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Friday, September 30, 2022
Thursday, September 29, 2022
Chapter 1: Ethereal Musician
Alayna lives as a recluse in the giant redwood forest far from
prying eyes. When intruders break into her home with the intention of robbing
and using her, a man with vivid green eyes becomes an unlikely saviour. The
instant they see each other their fates are sealed. Ben and Alayna have the
kind of attraction that reeks of a celestial mandate.
Chapter One
THE BLACKTOP GLISTENED after the rain, a dark snake
unfurling through the redwood forest. Cat eyes shone as if tiny creatures
populated the yellow lines.
The ripe smell of rich earth
competed with the distinct aroma of wet tar, and drips of fresh water plinked
through the foliage. Nearby a spotted owl delivered its distinguishing call.
Although it was early yet in the
afternoon, the gloom above gave the appearance of approaching night.
Set back slightly from the
switchback road, a small cottage huddled, nearly smothered in ivy huddled
beneath the giants populating northern California, wisps of smoke curling from
a stone chimney. Azaleas and rhododendron vied with prolific sword ferns for
space in a small garden.
On the porch an ancient bench
watched the days pass by, whether wet or dry. A red squirrel perched on the
gate post, unmoving until a woman came out the front door, and then he hurtled
up the nearest bole.
Grinning, Alayna gave a whistle and
left an offering of nuts and fruit in the stone platter upon the low wall.
Already, as she turned away, the squirrel shimmied downward. Soon, she knew,
his furry family would join him.
NOTHING OF NOTE happened in the small town of
Legget, besides tourists arriving to take photos of their cars driving through
the Chandelier Tree, or of themselves standing within the carved arch in the
massive trunk.
They stopped for a bite, maybe some
gas, and then most moved on to the nearest camping grounds. At certain times of
the year it was busy, but at others nothing much occurred.
Jack and Shaun argued with Ben
outside the local diner. The place was closed and a For Sale sign sat in the window.
“We need cash, bud, or we’ll never
get to San Francisco,” Jack snapped out, irritated that he needed to repeat
himself. “This one-horse town has zip for us; the tourist season is over, man.
I say we grab a few dollars from the gas station and head south.”
His scrawny body quivered with
intent.
“Yeah, hanging around here will only
get us stuck and bored,” Shaun said. “There’s nothing to eat either.”
They were quite the opposites, Jack
and Shaun, for Shaun was fat. He was stupid, too.
“Shut up,” Jack snarled at him.
“What do you know?” He shifted his attention to the third member of their trio.
“Ben, come on. Shaun and me, we’ll
grab the dough, just keep the engine running, man, like always. Man, it’s not
hard.”
Ben stared at him. “And how far will
a few dollars get us? I’m telling you, it’s a waste of effort.”
“You’re just a fucking wuss. We’ll
find other places along the way, get more. For fuck’s sake, man, do you want to
stay in this empty shithole?”
Ben lifted green eyes to the forest
surrounding them on all sides. A slight breeze promised rain later as it
ruffled his fair hair. Yes, he could stay. He hankered after some peace and
quiet. Jack, however, would pull a knife on him if he dared suggest it. The
weasel had a mean streak, and no conscience. He liked that knife too damn much.
“I’ll wait outside,” Ben eventually
said.
Jack slapped him on the back and
Shaun laughed. “Get the wheels. We’re going in.” Jack grabbed Shaun’s wobbling
arm and they strode across the road.
Their inane giggling disturbed the
quietness in the air.
Idiots. Folk would remember them.
Frowning, Ben climbed into the
driver’s seat and turned the ignition key. The old blue Chevy spluttered twice
and then caught. Eyeing the progress of the other two, hating himself for
giving in yet again, he timed his swing and landed in a squeal of brakes before
the glass doors as they vanished into the shop.
He didn’t watch. He didn’t want to
see another unsuspecting kid manning the register frightened out of his wits by
the insane Jack and the stupidity of that oaf Shaun.
It was time to leave those two
behind, but not in this quiet place. They would do too much harm here. He’d
either abandon them somewhere more populated or simply walk away when Jack
wasn’t looking.
The rear doors slammed as the two flung
bodily into the car.
“Get fucking driving!” Jack
screeched.
The Chevy sped away, heading north.
ALAYNA FINISHED EATING the vegetable soup she’d prepared
for her supper and placed the remains in the fridge, along with the butter.
Tomorrow night’s meal. She wrapped the rest of her freshly baked loaf and put
it in the old wooden bread box.
While rinsing her few dishes, she
stared out into the darkening forest. It was autumn now and summer’s
ever-present fog began to vie with the downpours that heralded winter’s
approach. It was always somewhat on the cooler side here, but she preferred
that. Heat had never summoned her, held no allure. Heat wasn’t good for her,
point of fact. She was comfortable in the mists, in the bracing air of a
fertile forest.
