Redaction, Part iV, Chapter 3

Chapter 3

Ho–ly shit! Sera glanced down at her dangling legs. The green light of the airship strobed over the ground a few hundred meters below. Swallowing the sour wad in her throat, she stared at the patches of vegetation. The leafy nubs didn’t seem to be getting closer.

Tightening her grip on the ropes, she cut her attention upward. A bark of relief escaped her. The oversized crate was lodged in the cargo opening. Thank the good Lord! Whoever had pushed her out of the airship hadn’t fully opened the bay doors. She was safe.

For now.

Swearing sounded above.

And obviously her luck would soon disappear. Her would-be assassin must have realized his mistake. Muscles burned along her arms and her fingers tingled. Right. She had to act. Now would be good.

She threw her thoughts back to her training at the Security Forces Academy. Now what had her training taught her? Not to be outflanked by the enemy in the first place.

Too late for that.

Although to be fair, she hadn’t expected the enemy to be aboard the dirigible. Obviously, she’d have to revise her theories. Not everyone in Dark Hope was an evolved human. Damn, Uncle Glenn Dawson for being correct.

He’d never let her forget it. And he’d probably chuckle when he wrote this unfortunate incident up in her annual performance review. Perhaps she should lie.

Swinging her legs, she twisted her hands until the rough wooden crate scraped her knuckles and the coarse hemp rope abraded her palms. No. Lying would make her no better than the cretins she planned to incarcerate.

And in order to do that, she had to act.

The sound of gears grinding scratched her ears. Looks like the bad guys had found the lever to open the bay. The crate dropped an inch and she jerked to a stop. The carabiners attached to her backpack clinked together.

Her grip slipped, leaving her hanging on by her fingers.

Fear dried her mouth, leaving her tongue stuck to her palate. On the bright side she couldn’t scream. On the dark side, she probably wouldn’t be able to hold on once the crate’s parachute deployed.

The dark side always sucked.

Come on, Sera. You’re the brightest in your class. Figure this out. Wood scraped metal as the crate slid lower. She had a minute tops, plus another thirty seconds before the chute opened and unfurled.

Getting a grip was her top priority. Which meant she would have to free one hand and that one would be her non-dominant left hand. Despite months of physical therapy, her right hand still hadn’t regained its full strength since she’d broken it.

Kicking with her legs, she adjusted her grip then uncurled her right hand. She swung in an arc down. Pain blazed through her left armpit, and rope cut into her palm. Tears stung her eyes. She just needed to hold on a little longer.

No way would she become a Rorschach image on the ground.

Reaching across her chest, she brushed a cold titanium carabiner. With shaking fingers, she unleashed the clasp and slid it free. Fabric whispered as the anchor runner unfurled. Please let it be the newest one. Please let it hold.

She looked up.

Her luck was still with her. The edge of the crate was wedged in the now fully open bay. Alas the bad guy seemed to have realized her good fortune too. She detected grunting above the whirl of the airship’s engines.

Gritting her teeth, she kicked with her legs. She needed to reach that bow in the rope netting before the crate fell through the bay. Once the chute opened, the rope would be snug against the wood. On the bright side, her fingers would be mashed between the net and rope. On the dark side, fingers could easily be severed.

Swinging her arm up, she skimmed the cord with the top of the carabiner. Suck ass. She swayed away from her target.

The crate cleared the bay.

The parachute would deploy soon. Sweat beaded her upper lip and kicked harder. One second passed. Then two. At three she was on the upswing. Holding her breath, she lunged for the net.

The titanium hook slipped over the top and she released the clasp. It sprang closed just as she detected the snap of fabric. Just in time. Crossing her arm over her chest, she clutched the shoulder strap of her backpack and straightened her left fingers. Her numb digits fumbled with the other strap before latching on.

The silk billowed open like a jellyfish then the crate jolted upward.

The movement crackled down Sera’s spine and the pack slid up her back. Her fingers spasmed on the harness before clamping down harder. Please don’t let her slip out. Please don’t let the harness break.

A moment later, she swung four feet from the bottom of the crate.

Thank God. Her head lolled against the pack and she sighed. Either the bad guy hadn’t realized she was underneath the crate or its contents were more valuable than she was. Licking her dry lips, she counted to five while her heartbeats slowed. One moment more to savor her victory then back to work.

She wasn’t out of danger yet.

Shaking herself, she watched the airship putter away. No signal flare shot from the oblong gondola. No spotlight shone on her. Hell, only a handful of people knew she’d been on board.

Only two might know she was no longer aboard.

The bad guy wouldn’t tell.

And the other might very well be part of the landscape beneath her.

Not that she needed to be rescued.

She was a highly intelligent, resourceful, over-trained security officer.

Drawing her legs up, she peeled her right fingers off the strap. She tucked them inside her calf-high boots and pulled a knife out of the built-in pocket. Her timing must be impeccable, otherwise she’d be crushed by the very crate that had saved her life.

