Welcome message

CLOSING

Free Reads From the Genre-istas will close to story posts in February of 2015.
Until we close, we w
ill do Encore Postings each Friday beginning Jan. 9th. Thank you for your interest and support!
WE WILL LEAVE A PAGE UP ON THIS BLOG WITH LINKS TO OUR WEBSITES.
EACH OF US WOULD LOVE FOR YOU TO STOP BY TO CHECK OUT OUR STORIES!

2015 - ENCORE POSTINGS

Friday, June 28, 2013

A Constant Heart


London, 1881
No one attended Lady Granby's balls unless they wished to be noticed. It was one of the smallest ballrooms in London. Too small for much dancing, actually, and unbearably hot. And Lady Granby was known to be a determined matchmaker. If you accepted an invitation from Lady Granby, you desired to be seen.
Emma Prichard hoped to go unnoticed. She wasn't arrayed in colorful finery. She hadn't even dressed her hair, except to collect her dark brown waves into a neat chignon. One must always look acceptable, even if unremarkable. It was the Prichard way. And truly she did not wish to be invisible, merely unremarkable. Notice might draw questions, even pity, or, worst of all, an attempt at matchmaking. She had been brought up too well to be rude, so she simply met few eyes and nodded politely at those she did acknowledge.
When you were an old maid, going unnoticed wasn't really difficult at all.
As a frequent chaperone to her younger cousin, Emma's usual ballroom experience consisted of conversation and refreshment while seated in an uncomfortable chair along the far side of the room. She and a few of her fellow wallflowers had taken to calling their line of painfully straight-backed chairs Wallflower Row. Courteously, the wallflowers each gave the others a turn at walking the perimeter of the ballroom, retiring for a sip of lemonade, or catching a breath of fresh air on an obliging balcony. Emma had elected to take the first turn of the evening and spent much of it smiling reassuringly at Abigail as she whirled around the ballroom in the arms of the second gentleman on her dance card. Her cousin was a lovely girl but a painfully shy debutante. 
If all went well during her first season, Abigail would marry. The notion brought a bittersweet satisfaction to Emma. Fingering the locket at her throat, a familiar, hollow ache started in her chest as regret pushed its way into her thoughts. James. Her regret had a name. Shaking her head and dropping the metal onto the warm skin of her throat, she forced her thoughts back to the happier prospect of Abigail's future.
Taking the final steps toward Wallflower Row, the sound of her name rang out with surprising clarity across the din of music and gaiety.
"Emma Prichard? Oh no, she never did marry. Two failed seasons and then she gave up the hunt." 
The voice was one Emma knew well. Constance Banbury was the mother of four daughters and, as the matriarch of so many marriageable ladies, she made it her duty to know the competition well. Those who frequented the races at Epsom Downs did not know their horses as well as Mrs. Banbury knew which gentlemen were eligible and by how much. Emma slowed her pace. A perverse curiosity made her want to hear what Mrs. Banbury and her companion might say.
"Oh no, my dear. 'Twas never a question of money. Her family has heaps. It does make one wonder. There is some scandal there, Elspeth, mark my words. It may be well hidden by all that Prichard propriety, but there is scandal nonetheless."
Biting back a rueful grin, Emma took the final steps toward the row and resumed her seat next to Penelope Rutledge, a good friend and fellow wallflower. Pen's dark, simple gown nearly matched Emma's, but her playful blue eyes and strawberry blonde hair set her apart from the plain brown of Emma's coloring. At least plain is how Emma always thought of her brown eyes and hair. James had said her hair was the color of chocolate and her eyes the shade of an amber jewel... But those sentiments no longer signified.
"Just in time!" Penelope chimed. "Frederick Jennings has been leering at me for the last few moments. If you had not returned, I think he might have actually summoned the courage to ask me to dance."
"Heaven forfend." Emma shot her friend a look of feigned disgust.
"You may jest, but I have danced with him, and I assure you it is not an experience I wish to repeat." Penelope huffed and straightened her gown fussily across her knees. Suspicion crept into her tone when she spied Emma's grin. "What is it? You look bemused."
Emma leaned toward Penelope to whisper conspiratorially. "I am a scandalous woman." 
"Really?" Pen pulled back in offense. "Since when and why was I not the first to know?"
 "Only according to Mrs. Banbury." 
 Pen settled back in her chair. She knew the barbed tongue of the Banbury matriarch well. "I am surprised you're smiling. Her comments usually cut to the quick. No matter how ridiculous they may be."
"You don't wish to hear it, then?" The question was hardly worth asking.
 "Well, yes. Of course, I do," Penelope blurted. Her outburst drew the eyes of a few ladies nearby. She added, in a quieter, more demure voice,"But only if you wish to share it."
"She supposes I never accepted an offer of marriage because I am mired in scandal." Emma spoke the words with a smile on her lips, still amused at Mrs. Banbury's ridiculous assumptions. "According to Mrs. Banbury, I never married because of some great and horrible secret."
Penelope looked at Emma, her bright blue eyes softening. Her voice had fallen to a whisper. "Is that better than the truth?"
It stung Emma to acknowledge Mrs. Banbury amusement at learning there was no scandal attached to her spinsterhood, just foolishness and a stubborn determination not to marry any man if she could not marry the one she loved. Unfortunately, the man she loved was equally stubborn and their last words had been spoken in anger. Stubborn pride. With James North so firmly in her heart, Emma had not even considered marrying another man in the three years since since their parting.
 "She would probably laugh to hear it was nothing as interesting as scandal." Emma had no need to hide the details from Penelope. In their common status as young women on the shelf, they had grown closer than sisters and Emma knew Pen's story was not so different from her own.
 "There is no shame in a constant heart." Penelope said the words emphatically and Emma knew she spoke for both of them. Pen had waited these past three years since her coming out for her brother's closest friend, Lucas Sharpe, to see her as more than a sisterly family friend.
 "She would laugh because I have turned spinster for a man I will likely never see again."
"I would not wager on it."
Emma turned to her friend in astonishment. "You don't think she would laugh?"
"Not that. I think you will most definitely see him again." 
"Ah, Pen. I do love your optimism." Emma gave her friend's fingers a light, reassuring squeeze, but Penelope clasped Emma's hand firmly and turned toward her with anxiety etched in her features.
"Emma, you do know he is here. Tonight."
The hollow ache in Emma's chest dropped into her stomach and she felt dizzy. Dizzy and yet restless with an uncontrollable energy. She stood, though Pen still held her hand.
"Em, do you think it's wise?" Emma glanced down at her friend, reading the concern on her face. Concern and understanding. Pen released her hand. "Yes, of course. You must go. Go and find him."

