It's time for another Friday Excerpt. This one is from Once Upon a December Nightmare and includes James's POV.
You can read the beginning in last week's post here.
2. James
The truck hopped once again along
the rutted road. James considered how the deer’s throats had been slashed, too
ragged to be from a knife. What had killed them? But he didn't know. He pushed aside his thoughts.
It was strange, but nothing they could do about it. He shrugged off the horror
of that clearing. A grin plastered itself to his face as he fiddled with the
radio knob until it picked up a country station. Hank Williams, Sr.’s “There’s
a Tear in my Beer” blared through the static of the speakers.
“Do we have to listen to that?” Cassie cringed and threw her
hands over her ears.
“You live in the country, Cassie. You should learn to like country music.” James chortled before
singing along. Denise’s voice joined his. How could someone live in the country
and not like Hank Williams, Sr.? He turned up the radio dial even louder to
further annoy Cassie who had pulled up the hood of her coat and smashed her
hands against it and her ears to block out his caterwauling.
The headlights flickered.
He paused mid-note. The truck was twenty-five years old and
not in the best of shape, but he didn’t think much about it until they
wavered again.
“Is something wrong?” Denise turned the radio down.
“Nah, we’re all right.” He gave her a comforting smile, not
wanting to worry his girlfriend. “Oh, by the way, when we get back, I’ll be
heading home tonight. I have to work early in the morning.”
“On a Sunday?”
“They called me in this afternoon.” He smoothly lied.
“On a Sunday?”
“They called me in this afternoon.” He smoothly lied.
“Okay, sure, but why didn’t you tell me earlier?” Denise glanced
over to her sister and friend before looking back at him. “I thought you were
going to stay the night again.”
“You wanted me to come along, didn’t you? But I have to
work. It’s closer for me to stay at my place since we’ll be getting back late.”
James huffed.
Denise had begged him to come along. She wanted to show him
off to her old friend, the always single Cassie. He would have liked to stay
with his own “old friend” April for the night instead, and thankfully Denise didn’t have a
clue about April. When his old girlfriend had returned to town a few weeks ago,
he was thrilled to see her. They picked right back up with their relationship
that began in high school. He liked Denise a lot, but he enjoyed April too. It
wasn’t the first time he juggled two girls.
“Yeah, sure. Whatever.” Denise crossed her arms and stared
straight ahead.
The truck continued along the twists and turns of the bumpy,
hilly road. Hank William Sr.’s voice faded away and changed into the upbeat
Dolly Parton singing “9 to 5.” Yet, they had all fallen into a state of uneasy
silence. James glanced over at the three women beside him. It was unusual to
hear them quiet. Women rarely stop gabbing when in a group. He chuckled to
himself, but the laughter drifted away.
The headlights went out completely. He slammed on the brakes.
The truck skidded to a stop and threw them forward.
“What happened?” Cassie asked.
“Why did the lights go out?” Mary added, a touch of fear
entering her voice.
“It’s nothing,” James said in his best comforting I’m-the-man–and-I’ll–fix-it
tone. “Let me check under the hood. Probably a wire jarred loose.”
He turned off the engine and popped the hood. After climbing
out of the vehicle, he lifted the hood and propped it up. He squinted at the
shadowy engine. It was too dark to see anything beyond dark blobs, so he
returned to the truck.
“Help me find a flashlight. I can’t see squat out there.” He
reached behind the seat and grabbed the rusty red toolbox. A hammer, various
wrenches, a screwdriver, but no flashlight. They’d be screwed if he couldn’t
get the truck started. While he searched for the flashlight, Denise scrounged
around in the glove compartment. The overhead light illuminated them all, and
he rolled his eyes when he saw Mary and Cassie just sitting there.
“Check under the seat, Cassie,” James said, putting the toolbox back.
“Check under the seat, Cassie,” James said, putting the toolbox back.
Cassie leaned forward. Her dark hair hung in front of her
eyes while she searched for the flashlight. “I don’t feel anything there.”
“Get out and check.” James huffed, trying to figure out
where the flashlight was. The truck door opened, and Cassie checked under her
side of the seat. When was the last time he saw the light? “You didn’t take the
flashlight out, did you, Denise?”
