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Messages - Quinn49

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1
Mystery / Story 1 Part 2
« on: August 04, 2017, 08:59:05 pm »
Mary Beth smiled and nodded. “Then I'll just stay at your house until morning.” She chuckled at his shocked expression. “I wish I had a camera, Foxx. Your mother has an empty room, doesn't she? I can just stay there until daylight, then make my own way home. But I'll see you to your door tonight, Foxx Calhoun. And you'll be safer for it.”
Foxx let her lead him away from the village and toward home. He finally stopped walking and shook his head. Resetting his newsboy cap and adjusting his long scarf, he smiled at her. “You're an amazing woman, Mary Elizabeth O'Dell. An amazing woman. If you weren't so dead set on marrying, I'd talk you right out of your clothes tonight in my own room.”
She smiled back and wrapped her arms around him for a short spell, then took a step back. “It's cold, Foxx and you've had a shock of some sort. We should keep walking. Do you want to tell me what happened to you? Or is that something that you'd rather not talk about?”
Foxx turned his gaze to Mary Beth and sighed. “I really don't know how to explain what happened to me. I lost total blocks of time tonight and I have no reasonable explanation as to why. Not to mention trying to beat Jimeson to death with my mug. Today was just a very strange day.”
Mary Beth nodded and slipped her arm through his as they continued to walk. “I'm a good listener, Foxx. And it sounds to me like you need a listener. Maybe even a good friend or two, while you're at it.”
Foxx gave her a sidelong glance and sighed again. “You amaze me, woman. I could use someone with a new set of eyes. Would you...would you consider going to Dublin with me tomorrow, Mary Beth? I want to go to the library there and look up some stuff on the legend of our Dance. I could use some fresh eyes on this. I'll tell you about my very strange day, if you'll agree to not laugh and to help me figure this out.”
Mary Beth nodded. “Okay, I can promise you I won't laugh. And I can give you all the help you need on this whatever it is.” She paused and furrowed her brow in thought. “It's legal, isn't it? I mean, we won't be doing anything that will cause my arrest, will we?”
Fox laughed and pulled her into a sideways hug. “By going to Dublin to get information from the library? I hardly doubt that would end in your arrest, unless it's against the law to do research.”
As they neared Foxx's gate, Mary Beth shivered. Foxx cast a glance at her. “Something wrong?” She shook her head. “I don't think so. But I can't say for certain, Foxx. Is your mother ill?”
He stared at the woman with him for a long moment before he responded. “No. She's fine. She was baking for the ceili when I left. Why do you ask. Mary Beth?”
The woman didn't answer him right away, she just started for the gate. “I think we need to hurry, Foxx. I think we need to hurry and get the information as soon as possible. We should leave as early in the morning as we can. I think there are lives depending on us finding that information.”
Foxx hurried after her, his brow furrowed, his eyes full of concern. He'd never seen Mary Beth so agitated. He nearly had to run to keep up with her, then get ahead of her to open the door. He headed for the kitchen, where he thought his mother would be. He peered in the door and smiled.
“Ma? I'm home and brought Mary Beth with me.” The woman was standing at the stove and didn't turn right away. When she finally did, she smiled, though it didn't quite reach her eyes. Foxx thought she may be getting tired, so he nodded to the kettle. “I'll fix tea. Why don't you go and sit with Mary Beth while I do this?”
She nodded and reached her hand to caress his cheek. Foxx shivered at the coldness of her skin and he looked at her, confusion filling his eyes. “Are you okay? You look strange. Are you having pain?”
The woman shook her head. “No, Foxx. I think I just need to sit down, you're right. I'll go and sit with Mary Beth. Why is she here? Did you tell me? Is she okay and her family?”
Foxx nodded at his mother. “She's fine. She's staying here tonight so we can go into Dublin in the morning. We have some things to do there.” For some unexplained reason, Foxx felt as though he couldn't tell his mother why they were going to Dublin. He shivered as ice crawled down his spine and thought again about letting Mary Beth sleep in the guest room alone.
He lifted the kettle and was pleased to find it full of water. He turned on the heat, gathered the cups, tea, sugar and cream, placed them on the tray and carried it into the dining room. He smiled at Mary Beth and placed the tray on the table. “Water will be hot soon. Should I get scones or biscuits?”
Mary Beth smiled and nodded. “Either one will do well enough, Foxx. I've not had anything to eat since the mid-day meal.”
Foxx frowned and went back to the kitchen. He took soda bread from the bin and sliced thick slices, got ham, beef and cheese from the refrigerator, placing that on a tray with condiments, put scones, butter and sweet biscuits on a plate then on the tray and carried it all into the dining room again.
“You have to eat, Mary Beth. Please.” He removed the items from the tray and placed them on the table in front of her, before he turned to his mother. “Do you want something to eat? I'll make you a sandwich, if you want.”
She smiled at him. “What a good boy you are, Foxx. Thank you. That would be nice.”
Foxx studied his mother intently, not sure what was wrong with her, but there was something. He pondered having Mrs. Kelly from next door come and stay with her tomorrow, but changed his mind. There was something he couldn't put his finger on that was making him uneasy in his own home and with his own mother.
He made her a small sandwich, knowing they had high tea and she wouldn't be wanting more than that. He put that and two scones on her plate, then turned back to Mary Beth. She was watching his mother more intently than he was.
“Mary Beth....” She looked at him and he drew a breath, but before he could speak, she reached to take his hand. “I don't want to be alone, tonight, Foxx. Please don't leave me alone.” She glanced again at Foxx's mother the same time Foxx did. The woman was staring at both of them and grinning with what appeared to be demented glee.
The kettle whistled and he stood to get the water. He all but ran to the kitchen and ran back. He poured hot water into the pot, then settled the tea leaves inside to steep. Something not right. Something wild and feral and vicious seemed to be circling the room, and it gave Foxx the sense of unsure footing on an icy walk.
What was happening here? What was wrong with his mother? He poured tea and finally sat as close to Mary Beth as he could. “Mum. Are you alright?” The woman turned her head, blinked and smiled. “Of course I'm all right, dear. Why wouldn't I be?”
Foxx felt something inside his mind click and he nodded. “Eat your sandwich, Mother. I'll take Mary Beth up to her room.” Before either woman could protest, Foxx had pulled Mary Beth to her feet and led her from the room. Once they were upstairs, Foxx took her into his room.
“Stay here, Mary Beth. There's something not exactly right here tonight and I agree with you. The sooner we find out what we can, the better off we'll be. We'll leave at first light. Do you want anything right now? I can go back down and get the sandwich if you're hungry?”
Mary Beth shook her head. “No, Foxx. Please. Don't leave me alone for a minute. I don't know what's going on in this house, but I think once we're out of here in the morning, it would behove you to not return until this is settled. I'd kill for tea, but it will just have to wait until morning. Saints protect and preserve us, Foxx. I think we're caught up in something terribly evil and your mother is part of it.”
As bad as that sounded, Foxx had to agree. His mother was acting strangely and he had no explanation for it. He settled Mary Beth in his bed and made sure she was comfortable in his old robe and warm enough, then he took the chair and made himself as comfortable as he could. As much as he thought about Mary Beth in 'that' way, he felt that tonight wasn't the night for sexual advances. He had decided he needed her help and he didn't need her angry with him right now.
He gave his bed over to her and pulled up the overstuffed chair for himself. When she started to protest, he shook his head. “No,” he said firmly. “You take the bed. It's bad enough I've kidnapped you from the comfort of your own home. I won't deny you the comfort of a bed as well. Good night, Mary Beth. We'll talk in the morning.”

Chapter III

   Foxx was awake before the dawn, cleaned up and dressed, ready for the day. He sat back down in the chair he had vacated and watched Mary Beth as she slept. He would have to disturb her and wake her soon, but he wanted to give her as much sleep as he could.
   As he sat, he pondered everything that had happened in the last twenty-four hours. He would have to research the legend and how it came to be. And he hoped that he would find information on the woman he had seen and actually spoken to yesterday.   
   With a sigh, he leaned forward and touched Mary Beth's shoulder. “Mary Beth. Time to wake up. We need to be on our way shortly.”
   She snapped awake and stared at him for a moment, then smiled as recognition came into her eyes. “Foxx. Why did you let me sleep like this? I could have gotten up and been ready when you were.”
   Foxx shook his head. “You needed to rest. You were up late and had quite an experience yesterday. The bath is through that door”, nodding to his left. “You go on and get ready, I'm going down to make tea. We can put it in an insulated flask and take it along with us.”
   He rose and started for the door, then stopped and turned back to her. “Mary Beth. Thanks for coming along with me and believing in my nonsense. I appreciate your help in more ways than you'll know.”
   She smiled over her shoulder at him and nodded as she headed for the bath. She'd have to wear what she had the day before for now, but perhaps they could take the time to stop and she could change. She would ask him when she went down.
   She gathered her things to get ready to take a hot shower then jerked as she turned to see Foxx's mother standing in the open door. The woman smiled, but there was a wicked gleam in her eye.
   “You'll help him die.” The strange voice came from the woman in the doorway. “And you'll die with him.”
   Then the little woman's demeanor changed and the smile was sweet. “Mary Elizabeth. I didn't know you stayed. Come down for tea, dear.”
   Mary Beth could only nod. “After I have a shower. I'll be down in a few, but I think Foxx has gone down to make tea. We're going into Dublin this morning. Go on down, now and I'll be along shortly.”
   She sighed with relief when the elder woman turned and walked away. There's something going on in this house, and Mary Beth will be glad to be on their way. She prayed while she showered and dressed that they could get away without further attention from this entity that had laid claim to Foxx's mother.
   As she made her way down the stairs, she could hear them in the small kitchen. She hurried her steps as the voices grew louder. “Foxx.” She spoke his name as she stepped into the room. When he turned to her, she nodded.
   “I think we can stop and get tea and breakfast along the way. I would like to go now, if we could. I want to stop at home and change into fresh clothing and I should think our business will take most of the day as it is.”
   Foxx smiled gratefully and side-stepped around his mother. “I'll be back when I get back, mum. You have a nice day. I'll send Mrs. O'Toole to help you today, if you wish, but I have to go now.”
   He brushed her cheek and took his cap from the hook near the door. He was almost to his truck when his mother called to him. “Drive safely. I won't be needing Mrs. O'Toole, Foxx. Not today.”
   He held the truck door for Mary Beth, then made his way around to the driver's door once she was in and safely buckled up. When he climbed in, he looked over at her and she was pale as paper.
   “What is it? Are you not well? Do you want to stay home?”
   She looked over at him and shook her head. “No. I want away from here, Foxx. There's something very odd with your mother.”  Foxx canted his head, “My mum? Why would you think that, luv?”
   “Because she stopped in the room just just before I took my shower and said something in a voice I knew wasn’t hers. Foxx, what’s going on?”
He turned to Mary Beth and blinked. “If I’d have known, Mary Beth, I would be telling you, now wouldn’t I? If I had all the answers, I wouldn’t be needin’ this trip to Dublin and the big library there. Something’s going on, that’s a sure thing. But what exactly, I don’t know. Yesterday morning at the Dance, I saw what James thought was a dead hand poking up from the ground. Then it disappeared and this woman was running about the circle there. Then the Vicar is telling me some legend about this woman and how she’ll come back when her lover does and me being the only one who saw her at the dance when that hand poked up from the ground.”
He turned his attention back to the road then huffed out a breath. “I’m sorry, Mary Beth. Maybe I’m just hungry and that’s why I’m irritable. There’s a place to eat just up the road, if you’d like to stop. I’ll refuel my caffeine and get something to satisfy my.....sweet holy Mary!”
As the little red lorry crested a hill, the valley laid out before them. Battle sounds and war cries could be heard. Fox slammed on the brakes and cut the wheel sharply to the right. The truck grumbled to a stop along the side of the cart path that had once been a road. He glanced at Mary Beth, saw she was as pale as death and reached for her hand. “It’s not real, Mary Beth. Whatever this is, it isn’t real. It’s some sort of vision and I don’t know if it’s a warning or something else. We’ll just have to wait it out. Hopefully, it won’t last long and we can be on our way.”
Mary Beth’s hand trembled in his, but he saw her swallow and look out at the field of battle on a shuddering breath. “It’s like a dream, Foxx. Like a lucid dream. Are we able to get out? Can we just leave?”
Foxx shook his head. “I’ve not been able to get loose of it until it was finished with me. Stay in the truck, Mary Beth. We’re safer here, I think.” Foxx watched the scene unfold in front of him and waited for the one who always showed himself in these epic battle scenes. He was glad he wasn’t alone and Mary Beth was also seeing the images and hearing the clash of steel and the roar of battle.
Men fell in front  of them, horses leaped the truck as if it were a wall and perhaps in this time and this place, it was a wall. Foxx saw him coming across the battlefield, sword held high and shield wet with blood, his and others. He stopped in front of the truck and as before, his visor was down and Foxx could only see his eyes. The intense blue of them sparkled with mirth as he saluted and turned back to battle as the image and scene faded.
Foxx leaned his head back against the seat of the lorry and drew breath slowly to calm his quaking and the nerves that danced on razor’s edge. He glanced at Mary Beth who had become very quiet and still.
“Mary Beth? Are you alright? Do you want me to take you home? I can go to Dublin alone. This had to have been quite unsettling for you. I can’t explain what just happened. I can only tell you it’s been happening ever since I found that thing in the middle of the circle.”
Mary Beth turned to Foxx and shook her head. “Let’s get on to Dublin then and the library. We need to see what we can find about this battle and this warrior and woman. There’s a reason why you keep seeing them, Foxx, and I think it involves your mother somehow. “ Foxx looked at her and was stunned at how dark and depth-less her eyes were, how glassy. “I just thing we need to go, Foxx. Now.”
Foxx pulled the little lorry away from the side of the road and drove ahead toward Dublin. Another fifteen kilometers and they pulled into the parking lot of a small diner. “I need to eat something, and you will be wanting tea, I’m sure. We won’t linger long here, Mary Beth. But if I don’t eat, I won’t be worth much in the research.” He grinned at her and got out to go round and open her door. Helping her out, he tugged her into a tight hug. “I’m sorry that back there frightened you.”
Mary Beth returned his hug and smiled up at him. “Startled, certainly. But hardly frightened. I found it fascinating to say the least. Intriguing at best. So let’s go in and eat and we’ll get on our way to Dublin. You could phone up James and see if he’s free for lunch or high tea. Maybe he will have some information for you that will help.”
Foxx nodded and pulled out his phone just as it rang. He answered it with a chuckle.  “This is what I call serendipity. I was just reaching for the phone to give you a call, James. What’s up?” Foxx furrowed his brow at his friend’s voice. “Mary Beth is with me. She was wanting to meet up and have lunch or high tea with you since we’ll be in Dublin in about an hour. We’re going to the library there. I want to research something. Yea, sure and it’s glad I’ll be to get to the end of it. Okay, then we’ll see you there.”
Foxx turned to Mary Beth and sighed. “James will meet us at the library. He says he has some information I might be interested in. He sounded odd on the phone. Perhaps he was just tired. But we’ll see him in an hour or so.” 
He opened the door to the diner and they stepped inside. It was empty but for the staff and one gentleman at the end of a long counter. They slipped into a booth and  waited for the girl to come with the menu. Foxx hadn’t realized how hungry he actually was until he sat down. He looked about for the waitress and sighed when he didn’t see her. It wasn’t like they were busy. He and Mary Beth were the only ones here, save the man at the end of the counter.
“Where has the waitress gone?” He kept looking for her and spotted her when she came out of the kitchen. She smiled at Foxx and Mary Beth, picking up menus as she started for their table.
As she approached, she changed. She became the woman from the  dance and Foxx couldn’t help but stare. She smiled sadly. “Hello, Foxx. You have yet to figure out the mystery. I would help you if I could, but I’m not permitted to give you the information you need to find. Just remember, not every friend is a friend and  there is one who is an enemy.”
Then the woman was back to the waitress and Mary Beth was nudging his knee with her foot under the table.  “Foxx! Where are you? The girl is waiting for your order. I thought you were hungry.”
Fox blinked himself back to the present and flushed from embarrassment. “Yes, sorry, lass. I was woolgathering apparently. I’ll have a full breakfast and tea. Have you ordered then, Mary Beth?”
She nodded and when the girl moved away, Mary Beth looked at Foxx. “What was going on? You looked really strange, Foxx.” She reached across the table and touched the back of his hand. “It’s something about here, isn’t it? What did you see?”
Fox shook his head and chewed on his lower lip. “I thought I saw the woman. She spoke to me through the waitress. She was as cryptic as she was before. I’m no closer now.”
Mary Beth nodded and squeezed his hand. “Foxx. Wasn’t there a man sitting at the end of the counter there?” Foxx nodded. “There was, yes. An older gentleman, if I recall.” Mary Beth frowned. “He’s gone. In order for him to have left, he would have had to pass straight by us. He didn’t. And I’ve seen him before. My job requires me to remember faces and such, Foxx. I have to in order to work at a busy pub. He was at the Pub the other night when you nearly hit poor old Jimeson with your mug. I also saw him walking along the road just before we drove into whatever it was we were witness to before we came here.  He was walking along the roadway. Foxx, could he have something to do with this do you think?”
Foxx stared at the woman across the table from him. How did he miss seeing the old man and how did Mary Beth see him when he hadn’t?  “Mary Beth, why didn’t you mention the old man before? He might be important to solving this.”
She looked at Foxx and sighed. “And maybe he’s part of the problem, Foxx. He seems to me to be showing up everywhere there’s trouble. I’m just suggesting we try to find him and speak with him.”
Fox thought long and hard, then shook his head. “I think we should give this over to James and let him handle the questioning. Can you recall what the man looked like? Would you know if we see him again?”
Mary Beth smiled and nodded. “I would know, Foxx. He’s not easy to miss, as he shows himself often. I’m wondering if he’s part of this. Didn’t I hear once that the legend claims the Lady’s father, as well as her warrior and the one who killed him would all return at the same time? I just think it warrants looking into.”
Fox nodded and dug out money for the bill and stood, reaching for Mary Beth’s hand. “Let’s get back on the way, then. James will be looking for us to show up soon, and we’ve dallied here long enough. Shouldn’t be long now.”
The rest of the journey into Dublin went without incident. They pulled up in front of the library and climbed out of the lorry to look for James. Foxx spotted him as he was coming up the walk and went forward to meet him. “Glad you could make it. You remember Mary Beth.”
James nodded and smiled. “I do. Did he have to hog tie you to come along? I didn’t know anyone would be willing to spend time with that mug.”
Mary Beth laughed and shook her head. “I asked to come. I wanted to help him. He’s had a rough time the last little while.” She glanced at Foxx and waited for him to launch into an explanation. Foxx sighed heavily and shook his head. “I think we’ll need tea for that. Maybe when we’re finished here, James can join us for lunch?”
Mary Beth didn’t agree. “Foxx, he’s a busy man.” She turned to James. “Foxx has been having visions, I suppose you could call them.” She launched into the telling of them from the Jameson problem at the pub to the battle vision they both shared on their way into the city. But she never mentioned the old man she had kept seeing. Foxx puzzled that as they made their way into the library and  into the historical section where the history of Ireland, both legend and fact, was stored.
Pulling Mary Beth aside, he asked her quietly why she hadn’t mentioned the old man. Mary Beth shrugged and shook her head. “Because I’m not sure where he fits, Foxx. If he’s part of the visions or part of the reality. Until we know for certain sure, we can’t mention him or James will be trying to find him, thinking he’s real. He may be a part of this, Foxx, but I think we need to decide what role he plays before we include him in our conversations with James.”
Mary Beth turned and started to follow James into the library. “You coming, Foxx? Daylight is wasting.”
Foxx followed, still puzzling over Mary Beth’s words when his cell buzzed angrily in his pocket. He frowned when he saw it was his own phone. “Mum? Are you alright?” There was static on the line before foxx heard the female voice.
“She’s fine, Foxx, for now. She’s had a bit of a scare and I’ll remain with her until you get home. She said someone had been in her house and she didn’t know where you were.”
“Mrs. Kelly. She knew where I’d gone. I’m in Dublin at the library. Mary Beth is with me and we’re doing some work. Who was in the house? When we left, she was in the kitchen making food for the Ceili. She wouldn’t allow me to call you. She said she was fine and she appeared so. Have you called the Dr? I can’t come just yet, but can you stay with her until I get back?”
Maggie Kelly agreed to stay, assuring Foxx his mother was fine in every aspect. She’d just had a fright, was all. She would speak to Foxx when he returned home. Foxx clicked off his phone, bewildered by the turn of events at home. He felt Mary Beth’s hand on his arm and turned to her.
“Mrs. Kelly is with my mother. She’s had a scare and told Mrs. Kelly there had been someone in the house with her. She’ll stay with my mother until I get back. I should have called her before I left.” With a heavy sigh, Foxx shook his head and went on into the library. Mary Beth wasn’t so sure that Foxx’s mother was scared. Something about this phone call made her stomach roil. “Mrs. Kelly,” Foxx continued on, “told me that my mother didn’t know where I had gone. We both told her where we were going, didn’t we?”
Foxx furrowed his brow in thought. He wasn’t sure of anything at this point except that he was unsure what was happening around him. His world had shifted sharply and he wasn’t sure he liked the way it was now.
Mary Beth nodded. “We told her, Foxx. Perhaps you should have the doctor look in on her when we return. It sounds like she’s had a spell of some sort.”
Foxx nodded with a heavy sigh. He really didn’t need this on top of everything else. He nodded to the old gentleman reading the news, not paying much mind. Mary Beth stopped to stare and the old man looked up from his paper and winked at her. She managed a smile, then moved away from him right away.
“Foxx. That old man reading the paper. It’s him, he’s the one who shows up every time something happens. Foxx? Foxx!”
Foxx was on his knees, grasping his head as if he were in pain. Blood dripped from his nose as James knelt over him protectively. Mary Beth turned toward the reading section, but the old man was gone. She pulled a handkerchief from her jacket pocket and held it out to Foxx, who couldn’t have been more surprised. He took it from her to staunch the flow of blood, but his eyes were distant and had the look Mary Beth recognized from the tavern the night before when he attacked Jimeson.
“Foxx, we’re at the library in Dublin. Remember? James is here as well. What are you seeing, Foxx? What’s happened?”
Foxx came out of his stupor more slowly this time. He blinked at Mary Beth and James, confused and dazzled.
“I wasn’t here. I’d stepped onto a battlefield the minute I stepped into this room. I was more than observing this time. I was swinging a battle ax and I felt it when it struck, felt the warm blood on my hands. Jesus and Mary, I feel sick. I’ve never...I haven’t...sweet mother of Hades!” He cringed as the memory of what he had seen flooded back and overwhelmed him.
James pulled him to his feet and got him into a chair. “Foxx, what’s this all about? What’s going on here? Tell me, man! If you’re sick, we can get you to a hospital.”
Foxx smiled up at his friend. “I’m not sick. At least, not in the way you mean. This all started when I saw that gauntlet at the Dance. I’ve been tossed into and out of battle scenes ever since. Mary Beth is too kind to tell you that I nearly killed Jimeson with my beer mug last night at the pub. If it hadn’t been for Murphy, you’d have me in custody for murder right now. I wish I knew what the in Jesus’ name is going on, but I haven’t a clue other than I’m not feeling very well at the moment. By the Saints, James, I was killing men with a battle ax. I could feel every strike, smell the blood, feel it warm on my hands. That’s why we’re here. I need to research that particular Dance and see if I can make sense of this before my head explodes. I was hoping you could give me a hand when you have time to spare.”
James stared at his lifelong friend and shook his head. “I have some time coming up. Nearly four weeks of vacation time. I’ll put in for it today and you’ll have me for those four weeks. I can spare the time, Foxx. Let me help you. The last thing I want is to arrest you or see you sick and in hospital.”
He changed focus and turned to Mary Beth. “I want to know every time he has a spell. Where he is and what’s happened starting now. You mentioned to him about an old man in the reading room. I didn’t see anyone. How does he fit into this?”
Mary Beth sighed. “I’m not sure, James. But anytime I’ve been with Foxx and he’s had a spell, the old man was there. Either just before or just after. When I go to speak to him, he’s gone. I’m not sure if he fades away or leaves and I don’t see him do so, but he’s gone.”
James nodded and handed Mary Beth a calling card. “My cell number and home phone. I don’t care what time of day or night, Mary Beth. You call me when he needs me. I know you’re there with him, but you aren’t an investigator. We’ll figure this out soon. Foxx? You want to stay and research or go on home and leave that up to me?”
Foxx, grateful to his friend, shook his head. “I’ll stay. I’m feeling better and I need to do this. I need to look into this, even with help from the two of you. I won’t rest easy at home, waiting. I’m better doing, James, you know me well enough to know that.”
The police captain nodded and smiled. “Then I think we need to get going on it. The sooner we find information, perhaps the sooner we can solve this. Come on. We’ll hit the research room first. It has listings of all the historical sites and small stories about each one. Once we find the one we want, we can cross reference to the bigger books and the tales that go along with it. If we can find one answer, we can find the rest.”

