Writing

Angelic Findings Summary

For over the last decade, the Angelic Findings manuscript has undergone multiple revisions. At the core, the story has stayed the same. A deceitful angel with a sly smile tricks our female lead into believing she’s safe with him, however she’s anything but. It feels like it’s been a lifetime developing the characters into something more than weak and whiny characters needing to be saved. For the first time I am feeling content with the story and because of that I have been able to write a summary, knowing these key points will not change. So without further ado, the Angelic Findings summary!

Cassandra’s battle with anxiety and insomnia is amplified by a mysterious nighttime phantom and her cousin Molly’s chaotic lifestyle. Despite her own fears and family problems, Cassandra attends a gala where she meets a mysterious man named Anderson. After a tense conversation at the bar, Cassandra stumbles upon a burglar in a restricted room and manages to foil his escape. The Angelic Findings’ soldiers storm in without making any noise and apprehend the burglar. This encounter leaves Cassandra with a mix of emotions and questions about the mysterious events of the night. The founder, Anthony Glau, pursues her. As they engaged in conversation, Cassandra’s initial unease grows as she observed unusual traits in Anthony. 

Anthony discloses his role in orchestrating the incident at a gala. He reveals video evidence of her unique abilities, claiming to want to protect Cassandra. Cassandra reflects on her family struggles and confronts the man, who hands her a photo showing angel wings behind her at the gala. She is shocked and curious about her own abilities. Despite feeling invaded, she stays to learn more about herself.

Cassandra vanishes from her family for three days. Upon her unexpected return, she awakens after a week of being unconscious. Cassandra discovered she possesses unusual powers. Molly helps her deal with her new abilities and introduces her to a kitten. However, a terrifying creature that turns things to stone appears, shattering their peaceful time. With the help of Anthony, they narrowly escape the danger. 

Cassandra and her cousins, Molly and Jonathan, land in a dark room. Anthony reprimands Cassandra for using excessive energy. Tensions rise as Cassandra confronts Anthony for not preventing the danger. He reveals they were never alone when the kitten transforms into the angel Puriel. This is a surprise to everyone because Puriel is Molly’s late fiancé. 

Anthony explains the significance of Cassandra’s mixed blood and the looming threat from the dark angel Azrael. Puriel interrupts their private moment, covered with blood and a gaping wound.

Anthony’s village is under attack by demons led by Azrael, wreaking havoc and causing chaos. Jonathan, amidst the turmoil, is entrusted with caring for angelic infants. When he feels his sister is in trouble, Morse, a dark-haired angel, takes Jonathan to an armory. Morse tells him to be careful before rushing to help. But Jonathan is too late. Azrael captures Molly.

Cassandra nervously waits outside the infirmary as healers desperately try to save Jonathan, who has been impaled by a spear. Despite insisting on seeing him, Anthony stops her, warning that the healer’s power is too dangerous for her. Overwhelmed by the fear of losing Jonathan, she lashes out with her fiery abilities. After finally seeing Jonathan, she discovers that he has been given a chance at life, but at a great cost – he will transform into a spirit. As she struggles to make sense of the situation, Cassandra finds herself drawn to Anthony, despite her anger and confusion. Eventually, they find solace in a peaceful meadow. But Cassandra’s guilt and uncertainty about Anthony’s true intentions linger.

Cassandra and Anthony explore stunning landscapes, and Anthony teaches her about angelic education, baby angels, and power struggles among angels. When they reach a grand building, the attendants strip Cassandra, bathe her, and dress her in opulent attire. Led into a daunting hall of ArchAngels, she defies their commands and asserts her autonomy. The revelation that she is the daughter of a goddess and bound to Anthony as his soulmate leaves her fuming. Anthony is tasked with taking her away to navigate the impending conflict with Azrael.

Trapped in a gilded cage by Anthony, Cassandra is determined to take control of her destiny. Despite her fear and guilt, she resolves to save Molly from the monstrous angel Azrael. Discovering her latent powers, Cassandra experiments with fire and breaks free from the confinement. As she learns about her divine heritage and family history, she forms a bond with Puriel. Together, they embark on a daring escape from the palace, defying the oppressive forces that seek to control them. 

Struggling with physical pain and emotional turmoil, Cassandra receives an unexpected offer from Anthony, but she hesitates, feeling unready for the commitment. Amidst their playful interactions, the moment is shattered when Cassandra is dragged underwater. As she fights for her life, a sense of urgency and danger unfolds, leaving her in a perilous predicament.

Puriel, in falcon form, searches for Anthony and Cassandra. He finds them far from where he left them and notices a mysterious mark on Cassandra. Puriel and Anthony discuss her powers and determine she’s too powerful to bring along. Puriel shares news about Molly’s well-being and they plan to move Cassandra away from Azrael. Despite temptation, Puriel refrains from taking action. They agree to focus on getting Cassandra away from Azrael, dealing with her anger later.

Cassandra wakes up in a strange place next to Anthony. She questions him about his intention towards her. A disturbance at the door prompts Anthony to leave Cassandra alone, and she finds a small garden outside. There, she encounters a dragon-like creature that heals a mysterious mark on her leg. Anthony later reveals that she is being tracked and insists that she stays in the house. Despite his military duties, they eventually engage in intimate activities, leading Anthony to refer to her as his wife before she falls asleep.

Cassandra wakes up to the scent of cinnamon and finds Anthony at the foot of the bed, ready for breakfast. They banter and share pastries, which contain the angelic food ambrosia, suppressing hunger and providing sustenance. Anthony teases Cassandra, and they playfully struggle over the last bite of pastry. Later, she prepares herself for a formal dinner, and Anthony surprises her with a marriage proposal. Despite feeling betrayed, Cassandra faces a tense moment as she tries to resist her conflicting emotions for Anthony.

Cassandra awaits her fate as a wedding planner turned goddess, observing the lavish affair through a window. Her cousin Jonathan appears, bringing comfort and company. In the midst of chaos and uncertainty, she is trying to understand her feelings for her fiancé. Tensions rise, secrets unravel, and the crowd’s reaction is far from welcoming. Cassandra seeks familiar faces for support, only to find herself engulfed by the unsettling atmosphere of the grand event.

Cassandra is ushered towards a throne, feeding her doubts about Anthony’s true intentions. Molly, her cousin, appears and warns her about Anthony’s deception. As Cassandra ascends the throne. The throne proves to be alive and fuses with her, imbuing her with divine powers. After an intense ceremony, she is left weak and hungry, but surrounded by supporters. Amidst tension with her husband and a confrontation with her rival, she asserts her newfound authority with a defiant act.

Grappling with her new reality, Cassandra struggles to come to terms with her transformation and the responsibilities that come with it, Cassandra steps away briefly, she entrusts her friends with the task of observing the unfolding events, seeking potential treacherous guests amidst the celebrations.

Cassandra, seeking solitude, finds herself in a garden where she encounters Anderson. He reveals he was meant to be her guardian angel. Anderson cautions Cassandra about the risks of ambrosia and attempts to display its effects. This leads to a transformation in Cassandra, revealing her hidden abilities. This unexpected turn of events leaves Anderson in awe of Cassandra.

Cassandra finds herself in a confrontation with Anthony, questioning his secrecy and manipulation. She challenges his motives and expresses her frustration with his lies. Anthony reveals his need for her to rule as a Demi-god, but Cassandra resists, asserting her independence and refusing to be used. In a final showdown, Anthony attempts to control her, but Cassandra defiantly asserts her true self. The tense encounter concludes with Anthony ordering her confinement, suspecting a threat to the palace.

Cassandra, angered, is locked in a room by Anthony. She sets the room on fire before Gabriel appears. She questions the concept of soulmates and the motives behind the power struggle. Gabriel explains the potential consequences of binding her soul and the true nature of soulmates.  He explains a plot to control both worlds by obtaining Cassandra’s soul. He reassures her that she is not bound by love. Gabriel reveals the fallen state of angels and the limited intervention in the human world is revealed. She seeks to save her cousin Molly and embarks on a journey with the guidance of Gabriel. Along the way, Cassandra faces doubts and challenges, questioning the true nature of those around her. 

Lent

Day 14: Reworking the summary of Ravenmaster

In the bustling city of London, phantoms haunt Maggie. She navigates a life filled with the dead. Maggie encounters the ghost of Anne Boleyn at the Tower of London. Together, they explore her hidden royal ancestry. Suspense builds as she grapples with a phantom encounter on the underground, finding solace in the unexpected company of her crush, Liam.

The budding couple strolls through the snowy city, reminiscing about their past. When they arrive at Liam’s townhouse, Maggie meets Liam’s mother, Eleanor, who is preparing Christmas dinner. Maggie discusses her unique path to becoming the Ravenmaster at the White Tower. During the car ride to midnight mass, Liam and Eleanor’s playful banter and teasing fill Maggie with a happiness that has been missing. As they head to a church, the romantic tension between Maggie and Liam unfolds. Maggie struggles to hold herself together during a church service, with Liam by her side. As a demonic being attacks her, and a spectral dispute unfolds, leaving Maggie in a perilous state. She must endure the chaos while navigating her own spiritual battle.

Liam’s troublesome brother, John, joins the joyful chaos as they gather for Christmas dinner. The family dynamics are playful as Eleanor pokes fun at both her adult sons. Even Anne Boleyn makes an appearance, as Liam’s French bulldog steals the spotlight. During the family dinner, amusing and embarrassing stories are revealed while everyone enjoys a delicious meal and plenty of wine. That is until a sinister figure appears in Liam’s garden.

Maggie and Liam encounter the corpse of a goblin; the chilling moment forces Maggie to reveal to Liam her ability to see and speak with ghosts. As they hide the body, a tower raven perches on the roof. Anne appears once more, revealing that the ravens are there to protect Maggie. The situation escalates, and Anne commands them to go to the tower.

In this thrilling and eventful tale, Maggie and Liam experience a series of unexpected and eerie events. Maggie tries to understand her feelings for Liam while also dealing with the supernatural and her own secrets.

In a harrowing journey to the Tower of London, Maggie and Liam encounter a string of supernatural events, ravens, a minotaur, and other demonic creatures. With the help of a phantom RAF Sergeant, they engage in a perilous protection spell. Maggie’s resilience is tested as she grapples with the repercussions of the spell.

Amidst a supernatural battle, a desperate plea is answered as Maggie and Liam invoke powerful forces. An intense struggle ensues with a minotaur, leading to a destructive blaze. Leaving the survivors in a hauntingly desolate setting.

Pick up  Ravenmaster: Book One in the Paranormal Defense series on Amazon

Lent

Day 3: Ravenmaster Plot work

  • What is the incident that starts the journey? 

The Paranormal agencies use stone dolmens as portals to travel the world. As time has gone on mother nature and humans have destroyed or damaged the dolmens. The natural wear and tear on the dolmens has caused some malfunction and sends agents to the wrong location or to the Obsidian Realm. Agents from all over the world are being lost and trapped in the Obsidian Realm. Only those with Fae blood can return from the Obsidian Realm. The PDM decided that instead of losing more seasoned agents; they were going to send in green agents on what seems like a suicide mission. Once again, Agent Ansley seeks the help of Maggie and Liam. This time, they actually know they are being used by the agency. However, Caroline, Maggie’s sister, brokered a deal with Ansley. If they survive the mission, Ansley releases them and they can leave for America with Caroline. 

The Obsidian Realm is where The Morrgan was banished by Odin, the god of war and of the dead. In retaliation of being banished, The Morrgan’s have caused the Dolmens to be corrupted before in the past. Transporting the Picts and Vikings to the Obsidian Realm, feeding the Morrgan’s need for blood and battle. The vikings that have died in the Obsidian Realm cannot enter Valhalla. But since the portals have opened again, Badb has been released. She is relishing in the war that covers the earth. Odin wants his souls and Badb wants blood.

Badb delivers a prophecy that calls for the end of the world. 

Summer without blossoms,
Cattle will be without milk,

Women without modesty,
Men without valour.
Conquests without a king…

Woods without mast.
Sea without produce…

False judgements of old men.
False precedents of lawyers,


Every man
a betrayer.

Every son a reaver.
The son will go to the bed of his father,

The father
will go to the bed of his son.

Each his brother’s brother-in-law.
He will not seek any woman outside his house…

  • Magic: is it hidden? How does it affect humans? Who has it? Rules? Laws? How much do the MCs understand it? How much do the readers know?

The readers learn as Maggie and Liam discover more about the magical world. 

On earth, magical beings walk side by side with the humans. However, the humans are unaware of how much magic is in their world. The Paranormal Defence Agencies are spread throughout the world and, in contrast to other government agencies, collaborate to maintain and control the narrative. If you exhibit any sort of powers, you become an agent. You are allowed to have side gigs. However, the agency documents all magical beings and requires them to work in some capacity if they would like to maintain their freedom. There are some that live off the grid in isolated and secluded areas. IE BigFoot lore.  The only magical creatures not a part of any agency are the Fae, they are unable to be controlled and don’t trust the government.

Humans presidents, kings, queens, and even dictators have all collectively decided that the knowledge of such magical beings should never be revealed. Only top level scientists even know of their existence. 