~ * ~

One inquiry to the kind and discreet Mr. Wimpole led Emma to a room Lady Granby had designated as the men's gaming room. Thick with cigar smoke and crowded with men chatting in clusters and gathered around card tables, the room still felt less crowded than the stifling ballroom.
It was not difficult to find him in the gathering of men. He was tall and stood a head above most around him. He seemed even taller now, more imposing a figure than Emma remembered. His hair was still the same onyx black, though long now and somewhat unkempt. It shone blue in the wall sconces lining the overcrowded room. His back was to her. 
Removed from those around him, Emma watched as he turned his head this way and that as if looking for someone. He would have a clear view above the heads of a roomful of shorter men. Suddenly, he turned and glanced toward Emma, as if he'd sensed her eyes on him. The crystal snifter he had raised to his lips fell with a soft thud to the thick aubusson carpet under his feet. 
Shock was clear in his features, his dismissal of the spilled drink at his feet. But was there more? Was his heart hammering in his chest too? Did he feel the invisible pull, like a magnet, between them?
Emma swayed toward him, unable to deny the magnetism. But before she could take a step, he approached in two long strides. A delicious scent, the bay soap he'd always used, swept over her and she bit back a moan at the exquisite pleasure of finally being near him again. He looked down at her, his dark blue eyes unreadable. Studying her, his gaze touched her hair, her lips, her neck before settling back on her eyes. Then he turned and moved past her. Emma thought for a moment he meant to walk away from her. Again. Then she felt his long fingers tugging at her own. 

~ * ~

"James. Where are you? I can't see you." Her voice sent a trickle of pleasure down his spine. His name on her lips. He had waited three years to hear it and was stunned at the lack of anger in her tone. Where was the resentment he so richly deserved?
He had spirited her away like a marauding pirate and had no idea where they'd ended up, except it was an empty room. Empty and dark. A sliver of moonlight through a partially open drape was the only illumination. He could just make out the shape of her. Pale skin, dark hair. Her hand reached out for him, and he grasped it like a drowning man reaching for a life line. 
Pulling Emma toward him, James kissed her palm and heard her gasp. A polite man would have been deterred, but his hunger for her didn't allow for delicacy. Snaking his arm around her waist, he tugged, fitting her curves against him. Then he dipped his head to taste her skin. 
As he kissed her neck, he touched a spot behind her ear with his tongue and found the place she'd dabbed her violet water. The dainty scent, one he only associated with Emma, was maddeningly erotic. She tilted her head, giving him access, while her hands roamed over his chest. They slid inside his jacket, fingering the buttons of his waistcoat.
"Emma." He said it once, his voice a husky murmur, before his lips found hers. Starved for the taste of her, he could not give her a delicate dance of mouths. This was a plunder. She moaned and he pulled his mouth from hers, as breathless as she.
She placed both hands on his chest. He reached up to stroke them and she pushed away from him. She sidestepped out of his embrace and he immediately missed her warmth.
He spoke the words he knew he should. "Forgive me, Emma, for absconding with you just now." It wasn't true. He was not the least bit sorry for pulling her into the darkened room alone, though he knew for the sake of her reputation, he should be. He had other regrets. Three years worth of them. It was easy to add, "I am sorry."
He wished for more light. Her silence chilled him. But this is what he had expected, what he deserved.
Her breath was still coming quickly. Beyond the beat of his heart and his own labored breathing, it was the only sound in the dark room. The shape of her face, the glow of her skin, was visible in the dim light. He waited for the condemnation, the anger, but she didn't speak. He couldn't stop himself from breaking the quiet between them. "I never stopped loving you, wanting you." 
"Then the last three years must have been as miserable for you as they were for me."
There was his Emma. He heard it all in those few words. A spark of spirit, the pain and regret that echoed his own, and even the resentment that must have built like a pyre, each year adding more tinder to the flame.
Yes. It echoed in his mind over and over, resonated from every part of him. He hadn't even realized he'd spoken the word aloud until she was in his arms again.
Then he said it again. "Yes." He breathed the word against her mouth and then pressed his lips to her forehead, her eyebrow, her cheek. Wet, salty. He drank in her tears with his kiss. He pulled away. He'd wounded her. There was so much more he needed to say.
But she held him fast. Pulling at his lapels, she reached up and nuzzled his neck, kissing the skin above his neck cloth. "I missed you, James." He heard the tears in her voice and something deep inside of him, the wall around his heart that he had spent so long erecting, began to crumble. He had spent the previous three years trying to make something of himself, earn his fortune and the right to be with Miss Emma Prichard. Were the years of separation worth it? They stretched before him like a gaping, empty chasm. All those years of effort meant nothing when he realized that they could have been spent like this. Day and after day with this beautiful, generous woman--the unbearably stubborn Emma Prichard--in his arms, pressed against his body.
"And I you, Emma."
She kissed him then, melting his regret, bringing him back from the chasm's brink. "Show me how much" Her voice was low, laced with need and desire. A siren's call. "Show me how much you missed me."
He pressed her against the wall, leaning in to kiss her again. For the first time since he'd sequestered them in the darkened room, he was gentle, tentative. 
A muffled rap on the door startled them both. James leaned down, resting his forehead against Emma's, feeling the puffs of her rapid breath on his neck. 
"Emma?" the muted words through the door were a woman's and she was frantic.
For a woman on the edge of ruin, Emma startled him by answering in a surprisingly steady voice.
"Yes, Pen. I am here." James released her, stepping away just enough to allow her to settle her dress and push disheveled strands of hair back into place.
The woman beyond the door continued to whisper. "You must come back to the ballroom. I am sorry, dear, but your brother is here. He is looking for you. And for Mr. North."
James heard the rustle of Emma's clothing and reached out a hand to steady her.
She did not spare him the worry in her voice. "We must go. Robert will be beside himself."
"Perfect. He's just the man I wish to see." Satisfied that Emma had righted herself, James reached up to straighten his necktie.
"Are you mad?"The tone of worry in her voice had turned to panic. "James, this isn't the time or the place to speak to my brother."
"Why?" He bit off the word and immediately regretted his tone. Reaching out, he sought her hand, and she grasped his firmly. "Haven't we waited long enough?"
He knew she would say yes. She must say yes.
He heard her intake of breath, as if she was about to speak. Her answer was his future. A searing ache, a familiar pain, started in the center of his chest. The wait of a few seconds felt interminable.
Light flooded the room and a thunderous bang echoed off the walls. Robert Prichard stood in the doorway, body tense, his face contorted in a mask of pure rage.

