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Excerpt from So Darkly Comes the Night


This is the first chapter of my new mystery novel that will soon be on amazon. if you like what you read please share this post.

One
Sometimes when I wake up I feel lost, and as I try to get my bearings, and put some meaning to my life, and sense to the new day, I wonder if my nightmares are the true reality. j.w.r June : 20 18

Death danced with him, and within him.

It filled his sleeping hours with fear. with accusing, unseeing eyes that penetrated his soul with bloodless faces, with smells of rotting flesh that stayed with him, smells that he could not wash off.

At times his nightmares wore different faces, but most of the time…most of the time the faces melting as if made from wax, filling his mind’s eye were those of his wife and daughter. He still felt the heat from the burning car, but before he could reach them, before he could crawl inside and be part of the flames he woke screaming, shivering from cold sweat that drenched his sheet and blanket.

But this night, perhaps because of the extra whisky soaking through his mind, perhaps because he no longer had the strength to escape, he made it to the car, opened the door, reached out for his daughter’s hand.

Like a church bell calling the faithful to Sunday morning worship, or the clarion call of a bugle, the first notes of the William Tell Overture pierced the tormented mind of the sleeper, shaking him free of the hunger, the need to join his family, dragged him out of another alcoholic stupor. A shaking hand fumbled around for the lamp on the rickety bedside table. An unshaded bulb burst into brilliance, chasing the darkness out of the dingy, sour smelling bedroom. A room that reeked from dozens of unpleasant odors that had soaked into the walls, into the cracked linoleum over the years, and could never be washed away with any amount of scrubbing or dulled by the strongest air fresheners. And lighting scented candles, or burning incense, only made the vile fragrance stronger
The smells no longer bothered him, and when someone daring to visit complained about them, he simply shrugged his shoulders, and muttered in his whisky rough voice, “Smells, what smells.” On more than one occasion he added, “If being in my castle bothers you so much, then get the hell out.”

Detective Ryan Telford scrunched his eyes to dull the burning light, picked up the cell phone his captain had ordered him to keep with him no matter where he was, and roared, “What the hell do you want…do you have any idea what time…”
He laughed before whoever was on the other end had a chance to answer. He didn’t know what time it was, and most important of all he didn’t care.

A crisp no nonsense voice full of authority filling his ear, setting his nerves on edge pulled him further from the funk of another drunken stupor. “I want you, Telford.”

“What the…Wilbur…Captain Jones.” He struggled to keep his feelings in check. “Captain,” his voice steadied, deepened, lost some of the whisky edged roughness. “What can I do for you at…” Bloodshot eyes glanced at the cracked faced windup clock beside the lamp. “What can I do for you at two in the morning?”

“I want you, Telford. I don’t just want you, I need you.” A tense, restrained chuckle filled the detective’s let ear for a moment before fading away into a cold silence.

“I didn’t know you cared, sir. But if you want me, I’m all yours, for the moment anyway. How may I help. If it is about your love-life…well I haven’t walked down that road for a while. But…I’ll do my best, if you will allow me time to wake up, and see what I can remember about such things…”

“Damn it Telford, I don’t have time to play your silly, childish games.”

Ryan rubbed two-day stubble with a hand growing steadier by the minute. “Yes sir, sorry. What is so urgent that it won’t keep until a decent hour.”

“There is a body I want you to look at.”

“Well sir…” He scratched at an irritating itch on his left temple, while gathering his thoughts. “Well sir…if it’s female, one-twenty, give, or take, blonde, thirty-six to fifty, turns every male head, not much over five-seven, likes scotch whisky, likes to dance to slow music and has a lost cat named Fluffy to find, I’m your man. Hell, seeing it’s only a bit after two in the A.M., she doesn’t even have to be blonde.”

Telford, laughing hard enough to shake his body collapsed on the edge of the bed, and waited for the string of four letter words pouring out of his phone, seeming to pollute the air around him to run out. And at last they did.

A harsh nasal voice snapped, “Cut the crap, Telford. The body is young, male, and dead.”

“Me…why me…sir? I’m still on suspension for that shooting, or have you forgotten. Will be for two more days.”

“Damn it Telford, drunk or sober, fit or unfit you’re still the best man I have for a homicide, or for finding Aunt Sally’s cat for that matter. Besides, I heard through the grapevine that you’ve been cleared, and the ruling will come down today.”

