them say about moving on and letting go, neither one ever will, but
they still have to say it.

Ah, the things we say but we don’t mean, but we still need
to say them just to prove our loved ones will hear it and know what we REALLY
mean.
Throughout the book, I had small flashes of reading
Death-wish in Alaska. I saw myself reading on my stomach on my hostel bunk bed.
I saw myself cross legged at the Regency hotel, in one of the many, many beds I
stayed in. I saw myself on the train when it was dead, distracting myself from
Jerry and Courtney by reading instead of masking my napping by turning towards
the window. There were just flashes though….until I read the part where a
little demon named Xolo looked right at Niko.
BAM!
I remembered not only everything that would happen after
that, (the brainwashing, the fake death, the suicidal loss) but I remembered
exactly where I’d been sitting the last time I’d read it.
On the second story of the Anchorage Backpackers Inn, at the
very end of the long hallway, I sat on the couch next to the wooden desk. I
don’t remember if I was eating yet another of my salads, (always sitting on the
coffee table) but I remember that when I realized what Xolo had done to Niko, I
dropped the book. I paused, my eyes darted up from the page, I lay the book on
the armrest to my right…and I just went, “whoa.” Reading that scene again, I
felt that same whoa and I felt myself zapped right back to that hostel.
It was amazing.
One last thing and I know I keep getting off topic…..getting
obsessed with the Cal Leandro’s books was the same as my getting obsessed with Supernatural.
I did it because to get absorbed by another set of characters passions, loneliness
and lives was to distract from my own. Whenever I’ve foolishly fantasized about
what I’d say to Jensen, Jared, Misha, Jim, any of them, it’s this I’d like to
say: Your show and your acting is a HUGE part of what got me through that
summer. Thank you.
I want to give that same thanks, now, to Robin Thurman.