~ * ~
  
Emma had dreamed of this moment. She'd dreamed of reuniting with James, yet the rage she read on her brother's face made it all more like a nightmare.
Robert was foxed. She could see it in his swaying stance and the glossy sheen of his eyes.
"You still can't have her, North. Can't you find some other woman to ruin?"
Pen spoke up. Emma hadn't even realized she'd come into the room too, and she jumped at the sound of Pen's usually soft voice, now firm and authoritative. "No one has been ruined, Robert. But we will all set tongues wagging if we don't return to the ball immediately." Pen placed a gentle hand on Emma's arm. "Abigail is with Dorcas Whitlock and her sisters." Pen spoke of another of the wallflowers with three younger sisters. "We should go to her."
"Yes." It would be such a relief to escape from Robert's drunken wrath, but one glance at James, and Emma found herself rooted in place. The notion of being parted from him again sent a sickening shiver of dread through her body. And she had questions for him. So many questions. But Penelope was insistent, and Emma turned to follow her back to the Granby ballroom.
"Wait." His voice, even a single word, calmed her. She closed her eyes and let the sense of comfort wash over her. "We must settle this matter now, Prichard. Emma and I have waited long enough."
"Emma." Her name echoed off the walls. Both Penelope and James had spoken it at once, each calling to separate parts of her nature. Penelope called to her sense of duty. What sort of a chaperone left her charge alone to abscond with a man into a darkened room? Abandoning duty was not the Prichard way.
Yet James called to her very soul. Her deepest desire was to send Pen and Robert away, forget about her duties, and hide away with the man who had never left her thoughts for three long years. But could she trust her heart to him? He had left her so easily and stayed away so long. Would he leave again?
It took all of her strength, every ounce of resolve to speak the words she knew she should. "James, this is not the proper time. I am here to chaperone my cousin and I have left her alone too long." The words struck her, echoing in her heart. "Alone too long." The phrase had nothing to do with Abigail and when she gazed at James, illuminated in the warm glow of hallway sconces, she knew he took her meaning.
He spoke directly to her, as if Robert and Pen weren't there and listening to every word. "You never have to be alone again, Emma. Tell me I won't be either."
"Good God, North. Have you no sense of propriety?" Robert slurred the words and tripped over his own feet as he moved toward Emma. His eyes widened, as if he was shocked at his own instability, and he grasped the edge of a well polished table to steady himself.
James finally turned his attention from Emma and glared at her brother. "Ah, the famous Prichard propriety. Will you tell Emma what your propriety has cost her? Cost us?"
"Does it really matter now?" Penelope stepped between the men, looking from one to the other. She sounded exasperated. Then she turned to Emma. "Tell him, dear. Tell Mr. North that he needn't be alone."
When Emma hesitated, Penelope continued. "She has been true to you, Mr. North. Constant and true. And you, sir? Have you been true to my friend? I do hope so, because she deserves it more than any woman I know."
James didn't say a word, but he approached Emma, gazing into eyes, a slight smile curving his lips. She opened her mouth to speak, but no words were sufficient. Apparently, Penelope didn't agree.
"Well, I shall take that as a yes, Mr. North. Now, will you do what is proper by my friend?"
"Shall I bend a knee here and now?" His words answered Penelope's question, but he never stopped looking at Emma. She couldn't stop gazing at him either. She studied every aspect of his beloved face, the familiar angles and the newer lines. How many times had she pictured him in her mind's eye? No imagining could ever compare to having him here, so close, so warm, and now, finally, hers.
"Yes, yes, of course you must do that. But not now. We're at a ball, Mr. North. Won't you ask her to dance?"
"Shall we, Emma? Or is your dance card full?"
A sensation tickled at Emma's middle, bubbling up into her throat, until a giggle burst from her. A giggle—as girlish and silly as anything she'd ever heard from Abigail. And she felt light. The ache in her chest was gone. She fingered the locket that James had given her so long ago, and it felt lighter too.
"Yes, my dance card is full, Mr. North." She stepped toward him, reaching out to take his offered hand. "And will be. From now until forever, I hope."
He lifted her hand to his lips, closed his eyes, and pressed his mouth to her skin. "Yes. Forever, Emma. Finally forever."

