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Read an Excerpt From When Devils Sing by Xan Kaur
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Young Adult
Read an Excerpt From When Devils Sing by Xan Kaur
Four unlikely allies in a small town investigate a local teen’s disappearance…
By Xan Kaur
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Published on April 30, 2025
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We’re thrilled to share an excerpt from When Devils Sing, a young adult horror novel by Xan Kaur, out from Henry Holt and Co. on May 27th.
When Dawson Sumter goes missing, all he leaves behind is a smattering of blood in room 4 of the debt-ridden motel owned by Neera Singh’s family. Disappearances like this aren’t uncommon in the rural Georgia town of Carrion, especially every thirteen years when a periodical cicada brood returns from underground, shrieking their deafening screams.For Neera, Dawson is another reminder that in this corner of the South, the rich only get richer, and the poor—well, nothing good comes their way.Neera sets out to investigate Dawson’s whereabouts—if he even still lives—along with three other teens: Isaiah, son of a prominent judge and clandestine true crime podcaster; Reid, son of the wealthiest man in the region; and Sam, estranged daughter of the local hitman. As they find themselves entangled in a messy web of secrets and lies, they discover the riches of the adjacent Lake Clearwater community may have a terrifying source of power dating back to the town’s founding and an ancient urban legend about three devils, each more sinister than the next. How deep does the rot go, and can they find a way to escape its reach?
It was only in the late hours of night when Neera Singh found time to play her guitar. The best time to practice was always, but the second-best time was when she was meant to be scrubbing blood off the walls in her grandparents’ motel.
Neera sat on the cool tile floor in Room 11’s bathroom. The small space reeked of bleach and lemon, but she didn’t have the lux- ury of being picky. The acoustics of the room were just too damn good. She hit record on her phone and set a timer, giving herself thirty minutes before she had to continue cleaning. That’s all she had most days—those precious thirty minutes.
The last of the Colonial Inn’s housekeepers were gone. All that remained was Neera and her mom, Kiran, to keep the place clean while her grandparents ran the front desk in shifts.
Before long, the timer on Neera’s phone rang, signaling an end to her session. She played back the recording as she donned rubber gloves and dipped a sponge into a bucket of cleaning solution.
Neera kept her mind on the music, listening intently, as she got to work on the blood-spattered bathtub. Red streaks covered the yellow-white tile, seeping into the cracks. It wasn’t often that there were bloodstains left over when guests checked out, but it was common enough that Neera knew better than to ask questions. She learned young that the motel, while a home for her, was merely a pit stop for others. Gone were the days when the Colonial housed bright-eyed snowbirds on the way to Florida. If the rooms were booked at all, occupants were often running from something, even if it was just themselves.
Nothing surprised her anymore, but Room 11’s last occupant had given her pause.
The man—well, boy, really—had checked into the Colonial in a frenzy, stumbling through the lobby’s door. He had looked about Neera’s age, with a shock of white-blond, tousled hair and blue eyes that had seen better days. As he lingered at the front desk, she noticed the whites of his eyes were bloodshot and the skin around them swollen pink and puffy.
It had taken Neera a moment to recognize him. She knew Dawson Sumter from her second job, bussing tables up in Lake Clearwater on the weekends. Except the boy that had stood before her was a ghost of himself. While he usually ran with the Clearwater crowd, rich kids dripping of privilege and bravado, Neera could tell he was from Carrion. It was how he always took extra care with his pos- ture, the tidiness of his clothes, the clean parting of his hair. He had the peculiar look of a marionette doll moving through the world as someone else pulled the strings.
Neera had asked, as she passed him Room 11’s key, “You okay?”
“Yeah.” Dawson kept his eyes trained downward as he grabbed the key, and Neera swore there was dried blood on his pale hands. But he had merely said, “Relationship problems.”
It was a lie, and they both knew it.
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When Devils Sing
Xan Kaur
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When Devils Sing
Xan Kaur
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It’d been a week now since Neera had last seen him, but his room was paid for through the day. She continued to scrub the walls, wondering just what Dawson had been running from.
Neera didn’t know when exactly her grandparents’ motel became the last place people wanted to find themselves. Some- where between the last recession and the impending one. But all that mattered to Neera was getting the hell out of Carrion, for good. If she and her family could do that, they’d be all right.
