Why should I provide my email address?

Start saving money today with our FREE daily newsletter packed with the best FREE and bargain Kindle book deals. We will never share your email address!
Sign Up Now!

Free Thriller of The Week Excerpt Featuring M.H. Burton’s Mixed Foursome (The Zach Roper Golf Mysteries volumes 1-4)

On Friday we announced that M.H. Burton’s Mixed Foursome (The Zach Roper Golf Mysteries volumes 1-4) 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:

Or currently FREE for Amazon Prime Members Via the Kindle Lending Library
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
Zach Roper is on the ball, and on the case. Murder seems to follow the retired Seattle police detective as he struggles to win a berth on the PGA Champions Tour. Will he solve the crime? Will he make the cut? Read on….
“Mixed Foursome” includes 4 of Zach’s cases-
1. “Murder in the Deep Rough-A corpse in the woods on number four attracts Zach’s attention before the first ball is teed.
2. “Murder on the 19th Hole”-This time it’s a Thai ‘princess’ who attracts his attention. The corpse shows up later.
3. “Murder Takes a Mulligan”-Zach and the ‘princess’ team up for golf and deadly politics in Thailand.
4. “Murder Goes to the Green”-Zach and the ‘princess’ again out to hustle a few bucks from the super-rich on the golf course, when the richest of the them all goes missing

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

Murder on the 19th Hole

 

 

  1. 1.              An Invitation

 

It was nearly more than two years since Zach Roper declared his retirement from detective work in order to concentrate on making it as a professional golfer.  While he had stuck to his promise he had been unable to fully realize his aspiration.  He had neither made the Champions Tour as intended nor completely failed to make it.  He was on a sort of Champions Tour taxi squad, called at a few days’ notice to fill in for someone with a wrenched knee, a bad back, or an extra thump in their heartbeat that required hospital observation.  Since this was an over-50 crowd fill-ins were often needed and he had answered the call a dozen and a half times during the last two seasons with decidedly mixed results.  A few top-twenty finishes which had earned him return invitations, dozen modest paychecks, and several embarrassing dead last finishes.

 

In addition there were a number of second-string events.  Smaller cities, much smaller purses, like the November tournament in Tucson Les Bowman had got him after he won the Northland Invitational at Iron Ridge.  Alas, no more $200,000 paydays!  Iron Ridge had not turned out to be the launch pad to a stellar career.  It looked increasingly like it was a flash in the pan.

 

‘I may be down, but I’m not quite out yet.  I’ve got Les’ Tucson thing again this November, my third straight appearance, 5th place and $35,000 last year, but more than two months away and nothing scheduled until then.’  he winced.

 

He climbed down off the little Fordson tractor leaving it and the gang-mower it had been towing to cool down in the shade of a big old pine.  Shading his eyes with his right hand he gazed down the neatly trimmed fairway to the small, heavily bunkered green 200 yards away.  ‘Almost as good as the real thing’ He thought ‘I’ve got it just about the way I want it.  Now I may finally be able to stop all this mowing and get in a little practice on my one-hole personal golf course.  Three-hole, really, the same green approached from three different directions, my own innovation.  Maybe I should take up golf course design’.

 

He had just grabbed an ice-cold beer from the fridge and collapsed onto the teak bench on the cabin’s back porch when the phone rang.  Wearily he rose to answer it.

 

“Zach, is that you?  Been trying to get you but your cell doesn’t seem to work…Les Bowman here.”

 

“Oh, Les, sorry, you’ve got to use my land line.  No bars here on this part of San Juan Island.  The ridge behind my cabin blocks the signal.  Hope you haven’t been trying too long.”

 

“Not long.  Glad I got you.  I’ll have to make a note about the phone for the future.”

 

“Did I hear you say future?  Could I have one?  In golf, that is.  It has been a pretty tough year and I’ve had way too much time to think about it.”

 

“You’re not the only one.  I’ve had a rotten year too.  Needed my second knee replaced so I had it done last February.  First one went super.  This one didn’t.  I’m still limping around six months later, whole season busted.”

 

“Sorry about that, Les.  I shouldn’t have been so selfish.  Did you get my ‘Get Well’ card and emails?”

 

“Yeah, but the ‘get well’ part didn’t work, however, Zach, I’ve got a new groove now, at least for one shot, promoting a tournament!  You won’t be able to guess where.”

 

“Ahh…Timbuktu?  Pyongyang?”

 

“Not far off.  Iron Ridge!”

 

“Did I hear that right?, The ‘Iron Ridge’ in Minnesota?  Or is there more than one?”

 

“The Iron Ridge in Minnesota.”

 

“I thought it was bankrupt, closed, kaput.  What happened?”

 

“A lot, a whole hell of a lot, auctioned off at a St. Louis County Sheriff’s Sale for back taxes, bought by a couple of Minnesota buddies of mine with more money than sense, reclaimed from the bush and reopened this year.”

 

“And the Northland Invitational Tournament revived?”

 

“Not exactly, a “Battle of the Sexes” Tournament in its place and you are invited.  You gotta’ come.  You’re the defending champion, sort of.”

 

“When?, and what the devil is a “Battle of the Sexes” Tournament?”

 

“The ‘when’ is the easy part, third week of September, three days, the 18th through the 20th.  Can you come?”

 

“Ahem, let me check my busy schedule…ahhh…yes.”

 

“OK, I’m putting you down.  Come as early as you want.  Tomorrow would be all right with me.  Oh, and the ‘sexes’ part.  You know the Ryder Cup format?”

 

“Sure, two teams, match play…one ball, two ball, head-to-head singles on the final day.  Is that it?”

 

“Right on.  Same as the Ryder Cup, but instead of US versus World, guys versus gals.”

 

“You’re kidding, is that anything anyone would want to watch?”

 

“Don’t know, but we’re going to find out, got some big names, especially on the women’s side.”

 

“Oh, I get it, Billie Jean King versus that old fart, Bobby Riggs, except golf.”

 

“Don’t be such a male chauvinist pig, Zach.  There are some big names on the men’s side too, though the men’s lineup is a bit longer in the tooth.  We’re taking strictly over-50 for the men, over-40 for the ladies.  They don’t have a Senior Tour so it was easier to get bigger names.”

 

“Is there any kind of handicapping involved?”

 

“None, men play off the longest of the Pro tees and women off the regular women’s tees, a one hundred yard difference on most of the long holes.”

 

“Sounds fair, Black Course I suppose.  That would give them quite an advantage, better angles on some of those narrow fairways, but hell, from close to the green they’re as good as we are, maybe better.”

 

“My thinking entirely, and it is the Black Course.  We’ve made it even tougher than it was the last time you played it.”

 

“Names, you said, so name ’em…gals first.  I can’t say I ever paid all that much attention to the LPGA, but maybe I’ll remember a few.”

 

“How about Judy Sanchez?”

 

“Oh, yeah, the fiery Latina with the double-wide butt, she could really smack ’em.  Won just about everything in sight, didn’t she?  Now that’s a big name.”

 

“Sure is, but a non-playing team captain like me.  I’m out due to bad knees, Judy due to excess poundage.”

 

“Too fat!, they always said she was too fat, bad for the image of the Ladies tour, now that’s sexist!  Good thing a slim waistline was never required on the Men’s tour.”

 

“Especially the Champions Tour.” laughed Les.

 

“Who else?”

 

“Ginger Schwartz.”

 

“Boy, that’s going back a long way.  She must be seventy.  Didn’t she play with Sam Snead and Bobby Jones?  What did they call her?  Something like ‘Miss Everything, three times over’?”

 

“Not that far back, Zach.  She’s only two years older that I am, and yes, she did win every LPGA tournament in her day, at least three times, and she’s still got game, doesn’t look a day older than she did when she retired fifteen years ago.”

 

“That I can believe, tall, close to six foot as I remember, and homely, she looked like one of those Depression-era photos of Okie migrants.”

 

“Not that bad, Zach, though she is from Oklahoma.  Still tall and thin, but with a backbone made of steel and a long smooth powerful swing.  You want eye candy, Zach?  We’ve got Pam Hamilton!”

 

“Oh, wow, the blond bombshell.  How could I forget her!, the big tits, the marvelous ass, and the signature pony-tail, enough to give a man a wet dream both coming and going.”

 

“You’re awful, Zach.  You’re going to have to watch your language around these girls.  They’re all as sharp with their tongues as they are with their clubs.”

 

“And you’re going to have your hands full Judy Sanchez.  She’s the sharpest of the lot.”

 

“That’s what the TV folks are hoping.  I just hope I can hold my own against her.”

 

“Any more big names?”

 

“Ulrika Swanson.”

 

“Another home run, but she can hardly be forty, didn’t play that long.  Did she even play ten years?”

 

“Not quite, only nine starting at age 20, didn’t make much of a splash until she was 24, then she won everything there was for four or five years and returned to her native Sweden under a cloud.  Hasn’t played publicly since, so far as I know, but she’s got an agent in Stockholm and he says she’s coming.  We’re keeping our fingers crossed.”

 

“You were right about the big names, Les, some of the biggest.  What about the guys?”

 

“Not quite so big.  Colin Guthrie, Dave Dekalb, Texas Tommy Talbot.”

 

“You’re right, a little underwhelming.  Well, old Colin won the British Open and a lot of tournaments in Europe.  Texas Tommy won at least a dozen times on the PGA tour, though never a major as I recall.  And Dave, well, he was a big name, but more as a baseball player than as a golfer.  So how many are there on each team?”

 

“Ten on a team, doubles the first two days.  Four teams each.  Two players sit out on each side, then one-on-one on Sunday.  Eight matches, again two sit out, one point for a win, half-a-point for a drawn match.  Sixteen points total.  $75,000 for playing, win or lose.  Thought you’d like that.  $15,000 for each point you win, another $15,000 for being on the winning team.”

 

“That’s big bucks for match play!”

 

“Pretty big, the sponsors are taking a real roll of the dice here, new format, not the top names, especially on the men’s side, and we don’t know what kind of attention the gals will attract.  It’s been a long time since most of them have been in the headlines.”

 

“So who are the sponsors?”

 

“Superior Mutual Funds, a big outfit in the upper Midwest, and Jean Ducharme, the French cosmetics giant, they’re both looking to give themselves a bigger footprint in the world market.  The Golf Channel is carrying us all three days.  They’re very enthusiastic.  Think it could bring some much-needed sex appeal and pizazz to the staid old game of golf.”

 

“I hope it does, and you can count me in as one of the ‘little names’.  I’ll be out in a week to do some practicing.  I’m looking forward to returning to good old Iron Ridge.”

 

 

 

  1. 2.              Leaving Home:

 

 

Zach was in a light-hearted mood as he de-pressurized the water system and zipped-up the little San Juan Island cabin for yet another of his forays into the land of golf.  ‘Some day I’m going to come back here and stay for more than two weeks’  he thought to himself  ‘Maybe for the rest of my life if my game doesn’t improve, but what would be so bad about that?  A small but cozy place, no frills, only the essentials of life, that’s my style.  Live on my Seattle PD pension.  That wouldn’t be so bad, someday, but not yet.’.

 

He wheeled the Dodge Caravan down his long narrow driveway and found his one-lane drive blocked by a Volvo station wagon coming in the other direction.  An overdressed, somewhat overweight, young woman got out and made her way as briskly to his car door as her high heels and the poor, lumpy quality of the locally-dug gravel would permit.

 

“Are you Mr. Zachary Roper?” she asked brightly.

 

“I am, and I’m in somewhat of a hurry.  Don’t want to miss the ferry to Anacortes.”  Zach frowned.

 

“Just a moment of your time, Mr. Roper, I’m Sally Wainright, Inter-Island Realty, I understand you own this forty acre tract of land.”

 

“Congratulations, Miz Wainwright, you know how to read a San Juan County plat-book.  You and a dozen others of your tribe who have been up here these last two or three years.  No I don’t want to sell it.  Not all of it.  Not part of it.  Not any of it.  Not now.  Not ever.  Does that answer your questions?”

 

“Well, Mr. Roper…uhh…I just wanted to let you know …uhh…that with island property in as great a demand as it currently is…”

 

“No, Miz Wainright.  I don’t want to know about the current demand for island property.  You see, Miz Wainright, I am a very wealthy and extremely eccentric professional golfer.  I live in my own little 40-acre fantasy world, sort of like Michael Jackson, and I don’t want to see that world disturbed.  So remove your person and your fricking Volvo before you discover that in addition to being eccentric, I am also prone to acts of irrational violence.”

 

She retreated quickly breaking a heel and leaving the shoe behind.  The Volvo zigzagged back down the driveway in reverse bouncing in and out of the roadside ditch several times as Zach pursued in his Caravan never more than a few feet from her front bumper.  ‘I don’t think that one will be back again.’ he mused with some satisfaction. ‘

 

He was late for the inter-island ferry but he didn’t mind that much.  He quaffed a couple of draft beers at the faux Irish brew pub that had a deck overlooking snug little Friday Harbor.  It was after Labor Day so the tourist crush was over.  ‘Too bad I’m leaving.  The island will be so pleasant now that the crowds are gone.’  The late ferry slipped in and whisked him away to Anacortes as the sun set over the Pacific.  ‘Tomorrow morning it will be off across the Cascades, the Rockies, through Glacier Park and then on across the vast prairies to the western edge of the North woods, to Iron Ridge Country Club and the ‘Battle of the Sexes’.’