2
Shapeshifter / Story 6
« on: July 28, 2017, 11:02:24 pm »
     The dirty brown car drove slowly along the access road, the driver unaware he was being observed. Eyes the color of rich amber watched from the low shrubbery that lined the roadway. ~Humans! Filthy beasts that foul the waters and the lands with their garbage!~
     It was late enough at night no one would notice the car and the access road led away from the lighted ball field and into the small spot of shrubs and water plants that indicated ‘swamp’. The driver was confident he could make the dump and get himself gone before any patrols wandered through.
     The animal followed the slow moving car, alert to any changes telling him he’d been spotted. The car had driven a few yards into the brush without lights. This drew the curiosity of the coyote even more. What was the filthy human up to in the darkness?
     The driver climbed out of the vehicle and opened the back, and the coyote watched as the man lifted a small bundle from inside. It canted its head slightly as the man, who smelled of fear and sweat, carried the bundle to the ditch, dropped it and nudged it over the small embankment with his toe. The cloth it was wrapped in opened up when the thing rolled and the air was suddenly filled with more than fear. It was also filled with blood scent and death. The coyote curled its lip over sharp canines and growled deep in its chest.
     What had the human brought here so close to its den? It crouched in the bushes and waited until the human had gotten back into the car and driven off before it approached the bundle that had stopped just shy of the shallow pool of water at the bottom of the ditch.
     The coyote smelled and whined at the strange fabric. Heavy, thick; but it didn’t stop the odor coming from what had been held inside. The coyote inched closer, sniffing at the  exposed hand and arm. Warm. Human. It smelled, then leaped away, waiting for the trap to spring. The hand didn’t move. Coyote was more curious now.
     This human had no strange human fur. Its body was naked. The coyote carefully studied the human that had been wrapped in the fabric. It sniffed and snuffled, licked to taste. Warm. Blood. Dead, but not. Coyote pondered at the strangeness of it. What trick was this of the humans to kill yet not kill? Blood, yes. Hurts, yes. Dead, no. Not yet. The coyote yipped in distress and couldn’t understand why it was feeling confused about the smells.

     “Hey, Ambrose! Snap to and get your ass in my office. Where’s your partner?”
      “Here, boss. I was in the … never mind. I’m here now.” Kate Graham moved with the grace of a cat as she crossed the floor. “Come on, Jake. Let’s go see what he wants this time. Maybe we can catch a hot one today.” 
     Jake nodded and dragged himself to his feet. “I guess. Can’t hurt. We haven’t had a good case for a while.” Together they headed for the Captain’s office. Jake was more than tired, even though he’d slept better than eight hours. Maybe he was coming down with something. His amber-brown eyes narrowed at the sun coming in the windows. He truly did feel sick. Damn it! He didn’t need this today. Or any other day, truth be told.
     Captain Aaron Morgan was seated behind his desk, studying a file and looked up at his two best detectives. “Jesus, Ambrose. What the hell is wrong with you? You look like hell.”
     “Thanks, Cap. I dunno. Maybe I’m coming down with some kind of bug. I’m tired. Really, really tired and I ache everywhere. I probably should have stayed home today.” Jake swiped at auburn hair that tumbled wildly around his ears and made him look sexy instead of unkempt. The streaks of silver and white flashed in the sun coming through the Captain’s window.
     “I don’t think so. Beat cops found another body. This one was back off an access road out at the old ball field. Little league took that field over a couple of years ago, but they’re only there a few times a week. The M.E. will be able to tell us how long the body’s been dead, but not how long it’s been out there in that ditch. Forensics team has been out there since last night. I want you two on this, so get your asses out there and bring me back a killer.
     “Oh, yea. Strange thing. The men tell me there’s some kind of dog tracks all over the place out there. Body’d been dragged a bit away from the water, but there aren’t any indications of bites. Hell of a thing.”
     Jake frowned. “What kind of dog? And why would a dog be around a D.B.?” He was thinking aloud again and Kate half-smiled. She loved it when he followed his intuition, which she thought was pretty far advanced. It always amazed her when his ‘thinking’ solved their cases.
     Their captain hunched his shoulders in a noncommittal way. “I don’t know anything about dogs and their habits, Jake. That’s why you’re the detective. Get your asses out to the ball field and go to work. Talk to a....” Aaron glanced down at the paper in front of him. “...John Myers. He’s the officer in charge out there. They’ve taped off the scene and are trying to keep a low profile to keep the gawkers to a minimum. He’s expecting you.” The tone of his voice held the hostility he still felt toward Jake making detective grade so soon.
     Jake nodded, one quick jerk of his head, and turned to leave. Kate recognized the anger that washed over his face for only a few seconds before he’d schooled it into something human again. She knew there was contention between Aaron and Jake about his making detective early. Aaron never thought that family should be given special privileges and Jake’s uncle being a retired police chief certainly seemed to give the man ‘privileges’.
     “Hey, Jake. Wait.” Kate caught him at the elevator, stepping into the box before Jake slammed the button for going down. “Jake. You know Aaron says things just to aggravate  you. Let it go. Jesus, you’ve been on this job for a year. By now, you should know he’s a prick. He just thinks you got preferential treatment and he doesn’t like it because he had to work his ass off to get where he is. Ignore him and let’s solve this case. “
     “Yea, well. It still bites. Morgan is still an ass. But you’re right. Let’s go out there and see what the fuss is about and see if we can pinpoint the type of dog.” He chuckled and shook his head. “A damned dog. What next?” But things were turning in his brain as the elevator took them to the parking garage. “Kate? What if it wasn’t a ‘dog’, but something else? There are wild things out there as well. Wolves, maybe, though they don’t usually come into the city. I’ve heard people talk about packs of feral dogs. Or coyotes.”
     Kate nodded thoughtfully as the elevator stopped and the doors opened. “I’ve heard of coyote attacks, and sometimes them entering businesses because they’re hungry, looking for food. Could be a pack of them, but I thought they were solo beasts.”
     Jake nodded in agreement. “Well, let’s get ourselves out to the scene and take a look. We sure can’t solve the crime by standing in the parking garage debating what kind of animal left prints all over our crime scene.” Jake opened the driver’s door, then stopped and thought about it for a second. “Why don’t you drive, Kate? I’m still feeling a little foggy.”
     Kate stepped around the car and rested a hand on Jake’s cheek for a second. “You don’t feel like you have a fever. Maybe you should see someone, Jake. You still feel like you aren’t sleeping?” She climbed behind the wheel, leaving a stunned Jake staring at her. “Well, for christ’s sake. Get in the car, Jake. Let’s go.”
     He nodded still stunned. “Yea, yea.” He went around and got in the passenger side. “Why did you do that?” Still shocked at Kate’s touch, he frowned at her as he snapped his seat belt into place. “Why did you touch me?”
     Kate turned her head to take in his stunned look  and shrugged. “Because we’re friends, Jake and I’m worried about you. You look sick, feel sick. You haven’t been sleeping well and I wanted to know if you had a fever. It’s not so bad, you know, letting someone touch you. Most women I know who know you would pay for the privilege, ruggedly handsome as you are.” Her teasing was light and playful as she ignored the flutters in her belly and ruthlessly pushed down any rush of feelings she shouldn’t have for her partner.
     Jake chuckled and shook his head. “You’re an idiot, Graham. ‘Women you know who know me.’ How many is that, anyway? Three?” He lifted the radio mic and called them out of the station and they started on their way to the crime scene. Jake let his memory drift to the first time he met Kate. He’d just returned from time away after a particularly gruesome case involving a young woman and she marched up to his desk, introduced herself as his new partner. His initial reaction had been ‘Bloody hell, not in this lifetime,’ but she’d proven herself invaluable since. His old partner had retired after that case and Jake had thought about another line of work himself. Kate was the one who talked him around to sticking.
     He had to admit, he’d been attracted to her from the beginning. Though wisely, kept those thoughts to himself. She was his partner. It wouldn’t do for them to become ‘involved’. He’d seen it happen with others, and it never seemed to work out. Jake imagined the stress of having a partner who was also your lover would destroy any relationship other than a professional one. There would be the worry, and the constant fear of them dying on the job. Not that he didn’t worry about Kate like that. But he had convinced himself it was different because she was his partner.
     He’d had the window **** just a bit to allow in the fresh air and he scented the scene before they turned the corner. “We must be close,” he muttered more to himself than to Kate. She slowed the car as they rounded the curve and nodded. Jake sat up straighter, blinking his eyes to try to clear the familiarity fog that overlaid the crime scene. He’d been here before. He was almost sure of it, though he couldn’t bring to mind when or why. And he knew without a doubt that the body wasn’t dead when it was dropped here.
     Jake paled as he stepped out of the car. He could smell the blood and taste the metallic tang of it on his tongue. Kate hurried to his side and peered up at the six foot tall man. “You okay? You don’t look very good, Jake. Why don’t you sit this one out? Maybe you are coming down with something.”
     Jake shook his head and went toward the small group of cops standing close to the crime tape. A smallish man stepped from the group and held out his hand. “You Ambrose and Graham? I was told to expect you two. John Myers. Come on, I think you need to see this before the lab boys mess things up. Group of concerned citizens over there.” He nodded toward a small crowd. “They’re worried it was some kind of animal attack. I don’t think any animal did this; at least not the four-legged variety.” They made their way to the dead body. The closer they got the more Jake knew he’d been here before, was prepared for the sight of the young woman. Jesus, the blood scent was powerful, though he knew she hadn’t been attacked here. Act like a cop, Jake.
Jake peered at the body and grimaced. A young woman who looked like she’d been beaten and stabbed repeatedly in some monstrous ritual of blood letting. He squatted down and poked at the tarp with the pen he’d taken from his shirt pocket. “She was wrapped in this?”
The younger police officer nodded and looked at his notepad. “Yes, sir.  Just as you see her, half exposed like that. We haven’t touched anything; just secured the scene and waited for you to get here like we were told. Those paw prints were all over the place. They look like some sort of dog, but we don’t know if she had a dog with her or not.”
Kate canted her head and looked at the prints, but before she could speak, Jake did. “This is a body drop. No blood other than what’s on the tarp and no obvious signs of struggle here. She didn’t have a dog with her, I think the dog came after she was dropped. And I don’t think it was a dog. Those prints look like coyote. I’d heard there was a pack of them out here, but they don’t seem to be wanting to wander any closer to civilization, so the city is leaving them be.”
Officer Myers walked a few feet away to speak to another officer while they waited for the medical examiner to arrive to join the forensic unit. “Hey, Mike? Does Ambrose give you the willies? It’s just spooky, how he knows things, don’t you think?”
Myers partner grunted in agreement, but kept his eyes on the corpse and the two detectives. “Yea, well. I wouldn’t mind havin’ a partner like that one. She reminds me of a cat, the way she’s all sleek and sexy. Wonder if he’s hittin’ that?”
Jake looked up at the two officers and snarled under his breath. “Those two need to stop with the bullshit, Kate.”
Kate laughed and shook her head. “Leave them be, Jake. They’re young and young men are  stupid dickheads.. I don’t mind, really. Makes me feel good about myself...you know? Knowing I can still be attractive to two twenty-somethings, even if they are idiots.. Come on. We have bigger things to worry about at the moment. Like how did this body get here and why. Forensics just arrived, so maybe we’ll know something that can help without having to wait for days.”
Jake nodded and poked again at the blood stained tarp. “No more blood than what’s here means this isn’t the primary. She was killed somewhere else and brought here. What we need to know is who she is, who killed her and why. Being dumped here, because this is so remote, they didn’t figure on us finding the body this fast. M.E. should confirm, but she’s not been here very long and I don’t think she’s been dead very long either. Let’s get out of the way and let the man do his job. I want to check out the area here, see what might have accidentally been left for us to find.”
Kate nodded and followed Jake as he wandered about the area, noting he was careful where he put his feet. “Jake? Why are you watching your step?”
Jake turned and blinked at her. “Sorry?”
“I’ve been following you around here and you’re being really guarded about where you put your feet. I was curious as to why. We’re far enough away from the scene, we won’t be messing anything up.”
Jake grimaced and sighed. “You don’t know if whoever dumped her wandered off for a **** before he  left. Or maybe he walked about a bit looking for the best place to dump her. Would be nice to get one good print out here...maybe we’d hit it lucky and it would match a specific shoe or sneaker or something.” He sniffed the air and shook his head. “I can tell you, there’s nothing fresh out here. Any urine smell is old enough to not be very strong. Let’s go talk to the M.E. and see if he’s got anything preliminary for us before he takes the body away.”
He turned back and headed for the crime scene again and the medical examiner. “Hey, Mike. What’s up here? Anything good for us?”
Mike Turner shrugged. “Female, roughly eighteen to twenty-two, one-twenty to one-thirty, roughly five foot eight. Been dead according to liver temp about twenty-four hours. This one was brutal, Jake. Stabbed and beaten. Cause of death, at this point seems to be blunt-force trauma to the temporal region of her head, but I’ll know more when I get her on the table. I figure you know this isn’t your primary, so I won’t have much to go on yet. Find me that and I’ll give you loads of stuff. New forensic equipment came today. In another day or so, we’ll be connected to a national database that will tell us if there are other unsolved out there with similar m.o.’s. Make access to prints easier as well. And I’m hoping to find some on her body. Killers don’t know they leave prints on skin just like any other surface.”
Mike turned to his assistant. “Let’s get her bagged and tagged, Josh. Load her up and take her downtown. I’m curious as to why she’s dead and maybe we can give that new equipment a try.”
Jake watched Mike and Josh body bag the victim, load her onto a gurney and shove her into the waiting van. He hoped they would have something by tomorrow at the latest. He still felt like hell and the world was taking a slow spin. His stomach lurched and he leaned against a nearby tree for a few seconds until the world righted itself again. Damn it, what was wrong with him?
“Hey, Kate. Mind dropping me at home? I can work from there on things and I’m still not feeling all that steady.”
Kate glanced up at him and frowned. “I think you need to see someone, Jake. You’re white as my grannie’s sheets, and sweating like a D.O.T. worker on a busy traffic day. I’ll take you home if you promise to call someone. Maybe I’ll stop by later on and bring you stuff. Whatever you need.”
“I’ll call someone, Kate. I promise. I just need to curl up and sleep for a hundred years. Getting something to help me do that will help me, I’m sure.”
He pushed away from the tree he’d been leaning against and headed for the patrol car. They almost made it when one of the officers called to them. “Hey! Detectives! Over here. You have to see this.”
Jake groaned under his breath and turned back to the scene. The cop was pointing to the ground excitedly, so they traipsed back to look. A piece of muddied paper lay almost buried, but Jake could see it was a ticket. He frowned and lifted it carefully by a corner with the tips of his fingers. Kate grabbed an evidence bag from her pocket and slid it up and over the paper.
“If it’s something, we’ll know when the lab finishes with it. It might be something that had been here all along.” Kate noted on the bag in permanent marker where the paper was found, the time and date, also noting that it had been found after the body was  moved, indicating the ticket had been under the tarp. “Come on, cowboy, let’s get you home so you can get well. I think we’re gonna need you on this every step of the way. You and your magic intuition.” Kate smiled as she walked back to the car with Jake. “You know, Jake. I’d come keep you company later if you asked me. We could have some dinner and do some reconnoitering on this. The girl is young. Maybe a college girl, maybe a runaway. But some mom is going to be worried about her daughter who didn’t return home last night. Or some room mate will be frantic about her friend who left a party and didn’t come home.”
“Yea, and maybe she’s a hooker who took one from her pimp. You can stop by if you want. Why don’t you work that angle this afternoon, I’ll work on another one from home. Come by, Kate. I’ll fix dinner or order in and we’ll compare notes.”
Kate nodded. She had more in mind than comparing notes, but she’ll let that come as it may. Jake was drawn to her, she knew, as much as she was to him. Being partners made it rough, but they could learn to work together and make a great team. And they could start by siphoning off some of this sexual buzz she had felt for him from day one of working together. At least she hoped they could. She wouldn’t mind a nice roll in the sack with Jake. She’d like to know if the rumors were true.

