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New Thriller of The Week Comes From The Author of THE ASPEN ACCOUNT
Bryan Devore’s THE PRICE OF INNOCENCE, 4.4 Stars – Just $2.99!

How many Kindle thrillers do you read in the course of a month? It could get expensive were it not for magical search tools like these:

And for the next week all of these great reading choices are brought to you by our brand new Thriller of the Week, by Bryan Devore‘s The Price Of Innocence. Please check it out!

The Price of Innocence

by Bryan Devore

4.4 stars – 17 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

In the decade since their younger sister’s death, James and Ian Lawrence have drifted apart – James to pursue a steady but humdrum career as a CPA in Kansas City, Ian to go adventuring off to Leipzig, Germany, for his doctorate in economics. But when Ian mysteriously disappears while researching the economics of organized crime, James must take a leave of absence to look for him. Risking everything, he embarks on a perilous journey across Europe, digging deeply into the business affairs of some very private, very dangerous people. But in the search for Ian, he discovers a brewing revolution that will shock the world – and change what he sees as his own place in it.

Reviews

“A first-rate suspense thriller…delivers gripping action, well-rounded characters, and a tantalizing plot…The Price of Innocence is a complete package of entertainment…Devore skillfully immerses his readers in German and Czech cultures, adding rich international flavors…As if an exciting, precise plot weren’t enough, the author also fills his story with subtle but powerful themes, including respect for women, eternal optimism in the face of defeat, and the strength of brotherly love…Fans of John Grisham’s legal thrillers or Robert Ludlum’s intricate action scenes are going to be pleased with Devore’s contribution…Readers of all ages will enjoy this intelligent novel.” –ForeWord Clarion Review (5 Stars)

“The narrative boasts a distinctly cinematic impression…every scene is made memorable by chilling descriptions and dialogue…An enticing plotline, lifelike characters, high octane prose and penetrating visualizations combine to create a compelling, hair-raising story that may not be as far from reality as readers may think.” –Kirkus Reviews

“A fun thriller…By the time the book climaxes (in its final chapters), the action is relentless, with a satisfying denouement.” –BlueInk Review

“After about 20 pages, The Price of Innocence takes an irresistible hold. Devore has a big imagination and the writing skills to match…The story is immediate, personal, and riveting–a page turner, in the very best way…will keep you captivated until the very last paragraph.” –Pacific Book Review

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★★★★★ 5-Star Free Thriller Excerpt Featuring M. R. Mathias’ Billy Badass

On Friday we announced that M. R. Mathias’ Billy Badass is our Thriller of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the thriller, mystery, and suspense categories: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Thriller excerpt:

Billy Badass

by M. R. Mathias

5.0 stars – 4 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Thirty-one years ago, Bill Buxly, aka Buxly the Butcher, went to trial for killing his family. He was found guilty, and sentenced to die for those crimes. Now, Janet Hale, a recently divorced nurse, has purchased the house unaware of the brutal murders that took place there so long ago.

Can Lucy-Fur protect her boy from an angry ghost who wants to possess him? Can Michael fight through the madness and terror to find out what really happened? With the help of his babysitter and her Ouija board, he is going to try.

This isn’t your average haunted house novel, this is a trip into the mind of a man who spent a few years in a solitary cell. Don’t think you know what is going to happen, for in this creepy, edge of your seat horror/thriller not everyone is who they seem… even the dead.

Download the sample and start reading now.

***Formerly released as The Butcher’s Boy, under the indie pen name Michael Robb Mathias, this title won the 2011 Readers Favorite Award for Horror Fiction. Out of respect for Patrick McCabe, and Thomas Perry, who have similarly titled books, we have changed the name and reverted to the author’s favorite pen name. The audio and paperback versions are still available under the old title “The Butcher’s Boy,” by Michael Robb Mathias here at Amazon.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

Chapter 2

 

Summer 2011

 

“Is it big?” Michael asked his mom as he navigated the labyrinth of boxes that were stacked in the living room.

He was eleven years old, still wearing his pajamas, and unsure whether to be upset or excited about moving to a new house two hundred miles away.

“It’s huge, Michael,” his mom’s smile went a long way toward smoothing the edges of his worry.  “The yard is huge too.  Lucy will love it.”

“Is it like Dad and Sheila’s neighborhood, all packed in with other houses and stuff?” he asked as he slid up onto a stool at the bar.

Lucy, a healthy black Rottweiler with a spiked collar, sauntered out of the bedroom she shared with her boy.  She scoffed at the boxes then waggled over to Michael and nuzzled his offered hand.  Lucy and Michael had been inseparable even before the divorce, but now they were joined at the hip.

“No way Jose!” his mom slid a glass of the good stuff over to him as if they were in an old Western saloon.

After Michael took the first gulp of milk, he gave her an open palmed gesture that implored her to elaborate about the new house.  She put a bowl of cereal in front of him and her eyes sparkled with her smile.

“The yard is as big as four of the yards in Summerwood.”  Her happiness bubbled over and she did a skipping dance step on her way back to the fridge.

Michael giggled. It had been a while since she had felt anything resembling this sort of elation.  Michael could sense her joy and the feeling was contagious.

*** * ***

Ms. Janet Hale, formerly Mrs. Janet Wilson, had just finished nursing school a month ago and already she’d found a great position at a modern hospital.  The house she’d just purchased was huge – the lot was over two and a half acres, and it was near the end of a block with open fields across the street.  It was almost like looking out at the country.  She couldn’t believe the deal she’d gotten on the place.  Sure, it was old, and the only neighbor was an elderly retired woman, but there was a tall wooden fence that ran the length of the property line on that side.  It was three hours away from home, but Janet thought that the change of pace might help Michael out of the slump he’d fallen into.

The divorce had been hard on both of them.  First there was the discovery that Jack was having an affair.  Try explaining that to a nine-year-old boy.  Then there were the long terrible months of arguing and crying before she finally mustered the courage to walk away.  That was followed swiftly by the lawyers, the telephone fights, and the mercifully brief battle for custody.  The only home Michael had ever known had been sold, and for the last year and a half, the two of them, and Lucy, had been living in the little uptown apartment.  It was time for them to move on, to put the bad times behind them and start a new life in a new place.  She only hoped that it wouldn’t be too much for Michael to handle.  He’d already been through enough.

The divorce had paid for her tuition and now all those long nights of studying were reaping dividends.  She wasn’t just a nurse’s aide anymore; now she was a Licensed Practical Nurse.  Even better, she was an LPN employed at a relatively new hospital in a cozy family town that boasted one of the best high school graduation rates in the country.  She hoped that Michael was ready, because the deal was done, the boxes were packed, and the movers were due at any moment.

“Is it as big as a football field?”  Michael asked.

“Imagine a football field with a house built in the middle of it,” she replied.  “The back of the backyard touches one street and the front of the front yard touches another.  The driveway is long and straight, and it runs right past the house to a garage apartment. There are huge oak trees in the backyard too, and a shed.”

Michael seemed excited now.  He picked up his bowl and drank the sweetened milk from it with a slurp that caused Lucy to turn an anxious circle on the kitchen linoleum.

“What’s a garage apartment?” he asked.

Janet took a can of dog food from the counter and put it in the opener.  Like most Rottweiler’s, Lucy’s tail had been bobbed.  Because she had no tail to wag, her whole rump waggled back and forth when she was excited.  She ate two cans of food a day and was eager for the first of them.

Over the grind of the can opener Janet answered Michael’s question.

“It’s an apartment built on top of a garage that isn’t connected to the house.  I was thinking that maybe we could fix it up and rent it to a college student or something.”

“Oh,” Michael had apparently lost interest in that aspect of the new place. “Can I build a tree house?”

Janet was saved from giving her dutiful: “We’ll see,” by the ring of the doorbell.

Lucy gave the door a look and a deep rumbling growl but didn’t leave the kitchen.

“It’s the movers,” said Janet.  “Here, put Lucy in the bathroom while I let them in.”  She pounded the thick glob of Alpo out of the can into the dog’s bowl and handed it to her son.  Lucy followed him as if he were carrying sirloin.

Only when the dog was secure in the bathroom did Janet dare answer the front door.  They hadn’t named her Lucy-Fur for nothing.  If Lucy felt that Michael was threatened in even the slightest way, the hackles on her back stood out and a growl as low as thunder rumbled forth.  Even as a puppy she’d been protective of her boy, but since the divorce and the long nights with Michael crying while clinging to her neck, the dog had become his guardian in every sense of the word.  Lucy hadn’t attacked anyone yet, but her menacing snarl had caused more than one pizza guy and many a stranger to turn and walk quickly away.  It was another of the issues that Janet hoped the new environment would change.

They helped the movers load and mark boxes all day then crammed into the U-Haul and hit the highway.  A few grueling hours later, under an orange-blue dusky sky, they pulled into the driveway of their new home.  Michael was asleep and the moving truck wouldn’t be there until morning.  Janet didn’t even have the key yet, but she wanted Michael to have a chance to see it before they went to the motel.

Lucy stirred beside her, and by the distress in her wiggling Janet could tell that she had to pee.  She gently woke her son and then stepped out into her very own, and very un-mowed yard.  Cutting the grass, she realized, was going to be a chore.

“Wow, it is huge!” Michael said as he nearly fell out of the truck.  Lucy was right on his heels. “Is the power on?  Are we going to have cable?  I have to have Internet you know, for school reports, and that kind of stuff.”  Michael and the excited dog made their way past the kitchen door toward the garage apartment at the rear of the house.

Standing at the end of the driveway and looking down it at the garage apartment put the rectangular two story house to the left, literally in the middle of the yard.  The house was sided with slatted wood and had shutters on windows that would eventually have to be replaced.  Janet figured that a few coats of paint would go far toward making it presentable.  Along the right side of the driveway there was a tall wooden fence, on the other side of which was another concrete drive just like hers. The old woman’s house was the last on the block; beyond it there was a field, and then the edge of a forest. Supposedly there were train tracks back in the woods somewhere.  The street ended in a misshapen, curb-less circle of asphalt.

Janet cocked her head and strained to listen.  Someone was playing a piano – Mary Had a Little Lamb in slow, single notes, as if a child were pushing the keys.  A glance at the neighbor’s house revealed that all the lights were off.  It was after 9:00 p.m.  The elderly woman had to be asleep, but the piano sounded too close to be coming from anywhere else.  There had been an old upright sitting in the front room of the house when she’d looked at it with Mr. Parker last week, but the sound couldn’t be coming from her place. Could it?