The fog thickened. Soon it would be so
silent out, one would believe oneself entirely alone in the universe. The road
would remain empty, isolated, and without movement but for the occasional elk
crossing its expanse on a journey through the night time forest. This was
perfection. Silence and isolation.
After the life she had, she desired
nothing else.
This was a place and time in which
to recuperate. People drained one of energy.
Finishing the dishes, she set two
lanterns alight and carried one to her desk in the living room, leaving the other
in the kitchen window. Setting it to one side, she drew her laptop closer,
flipped the lid, and called up her work in progress. She enjoyed the rustic
lifestyle, but her laptop was her mainstay of technology.
This book was taking a bit longer
than the others did. She found that the wildlife offered greater distraction
these days than her mind usually conjured.
Still, she had to eat.
It was a few small edits from
finished. She started typing.
“STOP!” SHAUN SCREAMED, and Ben slammed on the brakes, nearly
wrenching his head from his shoulders.
“What the fuck, man?” Jack demanded,
craning around to the back. He’d earlier clambered into the front passenger
seat, almost causing a goddamn calamity when his elbow ‘accidentally’ hit Ben
in the jaw.
“I saw a light,” Shaun mumbled
sheepishly.
Ben drew in a breath. Not this
again. Some unsuspecting household was about to be robbed. “No one lives out
here,” he said. “This is a waste of time.”
Jack eyed him. “You’re going soft,
bro. We may have to teach you a lesson, toughen you up a bit.” He eyed Shaun
next. “Where’d you see it?”
“Up a ways.” Shaun jerked a meaty
thumb over his shoulder.
“Back up, Ben,” Jack ordered. “This
isolated, maybe they got gas tanks out back, in case.”
Yeah, the idiots didn’t think it out
too well. Not that they ever did. So they robbed the register, got a few
dollars, but paper didn’t create gas, did it? They should’ve filled the tank
before leaving Legget behind and instead they now raced along a dark road as empty
as the tank would soon be.
These two assholes hadn’t yet
realised he deliberately drove north into the highlands, knowing there was
little to be had along the way. He intended to engineer his walk away. He’d had
enough of them and didn’t want to land up behind bars for theft or worse. All
three of them on foot? He’d leave them behind within minutes.
Ben backed up, and there it was, a
light.
A lantern in a cottage window.
Blinking, he stared at it. It called
to him, like the proverbial lamp in the storm.
His heart thundered into rapid
motion.
He didn’t like this.
This felt wrong. Something here was
not as it seemed.
“Developing a conscience, bud?” Jack
punched him on the arm, hard.
“Fuck off,” Ben said, bringing the
car to a halt.
ALAYNA LIFTED HER head, swiping dark blonde strands
of hair from her face. Did a car just stop outside?
Standing, she lifted the lantern on
her desk. Maybe a traveler was in some kind of trouble.
The lamp slid from her grasp when
three young men hurtled through the front door, which shattered on impact and instantly
flames licked at the ancient rug.
“Fuck! Stupid bitch!” Stamping the
blaze roughly out, the vocal one of the three snapped out, “You alone?”
Of course she was. To claim she
wasn’t would simply reveal she was a liar and that was potentially worse for
her. “I’m alone. May I help you? Would you boys like something to eat?”
“Yeah,” said the fat one, grinning.
“Shut up, Shaun!” The thin, dirty one, glared over his shoulder and then
crowded into her personal space. “You got any gas?”
Ah. She understood the situation in
a heartbeat. “There’s some in the shed out back, yes.”
“Shaun, go!” Scrawny screeched.
The final young man in the trio, she
noted, hadn’t moved a muscle since entering. After watching his buddy snuff the
flames, he had glanced into the kitchen, to the other lantern, and then
remained motionless. It was the strangest thing; his face was perfectly
composed, as if nothing disturbed his inner self.
Was that serenity, she wondered, or
the face of a psychopath? Why was she thinking this now? Clearly they were here
to cause harm and whatever he was inside had little bearing.
Now he did move, and she discovered
she was holding her breath. As Shaun shoved past him into the night, muttering
about always getting the shit end of the stick, he stepped aside with barely
veiled dislike.
Clearly, then, not so serene.
The skinny fellow looked her up and
down insolently. “You’re a little old for me, under normal circumstances, but
you could still keep a man warm, s’pose. What you? Like forty or something?”
Dread crawled across her skin as
bumps of puckered flesh. Her gaze flicked to the silent one, somehow drawn
there. Her blood ran cold when she read the expression on his face. No, not his
face. That remained carefully schooled. It was in his eyes … incredible eyes,
dear God. This boy was about to commit murder. And she wasn’t his victim.
“You will regret it,” she said then,
feeling she needed to warn him of the dangers to his soul.
His green gaze shifted to her and
seemed to pierce her soul. “I don’t
think so,” he replied. There was no emotion in his voice either.
“What the fuck …” the scrawny one
muttered. “Ben, fucking get her and hold her, I’m getting fucking hard here,
man.”