Shrubs grew into trees. Their twisted trucks clearly visible under the fuzz of late spring leaves. Spots of green appeared in the brown carpet. White mantles outlined boulders and run off channels. Not a level surface in sight.

Landing was going to hurt.

Not quite the glamorous life she’d pictured when she’d accepted this mission to suss out a traitor. She drifted over a stand of trees. This looked like as soft a landing as she would get. Twenty feet above the ground, she cut the rope anchoring her to the crate.

Trees rushed up to meet her. She threw her arms in front of her face. Branches smacked her arm, scratched at her clothing and yanked on her hair. The foliage’s limbs snapped under her weight. Fabric ripped.

The moment her feet touched down, she tucked her chin against her chest. Her knees buckled and she pitched forward, somersaulting ass over heels until her butt collided with another trunk.

She groaned. That was going to leave a mark. Spitting out twigs and leaves, she opened her eyes. Stars twinkled in the black velvet sky visible though the skeletal branches. The red, white and green glow of the airship appeared on the fringes of her horizon. Holding still, she did a mental inventory. Aches and pain everywhere but her eyelashes.

Anything broken?

She wiggled her fingers and toes before moving onto larger muscle groups. Everything behaved correctly. Thank God.

Bracing her hands at her sides, she pushed into a sitting position. Mud squished between her fingers. Thin branches clattered in the breeze. Unhooking the front clasp of her harness, she shrugged off her pack then brought it around to her lap.

The slide of the zipper sounded overly loud in the quiet. Reaching inside the cold canvas, she rummaged over the slick packaging of emergency rations, the soft rasp of clothing and the hard shell of her canteen. Where is it? Her fingers walked to the side before finding the padded, inner pocket. Dipping inside, she touched the earpiece of her night-vision glasses.

Setting them on her nose, she took in her surroundings.

Shards of moonlight cut designs in the lime green foliage and glinted off her blade laying a few feet away. Her muscles twitched with the need to retrieve it. Patience. Up ahead, the crate she’d flown down on lay cracked in half over a boulder. Silver bars glistened. Her blood thrummed through her veins. That was not scientific equipment, but weapons. TSG-17s to be precise.

Someone in Dark Hope was arming Outlanders.

Were they here to collect their freight?

Ears straining, she counted time in heartbeats. Ten. Twenty. Finally, she detected a faint rustle to her left and the skitter of four legs to her right. Rats. They’d survived the apocalypse along with cockroaches and politicians.

She scanned the area around her once more then rose to her feet. At least, there wasn’t a welcoming committee. Yet. But they would arrive soon. Pain flared down her back and hamstrings when she bent over. Biting her bottom lip, she wrapped her fingers around her knife’s hilt and straightened.

Tending her wounds would have to wait. She needed to neutralize those weapons then find higher ground. She took a step forward. Air hissed through her teeth as pain lanced her right thigh.

Shunting the stabbing feeling aside, she limped forward. She could walk it off, push past it, do whatever it took to reach that ridge. Soldier blood ran in her veins, practically laid camouflage in her DNA.

Upon reaching the crate, she selected the nearest stun-gun. She hoped it still held a residual charge. Wiping the dirt and leaves from the oval barrel, she kicked the rest into a pile. Once done, she aimed and fired.

The charged projectile pinged against the pile of tin and discharged. Blue light crackled across the weapons, triggering the energy from the other weapons and frying their circuits. Now the Outlanders can have them. After blowing nonexistent smoke away from the tip, she scooped up her pack and turned toward the glow of the dirigible.

That ridge should be high enough, but she’d have to walk double time to get there before the high altitude communication drone moved out of range.

She only hoped her uncle would take her call. Perhaps her luck would hold and he wouldn’t be incensed that she’d broken radio silence. She snorted. Geneticists hadn’t been able to make pigs fly yet. After stuffing her hands through the pack’s straps, she secured the harness under her breasts, hooked the TSG-17 on a carabiner and put one foot in front of the other.

Fifteen minutes later, she huffed up the rocky summit and dropped in the grass near a boulder. The granite still radiated a soft heat from the afternoon. Stripping off her backpack, she removed her sweater from inside and unrolled it. Gold and silver baubles glittered against the green wool.

Useless things. Why Outlanders valued them she had no clue. Flicking them aside, she found her communicator’s ear piece and lifted the body. The antenna stayed behind. Well, damn.

Her shoulders sagged as she inspected each half. The molded body split in two under her touch. She’d need more than duct tape and a paperclip to fix it. The airship shrunk on the horizon. Glancing over her shoulder, she switched her night vision to infrared. The ground turned into a patchwork of blue, red and dots of white. Ignoring the white animal shapes, she scanned the distance for any sign of a rapidly cooling human body.

None.