Without stopping her scrubbing, Neera glanced at her Yamaha guitar. Her ticket out—for all of them.
Neera’s phone buzzed twice, yanking her from her thoughts. A text from her mom.
Jason said yes. Tomorrow at 3
Jason managed the Tavern Bar & Restaurant in Lake Clearwater, where her mom tended bar and she bussed tables. He was also in charge of selecting musicians for the upcoming Cicada’s Song, an open-mic competition that happened during the Cicada Festival— though it wasn’t really an open mic. The contest was a special event, only held every thirteen years during the festival, and the Clearwater folks were highly selective of who they allowed onstage.
There was a chance the winner of the Cicada’s Song could walk away with a record deal at Blue Mountain Records, run by Grant Langley himself—Lake Clearwater summer resident and king- maker of the Nashville music scene.
Neera frowned at Kiran’s text. She hadn’t really expected her mom to pull through. Getting an audition was as likely as winning the lottery, especially for someone like her. But it didn’t help that Neera’s usual confidence vanished when performing in front of an audience. Her throat would get tight, her voice would warble and falter. She’d shrink away from the lights and the crowd until people started pulling out their phones, leaning across tables to chat with their friends.
Neera wrote back: Any chance I could audition Tuesday instead?
The reply came a moment later: No. This is it. Do you want it or not?
Neera’s fingers hesitated over the keyboard for a second. Yes. Thank you.
Neera leaned back on her heels and sighed. She sat there for a second, staring into space, then hit play on the song recording for the third time.
It still wasn’t good enough.
She gave the bathtub one last swipe with her sponge and tossed her supplies back in the bucket, grimacing at the dirtied water. On her way out of Room 11, she returned the rags and bucket to the cleaning cart, then scanned the room a final time to make sure she hadn’t missed anything.
Something glinted beneath the chair in the far corner, catching her eye. Neera crossed the room, digging beneath the dusty uphol- stery. Her fingers found something cool to the touch—a key ring with one key and a worn leather key chain embossed with a deer antler logo.
Neera wouldn’t have given the design a second thought if it weren’t so strange looking. Around Georgia, deer antler iconogra- phy was as common as the cross, but this was different.
This buck’s eyes were covered with a blindfold, while the antlers spread across the leather like sprawling, twisted tree branches. A unique design choice if she’d ever seen one. She slipped the key chain into her pocket, intending to return it to Dawson next time she saw him at the lake.
With a final look, Neera stepped out into the night and shut Room 11’s door behind her.
The distant smell of burning leaves hung in the warm night air, turning her throat scratchy. She checked her phone. It was after midnight, and there was still another room to clean. Yawning, she descended the short flight of stairs to the ground floor and made her way toward the laundry room.
Passing by the glass windows of the motel lobby, Neera paused. Inside, Nanaji sat at the front desk, his enormous glasses sliding down his nose as he read the Punjab Times newspaper. An Amer- ican news channel droned from the old television in the corner. Harsh, fluorescent light shone down on him, casting his brown skin in a dull shade of gray.
Looking in on her grandfather, Neera had one of those rare moments of sadness for him. There he was, a man far from his homeland, reading about Punjab in the run-down motel he had sold everything to own. As though he could feel her pity through the smudged glass, Nanaji looked up. His face immediately pinched into a frown at the sight of her, his heavy eyes sliding to the Yamaha resting across her back. Her tenderness for him evaporated at once.
Neera couldn’t be heard practicing without upsetting her grand- parents, but being seen with the guitar was somehow worse. The instrument was a physical reminder of her uncle, Ajay—a memory best kept buried for them all.
Nanaji waved her into the lobby like he would call for a dog. Reluctantly, Neera rested her guitar at the lobby’s door then walked inside.
“All right, Neera?” Nanaji said by way of greeting, his voice low and accented.
“Yeah.” Neera hung in the doorway, letting moths fly in. “I just have Room 6 to clean, then I’ll be done.”
Nanaji nodded absently. “How are your studies?”
It was a question he asked so often that it was almost funny. Neera’s lips thinned as she said, “I don’t start college until the fall, Nanaji. I don’t have anything to study right now.”
He looked up from his newspaper. “Oh? There is always some- thing to learn.”
Neera wanted to say that she was learning a new fingerpicking technique on guitar. That her recent cover of a Reverend Gary Davis song was pretty damn good. Her songs on SoundCloud were picking up in streams. But those were all useless things to him. Nanaji measured success by dollar signs and commas, despite his own struggling business.
