Showing posts with label PG. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PG. Show all posts

Thursday, May 11, 2017

How to Kidnap an Author

3,325 words - adult fiction

open book of stories


You’re going to be angry. I’ll just tell you that upfront.
If you want to come yell at me for being stupid, go ahead. But please at least bring the bail money with you. I promise I’ll pay you back.
See, it all started with the author signing. Or, actually it probably started with Dave, the security guard. If I hadn’t dated him, there’s no way I could have pulled off the kidnapping.
Dating a security guard is even better than being a security guard, if you ask me. You get to see all the hidden corners the cameras can’t reach. You get to find out the pass codes. You get to see the basement tunnels and the roof access. And you don’t have to go brain dead with boredom staring at computer monitors all night long.
I know you said I shouldn’t date him, and I agree. He turned out to be a jerk. But think of this to cheer you up. He’ll get fired as soon as they find out how I had a key to the janitor's closet.
So, Dave made it possible. But you know I’m not for kidnapping someone without a very good reason.
That very good reason was Helma Dugan. Debut author extraordinaire. New York Times bestseller. I know you’ve read her new book. It seems everyone and their dog has read it.
But do you remember her when we were growing up? Little Helma Dugan was just a frizzy haired kid with a runny nose and braces for too many years. She was in my grade. We were acquaintances. She sat at the lunch table with me and my friends. My writer friends.
The weird thing is, little Helma had no interest in being a writer, unlike me and all my friends. But she was an avid reader and would do a decent job reading over a manuscript. We all let her read and critique ours. She especially loved one of my novels called Love in the Arcade, about a teenage boy and girl who are tied for the winning score on the most popular game in the arcade and then get sucked into the game and have to fight to the death to stay alive. And, of course, they end of falling in love during all of this. Anyway, Helma kept bringing it up for at least a year after she read it. I guess that’s why we kept her around. She was good moral support when we needed a boost. We were like her own private book club.
So, when I went to college, and she asked if she could room with me and four of my friends, we shrugged and let her come along. She still had the braces.
We were all going to writing conferences together and comparing stories, and Helma was happily reading away anything we gave her. I entered dozens of writing competitions, but never won anything. At least, I thought I didn’t.
Life went on. I graduated. I still wasn’t published and had to get a job. Being a full-time writer is great until your rent is due.
My job got demanding and I had less time to write. All my other writer friends had agents and editors and most of them had husbands too, and they had all moved to other states, and so it was just me. Even Helma moved off somewhere, though I didn’t keep in touch enough to know where she’d gone.
I started to think my ideas were trash. All my friends had books coming out and even though they weren’t wildly successful, at least they were published. I wrote less and less frequently, until I kind of gave up on the whole writing thing. Then, to top it all off, I walked into a bookstore one day and there was Helma. She wasn’t buying books. She was signing them.
There was a table set up right at the front of the bookstore with a long green tablecloth. And on the tablecloth were stacks and stacks of shiny new hardback books. And behind it all was Helma, smiling a dead-straight smile, her braces gone, and signing the front pages with a flourish.
I must have stared for ten minutes before I realized what the title of the book was that she was signing.
Love in the Arcade.
I leaned around the line of people and snatched a copy, flipping it open. The first line was like a punch in the stomach.
“It’s so much easier to get along with someone once you’ve killed them a few times.”
I knew that line.
I flipped further into the book, turning pages and reading snippets, all the way to the very last line.
“Love’s a battle - make sure you’re on the winning side.”
I smashed the book shut, crumpling a few pages at the end.
This was my story.
I had written this story.
“Would you like to buy that, ma’am?” A sales lady asked. “The author is signing copies.” She pointed to my right at Helma.
“That’s not the author,” I said.
“Hmm?” She leaned closer like she hadn’t heard me.
Helma still hadn’t seen me, surrounded by her adoring fans.
I shoved the book into the sales lady's hands and darted out of the store.
At home, I booted up my laptop and dug around for the story. It was one I had written years ago. I’d sent it into a contest, and when I never heard back, I assumed the thing was rubbish. The contest had specifically said to keep the submission anonymous, so I had. No name. They said they would send a letter if I won. I never got a letter.
But now I pulled up their website and clicked on the contest results from that year.
Grand prize winner: Love in the Arcade by Helma Dugan.
My vision went a little tipsy.
Had Helma found the letter when she checked the mail? The prize had been something good. I checked because with all the contests I’d entered I couldn’t remember exactly what. But there it was - $2,000 and a publishing contract.
She had taken my publishing contract.
She had never been a writer, but she had plenty of experience editing. They would have had her make some edits to my manuscript, but that wouldn’t have been a problem for her.
Hands shaking, I googled her.
There she was, smiling that disturbingly straight smile.
And there was my book.
I clicked a link and read the blurb.
“...coming out with another book next Fall entitled How to Get on a Serial Killer’s Hit List, the first in a romance thriller trilogy.”
I blinked hard and long, that title staring up at me. I’d written that too. That whole trilogy! It was my romance thriller trilogy! One of my favorites I’d ever written, about a woman who’d been notified by the police that she was being put into witness protection because she was on this serial killer’s list of victims. But the police were too late and the serial killer shows up and kills her. Except they don’t know that he’s actually part of the vampire police, and he’s putting her into vampire witness protection. And the human police are totally corrupt and out to take over the world. Of course she ends up falling for the vampire chief of police, but not until the very end of the first book, right when the human chief of police drives a stake through his heart.
In the second book she trades her immortality for a chance to visit the underworld and bring her true love back from the dead, but it all goes horribly wrong when she realizes he’s in love with some other woman who’s also dead.
I won’t give away the ending, but it took me three years to write the whole trilogy. Everyone in my writing group cried when the vampire chief of police died.
And now Helma was publishing it? She’d had access to our shared google drive where we all posted our stories. Had she downloaded it and sent it to her editor after getting that first contract? Why?
I closed the laptop. Then reopened it and looked up her book tour schedule. She was at the bookstore today, obviously. But next weekend she would be at the library in the next town over.
The library that Dave, my security guard boyfriend, used to work at. And a plan started forming in my brain.


