Showing posts with label nightmare ever after. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nightmare ever after. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Wednesday's Writing Update: Nightmare Ever After and Ten Tales available, plus a Halloween treat

 

Happy Halloween!!

I'm still catching up on things from my five-day weekend last week, but I'm almost there in time for NaNo tomorrow!

Nightmare Ever After and Spells: Ten Tales of Magic are both available!
 
A Horror Novella 

The Sequel to Once Upon a December Nightmare 

Almost ten years have passed since that fateful December night.

But the monster is hungry again.

As the killings start again New Haven, Virginia, FBI Agent Timothy “Tim” O’Conner sends for the lone survivor from the ’02 murders to help him catch a killer. Cassie Richards wants nothing to do with the monster that killed her friends or the agent’s investigation, but she can’t forget the night that has haunted her nightmares. She returns to Virginia in search for closure, but will she be able to catch and kill a legend in time? 

Some reviews of Nightmare Ever After: 

“Get ready for another terrifying ride as you turn pages to discover the killer’s identity and who he’ll pick as his next victim.” – Cher Green, author of Escape to Love  

“The mystery haunts the reader through the pages, slowly unveiling the horror. The story has a definite X-Files feel.” – Christine Rains, author of L’il Gal Al and the Zombies of Amarillo   

To Purchase: Amazon US / UK / DE / FR / ES / IT / JP  Smashwords  Nook  Kobo (forthcoming)  iTunes (forthcoming) 

Add on Goodreads

 
Ten fantasy stories by ten authors.

1. SYSTEM, MAGIC, SPIRIT by T.D. Edge
Will Ambrose betray his magic system just to save an idiot prince?


 2. OBSESSION by Pamela Turner
Some questions are best left unasked. 


3. LADY BARD by Cherie Reich
A love song may be the only cure for a cursed prince.


4. THE FINAL SPARK by CJ Burright
She couldn't afford to fail again.


5. ST JAKE OF THE FUNHOUSE by Douglas Kolacki
For Edward, the 'saint' part was the scariest.


6. BARNABAS by Jeff Hargett
Sixty years, Barnabas has searched for his magic. Will he finally find it in Matilda’s Magic Shop?


7. BY YOUR OWN FREE WILL by Rayne Hall
What price would you pay to get your heart's desire?


8. A MAGICAL MELODY by Ciara Ballintyne
In a world where magic is in the music, Avram must settle the score before it's too late.


9. BRAINS, SEX OR MONEY? by Tara Maya
What would you choose?


10. THE WHITE RAVEN'S FEATHER by David D. Levine
Ibude is a warm-weather wizard held hostage in a frozen land, but his troubles can still get worse.


Some of these stories have been previously published in books, magazines and ezines. 

To Purchase: Amazon US / UK  Smashwords 
It's forthcoming on Nook, iTunes, and Kobo! And if you would like to read and give an honest review, please let me know, and I can hook you up with a copy. 

For a special Halloween treat, I am offering free copies of Once Upon a December Nightmare. If you would like a free copy, then in the comments please answer this question: "What is your favorite part of Halloween?" Also leave an email or some way for me to contact you to send you a coupon code for a free copy. 

And can you believe November 1st is tomorrow? It's time for NaNoWriMo, and even though I'm rewriting a novel, I don't feel all that ready for it. So much left to do!

So are you participating in NaNo this year? Ready for it to be November? Are you doing anything special for Halloween? 

Friday, October 26, 2012

Friday Excerpt: Nightmare Ever After

 

Today I have more from Nightmare Ever After. This is chapter two. Nightmare Ever After will be coming out next week, so mark your calendars! Also, today's my mom's birthday! Happy Birthday, Mom! I love you!

If you missed Chapter One, you can read it here.

(By the way, if you haven't read Once Upon a December Nightmare and don't like spoilers, then you might want to hold off on reading this.) 

 

CHAPTER TWO

Cassie Richards tapped the pencil’s eraser against the desk as the seconds ticked down to the end of the school year. Her U.S. History students rustled their test pages and filled in the tiny bubbles on the scantron. One by one, they finished and placed their tests upon her desk. She could’ve started hand-grading them, but why bother? The scantron machine would grade the tests in mere minutes, and she would be one step closer to her glorious summer alone.

Tap, tap.

Tick, tock.

Tap, tap.

Tick

The bell rang. Freedom!

“Have a good summer, kids!” Chairs scooted back with metallic screeches. The excited murmur increased to a loud buzz as the students filtered into the halls. Lockers opened and slammed shut in the distance.

Cassie stood to collect her purse and the tests when she saw a man slip inside the door. “Can I help you?”