Friday, June 14, 2013

ONE HOT MEDIUM



by Sarah Raplee


Psychic medium Cora Merryweather popped a couple of antacid tablets to quell the burning in her stomach.  Today’s one o’clock appointment will be a doozy for sure.
Limiting readings to locals might weed out the haters, but her bank account couldn’t afford to take that kind of hit. Half of Cora’s clients came from outside Iowa City, some from as far away as Waterloo and Des Moines. Like everyone else, mediums had to eat. And she refused to set her rates so high only the well-off could afford a reading.
                Cora’s sigh was cut short by a string of sneezes. Great, just great. She sounded like Typhoid Mary. How was she supposed to relax into a meditative state with her anxiety level rising like the temperature outside?
The sneezing fits had started as soon as silver-haired Mrs. Donovan, her morning client, had departed. After grabbing a box of tissues off the table, she’d settled down at her small desk and opened her old laptop. By lunchtime, she’d finished her record-keeping in spite of continued bouts of off-and-on sneezing. The persistent, unusual symptom made her suspect she was having a negative psychic premonition. She was normally an extremely healthy young woman. Besides, her negative premonitions had manifested as physical symptoms a few times in the past. When the chocolate protein shake she called lunch soured as soon as it hit her stomach, her fears had been confirmed.
The grandfather clock she’d inherited from Aunt Tillie along with the house whirred before emitting a single deep chime to mark the quarter hour. A shiver skittered up her spine. Fifteen minutes to show time. She reached for her blue plastic water bottle to wash down the last of the minty antacids.  The burning in her stomach had eased, but now she needed to pee. She plunked the bottle down  and drew her brows together in a deep, dark, heartfelt scowl.
No doubt her next client would turn out to be a hater. Why couldn’t the Doubting Thomases live and let live, the way she and most other mediums did? How would they like it if she barged into their places of business and accused them of being liars and con artists? Tried to ruin them?
She grabbed her neon orange cell phone off the desktop, paused to sneeze into a tissue and then texted her friend Joan at Discrete Security.
Is Owl on duty? The message was code asking if the security camera in the stuffed barred owl on her bookshelf was working properly.
Owl’s awake, Joan replied. Big Sister is watching. Bwa-ha-ha-ha-ha.
            Cora’s lips stretched into a grateful smile. It helped to know someone had her back, someone who cared about her and believed in her unusual abilities.
On a computer monitor in her office across town, Joan had a clear view of Cora’s room through the wide-angle lens in Owl’s left eye. Her friend wouldn’t hesitate to deploy a pair of well-trained security officers if “Barry” flipped to the Dark Side.  No cops would be called unless Cora appeared to be in physical danger; Joan’s business wasn’t called Discrete Security for nothing. Plenty of business people whose clients expected privacy preferred to handle unpleasantness without attracting media attention. Lawyers, therapists, talent agents…psychics.
Knowing Joan had her back gave Cora confidence. She stood and waved at Owl before heading down the short hallway toward the bathroom.
Bring it on, Barry—or whatever your name really is!
She never asked for more than the client’s first name and phone number. Her job was to channel their loved ones to bring her clients healing and a measure of peace. In order for them to accept that she was the real deal, she had to be careful not to acquire any information about them or their deceased loved ones ahead of time. No last names, no checks, nothing.
Her lack of information made it relatively easy for the haters to get in to see her. The patient ones, anyway; she was booked up for months ahead because of her spotless reputation. Luckily most doubters weren’t that dedicated.
Unlike Barry, her one o’clock. She sneezed three times and shut the bathroom door.
***
Tom Chase twisted the bell key beside the red front door of Cora Merryweather’s blue Victorian house and schooled his face into a pleasantly neutral expression. The authentic antique bell sounded a lot like an old-fashioned bicycle bell, only louder.
         The smell of fresh paint permeated the air. Business must be exceptionally good if she could afford to hire house painters. He squelched a grimace that wanted to curl his upper lip. How many grieving widows did it take to paint a house, metaphorically-speaking?
         An indignant-sounding meow sounded at his elbow. He glanced down into the unblinking, deep-blue eyes of an enormous, long-haired white cat laying in the wide porch swing. A sunbeam highlighted the snowy whiteness of his fur against the red-checkered cushion  How could the animal stand to lie in a sunbeam when it was so damned hot? Tom’s oxford shirt was already sticking to his back, and he’d only been outside his air-conditioned truck for a few minutes.
       “Hello,” he said. He'd always liked cats. The cat’s tail tip twitched a warning. He turned away.
       A bee buzzed past his head and drew his gaze to baskets overflowing with sweet-scented, multicolored flowers that hung above the porch railing. As he’d gone up the front walk, he’d half-noticed the row of neatly-tended snapdragons that guarded the front of the house and the green, long-leafed hostas that encircled a young sugar maple tree.
He caught a whiff of the flowers’ perfume and clenched his teeth. This place reeked of hope.  He knew from hard experience that hope was a dangerously addictive emotion. He’d spent more than two years trying to break his own habit.
His eyes narrowed at two weathered wicker armchairs framing an equally dilapidated side table at the far end of the porch. A cluster of white spray paint cans peeked out from behind one of the chairs.
Tom frowned. Maybe business wasn’t as good as he’d thought.Or she needed to raise her rates.
On the other side of the red door, a clock chimed the hour. He glanced at his watch and then gave the bell key another impatient twist. The medium was late. He tried the doorknob, but it wouldn’t turn. Maybe she’d stood him up. His gut began to burn. He’d waited six months for this reading. She’d damned well better show up.
The knob rattled and then turned.  The door opened and a pretty, ponytailed blond wearing a short pink sheath that showed off her legs smiled up at him. The smile didn’t quite reach her clear gray eyes.
“Hello,” he said. “I’m Barry.” If she’d had a tail, he was sure it would have twitched a warning.  
Even so, she nodded, sending her gold beaded earrings swinging in graceful arcs from delicate her delicate earlobes. She opened the door wider. “I’m Cora. Please come in, Barry.” She turned and walked away.
Eyeing the seductive swing of her hips, he followed.
They passed through a small, tiled foyer that was empty except for a coat rack and an umbrella stand. The large room they entered ran the width of the house. To his left, a comfortable-looking overstuffed couch and chair were grouped around a brick fireplace.  On either side of the fireplace, mullioned windows let in the light.
Cora moved to the right. “What kind of name is Barry, anyway?” she said.
“What do you mean?” He turned and watched her retreating ass. She didn’t seem to have heard him.
“Please, sit down.” She waved a casual hand at the square, polished wooden table, then took a seat. The wall behind her was lined with floor-to-ceiling shelves crammed with books and a few knickknacks. 
Tom chose the seat across from hers. He wanted a clear view of her facial expressions while she “read” him.
She sat as if a she had a broom handle for a backbone and folded her hands on the tabletop. Her short, neatly-manicured nails were unpainted, probably because she worked in the garden.  A thick gold band etched with a raven totem encircled the middle finger of her right hand. Her left hand was bare.
His shoulders twitched. She made him uncomfortable in his own skin.
“Is Barry short for—what? Barold? Barney? Barrow?” The frozen smile had been replaced by a look of disdain.
Why was she fixated on the damned name? “I was named after my father.” That much was true.
Something flashed in her eyes. “I don’t doubt that for a minute. Your father’s come forward, you see. The problem is his name is Thomas, not Barry.”
***
Cora scowled when his earth-brown eyes slid away from hers. The skin under his fashionable dark stubble reddened. A muscle jumped in his jaw. At least he had the decency to be embarrassed at being caught in a lie.
When he shot to his feet, she realized she was mistaken. His voice dropped to a feral growl. “Where is it?”
She swallowed. He seemed to occupy a lot more space than he had a minute ago. Her tongue darted out to lick lips that were suddenly parched. 
A jumble of images flashed in her mind's eye. Too many spirits vied for her attention for her to make sense of the mess in her head. Right now she needed to focus on the crazy guy in her living room, and he was very much alive.
Not now, she told the spirits. Later, I promise.
They pulled back their energy and left her to deal with Thomas on her own.
He squatted and ducked his head to look up at the table bottom, then stood once more and glanced wildly around the room.
Heart chugging like a runaway train, she rose from her chair. She had to tip her head back to catch his troubled gaze. Why had she bothered to bait this tall, dark and handsome nut job? How long would it take Joan’s minions to get here?