Minos hadn’t fallen to his death.

But that didn’t mean the bad guy hadn’t killed him and stashed his body among the freight.

Knock off the doom and gloom mongering. Attitude was as important in survival as the right tools. And speaking of tools…

She tugged an antique compass from another of the backpack’s pocket. The needle spun, stopped at forty degrees, then pivoted to one-hundred-ninety. With the magnetic poles switching, she didn’t think it would work. Of course, it could still bring her luck. Her ancestor had survived worse. Wiping the dirt off the David Dawson engraved on the cover, she returned it to her pack.

Switching back to night vision, she limped partway down the ridge. Although the going would be rougher, she was better off being high enough to see anyone approach but low enough not to be spotlighted by the full moon.

Her stomach growled and her thigh throbbed.   

One hour’s walk then she’d stop and tend her body’s calls. On the bright side, she had some water, food and enough supplies to make a camp. On the dark side, no one would know she was even missing for another five days.

That was four days, twenty-three hours and fifty-nine minutes more than it took to die in the Outlands.

 

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New Release

Yes, my other personality is set free. My paranormal romantic comedy That’s Amores was released on Valentine’s Day.

And yep, it’s a Valentine’s Day story.

amores-ss

 

Love flies with the speed of an arrow.

How’s a girl supposed to stay single with the entire town wants her married?
Alessa Lombard has a plan to avoid the marriage trap. It’s not that she’s opposed to marriage—wedded bliss is fine…for other people. All she needs is the help of the town’s newest bachelor to help pull off a fake romance, and the family curse won’t have a chance to ruin her life.

Determined to fall in love, Sloan Dugan immigrates to the magical town of Amores. Surely, in a town devoted to love, he’ll find a woman who doesn’t use trickery and deceit.

But Cupid has other plans. Alessa and Sloan will find themselves playing the game of love whether they want to or not. Will winner take all? Or lose everything?

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

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Break The Chains

Some how, some way or another Lent has snuck up on me. For the last handful of years, I haven’t given up anything. I want to keep my vices, thank you very much.

But I think now’s as good a time as any to make a change. And since it takes about 3 weeks to 3 months (depending on who’s talking) to make something a habit, I decided to try something new.

Given the flagging/faltering/just plain crap economy, I decided for the next 40 days, my husband and I will take a break from national chain restaurants. We’ll still go on our weekly date away from the kids meal, but in the interest of helping out some local chefs, we’ll embark on a culinary adventure and maybe, just maybe find a few new favorites.

Now, I just have to tell the hubby.

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Redaction Part iV, Chapter 2

Chapter 2

Fools never learned. Harlan Westminster lowered his binoculars and rolled onto his back. He squeezed his eyes closed until white danced in his vision. But it didn’t help. He still saw the image of the valley below. For a moment, the persistent humming in the air echoed the frustration roiling through him.

“How many did ya count?” Crouched under a low pine branch, Dennis Kramer broke the limb into bits. A tidy pyramid formed at his feet.

“Thirty-two tributes.” Harlan opened his eyes. In the dark skies of the eastern horizon, red and green stars flickered in the twilight. Thirty-two men, women and girls sacrificed and for what?

Dennis whistled low. “Wow. That must be a prosperous town to offer so much.”

“It won’t be enough.” The Providers never got enough. Harlan tucked the binoculars into his breast pocket. And it would be his pleasure to deprive them of this lot. “Let’s get the men.”

His band of six should be enough to liberate the offerings. Not that they’d thank him for it. Some of those idiots probably still believed they were going someplace nice–a city stocked with clean water, abundant food and cancer cures on every corner.

They didn’t get that life sucked and then you died–usually horribly.

Dennis dropped the rest of the branch onto his pile of tinder and dusted his hands. “Anyone we recognize in the bunch?”

Harlan scooted down the outcropping. “No.”

He’d learned early on not to return the tributes to their homes. They’d just be offered again. And again. Thankfully, he’d found some folks willing to send the tributes up North, far from the Providers’ reach, for a price.

He hoped the fools stayed there and spread the message.

Unfortunately, people down here didn’t seem to get the news. And the Providers kept coming, kept demanding more tribute.

“Any lookers among the women?”

Harlan lowered his head. Dennis was a good man. A little too preoccupied with females, but then he’d heard his wife wanted a baby and was willing to look the other way to get one. The birthing cancers affected some folks that way. “Why don’t you take some of that gold you acquire and buy a breeder’s services?”

Dennis’s cheeks flushed and his hands curled into fists. “I’m healthy enough not to pay for it.”

Harlan fingered the web of scars on his neck, jaw and cheek. With each passing year, the whites lines shown a little more through the black tattoo. Hell, he didn’t have a problem paying for it. It was a fair trade as far as he was concerned. Life was hard and he could make a few women’s lives easier in exchange for a half hour or so.