The groan escaping from Ryan’s mouth filled the small room. “Just tell me where to go… on second thought better not, your answer will likely upset me and make me burst into tears. It would be awfully bad form to cry over the phone to my brave and fearless leader. Just tell me where the corps is, and I’ll be there with bells on as soon as I make myself decent.”

“The way you sound, I think it best if I come and get you. Henderson, how far are we from Telford’s place?”

Ryan heard a distant, “Ten to fifteen minutes, sir.”

“Why captain…whatever do you…”

“To put it bluntly…you sound drunk, or at the very least, badly hung over. Be on the sidewalk in nine minutes. Henderson, put on the damn siren. Do I have to tell you how to drive, man? Next thing I’ll have to instruct you on how to tie your shoes.”

The detective yanked the phone away when a sharp, wailing sound poured into his eardrum.

A threadbare blanket, a sheet that looked like it would beg to be washed if it could speak were pushed off bare, hairy legs, and two size-twelve feet landed with a thump on the wood floor. A left hand, steady now lifted-up a mattress, and a right fished out a white shirt, green tie, and a pair of dark, mostly wrinkle free trousers.

“Damn, only seven minutes left. No time for a shower. Well, Wilbur will have to take me as I am.”

A shirt that didn’t smell too rank was pulled on, and buttoned, after a quick torso spray of underarm deodorant. Trousers were pulled on, buckled, and zipped. Feet were encased in two-day old socks. Dark, scuffed shoes were lifted to his nose, “I doubt if he’ll sniff my feet,” he chuckled, slipping them on.

He stumbled out of the small room, stumbled across the floor into the cramped bathroom, pulled on the string of the overhead light, scrunched up bloodshot eyes, and stared at the ashen grey face glaring black and him.

He filled his mouth with mouthwash, gargled three times. After getting rid of the sharp-tasting liquid, teeth were brushed, and a razor went once lightly over scratchy stubble. “You aren’t going to a prom.” A glance over at the clock birthed his first grin in many days. “Four minutes, Ryan my boy, your best time ever.”

Five minutes later, a black unmarked car pulled up beside him, and the back door swung open.

The captain barked, “Get in Telford,” and slid over to make room for the six-foot-two frame “The crime scene crew are itching to get about their work. But I didn’t want anything moved or touched until you see it first.”

Ryan growled, “Where are we going.”

“Robert Rakes Statue. Henderson, keep the siren on all the way.”

Telford rolled the window down halfway, buckled up, closed his eyes and hoped that the cool breeze would wash away the whisky fog, hoped it would slow down the bongos beating out the wild, mad mating ritual in his throbbing head. He knew what it cost Wilbur to ask for his help and opinion. He also knew what it could cost them if he screwed up. He made a mental note to go on the wagon. It wouldn’t be hard. He didn’t need to drink, and most of the time he didn’t want to drink. But lately it seemed that is what everyone expected him to do, and so he did. This is what he told himself every time he found himself looking at the dry bottom of a scotch bottle.

He was aware of the whispers, the sudden stop in conversation when he entered any room where his one-time friends were. He was aware of no longer being invited to meet the boys after work, have a couple of cold ones, and shake down the events of the day.

Ryan missed the locker room banter the sharp quick feel of a wet towel being slapped hard on naked skin. Missed most of all the companionship, the closeness he once enjoyed. He was toxic, an alcoholic, could no longer be depended on, and most likely would never have your back. At least that was the talk now days.
Maybe, just maybe this, whatever it was could be his way back to being what everyone once called him, the best detective in Toronto. His missed the nickname, “Sherlock,” that he once bore with sheepish pride. “But that was then, and this is now,” he muttered, opening his eyes to check their whereabouts.

“If you want to talk about anything, I’m here for you. Just like I am for the rest of my squad.”

The slight headshake started up the pounding, now more of an annoyance than painful. Bloodshot eyes closed once more, and a tousle head settled back against the seat.

The sudden stop, the sudden silence dragged Ryan out of a fitful sleep. If he dreamed on their journey, he didn’t remember, and perhaps that was best after all. Not speaking, he opened the door and stepped onto the grass. He grunted “Lead on McDuff,” to Henderson, and followed the tall heavy-set man towards the lights.

