Tuesday, January 28, 2020

Writer Wednesday: Week Forty-two



Hey, everyone, and welcome to Writer Wednesday: Week Forty-two! How's everyone doing? We're quickly closing in on the end of January. Where'd the month go?

Anyway, let's get this show on the road. The featured author for Week Forty-two is Gary F. Vanucci. As always, below are links where you can find Gary and his works.


Gary's Facebook Author Page

Gary's Twitter

Gary's Website

Ashenclaw Studios, LLC's Facebook Page

Gary's Amazon Author Page

Books:

Wothlondia Rising 1: Distant Familiarity

Wothlondia Rising 2: A Rose in Bloom

Wothlondia Rising 3: Maturation Process

Wothlondia Rising 4: Tears of Blood

Wothlondia Rising 5: Strength of Faith

Wothlondia Rising: The Anthology: Epic Fantasy Prequel (Realm of Ashenclaw Book 1)

The Legend of Ashenclaw (Realm of Ashenclaw Book 1)

Covenant of the Faceless Knights: Epic Fantasy Series Book 2 (Realm of Ashenclaw)

Secrets of the Ebonite Mines: Epic Fantasy Series Book 3 (Realm of Ashenclaw)

Tower of Torment: Epic Fantasy Series Book 4 (Realm of Ashenclaw)

Wake the Dead: A Graphic Zombie Apocalypse Novel (Wake the Dead Series Book 1)

Wake the Dead 2: A Graphic Zombie Apocalypse Novel (Wake the Dead Series Book 2)

Cage the Dead: A Graphic Zombie Apocalypse Novel

A Gathering of Dust: Skulldust Circle Anthology


Thank you for joining me this week, and I hope to see all of you next week. Remember to support indie authors and encourage them to publish more by leaving reviews for their work.

Saturday, January 25, 2020

Snippet Saturday: Idiots an excerpt from Halfborn



A Halfborn excerpt



I knew the risks of bringing Marshall out, but everything had gone so well. We were within a quarter mile or so of the R.V. as the scent assaulted my nose. Marshall hadn't gotten a whiff of it yet. The scent was poorly masked by what I could only guess was deer urine. I briefly thought we could make a run for it, making it to the Winnebago in mere seconds. Although they were somewhere between us and our destination. Then the bloodlust shot through me. It was too late, but I tried to fight it anyway.

“Marshall! Please don't!” I yelled, but he was already gone.

Screams erupted, and I ran toward them. Three different voices—two sounded in panic, while the third shrieked in pain and agony. I was finally able to get my eyes on the situation as shots rang out. Marshall held a grizzly of a man in his arms, his mouth latched to the guy’s throat. I had a fleeting thought of beard hair getting stuck in his teeth, then the sensation of bullets biting into Marshall's back chased it away.

Marshall threw the grizzly man's lifeless body to the ground and turned on the other two. They stopped firing. Whether it was because they'd run out of bullets or realized the shooting was doing nothing, I wasn't sure. Marshall stalked toward them. The younger, clean-shaven one turned and sprinted away as quickly as his legs would take him. The other had frozen in shock.

Marshall, being an animal of opportunity, naturally selected the one that had frozen. Leaving me to take chase. I couldn't let the guy get away, no matter how crazy his story would have sounded to people. I dropped my mental barrier, letting Marshall's bloodlust take over. As I caught up to the man, I jumped toward him. I came into contact with his body with more force than I intended, and he fell forward. His head smashed into a rock with a loud crack. His body twitched and jerked on the ground. I went for the strike when the smell of blood entered my nose.

I walked around to where the man's head lay on the rock. My gut wrenched at what I saw. The force of the impact had split the man's skull wide open. Blood pulsed steadily from the wound, pooling on the ground, and through the separation of bone, the man's brain was clearly visible. As I stood there, staring at the horrible scene, Marshall came up, still driven by his bloodlust. Either he didn't see what I did or didn't care. Instead, he went straight for the gushing wound, licking and sucking at it. He gulped greedily.

He looked up at me briefly, and I shook my head to refuse what I assumed was an offer to join him. I couldn't bring myself to feed. Not after what I saw. The man twitched on the ground as Marshall sank his teeth into the guy's neck. I listened to the beating of the man's heart slow, then ultimately stop. Marshall lifted his head and looked around, the wildness in his eyes dying a little as he wiped away the trails of blood from his chin.

“Are you finished then?” I asked.

“Yeah.” He glanced around, again. “Shit! I'm sorry.”