The night of, I dressed in black and I brought my backpack.
I did not buy a copy of her book - MY book - from the friendly sales clerk from a local bookstore that had set up a small shop next to the library front doors. I wasn’t going to add to her pirated royalties.
Before entering the room where she was presenting, I slapped an “Out of Order” sign on the door to women’s bathroom.
The plan was simple. I ran through it in my head again and again as I sat and listened to the head librarian welcome her and everyone applaud. I listened as she read the first chapter of my book. And I sat and listened as she answered questions from the audience.
“Where did you get the inspiration for this book?”
“This one, like all my stories, just came it to. It was like it landed in my lap one day.”
“We heard you are writing a trilogy next. Will there be more books after that?
“Oh, there are plenty more where this came from!”
I gritted my teeth and bided my time. When the question and answer session were over, I watched her like a hawk. The librarians were setting up a table at the back of the room for her, and everyone was lining up to have her sign their copy of Love in the Arcade. But she slipped out the door toward the bathrooms. Now was my chance. Slinging my backpack over my shoulder, I kept my head down and headed after her.
She saw the “Out of Order” sign I’d tacked up before her speech began and wheeled around for the bathroom on the floor below. Perfect.
When she was down the stairs, I ripped the sign off, and followed her at a safe distance. When she was inside the downstairs bathroom, I stuck the “Out of Order” sign on the door, then slipped in after her and locked the door so no one would disturb us.
I turned on the sink for some white noise, setting my bag down. When she came out of the stall, I was ready. I switched off the light and aimed a gun at her. She froze. Her eyes got very wide.
Now, before you freak about guns and safety and ask me if I’ve ever been to a shooting range in my life, let me tell you that this was not a real gun. Do you honestly think I have connections to be able to get my hands on a real gun? Good grief.
It was a toy from the dollar store. But in the dim light from the window, it seemed to be doing the trick.
I jerked my head toward the janitor’s closet connected the the bathroom. “Get inside,” I said.
I followed her inside, keeping the toy gun trained on her. It smelled like glass cleaner. She stumbled backwards into a chair.
“Sit,” I said. I dumped the rope I’d brought from off my shoulder and kicked it towards her. “Tie yourself to the chair.”
She picked up the rope and sat down with a whimper. Though, it quickly became obvious that I’d hadn’t thought this order through. She tied the rope around her waist and the chair, knotting it firmly, but it was obvious she could untie it whenever she wanted.
I decided to overlook this flaw and get down to business.
“You have a lot to answer for,” I said. My voice didn’t really sound very scary, so I tried making it deeper. “A whole lot to answer for.”
“What do you want?” she said.
“You know what I want,” I said. The deep voice thing wasn’t working very well. I sounded like a terrible soap opera actor. I coughed and continued in a more normal voice. “You’ve been dreading I would find out about this for a long time.”
There was a pause. “Who are you?”
She was dumber than I thought. “Seriously?” I asked. “I’m Lisa! Lisa Hemmingsway! The girl whose book you just published!”
“Oh,” she said. “Right.”
“Okay,” I said. “Listen up. I know what you’ve done. And if you ever want to see your dear cat Snookums again-”
“Snookums is dead,” she cut in.
“Oh, goodness.” I let the gun drop a little. “I’m so sorry!” She had really cared about that cat. “What did that happen?”
“Over a year ago. He was really old.”
I pondered this for a moment. “Well, do you have a new cat?”
“Of course! I have a little kitten.”
“Cute! What’s name?”
“Betsy.”
“Betsy? That’s a terrible name for a kitten! That’s an old lady name!”
“Well it’s better than your main character’s name. What was it? Senora? Doesn’t that mean lady in Spanish? My editor had me change all their names.”
“Just like you changed the author’s name?” I asked, leveling the gun at her again. “Look, if you ever want to see your terribly named kitten Betsy again, you are going to swear that you will walk out there and announce to everyone who the true author of that books is. Is that understood?”
She didn’t answer.
“Is that understood?” I asked again, louder.
“Please,” she said. “I just wanted a chance.”
“Promise!” I said. “Or Betsy becomes my kitten instead of yours! And I will change her name!”
“All of you were so talented!” Helma said. “I knew you would all be these famous writers and I was so jealous. I was never going to be a famous anything!”
“Do I look like a famous writer to you?”