He stood tall and erect, towering over six feet in height. His dark hair had just a sprinkle of premature gray at his sideburns. He was probably a few years older than she. Maybe thirty-five or thirty-six. She thought he was handsome. Was he someone’s father? She couldn’t stop her smile until his clear blue eyes met her gaze.

Sharp, focused. A cop’s eyes. Her smile faltered.

She struggled to swallow the lump in her throat and coughed instead. Her hand tightened around her purse, and her heart dropped to her stomach. Although she had suspected this day would come, she’d hoped it never would.

“Are you Cassandra Richards?” His hand went to his suit jacket, and he produced a badge. “I’m—”

“What department are you with? Roanoke Police? Virginia State?” Her purse dropped onto the desk and scattered pencils and paperclips.

“FBI, actually. I’m Special Agent Timothy O’Conner.” He offered his badge for her to see.

She leaned forward, and her hand shook too much to take his badge. Why did his presence affect her so much? She breathed in to calm her jumbled nerves and read the badge. He was legit. “It’s happened again, hasn’t it?”

“What has happened again?” He placed his credentials back into his jacket and leaned against a student’s desk.

Blood rushed through her veins and created a dull roar. She was surprised he made no indication of hearing her rapid heartbeat. Her muscles tightened, begging her to run, to flee. She sank to the chair and started gathering the scattered school supplies, anything to keep her hands busy.

“I didn’t do it, you know. I-I haven’t even been back to Virginia since . . . it happened.” She lowered her gaze.

“I know.” His voice was soft, low, a gentle caress that lured her to look at him. “Do you mind if I show you something, Cassandra?”

“It’s Cassie.” She couldn’t help but correct him. Cassandra seemed so unfortunate of a name. One she identified too well with that mocked Trojan prophetess, who warned the Trojans about the Greeks and their gifts to no avail. She should listen to her own warnings to flee, but she was tired of running from her horrific past.

“You can call me Tim.” He smiled and pulled out his smart phone. “May I? It’s a bit graphic in nature, but I believe you might further confirm something for me.”

No, no, no! Her thoughts spun in circles.

“I suppose,” she said instead. The sooner she did as he wanted, then the sooner he would leave.

He came around the desk and placed his phone before her. His hovering body heat warmed her back, and her cheeks burned. She should’ve shifted away, but she needed that flash of warmth to prepare her for what was in front of her. What she saw chilled her to the bone.

A mutilated corpse rested on a bed of dead leaves. A couple bright white flowers bloomed beside it. She leaned closer and enlarged the picture until she could see the person’s throat. Her hair shifted in front of her eyes, and she tucked it behind her ears. The jagged marks told her more than enough. She bolted from the chair, slamming right into him. He let out a soft “oomph” and grasped her arm before she could run for it.

“Why are you showing me this?” She jerked away and back up until she hit the whiteboard.

He stepped toward her and placed his arm against the board to block her escape.

“What do you want from me?”

“I want your help.” His jaw clenched, the muscles bunching before he relaxed. His thumb shifted and brushed against her arm. It tickled a bit and yet felt reassuring to her.

“My help?”

“Yes.” Tim scooped up the phone and motioned to the picture. “Did the man who killed your friends do this?”

“It wasn’t a man, but a monster.” She saw the disbelieving look on his face. No one found her story credible. Most days, she didn’t either. “It’s similar. Okay? Happy?”

He nodded and tucked the phone into his pocket. “I want you to come with me to Virginia.”

“No.” She crossed her arms. Her body shook, but it had nothing to do with fear anymore. New Haven had declared her a murderer. They treated her worse than cow shit after James, Denise, and Mary’s bodies were discovered. Even when her name was cleared, death threats, slashed tires, and broken windows didn’t stop until she moved back to Missouri.

“You’re the lone survivor, the only one who has seen this killer and lived. Cassie, he’s never been caught and he’s killing again.” He touched her chin, tilting her head to look into his eyes. “Don’t you want your friends’ murderer brought to justice?”

“I want him dead,” she said without remorse. She would do almost anything to catch her friends’ killer, but the monster was still out there. What if it still searched for her? “But I’m sorry. I can’t help you.”

His touch stirred a heat she hadn’t felt in a few years, but she couldn’t do as he asked. Going back just wasn’t an option for her. She skirted around him and snatched her belongings. Tests needed to be graded, so she could enter in final grades. She still had over a week left of work before her summer break would start, and she wasn’t going to let something that didn’t concern her ruin her plans.

“Does your principal know you were in mental institution for a while?” He rested against the whiteboard, hands in his pockets.