Fine. He was a simple man of a different time, a different place. She just wished he wasn’t such a dick about it.
And then there was the other issue—Neera didn’t intend to go to college at all. She hadn’t told anyone that yet, though, not even her mom.
Neera opened her mouth to remind him that for all his talk of education and success, his granddaughter spent her summer nights cleaning blood off the motel’s walls. But her grandfather’s cell phone rang. He glanced at the screen, his graying eyebrows fur- rowing, and rose from the desk to take the call in the back office. The door shut behind him with a dull thud.
Neera stood awkwardly in the motel lobby. This time of night, it had to be a relative from India or England calling. Nanaji could be on the phone for an hour or more. The right thing to do would be to watch the desk until he got back.
Neera didn’t often do the right thing.
She turned on her heel and walked out into the balmy Geor- gia night. Lightning bugs blinked in and out of sight along the tree line surrounding the motel. A symphony of katydids and tree frogs reverberated around her. The parking lot light flickered occa- sionally, casting the concrete in stilted shades of dark. A television blared from one of the rooms.
Guitar slung over her back once more, Neera made her way to Room 6. It faced the back of the motel, overlooking a weathered swimming pool and the broken fence that surrounded it. Beyond the pool were longleaf pines, towering and swaying with the night breeze. When the wind hit the trees in just the right way, Neera swore she could hear a song. Summers in Carrion were wondrous like that if nothing else.
By the time Neera finished cleaning Room 6, it was two in the morning. As she trudged toward her room, the sound of shouting made her slow, then pause. There was her grandfather’s voice, taut and angry—and he was shouting in English. It wasn’t uncommon for Nanaji to get into vicious phone arguments with his brother, but it was always in Punjabi, his preferred language for anger.
Neera took a few cautious steps forward and peered through the smudged glass of the lobby window.
A burly man stood across from her grandfather at the front desk, hands resting casually in his worn, stained blue jeans. His face was turned away from Neera, but she recognized him by his shaved head, the dozens of raised scars that ran down his forearms, and the dented toolbox that sat on the counter. Wiley was the motel’s handyman, but he was rarely helpful. Each time he showed, her grandparents were visibly on edge.
“I will pay it back soon,” Nanaji insisted. His voice carried through the lobby’s propped-open door.
“I need you to be more specific.” Wiley stepped forward, resting his hands on the counter. His skin was pale and muted, but his scar tissue shimmered beneath the harsh fluorescent lobby lights. “As I’m sure you know, my boss ain’t a forgiving man.”
“Soon,” Nanaji huffed, his expression indignant. “A few months. I will have it all by then.”
“Months?” Wiley snorted. “Way I see it, you got a week. Until the Fourth of July.” He stepped away from the desk, taking in the dingy lobby. His beady eyes darted quickly, then met Neera’s through the window. “Otherwise, you and your family may end up just like that son of yours.”
The threat was a simple thing. Quiet, and unassuming. It hung in the air for only a breath, swallowed up by the buzzing of the tiny front desk fan and the drone of the newscaster on the old TV.
Nanaji blinked, then slammed his hands down on the desk, rat- tling the tools in the toolbox. “Get out!”
“July Fourth, Mr. Singh,” Wiley said casually. He grabbed his toolbox with ease, giving Neera a quick, impersonal nod as he stepped out the lobby door and disappeared into the night. His Chevy pickup peeled out of the parking lot and onto the dark, two- lane highway the Colonial sat on.
Neera lingered in the doorway once again, fear twisting in her gut, while Nanaji slumped in his chair, rubbing his eyes. Shame crept across his face.
Neera didn’t know what to do. Ever since Ajay died, her grand- father had a weak heart, at a high risk for heart attacks. Fighting with the handyman in the middle of the night was the last thing he needed. But her grandfather was stubborn to a fault—the type of man who would refuse water in a drought if it was given and not earned.
“Are you . . . okay?” Neera asked finally. She resented the question, wanting, instead, for Nanaji to ask that of her. To comfort her—to offer her the illusion of safety, if only for a moment.
Nanaji wouldn’t look at her. He kept his gaze trained on the front desk, absently shuffling pages of the open newspaper. “I am fine,” he said flatly. But even from the doorway, Neera could see his trembling hands.