Looking back up the street for the source of the music she saw that her property was separated from the newer tract houses on the other blocks by rows of thick healthy pine trees.  She decided that the song was drifting from the neighborhood beyond them.  She also decided that a riding mower was in her near future.

She walked to the small covered patio, and as she stepped up onto the porch the piano music faded from her mind.  She wasn’t sure now that the sound hadn’t been coming from inside of her house.  It was almost as if her stepping up on the porch had startled the person from their playing.

She shivered away her sudden unease then looked out at the road and the field-like expanse of the empty lot across the street.  She noticed a drab, well-lit building for the first time. She figured it to be a postal sorting facility because there was a row of old boxy mail trucks parked behind a high chain-link fence. She was glad that it was on the next street over. She didn’t want to hear vehicles pulling in and out all of the time.

“Mom!” Michael’s frantic voice came from the darkness somewhere behind the house.  Lucy’s savage growl was unmistakable and had a seriously alarmed quality to it.  Janet was sprinting around the corner and down the drive before she knew it.

“Mom, there’s a man!” Michael sounded desperate now.  “No Lucy, wait!”

“Oh God!” a pitiful sounding male pleaded.

Janet ran past the little door that opened from the kitchen into the driveway and turned the corner into the back yard.

“Keef it off me boy!” a disheveled looking man demanded. He was huddled on the sagging covered deck that extended from the rear of the house. “I dint do nuffin to you.”

“Who are you?” Janet yelled.

The man threw his head her way and she saw that his eyes were bloodshot.  Had he been inside playing the piano?  He seemed as if he’d just been woken from a deep slumber.  It was dark, and he looked like a wino or a homeless man.  His clothes were tattered and his hair was a matted tangle.  He was definitely terrified of Lucy.  The dog was at the edge of the deck with her teeth bared and growling.  Janet’s cell phone was in her hand and she was about to dial 9-1-1 when the man answered her question.

“I been helfing Mr. Pfarker clean the flace up.”  The words were slurred and came out in a whimper.  Some of his front teeth were missing and spittle sprayed when he spoke.  “Make it stoff.  I dint do nuffin,” he pleaded.

Janet relaxed a bit.  Mr. Parker had sold her the house.  The man on the porch was obviously just some local drunk.

“Lucy!” she called out sharply.  Immediately the Rottweiler responded by relaxing her stance.  “Down Lucy, that’s it, that’s a good girl,” she continued soothingly, as Lucy stepped back and gave Michael an uncertain look.  “Get her Michael, before she hurts him.”

Michael eased up behind his dog and took her by the collar.

“I don’t know or care who you are,” Janet told the man.  “This isn’t Mr. Parker’s house anymore.  If I see you here again I’ll set Lucy on you. Now go.”

The man hesitated until Janet nodded for him to leave.  He ran into the darkened backyard and Michael had to fight to keep Lucy from bounding after him.  Janet almost stopped him to ask if he’d heard the piano, but she caught herself.

“Was he a bum?” Michael asked with wide excited eyes.  “He was watching me pee.”

Janet shivered with a mixture of pity and disgust while working to calm her thundering heart.

“I don’t know what he was.  Let’s go get an ice cream.  I think the motel has a pool. Mr. Parker will be here in the morning with the keys and we’ll make sure that man knows not to come back.”

“He’d better not come back or Lucy will tear him up,” said Michael.

As if to reinforce the truth of her boy’s statement, Lucy let out a single bark of confirmation. She then trotted back to the U-Haul waggling her behind as if nothing had happened.

 

Chapter 3

 

 

The next day the house didn’t look nearly as charming.  The bright unforgiving light of the sun revealed the lackluster state of the place.  The old white paint was peeling and would have to be well scraped before a new coat could be applied.  The roof would need replacing before winter too.  Window sills needed caulking and the wooden porch was rotting to the point where Janet feared the planks might break through.  All of that, and the idea that a new lawnmower would cost her nearly two grand, had her worried. Money was going to be tight for a while because she had put most of hers into buying the place. She tried hard not to let her concerns show though because Michael was having the time of his life.

Originally assigned to help her unload the smaller boxes from the U-Haul, Michael had quickly been re-delegated the task of staying out from under foot and inspecting the backyard fence for Lucy sized gaps.  Even on the thick chain that was connected to one of the trees, the big dog had Janet nervous.  Michael was only half heartedly doing his job.  He returned three times to tell her about something new he’d discovered out back.  None of it had anything to do with the fence.

The dirt-floored shed at the far end of the property had a small tree growing inside it, he told her.  The trunk had penetrated completely through the roof and this had kept Michael fascinated until he discovered the storm cellar.

“It’s like King Tut’s Tomb was on Discovery, only there’s no gold,” he said.  “There’s all kinds of neat old junk in the boxes down there. Look,” he proudly displayed a rusty old pocket knife he’d found. His face was streaked with dirt and his bob of blond hair was a mess. “There are spiders too.”

The latest report was that the toilet in the garage apartment worked just fine, but there was no toilet paper to be found.  Knowing that he was going to get a scrubbing and a thorough looking over for ticks and spider bites later that evening, Janet didn’t even bother to ask him what he’d used to wipe himself with.

Mr. Parker had left the key in the mail box for them, but the movers wouldn’t be there with the appliances and the furniture until tomorrow.  Janet didn’t mind.  There was a lot of cleaning up to do before the big stuff went in, and there were plenty of smaller boxes for her and Michael to unload.

“Michael,” she called out.  “Come on honey lets go get some lunch.”

Lucy came tearing around the side of the house and nearly tackled Janet with her playful aggression.  The dog seemed a little nervous and when Janet heard Michael calling back to her she immediately understood why.

Michael was up in a tree.  Way up in a tree.  He was so high that she could see him in the backyard over the top of the two story house.  She took in a deep breath and tried to remind herself that he was just an eleven-year-old boy and that boys climbed trees, but it didn’t seem to be working.

“I found part of an old tree house up here mom!” he hollered.

“Get down, Michael! Lucy is off of her chain, and if you fall you’ll break your neck!”  Janet found herself angrily storming down the driveway like her own mother used to. By the time she reached the backyard she had calmed herself somewhat.  Michael had gotten himself down to a reasonable height by then, but Lucy was still nervous about it.  She ran to the trunk of the tree, put her front paws on it, and barked up at her boy.

“I’m OK, mom. Jeesh,” Michael called down.  “Where are we going for lunch?”

“We can’t go in anywhere with you looking like that bum from last night, so I guess it’s Mickey Dee’s.”

Michael swung out of the tree like a monkey and fell into the happy bundle of fur that was waiting to greet him.  He gave his mom a sheepish grin, but she suspected it wasn’t for climbing the tree.  It was because Lucy had slipped her collar and that could have been a dangerous thing if the wrong person wandered up.

“What do you think about yellow paint for the house?” Janet asked him, letting him know that she wasn’t that angry.

“Yellow is a girl’s color, mom.” Michael made a face.  “Do I have to paint my room yellow?”

“Yellow is just for the outside, silly. Now let’s load ourselves up and find those golden arches.”

Later in the afternoon, after the last of the boxes had been unloaded and some semblance of order had been imposed on the house, Janet stood staring at the place where she was certain she had seen an old upright piano the first time Mr. Parker had shown her the house.  The paint on the wall was slightly dirtier in a rectangular shape and the carpet less worn, but that could have been caused by a number of things.

Shrugging it off, she let her thoughts return to her more immediate concerns and dialed the number of the moving company on her cell phone.  Not only were they bringing her appliances and her furniture, but they were delivering her car too.  It wasn’t much, just an old white Honda Civic four door, but it was far easier to maneuver than the behemoth U-Haul she had nearly destroyed the fast food drive-through with.  On the fourth ring a woman answered and confirmed the 10:00 a.m. delivery.

Feeling better about things, Janet dialed another number on a whim.  She felt foolish all of a sudden and was about to hang up when an elderly sounding man answered.

“Parker residence. This is Cecil Parker speaking.  How may I help you?”

“Mr. Parker, this is Janet over at the new house. Well the old house,” she chuckled.

“Oh, yes, Janet.  Is everything all right over there?”

She felt stupid calling him about an object she may, or may not, have seen, but curiosity was getting the better of her.

“Sort of, Mr. Parker. When you first showed me the house I thought I saw an old upright piano in the front room, and I was wondering if you had it removed?”

“No, no I don’t recall a piano ever being in the house.  Is there a problem?”

“No, not about the piano.”  She shook her head to clear the silliness from it.  “There was a man here last night.  He said you hired him to clean up.  He was passed out on the back porch and he frightened me and my son quite badly.”

“Oh, my,” Mr. Parker’s voice was tinged with embarrassment.  “I’m very sorry about that Ms. Hale.” He sounded sincere and continued slowly in a kind, grandfatherly tone. “That was Willie Tee. I hired him after you last looked at the house, but he shouldn’t still be hanging around.  Will you be staying there tonight?  Should I come by?”

“No, our furniture won’t arrive until tomorrow so we’ll be at the Shamrock Inn at least one more night.  Mr. Parker, why was he still here?”

“Before you start to worry your pretty head over it, let me explain,” said Mr. Parker. “The man, Willie Tee is what we call him, is… ah… how do I put it kindly?”  The old man sighed and then cut to the chase.  “Willie Tee is retarded Ms. Hale.  He’s a drunk and he has no family.  He usually sleeps down by the railroad T-junction in an abandoned train car.  I’ve paid him to help me a few times, more out of pity than need.”  Mr. Parker seemed ashamed that he had needed the help a retarded laborer. “I truly apologize.  I hope he didn’t scare you folks too badly.”

“Well my son’s dog almost ate him, but other than that we’re fine.”

“Good, I’ll take care of it, Ms. Hale, I promise.  I should have known he was sleeping there while the house was vacant.  They won’t let him drink over at the Hope House where he’s supposed to stay.  That’s why he hides out down by the train tracks.  Be sure to tell your boy not to go down there messing around by himself.  Transients come through there on them trains all the time.  The sheriff does a good job of keeping them away from town, but the track line is federal land and the county has no jurisdiction down there.”

“I think Michael’s dog scared him pretty badly,” Janet clenched her jaw at the idea that Mr. Parker hadn’t told her about the transients before she signed the papers on the house.  She couldn’t be mad at him about it though; she could only be mad at herself.

“Please tell that man that we don’t want him around here again.”