Ben inclined his head. “Sure, Jack.”
He approached as Jack unzipped his
filthy jeans. As he drew abreast, he snatched Jack into a head lock.
“Worm!” he spat.
Jack struggled, gasping for air,
arms flailing uselessly. Clearly Jack wasn’t a fighter. He was all air and
sound.
“Behind you!” Alayna gasped,
noticing fat Shaun’s shadow in the doorway.
Ben whirled, putting his back to
her, still holding a wheezing Jack. “Back off, Shaun.”
“What you doing, man?”
No one was now looking at her. She
stepped back unobtrusively until she felt the rifle stock under her fingers.
Gripping it, she swung it around, holding it aloft. As she did so, Shaun barreled
towards the other two, screaming obscenities at the top of his voice.
Alayna pulled the trigger.
The fat boy hurtled backwards and
toppled through the door. A gurgle sounded and then … nothing. She didn’t see
where the bullet made impact, it happened that fast.
An audible crack of snapping bone
came next and she shifted her gaze to the other two, in time to see and hear
the gaunt one hit the wooden floor, his neck at an odd angle.
That had taken both strength and
determination.
Perhaps pure desperation.
Utter silence enveloped the small
space.
And then Ben said, “I’ll remove the
evidence, and then be on my way. You might have to scrub the deck outside after
I’m gone.”
Alayna nodded. It was as much as she
could manage at that point.
His gaze again stripped her soul
naked, before he bent and hooked his hands under Jack’s arms and dragged him
out. A car door slammed soon after.
The sound of a heavier body
slithering with difficulty along her garden path sounded, and then a door
banged again.
Moments later Ben darkened her
doorway. There was no expression on his face. “Lock up. Oh, and put a fresh
round in that chamber.”
He touched his forehead and was
gone. An engine roared to life outside and tires screeched on the slippery
surface.
The sound vanished into the
distance, heading south.
Tuesday, September 27, 2022
Monday, September 26, 2022
Chapter 1: ANCIENT ILLUMINATION
Fire spews and ice follows. The world Drakonis is near death
and all life has fled. Except for Brennan, the thief who hears mysterious
directions to Castle Drakon on the wind, and brothers Bastian and Cole, who
choose to follow her. Then there’s Halley, an exotic dancer from the burning
cities, and Audri, who refuses to speak.
These five are the last and it is their task to ensure at least memory remains, or Drakonis will be eternally forgotten. To ensure this, they must find Castle Drakon.
In a grotto under the ice they discover three others alive and before the warmth of a fire hear of a mighty legend. Unravelling its mysteries could lead to a way off a dying world. An ancient light will illuminate their path.
Chapter 1
Fire in the Grotto
The flames are bright, because here it is safe; here no light is able to escape to reveal us.
The fire is
hot, and we are glad of it; most of us have been cold too long, most of us
cannot now remember ever being warm.
We ran from
fire, yes, into ice, but it feels as if that heat was a lifetime ago. We cannot
recall a full stomach either or remember when last we drank of fresh water.
I reach my
hands for the flames and for a moment I believe I can hold them and set them
alight inside me. I am weary of cold. I am terribly weary of running.
This is why I
am here.
I hope, now,
with the end approaching, I may stop running. Although it may be that we dupe
ourselves only with what hope is left, in this desire I am not alone.
Opposite the
fire there is Bastian; his head is bowed, his dark hair filthy, obscuring his
face. We have now run together, but we also met before, once, in our old lives.
Next to him
is Cole, also dark-haired, almost asleep due to the unaccustomed sense of
release and comfort.
They are
brothers, but very different I think, despite similar appearance. I know Cole
better; we have sprinted rooftops in that other life. I know he misses it as
much as I do.
Crouched
apart from us, fingers white around clumps of old straw - which is what we’re
sitting on - there’s Halley, a dancer from a distant city … at least, this is
what she claims. None of us have seen her dance. She appears the most
frightened by our gathering; she does not trust easily. It will take years to
undo her natural distrust.
Do any of us
retain belief in these times, truth be told? Halley, particularly, is ever
skittish, though. Her past weighs heavily on her. She is the most exotic of all
of us, with curled golden locks, caramel skin, and the darkest eyes I have even
seen. I like her and I think Cole does too, although his is a different kind of
like.
And then
there is Audri. Pale and fair and graceful; she
looks like the dancer among us. No one has heard Audri speak. We do not know if
she cannot or whether silence is a choice she made or was forced into some time
in her past. She stares into the fire unafraid. As ever, she is self-possessed
I think she
feels me looking, for she lifts her green gaze to me, and smiles. I want to
embrace her, for that smile tells me we made the right choice.
We have run
far, from fire and death into this terrible cold, holding onto only hope, and
here, if for a brief time, we may sit and experience the warmth of a comforting
fire. This little blaze has not the power to destroy.