The Obsidian Realm is where The Morrgan was banished by Odin, the god of war and of the dead, They are three sisters, Badb, Macha, and Nemain.

Macha – Goddess of land, fertility, kingship, war, and horses

Nemain – Goddess who personifies the frenzied havoc of war. 

Badb – Goddess of war. She takes the form of a raven or crow. Known as the battle crow. She causes confusion and fear among the soldiers to move the battle in favor of her side. She may appear prior to battle to foreshadow carnage to come or predict a notable death. Battle fields are called “The gardens of Badb.” She is known as rage, fury, or violence. 

Lent, Short Stories

Day 2: The Dark Watcher

The rain didn’t bother her, even as it dripped in her eyes and soaked her shoes. She barely felt it. All that mattered was watching the blood run from the throat of the Black Annis. The creature wore a dress made of the flesh of the fourteen children she had stolen from the small town. In an attempt to protect the youngest, the authorities had enacted a curfew. But they didn’t know that the blue hag hunted day or night, luring children into the oak branches with the promises of sweets. Every morning, the local news would broadcast the face of another missing child.

Sarah had to wash away the evidence before Chris came home. He was none the wiser to what his stay at home wife did throughout the day. He thought she used her free time to maintain the home and run errands without a child on her hip. However, that was not the case. The fiery little redhead was more than just a mother. Something her husband would know if he could see past her looks. Just like he would notice how their son looked nothing like him. But Sarah checked all the boxes he needed to present the perfect family when he had to show up at functions. And he was too busy with mistresses for Sarah to care. She had her freedom to hunt the monsters that plagued the world.

“Fuck,” Sarah hissed, as she stitched the gash the Black Annis left in her calf. The iron talons were hard to miss and the first thing Sarah removed from the beast.

“Mommy,” a little voice whispered at the door. 

Noah tapped on the door. It was Chris’ turn to pick him up from aftercare, which meant that all her hunting had to be done before five. 

“One second sweety.” Sarah turned off the water to the shower, watching the last bit of evidence circle the drain. 

Gently, she pulled a pair of cozy sweatpants over the gash and a hoodie over her head. Shaking away the hunter, Sarah forced herself to smile. It was time to be the caring parent and hear all about the adventures Noah had been a part of. He was the only true joy she held onto. Everything else was a facade.

“Baby!” Sarah squealed, wrapping her arms around her son. “How was your day?” She asked, covering his face with kisses.

Noah skillfully dodged her kisses. “I’m not a baby anymore!” He said through giggles. “I’m 5 and 1/2.”

Sarah held him at arm’s distance, looking him over. “You’re right, you’re right. You’re most definitely not a baby anymore. My little elf, that’s what you are.”

“What? No, there’s no such thing as elves,” said Noah, shaking his head. 

Sarah frowned. “Who told you that?”

“Tommy,” Noah said matter-of-factly. “He said that all of that stuff is just make believe.”

Sarah rolled her eyes. She couldn’t believe that in kindergarten, Noah was already dealing with this kind of nonsense. Creatures revealed themselves to the world less than a decade ago, yet there were still skeptics. 

They probably have to be eaten by one to believe. Sarah thought. 

Sarah knelt down to be closer to Noah’s size. “Baby, there are creatures out there. Good ones and bad ones, just like people.”

Noah nodded slowly. “You mean like the one who is taking all the little kids?” 

“Yes, just like that monster.” Kneeling was killing Sarah’s calf, but she would not let a bit of pain stop her from comforting Noah. “But I don’t think sh— it will be a problem anymore.”

Noah gasped. “Did the police get him?”

“They sure did, baby.” Sarah said with a sigh. “What did daddy pick up for dinner?”

Noah fidgeted with his shirt. “He said we couldn’t stop because the monster would eat me.”

Heat spread across Sarah’s cheeks. What was Chris thinking telling their son that a monster would eat him? That man never woke up to Noah screaming from his night terrors. Sarah ruffled his hair. 

“Ignore daddy. Nothing is going to eat you.” She smiled, pulling him into a hug. “You’re too strong for that.”

They left Sarah’s bedroom and headed for the kitchen. It was a stunning cottage core kitchen, straight out of Sarah’s Pinterest board. Chris had it done for her one summer while Noah and her were visiting Chris’ family. He was always too busy to travel. Or that’s at least what he told his overbearing father and demeaning mother. Sometimes Sarah understood why her husband was cold as ice. However, he was a grown adult. He couldn’t blame everything on his family. He made the choices and aging into them was that choice. 

Planting a weak kiss on her cheek, Chris eyed Sarah’s attire. “With all your shopping trips, I would assume you owned more than hoodies and sweats.”

Sarah patted his arm. “Well, if you spent more than 15 minutes at home, you’d know that I do.” She kept her voice low so Noah wouldn’t hear. “Maybe one of your childless whores would be more comfortable in negligees.” 

Chris’ eyes went wide as Sarah scooped up their son. Noah’s brown eyes bore into Chris’ blue ones. Sarah had explained her father had brown eyes. It was hard to dispute when she had green eyes and both her parents were dead. Chris had hoped that Noah would have his same blonde hair as him, but the child had neither his light locks nor Sarah’s fire red ones. His hair was dark as night. Behind Sarah’s back, Chris had taken Noah in for a paternity test. Or so he thought. The lab sent the results through the mail. Because of someone’s preference for business trips over family time, Sarah had enough time to edit the results and reseal the envelope. 

“Of course, my dear,” He smiled at Noah. “What delicious meal have you prepared for us tonight.” 

They seamlessly transitioned into the roles of parents and friends. Because before Noah, Sarah truly loved her husband. It wasn’t until she was pregnant did his attention drift from his wife, to his secretary, to their accountant, and eventually the nanny. Some days, she longed for the life they had before their child. Traveling the world and going on grand adventures. But knowing what she knows now. There is not a doubt in Sarah’s mind that Chris had been faithful even then. A drunken night or two as they cleaned up the kitchen, Sarah got up the courage to ask Chris why he even stayed.  

“Because divorce looks bad for a politician that runs on family matters.” He shrugged. “That and I should have listened to my parents when they wanted me to sign a prenup.” 

Sarah had expected his words to have wounded her. However, after years of romantic neglect, they had already turned into roommates. She didn’t know where Noah came from, but she knew he wasn’t Chris’. Years of infertility had worn on them as a couple. Despite the doctors’ explicit reassurance that the problem was his, he still blamed her. The fights pushed Sarah into hunting. She felt helpless arguing with him. Hearing him rip her a part about being a failure as a woman. To which she constantly reminded him that none of his whores have become pregnant either. 

One night while Sarah was out hunting for things that went bump in the night, until something bumped her on the head, knocking her unconscious. She woke up in the middle of the woods with hundreds of missed calls from Chris. Angry voicemails about how she can’t leave him. As she deleted the last hateful, teary message, the sky lit up blue and green. She had never seen dancing lights before. But somehow she knew her life was about to change.

“I picked up a rotisserie chicken, your favorite, the honey barbecue and all the fixings.” Sarah pulled the still warm mac and cheese and chicken from the oven. After setting it on the island, she grabbed the salad from the fridge. “I figured you’d forget our anniversary.”

They sat down for dinner. Never once a moment of silence as Noah regaled them with all the gossip of his kindergarten class. Jeffery stole Crissy’s french fries at lunch and she launched her chicken nuggets at him in retaliation. Bradley pushed Matt off the swing and Matt chased him around the playground. They both went on red for being mean. Noah’s chatter made it easy to overlook the chaos of their life. That was until a grinding sound came from the kitchen. 

Sarah stiffened. “Chris darling,” she said, grabbing his hand. “Could you take Noah up for his bath?”

Chris looked down at Sarah’s quivering hand. “Uh, sure.”

Without question, he took his protesting son by the hand leading him upstairs. Silently, Sarah thanked whoever watched them for Chris not fighting her. Clearing the dishes from the table, Sarah followed the noise. The window screen over the sink had been shredded to pieces.  Sarah snuck into the pantry, grabbing the machete she kept hidden near the broom and Swiffer. A place Chris would never venture to. According to him, the kitchen was meant for women. 

With the bath running above, Sarah crept out the kitchen door and into the backyard. Whatever diced the window screen had triggered the flood light making it difficult to see into the night. The grinding was louder now that she was outside. Sarah couldn’t believe that the Black Annis wasn’t dead. She had freed it from its hands and head before fleeing the scene. How could it be back? 

The creature gave away location, wrapping itself in a swing. Its scream pierced through the night. Sarah ran towards the creature, careful not to be cut by its iron talons again, lopping off its right arm. Blood trickled onto the ground. Sarah noticed a scar where its head had been reattached. 

“Why won’t you stay dead?” grunted Sarah, hacking at the blue creature’s neck. 

Blood pooled beneath the swing as yellow eyes raged in the flickering flood light. Its teeth, still grinding, craving Noah’s flesh.

“Good attempt, human,” a smooth voice called from the dark. “But you need silver to kill her.”

Sarah’s skin prickled. She had heard the voice before. The Dark Watcher was across the backyard, slamming a sword into the Black Annis. Its body turned dusty. Sarah stood her ground as he approached her. 

The hood of his cloak fell, exposing his long raven hair. His hand was cool to the touch, lingering on her chin. “I see you’re raising my son well.”

Sarah smacked his hand away with the machete. “So you’re the creature that raped me?”

The Dark Watcher recoiled at her accusations. “I most certainly did not. You spent nearly a year with me. ”

“How is that even possible?” Sarah demanded, “I was only gone for a few hours. What did you do? Steal my memories?” 

“After you destroyed the La Ciguapa, you touched the talisman she wore around her neck. That sent you into my realm. I came across you unconscious and alone in Spieviesta.” The Dark Watcher looked towards her house. A shadow watched from Sarah’s bedroom window.

Sarah’s head was spinning as a memory of a small brook with purple and pink bioluminescences filled her mind. “What the hell is Spieviesta?” 

“It’s the Forest of Spirits. It holds the souls of the dead beasts. The talisman allowed you to cross.” The Dark Watcher told her, gently pushing the machete away. “Your soul was so entwined that I thought you belonged to our side. But as you healed, I saw you were human. You begged me not to return to your world. You were so broken I gave in.”

His hand caressed her cheek. Against all instinct to run, Sarah leaned in. A wave of calm came over her. 

The Dark Watcher pulled her in close. “But when you became pregnant, I had to let you go. Spieviesta is no place for the living, let alone a child. So I watched from the shadows. You, my dear, are a force.”

 She wanted to remember, but fractured memories were all that came. Giant oaks with cabins built in their limbs. Dances around massive bonfires with fairies illuminating the night. Never once did Sarah see the sun, but she didn’t crave its heat. Safety existed in that place. A safety she craved at home but never found. 

The slamming of Sarah’s back door interrupted them. Chris charged towards them. The Dark Watcher shielded Sarah behind him.

“A White Lighter is raising my son?” The Dark Watcher seethed.

“A what?” Sarah peeked around the Dark Watcher’s broad shoulders. Chris’s aura was radiating a brilliant blue, bordering on white. “What the hell is a White Lighter?”

“Sarah, get away from him.” Chris demanded. 

Before Chris could come any closer, the Dark Watcher slammed his walking stick onto the cement patio. The ground cracked open, leaving a revive between them. 

“She belongs to me, Watcher.” Chris called, pacing along the opening as flames flicked the edges.

“I don’t belong to anyone,” shouted Sarah.

She was flush against the Dark Watcher’s back. His level breathing kept her calm. Sarah had seen Chris’ drunken rages before. But this was different. His eyes burned red. The longer she stayed separated from him, the more his arms twitched. He cracked his neck a few times, rolling his shoulders. Sarah gripped the machete’s handle, preparing for a fight.

The Dark Watcher’s free hand wrapped around him, clutching her waist. “A White Lighter, a being that demands loyalty for protection. Many believe that a White Lighter acts as a guardian angel. However, they only protect the most subservient of their followers. And you, my dear, are nothing of the sort.” 

“If you come back to me, I can wash away the memories, just like last time.” Chris tried to cross the ravine, but the flames leapt at him. “Let him take the boy and the pain will be gone. You will be happy again. We can be happy again.”

Sarah looked back at the pile of dust behind her. “I needed silver to kill the Black Annis. What do I need to do to be rid of him?” 

The Dark Watcher’s smile reached his coal dark eyes. “You just need to release him from your vows.”

“A divorce?” Sarah almost leapt over the flames herself. “You knew this. No wonder why you would never divorce me. You wanted me trapped. To control and punish because I didn’t fit your perfect mold.” 

“It doesn’t have to be as formal as your legal system makes it out,” The Dark Watcher told her. “You just have to recant your vows.”

Chris panicked. His aura was a deep red that didn’t match his soothing voice. “Sarah, there is no need for this. Come home and we can forget everything. Noah needs you. I need you. This is just a phase baby. One we can overcome together. We’ve done it before, we can do it again. Let me take away your pain.” 

Sarah’s brain tingled. She knew this feeling. One that she had whenever she took her daily pill. However, Chris was the one who kept her calm, not her pill. He stole away her emotions and freedom. No wonder when he was gone did she become a new person. One where she felt herself. One where she was free. 