Friday, May 3, 2013

Extreme Fall by Paty Jager


This is the first part of a mystery. The second part can be found on my blog on May 7th. 


Characters:
Brice Montgomery, victim, extreme rock climber, reality TV star and heir to a whiskey distillery
Hans Steiner – Producer of the show Extreme Climbing
Kyle Temple– Rock Climber, Brice’s friend
Sadie Temple- Kyle’s sister, one of Brice’s conquests
Riley Gardner- camera woman
Maxine Montgomery – Brice’s sister

Kyle Temple took a drink of water, wiped the sweat from his face with his t-shirt, and peered up the side of Dihedrals a climbing cliff in Smith Rock State Park. A snap and twang echoed in the canyon as Brice Montgomery plummeted the other eighty feet to the base of the cliff. 

Kyle scrambled over the rocks to his best friend. “Brice! Brice! God no!” He could tell by the vacant stare and blood pooling around the star of the TV reality show Extreme Climbing that there was little to be done.
“Call 911.” He said to the show’s producer.
***
“You can’t tell me this was an accident.” Kyle Temple poked his pointer finger at the State Trooper overseeing the removal of his best friend’s body from the bottom of the Dihedrals. Brice’s muscled body had limbs at odd angles and his bent neck made Kyle’s stomach sour.

“We won’t know anything conclusive until we’ve run tests.” The trooper motioned for the paramedics and stretcher to move into the area.

A crowd had gathered. Kyle peered up the cliff he and Brice were climbing for a segment of Brice’s show Extreme Climbing.  The rope Brice used to rappel down the cliff had snapped like a thin string.  As the moment replayed in Kyle’s mind, he noticed someone on the top of the cliff pulling the rope up.

“Hey!” He grabbed the officer’s shirt sleeve. “Someone’s trying to take the faulty rope.” He pointed up to the cliff top as the person disappeared from sight as well as the end of the rope.  Kyle picked up the other half of the rope still attached to his friend. “Don’t let anyone get this. It’s evidence.”

Kyle peered at the gathering crowd.  Where were Hans and Riley?  They should have both been at the bottom. They’d been here filming as he rappelled down. The only thing he could do for Brice now was find his killer.

The trooper put the rope in a clear bag and wrote on the bag. He nodded to Kyle to follow him.  They stepped away from the crowd.

“Tell me everything that happened.” The trooper pulled out a tablet and pen.

Kyle thought back to this morning. He’d woke first and decided to take a stroll before the other rose. Stepping out of Brice’s fancy motor home, he’d inhaled the pungent scent of juniper and soaked in the heat of the sunshine on his face. How could such a perfect day have gone so wrong?