An instant
later I wonder how far we would go to keep this respite inviolate. It is a respite only, whatever we choose to
fool ourselves with.
Bastian would
kill for it, I know; he is the oldest and has run the longest, and seeks to
protect his brother Cole.
Me? I would
back him up and wield whatever weapon is to hand.
In this I am
no doubt a fool, but I am weary of running.
The grotto is deep below the surface
of this ice-ridden plain.
Bastian found
the entrance in the rubble underneath the cliffs that mark the start of the
highlands. Already on the edge of life for months, we drew from the reserves
that come only with desperation, and crawled in after him. We shuffled for
hours, one behind the other, in absolute darkness, until flickers of amber
light revealed we had not imagined the summons or directions, that trust was
not misplaced.
All of us are
adorned with ragged knees and shins, torn palms and broken nails, but we are
also so dirty and tatty you cannot distinguish fresh wounds from old.
After an hour
of sitting, an hour of heat, we wonder if trust led us right. Nothing moves
other than the flames, and there are no sounds of occupation … and yet someone
built this fire.
Bastian looks
up at me, a question in his blue eyes. I wish we lived in a different time, for
I want to lay my hands upon his cheeks and tell him not to worry. I, after all,
led them across the plain. My words brought us here.
“Ah, I see
you have thawed somewhat.”
A man enters
from the shadows behind Bastian and Cole - the brothers’ jerk around - his
movements slow and careful. He seeks to put us at ease, I realise. His hands
are displayed as empty, a gesture of peace.
He is old,
very old. Wrinkled, barely any hair, and what he has left is pure white. He
wears a black robe, a frayed length of rope knotted around his middle. Pouches
hang from it. There is a rustle from one as he moves, and another tinkles
slightly.
His feet are
bare and he has no beard. I am glad of it; a beard would be too much
stereotype. I have seen his kind crouched on street corners in the cities,
begging for alms, ignored. This old man is no tramp, though; there is an air of
confidence about him.
He cannot
survive a climb into the highlands, I think. When we leave here, we leave
behind a skeleton, for he will not survive the fate of Drakonis much longer.
We all stare
at him as he walks around the fire to come to a halt beside me. A hand descends
to my head and rests there.
“Welcome,
Brennan, and thank you for bringing your friends.”
I cannot
react; I am paralysed by that touch. The last time someone touched me to impart
only comfort is now almost lost to memory. I am undone by the pathos.
Bastian
reacts swiftly. He hurtles to his feet. His eyes seem to flash in the dancing
amber light. “We heard the summons and we listened to Brennan, but blind belief
may have led us astray. Who are you, old man?”
“Bastian, all
your questions will receive answer. Please sit. You are safe here.”
Cole reaches
up and hauls his brother down. “We trust Brennan, brother. Relax.”
“You trust her.”
“And you trust
me, right? Give it a chance.”
Cole and
Bastian trade stares for a while until Bastian eventually nods and looks away.
That hand is
still on my head. It smooths my hair with careful strokes and then it is
removed. I feel … bereft. I look up to see pale eyes twinkling at me, and I
smile. Perhaps it is all right. I hope with all my heart blind trust has not
led me astray. How do I answer to that? If I came alone it would be my mistake,
and I would have to live with it, but I am not alone, am I?
“Who are
you?” I ask. My voice is hoarse.
The old man
settles into the empty space beside me, hands resting on knees. A pouch thunks into
the straw. There is something heavy in there.
“I am
Winter.” He smiles and waves a hand. “Not my real name, but I’ve forgotten in
the long march of years what my mother called me. Someone called me ‘Winter’ in
jest as a lad, and it stuck. Some now believe it’s because I love the feel of a
decent fire.”
“Which means
you must be cold,” Bastian mutters. He does not mean cold of body.
Winter
smiles and chooses to take the comment as meaning his flesh. “I am, yes, all
the time. This here is a cold land, young man. We are far north of the equator
and it was cold even before the fires began in the south. I now believe fate
gave to me this epitaph of ‘Winter’, for I am destined to live out my final
hours under this ice field. We go together, a final symbiosis.”
“Why are we
here?” Cole demands, ignoring the old man’s explanations.
He does not
do so out of disrespect; he simply understands we have run out of time.
“You are here
to know yourselves before your end march. Your time has come.”
What's next (all the WIPs)?
At least, these are the ones I have covers (images) for! These covers may still change ... probably will, but right now they serve to get me writing. At this stage. Tesserae is probably closest to the finish line, with Mark of the Kalion and Circles of Civilisation next, but who knows? The bug might bite for one of the others ... 🌟
Sunday, September 25, 2022
Chapters 1: African Moon & At the End
Tomorrow she will go on with her life …
It’s a hot day in Cape Town but a woman holds the vigil at a
window overlooking the beach. She has repeatedly dreamed of a sailing boat, a
lost soul perhaps, entering upon silver streaks on the water. Is this merely
dreaming or, as she believes, a vision?