Seconds gave way to minutes, but Nanaji refused to say anything more. He was content to leave Neera with unanswered questions and Wiley’s threat echoing in her head. With one last look at her grandfather’s slumped form, Neera slipped away from the lobby and continued to her room.
Neera shared Room 4 with her mom. She unlocked the door to the sight of two twin-size beds, a tattered dresser missing one of the drawers, and a TV that was older than she was. All the belongings to their name sat in trash bags along the wall. A handful of boxes stacked in the corner.
It was the most stable home Neera had ever had in her life. The Singh women had a knack for leaving, which meant they also had a knack for returning. Whenever Kiran broke up with a new boyfriend or was in between jobs, they’d always return to Room 4 at the Colonial until her mom was on her feet again.
They’d been back at the motel for about a month now. With Neera recently graduated from high school, and her mom’s newest ex out of the picture, they no longer had any ties elsewhere. The pair could stay for as long as it took to move forward again.
Or so they thought.
The night’s events proved that the motel’s stability was clearly barreling toward an end. It was no secret the Colonial was in the red, but Nanaji owing money to a mysterious person was a surprise. He was meant to owe money to the bank, just a few small business loans to keep them afloat until business picked up for the Cicada Festival. But to be threatened in the dead of night—owing money to someone’s boss—none of it seemed normal, much less legal.
What exactly had Nanaji done to keep the motel afloat? Was it worth their safety—their lives?
But where else is there for us to go? The thought sent an uneasy tremor through Neera’s gut. She collapsed onto her bed fully clothed and shut her stinging eyes. She had no answers. No solu- tions for her family’s mounting problems as they grew suffocating like the humid, summer air.
* * *
“Neera,” a voice said. “Wake up.”
Neera’s eyes opened. Her mom was standing over her, still in her bartending uniform from her shift at the Tavern. Kiran’s face was exhausted and stricken.
“What’s going on?” Neera struggled to sit up. She’d fallen asleep in her grimy housekeeping clothes again, shoes and all.
“We gotta go.” Kiran pulled Neera from the bed. “There’s a fire.”
Her mom’s words cleared away the last haze of sleep, then Neera smelled smoke. She stumbled out of bed and followed Kiran out the door. The sharp tang of smoke and gasoline hung heavy in the air. Somewhere in the distance, the roaring siren of a fire truck.
2A bolt of fear hit her, and Neera stopped walking at once. “My guitar!” She spun on her heel.
Kiran grabbed her arm, pulling her back. “The motel’s fine. Come on.” She dragged Neera to the front of the Colonial.
In the motel’s parking lot, a car was on fire. The flames rose high in the sky, billowing black clouds of smoke into the air. The few guests staying at the Colonial stood outside their rooms, bleary-eyed and curious. A couple of them recorded the inferno with their phones. Neera’s eyes darted around the scene, searching, until she spotted her grandparents standing in the lobby. They stared at the flames with open mouths.
Kiran dragged Neera across the lot and into the lobby, where she finally let go of her arm. “The fire department is on the way.”
Nanaji responded in Punjabi, and the adults continued the conversation that way. Neera was never taught Punjabi, save for a few words like hello, yes, and no. Useless in a moment like this. But Nanaji wouldn’t look Neera in the eyes. He kept his gaze trained away from her, as if she wasn’t there at all.
Neera moved to stand next to her grandmother, wrapping her arms around her small frame. Nani patted Neera’s face, smiling sadly. Tears fell from her eyes. Neera didn’t understand why her grandmother was crying. In the Singh household, the only emotion that ever got out was anger and the repression of it. Sadness was reserved for the places behind closed doors.
But then she looked again at the flaming car.
It wasn’t just any car on fire, it was her grandfather’s car. His ’87 Cadillac Fleetwood. Camel colored, with tanned leather interior. The car itself wasn’t worth much, but it was one of the few things her grandfather treasured. His gift to himself when he immigrated to America. Neera’s vision blurred as she stared into the flames.
The car’s engine exploded, lashing orange flames into the air. Glass shattered across the lot as the windshield gave out. Onlookers screamed and moved away, back to the safety of their rooms.
Neera could only stare as the Cadillac burned into a blackened heap of metal.
Excerpted from When Devils Sing, copyright © 2025 by Xan Kaur.
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