I wasn't sure if I was angry or disappointed. Maybe a combination of the two. I gave up on trying to understand the feelings that coursed through me. “Listen, Marshall . . . Just don't worry about it. This is my fault. I knew better.”

“Hey now, I'm the one that has no control. So how is this your fault?”

“All of this is my fault, Marshall! Can't you see that? I'm the reason you are how you are.”

He lifted himself from the ground. I gave the dead body a glance and started walking. I went back to the area where the other two bodies were. Marshall followed on my heels. I took in the area for a minute. Then I walked away, toward the direction of the Winnebago.

“I'm not dealing with this! Come on, Marshall.”

“But . . . Shouldn't we do something with them?”

“I just said, I'm not dealing with it. Let 'em rot. It was such a perfect day, and they ruined it. Just. Like. That. Ruined!” I said, feeling that much less than who I used to be. “What the fuck were they doing out here anyway? Idiots!”

I tromped through the trees, letting the rage that began within me take over. Rage had to be better than feeling sorry for the guys or feeling disappointed in Marshall's actions. I was angry that the day hadn't played out as it should have. Every bit of fun and distraction had been taken away in a matter of a minute or two. I was angry that I let myself get in the way, and I fought the bloodlust in me. It was a rage all in itself for not being sated.




*You can find and purchase Halfborn on Amazon HERE. Available in ebook and paperback formats, and you can read for free with Kindle Unlimited.

Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Writer Wednesday: Week Forty-one





Well, I completely didn't realize it was Wednesday. Where'd the week go? And why don't I remember to set these up in advance every week? LOL! Anyway, I'm going to do this quick-like. Maybe make a big faux pas in the process, but here we go.

This week's featured author is, well, me . . . Soleil Daniels. Next week we'll go back to our regularly scheduled program, but this week, well, I'm feeling greedy or left out or something. And I've run out of time and my computer's being a big pain in the butt (it must need to update or something). So, if you haven't checked out my work, you can find it at the following links.


Soleil's Facebook Author Page

Soleil's Twitter

Soleil's Amazon Author Page


Books:

Halfborn

To Save Lives: A Halfborn Series Short Story

Images from a Wandering Mind: a Sick and Disturbing Collection

Anthologies Soleil's been included in:

Creepies 3: Nightmares on Deviant Street

Weirder Tales: An Omnibus of Odd Ditties

One Million Project: Thriller


If you're an author and are looking into proofreaders, I also do that. You can find me over at Sunni D. Proofreading (yes, I need to update my site), on Facebook, on Twitter, and I also do my Writer Wednesday posts on the blog there (eventually, I'll get back to grammar and style blog posts on there).

Thanks for joining me this week. I hope to see you all again next week with a brand new author that's not me. Remember, support indie authors and leave reviews for their work.

Friday, January 17, 2020

Short Story Saturday: Sucker (a flash-fiction piece)





Sucker


She pulled into the parking space at the gas station. Imagine her surprise, or lack thereof, when she found out she had to take her sister’s boyfriend to work, again. It seemed like she was the only one who ever took him in since he’d blow the motor in his car.

“You need anything?” he asked.

“If you’re buying, a Pepsi. If not, I’m good,” she replied, knowing he’d come out empty handed with a pack of smokes in his pocket.

“Okay.” He slid out of the car, and then ducked down to reach through the window. “Here, hold this till I get back. Don’t know why I lit it.” He handed her a near-whole cigarette.

She watched him walk away, pulling the door open and walking inside, before mumbling, “Don’t mind if I do,” and putting the filter to her lips.

She inhaled deeply, letting the blue-grey smoke fill her lungs. Holding it in, savoring it for several seconds before exhaling. She hadn’t had a cigarette all day, being underage and dependent on her ‘friends’ to catch a drag here and there. If she was lucky, someone would give her one or even buy her a pack when she asked, giving them a couple extra bucks for their trouble.

She leaned her head back on the headrest. The bass coming through the twelve-inch subwoofers vibrated through her body—Just Like You by Three Days Grace played from a cd she’d burned.

She glanced to the store’s glass door to check if he was coming out yet. The coast was clear, so she put the cigarette back to her lips, taking a long drag and closing her eyes. On the exhale, she turned her head to the left toward the open window and opened her eyes to see something she hadn’t expected.

“Shit,” she said as the realization dawned on her who sat in the large truck three spaces over.