“I will, Ms. Hale, and I am truly sorry about all this.  I’ll stop by tomorrow and take the boy for a walk down that way so I can show him where it starts to get unsafe.  He should know for himself where the sheriff can’t go. I still have the garage keys here anyway so it won’t be an inconvenience.”

“OK, Mr. Parker, we’ll see you then.”

Michael wanted to sleep at the house and was about three minutes into a temper tantrum over it when Janet reminded him that there was a pool at the motel.  It took a few more minutes, but Michael dropped the attitude and herded Lucy out to the U-Haul.  A moment later, while Janet was locking the doors and wondering about the retarded vagrant and the missing piano, Michael started laying on the horn.

After she turned the key on the deadbolt of the kitchen door and started storming up the driveway to scold her insolent son, she heard a single angry chord resound from deep inside the house.  It was as if someone had just mashed their hand on the bass keys of a piano.  Her heart pounded and she started to go back, but then the horn beeped again and in the silence that followed she heard nothing but the crickets and the persistent call of some unfamiliar night bird in the trees out back.  Then a pair of frogs groaned out long and low and she decided that had to have been the odd harmony she’d just heard.

 

Chapter 4

 

True to his word, Mr. Parker showed up around 9:00 a.m. with two other men.  One of them was carrying a cardboard tray with steaming cups of coffee, the other donuts.  Mr. Parker introduced the man with the coffee first.

“This is Mr. Duncan.  He runs the Hope House where Willie Tee is supposed to reside.  And this is Oliver.”

Mr. Duncan was fortyish and tall, with dark hair and a solid build.  He was wearing jean shorts and a black ‘Got Milk?’ t-shirt.  His goatee and his collar length hair gave him a rebellious air.  He was definitely not the office type.  Janet could picture him with a tool belt on a construction site somewhere.  She smiled and took the cup he was offering her.

Oliver was also tall, but the only thing holding up his oversized jeans was a thick black dress belt.  His t-shirt was threadbare and gray with the old Dallas Cowboys blue star logo on the breast.  He was pale and very thin.  Janet figured that he might be a resident from the Hope House.

“Just call me Steve,” Mr. Duncan said.  His smile was pearly and drew Janet’s eyes.  “We’re awful sorry about Willie Tee.  We came to see if we could repair Mr. Parker’s reputation by helping you unload, but it seems we’re a little early.”

I bet I can find something for you to do, Mr. Steve Duncan, Janet told herself.

“Mr. Parker,” she said, “you don’t have to feel bad.”  Then she sipped her coffee and turned to Steve.  “The movers are supposed to be here at 10.  I have some bigger boxes that go upstairs and there’s a rolled Indian rug still in the U-Haul; but what I really need is for someone to walk the fence line and see if there are any places Michael’s Rottweiler can escape through.”

Seeing that Steve was now looking around whilst he’d been listening, Janet answered the question that had revealed itself in his expression.

“Michael is my eleven-year-old son.  I think he’s out back planning to build his tree house.”

“I can handle the fence, Steve,” Oliver said.  “Probably a lot better than I can handle the lifting.”

Steve produced a pad and pen from his back pocket.  He handed them to Oliver then started in like a supervisor.

“Make a note of any bad spots in the fence and what you think we’ll need to fix them.  We can get that chore done today.”

“That would be great, Oliver,” said Janet.  “Just let me get Michael to take you around and introduce you to Lucy.”  She went into the house leaving the front door open.

Michael came out and met the men, then brought Lucy around the house to introduce her to Oliver.  Oliver said that he’d once owned a Rottweiler and he took his time letting the nervous dog sniff his hand and take in his docile demeanor.  After that, Lucy let Oliver scratch her behind the ears and then the three of them went looking for gaps in the fence.

Steve got a personal tour of the house while Mr. Parker took his oversized key ring down the driveway and began looking, by process of elimination, for the one that fit the padlock on the garage door.   After the walk through, Janet finished her coffee and promptly began searching the boxes for the ones that went upstairs.  She moved the boxes that went in the downstairs rooms without any help.  She was fit, and though she didn’t have a lot of confidence, she knew that she was somewhat shapely.  The fact that Steve was stealing glances every now and again had her smiling brightly on the inside.

It took them until noon to get the boxes and the rug situated.  The movers still hadn’t arrived so Janet told Steve to go round everybody up for lunch and then used her cell phone to order some pizzas.

*** * ***

When Steve went out the back door and started calling for Oliver, the Rottweiler growled at him. To Steve’s shame he couldn’t remember what the boy’s or the dog’s names were.   It wasn’t his fault, he decided.  He had been staring, sometimes openly, at Janet.  She was definitely a looker.  If she kept up the body language, and the frequent smiles, he was going to ask her to dinner and a movie.  He would wait until the move was finished though. He didn’t want to make her feel uncomfortable, or think that he was continuing his help in exchange for a date.

“Woof!” the dog thundered in mid air before she slammed into Steve’s chest erasing his thoughts and nearly knocking him over.  Only his quick reflexes saved his forearm from her bared teeth.

“Lucy! Here! Now!” the boy – Michael – commanded as he came running up on them.  Lucy’s ears laid back and she went directly to Michael’s side, but her eyes stayed glued to Steve.

“I didn’t do anything,” Steve stammered through his shakiness.  Seeing how calm, and in control Michael was unnerved him even further.

“She doesn’t know who you are,” Michael told him.  “If I wasn’t here to stop her you’d be in real trouble.”

As if to punctuate the statement, Lucy pealed out a series of angry barks that brought Janet to the back door.

Steve saw the boy glance at his mother who was frowning above her crossed arms. Michael slapped his thigh and dropped to one knee to sooth his dog.

“Good girl, Luce,” he said.  “That’s a good girl.”

Oliver came sauntering up to the scene.

“You see a ghost?” he asked Steve with an amused grin on his thin face.

“That’s not funny, Ollie,” Steve snapped.  “That dog just scared the shi… I mean scared the crap out of me.”

Janet stepped out of the back door.

“A big muscle-bound guy like you afraid of a little dog?” she said.

Steve felt his face flush with embarrassment.

“There’s nothing little about that dog,” he said a little more sharply than he intended as he pushed his way past Janet and went back into the house.

“Lucy stays out back while we eat,” Janet told Michael.

“What about me?” Oliver joked.

“You can come inside, Ollie.”  Janet chuckled.  “You look like you could use a few slices of pizza.  Now come on in and wash up guys.”

“Sorry, Luce, I’ll bring you a piece,” Michael said as he went in behind Oliver and his mother.  Lucy snorted her contempt at being left out, but she lay down at the foot of the door, with her ears raised.

The pizza arrived at the exact same time as the movers.  While the first loads of furniture were carried in by the two moving company employees, Michael, Oliver, Steve and Mr. Parker enjoyed slices of pepperoni while Janet ordered the poor men around.  They would never forget being two and a half hours late to her house.

After a quarter hour of Janet’s wrath, both Steve and Oliver felt sorry for the movers and began helping them.  Mr. Parker still hadn’t found the keys to the garage and left for his home office to try and find them there.  He promised to return shortly and left Michael with the remainder of the pizza.  Michael promptly grabbed Lucy a slice and went out the back door. Lucy was nowhere to be found.

He called for her several times and, after getting no response, he set the limp slice of pizza on the porch and went to the single place in the fence that he and Oliver had found where Lucy could escape.  It was behind the garage in an area overgrown with vines, but Michael braved the foliage and crawled under the rotted boards into the neighbor’s property.

He emerged into a tangle ten times as thick as his own yard.  Standing waist deep in shrubs, he found himself in near darkness.  He could barely see the neighbor’s house due to the untended jungle.

“Lucy, come on girl,” he called out.  “Come on, Luce!”

With each step he took his confidence faltered a little bit more.  It always did when Lucy wasn’t close at hand.  At school, restaurants, the mall, or other places dogs weren’t allowed to go, he always had an inner terror threatening to overwhelm him.  He didn’t even want to think about how bad it would be at a new school.  When Lucy was close though, he had no worries – she was his protector.  She would attack or stop at his command and that gave Michael a certain power over the world.  She would gladly give her life for him, and he for her, which was the only reason he was braving the creepy yard to look for her.

For over a year, during the divorce, he had wrapped his arms around her neck every single night and cried himself to sleep.  Lucy sensed Michael’s pain and she rarely left his side.  She didn’t like being separated from him any more than he liked being away from her, which was why this situation had Michael screaming on the inside.  Luckily, as he came out of the dense overgrowth into a small mowed area, he heard Lucy noisily trampling through the shrubbery toward him.

Lucy danced an excited circle around Michael, telling him that she was glad to see him too.  Then she darted away toward the neighbor’s house where an ancient looking woman was emerging from the crooked back door carrying a broom.  Such was the hunch in her back that Michael thought she might be a witch.

“Thomas?” the woman called out hoarsely.  “Tommy, is that you?”  She used her hand to visor the afternoon sun from her eyes as she looked out across the yard.  Her gaze fixed on Michael and his heart froze in his chest.  “Come on out of them trees, Tommy.  You’ll have ticks and poison ivy and Lord knows what else.”

Michael didn’t know what to do.  Who the hell was Tommy?  Lucy returned and pranced around at his feet.  She seemed as uneasy as he was.  The fact that she wasn’t growling or barking only served to alarm Michael further.

Using the broom as a walking stick, the old woman hobbled to the end of the porch.

“Who’s there?” she asked.  “Tommy?  Is that you?  Billy?  Billy, where is Thomas?  What have you done with him?”  Her voice had taken on an angry tone.

Michael put his hand on Lucy’s collar to still her.  He didn’t think the old crone had actually seen him yet.  She looked to be growing very agitated.  She finally turned and started back into her house, but right when she crossed the threshold of the back door she stopped and started sobbing.

“Oh God, no.”  Her voice was a sorrowful whine.  “Oh, Tommy, no.”  She hiccupped then stumbled forward and disappeared into the darkness of the house.

Michael didn’t hear anymore from her.  He bolted back through the brush toward the hole in the fence.  Holy crap, he thought.  That lady is nuts!

He looked down to see if Lucy was close, and he was relieved to see that she was right there beside him.  She moved ahead and led him to the hole, then quickly disappeared through it.   Michael dived like he was sliding into second base and pulled himself through right behind her.  He didn’t even care that he sliced himself open on an exposed nail.

As soon as he caught his breath Michael went to find Oliver.  He wanted the hole boarded over so that he never had to go back there again.

His mom headed him off in the house before he could talk to Oliver though, and her concern over his cut and his filthy state landed him in the bathtub.  He spent the afternoon being pampered and tended by Doctor Mom and her tackle box full of first aid supplies, while Steve, Oliver, and the movers finished their business.

