Sunday, 27 February 2011

Sunday Story Into the Daylight | Cat Connor

WARNING: CONTAINS A TERRORBYTE SPOILER.
(This story comes after TERRORBYTE and before EXACERBYTE)

Into the Daylight.
© Cat Connor 2011

Into the Daylight.

Sleep waxed and waned, consciousness drifted from level to level. Exhaustion mixed with more exhaustion.
“I want him back.”
Even though they were audible, I saw the words tumble to the pillow. They lay heaving under the weight of ultimate truth. Green glowing words pulsating with power. I tried picking them up and swallowing them but they wouldn’t let me. I pulled the blanket higher trying in vain to smother them before the emanating light woke NCIS Special Agent Noel Gerrard.
They glowed brighter and brighter, sending neon green waves bouncing off the ceiling and skywriting across the room, I want him back.
Slowly the words dissolved, green trickled from them, streaking in the rain.
Rain?
I ran a hand across my face.
Rain.
There was movement next to me. For a fleeting minute, my heart halted its beating.
“Mac?”
“Noel,” the voice said.
“Oh.”
I rolled onto my back with my hands clasped across my stomach. My eyes closed to stop the rain but it eased out the corners and dripped onto the pillow.
“Talk to me,” he said.
I opened my eyes. When they grew used to the dark, I saw that he was propped up on one elbow watching me.
“I can’t.”
“Tell me,” he insisted.
“We should sleep, it’ll be morning soon and then we’re back on the hunt.”
“It’s not even midnight yet. Plenty of sleep time left in the night. Tell me…,” he insisted.
“No.”
“El, neither of us are going to get any sleep until you start talking,” he said. “I’ve got your back – we’re working close, this is… for the good of the investigation.”
We were working close. So close we were sharing a bed in a crummy motel (because there was only one bed and the couch was more revolting than the crappy bed), while trying to apprehend a fugitive. That may or may not have been involved in the death of the wife of a Naval Commander. The only reason I went along was that the fugitive was also a suspect in the rape case that landed on my desk.
An over lapping case.
But not a turf war.
We can work together like grown-ups and both agencies would prosecute the little prick.
I used my free hand to brush away the tears. It wasn’t rain, the motel was crummy but it didn’t leak.
“There is nothing you need to know. Dead is dead.”
“And yet this is eating at you now…”
I was powerless to stop the water fall of crazy that slipped off my tongue, “Because how can he be dead? I talk to him – I see him.”
Noel took it in his stride. It wasn’t exactly old news. He knew I had some odd Messenger conversations and he caught up quickly. “You’ve had forensics examine your laptops?”
“Yep. They reckon there was nothing on there, no spyware at all.”
“How many times have you talked to him in the last year, El?” Noel flipped the lamp on and sat up. “How many?”
“Ten
“Ten? That’s a lot of nothing going on.”
“I’m not that nuts.” A small smile crossed my lips. “Kurt says I’m cerebrally entertaining.”
Noel laughed, “Sounds about right. I wouldn’t be out here with you if I thought you were nuts? I would’ve cuffed you to your desk and taken Sam or Lee.” He rubbed his face. “We need coffee and you need to finish telling me why you think it is Mac you’re having conversations with.”
“It’s him. We turn the webcam’s on. I’ve heard his voice and I’ve seen him. He’s a little thinner in the face now, but it’s him.”
“Do these appearances coincide with anything in particular?”
“I don’t know.” They coincide with me being stressed and hard cases.
“Yes you do.”
Okay, so I don’t want to say.
I sat up a little, shoving the pillow into a ball behind my back. I’d considered something else.
“It’s possible someone has hacked his account and is using someone very similar to him to shit with me but there is no proof,” I said.
“That would be a fairly elaborate scheme – and take someone with a lot of patience to be carrying it on over the course of a year.”
“It’s been my experience that some people have an endless amount of patience when it comes to torturing others and playing out their crazed evil schemes.”
“That is one of the truths of our world,” Noel replied. He appeared thoughtful for a moment. “Of course it could be something else…”
“That he’s not dead?”
“Let’s not go that far. You knew when he was online,” Noel said quietly. “When he was alive I mean. Like when people know the phone’s going to ring?”
“Yes.”
He smiled.
“I’m not pretending that I know anything about psychic whatever but maybe you two have such a strong connection it can’t be broken. Or maybe there is some kind of residual memory in the laptop.”
“I thought about a ghost in the machine thing too. Which I’d think was possible if it weren’t the third laptop I’ve had in the last six months.”
“Three? What do you do to them?”
I shrugged. “Shit happens.”
“It doesn’t happen to pen and paper, this techno age has drawbacks.”
It was hard not to smile when faced with Noel’s logic. He made a good point.
“True.”
I felt a lump rise in my throat. I knew what was coming and was powerless to stop it. I fought to swallow it but it wasn’t going to let me.
I let the memory emerge. That fateful day when I made the call that changed my life. Ultimately, it was the call that would kill the man I loved.
I couldn’t tell him.
The words wouldn’t come. I wished he could see the movies playing in my head.
I saw Mac sitting at the table with a cup of coffee, laughing at me. I saw him inspecting a gash in my head. I saw him standing in my blood-covered kitchen with pure panic on his face. I saw him drinking coffee and surfing the net at an internet café. Then I saw him talking to Caine and I realized he wasn’t going anywhere. He wasn’t going to leave me because my life got a little messy.
That was the king of all understatements.
He should’ve run as soon as the Son of Shakespeare targeted me.
He should’ve run.
Why didn’t he go when he could?
The lump choked me.
“It’s my fault.”
“No it isn’t.”
“I don’t know where to go from here. I can’t make sense of things without him and I don’t even know who I am.” The words frightened me because they were my truth and I knew it was possible for that truth to overwhelm me. I had a new demon to fight. What if one day I woke up with no memory and walked away without knowing what I’d left behind?
“…If I hadn’t made that call… he wouldn’t have joined the FBI, and he wouldn’t have worked the Butterfly case with me. Therefore, he wouldn’t have been in the back of my car that night at the crime scene.”
Too much time spent wandering in a daze, not understanding how the hell I was supposed to go on, led to finally realizing that I had brought it all on myself.
It swamped me.
Clearly, the last few tumultuous years had taken a toll.
His words brushed the top of my head. “There’s nothing I can say except, we all make our own decisions and we walk our own paths. You didn’t kill him by loving him.”
He whispered them again, “You didn’t kill him by loving him.”
Yes I did. He’s dead.
“It’s time to let him go, El.”
“What if I don’t want him to go…?”
“You need to concentrate on life, on living.”
“What if I fail?”
Failure felt imminent.
He laughed. “You aren’t capable of failing anything and sure as hell not life.”
Shows how much he knew.
A loud noise outside our room caused a swift reaction. I grabbed my Glock from the nightstand. Noel rolled off the bed, Sig in hand and crept to the window.
I slid off the other side of the bed.
“Psst,” I hissed.
“What?” Noel whispered from the edge of the front window. He gently tweaked the cruddy curtain and peered out the small gap he created.
“Who is it?”
“Can only see a back. Staggering. Looks drunk.”
I had two seconds to wonder what a drunk back looked like.
Crash. Glass smashed and sliced the curtains as it fell into the room from the window on the far left side of the door.
“Another male,” Noel said still watching. “Don’t know where he came from but he threw the first guy at the window.”
I fumbled around for my boots and pulled them on. More glass fell. An arm launched in through the broken window. Blood sprayed. Both men were yelling at each other. An undertone in one of their voices sounded slightly recognizable.
Noel flung the door open. “Federal Agent,” he hollered. I moved up on his right, holding my gun with both hands.
One man was holding his dripping arm. The other punched him in the face.
“Stop,” I said aimed at the punchers head.
He lunged at the bleeding man. It off balanced him and bought him closer Noel.
Noel smashed the guy in the side of the head with his elbow. With the attacker on the ground and Noel cuffing him, I turned my attention to the bloodied victim. His face was partially obscured by the hood on his top.
“Hold your arm up and put pressure on that. I have a first aid kit in the room,” I told him.
Noel used his cell and called police and an ambulance while I grabbed the first aid kit. I took a bunch of wound pads, opened them then got the man to hold them on his arm. He looked shaky.
“Sit down,” I said holding his other elbow and helping him to slide down the wall. “Bend ya knee up, then you can rest your elbow and still keep your arm up.” I figured his arm would get tired. I remembered how tired mine got when I’d needed to do the same thing a long time ago.
He nodded; his dark hair inched forward from inside the hood and fell over his face. The way his hair fell sent pangs of remembrance shooting through my heart.
“Do I know you?” I couldn’t get a clear look at him. He was keeping his face out of the light and head down.
He shook his head.
“You don’t talk?”
He shook his head again.
“That’s funny, pretty sure I heard you both yelling at each other earlier.”
He didn’t reply.
Noel was watching. He’d been talking to the man he’d cuffed and had face down on the verandah.
“El, this gentleman thinks your bleeder is a cop who has infiltrated a gang.”
“Local?”
“No.”
The guy face down on the verandah spoke, “He’s a pig.”
“And you know this, with no room for confusion?” I asked.
“Yeah.”
“Awesome, assaulting a police officer will get you no favors.”
A police car pulled into the lot.
“Noel, can you take your man down to the car. I’ll wait here for the ambulance and have a chat with our bleeder.”
I waited until Noel dragged him to his feet and took him away. With them out of ear shot, I spoke to the man, still bleeding.
“He’s gone. Do you have ID?”
He shook his head. Without a free hand, he couldn’t to stop his hood from slipping part way off his head and revealing more of his face. Hazel eyes met mine. I knew those eyes. I was looking at a ghost. He dropped the wound pads, pulled his hood over his head and scrambled to his feet. Blood ran down his hand and dripped off his fingers.
“Hold your arm up,” I cautioned snatching more wound pads and pressing them to his wrist. It was almost impossible to process what I thought I’d seen. Within a split second, I convinced myself it was because of the earlier conversation with Noel. I was somehow projecting my insanity on the guy dripping blood.
“I’ll be okay,” he said slowly and quietly in a voice I’d heard a million times.
I wanted to shake him and demand to know who he really was. His face, eyes and voice all told me he was Mac. Impossible. Was I was face to face with his doppelganger. I took a breath and focused my energy on reality.
“Who do I contact?”
“My handler. Tierney. Jonathon Tierney.”
Well ain’t that just peachy. “Jonathon Tierney. You’re CIA?”
“I’m working a joint task force. An off shore gang is trying to get a foothold in Virginia and the east coast.”
I wrapped my hand around the gaping wound, pressing firmly and holding his arm up.
“This is West Virginia, small town at that. Off shore gang? What are you really doing here?”
“Work,” he replied. “One of the gangs has set up here. Guess it’s just far enough off the beaten track to make it work.”
“You have a name?” Calling him Mac would be ridiculous.
“Chad.”
His eyes smiled. “You?”
I heard an ambulance approaching. It was hard to bite back the urge to tell him he knew my name but instead said, “Ellie.”
I waved at the paramedics.
“I’ll call Tierney. What do I tell him?”
His fingers closed around mine. “Tell him…Socrates…”
Footsteps pounded on the stairs.
“Did you say Socrates?”
Paramedics hurried toward us.
Chad nodded. “Socrates needs extraction.”
My insides froze. A solid block of ice formed where my stomach used to be. Socrates. Mac’s alternate screen name was Socrates.
Someone was fucking with me.
“We’ll take it from here agent,” a paramedic said unwinding my hand from the dressings. “Good job.”
No words formed. I could feel my own blood draining from my head as they moved his hood and shone a flashlight at Chad’s face briefly. He was the splitting image of Mac.
“Pull his other sleeve up,” I said.
Chad shot me a warning glance. A paramedic did, despite the vocal protests from Chad. Each word he said spiraled through my ear canals and felt exactly like they did when Mac spoke them. I recognized a scar.
“Mac.”
His eyes met mine, and his head shook subtly. My heart broke all over again.
“We’ll take him, ma’am.”
Running up the stairs was Noel. Chad pulled his hood back on and sank into a dark pool.
Had it been so long since I’d laid eyes on my husband in the flesh that I saw his likeness in others who bore similar traits or was there something more to the man who looked and sounded like my dead husband. I could see sanity drifting away. Cerebrally entertaining my ass! I was heading down the slippery slope to full blown nuts.
“El?”
I shook my head and watched the paramedics wrap Chad’s arm and help him away.
“Where are you taking him?” I asked.
“City Hospital, Martinsburg. We’re eighteen minutes out,” a paramedic replied.
Chad looked back at me with his familiar warm eyes, “Call Tierney.”
“I will.”
Noel touched my arm. “You need to clean up.”
I looked at my hands. Blood. Blood?
“Cotton swabs,” I muttered grabbing the first aid kit and pawing through it contaminating everything I touched without care. I found a pack and a paper envelope. I swabbed the blood on my hand and sealed the swab into the envelope. On the outside, I wrote my name and the date. The envelope I stored safely in the first aid kit. My intention was to take it to the lab as soon as we were back in Washington.
“What’s that for?”
“DNA.”
“Is he someone?”
I shook my head. This was too nuts even for Noel.
“El?”
“Let’s get out of here.”
Far far away from the ghost and the mess.
I walked back into the room and threw my stuff into my backpack. Noel’s phone rang. He sounded pissed. I pulled my jacket on. My mind wouldn’t shut up. Every inch of me thought I’d come face to face with my dead husband. It didn’t matter that I knew he was dead. That I saw his cold dead body lying in the coffin was of no consequence to my screwed brain. My eyes saw Mac, it must be true. I talk to him on MSN. It must be true. I heard his voice right there in front of me. I saw the scar on his arm. It must be true.
And the kicker, Tierney was involved. CIA. Anything was possible. The mere thought of Tierney catapulted me back in time. I knew him well. I worked for him once too. Secrets never stay secrets.
Noel was still talking. I think he called my name a few times before I heard him.
“El?” When I looked up Noel was right in front of me. His hands were on my shoulders and he was looking into my eyes. “You okay?”
“I’m okay. What’s up?”
“Car accident. Our man is on his way to hospital in critical condition.”
“Convenient.”
“Very.”
“What happened?”
“The police car that left here with the prisoner attempted to stop a car driving erratically. The driver took off, there was a short pursuit.” He smacked his hands together. “Car hits tree.”
“He pursued with a prisoner in the car?” Incredulousness invaded my voice before I could check it. “Where the fuck are we?”
Amusement filled Noel’s reply, “West Virginia, remember.”
I shook my head in wonderment.
“Where we headed?”
“Hospital. I’ll get the team to make the arrest if shit for brains makes it.”
“It’s that bad?”
“Wasn’t wearing a seat belt.”
“Oh.”
He was on the phone again. This time I recognized the tone and the instruction, “Grab your gear.”
His team would be there shortly.
As we walked down to our car, I broached the subject of Chad and Tierney. “The other guy, the bleeder. He is one of us. I have to call someone for him.”
“So the dick was right about him being a cop. Do what you have to do.”
He climbed into the car. I pulled out my phone and made the call from the parking lot.
A number I knew by heart. The wait was almost unbearable. Finally, a woman’s voice answered.
“Shangri La Special Services.”
“I have a bird problem.”
“Can you be more specific?” she replied.
“I keep chickens.”
There was a click and then silence. Two breaths and then another voice.
“Demelza, you have a problem?”
My words felt sticky in my throat. “No, but you do.”
“How can I help you?”
“A message for you. Socrates needs extraction. His cover is blown.”
Without hesitation Jonathon replied, “Can you help him?”
“Would that be wise Jonathon?”
There was a pause. “I think not, forgive me. We will take care of Socrates. Where is he?”
“City Hospital, Martinsburg, West Virginia.”
“I’ll take care of it.” I imagined his beady bird eyes darting across the screen I knew was in front of him, deploying a team to bring Chad in. “Are you well Demelza?”
“As well as can be expected,” I replied and hung up.
I slide into the passenger seat and closed the door. Ironic that Chad turned up outside our motel room.
Noel started the car. “Everything all right?”
“Yeah, let’s go see Randall.”
I hoped he wasn’t pulp because justice needed to be served. There was a part of me that considered that if he was pulp, it had been served. Maybe.
Mac’s voice resounded in my head, “Maybe’s ass.”
How can his dead voice be in my head and be identical to the voice I’d heard from Chad or Socrates or whoever the hell he really was. I knew enough to know it wasn’t either name he’d told me.
Fifteen minutes later, we had parked and were standing in the emergency room. Noel waited to hear back from a doctor regarding the status of Randall. I saw the paramedics that picked up Chad.
I stopped one and asked after Chad.
“He’s in surgery.”
“Any idea how long that will take?”
The paramedic shook his head. His partner mumbled and they both headed off into the night. I looked around for a nurse and found one.
With a flash of my badge, I asked about the patient, describing him but not using his name. I had no clue what name he’d told the paramedics or hospital.
“Let me check for you ma’am.” She tapped a few computer keys. “That patient is John Smith.”
I guess that’s a step up from John Doe. I had my notebook in my hand and jotted down his name, such as it was.
“Got a birthday there? We need it for our records.”
“September 26, 1969.”
The pen fell from my hand, clattering onto the floor and rolling away. I watched. It rolled to Noel’s booted foot. He picked it up and brought it back to me.
With a grin he said, “Butter fingers.”
I tried to smile back but my face didn’t move.
“El?”
The nurse looked at me. “Ma’am are you all right?”
Come on voice.
“I’m okay. Thanks.”
Noel grabbed my arm just above the elbow and steered me to a quiet corner.
“What?”
I went for broke on the insanity plea and voiced the crazy thoughts, “The guy with the cut wrist. He’s using the name John Smith and his birth date is the same as Mac’s.”
“A lot of people share birthdates El.”
“Not a lot have the exact same scar on their forearm, the same eyes, the same voice, the same height.” Despite trying to control my internal panic, I could hear it in my own voice.
“El. Mac is dead.”
“Then who the fuck is John Smith?” I whispered.
“Didn’t you call someone? Can they tell you?”
“I’m confessing to you that I have obviously lost the plot. Let’s spread it around.”
He smiled. “You got blood. We’ll get it to the lab. Meanwhile, go see what else the hospital has on him and let’s get a picture and prints.”
“Am I insane?”
“No more than usual, El. No more than usual.”
“Good to know.”
“I only met Mac briefly. I’m no help here at all.”