“No,” she uttered. “I will not give in to you again.”

Sarah came toe to toe with the edge of the fire. Her green eyes boring into his blue ones. A wind from below pushed him back and made her fiery red locks dance like the flames. 

“Chris O’Mally I release you. I release you of our wedding vows. I release you of the promises you have not not fulfilled. You have not loved me through sickness and health. You have multiplied, harmed me, and most certainly have not forsaken all others.”

A deep laugh bellowed across the ravine. “That is rich coming from you, since I have been raising a Dark Watchers’ offspring.” 

Sarah rolled her eyes. “One time, and you stole from me. When I finally found happiness and was free of you. You stole my freedom again. Chris O’Mally all bonds with me are broken.” 

Sarah had expected lightning to flash through the sky or a vicious wind to rip through the air. Instead, she heard a soft click. Looking down to the broken patio, she saw her wedding band broken in half and a chain reaching across the ravine attached to the band Chris had worn.

Short Stories

Rockview: The Seaside Escape

The early evening sun was beating down on the weathered dock, warming my slightly tanned legs. It was only two weeks into summer, and I hadn’t put on more than a swimsuit and cover-up—Chripchrip. The little cricket alarm on my phone sprung to life, informing me it was time to roll over. I silenced it and did as requested, rolling over and soaking up the last of the evening rays. I didn’t want to have a bronze stomach paired with a ghostly booty.

“I see the bad moon a-rising. I see trouble on the way,” the song rang out on my phone. “Hello?”

“You done cooking?” Jackson asked on the other end.

“Oh, come on? Am I that predictable?”

“Sittin’ on the dock of the bay,” he sang, “watchin’ the tide roll away.”

“Okay, Otis Redding, you’ve made your point.” I sighed as clouds covered the sun, leaving me only with a cool breeze coming off the water. “You should stick to drumming. You were off-pitch.”

“You know, I think singing is in my future.” Jackson laughed as he started to hum another classic rock song.

“Are we getting dinner still?” My stomach growled. I unintentionally skipped every meal basking in the sun, enjoying my vacation.

“Just waiting on you.”

“Cassie, you know I’m not leaving until you’ve showered, blow-dried your hair, did your makeup, picked out what you want to wear, and changed three times. And before you say anything, ” Jackson chuckled, his keys rattling, letting me know that he was already on his way to the truck. “Yes, my dear, you’re that predictable. Yes, I’ve made reservations. And yes, I’ll be there in 45 minutes. So get moving.”

I laid there for about five more minutes before picking up my book and heading towards the house, walking the worn-out grass path that led away from the dock to my front porch. The roof was about ten years old, but it was still holding. Secretly, I hoped a hurricane would do enough damage so the insurance would pay for it, but knowing my luck, that wouldn’t happen until after I replaced it. The windows probably leaked more ac than it kept in but survived more storms than any new builds down the road. Since they hadn’t broken yet, I figured we were safe. Especially since I knew we’d never ride out a storm this close to the ocean. The pillars that lined my porch’s facade were begging to be repainted and were next on my list of realistic things to do right after I addressed the squeaky screen door.

The house was old, two hundred fifty years old, built by my great grandparents when they left the cape seeking warmer waters. It passed onto my grandfather, who added an attached garage When automobiles came into fashion, and then went to my dad, who used it as a vacation house. Dad said he wanted it to be filled with grandbabies, laughs, and happy memories, not just as a hidden sanctuary from the world. Instead of waiting to die as his fathers had before him, he gifted me the house for my 30th birthday this past spring.

However, an old house does not mean old plumbing. Jackson and I updated everything we could afford during winter break, which meant a tankless water heater and a massive shower head. Jackson thought I was ridiculous for wanting something that both of us could fit under at the same time. I just wanted to feel like I was drowning in Hell’s waterfall when I washed away the day’s stink.

I didn’t pick the showerhead for us to share. I loved the idea of being wholly encapsulated in a water column that blocked out the outside world. Besides, the cascading waterfall was the only thing that could penetrate my thick curls. The saltwater always wound them too tight, and most dainty showers might as well have been throwing water at me with a Dixie cup.

As I was humming Bad Moon Rising, I heard something downstairs.

Not again, I thought. Last time some creeper came to the door uninvited Jackson… I didn’t want to think about it. Unattended, the shampoo was running into my eyes, wiping it from my face. I listened again, but all I heard was the constant cascade of running water.

“Fuckers,” I muttered to myself as I washed out the last bit of shampoo. “You don’t have to break my front door.”

I groaned and pulled my towels from the rack. I couldn’t find my tablet, which I usually kept close. With my hair wrapped up in one of the towels and using the other to dry myself, I glanced over at the alarm clock on our nightstand. Jackson was still 10 minutes out. Though always punctual, Jackson was never early. I peeked out my bathroom window, but I didn’t see his black GMC Sierra at the end of the drive. I grabbed my phone off the counter, annoyed that I never downloaded the security camera apps.

“Hey babe, where are you?” I asked when he finally picked up the phone.

“I’m about 10 minutes out. What’s wrong?”

“Can you get here any quicker?” I asked, silently thanking God for the massive mahogany door. Any lesser wood might’ve splintered by now. Immediately I heard his truck pulling off the road and onto the gravel. I looked out the window one more time to be sure. “Somebody’s banging at the door, and all I can see is what looks like an unmarked cop car.”

Jackson sighed, “Did you check the cameras?”

“No, I didn’t check the cameras. I was in the shower and —

“And you left the tablet downstairs?” He sighed. “I told you to download the stupid app.”

“No, it’s in my nightstand,” I corrected him as the security camera notifications rang out behind me. “I would have called you first anyway.”

“Cassie, first you check the cameras, then you call me,” he said, “I’ll cut through the Johnson’s pasture and be there in less than 5.”

Almost in perfect sync with each other, the banging stopped just as Jackson hung up. Whoever was at my door should have left if they were smart.

Annoyed, I marched across the room to fish out my tablet, which was shoved deep inside the nightstand drawer. Twenty-six notifications from the security app awaited me. Of the sixteen cameras arranged around the property, three of them were fixed on the porch. I enlarged the view from the doorbell camera. There were two men at the door, and they looked uncomfortable as hell with their dark blazers and dress shirts buttoned up to their necks.

Jackson was already on the way, and it didn’t look like these two were set on breaking in, so I decided to finish getting ready. With my tablet in hand, I made my way to the bathroom to blow-dry my hair. I didn’t have long. Jackson could drive across water if he thought I was in trouble.

I gave up after a few more passes of the round brush and the dryer on high heat. There was no chance I was beating the Florida heat. It was sweltering outside, and between my damp hair and the humidity, even wearing just a towel felt heavy. I thought for a moment about how I could pull off a swimsuit cover-up as a dress but remembered the last time I did, that I ended up throwing it away. Red wine stains are the devil. Before I could decide on an outfit, I heard the roar of Jackson’s V-8 pulling up to the house.

I checked the clock and laughed. “Three minutes. Good timing, my love.”

I yanked a soft pink Maxi dress off the hanger and matched it with a pair of golden Roman strappy sandals. As Jackson neared the house, he slowed, letting the truck amble toward the two men so they could sweat a little more before they could ask whatever dumb questions they came to ask.

I could see the fire in Jackson’s eyes before he ever slammed the truck door. Men in suits always set him off, and these two were no exception. He never understood why they willingly wore nooses around their necks, though it would be easier for him to hang them from the rafters after he bled them out.

“Can I help you, gentlemen?” Jackson asked, winking at the camera.

The tall one, with a shiny spot on top of his head, fumbled as he tried pulling out his badge. “We’re looking for the owners of the house.”

Jackson read the badge from the edge of his sightline, never breaking eye contact with the sweating agent. “I’m the owner’s husband. What can I do for you?”

“We were under the assumption that a Derek Morris owns it.”

“Don’t know who’s updating your records at Quantico boys, but I got the credit card debt to prove this is our house.” Jackson scratched his lower back, just above the bulge where he kept his Glock holstered on his waist. “Now, if you don’t mind telling me why you’re standing on my front porch giving my wife a show on the security cameras when I know she’s supposed to be getting ready for dinner.”

Damn it.

I closed the app and headed back into the bathroom. The humidity lingered, making my dress stick. I wiped away the fog from the mirror, watching the last of my metallic scales recede into my hairline.

“Finally,” I whispered. With my scales gone, I saw how my skin glowed from today’s sunbathing adventures. I decided to skip makeup and let my sun-kissed face be free. Grabbing my saltwater pearl earrings from the countertop, I headed downstairs just in time to see Jackson come through the door.

“You missed all the fun,” he teased, locking the deadbolt.

“Who were they?”

“If they’re legit,” Jackson said, watching the black sedan drive away. “Feds. I have a feeling their department is classified.”

“Thank you for saving me,” I said, wrapping my arms around his neck. “Again.”

He kissed the tip of my nose. Instinctively he wiped his mouth, expecting my makeup on his lips. “You sure you’re ready?”

I crossed my arms over my chest. “Don’t I look ready?”

“Cassie, there were feds outside, and you’re just going to go out there naked?”

“I’m not naked,” I told him, avoiding eye contact. I looked for my purse, but it wasn’t hanging on its hook. I turned around to see if I had left it on the kitchen table. “It’s fine. If I need anything, I have stuff in my purse.”

Jackson sighed. “I wonder about you sometimes.”

“Only sometimes?” I asked as my stomach growled extra loud as if it was threatening him.

“Yeah, sometimes I wonder, and other times I just know.” Jackson laughed as he picked up the towel I had used earlier, revealing my purse underneath. “Cassie, are you okay?” he asked, handing it to me.

“I think so…I don’t know. I feel like my head’s stuck in the clouds more than usual lately. I’ll get better, though.” I smiled up at him. “I promise to be perfectly normal once you feed me.”

“I won’t hold my breath,” Jackson chuckled, nearly falling over as he held the door open for me. “I know who I married.”

Giggling, I walked out onto the porch and toward the truck. “If I weren’t starving, I’d take offense to that.”

We drove along the coast, passing a few farms with fields of cattle resting in the evening sun. The pastures were what I loved most about our town. Because there were acres of land in-between each home, neighbors didn’t bug each other unless they genuinely needed help.

“Did you find out what they wanted before you scared them off?” I asked as I watched the setting sun glisten over the bay.

“They were asking questions about your great-granddaddy. Not entirely sure what the feds would want with a dead man.” Jackson turned left at a four-way stop heading towards the small downtown.

An intricately woven cast-iron archway stretched over the street announcing the town’s name: Rockview. Just to the left was Dolphin Cove Marina, the original landing site of the town’s settlers. Legend had it that a pod of dolphins guided their ships through a storm and safely into the bay, narrowly missing all the rocks hidden by the monstrous, hurricane spun waves.

“You still in the mood for surf and turf?” Jackson asked as we waited for a few overly sun-kissed people–obviously, tourists since the locals stayed tan year-round–to cross the street before we continued down the road.

“Surf and Turf? No, I’ve been craving Franks all week!” I squealed. “I can not wait to sink my teeth into an order of ribs.” I always slathered them with extra BBQ sauce, but tonight, I wanted to drink it from the bottle.

“You going to need a napkin over there?” Jackson asked.

Tourists were everywhere, and I loved it. They brought life– and money– to our sleepy seaside escape. Without the snowbirds, I doubt the town’s quaint architecture of this town would have survived the army of contractors set on turning our brick and limestone buildings into soulless clumps of glass and plaster. Small clothing boutiques and tourist shops that sold cutesy, beachy trinkets were closing up for the evening as restaurants began adding extra tables and chairs onto the sidewalks. Even the food trucks were out tonight hoping to steal away some of the guests who were unwilling to wait for the next available table.

“You might want to call them and let them know we’re going to be late,” Jackson told me, adjusting the rear-view mirror.

“Looks like those feds weren’t done asking questions.” I smiled at him. “At least I’m all dried up.”

“It’s Florida,” he reminded me. “You know what humidity can do to you.”

“Well, what am I supposed to do? Walk around with a fan on my face? Or should we move back north and dry out like the rest of my people?” The hunger was wearing on my nerves. “I can’t help what I am.”

“That’s why you have that make-up. To hide the fact that you’re a fish,” he teased.

I clenched my jaw. “I’m not a fish. I breathe air, thank you very much!”

“Okay, dolphin.”

“Do you want me to eat you?” I asked sharply. “Don’t take any detours. If they want to poke around for information, they can do it while I’m sipping on wine.”

Jackson snickered. “Whatever you say, princess.” I leaned over the center console and punched him in the arm. “Was that supposed to hurt you or me?”

I didn’t answer him. I kept quiet until we pulled into Frank’s parking lot. It was the only restaurant in town with valet parking, and Jackson refused to use it. He drove us around to the back, where the employees parked, and opened the door for me.

“Heaven,” I said, inhaling the sweet and spicy scent of BBQ ribs and brisket wafting from the smokers.

“If there’s a heaven, it probably smells like this.” Jackson peeked inside his uncle’s smoker. Jackson picked up the baster brush and took a swipe with his finger. After a second tasting, I grabbed it from him. “He needs to add more cayenne pepper.”