It was those poor folks without females that deserved his pity. Especially when the land soured. Not everyone would settle for a boy.

Harlan lifted his crossbow from the dirt. Counting the arrows in the quiver, he headed into the valley. Shrubs raked his sleeves as he passed.

Dennis stayed put. “I want to see them first.”

Harlan paused. The other man had never asked that before. Damn. Dennis must be getting desperate. Not good for a mission where they were outnumbered two to one. Maybe the other man should guard their flank instead of attacking the Providers with Harlan’s crew.

“Come on.” Dennis shifted his weight from foot to foot. The sun’s glow faded on the Western horizon. “It’ll only take a minute.”

If the man hadn’t accompanied him on twenty-two successful raids, Harlan wouldn’t even consider the request. Instead, he reached for the binoculars. “Get a bre–”

A twig snapped.

Harlan spun around.

Starlight twinkled off the blade shoved under his nose. Branches rustled as a man’s face appeared.

Harlan’s fingers twitched. The crossbow was already loaded. More arrows were within reach.

“Uh-uh.”

The tip shifted and a cut burned across his chin.

“Drop it.”

Fuck. Harlan shrugged and the strap rolled down his arm. The crossbow hit with a soft thud. Footsteps pounded behind him.

“Arms up.” The knife gestured, skimming Harlan’s nose on the way.

Warm liquid trickled over his lips, flooded his mouth with a metallic taste. Harlan complied. For now. Just until he knew how many enemy surrounded him and where Dennis stood.

“Good boy. Now back up.”

Clenching his teeth, Harlan took a step backward then another. He hoped the man enjoyed his short stint of giving orders.

“Stop.” Branches snapped when the man stepped through the shrub.

Well fuck me. Harlan turned his head slightly, catching another stranger in his peripheral vision. These assholes weren’t Providers. They wore suits. Dusty dark one-piece suits stitched from finely woven cloth. Had the Dark Hope pricks finally come down from the mountain?

He knew the bastards had to be related to the Providers. Rumors of both had appeared in his village at the same time.

Then the tributes had been demanded.

His sister had been the first to be offered.

Two months later, the town and all its occupants had disappeared.

“Now turn around.”

Harlan kept the smile from his face. How nice of the idiot to order him to survey the scene. One soon-to-be dead man stood in the nine o’clock position, two burly thugs bracketed Dennis straight up at twelve, and another at four. Easy pickings if Dennis could take out the noontime buddies.  He glanced at his compatriot.

Dennis stared beyond Harlan’s shoulder.

“Down boy.”

Something hit the back of Harlan’s legs. They buckled. His teeth rattled when his knees hit the dirt. A rock dug through his pants and into his flesh. Okay, the bastard behind him needed to die first. Then the one at four o’clock. He just needed to get Dennis’s attention.

Dennis pointed at Harlan. “That’s him. Just like I promised. Now, where is my wife?”

Harlan’s shoulders drooped. Well hell, that was a pisser. Guess it was time for Plan B. He had a feeling there was a cartload of pain waiting in Plan B. Fingers curled in his hair and jerked his head back.

Spittle foamed at the corner’s of the bastard’s mouth. “This is the puke stealing our tribute?”

Harlan grinned.  Warm blood filtered between his teeth. “At your service.”

“Now, I want my wife. You promised to release her if I turned him over to you.”

At Dennis’s whine, a muscle twitched in Bastard’s face before his lips twisted into a sneer. “Send him to her.”

Really? It couldn’t be that easy. The grip on Harlan’s hair loosened and he lowered his head enough to see his former compatriot.

The burly thug on the left held Dennis’s arms. The one on his right grabbed his head and twisted. Bone crackled. The smell of loosened bowels permeated the air. When the thugs let go, Dennis crumpled.

Harlan grimaced. Now he wouldn’t even have Dennis as a distraction. Plan B just got a little tougher. Good thing he was used to accomplishing the impossible.

Bastard leaned down. His rancid breath washed over Harlan. “We’re supposed to turn you over to the ‘Viders, but your stealing has cost us too much.”

“Happy to oblige.” Harlan spat into Bastard’s face.

The bloody loogie oozed down his cheek while red stormed his features.

The thug buddies near Dennis’s corpse cracked their knuckles.

Bastard swiped at the moisture with his sleeve. “You’re going to die, boy. You’re going to die real slow.”

 

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Book Signing at the Chocolate Affaire

I’ll be signing my books at the Glendale Chocolate Affaire Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Stop by and say hi, or give me some of your chocolate, er, I mean buy some yummy chocolate. There will be music, games, food and free writing workshops.

It’s going to be great fun:-)

For More information: http://www.glendaleaz.com/events/chocolateaffaire.cfm

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Some Days I Just Want a Cabin in the Woods

There are some days I wish I’d never become a writer. Usually it’s when I’m watching a program/tv show/movie that I’ve waited to come out and about 5 minutes in, I’ve pretty much figured out 90 percent of the movie. It’s quite annoying and my husband gets irritated when I tsked and shake my  head. He knows I know. He also knows I won’t tell him but on occasion I do have to leave the room because the predictability pisses me off.