The old warehouse looked as if it was ready to fall in and Sam had always wondered that the last huge storm hadn’t dropped it to the ground in a gust of seventy mile per hour wind. But the damned thing still stood and his boss’s office was still neat and orderly at one end, while trucks moved in and out of the old place at the other. Sam never questioned what they hauled or why they were hauling it. That was part of the secret to surviving working for ‘Big Tony’ Mazza. And Sam Gespote wasn’t a dumb man.
He kept his nose out of the everyday operations of the business and Big Tony kept him on the payroll. Right now, he was relaxing in the big leather chair that faced Tony’s desk and enjoying a good Italian red.
“You took care of my son’s problem, Sammy? There won’t be any more words from that?”
Sam nodded. “I took care of it, Tony.” It felt good to be on a first name basis with the man who paid you your living. “There won’t be any more trouble from that particular problem.”
Tony smiled across his desk and slid an envelope toward Sam. “Then you have my eternal thanks, Sammy. We take care of one another, yea? I have another job for you. This one is easy. No killing. Just some information gathering. I want to know who’s ripe for the pickin’ at the police department. I like to change them out once in a while so no one gets suspicious. We can’t afford anyone from there getting suspicious while this operation is still going on. I need some new soldiers in there. Think you could do that for me?”
Sam chuckled and nodded. “Yea, Boss. I can do that for you. I have lots of contacts on the force. It’ll be nice to reconnect with some of them, do some asking around.”
Tony nodded. Sammy had been like a brother to him on the streets and when Sam needed a job, Tony offered. Sam never questioned, he just did. Tony could rely on him for a lot of things and keeping him and his safe was a major trust. Tony’s son, Vinnie, had a problem with women and drink. Nothing with drugs, since that was part of the trade that happened here and you didn’t **** in your own bed, so to speak, so Vinnie stayed well away from the new and growing drug trade. But he indulged in booze and women and once in a while, Sammy had to take care of things, get Vinnie clean and sober for whatever reason Tony deemed. Sam had worked at keeping that kid sober since he started working for Tony.
It wasn’t always an easy job. Vincent Mazza had a way with women. Usually the expensive ones that ended up costing him a ton of money. When they got pushy about what they wanted, it was Sam who came to the kid’s rescue and disposed of the problem without so much as a blink. He secretly wished the boy physical harm, but it was only a personal thought and not one to be spoken aloud or acted upon.
When Vinnie was younger, Sam often witnessed his father heaping praise upon the kid for the way he handled the women given to him. Vinnie had been involved with women since the age of fourteen. 
Now twenty, Vinnie understood the only way to treat a woman was like an object. He treated his own mother with respect, but only because she would beat him with a bat if he didn’t. The other women he was sent or whom he met on the street, were treated like scum. They meant nothing to the young man. They were often his punching bag, his ****, his dirty laundry, and got little to no respect from him. Sammy was finding himself cleaning up after the kid more and more often. One of these days, Big Tony would ask about how things were going and he’d be obliged to tell him about the women. Tony would take swift and terrible action against his own son. Sam shuddered as he thought about it. Maybe that would be best. The kid was a walking danger magnet. Big Tony didn’t need that kind of attention.
Sam called his buddy in the police department and arranged a lunch meet. Then went to Vincent’s place to talk to the kid again. One more time of talking and Sam will have to make an effort to talk to Big Tony about his son. As he turned the corner of the kid’s street, he saw squad cars and neighbors milling around. What the hell now? He pulled the car over and watched to see if he could figure out what was going on. He grabbed his cell phone and put a call in to the boss once he saw the action was his son’s apartment. The door was standing open and cops were everywhere. As soon as he saw the M.E.’s van, he hit dial and waited.
“Yea?” The voice on the other end sounded gruff and disoriented. Sam could hear a woman in the background and he winced.
“Boss? Got some excitement at Vinnie’s place. Cops and the medical examiner, reporters and gawkers.” There was silence on the other end of the line for a full minute. Sam was just about to speak when Tony, sounding more like himself, came back on the line.
“Get your ass over there and find out what the hell is going on, then call me back. I’ll get a call in to Marcel, in case we need him for something.”
Marcel was the family lawyer, Sam knew. He pushed open the car door and made his way across the street and elbowed his way through the crowd. He latched on to a cop he knew and pulled him closer. “What’s happening?”
The cop, jolted by the snatch, blinked at Sam and shook his head. “You have any idea where the kid is, Sam? Neighbors reported a loud argument, but by the time we got here, the kid was in the wind and there’s a body in his apartment. Looks like she’d been beaten pretty bad before she died. Skirt up around her waist, panties around her ankles. Stabbed repeatedly, bitten. Coroner says it looks like whoever did this was mighty pissed about something and the girl took the brunt of it.”
Sam sighed inwardly. “I ain’t seen the kid. Not since day before yesterday. Got I.D. on the girl?”
The cop flipped his notebook open and shook his head. “Nah. She looks to be about sixteen, Sam. If the kid is playing house with minors, he’ll go away for a long time. I gotta get back in there. See if you can find the kid and get him to come in on his own. Right now, we only want to talk to him. But if evidence says he’d been at her, we’ll need to do more than talk.”
Sam made his way back to his car and called Big Tony. “ Dead body in the kid’s place, Tony. Cops say she looks to be about sixteen and pretty badly beaten, stabbed, bitten. No sign of Vinnie. Neighbors reported a loud argument early this morning, cops responded, but only found the girl. I’m going to do some looking and see if I can find the kid. This isn’t his usual M.O., Boss. Anyone you know got it in for you or the kid?”
Tony grumbled back at Sam. “Find the fuckhead, Sammy, before the cops do. We’ll deal with our own. You know the usual places. Find him, Sam. Get his ass back here to me.”
The phone clicked off and Sam sighed to himself. He knew where to look, but if Vinnie didn’t want to be found, he played ‘least in sight’ very well. This could take a while.
Sam headed to Angela’s mother’s house. The kid liked to go there when he was in trouble. The grandmother kept him safe from Tony’s discipline as much as she could. Sam thought of her as an enabler. If she was hiding the kid, Sam knew it would be next to impossible to rend him free. But this was serious **** and had to be dealt with as soon as possible.

Jake barely made the bathroom of his apartment before he was violently ill. Chills shook him as fever raged through his body. He barely managed to undress and crawl into the tub, turning the shower on full. Pain wracked him as his vision blurred and his muscles went taught. He blinked and from one second to the next, he was looking at the world from a whole new perspective. Rage hurned through him as he sat in the tub, the water tumbling over his coyote body. He clamoured out of the tub and shook violently to get the water out of his fur.
He went into the bedroom and angled toward the window. With a leap, he was out and running. He had to get back to the lair and it frightened him that he  couldn’t control the police showing up or the possibility that his pack would be found. He kept them all in the little forest as much as he could, though hunting was getting harder as the pack grew and he knew on some instinctive level that he would either have to split them up or move them all to a larger area.
He managed to avoid the police presence and slip into the lair quickly. He was greeted with pups and other larger younglings yips and sharp barks. Yes, he knew about the humans and no there wasn’t anything he could do at the moment since there was a dead girl.
The young coyotes quieted at the mention of death. They could smell it in the air, but never associated it with the humans mucking about in their swamp. The alpha coyote tried to explain to them about how the young woman died and they needed to be vigilant now that the humans would be about more until they found answers. If they found evidence, they should leave it where the silly humans could find it on their own. The young coyotes understood and yipped in agreement. 
Satisfied that his pack was safe for the time being and they were aware of the humans and the dangers as well as the search for the bad human that brought death to their door, he left them again. They would be fine with food and hunting in small groups as long as they stayed away from the humans. 
The death had made him ill. The body had been mutilated and abused and all he wanted to do was find the perp before another girl died. He lost all sense of time in this form, but he knew it was getting late in the afternoon so he headed back to his apartment. As he made the leap into the bedroom window, he froze.
Someone was here, poking about in his kitchen. He glanced from the doorway to the bathroom where he’d left his clothes from this morning, then beyond to the kitchen. Kate! Damn, he’d lost track of time, which was easy to do in this form. He eyed the bathroom again and decided he hadn’t a snowball’s chance in hell of getting there without being seen. He watched her as she picked up a box from the counter and turned to head toward the bedroom.
“Jake? Jake are you awake? I let myself in, I hope you don’t mi....” Her mouth open, she stared at the coyote standing in the middle of the bedroom. She slowly lowered the box to the table next to the door and drew her service weapon. Jake stared at it as she aimed it at him.
****! ****, ****, ****! “Kate, don’t fire that weapon, PLEASE!”  The coyote blinked amber eyes at her and bared his teeth in what he hoped was a friendly grin. Kate wasn’t happy at the snarl he produced. Jake didn’t move, Kate didn’t move. They stared at one another for a full minute before Jake whined and lay down, rolling to expose his belly submissively. That was the last thing he wanted to do and hoped his pack never witnessed their leader in this pose.
Kate watched the coyote roll and frowned. This wasn’t the actions of a wild creature. Kate, being city born and raised, had little to no experience with the wild. She wished Jake was here, since he seemed to understand these beasts. She didn’t lower her gun, was actually afraid to. What if it rushed at her? And where the hell was Jake?
The coyote rolled to his feet and yipped lightly. Kate’s hands started to tremble as it closed on her. “I’ll shoot you. Don’t come any closer, dog. I WILL shoot you.”
“If you’re going to shoot me, you better make it a fatal shot, Graham, or I’ll hunt you down and shoot you back.”
Kate blinked and stared at the coyote. “Did you just talk to me? I guess that takes ‘speak’ to a whole new level.” Stunned beyond belief,  she watched as the coyote finished the transformation and Jake stood before her. She was too stunned to notice he was naked. She was too stunned to notice much of anything. “Jake? What the hell was that? It was some parlor trick! Jesus!”
Jake smiled at her and nodded at her hand. “Put the gun down, Kate, before you actually shoot me. I’ll explain everything if you give me a moment to get decent.”
Kate glanced at her hand, then at Jake. Her eyes raked his body from toes to top and back down. She managed a swallow as she took a careful study of the broad shoulders, powerful arms, muscular abs, and strong thighs. Her eyes finally stopped their roaming and stared. Jake was suddenly very aware of his nakedness and found himself nervous and shaky.
“Um, Graham? You’re staring. Go sit down and let me get dressed. I’ll be out in a few minutes and try to explain this to you.”
He grinned at her nod and watched her go out to the living room before he went into the bathroom and picked up his jeans and shirt from earlier. They were still damp and smelled of sickness, so he dumped them into his laundry and went back to the bedroom to get clean clothes. As he stepped into his jeans, he knew his secret was about to explode and he could only hope Kate understood enough to help him keep it from the media so he could move the pack and get them to relative safety.
He went to the living room in jeans and bare feet, his shirt on but open. He sat opposite Kate and smiled at her. “I guess you have questions. I’ll try to answer them best as I can. We’ll take it one thing at a time. I’m what the indigenous peoples call a skin walker. My animal is coyote. That’s where this gets strange. I didn’t know until a couple of years ago that I could change like this. When it happened the first time, I thought I was dreaming. It didn’t last long and I was back into myself within minutes. It kept happening, night after night for longer and longer periods of time. Eventually, I went to a doctor in another city. I couldn’t risk my career, so I lied about who I was and where I came from.
“But he knew. He knew all about me, my dreams and my ability. He said someone told him I would be coming to see him and he would be able to help me. He did, Kate. As far as he could, he helped me. His Grandfather was a Navajo shaman. This doctor told me what he had learned from his grandfather before the old man left this plane. He helped me control the change, helped me live a life within a life.
“It’s painful to shift purposely. What you call my ‘magic intuition’ is coyote sense. I can smell things and notice things that the normal human can’t. Crime scenes like the one this morning make me ill because I have these over-sensitive senses. I was there before the body was found this morning. She was still alive on some level when I pulled her away from the water in the ditch. What I saw and what I felt in those moments made me ill. I knew patrol was headed into the park and instinct made me go to my pack to keep them safe. It was also instinct to head home and get what few minutes of sleep I could. Apparently it wasn’t enough.
“I didn’t understand that either for a while today. What I find in coyote form makes me ill in human. I can’t explain it, Kate. It’s like sensory overload. I have to sleep or alter and run to overcome the illness. I can’t sleep and work too, so I try to stay here and not try to follow instinct to bodies and crime scenes. I’m always the first on scene and no one even knows. I can’t give them anything I know about the scene because a lot of it I can’t recall when I alter forms.
“I try to not find my pack, but that draw is too strong. I have to go to them, be with them, if only for a little while. They aren’t safe where they are now. Humans will hunt them and kill them because they don’t want to believe that the vicious murder of a young woman couldn’t possibly be done by human hands. I’m their alpha. My job is to keep them all safe.
“Because I found this girl early this morning while I was out hunting with some of the younger pack, I want to finish it. I want to find whoever did this and end him. She was still alive, Kate. And I couldn’t help her. And when I shift back, I forget. Until we rolled up onto that scene, I had no idea that I’d been there earlier. Every time I shift, I seem to lose a part of who I am, my humanity.”
Kate stared at the man who had been her partner almost from the beginning. He’d been assigned to her when he first made detective and they clicked, so Cap kept them together.
“So what? You’re telling me you’re some kind of werewolf thing? Some kind of monster?”
Jake flinched and stood to pace the room. “If that’s how you see me, then I guess that’s what I’m saying, Kate. I’ve never told anyone.” He paused in front of the window and stared out the glass at the rapidly setting sun. “I wanted you to know because this is all about trust. You have to trust the partner you have, right? I’m not a were-anything. I’m a shapeshifter. I hold the form of the coyote within me and once in a while, I shift.”
Kate still stared at him. she wasn’t sure what to think or how to react. She’d seen him do just that a few minutes ago. But her mind wasn’t wrapping itself around what she saw or what she was hearing. She blinked, then stood. “Jake? Look at me.”
When he turned toward her, she was drawn to the rich amber eyes, not quite human, not quite animal. She took a hesitant step forward, then stopped. Jake watched her and frowned as she hesitated. He wanted to run, he wanted to stay. He felt his heart rate kick up a notch and he willed himself to calm down. She’d put her weapon down at least. But what he told her would have her either run screaming or accept him. He expected her to run screaming, or at least laugh.
Kate did neither. She swallowed and reached a hand to touch his cheek, much as she had earlier in the day. Jake pulled his head back before her hand could rest there and smiled at her. She frowned and dropped her hand with a heavy sigh.
“Jake. I won’t hurt you nor will I expose you. I just don’t know what to think right now. Can we just have dinner and see? I want time to think this through. I want to sit here with you and talk about the case and see what we can put together between us. You haven’t rested, I can see it in your eyes. You’re exhausted and not feeling well. Come sit with me and we’ll have some wine and relax for a little bit. You can drink wine, can’t you?”
Jake laughed half-heartedly and nodded. “I can have wine, Graham. I’m not a monster.” He had no idea why he said it. He felt the need to make her understand he wasn’t the monster she thought he was. He needed to make sure she understood that he wasn’t evil or dangerous, that he would never hurt her. That she was important to him in more than the job. She was his friend and he cherished that because he didn’t have many of them.
He wasn’t sure what Kate thought about him and his unique ability. But there were things stirring inside him and he wasn’t sure if he liked them or not. He wasn’t even certain that might be a possibility. He frowned as he leaned back in his chair and closed his tired eyes. He was asleep before dinner even arrived.
Kate sat for a long time and watched him sleep. He looked so ‘normal’. But now she knew his secret, she was thinking back over all their cases and how good he’d been at following lead after lead until they had solved it. She teased him about his dogged determination and now wondered at how close she’d actually been. He was good at his job and she had ridden the glory of his instincts with him into praise from the city and the Police Commissioner. She remembered that he stayed as much in the background as he could and never claimed to have solved things on his own. He had let her take credit where he could, and she’d let him.
Now she understood why he had. He couldn’t risk his career or his life. He was determined to keep his ‘pack’ safe from the humans and she wondered now if they were all shifters or if that ability only went to the Alpha of each pack. She thought she would ask him later, but right now, he was so sound asleep, she doubted if even his phone would wake him. She placed a throw over him and smiled to herself. He was handsome and she always felt a pull from him she couldn’t quite explain.
She would let him sleep for now and a nap sounded pretty good to her, as well. If they both slept for a couple of hours, then maybe they could approach this whole matter with a clearer outlook. They would have to figure out how this could work to their advantage and still keep his secret. As much as she cared for and trusted her partner, she was still apprehensive about this coyote thing and just how much she could trust his ability to control the change. She made her way into his bedroom and collapsed on his bed, She was asleep before she could entertain another thought.


Sam hadn’t found the boss’s kid at his Grandmother’s and was convinced she hadn’t seen him in days. He frowned into the dusk and pondered the disappearance of the boy. He called Tony from his car and told him what he knew.
“The shithead hasn’t been around, Tony. Gloria hasn’t seen him for a few days and Angela isn’t happy about him being missing either. I’m going to check a couple of other places where I know he goes. You want him if I find him?”
“No, I don’t want him if you find him. I want you to get him the hell out of town until the cops find whoever killed this girl or we do. I don’t want you to come back here, Sammie. Cops are poking their noses around and that’s not a good thing, if you understand me. Just get the little **** out of town and make sure he stays clean. We have something big in the works and I don’t need the kid fuckin’ it up.”
Tony hung up without fanfare and Sammy sighed. He’d had plans with his latest girl for tonight. Now he had to find the dumb-**** and get him out of town. He couldn’t risk taking the girl and he didn’t want to tell her anything either. He’d discovered early on in his relationships with women, the less you tell them the safer they are. If they can’t tell the cops anything, the safer you are as well. But damn it he was **** as hell and really wanted to spend time with her to take his ease.
Well, couldn’t be helped now. He had a job to do and he would do it. Maybe he could convince the kid to give him a blow. Especially if he got him high enough or drunk enough. He knew the kid liked it both ways, so he wasn’t so much worried about that as he was the dick’s old man finding out. Big Tony didn’t know about the boy’s sexual tastes and Sammy kept it that way. That was how he earned the kid’s trust.
He stopped at one of the local hangs for kids and learned that Vinnie had been there not more than a half hour ago and that he’d left with a boy named Leon. Sammy frowned and thought, but the name didn’t ring a bell, although one of the girls there said Vinnie and Leon were ‘tight’, if he knew what she meant. So the kid either went to Leon’s or they found a cheap motel room. Since neither boy owned a car that anyone knew of, and Leon’s place was less than a block over, Sam had to figure that’s where they went.
He headed that way, keeping his eye out for Vinnie. He spotted him coming out of some seedy building alone. The kid spotted Sam at the same time and jerked his head toward the alleyway. Sam pulled the car in and the kid climbed inside.
“Sam. I was gonna call you...”
“Sure you were, kid. Look, I got orders from your old man to get you out of town. I’m assuming you knew about the girl?”
Vinnie furrowed his forehead and shook his head. “What girl? I don’t know nothin’ about no girl, Sammy and that’s the honest truth. Tell me.”
Sam filled the boy in as they drove toward the bridge that led out of town. “So, your father wants you hid until they find the clown who killed her. Which, apparently wasn’t you. I knew it, kid. I knew you would never do a girl that way. Cop friend of mine said she was brutalized. I never knew you to hurt a woman, Vinnie.”
Vinnie shivered and shook his head again. “I ain’t never hurt no female, Sammy, you know that. Even if they like it rough, I don’t hurt them. Slap them about a bit and cuff them to the bed once in a while, but I don’t hurt them on purpose. I ain’t never cut one like that. I don’t get off on blood..”
Sam nodded thoughtfully as they drove out into the country, headed for the rural cabin that no one knew belonged to Big Tony. Sammy’s mother owned it according to the papers on it. His mama was in a home for old folks, but Sammy kept up the cabin. It made a nice escape from the city; especially since the addition of the indoor pool.
They pulled into the drive and Sammy pushed the button that opened the garage door. The cops were aware of the place, but they left it alone, since no one was here all the time. He pulled the car in and closed the outer door.
“Vinnie, you and me, we gotta stay here for a bit. It’s safe here, since no one knows about it. Who’s Leon?”
Sam couldn’t help the jealous tone to his voice, and Vinnie smiled at him before they got out of the car. “He’s a friend, Sam. Just like you are. I don’t always have a taste for hen chicken. Sometimes, I just want ****.”
He laughed as he opened the car door and climbed out. “Come on, Sam. I’m hungry and that indoor pool is calling me. I want a swim.”
Sam grinned at the kid and nodded. “Sure, sure. Let’s go have a swim, then we’ll see what’s for dinner.” Sam wouldn’t have minded if the kid had offered himself, but he was a patient man and before the night was over, he would be sated one way or another.
By the time Sam had dealt with a phone call from his toss-phone and hunted up food for dinner, the kid was already in the pool. Sam was thrilled to find him naked. He stripped down to join him. Vinnie was lounging against the far wall of the pool, waiting.
“So, what’s for dinner?”
Sam laughed and it echoed off the walls of the pool area. “I took out some steaks and tossed a couple of potatoes into the oven.” Sam’s eyes widened as he took the kid in and noticed his arousal. “Jesus, kid. Wasn’t Leon enough?”
Vinnie laughed and stroked his long fingers down his length and shook his head. “No, he wasn’t. It’s been a while, Sammy.”
Sam nodded and closed the distance between them in a single stroke. “If Tony ever finds out, I’m a dead man. But I think you’re worth the risk.”
Vinnie chuckled and pulled Sam closer to him, hard body against hard body. “I know I am. Worth every penny. And I’ll keep you safe from my father, Sam. By the time I’m done with him, he’ll think it was all me and I convinced you with some difficulty. It’ll all be alright.”