“He needs to do no such thing,” I said as I licked the brush. “Your uncle creates magic. Don’t you dare go changing anything,” I stuck the brush in my mouth like a tootsie roll pop and sucked the rest of the sauce off of it. Jackson stared at me appalled but slightly turned on and leaned in to lick the sloppy splotches of BBQ from my face and lips.

Before things could get scaly, we entered the busy kitchen, and as usual, not a single person noticed us. The intoxicating aroma of wine, garlic, and boiling onions danced alongside the savory smells of andouille sausage, corn, potatoes, and of course, Old Bay Seasoning.

“If it’s not my favorite little mermaid!” Uncle Frank’s booming voice erupted from the front of the kitchen. “You’re just in time.”

“In time for what?” I asked, trying to avoid getting caught in one of his sweaty bear hugs. I failed. Instead, his monstrous arms wrapped around my thin frame nearly twice.

“I was just about to drop the crabs in the pot. You wanna help?” Uncle Frank asked, releasing me with a kiss on the cheek.

Jackson lingered behind as we walked over to the live crabs. “Hi, Uncle Frank, it’s just me, your own flesh and blood. Your godson and the reason why you even know Cassie.”

Uncle Frank lifted his eyebrows, shoving his hands into the tank. “What’s got him all twisted?”

“Some feds showed up at the house asking questions, and he let them leave alive.” I leaned down to watch a few unbanded crabs take swipes at Uncle Frank.

“That would leave me all sorts of grumpy, especially since they were coming after you.” Uncle Frank chuckled, emerging from the tank with his chest half wet.

I looked at the ground, avoiding eye contact with him. “They might be in your dining room right now.” “What the hell?”

He groaned. “Cassie, why did you bring that rabble into my restaurant? I have to look respectable for the snowbirds.”

“I think as long as your food continues tasting like it does, you could walk around naked, and most wouldn’t mind.” That earned me a deep belly laugh.

“I’d mind.” Jackson sighed. “And I can see them. Sarah sat them at the bad table. That wolf is one smart kid.”

“That’s why I keep her around,” Uncle Frank bragged. “She needs to work on her people skills, but I don’t have to worry about security when she’s here.”

I dropped two crabs into the boiling water. I always felt conflicted about the idea of keeping creatures in captivity. I had no problem hunting for my food. It felt less like murder when whatever I was after had the chance to run away. I felt a little bit better knowing that most people believe that crabs cry when they get dropped in boiling water. It’s not so much they’re sobbing as it’s them cursing me a thousand different painful deaths. Maybe they shouldn’t be so damn tasty.

Elijah, a veteran server, came in and grabbed fresh bread from a basket. As he was about to leave, he made eye contact with me and pointed to his hairline. Shit, my scales! Playing with a boiling pot of water wasn’t such a great idea.

“Um, babe,” I ran over to Jackson, who was watching the two FBI agents through the small round window in the kitchen door. “We have a problem.”

“Yeah, I know, those guys aren’t the feds.” Jackson turned and saw how bad it was. “Holy shit Cassie. Your face. This is why —”

“I know, I know. I fucked up.” I can’t believe I thought I could get away with no makeup.

It was the main thing that kept me from, well, looking like a fish girl who forgot to grow gills. I wanted to scratch my hairline. It was painful to have the scales hidden under my skin for so long. Stupid curiosity was getting the better of me. I wasn’t a cat. I didn’t have nine lives. What the hell was I thinking going out in public without protection?

Jackson pulled me close to his chest, keeping his breathing level. “We’ll figure this out, my love.”

I’m not sure what was going on with me. I had never been triggered by steam before. Usually, it took a full-on shower for even the smallest of my scales to make an appearance. I had never lost control over my body to the point where I murried out in public.

Holding my arms tight against my body, I shivered from the pain of the finlets as they sliced through my dry forearms. “I swear if you stab me with those spikes, you’re going to be angry with yourself for ruining my shirt.”

He was right. I would be mad if I ruined his shirt, again, for the third time this month. Blood wasn’t the problem. I knew how to get blood out of clothes. What I didn’t know was how to sew.

Uncle Frank took one look out the swing door and quickly shuffled us away. “My dear, let’s get you into my office. Easier to clean up any spilled blood.”

“You’re a shitty liar,” I told him with a fake smile. “The feds have vanished, and my guys can’t track them.”

Uncle Frank said flatly, “And I have a restaurant full of paying humans that I’d like to keep happy. So dry up in here before we have more to worry about.”

“You act more like him than you do your dad,” I told Jackson as soon as I knew Uncle Frank was out of earshot.

Jackson shook his head. “You’re just lucky he loves you because anyone else would have been out on their ass.”

“Do you honestly think they were Feds?” I asked as my body started to get control over itself.

“You know the government loves to employ are kind,” Jackson reminded me. “Love, I saw scales on when he whipped the sweat away. There’s a possibility he’s Muir.”

“Fuck,” I whispered. “It’s been over 250 years. They can’t possibly still be holding a grudge.”

“You hold grudges if I don’t take out the trash on time.” He reminded me. “There are countless amounts of Muir that blame your granddaddy for abandoning them in the new world.”

I looked up at the ceiling, trying to fight back the tears. We weren’t immortal, but for centuries we were indestructible, taking to the sea when our bodies needed to heal. But our healing source has become contaminated. It wasn’t something that happened quickly or even done on purpose. It was a by-product of the carousel of progress, as humans and Muir like created new and marvelous things that no one can live without, came new ways to poison us. We didn’t realize what was going on until it was too late.

Jackson folded me in his arms. “Want me to call your dad?”

“No,” I said. “Let’s have dinner first and then call him.”

“Fine, but you can’t stab me at the dinner table,” Jackson said, rubbing his hands on my now recovered arms. “You know how Frank is about getting blood on the furniture.”

We left the office and made our way to Sarah, the hostess. She smiled a toothy smile before leading us to our usual spot on the deck. It was close enough to the water for me to feel the breeze and not to have to worry about the moisture triggering anything.

“Chris will be out in a moment,” she said, dropping off the menus and returning to her stand.

“Why is Chris working tonight?” I asked, opening the menu. I never actually ordered anything from the menu. Uncle Frank usually knew exactly what I wanted and had the cooks making it before the waiter took our drink order. But after the whole Muirring out in the middle of his kitchen, he might have forgotten.

Jackson flipped open the drink menu, scanning the long list of beers. I knew he was searching to see if they finally added red ales to the list. “He’s covering all of Janice’s shifts. Frank said that Janice just stopped showing up, so they sent a few people to check on her. Her place was cleaned out.”

“Hm,” I said more to the menu than to Jackson. “I wonder if she started getting a body count.”

“Well, an Erinyes can only be good for so long.” Jackson folded the menu and looked around. Our server still hadn’t appeared and thankfully, neither had the feds.

“I told her working here would be hard, too many choices to snack on. A bar is the perfect place to find someone breaking their wedding vows.” I looked around at the other couples, wondering who was breaking their marriage vows. “Where’s is Chris?”

We watched as Jessica and Rachel walked by our table. Each of them smiled at us and kept ongoing. I didn’t blame them. Everyone was in the weeds tonight, which is probably why the new guy was so late.

Our usual server, Steve, nearly passed us but stopped. “Why don’t you guys have drinks yet?”

“Because Sarah sat us in Chris’ section.” I sighed.

“Why the fuck would she sit you with Chris? I got to talk to that girl,” Steve shook his head. “She just triple sat him. I think she’s punishing him for gambling way their rent again.”

Steve left the table without taking our order.

“Bring us a bottle of red!” I shouted at him.

Steve stuck his hand in the air to acknowledge me.

“Well, at least it wasn’t the middle finger this time.” I smiled at Jackson.

On the floating dock, a guitarist strummed a relaxing melody. I listened, trying to wash away my mounting fear. I watched couples sway back and forth on the dock bar sipping on drinks, not having a care in the world. I was jealous. I wanted to live in their world where monsters didn’t exist.

“So, Muir feds?” I rolled my eyes. “That’s new.”

“If they are actual feds, we’re fucked. I don’t know where else we can go that’s more off the grid than a town with two stoplights.” Jackson grabbed my hand and kissed it. “Wanna buy a boat and sail away.”

“As much as I loved the idea of disappearing from the whole world. Dad would kill us if we did that.” I laid my head on the table. “Where’s our wine?”

Jackson started to stand up but quickly changed his mind. “Don’t turn around.”

Of course, I turned around.

The tall, not bald federal agent was now impersonating Chris. His shirt was two sizes too small, Chris’s name tag was half hanging on, and the buttons were buttoned unevenly. The man was trying to carry my bottle of wine, but it was obvious he had no serving experience as it nearly fell off the tray twice. Even if I’d never seen Chris before, I knew, even at this distance, this man wasn’t human. Hell, I knew he wasn’t Muir. I don’t know how Jackson overlooked the bulging eyes and wide-set nose. All telltale signs of Salamander folk.

“Ugh,” I made a cat face to hold back the bile, trying to escape from my stomach. “Why do they always smell like the receding tide?”

Jackson laughed at me, but it seemed as though he was unaware of the approaching smell of sulfur and rotten eggs. The closer he got, the more overwhelming the smell became.

“They smell. How do you not smell it?” I asked in a hushed voice.

“You Undine are so weird?” Jackson shrugged.

I stopped as the bottle of wine came into my peripheral. “Where’s Chris?” I hissed as he uncorked the bottle.

“He’s unhurt. My partner gave him a sleeping draft and stashed him in the utility closet. It’ll wear off in less than an hour,” the waiter said. “I know, it was drastic, but we need to talk.”

“About what?” Jackson demanded loud enough to earn the glances of the couple at the table next to us. Their eyes flashed yellow, exposing that they weren’t human, making me worry less about the disruption.

I just hoped Uncle Frank wasn’t going to catch wind of all this.

“My partner and I should have handled this in private but, here we are,” he said, pouring Jackson a glass of wine. “I promise I didn’t poison it.”

Jackson locked eyes with the Salamander. “If you had, it would have been the last thing you did.”

“Sir, killing you would make our journey mute.” The Salamander looked around. “There are factions in the north talking about a Muir and Undine couple. They are saying the offspring’s blood will-.”

“You’re barking up the wrong tree, buddy.” I laughed so hard that I brought more attention to us from all the tables nearby. But the Salamander’s emotions never wavered. “I’m not pregnant.”

“At first, we thought they were speaking of your mother. Since she produced a hire so early in life, but now,” the man leaned in close, smelling me.

Jackson nearly flipped the table, getting out of his chair. Pulling the Salamander away from me, he growled. “Do you have a death wish?”

The Salamander threw hands up in the air, “I had to be sure,” he stammered. “But ma’am, you’re pregnant.”

“Cassie?” Jackson stared at me. “Is he- is there any possibility?”

“I’m still two days away from even thinking that is a possibility.” I stammered. “And even if I were, I have no clue what our child could do for the Salamanders.”

“It’s not just us.” He said, rubbing his throat. “Your child could save the aquatic peoples from all the human pollutants. Its blood is the cure. It’s the reason we left the old world.”

Short Stories

Seven Days

My phone beeped with an incoming message. Damn it. I thought I put it on vibrate. Oh well, I don’t think it was loud enough to wake anyone up. I grabbed my purse and threw it over my shoulder. One last glimpse in the mirror, and I was out the window. The cool nighttime breeze felt great after sweating it out in my parents’ greenhouse temperatures.

“Really, Allie? You had to sneak out of the house?” Jordan was leaning on his motorcycle. All I could see was the red light on the end of his cigarette.

“I thought it would be fun. Like old times.” I wrapped my arms around his neck and kissed him. “Really, Jordan? Smoking?”


“They don’t let us drink in the desert.” He put it out and popped in a piece of gum. “We going?”


I clung to his waist, squeezing as tight as possible. There was no way I would be separated from him during his leave, not even once. We had seven days before he had to spend another six months overseas, which meant six more months of wondering if something awful was going to happen every day.

DAY ONE

The sun started to rise over the ocean when we stopped for our break. I stretched my legs and took a deep breath. After such a long, harsh summer, I welcomed the December cold. The ocean breeze quickly wiped away the smell of the road, but nothing could get the smell of jet fuel out of his flight jacket. I didn’t care. After five years, the smell was comforting.


It was hard to believe how much Jordan had stashed in his pack. He pulled out a blanket and a small set of speakers that he attached to his phone. I poured us coffee, watching steam roll off the top.

“Only five more hours.” I looked at him. Jordan was always somewhere else when he was on leave. I knew he didn’t like leaving his team behind, but he needed to get away. Even a lifer needed a break.

He wrapped his strong arms around me. With such a simple gesture, I knew I was safe. It wasn’t easy to be strong when he was gone, but I knew I had to be. He had some of the best men out there watching his back. He brushed away a strand of hair that escaped my ponytail. Even with my eyes closed, I knew he wore the faintest smile as he kissed my forehead. He was back with me.


“Babe. How’s your ass?” He was ever the romantic.


“I never knew how uncomfortable your motorcycle was till I spent two hours on it.” I sighed as he rubbed just the right spot. God, he was amazing. “I could be ready to head out in five minutes unless you want to make it twenty?”