Noel leaned against the wall outside the hospital. It was still dark and cool. I couldn’t imagine how he thought I was sane after the things I’d told him. It surprised the hell out of me that he hadn’t called Caine and suggested an immediate psychiatric evaluation. At that point, it occurred to me that he may have. I wouldn’t know until the men in white coats showed up.
And with that, I was shuffled sideways into a Men In Black scene. The theme song filled me to the point I was singing along. We all know I can’t sing. It wasn’t going to go well for anyone who valued their hearing.
“El, Men In black?” Noel blew out a long sigh. “Really?”
“Sorry.”
“You okay?”
“Sure, my dead husband is having surgery on his wrist and I thought his ashes were buried in Fairfax.”
“They are. There is no way that guy is Mac. Ya think someone might have noticed he’d come back to life?”
“Ya’d think. Doctors, nurses, someone in the morgue.”
“Come here,” he said holding out his hand and indicating for me to move closer. “We’ll find out what’s going on here that much I can promise you.”
I nodded. “It’s the uncanny resemblance that’s screwing my head up here.”
“They say we all have doppelgangers.”
“I know. I’ve just never met one before.”
I stopped and stared up at the stars. A helicopter circled the building then disappeared from sight. By the noise, I’d say it landed on the roof. Someone’s night ended badly and required an airlift.
Suddenly I was tired, exhausted, and empty. My life is so normal it should be a Days of Our Lives episode. I was sure I should be clutching the back of a settee dramatically looking into space while wearing four inch heels and a designer gown. Any minute the camera would pan out then fade to another scene with some seriously handsome man looking desperately worried and staring into the flames in a fireplace of some alpine ski lodge.
Sometimes it sucked to have my imagination. This was one of those times. Noel was watching me with way too much interest. For a second I could’ve believed he’d never seen Days of our lives. But he looked too much like the guy in front of the fire.
A nurse emerged from within the hospital. She looked over at us and beckoned.
“We have an update on Randall,” she said holding the door open for us. I read her name badge. Tamsin.
“Thank you Tamsin,” I said.
She smiled. “The doctor is waiting for you – down the hall second on your left.”
Noel nodded.
Moments later, we were told Randall died from his injuries.
Closure of sorts. For my case, there was a certain amount of relief. The victim would no longer be required to go through the third degree in a court room. We had his DNA on file. We knew he did the rape, but legally it was ‘alleged’ until proven guilty in a court of law. As far as I was concerned, he was a dead rapist. Seemed to me that it was the best possible outcome.
Down the hallway, the dark night waited. From the darkness, I heard the unmistakable thump of helicopter rotors.
Tamsin waved us down as we headed to the door.
“Ma’am, I have some news regarding the other man you were asking about, John Smith?”
“That’s him.”
“He was airlifted to another hospital.”
“I didn’t know his arm injury was that severe?”
“Special circumstances ma’am. They’ve transferred him to another hospital.”
“Do you know where?”
“No ma’am only the pilot would know that.” She dropped her voice to a whisper, “All his records were taken too and his treatment paid for in cash.”
I nodded.
Gone.
Once the blood sample was processed by our lab, I would know more. It seemed so simple. Take the blood to the lab. Reality was different. It could be months before I got an answer. Being nosy isn’t a priority. Blood sample with no case number meant I would have to wait until there was nothing else in the queue. Good luck ever getting an answer from the blood.
There was no point hanging around. Randall was dead and Smith was gone.
“Home,” I said as Noel held the door open.
“Yeah, I’ll send my team back – they should be half way here by now.” He pulled out his cell phone and made a call.
An hour later, everything was packed and in the car. Our short stay at the miserable motel was over. I paid for the broken window, it just seemed easier than the owner trying to squeeze cash out of the deadbeat we’d had arrested.
Dawn broke with slow deliberation.
In silence, we headed into the daylight.





