Showing posts with label Excerpt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Excerpt. Show all posts

Monday, January 20, 2014

Malpractice! The Novel by William Louis Harvey @sexandlawnovel

“Please excuse me, Doctor,” Paul interrupted. “I note that on my copy of this page, someone has drawn a ring around P-fifty-six. Do you know who drew that ring and why?”
“Objection,” said Charles Quick. “That was a compound question.”
“Sustained,” said the judge. “One question at a time, please, Mr. Butler.”
“I apologize to the court, Your Honor.” Paul continued, “Doctor, who drew the circle around P-fifty-six?”
“I did,” Dr. Black said.
“And, why did you draw that circle?”
Now Dr. Black seemed to gather confidence. “A pulse rate of fifty-six is slow for a child, and taken together with the information that she had hit her head, I worried about the possibility of bleeding causing increased pressure within the head since that is known to cause a slow pulse.”
“Objection!” Quick called. “This witness has not been qualified as an expert, so he is not permitted to express opinions but only facts.”
“Mr. Butler?” the judge questioned.
“Well, Your Honor, I see the problem, and we will revisit this issue later in the case. However, as the first physician to examine and suggest treatment for this patient, the doctor had to make decisions about a diagnosis and treatment based on his knowledge and experience.”
“Everything in the record is admissible,” said Quick. “However, the reason for his encircling the pulse figure is not explained in the record and is an opinion. I mean no offense, but the doctor was only an intern at the time—a doctor in training.”
“Objection sustained,” said Judge Davies.
Secretly Paul was pleased. He had managed to focus the jury’s attention on the pulse rate, an important issue in this case. (p. 54) Malpractice! the Novel



Malpractice_Cover_sansback1
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Genre – Steamy Courtroom Drama
Rating – R
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Saturday, January 11, 2014

#Fantasy #Excerpt The Curse Giver by Dora Machado @DoraMachado

Excerpt 2.  End of First Chapter 
 
The scent of pine turned acrid and hot. Cones crackled and popped. The fire hissed a sinister murmur, a sure promise of pain. She didn’t watch the little sparks grow into flames at her feet. Instead, her eyes returned to the back of the crowd, seeking the stranger’s stare. She found him even as a puff of white smoke clouded her sight and the fire’s rising heat distorted his scarred face’s fixed expression.
The nearing flames thawed the pervasive cold chilling her bones. Flying sparks pecked at her skin. Her toes curled. Her feet flinched. Pain teased her ankles in alarming, nipping jolts. Dear gods. They were really going to burn her alive.

Lusielle shut her eyes. When she looked again, the stranger was gone from the crowd. She couldn’t blame him. She would have never chosen to watch the flame’s devouring dance.

A commotion ensued somewhere beyond the pyre. People were screaming, but she couldn’t see through the flames and smoke. She flinched when a lick of fire ignited her shift’s hem. A vile stink filled her lungs. Her body shivered in shock. She coughed, then hacked. Fear’s fiery fingers began to torment her legs.

“Come and find me,” she called to the God of fire.

And he did.

Curse Giver
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Genre – Fantasy/Dark Fantasy
Rating – PG-18
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Sunday, January 5, 2014

The King of Sunday Morning by J.B. McCauley @MccauleyJay

Missing In Action

1997

Barry Flint was dying. He was drifting in and out of consciousness. Killed by the cancer and chemotherapy, his body was giving up the fight. He knew his daughter was by his side. He knew he was in the prison hospital. Thank God it would be over for her.

Jo had followed him wherever he had gone. After embezzling five hundred large out of the wine store, they had needed to scarper quick like. He had thought about Spain but found The Algarve far more anonymous. From Essex to Portugal and back again. All up four years on the run and for what? To die a creeping death in a cage of fools.

She had followed him to Wandsworth Prison when Interpol had finally caught up with them. Away from the romance of her life. Away from the one man who would love her in spite of her father. He had made a deal with the people that mattered. Jo would be safe but she would never feel that blinding love that she had found on those sun-kissed shores with Tray. Barry had never forgiven himself for that and the guilt had wracked him ever since. Perhaps that was why the cancer had manifested itself. A display of the guilt he felt towards his daughter.

He surrendered to the morphine. He was so dosed up he couldn’t open his eyes but he could feel her presence.

“Dad?” His eyes flickered but remained firmly shut. “There’s someone here to see you.”

Again his eyes rolled behind the lids. Jo made way for a man that she recognised but did not know. Once, when her Mum and Dad were counting out fifty-pound notes on the lounge room floor, he had come round and taken away plastic bags full of cash. He had mentioned something about cleaning and left. She had never seen him again until this moment.

The suited, burly man bent down and spoke softly into the ear of the emaciated body. Barry recognised the smell of his aftershave first and then the deep voice of yesteryear unfurled like wisps of smoke in his ramshackle mind.

“He says ‘thank-you’ Barry”, the man gently touched Barry’s shoulder. “You have nothing to worry about. A promise is a promise. Jo will be sweet.”

Barry smiled. Jo saw it. She gasped. The darkness swirled around him as she felt for his hand. He remembered what he had done and why and suddenly he was there. Amongst those dunes.

The wind stung his face as it blew off the Atlantic. The muzzle flashed. He left the body where it lay, face down in the sand. ‘Scum’, he thought to himself. He put the gun inside his jacket and turned his back on the boiling ocean. Now his journey home could begin.

The tears started to flow. He didn’t want to stay anymore. He felt her squeeze his hand. The darkness descended, never again releasing its hold on Barry Flint. Jo Flint slowly let go her father’s hand and inevitably, her father with it.

King of Sunday Morning

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Genre – Thriller, Action, Suspense, Gangster, Crime, Music

Rating – PG-18

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Quality Reads UK Book Club Disclosure: Author interview / guest post has been submitted by the author and previously used on other sites.

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Julia (The Good Life series) by Sarah Krisch

2.

Juggling her laptop bag and purse, she somehow managed to unlock the three deadbolts to her walk-up apartment. As Julia kicked the door closed behind her, Nora came bursting into the entryway. Never short of energy, Nora was even more over-the-top than usual as she squealed with excitement.

"What? What is it?" Julia said, setting her things down on the kitchen counter.

"Didn't you get my message on your cell?

"No, I was just in to see Gloria. I didn't even check my messages." Julia pulled out her cell phone and noticed that she had indeed missed a call. She must've been under the hair dryer when it rang. She felt the urge to listen to the message, but thought Nora would kill her if Julia didn't let her pass on the earth-shattering news.

"So what is it? Did I finally win the lottery?"

"No, even better!" Nora took hold of Julia's hand and practically dragged her into their small living room.

"What? What is it?" Julia asked.

Nora made Julia sit on the loveseat before she leaned against the desk crammed into the corner of the room. With her eyes shining and a smile wide across her olive-toned skin, she was about to start speaking but couldn't help herself. Her hands shook in front of her and she let out another squeal. Julia hadn't seen her this excited since she received her acceptance letter to the Chicago Veterinary School of Medicine.

"Nora, you're starting to scare me. Who called?"

"Darius."

Julia's agent only called when he had good news to share; otherwise he preferred to dispense disappointment via email.

"Darius called… and what? Did he sell my book?"

"Even better!"

"Don't tell me it's a multi-book offer!" Julia's heart raced at the possibilities. If she landed a multi-book deal, she might actually be able to pay her bills on time. She might actually start to feel like an adult instead of existing in the muddled land of the almost-grown-up. Darius had been shopping a book-length compendium of her syndicated column for a few months, but had only received nibbles from book publishers. Julia had doubted Darius when he originally contacted her to offer his representation. After all, if the Herald didn't want the rights to her blog, why would a book publisher?

"Not just a book offer. A book and TV deal! Can you believe it?"

"Wait…" Julia leaned back on the old couch they'd had since their college days. If she'd been standing, she would've probably been wobbly on her newly pedicured feet. "Are you sure you heard him right? Book… and TV? What do you mean TV? Like an appearance on Live With Kelly and Michael? Oh, don't tell me, he got me a spot on Ellen!"