DAY TWO


The Florida keys welcomed us with a salty chill wiping away any other thought I had in mind. Jordan pulled the bike over, and we watched the sunset. He leaned back, resting his head on my chest, and closed his eyes. Brushing my fingers over his fuzzy head, I saw the rise and fall of his chest finally start to deepen. Relax, love, relax.

That first night in bed was bliss. We spent most of the time talking, trying to bring his mind to peace. I thought our eyes would never close. But once he tucked me into our blanket cocoon, I drifted right to sleep with our breathing in sync.​

The sunlight caught my ring. Three years later, it sparkled just as brightly as it did the day he gave it to me. Jordan reached under the covers and drew me into him. I sighed at the heat of his breath against my skin. It was bittersweet, only five days remaining until he went back to his sandy mistress.


“Do you think our parents are here yet?” For that question, I got the stink eye.


“Six months with me gone from your bed, and that’s the first thing you think of?” He asked, kissing my words away.

DAY THREE

After a day of lounging around the resort, it was finally time to get away. The bar crawl began, only this time, friends and family were tagging along. Everyone wanted to spend time with Jordan.


The boys all thought it would be fun to wander into the nudist bar, The Garden of Eden, while still slightly sober. That was not something I would even attempt while there was still sun.


It was an easy choice for the girls to go into Kermit’s Key Lime shop since we knew the guys would bitch about it. They already gave Jordan hell for a joint bachelor/ bachelorette party.


“Ally, look how perfect this is.” Jordan’s older sister Kayla held up a picture frame that said Married in the Keys. It even had little dog tags hanging from the edge.


There was no arguing. Kayla bought it. Just as the transaction finished, they could hear the guys laughing outside. That didn’t take them very long. Kurt had found a set of drinking boobs, and somehow Chase had figured out a way to secure them to their heads.

“Come on, Jay! We have to see the sunset.” Kayla said, pulling on his arm. The girl became bossy when she drank.

DAY FOUR


Hammocks freckled the entire resort. There was a group of them close to where the wedding would be held.

“I’ll take this sand any day over the shit back over there.” Jordan let his legs hang over the side of the hammock with his toes dragging in the sand.


“You know how to make that happen.” I wasn’t looking for a fight, but I couldn’t help but say it. “What would I do here, Ally? I blow shit up for a living.” His voice got harsh.


“I’m not sure. But I heard of these pirates that go around blowing up old buildings and things no one wants anymore. I think they are called demolition men.” I stuck my tongue out at him then licked the side of his face.


“You’ll pay for that.” He started tickling me. How he ever thought there was enough room for his 6’3”, 200-plus pounds and my barely 5’3”, 110 pounds to even breathe was beyond me. We both fell out of the hammock, but he was the first to hit the ground. It was nice of him to break my fall.


DAY FIVE

Jordan thought he was sneaky when he slipped from the bed, but it was never an easy task since I constantly tangled my limbs around him.

“Where are you going?” My voice came out in a whisper. I was surprised I got anything out at all, being half asleep still.

“It’s bad luck for the groom to see the bride on their wedding day.” He kissed me and walked out the door.

“That’s only in the wedding dress.” It didn’t matter that I yelled after him. The door was already shut.


It wasn’t long before my Mom, and the rest of the women in my family came rushing through the door. I pulled the covers over my head. I was excited, but it was only eight-thirty in the morning. “One more hour, please.” I pulled the covers over my head.


“We waited till Jordan left. Didn’t want to interrupt anything.” My Mom gave me a giant hug. “Time to get pretty, missy.”

“Why are you still in bed?” squeaked my ten-year-old cousin. She told me on the phone how happy she was to be the flower girl, even though she thought she was way too old to be one. “Ally, aren’t you excited?”


“Of course, Chelsea. I just wanted to spend a little more time with Jordan.” I finally felt my mood lighten up. Today was my wedding day—no time to sulk. I could do that after he left by sharing my feelings with Ben and Jerry’s. The photographer came in and snapped a picture. Luckily for her and the wedding album, I was already dressed.

“I wonder what the other photographer is doing with the men,” I thought. “Guess the truth will come out when I get the pictures.”


Everyone was so happy I had to keep from laughing. I was truly blessed to have such a great family, and soon I’d have a sister, too.


“Do you have your vows?” Always the stage mom, my mother worried about everything, but thank God she did. I’m sure I would have left something back at home like the marriage license – you know, something that wasn’t that important.


As it drew near seven, an infestation of butterflies found a new home in my stomach. I could see from the bridal suite that the guests were arriving, and I swear I caught a glimpse of Jordan, but I wasn’t sure. All his friends wore their dress blues. When my dad came to the door, I started tearing up. After three years of being engaged and two years of dating, we were finally going to do it. I never thought this would actually happen, but here we were.


I was watching my bridesmaids walk down the aisle when my dad squeezed my hand.


“If you want to run, I wouldn’t blame ya.” I laughed at him. “Being married is one of the hardest things I’ve had to do for the past thirty years.”


“Daddy? I thought being married to Mom was the easiest thing in the world.” Thank God he made me laugh because I felt like glass ready to break.

The music started, and it was our turn. I’m not sure if I was walking or the vibrations from me shaking moved us down the aisle. But seeing Jordan seemed to ease my nerves. When he took my hand from my father, he leaned in and almost kissed me. Everyone started laughing. I was so happy he was the one who did something silly because I thought for sure I was going to trip and fall. There was still time, though. We had to walk back.

Once the laughter settled down, the priest started the ceremony. When he asked if anyone thought we shouldn’t be married, the whole bridal party raised their hands.

“Be right back,” Kayla said as she ran back into the resort.


“What’s going on?” I meant for it to be louder than a whisper, but I almost fainted.

Soon Kayla came running back. Everyone turned around in their seats, trying to see what she was carrying when a sharp bark came from under her shawl. I couldn’t believe it. Lilly? She actually snuck Lilly into the resort. Kayla had joked about this a million times, but I never thought she would do it. I wonder where she had kept the dog this whole week. Jordan headed butted our little westie as she covered his face with kisses.

“What are they going to do now? Kick us out?” Kayla put Lilly on the ground next to us. “Okay, now you can continue.”

I was crying so hard I could barely focus on what the priest was saying.


“The couple has prepared their own vows.” He looked towards Jordan. “Jordan, would you like to start?”


Jordan nodded and stuck his hand in his coat pocket. He smiled at me as he searched his pant pockets. I was starting to get worried. I remember giving him his vows the night before. I even stuck them in his jacket pocket. But with a wink, he bent down and took the roll of paper from Lilly’s collar.


“Allison, from the moment I met you, you got under my skin. And no matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t get rid of you.” He stopped and took a breath. He was shaking. “But after all the times…”


He stopped. All the men in uniform looked at each other. The ground started to shake, and within seconds the roar of jets came overhead. The Keys were used to having jets, but these jets weren’t ours. Before they were out of sight, what looked like small duffel bags fell from each plane.


The war had finally come to us. We waited for the explosions to hit. The first one hit out in the ocean while the other two rocked somewhere nearby. The wedding party looked to Jordan and the rest of the groomsmen. The priest waited a moment. The skies were clear, and the guests were distressed. He cleared his throat.

“Shall we continue?” Jordan held my hand tighter than I had ever felt. I could feel his pulse in his fingers. I knew the one thing that always kept him sane was knowing I was safe. I was no longer safe. No one was.


DAY SIX


Jordan’s cell phone rang for the twenty-eighth time. It was them. They wanted him back. It wasn’t going to happen. I still had forty-eight hours left with him. When the first call came, Jordan reminded me why we chose this spot. There was spotty reception. He had told his commanding officer that and told the hotel to lose any messages that might come in.

“Do you think the guys have answered their call?” I asked, swaying in the hammock.

“No. They are under strict orders. Forty-eight hours of drunkenness.” Jordan jumped out of his hammock. “We’re going on a boat ride.

“Are you crazy? They were just bombing the waters yesterday!” But there was no arguing. I could see the motley crew already assembling. Dolphins played in our wake, and the birds dove into the clear blue waters. The salty air stuck to my skin as we charged to our destination. The men kept their eyes on the sky, but they doubted the planes would be back. Jordan had overstocked the boat before we left. I couldn’t imagine seven people needing so much food for a day trip.


“Do you trust me?” Jordan asked when we were alone.


I took off his sunglasses and looked him in the eyes. “Has the heat gotten to you? Because I’m pretty sure I made that clear not even twenty-four hours ago.”


“Good.” That was all he said till we made it to the atoll.


Each member of Jordan’s flight crew had a giant sack slung over their shoulders. It was probably beer and other provisions needed to have fun on a deserted island. Kayla grabbed Lilly from the cabin. Seemed my dog wasn’t one for water.


“What are we doing here?” Kayla asked.


“Getting away from it all,” Kurt replied. But he didn’t look back. He was already heading down a worn path.


“Do you know where we are?” Kayla asked me after letting Lilly hop down.


“I’ve kind of learned not to ask your brother where we are going. But I couldn’t help but think how things were looking a bit strange. It’s better left as a surprise.”


The place was supposed to be deserted, but the path we were walking on was cleared out. Flowering bushes were planted throughout that didn’t belong. I looked to the shore one last time. Kurt had landed our boat so precise, and there were cleats buried in the sand from a leftover dock. What were these boys up to?

Kayla shook her head. “You two are really made for each other.”


A few hours later, I realized this wasn’t going to be a short walk. My sandals were not meant to be worn beyond a trek from a parking lot to the sand. I had had enough. I jumped on Jordan’s back and bit his ear.

“Ah! What was that for?” He flipped me over his shoulder like a rag doll.


“Where are we going?” I stopped the group.

“We’re almost there.” He looked down at my feet. The pedicure from the wedding was worn off from our trek. “Do you want a piggyback?”

“How do you know where we’re going? I swear we’ve passed the same tree a few times already,” asked Chase’s wife. I almost felt bad for forgetting her name.


Kayla seemed to have the same feeling towards her as I did. “We’ve been going in a straight line. How could we have possibly passed the same tree? Maybe the same type of tree, but not the exact same one.”


“Are you sure? Because -” She was cut off by a sharp crunching sound coming from ahead of us on the path. The men dropped their bags. I wasn’t sure what they were going to do. I was still on Jordan’s back, and no one had a gun. At least, no one was supposed to have any guns. This was a gun-free vacation.


“Shit.” That was all I could say as Lilly ran off.


Lilly’s barking at least let me know she was alive. I caught my breath when I saw a man come down the path. It could have been a million times worse. He could have done horrible things to make Lilly stop. But instead, he marched right up to us with my savage west highland terrier at his heels. I was expecting the men to be ready to fight, but they were just excited.


“Jackson! Finally!” Chase embraced the man in a tight hug.


“Who is that?” I whispered.


“Someone who is going to make this easier.” Jordan walked over and shook his hand.


Jackson led the way. I couldn’t believe where he was taking us. I felt like I was in a movie by the time we crawled through a tunnel hidden behind a waterfall. I thought we had seen everything when we finally made our way to his home. But we hadn’t. There was a well-built two-story house waiting for us.

It helped that he was a former Army ranger who used to work construction before abandoning all normality.


“Do you own this island?” asked Carla. I’m not sure how I remembered her name at that moment, but I wanted to shout it so I wouldn’t forget.

“No one can own this land. I tried to buy it, but they told me the sea would swallow it in five years.” Jackson gave Kayla a wink. “Ten years later, it’s still here, and so am I.”

The solar panels on the roof powered everything. Mind you, there were only a few fans and a charger for his satellite phone. He had a wood-burning stove that must have been a few hundred years old. It seemed that Jackson lived in the Swiss Family Robinson’s house but on the ground.

DAY SEVEN

When I woke up, Jordan was gone. He wasn’t far. I could hear him faintly talking with the other men. I stayed in bed, enjoying the sea breeze while trying to forget. Trying to forget that he was leaving for war again, but he might be stateside this time.


The smell of coffee pulled me from the bed. What time was it, I wondered. I knew the sun was up, but out here, that didn’t mean anything. It easily could have been 6 am. Being here was like camping, but with fewer bugs.


“So, it’s settled.” I heard Cameron say as I opened the door.


Please don’t squeak. I prayed as I shut the door behind me. I tip-toed down the hall to find Bea and Kayla sitting on the floor out of sight. Kayla yanked me down.


“What’s going on?” I asked.


Bea held up her finger. Kurt was talking, but it was hard to hear him over the damn birds.


“If they stay here, they will be safe. We won’t have to worry about the invasion, and we can work.” Kurt was trying to convince himself this was a good plan.

“They will be safe here. No one knows about the atoll,” Jackson said as he started filling his friend’s cup with coffee into everyone’s cup.


My stomach growled. With the look from Bea and Kayla, I could only hope that the men didn’t hear it.


“They’ve used empty islands before as holdouts. You found some yourself.” Jordan twisted in his chair.

I couldn’t believe that they were about to leave us here without even consulting us. And to make matters worse, Jordan didn’t even seem sold on the deal. This didn’t sound like him. He was methodical in every step of our life. Why would he even think this was a good idea? I had had enough. If they wanted us to play survivor, I was going to be a part of the conversation. I pushed past the two spies and into the kitchen before the men had time to think. I tapped my foot, waiting for one of them to let me in on my extended vacation.