Kate woke up with the moon shining in the open window and a chill breeze blowing the curtains into the room. She became aware all at once of something ‘other’ in the room with her. “Jesus, Jake. Can’t you make some noise to let a person know you’re in the room?”
Jakes voice sounded from the doorway with a chuckle. “I’m not in the room, Kate, but Adrian is. Get out, Addy. Go back to where you should be and stay away from here. It’s not safe for you to be here, you know that.”
*Who is she, Jake? Why is she in your bed?*
“Who she is is my partner. She’s in my bed because I want her there. Go home Addy. NOW!”
Kate could have sworn she felt as if the coyote was young and had spoken aloud. She watched as the animal turned and leaped out the window. She turned to Jake and shook her head. “Did that coyote speak to you?”
Jake sighed and nodded. “SHE thinks we’re intended to be mates. She’s young, still a pup by most standards. In human years, she’s only a kid - sixteen. I brought her into the pack after she lost her parents to a ‘hunting accident’. I think she fixated on me or something. Anyway, why are you in my bed?”
Kate flushed and started to get up, flustered that she’d been caught. She hadn’t intended to sleep very long. “I was tired and you had the comfy sofa. I didn’t think you would mind, but I’ll just get up and....”
Jake stopped her with his hand on her shoulder. “What I told Addy was true, Kate. I want you there. But if this shifter thing makes you uneasy, we can let things be as they are for now. If we do that, be aware that I want you in my bed and I’ll do everything I know how to do to get you there and keep you there. Partner or no, I’m not going to ignore this feeling any longer.”
Kate felt her heart thump hard in her chest and she shifted so Jake could join her. “I think we need to talk about this shifter thing, Jake. I want to understand it, truly I do. I want you to trust that I will never betray you to anyone. Your secret is safe with me.”
Jake sat on the edge of the bed, unsure of his welcome any further. “I’ve always had a sense of ‘other’. All my life, I’ve had this ability with animals, like a second sense. My grandmother was a fanciful sort and could spin tales like a pro. She was the first one to warn me, I guess, about changers, shifters, and how they’re shunned and avoided and killed when the human world had enough of them or blamed them for things they couldn’t explain by any other means. It was always the wild dogs, or wolves or coyote. And easier to kill them, than to accept them as part of the world humans claimed as their own.
“I always thought my gram was talking about fairy tales until I started to have dreams of coyote, running with them, leading them. That was when I figured it out. It was her warning to me. Research into my family history gave me the rest. My Grandfather and several Uncles were shifters. It seems to have skipped my father, but came to me instead. Maybe because he was in such acute denial of what he was that he never shifted. He still won’t talk about it to me or anyone else and actually threatened my Grandmother if she spoke to me about it, so she told me tales swamped in truth, and warnings masked in humor. She was the one I called before I went to see a doctor. She told me who to see, who to talk to, what to ask. That’s how he knew why I was there and why he helped me as much as he could. The rest I had to learn as things went along. Gram is dead now, and my father still won’t listen to me, so I’ve had to figure things on my own for a while now.
“I don’t know if this will be good for us or not, you knowing. But to my way of thinking, it should be a good thing. You have questions, I can see them in your eyes. I’ll do my best to answer them for you.”
Kate smiled, unsure where to begin. “You can start by telling me about how many of you there are here. How many do you protect?”
“We’re a small group of about six. I found the others just by accident one night while I was hunting. They were huddled in a small cave and half starved. Not one of them understood what they were or what they could do. So I began by teaching them basic survival, things like how to hunt, when and where, so they wouldn’t get caught and killed. They were taking peoples pets and strays. I had to make my point what they were risking by doing that. Most of them are young, none above the age of eighteen, and shunned by family or have no family left, like Addy. I’ve always had an open window policy here, but if it makes you uneasy, I’ll talk to them about it. We can shut that off.”
Kate was shocked and it registered in her expression. “You will do no such thing, Jake. They need you to be there for them and you will be. We’ll just set something up so they have a sense of when. They can’t just come wandering in here to you at all hours. No wonder you’re getting no rest.”
Jake canted his head slightly and smiled. “Thanks. I’ll still speak to them, since they won’t trust you or anything you might say. It’ll take them a while to understand you are a friend. I’ve let them think the law here will destroy the pack if they had reason to believe they were a threat.

3
Angels and Evil / Story 5
« on: July 27, 2017, 10:51:54 am »
Gabriel
© Q. L. McKenna   

                  The sun blazed red as it slowly sank below the horizon, it's rays reflecting on the mirrored glass of the tall building. The city moved far below and the traffic sounds drifted up to the open window of the top floor, muted by the distance. Stop lights looked like tiny tree lights from this height, Gabe thought as he watched them blink red then yellow then green. He watched the sinking sun through the window and sighed as the purple and lavender hues of twilight began to steal the light. Gabe had been an Earth-bound. An angel assigned to this world to aide those humans who needed help.
                  He knew he was good at his job. But a woman had lied about him and his Father had stripped his wings as punishment. There had been no chance of redemption, no investigation. He was given less chance to explain himself than he gave the humans who were his charge. The woman stood at his Father's right hand and had his ear better than most.
                  Gabe had often been rebellious and troublesome, though none of his shenanigans had been enough to raise his Father's wrath. He got his work done, though through nefarious means and tricky methods. But the woman wasn't as easily amused when she toyed with Gabe's affections and he toyed back.
                  The building, the tallest and most magnificent in the city, didn't exist for the mortals who resided there. What they saw was a beautiful park with plenty of trees and pathways for walking. Gabriel Bedford was a part of the network of Nephlim and Archangels that helped keep the balance in the Above World where humans, angels and fallen lived together in virtual peace.
                  Humans didn't know who was angel, who was fallen. It was best that way. The fallen weren't permitted to breed with humans, though they could have relationships with them. Gabe often wondered why, but never thought to ask his Father about it.
                  It was too late now. He'd been stripped of his wings and banished from his Father's house because he dared to love and the woman he loved betrayed him as easily as she'd slipped on shoes. He'd vowed he would never love again. He'd managed thus far to stay aloof and untouchable.
                 Jenks Angelo's office was on the top-most floor of the tall glass and steel building. Surrounded by mirrored and tinted glass on two walls, brick and mortar on the others, it held a quiet hush of sliding doors and deep plush carpet. Jenks spread his wings and shivered at the feel of the stretched muscles under his skin. He watched Gabe for a few moments. He'd seen that stance before, that stiff backed straight shouldered way Gabe had of standing when he was irritated about something.
                Jenks was Gabe's boss and his best friend. He understood the man better than anyone, and he prayed every day that his Father would figure out that Gabe wasn't one hundred percent wrong in that relationship. How wrong it was that the Angel who trapped the man was never punished for her roll in the affair. No one took the time to figure out why the woman, a nephlim, had trapped Gabe into an affair. Jenks thought it was because she wanted the Father, not the Son. And unable to have one, decided to punish the other. Gabe was young and stupid in love with her. Or at least, with what she offered him.
                Archangela, Inc. was etched into the glass door and a personal assistant kept the fair folk from hounding her boss. The furnishings were of Ebony wood, dark and bold. The glass topped desk dominated the room, the light paneled walls that set off the dark Ebony of the furnishings, held shelves that overflowed with books and papers on ancient lore, mythology, magics, angelic information and other things too numerous to mention. But Jenks could put his finger on any called for information at any given moment by simply walking to the shelf and pulling it to him.
               Jenks' business was dealing with the mythical and legend. Gabe had been his best friend for centuries. He handed Gabe a drink and leaned a narrow hip on the corner of his desk.
               "There are rumblings in the world beneath this one. Loud rumblings, Gabe. Have you found the woman yet?"
               Gabe took the drink without turning and shook his head. "Not yet. Though I know where she's supposed to be tonight. She's friends with a hunter. You know that, don't you?"
               Jenks nodded. "I just got the prelim today. I didn't recognize the name, but that's not anything new. Hunters change their identity as often as I change my socks. We have to find her tonight, Gabriel. There's a reason why she's being singled out and hunted. We have to find out why and keep her safe."
               Gabe turned then and looked at his friend. "I'll do what I can. I won't be able to get near her with that hunter in her hip pocket, but I'll do what I can. She's supposed to be at the Comedy Shoppe tonight. He's performing there, from what I hear. I'll slip in and see if I can make contact, at least. Maybe I can put a tracker on her somehow. That will help. At least we might be able to know where she is. That is, until her pal Ian finds it and that will only be a matter of time."
               Jenks sat down in his dark leather chair, placed his drink on the table next to it and rubbed his hands over his face. "Gabe. What's bothering you? It's something more than the Hunter and the woman. You can talk to me, you know that. Besides, with technology what it is now, we could track her long enough to know her habits, her routine. Then you can move in."
               Gabe finished his drink and smiled. "You always believed in me, Jenks. I'll make sure the woman is safe. I wonder, sometimes, if He didn't regret His sentence after it was done. You never spoke of it; have yet to say. I'm curious, is all. I'm not permitted contact, so I haven't been able to talk to Him."
               With a sigh, Jenks stood and went to his friend. "You don't have to do this, Gabe. I just thought...if you wanted to earn your wings back...then perhaps this will help you. Your fall wasn't all your fault and I always thought it was wrong of the council to take your wings. Banishment for a century would have worked just as well." His hand came up and rested on Gabe's shoulder.
               "You've always been my best friend. Now you work for me. But if this is something you'd rather not deal with, we can look at other options."
                Jenks shook his head. "I can't say what He's thinking, Gabe. You were His favorite son. He was hurt by what the woman told him. She had his ear more than you and he saw no reason why she would die. All I can say is this was His idea. To give you a job He knows you can and will do without fail. He wants you back, Gabe. He wants His son to return to Him."
               Gabe gaped at his friend. How could he have not known that? After all this time and all the trouble he'd dealt with, how could he not have known it would come to this. "I'll do what I can, Jenks. It may not fit with His methods, but I promise, I'll do what I can."
               Jenks smiled. "That's all I can ask of you, my friend. Now...do you have everything you need for this evening? Can I get you anything? Do anything for you?"
               Gabe chuckled. "You could find me a date." Jenks laughed. "You wouldn't get to the woman if you had a female hanging on your arm. We just need to know why the Underworld wants her. What is it about her that makes them all fight to own her. We can't allow that to happen, Gabe."
               The angel nodded. "Her father's a hunter as well. A Purist. I can't let him get a whiff of me or he'll kill me just on principle."
               Jenks frowned. "I wasn't told that. How did you find that out? It's not in the prelim and my people didn't mention it."
             "Your people aren't the only ones with Nephilim contacts, Jenks. And I rely on mine far more than I rely on yours. No offense, my friend, but your 'people' are sometimes of questionable backgrounds and abilities."
              Jenks laughed at that in agreement. "All right. Then I'll look into that. If he's a Purist, then perhaps that has something to do with why they want her. The daughter of a Purist and a human. It would be interesting to see what that mating produced. There were no siblings mentioned, so I'm assuming there are none. Or none that would hold interest with anyone WE would know.

              Gabe's mouth tipped up at the corners and he turned back to stare out the window that had closed automatically once the sun set. He knew it was to keep out undesirables, but he missed the air. He looked toward the sky and shook his head sadly.
                "You never see the stars here. The city lights interfere with that and you never see them. I might head upstate for a bit. I miss the stars, the wonder of them. Maybe I can manage to take the woman with me for a day or two. If I can get her away from Ian for that long. Maybe she'd like to see the stars too."
                  Jenks studied the back of his friend. He knew by his stance that Gabe was missing more than the stars. He also knew he was a lonely man and often hoped that his Father would give him a love that would ease his heart and soul. Gabe had a lot to give and no one to give it to. Maybe this assignment was something more. It remained to be seen.             
         Jenks laughed at that in agreement. "All right. Then I'll look into that. If he's a Purist, then perhaps that has something to do with why they want her. The daughter of a Purist and a human. It would be interesting to see what that mating produced.
      There were no siblings mentioned, so I'm assuming there are none. Or none that would hold interest with anyone WE would know.
                  Gabe's mouth tipped up at the corners and he turned back to stare out the window that had closed automatically once the sun set. He knew it was to keep out undesirables, but he missed the air. He looked toward the sky and shook his head sadly.
                 "You never see the stars here. The city lights interfere with that and you never see them. I might head upstate for a bit. I miss the stars, the wonder of them. Maybe I can manage to take the woman with me for a day or two. If I can get her away from Ian for that long. Maybe she'd like to see the stars too."
                   Jenks studied the back of his friend. He knew by his stance that Gabe was missing more than the stars. He also knew he was a lonely man and often hoped that his Father would give him a love that would ease his heart and soul. Gabe had a lot to give and no one to give it to. Maybe this assignment was something more. It remained to be seen.
      Gabe turned and smiled at his friend. “It’ll all be okay, Jenks. I better get on my way if I’m going to that club.” He placed his glass back on the bar and turned to head for the door when the phones on Jenks’ desk began to ring and the map of the city on the wall behind his desk lit up like a Christmas tree. Red lights flared, causing Gabriel to suck in a horrified breath; followed by green lights which made the red lights grow dim and blink out. In the vicinity of the green lights, were yellow lights. Only one or two of them faded and went out, then the blue lights appeared.
      Gabe stared as the blue lights moved toward the green lights. He looked at Jenks and saw the tension in the man’s eyes. “Jenks?”      
      The blue lights went out quickly and Jenks seemed to relax. “They’re breaching faster and in different places now. It’s all we can do to keep up. Did you notice how fast the hunters showed up? We really need to find out what it is about this woman that makes them want her bad enough to come to above world before total dark. The other problem is the ‘others’ who can come during the day. ”
      Gabe nodded. “How long have they been coming to surface en-mass like that?” He picked up his empty glass and filled it to half, taking a slow savoring sip.
      Jenks shook his head. “A couple of weeks now. We’ve managed to quell them every time, but it’s getting more and more difficult to do. We don’t have enough of us to cover every possible portal that’s been breached. I just can’t understand how they’re managing to open portals that have been closed for centuries. Maybe the woman is the answer. Find her Gabe, and keep her safe by whatever means.”
      Gabe sighed and nodded, setting his again empty glass back on the bar. “I’ll be in touch, Jenks. Thanks for the opportunity.”
      Gabe used the stairs instead of the elevator. He felt it was just his way of staying in shape, not that he had to worry about much along those lines. Half way down the stairs, he paused. Something felt slimy and made his skin crawl. He canted his head for only a minute, then turned and went back up.
      He wanted to tell Jenks about it and make certain his friend was all right. Just as he pulled open the door to the top floor suite, the building was plunged into darkness. What the hell? He broke into a run toward Jenks’ office. The door flew open and Gabe dove through.
      “What the hell is going on? Jenks? What’s happening?” He hauled himself to his feet and glanced around the empty room. “Jenks? JENKS?! Where are you?”
      He startled and snarled when a hand clamped on his arm. “Quiet, you idiot! I thought you were leaving, what are you doing back here?”
      “Jesus, Jenks! I took the stairs because...well, because I could. About half way down, something felt wrong. So I came back up. What’s going on?”
      “There was a security problem right after you left. You wouldn’t have gotten out of the building, Gabe.”

4
In Memory... / Poem 2
« on: July 27, 2017, 10:21:07 am »
The world was stunned to silence as gray dust filled the city air.
People watched in horror as the buildings fell. Someone didn’t care.
They didn’t care as bodies fell, as papers littered the sky
They didn’t care, not one bit, and we all wondered why
“What do we do?” we asked ourselves. “Where do we go from here?”
Our leaders stood in disbelief, as the nation shook with fear.
What happens now, who do we blame, three thousand lost their lives
They left behind their husbands, children and their wives.
Mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, aunts and uncles too
Families hurt and families cried and searched for any clue
Everything slowed to stillness as we bowed our heads in prayer
We would not bend we would not break, but it all seemed so unfair.
Then from the ashes rose a phoenix, proud and bright and true.
They didn’t win, they couldn’t win or defeat the red and white and blue.
We will never forget, we will be strong and we will always remember
Our day of reckoning, our day of pain on the eleventh of September.

5
Dragon's Fight / Poem1
« on: July 27, 2017, 10:15:08 am »
On ebony wing, the dragon flew
In answer to a call
To face the problem at it’s source
To watch the demon fall.
The storm raged across the skies
The bellowing filled the air
The dragon’s cry trumpeted loud
The demon didn’t care.
Lightning flashed like dragon’s breath
Hot and sharp across the void.
The dragon’s roar was loud and great,
The demon could not avoid.
The sudden burst of fury
As the dragon’s charge was met
The demon was brought to his knees
Though not his death as yet.
The fear was great within his eyes
As he watched the beast descend
The Breath of Fire touched him
He knew it meant his end.
The walls did tremble, crack and groan
As down the demon fell
The dragon’s victory cry was heard
Beyond the gates of hell.

6
Magickal Night / Story 4
« on: July 27, 2017, 10:10:22 am »
Magickal Night

©Q.L. McKenna


I could see the night sky from my bed. Black as ink, not even a sliver of a moon in sight; but there were other lights up there. I had watched them blink into existence over the last several hours; brilliant white, red, green, yellow and sometimes, blue. The stars sparkled against the black curtain of the night and made me smile.
This was my ritual at bedtime. To watch the stars come to life and imagine what it would be like to be among them, even briefly. I was about to turn away when the first streak crossed the sky and caught my eye. What was that? I scrambled from my bed to kneel at the window and watch the sky intently. I’d never seen a streak before. Maybe it was a rocket that fell or a plane going down in a ball of flame.
I noticed the second, then a third and fourth streak of bright light across my beautiful dark sky patched with sparkles. My imagination ran wild with a nine year old’s thoughts of space invaders or rockets or bombs exploding in mid-air. WOW! I wanted to run across the hall and wake my brother, but I knew better. That was a strict rule at our house. Once in bed, we stayed. But I was the dreamer, the one who didn’t sleep for hours after heading to my bed, who let her imagination run with thoughts of stories of the mythical and the magickal.
         I was watching something magical dance across my little patch of sky and it was stirring my very young muse. I scrambled for my notebook, and little penlight flashlight along with the pen that always rested close by. Not wanting to move my eyes from the sky even for a moment, I flipped the notebook open, counting the pages I knew I’d already written on until I came to a blank one.
I was too breathless to write; too excited to move away from the window, as I watched streak after streak of light blast through the sky on its way to earth. I wondered, somewhere in the back of my mind, if anyone else was seeing this mass attack. My lips twitched as I gripped my pen tighter and tighter. I would make notes of this attack for the future generations, if in fact there would be future generations.
My thoughts were of aliens and spaceships, battles waged against the odd-looking beings that were invading our world. Would we survive? Would we concede? Would we now have to live on the moon as slaves to these spacemen? I tried to imagine it as shivers ran up my spine. I pondered if we would all still be alive in the morning when the sun rose. Would I see my brother again or would there be school on the moon?
I swallowed my fear and continued to watch, fascinated by the sometimes bright and blinding flashes and trails across the night sky. Sometimes, it was like watching a sprinkling of fairy dust drifting from the black sky. Other times, it was like exploding sky rockets or bombs darting across the night. I imagined where they came to earth and what would happen when they did.
I dragged a pillow and blanket from my bed and snuggled down to continually stare into the night. It wouldn’t be until the wee small hours of the morning before my body over-took my mind and demanded that I sleep. But there was still the magical show happening high above me in the deep dark heaven when I drifted into sleep, curled under my window with my penlight and pen and notepad safely tucked beside me.