She will watch, she will give it this one day and night, and
then go on with her life, and waiting with her is Barney, her beloved dog, and
Fantasy, her snooty cat. Man, a girl and her fur babies get hungry while
waiting for something to happen, and yet her instincts keep her there …
watching … waiting …
Lattice 3 from Latticework: 14 Lattices from Space and Time
SHE LEANS ON her elbow, chin in hand, and stares out over the bay. The sun is bright on the water and the sun worshippers are out in full force on the narrow strip of beach, their colourful umbrellas and sunshades drawing the eye.
Bronzed bodies languish
amid reddening skins. She, however, is uninterested in people silly enough to
burn to crisps in such heat; she watches the water intently, staring through
the hot silver stripes upon the waves.
Twice now she has dreamed
of the yacht and both times the images were so real she can no longer ignore
it. She sees sails dancing upon a beam and with it there is a feeling of
sadness. Such sadness that she is in tears when she awakes.
She will look and watch
until she either dies of eyestrain or something happens to prove her night
visits are more than dreams. Or, she thinks in amusement, she will die of
starvation, just sitting here.
The screams of frolicking
kids rise up to reach out to her through closed windows, but she barely hears
them. The drone of a jumbo jet overheard faintly rattles the glass and is then
gone. The subdued sounds of slow traffic vying for right of way along the
crowded street do not even register, and neither does the periodically jarring
siren of an angry driver leaning on the hooter. Her mind is engaged in the
soothing notes of Mozart at his absolute best.
Barney snuffles at her
feet, gives a loud moan and thumps his tail resoundingly upon the wooden floor,
and then sees that his mistress is not about to budge yet. He releases an exaggerated
yawn and sinks to the floor with a long-suffering sigh. The great big fur ball
is asleep in seconds. Lucky sod.
She leans down to scratch
him behind his ears and then props her chin up once more, all without taking
her eyes from the water. At least Barney adores Mozart too.
Alex did not. Alex
thought loud rap was music, the louder the better, and scoffed at her love of
classical music. She kicked him out eventually, more because of his musical
tastes and his love of inflicting it on others, than for any other reason.
He was a distraction for
a while, but not enough to warrant putting up with that noise. The peace after
his railing mode of departure was worth billions. And Barney hated Alex; what more proof did a girl need? Barney, for
heaven’s sake, puts up with Fantasy, her I’ll-take-you-on-hell-on-four-paws
Himalayan cat. That is saying something for Barney’s nerves.
Mozart delves into his
famous clarinet concerto and she feels her body relax. Out of Africa indeed. That is African sun out there, although in
cosmopolitan surroundings.
Cape Town on a hot day.
Sun worshippers and cell phones, bling and gourmet treats. It could be the
French Riviera, for pity’s sake. Karen Blixen would turn in her grave, for
certain. Karen Blixen probably never dreamed of a modern sailing yacht.
We should all do the
best we can with what is given us,
so that one day we too
can look back and say,
‘I lived a good life’.
At the End is an insight taken from FingerNale Tales and
tells the story of a woman looking back over the years of her life.
I NEVER THOUGHT
I would get old. It comes as a surprise to sit here at age ninety. Really it
does. This, for me, is merely a number, for I do not feel nine decades old and,
despite those sets of ten and the various injuries sustained over their
progression, my body tells me it is a lie.
Is my mind as sharp as I
believe? You be the judge of that. Base it on these ruminations, perhaps.
Let us see. I remember
being lowered headfirst over the font in church and having water sprinkled upon
my head. My mother in later years told me I was three weeks old.
The time I skinned both
my knees after slipping on wet paving - I was eighteen months, and put up quite
a racket. Another tumble, this time from my tricycle - two and a half years
old. First day at school. High school. First boyfriend. Tenth boyfriend - he
was the one I married, at age twenty-two, bless his now departed soul.
I recall every birth
also, four of them, two boys and two girls, although I doubt a mother ever
forgets, no matter how old she is, no matter how old her children are either.
Unless you are unable to remember.
This is not a maudlin
trip down memory lane, though, and I am not about to discuss those diseases
that befall some of the aged (and sometimes much earlier than old age). My
point is, I do remember all of it, and I believe my mind is as sharp now as it
was when I juggled job and studies.
Do you agree?
Saturday, September 24, 2022
Chapters 1: Artist, Bartender and Caregiver
You will have noticed I'm posting chapters 1 from my books (TINSAL and ILFIN so far), and here's 3 more. As these are excerpts from shorter stories, some are parts, other full chapters. Enjoy!
Alyria is sleepless in humidity, her thoughts in turmoil.
Going to her studio to paint, she discovers that someone has broken in and
stolen her art, and the thief may still be in the house. Brandishing a
paintbrush as weapon, she prepares to defend herself …
Somewhere in the South
JULY
Heaving
out a cross between a growl and a sigh, she kicked the thin sheet serving as
covering – covered only because one had to hide from mosquitoes in this sticky
weather – and padded barefooted to the bathroom.