He shook his head, a chuckle playing at his lips. “Shit’s right,” he said, getting out of the truck and walking over. “I’d ask when you started smoking, but I don’t want to know.”

“It’s habit. He had me hold it, what else was I supposed to do with it?” she said, setting the offending item in the ashtray.

“Yeah, a bad habit.” He took a drag from his own cigarette. “I’ll tell you what, don’t tell anyone you saw me here, and I won’t let your mother know what I saw.”

She looked at him, incredulous. She wanted to ask why but decided to avoid the grief on both accounts. What the hell did anyone care why he was at the store for anyway?

“Okay,” she replied, and he walked back to his truck and climbed in, sitting there.

“What’s he doing here?” The car’s door creaked slightly as it opened.

She turned to look at her sister’s boyfriend. “Beats me. Your fucking cigarette’s in the ashtray.”
She glanced behind her, putting the shifter in reverse and backing out of the spot swiftly. The tires chirped as she slammed the gear shifter into drive and hit the gas, wondering how weird what had just happened was.

It was only later she’d found out the man had been cheating on his wife with a woman who worked at the gas station they’d been parked at that day. Something that would hang over her head for endless years later, making her feel like a sucker—filling her with guilt and helping to fuel her already paralyzing depression.

Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Writer Wednesday: Week Forty



Hello and welcome to Week Forty of Writer Wednesday! How's everyone? Good? Good. So, we've reached forty. I've got twelve authors left in my current list, so I'll need to go hunt some more down. Also, I'm officially open for suggestions on who to feature. Just leave a comment saying who, what they write, and at least one of their books or the name of their blog. Anything I can use to hunt down their links.

This week's featured author is Marla Todd (aka Juliette Kings). She has a fangtastic blog filled with short stories, random question polls (they're so fun), and a Vlad Diary. Dude, how awesome does that even just sound? Diary posts from Vampire Vlad! Seriously, go now and check out the blog! The link's below—the Vampire Maman. Go on, give it a click. Also, don't forget to check out the books filled with short stories, one of which is entirely Juliette Kings' stories and the rest are charity anthologies from WPaD that feature stories from Marla Todd/Juliette Kings.



Vampire Maman: Musings of a Modern Day Vampire blog/website


Marla Todd/Juliette Kings' Books/Stories:

Morning at the Vineyard: A Collection of Tangled Tales

Multi-author anthologies:

Dragons and Dreams: A Fantasy Anthology

Passion's Prisms: Tales of Love & Romance

Goin' Extinct: Tales from the Edge of Oblivion

Creepies: Twisted Tales from Beneath the Bed

Creepies 2: Things That Go Bump in the Closet

Creepies 3: Nightmares on Deviant Street

Tinsel Tales: A Holiday Treasury

Tinsel Tales 2: Holiday Hootenanny

Strange Adventures in a Deviant Universe: WPAD Science Fiction

Weirder Tales: An Omnibus of Odd Ditties


Thanks for joining me for this week's Writer Wednesday. I hope to see you again next week. Remember, support indie authors and leave them reviews for their work at your favorite review sites.

Saturday, January 11, 2020

Short Story Saturday: Not You




Not You



Seth ran into the room. Panic etched his facial features as he grabbed a few things here and there.

“Come on! We have to go!” he said in a rush.

Willow took in his appearance. His dirty-blond hair jutted in every which direction. His cheeks were flushed, and his pupils were so expanded, the green of his eyes was near-impossible to see.

“Go? What the hell are you on about, Seth? You look like you’ve been chased by a rabid animal. I’m not moving until you give me a good reason to. It’s my day off.” Willow sighed, and then she patted the cushion beside her.

“There’s no time. We have to go! I want to pick up Gena on our way. I hate to think she’ll be sitting there alone when it happens.” He ran his left hand through his hair, taming it a bit.

“When what happens?” Willow asked.

“It’s World War Three, Willow! There are nuclear missiles being launched as we waste time,” he all but shouted before grabbing her wrists and pulling her to her feet.

“Wouldn’t they let us know that on the T.V.? I haven’t seen anything about it.” She wriggled from his grasp.

“Really? Do you really think the government would tell us that? And if I’m wrong, what’ll it hurt? But if I’m right . . .” He wrapped his hands around her left. “Please, Willow. I’m trying to get us to a place that may very well be the safest place we can get.”

Willow sighed, giving up. “Okay, but if you’re wrong and you ruin my only day off, well, you’ll pay for it later.” A moment passed. “Wait, do we really have to pick up your sister?”