7
Mystery / Story 1
« on: July 26, 2017, 09:43:29 am »
MURDER AT THE DANCE

© Q. L. McKenna


The stone spires stood as silent sentinels, keeping watch over the green rolling countryside and the village below them. In their middle was raw power, so the stories went. Sometimes, people who came to admire the stone circle could feel the magic that hummed there. Sometimes, they claimed to have seen a woman in white darting among the stones.
The white-washed and sleepy village that nested in the valley below the Dance had been there for centuries. The people were simple people who prided themselves in the fact there was a stone circle within their county. Sheep and wool were their exports that helped support this mostly farming community. The rest depended on the tourists that came and went starting in the spring through the winter solstice. Then it quieted down again and the village became sleepy and quiet but for the local pub that was always open and always crowded of an evening, with locals providing music for dancing.
Anyone who lived there could tell a tourist anything about the Dance. Or could hold court about the Druids who lived and worshiped there in the years past, and about those that still do at the solstices. It's said that their beloved Prime Minister had worshiped there in his capacity as a Druid High Priest and the people who lived in the village were proud of the fact that the Prime Minister came to worship the sun cycle at their Dance.
The little village didn't boast a police force as such. They had a Minister of Justice and a few men of the village were duly sworn to act as deputies if the need arose. They kept the peace during the tourist season when tourists who indulged in too much Harp or Guinness could get a bit rowdy with the locals. That was about all that was needed in Halloway. If anything bigger than that arose, then they called for help from Dublin, the largest and closest city.
It was the groundskeeper that saw it first, in the gray of the morning while the sun tried to burn through the early spring fog. The strange shape that poked from the ground in the very center of the 'Dance'. Foxx was far from a frightened school kid who saw myth and legend in everything Irish, though it was true enough most things Irish were made of myth and legend. He stood curiously tilting his head, his cell phone to his ear, staring at the thing. He'd gotten about as close as he was going to get to the silver hand-shaped ‘glove’ that seemed to be growing out of the ground as if it were planted there, and decided that he needed to call someone who had more understanding of the law than he did. He called Dublin and spoke to his friend.
“Yea, that's right. It looks like some kind of metal hand. Yea, here in the middle of the Dance. I don't know how it got there, I just think someone should come and investigate.” He paused and listened for a few seconds, adamantly shaking his head. “No, I'm not going any closer than I am until you get here. What if it's something dangerous?” Sweet Jesus and Mary. “I have no idea what could possibly be dangerous all the way out here in the country, but...you just have to come and see for yourself.” He waited, listening to the other end of the conversation. “I don't know. It wasn't there at eight when I got here, but when I finished my mowing outside the Dance, it was there. So around ten-thirty.”
He nodded and clicked the phone off. What the hell was that thing? It looked to him like some kind of hand. Not a human hand, but a metallic hand. And it seemed to be just growing from the ground in the center of the Dance. He'd been working here for thirteen years and never once saw anything strange until today. No lights, no 'energy field', no ghostly visions of ancient gods or goddesses, nothing at all in thirteen years until today.
Foxx B Calhoun stood between two of the still standing stones of the Dance and waited for the police to show up. A tall and broad shouldered man, with cobalt blue Irish eyes and dark chestnut hair that was stylishly shaggy. He watched the sun climb the sky, reaching toward noon. The quick movement and flash of white caught his eye and he turned to his left just in time to see a woman disappear from view behind the King stone.
“Hey! You! Wait! Wait!” He dashed through the ancient stone circle and felt a zing on his skin that had him glancing back the way he came. Seeing nothing, he ducked behind the King stone and searched quickly for the woman in the flowing white gown. When he didn't find her anywhere, he scowled at the image in his head. Gown? Now? Here in this place?
She had to have been a tourist; one of those who thought the Dance belonged to her since she was one of the “Lady's Chosen”. He'd always thought they were a biscuit shy of a dozen himself. But if that's what they believed, who was he to question. Foxx only knew that no one other than the groundsmen and those Druid people were permitted beyond the blue ropes that kept the tourists from chipping away bits of the monoliths. The stone circles were protected now and he was glad of it.
The sound of tires on gravel had him returning to his post between the two stones; but he wouldn't forget that he'd seen a woman and he'd be sure to mention it. Tall, thin, blond and beautiful, dressed in a white gown. He didn't see only a glimpse of her face, but what he saw told him she was more stunning than any woman he'd ever known, and he wouldn't mind seeing her again.
He waited for the car to arrive, leaning against his rake. Most tourists walked up here, but there was an access road just for these circumstances so the garda didn't have to walk up the winding road to the Dance. He studied the ground in front of him intently. He would feel like a jerk if this turned out to be nothing but a practical joke, but the sight of the metallic hand popping up from the ground made him uneasy.
Top that with the strange woman that slipped away from him just now, not to mention the weird feeling he had gotten when he dashed through the circle of stones after the lady, and Foxx had a good dose of heebie-jeebies. He would be glad to pass this off to the garda and be on his way toward a pint of Harp at Tom Murphy’s pub. A bit of something to ease the case of tremors he was feeling now. He turned at the sound of a car door and felt himself relax. A familiar face approached him from the direction of the police car.
He smiled at the police captain, holding out his hand in greeting. “James. Nice to see you're on the job. I'm not sure what this may be, but I wanted a professional opinion. If it's nothing, I'll say I'm sorry and get on with my work.”
 The captain jerked his head in recognition and looked beyond Foxx's shoulder to the silvery hand. “You say it wasn't there yesterday and not there this morning when you came on? But when you finished what you were doing with the lawn out here, it was there?”
Foxx nodded, as James stepped around him and went to get a close up look at the curious metal hand in the center of the stone circle. “Sure and it's still there. Looking eerie, poking out of the ground like that.” He followed James into the circle and waited to see if the police captain felt the zap. Apparently not, since he was kneeling down to have a look at the 'hand'.
James muttered to himself and shook his head. Pulling a pen from his pocket, he poked at the palm of the piece of armor and found it was impossible to push it over to it's back. A gauntlet, he thought. That's what they were called. But why was it here, in the middle of a stone circle and how did it get here?
Sighing to himself, he poked at it with the tip of the pen he'd drawn from his pocket again. He tried to look at it from every angle and shook his head. He'd have to wait until he could get permission to do a bit of digging. Nothing about this felt 'right'. Captain James Andrews frowned at the gauntlet and studied the dirt around it. It'd not been disturbed that he could tell and the hand did appear to have just grown out of the ground. But he had to get this gauntlet back to the lab so there could be DNA and other forensics run on it.
Foxx stared at the gauntlet. What in all bloody hell? How did it get there? He'd totally forgotten about seeing the woman after seeing this. How did this happen on his watch? He squatted down next to the police captain and shivered at the closer look at the hand that seemed to sprout there like some unholy flower. Dead center in the holiest of holy places in all of Ireland.
“Mary, Mother of God, James. Is that real?”
James turned and nodded grimly. “Afraid it is, Foxx. Trouble is, I have no idea how it got here or what is further under the surface. It looks as though nothing's been disturbed here, but that thing is coming out of the dirt somehow.”
Foxx was stunned. “Jesus, James. You aren't thinking of digging here! In the middle of the circle! You'll be angering more than the folks what come here to see it if you do. This is holy ground.”
James nodded in agreement. “I know. I understand. But I've got what might be a body here, Foxx. I can't leave it just here, now can I? Your tourists will have to wait or go to another dance. The Lord knows there's plenty if you know where to look and what to look for. I have to investigate, you know that.”
Foxx nodded and sighed, shaking his head as he rose to his feet. “I have some calls to make, James. You best call the Minister. They'll be after wanting you to not go digging will-he, nil-he here. He should be the first before anyone else you have to call. And the Vicar should be called, as well.”
He dug out his cell phone when he got nothing more than a grunt from James in response and made his first call to his boss to inform him of the problem and to tell him there would be no one at the Dance today and what should he do?
His next call was to his home to let his mother know that he would be very late because of a problem at work. That call took him a bit longer, as he tried to explain to his mother without actually telling her what was happening. Foxx closed his phone and returned to James in the center of the circle.
“Once the Minister gets here, permissions will start with him. You did call the Minister, didn't you?” James may know law, but Foxx knew the rules for the Dance. James nodded noncommittally and rocked back on his heels with a heavy sigh. There was nothing he could do but wait for the locals to show up and try to boss his investigation.
Just the idea of a body here, in the center of the Dance was making Foxx queasy. And the idea that said body wasn't fully visible, but buried somehow deep in the earth with no visible signs of any one digging or moving the earth in any way was just plain wrong, to his mind.
As Foxx stood and watched James work, he heard a rumbling that had him searching the skies for any signs of a storm. He scowled when he saw nothing, yet he had heard the echoing rumble of distant thunder. He glanced at the others standing around the Dance, noting that none of them seemed to have heard any sound at all.
Foxx scowled and searched the sky again. Nothing. Not a cloud anywhere to be seen. Yet he still felt the sizzle in the air of an approaching storm. Something was very off about today, and it made him very nervous indeed.
He anticipated that once the word got out, and he was sure that the Minister's secretary or someone from the garda would be spreading the word that a body had been found in the middle of the Dance, things would be a mess. By the time he finished talking to James, there were people milling about the circle and even more clicking away with their cameras taking pictures of the strange hand. Dear sweet god, how did they find out already? This kind of thing seemed to always draw a curious crowd. Murder and mayhem seemed to bring out the morbid in people.
Foxx wondered why that was and started to speak to James when he saw her again. She was standing beside the King stone, watching with guarded curiosity, her expression one of great sadness. This time, she wore the clothing of a huntress, complete with bow and quiver, instead of the long white gown he'd first seen her in. He wanted to shout, but somehow he knew she would simply vanish again. So he quietly started to edge that way.
When he was nearly to her, she shifted her attention to him and his breath caught in his throat. She was staring directly at him and he felt his heart stumble a beat or two. She was the most beautiful thing he had ever seen. Sharp gray eyes captured his blue ones and she smiled beguilingly. Foxx opened his mouth to speak and couldn't find words that would work well enough.
The woman stared at him for another instant, then turned and stepped behind the King stone. Foxx hurriedly followed, but when he rounded the stone, she had already disappeared. Twice in one day, he had seen her. Foxx shook his head to clear it, then turned back again to the center of the circle itself. He had nearly forgotten to tell James about the woman. Well, now he could tell him more of what she looked like. That would make it more truthful, though he would never lie to a policeman.
James looked up as Foxx approached and nodded. He stopped a few feet away from the hand and motioned James to him. When James approached, he tried to think of a way to broach the subject without sounding like a fool.
“I almost forgot to tell you about the woman.” Foxx twisted the cap he’d removed as he had approached the woman in his hands and waited. James just nodded, encouraging him to go on. “I saw a woman just after I called you about this. She darted behind the King stone, and by the time I'd gotten there, she was gone. Not a trace of her to be seen. I just saw her again. She was watching everything and she looked so very sad. I got close to her before she saw me. Then she looked dead at me and stepped behind the stone again. When I circled around, I couldn't see her. She was gone again.”
James scowled. “Why didn't you call me? We might have been able to catch her.” Foxx shrugged. He knew the answer, but didn't want to express it to his friend. He knew there was something more to the woman than just being a woman. She was 'different'. He wasn't sure why or how she was different, but he understood that she was. And he had the uncanny feeling she wanted to speak with him. It made him uneasy to grasp that idea. And it made him more uneasy to not know why he felt that way.
“I can describe her if you need me to. I don't think she has anything to do with 'that'”, nodding his head at the hand. “Doesn't that look a bit too real?”
James snorted and shrugged. “I'll see if I can take it in to the lab. It's a bit too strange to me. I can't explain it, Foxx. I can't explain any of this.”
Another rumble of thunder, this one sounding closer, startled Foxx into looking again up to the clear blue sky. ”Do you hear thunder? I swear I hear thunder.” James chuckled and shook his head.
“Christ Jesus, Foxx. Seeing disappearing ladies and hearing non-existent thunder. Are you sure you didn't tip one too many at Murphy's last night?” He pulled a notebook and pen from his pocket and pursed his lips. “The woman, Foxx. What did she look like? How old do you say she was? What was she wearing?”
Foxx shifted and glanced at the King Stone before he spoke. “I'd say that she was in her thirties, long blond hair like spun gold, depthless gray eyes and a soft mouth.” James scowled then chuckled.
“You sound like you're in love with her, Foxx. Just tell me what she looked like without all the editorial comments.”
Foxx blinked and laughed. “Sorry, James. But I've never seen a woman quite like her. She was tall, slender, blond, gray eyes. This time, she was dressed in a green tunic thing and tan pants. Low boots, if I recall, and complete with a quiver and bow. The first time I saw her, she wore a long white gown. I wish I could tell you more, but I can't. She looked right at me, James. I felt like she knew more about me in that short glance than anyone ever has. It was a bit uncomfortable, I do have to say.”
James made quick notes on his pad and nodded. “I'll get this out to others as soon as I get back to the station. Foxx? You think you might be able to give what you saw to a sketch artist? Maybe we can get lucky and someone local will recognize her.”
Foxx nodded. There goes his plan to get very very drunk. “How long will that take, James? I had a few loose plans for tonight.” James beamed him a smile. “You'll be home well before pub-time, Foxx.”
James turned at the sound of a truck and started to return to the center of the circle. Foxx was about to get back to work on his lawn and try to fit time with the sketch artist into his day. The people milling about were beginning to chatter amongst themselves and move around to try to get a better view of the 'hand'.
Foxx heard again the roll of thunder and turned back to James just as lightning streaked from the sky and struck the ground. Foxx lurched and stumbled and saw James fall, then scramble on his hands and knees away from the strike zone, his clothes smoking from the electrical charge the lightning sent into the ground.
Foxx's teeth hurt and he could taste blood before he understood that he was on his stomach in the dirt. He looked at James to see the man crawling away from a burned spot in the grass, others struggling to gain their feet and some of the people staring unbelieving at the spot where the curious hand had been.
Gone! It was totally gone. The hand was absolutely no longer there. Foxx blinked and shuddered at the strangeness of the day. James was pulling himself to his feet and gaping at the barren spot on the ground where the hand had been, along with everyone else.
“Sweet Mother of God!” James muttered as he staggered forward to look at the ground. Foxx joined him at the center and several people muttered excitedly. Others stood in stunned silence and stared at the burned circle inside the stone circle.
Foxx shivered, not knowing why. His eyes tracked to the King Stone and his breathing hitched. She was standing there, clear as a bell, dressed in pale blue and wearing a circlet of gold. There were tears on her cheeks as she canted her head slightly when she caught him watching her.
Foxx thought about nudging James, but something told him if he did, she would be gone again as soon as he spoke out loud. He felt the ice creep down his spine and he shivered. She stood and watched him for a long time, before she stepped behind the King stone. Foxx assumed she disappeared, just like last time.
All he wanted to do was get away from here and hit the local pub. He needed an ale and some time to relax and give this some thought. He glanced over at James, who was staring toward the King stone. He canted his head and frowned.
“Something wrong, James? You look like you're deep in thought.”
“I thought I felt someone watching me. Gave me shivers. I just couldn't pinpoint it. I don't know. Was strange, that's for certain.” James shuddered and glanced back at the place where the hand used to be. “What do you think happened here, Foxx? Some kind of explosive rigged to go off at a certain time?”
Foxx shrugged and turned his attention to James. “Why would you think I would know about anything like that? I called you. I have no idea what it was, what it meant, why it was here. That's your job to figure out, not mine.” He looked at the man who was his childhood friend. “You thinking I had something to do with this?”
James shook his head. “No, not really. But I'm thinking you know something that you're not saying. And I'm curious why you aren't saying it.”
Foxx wasn't pleased with being in this position. He scowled at James and shook his head. “That makes no sense, James. No sense at all. Why would I try to hide anything from you? We've been friends since childhood. I've never lied to you or tried to make myself innocent when I wasn't. Why in all hell would I try to do that now?”
James shrugged and smiled as best he could and still look serious about his work. “I wasn't accusing you of anything Foxx. I'm just trying to find answers. Since you were the one to find it and seem to be the one seeing non-existent women and hearing thunder that isn't there, I had to assume you may know something that would help us solve this.”
Foxx scowled and shook his head again. “I know what you know, James. At a little past ten-thirty this morning, I saw what looked like a metal hand standing upright in the center of the Stone Circle. While I was waiting for you, I saw a woman in white flitting among the stones. Thinking she was a tourist and may have seen something, I gave chase. She ducked behind the King Stone and I was mere seconds behind her, but when I got to that point, she was gone. Simply gone. There was no trace of her anywhere. I returned to my original place to wait for you. After you arrived, I saw her again, in green, like a huntress. Again, by the time I got to the King Stone, she was gone with nary a trace. I saw her again after the hand thing disappeared, dressed in blue. And she appeared to be crying. I heard thunder before the hand thing disappeared and saw the lightning streak. Jesus and Mary, James, I thought you were struck dead. It was grateful I was to see you move. Was it hot? Did it burn?”
James chuckled and shook his head. “It felt like a bomb had gone off directly in front of me. For a minute, I couldn't see or hear, my ears were ringing and the bright light from the flash blinded me. I thought my career was ended and I'd be a blind and deaf cripple for the rest of my life. When I finally realized what had happened, my instinct was to get away as fast as I could. Everything felt hot for one solid minute, before my legs and arms moved enough to get me away from the source of the blast. I didn't know the hand was gone until I was able to settle myself and catch my breath. That's when I heard you curse and I looked in this direction and saw the hand was gone.”
He was about to continue his story when the Vicar came rushing into the circle, waving his hands wildly, his black cassock flying behind him in the slight breeze. “You can't dig here!! STOP!!!” Foxx chuckled and James just stared at the man in disbelief.
“Vicar, no one is digging anything at the moment. But this IS a crime scene and you're walking all over evidence.” James' voice was bland and his face schooled into a neutral expression. “But we will have to dig at some point. I don't care if I have to take this to the Taoiseach to gain permissions.”
Vicar Timothy O'Malley stopped running and leaned forward to catch his breath. “Thank the heavens, Captain. I heard from Mrs. O'Brien that there was a body here buried in the ground. There should be a dispensation for digging here. I assume you will be getting the proper papers?” Under his cassock, the Vicar wore a pair of faded jeans and scuffed work boots. Foxx would have bet a week's wage he also wore a beat up flannel shirt as well.
“I don't have any idea, Vicar, just what will happen. I will ask whoever I need to get this crime solved. We need to figure out what happened here and why. If I have to dig to God damned China, then I'll do so.” James snarled at his frustration and wondered just how this had gotten so out of hand so quickly.
The Vicar frowned. “There's no need to take the Lord's name, James Andrews. I'll hear your confession on Saturday. I won't argue if the proper papers are signed and sealed giving you permission to dig here. I just want to make sure that nothing is destroyed in the business of your investigation. This is not only a National Monument, James, it's a religious place. Sacred ground. Things have to be done with respect and care.”
James sighed and studied the ground at his feet, feeling the heat of embarrassment touch his cheeks. “I know, Vicar. I'm sorry. I'll get all the papers in order and then there won't be any problems. I'll be careful and respectful and everything will be put back the way it was, I promise you.”
Tim O'Malley nodded. “Then let's look at this, James. What kind of crime do you think has been committed here? Where's your evidence?” The Vicar looked around the inside of the circle curiously. “I was told there was body part exposed, but I don't see it anywhere.”
James smiled grimly. “Everyone wants to be a detective,” he mumbled to himself before giving over his attention to the Vicar. “I think someone was murdered here, Vicar. I think their body was buried here in the middle of the dance. I don't know if it was something ritualistic or if it was just because it's the Dance. There was a hand in a silver gauntlet that appeared to be growing from the ground. It was just there. Then the lightning came and it disappeared. We haven't been back to the spot to see if we can tell what happened here. I thought I might as well wait on the Minister so I won't be repeating myself yet again.”
The Vicar stared at James and furrowed his brow in thought. “A hand you say? In a gauntlet? There's an old tale about this Dance. Have you ever heard it?”
James shook his head and settled himself on one of the toppled stones, figuring he was about to hear the story whether he wanted to or not. He had the time. He had to get papers signed for authorization for the digging and the Minister wasn't here yet.
Timothy sat down next to James and Foxx joined them. He smiled at the interest the two men suddenly showed and settled in for the telling.
“Long and long ago, in a time before time, there was a Lady who fell in love with a warrior. He was beneath her status as her father was a Baron and he was just a warrior. A man who loved the Baron's daughter with all that he was, everything that was in him to give, he gave to her. And she returned his love tenfold. They wanted desperately to marry and so made plans to do so. But the Baron had other plans for his beautiful daughter and refused to give his permission for the bans of marriage to be announced. Instead, he offered his daughter to any man who would kill the warrior and rid him of this disgrace.
“A man stepped forward; a Duke from a neighboring land. He had admired the Lady from afar and decided to accept the Baron's challenge. He befriended the Lady's warrior and found out their plan to meet at the Dance and run away. The Duke had other ideas, so he summoned the warrior to his home and killed him easily since the warrior wasn't expecting him to bury his dagger in the warrior's heart.
“The legend says the Lady waited at the Dance for her lover, who never came. The weather turned bitter and she waited, true and faithful to her warrior. She froze to death in the storm and when they finally found her, she was clinging to her warriors hand. Apparently, his body had gone to her, even though he had died hours before. But the only thing that could make the transition from ether to corporeal was his left hand. She had slipped a ring onto his finger and died there, clutching his hand to her breast.
“It is also said that when the time was right, she would return to the Dance and wait for him. That he would reincarnate and return here, to meet her again. Once they were together, they would make the choice as to where they would remain. Here or there...one place or the other.
“The legend says that the Duke rushed to the Dance, but he was too late to save the woman. He swore vengeance upon the Warrior and the woman as well as the gods for taking her from him. A streak of lightning, a freak thing in the dead of winter, struck the Duke and killed him. Some say the gods punished him by burying his body so the Lady's rescuers never found him.”
The Vicar looked over at the King stone and shook his head. “For some reason, the King stone is an important part of the story, but I can't recall now what it is. I'm sure there are things that have been written about the legend and could be found in the library. I think you may find something interesting there about what's happened here. Perhaps, the Lady has realized that her lover has returned.”
Foxx swallowed and shivered. Now he really did need that drink. He was the only one to have seen the Lady. The only one she seemed focused on. Sweet holy Mother. Did that mean that he was her lover of old? He had no idea what it meant, but he didn't think he liked it. He wanted no part of ghostly apparitions from the past, no matter how distant that past was.
James chuckled. “You really think this has to do with a legend that's hundreds of years old, Vicar? That hand was there. I touched it, and it wasn't some ghostly apparition. And somewhere under the earth is a body that belongs to that hand. I can't base my police work in myth and legend.”
The Vicar nodded and looked thoughtfully at the scorched mark in the middle of the circle. “Maybe, this time, James, you'll have to at least consider what was and what might be.” He stood and looked around. “I'll trust you'll get the permissions before you go to digging. I have to go and visit the good Widow Gracey. She's feeling poorly and has asked for confession. You'll keep me informed of the progress?”
He started out of the circle when he paused and turned back to the two men sitting side by side on the toppled stone. They'd been friends for as long as Timothy could remember. When Foxx's father had died in a horrific accident, it was James' parents who took him under their wing and saw to his well-being, taking the greater load of raising a boy alone off his mother. When James’ first marriage had hit the rocks, it was Foxx who was there for him to help him pick up the pieces. This very strange case would affect the both of them in some manner, he was sure of it. He would add both men to his prayer list tonight.
Foxx sat quietly, considering the Vicar's words. “You think he was serious, James? What if it's true? What if the Lady is here because she's come for her lover?” James snorted and shook his head.
“Are you serious, Foxx? It was just a legend, a story. There's no way that would actually have happened and no way in hell it would come true now. You really didn't believe him, did you? Damn, man! Use your head. Why would you even think that this could be a possibility?”
“Then you tell me, James. Why am I the only one to see her? She appears when the place is crawling with people and no one sees her but me. I was the one to see the hand first. I saw the woman, I heard the thunder. No one else, including you, saw or heard anything. No one other than myself. And to be honest, James, it's making me a bit nervy. I'm ready to go home. Or to the pub, which ever place is nearest, and drink myself into sleep. I wish I hadn't come to work today, that's what I wish. And I really wish you would stop talking to me like I'm one of your suspects.” He tossed his work gloves onto the rock and cursed inventively. “I'm going, James. If you've a need to arrest me, I'll be at Murphy's.”
Foxx stomped off, leaving the Captain looking ashamed and embarrassed. Foxx was his friend, they had been like brothers since childhood. But there was just something that James could sense and it made him uneasy. Why WAS Foxx the only one to see and hear these things? It made little sense to him and until he could figure it out, he would keep making his friend uncomfortable. It didn't matter. James knew where to find Foxx if he needed him. The man was always true to his word. He would be where he said he would be, of that James had no concerns.
What did concern him was the why of it. And until he had answers, he'd continue to be concerned. Not only for Foxx, but for Foxx's safety and sanity. If this was some kind of prank, some kind of challenge to Foxx, then he would find a way to stop it before someone got hurt. Having decided that, James took himself back to the place where the hand had been. There wasn't any indication at all that anything like a hand had been there. And if James hadn't seen it himself, he would have doubted Foxx.
Foxx was nearly off the tor before his anger subsided and he could think clearly. He couldn't get the vision of the woman out of his head as he logged out at the gate. He nodded to the night man and turned toward the village and Murphy's pub. James was just doing his job. That was all. He hadn't actually accused Foxx of any crime other than being stupid. Foxx gained a better hold on his temper with every step.
By the time he reached Murphy's, he was almost back to himself. He smiled as he pushed open the door. Tom Murphy was behind the bar, a towel slung over one shoulder and a rag in his hand. He wiped at a spot and Foxx claimed the stool. Murphy was a large man, broad shouldered, green-eyed and a red headed Irish temper to match his size. The pub was his woman. Murphy had never married.
“What's up with the Dance, Foxx? People been in and out of here all day saying there's some kind of investigatin' going on up there. I told them to come back around pub-time tonight and you'd tell them what it's all about.” Murphy looked at Foxx expectantly as he drew up the pint of Harp Foxx had ordered.
“I'm not sure what's going on up there, Tom. Strange stuff as near as I can tell. Things appearing and disappearing all over up there. Vicar O'Malley told us about the legend that goes with this particular Dance. You know they all have them. Do you know the legend?”
Murphy nodded with a knowing smile. “I do, yes. Tim O'Malley spends every Saturday after confession here. I think he's trying to drown out all those sins he hears of a week all in one night. But he's a good story teller, he is. He's told that legend in here a lot lately. Almost as if he's trying to make us believe that there's a woman who haunts the Dance waiting for her lost love.”
Foxx nodded and sipped the ale that Murphy had set in front of him. “James thinks there's a body buried in the Dance. He wants to dig it up.” He placed the pint down and looked up at Murphy. “I saw the woman, Tom. I saw her three times up there this morning. God's witness, Murphy. She was standing next to the King stone, big as you please.”
Tom Murphy eyeballed his friend and frowned. “A body, you say? Sweet Mother of God, Foxx. How did it get there?” Murphy ignored the last statement Foxx had made, pretending his friend and customer hadn't told him about the woman. He didn't want to talk about haunts in his pub.
“Jesus, Murphy. Did you hear what I said? I saw the woman. Big as you please. Just like I'm seeing you now.” Foxx took a long drink of his ale and let it settle in his stomach for a bit.
“I heard you, Foxx. I just don't like talkin' about the Dance and the woman.” Now Tom Murphy had Foxx's attention and both men stared at one another. “Don't like it a'tall.”
“You've seen her too, haven't you? Murphy, you have to tell me. I thought I was losing my mind. Seeing women and hearing thunder and....c'mon, Tom Murphy. 'Fess up.”
Tom signaled Foxx to the other end of the bar where they could talk in private. “I saw her. Once. Beautiful like an angel she was. All tall and slender in that white gown, lookin' sad and alone. I went to talk to her, you know, friendly like. And when I reached the King stone, she was gone. Gave my heart a hard thump, it did. I dreamed about her for a week after. I never told anyone about it. Just didn't seem right. Then O'Malley comes in here tellin' his tales and it made me think of her all over again. I haven't been back to the Dance since that day. Not since then. I was too scared to go back, Foxx. Now you're tellin' me you've seen her too. What about James? Did he see her as well?”
Foxx shook his head. “He didn't, no. Only me. I saw her three times, Murph. Three times near the King stone and she looked at me with those sad gray eyes and it seemed she was wantin' me to come talk. But every time I tried, she would slip behind the King stone and disappear. I thought it was just me. James all but said I was crazy or stupid. But you've seen her and I'm laying a week's wage that Father O'Malley saw her too. That's why he tells the legend. I just want to know why I'm seeing her; what it means. Maybe tomorrow I'll head into Dublin to the library and see if there's anything written on the legend. Maybe start to find some answers.”
Murphy nodded and went to help the last couple of people who had wandered into the pub. Foxx shrugged off a feeling of being watched and stood, having finished his ale. He wanted to go home, get something to eat and return later this evening. He felt exhausted as he slid the mug across to Murphy.
“Headed home. I'll be back after dinner. Maybe we can talk more then.” Murphy saluted Foxx as the man headed out the door, happy to return to his customers. Foxx turned toward home and started his walk. The late afternoon had turned a bit nippy so he tugged the collar of his jacket up and wished to hell he'd had remembered his scarf this morning or that he hadn't tossed his gloves at James.
Stuffing his hands in his pockets, he turned the corner onto his street. When he did, he looked up and froze in his tracks. There, in front of his home, stood the woman he'd seen at the Dance. And she was talking to his mother as if she'd known her all her life. Foxx got his legs to moving and sped to his gate. He'd bloody well get some answers now.
The woman looked up as he hurried along and offered him a bemused smile. “You're Foxx. You're mother has been so kind and has told me a great deal about you. My name is Marissa. Would it be alright if we spoke a bit? I have a tale to tell you, Foxx, if you'll listen.”