The End.







Cat Connor author of The _Byte Series.
Cat’s blog: http://catconnor.blogspot.com/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Cat-Connor/76140493745
Twitter: http://twitter.com/catconnor
REBEL E PUBLISHERS: http://www.rebelepublishers.com/
Amazon author page: http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B002DP3JCQ
KILLERBYTE : http://catconnor.blogspot.com/p/killerbyte_27.html
TERRORBYTE: http://catconnor.blogspot.com/p/terrorbyte.html
EXACERBYTE: http://catconnor.blogspot.com/p/exacerbyte.html



This is a work of fiction.
All characters in this publication are fictitious
and any resemblance to real persons,
living or dead, is purely coincidental.
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2011 Cat Connor

Saturday, 26 February 2011

Rivers of London | Ben Aaronovitch

Rivers of London
by Ben Aaronovitch
Pub: Gollancz
Hardcover out now

It was always going to be a challenge making an impact with a London based Urban Fantasy. There are some very solid series already and Aaronovitch is pitching himself in with fans of series like Mike Carey's fantastic 'Felix Castor' books and Kate Griffins novels. It was then with a blend of excitement and trepidation I returned to London through this well hyped novel.

Peter Grant is a police constable about to get his first proper placement when he finds himself taking an eyewitness statement from a ghost. Soon instead of just being a new policeman Peter is an apprentice wizard in a tiny and mysterious police department that exists through an ancient agreement. Trying to untangle a strange series of murders and prevent all out war between the followers of the various Thames deities leads Peter through an intricate and well thought out plot.

This is a quirky book, personified gods and dead actors give a slightly classical air to a modern story and Peter and the main supporting characters are well set up, though development is light through this novel. Of course the joy of a series is that you can take your time developing the individuals and focus each book on plot and action, which Rivers definitely delivers on.

It's a good set up and a nice change that the main protagonist is actually police rather than working with or running up against them, the internal world logic seems good and there are some fresh elements to the book. It's a very easy read, the pacing pulls you through quickly and there is a charmingly uncynical humour. I think Aaronovitch has ably lived up to the challenge of London based UF and this has plenty of potential as a series.

Friday, 25 February 2011

The Blade Itself - Joe Abercrombie

The Blade Itself
By: Joe Abercrombie
Pub: Gollancz
515 Pages.



This stands as a somewhat belated review in a number of ways. Firstly in simply being the first for a while, so apologies for the hiatus. Secondly the book I’m reviewing has been kicking about for quite some time itself. My interest in Joe Abercrombie sparked by wanting to read his latest two books and my slightly OCD habits meaning reading things in order. So without further ado, on with the review.
Bethod, self-appointed King of the North, a man who built his throne on the blood of his enemies, has set his designs on further conquest. To his southern border lies the Union, a land Bethod wants to rule as his own.
Logen Ninefingers, Bethod’s former champion, has gone his own way, and separated from his small band of warriors during a skirmish, throws his lot in with Bayaz, The First of the Magi, who has is own plans for the Union, and opposes Bethod.
Within the Union itself a quiet war is already being fought, as the great and the good of the kingdom wrestle for power. Inquisitor Glokta, former war hero, left crippled by his capture and torture at the hands of the Union’s enemies, finds himself a pawn in the power plays of his master and fights to stay one limping step ahead of a messy death.
Jezal dan Luthar, wishes for power without seeing the strings twitching behind the scenes. A Captain in the Union army Luthar’s ambitions rest on triumph in the Union’s annual fencing competition.
The book’s narrative leaps between these key characters, as well as others, as Joe Abercrombie sets the stage for the books to follow. I realize that doesn’t talk the book up and it’s not noticeably when reading as such, it’s just the book ends at the start of much bigger things. It is more than just a prologue however.

The characters highlighted are the most engaging, Logen chief amongst them, and while both Jexal and Glokta are somewhat dickish and abhorrent by turns when viewed away from the book, though once inside their heads (very much so in Glokta’s case) they both draw the reader in.
The prose and dialogue give the book a harder edge than some fantasy (although fall short of the bone crunching nastiness of Richard Morgan’s The Steel Remains). It is the fight sequences that stand out, with participants being neither elegant or certain of success, and succeeding in part through sheer luck at times.
Despite my point regarding setting the stage there is surprisingly little world building within the book, and what there is of it is undertaken with subtly. Instead the main focus is on the characters and their situations and problems.

I can’t wait to work my way through the rest of the series, hopefully the ground work and promise here will be built on to good effect.

Wednesday, 23 February 2011

Writer Wednesday | Steven Savile #2

The Business of the Modern Writer
Or The Mid-lister’s Dilemma for the Digital Age

In the main the life of a full-time writer isn’t a lot of fun, to be honest. It isn’t
glamorous. We’re not all on our yachts in the Bahamas supping champagne from
the bellybuttons of Bond Girls. In fact, I can’t remember the last time I supped
champers from the belly of a Bond girl… oh, wait, I can… never.

Here’s the thing, the dirty truth – it’s a lot of hard work and scrabbling about.
You need a million skills outside writing and you are basically the only one who
truly cares about your career, so you are chasing money, hunting the accounts
department’s who are curiously delinquent on sending out royalty statements
on time (especially overseas), and if you are like me you are juggling projects to
make ends meet.

But I suspect Bob Dylan was right, and the times they are a-changing. Again.

Writing has been my only source of income since 2005, when deep in the throes
of depression I walked out on a comfortable and relatively well-paid job as a
college teacher and into the arms of uncertainty. That’s the best word to describe
life as a writer, I think. Since 2005 I’ve been one of the lucky ones. I might not
have torn up the bestsellers lists or been a name on everyone’s lips, but I kept
the mortgage paid and food on the table by taking any and every job available,
including scripting the storyline for the new Electronic Arts game Bad Company
3, writing dialogue for a kid’s online game, Spineworld, ghostwriting a few
books, including a celebrity tell-all, writing tie-in novels for Slainé and
Warhammer and Stargate and Primeval, stuff for Torchwood and Doctor Who,
work where more often than not it is the franchise name people identify with,
not the writer. I’d write, on average, 750-800,000 words of published work a
year. An average novel runs 100-120,000 words. You can do the maths. In that
time I also managed to write three novels no-one in the world has been able to
see (apart from my host here, who had the dubious honour of first-reading one),
Hallowed Ground, a weird western novel, think King's Gunslinger meets HBO's
Carnivale. Angels, demons, characters from mythology - very Neil Gaiman/Clive
Barkerish without actually being either, and therefore utterly unclassifiable in
terms of market differentiate and selling in a traditional bookstore. This was
finished over two years ago. Then there’s London Macabre, which has been out
with publishers for a year this month. By far and away the most ambitious thing I
have ever tackled, I risked 9 months of no income to put heart-and-soul into this
massive novel of fabulist Victoriana that isn’t steampunk in the slightest, but is
actually more like the bastard child of Philip Pullman and Gaiman’s American
Gods – actually it’s not true that no-one has seen this, it comes out in Poland in
about 14 days, via Copernicus Corporation, who bought it within 2 days of it
landing on their desk, falling head-over-heels in love with the mad world of the
Greyfriar’s Gentlemen – and of course, Gold, the sequel to my debut thriller,

Silver (more of a continuation than a sequel to be completely honest). Now Gold
is due to hit the shelves some time around October 2011 but I am expecting it to
be January 2012.

What that means is approximately 15 months worth of work has generated
zero income thus far (not counting Gold, which obviously was bought for a nice
advance right around the completion of Silver).

The last time I had 15 months of writing that didn’t earn anything was in
1991-3 when I first started writing seriously. I wrote 3 novels that I couldn’t
sell, The Last Angel, The Sufferer’s Song and Laughing Boy’s Shadow. If you are
vaguely familiar with my stuff you’ll know that The Last Angel finally came out
in 2001 (then titled The Secret Life of Colors) through an American small press,
DarkTales. I was paid 200 bucks for it. They printed and sold out all 250 copies
in a few weeks. Laughing Boy’s Shadow was published in Sweden as Skrattande
Pojkens Skugga in 2003 and then in the US by HorrorWorld in a gorgeous limited
edition hardcover and trade paperback that might well be the most beautiful
single edition of anything I’ve ever written – but before that I committed the
mortal sin of self-publishing the original in 2002, via Dark Fantastique, which
was the name of my website. I printed 225 copies and sold out in about 12 days,
breaking even. The Sufferer’s Song was the only one I never managed to sell. Well,
that’s not technically true, I sold it 4 times to small presses that never actually
managed to stay in business long enough to put out a 160,000 horror novel. I
actually released the first 50,000 words of it via e-serial to a yahoo newsgroup
in 2001, but illness, divorce and all sorts of other problems stopped me from
running the serial to its end.