Faint
glows from the streetlight further along meant she wouldn’t stub her toe on
something unseen. Jenna, her housemate, tended to drop stuff as she dashed
about, and left whatever it was exactly where it fell.
Allowing
darkness to cool her, without much success, she tinkled into the bowl, leaving
the door open. Summer needed to surrender to autumn soon; this humidity drove
her insane. A storm to release the expectant energy in the air would be most
welcome, too.
Snorting
as she washed her hands after, she became aware of the fact that her mind had
now calmed into a rolling pattern. Mostly about the weather. Even wishes for
snow, as if that was likely here.
Funny
that. Trying to relax, her thoughts went all carnival freak show on her, but
awake and on the move, everything settled. It bloody should be the other way
around, but then her whole life worked inside-out, so why expect a smidgeon of
normality as due to her?
Moving
along the dim passage to the kitchen Jenna invariably left in a mess, the urge
to paint overcame her. Despite her raging thirst, she knew if she ignored the
prompting she’d definitely regret it in the morning. These days the compulsion
came rarely; time to use it or lose it again.
A
few weeks back, preparing for a job interview, she ignored the urge in favor of
preparation – bloody needed that job – and later that evening stood before her
easel with no insight at all.
Yeah,
she got the job – doing layout at a local printer – but it merely paid bills.
It certainly did not challenge her. She knew her way around the software and
was hired because of that, not for any artistic input. It bored her into
numbness.
Art
was her life, her passion. Emphasis, though, needed to go on the ‘was’. Art was her life. After catching Cole in bed
with Jenna’s cousin, everything that made her, Alyria Marn, the person she grew
up to be, vanished.
Harry leads a solitary existence, tending bar because it
allows him to interact with people without becoming involved. His life isn’t a
normal one, after all.
When the woman perfectly dressed and groomed takes a seat in the shadows and asks for wine, something about her calls to him. He answers that summons and it changes everything, for they have something extraordinary in common.
His dreams, and hers, will never be the same again.
Chapter 1
GIVING THE GLASS a final swirling polish, Harry
studied the brunette seated near the end of the counter, where the shadows hid
her somewhat from general view.
Lifting the vessel, he checked for
marks. Beer guzzlers didn’t worry much about fingerprint smears on their robust
glasses, but wine drinkers were finicky. And, by the looks of the woman -
perfectly groomed - she’d definitely take offense to a less than shiny goblet.
Grabbing the house white and holding
the glass in its polishing cloth, Harry ambled to the curved end of his domain.
She wanted to see the bottle before accepting the wine, so he chose the more
upmarket one, not the cheaper plonk generally on offer.
She barely glanced at him when he
presented the opened wine - fortunately this one came corked and she’d know
that from the bottle’s neck - but did study the wine glass for a few beats,
before nodding.
He poured the obligatory taste test
volume, but she waved a manicured hand in dismissal, and thus he filled her
shiny vessel. Technically he poured into a red receptacle, but she’d asked for
a large white, emphasis on large. His
boss wouldn’t mind; fact was, if she didn’t finish the bottle, it would go to
waste. Well, it wouldn’t really, because he, Harry, would take it home at the
end of his shift, but as a sale it would go to waste. Few ordered wine in this
place, and those that did opted for the cheap stuff.
Having done his duty, Harry
retreated. Glancing over his shoulder as he moved away, he noticed how the
woman stared at the golden liquid.
Uh-oh. A potential alcoholic about
to fall off the wagon? In her case it was tripping from a chariot, but the
result would be the same.
He swung back, swiftly setting the
opened wine down on the counter. His sister had fallen a few times and each
time she reached out for help again, the standing up had been harder for her to
achieve.
His duty was not only serving
customers; he was here to discern who could and who should not drink. His
empathy and his keen eye was the reason he’d held this job so long. His boss
told him that, and he knew it as a facet of his inner self as well. Many
thought little of his bartending - especially his sister - and yet he found it
fulfilling. In this shadowy place he encountered personalities from all walks
of life, and had, years ago, discovered that each had something to teach him.
Without a doubt, he knew people.
He knew how to listen.
“Ma’am,” he said as he stopped
opposite the woman.
She ignored him to continue staring
at her fermented brew, leaving him with no opening in which to move forward.
Not a talker, then. Most patrons loved the sound of their own voices, but not
this one.
“Perhaps a water is more to your
liking?” he offered, thereby obliquely making reference to her potential
chariot status.
Her long eyelashes fluttered up and
blue yes speared him. Contrary to his expectation, amusement lurked there,
borne out when her mouth lifted at one corner.
“Thank you for your concern, but I
am not in trouble,” she murmured.