“You were the best writer of them all,” she said, hurrying on like she knew she only had seconds to explain her case. “You were so talented! I knew when that letter came from that writing competition that you were going to be somebody. And I was jealous. I thought I could have just a piece, a small piece of what was in store for you. You wrote so much, surely you would be able to win a hundred more competitions! Surely this wasn’t your only chance. But it was my only chance!”
“That was my only chance!” I said. “Have you seen any books with my name on the cover? Have you been to any of my book signings?”
She was quiet for a moment. “You gave up,” she said softly. “I didn’t think you’d give up.”
I set my mouth. “I did not give up.”
“You did,” she said. “I would log into your account online where you kept all your writing files, and there were less new ones every time I came back. You haven’t been really writing in years.”
“You’ve been logging into my account?”
She didn’t answer.
“How many of my novels have you stolen?” I asked.
“Just the one that’s published, and the trilogy. The romance thriller one.”
I let the gun drop, leaned against the wall to see her face better, and glared. Holding up that toy gun was making my arms ache. “Anything else?”
“And… well… and one more.”
“Which one?”
“The one about the girl who gets tricked into being engaged to that dwarf even though she’s in love with the King of the gold mines. You didn’t have a title for it.”
I stood up straight. “Seriously? That was the one you went for next? I would have thought Sunken Moon about the were-mermaids would have been your next one.”
She shook her head. “You never finished that one. Remember? You never told us how Driselda gets out of the sea witch’s cave before the full moon is up or how Gerald reacts after finding out what she is.”
I’d forgotten that. “I don’t know how it ends yet,” I said. “The ending I thought up first was stupid.”
She shrugged. “You’ll think of something good.”
I frowned. Every time I sat down to write lately, I could only think of how stupid all my ideas were. How no one wanted to read them. But apparently I was wrong.
“Look,” she said. “I get that you’re mad at me. I had no right to steal that competition winning from you. But-” She stopped me as I opened my mouth. “You are a brilliant writer. People love your stories! You can’t stop writing.”
She was right. That much was clear from the lines of people she had waiting for the autograph of the person they thought had written Love in the Arcade.
“You need to give back my stories,” I said.
“I can’t!” She looked petrified at the idea. “No one would believe me. They would think you had blackmailed me or something.”
I chewed the inside of my cheek. “I’m deleting that online account with all my stories. You’re not publishing any more of them. Got it?”
She nodded. “Of course!”
“And if you don’t find a way to give those stories back, I will ruin your writing career!” I said. “I’ll- I’ll give you awful reviews on goodreads!”
She swallowed. “I can’t give them back,” she said. “But I could make you a co-author of the trilogy. It’s not out yet.”
I considered.
“Then you’ll get your name out there. You can send out new stories and have your own books. We can go on book signing tours together!”
“No tours,” I said. “Not together.”
“Right. Sorry.”
I considered her offer. It wasn’t bad. If I had seen that letter from the competition, would I have been brave enough to actually go forward with it? To publish other books?
In a way, she had given me a confidence that I couldn’t have gotten any other way.
“Fine,” I said. “Keep the book. But just you wait. I’m going to be more famous than you one day.”
As I untied her, she looked like she was going to give me a hug, but I stepped back. “Hey,” I said. “Don’t push your luck.”
The janitor’s closet door banged open. “Hands up! This is the police!”
“It was her!” Helma said. “She kidnapped me! I had to keep her talking! She’s here! Arrest her!”
And that’s when I saw her phone in her hands. She’d been hiding the screen from me as she texted.
And that is how I ended up in a cell writing to you to post my bail. Pretty please?
I know you’re mad. I get it. It was irresponsible of me. I shouldn’t have threatened her kitten. I get it.
But let’s talk about Helma for just another minute. There’s no way she’s actually going to make me the co-author of my trilogy. I can’t believe I was stupid enough to believe her. I had been debating buying a copy of my book just for fun, but no way that’s happening now. Especially because after I pay you back for bail I will be broke. So, let’s just be mad at her instead, okay?
On the bright side, sitting here in this cell, I figured out how my were-mermaid story ends. And, guess what? I have this brilliant idea for a whole new novel about- Well, I don’t want to spoil the surprise.
It feels good to be thinking about writing again.
Who knew it would take little brace-face Helma Dugan to solve my writing problems.