Actually The Sufferer’s Song wasn’t my only foray into electronic publishing. Lou
Anders, the editor at Pyr, used to run a wonder website right around 2001 where
readers could log in, read anything for free and the writer’s would be paid based
upon time spent in total reading their book (from advertising revenue). When
the site went bust The Last Angel was #1 in the crime section, holding off James
Patterson and a few other big names. Unfortunately the money never came so
the book didn’t earn any more than that basic 250 bucks.

What that means is these manuscripts were good enough to tempt people to
invest in them, but for almost 20 years were pretty much dead to me.

That is a frightening thought given how I spent my life month-to-month
scrabbling for the mortgage money.

The thing is, for me, it’s always been about the words, not the packaging.

So, on February 1st 2011 I decided it was time to try a little experiment – namely
I launched Bad Press, my own digital imprint of my back catalogue. It’s nothing
fancy, a few ebooks, including my novellas Houdini’s Last Illusion and The Hollow
Earth and other Stories, a mini-collection of short stories, Gods and Monsters, and

a new supernatural series I’m working on with fellow Brit Steve Lockley, Of Time
and Dust and Missing with the third installment, Deadlines, to follow soon.

My thought was price low, 99c/71p for the novellas/collections (from which I’ll
earn a huge 35c a sale with Amazon getting the 65% lion’s share). Then take the
old novels, price them at 2.99 (where the royalty is two dollars, as it comes in at
the 70% price point Amazon want indie writers to sell at).

I’m not sure what expectations I had – I mean, I am well aware that Joe Konrath
has gone indie and Amanda Hocking is tearing the printed world a new arsehole
with her 450,000 sales in January… the numbers never lie, right? My hope
though was that by June-July I could have a small ‘cottage industry’ in place
running my back catalogue. I’m setting very low targets, to be honest. I’ve been
quite calculated about it. I’ve looked at what my expenses are, and just how
vast my back catalogue of original stuff doing nothing for me is, and worked out
that I need to run 15 e-projects moving 100 copies a month priced at 99c. The
income from that means that I won’t have to chase tie-in work, or ghostwriting
and can concentrate on my own original material. Of course my brain still thinks,
ahh, self-publishing=stigma, but there’s something a little exciting about the
notion of taking control of your career in a way that up until very recently just
wasn’t possible. Last month I mentioned Here Comes Your Man by Derek Gentry
as being one of my books of 2010. Gentry self-published that novel under the
Hysterical Press imprint he set up because he’d had a terrible time trying to sell
it to a traditional publisher. I had no idea it was self-published, and obviously
loved it to bits. There’s a seismic shift going on here.

Barry Eisler, a very well known and respected NYT Bestseller has just taken the
dip, releasing an original story straight to the kindle, The Lost Coast. I’ve been
thinking for a long time that Eisler would be one of the first established names
to make the jump – he’s more important to the acceptability of the kindle than
Konrath is, because Konrath was a midlister, making a living out of his words,
but Eisler’s the next step up the evolutionary writer’s chain. Above him it’s the
likes of Lee Child, James Pattersson etc, and the day JP realizes he can circumvent
the publishers and go direct bring 70% (or more as he’d be a major coup for
Amazon) of the income, earning more per book and being totally in control of
his on JP Library you can bet NYC’s publishing halls (hallowed or not) will be
terrified because the tremors from that kind of sales heavyweight going direct
will measure 9 on the Richter Scale. Now it may not be JP, savvy businessman
as he is, because technology can simply be a ‘younger man’s game’ but there’s a
heavyweight out there who will make the leap. There’s something of a revolution
going on.

So, back to Bad Press. Why that price point? It’s the risk factor – if you’ve never
heard of me, but see decent reviews you’re likely to think meh, it’s not even a
buck (or 70p if you’re back home in Blighty), and what can you buy with that?
The logic is up to 30,000 words, 99c, over 30,000 words and into proper ‘novel

territory’ 2.99 for that higher royalty meaning 17 sales at that price point, or 100
at the lower one of 99c.

Let those numbers sink in for a moment – I’ve got 3 back catalogue novels that
need to sell 17 copies a month alongside 12 back catalogue mini-collections of
short stories or novellas that need to sell 100 over the same time period to pay
my mortgage and living expenses. That’s an average of 1 sale of each novel every
two days, and 3 sales of each short story a day. There are over 4,000,000 kindle
users out there right now, and growing each day…

How effective is your marketing as a writer? Can you reach 3 new people a
day? With tools like Facebook, Twitter, and other social media, never mind
your personal blogs etc, I think you can – remember the best advert for you
book would be your OTHER books, so if you have 15 out there, and they’re
all decent fun reads worth the 99c price tag you’re likely to get some repeat
business – and the more you sell, the more you will sell because you’ll start
featuring in those ‘People who bought X also bought’ features linked to all sorts
of similar titles. Think of it as a spike – you sell one hundred, you’re linked to
100 people’s previous purchases, you sell 100 a month, you’re linked to 1200
people’s previous purchases by the end of the year, sharpening that spike. With
15 projects you are potentially linked to the previous purchases of 18,000 people
and that’s without any exponential increase in actual sales. That will bring
increased visibility much as word-of-mouth and blogs drive traffic. It’s almost
like co-op space in bookstores, being featured on the front table beside other
books you think shoppers will like, only it’s free – and that’s where the impulse
price of 99c scores because people will take that risk on a new guy when it’s less
than a can of coke. At least that’s the theory I’m working on.

Of course you still need to have faith in your product.

So, with all those numbers in mind, how goes the great experiment 22 days
in? I’ve already earned my mortgage (for 60 days from now, when Amazon
start paying out) for April, meaning my back catalogue, previously dead to me
remember, has bought me one month’s grace to work on Glass Town, the new
original fantasy novel, and we’re not out of the month yet. I’ve yet to upload
more than half of the projects I’d been intending to this month, meaning, again,
that the potential is there for greater gains…

So what’s the dilemma, you ask (if you made it this far down)?

Those two novels that I mentioned before, the ones that have yet to find a
traditional home… one of them has sat on the desk of a major NYC house for
almost two years now, not being rejected because they don’t want to potentially
lose it, I suspect, and not being accepted because they don’t know how to sell it…
the other has just celebrated it’s 12 months since the words THE END appeared
on the last page… at what point in this new world does a midlister like me decide
that the 2 years or more from typing THE END to seeing the first copy hit the

street (if you’re lucky and get the right team behind it) is too long with the words
not working for them?

I know my heart is competing with my brain these days – logically I love the idea
of controlling all aspects of my own career, being a business man as well as a
writer, but I am still completely in love with what the new breed are calling Dead
Tree Books (a phrase I find incredibly insulting, to be honest), and I’m part of the
game – I know that when I finish Glass Town I’ll send it to the agent and it will go
out and become part of the waiting game…

But I think the days of waiting two years for someone in NYC to do their job are
running out. I imagine they’re somewhere between curious and terrified, and
can’t imagine what happened to music happening to books. I had one editor
(who I love and think is an awesome woman, very savvy, switched on) ask if
I hadn’t thought about releasing London Macabre direct to the kindle already
where it could find it’s audience and become a cult book… that was in September
and it shocked the hell out of me. I dismissed the idea out of hand. Six months on
and the simple truth is that book could have been earning already, buying the
time for me to write another original novel… but for every writer like me (who’s
still attached to the old ways) there are a dozen breaking through who couldn’t
give a damn about walking into WHSmiths and thinking, I did that, that was me…
and instead they refuse to wait, to play the game, and are taking control of their

Those three novels I wrote in that fallow period back in 1991-3, they have
earned more in the last 3 months than in the 17 years they’ve been ‘alive’ and
unlike before, when shelf space was limited and after 3 months your book
was dead, they’re still there, and just as likely to earn more over the course of
2011, meaning, for once, this midlister’s back catalogue is working for him, and
working so well it’s actually paying for the time to write brand new original
fiction… it really is a different world from the one I set foot in back on that fateful
day when I wrote the line ‘It was another day in hell…’ and started my first ever
novel.

It doesn’t feel like hell anymore.

Steven Savile

Just to make it easy for you Steve’s ebook versions of Houdini’s Last Illusion and
The Hollow Earth are available here for dirt cheap… next-to-nothing… go on, you
know you want to. Click here: Hollow Earth (http://www.amazon.com/Hollow-
Stories-Greyfriars-Gentlemans-ebook/dp/B004LROTP0/ref=ntt_at_ep_dpi_2)
Houdini’s Last Illusion: http://www.amazon.com/Houdinis-Last-Illusion-ebook/
dp/B004LLIX4Y/ref=ntt_at_ep_dpi_11)

Sunday, 20 February 2011

Sunday Stories If Tomorrow Never Comes | Cat Connor

WARNING: CONTAINS TERRORBYTE SPOILERS.
(This story comes after TERRORBYTE and before EXACERBYTE)