By God, she had a voice able to
churn the guts of even a gay man. Husky, gravelly, filled with nuance, super
sexy. Her voice was the lie to her appearance. On the outside, every dark hair
was in place -a bob cut - and every crease of her formal suit was in its ironed
position, but on the inside, man, on the inside she was something else
entirely.
Harry inclined his head. “I’ll leave
you to it, then. My apologies.”
As he moved away once more, she
lifted her wine, and sipped. For some reason that subtle slurp, barely audible,
set his hands to shaking.
Hauling in a self-admonishing
breath, he glanced around the bar. On a Tuesday it was usually quiet, and now,
with forty-five minutes to closing, only two men sat over beers at a far table.
Those two were regulars; they’d up and leave once their drinks were consumed.
He knew they never drank more than three each, and both were on their third.
No one needed him right now.
Harry turned back to the woman.
“Folk tell me I’m a good listener,”
he said.
He’d used that line many times and
it usually worked. Truthfully, many came in here not to just drink their
problems away; some simply wished someone would hear them, and therefore
started talking when he offered a willing ear. It was also true that sometimes
they didn’t know when to shut the hell up, but he suspected this woman wasn’t
one of those.
She proved it when she lifted one
perfect eyebrow. “Does that work for you?”
He grinned. “Usually.”
“Curiosity gets you into trouble,”
she murmured.
“And occasionally curiosity can get
you out of trouble, too,” he rebutted.
She inclined her head but said no
more.
Harry leaned forearms on counter to
narrow the space between them. “Let me guess; you’re in finance or you’re
connected to the law. Either someone’s crooking the books or you have a
difficult case.”
Sipping, she shook her head,
amusement climbing into her gaze once more. Setting the glass down with
exaggerated care, she offered, “You shouldn’t judge a woman by what she wears.”
Interesting. Women generally dressed
according to that kind of judgement. They sought to make a clear impression
with what appearance was able to sell.
“Someone needed to believe what it
is you project?”
“Bingo,” she said, almost inaudibly.
“Boyfriend? Husband?”
Again she sipped her elixir first.
“Neither. You’re fishing and I am in no mood for guessing games.”
Harry straightened. He was being
boorish. Curiosity wasn’t part of his job description, and it certainly wasn’t
in his nature to force something from someone unwilling to share.
“I’m sorry. Enjoy you wine.”
Moving off, he inwardly berated
himself, because, this once, he had to admit he was curious. He wanted to
know her story. Mostly, he desired to hear her speak. Her voice was something
else, did things do his innards.
“I filed my Will today,” he heard
from behind him, and her statement was utterly devoid of all emotion.
Inhaling, Harry casually turned.
“Will? As in Last and Testament?”
She nodded, staring into her golden elixir.
She’d barely touched it, despite requesting the large glass. “The law firm
needed to see me as a woman with a long life ahead of her, an affluent one
simply dotting an i and crossing a t.”
He closed in carefully, afraid to
spook her. “But you’re not?”
Smirking, she lifted her glass and
gulped down a huge mouthful. Once she had swallowed, she said, “I’m affluent,
make no mistake. It’s the long life that may be an issue.”
The manner in which she stated it
caused a shiver to run throughout his body. “Are you ill?”
Pressing her hands flat on the
counter - he noticed how her skin there lost all colour, as if she forced all
her strength into the action - she stood. “Forgive me. This has nothing to do
with you. I don’t know why I said anything.” She reached for her purse.
“Told you I’m a good listener,” he
said quickly, giving her a cheeky smile. “Consider me your confessor. I have no
other business tonight.”
That was true. The two regulars were
waving their way out as he said it. All he still needed to do before heading
home to his lonely cottage was to wash the final glasses, tally the night’s
takings - a matter of five minutes - and lock up.
He found himself praying that she’d
stay, that she’d talk to him.
A caregiver acts as confessor to an infamous patient.
Emma Reed is Ward Sister at a frail care centre. When Celeste Harwood is admitted, she is suspicious of the woman’s motives. Has Celeste come to hide from the world? If so, that is not right; her bed is needed for someone deserving.
When Emma sees how wary the nurses are of Miss
Harwood, she understands something else is at work. Her doctor arrives and
tells a tale of murder, of a woman about to suffer a terrible death, and Emma’s
curiosity is aroused.
Fortunately, Celeste wants to share her story …
Chapter 1
AS THE MORNING chorus of
birds sounded, before proper light had arrived to herald the new day, Emma, in
her small kitchen, already sipped her coffee.
Her shift was
seven to seven for the next three days, as ward sister at the local frail care
centre, and that meant long hours on her feet, and early mornings out of bed. Luckily,
she was an early riser anyway. The progression into Spring made it more bearable
also, as by the day the days grew longer, and light now accompanied her to
work.
After finishing
her black brew - instant because she had no time for filtering - she rinsed her
mug, grabbed her lunch box filled with healthy snacks, checked that her phone
and sunglasses were in her bag, found her car keys, and headed out, locking her
flat’s door behind her.