"No, silly. A TV deal, as in a deal for your own TV show. He said something about Randal Publishing and its subsidiary—"

"GreenTV? He landed me a show on GreenTV?"

"Actually… yeah."

Julia felt short of breath. She had to stand, had to walk. If she didn't move around she would explode. After pacing the small living room two, three, and four times, she realized she was holding her breath.

"You… you aren't playing the worst ever practical joke, are you?" Julia finally said.

"This is me you're talking to, your best friend. I wouldn't do that to you."

"I know you wouldn't, it's just…" Julia said, and then her pacing led her into the kitchen. She looked at the clock on the microwave: 3:17 p.m. She figured it was close enough to happy hour, especially when she had something to be happy about. She grabbed a bottle of elderberry wine, a vintage from a valley farm not more than a mile from her grandparents' home. She exited the kitchen while carrying the wine bottle and two mismatched glasses, decidedly not of the wine variety. "Want a glass?" she asked, but before Nora could answer, she continued. "It's just… I can't wrap my mind around it. How can this be happening to me?"

"Yes, I'll have a glass," Nora said. "Here, let me open that. Your hands are shaking." Nora hurried to the kitchen for the corkscrew. When she returned, she took the bottle from Julia and uncorked it.

Julia held up the glasses as Nora poured. As she poured, Julia saw her gorgeous manicure, and that her hands were indeed shaking terribly.

"This is happening to you because you deserve it. You're talented, beautiful, and hard-working. No one deserves it more than you."

Julia couldn't say anything for fear she would start crying. And if she started crying, then Nora would start crying. Julia could tell that Nora knew what she was thinking; she took a sip of wine and stepped away, casting her gaze out the window over the desk. The view was of the pitted, crumbling brick wall of the building across the narrow alley. That view was reason alone for Julia to justify spending so much of her time at Gloria's salon.

And to think, all of those mani/pedis helped her to land the deal of a lifetime.

Julia drank half of her wine and felt the tightness in her chest easing. Her breathing was steadying.

"So Darius... what else did he say?"

"Not much. I'm not his client, you are. And I suggest you call him back, especially before that wine starts kicking in."

"Okay. I'll call." Julia took her cell phone from her pocket. "But one thing."

"Sure, anything."

"Stay here when I talk to him. I don't think I'll remember how to speak if I make this call by myself."

"I wouldn't miss it for the world. Just make sure you put it on speakerphone."

As Julia punched in Darius' number, Nora gasped, "I can't believe I took a phone message for a future TV star!"

Julia

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Genre – Contemporary Romance

Rating – PG-13

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Quality Reads UK Book Club Disclosure: Author interview / guest post has been submitted by the author and previously used on other sites.

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Her Books Presents: Book Club Picks @Kathleen01930

I
The painter Georges Braque once said that there is only one valuable thing in art, the thing that you cannot explain. All my life I have marveled at people who think they understand things, that they have answers. Such confidence is astonishing to me. For many years, I thought myself deficient in that I never felt I knew much of anything. It was only when I began to study art, to seriously study art, that I realized what passed for great assurance and knowledge in many people was simply their decision to terminate their thinking at the point where they became uncomfortable.
It is to me one of life’s great mysteries that there are those who can ignore or eliminate feelings that they don’t want. I never thought I had a choice. I thought that the assault of emotions that were so much an everyday part of my life as a child were as confusing to everyone as they were to me. I don’t remember when I first realized that not only did most people not feel and sense and experience what I did, they didn’t believe such experiences existed.
The study of art was my salvation. I thought I was mad - so did a good many other people. But when I began to look at art and to let it enter my spirit as erotically and powerfully as a lover would enter my body, I realized something that has haunted all of my life. I am different. I am both blessed and cursed. I was born missing a layer of protection between myself and the world that most people have and are totally unaware of having. And, worse, there is no way for me to acquire it. I am like those strange invalids whose resistance to every form of bacteria is so fragile that they can only exist inside a climate-controlled bubble. Only it is not bacteria that infects me and threatens my wellbeing, it is something far less tangible. I am profoundly sensitive to energetic forces that I cannot explain - powerful feelings, hidden longings, mysterious urges, strong thoughts - all the things that most people do their best to conceal from the world. They are as real and accessible to me as the beauty mark on a pretty girl’s cheekbone or the delight in a man’s eyes when he beholds her.
My name is Tempest Hobbs. I am descended from a long line of sensitives. One of my great grandmothers, many generations back, was Deliverance Hobbs who was tried as a witch in Salem, Massachusetts in 1692. But my great (I forget how many greats) grandmother was not among those executed on Gallows Hill. Her life was spared because she confessed. She admitted she was a witch.
I have lived in Salem all my life but for a few years spent at college and studying abroad. What I learned when away from Salem was that, different though I am, this difference is less tolerable in much of the world than it is here in Salem. In Salem there are three kinds of people: those who think the metaphysical is nonsense; those who have developed clever ways to earn their living from metaphysical gifts which they may or may not actually possess; and those, like me, who live with this curse in whatever form it takes, and do our best to lead a normal life. Whatever that is.
These days Salem has transformed into a theme park of the occult. Witch museums, psychic readers and astrologers, shops offering amulets and potions, tarot cards and herbs, draw tourists from around the country. I need only  leave the house here off of Derby Street to walk past business after business catering to this trade. I pass Derby Wharf where the Official Witch of Salem sells feathers and beads, rocks and books, past Pyramid Books filled with hundreds of books on every manner of occult and metaphysical subject. I turn the corner and walk up Hawthorne Boulevard past Fatima’s Psychic Studio and turn down Essex Street past Crow Haven Corner. Between these establishments are smaller shops. The occult is big business here in Salem. By the time I arrive at the Peabody Essex Museum where I work I have been assaulted by every conceivable sort of metaphysical purveyor.
Let me add that I am not one of those who choose to make use of their metaphysical endowments. I don’t call what I have a gift. Curse would be more appropriate. Curse because I have no say in the matter. As a child I was often the recipient of a stern look, a sharp rebuke, or a swat, and I never knew why. When I tried to comfort my mother’s friend for being sad when her latest lover abandoned her, she flew into a tizzy and called me a presumptuous little shit. How was I to know that it was crucial to her pride that everyone think the man had left due to a job offer in another city and not because he was tired of her?
My father’s family was somewhat more tolerant. My mother’s never much liked me.
“Sweetie,” my Aunt Honor Hobbs would say, “you’ve got to be more careful how you talk to people. Grownups can be very proud. They don’t like it when you tell their secrets.”
“But, Auntie H,” I’d wail, “I didn’t tell any secrets. I heard her say she was miserable without him and would be so good to him if he would just come back. She asks God all the time to make him come back to her!” My indignation was as righteous as my feelings were wounded.
“I know, baby,” she sighed, holding my hands, kissing my cheeks and my damaged pride. “I know you hear her say those things.  But they were secret things to her, she didn’t want anyone else to know about them.”
“But then why did she say them?”
Of course, what Auntie H had no way to explain to me was that though people were not talking to me, I was listening to them. It confused me for years.
Art, blessed art, was my salvation. It all began with a painting of a girl in a garden by Robert Vonnah that hung in the Colonial Tavern’s Tearoom where Auntie H took me for lunch or treats.
Auntie H Hobbs was a beautiful woman. I spent more of my childhood with her than I did with my parents. My mother was a nurse at the local hospital and my father taught auto mechanics in a nearby vocational-technical school. We lived near Collins Cove on the way to the Salem Willows, but Auntie H lived in an eighteenth-century house just around the corner from the House of the Seven Gables.  My earliest memories are of days spent at Auntie H’s, day-dreaminging in her wild, fragrant garden, learning to play the piano and knit in her pretty parlor, walking down the street to where it ended at a small stony beach along Salem Harbor. Even after I started school at St. Bernadette’s I’d walk down Derby Street, past Pickering Wharf and the liquor store called Bunghole - a name that made the boys laugh hysterically, though it was years before I figured out why. I passed the Customs House where Nathaniel Hawthorne once worked, and the Maritime Park, and then went down Auntie H’s little side street. When Mama came for me after her shift at the hospital, I always begged to be allowed to stay over which was fine with Auntie H. She’d put on one of her spectacular silk kimonos and a slouchy velvet hat with feathers or roses. We’d walk back across Derby Street to the Colonial Tavern.
The painting hung in a gilded frame between two of the front windows and, if the table below it was available, I’d claim it before the server had a chance to seat us. I thought the painting was the most perfect thing I had ever seen. The garden reminded me of Auntie H’s, filled with pink and white flowers with touches of blue and violet. The girl was young, dressed in pink with a sash around her waist. She sat, hands folded in her lap, leaning against a tree. Her eyes were closed. Auntie H told me the name of the painting was “Daydreamer”. I loved it.
What I loved the most was that when I looked at it, when I focused on it, I could shut out all the chatter that seemed to be going on in my head.  If I wasn’t concentrating there were all these strange thoughts that assaulted me as people passed by... I love that, wonder if it’s for sale... I hate that, impressionists are a bore... Wouldn’t mind nailing her... Wonder what that’s worth... But when I looked at the painting, let my mind enter into it, shutting out everything except the beauty of the work, the voices went away. It’s been that way ever since.
Let me tell you something about this Curse, it makes leading a normal life impossible. There are times when I am less conscious of it than at others but there is always this incessant buzz, this tickle of emotions, this awareness of stuff that is not my business, and that I don’t want to know. I have no idea how I got this way. Was it something inherited from my infamous ancestor? I don’t know. But it makes my life more miserable than you would believe. I won’t bore you with the recitation of boyfriends that have come and gone in my life. Gone, all of them. But that is not the worst.
You may have seen true crime shows on television in which a psychic is involved. Perhaps you think it is a joke or a scam, something to snicker about. I can’t speak for other sensitives but from my own experience I can tell you it is more horrible than anyone can imagine. It has happened to me three times. The last one was the worst. It went on for months and ended badly. Believe me when I tell you the emotions that assailed me through those months, right up to the bitter end, were indescribable. My mother, a nurse for close to forty years, could scarcely bear to approach the hospital’s locked ward where the most traumatic cases were confined. She could not bear to see what had become of her daughter, the weeping, terrified wreck that huddled in a rocking chair begging to die. My poor mother.
              I have been home and back at work for four weeks now. But I sometimes wonder how much longer I will be able to hang on.
51lDsNSAR9L
Samples to Savor: Book Club Picks, presented by Her Books:
Discover your book club’s next page-turner and spark fascinating conversations with your friends in this free sampling from eight bestselling authors. You’ll find rich prose, evocative plots, compelling characters and surprising twists from:
Finding Emma by Steena Holmes
Composing Myself by Elena Aitken
Spare Change by Bette Lee Crosby
The Scandalous Ward by Karla Darcy
The Tree of Everlasting Knowledge by Christine Nolfi
The Promise of Provence by Patricia Sands
Broken Pieces by Rachel Thompson
Depraved Heart by Kathleen Valentine
About the Author(s):
Bestselling authors Steena Holmes, Elena Aitken, Rachel Thompson, Patricia Sands, Christine Nolfi, Kathleen Valentine, Bette Lee Crosby and Karla Darcy provide readers worldwide with contemporary fiction and nonfiction releases ranging from historical romance to literary.
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Genre –  Women’s Fiction
Rating – PG
Connect with the authors on Faceboook