If tomorrow never comes.
© Cat Connor 2010

The stereo lights flickered and music filled the room. I closed my eyes as Garth Brooks sang. It took me a moment but I recognized the song. ‘If Tomorrow Never Comes.’
Mac used to love Garth Brooks. I listened for a little bit but the lyrics broke my heart all over again. Sometimes tomorrow never comes. I turned the stereo off and sat in silence. It wasn’t long before my own thoughts created a commotion.
Words rolled around in my mind. They’d been taunting me for over a year, the poem became muddled and disjointed. I wasn’t even sure if it was the beginning and I didn’t want to open our poetry book to check.
I whispered, “When the world has done, lost in time too tired to run, a safe place came to be…”
My engagement ring slipped on my finger. I straightened it, pausing as the princess cut diamond sparkled in candle light. It still captivated me, even now that our life together is nothing but memories stolen by the night. Time sliding dividing light, jumbled thoughts trapped inside, who I was suddenly died.
I remembered the day he pushed the ring onto my finger. A smile reflected back at me from the television screen.
My smile.
Candles flickered; my ring sent tiny pools of iridescent light across the ceiling. They almost looked like butterflies. I poured another glass of wine.
A voice I knew too well and missed too much spoke, “Wine? We out of bourbon?”
Words fell from my mouth as my eyes searched the room, “Bourbon holds too many memories.”
“How about tequila? You always loved te-kill-ya.” His voice flowed warm and smooth, like he was right there.
Feeling his words surround me I shook my head. “Mac…” Again, my eyes flicked around the room but I never moved.
Seemed I was always looking for a ghost and he was always finding me. A faded reality trapped in my head.
I looked down to find the TV remote in my hand, my fingers pressed buttons and the screen changed. Flashing pictures on the screen. Jingle bells flooded from the set of a cheesy sitcom Christmas party.
Christmas party.
Shit!
I jumped to my feet knocking the coffee table and spilling wine on the rug. I hurried to the kitchen and grabbed a fist full of paper towel. Moments later the rug was dry and the paper towels sodden. I tossed them in the trash. The house would smell like a winery later.
My keys and cell phone were on the kitchen counter, I took them. I blew out the candles in the living room and switched off the television plunging the room into darkness. No more glittering lights to play upon the ceiling as I moved my hand. Darkness folding images like cloth. Out in the hallway I put on a long woolen coat and hat, then wrapped a scarf around my neck and tugged on soft purple leather gloves. The threat of snow hung heavy in the air when I arrived home an hour earlier. I didn’t expect it to have changed much between then and now. Unsure reality dripping through a dream.
On the way into the city, I tried to raise some Christmas cheer. It wasn’t a happening thing. I found an unexpected car park right outside the venue and even that didn’t change things. I knew I’d have to fake it. So fake it I would. At least I didn’t have to walk miles in the freezing air. Snowflakes drifted down and stuck to the windshield.
Happy fuc’n Christmas.
Cassie was waiting by the door. She smiled warmly and hooked her arm through mine.
“It’s starting to snow. Come on, the kids are waiting,” she said squeezing my arm.
“How’d you know I’d come?”
“You wouldn’t miss this.” She looked quite smug when she added, “Carla is waiting for you.”
And suddenly the fake smile was replaced by the real thing. So I wouldn’t miss it on purpose for Carla’s sake. Touching a heart giving hope.
“Did Sam and Lee make it?”
“You think they’d miss the Butterfly Christmas party? Are you mad?”
Free food and kid’s games.
“Nope.”
And maybe yes, yes I am mad. Stark raving bonkers. Silver and gold butterflies hung from tinsel, high up on the ceiling. I didn’t know if the butterflies were real or imagined. The room sparkled. A deep breath revealed an undertone of teen spirit with top notes of Christmas. Pine trees and eggnog.
The noise level within the conference room settled at dull roar. One end of the room boasted an enormous Christmas tree. It took up the entire corner of the stage.
“Stage?” I questioned Cassie.
“We thought a stage would be a fitting platform for that huge tree, and make it easier for the talent to perform.”
“Talent?”
Now we have talent. A neon flashing light went off in my mind and Mac floated just out of reach waving his arms yelling, “Warning, warning.”
Cassie laughed.
Lost in Space? Oh no, not Lost in Space. Oh, crap. Talent. Stage. Mac warning me. This is not boding well for a pleasant evening with friends, family and kids.
“No. Not me. No way.” I looked over my shoulder for an exit. No exit just Sam and Lee closing in fast. Long legs, long strides. I had nowhere to go. Sam’s smile shone. Panic set in. A hand clamped down on my shoulder and another gripped my other shoulder. Cassie released my arm.
“Traitor,” I hissed as she moved toward the stage.
“Chicky Babe,” Sam crooned. “Looks like the kids want to hear some poetry.”
“Uh huh,” I replied. That ain’t gonna happen.
“Come on Ellie, Cassie wants you up there,” Lee said steering me by the shoulder. “You’re up, you’ll be great.”
The three of them laughed as I grew nearer to the stage and the horror. Cassie scooted ahead. I watched her climb the steps.
There was a parting of the sea. Children lined the way, clapping, laughing, and being kids. I felt sick.
Cassie was talking into the microphone. Words became airborne; they flew on little silver tinsel wings all over the room. A few dive bombed me. I ducked involuntarily. Sam’s hand gripped my shoulder a little tighter. He leaned in and whispered in my ear, “You all right?”
“I’m okay,” I replied wishing it were so. If I wished hard, there could be a Christmas miracle and I might not make a complete dick of myself on the stage. Then it dawned on me. They were taking the mickey. There was no way my friends would let me spout dark morbid poetry at innocent kids. I relaxed just a little but I still had to venture onto that terrifying stage.
The crazy enthusiastic clapping was punctuated by squealing. I turned and there was Carla Torres, squealing with joy along with the other hundred and fifty or so young people in the room. She waved frantically at me. I waved back. My eyes scanned the area beyond the seething mass in my wake. Obviously, someone cool just walked in. I expected to see Rowan Grange, Lorenza Ponce or maybe even Jon Bon Jovi. No one was behind me just Lee and Sam.
Man kids are excitable.
The clapping continued as I climbed up to the stage.
There I stood – dwarfed by a giant tree (I’m not short) and in front of a microphone. Behind me was an impressive drum kit. There were also guitars and other equipment, mostly hidden by the tree. I guessed there was a surprise in store for the kids. The real talent. My mouth was dry. Sand dry. I imagined trying to speak and the sand falling from my mouth all over the stage. The sand become glitter sprinkling magic.
An older deeper male voice spoke and came closer. Then another joined in. Mac’s father and mine materialized from the tree and introduced me to the kids.
There was no escape. Instead of Lee and Sam, I had the fathers flanking me. With no clue if my voice would be heard through the sparkling sand, I spoke into the microphone. A little voice inside told me I could do this.
Do it for the kids. Show no fear.
Part of me couldn’t believe we’d come this far. The kids who looked up at me from the floor had better lives because of a vision Mac and I had. Mixed emotions confusion reigns. Holding love in shaking hands.
A golden butterfly tumbled from above and landed on the microphone. I wanted Mac. I wanted him to know that I’d never missed anyone the way I missed him. The butterfly whispered, “I miss you too.” I wrapped my heart around his words and cradled the fragile sound. They held strength and I needed to capture every ounce.
I waved to Carla and took a breath before injecting as much joy into my voice as I could. “Thank y’all for coming down here tonight. I’m truly delighted to see so many of your smiling faces.”
You could’ve heard a pin drop. Such focus. And all of it on me. I swallowed hard and pushed the panic aside.
“I’m happy I could be here. I can see some familiar faces out there, are y’all looking forward to Christmas?” A cheer went up. “I guess that’s a big fat yes! When I came in, it’d just started snowing…” Noise reverberated off the walls around me as they all yelled some more. I held up a hand, silence fell. “I’m going to turn this here microphone over to my Dad. I think he has a few things to say to y’all.” I stepped aside as Dad took my place. He took the microphone and walked to the edge of the stage with it in his hand. Dad spoke to the kids about the Butterfly Foundation and our goal for the coming year. I stood with Mac’s father. We watched the kids respond to my dad and the joy in their faces as he wished them all a merry Christmas. From the back of the room, I heard bells. The kids turned. Double doors opened and Santa waddled through dragging an enormous sack.
Dad put the microphone back in the stand as Cassie whispered in my ear. “We have a surprise for the kids. Every one of them is getting a gift.”
Mac’s Dad grinned. “We’re not talking girl or boy age-12 type gifts here Ellie.”
Santa dragged his humongous sack ever closer, chatting to kids as he made his way to the stage.
Cassie continued, “We went through every one of the online profiles and we shopped for each and every kid.”
So that was what the family had been doing while I was hiding from the world and burying myself in work. A lid banged shut. Dust rose. The picture in front of me was that of a coffin wearing a badge.
“That’s impressive,” I replied, blinking to clear the dust and remove the image of death. Santa reached the bottom step. I went to help him with the sack. Under the bushy white beard, I detected a facial twitch. “Caine?”
“No, it’s Saint Nick. Who’d you think?” he growled.
“A night of surprises. I hope someone has a camera.”
He grumbled under his breath and twitched so hard the beard jumped. A large padded chair appeared on the stage. Caine settled in it. The microphone was adjusted and moved closer. From his bag, he pulled a scroll and unrolled about ten inches. A smaller chair was placed on the other side of him. I figured that was for the kids. We don’t do the sit-on-the-fat-man-in-reds knee thing. It’s just wrong. The whole Santa thing irked me. Here we spend years teaching kids not to accept things from strangers… but an old fat man who says ‘ho ho ho’ is okay? I put my feelings regarding Christmas aside.
This Santa was my SAC not some semi-toasted mall Santa or some sick bastard who had a Santa fetish.
Sam and Lee appeared in the wings, they carried a large sack each. The sacks were placed beside Caine. I really hoped there was some kind of order to this, reading out a hundred and fifty names and finding the matching gift was going to take all night.
Cassie pulled my arm gently. “Come on.”
I was happy to escape the stage. Caine began calling out names. Lee and Sam, and both fathers had the job of finding the gifts. I’d escaped without having to spout poetry. Thank God! The only Christmas poem I knew by heart was one I wrote years ago and it really wasn’t for children.


Angels on the Christmas tree.

Christmas time is here again
Pick up the knife and count to ten
There’s no light in my eyes,
Hold the knife until the pain subsides
Sparkling lights and twinkling stars
Tinsel, streamers, and emotional scars
All mix and mingle on Christmas day
The angels of death watch me play
Christmas time is here again
Pick up the knife and count to ten
Candy canes and mirrored balls
Blood drips down the painted walls
Santa Claus and reindeer shit
Elves, toys, and their little bits
Gather around the Yuletide log
I wish that I had become a frog
Christmas time is hear again
Pick up the knife and count to ten
Popcorn threaded on pieces of string
Stabbing people is my thing.