A man in uniform, handing them white coveralls, and latex gloves, gagged, pointed at the corps, “In my twenty years, I’ve never seen anything like this. He’s been butchered, like a lamb led to the slaughter house.”

His eyes swept the area with a quick glance, taking in the half-dozen men and women dressed in white, gathered in groups of two, sipping steaming coffee, and talking in low voices.

Telford knew that a minute after he said he was done, they would buzz around like a hive of bees in a field of wild flowers. They would look for footprints, tire tracks, blood splatter, take samples from the body, take hundreds of photographs, and mark each thing with a crime scene number. Anything, and everything would be sampled, be examined over the next hours, the next days.

Seconds later, three abreast, the officers stepping over the crime scene tape, followed the beam of light dancing over the crew cut grass towards the body.

Somebody would have had to call this in. So somewhere there was a potential witness. They had to be found, interrogated. The footage from every traffic camera, every security camera in the region would have to be viewed half-a-dozen times to make certain nothing was missed. This would take time. Until this process was completed, and the results put down in black and white for all concerned to see, it would be up to him, and others like him to look for motive, for opportunity and for the means.

The first step, the most important step for him was the identity of the victim, because nine times out of ten, the killer would be someone the victim knew, a member of the family, friends would be the first people to be interviewed, and their alibis checked out. If this didn’t achieve the required results, the circle would be extended to casual acquaintances, to chance encounters.

The wicked pounding of Telford’s head had now subsided, his hangover was like it never had been. His thoughts were clear, his mind waiting to be put the task at hand. As eager and excited as a hound closing in on a fox, confident that he would see things that others missed, he strode towards the body.

There it lay, stretched out on the dew soaked green grass, face and neck hidden beneath dark cloth, looking more like a store front mannequin than a human. As always, he stood at a distance taking in the whole area, checking every inch of the crime scene, looking for anything out of place. Even the most polished killer made mistakes, and it was his job to spot each one, make sense of it, and start building a profile.

His gaze shifted to the bare feet, “Now, why did you remove the shoes.” He turned to Jones, “Have someone look for his shoes. Captain, please shine your light on the bottom of the feet. Damn, whoever did this wanted this kid to suffer. See the charring along the instep and the bottom of the toes.”

The captain nodded, and shouted, “Henderson, see if you can find a pair of shoes that don’t have feet in them.” He grinned in Telford’s direction, “He’ll have to trip over them first, but he’s all I can spare for now.”

Ryan’s gaze moved up the straight legs, taking in blood-soaked jeans, the missing belt, the gaping wound that stretched from groin to collar bone. “It’s not his first kill,” he muttered.

“How so?”

“The body is laid out too neat, and the killing took a long time. See all the shallow cuts on the torso above the wound. Whoever did this, knew what they were doing. There are usually hesitation marks on the first victim. At a guess I would say this is most likely the third or fourth kill.”

“Damn it all Telford, are you trying to tell me there are…”

Telford grunted, “Take the cloth off his face, Wilks,” and steeled himself for the unveiling.

Wilks bent, reached out, lifted the cloth, reveling a bloodless face, and wide, staring eyes, that seemed to burn into Ryan’s mind.

Not since his wife and daughter’s death had he felt this kind of empty hollowness rushing through him, setting his stomach churning like a pinwheel in a windstorm.
His supper, shooting out of a half open mouth, splattered over the grass beside the body, splashing twenty-year-old scotch, strands of half chewed spaghetti, chunks of meatballs, parmesan cheese, and a sauce made of tomatoes onto the bottom of bloody jeans.

Hands flailing, clutching at the air, he staggered around like a man coming off a two-day drunk, and fell forward. A white face, and wet grass smacked together, stunning him for a moment. Groaning rolling over, unseeing eyes stared up at the stars.

Telford breathed deep, tried to scour the image from his mind, a mind that he felt he was losing, but he couldn’t. He rolled over on his stomach and putting one hand in front of the other pulled himself to the bronze base of the statue. Fingers that had lost their strength, fumbled over the cold rough metal for something to hold onto.

Wilks, now beside him, reached out his big hand, grabbed Telford’s waving arm and like he was lifting a sack of grain, hauled the detective to his feet, propped him against the statue, held him until the trembling slowed, held him until it looked like the man could stand by himself.