And then there are those bright shiny occasions when I get a few unexpected twists.

This past weekend, it happened when I watched A Cabin in the Woods. My son picked it out, and I wasn’t that excited as I’d seen a movie with a similar title recently. But I was bored and so we sat down to watch it.


The premise is 5 kids take off to spend the weekend in one’s cousin’s cabin and of course bad things happen. So when the movie started I was confused about these 2 office guys talking about one’s spouse and their fertility problems. Just as I was ready to pop out the movie and check to see if I’d gotten the right movie, the scene cut to the college kids. There was humor and a little sly ribbing of the horror genre.

It just got better from there.

And I absolutely loved, loved the ending. Brilliant. Sigh. God, I wish I’d written that.

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Redaction Part iV

Chapter 1

“I’d heard rumors you’d been released, but I didn’t believe it.”

Serendipity Tahoma gripped the curved aluminum railing running the length of the airship’s lounge. Guess her five minutes of alone time were up. Too bad Minos Charon was the one to intrude on her solitude. Of all the passengers, she’d been determined not to be seen by the horrid gossip. “I was at home, in Dark Hope, not in a holding cell.”

“There was a time you thought they were the same thing.” Minos leaned against the bank of windows embedded in the hull. Cool air combed through his wavy dark hair and crammed the woodsy scent of his cologne into the thirty-foot space.

Good Lord, the man wore enough for three people. Rubbing her nose, she inched closer to the exit. She had to get out of here. Now. Minos never traveled far without a fawning entourage.

Sensors flashed green, red, and white lights at timed intervals below the dirigible and bathed the interior.

But if she left in too much of a hurry, he might blab. Only a handful of people knew of her presence on board. She had to find a means to keep it that way. Which meant no retreating. At least not yet.

“How do you know what I thought? We’ve never been friends.”  Although they’d been in the same classes in high school, she’d been five years younger——his to torment for the amusement of his friends. Her hands balled at her sides. A few well-placed hits should incapacitate him, give her time to bundle him into a hiding spot——like the broken latrine near the crew quarters.

All in the line of duty.

Not revenge. Her family was above such things. No matter how much she would enjoy it. Alas, that wouldn’t work. The jerk was bound to be missed.

Like partners in a dance, Minos followed her, brushed his arm against hers and smiled. Dimples cut into his tanned cheeks and laugh lines crinkled the skin around his brown eyes. “I recognize a fellow rebel when I see one. I just didn’t think it would take you twenty years to act.”

It hadn’t taken that long. Not that he needed to know that. Not that anyone needed to know of her adventures. Her heritage demanded appearances must be maintained. Darn it. And speaking of appearances.

“Well, it’s been fun catching up. But I should finish dressing for dinner.” She threaded her hand through her worn denim strap of the backpack on the nearest seat. The soft fabric contrasted to the stiff climbing harness it was grafted upon and lifted the bag. Her collection of carabiners clinked together. Packets of dried food rasped against each other. Water sloshed inside the bottle tucked in the ripped netting pocket on the side and wadded up clothes cushioned the backpack’s impact against her back.

“You’re not fooling me, Sera.”

She raised her chin. Her heart raced and sweat slicked her palms. “I don’t know what you mean.”

“No one knows you’re here. You’ve stowed away.”
“Don’t be ridiculous.” The very idea. Natives of Dark Hope obeyed the governing by-laws. They had evolved.

Disorder, greed and privation were the hallmarks of Outlanders.

Never her people.

Never.

“Trust me, if if was public knowledge that you’d been allowed to leave the city, everyone on board the ship would be talking about it.”  He jerked his head toward the bag in her hands. “If you want to keep up the pretense, I suggest you ditch that ratty pack. It’s hardly fitting for one of Dark Hope’s royalty.”

She hugged the bag against her chest. “It was a gift.”

And her most prized possession. Shifting slightly, she cradled the bag under her arm.

“Right. Who would give the great-great-great-granddaughter of Dark Hope’s founders something that should have been recycled a decade ago?”

“Someone with nothing else to give.” She fingered the large black stitches holding the red, green and blue patches over the areas where the denim was nearly worn to white threads. Someone who, having crossed the hostile Outlands and made it to the safety of the Burbs, never planned to leave again.

Minos snorted. “In Dark Hope? Not likely.”

Sera shrugged. No one wanted for anything once they arrived and registered in the outskirts of the city, but those born outside the world-wide consortium of mines and caves were a different story. A vastly different story.