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Infernal Gates by Michael J. Webb @mjwebbbooks

Chapter 4

Professor Alec Bernard adjusted his battered, ten year-old sunglasses as he glanced up at the cloudless azure sky. He was grateful for the crumpled Tilley hat he wore as protection against the relentless onslaught of the southern-equatorial sun that hung suspended above him like a giant molten pearl.

The fifty-something professor from Wyoming licked his parched, cracked lips, then used the back of his hand to wipe away a small river of sweat from his furrowed brow. At times, it had seemed to him as if the furnace-like heat was a living thing—a voracious parasite feeding on a hapless host.

Here, on the plateau the Khoikhoi called the land of thirst, it was winter, but the temperature had already reached more than one hundred degrees Fahrenheit. It was one of the many paradoxes of the Great Karoo—a place near the southern rim of Africa where it was either too hot or too cold, and always too dry.

Reluctantly, Alec stopped digging and took a rare break from the endless hours of work that had consumed his days for the past three weeks. He dropped his shovel, bent down and picked up his half-full canteen, carefully unscrewed the cap, then took several measured sips of the lukewarm water.

As he sipped the precious liquid, his grey-blue eyes roamed over the vast and desolate landscape, marveling at the stark beauty of his private hunting grounds. Earlier, as he and his promising young Graduate Assistant, Donald, had hiked in from their base camp, they’d watched the sun rise over the snow-capped Swartberg Mountains. They ringed the high desert plateau like a massive natural garland.

It was hard for him to put into words the gamut of conflicting emotions he experienced whenever he worked in a place like this; a place where his wrinkled face had become chronically red and cracked from the sun and wind, where his body had accumulated a myriad of small, perennially infected sores. The sores were the result of his skin being repeatedly pierced by thorns, cut by barbed wire, and bruised by falls onto sharp rocks. The emotions were the result of his ongoing love-affair with the distant past.

Satisfied he’d allowed himself enough of a break to stave off dehydration, he carefully screwed the cap back on the canteen.

He was about to resume digging, when something odd happened.

He heard his name whispered—

“Alec—

Startled, he turned, expecting to see his Graduate Assistant.

But Donald was nowhere in sight.

“Must be the heat,” he muttered as he returned to the task before him. With practiced precision he sifted a few more inches of the loose rock and dusty topsoil with his shovel.

Then, he heard his name whispered again.

“Alec. Come to me—”

At first, he thought it was Donald playing a practical joke on him, something the capricious young man was well-known for. He looked up and scanned the immediate area around him, then realized the guttural voice had come from inside his head.

He sat down, took several deep breaths, hoping the infusion of oxygen would banish the uncomfortable feeling in the pit of his stomach.

“Better relax a few minutes,” he told himself as he watched a large scorpion make its way across the rock-strewn ground. It stalked a grasshopper twice its size. With lightning-fast speed, the small predator pounced upon the unsuspecting insect and pierced it with its venomous stinger. The grasshopper writhed in agony, then shuddered and died. The deadly carnivore disappeared inside a tiny crevice and dragged its afternoon meal with it.

Suddenly exhausted, Alec leaned back against a huge boulder, adjusted his Tilley so that it provided a measure of shade for his face, and closed his eyes.

Immediately, a boyhood memory filled his mind.

He sat on his father’s lap and listened to one of his dad’s endless stories. On this occasion, his father told a tale from the Old Testament. It was about a man—what was his name? Joshua. Apparently, Joshua had commanded the sun to stand still and it obeyed. For three days! Alec asked his dad if the account was true. His father, a dedicated churchgoer, replied, “That’s a good question, son. According to Pastor Corwin, it is.”

“What do you think?” he’d pressed.

His father frowned, then answered, “I honestly don’t know.”

It dawned on him years later that his father’s lack of faith in the veracity of the Bible had sown within him the seeds of an antagonistic skepticism about anything related to God.

“Professor, come here! I’ve found something extraordinary.”

Alec’s eyes snapped opened.

He blinked repeatedly as his eyes adjusted to the sudden glare of sunlight. He heard a loud screeching sound above him and looked up. A huge bird circled overhead. At first, he thought it was a gigantic blue crane soaring on the invisible currents of heated air like a glider as it searched for any signs of food hidden among the thorny veldt spread out below. As he looked closer, he realized it wasn’t a crane—it was a vulture. One of the largest he’d ever seen.

“Professor, where are you?”

He stood up and brushed the dust from his shorts, grabbed his shovel and canteen, then walked around the huge boulder that had hidden him from view.

His assistant waved and shouted, “Professor—over here!”

He made his way toward Donald, mindful of the prickly bracken that dotted the landscape and careful to avoid the small boulders that were his nemesis. When he reached the younger man, he asked, “Okay, what’s all the excitement about? You were shouting loud enough to wake the dead.”