 

As he drove through lake-dotted northern Minnesota Roper began thinking about what he might find when he reached Iron Ridge.  True he had been back to Minnesota twice to appear as a witness in two of the six trials spawned by his investigative work there two years earlier.  He wondered what had happened to some of those people during the 16 months since his last contact.  He knew that Jake Aslesen, convicted for hiring the murder of  Iron Ridge owner Al Smith, plus attempted murder, and embezzlement of $950,000 in Iron Ridge funds, was in federal prison and would probably stay there for the rest of his natural life.  He knew that Doug Westerling, Al Smith’s partner, had been convicted of fraud and grand theft and had already served out his one-year sentence.  Was his co-conspirator in investigation, Eric Wang, still a St. Louis County Sheriff’s Deputy?  He hoped not.  Eric was too good and too bright for such a low-powered job.   Was Al’s widowed wife Diana Smith clean and sober?  Or even one of the two?  Was Beau Jacobs still alive?  He must be, he was enough of a celebrity that his death would  have gotten at least some public notice, and how about the hired killers?, Erlandson and Flores.  He knew they had been tried and found guilty, but nothing beyond that.

 

 

  1. 3.              Return to Iron Ridge:

 

 

He saw few changes as he rolled into the parking lot.  Nothing he could see to the course from his vantage point.  The huge hotel that perched atop the ridge behind the course appeared to be abandoned.  Les Bowman came out to greet him even before he reached the information desk.

 

“Nothing has changed around here from what I can see, Les, except the hotel.  It looks pretty grim.”

 

“It’s closed, wasn’t part of our deal.  We only bought the course and the clubhouse.  Nobody wants it.  Didn’t you see the new hotel the Ojibway built as a part of their casino complex in town?”

 

“No, I didn’t come that way, came straight from the west.”

 

“Not as fancy as the old hotel was in its heyday but plenty of rooms for golfers and gamblers, and, since we’re no longer aiming for the super-rich, it’ll do.”

 

“…And the ski operation?”

 

“Still hanging fire, it didn’t sell at the auction but the Ojibway are thinking of taking it over once they get their casino running smoothly.”

 

“So then a lot has changed around here.”

 

“Some has, out on the course too, you can’t see it from here, some additional bunkers, nasty ones, on the Black, some new plantings blocking off approaches that were too easy.”

 

“Too easy?, I don’t remember anything too easy on the Black.

 

“Any of your ‘big names’ here yet?  Or am I the first.” laughed Roper.

 

“Most of the gals are here already.  You’ll meet them tonight.  They’re having a get-together.  It has been years since many of them have played in any kind of money competition.  They say they came early to work on their games, but I think the socializing is more important to them than the golf.  Ulrika Swanson is the only one of the big names missing.  I’m still holding my breath on her.  Not many of the guys yet.  Most of the big names are out at Philadelphia and won’t be coming in until that tournament is over, but a few of…shall we say the lesser names are around.”

 

“Like me.” smiled Roper “So how’s the knee?”

 

“Better, as long as the weather stays warm.”

 

“How’s Judy?”

 

“Delightful, you’ll meet her tonight, if not sooner.  She’s all over the place, constantly in motion.”

 

“I thought you said she was slowed by…uhh..”

 

“Not so as you would notice.  Claims she can’t see the ball because her belly sticks out too far, but I don’t believe it.  The Golf Channel guys think they may tape us playing a few holes together as part of a promotional package and I think we’re both up to it.”

 

 

  1. 4.              Party Time

 

 

Roper practiced that afternoon.  The party that night was a noisy, animated bash.  The liquor flowed freely enough to loosen up the predominantly female crowd, not that they needed that much loosening.  Most stayed reasonably sober, though the beauteous Pam Hamilton did appear to be a bit unsteady before the festivities ended.  Roper remained silent throughout.  Taking it all in, sharing in their good humor though not actively participating in it.  It was obvious that no one knew who he was.  Why should they?  He knew who most of the women were and he was impressed, a very handsome, in many cases even sexy-looking assembly, and not just Pam Hamilton, a few inches broader in all directions but still a knockout.  Even Judy Sanchez looked gorgeous.  A good forty pounds heavier than she had been during the fattest of her playing days, but still a charmer with a beautiful face, broad curves, a flirty, girlish attitude and a razor-sharp wit.

 

There were some of the women Roper didn’t know, however.  One in particular intrigued him.  She looked vaguely familiar, but he couldn’t recall where he had seen her before.

 

“Do you know who that is?  Over there in the far corner next to Ginger Schwartz, the little Asian chick?”  He asked Craig Levander, a fellow Champions Tour taxi squadder and one of the few men he knew.

 

“Beats the hell out of me, the gals all call her ‘princess’ or ‘the princess’.  They all seem to know her.  At least the older ones do.”

 

“I’m not going to rest until I find out who she is.  She just looks interesting, time to put on my detective hat.  It shouldn’t take me long.”

 

 

  1. 5.              Meeting the Princess

 

 

It didn’t take long at all.  The very next morning Roper found her out on the terrace having breakfast with the luscious Pam Hamilton, both of them chowing down with unladylike enthusiasm.  He had only a cup of black coffee in hand, was going to drink it before sampling the breakfast buffet, decided he couldn’t pass up such a great opportunity.

 

“Mind if I sit down for a minute?”

 

“Not at all.  You’re not interrupting our conversation as we’re too busy stuffing our faces.” beamed Pam.  “The Princess” eyed Roper coolly but said nothing.

 

“I’m a great admirer of yours, your golf , that is,  Miss Hamilton” Roper started unsteadily.  “You were a great star while I was a Seattle PD flatfoot fantasizing that I could make it on the Pro tour.  Now I’m a retired flatfoot who has made it about half way onto the Pro tour.”

 

“Admire as much of me as you like, golf or otherwise, Mr….ahh.”

 

“Roper, Zach Roper.”

 

“The golfing detective,” purred the Princess “I read all about you.  You even made the news in Thailand.  Well, this is a pleasure, though you clearly don’t have a clue as to who I am, big sister Pam, why don’t you formally introduce me to this nice sexy man.”

 

“Wow, your juices are really flowing for such an early hour, Princess. Mr Zach Roper, may I introduce Sutsada Nammontree  AKA ‘Sister Soo’,  AKA ‘The Thai Princess’, the most famous Thai woman golfer never to win an LPGA event in 14 years on the tour.”

 

“Many thanks for your predictably insulting introduction Sister Pammy, but alas it’s all true.  I played 14 years and never won a thing, never finished better than third, but like a good dutiful Thai woman I saved all my money and went back home when the LPGA decided that I had lost my looks…and lived happily ever after, until now, when the prospect of hard cash has lured me out of retirement.”

 

“Charmed I’m sure” Roper replied “A real Thai princess, that’s a first for me.”

 

Both Pam and the Princess exploded in laughter at his remark scattering scrambled eggs and a half-eaten strip of bacon onto the clear glass tabletop.

 

“Have I said something wrong?” asked a concerned Roper.

 

“No, not really.” coughed Pam wiping a tear from the corner of her eye.  “You tell him, Princess.  It’s your story.”

 

“Only in my girlish dreams was I ever a princess.  A princess who grew up in a small poor village with the smell of pig shit in her nostrils, some princess” her laugh had a clear bell-like quality to it.  “My daddy ran the local rice mill and the miller gets to keep the rice husks, which pigs love.  So millers always raise hogs, next to the rice mill, which was next to our house, a princess who learned to slop hogs as soon as she could walk and  long before she ever swung a golf club.”

 

“So how did you ever come to be called ‘the Princess’?  And how did you ever learn how to play golf?”

 

“The first part is easy.  I had an agent, he was also my husband for a while, he brought me to the States and helped get me onto the LPGA tour.  He thought being a ‘Thai Princess’ would be good public relations.  He was right, they ate it up.  As for golf, that’s a more complicated story.  My family had some money.  Not a lot, but enough to send me to a girl’s school in Chieng Mai run by some American Methodist Missionaries.  There I learned English, Christianity, and ladylike behavior.  I kept the English and ditched the rest.  That English was enough to get me into Chieng Mai University where I was studying to be a school teacher, something I’m sure I would have been a complete failure at, when my ‘Prince’ arrived…and he was a real Prince… a titled descendant of the kings of Chieng Mai who ruled the small, but prosperous, kingdom until 1824 when it was absorbed into Siam, which later became Thailand.  A real Cinderella story, except for one small detail, he already had a wife, a nice boring blue-blooded one.  What he wanted was a mistress.  Mistress was a move up for me so I took it.  He was an avid golfer so he taught me.  Soon I could beat the pants off him.  He used to take me to some of Thailand’s aristocratic watering holes like Hua Hin, on the sea shore, where the King has one of his palaces and there’s a dandy golf course.  He even set me up there as his ‘kept woman’, hundreds of miles away from Chieng Mai so I wouldn’t embarrass him.  He would come down every month or so ‘on business’.  I hung out at the Country Club.  Played a lot of golf and drank like a fish when I wasn’t playing, got so good that I started hustling some of the club members.  I had great confidence in my game.  I could even beat them when I was drunk, so long as they were drunker.  Then a new man came into my life, an American golfer, playing the Asian tour and in Hua Hin for a tournament.  He thought he was good enough to make the PGA.  He though I was pretty hot too, both on and off the course.  I married him and he brought me to the States.  He never did make it onto the PGA tour, but I made it onto the LPGA with his help.  My Pro career was better than our marriage which eventually broke up.  I sobered up, more or less.  He drank too much, bounced around as a club pro.  I don’t know where he is now.  We had a daughter.  I sent her to Thailand for my parents to raise after our breakup.  I sent money and kept playing the LPGA as long as they would have me.  My daughter is 20 now and I’m back here in the States for the first time in 14 years, enjoying every minute of it, and we haven’t even started playing yet.”

 

Pam had been looking on with a sly grin on her face.  “I’m off to the driving range boys and girls.  My slice was terrible during yesterday’s practice round.  I’ve got to fix it before I go out again.”

 

“But Pam, we’re set for 9:15 on the Black.” the Princess interjected.

 

“Take Mr. Roper here along with you.  Maybe he can give you a few pointers, but before you go get him to eat a proper breakfast, and get seconds for yourself.  You’ll need a couple of extra pounds of fat to burn for energy once the serious golfing begins.  I’ve got my fat reserve already.”

 

‘I can’t believe how well this is working out’, thought Roper, the two of them chatted on.  Roper got himself a heaping plateful of breakfast and the Princess got herself a heaping plateful of crisp hash browns.

 

“I just love ’em, seems such a simple dish but you never get them in Thailand, great for my fat reserves.”

 

Roper nodded smilingly.  None of the Princess’s fat reserves were in evidence and he was sure that it would take more than a heaping plateful of hash browns before they made so much as a cameo appearance.

 

“By the way, what should I call you?  You can call me Zach.”

 

“OK, Tsaak”  she pronounced the ‘a’  of ‘Zach’ as an ‘ah’ and her Z’s with a fuzzy half ‘s’ sound and a slight wrinkling of her snubbed nose which showed that she was trying hard to mimic him. ”You can call me anything you like.  I’m not particular.”

 

“Then I’ll call you ‘Princess’ if you don’t mind.  In view of the great story of what an un-princess like princess you are.”

 

“Glad you liked the story.”

 

“I like a lot more than the story.”

 

She didn’t reply but returned a look that said ‘the same goes for me too’, or at least that’s what Roper thought it said.

 

 

  1. 6.              The Princess Comes out Swinging:

 

 

Just before 9:00 they started for the tee.  “Want to take a cart?” asked Roper.

 

“No, I always walk unless I’m made to do otherwise.”

 

“Me too, a woman after my own heart.”

 

Roper had sent a decent shot down the middle of the fairway and was now observing the Princess on the Ladies tee.  She was all business and concentration.  Carefully aligning herself, taking only a single practice swing without full extension.  Then the real thing, and what a beautiful sight it was.  Back-swing coiling around her limber body until she nearly hit herself in the butt with the club head, then uncoiling, sweeping forward, a quick snap of her hips as club struck ball, continuing its forward arc in a follow through that didn’t end until the club head had made a complete circuit on its axis.

 

“Did you see where my ball went, Tsaak?  I lost it in the sun.”

 

“No” he said blushing.  He would have added ‘What ball?  I was too busy watching your marvelous swing and your amazing little body’ if he had been telling the truth.  “I’m sure it’s right down the middle, and long, very long.  What a great…ahh…swing you have Princess.”

 

It was only the first of many great swings Roper witnessed that day including one from behind where he got to see how that ball striking hip snap wiggled her cute little ass.  His game looked crude and clumsy next to hers.  It was all he could do to keep up with her.  They both finished with even par 72s.

 

“Not bad for the first time out.” said Roper.  “Should we sign up for another practice round or..?”

 

“You sign us up for tomorrow morning, the earlier the better.  I love to play in the early morning.”

 

“So do I.  Well then, Princess.  How serious are you about golf?  Do you think we could take the afternoon off to do a little sight-seeing.  I know this area pretty well.  I could be your tour guide.”

 

“Sure, let’s do it.  I’ve been practicing my tiny butt off for three days.  I need a break.  You’re the one who needs the practice.  Maybe you’re not serious enough about golf.” she smiled.