I looked at my hand. No knife.
Cassie noticed. “Problem?”
“Nope.”
“Good, figured you and I could have a drink while the men folk do the Santa/gift thing.” She led the way through a door into a smaller room with a bar that housed decidedly adult beverages. “Eggnog?”
“If it’s not the non-alcoholic one you have out there for the kids.” I nodded my head to the outer room. I could hear Caine’s gruff voice call out the first name.
“Pretty sure this stuff is made with Irish whiskey.”
“Then, yes please!”
I perched on a stool and took the offered cup.
“Merry Christmas,” Cassie said taking a sip.
I followed suit. It was hard to remember a time when I actually meant those words. All was quiet where we were, apart from the occasional squeal of delight as gifts were received and the wrapping subsequently torn to pieces. Sounds of life that filtered through the wall.
“The kids are having fun,” she commented.
“That is the point.” I took another hefty swig of eggnog. “How’d you get Caine to do the Santa thing?”
“That wasn’t me, he volunteered.”
Ah, there we have it, the Christmas miracle.
“Christmas makes people do weird things,” I replied.
“It brings out the best in people,” Cassie said.
Not necessarily. Christmas’s when we were growing up were interesting. Ones when dad was deployed off shore were horrible. At least when he was home we had Christmas. Mom didn’t always attend. Some years she was in hospital, others she was off her meds and gone both were preferable to the Christmas’s she came too.
“You’re such a Pollyanna.” My drink was gone.
“It’s not a bad thing to see rainbows, you know.” Cassie’s voice held promise and even joy. She saw rainbows where ever she went and it astounded me. A social worker who still believed in her ability to change the world one kid at a time, after everything she’d seen. She still believed people could change and she still believed in happy ever after.
“I see rainbows. I just don’t let them color my world.”
“And I do?”
“Oh yeah, you are fully rose tinted.” I smiled. “It’s what we love about you the most.”
“I see the good.” She started to defend herself then realized I wasn’t picking. I was just stating what I saw. “You see the bad… we’re two halves.”
I poured another drink for us both. Mine disappeared a little too fast.
“Two halves make a whole,” I replied. “Ying and Yang.”
She gave me a hug and refilled my drink. “You and I need to talk about Carla.”
“Is she all right?”
Cassie smiled. “She’s wonderful, as you know.” Her serious face replaced the smile. “I want to discuss her future. Your future.”
Oh here we go. The hard sell for Christmas. Maybe if I mentioned the butterflies that have become part of my life she’d re-think her plans to create a family of Carla and me. I watched as a silver butterfly floated near the ceiling. It soared effortlessly. One by one more joined in and as I watched enthralled, they spelled out, ‘What do you got?’ I got fuc’n nothing, that’s what I’ve got. Just like that, the magic butterflies filled my head with the name I’d been looking for all year. Unsure reality becomes a crazy glued dream.
“Ellie?”
“What?”
“Did you hear me?”
“I don’t think so.”
“How much did you have to drink tonight?”
I grinned. “I’m not drunk, I was thinking about something.” From the other room I heard music. Recognizable. I looked around for an exit.
Recognizable and familiar the music wrapped the past in a silvery glow. It pulled at me and made me want to stay but there was something I needed to do.
“How do I get out without going through there?” I asked pointing at the source of the music. I could barely believe I was going to walk away without so much as poking my nose in to see the talent.
“You can’t leave!” Cassie was horrified. “Carla was looking forward to spending time with you tonight.”
“She’ll be fine with Sam and Lee. I have to do something.”
She pointed to a long curtain. “There is a door behind that; it goes to a hallway that leads to either the stage or the front lobby.”
“Thanks. I’ll be back. You’ll see.”
I took off at a fast walk, as I hit the lobby I checked my hip. Relief stormed me as I realized I was still wearing my gun. Always good to be prepared. I left the building and ran to my car. The cold air and the eggnog combined to form a potent mixture. Probably the two wines I had at home didn’t help. I wasn’t driving anywhere. Mac’s voice repeated some lines from an old poem in my head, “We sometimes start over, a new life begun. Nothing is permanent, everything changes, it’s the way that it is as life rearranges.”
It didn’t make a lot of sense. I slid into the passenger seat and made a call.
“Lee?”
“Chicky, problem? You don’t seem to be in here. Thought you liked this band?”
“I do, wanna stall them for me, so I get to use my badge to meet cool people for a change?”
“Sure I’ll get Sam to sit on that lead singer.”
“Thanks, I appreciate it. Now – the problem.”
“What do you need?”
“You to drive for me, I’ve had a few drinks. I’m in my car – out on the street.”
“On my way.”
We hung up. Twenty seconds later Lee climbed behind the wheel and shoved the seat right back.
“Where we going?”
“Work, we’re going to work. I need to use the computer.”
“Now? Christmas party. Caine doing his Santa thing. One of your favorite bands playing, and you wanna go to work. This isn’t meshing. What’s up?”
“I got a name. I think I can find Carla’s uncle. I’m looking for Jonathon Francis Torres.”
“You pulled his name out of thin air?”
“Yeah – I did.”
It was a quiet drive. Lee didn’t pursue how I came by the name. He was well used to me pulling answers out of the air. I sat behind my desk and started running every known search program hoping to locate Jonathon Francis Torres. Carla never knew her father’s family. There was no record of any relatives but I had a feeling there was at least one. I’d been looking ever since that night that changed our lives. With all the resources I had at my disposal I still came up empty on a relative until the music, the talent, and another butterfly visit. Ironic or just weird?
Lee perched on the edge of my desk. We were both watching the screen as numbers, faces and names flashed by at a rapid rate.
“You sure it’s him?”
“Yep.”
With that something flashed and beeped on the screen. I clicked on the image. A photograph opened. A picture of a young man. Possibly in his late twenties. He looked like Carla. Same eyes and mouth. Information began to fill the screen. A death certificate. Jonathon Francis Torres was deceased. He died fifteen years ago. Two years before Carla was born.
“He’s dead?” Lee muttered pointing to the screen in front of us.
“I don’t think so.” We sometimes start over, a new life begun.
“He doesn’t want to be found?” Lee asked.
“Feels that way.”
I started opening files from a list at the bottom of the page. They lead to a rabbit warren of more files. Every alias I touched was fascinating. Several had long rap sheets. His choice of employment swung from CEO to nightclub bouncer. This guy was clever. None of the aliases overlapped. Some of them were active for years, indicating he lived for extended periods as certain people. There were gaps between ‘lives’. In some cases there were months between them. Months of nothingness. I am an enigma that doesn’t exist. A name in the realm of swirling mist. There’s nothing to say I was even here.
None of the aliases matched up in any way, even the identity photos were different. He changed his appearance. The name that popped into my head at the party. That was the key. His life was like a Chinese puzzle box. No wonder none of the reports led to his real name, he was well protected. He even had multiple social security numbers to match his multiple identities.
“He’s been a busy boy for a dead man,” Lee commented.
“How did finger prints fail to link him? He can’t change those, surely.” I skimmed police reports.
The screen went blank. A white square popped up. One word.
Classified.
“Shit!” Lee said, leaning closer. “You’ve been locked out.”
We stared at the white square for a few beats and then each other. My desk phone rang.
“This should be good,” I said, my eyes rolled as I picked up the receiver. “SSA Conway.”
“SSA, stay on the line for another party.” Interesting. I shrugged at Lee and waited. A few moments later, I heard a quiet click and a male voice spoke, “This is Jonathon Torres. You were looking for me?”
Hells bells that was unexpected.
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“You have a niece that is orphaned. Thought she could do with some family.”
Silence filled the air space between us.
“I don’t exist. I’ve been deep so many years I can’t even tell you if I ever met her.”
That explained why finger prints didn’t lead to anyone other identities. Classified.
“You haven’t, not as you anyway and she has no memory of an uncle. Can we meet?”
“No.”
“Which agency?”
“Doesn’t matter.” His voice softened, “It’s above your pay grade.”
“You’re her only relative.”
“I don’t know how to take care of a kid.”
“You’re in the mist?”
“I am the mist and this never happened.”
“Now what?”
“Take care of her. You obviously care a great deal to track me down. No one has ever managed that.”
I care.
“I’ll see she’s happy and well taken care of.”
“How’d you find me?”
“A Christmas miracle.” I can’t explain my mind to a stranger any more than I can to myself.
“Look after the kid.”
He hung up. The line went dead. I called the switchboard and asked them to give the last number that called my line. No number registered. I asked them to re-check and list all numbers that had called my line over the last four hours.
None.
I hung up. My computer was back to normal.
“I just received a call, how can there be no number registered?” I leaned back in my chair and tapped the keys. “Check this out, there is no record of any computer activity.”
“You’ve been wiped,” Lee muttered.
I smiled. Was hard not to. This kinda spooky shit was usually confined to movies and books.
“Yeah, I was wiped. Guess that means he’s a spook.” I had what I needed. If Jonathon wasn’t going to step up and he was the only relative, then someone had too. Maybe Cassie was right. I needed to think. Best place to think was in a room full of happy kids and awesome music.
“Now what?” Lee asked. “And you’re smiling.”
My eye brows rose. “Let’s go back to the party.”





Merry Christmas.


Glittering Ice.

It became and so it was
All that was known now lost
Time ticking slowly away
A silent cry rings out for you
Heart breaking
Mind wandering, recreating.
Past frozen in an icy tomb
Your image dissolving
Voice fading into the dark
Taking with it my heart
Looking back at you
time distorting my view.
Sparkling diamond on my finger
Glittering ice in shining moonlight
Time ticking slowly away
A silent cry rings out for you
You were mine, you were true.
Heart breaking
Mind wandering, recreating
All we were and all we had
It became and so it was
All that was known now lost.


Copyright Cat Connor 2010

Cat’s blog: http://catconnor.blogspot.com/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Cat-Connor/76140493745
Twitter: http://twitter.com/catconnor

This is a work of fiction.

All characters in this publication are fictitious
and any resemblance to real persons,
living or dead, is purely coincidental.
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2010 Cat Connor

Monday, 14 February 2011

Launch Party!