Well, I’d better finish this letter. I need to get started on my next story. It’s going to be a best seller. I can just feel it!





Tuesday, February 14, 2017

Seed

1,588 words - teen sci-fi





I leaped from the space pod right before it crashed, tumbling as I hit the ground. Gravel scraped my palms and tore at my pants. The pod was a wreck. Coming into earth’s atmosphere had been harder than expected. It was never going to fly again. But that didn’t matter. This was a one-way trip for me. 
I hadn’t bothered with a helmet and breathing was laborious. There was enough oxygen, but sucking in the dirty air made my lungs ache. When I looked up, the sky was a murky red at the edges fading to a smoky black top. Crags of volcano tops ripped up the skyline. I knew it was bad before I came. Everyone knew. But seeing it for myself was so much worse.
I got to me feet as the earth shifted under me, throwing me back onto my side, spilling my dozens of cornrow braids onto the ground around me.  
Pressing a hand to the capsule hanging around my neck, I felt a warm pulse against my palm. The seed was still safe.
Rolling onto my back, I looked straight up. Somewhere up there, there was a sun, dull and red, ready to blink out of existence. But the volcano ash was too thick to make it out. I sat up and looked around, more wary about getting to my feet this time. The gravel was the same deep brown as my skin, like people had crumbled to pieces here, their bodies turned to dust and rock. Something cracked behind me and I jumped up.
The ground was breaking open, a deep fissure splitting the earth like a crooked mouth. The ground popped and crackled under my feet, ready to swallow me up. I ran.
The seed was burning inside the capsule, hot and alive. I needed to plant it before it was too late, but where? The ground was black and broken. The volcanoes were angry or dead. The sun was hidden. The whole earth was decaying. The seed didn’t stand a chance on this planet.
The further I ran, sweat dripping off my nose and chin, the more I realized how pointless this was. I came here to save this seed, to try and save humanity, but all that was here for us was death. I knew it was a suicide mission, but I didn’t realize it would be a genocide mission too.
I scrambled up the side of a volcano, slipping on loose stones like broken glass. The peak of the volcano was smoking like a newly blown out candle. Steadying myself, I looked around for something, but I didn’t know what I was looking for anymore. Green was an impossible color here.
There was only black and that one belt of red circling me on the horizon, dividing the black in two. As I watched, even the red line of light was dimming, fading away until it was a smudge. And then a memory. Blackness engulfed me.
Wind hit, cold and sharp, snatching the sweat off my skin. I huddled down on the side of the volcano, wrapping myself together for warmth.
The darkness was so thick it pressed my eyeballs back into my skull.
The sun was gone.
I knew it like I knew I was breathing.
The sun was gone.
The
Sun
Was
Gone.