“We rose at six. Wanted to scale the cliff before it was too hot. Riley Gardner, the photographer, said she wanted the morning light on the cliff as she photographed.”  That flashed a picture of the hurt look on Riley’s face the night before when his sister, Sadie, stepped out of Brice’s car and clung to his arm as the two enter the motor home.  Sadie and Brice had an on-again-off-again relationship for five years. Kyle had stayed out of it. He wanted to remain a loyal friend to Brice and not argue with his sister.

Brice had left Sadie in the bed in the back of the motor home and joined Kyle to check over their climbing equipment.  Where was Sadie right now?  “I need to tell my sister what happened.” 

“Not until you’ve told me everything.” The trooper leveled his gaze on Kyle.

“We, Brice and I, checked the gear. Everything was fine. Hans, the producer and Riley, pulled up on a Gator and we loaded the equipment in the back. We grabbed energy bars and water and hopped in with him. He hauled us down to the base of the Dihedrals and we unloaded the gear. Hans remembered something they needed for filming and left. Riley stayed with us to check the lighting while Hans went back. When we started setting out our gear we noticed some of it was still in the back of the gator.” Kyle stared hard at the trooper. Was the gear still in the gator the rope that snapped?

Kyle backtracked in his mind, but wasn’t certain. He remembered taking tags off new rope, but he wasn’t sure if it was his or the one Brice used.

“Was this Montgomery’s first climb?”

Kyle stared at the trooper as if his head just dropped to the ground. “Don’t you know who Brice Montgomery is? He is the star of the reality show Extreme Climbing. He’s climbed every cliff that he’s come across. There is no way his fall was an accident.”

The trooper scribbled in his pad. “Had the equipment you used been used before?”

“Only our personal harnesses. Brice purchases new rope every climb. That’s how careful he is.” 

“What happened when he fell?”

“We both climbed up the Sunshine. Sat at the top, drank water, and ate an energy bar. Watched a bald eagle and talked for about thirty minutes waiting for Riley and Hans to get set up below for the rappel.”
“What did you talk about?”

Kyle sighed.  “Family, or more precisely the fact his family was pressuring him to give up the rock climbing show and put his interest in the family business.”  Brice had complained his father wanted him to join the board at the family business and his sister wanted to take that position. He wanted to let her have it but his father was of the old school that a male heir should run the business and not a female.

The trooper’s eyebrow rose.  “He didn’t get along with his family? Do they live around here?”

“He got along fine as long as they didn’t talk about the family business. No, they live back east.”

“What happened when you rappelled down?”

“Brice told me to go first, he wanted a few minutes alone to clear his head.” He still wasn’t sure what that was about but he was pretty sure it had to do with his sister’s call yesterday asking Brice to pick her up at the airport. When they’d arrived at the motorhome she was bubbling and Brice had appeared to be brooding.

“Was that the normal procedure?”

He’d been on several shows with Brice and he always had the guest go first. “Yes.”

“Go on.”

“I rappelled down, unhooked, shouted up ‘off rappel’ and asked Hans for a water bottle.” Kyle’s body flinched remembering the next sounds. “I heard a snap and Brice shouted. I looked up.” The same panic and sick feeling in his gut struck remembering the sight. “His body was falling rapidly. There was nothing any of us could do to stop his fall.” The feeling he’d failed his friend lodged in Kyle’s chest digging and prodding like bronc rider’s spurs.

“What was the snap sound?”

“I assume the rope breaking.”

“Does this happen often?”

“No. Especially not with a new rope.”

The trooper stared at him. “Tell me about the snap sound?”

“Kyle! Is it true?” Sadie, Kyle’s sister, ran up to him, flinging her arms around his neck.

“Shh… yes. Brice fell—”

“Will he be…”

He shook his head and Sadie started wailing.

“Miss?” The trooper touched Sadie’s shoulder.

“This is Sadie Temple my sister.  Brice’s friend.”  His friend slept with his sister, but they didn’t introduce themselves as a couple when they met new people. Kyle had picked up on that oddity over the years and did the same.

“Miss Temple, where have you been?” The trooper asked.

“I was back at the motor home waiting for Brice and my brother to finish taping so we could go for a drive.” She wiped at the tears streaming down her cheeks and turned to him. “What happened?”

“The rope broke.”

Her eyes widened, and she shook her head slowly.  “Then he’s…”

“I couldn’t do anything. He just…” Kyle bit the inside of his cheek and wished like hell there had been something he could have done to prevent the fall.

“Where’s Hans and Riley?” Sadie demanded.

“I wish I knew.” Kyle scanned the area. The paramedics were making their way up the other side of the Crooked River Gorge, Brice’s body on a gurney between them. The spectators had left. The only people milling about the spot where Brice landed were police officers taking measurements and bagging the equipment.

“They should know the police would want to talk with them.” Sadie blew her nose in a tissue.

“Yeah.”

The trooper talked into his radio. “Put a road block up at the entrance to the park. We have two missing witnesses.”

Sadie turned to Kyle. “What am I going to do?”

He stared at his sister. “Continue life as you always do when you and Brice were ‘seeing other people’.”

She slugged him in the chest. “That’s not funny.  I’m pregnant.”

That made sense of all Brice’s actions since picking up Sadie. “Sis, I’m… Is it Brice’s?”

“Now you sound just like him and his sister.”

“You’ve talked to Maxine?”

“Yes, she flew out with me yesterday. She stayed in town, something about trying to set up a west coast distillery.”

“Did Brice see her?”

“We had dinner together.”

Why hadn’t Brice told him this bit of information when he was lamenting about the family? Had he decided a family man should take over the family business?