 

“Oh, I am.  It’s just that there are some other things that I’m also serious about.”

 

“Me too.” she said flashing him a sly, crinkly half-smile.

 

 

  1. 7.              On Tour:

 

 

Roper gave the Princess his backwoods tour including the now-infamous Crossroads Tap because she was interested in it.  They did not go inside.  They ended up with an improvised picnic at the abandoned CCC camp with hot dogs and wine chilled in the clear, cool lake.

 

“This is heaven.  Fourteen years I traveled around the States but I was never here, .never anything like it.  I saw a lot of hotel and motel rooms, and a lot of golf courses, but rarely had enough time to take in the sights.  I was so serious in those days, so determined to be a star.  That all seems so silly now and when Ulrika, she was my roomie for her first five years here, when her career took off and she started winning everything, that made me even more determined.  What good did it do me?  And what good did all that winning do Ulrika?”

 

“This isn’t the only scenic spot in the US, Princess.  I even own one, or at least 40 acres of one, out in Puget Sound, on San Juan Island.  Want to visit it?”

 

“You can show me the whole damn USA if you like.  No reason for me to hurry back to Thailand, but what about your Pro career?”

 

“It’s not as if it is going anywhere.  I’ve got to play a gig in Tucson in November and that’s it for this year.  Then maybe you can show me Thailand.  I’m as un-traveled as a person can be.  The only foreign countries I’ve ever been to are Canada and Mexico.  I don’t even have a passport.”

 

They built up the fire and talked all that evening and on into the night.  The two bottles of wine were long gone, but they couldn’t have been more sober.  It all ended with a chaste but delicious kiss at the door to her room in the Casino Hotel as noisy drunks brayed in the background.  ‘Chemistry there is, but no need to hurry it’ thought Roper.  The Princess though the same, but in Thai.

 

 

  1. 8.              Practice Practice:

 

 

Their early morning practice round the next day was more of the same which made it sound boring, but ‘the same’ was so exquisite.  No need to improve on it.  That afternoon they got to be part of the ‘gallery’ as Les and Judy squared off for their video-taped promo.  It was uproarious and ad-libbed.

 

Judy led off with “Well, you crippled old man.  I suppose you want a cart.”

 

“Yes, I thought we might need one, in case you can’t haul your ample derriere up some of those steep hills.”

 

“Don’t worry old fella’.  I can sprint up those hills.”

 

“That would be quite a sight, you sprinting.  Mind if I watch, from a cart, at the top of the hill.”

 

Finally on the tee with Les hitting a straight but short one,  “You looked a little stiff there, Les, guess I’ll have to show you what a fluid swing looks like.”

 

Later, with Judy driving this time, “That goes well beyond fluid, Judy.  I’ve never seen so many moving parts in a golf swing, why some of them are still moving.”

 

“Everyone’s a critic, but I out-drove you by forty yards.  This is my secret.  This is where the power comes from.” she said patting her ass.

 

“That’s what I remember you saying when that ‘power source’ of yours was half its current size.  If it’s true you should be hitting the ball 400 yards by now.”

 

“All you skinny guys are alike, can’t deal with a full-figured woman.”

 

“I’m sure I can find a way to deal with your full figure off the golf course.  I’m just not sure I can handle it on the course.”

 

“Pretty racy stuff.” giggled the Princess “for the Golf Channel.”

 

“They’re trying to expand their market share, think ‘Desperate Old Golf Pros’.” quipped Roper.

 

“If anyone could make that work it would be those two.  They’ve got chemistry.” smiled the Princess.

 

“I hope there’s enough of the ‘chemistry’ so the rest of us can get a taste.”  Roper replied.

 

“Oh, there is, there definitely is.” said the Princess with a twinkle in her black eyes.

 

 

  1. 9.              The Kickoff Dinner:

 

 

The taping was a great success and the day ended with a pre-Tournament dinner.  All the men were now there.  Roper noticed that he and the Princess were not the only “Battle of the Sexes” enemies that had already paired off.  Texas Tommy was squiring the beauteous Pam and Colin Guthrie and Ginger Schwartz cut an odd-looking duo with the squat Colin a good six inches shorter than Ginger even before she put on the towering high heels she was now wearing.  The last seats were just filling as a ripple went through the crowd.  Roper didn’t pick it up, but the Princess whispered in his ear.

 

“Ulrika’s here.  There she is, coming in now.  Oh, my.  She doesn’t look at all good, even from this distance.”

 

The room was hushed as the small dark-haired figure took her seat on the dais.  She was alone.  No escort.  After a brief silence the whispering began.

 

“I thought she was bigger than that.  She’s so tiny.” said Roper.

 

“She was bigger than that.  I think she has shrunk.  Is that possible?  And how can you shrink and get fatter at the same time?  Look at her, that roll of fat that jiggled when she walked in.  She’s flabby, never had so much as an ounce of fat on her body when she was playing on the tour.  She didn’t even have fat where us ladies normally have fat, even when we’re thin.  All muscle, like a body builder.  And those dark glasses, she never wore dark glasses dark in the old days.  I hate to think what she may be hiding.”

 

“Like what?”

 

“Booze, it all adds up, the puffiness, the flab, the unhealthy color, the shades.  Normally she didn’t drink, wouldn’t touch a drop.  But every once in a while, when she got into one of her black moods, when she thought things were going badly, or when they really were going badly, I would find her in bed, passed out, with a bottle of vodka.  Or I’d get a call.  She would be in some bar.  Too drunk to make it back to wherever we were staying.  I usually organized the rescue expedition.  I wasn’t strong enough to carry her by myself if she had already passed out by the time I got there.”

 

“Sounds awful.”

 

“And that wasn’t the worst of it.  She had often hurt herself, falls, broken glass, or been hurt by someone else, usually a guy, though women beat on her too, and raped her, either rape or consensual sex while she was stewed to the gills.  It’s a fine line sometimes.  She always wanted to forget about it the next day.  Claimed she didn’t remember anything.  Maybe she didn’t.  Maybe she just didn’t want to.  I was a bad example for her as a roomie.  Drank more in a month than she did.  Always celebrated after a tournament whether I had anything to celebrate or not.”

 

“So, how often did she go off on these binges?”

 

“It varied.  She could go two or three months without an incident, then bang!, and always just for one night, never missed a tournament.  I never missed one either, though I showed up loaded a couple of times when I had afternoon tee offs.  Fell into a sand trap once while trying to squat down and line up a putt, that was embarrassing.  Fell flat on my face once while bending over trying to tee up my ball, but that was in a celebrity pro-am in Las Vegas and the three gals who were with me were all as smashed as I was.”

 

“And yet you didn’t have a drinking problem?”

 

“No, I didn’t have any problem drinking at all when I got in the mood for it.  I just didn’t ever go as far as Ulrika did, maybe still does.  If you saw her take a drink you would know that she wouldn’t stop until she passed out.”

 

“And when she started winning?  How could she be that good and still be a drunk?”

 

“I don’t know, but I did hear that they had a psychiatrist working with her and I know that she went for chemical dependency treatment at least once.”

 

“An interesting case.”

 

“Now you’re sounding like a detective, but it’s golf time Tsaaki.  No murders this go round.” she smiled “I will tell you one thing though.  She’s not going to win anything in the shape she’s in.  Lucky we can put two players on the bench each day, but I’m sure they’ll have to put her on the card at least one day.  I feel sorry for her.  It’ll be awful, just awful.”

 

Roper couldn’t get out of his detective mode.  He watched the small, dark, barely moving figure off and on during the dinner and the round of after dinner speeches.  When Judy introduced her she stood up and muttered a few words in a low weak voice that did not reach his ear.  He did notice the loose wobbly roll of fat around her middle that the Princess’s sharp feminine eye had previously detected.  The room cleared within minutes after the last speech ended.  The women, who had been animated and cheerful up to this point, were now subdued, as if chilled by a cold wind coming from the dark, spooky Swede.

 

 

  1. 10.           The Games Begin:

 

 

The “Battle of the Sexes” commenced with a brief ceremony during which the contending teams and their Captains were introduced and the ground rules were read out.  When the team pairings for one-ball were announced Roper was not surprised to find himself in the second foursome, nor that his partner was his fellow taxi squadder Craig Levander.  He was surprised to find that their female opponents were the Princess and Marcia Mullins.  ‘Some strings are surely being pulled’ he thought.  ‘Oh. Well this is the “Battle of the Sexes” so why not!’  Or maybe it was just for the visuals, they were looking for contrast.  Roper at 6-3 and the even taller Craig at 6-5 facing the two shortest women on the ‘enemy’ team, The Princess at 5-2 and Marcia, an inch shorter from the looks of her, stockier than the Princess, a nice curvaceous shape with well-rounded breasts and a broad butt, strong, compact and athletic.   As they waited for the first foursome to go off Roper sidled up next to the Princess and whispered in her ear.  “Who is Marcia Mullins?  She certainly looks good.  Has a great shape, haven’t seen her swing yet.”

 

“Oh, she’s as good as she looks, golfing too.  You’ll find out.” she smiled “She was my roomie for three years after Ulrika hit it big.  Just 19 when she turned Pro.  By that time my hubby/agent had my age down to 23, from an actual 33, so they bunked her in with me.  She had a short Pro career.  Played five years, then quit to make babies, tried for a comeback at 36, with limited success.  Just turned 40, the youngest on our team, was playing some Pro events as recently as last year so she’s not rusty like me, and she’s in marvelous shape.  Five kids and she’s slimmer than she was at 19.  Who’s the big guy?”

 

“Craig Levander, like me, an old fart trying to revive the athletic dreams of his youth, made a pile in computer software, sold his business and lit out for the Champions Tour.  Lots of beef and muscle, hits the ball a ton, wins driving contests, a good, though streaky, putter, short game is erratic.  Watch out, we could be dangerous with him booming ’em off the tee and me handling the approach shots.”

 

A few minutes later the “Battle of the Sexes” was joined.  Craig did not disappoint as he ripped one well over 300 yards off the first tee.  Then Marcia, with a compact, no non-sense swing that matched her taut little body punched one low and string-straight off the Ladies tee that pitched up just 20 yards short of Craig.  Roper lofted a nine iron onto the 430-yard par 4 leaving an uphill 12-footer which Craig sank easily.  Meanwhile the Princess using a ridiculous looking 25-year-old five wood plunked one on 15 feet past the hole.  Marcia’s putt rimmed the cup but didn’t fall.  The boys narrowly won the first hole.  The rest of the match was back and forth.  Neither team getting more than one up.

 

The long narrow par 5 18th arrived.  Roper briefly recalled his amazing victory there two years before, going in one shot down to Les Bowman, hoping for a birdie, a draw and a chance at a playoff when Les put his approach shot into the far back bunker.  In ecstasy when his seven-iron leaped into the hole for an eagle.  This time he and Craig came in one up.  Craig’s drive was long but caught in one of Les’s ‘new plantings’.  Marcia’s was well-placed and safe, but short.  The Princess had been anything but ‘rusty’ so far, driving straight and true, putting crisply, but she was not a long hitter off the fairway so Roper expected that she would leave Marcia a lengthy approach shot.  ‘Just as well’ he thought ‘I’ll be lucky if I get it out of the woods in one, but if I can do it we can still make par, and that should be enough’.   This time she proved his expectations wrong.  He paused to watch her from his shady spot deep in the brush, the back view, his favorite.  She put something extra into it.  The head of the 3-wood actually did touch her tush on the back-swing.  He was sure of it.  The twitch of her butt as club struck ball made him gasp and he felt his cock harden.  He was too far back in the boonies to see where the ball went, even if he had been looking at anything but her.  A happy squeal from Marcia indicated that it must have been good.

Continued….

Click on the title below to download the entire book and keep reading

M.H. Burton’s Mixed Foursome (The Zach Roper Golf Mysteries volumes 1-4)>>>>

 

KND Brand New Thriller of The Week – M.H. Burton’s Mixed Foursome (The Zach Roper Golf Mysteries volumes 1-4) – “A Solidly Entertaining, Mildly Raunchy Quartet of Golfing Capers” – Kirkus Reviews

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, M.H. Burton’s Mixed Foursome (The Zach Roper Golf Mysteries volumes 1-4). Please check it out!