Chapter II

Foxx was so startled that she spoke, he could only nod his head and swallow the sharp remark that danced glibly on his tongue. She spoke! She actually spoke! And she didn't disappear like before. She was real. He could touch her. She smiled at him again and the heat shot through him like an arrow and settled in his groin. He shifted slightly to hide his uneasiness.
“What is it you want from me? Did you put that hand in the Dance? If you did, you need to tell me why and we need to go talk to James.”
Marissa only shook her head. “I didn't put the hand in the dance, Foxx. It came there of it's own accord. It's time. And because it's time, I must tell you a story.” When she took his hand, Foxx couldn't have told her 'no' if he wanted to. And he didn't want to. He needed to hear this story and try to figure this out .
They walked together into Foxx's house and settled at the table. Tea and a hearty soup was waiting, and Marissa smiled. “It's been awhile since I've had high tea, Mrs. Calhoun. I thank you for the consideration.” The older woman simply smiled and nodded, then joined them at the table. Foxx frowned at his mother and started to object when Marissa interrupted him.
“No, Foxx. She is part of this, so she must remain. Your mother...well, it will come with the telling of the tale I need to tell now.” Marissa, smiled and sipped at her tea to wet her throat before she began her story.
“I'm sure that the Vicar has told this tale many times in the village and to people who have been to the Dance. But I will give you the true tale and you will be able to understand more than you do now. Together we will tell you all you need to know, your mother and I. We will give you the understanding that hopefully will make sense to you.
“My father was a man of wealth and privilege, who had little time for a heart's fancy. I was far too old to be single, yet far too young to be on my own without a man's guiding hand. My father longed for me to marry for the betterment of the land and for money.
“But I was in love with a warrior. My warrior hadn't the social or political standing he needed to marry me to please my father's demands. Yet I was determined to have him, to make a life with him in spite of my father's wishes. I plotted and planned with him to run away to wed and return triumphant in my foolish plan to thwart my father.
“Little did I know that he was planning my warrior's demise. He had sent out a plea and the Duke responded to his message. They plotted a way for my warrior to meet with the Duke by claiming the Duke had work for him that would make him wealthy beyond his wildest dreams. He accepted the work, befriending the Duke. The man made arrangements for my warrior to meet him to do the work that the Duke had asked him to do. When my warrior went to the place to meet with the Duke, he was ambushed and killed.
“I had also made a plan to meet with my warrior after the work had been completed. We were to meet at the Dance and run away together. I was to wait for him to come to me. I waited and waited long into the night, but he never came. Instead, my priestess met me and told me what had happened. She told me that she had cast a spell and the warrior would return to me in a future time. But she couldn't separate the men and so, when my warrior returned, so would the Duke and my father. And they would again try to kill my love and take him from me unless he could remember and stop it from happening again.
“I've been given only three days in which to have my warrior remember enough to stop the attack, or I will lose him again forever. I died at the Dance. I can't tell you more than that. What happened after, I have no knowledge of.”
Foxx stared at the woman in front of him and then at his mother, his eyes wide in disbelief. “Did you know the legend? What else did you know? Who is she? Who am I? Why is all this happening, now? Mother? What is it you aren't telling me?”
Foxx's mother smiled sadly and shook her head. “I was Marissa’s witch, Foxx and even that I didn't know until I started to hear the stories of people seeing the 'White Lady' at the dance. And when you told me today that there had been a problem at the Stone circle, I put two and two together and came up with the answer.”
Her green eyes, as deep and intense as Foxx's blue ones, studied him for a long moment. “You have been chosen, Foxx. I should have known you would be. You have always been destined for something greater than what you are. There's more you need to know, son. More we need to tell you.”
His mother poured more tea and sat quietly until her son stopped staring at his cup and looked up at her. “What more do I need to know?” He took a long study of his mother's face and shook his head. He was nearly thirty. Why in bloody hell was his life changing so drastically? What had he done to deserve this?
Marissa reached and touched his mother's hand and the older woman smiled at her. She looked back at Foxx. “The people involved in your life, Foxx. Those you know and call friend are part of this. Your true friend will always remain your friend, but there is an enemy among them and not so easily spotted. It will be a difficult journey for you. There will be hard choices for you to make. I can't force you to this; this is one choice you must make yourself. I will help you as much as I can. I will leave you and your mother to discuss. I can only stay in this form a few hours every day. But I will return here each day and answer what questions I can. Until we talk again, stay safe.”
Foxx sat quietly as the woman moved away from the table and went out the door. It seemed to him that she would have just disappeared if she was a ghost, like she had at the Dance. He turned to his mother. “What do you know that you aren't telling me? If I'm to survive this thing, I need to know what you know.”
His mother looked him in the eyes, green to green. “Not everyone or everything is as it seems, Foxx. Not everyone or everything is good or bad. Sometimes, one must become an enemy to remain a friend. You will do well to remember that.”
Foxx nodded and stood from the table to help his mother clear the dishes and cups. He wasn't in the mood now for the pub, nor was he in the mood for James and his inane questions. How was he to explain this to him? James was as much a non-believer as he is..was..may yet again be. He was sure that James would always be his friend and would help him in whatever he chose to do. He and James had always been fast friends. There shouldn't be any question as to James' loyalty. But there was. The woman, Marissa, had put it there. She had placed doubt squarely on his shoulders about the people he thought of as friends.
He sat by the fire that evening, numbing his mind with a glass of Irish. The whiskey felt good in his belly, letting him forget what he'd seen and heard today. It had been a very long and very trying day. He wanted to talk to someone, but who would believe him and who could he trust? He wasn't even sure he could trust his own Mother.
He leaned his head back and drew in a deep breath. He would close his eyes for a moment. Just a bit of a rest to curb the dull ache that was starting right behind his eyes. He could rest for only a few minutes, then maybe he would wander to the pub. Perhaps music and people would be what he needed.
It all happened so fast, Foxx couldn't orient himself. He was ripped from his chair near the hearth, and tossed, arse over tin cups, into a vision. The land was harsh. Early Spring had clogged the roads with mud and the land was drenched to over capacity. There were no streets or houses in the immediate vicinity, just a cart track that disappeared over the closest hillside. He heard the rushing roar of water as a local stream gushed passed, causing a small bridge to tremble from its force. Was he an active part of this vision or was he just an observer?
The sounds and smells of battle came to him first before it materialized in front of him, slashing swords and swinging maces. Men on foot and on horseback, shouting, yelling, attacking. The ground was soaked with blood and dead bodies were everywhere. Foxx was stunned as he took in the scene. Just an observer, then. He walked slowly among them, warriors and dead alike. Who were these people and why did it matter that he see this particular battle?
He couldn't speak to any of them, all he could do was watch as they killed and maimed one another, as men were wont to do. He saw a man on his war horse, slashing and killing with abandon, his Love's favor tied to his arm, a blaze of brilliant blue against the bloodstained armor. The vision was blurred enough that Foxx couldn't see the man's face and doubted he would know him if he could have seen him.
Then everything slowed to a crawl, the man on the war steed turned his head and looked straight at Foxx. The visor of his helm was down, and all Foxx could see were the man's blue eyes. There was rage and fury there as they stared at one another for only a few seconds. Then the warrior lifted his blade in a salute and the vision faded. Foxx found himself in his chair in front of the hearth. And he suddenly had an urge for the pub and company.
He polished off the Irish in his glass then stood from his chair on shaky legs. What was happening to him and why? He carried his glass to the kitchen where his mother was mixing what he knew would be soda bread for the coming week end. A ceili in honor of some bans of marriage or other. Foxx couldn't recall now. But his mother would bake the bread and special foods along with several of the neighbor women.
She looked up from her work and nodded. “Headed for the pub, are you?” Foxx smiled at her and slipped his arms around her waist. “I am. Enough of the evening's been wasted. I won't be out late. I just want to talk to Murphy for a bit.”
He kissed her cheek and smiled at her. “Don't be over-tiring yourself, Ma. You know how the doctor fusses when you do.” She smiled and nodded and returned to her bread making. “What does he know? Can't have a good ceili or a good wake without good food.”
That had Foxx chuckling to himself as he stepped out the door. He knew there was no sense in fretting over her. Maggie Calhoun would die with her hands in bread dough and a smile on her face. After her heart trouble last year, Foxx tried to get her to slow down. Her only response was God would come for her when he was ready for her, made no difference if she was sitting doing nothing or baking bread for the next wedding, ceili or wake. Foxx couldn't argue with any of that logic and just let her be. It was better that she was active. It helped keep her sharp.
Once Foxx was gone from the house, Maggie sighed. This was surely an unexpected turn of events. She'd have to see what she could do to discourage Foxx from pursuing this legend story. She would have to stop him and she wasn't sure how she would accomplish that task. She continued making her bread, letting her mind wander a bit.
Why in all hell had that Vicar started telling the story? There was a purpose there, she was certain of it. Then the strange woman showing up at her gate, saying her name was Marissa and offering no other, looking for Foxx. Maggie had known her straight away and was staggered by her sudden appearance. Of course, she would have to stop that before the boy found out the truth. Maggie's lips twitched into a sneer as she turned out the bread dough to knead. She would find a way to stop it. Had to find a way to stop it.
Foxx strolled along the hedgerow headed toward the village pub. It would do him good, he imagined, to be among the people he knew best. The drink, the music, the dancing...and perhaps pretty little Mary Elizabeth O'Dell would be waiting the tables, too. The hedgerow closed in around him, making him feel like he was walking in a tunnel of Irish green. The cares of the day slipped from his shoulders and his mood lightened.
The thought of the pretty maid gave Foxx's heart a bit of a bump and made him smile. And of course, the thoughts of Mary Elizabeth pushed all the other thoughts out of his head. By the time he'd reached the pub, he was grinning like a Cheshire Cat. He heard the music before he got close enough to open the door, heard Tom Murphy's voice, heard Mary Beth's laughing response to a question, heard the laughter of the other patrons as they drank their pints and glasses and sipped their whiskey.
He stepped inside and sidled up to the bar, parked on a stool and nodded at Murphy. “Build me a pint, then, Murphy. And I'll be havin' a bag of those new crisps while I’m waitin'.” Tom nodded at Foxx to indicate he'd heard him, finished the pint he'd been building and slid it down the bar to Charly Hennessy.
Tom Murphy slid the bag of crisps over the bar and wiped the spot in front of where Foxx was sitting. “Everything okay, then?” Foxx tipped his head at Murphy's question. “'Tis. Nothing new here? Father O'Malley hasn't been in or a strange woman?”
At Foxx's question, Tom stopped wiping the bar. “I haven't see Tim O'Malley yet this evenin' and there's been no strangers, woman nor man, tonight. Why do you ask, Foxx? Something wrong?”
Foxx nodded only slightly and eyed the others at the bar. They all seemed to be involved in their own trouble, so he leaned closer to Murphy's ear. “She was at the house when I got home today. The woman from the Dance. She was conversin' with me mother as free as you please. Ma invited her in for tea. Jesus, Murphy. What's a man to do about something like that?”
Murphy continued to wipe at the same spot in front of Foxx and gape at the man. “Your MOTHER saw her and talked to her? She was at your house?” Tom rubbed his free hand over his stunned expression and tried to school his face into something akin to neutral. “Mother of God, Foxx. Why is all this happening now? Why now?”
Foxx shook his head and shrugged. “I have no idea, Murphy. I think I'm headed into Dublin to the library there in the morning and see what's been written about the stones here. Whatever is happening, it has to do with them. I need to find out what I can.”
Tom jerked his head once in acknowledgement. “Good luck to you, then, Foxx. I hope something can be found to settle this nonsense once and for all.” Murphy wandered down the bar to take the order from new patrons and Foxx fixed his attention on Mary Elizabeth as she waited tables.
Foxx had always thought they would be a solid couple one day. They were just seeing one another now, but that could change at any time. She was making signs like she would like to make it a permanent relationship and Foxx was more than ready to do that, but not as soon as Mary Beth had planned. He thought it would make his mother happy if she knew he had someone to share his life with, though why it worried her was beyond his thinking.
Mary Beth had winked at Foxx several times as she passed him in her rush to get orders made to the kitchen for 'pub grub' and ale orders to the bar. As she paused to wait while Tom built two ales for her, she sidled to Foxx, offering him her sweet smile and a toss of red curls.
“It's a good evening to you Foxx. How's your sweet mother? I hear she's making food for the ceili on Saturday. It promises to be a beautiful day and I heard that Jared's family is all coming up from Derry for it. I hope I'll be seeing you there?” Foxx nodded and Mary Beth picked up her tray to deliver the ales to her customers.
Foxx would go to the ceili and enjoy himself. Especially if Mary Elizabeth was going to be there. His mind wandered as a man's would to her sweet curves and pretty Irish green eyes. He would have a taste of her lips and be content. If she would allow him more, there would be more. But with her strict upbringing, Foxx wasn't planning on much more than a kiss or two.
Mary Elizabeth O'Dell had a multitude of plans in her lovely head for Foxx Calhoun, and all of them led to the altar and Father Timothy O'Malley. She just had to convince Foxx that was what he wanted more than anything. She smiled at him several times tonight and talked to him about the ceili. Now that she knew he would be there, she knew exactly what she would do to give him a boot toward finalizing her plans.
She thought anyone with any lick of brains would know she and Foxx were destined to be together. She also knew that Foxx's mother would be a hurdle she'll have to jump in order to get him where she wanted him. She didn't know why she knew or how she knew, she just knew things would be difficult when it came down to his mother.
Foxx would like nothing better than a tumble with Mary Beth. But he knew she had white gowns and church bells in her head, and that wasn't what he was about. He would play along for a while and try to talk her out of her clothes, but if it didn't work, Foxx would eventually move along. Wedding bells were just the key that turned the lock, and he wasn't ready for locks.
The music was bright and the lights low as Foxx sipped his second ale of the evening. He wasn't paying much attention to his surroundings, seeing's he was watching Mary Beth at the moment. He was smiling, tapping his foot to the rhythm of the whistle and drum. Someone beside him picked up the spoons and the rhythm was getting wild even for the Irish.
Then in his head, he heard the voice. It brought everything in him to a stop and his breath caught in his chest, his heart pounded. It sounded like...Fox wasn't sure what it sounded like. But he would never forget it for as long as he lived.
“It is I who comes for you. I who will do for you. You will die here, Foxx Calhoun. And no one will be here to save you.”
It was coming from behind him and in front of him and from the side. Foxx spun, his mug raised and nearly clouted old Jimeson Gray in the head with it before he realized that Tom Murphy had hold of the mug, his eyes wide with fear, and was calling Foxx's name.
“Foxx. Foxx? Foxx! Give the mug to me, lad. Give it to me.” Foxx felt his fingers relax as he nodded and the panic gave way to fear. His blue eyes, as deep and sharp as blue skies, stared at Murphy. His mouth was open, but he couldn't form words as he watched Murphy nod and take the mug from his hand.
“It's okay, now, Foxx. There's a lad. Sit down, I'll have Nell bring you something to eat. You'll feel better for it.” Foxx nodded at Tom's words and shuddered once before he turned those eyes back to old Jimeson.
“I'm sorry. I don't know what I saw or who I saw, but it wasn't you, Jimeson. Christ Jesus, I didn't mean to scare you and you know I'd never hurt you.”
The old man nodded and swallowed. “I don' know who you thought I was, Foxx. You was talkin' in some language I di'n'a know. If 'twas Gaelic, it's none I've heard before. And you kept saying 'ainmhithe'. I know what that means, Foxx. I don't think you was being polite.”
Foxx simply stared at the old man and shook his head. “I'll apologize again, Jimeson, and say I can't tell you what came over me in the moment. I'll buy you a pint, then and we'll be over it.”
The old man nodded, accepting the apology and the pint. “'Twas more 'n a moment, Foxx. Liam and the boys, they played three jigs and a sweet song while you was threatenin' to bean me head.”
Foxx shook his head and his lips twitched. “Make it two pints, Tom. Jimeson here needs it. I think he's lost his marbles tonight. Saying I was speakin' Gaelic, calling him ‘animal’. What was that all about?”
Tom peered at Foxx over the rim of the coffee mug he had nearly to his mouth. “You were saying something, Foxx. None of us knew what you were saying. You just kept saying to Jimeson 'ainmhithe' and threatening him with your mug. I don't know what was happening in your head, Foxx, but it was scary, to be sure.”
Foxx stared at Tom, then shook his head. “I hardly know Gaelic. I don't know how I would be talking in any other. And I don't know why I would be callin’ Jimeson an animal.  I've never done so before. We’re friends, why would I call him names?” His mind worked overtime as he tried to think why he would keep saying it over and over to poor old Jimeson.
“I think I'd best be headed home, Murphy. I have too much on my mind for ales and music tonight. I want to get an early start in the morning with the Library in Dublin and see what I can learn about the Dance and the woman.”
Foxx tossed a few bills on the bar and nodded to Jimeson. “That should cover him for a few more rounds. I'll stop by tomorrow when I get back.” Tom nodded and swiped the bills off the bar and wiped up the wet where Foxx's mug had been sitting.
“You take care, Foxx. Strange things happening all around us now. Just remember, I got your back if you need it.” Foxx nodded, frowned at the odd statement from Tom and stepped out the door into the cool early spring evening. He would head home and try to get some rest before he started out in the morning. It wasn't a long drive to Dublin and he was sure his Lorrie could handle it. He'd stop for petrol on his way out of town and just___
He looked up at the sound that seemed to be directly in front of him and staggered back a couple of steps. The man had a sword aimed at Foxx's chest and a leering grin on his face. Foxx backed against the wall of the building behind him and swallowed hard.
“What do you want with me? Who are you?” The man kept advancing until the point of his sword was just touching Foxx.
“It's I who will do for you, Foxx Calhoun. I who will end you.” The man stepped forward quickly and the sword pierced Foxx's chest. He felt the pain, saw the blood and grasping the metal in his hands, he dropped to his knees. He looked up at the man as he stood over him and couldn't believe what he saw vaguely in the man's face. He blinked and the world faded.
When Foxx woke, he found himself staring up at old Jimeson and Mary Beth. His fist was resting on his chest and grasped nothing. There was no blood on his shirt nor evidence of a sword wound. But his chest felt as if someone had hit him hard with a rock. He blinked and struggled to stand, watching Mary Beth and Jimeson as they watched him. Not one of them spoke until Foxx was totally on his feet and leaning against the wall of the building, dragging great gulps of air into his lungs.
“Are ye' fine, there Foxx?” Jimeson canted his head and frowned. “Ye' don' look so good, boyo. Maybe we should get you to home, son so's you can rest? Mary Beth here found you just layin' here and mumbling to y'self. She came right back to the Inn and got me and we came to see if you was dead or just drunk. Seems ye's neither one. You was moanin' and clutchin' at your chest there like y' was holdin' onto somethin'.”
Foxx was too stunned to speak. He had been run through with a sword. He knew that, felt it, saw the blood. Yet here he stood, breathing in air like a tire pump and staring at the woman he wanted and the old man he damn near killed with an empty mug at Murphy's. How could he explain what he'd just seen and felt? How could he even begin to explain it when he couldn't get his own head around it? He groped for the right words and found himself totally without them.
Mary Beth pushed old Jimeson aside gently and took Foxx's hand in hers. “I'll see he gets home, Jimeson. Thank you for helping me with him. I'm sure Foxx will be ready to talk tomorrow. You go on home, now, Jimeson. I think I can handle it from here.”
She smiled at Foxx and pulled him gently away from the wall. “You feel okay to walk or should I see about finding a ride?” Foxx shook his head. “I'm fine to walk. Truly, Mary Beth, you don't have to walk with me. I'm out of your way and you shouldn't be wandering about alone at night. I should be walking you home.”
Mary Beth smiled and nodded. “Then I'll just stay at your house until morning.” She chuckled at his shocked expression. “I wish I had a camera, Foxx. Your mother has an empty room, doesn't she? I can just stay there until daylight, then make my own way home. But I'll see you to your door tonight, Foxx Calhoun. And you'll be safer for it.”
Foxx let her lead him away from the village and toward home. He finally stopped walking and shook his head. Resetting his newsboy cap and adjusting his long scarf, he smiled at her. “You're an amazing woman, Mary Elizabeth O'Dell. An amazing woman. If you weren't so dead set on marrying, I'd talk you right out of your clothes tonight in my own room.”
She smiled back and wrapped her arms around him for a short spell, then took a step back. “It's cold, Foxx and you've had a shock of some sort. We should keep walking. Do you want to tell me what happened to you? Or is that something that you'd rather not talk about?”
Foxx turned his gaze to Mary Beth and sighed. “I really don't know how to explain what happened to me. I lost total blocks of time tonight and I have no reasonable explanation as to why. Not to mention trying to beat Jimeson to death with my mug. Today was just a very strange day.”
Mary Beth nodded and slipped her arm through his as they continued to