Telford, with tears streaming down his face, screamed, “Damn you Jones, damn you Jones. Damn your soul. Some joke. Some joke indeed. I’m not laughing. I’m not likely to ever laugh again. I know we haven’t been getting along, but this… this is a new low for even you.”

“I don’t have any idea what you are yammering about, Telford, and if you don’t get a grip…”

“If I don’t get a grip…then what.”

“You may as well go back to the gutter because you’re no use to me in this state.”

“Captain.”

Wilbur snarled, “What is it Wilks?”

A trembling finger pointed towards the body, “There’s something sticking out of the wound. It looks like rolled up paper.”

“Well, what are you waiting for?

“Is he done,” Wilks asked, waving a hand in Ryan’s direction.

Jones casting a pitying glance towards Telford’s, nodded, growled “He’s done.”

Wilks bent over and using a long pair of forceps eased the object out of the gaping cavity, straightened up, and handed it to Jones.

A rubber band dropped into an open evidence bag, provided by Wilks.

As if it were a new found dead sea scroll, or an ancient treasure map, the captain unrolled the paper. “Shine your light on this, Wilks.”
In the beam streaming out from the flashlight held tight in Wilks dark hand, the words seemed to jump off the page. “My name is Isaiah, and my name is death. All of you will shake when you see my shadow. All of you will scream from fear when you hear my name. You cannot escape me. There is no safe place to go. I will choose my prey from among you. You cannot stop my taking. You cannot stop my killing. You will fear to sleep. You will tremble upon your waking. I bring fear, pain and death, and when I am gone, there will be no one laughing. My name is Isaiah, and you will tremble at my passing.”

The blood-stained paper slipping out of white shaking fingers, fluttered, like an autumn leaf to the ground, coming to rest across the toe of Wilbur’s right shoe.

From Keeper of the Sword: book two


From Chapter Ten: Perilous Passage
Adelard shouted over the roaring water, “Keep to the right of the Island. Breandan warned me that great harm may come if we if take the left side.” Their six-day journey had been a wild ride but nothing like this. A wave, ten ells high, proudly wearing a white bonnet caught their raft, picked it and slammed it down, rattling pots hanging in the cabin.
Another wave larger than the first clutched the raft tight to its frothy, boiling bosom, whirling it around half a dozen times before casting it free.
Five-hundred ells, four-hundred, three-hundred, to the fork, and the river growled, rolled and boiled beneath them, promising destruction with every ell covered.
Alstrom fought to hold onto the twisting handle of the sweep, fought to keep the wide white blade immersed in the waves, fought to guide their little craft over to the right.
The other rangers rowed like an army of a hundred Glegs were closing in.
A wave surged over the back of the raft, knocking Alstrom to his knees, ripping the steering oar from his hands, and washing it over the side. He crawled over to the spares, drew his dagger, cut through the lashings, crawled back to the stern, and placed it in the Y shaped oarlock.
Josh left his place at the oars, crawled to Alstrom, placed his hands behind the ranger, lending his strength to the task.
Adelard shouted, “Pull, pull harder now, pull again,” and the nose of their craft turned towards the right hand shore.
A sudden movement on the island tip caught the corner of Josh’s eyes. He straightened up, held tight to the sweep handle, and scanned the approaching land, now less than two-hundred ells away and closing fast. A figure stood on the fingertip of the island, waving a bit of red cloth in the air.
Josh blinked, wiped the spray form his eyes and looked again. The moment he knew his eyes weren’t playing tricks on him, he screamed, “Adelard, there’s some on the island.”

From Keeper of the Sword: book two


Chapter Twelve: The Last Battle
Adelard turned to the walls of the citadel, and watched a beam of light lance out towards him.
He whirled to face the Gleg, when he heard a sword sliding out of its leather scabbard. As he whirled, he jumped backwards, and reached for his weapon.
Adelard didn’t wince or cry out as a blade sliced into his left arm above the elbow. Ignoring the pain, ignoring the blood dripping down his arm, he drew his weapon, and swung it in time to parry the next blow.

If you would like to know more, then just click on the book cover.

From Keeper of the Sword: book one


From Chapter Four: I’m going to Run Away

Josh went to where the fire was and kicked sand onto it.

“Don’t do that Josh, not until we do the ritual that your gramps sent us. At least you’ll be here to tease him about it.”

“Oh alright,” Josh hesitated for a moment before he stopped kicking sand on to the blaze. He remembered the warning gramps had sent him.