“I found an opening where there shouldn’t be one.”

“What?”

“Yesterday, that embankment was a wall of solid rock.” Donald pointed in the direction of one of the many low hills, or kopjes, as the few local inhabitants referred to them. Unlike traditional hills, which were rounded at the top, the ones on this plateau were all flat. The odd-looking formations were a result of a unique kind of geologic activity virtually unknown anywhere else.

Alec raised his hand to shield his eyes and squinted.

The scorching afternoon heat radiated off the black earth in shimmering waves. There was also a haze of heated air between him and the spot fifty yards away where his graduate assistant pointed. “You’re certain it wasn’t there yesterday? Openings that size don’t appear in solid rock over night—unless something unusual happened, like an earthquake.”

“Professor,” Donald said in a tone of voice that barely hid his displeasure at being challenged, “yesterday you pointed out that particular cliff to me as an exquisite example of the kind of violent geologic activity this plateau is well-known for. You also reminded me that the dolerite formations at the top are the residual imprint of the massive displacement of the continental shelf. I believe your exact words were, ‘This particular formation brings to mind what Hell might look like on a good day.’”

“U-m-m-m, so I did.”

Half a mile away, a flash of heat lightening struck the earth, accompanied by a loud crack of thunder. At the same time the wind, which had been blowing for the past half hour, stopped.

A loud buzzing sound filled the abrupt silence.

Alec squinted in the direction of the irritating sound. An odd-looking, undulating black cloud was headed toward them at incredible speed. “Run!” he shouted as he suddenly took off in the direction of the newly-created opening.

Donald glanced at the Professor’s fleeing back, then at the strange-looking cloud, and ran. He caught up with his mentor half way to the opening. “Why are we running?” he gasped.

Before the professor could reply, he got his answer.

A huge swarm of the largest, blackest flies he had ever seen overtook them. They were blood flies and they were very hungry. Everywhere one of them found bare skin was a place they could bite, and feed. Like ticks, they used body heat and carbon dioxide signatures to track their prey from great distances. Then, they used a pair of incredibly sharp, miniature pincers to grab hold of your skin. Finally, they drilled their retractable proboscis into your body and sucked out as much blood as their tiny stomachs could hold, swelling to twice their normal size.

Alec and Donald stumbled the last few feet to the opening in the cliff. Incredibly, once they reached the cave entrance, the flies retreated in mass, as if on command. A small remnant remained, still attached to the two men, those few who had become trapped by their own insatiable lust for blood.

Donald brushed the pesky insects from his body. “Whew, that was really weird. I’ve dealt with horseflies before, but I’ve never seen—or experienced—anything like that.”

“Neither have I,” Alec muttered as he stared out at the desert.

“Then why did you yell for us to run?”

Alec pulled his gaze from the sun-drenched plateau and returned Donald’s puzzled look with one of his own. “I—I’m not certain—”

Donald shook his head. “Like I said, Professor, weird, really weird.”

Alec pulled two remaining blood flies from his body and crushed them under his feet, amazed they could inflict such pain. “Look at this,” he said as he bent over and picked up one of several medium-sized pieces of polished black rock scattered around the cave floor. “If I’m not mistaken, this is Cephren/Khafre diorite!”

Donald grabbed the unusual-looking rock out the professor’s hand and walked over to the cave entrance. When the sunlight hit the stone, it exhibited a faint bluish color. “It can’t be!”

“Feldspar iridescence,” Alec muttered over his shoulder, distracted by something else. “A metamorphic signature classic to the ancient quarry used by a number of Egyptian pharaohs. It was located sixty-five kilometers north of Abu Simbal, the site where Ramses II built his tomb along the banks of the Aswan—a remote area along today’s Egyptian/Sudanese border.”

“How the hell did granite quarried by the son of the Pharaoh Cheops over five thousand years ago from a site in the Nubian desert get here?”

Alec ignored the question, pulled a small flashlight from his back pocket, and turned it on as he moved deeper into the cave.

Once, they’d forgotten to bring a flashlight with them. They’d been lost in the utter darkness that fell like a thick, black curtain within minutes of sunset. It had taken them over three hours to find their way back to their camp in the moonless night. If their Khoikhoi guide, Heitsi, hadn’t built a huge fire that could be seen from several miles away, they would have wandered all night. Since that time, he never went anywhere without one.

“If you think that’s unusual, come take a look at this.”

Donald stuck the bluish-black piece of granite in the back pocket of his shorts as he walked over to where the professor stood. “This is incredible!”

“Do you recognize any of the motifs?” Alec whispered.

“I need more light.”

Alec stepped closer to the rear wall of the cave and held the flashlight up higher. Donald stepped in front of him, close enough to the cave wall to touch it.

“This is one of the most extraordinary renderings I have ever seen, or read about.” One of Donald’s hobbies was the study of ancient rock art. When he wasn’t traveling the world hunting for the fossilized remains of dinosaurs, he visited various remote sites around the world to view primitive rock art.

“Don’t keep me in suspense, young man, what are we looking at?”

Donald slipped into his teaching mode as their roles reversed. “There are two broad categories of rock art—engravings, commonly known as petroglyphs, and paintings, more precisely referred to as pictographs. Both have similar themes and images, although engravings tend to show less detail and fewer human figures.”

“I assume the distribution of the two techniques is primarily governed by geology.”

Donald nodded. “Engravings typically occur out in the open and are usually associated with igneous rock, like the dolerite we have here. Paintings, on the other hand, are most often found where there are cave or rock shelters, in outcrops of granite, or in formations of limestone, sandstone, and quartzite. I don’t know of any that have been discovered where the canvas was volcanic rock.”

Alec panned the light over the huge rock art work. A thoughtful look rippled across his weather-beaten face and a sudden chill raced up and down his spine. There was nothing overtly sinister about the ancient rendering, it just felt wrong.

“Go on.”

“What makes this unique is not only its size, but the fact that it consists of elements of both engravings and paintings. I don’t know of any place in the world where they’ve ever been found together in a solitary piece of art. We’re looking at something no one has ever discovered before.”

Alec moved the light slightly to the left and his eyes grew wide. “Can you date this work with any degree of accuracy?” he asked, a strange tone in his voice.

“Most South African rock art work I’ve studied dates back about twenty-seven thousand years,” Donald answered, engrossed in the art work. “But all of the work that old is much more primitive than this.”

Alec’s hands trembled.

“Based upon the incredible detail, the intricate complexity, and the astonishing preservation,” Donald continued, “I’d guess this particular rendering is probably only four or five thousand years old. We’ll have to radiocarbon date it to be certain.”

Alec let out the breath he’d been holding. “Then how do you explain this?” he whispered as he focused the flashlight on the most dramatic scene in the rendering.

Donald turned, saw what the Professor had been staring at, and answered haltingly, “Something is very wrong. There’s no way that animal should be in this picture.”

In front of them was a striking, full color, life-size image of the ferocious beast whose bones they’d been searching for in the dust and dirt of the high-desert plateau for the past three weeks. The Tyrannosaurus Rex of its day, it was at one time the largest land-dwelling carnivore on the planet.

“Gorgon,” Donald whispered.

Alec stepped forward to get a better look and stretched forth his hand to touch the rendering, a look of awe on his face.

That was when his flashlight went out.

Darkness engulfed the two men like a thick black cloak.

“Hell of a time for the batteries to go dead,” Alec groused as he shook his flashlight.

Donald gagged and coughed. “What’s that smell?”

Alec choked as a putrid stench filled his nostrils. Then, he again heard the grating, guttural voice that had beckoned to him earlier. “Alec. Come to me—Now!”

“Did you hear that?” he managed, struggling to breathe through his mouth and talk at the same time.

“Hear what?” Donald gasped as he turned and ran for the cave entrance, and the light.

“Don’t leave me here alone, Donald,” Alec yelled after his assistant, his voice cracking.

As the two men stumbled out of the cool darkness of the cave into the blistering heat of the veldt, they were greeted by a tall, thin, muscular black man with deep-set, ebony-black eyes.

“Heitsi, what are you doing here?” a surprised Alec asked after he’d gulped several deep breaths of clean air.