I was too late.
There could be no life without a sun.
The volcano I was huddled against flared, throwing orange light and a blast of heat over everything. I slipped, lost my balance, and tumbled down the side of the volcano. The sharp rocks stabbed at me until I slid to a stop at the bottom.
I pulled my arm out from under me and untangled my legs. My hand went to the capsule around my neck. It was safe. My clothes were shredded though. I could feel the wind whipping the torn edges. My shoulder and leg were both bleeding. It was too dark to see, but I could feel my limbs slippery with blood.
I should not have come.
I pictured this planet, floating through space next to a smoldering rock that used to glow. What did a sun look like when it was gone? No one would ever know.
I blinked, but the darkness didn’t lift.
Stretching out my legs, I rested back on my hands, wincing, and looked straight up at where the stars were, if only I could see them. I tugged the capsule off from around my neck.
“There’s no place for you, little seed,” I said. “I’m sorry. I’m so sorry. All you need is one little bit of life to live off of, but there is no life here.”
I pictured each volcano going out, turning cold, the lava hardening. I would be long dead before the last of them. If only they were truly alive. Then I would climb to the top and throw the seed in. But I knew it would be a waste.
I opened the capsule and light came out as the glowing seed tumbled into my palm. It was like a star, right there in my hand, the only one I could see.
This one seed contained the fate of billions of people. How tragic that neither it nor I would ever grow up to become what we could have been. We would be the last two things to die on this planet.
“Oh,” I said, as a realization came to me. “I am alive. I am the life I came here looking for.” It hadn’t been a waste coming here.
I scraped at the ground with one hand, pulling up chunks of rock and earth. Then I dropped the single speck of light into the shallow hole. It shined up at me, bright and warm. I buried it and the world went dark. But not forever.
I let the blood from my arm and leg drip onto the buried seed, like water for a plant. But this was no mere vegetation I was growing. The blood was dripping too slowly, so I took a sharp rock, sucked in my breath, and pressed the pointed edge into the wound on my leg, ripping it wider.
I gasped at the pain, but the blood came freely now, swift and thick. I let it run.
I had known I was coming here to die. This was the best death I could have imagined for myself.
I hoped the seed would grow quickly. I hoped I wasn’t too late. I hoped there were people still alive, still waiting for the light to come back.
I felt my consciousness draining away with the blood. I fell to my side and curled around the hole I’d dug, my braids splayed on the ground around my head.
And I waited to die.
The place where I’d planted the seed began to glow. And then one tiny little tendril of light poked out of the ground like a plant sprout. Right in front of me, it began to grow. I watched leaves divide from the stem, the tips of them reaching higher and higher like a plant looking for sunshine. It pulled itself up tall as branches split off and more leaves budded. I flopped onto my back to watch it fill out above me, this tree of bright light. The trunk thickened, the branches lengthened, the leaves multiplied. It was beautiful and glorious.
The tree at last settled into itself, the whole process happening without a sound. And then fruit began to form, blossoming from the branches, filling out full and round, making the branches bend beneath their weight.
Right above me, a branch tipped down, a single piece of fruit at its tip. I reached up, and the fruit fell into my hand. It was hot and heavy, and when I bit into it, the skin broke under my teeth spilling juice down my chin and delicious sweet warmth into my mouth. I had never tasted anything so delicious.
I could feel the warmth spreading from my stomach down through my limbs. And then, in my center, where my shirt is torn to expose my stomach, I began to glow.
Tendrils of bright white light emerged on my skin, curling and growing, making a pattern of curves across my stomach. The light kept growing, curling across my chest, wrapping down my arms, and spilling down my legs. Vines of light curl around wrists and ankles. As I watched, the wounds on my arm and leg began to close up, the skin healing without a scar. My veins, empty of blood, filled with light. Small leaves and flowers blossomed in the design on my skin like they had been inked on in shining white. A rose bloomed on my palm as vines curled around each finger and toe. I could feel the light trickling up my cheeks and across the back of my neck.
I sat up, turning my hands over and over, stretching out my legs, admiring the shimmering beauty.
I could feel heat intensifying across my back, warm and comforting. When I turned my head, I saw that two enormous fiery wings had grown from the light, stretching out from my shoulders. I furled them open and felt a rush of glory at their size and majesty.
I didn’t come here to die.
I came here to live.
The trees roots began shooting out across the ground like tongues of fire, turning the black earth to burning gold.