Or currently FREE for Amazon Prime Members Via the Kindle Lending Library
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
Zach Roper is on the ball, and on the case. Murder seems to follow the retired Seattle police detective as he struggles to win a berth on the PGA Champions Tour. Will he solve the crime? Will he make the cut? Read on….
“Mixed Foursome” includes 4 of Zach’s cases-
1. “Murder in the Deep Rough-A corpse in the woods on number four attracts Zach’s attention before the first ball is teed.
2. “Murder on the 19th Hole”-This time it’s a Thai ‘princess’ who attracts his attention. The corpse shows up later.
3. “Murder Takes a Mulligan”-Zach and the ‘princess’ team up for golf and deadly politics in Thailand.
4. “Murder Goes to the Green”-Zach and the ‘princess’ again out to hustle a few bucks from the super-rich on the golf course, when the richest of the them all goes missing

Kirkus Reviews
“….the stories have the muscularity and acceleration to keep the reader involved, and Burton has great success with his characters, particularly Zach and the sassy Thai “princess”, a former professional golfer who joins him in three of the adventures.  Those two also share a considerable amount of time in the sack—“The bed springs groaned loudly, no doubt unaccustomed to such a workout”—which takes them from Sweden to Southeast Asia, where Burton displays a decent hand at scenery description.”  Kirkus Reviews  

About The Author

I always wanted to be a writer but got a rather late start at age 60. The first thing I wrote was “Tales of Ramasun” based on my experiences as a US Army Security Agency intelligence gathering spook at a remote, and top secret, base called Ramasun Station in Thailand during the Vietnam War. That has been so well recieved that there will be more ‘tales’ in print by early 2013. Then I branched out into the detective novel genre with “Mixed Foursome: The Zach Roper Mysteries”. I have always been a great fan of ‘whodunnits’ so I decided to take a crack at writing them….have gotten some positive feedback including a recent review from Kirkus, so I am going to keep at it. I’ve written many short stories, some of which have made it into print in various anthologies, but finding Amazon Kindle and CreateSpace has been a real godsend. From now on I’m going to do nothing else. I love to write, wish I had started earlier in life, but the advantage of old age is that you have lots of good material stored up. I’ve never had ‘writer’s block’, can’t imagine what it would be like. Fame and fortune do not interest me at this point in my life. I just want to tell stories for those who appreciate them, I don’t care if they number in the dozens, hundreds or thousands.
(This is a sponsored post.)

Free Excerpt From Bestselling Paranormal Thriller The Book of Paul by Richard Long – Now Just 99 Cents on Kindle!

On Friday we announced that Richard Long’s The Book of Paul 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:

The Book of Paul — A Paranormal Thriller

by Richard Long

4.5 stars – 97 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

“Everything you’ve ever believed about yourself…about the description of reality you’ve clung to so stubbornly all your life…all of it…every bit of it…is an illusion.” 

In the rubble-strewn wasteland of Alphabet City, a squalid tenement conceals a treasure “beyond all imagining”– an immaculately preserved, fifth century codex. The sole repository of ancient Hermetic lore, it contains the alchemical rituals for transforming thought into substance, transmuting matter at will…and attaining eternal life.

When Rose, a sex and pain addicted East Village tattoo artist has a torrid encounter with Martin, a battle-hardened loner, they discover they are unwitting pawns on opposing sides of a battle that has shaped the course of human history. At the center of the conflict is Paul, the villainous overlord of an underground feudal society, who guards the book’s occult secrets in preparation for the fulfillment of an apocalyptic prophecy.

The action is relentless as Rose and Martin fight to escape Paul’s clutches and Martin’s destiny as the chosen recipient of Paul’s sinister legacy.  Science and magic, mythology and technology converge in a monumental battle where the stakes couldn’t be higher: control of the ultimate power in the universe–the Maelstrom.

The Book of Paul is the first of seven volumes in a sweeping mythological narrative tracing the mystical connections between Hermes Trismegistus in ancient Egypt, Sophia, the female counterpart of Christ, and the Celtic druids of Clan Kelly.

 

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

Exercises

He practiced smiling.

Looking in the mirror, Martin pulled up the corners of his mouth, trying to duplicate the expression of the blond-haired man on the TV with the big forehead. Something wasn’t right—the eyebrows? His eyes darted back and forth from the mirror to the television, posing, making adjustments here and there…lips down, more teeth…comparing…nope. After a few minutes, his face started to hurt and he gave up.

He did push-ups instead. Push-ups were easy. He did two hundred before he had to stop and change the channel. A show called The Nanny had come on and he leapt up like a cat as soon as he heard her whiny voice. He pressed the remote button with blinding speed-click, click, click, click, click-until he found an old black-and-white movie. Good. He liked those. He went back to his push-ups, his face tilted up so he wouldn’t miss a thing.

In the movie there was a woman who was worried that this man didn’t love her anymore. She didn’t know it, but the man was worried that the woman didn’t love him either. They spent all this time (he couldn’t even count how many push-ups) trying to make each other jealous, hoping that would make the other one love them again. Martin didn’t understand any of it. He looked at them laughing and smiling while they tried to trick and embarrass each other, then went to the mirror and practiced again.

It still didn’t look right.

Pretty

Birds were chirping, dogs were barking. It was a bright, bright beautiful cool crisp day in the neighborhood. Junkies were up with their crackhead cousins, prowling the lanes of Tompkins Square Park, looking for a not quite empty vial to suck on or maybe a john so they could buy one. The gentry joggers were up already, circling the park in huffy, puffy laps, their pounding hoofbeats echoing the clang-whirl-shwoop-crunch of the mob-owned garbage trucks.

Ho-hum. Rose slowly fingered the ring on her nipple and wondered why she couldn’t get back to sleep. The garbage trucks were the obvious reason. The booms and bangs down below sounded like artillery fire. Still, she usually slept like a pile of cannonballs at Gettysburg. When she went down, she stayed down. At least until noon. She worked nights at the tattoo parlor, happily infecting all the ink-crazed kids with HIV and hepatitis C (if they were lucky). She didn’t realize she was doing that. She’d been following the sterilization techniques handed down by her creepy boss. Unfortunately, they weren’t any more effective than the jar of clear blue liquid that the barbershop used to sterilize combs. In the time she’d been working, she had already been responsible for the possibly fatal infection of eleven pierced and tattooed members of the “tribal community.”

So Rose, blissfully unaware of her crimes against humanity, lay wide awake at nine-fifteen in the morning, twisting and turning her nipple ring. She wasn’t sure why she was awake, but now that she was, she knew what she wanted to do about it. As she rubbed the two silver rings that held her clit hostage, she wondered again why she was up so early and why she felt so…horny? Hungry? What?

She knocked off a quick O like she was popping a wine cork, light and charming but nothing special. That’s when she realized it wasn’t a sex thing. So what was it?

She gripped the rings on both nipples and stretched them upward as far as she could, dragging her small twin mounds along like a pair of stubborn mules. She pulled and pulled until her nipples ached, then held the rings at the Maximum Stretching Point, feeling the pain course through her, then settle back down again. She didn’t back off even a millimeter, just took some deep slow breaths for a moment or two and tried to pull them out even farther.

She thought of a dancer doing hamstring stretches, and she figured the technique and level of pain must be fairly equivalent. After slowly yanking them out again, she thought, I’m in training, and started giggling so hard she had to let go. Thwack. Her tiny tits and sore, swollen nipples bounced back against her chest like a pair of hard rubber balls. Boing. Giggle. Ho-hum. Hmmm. So it wasn’t the sex and it wasn’t the pain or the sexpain or the painsex. So what was it? She looked out the window at the blue morning sky and the green bushy trees and the squirrel tightrope-walking on the fire escape and the cling-clang of the garbage truck and…

She was happy. She was unreasonably, deliriously happy! But why? The “why” brought a tiny frown to her tiny face, but the “happy” was so much stronger that it brushed away the “why” with a single gust of cool fresh air that came blowing through her curtains.

She threw the covers off the bed and let the breeze wash over her until her skin was a textured roadmap of goose bumps, pits, posts, rings and colored ink. She breathed and the ink breathed with her. She sat on the edge of the bed and jingled like Donner and Blitzen. She smiled and she looked out the window and knew something good was coming her way.

Rose stood up and stretched and took a deep breath and yawned and padded into the hallway where her yoga mat was waiting. She spent the next half hour going through her routine, a rare carryover of the training and discipline that dominated her preadolescent life as a competitive gymnast. She could do headstands and handstands and downward-facing dogs like nobody’s business. In fact, it took some fairly severe contortions for her to even break a sweat, but by the final lotus pose, a slippery sheen of perspiration coated her arms and chest.

She sniffed her armpits, bowed to the altar at the end of the hall and lit three candles. The candles were nestled between a variety of crystals and minerals, some so brightly colored she often wondered how something that vibrant and wondrous could actually be growing like a plant on the walls of caves in total darkness. Or like her amethyst geode, actually growing inside a rock, like an egg hatching a million-year-old purple crystal baby. Her favorite gemstone was one her mom gave her, a brilliant red crystal she called a bloodstone. Its smooth, squarish surface was easily five inches across and three inches thick, one of the largest of its kind, she’d been told. She rubbed it for good luck like she did almost every day, then pranced into the bathroom for a very long, very hot shower.

She hummed a happy song while she soaped and scrubbed and rubbed and shaved and shaved and shaved. She wasn’t sure what the song was or where she’d heard it before. After three more humming choruses, it suddenly came to her and she could see Natalie Wood dancing in that dress shop, looking in the mirror while the other girls scolded her for being so silly. Rose looked in her defogging shower mirror, liked what she saw and sang out right along with them, “I feel pretty…oh, so pretty…”

 

Monsters

You tell your children not to be afraid. You tell them everything will be all right. You tell them Mommy and Daddy will always be there. You tell them lies.

Paul looked out the filthy window and watched the little girl playing in the filthier street below. Hopscotch. He didn’t think kids played hopscotch anymore. Not in this neighborhood. Hip-hopscotch, maybe.

“Hhmph! What do you think about that?”

Paul watched the little black girl toss her pebble or cigarette butt or whatever it was to square number five, then expertly hop, hop, hop her way safely to the square and back. She was dressed in a clean, fresh, red-gingham dress with matching red bows in her neatly braided pigtails. She looked so fresh and clean and happy that he wondered what she was doing on this shithole street.

The girl was playing all by herself. Hop, hop, hop. Hop, hop, hop. She was completely absorbed in her hopping and scotching and Paul was equally absorbed watching every skip and shuffle. No one walked by and only a single taxi ruffled the otherworldly calm.

Paul leaned closer, his keen ears straining to pick up the faint sound of her shiny leather shoes scraping against the grimy concrete. He focused even more intently and heard the even fainter lilt of her soft voice. Was she singing? He pressed his ear against the glass and listened. Sure enough, she was singing. Paul smiled and closed his eyes and let the sound pour into his ear like a rich, fragrant wine.

“One, two, buckle my shoe. Three, four, shut the door…”

He listened with his eyes closed. Her soft sweet voice rose higher and higher until…the singing suddenly stopped. Paul’s eyes snapped open. The girl was gone. He craned his neck quickly to the left and saw her being pulled roughly down the street. The puller was a large, light-skinned black man, tugging on her arm every two seconds like he was dragging a dog by its leash. At first, he guessed that the man was her father, a commodity as rare in this part of town as a fresh-scrubbed girl playing hopscotch. Then he wondered if he wasn’t her father after all. Maybe he was one of those kinds of men, one of those monsters that would take a sweet, pure thing to a dark, dirty place and…

And do whatever a monster like that wanted to do.

Paul pressed his face against the glass and caught a last fleeting glance of the big brown man and the tiny red-checkered girl. He watched the way he yanked on her arm, how he shook his finger, how he stooped down to slap her face and finally concluded that he was indeed her one and only Daddy dear. Who else would dare to act that way in public?

“Kids!” Paul huffed. “The kids these days!”

He laughed loud enough to rattle the windows. Then his face hardened by degrees as he pictured the yanking daddy and the formerly happy girl. Hmmm, maybe he was one of those prowling monsters after all. Paul shuddered at the thought of what a man like that would do. He imagined the scene unfolding step by step, grunting as the vision became more and more precise. “Hhmph!” he snorted after a particularly gruesome imagining. “What kind of a bug could get inside your brain and make you do a thing like that?”

“Monsters! Monsters!” he shouted, rambling back into the wasteland of his labyrinthine apartments, twisting and turning through the maze of lightless hallways as if being led by a seeing-eye dog. He walked and turned and walked some more, comforted as always by the darkness. Finally, he came to a halt and pushed hard against a wall.

His hidden sanctuary opened like Ali Baba’s cave, glowing with the treasures it contained. He stepped inside and saw the figure resting (well, not exactly resting) between the flickering candles. At the sound of his footsteps, the body on the altar twitched frantically. Paul moved closer, rubbing a smooth fingertip across the wet, trembling skin and raised it to his lips. It tasted like fear. He gazed down at the man, his eyes moving slowly from his ashen face to the rusty nails holding him so firmly in place. The warm, dark blood shining on the wooden altar made him think about the red-gingham bunny again.

“Monsters,” he said, more softly this time, wishing he weren’t so busy. As much as he would enjoy it, there simply wasn’t enough time to clean up this mess, prepare for his guests and track her down. Well, not her, precisely. Her angry, tugging dad. Not that Paul had any trouble killing little girls, you understand. It just wasn’t his thing. Given a choice, he would much rather kill her father. And make her watch.

 

Laundry Day

Martin felt good. So good he would have smiled if he could. Today was laundry day. He’d been awake for hours, doing his exercises (one thousand sit-ups, push-ups and chin-ups, plus an assortment of martial arts routines), reading his favorite periodicals (Popular Mechanics, Soldier of Fortune, Lost Treasures). Even so, he was still able to tinker with his home surveillance system, take his shower at precisely nine a.m., and then finally…move on to the laundry.

Martin enjoyed many things in life: hunting, hoarding, watching TV…but he loved doing laundry the most. Every day was a contest between him and hard water. New York had the hardest water, like it had the hardest everything else. It helped with the dishes, breaking down the dried spaghetti sauce on his plate like hot corrosive acid. It helped in the shower too, where he rigged a special high-pressure nozzle that practically ripped the skin from his knotted muscles. He entered the bathroom with great determination, carefully hanging his gym shorts on their special hook, and proceeded to shave every hair on his head, chest, arms, underarms, legs and groin with an electric hair clipper, to a uniform one-eighth-inch length. One less thing to think about. Then he turned on the shower as hot as he could stand it, stepped inside and reveled in the fire hose blast of all that hard, hot water. Ahhhhhhh.