“Hey, Babe.” Jordan never said that unless he was in trouble.


“What’s going to happen to our family?” I knew they were leaving soon. They had their stuff packed by the door. I’ve seen it one too many times to let any time pass.


“They’ll be in the mountains with my family.” Kurt had family in the Blue Ridge mountains.


“I don’t think the Germans or the Russians would be that crazy to go that high up. The hillbillies might destroy them before our family would ever have to worry.” I tried to smile through it. I didn’t like to think of my Mom being so far away from me with no way of knowing if she was safe.


“You’ll have the satellite phones, Allie.” I knew there was a reason why I married him besides his good looks.


“Fine. We’ll stay. But I better hear from you every chance you get.” I kissed him like every other time he left. Not a goodbye kiss, but a see you soon but not soon enough kiss.

Short Stories

Road Trip

In hindsight, it was probably a bad idea. But with the top down and wind blowing through their hair, there was no better start to the weekend. Gwen cranked the music louder to muffle Olivia’s singing.

“What? It’s not that bad.” Olivia continued belting out lyrics. “Well, shake it up, baby… (shake it up, baby).”


“Twist and shout… (twist and shout),” Gwen couldn’t resist joining in. Olivia’s positivity was infectious. “How much longer do we have?”


Olivia looked down at her phone and brought up the map. The blue line traced the path to their weekend. “Without traffic, I’d say less than an hour till we hit the first Key.”


“Yessssss!” Gwen stomped her feet, stuck a hand out of the Jeep, and shouted, “Freedom!”

“I know. We’ve put this off for too long.” Olivia shook out her hair. It was a poor attempt to stop it from smacking her in the face. “Gwen, we need gas.”


“No, we don’t. I filled up ten minutes ago.” She looked at the gauge just to be sure. It was early, but there was no doubt in her mind that she could have just stuck in the pump and forgotten to do anything.


“Uh, yeah, you do.” Olivia pointed over to the military convoy pulling off to the gas station.

“Ten bucks they’re Navy.”


“Oh, you’re so on.” Gwen let off the gas and pulled behind the trucks.


What could be wrong with a little flirting? Both girls were single and on vacation. The sun started to rise. They welcomed warmth that the early morning was missing. The girls traded their sweaters for sunglasses and finally found hair ties at the bottom of their beach bag. Gwen took the final sip of her coffee and was glad to have a reason to go inside and spark up a conversation.
The coffee smelled fresh, which was rare for a turnpike rest stop. Olivia raided the chips, trying not to stare at the two men browsing the candy bars. Gwen couldn’t believe how her best friend could go from a shy, reserved librarian to acting like a boy-crazed sixteen-year-old.


“Shit.” Gwen let the coffee overflow burning her hand. She stuck the burnt part into her mouth and went looking for ice.


“Don’t put ice on it.” The warning came from a deep voice behind her. Gwen froze, thinking her mishap had gone unnoticed. The last thing she wanted was for a cute guy to see her sucking on her hand after burning herself. “It’ll blister quicker. Try warm water or soy sauce.”


She released her hand and winced. “I’ll be sure to keep that in mind next time I try to cook.”


“Or pour coffee?” He smirked.


“Aren’t we a smart ass?” She thought. But he was helpful, and those green eyes made it easy to forget the burn. He looked around the convenience store before asking. “You two making this trip by yourselves?”

“Yeah. We’re big girls. I think we can handle it.” Gwen couldn’t help but grin. He was gorgeous. “Why do you think otherwise, Mister… Cifone?”


“Commander.” He was cocky, but he was good at it. “Of course I do. There are pirates in these parts. Why else do you think they are calling the Navy down here.”

Gwen laughed at him. “Well, if my ship gets boarded and plundered, I’ll be sure to call out for you.”


“I’m sure you’d be what they’re plundering.” He couldn’t keep a straight face. “We’re all on leave if you ladies are making it all the way down to the tip. We’d sure love for you to join us.”

“That could be fun.” Gwen stuck out her hand. “I’m Gwen.” He looked at her hand and saw it was still red.

He gently took it in his and kissed it. “I’m Lance.”


“Oh, no, he didn’t!” Olivia blurted from the cash rep.


Olivia watched the two exchange numbers. Gwen had to drag Olivia from the convenience store. When they got in the car, Gwen handed Olivia a ten. Olivia was able to keep silent until they hit 80.

She finally blurted out, “Please tell me what I witnessed was real.” Her mouth hung wide open.

“You might want to close your mouth,” Gwen said, trying to change the subject. “You could swallow a bug.”


“No, really? Did a guy named Lance really just kiss a girl named Gwen on her hand?” For the twenty years they had known each other, Olivia had made this her life goal. “You have to marry him!”

“You’re crazy. And no matter what story you read, she never marries Lancelot.” She saw Olivia’s smile fade. “Don’t I have to find Arthur first?”


“No, because everyone knows that Lancelot is the better looking of the two.” Olivia yawned and laid her chair back. “Hopefully, one of his round table members is just as hot.”


Olivia slept the rest of the way to Key West and missed out on the few times Gwen pulled over to take pictures of houses on stilts. The seven-mile bridge gave way to open skies and blue waters that made Gwen want to pull over and jump into the ocean. There would be time for that during the week.


Gwen tried to wake Olivia when they went through Sugarloaf key, but the girl continued sleeping. Even sleeping through her own photo shoot with a Key deer. One came right up to the parked Jeep and sniffed Olivia’s dangling hand.


The Jeep chugged down the road past places that could have been anywhere but the keys. They passed through where the townies lived and into postcard Key West. Those fancy postcards only told part of the story. It was refreshing to see normality in a vacation spot. Bright colors blinded Olivia as she opened her eyes.


“We’re here?” She sounded a bit surprised.


“Of course we are. What did you think I was doing while you were playing sleeping beauty?” As Gwen pulled into the driveway of the bed and breakfast, her phone buzzed.

“Ah! Let me read.” Olivia snatched it up before Gwen could react. “Hi, beautiful. Us sailors are getting settled in. Why don’t you and your friend meet us for lunch?”


“So I’m guessing he has a friend or two for you,” Gwen said, yanking her phone back. “No more reading my messages.”


“Yeah, like that is ever going to happen.” Olivia rolled her eyes. She started shoving all her stuff she threw around the Jeep into her overnight bag.


Two queen beds with white and baby blue quilts and matching towel animals awaited them behind the door. Gwen claimed the bed closest to the sliding glass door.

“Olivia, you have to see this.” Both girls gasped at the view. Their room was only a few drunken skips away from the ocean. The sand and blue water were just what they needed to recharge.

Gwen was delighted with her last-minute hotel choice. “How cute is this?”


“Are you sure the animals aren’t going to miss you while you’re gone?” Olivia was already out of her sweatpants and shirt and into a bikini with a bright pink cover-up.

“There are other caretakers for the otters.” Gwen hadn’t even thought about changing. She was perfectly content with stepping out on the balcony and taking a nice nap on the hammock. “Pretty sure I’ll miss them more.”


“Not if you’re distracted.” Olivia waved Gwen’s phone in front of her. “How did you? Seriously are you a magician?” Gwen was sure she had her cell in her back pocket.


“You dropped it when you put your bag down. And since when have you cared about me touching your phone? What are you hiding?” She lifted her right brow, half expecting Gwen to dive for the phone. But there was nothing more than a shrug from her.


“If you want to ruin your surprise go right away. But don’t come crying to me saying how you couldn’t wait.” It was easy to bait Olivia. The two had known each other for twenty-three out of their twenty-seven years of life. “Go ahead. Look if you must.”


Olivia stood with her mouth open, looking at the phone, not knowing what to do. She blinked a few times, waiting to see if Gwen was lying. But there was nothing. Moving faster than she expected herself to, she snatched a business card off the desk and ran into the bathroom with the card and phone. Gwen rushed over and pounded on the door, but there was nothing she could do about it now.


When Olivia finally returned from the bathroom, she had a massive smirk on her face. Gwen knew that look all too well. “What did you do?”

“Oh, nothing. Just you might want to put on something cute. The knights of the round table are heading this way.” Olivia stumbled over her bag she had carelessly tossed down when she came in. Luckily, there was a wall to catch her.

“Hmm. I don’t think you’ll be needing a drink anytime soon. You can’t even walk soberly.” Gwen found the cooler that Olivia had for some reason stuffed in the closet. She pulled out orange juice and cheap champagne. “Or I’ll just pretend you didn’t smack your head on the wall.”

The doorbell rang just as Olivia finished cleaning up the giant box of makeup; she toted everywhere. It didn’t need to be so large. She only used eye shadow. Everything could have easily been stored in a small bag that fits inside her purse. But every time Gwen brought it up to her, she always said the same thing; “I like to keep my options open.”


Commander Lance Cifone was the first to come through the door. He was no longer in uniform, just board shorts, and a fitted tee. Behind him, another hunk of the same height, though slightly less build. His blonde hair was rebelling against the standard Navy cut.


“It’s good to see you so soon.” Gwen did her best not to give Olivia a death stare, but it was hard when the girl was pretending to be little Miss innocent.


Lance leaned in and kissed her cheek. “Olivia’s text seemed so eager to get us here. I didn’t want to disappoint.”


“What? No?” Olivia’s face flushed. “That was all, Gwen.”


“Well then,” He winked at Gwen. “I better send Charlie back because I thought I was fulfilling a specific order.”

“No need.” Olivia shut the door quickly behind him. “I’m sure he wouldn’t want to go back to base while on leave. If he did, I’d just feel horrible.”


Gwen loved when Olivia’s plans backfired on her. “So what do you Navy boys do besides get drunk and tan yourselves?”


“We take pretty girls on boat rides.” Lance nodded towards the ocean. The girls grabbed a few towels and the cooler they had packed already. Charlie came through with a packed lunch for the four of them.


“So the Navy is like grown-up boy scouts? Always prepared?” Olivia said, earning the stink eye from Gwen. “What?”


Charlie led the way from the hotel to the boat. Olivia watched as Gwen and Lance talked. There was something about him that made her worry. Gwen glanced at her, and Olivia beckoned her back with a finger.


“Hey, anything wrong?” Gwen wanted to know why her bouncy friend had done a 180.


“Are we really going on the boat with them? I mean, we just met them.” Olivia whispered. “What if they are like serial killers or something?”

Gwen fought back a sigh. “Well, I was going to wait to tell you, but this isn’t my first time meeting Lance.”

“What?” Olivia stopped in her tracks.

“And you’re just telling me now?”

“Well, I was going to tell you on the way down. But I thought this was more fun.” Gwen felt bad for holding back from Olivia. She was her best friend, but she had to be sure there was something there before she even thought about telling the Drama Queen anything. “Look, when we get out on the water, I promise you’ll get the whole story.”


Olivia waited a moment before she caught up with them. Gwen bounded through the sand and caught Lance’s hand. He leaned in and gave her a quick kiss. Olivia wanted to be happy for them, but knowing her best friend had kept a secret left her bitter. Olivia shook her hands and feet, letting the anger flow out of her.


“Is she okay?” Lance asked.


“She’ll be fine in a moment. That’s her angry dance.” Gwen let Lance help her into the boat.


Olivia, with the temper tantrum she had just thrown, felt even more stupid standing there with the picnic basket. She wouldn’t blame Charlie if he backed out now. Damn it, Lance. Charlie is perfect. How could she stay mad at her best friend when she picked the perfect guy for her? “Hey, wait for me!”


The water was glassy perfection allowing a clear view of the colorful fish that swam around the anchored boat. The two couples grabbed their snorkeling gear and decided to explore the nearby reef. Olivia could not believe how she almost ruined the day.


Beautiful colored parrotfish munched away on the reef while a school of Sergeant Major fish swam quickly over them. The sun was at high noon, and Gwen and Olivia started to burn. Unlike the two Naval officers, they did not have tanned skin. At the bottom of the small stepladder swam a giant, dark fish. Olivia froze. Everyone surfaced as Olivia started panicking and swimming away from the boat. Charlie stopped Olivia from trying to swimming miles back to shore.

“Where are you going?”


“That thing is going to eat me!” The words squeaked out of her.


“Olivia, seriously?” Gwen couldn’t believe her. They had gone over flashcards of fish that looked dangerous and which weren’t, just for this reason.

“It’s Goliath grouper.” Olivia just stared at her. It seemed the flashcards hadn’t worked.

“It’s also called a Jew Fish.” Gwen saw the gears in Olivia’s head start to put things together. “It’s not going to eat you.”

“Well, it looks like it can swallow me whole.” She put her mask on and slowly started to swim back to the boat. Charlie held her hand the whole way.


“Gwen, you need help with that?” Lance took the sunscreen from her and started to rub it on her back. “I mean unless you were going for the tiger stripe look.”


“I thought that’s what you liked.” She shivered from the cold spray.

“So, are you going to tell me or what?” Olivia had her giant beach hat on and huge dark sunglasses. She looked like a movie star from the 1960s.


Gwen thought about holding out a little longer, but Olivia looked as though she was about to explode. “Remember about six months ago when I had to go to Tampa?”