She straightened. Because the charges were dropped, her record at Grayson Sanatorium was expunged, or so she thought. She never told anyone.

“I didn’t think so. You know, if they find out—”

“That’s not fair.” She whipped around and glared at him. “You’d get me fired from my job. Then what will I do?”

He shrugged. “Come back home. Give us your opinion on this killer, and then you can return to your life here. Since school’s out, I’m sure you can arrange to leave early.”

Her fingers tightened into fists, the nails digging into her flesh. She’d worked so hard to get where she was. That damn monster threatened to destroy everything again. She could still feel its hairy hands around her throat. But she couldn’t go with this agent back to Virginia. Tim O’Conner seemed like a reasonable man. She couldn’t see him really forcing her to go against her will. “I can’t.”

“Miss Richards,” he said, all formal again, “I can insist you’ll go.”

“I said no.” She clutched the purse strap and the stack of scantrons against her chest. They were real. Her life here was what mattered, not the one she left behind almost ten years ago.

“I heard one of the girls who died that December night was your best friend. Which one was it?” His breath brushed against her hair.

“M-Mary, Mary Hart.” Cassie closed her eyes. As if it happened yesterday, winter’s chill nipped at her face. Mary had lost her sandal as they fled the monster. Cassie let loose a small squeak at her memory of her best friend’s whimpers as the creature killed her. She bit her knuckles to keep her emotions in check.

“You know her killer and can help us stop him. Mary needs you.” He produced a piece of paper—an airplane ticket. “Are you coming?”

She looked at the ticket, which would take her to Atlanta and then Roanoke. “You’re a cruel man.”

“I’m a man who gets the job done.” He waved the ticket, his arm brushing against hers. “Do it for Mary.”

She bit her lower lip. Her heart pounded, but she snatched the ticket from his hands. She had to do it. For Mary. “I have some things to settle before I go, but I’ll come.”


In November, we'll have excerpt from the short stories in Women of Foxwick. If you've enjoyed what you've read, consider adding Nightmare Ever After to your Goodreads list here. By the way, I should have Nightmare Ever After published next week, so please check back for purchase links.

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Wednesday's Writing Update: Editing and Gearing up for NaNoWriMo

 

Happy Wednesday! I'm taking a five-day weekend from the full-time job, so I might be a bit slower to respond, so please be patient with me.

 

I've signed up for a couple blogfests in November. The first one is Mina Lobo's Resurrection Blogfest on November 7th. This date also happens to be Insecure Writer's Support Group day, but I managed to combine the two. The goal is to find a post you feel needs some love back from your first year of blogging. You can read more about the blogfest here.

 

The second one is I'm Thankful for my Readers bloghop from November 5-7th. In this one, you give thanks to people who read your work from CPs to beta readers to people who purchase your books. This bloghop is hosted by Vikki and Tara. And isn't that just the cutest blog hop picture?

Thank you, everyone, who has signed up for The Nightmare Collection Blog Tour. I really appreciate it, and I'm now trying to get interviews and guest posts written. It should be a good tour from December 3-7.

On the nightmare front, I am finished editing Nightmare Ever After. I will now use the next few days to proofread it as well as format it. My goal is to upload the formats on Monday October 29th and announce the purchase links on Halloween. There might be a treat for you next Wednesday too. Then, it'll be time to format for the print/ebook versions of The Nightmare Collection for a late November release.

I'm also gearing up for NaNoWriMo. I'm bookworm0753 on the site. This year I'm rewriting my first novel The Phoenix Prophetess, so I've been reading through my pretty crappy first draft. Okay, it's not that crappy, but the rewrite will make it much better and more manageable to edit come next year. I'm taking LOTS of notes, and I'm excited about it but also worried since I have so much other stuff I need to do in November.

On Sunday, I had a major breakthrough with my YA Contemporary novel Starred. I've been trying to edit it, but I only got one scene done. Something was holding me back, and I figured it out. If I can keep up editing a scene a day for the rest of October, then I'll have the first Act done. I'll be on track.

And the plotting for The Loveless Princess is going well.

So what is everyone else up to? Signed up for any blogfests/hops lately?

Friday, October 19, 2012

Friday Excerpt: Nightmare Ever After and Guest Post over at Livia's

 

First, I'm talking about why writers should consider writing flash fiction over at Livia's blog, Leave it to Livia, so please be sure to stop by.

Today's Friday Excerpt comes from Chapter One of Nightmare Ever After. I apologize it's a little on the long side, but it's worth the read. Nightmare Ever After is the sequel to Once Upon a December Nightmare and will be available on October 31st.

(By the way, if you haven't read Once Upon a December Nightmare and don't like spoilers, then you might want to hold off on reading this.)