Martin was hard too. Looked hard. Felt hard. Yet his one true luxury in life was softness. Soft shirts, pants, underwear…soft sheets, pillows, blankets. Martin cursed the water silently as he washed his hand washables. He had more hand-washables than most people had laundry. How could you trust your personal garments…fabric that came into physical contact with your skin…to anyone else? He muttered and fought fiercely against the hard, spiteful water, but just as he felt the clothes in his hands raise a mushy white flag of surrender, he suddenly heard a sound he never heard in all the time he had lived there. The doorbell.

Ding-dong

Martin had one of those spring-button doorbells that almost dislocates your finger when it pops back out, making that “Ding-dong, Avon” sound. He craned his head over to the peephole while keeping his body to the right side of the doorframe in case the Avon person happened to be carrying a shotgun and wanted to punch a window through the door and his newly trimmed belly. He was being extra careful because he was trained that way, not because he was expecting any trouble. Better safe than sorry.

In the peephole’s fish-eye distortion he saw the spiky hair of the girl who recently moved in upstairs. He had seen her on a few occasions, but he doubted she had seen him. Curious but ever cautious, he opened the door an inch and peeked outside. She was young, early twenties he guessed, probably five feet two inches. Her hair was also short and jet black. She had big dark eyes, long lashes and a thin gold ring in her nose.

Martin waited, saying nothing. He hated nose-rings and wanted to hand her a Kleenex. She said nothing either, looking at Martin’s eye in the door crack. The silence didn’t bother Martin in the least. He spent ninety- eight percent of his time waiting and watching. He had the patience of Job. Besides, this was her errand. Whatever she wanted, she would either get around to telling him or she wouldn’t.

“You the super?” Rose asked finally.

“No,” Martin replied.

“My sink’s broke,” she grumbled.

Martin said nothing, since he had no idea how to be concerned about her problem.

“You know where he lives?” she asked after three more uncomfortable seconds. She began fidgeting from staring so long at the unblinking eye.

“Yes,” Martin said.

Rose paused a second, wondering if this guy was just stoned or an idiot or mean or what. “Well, do you think you could tell me?” she asked finally, tapping her foot.

Martin hated foot-tapping even more than nose-rings and paused even longer while debating whether to tell her. “Next door,” he said at last, as Rose was heading back up the stairs.

“Thanks a lot,” she said, her voice dripping with the sarcasm distinctive of New York City apartment dwellers.

“You’re welcome,” Martin said, ignoring her sarcasm and incapable of it himself.

He closed the door and looked through the peephole, catching a glimpse of her hair moving toward the apartment next door. Glad to have concluded the exchange, he was happier still to return to his hand-washables, pulling out a bottle of Forever New from under the sink where there were six more keeping it company. Then he heard the ding-dong again.

His reaction to the doorbell both startled and confused him. He expected to feel annoyed at being interrupted yet again from one of life’s greatest pleasures, but instead he felt a flutter of excitement. Why? He walked to the door and opened it a bit wider this time, shocked at himself for not looking through the peephole first. But it was just the girl, as he expected, still unarmed and grumbling more than ever. “He’s not there,” she said.

Martin said nothing. The super was in the hospital, where he would remain for the foreseeable future, having slipped in the bathtub after knocking back a fifth of vodka.

Rose stood in the hallway, still expecting some kind of response. Then her eyes widened as she took in the part of Martin’s body he had exposed through the six-inch gap. His bare chest was rippling with sinewy muscle and covered with a glaze of short hairs that ran from his chest in a ribbon to his navel and below, disappearing in the loose gray cotton of his gym shorts. Her eyes followed all the way down and she felt an involuntary spasm in her crotch when she saw the big lump in his.

Martin remained silent, watching as her eyes bounced back to his face like a diver on a springboard, hoping she hadn’t been caught. Just as quickly, they drifted back down again.

“Know where he is?” Rose blurted out, struggling to maintain eye contact.

“No,” he lied, feeling the lump grow bigger from the unaccustomed attention.

“Know how to fix a sink?” she asked with more tension than she intended, partly because of his unwillingness to speak unless spoken to, yet mostly due to a sudden re-emergence of one of her favorite sexual fantasies involving household repairmen.

Something clicked inside Martin’s head when she asked that last question. He wasn’t sure if it was the question or the way her voice was quivering, but he responded immediately and with some real enthusiasm this time. “Yes,” he said. “I do.”

 

The Good Stuff

“My name is Rose,” she said to the air in front of her as they climbed the stairs.

Martin said nothing, his senses too occupied with analyzing the changing surroundings to respond even if he had the inclination. When she turned around suddenly to face him, he almost went for the quick kill punch to the Adam’s apple he automatically used whenever threatened in close quarters. But he pulled back before she even noticed.

“And what’s your name?” she asked in the tone you use for a shy three-year-old.

He felt angry at her patronizing tone. He wasn’t an idiot for Chrissakes. Yet he was shocked to see his anger melt away under her smiling gaze. “I’m Martin,” he replied.

I couldn’t believe it! His real name! What was going on here? I wanted to shake him and say, “Hey wake up!” But I wasn’t there, not all the way. So I kept my mouth shut.

“Hi, Martin,” said Rose, shaking his hand and smiling again. Then she turned with a toss of her short black hair and started up the stairs again.

Martin actually looked at his hand before following her.

As soon as Rose opened her door, Martin’s eyes bugged out in wonder. Had he entered some science-fiction teleporter? A time machine? A Moroccan opium den? She couldn’t have been living here more than a few months, yet every square inch of the walls was covered in exotic draperies, the intricate patterns almost causing him to hallucinate. His eyes scanned across them and down to the floor, which was layered with what looked like big, white, hairy yak-fur rugs on top of Persian carpets. Resting on the rugs and carpets were giant silk-embroidered pillows, so many he wanted to count them, but his eyes lingered on the low table they surrounded. The table was made of black teak and held over a dozen fat beige candles, all lit and dripping into the red dragon inlays carved into the surface.

Fire hazard, he thought, ever the pragmatist. How she could even think of leaving her apartment with so many candles burning? She could burn the whole building down! He would escape, of course, his acute sense of smell alerting him far in advance, but that didn’t mean he shouldn’t snuff them out right now for the risk they represented.

“The sink’s over here,” Rose said brightly, extinguishing his thoughts instead.

She was pointing at a door and he was shocked again to realize that he couldn’t match the floor layout with his own apartment. It must be the same or at least a mirror image. That was one of the things he liked most about apartment living, the predictability of the environment. But everything seemed so different.

“Over here,” she coaxed in a warm, relaxed voice. When he didn’t immediately respond, she took his hand and led him. He looked at her small hand in his and watched in disbelief as his feet started moving, skirting the pillows to follow her. On his way, he paused in front of a thick (couch? mattress? futon?) covered with the silkiest blankets he’d ever seen. Everything seemed so soft, including the translucent curtains draped from a central gathering on the ceiling. They surrounded the bed on all sides like a wispy cocoon.

Rose tugged on his hand again, pulling Martin away from the wonderful cocoon.

On their way, they passed in front of her altar. Martin stopped again, mesmerized by the candlelight illuminating all the gems and minerals. He stroked the large red gem much as Rose had done, not for luck, but for the sheer pleasure of the tactile sensation. It was so beautiful. The candles made it look like it was glowing from within, like it was alive and might respond to his touch with an even greater display of brilliance.

“Nice,” he said appreciatively, crouching down to gaze at it even more intently.

“It’s a bloodstone,” Rose bragged, elated that he was enjoying it as much as she did.

“Rhodochrosite,” Martin corrected her. “Probably from the Sweet Home mine in Alma, Colorado. It’s a fine specimen,” he added, standing up again, “best I’ve ever seen.”

“Thanks.” She beamed, his admiration erasing her frown from his previous comment.

They silently stared at each other for a moment that stretched out far too long until she couldn’t take it anymore and pulled on his hand again. Yes, Martin thought, feeling the same discomfort and needing to get back on firmer ground. The sink.

When they passed through the door, Martin landed with a whump back on the planet. It was like he was in his own apartment again—sink over here, cabinets there, just a normal kitchen—no candles, no rugs, no softness, no nothing! He wanted to run back into that other world…the world on that side of the door. But he stood there dumbly, his mouth open, his head swiveling back and forth between the two rooms.

“I’m not finished,” she said, not sure why she was acting so apologetic. “I blew all my money fixing up the other room.”

Money? All you need is money? Martin thought, not sure why he felt so angry and disappointed. Then he looked at her pretty face and turned his attention back to the sink, grateful for something to do. “It’s not broken, it’s clogged,” he said with characteristic bluntness. “Don’t you have a plunger?”

“I tried.” Rose said with a shrug, holding up the still-dripping implement. Then she added with a wince, “Macaroni and cheese.”

Cute, Martin thought, an unfamiliar warmth invading his chest.

He grabbed the plunger and pounded the drain like a pneumatic drill. The clog was obliterated in eighteen seconds and his anger had almost vanished too, when a fresh new horror caught his eyes.

“Woolite? You use this shit?”

Rose didn’t understand the appalled expression on Martin’s face, wasn’t even quite sure she heard him right. Did he really just make a disparaging remark about her fabric softener? She didn’t have time to ask. He was already out the door, grunting, “I’ll be back,” like you-know-who.

Martin flew down the stairs, unlatched the seven pick-proof locks and the cold-rolled-steel dead bolt and threw the door open so hard the frame almost splintered. He grabbed a jug from his special stock and bounded back up the stairs. Rose was waiting right where he left her. There was something about seeing her lean against that sink that made his cock inflate like a meat balloon. The hard-on was a real surprise for him. Even so, he didn’t pay any attention to it, as usual.

She did. Martin had a really big one. Figures. Why should someone who couldn’t care less if he used it or not get a really big one? The head of his cock pushed its way out the leg of his gym shorts and was still growing down his thigh. Rose knew her mouth had to be open as she watched its progress, but she couldn’t do anything about it. When she looked back at his face, she was even more shocked to see he was completely oblivious to what was happening. Instead, he turned to the sink and thumped down the big plastic jug.

“Here, use this,” he said proudly, handing her the bottle. “This is the good stuff.”

Rose couldn’t decide which was a bigger turn-on…the man standing there with his big huge cock hanging out his shorts like a fat log, or the fact that he was so blissfully unaffected by it. She reached down, grabbed the big fucker in both hands, looked him straight in the eye and said, “No. This is the good stuff.”

Preparations

Paul wiped the blood from his hands before lifting the heavy book and placing it gently on the lectern. “That wasn’t too smart, you droppin’ by unannounced,” he chuckled. The body offered no argument. There wouldn’t have been one even if he were still conscious. “So much to do, so little time,” Paul sighed, pulling out the other nails, hog-tying his ankles to his neck, stuffing the body in a burlap sack and hefting it over his shoulder as easily as a bag of flour. He patted the sack on the rump and stomped out of the room, winding through the black corridors before depositing his burden with a thud on the filthy floor of another dark room.

“Have a nice nappy-poo. I’ll be back in time for supper!” he shouted, waving to the still-silent lump as he tromped back through the hallways to his candlelit sanctuary.

He sealed the door behind him and walked to the lectern slowly, deliberately, reaching under his shirt to extract the key dangling from a chain around his neck. He unlocked the wide leather strap binding the massive tome and felt the power course through his veins as soon as he opened the ancient leather binding.

He rubbed his hands gleefully. There was so much fun in store. New friends to meet. Old bonds to renew. Paul relished every encounter. One more than all the rest.

Which isn’t to say that no one else mattered. No, you couldn’t say that. But nothing mattered more than him.

No one was more important than Martin.

Into the Softness

She dropped to her knees right there and took him in her mouth. It was a tight fit.

“Wow,” he said. She looked up at him and would have smiled if her lips weren’t stretched so thin.

Martin didn’t have many experiences to compare this to, but he guessed that she was very good at this. She was. She had amazing technique and knew all kinds of special tricks, but she didn’t need any of that now. She was in a higher state of need and she sucked him hard and loud and sloppy. Martin groaned from the intensity of it…of her.

Her tongue was pierced with a stainless-steel barbell she was rubbing on the soft-hard tube of his urethra. He got scared because he knew she must have something in her mouth doing this to him, but he couldn’t imagine what it was or how she got it in there without him seeing it. But he didn’t stay scared. He got harder and he knew he had to do something, something more…but not in here. He needed to do it in there…in that room.

In the softness.

Martin picked her up and carried her in. She thought she might pass out from the excitement. He slammed the door behind them and Rose’s heart slammed in her chest.

He paused once they were inside and let the dark lost world wash over them, waiting until the candles and smells and the absolute quiet erased any memory of anything that had ever happened before. Then he gently set her down on the bed and stepped back to watch her sink into the billowy fabric.