The next sun was coming.






photo by steve p2008

Monday, February 6, 2017

Garlic in the Blood

1,715 words - adult fantasy



The garlic plants were dead.
Sei knew before she pulled up the first bulb. She been trying to save them for weeks now as the stalks turned brown from the tips down, wilting until they lay flat on the ground. She’s known they were dying. And now they were dead. All of them.
            She had outlined her property in garlic, a line of plants poking out of the earth like bright green sentinels. And then she had planted another outline around her house. It was impossible to have too much. But this year there would be none at all.
            Sei dropped the rotted bulb and wiped her palms on her jeans, smearing them with mud and decayed plant. More than the potatoes, more than the peas or the watermelon or the corn or even the wheat, Sei needed the garlic. She wouldn’t have time to die of starvation if she ran out of garlic.
            Wiping her sweaty forehead with the back of her hand, she got to her feet. The sun was low, sitting on the ground and glaring. It was time to drink her tea.
            That was when she saw something she hadn’t seen in over a year. A stranger.
At first, he was just a dark smear against the setting sun, but every muscle in her body from her little toes to her scalp tightened at the sight. People did not come and visit Sei. There wasn’t a soul for miles. And there especially wasn’t anything without a soul. At least, there shouldn’t be.
            And the garlic was dead.
            She watched the man get closer. He was riding a horse of all things, which made her hunch her shoulders when she saw it, like she could make herself smaller, make herself disappear. She bent her knees like she was readying for a fight and her hand darted to her pocket where a long smooth piece of metal protruded. She was never without it, even after more than a year of solitude.
            She swallowed hard, twisted her foot firmly into the dirt, and waited.  
            She watched him dismount, the horse throwing his head like he had been ridden too hard and too fast and was glad to be rid of his rider.
            “Who are you?” she asked. Her voice was creaky from talking only to cats and chickens.
            She saw him take in her stance, the metal stake in her fist. He raised his hands in surrender. “I’m Drake,” he said. “I’m human.”
            “I can tell,” Sei said. But she didn’t relax her grip on the weapon.
            “Are you Sei?” the man asked.
            It was a stupid question. They both knew it, so Sei didn’t bother to answer. 
            The man – Drake – cleared his throat. “I need your help,” he said.
            “I’m done with all that.” Sei narrowed her eyes. “So you can get right back on your horse and go back to where you came from.”
            “I can’t!” Drake said. “There is no place to go back to anymore. It’s gone.” His voice cracked. “My whole city is gone.”
            Sei closed her eyes, trying to block out his words. “How many?” she asked.
            “I think it’s just one.”
            She snapped her eyes open. “One? That’s impossible. How big is your city?”
            “About 10,000. Or, it was. Only a couple hundred of us are left.”
            So it was small. But still.
            “When did it start?” she asked.
            “A month ago. It happened so fast, we didn’t realize what was going on until it was too late.”
            Sei watched the rim of the sun slide out of sight. She couldn’t be out here now.
            “I can’t,” she said, turning away and striding across the garden toward her house.
            “No!” Drake ran after her, grabbing her arm.
            She turned on him, the metal stake raised. No one had touched her in years. Even before she retired, before she came to the farm and chose solitude over death, she was untouchable. People spoke to her with downcast eyes, keeping a safe distance, like she wasn’t entirely human herself.
            “I’m sorry,” Drake said, dropping her arm and raising his hands again. The gesture irritated her.
She started back to her house.
            “But if you don’t help us, there won’t be any of us left. My daughter-” His voice broke again.
            It could all be an act. Sei knew this as she scuffed her boots off on the doormat and opened the front door. It could be a trap. There were plenty who wanted revenge on her. She just wasn’t sure how they would have talked Drake – a human – into helping them.
            She flicked on the lights and turned to face him, her arms crossed. “I’m retired,” she said. “You wouldn’t want me anyway. I’m rusty by now. I haven’t killed more than a chicken in fifteen months.”
            “You’re the best there’s ever been,” he said. “And you’re the only one left.”