Morgan joined Josh at the small fire. They marched around it twice to the left, changed directions and circled it three times to the right. Neither of them was surprised when a ship didn’t appear. Josh started to kick sand on the fire again.

Morgan begged, “Please Josh, put some more wood on the fire, I’d like to sit here for a while and think about all the good times we’ve had.”

Josh put a few dry branches on the smoldering embers. The fingers of the flame grew larger

and reached up towards the full moon that floated above them. He dragged a big log close to the warmth. The two of them sat close together and put their arms around each other. Morgan rested her head against Josh’s shoulder and they sat in silence, overwhelmed by sadness.

The moon sank lower in the dark sky and Morgan broke the silence at last, “We should go Josh,”

Josh stood up and kicked sand onto the dying embers, making certain to extinguish the last tiny glow.

Morgan stood up, turned around, and screamed.

Josh whirled around, his mouth dropped open. Right behind them, and less than twenty feet away stood four oddly dressed men. Two of them were reaching for long black shafts in quivers hanging over their shoulders, and a third held a long gleaming sword. Josh screamed, his knees buckled and he fell to the beach.

 

Long Ride to Abilene: Chapter One


He downed his whiskey in one quick gulp, wheeled around to face me, and dropped his hand to the butt of the colt forty-five slung low on his hip. Looking into dark eyes, eyes that were once filled with, laughter, deviltry, and a sense of fun that spilled over into anyone around him, now filled with bitterness and hate sent a coldness like I had never felt before, starting at my toes, surging upwards that set my hands to shaking.
I knew that death stared me in my face, and if I made a wrong move, or even so much as blinked, this might be my last day on this green earth. At that moment, my mind circled back to the day that set me on this course, and I caught myself thinking, “If only I hadn’t decided to go into Plentiful so early in the day. If only old Jim Wills had of been quicker at his figuring out what we owed, or what he intended to give me for the things I’d brought in, but he wasn’t, and thinking on what could have been, or might have been wouldn’t keep me breathing, not much longer anyway.”
The only thing that might spare me, is I had taken the bosses advice and left my gun in camp before coming into town.
He snarled, “You’ve been ridin me for a long time. Goin on about how you is better than me. How much more work you do than me. How you’re better at settin a horse, or ropin cow critters. We’ll I’ve had it. I ain’t goin to take it no more. You ain’t goin to be tellin me what to do. And I say to hell with you and your brother. And I say to hell with our trip to Oregon. I’m for settlin our differences right here and right now.”
“The kind don’t have no gun,” came from behind me.
I didn’t have to turn to know who was speaking. I was wishing I could see Trav once more.
It were dark enough in the saloon to see the flame shooting out the end of his colt. The thunder of it rolled around me, dimming my hearing, giving me the kind of chilling coldness I had never known before.