Rose looked at him standing there, so still, his hands slightly out to his sides like he was trying to keep his balance. She was afraid for a moment that he might be too tender, but when she saw the heat in his eyes, she relaxed and smiled at him. He looked like he was going to smile back, but his features evened out, smooth and unknowable. She looked down and saw his cock was harder than ever, his gym shorts in a pile around his feet. She unbuttoned the black fabric buttons on the front of her tiny dress and pulled it apart so she could show him her small breasts and the other rings he hadn’t seen yet.

Martin came to her like a big cat, low and lumbering, rolling his shoulders as he crawled on top of her. He moaned as he straddled her naked chest, the softness caressing him, coming from everywhere at once. He paused for a moment on top of her, staring at the rings in her nipples and the long golden chain winding between them like a lazy river. At the end of the chain, a small shiny key drew his attention even more than the nipple rings. He felt his heart tighten with dread, but when he looked closer he saw it wasn’t the same. Still, it looked so familiar. Hadn’t he seen it somewhere before? He tried to remember, but his eyes kept moving, scanning her creamy skin and the crescent moon tattoo and finally resting on her face again. Her smiling face.

When she smiled he felt something move inside his chest. It was more intense than the warmth he felt before, like congestion…but rumbly …louder. As he leaned over to kiss her smiling lips, he noticed a little drop of water had fallen on her chest. On the key. He looked to the ceiling to see if there was some kind of leak, but the angle wasn’t right. The rumble in his chest grew louder when he realized the drop had fallen from his eye.

 

Narrator Intrusion

Call me William. I remember everything. It’s what I do.

I didn’t plan on entering the story so soon, but I just couldn’t take that last scene. Why? Why should it matter to me if they fucked each other’s brains out? I thought you’d never ask.

All these things happened once upon a time in the East Village, when outlaws still roamed, junkies copped and squatters squatted. I lived there too, before gentrification and the unusual events you’re about to witness swept all of us away.

I have a true photographic memory, the kind that guarantees a perfect score in any test, the kind that easily passes itself off as high, perhaps genius intelligence, even if there are no other outward indications that this is the case.

I sit. I watch. I listen. I record. I see all these people, but they don’t see me. I wish things were different. I’m lonely too, like they are. At least I can admit it.

Some of them are better than they seem at first. Some of them are worse, much worse. Sometimes I think evil is just loneliness with nowhere else to go.

Take me for example. All my life I’ve struggled to do the right thing. Well, most of it anyway. I’ve fought hard and long against the darker urges, sometimes successfully, sometimes not. It’s easy to lay the blame on genetics, or on Paul and The Striker. I could even blame Rose if I wanted. But as I watched her and Martin through my closed eyes, as I heard her scream a cry of pleasure I had never heard, seen, felt, or even imagined, something clicked inside my head.

I wish I didn’t see so much. I hate this gift sometimes. When I was younger, I thought everybody had it. I guess I was about six or seven when I mentioned “the eyelid movies” to Mother. She dropped her cup of tea. “You get them too?”

She told me she had them all the time when she was younger and so did her sister. Her sister went a little crazy because of it, she said. That was the most I ever heard Mother talk about her past. She did tell me more about the eyelid movies though. She called them her visions. She said they were really strong when she was younger, then they came less and less frequently. Sometimes they showed the future and the past, but most of the time they were about other people, what they were doing or thinking in the present. It was more like that with me, I learned. Mine never faded away. They got stronger and stronger and stronger. After a while, I didn’t have to close my eyes, though it helped cut out the clutter of whatever else I was looking at. Mirrors and ponds are good too, but I like clear blue skies the best. It feels like I’m looking into another dimension. I suppose that’s true.

Sometimes I can’t see anything. Sometimes the visions are so clear, it’s like I’m in the same room. They were much too clear that fateful morning. I could see everything. I could feel everything too. Their hearts beating. Pounding. My head pounding in a queasy echo. And right before I ran to the bathroom to heave up all the hate churning in my guts, I saw something else.

I wasn’t the only one watching.

The Book

The Book was everything. As his blunt fingertips skimmed the crinkled pages, old memories flickered through his mind like the stroboscopic sputtering of a hand-cranked nickelodeon. Paul breathed in deeply, savoring the poignant rhythms of a story that had been told and retold at numberless firesides for countless centuries until it was finally, faithfully recorded in this, the only volume of its kind in existence.

He rifled through the yellowed leaves faster and faster, the words and images cascading in a blinding flurry, pages turning and yes, the Great Wheel turning with them, faster first, then slower and slower, so slowly until…

Paul stopped at the center of the book. He stared at the two blank pages. They had remained forever unmarked, but showed him everything he’d ever known or would ever need to know. His eyes rolled backwards into his head until only the whites were showing. No, not the whites. His vein-etched orbs were the color of coffee-stained teeth. They matched the ancient vellum leaves almost perfectly.

He stared at the pages with iris-less eyes and he saw. Saw Martin in bed with the girl. That girl. They’d been circling each other day after day, passing each other on the staircase, shopping in the same deli, flitting to and fro like moths circling a lightbulb, far more oblivious to each other’s existence, to their significance, than he. And now, she was here, driven by the will of her scum-sucking sire, her very presence heralding the prophecy. They had found each other. They had rutted. And even though neither of them had an inkling of what had passed between them, of what it meant or how deeply their connection was ingrained and yes, foretold, they would eventually arrive at the truth of it, and with that truth they would fully awaken. To each other. They would know.

He would never allow that to happen. Measures had been taken.

He gazed at the metal-studded face of the girl, oblivious to anything accept the man lying next to her, the man she inexplicably adored, the man she would destroy by the strength of her compassion, if she could not be stopped. He saw the mark on her chest, the crescent she concealed with her first tattoo. He saw the mark on Martin’s chest, the ring encircling his solar plexus. It was the sign he knew would appear this cycle.

The training, as always, had been long and arduous. But the boy exceeded all his expectations. Her fingers toyed with the ridges of Martin’s scar as if she knew the story it told. The long, sad story. He thought back to the early days. The very early days. There was so much hope then. Now everything was stained and faded. So much promise. So much loss.

The only consolation to his sadness, rage and loathing was that he was not alone in the witnessing, or his suffering. Right before he closed the Book, he saw one last, and not too startling, vision. It was me. Staring right back at him.

 

The Collector

Before I met Rose, before all the darker roads it led to, I had always been a collector. Being a collector is a lifelong adventure, an endless treasure hunt. If you’re a collector, you know exactly what I mean. If you’re not, you’ll probably never get it. Being a collector means that there’s always somewhere to go, always something to do, always the possibility of excitement, of discovery…of eureka!

It’s little wonder why I love it so much. Collecting is the great obsession and distraction for the terminally lonely. The greater the obsession, the more compelling the need to seek and acquire, to escape that gaping hole. I needed all the help I could get.

I never actually thought about becoming a collector. I already was one from as far back as I can remember. Most kids play with toys. I collected them. I would line them up in rows just to look at them. I didn’t really define any of this as “collecting” until they came out with those monster  movie models you would assemble with that wonderfully stinky, toxic, brain cell-eating glue that millions of children are now deprived of.

My collecting got out of hand gradually, by degrees. Always drawn to the morbid, I branched out from my monster toy collection to monster magazines and movie stills. I read every horror novel ever written. As I grew older, I began to lose interest in horror books. The monsters and ghosts and ghouls had gradually lost their main appeal, which was their ability to genuinely frighten me. They just weren’t real enough.

I turned to the occult. Once again, I studied everything I could get my hands on—Gnosticism, Hermeticism, Luciferianism, Satanism, Pythagoreanism, Rosicrucianism, Paganism, Kabala, ancient legends and obscure myths, witchcraft, pagan festivals—the Druids. It didn’t stop with books. I learned about divination. Numerology, the I Ching, and the tarot. And guess what? I suddenly discovered that my little “gift” wasn’t limited to visions of the here and now—I could see the then too. Well, some of the time. Those visions were always murky by comparison, distorted like a funhouse mirror. Even so, it was enough to interest girls at a party. Keep the bullies off my back.

I loved the tarot and started collecting old decks I found at flea markets or in musty, dusty antique shops and secondhand junk stores. One time I found a hand-painted deck that was so old I couldn’t believe it. The dealer only wanted forty bucks for it, which I haggled down to thirty. Any good collector is a good haggler. I recently had it appraised for several thousand dollars, though I’d never think of parting with it.

See? That’s what it’s like to be a collector. Treasures mean so much more than money.

I never told Mother about any of my occult wanderings, but I’m pretty sure she saw anyway. One day out of the blue she said, “Never use your gift for personal gain. And stay away from the darkness.”

Oops. Too late.

I left Mother as soon as I turned eighteen. I couldn’t wait to get as far away as I could, applying to East Coast Ivy Leaguers. My SATs and GPA were in the top two percent nationally. Got a scholarship to Harvard. Impressed? You needn’t be. I was expelled after the first semester for selling acid in my dorm. Oh, well. I didn’t fit in with the pink Lacoste polo shirt crowd anyway. My asshole preppy roommate ratted me out. I never should have had a roommate. Never had one since.

I fled Boston for New York, far away from Mother’s outpost in Berkeley, moving into a small, cheap apartment between Avenues A and B. With only a high school diploma and minimal job skills, my career prospects were fairly grim. Even if I stuck it out at Harvard, I still wouldn’t be catnip for any headhunters, unless there’s a greater demand than I’m aware of for graduates with a major in evolutionary biology and a minor in anthropology.

Guess what I did to make a living? Fortune telling. I put an ad in the Village Voice. The headline read: Scientific Readings. The “scientific” part mainly consisted of combining the numerology interpretations with the zodiac designations of the minor arcana cards in their readings. Translation: I could pick the dates when shit would happen. The accuracy of my readings was a surprise even for me. I had a very strong repeat business, which financed what I really wanted to do: collect stuff.

At first it was more of the things I’d already been collecting. Tarot decks, Ouija boards, amulets, talismans and books. Lots and lots of old books, particularly books of spells, incantations and invocations. Grimoires. The Testament of Solomon, the Clavicula Salomonis, The Black Pullet, The Book of Simon the Magician, The Book of Enoch, The Sworn Book of Honorius, The Pseudomonarchia Daemonum. Blah dee blah blah.

We’re talking ritual magic here. Alchemy. I learned Latin, Greek, Coptic, Arabic and Aramaic just so I could read the original texts and come to my own conclusions about the proper translations. I spent every dime I made when the opportunity arose to possess one of the (hopefully) authentic manuscripts. The culmination of my efforts—and the beginning of my degradation—occurred after visiting a very old man in a very old bookstore in London. He claimed to have in his possession (and was offering for sale!), a slim volume with a white leather binding and yellow vellum pages, written in Greek. He said it was the Corpus Hermeticum written by Hermes Trismegistus.

Depending on who you ask (if you actually know anyone who’s heard that name), Hermes Trismegistus was either: a) the Greek god Hermes; b) the Egyptian god Thoth; c) a combo Hermes/Thoth god; d) the human/god grandson of Hermes; e) a spiritual figure, maybe a god, maybe not, who reincarnates throughout history teaching his secret doctrine to worthy initiates; or f) Moses.

I was fascinated with the various legends surrounding Trismegistus, so I jumped in with both feet, reading everything I could find, sorting through all the contradictory suppositions. My research began, as one should, I suppose, with the gods. Thoth was the god of wisdom who invented writing. Hermes was a herald, messenger and inventor. HT was thought to be all of that and more—a great sorcerer, the first alchemist—and a very prolific writer, composing thousands of texts, most of which eventually found their way to the Great Library of Alexandria. Only a handful of manuscripts survived the heretical purges of the newly Christian Roman Empire.

Whether HT was a demi-god, a great sage or even a real person, all scholars agree that a rich legacy of esoteric teachings sprang from the Hermetic tradition. The surviving books attributed to Trismegistus or his followers were usually written in the third person, even though Hermes/Thoth is usually the main character—a kind, patient, wise teacher. Basically, he’s the answer man. The answers are usually veiled in cryptic dialogs between himself and some thickheaded apprentice, or one of his equally dense sons, Asclepius and Tat.

The most legendary Hermetic work is the Emerald Tablet, which is said to contain the secrets of (drumroll, please) creation. The sacred text was carved into a big green crystal or maybe the world’s largest emerald. Composed of only fourteen verses in most translations, the Emerald Tablet became the basis of alchemy—the cookbook of creation. There are probably as many legends surrounding the origin of the Emerald Tablet as there are tales of its disappearance, discovery (and subsequent disappearances and rediscoveries). One thing I know for certain, it’s not on display in any museum.

The Corpus Hermeticum is Hermes/Thoth’s greatest hits compilation. It contains most of the extant writings. So when this really old guy told me he had a really old copy of the Corpus Hermeticum written by the Great Master himself, I knew it had to be utter horseshit. Yet even if it was a legitimate Greek transcription I could interpret myself, it would be worth whatever he wanted.

He wanted $11,100. “Interesting. How’d you come up with that price?”

“That’s the number,” he replied grumpily in an unexpectedly rustic American accent, turning his head away, waving his arm like he was shooing a gnat. I thought he was being cute or ridiculous, equating the price with Hermes III, but I didn’t ruffle his feathers about it. I was too anxious to get my hands on it to get into a pissing match with the old geezer about something so petty, even though I was already haggling with him in my head.

When he opened his small safe, put on his white gloves and pulled it out, my heart was beating like a bongo. He made me wear gloves too, which wasn’t surprising, even though my fingertips were itching to come in direct contact with the ancient vellum. Vellum is skin, by the way, usually lambskin, but I’m getting ahead of myself.