Copyright 2013 Paty Jager

Who do you think killed Brice? Leave your thoughts in the comments section and then hop over to my personal blog on May 7th to read the ending. 

Friday, April 19, 2013

SERUM KILLER By Robin Weaver


SERUM KILLER

By Robin Weaver

 
It was a single bite from one tiny ant, but I began to change in ways I never imagined.  Horrible ways.

I’d been pruning roses when the little bugger bit me on the wrist, near my pulse.  If he’d gnawed any place else, I might have remained unscarred, but fate didn’t favor me.  My arm swelled and I soon resembled Popeye—at least one arm did.  Pain racked my body and I begged Harold for something, for anything.  He grunted and grabbed his coat.

My body was convulsing when my spouse returned.  I snatched the bottle from his hand and swallowed the clear liquid, without looking at the label.  The pain subsided and I slept.

          For three days, I hovered in the realms of sleep, waking only for broth and more serum.  In my few blinks of consciousness, I saw my husband watching me.  Harold seemed concerned, but not about me.  I asked for a doctor—he told me he was a doctor.  How could I have forgotten that?  I wanted to tell him to go away, but I craved the medicine.

On the fourth day, it was over.  The pain disappeared. I felt alive, anxious to embrace the day.  I was me again.  Except for the strange red welts.

Welts?  Something nagged at my brain.  I’d only been bitten once.  Why were there so many welts?

“Anaphylaxis,” my spouse said, although I hadn’t voiced my question.  “An allergic reaction.”

He treated me like an idiot.  I wanted to scream at him, I know what anaphylaxis is!
I didn’t.  Instead, I asked, “The medicine worked?  I’m better, right?”

He shrugged.

          I didn’t let his attitude affect my exuberance.  I wasn’t just better—I was T-friggin’-rrific.  I wanted to bask in the sunshine.  I wanted to build a house.

Build a house?  I pushed my weird thoughts aside and went in search of sweets. 

          Pancakes sounded perfect.  I mixed the batter from scratch and grilled the cakes to perfection.  I cut them into perfect little squares and raised the bottle of syrup.  Instead of dispersing the delicious concoction over the griddled dough, I positioned the plastic container above my mouth, squeezing the brown goop into my throat. I gurgled and squeezed until the bottle was empty. 

With my sugar gluttony sated, I fell into the watchful gaze of my spouse.  He smirked.  I hung my head.

What was wrong with me?  I didn’t even like syrup.

My shame was short lived.  Enthusiasm consumed me, making it impossible to contain the energy pulsating inside.  I washed, I ironed, and I cleaned.  In pursuit of perfection, my feet scurried and my fingers labored until everything sparkled.

My husband came home for lunch and brought his assistant.  I never liked that woman, but being the ideal hostess, I served her lunch.

“Aren’t you the busy bee,” she sniggered.

“Don’t you mean ant, Helen?”  My husband cackled.  “My little wife’s a worker ant.”

          The two of them giggled like teenagers.  They annoyed me.

My mind was still foggy.  I couldn’t remember why my husband had a teaching assistant.

I forced my brain into concentration.  “Oh, yes,” I murmured.  “Harold isn’t a medical doctor, he’s a psychiatrist.”

Something seemed wrong, but I couldn’t think about it.  Too much to do and I needed sugar—I had an insatiable craving.  I slipped into the pantry to grab a bag of sugar.  I ate the white granules straight from the container.

Two days later, the assistant returned.  She and Harold thought I was upstairs, but I hid in the pantry, listening.

Harold whispered, “I’d say the experiment is a success.  There is no trace of the serum in her blood work.  The diagnosis will be an acute reaction to insect bites.  One that affected her brain.”

          “That woman is certifiable,” the assistant purred.  “Darling, you’ll finally be rid of her, once and for all.  Too bad you won’t be able to publish your findings. You’d be famous.”

Even though I had a sucrose fixation, Helen’s sugary voice made me sick.

“Yes, we’re lucky she didn’t go into pulmonary edema when I gave her the serum.  Because of the pre-nup, I would have lost everything if she’d died.  When we commit her, I will still control her assets.”

She was talking again.  “How much longer, Hal?  I’m tired of waiting.”

          My husband’s evil cackle haunted the air.  “Patience, love.  My colleagues will observe her tomorrow.  I suspect we can have her institutionalized the next day.”

          Teenybopper snickering permeated the air, angering me more than their evil words.  I couldn’t let them commit me.

          My still-fuzzy brain latched onto a solution. I would call my new friends.  They would know what to do.

Flinging open the pantry door, I surprised my spouse and his assistant.  Two whacks with a frying pan ended that inane giggling.

A bigger problem loomed large.  Mercy.  What would I do to cover my tracks?

Concentration was vital and I was out of fructose.  I opened every canister in my kitchen but couldn’t pinpoint one granule of sugar.  I scampered to the store in search of sweets and a solution.

          When I returned, my little friends waited, having resolved my little problem.  I stared at my spouse and his girlfriend, their unconscious bodies covered with thousands of ants.  Soon, there would be no bodies.

          I laughed, the sound strange and foreign.  Harold and Helen didn’t get it.  I’m not a worker ant.  I may be human, but the serum altered me and I now command.

          I rule the hive. As queen.

Friday, March 22, 2013

KISMET

by Jenna Bayley-Burke 


Emma Riley hasn't seen Colin Davis since he gave her her first kiss, and walked out of her life. But since they were only fourteen and his family moved across the country, he can't really be blamed. Can fate, first love, and a warm smile convince Emma kismet does exist? 