I remember the day well when the whole thing that was to make such changes in my life started. I had come to town early to settle some of our accounts, not with cash money you understand, because in those days it was in short supply, but with things we made or grew on our place.
I had two honey glazed hams from our smoke house, three dozen fresh eggs, a tub of new churned butter, four slabs of bacon, two dozen cured cow hides, thirty-two tallow candles, and a sack of wintered over spuds.
Depending on the mood of old Jim Wills, there should be enough to cover what we owed, and some left over for some needful things, like flour, molasses, and dried beans.
While waiting for Jim to do the figuring, I taken a bite of time to ogle all the things piled up every which way, in corners, on old tables, hanging from the wall, and shelves spilling over with canned goods that was covered with interesting labels.
I’d done reading the labels of pork and beans, peaches, condensed milk, from some company named Borden, and was knee deep gawking at the guns and knives, when two men came busting in through the door, bringing a gust of wind, and swirling dust that set everyone into coughing.
I tugged my gaze off a new Henry rifle, and the navy colt I was a hungering after, but knew I’d likely never have the cash money to even buy bullets for them, and took in the new intruders. Old Bill Brady, sitting near the cherry red stove, stopped mid-move of his checker game. A woman I didn’t know, clutching tight to the hand of a little girl, stopped fingering the red cloth stretched out on a long table propped up at one end with timber and flat rocks, and gave them a dirty look.
An old tame Injin, weighed down by a large bundle of wolf pelts scurried out of their way as they strode down the narrow aisle.
I recognized the taller one right off, being I’d seen him more than one time here in town. Mostly I’d seen him on top of a big black stallion, or coming out of the Lucky Diamond saloon with a couple of men.
He wasn’t new to Texas, but he was to these parts, and every-body that had any knowing of the man spoke highly of him. The story they told is that he had the beginnings of a fine ranch down near the Rio Grande, with a wife and a couple of youngster’s. One day when he was out clearing a water hole and pulling some dumb critters out of the mud a raiding party of about a dozen Kiawe came helling through his place. They kilt his family and burnt his house down to the bare earth.
Some folks say he went mad over what was done, and not one person I knowed blamed him for what he done next. He took right after that raiding party and follered it down in to the heart of Mexico, right into their ranchero, and dealt with every-one of them. There were a heap of stories floating around about what he had done. Stories that would set your teeth to chattering, make the hair on the back of your neck stand up, and change the blood in your veins to ice water. It were said by many a one that he had himself a sack full of scalps that he’d take out of a night and count, just a wishing and a pining that there weren’t more of them.
But like I said no one I knew held it against him, and when he came to our part of the country to start over again, most folks, including mine held him up as some kind of a hero.
When it happened that Ma was with me, he always taken off his hat, said, “How do mam. The best of the day be with you and yours,” in a genteel rumbling kind of voice.
Like every time before, he wore clean dark grey trousers, with their tops hanging half way down over black boots polished brighter than a mirror. A Mexican style jacket, embroidered with fancy do-dads in red and blue thread, mixed with a bit of gold stretched over wide shoulders and big chest. The whole of this was topped off by a grey sombrero, covering long dark brown hair that many a Comanche hankered after.
The only thing missing from his normal outfit were a navy colt, cartridge belt, and holster. I wrestled with my memory for a mite of time, trying to dredge up a name, afore it popped full grown into my head.
Remembering my manners, the ones Ma had drummed into my bottom with a hickory stick, when- ever I was to forget them, I doffed my hat and said, “How do, Mr. Captain Roberts. How’s the state of your constitution this fine day?”
Well the burly man brushed right past me, without so much as a hello, or a friendly how do. Captain Roberts stopped right there in front of me, touched the brim of his hat. A big cheerful grin brightened his wind and sun weathered face. “How do to you to. As to the state of my constitution, it’s fine mighty fine. If I have it right, you’re Emmett Coressin’s boy…”
Forgetting my manners for a moment, I blurted out, “That’s right Captain. Davey…Davey Coressin…” Just then, my manners hit me. “Pardon me, Captain, for speaking so bold and out of turn.”
“Not at all. I do admire a man that speaks up for himself.”
A voice, gruff and raw, like it came from a throat that was scratched from dust, or had a fight with a tumbleweed, coming from behind me, roared, “Hurry up, Darius, I ain’t got all day.”
A chuckle came pouring out of the captain’s mouth, and a right eye, blue as a mid-summer Texas sky closed in a quick wink, “You go right on about your business Mayhew, I’ve got some talking to do with this young man here.”
I whirled around to take a look at the man with the whisky rough voice.
A snort, loud as a horse’s whiny came from out of thick lips perched between a black bushy beard, that could have supplied a home to a hive of bees without them getting crowded out, and a handlebar moustache that looked like it had been cut off a horse’s tail. “You ain’t goin to try and rope this here kid into your mad scheme, air you Darius?”
Eyes that seemed to spark with the fires of hell it’s-self, bored into mine, “If you’re wantin to live kid, don’t pay the captain no mind, no mind at all.”
Whenever I were to think on it afterword, whether night herding, or eating dust riding drag, I supposed it were him calling me a kid that made me make up my mind to listen close to every word that came out of the captain’s mouth and do whatever he asked me to, or die trying.
Afore the captain could get in another word, the doors busted open again, bringing with it more wind and more dust.
When the coughing fit ended and the last grain of dust settled onto the broad-board floor, every eye in the place looked at the pair of intruders, taking them in from their dust covered boots to wide brimmed hats perched on their heads.
The one, a couple of steps ahead of the other, with a swagger that made you think he knew he owned the place, or thought he did and everyone else in the world were less than he was, appeared to be the focus of most people, but it was the one a couple steps behind that caught and held my attention.

this is the first chapter of my novel and I am looking for, and hoping to get feedback

From, “Keeper of the Sword,” book one.