Instead of answering, their Khoikhoi guide stared at the cave entrance. Frowning, he walked past the two men, toward the giant slit in the rock and sniffed the air. When he turned around he had a scowl on his face as he asked, “Have you seen heat lightening today?”

Alec nodded.

“What about blood flies?”

Dumbfounded, both men looked at one another.

The African raised his arms over his head in a V shape, said something in Khoisan, then turned his back on the cave entrance and strode past the two of them. When he was about fifteen feet away, he stopped and turned. There was a look of barely controlled fear in his eyes. “You have awakened the Unmentionable. It’s no longer safe here—”

With that, he resumed his hasty departure.

Donald looked at the professor. “What the hell was that all about?”

Alec glanced down at the flashlight in his hand. The light was on. Evidently, the batteries were not dead.

When he looked back up, his eyes were riveted to the retreating back of the black man he’d used as his guide for the past five years, wondering the same thing. He’d only heard Heitsi use the word Unmentionable once before—and on that occasion it had frightened him as nothing else in his life ever had.

Infernal Gates

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Genre – Christian Thriller, Fantasy, Adventure

Rating – PG-13

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Website http://www.michaeljwebbfiction.com/

Monday, November 25, 2013

DELETED SCENE ONE TEARS OF TESS – Pepper Winters @PepperWinters

DELETED SCENE ONE

TEARS OF TESS

Copyright PEPPER WINTERS

(unedited)

The sparkling pool sprawled before us, flowing under quirky bridges, around islands of palm trees, with an infinity edge cascading onto the beach. The crisp teal water glistened against the dark sapphire of the sea, like a priceless gem.

Already my skin pricked with sweat and we’d only just left our room. My white bikini, embroidered with little black seahorses, made my skin look darker than its natural shade of white, and my flower crocheted sundress revealed glimpses of flesh through the needlework. Both items I’d bought at the Melbourne markets a few days ago. I wanted to look hot for Brax. I hadn’t been working out this hard at the university gym for nothing.  I was in the best shape of my life, tight and toned; I had every intention of flashing my man.

Maybe that was why my libido was sky-high?  Didn’t people say your sex drive increased when you exercised?

I peered at Brax across the table, eating his breakfast of fresh fruit and cereal. He wasn’t like a typical Aussie builder. He didn’t eat pies or junk food. He took care of himself, and his exercise came in the form of lugging bricks and timber around in the toiling Melbourne sun.

He crunched a mouthful of muesli, watching me with an amused look. “You’re spacing again, Tessie. Anything you want to tell me?”

So adorable in his lavender t-shirt and baggy white shorts, he was the poster boy of holiday chic. His hair damp from a shower and a droplet of milk trembled on his lower lip.

My stomach clenched. I unsuccessfully tried to get him in the mood this morning. Food was the only thing on his brain. But now that we’d eaten…I had a plan.

Tears of Tess

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Genre – Dark New Adult Contemporary Romance

Rating – PG-18

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Website http://www.pepperwinters.wordpress.com/

 

Quality Reads UK Book Club Disclosure: Author interview / guest post has been submitted by the author and previously used on other sites.

Friday, November 22, 2013

Isabella: Braveheart of France by Colin Falconer @colin_falconer

Chapter 5

Two weeks later Isabella prepares to become a queen. “How do I look?”

“You look beautiful, your grace,” Isabella de Vescy tells her. She is much older than her other ladies and has taken her in hand, as if she thinks she needs a mother. Perhaps she does.

“Do I look regal?”

Even in the polished steel mirror she sees the frown of hesitation. “Very regal,” the younger one, Eleanor, tells her and earns a frown of rebuke from de Vescy that she thinks Isabella does not see.

Well of course I do not look regal. I look like a twelve years old girl, over-primped and overdressed; if not for these ribbons and artifices I would disappear inside this gown and my uncles would have to hack a way through the taffeta and velvet with their swords to free me.

“Will Gaveston be there?”

De Vescy shrugs with all the eloquence that a mature woman can muster.

“Why does no one want to talk about him?

Valois bursts in. Her uncle comes and goes as he pleases, it seems, immune to Madame de Vescy’s cold stares. He still treats her as a child, they all do.

He regards her gown and sighs. He had done much sighing since arriving in England. “Are you ready to become queen of England, your grace?”

She takes a deep breath and nods her head. She is ready for no such thing.

* * * * *

Isabella

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Genre – Historical Fiction

Rating – PG-13

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Thursday, November 21, 2013

The Kings of Charleston (Vol. 1) - Kat H. Clayton

Chapter Three

AS PROMISED, A LINCOLN TOWN Car was waiting in our driveway. I could only imagine what the perfect Romans called home. I was sure it would have Roman columns, scores of fountains, and statues of the Roman gods.

I didn’t have much time to really think about it, because apparently they only lived a few blocks away. How convenient, I thought sarcastically. The car stopped in front of large iron gates. Although the house was not far from our own, the street was dramatically different. The homes were much further apart, and they all had high fences surrounding them. I heard the familiar buzz of gates being opened as the driver slowly pulled into the driveway.

As we entered, I noticed the multitude of magnolia and oak trees lining the short, circular driveway. The car came to a halt at the front of the house. It appeared as equally old as our home, with its multiple porches, white wood siding and black shutters. It was hidden behind towering palm trees and oaks that created a bright green shroud around the third floor.

The driver stopped and opened the door for us. We proceeded up to the front door, where the Romans were waiting. Tyson looked even more handsome than he had earlier in his suit. His wife was dressed in a lilac strapless dress and her ebony hair was left loose around her face.

I searched for Cal, but he wasn’t standing behind his parents or anywhere on the porch. I was disappointed and hoped he would show up soon.

“Hello! I’m so glad you could join us,” boomed Tyson, as he grabbed my father’s hand. “And you both look gorgeous!” he shouted in my direction, revealing his beautiful white teeth. Mr. Roman definitely fell under my definition of a fake.

“Thank you,” Mother quietly whispered, and I could have sworn she half-curtsied.

We were ushered into the foyer, which was cavernous, with twenty-foot frescoed ceilings and columned archways. It reminded me of a cathedral I had seen in Rome, which was pretty ironic, given their last name.

Once in the large front living room, Mr. Roman pulled Dad to the side and began talking to him in a hushed voice. With a quick nod from Dad, they disappeared into the hallway, their dress shoes clacking on the floors. Mother was busy talking to Mrs. Roman. With no one to talk to, I decided to scrutinize the paintings in the room to stifle my boredom.

The room was very lavish and decorated with antiques, much like our house. There were thick brown velvet curtains covering the massive windows, and the walls were covered with light blue patterned wallpaper.

I was surprised to find the same painting that was in our living room. I made a rapid glance at my mother and Mrs. Roman. Their heads were tilted toward each other and they giggled together about something. I turned back to the painting and strained on my heels to look at the cherubic statue in the painting a little closer. I did have to admit Mother had been right about the high heels. They made it easier to see the painting clearly. Once again, there was the red writing of “Kythera Forever” emblazoned in almost the exact same spot.

“Hello, Casper.”

I stumbled a few steps back. I teetered on my heels for a moment before falling backward. Before I could hit the ground, a pair of strong hands grasped my forearms.

I turned around to see that Cal was smiling at me and suppressing a bit of laughter. He was gorgeous, I had to admit, but that wouldn’t make up for the fact that he probably had intended on scaring me.

“Sorry, I didn’t know you were in such deep concentration,” he said, grinning, his dimples showing.

Behind him, my mother and Mrs. Roman had both risen to their feet. Mrs. Roman was trying to suppress a laugh, but Mother looked anything but happy. Her red lips were pursed and her cheeks were set ablaze with blood. I felt my own cheeks flushing. I looked at her, shrugging my shoulders. I had never been so clumsy in my life.

“No, I should have been paying more attention,” I said, loud enough for Mother to hear. She instantly perked up, smiled, and continued her conversation.

I turned my attention to Cal and forced myself to smile at him. “Your painting is very interesting. We have one just like it in our house.” I glanced at the painting again.