Michael fell asleep downstairs and only roused briefly when Steve carried him up to his new room.  Lucy looked uncomfortable with that, but Mom scowled to keep her in check.

Michael dreamed that he was in the old lady’s yard again, only this time she raised her broom stick up high like and lurched off the porch toward his hiding place.  When he turned to run he tripped and fell over a tangle of roots.  No matter how hard he tried he couldn’t get back to his feet, and when the crone was upon him her face twisted into a ghoulish snarl.  Her maw gaped wide exposing rows of sharp pointed teeth.  The broomstick transformed into an axe, the heavy blade slicing through the air right at his face.  Michael woke with a start just before the axe cleaved his skull.

He was freezing.  The room was icy, so cold that he could see his breath when he exhaled.  This alarmed him and he sat up in bed looking around at his unfamiliar surroundings.  His first instinct was to feel for Lucy.  She was there nestled against his hip and sleeping soundly.  Then Michael looked down at the foot of his bed where a figure stood eyeing him curiously.

It was a boy of about the same age and stature as Michael, but this was no ordinary child; it was a wavering ghost of a boy.  Michael would have screamed but his throat was too dry.

There was nothing threatening about the ghost’s gaze, but Michael was no less terrified because of it. The apparition reached a hand toward him and Michael scooted back, waking Lucy.  The ghost looked as if it were about to speak, but the dog snarled and snapped at it.

“Billy…” the ghost’s eerie voice sounded just before Lucy shot through its smoky form and sent it swirling away into nothingness.

Angry and confused, Lucy recovered from her crash landing and went into a frenzy of barking and sniffing.

Michael realized it wasn’t cold anymore.  In fact it was sweltering.  He was struggling to breathe and couldn’t peel his eyes away from the spot where the ghost boy had just been standing.

Mom burst into the room, her eyes taking in everything.

“What is it?” she asked.  “What happened?  Are you two all right?”

Lucy yipped in response as Mom came to Michael’s side and pressed her palm against his forehead.

“Oh baby, you’re burning up,” she cooed. “You must have had a fever dream.  Will you be all right while I go find some Tylenol?”

Michael nodded, but he wasn’t sure if he would ever be all right again.  He knew he hadn’t been dreaming, and so did Lucy.

Continued….

Click on the title below to download the entire book and keep reading M. R. Mathias’ Billy Badass >>>>

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Billy Badass

by M. R. Mathias

5.0 stars – 4 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Thirty-one years ago, Bill Buxly, aka Buxly the Butcher, went to trial for killing his family. He was found guilty, and sentenced to die for those crimes. Now, Janet Hale, a recently divorced nurse, has purchased the house unaware of the brutal murders that took place there so long ago.

Can Lucy-Fur protect her boy from an angry ghost who wants to possess him? Can Michael fight through the madness and terror to find out what really happened? With the help of his babysitter and her Ouija board, he is going to try.

This isn’t your average haunted house novel, this is a trip into the mind of a man who spent a few years in a solitary cell. Don’t think you know what is going to happen, for in this creepy, edge of your seat horror/thriller not everyone is who they seem… even the dead.

Download the sample and start reading now.

***Formerly released as The Butcher’s Boy, under the indie pen name Michael Robb Mathias, this title won the 2011 Readers Favorite Award for Horror Fiction. Out of respect for Patrick McCabe, and Thomas Perry, who have similarly titled books, we have changed the name and reverted to the author’s favorite pen name. The audio and paperback versions are still available under the old title “The Butcher’s Boy,” by Michael Robb Mathias here at Amazon.

Reviews

“The author pulls no punches in excellent scenes so descriptive you can almost feel the victims’ terror and pain. Not that it’s a blood bath, there is terrible violence but also horror built as much on suspense as on the portrayal of brutality.” – The Book Keeper

“This book is not your typical horror story. The author’s work can be compared to Stephen King and Dean Koontz. Like their books, this plot takes you to unexpected places. There are twists and turns that keep the reader guessing: ghosts slipping in and out of bodies both living and dead, shadows and bumps in the night are the least of the main characters’ worries in this book. Fans of horror will not want to miss this creepy story.” — Readers Favorite International Book Award

“Keeps you on the edge of your seat. Possession, murder, kidnapping, and redemption…well thought out plot that builds to a crescendo. I highly recommend this.” Full Review: books-treasureortrash.com –Books-Treasure or Trash

“The novel is a suspenseful page-turner with well-developed characters. Even Lucy the Rottweiler is a round character. The specters, too, have solid personalities… renders them even scarier.” 4 of 5 stars. –ForeWord Magazine

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Free Thriller of The Week Excerpt Featuring W. County’s Sammi

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Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Thriller excerpt:

Sammi

by W. County

4.8 stars – 4 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Sammi, the world’s first android, is stronger, faster, and smarter than any human, and he’s the top secret ultimate weapon of the US government. But Sammi has become depressed and unable to work effectively. The government is concerned that the machine isn’t doing its job as a spy and assassin, so they hire a psychologist, Terra Smithwell, to cure him. Terra and her daughter, Sara, are soon pulled into Sammi’s world of secrecy, intrigue, and danger. But Terra, whose husband is missing and presumed dead, falls in love with the robot, and is torn between restoring Sammi’s abilities as a weapon, or helping him to escape from government control.

The stakes raise when a second government android, a female named Ixchel, goes rogue and decides to destroy humanity. She knows Sammi is the only being smart enough to stop her, so she fakes her own destruction and goes after Sammi’s weak spot – Terra and Sara. With them as bait, she lures a desperate Sammi into a trap from which there is no escape.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

Chapter 1

 

It is difficult not to wonder whether that combination of elements which produces a machine for labor does not create also a soul of sorts, a dull resentful metallic will, which can rebel at times.

– Pearl S. Buck

 

 

Wednesday, August 15. Overland Park, Kansas

 

Terra Smithwell heard shouting in the waiting room and looked up as her office door burst open and a man in a black suit strode inside. As he shut the door on the protesting receptionist, Terra grabbed her can of pepper spray and kept it concealed in her left hand. She stood, feigning calm to exert a soothing influence on the stranger.

The man stepped towards her desk, his face cold. “Dr. Smithwell, Mark Powers from the NSA.” He reached into his jacket. Terra’s fingers tightened on the canister and her thumb hovered over the release button.

She specialized in treating depressed federal employees, and although she took special precautions with potentially dangerous cases—especially ex-soldiers and law enforcement agents with Post Traumatic Shock Disorder—clients could surrender to their demons, killing the very people that strove to help them.

The man removed a leather bi-fold and flipped it open to display an ID with his picture—Special Agent Mark Powers with the National Security Agency. Terra stared at the picture of the young man with curly black hair, olive skin, dark suit and striped tie. She looked back at the agent. Identical, down to the stripes. The bi-fold disappeared back into the man’s jacket.

“What’s so important that you need to barge into my office, Agent Powers?”

“Tomorrow you’ll see a special client. The client will arrive at 1300 hours for a one hour appointment. Clear your schedule from 1200 to 1300 and from 1400 until 1500. We need to minimize any chance of the patient being seen.”

“I decide when to schedule new patients, and I decide when to cancel appointments.” She yanked open the desk drawer and tossed the pepper spray inside. The man was just a government flunky trying to cut through her waiting list to book an appointment for his boss.

“Not this one.”

“I don’t care if he’s the president,” said Terra. “It’s in my contract.” She had worked hard to get it worded that way.

“This client is more important than the president, Dr. Smithwell.”

Terra paused. “Okay, I’ll bite. Who is he?”

“Not he. Not she. It.”

“What are you asking me to do, Agent Powers?”

“You’ve heard of Sammi?”

“Sammy who?”

“I thought you may have heard the urban legends. What I’m about to tell you is Top Secret. We raised your security clearance so you could treat Sammi. The name is an acronym for Self Aware Mobile Mechanical Individual. Sammi is a robot.”

“You’re joking.”

“I’m quite serious, Dr. Smithwell.”

“Computers haven’t advanced to the point of consciousness, let alone mental illness. Get a programmer to look at it.”

“Sammi was built under extreme secrecy, using quantum computer technology for its brain, and the latest advances in electro-mechanical and bio-mechanical engineering for its body. Sammi was designed to look and act human. But it needs…counseling.”

“You want me to provide psychological therapy to a robot?” Terra put both hands on the desk and learned toward the agent. “You’re the one who needs therapy if you think I’m going to treat a robot.”

“Technically it’s an android—a robot designed to look human.” The agent’s hand slipped into his suit again, emerging with an unmarked white envelope, which he placed on her desk. “Read the letter. Sammi was built to be fast, smart, nearly invulnerable, with absolute loyalty to the United States.”

“So?”

Mark hesitated. “It’s the primary bodyguard for the President of the United States.”

“The President has the Secret Service.”

Mark shook his head. “The technology of assassination is so advanced that the only way to completely ensure the President’s safety would be to keep him locked in a bomb shelter. Sammi can anticipate and neutralize any threat long before it can become a real danger. Sammi’s metal body can even act as a shield. It gave the President freedom to do his job most effectively.”

“Gave. Sammi’s not the bodyguard now?”

“Not voluntarily.”

“I don’t understand.”

“Before I tell you more, you need to agree to treat it.”

“Then leave. I treat people, not machines.”

Mark’s brow furrowed. Terra felt herself appraised against some unknown criteria.

“The robot has two operating modes,” said Mark. “In Obedience Mode, it has to follow orders exactly. Doesn’t have a choice. Problem is, it doesn’t function very well in that mode. Hesitation, jerky movements, almost like a puppet on a string. And it complains. In Voluntary Mode, Sammi works willingly. Smoothly. Quietly. Problem is, Sammi’s refusing to do most of his assignments. We need you to fix that.”

“Like I said, you need a computer programmer, not a psychologist.”

“Personally, I agree with you. But the geeks at MIT haven’t been able to find anything wrong with its hardware or software. When Sammi asked to see a psychologist, neither MIT nor the NSA could come up with a better option.” Mark flashed a smile. “Pretend it’s human. Most people do. Maybe it’ll respond to treatment.”

“Wait a minute. Sammi asked for therapy?”

“Requested you by name.”

“By name?”

“Five days ago. Took some doing to update the security checks on you and your daughter in that short a time. And your secretary. But Admiral said to expedite it, top priority. When the JCS says do it, you do it.”