“Your however-many-greats grandparents Mavis and David Dawson made sure everyone had a share of food and clothing.” He tapped the column in the center of the room, interrupting the vibrations caused by thrum of the blimps four engines. “Then there were your greats——the Tahomas, Buchanans and Robertsons——who made sure everyone got as much education as they could stomach.”

“Well, thanks for your advice. I’ll be sure to take it under consideration.” She adjusted the backpack before sliding her free arm through the second strap and buckling it under her breasts. They may be adults, but she didn’t doubt he’d still try to pull it off her and play keep away with it.

Of course, if he did, she’d have a legitimate reason for cleaning his clock. But battering his face would only lead to questions. And she couldn’t blow her first mission. She had to remain hidden.

“You’re never going to last in the Outlands if your back gets up over a little criticism.”

It was never a little criticism with him. Her teeth clicked together. Besides she knew all about the Outlanders and not just from her studies at the university. Of course, he didn’t know that. No one did. And it would stay that way. “Until later.”

Pivoting on her heel, she strode toward the exit.

Footfalls sounded behind her. “The crew quarters are that way, Sera.”

Sera paused with her hand on the door knob. The tips of her knuckles flashed white. He needed to leave her alone. For his sake. His basic self-defense wouldn’t be able to compete with her score of studying mixed martial arts. Damn the jackwagon for being so popular. If no one would miss him, she’d truss him up and stuff him in a closet.

“For your information, I am dining with my cousin Rolf and his crew. ” Something shifted beyond the bank of windows. Her eyes strained in the twilight. Could it have been a bird? She should check it out. Rediscovering an ancient species would be the perfect cover for her mission. What in the world? “While they don’t get served until after the guests, I still need time to dress.”

A bell chimed through the rectangular lounge. Footsteps thudded on the hallway above their heads. More guests were coming and they would have to walk through the lounge to get into the dining salon. She couldn’t afford to be seen. At least not yet. Her boss had been very clear on her mission and her cover.

“Goodbye, Minos.” She opened the door and stepped inside the airlock tucked under the curving metal stairway.

“I think I’ll find the captain.” He crowded into the stairwell to the crew level. “Don’t want to break any laws by not reporting a stowaway.”

He pulled the door closed and the lock clicked home.

“You do that.” Maybe her uncle could silence the lout. Diplomacy and tact were probably the best means to stymie Minos’s gossip. Unfortunately, she’d gotten less than perfect marks in those classes.

She paused at the bottom of the staircase. To the right lay the officers’ quarters, communication rooms and access door to the gondola. But to reach it, she’d have to walk through more passenger cabins. No way could she risk being seen again. As it was her boss would have a hairy cow and a calf. “The captain should be in his quarters.”

Minos crossed in front of her then stopped. “Aren’t you coming?”

“No.” Her uncle the captain would no doubt chew her out for being seen in the first place. But really, being stuck in crew quarters that reeked of bad cheese and unwashed socks was a just a hair above the call of duty. Even for someone with her background.

“I knew it. You have escaped Dark Hope without a pass.”

“Whatever.” Sera rubbed the back of her neck. “Go see the captain for your answers since you obviously don’t accept mine.”

She stared him in the eye. Ten seconds. Twenty. Didn’t the lunkhead get the message? Frustration clawed at her. She had no time for this. She had work to do before their early morning arrival in Abaddon. Turning, she headed toward the crew quarters on her left.

Minos hooked her arm and jerked her to a halt. “I think–”

Raising her free arm, she folded her fingers. One small strike in the chest. That should let him know she meant business. Plus, it wouldn’t show.

A loud thump echoed down the corridor in front of her. A soft scrape quickly followed.

Crap! She froze but her mind raced, turning out scenarios. Most of them life threatening. Screw Minos, his gossip and her mission. Her priorities had just shifted.

“The equipment must have broken loose.” Jerking out of his grip, she jogged toward the cargo hold. “Tell Captain Saldana!”

Another scrape and the ship shuddered. Her heart raced. She pumped her arms faster and the gangway bounced underfoot. Those crates could puncture the blimp’s skin and then they’d be in trouble. Death by splat trouble.

Minos pounded behind her. “Wait!”

Damn it! What was wrong with the man? Nothing in his education had prepared him for this emergency. She’d only had to the one class in aeronautics but at least it had covered balancing loads. “Tell the captain! He might be able to adjust the ballasts to compensate for the shifting weight.”

“And leave you alone to face what’s in there?” Minos was so close he practically stepped on her heels. “I don’t think so.”

Naturally, he wanted to be a hero. She sprinted by the crews’ quarters before shoving the air lock door open. The whine of the turbine engines increased when she stepped inside. Fiberoptics illuminated the Aluminum and carbon-fiber ribs and highlighted the catwalk running the length of the airship’s body.

Her unwanted companion cursed as he slapped the self-closing door and chased after her. “Slow down, Sera. For all you know it could be a real stow-away or a Provider.”