“It’s a painting by Antoine Watteau called ‘Embarkation to Kythera’ or ‘Pilgrimage to Kythera.’”

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Genre – YA / Mystery / Suspense

Rating – PG13 (No sex scenes, some violence)

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Website http://kathclayton.com/

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Thirty Scary Tales by Rayne Hall @RayneHall

*

The next days passed in a wave of happiness, a gift from the gods. Laina looked radiant; and he had brought this about. For the first time in his life, he tasted what it meant to love.

During the day, they laboured; at night, they loved in bliss. The only shadow was the perfumed Kurush who devoured Laina with his lustful gaze, licking his lips as he stared her buttocks and bust. Turgan suspected that he was molesting her not only with looks but with words, and he longed to smash a fist into that lecherous face. But assaulting an officer would bring severe punishment not just for himself but Laina, so he swallowed his anger and restrained himself.

By simply being around Laina, he could keep her safe. Darrians respected marriage, and it was unlikely that the Darrian would force his advances on someone else's wife.

Being able to protect his wife filled his heart with a bliss he had not known before. He must stay around for as long as he could.

*

Thirty Scary Tales

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Genre – Horror

Rating – PG-13

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Quality Reads UK Book Club Disclosure: Author interview / guest post has been submitted by the author and previously used on other sites.

Monday, November 18, 2013

Excerpt: Evergreen by David Jester @DavidJester

3

Susie Flanagan was innocent; as pure as gold and as sweet as sugar was what her grandmother used to say. She was the perfect teenager, everything a mother and father could hope for. She took care of her two little sisters, cleaned up their endless streams of sick and shit, took them for walks around the park, cuddled them when they were tired and soothed them when they were ill. She sat by her grandmother’s bedside when she was sick, practically watched her die -- a slow and tortuous passage from this world to the next. She was loving, caring, adorable. That’s what her parents believed, that’s what everyone in Evergreen believed, but that was far from the truth.

Seventeen year old Susie had a wild side. What her parents didn’t know was that she often snuck out at night and had been doing so for years. She had spent many weekends at clubs, house parties or just hanging around on the street, getting drunk, meeting boys. The other girls didn’t go out to the clubs -- rarely left the community for fear of being stigmatised, abused as a ‘gypsy’ as outsiders tended to do -- but Susie fit in so well that no one knew she came from Evergreen. It wasn’t that she was ashamed of where she came from, she adored the culture, it just didn’t mix with the life that she wanted. The travelling community that she had been raised in stuck to fundamental ideals of no sex before marriage, it was a male-centred world where the job of a woman was to get married, have kids and spend her days cooking and cleaning. Susie wanted fun, drugs, boys and sex.

Her parents thought she was a virgin. They tried to set her up with a number of boys from the local communities, she wasn’t interested. They thought she might be gay -- what they didn’t know was that she already had a number of boyfriends and countless more sexual partners.

She had been visiting one of these -- a twenty-something man she’d met outside a rave, acting drunk and flirty and looking irresistible -- on the night she died. She’d stayed out a little later than she’d hoped, the night had dwindled away and the morning was quickly approaching, in a few hours her parents would rise and would expect her to be in bed, ready to look after the house and the soon-to-be-crying siblings.

She walked with a kick in her step, her high heeled shoes in her hand. Evergreen was accessed through a long gate, big enough for the caravans to fit through, but Patrick Ryan’s caravan was right next to it. He hadn’t been sleeping for the last couple of days, not since Siobhan had been murdered -- he would be awake, alert to the sound of an opening gate.

She went around the back, the route she always took. The park was bordered by thick rows of trees, their leaves intertwined to form a bushy perimeter. The ground was wet; it had been raining earlier, not heavy but enough to soften the mud. It squashed between her toes as she walked, cringing with every step.

She stood on something sharp, gave a gentle hiss of anguish and snapped back her foot. It was too dark to see what she had stepped on, or to see the resultant puncture wound in her foot. She cursed under her breath, imagined a torrent of blood seeping out of her foot.

She dug around in her pockets, momentarily alarmed when she couldn't find the phone, the last thing she needed was to have left it at the stranger’s house. He was drunk and seemed like an idiot, if he woke to find her gone and noticed her phone he might be dumb enough to dial the number listed as ‘home’. She swallowed thickly, scrunched her eyes shut until that thought disappeared.

Ohthankgod,” she muttered in a single breath when she felt the outline of the phone in her jacket pocket.

She heard something around her, felt something closing in on her. She always felt a little spooked out in the darkness, whenever she woke up in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom she usually left the hallway light on, fearful that if she turned her back on the darkness something would step out and grab her. It was stupid, childish even, but she couldn't help but feel that there was something in the blackness, waiting for her.

The darkness was unbearably thick but she knew her way around. She had walked this path many times. For most of the year it was okay, the trees were bare, allowing light from distant streetlights or the moon to light her path, but in the summer the leaves on the tees thickened, blocking out the moonlight and leaving her in blackness.

She instinctively edged sideways; sure that someone was standing by her side, preparing to lead her into the black.

Jesus Christ Susie, calm down,” she told herself, trying to brush off her stupidity.

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Genre – Horror

Rating – PG13

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Sunday, November 17, 2013

What Lies Inside by J.L. Myers @BloodBoundJLM

CHAPTER THREE

“Just a minute, Amelia,” Mom’s voice jarred me to a standstill on the porch.

Sheltered by the roofline’s shadow she produced a small cylindrical tube from the pocket of her designer sweats. After waiting up all night so she could see us off on our first day of school, she was ready to sleep through her first day. It was preparation for her new position at the Portsmouth Vampire Council, which began each weekday after twilight.

I snatched the tube from between her fingers and lifted it to eye level. “Nasal decongestant?” I questioned incredulously. “I just want to be invisible. But everyone is already going to be looking at the weird new girl. Now you want them to think I’m a dweeb too?”

“It’s menthol.” Mom shrugged. “I thought it might help distract your sense of smell.”

With a groan, I let Mom hug me. Then I retreated to the car, shoving the nasal tube into the glove box. There was no way in hell anyone was going to see me using that thing. Dorian was already in the driver’s seat, warming up the engine, as he always did.

“We’re not ready.” I glared at the opulent French mansion—our new home—shrinking in the rear-view mirror. Apparently Uncle Caius had a lot more money than I’d realized.

It was a double-story, with a mixture of stone and beige-rendered walls, soaring windows, and high ceilings inside. Acres of green land surround its walls, back-bordered by a thick shelter of oaks. There was a stone-bordered gate that fronted the property, offering a scenic view of the rolling swells of Rye Beach. Just watching the mansion shrink as we drove away made me long for the cabin. There I had felt safe, from myself. This mansion was too big, too cold. It could never feel like home. It could never feel safe.

The move had been inevitable. Kendrick had brainwashed Joel into believing he’d been attacked by a rabid dog. Being a Pure Blood, his ability to compel was stronger than any turned vamp’s. Still, Mom and Uncle Caius were worried that me being anywhere near Joel would break the compulsion and endanger our secret lives. So they weren’t about to take any chances. Our destination had been decided with a job offer. Uncle Caius wanted Mom on the Vampire Council in Portsmouth. With a little encouragement, she’d agreed. It was one of many sub councils that operated around the world in service to The Armaya, the epicenter of vampire legislation and politics. As the only surviving Pure Blood of his lineage, our uncle held a seat there on The Armaya’s Royal Vampire Council. After that our move had been arranged to the small, sleepy town of Rye, bordering Portsmouth, New Hampshire.

More than six months had passed at the cabin. It was hundreds of miles from our old home in Anchorage, and hidden amongst the wilderness of the Alaska Range. As Caius had predicted, Dorian began the transformation soon after our retreat. I couldn’t hide my relief at his fading fear of me. We were one and the same, cut from the same cloth, and now we shared a secret. The thing we had become.

“We are ready,” Dorian countered. “And you heard Mom. We passed all the tests successfully.”