8
Fae and Winter / Story 3
« on: July 25, 2017, 10:18:06 pm »

Nebula and Puck ~ A Faery Tale
                                                                                                     
© Q.L. McKenna

"Can you feel it? Can you feel spring in the air?" Nebula, the Flower faery danced lightly on the surface of a three foot snow drift. "A few more days and I can send the Snowbells to the surface and make the humans happy." The soft tinkling of her shoe bells filled the silent, sun-filled day.

"Nebs. It's only February. You know you can't startle the humans with flowers yet. Not until March." Puck chuckled at the little faery; enjoying her happy dance. "Besides, Jack isn't done yet. He says it'll be a hard February all the way." Puck looked around the small grove and shivered.

"Come on, Nebs. We can't stay here much longer. The forest creatures and tree folk will be stirring awake and I don't want to be caught in a storm of Jack's making. I want to be home safe and sound. And you should be too."

Nebula, always a happy little faery, frowned at Puck. They had only been friends since FOREVER, and she still could find him a bit annoying when she was in the mood to have fun and he started fretting about the 'forest creatures and tree folk'.

"Aw, Puck. You know we're safe here in the faery ring and the tree folk will leave us be. They don't want to get lulled into a ring and get trapped here. And what 'forest creature' isn't afraid of the great Puck?"

Nebula danced a bit longer as her shoe bells tinkled madly. Then she stopped suddenly and canted her head to one side. "Oh! Listen, Puck. The children. And they're coming this way. Let's hide and pretend we aren't here!"

Nebula and Puck hid themselves in the deep snow and watched as the children drew closer. Chloe and her brother Max were not paying attention to where they were walking and nearly stepped on Puck and almost kicked Nebula into a tree. Nebs sputtered and shook the snow from her purple hair and blue dress. The children didn't know they were there, so she couldn't be angry at them.

The two mystical beings joined in as the children made snowmen and small forts and tossed snowballs at one another. Puck caught a few snowballs himself and tossed them back, as the children giggled and laughed.

For most of the winter, Puck and Nebula had watched the children and at times had joined them in their play. Now, on the cusp of Spring and nearing Winter's end, closer the Passing Rite that would bring the flowers and joys of warmer weather, they fought their last snowball fight and built the last snowman. Tomorrow would bring warmth and more sun. The snow would begin its gradual melting and the green would take its turn to cover the earth. And come next winter, Nebula and Puck knew the children who played with them now wouldn't remember them and they would pass into the myths and tales until the next child would remember and come to play with the mystical beings in the faery ring forest. 

9
Vampires / Story2
« on: July 25, 2017, 10:06:28 pm »
The Tattoo Artist
© Q.L. McKenna

”Preface
“All other things to their destruction draw,
Only our love hath no decay...”
John Donne, “The Anniversary

Chapter 1

“Suuuuuzzz!! You can’t get a tattoo! What will your father say?” Angie always stretched her name out when she was upset, and it made Suzy cringe. She was almost eighteen, so why would her father say anything at all?
The two girls stood with their noses pressed against the darkened window of the tattoo parlor, trying to see what they could see. Suzy gave her friend one of her signature looks and shrugged. “I’m nearly eighteen, Angie. I can wait until I am to get a tattoo, and he won’t be able to say anything at all. Let’s go in and look at tattoos so I can decide what I want for mine.”
Angie shuddered at the thought of being seen entering the little dark-windowed shop. “Suuuuuzzz!! I don’t want to go in. What if someone sees us?”
Suzy sighed and tugged her friend through the door. “I really wish you’d stop whining, Angie. You’re the same age I am and you’ll be an adult before me, so just come on!! We’re only looking at pictures. Geez.”
The bell jangled as the door closed behind them, sending the room into semi-darkness. The black lights made the tattoo pictures pop from the books on stands along the walls. Suzy immediately became engrossed in the book that held small flowers and other symbols. She slowly turned the pages and stared at the beautiful artwork displayed there. When Angie tapped her shoulder, she glanced at her, her brow furrowed in annoyance. Angie gave her a bland look and nodded to her left. Suzy looked up and was startled to see a man watching her. He canted his head and took the few steps that brought him from behind the counter to stand next to her.
“Can I help you find a tattoo?” His voice was so soft and sensual; it gave Suzy a slight quiver deep in her belly to hear him speak.
“I-I want a tattoo,” she found herself saying as she stared up at him. “Here. Right here,” she touched the soft mound of her breast and was flattered at his smile. Angie sucked in a breath at her friends sudden boldness.
The man nodded and took the book from the stand and tipped his head toward the counter. “Come over here. You can’t appreciate some of the tattoos in this light. I have one that I think you’ll like.”
The girls followed the man to the counter and watched as he turned the pages. The pictures were of faeries, small angels, flowers and symbols that made no sense to Suzy. Then he turned the page and stopped, his finger pointing to the beautiful black rose with droplets of bright red blood. Suzy stared at the picture and before she could stop herself, she nodded.
“That’s it. That’s the one I want.”
Angie crowded closer to look at the tattoo pattern, but Suzy ignored the friend she had known since babyhood. The man was holding her attention once again as he reached and stroked the soft mound of breast.
“I have another thought for the placement of this tattoo, if you’re interested.”
His smile was warm and welcoming and Suzy was enthralled with his attention. Angie wasn’t impressed. She wanted out of this place and she wanted Suzy with her when she left. “Suzy. I want to leave. Let’s go to the movies like we planned. Please?”
Suzy shook her head. “I want a tattoo. This tattoo. And this wonderful man is going to put it where he thinks it will look smashing. You can go if you want, Angie. I’ll catch up with you later.”
“Yes, Angie. Go on. Suzy will catch up with you when I’m done with her...tattoo. Run along now.”
Angie didn’t want to leave Suzy here with this man. She wavered, then nodded. “I want to know your name. Who are you?”
“Why?”
“Because if something happens to Suzy, I can tell her father where to start looking for her.” She glared at the man behind the counter, then at her lifelong friend. “I think we should go, Suzy. I’ll come back with you on your eighteenth birthday and hold your hand so you can get your tattoo. But I think until then, we should just stay away from here.”
“My name is Michael. Just Michael. And when your friend is ready for her tattoo, I think we can manage to deal with it without you.” He turned his attention to Suzy and smiled. “Are you ready for your tattoo, Suzy?” Deep Irish blue eyes stared into her green ones.
Before Suzy could answer him, Angie yanked on her arm and jerked her toward the door. “I’m calling your father, Suzy. The Chief of Police needs to be kept informed about riffraff in the town. And you have no idea what he may have in mind. You didn’t notice he didn’t give you his full name. I think there’s something weird going on here. Come on, Suzy. Let’s just get away from here, please.”
Suzy was angry with her friend, and she snarled at her. But Angie was determined. “I mean it, Suzy. Either we leave now or I call your father. I don’t want to be anywhere near this place in the dark. Let’s just go grab a pizza and go home. We can pick up a movie on the way and we’ll just spend the night in pizza and movie heaven.”
To keep the peace, Suzy went grudgingly with Angie, but not before a backward glance over her shoulder to Michael and a mouthed ‘I’ll be back without her’ as they slipped out the door. Suzy glared at her friend.
Michael smiled and nodded as he watched Suzy leave his shop. “Perfect.” He muttered to himself as he turned to go back into his rooms. “She’s perfect and will do quite nicely.” He fought his hunger back once again, as he had done on previous nights. But Suzy McAdams was perfect. He could wait a bit longer before he took her, tasted her blood. He could wait until the full moon.
Chapter 2

Suzy was furious with her friend. “What is wrong with you, Angie? Didn’t you see he was coming on to me? He was interested in me, and you just blew it out of the water. Thank you so much, you prude.”
Angie nodded and smirked. “Prude I might be, but I’ll be very much alive. I wasn’t sure I’d ever see you again, Suzy. I didn’t want to lose you to some tattoo artist. He looked dark and dangerous and, and hungry.”
Suzy stared at Angie. “Whatever THAT means. Geez, Angie. Artists are supposed to be dark and mysterious. And what did you think he was going to do to me? For crying out loud! Let’s just get the pizza and movies and go back home. I didn’t know I had such a ‘goody-two-shoes’ for a friend.”
The girls spent the night in teen bliss, staring at the hunky werewolf on the TV and swooning when it appeared the young star was looking directly at them. They laughed, ate and talked about boys, but Suzy had other things on her mind that she didn’t mention to Angie. She was making plans for the next day.
The next morning, the girls had breakfast with Suzy’s father before he went to work. Suzy’s mother had died when Suzy was only four, so there had always only been Suzy and her father for as far back as she could remember. He’d raised Suzy to be conscientious, caring and brave enough to try most anything.
Breakfast conversation circled around school and her dad’s work. Mark McAdams was the Chief of Police in the small town where they lived. He’d been a police officer nearly all his life, so Suzy was used to his crazy schedule. He’d worked late last night and was headed back to work today. Seems a couple of hikers had gotten themselves lost in the National Forest, so he was going back to help coordinate the search for that day.
Angie had to be home to go to church with her folks, so Mark agreed to drop her off on his way to work. Suzy had been careful not to mention Michael, so Angie wouldn’t think to talk to her dad about him. Suzy hugged her best friend ‘goodbye’ and promised to come around after church to hang out for a while, which was the normal thing to do when Mark had to work so much.
Suzy hurried through her morning chores, then planned her wardrobe for her excursion to the village tattoo shop and Michael. The afternoon found Suzy back in front of the little shop, peering in the front window. But she wasn’t looking for pictures of tattoos. She was looking for Michael. Hoping he would appear like he had yesterday. Her hands were cupped around her eyes as she tried to block the sun from reflecting in the glass. She’d taken care with her clothes this morning. Showered with her best body wash, shampooed her hair, which was a rich and heavy mahogany color with deep golden highlights, using the same scent as her wash, fussed with her makeup, being careful to wear just enough to make her look interesting and grown-up. Her stomach fluttered as she peered carefully into the glass. He had to be here. Even though it was Sunday, he had to be here. She only wanted to see him, see if her reaction had only been because he startled her yesterday, the way he looked at her like he’d known her since forever.
“Finding anything interesting?” The voice jolted her and she spun to face him. “Michael! You startled me. I - I was looking for you. I thought perhaps you could tell me about that tattoo and where you thought it would look its best on me.”
Michael smiled and unlocked the shop door, pushing it open, then stepping aside to allow her to enter before him. When she passed him, her scent filled him and it took all of his control not to grab her and drag her into his rooms. He wanted her, needed her blood. Her blood. The others had been only to satisfy a hunger. But she would satisfy so much more. He would have to take his time with her. Ease her into a level of trust he knew she didn’t have yet. He found himself grateful she’d rid herself of that whiny little girl she’d dragged in here yesterday. That one was going to become a problem, he could already see it.
“So, you’ve decided then? About your tattoo? Come here with me, Suzy is it? I’ll show you my workroom and we can talk about placement.”
Suzy followed him like a happy puppy into the small ‘work room’ just off the main floor of the shop. “It’s Suzanne, actually. Suzy is just a childhood nickname. I prefer Suzanne.”
Michael smiled to himself. ‘Like fish in a barrel,’ he thought as he sat her down facing him. “I wanted to explain the tattoo to you. It’s a symbol of who and what I am. A symbol of eternity, of love and life.” He reached and touched the back of her hand with a gentle finger. “I would like to place the tattoo where only you or your lover will see it. Someplace...intimate, if you understand me.”
Suzy’s mind went to mush at his touch, at the way his eyes captivated her, and she simply nodded. Michael smiled and lifted her limp hand to his lips. He intended only a smell of her, but she was so pliant and giving, he couldn’t stop himself before he turned her hand palm up and sank fangs into her wrist. She watched him with eyes wide, and only murmured a small sigh as he drank from her. He would stop. He had to stop. He couldn’t take more yet. He forced himself to stop, lick her wounds closed and pull himself away from her. She simply blinked and smiled at him.
“I think I get your meaning, Michael. Thank you. The spot you suggested will be perfect and no one will see it but me...and my lover. I have to go now. I promised someone...oh, Angie. I promised Angie I would come by this afternoon.”
Suzy stood and blinked again. Michael stood with her and walked her to the door. He took her hand in his and kissed her knuckles, pleased with himself when he turned her palm up to kiss again to see the punctures had healed quickly and left only two very small red dots, like bug bites to be seen by anyone else. Michael hoped the euphoria Suzy felt at present would dissipate some before she reached Angie’s house, and hoped fervently it would bring her back to him tonight. Michael thought he should have planted a suggestion as to where she’d been. Too late now to think of those things. He knew she would return and he prayed he had the willpower to hold off claiming her until the full moon. She would be eighteen by then and free to do as she pleased.
Chapter 3

Suzy walked to Angie’s house in a cloud of euphoric bliss. She’d seen Michael, spoken with him, sat in his little workroom in his shop and held a conversation with him and she was still alive. Angie didn’t know what she was talking about. There was nothing wrong with Michael. Nothing at all. She smiled dreamily to herself and turned up the walk toward Angie’s front door. It was then she noticed that as she had gotten further away from Michael, the less euphoric she had felt. She paused and almost turned to go back to see if the feeling got stronger as she got closer, but before she could do so, Angie had come out the door and was waiting for her.
“Well, for heaven’s sake, come on. Where have you been? I tried calling your house to tell you we were home, but you didn’t answer. What’s wrong with you? Are you feeling alright?”
Suzy nodded, her brow creased in a frown of curiosity. “Yea, yea, I’m fine. I was just lost in thought, I guess. Maybe you called and I was already on my way here? It’s such a beautiful day; I thought I’d walk over. Meander over is more like it, I guess. But I’m here now, so what should we do? Want to walk? Or stay in and watch movies?”
Angie smiled at her friend and opened the door. “Let’s just stay in. My mom’s making spaghetti and meatballs and Aunt Jeanna and her girlfriend are coming over. You know how much you like Aunt Jeanna. She has a new girlfriend and she wants us to meet her.”
Angie’s Aunt Jeanna had gone through a difficult break up with her former girlfriend only a year ago. So the idea she had another was exciting and intriguing. And even though Suzy was happy for Angie and her family, she felt empty and odd. She wanted to be with Michael. She couldn’t think of anything she would like better than to please him. But she felt she owed Angie the afternoon at least and maybe she could go to see Michael later on tonight or tomorrow.
The family dinner conversation circled around the two missing hikers and the dangers of hiking in the National Forest without a GPS or at least a compass. Angie’s father said that they were city kids from upstate who had never backpacked anywhere more wild than Central Park. Aunt Jeanna said at least they weren’t local kids and she hoped they would find them soon. Her new girlfriend, Whitney, was a veterinarian and had her own practice. Suzy was impressed and asked all kinds of interesting questions and got many interesting answers. They were partly finished dessert when the phone rang and Angie’s father answered it. The two girls could tell it was something serious by the way his voice dropped and he closed the door to his study. They passed worried glanced to one another and the house got suddenly quiet, with everyone speaking in whispered tones.
When John came out of the study, he was pale and shaken. “That was your dad Suzy. He asked that you stay here until he can come and get you. He doesn’t want either of you walking anywhere or staying anywhere alone. They found the two hikers. Seems they’ve been murdered.”
There was a heartbeat of silence, then everyone was talking at once. John finally put his hand up and called for quiet. “No one has any details as yet. But Mark doesn’t want Suzy to walk home alone or be home alone. He’ll stop here when he gets done with things. If it’s too late, he’s going to stay at the station. Suzy will stay here with us and he’ll come get her in the morning. He’s asked the school board to close school tomorrow so no one has to be on the street for any reason alone. I have to agree with him. We’ve never had a murder here for as long as I can recall. Now we have two of them and to say it unsettles me wouldn’t be stretching things far at all. Jeanna, you and Whitney can stay as well, if you’re spooked about driving home.”
The two women shared a look and agreed to stay, but they would have to leave first thing in the morning because of Whitney’s veterinary practice. Since there was no time of death on the two hikers, no one could say if daylight would be any safer than the dark, but dark seemed worse for waking fears.
Angie and Suzy exchanged looks and stood to help Angie’s mom with clearing the table. “Suzy?” Angie’s voice was a whisper. “Will you let me know what’s going on as soon as you know?”
Suzy nodded. “As soon as my dad tells me anything, I’ll call you right away. This is just too weird, isn’t it? I wonder what happened to them. Those poor people.”
Angie agreed with a bob of her head and began to place the dishes into the dishwasher. Aunt Jeanna and Whitney stopped in to say good night so they could leave early in the morning to get back so Whitney could open her practice in the next city over. Suzy and Angie finished their chores and went out to sit on the front porch swing and enjoyed the evening and the warm weather, talking and giggling about boys and their week end dates. Though Suzy wasn’t planning on a weekend date with anyone but Michael. She couldn’t tell Angie that, so she pretended to think about her friend Josh.
Chapter 4