No-nonsense
shoes barely made a sound on the threadbare carpeting in the corridor as she
strode swiftly for the block’s main exit. No doorman here, not even a buzz-in
system; the door was never locked, a state most residents bemoaned, given their
rundown neighbourhood. That, however, was not her present worry.
In the grey
light, Emma went to her small car, glancing around to see the parking spaces of
their dedicated lot all filled. Most only left for work in about two hours, and
she had to admit she preferred the silence as it was now. No need to greet
folk; no need to interact with anyone.
The streets,
though, were not as quiet. Shift workers were going on and coming off duty, and
trucks and vans were already about the day’s deliveries. Busses ran also,
although not yet as full as their later counterparts would be.
Twenty-three
minutes later she pulled into the centre’s parking lot. In rush hour traffic it
would take more than an hour, another reason she preferred the early hour.
She noticed the
younger nurses arrive, as well as two doctors. No one called greeting, moving
instead with purpose to relieve the night shift.
The first
sunbeam hit the windows as she strode up the ramp to the staff entrance,
creating on the two-storey building multiple mirrors. Averting her gaze, Emma
entered. The patients would soon be awake.
AROUND 9:30 A.M. the bustle
of breakfast, medication and rounds finally died down enough for Emma to pay
attention to her list of new patients, those arriving later in the day. Part of
her duty was to see them settled.
Three longer
term ‘residents’ had died during the night before last, and thus were three
places available, and would be filled today. A list of those seeking final care
before passing on was consulted every time a death occurred, and beds were
allocated according to need.
One, she saw,
was a cancer patient, a man in his seventies. Another was a teenage girl on
life support after a car accident; her parents had not yet found the courage to
let her go and her bed in the hospital was needed for other patients. The third
was a woman in her late thirties with a degenerative disease …
Emma frowned
over the notes accompanying that patient’s identity. She could find nothing on
the woman’s condition, only that she had been waiting three months for a frail
care bed, signed off by various doctors as necessary, no recovery likely.
“Hannah, do you
know more about this woman?” she asked the older nurse at the station with her.
Hannah peered
over her shoulder. “Harwood? Nay, love. Guess we’ll soon find out. I’m off for
coffee and a sandwich. Want something?”
Emma smiled her
appreciation. “Tea, if you don’t mind.”
“Back soon.”
Hannah winked, and left.
Sighing, Emma
withdrew her lunch box to nibble on an energy bar.
PUNCTUALLY AT 1 P.M. the
first ambulance arrived, bearing Mr Rivers, the cancer patient.
Despite his
obviously weakened condition, he was in good spirits. “Call me Pete,” he told
everybody, and, as he wheeled down the passage to his final bed, Emma already
knew Pete would be a favourite.
It also meant
his death would hit the staff hard.
1:30 saw the
arrival of the teenager, a beautiful girl with blond hair and unblemished skin
utterly unmoving on the trolley leaving the ambulance. Emma swallowed on seeing
her; the girl - Cathy - had already moved on. What remained now to transfer to
the bed she would inhabit until her parents signed the consent forms that allowed
her to go was only a vessel.
Silence
accompanied the teenager to her room. Many nurses suspiciously blinked. Yes, it
was harder when the young came here to die.
AT TWO, MISS Celeste Harwood
entered the precincts of the frail care centre, and her arrival instantly
created unease.
In a wheelchair
pushed by one of the paramedics, she sat bolt upright, her every hair in place,
her makeup flawless. With red hair cut short, sleek curls hugged the woman’s
thin face, and pink blush lent her cheeks the guise of health, and coral
lipstick her lips a robust appearance. She wore a colourful robe, shimmering
silk, with matching slippers on her feet. This wasn’t hospital garb, but it was
bedwear, if of the kind one found in the boudoirs popular in historical romance
novels.
Emma noticed
that the paramedic seemed uncomfortable, handing his charge over with haste and
few words. Hannah, who accepted the paperwork, glanced down, then looked up
swiftly to gape at the woman as if she could not believe her eyes.
“It’s Miss
Celeste,” a young nurse whispered to the other beside her.
Someone famous,
Emma reasoned, and moved to put all speculation to bed. “Let us get Miss
Harwood to her room,” she stated, snapping her fingers when the nurses were
tardy in their response.
Not one to read gossip-type
magazines and hardly ever on social media, Emma had no idea who the woman now
in their care was and did not care either. Rich, poor, famous or not, here it
was about the final days, not about personalities and celebrities.
The woman’s
large green eyes swung to Emma, to study her in some amusement, but her
expression was otherwise neutral. She allowed the nurses to wheel her away
without saying a word. As she disappeared, Hannah approached, her mouth already
open to spill the gossip.
“Not now,” Emma
frowned. “I need to have a word with her doctor.”
Hannah’s lips
glued shut briefly, but then she whispered, because she could not help herself,
“That’s Miss Celeste, the Seer.”