With an irritated breath, I turned and stared out the window as manicured trees fronting oversized, gated properties passed by. Yesterday Mom admitted to the tests she had planned to assess our self-control. I had been beyond pissed. Still, no amount of arguing could change her mind. Now Dorian’s laid-back attitude was beginning to grate on my nerves. I clenched and unclenched my hands. “So we didn’t attack and kill a few delivery men. So what? How does that compare to a classroom full of blood-pumping human bodies?”

“Amelia,” Dorian said, glancing in the vanity mirror backing the sun visor. He ran a hand through his thick, dark hair to re-shape it. “We’ll be fine.” He looked at me sideways and smiled. “You know, you’re stronger than you give yourself credit for.”

I crossed my arms over my chest, doubting Dorian’s faith in me. How could he truly believe that after everything that happened?

When we first relocated to the cabin, Mom and had taught us to hunt. We started with herds of Caribou, graduating to more challenging prey like packs of wolves, and even the elusive mountain lion. Kendrick, between frequent snowboarding breaks, had come hunting too. But I had detested the whole process. How could honing our predatory instincts make us safer around humans? But as my natural desires took over, I became thrilled by the chase, my muscles snapping into action and my fangs ready and waiting. After each hunt, each kill, the thrill would dissipate, replaced by a body-shaking guilt. My speed, strength, and lust for blood proved beyond any and all doubt that I truly was a monster, and I always would be.

I took reprieve from one fact alone. Vampires weren’t immortal. Our lifespans were extended, but I wouldn’t forever be this bloodthirsty creature, a killer. One day I would die.

I pulled my New Student packet out of my bag and began memorizing my three-week class rotation and the school map. The last thing I wanted was to have to ask for directions.

A moment later Dorian turned off Ocean Boulevard onto the private, gated entrance of our new school, St. Volaras. It was the best private school in the area, holding over five hundred students. The size of the student body alone only unnerved me further. Today would be an assault of temptation from unknowing victims. And, if I did lose it, there would be countless witnesses that no amount of compulsion could cover up.

Dorian revved the engine of our turbo-charged Audi Cabriolet. He dropped back to second gear, following the line of high-end cars through the student parking lot. The A5 was a joint birthday present from our uncle Caius. It was a reward for coming so far in our ability to restrain.

Every part of me hated the car and everything it represented, everything it reminded me of. I glared at Dorian, knowing he’d revved the engine to draw attention. I hated that he was so confident and self-assured, when all I wanted to do was remain invisible.

Dorian ignored my glare and pulled into a spot rearing the lot, before jumping out of the car.

I sat without moving, wishing I could just disappear. Then Dorian poked his head back through the driver’s side door. “You can’t stay here all day.”

I bit the inside of my cheek. “Wanna bet?”

“C’mon,” Dorian said, rolling his eyes. “Don’t make me drag you to class kicking and screaming.”

Although his tone was joking, I didn’t doubt his threat. He was set on the idea of a normal life, and wasn’t about to let me mess that up for him. Cursing him under my breath, I snatched my bag from the back seat. Outside I yanked my hoodie over my head. It was my favorite jacket, black cotton with a detachable hood. If it had been made of leather it would have been perfect for riding a motorbike.

I got out of the car and froze. Students littered the parking lot. To me they resembled herding bovine, blissfully unaware and ripe for the picking. I groaned, picking up a scent that was all too familiar these days. Human blood. In the cool morning air it was faint, but still distinct.

“If I were you, I’d wipe that look off your face.” Dorian stepped in front of me, blocking my view of a group of preppy-looking girls. “People are beginning to stare.”

I looked away from the clustering students, refocusing on Dorian’s piercing silver-blue irises. They were now the same color as mine, and from what we’d been told, a consistent vampire trait. “What look?”

Dorian smiled, lips parting to reveal the points of his fangs. “That crazed, I’m so starving I could eat you, look.”

My jaw dropped then quickly clamped shut. I couldn’t even control my expression? There was no way I could do this!

“Yes you can.” Dorian clearly knew me too well. “Look, Amelia,” he said more seriously. “We can have a normal life. You can. This is just the first step. Will you just try, for me? You know I can’t do this without you.”

With a deep breath, I planted my hands on my hips. I knew Dorian was using emotional blackmail, but I caved anyway. “Okay. But if I kill anyone, I’m blaming you.”

Dorian roped his arm through mine and yanked me forward to walk alongside him. “Your murder is my condemnation. Got it.”

As we headed to the main building, I held my breath. My sight rose above the heads of surrounding students. The building was three levels of brick, with rectangular windows and tall glass doors. Dorian was already checking out the surrounding female members of the student body. I wasn’t beyond counting bricks for a distraction. Before I could begin, someone darted in front of us.

The boy’s scent—if you could call him a boy, with his over-developed muscle mass—reached my nostrils instantly. It was fiery and sweet, and somehow different from any human’s I had ever picked up on. The urge to extend my fangs pulled at me from within. I swallowed, struggling to push the sensation back.

The boy edged forward. His tan face was frozen with a threatening scowl, and his hands curled into fists. “Go back to where you came from,” he snarled through tight lips. “You’re not welcome here.”

Dorian instinctively tensed and released my arm, ready to take action. But before he could even utter a word, the boy turned and stalked away.

Dorian shrugged his shoulders “What was that about?”

A startling realization struck me. “He could tell. He knows what we are.”

Dorian laughed, pulling me aside to let passing students through the main doors. “You take paranoia to a whole new level, sis.”

Certain belting him would draw attention I held back the urge. Instead I settled for a piercing look that I wished could kill, or at least inflict torturous pain. “I’m paranoid?”

Dorian waved his hands in a half-assed surrender. “C’mon, you know I didn’t mean it like that. That jerk is probably just a dumb jock, pumped up on steroids.”

I wasn’t convinced, but Dorian was already past the incident and busy catching the eye of a pretty girl. He glanced down at his watch. “Classes start in five. So go, get settled. I’ll see you at lunch.” He pushed me through the glass doors winking, before backing away in the opposite direction. “You’ll be fine. I promise.”

I sucked in a quick, deep breath and held it. My lungs ached in protest. Students swarmed the foyer. I pushed past them, bounding up the stairs to the second floor. Psychology was first up. I shot through the door to room 2.6, taking a vacant desk. It was by one of a handful of windows that lined the far wall. With my lungs contracting and on the verge of forcing me to breathe, I dumped my bag on the desk and threw open the glass barrier. Poking my head out into the cool autumn air, I sucked in a much needed ragged breath.

Whispers about the ‘new girl’, were hot on every student’s lips. Vampire hearing, lucky me! This day just kept getting better. They thought I was strange, a total weirdo. And who could blame them? I was acting like a freak!

Shrinking back into my seat, I kept my head down with my hoodie sheltering my face. My long hair hung as a solid barrier between me and them. The scent of fresh blood intensified as more and more students filled the classroom. There was nothing I could do in this setting to dull it. But I could drown out their chatter.

I pulled my iPod from my backpack, plugging the earbuds into my ears. It was jam-packed with music from all my favorite bands: Red, Skillet, Three Days Grace and Lifehouse, just to name a few. It used to have pop music too, but since discovering my darker side my taste in music had followed suit, and the urge to dance wildly in the privacy of my room no longer felt uplifting. In spite of that, I smiled. The cover was new, glossy purple—my favorite color, which in the right dark shade was nowhere near being girly pink, ick! It had been a parting gift from Kendrick who’d uploaded the new Three Days Grace album. My heart squeezed, wishing he were here.

Still able to scent the students, I stifled a groan. My arms coiled around my waist, nails pricking my sides and breaking the skin. The distraction helped, just enough to keep me cemented in my seat, until the classroom door opened again.

In an instant, the energy in the small room shifted. I removed my earbuds. The gossip on everyone’s lips had faltered.

Then it hit me. The same unique, fiery, sweet scent of blood I had encountered not five minutes earlier. No…not him again.

Against my better judgment, I brushed my hair behind my ears and dared to glance up. My world froze. Any remaining chatter became irrelevant as I stared on. Standing in the doorway was not the boy who had threatened Dorian and me. This boy had similarly colored satin-black hair, styled into messy, loose spikes. His charcoal V-neck shirt acted like a second skin, clinging to reveal a sculpted torso. The light from fluorescents bolted to the grated ceiling bounced off his bronzed arms, offering shadowed definition to his protruding biceps and numerous…scars? Nudging recognition tickled at the back of my subconscious. I couldn’t rip my eyes away. I’ve seen him before.