“Well, I told you I used it the other day when the lights
were out,” Denise said. “Didn’t you put it back?”
James tried to keep calm, but his patience was wearing thin.
“I told you that the flashlight needed more batteries. I thought you had gotten
them and put the flashlight back. Did you go to the store and get them?”
“No, I haven’t had a chance yet. I’m not the only one who
can do things.” Denise glared at him.
“I know that. I’m not the one sitting on my—” James held his
tongue before “fat ass” came out of his mouth. He didn’t want to air dirty
laundry and have this argument in front of her little sister, Mary, and her
sister’s friend. At times, he was half-tempted to break up with Denise,
especially since April was back, but he wasn’t about to screw up the holidays. “Hand
me your lighter. I’ll see if I can figure out what is wrong.”
Denise threw it at him, but he caught it. He took it with
him and purposely left the door open.
Let them freeze.
He flicked the lighter on and used the tiny flame to search underneath the hood. Although he considered himself handy around a vehicle, he could barely tell the battery from the radiator in this light, or lack thereof. He couldn’t see if anything was loose.
Let them freeze.
He flicked the lighter on and used the tiny flame to search underneath the hood. Although he considered himself handy around a vehicle, he could barely tell the battery from the radiator in this light, or lack thereof. He couldn’t see if anything was loose.
“Damn it.” He slammed the hood down and went back into the
truck. “I don’t have enough light. Let me try starting the engine again.”
He turned the key in the ignition. After three tries, the
engine turned over, but they still had no headlights. Without lights, it would
be too dangerous to continue down the winding mountain road. There were no
guard rails, and some parts dropped off in a steep cliff. He turned the engine
off. “Let’s see if we can call someone. We can’t go anywhere in the dark.”
All of them, except for Cassie who didn’t have one, pulled
out their cell phones and searched for some bars.
“Any signal?” A hint of panic flashed through Cassie’s
eyes—could she possibly be scared?—but she sounded calm.
Denise shook her head, snapping her phone shut. “No luck
here.”
James opened the door again and stood, pointing his cell
phone toward the star-speckled sky. “I have a bar. Let me try calling.”
He dialed Denise’s mom’s number, but it didn’t even give
half a ring.
“We need more than one bar to call out.” He sank back down
on the leather seat.
“Let me see with my phone.” Mary motioned for Cassie to get
out. James went around to the other side to help Mary climb into the back of
the truck and get onto the roof. He watched as she held her cell phone up as
high as her five-foot frame would go. If only it would work, he could go to his
warm bed with April in it.
“I have two bars!” She dialed the number.
James could hear the ring from where he stood and bounced on
his feet. Come on, pick up!
Then she lost the signal, tried again, but had no luck. “Sorry,
guys,” she said, and James helped her down and back into the truck.
They weren’t likely to get a signal by standing here, so he
turned toward the blonde, brunette, and the redhead. “I’m gonna go and find
help. We can’t be too far from the main road. Perhaps three, four miles. I can
probably get a cell signal then.”
It shouldn’t take him more than an hour or two. He’d call Denise’s mom, she could drive and pick him up, and then they could go back and get the girls. It would all work out fine.
Yes, in real life the truck's lights went out and none of the cell phones worked. Very ripe for a horror movie, right? If you enjoyed the excerpts, then please consider purchasing a copy. It's only $0.99.
11 comments:
It's going from bad to worse. And I'd guess James gets it first.
I hope it works out. I've often found real life to be a great excuse to write horror. When i was younger I bore witness to many scary things which is fruitful in my adult life with writing. Thanks for sharing.
This is a perfect story for this time of year...
Off to buy my copy now!
Awesome! I have been so absent from the blogosphere I didn't realize you have books out! Off to get them!
This is a creepy story, but at this point I'm not as worried about James as I am about Cassie, Denise and Mary. He's kind of turned out to be a jerk.
Creepy. Nice work Cherie :) you've got me all creeped out just in time for halloween =)
Uh oh. Broken down vehicle. No cell phone signal -- that's very common around here once you leave town.
That was based off one of your own experiences? Wow. That must have been really scary.
That's right, James. It'll all work out fine! ;)
I agree...good for this time of year...great job!
I just downloaded a copy. :)
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