“Yeah, it was to be a guest speaker. OH MY GOD! Was he a student?” The question was a strange mix of happiness and why.


“What? No. Lance asked me to come to speak about training animals for the Navy.” Gwen honestly didn’t know what went on in Olivia’s head sometimes. “He took me to dinner both nights. I was out there saying it was for rapport or something, but after dinner, let me know that it wasn’t.”


“So you held out for six months?” The alcohol was finally hitting her, and she wasn’t as mad as she was this morning.


“I couldn’t tell you. You have been talking forever about me meeting a Lancelot. I thought this would be more fun.” Gwen left her sitting on the bow.


The men had disappeared into the cabin. She was glad that Lance hadn’t heard how Olivia was probably already planning their wedding and demise in her head. It was much cooler below deck.

“What’s that?” She pointed to the map.

“We’re just trying to find an island the guys keep talking about,” Charlie answered.


“What’s so special about it? Aren’t there a bunch of little ones all over the place?” Gwen cuddled up to Lance. It was nice to be next to him.

“Some of the guys say it’s haunted. I call bullshit, but Charlie wants to check it out.” Lance absent-mindedly started to scratch Gwen’s back. “But there are other things I’d much rather be doing with you.”

Gwen eyed him. First time in months, she could actually touch him, but now, all she wanted to do was kick him. He brought Charlie along to distract Olivia, not invite them both out on the romantic boating trip he had promised her. They were already out here together, no way she could ditch her best friend now. “I’m sure one little adventure wouldn’t hurt.”

“We’re going on an adventure?” Olivia peeked in. She had an irrational fear of boat cabins.


“Yeah, we’re going to go ghost hunting.” Gwen watched her friend’s face go white.

Where had her best friend gone? Who was this scaredy-cat standing before her? “You alright? If I remember correctly, you dragged me throughout New Orleans hunting ghosts.”


“Yeah, but that was on land. With land surrounding us. What if the boat breaks? Or a ghost lets out all our gas? Or what if we get separated?”


“Don’t worry, Olivia, remember you’re with the grown-up boy scouts,” Charlie said, taking a small dig at her as he brought up lunch.


It was another three hours before they saw anything. Gwen started to wonder if they were going to end up in the Bahamas or maybe even Cuba. “Are you sure that the island even exists?” she asked. “

We’re going to get stranded out at sea and have to catch a shark to pull us back to shore, aren’t we?” Everyone looked at Olivia. “What? It could happen.”

“What has she been drinking?” Lance whispered into Gwen’s ear.


“Not really sure, but I think I want some.” Just as she finished saying, they spotted land on the horizon.


Olivia waved at the hazy land. “Why, hello ghost island.”


When they pulled up to the dock, it was worn and covered with barnacles. They saw that someone had recently been here. There was a fresh rope neatly piled up. They all gave each other an uneasy look. They weren’t leaving without exploring first. Olivia clutched the rail. “Gwen, I think we might want to sit this out.”


“What’s gotten into you?” Gwen pulled her onto the dock. “You’re the one who always drags me to these kinds of places.”


“Yeah, but they aren’t three hours away from civilization.” Olivia’s eyes darted around the island, searching for a reason to make Gwen stay in the boat.


It was an overgrown mess. Palmetto branches cut their legs. There were no houses for the ghosts to haunt. At least none that the four had run into yet. Birds of paradise sang to their intruders from flowering trees. Spiderwebs hung just above their heads, forcing the men to crouch in a few places.


Gwen looked back at her friend, who was still on high alert. “See nothing to be scared of.”


“You’re right,” she said as a rabbit hopped past the group and back into the bushes. “All that’s here are cute little animals.”


“Hey, what’s that over there?” Charlie asked, pointing at a chain-link fence that was covered in vines. The barbed wire on the top looked too new for how overgrown everything on the island was.


“Okay, guys, let’s go back.” Olivia was trembling.


Lance wanted to push on, but Gwen was starting to catch a bit of Olivia’s fear. “A quick look, and we’ll turn back, I promise.”


The group walked along the fence. The vines and overgrowth were starting to look all too perfect. It was clear that it was to mask the fence from the shore. Gwen doubted that whoever put up the fence thought people would wander this deep into the woods.


“Oh, there is definitely someone here,” Gwen said, pointing to a small, spinning radar dish.


“What is that?” Olivia asked.


“It could be several things,” said Lance. He squeezed Gwen’s hand, which was resting on his shoulder. “We can go back.”


“Are you crazy?” Gwen said. “We just found something. Let’s go.” She moved quicker down the fence.


“Gwen!” Olivia squealed. “Please! Let’s go back.”


Gwen kept walking. She had never complained when Olivia would drag her to historical places that were supposed to be haunted. Now that they finally found a real place that could truly be haunted, Olivia wanted to turn back. It made no sense. Just ahead was a roadway leading to whatever was hidden behind the fence. On either side of the solid-looking gate were guard towers with their windows smashed in. They didn’t see any guards.


“Did you call in our coordinates?” Charlie asked. Lance shook his head. He took one look at the wielded gate and grabbed Gwen. “We need to leave. Now.”


“What? It’s just a closed base. Why are you so freaked out?” She got out of his grip and marched up to the door just to the side of the gate and tugged at it. “Look. The door still opens.” Gwen ducked inside before anyone could stop her.


“Your girl is going to get us killed.” Charlie followed after Lance.


There were two buildings inside. Lance and Charlie knew this was a research facility. Lance had met Gwen on a base that was basically its twin. Expect this one had chains on the doors and bars over the windows.


“She’s over there.” Olivia pointed to where she saw a figure in the distance.


“Over there?” Lance asked. “There was no way Gwen could have run off that quickly. We were right behind her.”


Olivia tried to shake off her fear. “Well, Charlie, I think we found your ghost.”


“Lance!” Gwen’s cry came from another direction.


The three ran towards it. Lance and Charlie both pulled guns from their pockets. Olivia just looked at them. “Why do you have guns?”


“Boys scouts, always prepared, right?” But Lance’s voice was shaking.


Gwen came running from around the building. Olivia had never seen her move so quickly. Moans echoed through the empty space.


“Where the fuck did you bring us?” Gwen said as she ran past them.


“Those aren’t ghosts. Those are fucking zombies!” Olivia shouted. She didn’t understand why Lance and Charlie were just standing there. “Shoot them!”


Charlie picked up Olivia and ran. No one stopped running until they were back at the boat. In the cabin, Lance made Gwen strip down to be sure she wasn’t scratched or bitten. “Did you know about this place?” Gwen couldn’t hold back her anger.


“You know I didn’t.” Lance kept his distance. She had already pulled away once, and maybe space was what she needed.


Gwen paced the small cabin. “Human testing wasn’t supposed to start for another five years.”


Lance stopped her. “Gwen, what are you talking about?”


“Don’t act like you don’t know.” She pushed him off of her. “Why do you think I was there?”


“Because you were an expert in animal training. Why else would you have been there?” Lance didn’t know what she was talking about. He trained dolphins to salvage things from wrecks, and until now, he thought Gwen trained otters and other animals to do the same thing.


Gwen muttered to herself. “The super soldier project. They were testing it on the animals first.”


Lance held his breath. He didn’t want to alarm the two upstairs. If they were doing the testings on humans here, there should be no problem. He’d bring Charlie and a few other guys back and take care of the mess. The zombies were contained. It would be an easy clean-up. As Lance started to relax, so did Gwen. Everything would be alright.


The boat had been moving for some time before Gwen and Lance made their way out of the cabin.


“Everything alright?” Lance asked, popping open a beer.


“We’re good,” Charlie said, accepting a beer.


Olivia sat down next to Gwen and whispered. “Did anyone shut the door?”

Short Stories

Somewhere Across the Sea

Layla’s room was what every little girl wanted, filled with stuffed animals and soft blankets. But there weren’t any pink walls. All the walls were sky blue. One even had an underwater castle with fish swimming around it. Layla perked up in bed while she waited for her parents to come to tuck her in. The nightly routine was never broken, ever.

“What book do you want tonight?” her mother’s sweet but toned down, southern accent asked before ever stepping foot in the door.


“The fishie book!” she called back.


Her parents came through the door. First, her mother was already in her comfy clothes, as she called them, followed by her father. A few of Layla’s friends told her that they were afraid of her dad. One friend told her that her daddy had a deep scary voice that was as loud as thunder. But she couldn’t understand why, because to her, he was the funny man who made voices while her mom read stories, making them last longer than they should.


“Little one, you have a hundred books on fishies. You have to pick one.” Her father fixed his glasses on his face

. “Oh, Charles, you know which one she is talking about.” Mother plucked a book with duct tape holding the spine together from the shelf above the bed.


“Right.” He settled in next to Layla. “The fishie book.”


It didn’t matter that, as her parents read, Layla would read right along with them. The book’s pages were yellowed from age. It was her mother’s book from when she was Layla’s age. The artwork didn’t look like Layla’s Disney books. They were different. She asked her mother if they were painted, but there was no way to really know. With the last page coming up, Layla fought back her yawns. She was a big girl now. Six years old. She could stay up through the fishie book.


Her father tucked her in with the last word of the story. He didn’t need to see the text any more than she did. With a kiss from both parents placed on her forehead, she was almost in dreamland. Her mother gives her the final bit of the recipe, the click of her otter night-light. Knowing that the glow from the silly little otter helped keep the monsters away, Layla knew it was okay to let her heavy lids finally come down. Sometime during the night, a storm must have come through because that could be the only reason why her otter would be off. Layla listened to be sure no monster was in the room. As she listened, her eyes adjusted. Even though she hadn’t heard any monster, she was so scared to get out of bed. Taking a big breath, she placed one foot on the rug. Nothing happened. Good, now it was time for the other. Layla made her way by moonlight across the room. When she clicked the switch on the lamp, just like her mom did, nothing happened. Layla found where the plug was, and it was plugged in. At this point, she didn’t know what to do, but she wasn’t going to be able to sleep in the dark.


Layla didn’t want her parents to think she was still a baby. Mommy just started letting her watch scary movies with daddy, and she said if she started having nightmares, there would be no more scary movies. After a moment, Layla knew she had to wake her mom. Tiptoeing down the hall, Layla made her way to her parents’ door. At first, she knocked with just the nail of her finger. Her mother was always a light sleeper and usually woke when Layla opened her door, but this time, nothing.


“Mommy?” Layla whispered.


When she went to turn the knob, she found that it was open, so she gave it a gentle push. The bathroom light to the left of the bed was on and gave off enough light to see her parents both in bed. Just as she was about to wiggle her way through the door, she stopped. There was someone else in the room.


“Don’t see me, don’t see me, don’t see me.” Layla couldn’t stop the pleas from escaping her.

Layla quickly ran back down the hall to her room. She shut the door and locked it. Her mom said if a monster was ever in the house, she would go into her closet and hide there. She did her best to do what her daddy had shown her and barely moved the stack of blankets out of the way to expose the little door. She slipped in and waited for morning. When the birds started to chirp, Layla crept out from her hiding place. If the sun was up, it meant it was safe. The monster never came to her room last night. Maybe it was all made up in her head. She wasn’t going to tell her mom, but she was right. She wasn’t big enough for the scary movies. That had to be it. It was just a figment of her imagination. Layla wasn’t sure what that meant, but she heard her father say it a few times.


When her tummy started to rumble, Layla couldn’t believe her mom hadn’t come to get her yet. It’s not like she needed to be told to get up, but her mom still did it every morning by tickling her till she thought she would pee. The hall was a lot less scary, with the bright sun pouring in through the windows.


Her parents’ door was wide open. That made Layla smile and skip all the way into the room. She saw her mommy sleeping in bed, but her dad was nowhere to be seen. But it didn’t matter anyway since Daddy wasn’t very good at making Mickey Mouse pancakes.

“Mommy, I’m hungry.” Layla didn’t need to whisper anymore. There was no monster, and it was way past the time for Mommy to be up.


But nothing came from her. When Layla wiggled her arm like a jelly worm, and still her mother did not stir, Layla climbed into bed and looked at her mom. She was so pretty. Even when she slept, she was lovely. Layla got real close and opened one of her mother’s eyes. It was a lot harder than it usually was.


“Mommy, you’re sleeping too much.” There was still no answer. “Fine! I’m going to ask daddy to make me pancakes.”

Layla stormed out of the bedroom and into the kitchen. But her father wasn’t there. She saw his keys and wallet in their basket, so he had to be here somewhere. After looking basically everywhere, she plopped down on the couch and started to watch cartoons. Before a whole show was over, her tummy rumbled again.
Layla went out front to see if she missed her dad. Sometimes he worked on his car and would hide under it. He said it was his secret place from Mommy. And she didn’t check there last time, so that had to be it. After looking under the car and not finding him anywhere, Layla sat at the end of the driveway. Maybe he went with a friend somewhere.


“Layla?” A woman’s voice called from across the street.


“Hi, Miss Rachel!” Layla sprung to her feet and dashed to her neighbor’s yard.


“What are you doing outside?” Rachel was young and looked different from mommy. She had long brown hair that looked like it was painted like a tiger with red stripes.