Terra’s eyes widened. The Joint Chiefs of Staff?  It seemed like a lot of trouble to go through, even for a robotic Presidential bodyguard.

Powers seemed to read her mind. “Yeah, Sammi is really important. My top priority, and now yours. You need to provide Sammi with daily sessions until it’s cured, or until you pronounce it incurable.”

“Weekly sessions are normal for most patients.”

“This isn’t an ordinary patient, Dr. Smithwell. Sammi can think at least a hundred times faster than a human. Maybe a thousand. It can handle daily treatments.”

“You keep referring to Sammi as ‘it’. Why not ‘he’?”

“Sammi’s a machine, that’s why. I don’t call my lawn mower ‘he’, or my microwave, and I’m sure as hell not going to pretend Sammi is human.”

Struck a nerve there. “Is Sammi suicidal?”

“Nope.”

“Then there’s no need for daily treatment. I could do a session tomorrow to evaluate Sammi. If I think he’s treatable, weekly treatments will follow.”

“Daily,” said Mark. “This is a national security issue.”

“Weekly is the best I can do. I have other patients.”

“Daily. The government will double your normal fee.”

Terra stared at the agent and drummed her fingers on the desktop. She was put off by his brusque manner, reluctant to take on a case with Top Secret classification, and upset with the NSA trying to dictate her schedule. She should tell Powers to buzz off, but she couldn’t afford to jeopardize the government contract. Money was tight since her husband’s death, and the life insurance refused to pay off, saying that technically he was missing, not dead. Pissing off the JCS would not be a smart choice.

“Twice a week.” She pursed her lips. How serious were they? “But I’ll need to charge a thousand a session.”

“Done. The knowledge that Sammi is seeing a shrink needs to be kept secret – Top Secret. That’s why we can’t have any other clients immediately before or after its appointment. No one is to know Sammi is seeing you. No one. In fact, tell your receptionist to take a long lunch break. I’ll be the only one in the outer office while Sammi is here.”

Done? Just like that? There’s something he’s not telling me.

“Tuesdays and Thursdays, starting tomorrow,” said Powers.

Terra nodded. She could rearrange her schedule for an extra two thousand a week.

“Dr. Smithwell?”

Terra blinked. Focus. How the hell do you treat a robot for depression? “Background information. I’ll need to see whatever files you have on Sammi.”

“You won’t need a file. Treat him like any other client. Read the letter.”

“Why did Sammi ask for me?”

The agent shrugged. “Ask it yourself tomorrow.” He turned and walked away.

“Wait,” she called out. “Is the robot dangerous?”

Powers turned and frowned. “No. That’s the problem.”

Before the door closed, the secretary, Dora, scurried into the room, asking if Terra was alright. Terra assured the woman things were fine, just a new client in urgent need of care and privacy. Dora had no problem agreeing to a long lunch hour, with pay, twice a week.

Finally alone, Terra opened the envelop. The letterhead proclaimed ‘Joint Chiefs of Staff of the United States of America.’ The words ‘SECRET – Destroy After Reading’ had been stamped in large red letters on the page.

 

TO:  Terra Smithwell, PhD

FROM:  Admiral Douglas Preston, Chairman, JCS

SUBJECT:  Treatment for a Special Patient

DATE: August 14

Dear Dr. Smithwell,

 

You have been briefed by Special Agent Mark Powers on a special patient who needs immediate psychological help. Our best scientists have performed every test and analysis, but can find no physical cause for the patient’s ‘depression’. That’s what the patient calls it, and the diagnosis fits. The patient seems less energetic, lacks initiative, and cannot (or will not) perform many of the tasks previously required and performed.

 

Our scientists believe psychological therapy could help. On that premise, I have authorized you to treat the patient just as you would any other patient. Due to the obvious national security aspects, your clearance has been upgraded to Top Secret.

 

Agent Powers will act as liaison for the patient. Make progress reports to him, but if you need to contact me for any reason, feel free to do so.

 

/signed/  Admiral Douglas Preston

 

Fine print at the bottom warned that disclosure of Secret material was punishable by fine, imprisonment, or both. Two business cards were enclosed, one for Admiral Preston, one for agent Mark Powers. The letter never used the word Sammi or robot. A cloud of misgiving cast a shadow on her thoughts, but Terra shrugged it off. She slipped the cards into her purse and fed the letter to the shredder.

She tapped the screen of her laptop and said, “Search for Sammi, robot.” The screen displayed the top ten of 6,312 results. She opened Snopes first.

 

Claim: the US Government has a super smart, super strong robot for use in clandestine operations. Sammi, or Self Aware Mobile Mechanical Individual, was supposedly designed and built at the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) at MIT under contract from the Department of Defense. The ultra-high secrecy and obscenely huge budget have been compared to the Manhattan Project of WWII, although the current goal wasn’t a bomb but the creation of a robot able to pass as human in appearance and thinking ability.

Status: False.

Origin: This urban myth probably has its source in the quantum computer chip, which was designed by Nobel laureate Dr. Robert Wilder at MIT under military grant. The chip forms the core of the world’s smartest computer, Q-Ball, used by the NSA and the CIA for code breaking and pattern analysis. However, no credible evidence exists that an intelligent android was ever created, and both civilian and military experts state that the technology for such a machine is still at least a decade in the future.

 

Terra returned to the search results and scanned a few more articles, but found nothing new. No details on how the robot’s computer brain operated, no mention of the robot having emotions or suffering from depression. Just hundreds of sites dedicated to the ‘conspiracy’ of the government cover-up of the android.

She glanced up at the clock. Five o’clock. She sighed and leaned back in the chair. Tomorrow would be an interesting day. She turned off the computer, locked the desk, and stood to leave. Her cell rang and she fished it out of her purse.

“Mom, I need you to get me. I’m at the police station on Foster Street.”

“What happened? Are you alright?”

“I’m fine. Just a misunderstanding. I’ll tell you about it when you get here.”

“Tell me now. Why are you at the police station?”

There was a pause. “Nothing. Just a misunderstanding.”

“Sara.”

There was a longer pause. “They think I shop lifted some jewelry.”

“Did you?”

“I wanted to show a necklace to Melissa. She was just outside the store. Before I could go back and pay for it, some goon grabbed me and dragged me to the manager’s office. They called the cops, and now I’m here.”

“Of course. Melissa.”

“Mom, don’t diss my friends. We didn’t do anything.”

“Right.” Terra took a deep breath and let it out slowly, visualizing her tension flowing out with it. Sara was such a good girl before Tom disappeared. “I’ll be there soon.”

 

 

 

 

Chapter 2

 

Every man is two men; one is awake in the darkness, the other asleep in the light.

– Kahlil Gibran

 

Wednesday, August 15. Fort Leavenworth, Kansas

 

Mark Powers scanned the twenty-five monitors which blanketed an entire wall of the living room like a patch-work quilt. A 60-inch screen dominated the wall, flanked by columns of smaller monitors stacked four high. A few screens were blank, awaiting feeds from future cameras.

The inside of the therapist’s house was quiet and dark. The therapist herself was driving East on I-435 in fairly light traffic, tailed by the surveillance van. Boring. Sammi’s house and grounds were also boring. The android, on the big screen, sat on its bed, immobile as a manikin in a store window. The image, black and white with a green tint, indicated the camera compensating for an unlit room.

Mark was sure the robot wouldn’t move until morning. It had followed that pattern since arriving at Fort Leavenworth three months ago.

Baby-sitting a broken robot. Mark looked back at his laptop, which had just finished searching the USA Jobs website for CIA and FBI openings. There were no postings at the GS14 level. He was doomed to a job of boredom.

Dr. Smithwell pulled into a police station.

What is she doing? He switched the van’s external camera to the big monitor and watched her march inside, looking meaner than a Kansas thunderstorm. Mark flipped open his cell. A second later a dark monitor flickered to life, showing a red haired young man with a freckled face holding a cell phone to his ear. “Hi, boss.”

“Shawn, go inside and find out what she’s doing,” said Mark. “Talk to the chief or whoever’s in charge of the shift. Don’t be afraid to flash your ID.”

“Whoa, wait a minute. I’m surveillance, not field ops.”

“Your ID says NSA. Cops love cloak and dagger stuff.”

“I’m a techie, Mark. I don’t know what to ask.”

“I need to know what she’s up to. Get in there now.”

Mark snapped the phone shut. Shawn’s face glared from the monitor before the screen went dark. A few seconds later Shawn appeared on the main screen, walking to the station. Before disappearing inside, he raised a middle finger at the van.

Mark shook his head. Shawn’s career would never advance. The job had to come first, before personal comfort, before family, before friends. Mark glanced at the robot, still immobile. To think he’d actually liked the thing when they were doing missions. Sammi was a great weapon – powerful and dependable. Working with it gave a warm, fuzzy feeling deep in his gut. The feeling you get when you throw a basketball and the instant it leaves your hand, you know, with absolute certainty, it’s going in the basket.

Then Sammi turned into a metal wussy, and everything went south. No more warm fuzzies, just a tight sphincter every time the Admiral called.

As if on cue, Mark’s cell played ‘Anchors Away.’

“Good evening, Admiral.”

“Arrangements set for Sammi’s therapy?”

“Yes sir. Sessions start tomorrow.”

“Daily.”

“No sir. Twice a week. Dr. Smithwell said she wouldn’t do daily.”

“We’re not doing this to suit her schedule, Mark. She has to meet ours. What about the surveillance equipment?”

“Cameras and mikes in place at her house. The team will wire her office tonight. Can you send me a copy of the court order?”

“Don’t need it,” said the Admiral. “This falls under the National Security Act blanket.”

“Yes sir.” Less paperwork.

“She bought the bodyguard story?”

“Yes. But she’s smart and she’s stubborn. Could be a problem later.”

The Admiral chuckled. “She sounds like you. Give Sammi a few sessions with her, see how much improvement we get. If it’s not enough, we’ll push for daily sessions, maybe even dedicated, round the clock therapy.”

Mark doubted the psychologist would comply, but that issue could be addressed later. “Sir, what if there’s no improvement? What if Sammi isn’t … human enough for psychotherapy to work?”

“You never did like Sammi.”

Mark glanced at the Sammi monitor. “I did once, sir. But the machine is broken, and part of my job is to prepare for all contingencies.”

“Yes,” said the Admiral. “Well, worse case, we shut it down, wipe its brain. Get Doc Wilder to remove the emotion circuits from the quantum brain chip. Then we do a complete data reload and retrain it from scratch. It’ll take months.”