My first reaction was complete elation. I’d seen enough volumes like this to know that the binding and vellum could possibly come from the same time period associated with most of Hermes/Thoth’s writings—around 300 CE—the key transitional period from papyrus scrolls to parchment codices, driven by the emerging power of Christianity. The Greek hand-lettering was also consistent with other ancient manuscripts from the same period I’d seen in various metropolitan libraries. Best of all, just from reading the first few pages I knew that the material was truly the Corpus Hermeticum. Reading it in Greek immediately highlighted some discrepancies in the Latin and English translations I’d previously seen.

Boy, this is going to be fun!

Then I saw it. There on the spine, like a turd on a lotus flower. Someone had written “Hermes Trismegistus” in black ink block letters.

“What is this shit?” I shouted, my booming pissed-off voice startling even me in the cramped quarters of his tiny office.

“Don’t know who did it, don’t really care. Just wanna get it outta here. Been nothin’ but trouble for me. That’s why I’m sellin’ so cheap. You know I’m sellin’ cheap, dontcha?”

I did. Despite the blasphemous desecration, it was still worth much more than the asking price, unless it was an extremely well-executed forgery. That was a risk, but one I was willing to take. “I’ll give you ten thousand,” I said. That was a hell of a lot of tarot readings.

“The price is the price,” he muttered, crossing his arms across his birdlike ribcage.

I paid. Cash. When I finally held it in my hands, skin to skin, I got such a rush I thought it really might be magical. I couldn’t wait to get back to my room and dig in. But he had another jack-in-the-box he was dying to spring on me.

“Ever hear of anthropodermic bibliopegy?” he whispered as I made for the door.

“Yeah,” I said, a shudder tinkling the ivories of my backbone. “Books bound in human skin.”

“Ever seen one? Held one?” he asked almost tauntingly, displaying his yellow teeth in a quivering grin for the first time that day.

“No,” I said. But I knew I’d be holding one soon.

He strained to reach the shelf above my head, pulling a book down, handing it to me. No gloves this time. No, you wouldn’t want gloves for this. The cover felt…I guess crinkly would be the best way to describe it. Stiff and crinkly. The inside cover was smooth as suede. There was an inscription on the first page, written in an elegant hand that made it even more macabre: “The bynding of this booke is all that remains of my deare friende Malachi Firth, flayed alive by Connor O’Ceallaigh on the First Day of November, 1238.”

“I have more,” he said with a deranged spastic eagerness. He certainly did. Lots more. Mostly courtroom accounts of murder trials, covered in the skins of the condemned, a fairly common practice according to my new buddy, the Crypt Keeper. Once he saw how much I was enjoying myself, he figured I was a kindred spirit so he brought out the heavy artillery. “These ain’t for sale,” he whispered. “But I thought you’d like to see.”

He opened a blue velvet curtain that hung floor to ceiling, concealing a doorway and the contents within. It was a narrow room, almost like a closet, with a creepy icon of some saint against an otherwise bare wall at the back. It was surrounded by bookcases containing many shelves holding many, many volumes, all with the same creamy tan bindings I was becoming way too familiar with.

“Wow,” I said, honestly impressed. “That’s a lot of books.”

“No, no…” he groaned, like I was some idiot totally missing the point. “Read one!”

I picked one out at random and started thumbing through it, my eyes getting wider and wider with every page. “Is this what I think it is?”

“Read another, pick any one,” he cackled, so excited I thought he would crap himself.

Holy Mother of God. They were diaries. Written by murderers. Notice the plural. Perhaps ten or twelve small volumes would be written in one hand with a similar binding style. Then there would be an equal number, or in some cases up to thirty or even fifty, written by another sicko, each and every one of them covered with the skin of their victims.

“Where the hell did you get these?” I asked, my head spinning as I grabbed one after the other, thumbing through quickly. The gruesome descriptions were beyond anything I had read in a hundred horror novels or even the nightmares I had afterwards.

“Can’t say, can’t say,” he repeated in a mumbling chorus, shaking his head, the gleam in his eyes snuffed out instantly by my prying question. “Have to close now, anyhow. Good day to you, sir,” he grumbled, suddenly as surly as when I came in.

Crazy old coot. I was pissed at him for giving me the bum’s rush, but I had my treasure to ease the sting. I went back to my hotel and stayed up all night reading and writing. Had some revelations that bordered on the sublime, but my mind kept erasing those visions of a divine realm bathed in ethereal light and replacing it with the sight of a cramped closet filled with hatred, torture and sadistic glee.

I went back the next day. The store was closed. I cursed. Even stomped my feet. My plane was leaving in a few hours. I took the flight, figuring I’d come back again soon and get another dose of that horror of horrors. But I kept putting it off and putting it off. When I finally returned three years later, the store was empty of everything but cobwebs.

I couldn’t get that sick scrawling script out of my head. I was so preoccupied with what I’d seen that I started reading books about serial killers. Suddenly, they were much more interesting than all the horror books or the occult mumbo jumbo. Scarier too. Ted Bundy, Ed Gein, Jeffrey Dahmer. The real monsters. Monsters like I saw in the Skin Library. I learned a lot about them. What they did. How they did it. Where they lived. It was the last category that really got me into trouble.

One day while I was wandering around my favorite flea market, I saw a painting of a clown. The seller had no idea who the artist was—I could tell by the price tag and his complete lack of interest when I forked over three dollars for it. But I knew. Oh, yes, indeed. John Wayne Gacy. After I went home and proudly hung it on the wall, I began to wonder: What if you could get your hands on some of the real collectibles from serial killers? The things they collected?

A few days later, that crazy bug of an idea shaped itself into a plan. I would go on a road trip. Stop by some of the homes and haunting grounds of these real-life monsters. Maybe visit some of the police precincts where they were captured and see what I could find. See what might be available. At this point, I suppose it wouldn’t surprise you that I was quite successful in my quest. I’m quite sure that certain people would do almost anything for a peek at my collection.

Who could blame them for their curiosity? I mean everybody knows about the severed heads that Jeffrey Dahmer kept in his refrigerator. But who do you know that has one?

 

 

The Afterglow, Part I

Rose felt wonderful. She stayed in bed long after Martin had left, feeling the steam drift from her body in little clouds. Her whole body sighed with satisfaction, a deep, relaxed “now I know what everybody’s been talking about” contentment that everybody wants, but nobody seems to get. She hugged her chest with a pillow and sighed again with another feeling she couldn’t comprehend, a deeper, more elemental emotion…a feeling like…no, not love.

It couldn’t be love.

She shook her head to clear away the schmaltzy cobwebs and stared at the table. There was a big leather pouch lying between the candles. She looked at it for a long time, torn between curiosity and the comfort of her bed. Curiosity won out, as always, pulling her to the table. The pouch was heavy, about ten pounds she guessed. She opened the drawstring and peeked inside. Holy shit. It was gold. Tiny ingots, fat round coins. She spilled the contents onto the table, the falling chunks ignited by the flickering candlelight. Some of them fell in puddles of milky wax, melting them all over again, painting them gold, painting everything gold, the deep dark corners of the room now gold, a gold disco ball of rays on the ceiling.

Martin pointed at the bag and the ugly barren kitchen before he left. His last words echoed in her mind. “Finish it,” he said.

She stood there naked, sweating gold, knowing what he wanted, wanting it as much. Yes, she would finish it and make a golden nest for them. For them?

“Let’s not get carried away. He’s just a guy with a big dick and a bag of gold.” Then she picked up a one-ounce ingot and added, “Well, that’s not too bad for starters.”

The Afterglow, Part II

Martin felt terrible. He felt cold and he felt hot. Was he sick? He never got sick. He sat on his favorite park bench, rubbing the worn wood under his palm, willing it to heal him, to cure the chill of confusion sweeping over him like a fever.

What happened to him? What was he going to do? Panic came in waves, but between the crushing tides, he felt something different, something struggling to come to the surface. It was a feeling for the girl, a feeling like…

Suddenly, he looked up. He was here. He knew it.

Martin looked in every direction. Nothing. He tried to relax and rubbed the wood. Words floated by in his head, calming him like a nursery rhyme…over and over and over. He closed his eyes and willed the world to go away. As soon as he calmed himself, the waves came back, propelled by an image of Rose smiling at him.

He snapped his eyes open. There he was. Over by the fountain. Martin watched as he came toward him in slow motion, his long black overcoat rippling in the sun, his stringy white-blond hair blowing from his shoulders. He smelled the stale alcohol on his skin as he lowered his beefy bulk next to him. Then he looked into those blue-gray eyes, watched that mustache curl into a smile, and felt the oldest fear he had ever known.

“Hello, Martin,” the big man said.

Martin took a long, slow breath and answered, “Hello, Paul.”

Paul didn’t say anything. Neither did Martin. He just looked into Paul’s cold eyes and wondered what he wanted. Whatever it was, he knew it was going to hurt.

 

 

The House of Pain

Rose did tattoos and she did them well. Rat-tat-tat-tat. Wipe off blood. Rat-tat-tat-tat. She did piercings too and liked them even more. She had gained quite a reputation for doing what were known as technical piercings. “Technical” because they represented a level of difficulty requiring an equally demanding level of skill. Uvula piercings, for example. If you’ve ever seen a Warner Brother’s cartoon you know what a uvula is. It’s that quivering punching bag blob of flesh dangling at the opening of your throat. The one that wobbles like a bowl of pudding whenever Elmer screams at Bugs.

Why would someone want it pierced? Don’t ask me. The challenges are significant, not the least of which includes the ability to hold your mouth open a really long time without moving even a teeny, weeny bit because someone is trying to lance that squirming sucker with a six-inch-long needle. And that’s just the piercee. The piercer has to take that needle and…well, it gets pretty hard to describe without pictures.

Technical, very technical.

Rose had become skilled at even more challenging body modifications, involving grafts and implants. She was the one to install the row of eleven stainless-steel wedges into the shaved skull of Jim “Stegosaurus” Robbins.

In most countries, you would need seven or eight years of intensive medical training to perform this type of surgery on another human being, or at least a well-forged diploma. But God Bless America, all you need here is a reasonably steady hand and a compulsive desire to carve and mutilate the flesh of your fellow tribal community members.

Anesthesia isn’t a problem. Nobody wants it. Pain is more than a fetish in this neck of the woods, it’s a badge of honor. The more you can take, the greater your standing in the ink and metal clique.

Rose was no slouch either. Pain and pleasure had become so entwined in her brain that she would give herself a new piercing just to take the edge off a rainy afternoon. She had fifteen earrings, three nose rings (which she would alternate, being one to frown on ostentation), two nipple rings and dumbbell combos, one tongue ball, five labial rings on either side and two clitoral rings (just because the first one felt so good).

Needless to say, airport check-ins were a nightmare.

Rose, still in bed, flicked her clit rings back and forth, debating whether to skip work altogether or stop in for a quick tongue job scheduled for the early afternoon.

She looked at the bag of gold and looked at the kitchen. She thought about the tongue job and how much she loved her work. She thought about Martin and his big horse cock and fingered her clit so furiously it sounded like the phone was ringing.

If she jumped out of bed right now and didn’t shower (as if she would shower and wash off the smell of him!), she could do the tongue job, sell the gold and still make it downtown to the fabric shop before closing time. She didn’t like to rush but she couldn’t bear to wait. She wanted it all: the warm blood, the cold cash and most of all, she wanted what every New York City woman wants, whether she’s a manicured, pedicured Upper East Side, Hampton Jitney JAP or a downtown magenta-haired bone-through-the-nose juke joint junkie.

She wanted to shop.

An Invitation

“You look troubled,” Paul said. “What would a big strong man, a great fine animal like yourself be troubled with on such a lovely day as this?”

Martin hadn’t seen him since…he couldn’t remember. It seemed like no time had passed from the way Paul was acting. He spoke in that showy way of his, that Irish brogue managing to sound happy, sad and angry all at once. He waved his arms broadly for emphasis, scaring away the ambling pigeons. Scaring the old couple on the next bench. Scaring Martin too.

“Ahhhh…it’s a woman isn’t it?” Paul asked, shaking his head. “It’s always a woman that brings out the worst in a fine young lad…shaking up the quiet sureness, the certainty, the solid knowing that is the very core and center of a man.”

Martin listened in amazement, transfixed as always in his presence, wondering once again how Paul always knew exactly what was bothering him. Had he been spying on him? No. He just knew. If it had anything to with pain, he knew.

“You want it back, don’t you?” Paul continued with a wink. “You want to know again for certain what is what and which way to go and how to get there. You want to take away all that gray and get back to good clean old black and white again. Don’t you, boy?”

The word “boy” cut into Martin like a knife. He gulped on it, and the big back slap that punctuated Paul’s question, but he couldn’t help but answer.

“Yes,” he said, surprising himself by how mu

Thriller Readers Alert!! Just 99 Cents For KND Brand New Thriller of The Week – Richard Long’s The Book of Paul – 4.4 Stars on 96 Reviews

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, Richard Long’s The Book of Paul. Please check it out!

The Book of Paul — A Paranormal Thriller

by Richard Long

4.4 stars – 96 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

“Everything you’ve ever believed about yourself…about the description of reality you’ve clung to so stubbornly all your life…all of it…every bit of it…is an illusion.” 