“I was looking for my daddy, but I couldn’t find him. Could you make me pancakes?” The little girl squinted from the sun as she looked up.


“Layla, where are your parents?” Rachel wasn’t sure if it was the sound coming from Layla’s stomach or the fact that it was Tuesday and she wasn’t in school, but something wasn’t right.

“My mom is sleeping, and I don’t know where dad is. But I’m starving. Do you have any cookies?” Layla put her hand on her stomach. It was starting to hurt.

“Let me go grab my phone, and we’ll see about waking up your mom.” Rachel grabbed her phone and her pepper spray. She didn’t know what to expect, but that was about the only thing she had to defend herself if anything went down. Layla led the way in the house. Rachel knew it well. She had been babysitting for Layla since she was born. Everywhere she looked, everything seemed to be in place. As they went down the hall, Rachel noticed the office door was open, and it was never open. The office always stayed locked.


“And then I saw a monster in mommy’s room last night, so I hid in my little room.” Layla broke Rachel’s investigator mood.

She stopped dead in her tracks. “Layla, what did the monster look like?”


“Like a man, but he was all black. It’s okay, I’ve seen them in movies, and they can’t be outside when the sun is up.” The little girl made her way into her mom’s room. “Moooooom, you have to get up. I see your eye is open.”


Rachel was shaking. There was a pool of blood on the floor below the dangling arm. And Layla was right. Her eye was open. Rachel didn’t need to look anymore. The woman was dead, and this little girl had spent the day with a dead body and didn’t know it. She didn’t want to alarm her, so Rachel made sure to do it in another room when she called the police.

The doorbell rang, and Layla beat Rachel to the door. “Hi! Are you friends with my dad?”


“No, I’m here to see your mommy.” the police officer smiled down at her. But when he looked up at Rachel, he knew it was about to be a long night.

“Well, good luck. She’s been sleeping all day.” Layla didn’t care anymore about the new person, her cartoon was on, and there was no way she was going to miss it.


15 years later


Layla, you’ve got me on my knees.
Layla, I’m begging, darling please.
Layla, darling won’t you ease my worried mind.


My namesake’s song rang out from my cellphone. It had been my alarm since Rachel gave me my first cell phone. If I wasn’t woken up by it, my day was most definitely shitty.


“Good, you’re up.” Rachel peeked her head in the room.


“Mooooooom, of course, I’m up. I have a meet, don’t I?” I rolled back over and faced the wall. God did my head pound.


“How was I supposed to know. You were out until three. Is five hours of sleep really a good idea after a night of drinking for your first swim meet?” She chastised me, but it was clearly playful. “You know most swimmers don’t come out of retirement by showing up hungover and kicking everyone’s butt.”


“Michael Phelps got high and did one even better.” I loved reminding her. “He’s the most decorated Olympian ever.”


“So are you telling me you’re smoking pot now too?” Her eyebrow went up. “Yeah, that’s what I thought, now get your suit on. Or at least your warm-ups you don’t want to be late.”


“Come on. I’m twenty-one. Should I really have my mom drive me to qualifications?” I dragged my sorry butt from bed and looked in the mirror—Jesus, what did I do last night. My hair, which I flat ironed, was back to its natural curl state. The blonde highlights had faded out months ago, and I was left with my mousey brown hair.


“Shower before you get in my new car.” Mom sniffed my head. “Vomit doesn’t come out real easy.”


Every ounce of me wanted to fall back asleep once I got into my mom’s SUV. But she made certain that wouldn’t happen with the contestants’ question about my night out. Unlike most of my friends, I didn’t tune her out. I couldn’t. Apart of me felt guilty that I’d taken her twenties away from Rachel. She became my mom the moment she saw my mother lying cold on her bed. Every now and I would say a little prayer thanking God for Rachel because who knows how I would have turned out without her.


The chlorine tickled my nose as I stepped on the pool deck of the Ft Lauderdale swimming hall of fame. I received death stares walking by my old teammates since I spent most of college avoiding any pool deck. I wasn’t here to give the school another record-breaking time. I was here for qualifying. I looked over to my right and saw a few of the guys I went out with last night. They looked like they were having a rough time.


Hey Greg!” My voice carried over the stretching swimmers.


“Ay, Layla.” He cringed. “A bit loud, don’t you think?”


“Sorry,” I moved closer to him. “What did we do last night? I don’t remember”

“You thought it was a great idea to swim out to the buoy. I don’t know how you did it with how much rum you drank.” Greg pushed his sunglasses closer to his eyes even though they were already pressed as close as possible.


“Nooo, I didn’t.” But from the look that Greg gave me, I did. “Who else swam out with me.”


“I did, so did Jess and Brad.” Greg pulled his arms back, waiting for me to stretch them as far as they could go. “Brad couldn’t even beat you this time. Is rum your super drink?”


I heard my heat being called on the loudspeakers. I turned and walked to the blocks and winked at him. “I guess we’ll find out soon enough.” I looked out and saw my mom on the other side of the pool. She waved and pointed to my left. I didn’t want to look, but I knew who I was sharing the center lanes with. Jenna, the evil spawn of satan, a Barbie doll who made racing growing up a living hell.


“Oh, I thought you would chicken out like last time,” Jenna said, stuffing her overly bleached blonde hair into her swim cap.


I gave her a nod, but there was so way that she would psych me out this time. The announcers called for swimmers on the blocks. It was the 100 fly. I’m not sure what possessed me to sign up for a sprint first, but it felt right.


“Take your mark.” The voice rang out over the loudspeaker.

Right as the beep went off, I made sure Jenna heard me. “Eat my bubbles bitch.”


The water rushed over my body. I kicked stronger than any of the girls in the surrounded five lanes. I looked over to my right, and I saw Jenna. She had already broken the surface. I knew I had to break soon before anyone noticed. It wasn’t unheard of for twenty-five meters to be swam entirely underwater, but not at the speeds I was about to hit.


“Sorry, Mom,” I whispered to myself. But I wasn’t going to let anyone underestimate me. I was about to break not only the female world record but also the men’s record. I had to be sure that I didn’t push too hard. I felt the skin grow between my fingers. I couldn’t help but smile. I kicked ack knew that Jenna was getting water in her mouth from my kickback as my toes webbed and my feet became little fins.


“Layla!” Rachel’s voice rang out clear as my head broke the surface.


The discussion we were going to have on the ride home was totally going to be worth it. What did she think would happen when she signed me up for swim lessons all those years ago?


Only a half a length left. I had to focus on making sure my skin was normal before I hit the wall without losing my momentum. Underwater, my hands slammed into the center of the black cross. I wanted to be sure that the display clock got my time in a split second. I kicked back. Before my head broke the surface, I could hear Greg and my mom screaming. I knew I broke the record when everyone else started to get just as excited. Pulling the goggles from my head, I could already read the red numbers, 46.23, two seconds faster than the men’s world record for the 100 fly short course.


Waiting behind mom and Greg were two grumpy men in suits. I’m not sure what they wanted with me this time, but they weren’t going to take this title away from me this time.

Short Stories

Tinkerbell’s Tears

The bar had more smoke in it than usual that night. But James still saw a tiny, shiny flicker coming from a stool on the far end. Walking closer to see what it was, it became clear that the flicker was from a cute petite blonde with a pair of wings. He made a gesture to the bartender, and a Johnny Walker on ice slid down the bar.

“Hey, Blake, what’s up with the chick with wings? Did I forget it was Halloween or something?” He asked, catching the glass.

“Nah, she says she’s Tinker Bell.”

James coughed up his swig, “Sure, and I’m Peter Pan.”


Blake wiped up the wasted alcohol. “After the shit, I’ve heard her rattle off. I wouldn’t say that too loud.”

The blonde was sitting alone with eyeliner running down her face and had half fallen out a bun on top of her head. She was a mess. Attractive. But a mess. Tinker Bell or not, James would get the story from her; he had no problem encouraging women to talk.


“What she been drinking?”

“Everything from rum, vodka, and gin. You name it. She’s had it tonight.” Blake shook his head and sighed, “poor thing.”


“Blake, you’re turning into a softy.” James ribbed.

“You want to be a shoulder for her to cry on, don’t you? And then take—”


“Hey, sometimes I’m a little better than dirt.” James interrupted him. “Just send her a martini of some kind.”

Tinker Bell watched the conversation from down the bar. It was no surprise that, again, she was the topic of discussion. But there was something about this one. He looked familiar in a comforting sense that actually disturbed her.


“Great, here comes another one of these creeps,” she muttered. “Can’t they just leave a girl alone?”


Earth seems to be full of them. Staring out the window to the windy street, she wondered why she ever picked this rat hole in the first place. Oh, that’s right, to find someone other than him. Stirring what was left of her drink, she thought about the most recent events that had brought her here. I can’t believe these humans have destroyed everything with this atom smasher, searching for different dimensions. What, are they stupid? Do they really think that all their fairytales and nightmares come from nowhere? Now everyone can cross back and forth, no problem. I bet that Wendy bitch was happy to find that out. Blake walked to her with another bright green martini in hand.


“And would this be from the guy at the other end?” Tink wiped the eyeliner from her face, but the mascara had already stained it.

“That would be the one. Every one of your drinks has been from someone feeling sorry for you. I don’t think this one is as bad as the rest.” Blake watched Tink size him up compared to the rest of the creeps from the night. “This one’s a local. I promise he ain’t that bad.”

“Maybe you’re right.”


Blake waved James down. He was about 6’2 with a crew cut, and what was left of his hair was either dark brown or black. When he got close, his emerald green eyes pierced right through her.


Those eyes, I know I’ve seen those eyes before. And when he sat down, he smelled like Neverland. How strange.

“Blake said your name was Tinker Bell.” The green eyes went straight to the wings.


“Yes, they are real.” She made them open, flap, and then lay back down. “So, what do you want?”

“My name is James.” He held out his hand for her to shake. However, Tink stared at it as if something was off. “Usually, one would at least shake the hand of the person who bought her a drink.”


“James, where are you from? Blake says you’re a local, but you look very familiar, and I’m not a local.” She reaches across the bar and takes a straw.


“Tinker Bell, what happened to Peter Pan?”


The tears began rolling down her face, makeup going everywhere, and finally, she pulled the sorry excuse for a bun down.


“It’s so funny how the story is told here. It isn’t even the right story.” Between sobs, she sips her drink. “What is this crap of being a kid? Peter Pan isn’t a kid. He’s really 106 stuck in an eighteen-year-old’s body!”

“He’s really 106? And that would make you?”


She gave James the death stare and started searching for Blake to get this guy away from her.


“I forget a lady never reveals her true age.” He taunted her too much. “Tinker Bell, my name is James Hook.”


Her head turned so quickly it should have snapped off. Tinkerbell muttered something over her drink while she reached to check if her wand was still in her boot. “Captain James Hook?” She whispered. “You can’t be. Pan killed you.”

Hook’s laugh silenced the entire bar. “The same time Pan was trying to kill me was when this wonderful little rip in time happened. And, darling, if I remember correctly, it upset you gravely that I was being killed.”

Tinker Bell blushed and quickly tried to conceal it. “Of course it did. Who else was going to get rid of Wendy? Not the babbling lost boys. They couldn’t kill her even when she was right in front of them.”


“I was never going to kill her. Pan wanted me to get rid of you.” His confession turned her eyes bright red. “God, Tink! After so many years, you still don’t understand, do you? How did Peter ever get to this Wendy girl?”

“It’s awfully similar to the Disney story. Only when they say he lost his shadow, he didn’t. Who knows what he really lost that night, but he was upset, and so was she. There was so much screaming and fighting. It didn’t make sense why he was bringing her with him. I mean, he was sleeping with Wendy, but he was sleeping with everyone else, including me. Disney got both wrong. She wasn’t a child, either. She was seventeen. AND THOSE bastards! They make me look like a slut.”


Hook chuckled at the idea of his pathetic character shoving her into a lantern. “If only you were tiny enough to shove into a lantern, it would have made that whole ordeal a lot easier.”


Tinker Bell threw what was left of the drink in his face. Blake handed James a towel. This was the third drink thrown tonight, and they had all come from her. Blake savored James being off his game with Tinker Bell. James was always a smooth talker and always knew how to calm a girl down when she was upset.

“Bell, do you know why he brought her to Neverland?” He asked slowly and deliberately.


“Some crap about her parents wanting her to grow up, and he didn’t want her to. It doesn’t matter. It was a B.S. story.” She took her wand out from the boot and flicked it once, and the glass was full again.

“Tink, she was pregnant. He wanted to tell you. He wanted to tell you he loved her, but you were so angry and wouldn’t hear it. He loves her, and I love you, Tinker Bell.”

Over and over, the Disney version of what happened that night ran through her head, but she knew deep down it wasn’t true. But she wanted it to be true. She wanted Peter to have dropped Wendy off at home and returned for her. But he never returned. Tinker Bell remembered them fighting over Wendy on Hook’s ship, but never the truth. Tonight explained everything. Peter had promised her he was only dropping Wendy off and coming right back, but even then, deep down, she knew he would never be back.


“He’s a father.” The words barely escaped her mouth. James nodded, and she fell into his arms, crying more.


“Just take me back to Neverland.”