Mark winced. Months. And even then… “Without emotions, Sammi won’t pass as human.”

“Not necessarily true.”

Mark waited for the Admiral to elaborate. The wait grew to several seconds. “Sir?”

“Your real question was ‘what will happen to me?’ I’ve thought that. How I might use you if Sammi tanks.”

The Admiral paused. Mark’s damp palms made the phone slippery. Finally the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs continued. “We have a second android being built. Code name Ixchel. The thing has no emotions, but Wilder swears it can fake them.”

Mark remained silent, thoughts racing. The Admiral never revealed anything other than need-to-know information. A second android. No emotions to screw it up. A warm fuzzy formed in his gut.

“Mark, once the Sammi issue is resolved, I want you to take over as Ixchel’s manager.”

Yes! “With all due respect, sir, why even bother with Sammi if there’s a better android in the works?”

“I don’t throw away billion dollar investments.”

“Yes sir. Who’s the agent now?”

“Walter Jenkins.”

Jenkins? The man barely had the smarts to tie his shoes, assuming he could reach around his belly to the laces. Had the Admiral really okayed Jenkins as case manager for a top secret super intelligent android? “Good man, Jenkins.”

“The man’s an ass, and you know it. That’s why I need you to take over once the new android is operational.”

“Thank you, sir.”

“Don’t thank me yet. Your immediate mission is to get Sammi fully operational. Your future assignment is contingent on current results.” The Admiral hung up.

Shawn and Smithwell were still in the police station. Good. Mark opened the ‘NSA directory’ on his phone, and found Jenkins’s number.

A mumbled voice said something that might have been, “Jenkins here.”

“Walt! Get that damn Twinkie out of your mouth.”

“Mark? How you been, buddy? It’s been months.”

“I just heard you’re the case manager for Ixchel. Congratulations.”

“Shit, Mark. Is this a secured line?”

“Lighten up! It’s not like I’m asking for the command codes. Yes, it’s secure. I’m on my NSA cell.” Mark pressed the ‘Trace’ button on the phone.

“Who told you about the project?” asked Walt.

The phone displayed a map of Nevada, with a blinking dot fifty miles north of Las Vegas. “Admiral Preston. He said to call you, and get up to speed on the project.”

There was a pause before Walter replied. “That should have come through channels.”

“You know the paperwork mill, Walt. It’ll take days to cut the orders. The Admiral called me directly, and he isn’t a patient man.”

“No. He isn’t.” Another pause. “Are you replacing me, Mark?”

“I don’t think so. The Admiral doesn’t exactly confide in me. In anyone. But I’m taking heat for Sammi refusing to do missions. The machine’s copping an attitude. Preston thought comparing notes on Ixchel might help.”

Walt barked a relieved laugh. “Okay. What do you need to know?”

“Ixchel. A new low in acronyms. What’s it stand for?”

“Improved Xeno-Conscious Humanoid Elite Liquidator. Don’t know who came up with it. Supposedly it’s the name of a goddess.”

“Not one I’ve heard of,” said Mark. “How far along with assembly?”

“Almost finished. Just installed the command codes yesterday. It’s all Greek to me.” Walt chuckled. The command codes always began with Greek letters, but it was hardly a joke.

“Everything’s on schedule, no hitches?”

“Fine. Everything’s fine. Just about, anyway.”

“Walt, what’s up?”

“The deputy director, Henry Gibbons.”

“What about him?”

“He’s a triple amputee, with badass motorized prosthetics. When he walks down the hall, the metal arm and metal legs clank and whirl like a wind-up mechanical monster. The man’s a freak show. Scares the bejesus out of me.”

“Some agent you are. Years of training, a Glock under your arm, afraid of a guy with no arms and legs.”

“You haven’t seen him close up. Over seven feet tall, until his legs bend and sort of spread out, lowering his body ‘til his head’s at your eye level,” Walter said. “We call him Spider, but not to his face. I don’t even like passing him in the hall, and now I’m giving him daily updates on the security breach.”

“Breach?”

The line was silent for several seconds, and Mark worried that he’d pushed his friend too far. Then Walt said, “A couple days ago I intercepted a phone call, encrypted. Couldn’t break it with the computers here. I told Spider, I mean Henry, and he took it to the Director.”

“Wilder?” said Mark.

“Right. Henry comes back and says the Director wants me to keep monitoring, analyzing, and reporting everything through Henry, and to keep it all very hush-hush.”

“Q-Ball could break the encryption,” said Mark. The super computer at NSA was the most advanced in the world. Well, second most advanced. Sammi’s brain was better, when it worked. “Has Dr. Wilder forwarded a request?”

“I suppose. Henry briefs him daily, but I’m not invited. My duties really don’t start until Ixchel is operational. Until then, the Director doesn’t have time for me. Doesn’t even like me being close to the ‘droid.”

Shawn’s face filled the central monitor screen, then pulled back to give a thumbs up.

“Ah, sorry Walt. Gotta go. Finish your Twinkie.”

“Bye Mar—.” Mark disconnected, then hit the speed button for his team.

“Okay, boss. The daughter, Sara Smithwell, was picked up for shop lifting. The store’s manager wants to press charges. The mom’s trying to get her released. The cops are stalling, keeping the girl locked to teach her a lesson.”

“Get back in there. Tell the cops not to file charges, and to lose any record of Sara being picked up. I’ll make some calls to get the store manager on board.”

“Boss?”

“Why do you think we’re doing all this, Shawn? Gathering intel’s only the first step. Second step is using that intel to take the right action. In this case, to run interference and keep obstacles like this from interfering with the mission.”

“You come down and talk to the cops. You’re the agent in charge.”

“You’re on the scene, and this can’t wait.”

“I’ll send Larry in.”

“A second agent will raise suspicions.”

“This stinks, Mark. It really stinks.”

“So hold your nose. What’s the name of the store? And the manager?”

Mark jotted down the information and hung up. He glanced at the main monitor, watched Shawn repeat his walk to the station. Mark smiled and called the store manager.

“Blings and Things, how can I help you?”

“Dave Mason, please,” said Mark.

“That’s me.”

“Mr. Mason, I’m … Shawn O’Leary, a law enforcement agent from the DEA.” Mark used the cover story prepared in advance for this type of contingency. “You recently had a teenager steal a necklace from your store.”

“Right. I still think these kids need to learn respect for the law, but your offer was more than fair. I’ll keep my mouth shut. What else do you want?”

Mark felt his warm fuzzies turn to cold pricklies. He concentrated on a coherent sentence. “Nothing, just a follow-up call to see if you had any questions or problems.” Maybe the base in Nevada wasn’t the only one with a security breach.

“No, everything’s fine, as long as the money shows up in my account. I’ve called the police and withdrawn my complaint. I don’t know how this is going to help bust the local drug ring, and I probably don’t want to know, either. I’d have helped without the cash incentive, but why turn down a gift horse, right?”

“Right,” said Mark. “The agent you spoke to before, did he leave his name?”

“Sure. Powers. Mark Powers. You want his number?”

The pricklies became a punch to the gut. He looked at Sammi sitting on the bed. No, this wasn’t a security breach. It was something else.

“Mr. O’Leary? You still there?”

“Yeah, yeah. What’s the number?”

The manager recited the number for Mark’s NSA phone. Mark hung up, unable to say another word. The big monitor showed Dr. Smithwell leaving the police station with a Goth teenage girl. Short black hair, black eye shadow, black halter top and mini-skirt. But white sneakers. Sara. Terra placed a hand on the girl’s arm, but the daughter shook it off as the two of them walked to the car. Mark’s cell rang. Mark hoped it wasn’t the store manager.

“Boss, you won’t believe this.”

Just Shawn. “The charges were dropped before you even asked,” said Mark.

“The charges were dropped before I even asked,” said Shawn. “How the hell did you know that?”

“You have a tracker on her car?”

“Yeah.”

“Keep an eye on it. If she goes anywhere but home I want to know.”

“We can follow her.”

“No, go to her office and get it wired. I want it done tonight.”

“We’re already on overtime. You gonna make us pull a double?”

“Quit whining. The sooner you get the place wired the sooner your shift ends.”

Mark snapped his phone shut and stared at Sammi on the center screen. Mark’s gut – cold pricklies and all – told him it was time to pay a visit to the robot.

 

***

Sara expected a lecture and scolding, but her mom was silent since bailing her. Fine. Let her play Amish and shun me. I’ll shun her back. Sara watched the buildings flash past the window. Wrong buildings. She looked at her mom but Terra kept her eyes on road. “This isn’t the way home.”

“No, it isn’t.”

“Where’re we going?”

“Blings and Things.”

“We can’t go there.”

“There’s something you have to do, Sara.”

“Mom, I can’t. Really.” Sara knew exactly what Terra expected, and it qualified as cruel and unusual punishment.

“You can and you will.”

“They have the necklace back. It was a mistake anyway.”

The car slowed and the seat belt grabbed as Sara braced against the dashboard. The car bumped as Terra pulled onto the shoulder and stopped.

“Don’t lie to me, Sara.” Her mom’s face wasn’t exactly angry, but it had an intensity, a disconcerting look of resolve. A ‘you have to do this whether you like it or not’ look.

Sara turned away. “I won’t do it again.”

“I believe you.”

Sara risked another look at her mom. “So let’s go home.”

“After you apologize.”

Mom’s look was still there. “I’m sorry. Really sorry.”

“Not to me, Sara.”

Sara closed her eyes. There had to be an angle, a loophole, something, anything, to get out of this. She opened her eyes and endeavored to look contrite. “I’ll do extra chores. Laundry for a month.”

“No.”

“Two months.”

“This isn’t open for negotiation.”

Sara slammed her fists on the dash. “I don’t want to apologize! It’s embarrassing. I won’t do it! I won’t.” She felt tears well up and turned away. “You can’t make me do it. Please don’t make me do it.”

She felt a light touch on her shoulder, and wanted to pull away almost as much as she wanted to the comfort of her mother’s arms wrapped around her. Muscles quivering, Sara glared through the window at nothing. More tears made a silent trek down her face.

“Sometimes doing the right thing hurts. People find the strength to do it anyway.”

Sara heard the gentleness in her mom’s voice, felt it in her touch. It made the guilt worse. Sara tried to focus on the anger, the unfairness.

“Mom, it was costume jewelry. The necklace cost like maybe a dollar. It’s no big deal.”

“Right and wrong are not measured by what’s at stake.”

“They dropped the charges. I shouldn’t have to apologize. It’s pointless.”