Michael paced the floor of his rooms in the back of the little tattoo shop. Narrow streams of sunlight made their way passed the heavy drapes that covered his windows. He’d closed them since he was in no mood for the sun. Avoiding those narrow beams like the plague, he didn’t try to stop them. He usually enjoyed watching the dust motes that floated there, but not today. Today, he was furious with himself for allowing the pleasure of a taste of Suzy...Suzanne. Now she was inside him and he couldn’t shut her out.  The two in the forest were just to satisfy the need to feed and the enjoyment of watching the fear register in their eyes when they understood what he was and what he intended. He had taken them fast, his hunger unbearable. There was little pleasure in the kill, but it kept him from going out to find her. Where had she gone from here? He followed her to Angie’s through the small link that had formed when he bit her. But the longer she stayed away, the more the link faded and now he had no idea where she was.  He’d watched the police cars leave town and knew they had found the bodies. The vampire had tried to make it look like an animal attack, and hoped his ruse had been successful. But he knew from experience that wouldn’t stand for very long. Michael had wanted them to keep looking, at least until the full moon.
Where was she? He’d anticipated her returning to him before dark, had planned on seducing her. It was now nearly total dark and there was nothing from her. He had to think she wasn’t able to shed her ‘friend’ or maybe Angie had talked to Suzy’s father. That wouldn’t do at all. He stood by the window in his private bedroom and watched the moon rise. His worry ate at him. What the hell was wrong with him? She was only a human; with the sweetest blood and the most angelic face. He sucked in a sharp breath and shook his head.  Stop it you fool. Put her out of your mind. She’s nothing but human, a feeder; and beneath you.
Michael chuckled at his own nonsense, but kept watching the moon. Where was she? Why wasn’t she here? The bell at the shop door rang and he leaped to go to the front. It had to be her. She was just late, that’s all. There was no compulsion that she come to him, but he thought she wouldn’t be able to resist the pull the bite should have produced. Stuttering to a stop as he stepped into the shop, he stared at the man who stood in the middle of the floor, his mouth agape. “Good evening, Chief. How can I help you?”
Mark startled at the sound of a human voice and glanced toward the door in the back. Michael stood watching him from the open doorway, a smile toying at the edges of his mouth. “My name’s Mark McAdams. I’m sorry to bother you so late, but I was wondering if you had seen either of these two young men? If maybe they stopped in to look at your designs or to get a tattoo?”
Chief McAdams laid two photos on the counter for Michael to look at. While Michael looked, the police chief stared at all the tattoos on the walls. Michael took a cursory look at the photos then shook his head. “I’m sorry, no. Have they done something wrong?”
Mark frowned. “They’re dead. Something or someone killed them in the forest not far from here. I understand the draw of young men to body art. I got my first tattoo when I was barely eighteen. So I’d hoped that they had stopped in here while on their journey. Maybe looked at pictures, made an appointment for their return?”
Michael shook his head, looking concerned and sympathetic. “I’m sorry, chief, but they didn’t stop here. I wish they had. How were they killed? That’s too bad for their families.”
Mark nodded. “It looked like an animal attack, but we won’t know more until the M.E. gets done with his business. That may take a couple of days, depending. Well. Thanks for your help, Mr... ?”
“Michael. Just Michael. I’ve not been a ‘Mr.’ for a very long time. I wish I could have been more help, chief. I hear a lot of interesting things when I’m working on my art. If anything strikes a chord, I’ll let you know. Stop in sometime. I’ll re-ink your tat for you.”
Mark chuckled and nodded. “I might do just that one of these days. Thanks, Michael. I’ll be in again.”
Michael would have sighed if he’d had breath to do so. So that was Suzy’s father? Interesting. He drummed his fingers on the countertop for a moment, while he thought.  Then his ever-working brain drifted to Suzy and his worry was back. Maybe he should go check on her? He could just go there and make sure she was all right. No one would see him, he was certain. But he had hoped to hear from her and since she hadn’t shown up at the shop, he could only imagine she was busy somewhere. Probably home. He would check there first.
Though he didn’t need it, he grabbed a light jacket. It helped to make him look ‘normal’, as he walked the streets. He stepped out and locked the shop door, then made his way along the street, headed for the McAdams’ house. He slowed his pace as he neared the tidy little house with the picket fence and the bright red door. That always tickled him in his wanderings. He had known the sheriff lived there, but had known nothing about his lovely daughter until yesterday. Twenty-four hours ago, he’d met and tasted the one woman who drew him like no other had before. He didn’t understand it, didn’t care to try. All he knew was she was the one and he would have her. He just didn’t want to be sloppy about it.
Chapter 5

Michael paused on the walk across from the house and studied the windows. He had no idea which room was Suzy’s, so he watched them all. The upstairs rooms stayed dark, and the single light that was on downstairs never went out. She obviously wasn’t home. She had mentioned Angie, so she may be there. It was smart of her to remain indoors, off the streets. He knew a closed door wouldn’t stop him if he really wanted to get to her. But he would wait for now. At least he knew she was safe, wherever she was.
Now that he could relax about where Suzy was or wasn’t, Michael became more aware of his own needs and the demands being a vampire put on him. He started back to his shop to deal with those needs and necessities. He smelled her before he saw her. Female! Her blood scent tickled his nose and he stepped into shadow with the intent of letting her get beyond him, since it seemed she was heading straight for him.
As the woman got closer to him, instinct took over and his hunger roared through his system. He knew he shouldn’t kill here. He needed to woo her away from the village and into the forest, but there was no time. His hunger and what he was wouldn’t allow time. He stepped back into the street and started to walk toward her. She rounded the corner and he nodded as she trotted passed him. Running. What was it about humans and running? Tonight, this one would wonder why she bothered at all. He spun quickly and before she had gotten more than five paces beyond him he had her, grabbing her arm and jerking her off her feet. She opened her mouth to scream, but the only sound she made was a small whimper. His hand closed over her throat quickly as he lifted her into his arms.
The woman, small and slight in build, could only stare into red eyes that were dull from hunger and need. She wasn’t Suzy, but she would do for now. He carried her easily, his hand still at her throat.
“I won’t hurt you. I promise you, there will be very little pain.” Michael’s voice was rough with the ache inside him to feed. She whimpered and he looked down at her. “Do you have children waiting for you?” She shook her head ‘no’ and he smiled. “Excellent.” He had vowed long ago that he wouldn’t take a woman from her children.
He carried her the few blocks to his shop, then slipped into the back door. She might be fun to play with for a while. He opened his back door and slipped inside, carrying the woman into his rooms. By the time he had her secured to his bed, she was trembling. He sat down next to her and brushed his fingertips along her jaw. “Don’t be afraid, little one. I only need a taste of you.”
Michael smiled down at her, used his fingertips to turn her head away from him to expose her lovely long white neck. He leaned and sniffed. The scent of her was intoxicating. He closed his eyes and bared fangs as he let his own euphoria envelope him, then sank fangs into her neck and drank deeply. She only struggled for a short while before the bliss and sensuality of a vampire’s bite took her under and she died there on his bed, in total surrender. He finished her, then sat up. His hunger was sated for now, but she hadn’t struggled enough. The rush of the kill wasn’t there. And now he was left with a body to move. He glanced at the window to judge the time. Too close to dawn. There was no way to get her out of the village and into the forest. And he would have to take her deeper this time. They can’t find her as fast as they found the other two. Making the decision to keep her until night and move her then, Michael went to the basement for the plastic and tarp. They would hunt for her, but there was nothing to lead anyone to his doorstep and he hoped to be gone long before the woman was found, taking the sheriff’s lovely daughter with him when he left.
He easily hid the body of the woman, then set out to go about his day. He began by pulling the heavy drapes over his easterly window. The heat would decay the body too rapidly, and he didn’t want that. He’d read about those dogs that found bodies, and he had no desire to meet one face to face for several reasons. He’d managed to get through most of the night without Suzy crossing his mind, but now the image of her crashed into his head unbidden. Damn it! This had to stop.
While he changed his clothes, he snarled at no one and headed for the front of the shop. He would have to see what he could do to get his woman into his clutches soon. If she stopped in, perhaps another more serious taste of her. Maybe it was time to take this to another level. He didn’t want to kill her, didn’t want to feed on her. He wanted to change her, take her as his. He would have to plan today and make every attempt to get Suzy into his shop again. He glanced at the calendar to see when the moon was full. He had only a few days to get things finished and in order before he had to make his move.
His priority for the evening was to remove the body from his rooms. In the meantime, he had to open his shop and wait on the customers. Perhaps he could find something sweet and tender before his evening activity. Something to give him a bit of a rush and a little more strength. He’d made no plans of further kills, but one never knew who would enter his shop or when. His smile was vicious as he made his plans and answered the questions of those who found their way into his little place of business. He saw the police car when it pulled up to the curb so he met the man at the door.
“Chief. You’re making a habit of gracing my place of business. Welcome.” He stepped aside for the man to enter. Chief McAdams’ nodded as he did so; glancing around to be certain they were alone.
“The M.E. preliminary report is back. I know a lot of your business here in town is at night, so I thought I’d warn you. It was some kind of animal. More work has to be done, but from what we know right now, the young men were killed by some kind of animal. Maybe you should keep to indoor activities for a little while until this can be cleared up. We’re setting traps now and hope to trap the thing and get it relocated if it’s not sick. If it is, then we’ll put it down. But maybe you could try to encourage your customers to come during the day. I’m imposing an ‘off the street’ curfew of seven pm.”
Michael nodded gravely. “That is very wise of you, Chief. One never knows what’s wandering the forests. Sick, injured, crazed. Animals do strange things when backed into a corner, threatened or hungry. I will curb my business to fit your curfew. Thank you for telling me.”
Mark nodded. “Thanks. That will help keep the kids off the street. I know they like to at least gawk in your windows. I appreciate your keeping your tattoo art to those of legal age. Keeps the parents calm.”
Michael simply smiled and nodded. Just as Mark turned to leave, the door opened and Suzy stepped in. Michael’s mouth watered at the sight of her and her eyes ogled at her father. “Dad! I saw your car out front. Is everything okay? Are you on your way home? I could use a lift if you are. I walked to Angie’s and now I’m a little afraid to walk back home alone.” She was babbling and she knew it. She had stopped to talk to Michael and now that was impossible.
She couldn’t stop staring at Michael and it was with great difficulty that the man turned his attention back to the police chief. “Your daughter? What a lovely girl, Sheriff.” He turned back to Suzy with a smile that nearly had her swooning. “Welcome to my shop. Perhaps when you’re older, you will come in for a look around. But right now, you’re underage.”
Suzy smiled, but her eyes narrowed just a bit. “I’ll be eighteen in a few weeks.” She took offense to him referring to her as ‘young’. “Dad? Can you take me home?”
Mark snapped out of his shock at seeing his daughter in the tattoo shop and nodded. “Sure can, Suzy. Come on, let’s go.” He blinked at Michael as if seeing him for the first time. “Thanks for your cooperation, Michael. I’ll be stopping by later to get that tat re-inked.”
Michael nodded. “Anytime. You won’t even need an appointment.” He winked at Suzy and turned away before he attacked them both. The girl had no idea what her very presence did to him. As soon as he was alone, he snarled and stuffed his shaking hands into the pockets of his jeans. He was running out of time; he had to act soon if he was going to take the girl. He closed the shop earlier than normal and went back into his rooms to prepare the woman’s body. As soon as he felt at ease, he would remove her body and take her into the deep woods and leave her to the animals there. It would take them awhile to find her and he would be long gone by then. Along with the sheriff’s lovely daughter.
Michael paced away the minutes and hours until the village slept, then moved the body of the woman he’d killed. He had wrapped her in plastic earlier and now he placed her in the back of his truck, covered her with a tarp and began his journey. He drove always within the speed limit and never tried to hurry past police cars he spotted or make any odd maneuvers. When he reached the road he would use to enter the national forest, he paused as he waited, watched and listened. There was nothing to tell him of any danger, so he went on with his grim chore. After driving for nearly two hours, he stopped and nodded. Far enough. He unloaded his grizzly package and took her farther into the forest on foot, making certain to leave no trail anyone could find right away. He moved with vampiric speed and by the time he felt safe enough to drop his load, he had gone several hundred miles into the deep woods.
At hearing the roar of a mountain lion, Michael nodded. “Here’s your dinner, then. She’s a tasty morsel, if I do have to say.”  He unwrapped her body, stripped her naked, then let her roll a bit down a small embankment.
He placed her clothing, the plastic and the tarp into a black bag and quickly returned to his truck. He would dispose of that bundle as soon as he could. He found an abandoned campsite and used the fire pit to burn the items he’d used to move the woman’s body and her clothing. He watched and waited until everything was ash, adding wood when it was needed. Satisfied that every bit of fabric and plastic was gone, he covered the remaining coals with sand, then climbed back into his truck and headed for home. He slipped inside quietly as the sun was turning the dark night into the soft purple of dawn. Michael stripped, showered and then went to bed. He could rest for a few hours. Being a vampire, he never truly slept. Not like the humans. When he woke it would be soon enough to begin his plan to ensnare Suzy, make her his and leave the village to the humans. He cared little for the shop and its supplies. He could always get more. Besides, the tattoo he longed to place on Suzy’s lush body was only for his enjoyment and hers.

Chapter 6

Michael spent the day in frustration. He wanted Suzy, but he didn’t want to take her roughly, without heat. He wanted her to come to him. He was testy with his customers, short with himself. He paced and thought and snarled at every shadow that crossed his door. Growled at every human because they weren’t Suzy. What the hell was wrong with him?
At noon, he put up a sign that said he was out to lunch, and hunkered himself down in his rooms. Need clawed at his belly like a hunger and desire swept through him as a wave that crested then crashed over him. His tongue brushed against his sharp incisors as he struggled to hold on to the humanity that was Michael Zarkov. That was what let him stay among the humans. His ability to blend in, to mix with them well.
It was a gift left to him by the one who had mentored him at his change. She had only stayed with him for a short while, before she told him he had to make his own mark, learn to live in a world that shunned his kind and killed them with regularity. He felt he had progressed well enough, but lately the thought of spending eternity alone didn’t hold any appeal with him.
He’d had human lovers. But once they began to age and he hadn’t, they became burdensome with their begging to remain with him and stay forever young. He didn’t want that kind of female. He wanted one who loved him first and the vampire second. One who wanted to stay with him because he was Michael Zarkov, not because he was ‘Michael’ and immortal. He hadn’t known that was what he was waiting for until he met Suzy. His first look at her had him salivating. Then she was inside him and he couldn’t stop the want or desire. He was so lost in his reverie, he snarled at the voice that called his name.
“Michael? Are you here? Hello?”
Sweet Jesus, she was here. In his shop. He struggled to pull himself back to the present and give her an answer. Just as he rose from his chair, she spoke again, this time from his doorway. “Michael?” She stopped when he snarled at her and stared at him. “I...I’m sorry. I thought maybe you were sick. Your ‘out to lunch’ sign is still up and the door was unlocked. It’s after six, so I was worried you were ill. Are you alright? You don’t look well.”
She started toward him and he stepped back. “Stop. Let me get myself oriented and I’ll be right out.” He didn’t know what he would do with her standing in his doorway, looking for all the world like ‘prey’.  She took another step forward and he took another back. His legs hit the edge of his bed and he caught himself before he fell.
She stopped and looked around the simple living room. There was nothing striking about the furniture, nothing untoward or ‘bohemian’. She frowned at Michael and nervously fidgeted with her fingers that she had clasped in front of her. “A woman’s gone missing, Michael. Her parents said she’d gone out for a jog two nights ago and hasn’t returned.”
He watched her as she examined the room they were in. It occurred to him she was afraid, but not of him. Not of being alone with him. This puzzled him a bit. “I’m sorry, Suzanne. I know that makes more work for your father and leaves you alone more often than not. But you’re safe. Nothing will happen to you, I swear.”
“And you know this how? How can you say that with such confidence? Will you keep me safe? Do you know something, Michael?”
He shook his head and smiled at her. “I’ll keep you safe, Suzanne. With my very life, I will keep you safe.” Because I have to keep you safe to keep my own sanity. Because I need you like the stars need the sky. Because you are my hope, my home, my light. But he couldn’t say that to her. Not now.
He shouldn’t have taken the woman. Not so close to the others. What had he been thinking? He had used her to sate a hunger that only one woman would satisfy in him. His blue eyes rimmed red and his fangs pushed against his tongue. He turned away from her quickly and hoped she hadn’t noticed.
“Michael? Are you sick? Do you need something to eat? I can get you something if you want. I’ll just go lock up and turn off the lights out there and we can enjoy a meal together. Unless you don’t want to spend time with me?”
He answered her without turning. “I’m not sick. You just surprised me. If your father knew you were here, I could be in a lot of trouble.”
“I just thought - I mean, I’d hoped that you would want to be with me. My dad isn’t home and probably won’t be home for a while. It’s my birthday tomorrow. He always takes the day off and we celebrate with Angie and her parents. So I thought....Michael? Please look at me.” Something was very wrong, she could sense it, but didn’t know what it was. Since he didn’t respond, she shrugged to herself. “I probably should go.”
She was leaving? Leaving?!  No! No, no, no...she couldn’t leave. “Please, don’t leave. I want you to stay with me.” His back was still to her and she frowned at him. He turned then and let her see the red that rimmed those Irish blue eyes, let her see the fangs that brushed his lower lip. “Stay with me, Suzanne. Be my forever.”
Suzy ‘eeped’ and tried to turn and run. What was wrong with him? He’d never looked like that before. Michael lunged and pulled her to him, feeling her heart rabbiting around in her chest, her pulse hammering in her neck. Wrapping his arms around her, Michael brushed his lips against her neck. “I want you. Since the first day I saw you, I’ve wanted you. I want you to be forever with me. I can make you like me, Suzy and we can stay together for eternity.”
Suzy kicked and squirmed, panting in her sudden fear of him. Her fight only drove Michael into further frenzy. “Please, Michael. Please, don’t kill me. I...I’ll stay with you for as long as you want, but please don’t kill me.”
He felt her shiver and laughed at her fear. “You still don’t understand, do you my little mouse? I killed those boys in the forest because I had to feed. I killed the woman as well, but they’ll search a long time before they find that one. I wasn’t quite so careless with her.”
Suzy could feel the strength in him and knew she would die before morning. Nothing he was saying was getting through the terror as she gulped air and tears slipped from frantic, fear-filled eyes. Michael was behind her and he held her with one hand as the other pulled her hair away from that sweet spot on her neck.  “I won’t let you die, Suzy. I will teach you how to live.”
Michael hadn’t wanted to end this in this manner. He’d envisioned candles and soft music. A sincere discussion of what he could offer her and pictured her in his mind as accepting and loving. But the situation called for action. He nudged her head slightly, turning her face away from him. He’d wanted to watch the euphoria as it slid over her, as she climaxed in his arms before she “died” and he fed her to bring her back to him.
His words soft whispers in her ear as he spoke. “I’m sorry I have to cause you pain before you feel pleasure, Suzy. But I feel pushed to change you now. I hadn’t planned on this tonight, but I’ll give you a nice birthday present.” Soft sensual lips brushed her skin again and he heard her whimper. “Shsh. This won’t take but a few minutes.” He bared fangs and leaned into her just as the bell on the shop door chimed. Michael cursed and then smiled at Suzy.
“Make a sound and I will kill whoever is out there. Understand?” As Suzy nodded, he sat her in the overstuffed chair and kissed her. “Not a peep.”
He went out to the shop, wiping his hands on a small towel. “Ah, Chief McAdams. What brings you by this evening?” Damn the man! Would he ever be rid of him?
Suzy caught the sob in her throat. Her father? She battled between running to him, screaming or being silent and taking Michael at his threat. She couldn’t risk her father, so she stayed very still in the chair and wept silently, shivering with fear.
“Michael. I just noticed your door was open and was checking to make certain you weren’t in any trouble here.” The Chief nodded his head at seeing Michael still standing.
“I’m sorry. Must be my last customer didn’t pull it tight enough to stay. You know these old buildings and their little quirks. I was just cleaning up. Thanks for stopping by. I’ll close it and lock it from in here.”
Mark nodded again and left the building. Michael followed him immediately and closed the door, flipping the deadbolt and drawing the shade down to indicate the shop was closed. Returning to the back, he smiled at Suzy, but there was nothing gentle in that smile.
“Now. Where were we? Ah, yes. You and your delectable blood.” Michael’s eyes changed and Suzy shrank back against the chair. “I won’t hurt you, Suzy. I want to spend my life with you. And it’s a very long life.”
Michael reached for her and yanked her to him. Now, Michael, Now!!  Take her now before she’s aware. Michael’s blood pounded through his veins, threatening to burst from him, blanking out all other sound. He viciously bit and drank from her. She fought at first, struggling to escape his clutches. Her struggles only fanned the blaze of need surging within him. He sank fangs deeper, took more, took quickly until she was nothing. Until her heart had stopped and he was sated. He hadn’t known it would feel like that. Her blood washed through him like a cleansing fire. He pressed her face to his chest for only a moment before he tore open his wrist and forced blood into her mouth.
“Take, my love. Take and live. Take and be with me for eternity.” He waited patiently until she began to drink, her hands clutching his arm, drinking from him on her own. Michael smiled as he waited until she had pulled away from him. Mine!  He felt the draw, the pull they shared for one another and it lightened his heart a little. She was his and he, without question, was hers.
Michael would disappear into the night, into the dark, with Suzy at his side. And no one would ever find them. He stood by the window and watched the moon rise. They would leave soon....very soon. Before anyone missed her and her friend Angie would begin to put the bits and pieces together in her head. Michael and Suzy would be very far away before that happened.

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