Ok, so you probably all know Cat Connor by now, we've reviewed her, interviewed her (new one coming soon), nosed around her bookshelves, she has opened our Sunday Story season with her Ellie Conway shorts and she is a regular visitor. We've even been blurbed on the paperbacks (yeah, I squee every time I remember that.)

I love this series of books and number three has just come out in ebook and is due any minute now in paperback!

Here is what I thought of it and here is the blurb about book three, Exacerbyte!


Exacerbyte by Cat Connor
The 3rd _byte.
Hawk is hunting again. SSA Conway is his nemesis – she wants justice and is determined he should keep his appointment with the electric chair. He has taken too many children and killed too many people. And it’s all about the music. FBI Agent, SSA Ellie Conway, has decided it is time to step up and apprehend Hawk, not only to stop the abduction of vulnerable children, but to avenge the murder of FBI Agent Mac Connelly. Her pursuit involves Russia and takes the team to New Zealand, where Hawk has widened his net and increased his activity. As the Delta A track him and investigate the disappearance of more children, a far more sinister reality emerges, which demands the might of the Military, CIA, NCIS and the Russian FSB. Exploiting her quirky intuition, together with help from surprising sources, Ellie comes to understand why ‘it’s all about the music.’

ISBN:eBook: 978-0-9869731-5-4   ISBN:POD paperback: 978-0-9869731-6-1
Thriller/Suspense/Mystery/Detective: 448 pages:  8 x 5 ins paperback : US$ 16.99

http://www.amazon.com/Exacerbyte-Ellie-Conway-ebook/dp/B004MME2W4/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&m=A3QI763M62X7GQ&s=digital-text&qid=1297186964&sr=1-1

http://www.amazon.com/Cat-Connor/e/B002DP3JCQ/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1

Sunday, 13 February 2011

Better than Life - Rob Grant and Doug Naylor


by Harbinger.





I have been struggling to read as much as I have in the past. What Uni work and now having a job, finding time to sit down and read something (that is not about Popular Conservatism and the Empire) is tough. I have only just finished reading Triumff by Dan Abnett, which I started reading an awfully long time ago. Hagelrat has already reviewed that particular book, and does not differ in opinion much more than I do (yes I loved it too!). Therefore I have no particular desire to write a review for it. I have decided over the next few weeks, to find more time to do things I want to do, namely reading. However, I also want to start writing a story (which I have been promising to do since I was 13).

I am sure that by now everyone knows that I love Red Dwarf. A while ago I did a review of the Red Dwarf book Infinity Welcomes Careful Drivers (click this link for the review). After the success of the first book Rob Grant and Doug Naylor wrote a second. Better than Life, immediately follows the conclusion of Infinity. This following on of the two stories is almost seamless, and had the odd mix of comedy and despair that the first book had.


We left Lister, Rimmer, and the Cat trapped in the virtual reality game Better than Life. The game protects itself and is designed to prevent people from wanting to escape. They live in exaggerated perfect lives, while their bodies waste and die. Kryten in desperation attempts to carve into Lister's arm a warning. While in the game Rimmer's diseased psyche, is destroying and running the game world for himself and the others. However even if the 3 manage to escape back to reality, what are they escaping to. A claustrophobic existence on board a ship controlled by a senile super computer, an over emotional sanitation robot...,and worst of all a toaster that won't shut up!


A brilliant book, that is defiantly the match of it predecessor. In fact it reads as if the writers, having immediately finished the first on started work on this one. It retains the surreal feeling of a group of mad an lonely bachelors who hate each other being forced to live in space. It retains many of the plot lines of the TV show but also takes them in new broader and occasionally more serious directions. Certainly well worth a read.


TTFN


P.S. I am thinking of starting my own blog. (along with writing a book and the 101 other things I want to do.) If anyone has any advice...such as screaming "Don't do it!", at the top of their lungs I would be interested to hear them.

Sunday Story Every Rose Has It's Thorn | Cat Connor

WARNING!
This story contains a HUGE spoiler –
It follows along a few weeks after TERRORBYTE ends.
It’s advisable to read TERRORBYTE prior to this story!