Passing the cubic ballast tanks, she shook her head. Did anyone really believe in Providers? “Really, you might as well have said the Tommyknockers or Boogeyman.”

Her voice rose an octave on the abundance of Helium, not fear. She’d stopped believing in those monsters once she’d realized her Outlander friends were trying to scare her. Every bad thing from acne to cancer was caused by ‘Viders.

Pausing by the last airlock, she inspected the door. With the hinges on the other side, she might have force to open it. Maybe Minos wouldn’t be so useless after all.

Bracing his hands on his knees, he gasped for air. A lock of dark hair bisected his forehead.

“I’m going to see if I can open the door. If I can’t, you’ll have to help me move whatever’s tumbled loose and is blocking it. Got it?” If that didn’t work, she could always cut through the multi-laminate skin next to it. But then the ship wouldn’t be able to airdrop the supplies and equipment to the Forestry crew on the other side of Abaddon.

“I think we should get the captain and let him handle this. It’s his job, after all.”

What a jerk. He’d had his chance to play messenger and didn’t take it. Didn’t he understand that everyone’s safety was at stake? Twisting the knob, she heard the latch retract then threw herself against the door. It sprang forward upon impact, ripping the handle out of her girp. While the door swung on an arc, momentum carried her forward. She slammed against the crate in front of the door, bounced off and collapsed to the floor.

Pain blitzed her system. Her fingers tingled; heat blazed up her arm. A wave of dizziness crashed over her. Well, crud, she’d forgotten how much full-contact sports hurt.

Clapping his hand over his mouth, Minos tried to cover his laughter with a cough.

He was unsuccessful, but then she doubted he tried very hard. Butthead.

“Need help up?” His voice boomed in the low space. The door slammed shut behind him. Darkness filled the small room.

“No.” Bracing her hands at her sides, she pushed off the deck. Pangs sprouted in a frenzy along her injured side. Holding her breath, she rose to her feet. Her little tussle with the crate was bound to leave a mark. “Get the lights, will you?”

“Maybe I should just take you back to your room and get you an aspirin.” Despite his words, she could hear his soles tap against the metal deck.

“I’ll be fine.” In a day or three plus a hefty dose of pain killers. She hissed through the pain as her fingers probed her side. Thankfully nothing appeared broken just bruised. “We need to secure everything.”

And where were the lights? He should have found them by now. The switch was right next to the door after all.

As if on cue, the overhead lamps flickered on. He scanned the hold before staring at her. “Fine, we’ll check the cargo. Then I’m escorting you back to your cabin and personally seeing to it that you don’t get into anymore scrapes with the research equipment.”

Him and what army. She bit her tongue to contain her reply. Cradling her sore arm against her body, she headed for the aisle behind her. “I’ll check this side; you check that one.”

She turned the corner before he could answer. Not that she wanted to hear anything he had to say Temptation might get the better of her, and she’d be forced to stuff him in a crate. Black straps wrapped around the oversized wooden crates and secured the seven-foot high stacks of boxes. Nothing clogged the aisle.

That’s odd. She’d definitely heard something fall. “Everything seems in place.” She continued walking. Maybe the cargo had come loose at the end or on Minos’s side.

Silence rang above the drone of the engines.

“Minos? Did you hear me?” Her stomach cramped. She paused and peered through the crack between stacks. Nothing moved in her narrow range of vision. “Minos?”

A loud thump sounded from the other side. She shook off a twinge of unease. There was nothing to be afraid of. A whisper of movement shifted in the black. The hair on the back of her neck stood up. Get a grip.  ‘Viders didn’t exist. Neither did the Boogeyman. And Tommyknockers only live in mines and caves. It was just Minos, being an ass.

“Are you okay?” She locked her jaw. “Minos. This isn’t funny.”

A moan sounded ahead and to her right.

Her heart stuttered inside her chest. Crap! He was hurt. She rushed ahead. What an idiot? She shouldn’t have allowed a civilian to accompany her on such a dangerous errand.

Just as she neared the last crate, the lights clicked off. Red, green and white flashed through a square in the floor. Holy shit! The hatch was open. She tried to slow.

Something hit her across the shin and she pitched forward. She flapped her arms, trying to fly, desperate to grasp something. Anything. Fingers scraped wood, nails snapped in a pop of pain then she hooked fibers and stopped. Her torso and arm hung over the portal. A bloody sunset painted the ground below. Far below.

OhGodOhGodOhGod. She tried to swallow. Her tongue stuck to the roof of her mouth making it impossible. She’d nearly been splattered over the ground. Not the impression she wanted to make on the Outlands. Sweat misted her upper lip.

What if… Don’t think it. Don’t even think it. Minos hadn’t walked out of the airship. She swung her free arm. Her fingers brushed the netting. Missed. Dang it. She gritted her teeth. And just where was he anyway?  She swung again for the netting. Got it!