A warm finger tapped on Emma Riley’s bare shoulder. She straightened her posture and tried to shrug off the touch. Emma didn’t like bars, hated the men who tried to pick up on her even more. But her coworkers insisted on a post-seminar drink.
“My friend says he knows you.” Emma turned at the sound of the deep voice behind her, as did her three coworkers.
“That’s a great line, but I’m not interested.” The man was handsome, looked jovial and safe. But Emma knew men in resort bars were looking for a fling. And she didn’t do flings.
“I agree with you. But he,” the man gestured over his shoulder, “he insists he knows you. I bet him twenty bucks he doesn’t.”
Emma’s gaze was drawn to the back of the bar, where a man with spiky blonde hair sat, shaking his head. When he looked up his eyes locked with hers and her heart stalled. Even the lopsided grin was the same as it had been when she’d last seen him. Over a decade ago, in junior high.
Emma slipped off the barstool, her feet barely touching the ground as she made her way to his table. He stood as she approached, his smile widening until dimples pressed into his cheeks.
“Colin Davis, when did you get so tall?” Emma smiled up at him, unsure if hugging him would be appropriate. It had been so long. They’d known each other most of their lives, up until the day his parents split up and they moved away. When he said goodbye he’d kissed her. Her first kiss.
“I started growing when I was about sixteen.” His eyes sparkled as he stepped closer, but he didn’t make a move, just pulled out a chair and motioned for her to sit.
“It must have been that Texas heat.” She took her seat and watched him take his. The boy she’d known barely visible in the man across from her. Still, he felt exactly as she remembered. Warm, accepting, honest. “Did you like it there?” 
“Texas?” Collin shrugged. “It was all right. Better than Florida, not as good as Colorado.”
“You kept moving?” Emma leaned forward in her chair; thankful for the reprieve from the clucking hens she worked with. At twenty-six she was a decade younger than any of them, which they felt gave them free reign to tell her how to live her life. Colin’s friend kept them occupied by the bar, allowing Emma to get answers to all the questions she’d had over the years.
“Every time Dad got promoted. I hoped we’d make it back to Oregon, but it never happened.”
They caught up on stories of old friends, traded tales of college, and shared about their families and jobs. Talked as comfortably as if not a day had passed.
“Emma, we’ve got a program at eight tomorrow morning.” She blinked to awareness, taking in Meredith, her supervisor, and the clock on the wall alerting her three hours had gone by while she reminisced with Colin. She should go, but her body stayed planted. She didn’t want to leave him again, not yet. She introduced her friend to Colin, explaining the amazing coincidence.
Colin shifted so he could shake Meredith’s hand across the table. His foot slid next to Emma’s, making her gasp as her body vibrated at the connection. Colin grinned as he chatted with Meredith, keeping his foot firmly against Emma’s.
“We’re going to head on up. Are you coming, Emma?” Meredith asked.
Emma’s stomach plummeted. She wanted to stay, but staying would subject her to office speculation for the next year, at least.
“Can you give me a minute?” Meredith made herself scarce and turned back to Colin. “I’d love to stay and catch up more, but we have to present our pitch at the convention tomorrow.”
“I’ll walk you up later.” He reached for her hand across the table, his grasp warm around her fingers, melting her resolve.
“I don’t want them, or you, to misinterpret what’s going on.”
Colin tilted his head to the side. “Please tell me you’re not engaged.”
“No, it’s not that.” Emma knew she was blushing, but continued. “I don’t have men in my room. Even old friends.”
“Wow. I always wondered what kind of woman you would become, Emma Riley.”
Emma chuckled and shook her head. Even in junior high the kids called her old-fashioned. “The same kind I always was, I suppose.”
“Even better than I remember.” Colin wrapped his other hand around hers. “Do you like your job? Not advertising, but the position you have? The firm you work for?”
Emma furrowed her brow and tried to catch his meaning. “I’m good at what I do.”
“But would you do it from Virginia, or do you need to stay in Oregon?”
“Virginia?” He’d said his aeronautics firm was based in Virginia. “I’m not sure what you mean.”
“I think there’s a reason we’re both here. It has to be fate, right?” Colin spoke quickly, his voice becoming hypnotic. “I mean, I know you never forget your first love, but it always felt like more than that. As if we really missed out on something. I was a kid then, there wasn’t much I could do about letting you go. But now, I don’t want to.”
“What are you saying?” Emma studied his face for clues, her heart wrapping around his words. First love. He’d been that for her, she’d fixated on him for years after he left. But she never imagined it had been the same for him.
“I don’t think there’s been a day I didn’t love you, Emma. When I moved I tried to convince myself we were fourteen, and that I’d get over it. But I never did. I always wondered where you were, who was holding you, how you felt when I left.”
Colin had been so brutally honest Emma couldn’t help but do the same. “I was heartbroken. No one has ever kissed me like you did.”
“It was my first time. I promise, I’ve gotten better.” The dimples were back, his smile so big it pressed into his eyes. Deep blue, fascinated, clever. She could stare into his eyes forever.
“It was fantastic.”
“You want to try it again?”
“Yes, but –”
“Come back with me to Virginia. I don’t want to be without you for another day. We let too many get away.”
Emma couldn’t deny the feeling of kismet, the power she’d felt when their stares met, the electricity when their bodies touched. It was nothing she’d ever experienced before. A nuance of feeling at once familiar and unknown.
“Emma? Are you ready to go?” Meredith’s voice broke the trance. Emma reigned in her thoughts, but kept her gaze on Colin. Did she dare? Her cheeks heated as a slow smile lifted her lips.
“I’m going to stay with Colin.” Forever.        

© 2007 Jenna Bayley-Burke

 Library Journal has this to say about Jenna Bayley-Burke's 3/26 novel release, Caribbean Casanova.
"An all-around good tale, with lots of spicy sensuality and graphic language. A good read for the beach this summer."