Every Rose Has Its Thorn
An Ellie Conway short story.
by Cat Connor


My office walls provided a safe zone as I sat at my desk flicking aimlessly through a pile of case files. Lee and Sam were out on an investigation. Caine was in his office. A buzz of voices and phones ringing from the bullpen penetrated the walls as muffled sounds of life.
With a sigh I leaned back in my chair. Tiredness washed over me. It wouldn’t hurt to close my eyes for a minute.
Staring at the ceiling I found myself counting glow in the dark stars as a small voice whispered, “You’re not in D.C. now, Ellie.”
The room was the same as when I was young. Nothing had changed. Except me. My laptop sat on my star-covered bedside table.
Grey light squeezed through a gap in the curtains. It was barely morning.
I dragged the covers back up off the floor where they’d fallen during the night and then picked up the laptop. With a sense of coming home, I logged into my own little world. I wasn’t expecting anyone to be around at the crack of dawn; my checking in was more about missing the comfort of my virtual home than wanting to interact with others.
The screen changed to the familiar blues of Cobwebs’ chat room. My name sat at the top right-hand side of the screen with a golden hammer next to it. The gold hammer meant I owned the room, and I bestowed hammers upon people I trusted to moderate in my absence. With the help of friends we’d created it as a place where poets could share their work.
Already there were several good mornings typed into the main chat box. The list of names below mine surprised me. Obviously no one slept much last night. I scanned the list twice looking for Galileo, while replying to those who had said hello. He wouldn’t be there, not that time of day and not on the day he was heading to Virginia Beach on vacation. A private message from Stormy lit up bright red at the bottom of my screen. I clicked it open.
Stormy: You seen Carter lately?
An odd question for such an early hour. I found myself muttering at the screen, “Nope, and I don’t wanna see him either.”
I typed a more pleasant reply.
Otherwisecat: No. You do mean in here, huh?
Stormy: Yeah. We may have a problem with him. He’s been a little spooky and freaked Bitter out a few hours ago.
That’s not so odd for Carter.
Otherwisecat: I’ll change the room code. Recreate the room so he isn’t a gold hammer anymore. Tell the other golds not to hammer him.
It’s no real surprise that he’s gone freaky. I’d come across him in life and odd is the nicest thing I could say about him.
Otherwisecat: Stormy, you seen Galileo in the last few hours?
A whoosh of air escaped my lips and I realized I was holding my breath waiting for her reply. I really need to get some guts here and just ask him to meet me for coffee someday. It’s hardly inconceivable. I heard it then, the loud clucking inside my head.
Stormy had replied while the clucking occupied me.
Stormy: Nope. Why don’t you two just get together?’
Because I’m chicken, but why hasn’t he asked me? Hmmm? Maybe he doesn’t feel like I do. I gave myself a good hard mental thwack; no sense thinking stupid thoughts when I know otherwise. The clucking got louder.
Otherwisecat: I’m chicken.
Stormy: LOL you scared? I don’t believe it.
Thank god, our relationship medium was a computer and she couldn’t see the rising color in my cheeks. I bet she was really laughing too.
The main chat window captured my attention; a girl was posting a poem. It was beautiful, well crafted and full of delicate imagery. When she’d finished I commented on the imagery and heart that went into the creation of such a poem and thanked her for sharing with us. Stormy lit the bottom of my screen up.
Stormy: Wow, that kid is amazing.
Otherwisecat: Sure is.
We could do with more like her, and then maybe I wouldn’t be the most hated host in the chat system. I don’t think I am the most hated, Stormy, Bitter, and I probably share that honor. Our zero tolerance policy gets us a lot of flack. We don’t tolerate rudeness, bright-colored fonts, gore, or graphic sex and violence.
Galileo has the same zero tolerance but doesn’t tend to get people’s backs up as we do. Guess he’s just a nicer person. I watched the room respond to the new poet, ready to privately admonish anyone who overstepped the line. We all agreed on disciplinary actions: two private reminders to be nice, one public, and then I kick them out.
If they come back and behave badly again they face a twenty-four-hour ban, and after that it can easily become permanent. People should be safe in our room to share their work without harassment by others. I yawned and stretched. Everyone was playing nice.
Morning noises in the house reminded me I had to get moving.
I’d been in Richmond working for weeks on a particularly nasty serial rape case. Yesterday Delta A arrested a suspect. Last night we finished up the paperwork. The case was closed. Confession made and corroborated. Suspect my ass. He was guilty as sin and twice as ugly.
Best of all, instead of rejoining Delta A back in Washington, D.C., right away, I was going home to Mauryville in Rockbridge County.
I typed my goodbyes into the main room.
Then typed a private goodbye to Stormy.
Otherwisecat: Tell Bitter blocking Carter from her messengers would be a smart idea.
Stormy: Okay. Why don’t you email Galileo and ask him out for coffee. Which she followed with a smiley face.
Otherwisecat: I can’t.
Stormy: You will and get back to me tomorrow telling me you did.
I poked my tongue out at the screen and then sent her a cheeky smiley face.
Stormy: Do I have to do this for you?
Pure panic rose as I answered: No!
Stormy: Then do it.
Otherwisecat: Bye Stormy, I gotta go do the breakfast thing with the family.
And get the hell out of Dodge.
An hour later I walked into the kitchen. Dad was nowhere to be seen.
Sun streamed in the window, bathing my mother in a golden glow as she busied herself at the counter. Light reflected off the loose fitting scarlet silk shirt she wore, her long golden blonde hair clipped back into a low ponytail, her expensive jeans pressed to a sharp crease.
My mother was immaculately groomed as always no matter what the time of day. She seemed so normal, like everyone else’s mother, as she made breakfast.
Deception of appearances.
A large cloud meandered across the sun, casting odd-shaped shadows in the room. I sat at the kitchen table. Dad had already eaten. His coffee cup sat almost empty and his plate bore the remnants of scrambled eggs.
“Where’s Dad?” I asked, hoping he was coming right back.
“He had errands to run.”
Damn looked like I was eating with Mom and without a buffer zone.
“I’ll call him later from home then.” Home resonated in my head. Home. Alone. Miles away from people. If I closed my eyes I felt like I was already there.
“Do you want eggs, Gabrielle?”
“Sure,” I replied. The spell was broken; my shoulder muscles tensed. For a moment, it felt like I was staring down a gun barrel. I recognized Mom’s interrogation opening and could barely begin to imagine what she’d come up with this time.
A plate appeared in front of me. Obviously, there had been no question in her mind about breakfast. My eggs were accompanied by a glass of orange juice.
I forced my shoulders to relax but could do nothing to alleviate the tightening ball in my chest.
She sat across from me at the kitchen table. Mom’s slender fingers toyed with the edge of a napkin, repeatedly smoothing the same section of fringe. I reached out for a bread roll, willing my hand not to shake.
Buttering the roll to within an inch of its life helped a little. I managed two mouthfuls before Mom spoke again.
“Do you have an eating disorder?”
I put down the roll and started on my eggs. With a death grip on my fork, I forced myself to eat a mouthful knowing she was watching me with abnormal interest.
Had I not been subject to the same accusation on a regular basis since early childhood, it may have been funny. But I had and any amusement factor had long since worn off. My internal voice made a frantic attempt to pacify my rising temper, “Come on Ellie, just one meal, surely you are adult enough to get through one meal in a civilized manner, then you can go home?”
The attempt was thwarted with a resounding, ‘Hell no!’
“Gabrielle, do you? I’m sure you’ve lost weight.”
My eyes met hers, my stomach churned, and I hoped my voice was calm as I replied, “No, Mom.”
“You look skin and bone. There’s nothing to you.” She scrutinized me. “Your face is drawn and sharper than I recalled.”
Oh God! I wanted to scream, “This is how I look this is how I have always looked!”
Compared to the internal screaming and stamping I was doing, my actual response was almost civil.
“Can’t you let me be how I am?” I shoveled another load of eggs into my mouth to stop myself saying anything more and watched her from under my bangs.
“You’re too skinny.”
I swallowed my mouthful – she wasn’t going to let it go.
“I’m really sorry I’m too skinny for you, Mom,” I said quietly. “What is it you want from me?”
“Eat more! For God’s sake, Gabrielle, you are wasting away. Perhaps we should be looking at some sort of help.”
My fingers tightened on the fork. My mind chirped, Here we go again.
“Luckily you don’t need to concern yourself, Mom. As a Special Agent I have regular psychological exams,” I replied, then hissed under my breath, “So I don’t end up like you.”
“What do you mean by that?” her eyes narrowed as she found an opening she could use.
What a way to find out her hearing was as sharp as ever.
I sighed.
“Don’t push me. Mom.”
“I think I deserve an explanation.”
I felt powerless to prevent my outburst. “I’m having trouble with your sudden interest and concern. Let’s face it your track record lacks in that department.”
“You ungrateful little witch!”
“That’s right, Mom, I’m ungrateful, and you gave me so much to be grateful for. The times you’d disappear for days on end while Dad was at sea and came back wearing the same clothes you left in and stinking of booze. Those times you took off and left Aidan shut in a fuc’n cupboard until I came home from school to free him. The sudden concern you displayed when you wrote notes to excuse me from gym class… why was that again, Mom?”
Mom fidgeted with the fringe and focused on the sugar bowl.
I continued, “Oh, I remember, so no one would see the bruises you left on my body.”
Her voice faltered as she whispered, “You were a clumsy child.”
“No, Mom, I wasn’t.”
“What is it Gabrielle, anorexia or bulimia?”
“Neither, Mom, I’m not ill.” Then something occurred to me; maybe she needed me to be ill to make her feel better. “Do I need a mental illness to make me interesting, Mom?”
She snapped, “Don’t be ridiculous, Gabrielle.” Mom raised her chin slightly. “Bangs at your age? What are you hiding from?”
I groaned internally. She wasn’t done yet.
“Let me eat my breakfast, please Mom.”
She said, “Are you gay?”
Scrambled eggs lodged in the back of my throat. I grabbed the glass of juice and took a big swallow.
“What?”
“Are you gay?” she repeated, her piercing blue eyes narrowed as she stared at me. “Because it’s okay to be gay. Your father and I just want you to be happy.”
“No.”
She was determined to make me much more interesting than I was.
“Gabrielle, you’re nearly thirty and you have never even mentioned a man.”
“I don’t want to discuss this with you.” I picked up my fork and tried to continue with my breakfast, quietly hoping the eggs would choke me. My hand shook as I lifted the fork to my mouth.
I don’t want to discuss anything with you!
“Look at you, you’re a wreck. You need a man.”
Lowering my fork and raising my eyes to Mom’s, I spoke with calmness that took me by surprise, “I’m tired, Mom. I’m very tired.”
“Perhaps you should consider a different career with more civilized hours.”
“I like my job.”
“You should eat more.”
All hope evaporated with her last comment. My jaw muscles tensed and head started to ache. My right hand slid to my hip, bringing a moment of relief followed by a deep sigh. My gun and badge were useless against my mother; time to invest in silver bullets.
“When did you last have sex?”
“I said. I. Do not. Want. To. Discuss. This.”
Pulling my gun and decorating the walls of my parents’ kitchen with my brains would’ve been more enjoyable than her questions, but choking to death on eggs seemed like a more reasonable option.
“Have you ever had sex?”
I desperately attempted to relax my taut muscles. Pressing my fingers to my temples, I massaged gently, hoping to ease the headache before it became thunderous. “Have you, Gabrielle?”
I let my arms rest lightly on the table and tried for a reasonable tone, “I’m not ten years old anymore. I don’t have to answer to you.”
“No, you were much more respectful when you were ten.”
I pushed my plate away and stood slowly, making deliberate eye contact with her. Biting my tongue didn’t work and there was no way to keep the truth in now, “That wasn’t respect Mom. That was fear.”
I stepped back from the table.
She never missed a beat, “That’s right, Gabrielle, run off and vomit.”
“Actually, Mom, I am going to vomit then have sex with the first woman I can find and the next man I come across – just in case I swing both ways, and maybe if I’m very lucky I’ll develop some totally fascinating mental illness so you can feel good about yourself. I’d hate for you to think I was a regular normal person, lord knows you can’t cope with normal!”
Her lip trembled. I had to get out before she started crying.
She watched me close the car door from the kitchen window. In my mind, she appeared like an ogre but in reality, she was simply a sad human being. It was hard to see the insanity as tears trickled down her beautifully made-up face.
If only she could disguise the mental illness as well as she could her advancing age.
Sheer stupidity on my part coupled with extreme tiredness – never a good mix around Mommy dearest. I didn’t wave as I drove away.
It was hard to know what made me relive the last meal I’d shared with Mom, three years after her death. I had a brewing theory that everything hinged on my actions that day. My inability to deal with my mother led me to a coffee shop in Richmond instead of going directly home. There I met Mac for the first time in the flesh. Two months later Mac and I were an item; the Son of Shakespeare was on a killing spree and killed my mother along with a long list of people I knew. A while later Mac and I were married. He joined the FBI and a year later while working with me in Delta A was killed. That breakfast with Mom started a chain of events that left me feeling gutted.
Maybe it was mortality. Maybe it all hinged on the fragility of life. Maybe nothing lasts forever, not even scars. Maybe if I’d handled Mom better, Mac would still be alive.
Mac’s voice drifted from the car radio. “Maybe’s ass.”
My smile was fleeting. “Maybe’s ass.”
A song buried his voice under the recognizable opening bars of Poison’s Every Rose Has Its Thorn. I listened hoping the song would make me feel better somehow. It didn’t. All it did was remind me that his voice was fading and one day I wouldn’t be able to remember what he sounded like.
My focus turned to the road. I wasn’t driving from Richmond to Rockbridge. I was sitting in my car outside a house in Georgetown with absolutely no idea how long I’d been there. House lights twinkled up and down the street. The song finished.
I grabbed my bag from the passenger seat and got out of the car. The door opened as I raised my hand to knock.
Special Agent Noel Gerrard of NCIS smiled a little as he said, “You’re on the wrong side of the river.”
“It’s been a long day.” It’s been a long few weeks.
“Wanna drink?”
I stepped inside and let the door close behind me. Bathed in the warm glow of electric light, I followed Noel through the house to the kitchen and dropped my bag on the floor by a chair. He placed two tumblers on the table and produced a bottle of whiskey from a cabinet. I liked his kitchen. The wood felt cozy.
We sat at the table with the bottle between us.
“I was wondering if you were ever going to come in,” Noel said, pouring three fingers of whiskey into my glass. His eyes flicked to mine.
“Me, too.”
“Thought you were on leave.”
“Didn’t wanna rattle around an empty house, so I went into the office to catch up on paperwork.”
“I heard you were asleep at your desk.”
Guess the not sleeping at night is catching up with me.
I raised my glass. “To Mac.”
“To Mac.”
Glasses clinked. The amber liquid slid easily down my throat.
“To hindsight.”
Noel put his glass down. “I’m not drinking to second-guessing and twenty-twenty retro vision. Gimme something else.”
“I got nothing.” I drained the glass. Noel filled it again.
He held his glass in the air. “To those that made us who we are today.”
To Mom.





The End.


Special thanks to Sara J Henry for fixing my comma cock-ups and other anomalies!! :D


Novels by Cat Connor:

Killerbyte:
When a poetic psychopath starts hunting and killing patrons in Special Agent Ellie Conway’s chat room, Ellie finds herself embroiled in an invisible killer’s twisted plan and battling to keep her sanity.

Terrorbyte by Cat Connor
Ellie Conway is back: wisecracking, kicking ass and using her psycho-prophetic talents to grapple with a murderer with ulterior motives, secreted behind a series of grotesque crimes.

Exacerbyte by Cat Connor
(The 3rd _byte.)
Hawk is hunting again. SSA Conway is his nemesis – she wants justice.

Sample chapters all books can be downloaded in PDF format on my website:

You can contact Cat on twitter @catconnor
My blog: http://catconnor.blogspot.com/
Cat’s website: http://catconnor.wordpress.com/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Cat-Connor/76140493745
Via her Publisher: http://www.rebelepublishers.com/

This is a work of fiction.
All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons,
living or dead, is purely coincidental.
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2010 by Cat Connor

This story may not be reproduced in whole or part, by any means, without permission.
Making or distributing electronic copies of this book constitutes copyright infringement
and could subject the infringer to criminal and civil liability.