The boy caught sight of me as he entered the room, and stalled. His honey-glazed eyes, rimmed with iridescent green, widened.

Somehow able to move again, I averted my eyes. But it was already too late. I could hear the heavy steps of hunting boots closing in on me. A hard lump crawled up my throat and my heart-rate increased. The potency of his fiery scent soared. It invaded my lungs and made my mouth water. He was close, way too close. With a throat-constricting gulp, I tried and failed to force my lust for his blood back down. Then I blinked up to meet his curious gaze.

“Hi. You’re new.” His tone was steady, maybe even friendly. Yet there was visible conflict in his eyes.

“Uh huh,” I replied, as a telltale tingle ran along my gums. No, please. Not now. I could practically taste the hot sweetness of his blood on my tongue and hear the irregular beat of his strong pulse. A sequence of events flashed manically through my mind. I saw myself leaping over the desk in one swift move and sinking my now fully extended fangs into his neck. Control yourself! I pinned my lips together, concealing my fangs. My nails dug into the cushioned seat, acting as an anchor to stop me from acting out the deadly fantasy still reeling through my mind. For a second I longed for the nasal tube stashed back in the car.

“I’m Ty Malau,” he said, iridescent eyes narrowing at me.

Uncomfortable silence thickened the air as he watched me, waiting for a polite introduction. It was clear he had no plan to let me be until I spoke. So I looked away, covering my fanged mouth with one hand. Through my barricading fingers, I managed to croak out, “Amelia Athobry-Lamont.”

“It’s nice to finally meet you, Amelia,” Ty said.

My eyes shot back to his smiling face. Finally? There hadn’t been any kind of emphasis on the word, but something about it, or maybe even the sentence he’d used it in, bothered me. Was I reading too much into this? Something about him seemed so inexplicably familiar. But for the life of me, I couldn’t place him.

Ty motioned to the spare seat beside me with a scarred hand. “Mind if I sit?”

My tongue floated in a pool of expectant saliva and my hands began to tremble. They were still clutching the cushioned chair for dear life. The threat of release was growing. Please, just leave me alone. I knew if he didn’t walk away soon, I would lose all control. Ty shifted his weight from one leg to the other. I could almost feel the growth of anxiety rippling in waves off his body. Shit! I mentally slapped myself. I’m staring at him like he’s something to eat. Look away, dammit! With great strain, I forced my eyes away from his perfectly symmetrical features, and down onto my iPod, wishing again for Kendrick.

A quiet grunt emerged from Ty’s throat. “Never mind….”

His retreat to the other side of the classroom dulled the overwhelming punch of his blood. With his scent around me fading and my fangs retracting, I allowed my lungs to breathe again. The short, testing breaths relieved some of the involuntary reactions to his proximity. I could still smell his blood, as well as the other students. But I took a sliver of comfort from the fact that I had managed to control myself, just enough not to turn this room into a bloody massacre…yet.

The classroom chatter had resumed. It seemed almost everyone had been watching Ty and me with bated breath, and now it was all they could talk about.

I plugged my earbuds back in and dropped my head against my bag. My eyes squeezed shut. “You’ll be fine,” Dorian had promised. A silent laugh vibrated my chest. Yeah right!

~

What Lies Inside

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Genre – YA Paranormal Romance

Rating – PG-13+

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Website http://bloodboundnovels.com

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Contact by AFN Clarke (Excerpt)

Casually walking down the street, chewing gum, trying to look hard and unconcerned, heart pounding like a steam hammer gone mad, palms sweaty, and a huge claw tearing away in the pit of my stomach.

It's just another scare... They are trying to set us up... It's a booby trap... There's a hidden sniper. It's for real this time... All the possibilities ping round my brain. Holy fuck, why not call in the bomb blokes?

The street looks just as always. Drab terraced housing sloshed with rain. Half a dozen in a derelict condition, the others empty, a few at either end inhabited. Stall for time.

“Hello 3, this is 33 Alpha, say again number of house, over.”

“3 wait out.” Pause.

“Hello 33 Alpha, this is 3. Number is 21, over.”

“33 Alpha, Roger out.”

Come on, Clarke, get your finger out, if you're going to go, there is not an awful lot you can do about it. Twenty-one is just across the street. Position a tom on each corner and take one with me. Hell, why die alone.

In through the upstairs window, I think. Climb on a willing back. I collapse through the window and sit there shaking like a leaf. The whole room is littered with old clothes, newspapers, shit, and God knows what else. just look for any pressure pads, trip-wires or pull switches. Top floor search over. Nothing. Move to the top of the stairs. There could be a pressure pad on any one of those steps. We look around for something heavy. A piece of wardrobe, that will do. It clatters down the stairs and lies at the bottom looking at me.

“You O.K., boss?”

“Yeah.” I join it at the bottom of the stairs.

Twenty minutes later I'm standing on the street, enjoying the cool rain splashing on my face.

“Right, guys, just another rubber dick. Let's go.” One day one of these tips is going to be real. I just don't want to be around when it is. Right now, I'm just very relieved.

Back to Leopold Street and up the stairs. I must have some sleep if only for an hour or two. The average for the past week has been two hours in twenty-four. The mileage per day does not bear thinking about. Flop onto the bed. I've only been between the sheets three times in the month the tour has been going. Some time a change of clothes would be very welcome.

It's daylight outside, but in here with the light off it's dark. A pale grey light struggling through the black-painted window. All the windows in the place are painted out and the Ops Room is encased in two-foot-thick concrete with a further layer of sandbags on the outside.

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Genre – Autobiography / Biography & Memoir

Rating – 18+

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Website http://www.afnclarke.com/

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Constantinopolis by James Shipman @jshipman_author

More cheers accompanied Zaganos’s response, although Mehmet noticed these came almost exclusively from his Christian/convert faction.

Halil now came forward to speak, first bowing before the Sultan.

“My dear Sultan, and assembled council. I humbly speak as Grand Vizier. I appreciate our Sultan’s enthusiasm for this project, but I must respectfully disagree.

“I certainly agree that capturing the city would do wonders for our empire, for our people, for our faith. However, our Sultan tells us these things without addressing the obvious problem: how to accomplish the task?

I would point out that it is not the will of his ancestors that prevented the capture of the city. Certainly it was not the will of Murad who desired this above all things. It is the city itself that prevents this.

How is the city to be captured? Is not Constantinople surrounded on three sides by water? We have no fleet to speak of my Sultan. We have difficulty enough ferrying a few troops back and forth across the narrow waters of the straights without interference from the Greeks. And the Greeks possess their Greek fire, the terrible weapon they use to burn our ships and kill our sailors. The only time the city has ever fallen is by sea, and then only to the Venetians and other Latins, who did possess a great fleet.

Should we defeat the city by land? We outnumber the foolish infidel Greeks ten or twenty to one. But they have the walls. As you know my Sultan, the city is only exposed by land on one side. A triple network with a moat protects the land approach to Constantinople, with two huge walls surmounted by scores of defensive towers. The city can be defended against our hundreds of thousands by a tenth of that amount. The walls have not been breached in a thousand years.

And that is just to speak of the Greeks. What of the rest of the West? Time and again our attacks on the city have served as a lightning rod for the Pope and the kings of Europe to rise against us. We have fought battle after battle to preserve our territory in Europe. When will we prod this hornet’s nest too greatly? Our strength is in the petty squabbling of the Christian kingdoms. Can we afford to unite them? We may lose more than Constantinople; we may lose Europe in the bargain. Think of John Hunyadi my Sultan. He is perhaps the greatest Christian warlord we have faced. We have a truce with him now, but if we attack the city? With our forces diverted to the center, what will stop him from attacking the north? We could lose everything gained in the last hundred years in a single winter.

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Genre – Historical Fiction

Rating – PG

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Website http://james-shipman.com