***

“What’s the big-g-g ruthsh?” Gena had been hiccupping and slurring her way through everything she said since she opened the door.

“For shit’s sake, woman! Just get in the ever-loving truck,” Willow said, her patience had dwindled to near-nothing.

Willow had already held up and guided the woman to the open door of the dark red ’78 Ford F-150. She just needed to get in and slide to the middle of the bench seat.

Gena put her left foot up on the floorboard and gripped the back of the seat—her five-foot-two inches made the step-up difficult, even if she wasn’t drunk. Willow saw Gena falling back toward her, and she was quick to brace Gena’s back to steady the woman. It wasn’t Willow’s first rodeo with Gena and her drinking. The woman strained again to get up on the seat. The exertion ended with Willow getting a cloud of methane to the face.

“A power-boost. Fantastic!” The sarcasm oozed from Willow’s words. “At least you finally got in. Now scooch! I have to get in too.”

“Willow, be nice, please,” Seth pleaded, and then he walked around to the driver’s side door.

“Fine.”

***

Three hours later, Gena had been passed out, snoring and farting, with a strand of drool connecting her mouth and her leg. Willow noticed those facts the last time she’d looked over at Seth. His face strained with a look of concern, and he was mumbling something she couldn’t hear, so she turned her attention out the window.

If there were nukes, they sure were taking a long time to hit, she thought. She hated when he started getting into that conspiracy theory stuff, but she couldn’t just tell him to stop. Even though it stressed him out, it also made him happier than she’d seen him in a while.

It soon became obvious that they had been picking up speed, and a lot of it. She could barely make out the trees through the blur of everything as they passed.

“Seth, slow down. We’ll never make it to your supposed safe spot if we die in a fiery crash because we were going too damn fast,” Willow said.

Gena groaned in the middle, but Seth gave no response, and the truck continued to pick up speed.

“Goddammit, Seth! I said, slow the fuck down not give it more gas.”

“Who are you talking too?” Gena asked.

Willow turned to look at her. “Who the hell do you think?” She gasped when she saw the seat empty beside Gena. “Seth!”

The door was closed. She hadn’t heard it open. Yet, Seth was gone, and the truck continued to barrel at speeds that should’ve been beyond its capabilities.

“Shit! Gena, slide over and hit the brakes,” Willow screeched.

“Oh, no, I can’t. I’ve been drinking and can’t afford another DUI,” Gena responded. “You do it.”

“How do you expect I do that?”

“Climb over,” Gena said, putting her head between her knees.

Willow wanted to pummel Gena with her fists. Instead, she unbuckled her seatbelt and brought her legs up to put her in a crouched position in the seat. With no one steering the truck, it miraculously stayed on the road while Willow wriggled over the top of Gena to get to the driver’s side of the truck.

Immediately after her butt hit the seat, Willow gripped the steering wheel and placed her right foot on the brake pedal. It didn’t respond, so she grabbed the steering wheel more firmly and slammed both feet on the brake pedal. Nothing.

“Fucking stop, truck,” she yelled.

“Where’s Seth? You don’t know how to drive,” Gena griped.

“Don’t start with me, woman!” Willow said, removing her feet from the brake pedal and placing her left foot on the clutch. She grabbed the shifter and downshifted.

The truck protested but eventually went into third gear and slowed ever so slightly. She tried the brake again. Nothing. She popped the shifter into neutral and tried the brake. Still, it wouldn’t work. So, she downshifted to second, then first. The transmission grinded and protested with each shift, but the truck still wouldn’t come to a stop. It even climbed a hill, picking up lost speed on the way down the other side.

Willow reached the point of giving up and was about to tell Gena they’d have to jump and hope for the best when the truck came to an abrupt halt at the very bottom of the hill and shut off. Willow sat trying to catch her breath and make sense of what had happened.

“It’s about time you learned how to use the break. Probably burned the damn transmission up,” Gena said.

“Oh, shut up, you damned good-for-nothing drunk. Where the fuck is Seth?” Willow asked, but in place of a response was the blaring of a semi truck’s horn.

“You could’ve at least pulled off the road, dummy. Come on, get out of the guy’s way.”

Willow turned the key off and then back to the on position. Not even a click. “Yeah, go figure. As if this situation couldn’t get more strange.” She put the shifter in neutral, blowing out a long, steadying breath. “Come on, get your short ass out and help me push it off the road. Then we’ll try to figure out what’s going on.”