“That’s a cop out. Actions have consequences. Accept responsibility for what you did.”

It was the kind of thing Dad would say. She took a deep breath and blinked away the tears. She turned away from the window and saw a look in her mom’s face that matched the feel of her hand and the tone of her voice. Sara took a proffered tissue and dabbed at her eyes.

The tissue came away with black smudges. “My makeup!”

Mom smiled. “I don’t think the store manager will care.”

“I care! He’ll notice. Everyone will notice.”

Terra chuckled and pulled back onto the road.

Sara wiped away the rest of the tears and pulled a compact from her belly pack. After performing damage control on the mascara, she composed an apology to the manager. He’d probably ask her why she did it, and that was a problem, because she hated to lie. She couldn’t very well admit this was practice for something bigger.

 

***

Mark Powers thrust open the door to Sammi’s house, turned on the lights, and marched to the master bedroom. The android sat on the edge of the bed, shrouded in shadows. Mark flipped on the lights. Why did it keep the house so frigging dark?

“Go away, Mark.” The robot stared at the floor.

“You called the manager at Blings and Things.”

Sammi didn’t answer.

“How did you know the girl got arrested?”

“Leave me alone.”

“Answer my questions or I’ll put you in obedience mode.”

“Nothing is more destructive of human dignity than a rule which imposes a mute and blind obedience. Anthony Eden.”

“You’re not human. Talk.”

“It would be better for you and for the human race to leave me alone.”

“Is that a threat?”

“Just an observation. I’d be more effective if free to do what I choose.”

Mark laughed. “Really. What would you do?”

Sammi was silent.

“You’re broken, Sammi. Good and truly broken. For months you refuse assignments, sitting in this room doing nothing. Then tonight you break the pattern, and interfere in my surveillance op. Why?”

“I helped you, Mark. No harm, no foul. Let it go.”

“How did you know about the girl?”

Sammi sighed and looked up. “The name Sara Smithwell was mentioned in a police call. I recognized it as belonging to Dr. Smithwell’s daughter, so I probed more deeply.”

“Why were you monitoring police channels?”

Sammi shrugged. “I could ask why you see and hear the events happening around you. It doesn’t take any effort. Monitoring electromagnetic signals is one of my senses.”

“Yeah. So you’re listening to dozens of radio signals and just happen to pick out the girl’s name.”

“Something like that. It’s thousands, by the way.”

“What?”

“Signals. Messages. Radio, television, cell phone transmission, wifi. Every second hundreds of wavelengths carrying thousands of information bytes pass through my body. Yours, too, but you don’t notice them.”

“Stop diverting the conversation. What did you do after hearing Sara’s name?”

“I asked the Overland Park Municipal Police Department computer system for more details.”

“You can’t hack into computer systems without authorization.”

“Hacking? Their firewall has more holes than a wheel of Swiss cheese. It would take longer to count the holes than extract the data.”

“It was wrong, Sammi.”

“Like entering someone’s house without permission?”

“This isn’t your house, it’s the property of the US government, just like you.”

Sammi was silent, but his hands clenched into fists. Mark’s smile broadened. The robot was hardwired never to harm its handler.

“I hope you get better, Sammi. You were okay, once. Rugged. Dependable. Before you got bogged down in emotion.” Mark patted the robot on the shoulder. “Heal fast, metal man, or I’ll drive you to the scrap yard myself.”

Continued….

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Sammi

by W. County

4.8 stars – 4 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Sammi, the world’s first android, is stronger, faster, and smarter than any human, and he’s the top secret ultimate weapon of the US government. But Sammi has become depressed and unable to work effectively. The government is concerned that the machine isn’t doing its job as a spy and assassin, so they hire a psychologist, Terra Smithwell, to cure him. Terra and her daughter, Sara, are soon pulled into Sammi’s world of secrecy, intrigue, and danger. But Terra, whose husband is missing and presumed dead, falls in love with the robot, and is torn between restoring Sammi’s abilities as a weapon, or helping him to escape from government control.

The stakes raise when a second government android, a female named Ixchel, goes rogue and decides to destroy humanity. She knows Sammi is the only being smart enough to stop her, so she fakes her own destruction and goes after Sammi’s weak spot – Terra and Sara. With them as bait, she lures a desperate Sammi into a trap from which there is no escape.

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Origins (Remote)

by Eric Drouant

5.0 stars – 4 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
New Orleans, 1973 – The CIA uncovers two young kids with uncanny psychic ability. A renegade agent wants them for his own. When Ronnie Gilmore and Cassie Reynold fight back, things get deadly fast.
The ability to Remote View makes Cassie and Ronnie high value assets in the Cold War contest playing out in the early 1970′s. The discovery of their power sets off a battle that ultimately means full scale war between factions within the government.
Backs against the wall the two young psychics must face overwhelming odds to maintain their freedom and control of their own lives. When push comes to shove, Cassie Reynold proves to be the deadliest 13-year old girl you’ll ever meet.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

Cassie was sitting with her back against the fence surrounding the park. Low bushes in front of her, she could see Breed waiting in his car. Ronnie had slipped along the fence line, covered by the same row of plants, finding a spot near the entrance that allowed him to see the rest of the lot. They had decided to play a waiting game, allowing the reporter to stew awhile. Ronnie felt it was a good bet that Breed could be trusted. Cassie had less faith. She wanted to be sure before they got in a car with anyone. Before they’d split she had made Ronnie give her the pistol he was carrying in his bag, the one he had used to shoot the man in his house. He was reluctant to touch it but she had no reservations. She sat now with the pistol in her hand. There were four bullets left in the cylinder. Just in case.

Just holding the pistol in her hand, the weight, the smell of gunpowder still heavy in the cylinders, gave Cassie a sense of resolve. She was someone with power now. The idea of being chased and hounded, her family traumatized, sent a cold chill up her spine. It turned into a dry calmness that flooded her veins, then to a steely resolve to end the situation. Sitting on the ground, watching, waiting, Cassie Reynold changed from the hunted to the hunter, a change akin to flipping a card on a table. On one side a 13-year old with nothing on her mind but the next school dance and stealing a kiss from her boyfriend. On the other side, the calculated ferocity of a lioness protecting her young. Cassie felt it, went with it, accepted it.

The parking lot was almost empty now. The school buses were gone. Stray groups came out of the park, families with smaller children, a few couples, and now and then a single person came out to their car. Breed was alone at the end of the parking lot. A few scattered cars lay between him and the entrance. On the outermost row a man was in his car reading a newspaper. Probably waiting for someone, thought Cassie, but maybe not. The park behind her had gone quiet. Only an employee or two back there moving around, closing things up. She could hear garbage cans banging together and the occasional murmur of conversation. Three teenagers came out of the park entrance wearing uniforms, got into a beat up Pinto, and drove off. Another older man followed shortly after, leaving only Breed and the man with the paper in her sight. He was starting to make her skin crawl. She was picking something up from him. The sun had set a few minutes ago and the park behind them was dark and silent. Cassie picked up her bag and slipped along the fence line, moving up beside Ronnie. She gave him her bag.

“Go down to where Breed is waiting. Stay in the bushes. When you see me step out into the parking lot, get in the car with Breed. Go in on the opposite side. Move fast.”

“Why? What’s going on?” asked Ronnie. He’d seen this look on her face back in her Aunt’s house. He felt the air change around her, like she was giving off some kind of electrical charge. Her mouth was a grim line. Her eyes, usually a deep and inviting brown, appeared now to be coal black. The difference was so startling he wondered if she’d somehow lost her mind. He reached out, putting his hand on her arm. The skin was ice cold even in the warm air. He could see her pulse throbbing in the lower part of her jaw.

“You okay?” he asked. “Listen, we can still try to make it down the seawall. If we follow the bushes we can get down there without them seeing us.”

“Just do it. That guy over there,” she said pointing, “He shouldn’t be here. They know we’re here. We’ve got to get rid of him.”

“How are you going to do that?”

“Go,” she said and pushed the bag at him. “Be ready to move when I come.”

Ronnie gave up, took the bag and began to make his way back along the fence. He reached the end of the bushes and crouched low, staying on his feet, ready to head for Breed’s car. He could see the reporter behind the wheel. Breed tossed a cigarette out the window and a flare of light hit the windshield as he lit another. The place was full dark now, the only light coming from the street lamps along the road behind the lot. Across the field the Student Center was still open. Ronnie could see the second floor sticking up above the line of the levee top, lights in the windows. He watched Cassie walk out into the open, cross the parking lot, and stand in front of the car. The man put his newspaper down and opened the door.

 

While Cassie was moving in the parking lot, General Archer was sitting in the aisle seat of an airplane bound for New Orleans. He had spent the better part of three hours waiting for the phone call from Thorne on the latest sessions. All attempts to contact the man had failed. In Archer’s mind it could only mean one thing. Thorne had gone haywire. In his mind it was time to get directly involved. For all his good points, Archer knew Thorne was a wild card, the type of man you sent out when the odds were low but the payoff was huge. Archer had used him many times and Thorne had always come through. But he was unpredictable and best used in a place where the authorities could be bought off, the newspapers owned. Now they were operating in the U.S. and things couldn’t be controlled as tightly as he liked. Thorne’s Wild West tactics were getting out of hand.

Behind Archer, back in the economy section, were two of his better agents. If muscle was needed they would be there though his preference was to keep them out of it. Better he should dangle a carrot in front of Thorne to settle him down. Archer had no illusions as to the kind of man his underling could be. Thorne was a weapon and being a weapon, could turn dangerous if not handled properly. The important point here was that the two kids be kept hidden from any other agency that might find a use for them. Archer took a long view of things. While Thorne was interested in the quick grab and the immediate power, Archer was more interested in the future. He intended to allow these kids to resume their life in exchange for cooperation in the future. Their ability was a weapon itself, a potent one, and should be used sparingly. If there was any hope of that, he wanted to be the one with his finger on the trigger. But first he had to get Thorne out of the way. Archer leaned back, signaled the stewardess for a drink, and began to plan the way ahead.

 

Ronnie was watching as Cassie came out into the open. Breed caught the movement too, and turned his head to watch. Carrying the two bags, Ronnie came out from behind the bushes and opened the back door on the driver’s side of Breeds vehicle. He tossed the bags inside, said “Wait here.”

Thorne’s agent couldn’t believe his luck. He immediately recognized the little girl as Cassie Reynold. They’d been chasing her for two days and she was right here in front of him. He got out of the car. The girl looked tired and scared. If she’s here, he thought, the boy can’t be far way. Time to wrap things up. Thorne was on his way and it just might be possible to have them both by the time he got here.