The crate tumbled forward, pushing her through the hatch before falling after her.

Air screamed in her ears as she plummeted toward the ground.

Chapter 2

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Slacking Off

Life doesn’t wait for me to finish a chapter. It tends to come at me like a runaway locomotive, flattening me if I don’t step back. And so it comes that at the end of January I’m not anywhere near where I wanted to be with the next book. In other words, it’s going to the editor in March not February.

It wasn’t an easy decision to make, but I needed the time to celebrate and focus on my family.  Just so you understand what’s been going on in the last two months, I’ve had:

5 holiday parties

4 birthday celebration, two of which were parties I hosted.

1 graduation ceremony

1 graduation party (hosted by yours truly)

4 visits to the Doctor (all different thank you very much and one on Christmas Eve)

2 visits to the hospital

4 trips to get lab work done

A $15,755 bill to replace the AC units on our house and fix the duct work before the 115 temps arrive.

4 dinners out with friends.

Two volunteer jobs with my writer’s group.

A nasty kerfuffle at work

Plus I got to schedule another trip to a specialist, lucky me and they’ll want more lab work.

On top of all the other stuff that happens around the holidays, including my first ever Christmas without my daughters (spent with boyfriends’ family).

After gnashing my teeth for a bit, I decided that it was alright if I wasn’t where I wanted to be with my writing. I can still make my new deadline. Besides, this promises to be a really good book, even if I am writing it with my eyes closed in parts:-)

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Hair

Not the musical.

Not the song by Lady Gaga.

I’m talking about the stuff that grows on most folks’ heads. Hair says a lot about a person. Butch cuts. Coiffures. Up-dos. Bobs. Buzz cuts. Bald. French Braid. Farrah Fawcett hair. Okay, I couldn’t resist the last one. But you get the idea and I’m sure many of you had a picture pop up inside your head while reading the list.

So why am I writing about hair?

Easy. You had a picture pop up in your head when I mentioned a specific style and for good or ill, that picture had an association, a reaction for a writer to build on. I can build on that, but not easily. You see, you may not be reacting like I want so I had to rethink my wordsmithing.

Lightbulb!

Despite getting 6 inches whacked off the length of my hair a couple of months ago, my husband still manages to lay on it (accidentally on purpose), grab it, pull it or just down right try to use it like reins. And while it earns him an elbow to the gut (accidentally on purpose), it also served as inspiration for my cannibals.

Now after you mop up the Dr. Pepper that just shot out of your nose from trying to reconcile those two things, I shall explain. In a Dr. Seuss Stars upon Thars kind of way, I decided that long, luxurious Prell hair flying in the wind could be a decided disadvantage. Such a thing is easy to grab and controlling the head, controls the body.

So, my fine young cannibals don’t have hair.

Baldness is more than a birthright, it’s a necessity in their line of work. Of course, keeping with the Sneeches theme, their captives do have hair. Well, they do until dinner is served and then they’re scalped because really, who wants to floss while they eat.

I’m sure many of you are wondering what happens to their glorious manes upon being forced to accept the dinner invitation? Well, staring Monday I’ll be posting a chapter a week of the next book in the Redaction series until it goes live sometime in April. Early April. Crossing fingers.

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Let it Rain, Let it Pour

I love the rain. We have metal awnings outside our bedroom window so I get to actually hear it while watching the ripples spread across the pool. This last weekend we had rain from Thursday until Monday. Not that unusual for folks whose natural landscaping in green. But a nice treat for those of us in the Valley of the Sun (whose traditional color is brown.)

Naturally when it’s raining, I have to be out in it.

This causes some issues for the dog. Don’t get me wrong. Bear loves to swim. He walks downs the steps, bites the leaves/bugs floating on the surface, does a few laps then gets out, shakes off and lounges by the water pretty much all year round.

But…

When he was a puppy, the kids thought it was funny to spray him with the hose. To say he didn’t like it, is to say white rice has a few carbs. If the hose was running, he wouldn’t go outside. And giving him a bath was pretty much impossible. He took off the shower door once, does the Houdini routine to escape his harness and leaps and jumps, showing only the whites of his eyes until he runs far, far away where the hose couldn’t reach him.

As you can imagine, this made walking the mutt a bit difficult on those 10 days of the year when it actually rains here.  Thankfully, he loves his walkies and once he made sure (by walking backwards for half a block) that the kids weren’t about, he decided he liked walking in the rain.

Now, he loves it like the rest of us desert dwellers and insists on going outside to sit in it then the turd comes back inside and lays down on my side of the bed and rolls around.

Of course, there was a setback a few years ago when Bear was prancing around in what he thought was rain when he looked up to see my son on the roof with the hose. It took him most of the summer monsoon season to stop checking the rooftops for random hose wielders.

Today the rains move out of the Valley and while I’m sad to see them go, I’m glad not to have to wash/dry my blankets every night.

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