With a bit of grumbling from Gena, they managed to push the truck off the road, and the cars that had gathered behind them drove by like nothing out of the ordinary was happening.

Willow kicked the back passenger’s side tire. “What the fuck is going on?” she screamed up at the sky.

A trill noise sounded from the cab of the truck. Willow looked to Gena who had sat down on the grass, and then she looked back to the truck.

“Was that your phone?” she asked.

“Nope, mine’s here,” Gena said, holding up her cell.

Willow felt her front pocket where her phone was. It had to have been Seth’s. He usually put it on the dash. She opened the passenger’s side door and reached across, grabbing the phone. She put in his pin, and the screen lit up, showing a new text message. She tapped the message, opening it.

Seth is safe. He is somewhere that he will continue to be so.

She didn’t understand. He had been driving, and then he was just gone. How could he possibly be safe? She typed a response.

Where is he? Bring him back! How do I know he’s safe?

She waited until the phone dinged again.

He was chosen. He is safe.

She started to get angrier with the cryptic messages.

If he’s safe, take me to him!

The phone dinged a minute later. The wait increased her anger, and she could feel the blood pulsing in her head. She checked the message.

He was chosen. Not you!

She turned to let Gena know about the texts. “Gena . . .” But Gena was gone. Her phone lay on the ground next to where she’d been sitting.

Willow heard the rushing sound of something through the air and then there was a huge explosion. Everything went black.

Tuesday, January 7, 2020

Writer Wednesday: Week Thirty-nine




Hey, everyone! Welcome to Writer Wednesday! I hope the year has started off well for all y'all. Are we ready for Week Thirty-nine?

This week's featured author is Douglas Debelak. Below are the links where you can find out more about Douglas and his works.


The Ghostwriter Series' Facebook Page

Douglas' Amazon Author Page


Books:

The Involuntary Ghostwriter: The Ghostwriter Series Book One

The Ghostwriter's Wife: The Ghostwriter Series Book Two

The Ghosterwriter's Legacy: The Ghostwriter Series Book Three



Thank you all for joining me this week. I hope to see you again next week. Remember to support indie authors by leaving reviews for their works.

Saturday, January 4, 2020

Snippet Saturday: Who's there? a tidbit from 'Wraith'





Should I run? Should I fight? Should I give myself over willingly? How far would I get if I fled? Is it an Inborn, the originals of vampire kind? Or a Wraith, the hunters and executioners? Another Halfborn like Innocence and I? What did they have planned for me? I've slaughtered nearly a hundred people since returning home, most of them known and open cases, would that be a death sentence? Even if it wasn't, would they find out what I was? The unnatural child that was supposedly killed years prior?

I listened closer. The footsteps approached, and I could almost picture the person nearing my front porch steps. I could tell it was one person. They were alone, and I wondered if they were sent to take me out, why there weren't more?

I heard the first foot make contact with the steps. I went to the window, unlatched it, and worked to wiggle it free. It squealed in protest. The person approaching my door stopped.

“Well, that's just awesome,” I said under my breath. “Man up, Coral. You've brought this on yourself.”

Several moments went by before my uninvited guest began to move towards the door again. I listened as they came closer, and I decided to walk to the door to greet them. Albeit, I tiptoed, trying not to make a sound on my way out of my bedroom and down the hall to the living room. It completely slipped my mind, until it was too late, that if this Born was any good with their senses, they'd know I was getting closer to them even if I didn't make a sound. That knowledge entered my thought process right before I stopped in front of the door.

I briefly wondered why they hadn't knocked. Then I heard a muffled noise coming through the door. It sounded like they were whispering, but I couldn't tell what they were saying because the language was unfamiliar to me and unlike anything I’d ever heard before. What I could tell, though, was my visitor was male.

I stood and waited. I thought about opening the door with a straight-forwardness, demanding what the guy wanted, but the fear that my demise may very well be on the other side of that door kept me from doing that.

Five minutes passed. Then ten. I turned to go to the sofa and sit at fifteen minutes, and that's when the knock rang throughout the living room. I jumped, nearly leaving my skin on the floor if that was at all possible.

I froze for what seemed like an eternity, gathering myself and steadying my heart. I wondered if I still had time to flee, but instead, I drew in a deep breath and released it in a calming fashion. Then I repeated the process until the muscles relaxed in my shoulders. Finally, I turned back to the door and gripped the handle, turning it as slowly as possible. I pulled the door open, and my eyes fell on the man in front of me.