 

CHAPTER ONE
 
FBI Special Agent Tim O’Conner’s nostrils burned from the pungent reek of death. His fingers twitched to cover his nose, but he wouldn’t dream of looking disturbed by a corpse, especially in front of the local yokels. Off to his right, a green-faced deputy leaned against his truck and barfed into a plastic grocery bag. Tim swallowed hard and breathed shallowly through his mouth.

Sunlight dappled the forest floor and deepened the shadows around the golden pattern. The rustling leaves sounded like raindrops splattering upon a roof. Each footfall sent gravel flying on the forestry road. The odor grew stronger. Tim ran his tongue against his teeth, as if he could rid the rotting death coating it.

Sheriff Jones knelt at the edge of the road. His crisp brown slacks had mud upon the cuffs, but his sheriff’s star gleamed. He held open a manila folder and shuffled through papers.

Tim cleared his throat. He flashed his badge before tucking it into his pants’ pocket. Due to the late May heat, he left his suit jacket in his SUV not far from the deputy’s truck. “You requested a FBI agent? I’m Special Agent O’Conner.”

“Pleased to meet you, O’Conner.” Jones stood, stepped back from the corpse, and offered his hand. The two men shook hands firmly.

Past the sheriff, he could see the edge of a hiking boot. It dangled from a partially gnawed leg. The other shoe was missing from the body’s bare foot. Since no vehicle had been discovered, he assumed the person was a hiker. Tim saw no backpack, so perhaps the person either had lost it or was only out for a couple hours. From his position, he didn’t detect any maggots, but the smell indicated death had to have been at least a few days or more ago. The medical examiner would tell them more.

“Who discovered the body?”

“Forestry service. They radioed us.” The sheriff took off his hat and wiped his forehead with a handkerchief. “They asked if they could give a statement after their rounds. Hope that’s all right with you.”

“I suppose it’ll have to be, won’t it?” His jaw bunched at the lack of protocol, and he continued to peruse the corpse. The mangled flesh suggested quite a few animals had feasted on this poor departed soul. The flies’ humming sent a shiver down Tim’s spine. From the long hair and torn tank top, Tim guessed the hiker was likely female, but even then it was hard to tell.

A few days ago, the news had mentioned a missing hiker. He hadn’t remembered her name, but could this be the same person?

“Any ID?” 

“We’ve been waiting on Patti Smith, the medical examiner down from Roanoke. She should be here shortly.” The sheriff glanced over to the deputy as he puked again. “Mikey, just drive down to the east entrance and look out for Patti. She might get lost up here.”

Tim knew Patti since he’d been assigned to the area three years ago. She was a damn fine medical examiner.

The deputy nodded and fled to his truck.

“Newbie?” Tim motioned to the deputy.

“Nah, Mikey’s a good guy but has a weak stomach.” Jones shrugged.

“Did you alert the State Police?” The FBI had jurisdiction in the Jefferson National Forest, but he wouldn’t be surprised if the State Police would be involved too. The Bureau was trying to get along better with the local and state police. They did know the land better, even if Tim sometimes thought they got in the way too much.

He tiptoed closer to the body, so he wouldn’t disturb the scene. Something shifted along the body’s upper torso. He squinted as he leaned closer.

“I did. Called them right after you.” He motioned to the body. “What do you think?”

“Something’s moving.” Tim scratched his chin. The odor shoved him back, but he kept moving near the corpse.

“Probably bugs.”

Tim removed a pen from his shirt’s pocket and lightly lifted up the neck of the tank top. Worm-like shapes writhed under the body. Then, a fat maggot popped out from the jagged tear along the victim’s throat.

Caw-caw! A crow flew from a tree branch, and Tim jerked upright. His heart thudded in his chest. He had to almost laugh at himself. Maggots were normal. So were birds in the woods. He was almost as bad as the barfing deputy.

“Agent O’Conner?” Sheriff Jones gave him a smug, slightly amused smile.

Great, the sheriff noticed his reaction as well. Tim slipped his pen back in his pocket and took a few steps away from the body. His gaze traveled up the slight incline. No signs of a struggle. The leaves and dirt appeared undisturbed, so he didn’t think she had fallen. A few animal markings dotted the area. 

“It’s possible the hiker could’ve died here. Heart attack, heat stroke, something of that nature. There’s no drag marks.” He circled the body. “Not much blood. Dead before the animals got her, I suppose. The ME will tell us more.”

“So you think this is an accident?” The sheriff clutched his folders closer to his chest.

“Do you think it isn’t?” Tim’s eyebrow arched as he studied the older man.