A small fire crackled, danced and sent smoke swirling into the air above the sandy beach on the south side of Anderson’s Point. Good memories of picnics, of learning to swim, of water fights flooded Morgan’s mind as she approached Josh.

Anderson’s point stretched almost a quarter of a mile into the quiet ocean waters. About half way out into the Pacific, it curved to the north and formed a large bay. Only a few overgrown paths led through the thick tall trees to the bay.

Josh raised his eyebrows, “Wow, you really are expecting a ship to come for us.”

Morgan replied, “Not really, I’m going to run away.” She bent over, weeping.

“What?” Josh yelled, not wanting to believe her.

Morgan shouted, “You heard me, I’m going to run away.”

“Why?” Josh felt his whole world ending, “What about our birthday party?”

She growled, “Grow up Josh. Birthday parties are for kids. I’m not a kid anymore, and I didn’t think you were one either.”

Josh insisted, “You still didn’t tell me why.”

“I had another big fight with Mom. I wanted to go to Victoria and see Billy before he leaves. He and his brother are going to Vancouver and then to Toronto as soon as they get enough money.” Morgan sobbed.

Josh put his arm around her and patted her right shoulder. “You’re not planning on going with them, are you?”

Morgan replied through her tears, “I wasn’t at first. I just wanted to see him, but now I don’t have any choice, I can’t live with Mom anymore, and Dad doesn’t want me either.” She wailed, “I’m taking the early ferry. Billy is going to meet me.”

“Where are you going to spend the night?”

“Here,” Morgan blew her nose on a well-used piece of Kleenex.

“I have a better idea.” He pleaded, “Come and spend the night in my tree house. I already asked Mom if I could. It’ll be fun. I have my portable DVD player there and we can watch movies. Please? Who knows how long it will be before we see each other again, if we ever do. I am going to miss you,” he hugged her.

“That will be cool, real cool,” Morgan hugged him back.

“I’ll walk you to the ferry in the morning and cover for you as long as I can.”

She cried, “Oh Josh, I’m going to miss you, but I’ll keep in touch, I promise.”

Josh went to where the fire was and kicked sand onto it.

“Don’t do that Josh, not until we do the ritual that you’re gramps sent us. At least you’ll be here to tease him about it.”

“Oh alright,” Josh hesitated for a moment before he stopped kicking sand on to the blaze. He remembered the warning gramps had sent him.

Morgan joined Josh at the small fire. They marched around it twice to the left, changed directions and circled it three times to the right. Neither of them was surprised when a ship didn’t appear. Josh started to kick sand on the fire again.

Morgan begged, “Please Josh, put some more wood on the fire, I’d like to sit here for a while and think about all the good times we’ve had.”

Josh put a few more dry branches on the smoldering embers. The fingers of the flame grew larger and reached up towards the full moon that floated above them. He dragged a big log close to the warmth. The two of them sat close together and put their arms around each other.

Morgan rested her head on Josh’s shoulder and they sat in silence, overwhelmed by sadness.

The moon sank lower in the dark sky and Morgan broke the silence at last, “We should go Josh,”

Josh stood up and kicked sand onto the dying embers, making certain to extinguish the last tiny glow.

Morgan stood up, turned around, and screamed.

Josh whirled around, his mouth dropped open. Right behind them, and less than twenty feet away stood four oddly dressed men. Two of them were reaching for long black shafts in quivers hanging over their shoulders, and a third held a long gleaming sword. Josh screamed, his knees buckled and he fell to the beach.

  • Keeper of the Sword

    It is often a simple thing, the roll of the dice, the turn of a card, or a chance meeting that can change one’s life forever. For Josh Campbell, and Morgan Connelly it was a seemingly harmless chain of events, a fight after school and performing a ritual that neither one of them believed in.

  • Fairy Time Ball

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    “Them things in my soup ain’t no chicken or potatoes. They have eyes, and they hop out of my way every time I bring a spoon close.”

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  • follow the red link to read more from Keeper of the Sword

    Full of fear and excitement Keeper of the Sword (The Sword of Kings) Josh notched an arrow to the bow string, pulled it back to his ear, took careful aim and released the shaft of death, and before it reached its target, a second bolt sliced through the dark. (To find out more, just follow the link.)
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