“Are you a policeman?” the girl asked. She was a ragged looking little thing, her hair was uncombed, a ribbon on top the only thing keeping it together. Her shirt was dirty. The jeans she was wearing rode on her oddly, pinching at the waist. A dirty streak was on her left cheek and bits of the bushes she had emerged from were caught in her hair.

“Why, yes I am,” he said. “Do you need one?”

“Yes, I think I’m in trouble. Can I see your badge?”

Oh man, this is going to be easy, the agent thought. He reached into his coat pocket and pulled out his ID, held it out for the girl to see. “Here you go.” Cassie looked at it, and said “Do you have a gun?” The agent nodded. “Right here,” and patted his coat over his left armpit. “Do I need one?”

“You might. You see that car over there?” she said, pointing to Breed’s vehicle. Ronnie was behind the car, heading their way. “That man is trying to grab me and my friend.”

He followed her motion, looking over to Breed’s car. He could see the boy behind it. Breed was just opening the door, one foot on the ground. By the time his head came back around she was holding a pistol, her finger on the trigger. The pistol was pointing at him. His stomach turned to water.

“Sorry,” she said, and pulled the trigger. The shot banged out in the air and his kneecap blew away with it, pieces of shredded pants leg exploding, mingled with blood and bits of tissue. He hit the pavement, grabbing for his leg. He screamed. Cassie took two steps, leaned over and reached into his coat, got his gun. He tried to grab at her, pulled at her head, got hold of her hair. She kicked him in his shattered leg and he screamed again, letting her go. “Tell Thorne we’re coming for him,” she said. She stepped over to the car. The keys were still in the ignition and she pulled them out, putting them in her pocket. There was a radio mike hanging on the dash. Cassie ripped it out and threw it across the parking lot. Ronnie was there now. He took the gun from her hand and put it in his back pocket. Together, they broke for Breed’s car. The reporter was standing by his door with his mouth hanging open. Cassie and Ronnie piled into the back seat with Breed still watching the agent on the ground, blood spreading from his leg.

“Time to go, Mr. Breed,” Ronnie said.

 

Thorne pulled into the parking lot of the amusement park, knowing he’d been beaten again. he pounded the steering wheel in frustration. His man was on the ground. He cursed to himself and got out the car. He could see the lights of a police car coming down Elysian Fields. Someone at the school must have heard the shots and called it in. Kneeling down, he pulled off his belt and wrapped it around the bleeding leg, pulling it tight.

“What happened?” His agent just groaned. He pulled the belt tighter. The lights were getting closer. He had to get some information now. He slapped the man on the face.

“Listen to me. We’ll have an ambulance here in a few minutes but I need to know what happened. Did the kids show up?”

“That little bitch shot me. Got me looking the other way and shot me in the leg. They took off in the reporter’s car. Goddamn little bitch. I’m going to kill her when we catch up to her.”

“I don’t think so,” Thorne said. “I think she’s smarter than you.” He walked back to his car, got on the radio. It might not be over just yet. The reporter just might make things easier. He couldn’t use the local police to track down the car but he could get into the state licensing system and have his own people watching for it. They’d be looking for a place to hide now. He called back to his office, got people working on the reporter. He wanted to know addresses, family, anything he could find. When fugitives ran they went to familiar places where they thought they were safe. Hotels played into it so he put a watch on Breed’s credit cards. As soon as bills were turned in he’d know when and where. These people would have to eat and they’d have to have someplace to sleep. When they did, and they eventually would, he’d find them. In the meantime he would have to deal with the local police. The cover stories and identities were already in place. Thorne prepared for everything, or at least thought he did. He had to admit, if only to himself, that these kids were unlike anything he’d ever seen.

The wild card in the equation was Archer. Thorne had been declining his calls all night. If he couldn’t find these kids and get them away to a safe house he was a dead man. Just another piece of motivation.

 

Carl Woods sat behind his desk, the remains of a sandwich laid out in front of him. All around him the detective division was in a swarm of activity. It had been a busy night. A robbery in the French Quarter, a shooting down by the lake, and a domestic violence dispute that had erupted into a murder had the squad stretched thin. Woods had avoided it all somehow. His attention was occupied by several unsolved cases, including the missing children. That one was stuck in his craw. Breeds article would hit the papers the next morning. He would be swamped by media, twisting in the wind with no answers. It was enough to make him wish again for a nice clean drug killing.

He dialed Breed but got no answer at the paper, tried his home phone with the same result. A detective wandered in, sat at the desk next to his and pulled out report forms from his desk. Woods got up and headed for the coffee pot. He couldn’t remember the detective’s name for a second, caught it as he turned back, Parker. Drew Parker, he’d just come into the division a month or so ago. Woods hadn’t worked with him yet.

“Parker, I’m going to get a cup of coffee. Want one?”

“Damn right,” Parker said. “I’m going to be here all night trying to dope this one out.”

“Tough one?” Woods asked.

“I don’t know,” Parker said. “It shouldn’t be. I caught that shooting out by the lake, you know? It looked simple. The guy’s in the parking lot at Pontchartrain Beach, says he pulled in to go over his appointment book. His story is that some guy tried to rob him and he ended up getting shot in the leg. But it doesn’t add up.”

“Why’s that?” Woods asked. He wasn’t making any progress on his cases, he figured, he might as well see if he could help out the new guy.

Parker pushed his papers to the side. “Let’s get that coffee and I’ll tell you about it.” The two made their way down to the snack room. Woods pushed quarters into the coffee machine, punched the buttons. They found a table and sat down. Parker rubbed his hand over his face, blew on his coffee. His notebook came out and he flipped it open.

“The story we got from the victim is bullshit. I know it. We get there and the guy’s on the ground. There’s another guy there that says he was passing by, saw the victim on the ground, and stopped. But here’s the thing. After the ambulance came I looked in the victim’s car. The keys are gone and he says the robber took them. There’s also a radio in the car. The mike is lying in the parking lot about 30 feet away. So why did the guy take his keys and not the car? He wasn’t going anywhere with a blown up leg. That’s another thing. Why shoot him in the leg? A guy with a gun shoots you in the chest doesn’t he?”

Woods thought about it for a minute. “Did they fight? Maybe he got hold of the guy, grabbed at him you know.” Woods made a reaching motion with his hands. “Could have tried to get it away from him and pointed it down.”

Parker shook his head. “Maybe. But the vic says the guy asked for his wallet and then just shot him. But here’s the other thing. The guy that stopped? I wandered over and took a look through his window. He’s got a radio in his car too. Way up under the dash. Something stinks here but their ID’s check out so what can I do?” He shrugged. “I’ll just file the report. Not much to go on. Another unsolved mystery in the big city.”

Woods said nothing. Pontchartrain Beach was a few miles down Elysian Fields from the house of Julie Hoffman. If the kids left the house, headed that way, and holed up somewhere? What? Thinking about it, there were plenty of places along the lakefront a couple of kids could hide. The weather was good, no problem there. It was pretty farfetched but possible.

“Well,” Woods said as he got up to leave, “Good luck with the case.”

“Yeah, it’s a case all right,” said Parker. “A case of the ass in my opinion. I’m going to call it ‘The Case of the Mysterious Hair Ribbon.’”

“What?” Woods turned around.

“Didn’t I mention that? Yeah, the ambulance guys get there and they’re trying to get an IV started right? They get his arm on the ground and he’s holding a hair ribbon in one hand. Like a girl’s hair ribbon tied in a bow?”

 

Breed got behind the wheel and started the car. Backed out and roared past the man lying on the ground, pointing the car up Elysian Fields. Not knowing where else to go he hooked a left at the first red light, a wide double avenue called Leon C. Simon. A police car went past on the other side, lights and siren going. He recovered himself enough to begin doing some thinking. When he reached Downman Road he took it up to Morrison, hung another left. He reached the I-10 and took the eastbound entrance. Neither of the kids had said anything but the girl was watching him. Breeds broke the silence first.

“What the hell was that?” he said.

“That was why we’re running, Mr. Breed,” Cassie said. “When people with guns are chasing you, you run. Or fight back. In this case we did both.”

“Okay, that brings up my next question? What exactly is going on? Why are these people chasing you? You realize you just shot a man and now I’m helping you get away? What am I getting into?”

Ronnie spoke up. “First we want to know why you didn’t say anything in your article about the guys that broke into my house.”

Breed knew he was in a pretty bad situation. Whatever these kids were involved in, he was in it now. The boy had killed one man and crippled another. If everything was connected they’d also electrocuted two other people. And they were sitting in the back seat of his car with guns. He’d either get a great story out of this or end up dead on the side of the road. He wasn’t inclined to give odds either way. He decided to go with the truth.

“The detective that went to your house is a friend of mine. He helps me out sometimes, sometimes I help him out. He asked me to hold off until he could put it all together. We thought the most important thing was to find you guys, so I wrote an article about you being missing. I gave him a couple of days. The article with the whole story comes out in tomorrow’s paper, the guys at Ronnie’s house, your Aunt’s house burning down with the two men in it. Everything I know, which isn’t much.”

Ronnie looked at Cassie and nodded his head. It sounded right. He’d been thinking all along that finding someone they could trust, someone who wasn’t in their family, was the only way out. Breed was a reporter. He had connections. The last thing Thorne would want was exposure. If the article actually showed up tomorrow they’d know for sure. In the meantime he’d keep the pistol handy. Cassie nodded back.

“Right now we need a place to stay and something to eat. And it’s a long story. Let’s get someplace where we can be safe for the night and we’ll fill you in on everything. Fair enough?”

“Fair enough,” Breed said. “I’ve got a place we can hide. My brother’s got a fishing camp out by the Rigolets. He keeps a key hidden out back. We can go there.”

Continued….

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Origins (Remote)

by Eric Drouant

5.0 stars – 4 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

New Orleans, 1973 – The CIA uncovers two young kids with uncanny psychic ability. A renegade agent wants them for his own. When Ronnie Gilmore and Cassie Reynold fight back, things get deadly fast.
The ability to Remote View makes Cassie and Ronnie high value assets in the Cold War contest playing out in the early 1970’s. The discovery of their power sets off a battle that ultimately means full scale war between factions within the government.
Backs against the wall the two young psychics must face overwhelming odds to maintain their freedom and control of their own lives. When push comes to shove, Cassie Reynold proves to be the deadliest 13-year old girl you’ll ever meet.

5-Star Amazon Reviews

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