“Let me show you something.” He offered the FBI agent the first folder. “About nine years ago on June 6, 2003, seventeen-year-old John Faraday and sixteen-year-old Cara Ryder went missing. We discovered his 2003 Ford F-150 along this very road. On June 8th, we finally stumbled across their bodies within a clearing. Beside them, we found deer remains. These kids were murdered, and that’s not all.”

While the sheriff spoke, Tim flipped through the pages. The last picture he came across was the bodies. The ragged neck wounds were eerily similar to the hiker before him. “They weren’t the only ones?”

“Nope.” Sheriff Jones handed him the second folder. “James Canley, Denise Hart, and Mary Hart were discovered in that same clearing on December 29, 2002. According to the parents, they were supposed to have gone to a movie on the 28th, so no one knew why they were found along this road. We suspected murder and had a person of interest, but the investigation took a different turn when Faraday and Ryder were killed six months later.”

Tim flipped through the next set of pictures. An old black truck sat upon the road. Drag marks and blood smeared across snow. There were three bodies. A gaping hole replaced the one girl’s throat. The other two had fared no better. The frigid December temperatures slowed the decay rate, so the corpses were fresher than the one in front of him.

“Who was your person of interest?”

“One Cassandra Richards. She’s the last photo in the file. A car hit her along the main road, and the paramedics took her to Roanoke Memorial Hospital. She had trace evidence from her friends, but her mental state kept her from trial.” The sheriff sighed. “We were certain she did it.”

The agent came to the last photograph. A wide-eyed young woman stared back at him, her eyes as haunted as if she’d lived through a nightmare and had never woken up. “What happened to her? Is she living in the area?”

“After we had realized she wasn’t our killer, she was released from Grayson Mental Sanatorium. She’s not here, though.” Jones cleared his throat. “Let’s just say many folks didn’t welcome her back. Last I heard she taught high school history in Springfield, Missouri.”

“And she was your only suspect?” Tim touched the picture. His heart clenched for the pretty girl. In the distance, a truck engine roared closer. The deputy was probably heading back with the medical examiner. Either that, or Virginia’s State Police had arrived.

“Yes. We had some strange trace DNA and hair on the victims, but it was nothing conclusive.” His chuckle lacked humor. “Young Cassie there told us a hairy monster killed her friends. Can you believe that?”

Normally, Tim would’ve said no, but seeing those eyes, his gut told him to trust her. “And I guess you think the killer’s back. Is that why you brought these folders to a crime scene?”

“You guessed right, Agent O’Conner. The one man from the forestry service recognized the wounds, told me it might be the same killer. We rarely have crime out here, O'Conner. I brought these reports to check it out. You still think it’s an accident?”

After seeing these pictures, Tim wasn’t so quick to label it one way or the other. “We’ll see what Patti says. I suggest we start a perimeter search. If the hiker was murdered, then this isn’t the primary scene. There’s not enough blood or disturbance. If it's not an accident, could this be the work of a copycat?”

“I really don't think it's a copycat. But I agree this isn't the primary scene. My office is willing to help. I know this is the FBI’s call. We have little jurisdiction here.” The sheriff gathered the folders.

“We’ll be glad for the assistance. There’re a lot of woods out here. I’ll call in some backup and see if the Western Lab can speed up their lab work on what we discover.” Tim’s partner Jess Lawson had picked a fine time to go on maternity leave. He could’ve used her help. He removed his cell phone from his pocket and searched for a signal.

Nothing.

“Oh, those phones don’t work out here. You can borrow our radio. Mikey’s back with the ME.” Sheriff Jones nodded to the deputy’s truck, followed behind by the medical examiner’s vehicle and the State Police in their cruiser.

“Thanks, Sheriff.” Tim nodded.

Jones returned the gesture.

Tim glanced at the corpse again before heading to Patti’s vehicle. Even along the forestry road, the sun barely poked through from the dense tree canopy. Such a picturesque place for a terrible crime. If the sheriff was right this man had killed again, then Tim would find the murderer. He knew he would need to speak with the medical examiner as well as the State Police before he could call in a couple more teams, but he needed to talk to one other person. 

Cassandra Richards was the lone survivor. How could they believe she had anything to do with killing her friends? Plus, if this person was murdered and the evidence pointed to the same man who killed those teens back in 2002 and 2003, then she could give them insight on the case. Persuading her to return, though, might be a problem, but Special Agent Tim O’Conner was up to the task.


Next week, I'll have chapter two. If you enjoyed what you read, then consider adding Nightmare Ever After to your Goodreads list here.

Don't forget to visit Livia and my guest post about flash fiction here.