            She frowned and turned away. “That’s why I’m done,” she said. “If I go back, I won’t live any longer than the rest of you.” Taking the kettle off the stove, she filled it with water from the tap and replaced it, turning on the burner and hearing the little drips of water on the outside of the kettle sizzle as the stove heated up. She opened the kitchen cupboard and took out her tea ball, a cluster of garlic cloves, and a ceramic dish of honey.
            Drake watched her from the doorway, unmoving. As she made the tea, she avoided his eyes.
            “I couldn’t get within five miles of it anyway,” she said and crushed the first garlic clove with the side of a butcher knife. The papery skin slid off and the sticky pale flesh went into the tea ball. She couldn’t smell the garlic anymore. But she knew that Drake could. She was sure he could smell the farm – smell her – miles away. And he was only human.
            “How often do you drink that?” Drake asked as she crushed the next clove and added it to the tea ball.
            “More often than I eat,” she said. “Eating is only important if you’re going to be alive long enough to go hungry.”
            Drake looked around the kitchen, at the rows of braided garlic hanging from the rafters, at the sliver cross above the table, at the boxes of matches piled in a bowl next to the sink, at the hand-dipped candles standing on every flat surface, and at the gun on the window ledge. He could probably guess that the bullets inside were silver.
            “When you eat garlic,” she said. “It doesn’t just stay on your breath. It gets into your system. It takes days to wear off.”
She didn’t just eat her garlic. She saturated her bath water with it, made lotion out of it, wore it in a locket that she never took off, stuffed her pockets with it, and made potpourri to fill her drawers.
She didn’t just have garlic breath.
“I have garlic in my blood,” she said.
Drake picked up the nearest candle and examined it. It too was full of dried garlic. He set it down.
“Why did you start?” he asked.
The kettle began to whistle. Sei pulled it off the stove with a hot pad and poured a steaming stream of water into her mug, dousing the tea ball full of juicy garlic cloves. She replaced the kettle and added honey to her mug.
“All those years ago,” he said, “if you knew it was so dangerous, what motivated you to start?”
She stirred the tea and looked out the window at the dark landscape. “Shut the door,” she said. “And turn the locks. All of them.”
Drake did as he was asked. She blew on her tea to cool it but didn’t take her eyes off the garden outside.
“It was my sister,” she said. “She was a year younger than me.”
            She sipped the tea. It burned her tongue.  
            “She was killed right in front of me.”
            “I’m sorry,” Drake said. “I’m sorry.”
            Sei set down her mug with a hard clink. “But I killed her murderer. It was my first kill.”
            Drake met her hard gaze with his own. “Not all of us can do that,” he said. “You have a talent. A gift.”
            “I have a curse,” she said. “They may not have souls, but each and every one of them haunts me to this day.” She felt herself breath in made herself hold it, lungs full, trying to block the memories. “Two hundred twenty seven,” she said when at last she exhaled.
            Drake took in his breath.
            No one realized how many it was. She had a scar for each and every one of them. A physical scar, either from their nails, or from their teeth, or from the fire when she burned their bodies. Fights were messy. Fights left wounds. But nothing on her body was as permanent as the scars on her mind. Teeth and fire and blood could never do as much damage as a memory.
            “What would your sister want?” Drake asked.
            It wasn’t a fair question, and they both knew it.
            She gazed out the window even though it was too dark to make out much but the line between the black ground and the star speckled sky.
            The garlic was dead.
            She turned away from Drake, putting her hands on the countertop and closing her eyes.
            “Give me a week,” she said.
            Drake inhaled to speak, but she cut him off.
            “That’s the best I can do. Even after a week of detox, I’ll still have garlic in my blood.” She would have to sweat it out, move away from this farm that had garlic in the very wood the house was built from. A week wasn’t even close to enough time.
            It was suicide and she knew it.
            But what else was there?
            There were the chickens and the cats. There was the garden. There was life. There was the simple pleasure of breathing in and out.
            But how high a price was she willing to pay for those simple things?
            Would she give up her sister again? Would she give up this man’s daughter?

            “One week,” she said. “And then I’ll go after your vampire.”




photo by Pete G