In the rubble-strewn wasteland of Alphabet City, a squalid tenement conceals a treasure “beyond all imagining”– an immaculately preserved, fifth century codex. The sole repository of ancient Hermetic lore, it contains the alchemical rituals for transforming thought into substance, transmuting matter at will…and attaining eternal life.

When Rose, a sex and pain addicted East Village tattoo artist has a torrid encounter with Martin, a battle-hardened loner, they discover they are unwitting pawns on opposing sides of a battle that has shaped the course of human history. At the center of the conflict is Paul, the villainous overlord of an underground feudal society, who guards the book’s occult secrets in preparation for the fulfillment of an apocalyptic prophecy.

The action is relentless as Rose and Martin fight to escape Paul’s clutches and Martin’s destiny as the chosen recipient of Paul’s sinister legacy.  Science and magic, mythology and technology converge in a monumental battle where the stakes couldn’t be higher: control of the ultimate power in the universe–the Maelstrom.

The Book of Paul is the first of seven volumes in a sweeping mythological narrative tracing the mystical connections between Hermes Trismegistus in ancient Egypt, Sophia, the female counterpart of Christ, and the Celtic druids of Clan Kelly.

Reviews

“Long’s prose is deft and clear, transporting the reader from one character’s psyche to the next…this tale is a compelling one. A psychological thriller for readers who are bored with run-of-the-mill horror…Those who embrace the genre will eagerly anticipate a second installment in the series.” – Kirkus Reviews
 
“Intelligent, self-aware, and often amusing…hitting all the markers for sadistic, salacious, and scary. Long is doubtless going to build a large and loyal fan base composed of people just like him: literate folks with a bizarre sense of humor who prefer a bucket of blood to a bath filled with rose petals.” – ForeWord Clarion Reviews
 
“Totally absorbing! The Book of Paul is moving, profound, funny, terrifying and never lets you go. The prose is swift and sharp…at times, even poetic. Masterful storytelling. Hats off!!” – Henry Bean, writer/director of The Believer
 
“Completely outstanding…an ingenious mixture of all things intriguing! The Book of Paul is truly an enchanting tale that will leave you spellbound. I can’t wait to read more of this series! The only thing I can say is…wow! Hats of to Richard Long for creating a truly worthy and delightful read.” — Close Encounters with the Night Kind

From The Author

The Book of Paul crosses a number of genres. Sometimes when I’m asked what kind of book it is, I’ll say it’s a dark, paranormal thriller with occult horror themes, mystery, suspense, erotica and black humor. Other times, I just say, “It’ll really curl your toes.”

Written is short, titled chapters, the story is extremely cinematic. Think The Omen meets Pulp Fiction. The momentum is relentlessly driving, yet it’s as much a psychological exploration as a rollercoaster ride. When I write, I submerge myself in the characters. I want to feel their fears and cravings, truly inhabit them. I keep descriptive narrative to a minimum and write from multiple perspectives, which hopefully allows readers to project their own perspective and participate more directly in the experience. I want people to feel more intensely — more afraid, more amused, more curious, perplexed, horrified, awed and aroused — to climb inside these characters and walk down all the dark alleyways.

I’ve always been drawn to the scary side of the street. Science, religion and mythology are other big interests. The Book of Paul and the six volumes of sequels and prequels trace the history of Hermetic and Gnostic philosophy, alchemy, druidism and pagan mythology – particularly the Egyptian, Greek and Celtic traditions. There’s also a strong science fiction element involving quantum physics, artificial intelligence, life extension and what’s known as The Singularity.

Propelled by the prophecy of a fast-approaching apocalypse, the story rides a crest of dark suspense above an undercurrent of arcane mystery. Nothing is as it seems. Very gradually, the mythological tapestry is revealed through the narrator’s secret journals and the ancient codex guarded by Paul. Only as the climax approaches does he fully grasp his own significance in the labyrinth of Paul’s nefarious scheme.

The Book of Paul is not for the faint-hearted. There is graphic sex, sadomasochism and gore. There are also plenty of laughs along the way, often sucker punches that ease the tension only long enough to make the revelations even more thrilling and chilling. The aim of it all? Question everything.Magic and mystery and wonder are everywhere. So are cruelty, sadness and terror.

As Hunter Thompson said, “Buy the ticket, take the ride.”

For fans who sign up for my newsletter at TheBookofPaul.com, I offer exclusive content like deleted or extended chapters, previews of the forthcoming volumes in the series and other fun surprises.
(This is a sponsored post.)

Enjoy a Free Excerpt From KND Thriller of The Week: Stan Thomas’ The RoCK CLuB – 4.9 Stars on Kindle

On Friday we announced that Stan Thomas’ The RoCK CLuB 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:

The RoCK CLuB

by Stan Thomas

4.9 stars – 7 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

In 1982, Clark Ralston was eleven years old, his beloved little brother was nine, and his gorgeous and precocious twin sisters were seven…

Fiends and monsters in most adolescents’ lives are conjured up fantasies or characters from a Grimm Brothers fairy tale or the like, which produce an occasional nightmare. The ogre that bedeviled the Ralston children was not a fleeting fantasy or a dark creature in a bad dream after a scary movie. Their antagonist was an ever-present alcoholic and abusive father.

In an effort to visit some retribution on the source of their fear and angst–something no child should ever feel in their own home–Clark initiates an innocuous little distraction called The Rock Club, an exclusive band of juvenile mercenaries determined to torment and befuddle their father…

Nineteen years later, commitment-challenged Clark is trying to distance himself from his stunning, hero-worshiping sisters. When his girlfriend accepts an internship at San Francisco General Hospital, he jumps at the opportunity to create space between himself and his suffocating siblings and moves from L.A. to the Bay Area.

Clark loves everything about San Francisco: the Victorian architecture of its urban neighborhoods, the cable cars, the eccentricity and diversity of its citizenry, and the plethora of different smells and unique ambiance of the city. He’s even beginning to feel like he’s getting over his fear of commitment until The Rock Club pulls an encore. And this time it’s not so innocent… this time it’s deadly.

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

Part 1

 

The Affliction

 

 

1982

“PSST… CLARK, YOU AWAKE? Ritchie says girls have babies from the same place they pee. That’s stupid stuff, huh. I told him it was stupid. Ritchie’s wrong, right?”

Clark Ralston tried to suppress his breathing, to refrain from making the slightest of sounds. He lay still, body rigid, eyes closed, willing his brother to lose the ability to speak.

The refrigerator motor clicked on in the kitchen. The dog next door whined, signaling it was time for their neighbor, Wong Li, to get home from work.

“Clark, you awake?” Mark repeated.

So much for mind over matter. Clark rolled to his side to face his brother in the twin bed against the opposite wall. “I am now, doofus. What’re you still doing awake? You’re supposed to be sick. Go to sleep.”

“Ritchie said–”

“I heard you.”

“You weren’t asleep,” Mark charged.

“Shut up.”

Due to a moonless night, the room was pitch black. Good thing, because if Clark could have seen his brother he might have just popped him in the nose.

“What about it?” Mark persisted.

“What?”

“What Ritchie said.”

“Why do you do this, man?”

“What?”

“Wait till I’m almost asleep and then ask a stupid question.”

“Don’t know. It’s like the light clicks off and my brain clicks on, just like that.” He snapped his fingers.

“I’m asking Mother for a night light tomorrow.”

Like a puppy with a chew toy, Mark wouldn’t give up. “Is Ritchie right?”

Clark gushed air through his mouth as he rolled onto his back. “He’s close.”

“Oh, I know where now.”

“Not there, that’s gross.”

“How do you know where they get out?”

“Learned it in school.”

“How come I didn’t learn it?” Mark asked.

“Cuz you’re only nine.”

“You’re just seventeen months older than me, man. How come you know?”

“You’ll learn it next year. Now shut up and go to sleep, or I’ll get Dad.”

“Too late, I already know.”

“No, you don’t.”

“Yes, I do.”

“You’re dumber than dumb, Mark, if you think girls crap babies.”

“I’m not dumber! Take it back.”

“Shhh!”

“Take it back, or I’ll tell Mom in the morning.”

“Okay,” Clark said. “I take it back. You’re not dumber than dumb. Now leave me alone.”

“One more question, then you can go to sleep. I promise.”

Clark sighed. “One more, dude, and that’s it.”

“Think Dad will really buy a new car like he said? A Corvette would be cool, man.”

“I don’t give a fart if he buys a new car or not. Now go to sleep, and don’t pee the bed.”

“Clark?”

“What!”

“Don’t call me dude.”

***

The following Saturday Clark came to with a throbbing headache and Merle Haggard proclaiming he turned twenty-one in prison doing life without parole. He hated country. The music, blasting full-volume, stung his ears. He couldn’t think. Cracking his eyelids, he found himself face to label with the wine bottle that had flown from under the driver’s seat and smacked him square in the face when their new Chevy hit the curb doing sixty. His head lay wedged against the passenger door panel, the window lever practically shoved up his nose. A thin rivulet of blood trickled down his forehead from a small gash at his hairline. The shrill vocals and raging banjos of a bluegrass group replaced Merle on the radio, ratcheting up the pain in his head. Pure agony. He tried to reach for the on/off button to kill the music but couldn’t; his arms were pinned under his body. Still a bit disoriented, he thought he heard a different sound but couldn’t be sure. Sounded like high-pitched screams. Singing, or screams? Were his sisters in the car? He remembered now, they were in the back seat. At least they were when they left the bar.

Clark tried again, without success, to move his body. Paralyzed? Panicked, he began gasping for breath as if all the oxygen in the car had suddenly been sucked out. Willing himself to calm down, he filled his lungs with cool coastal air, held it for as long as he could, and then slowly exhaled. Dealing with his dad over the years had made him a pro at pricking the anxiety balloon. Regaining a measure of composure, he understood why he couldn’t move; something pinned him down. Something heavy. Where’s Dad? Must be close, he could smell him. MD 20/20 and Camels created a stink hard to mistake. With considerable effort, he turned his head a bit. No wonder the odor. His dad lay on top of him.

His ears pricked to a noise outside the car. A siren? Siren, or guitar chord? Hard to tell whether there was another sound in the whole world, save for the strident yowling of the bluegrass singers and his sisters’ screaming.

He felt movement against his back.

“Clark? Son?” Lawrence Ralston said. “Can you reach my bottle?”

“No, sir, I can’t move. Why’s the music so loud?”

The pressure lightened.

“Can you get it now?”

“I think so, but I’m bleeding and it’s in my eyes and why’s the music so loud?”

“Just get the damn bottle and give it to me.”

Following orders, he managed to free an arm, grab the half-empty bottle, and pass it over his shoulder. Due to Clark’s position and the blood, his dad appeared as a blurry blob in the peripheral vision of his left eye. The radio experienced momentary dead air, and in the relative quiet he heard the aluminum cap unscrew, the sound of a bobbing Adam’s apple, then the crash of the bottle as it landed in the roadside thicket.

He also heard the unmistakable wail of a siren. Close, maybe a block or two. A couple dogs somewhere tried to match its piercing pitch. He made an effort to shift his position again, but couldn’t.

“Dad, can you please get off me? I’m squished.”

“Need a cigarette.”

“Could you wait? The police will be here soon.” Stupid. He had never known his dad to smoke a cigarette that would make his booze breath disappear; not even Kools.

“And a light,” Lawrence said, stretching for the knob with a burning cigarette etched on it.

“Can you see Elizabeth and Elise? Are they all right?” Clark asked.

“They’re okay.”

“They’re screaming.”

“It’s not their hurt scream, they’re scared. They’ll be fine.”

A slight breeze blowing through the hole the windshield had occupied fifteen minutes earlier pushed Camel smoke into Clark’s nose. The resulting sneeze shot dagger-like pain through both sides of his chest, indicating broken or bruised ribs.

“Something’s wrong with me, Dad. I think I’m dying,” he yelled over an obnoxious car salesman extolling the virtues of a used Mustang.

“Calm down, you’re not dying, idiot.” Lawrence clicked the radio off and the girls’ screams subsided to weak whimpers, as if the same knob controlled them.

A flashlight beam began snooping around the wagon’s interior, exposing its occupants, and a commanding baritone asked, “Is everybody okay in there?”

Clark twisted his head just enough to recognize the emblem on the sleeve of a California Highway Patrol uniform.

“Yeah, we’re okay, Osifer,” Lawrence answered. “Check on my girls in the backseat.”

Clark groaned at his father’s failed attempt to speak without slurring his words.

 

“I can do that!” Elise exclaimed. “I wanna play that game!”

The children sat on the curb watching their father stand on one foot, count backwards, and walk a white line that, judging by his exaggerated balancing act, could have been two hundred feet off the ground. Intermittently his lurching, stumbling body became an eerie silhouette in the headlights of oncoming vehicles.

“He’s not playing a game,” Clark said, his chin perched on arms folded across his knees, tears rolling down his plump cheeks. The pain in his upper body was almost unbearable.

Elizabeth studied her father intently. The identical twin girls, though scared out of their wits, emerged from the demolished metallic-blue station wagon unscathed. “Well, what’s he doing?”

“It’s some kind of test and I don’t think he’s doing so well,” Clark said, his breathing labored.

After administering the sobriety test the officer began lecturing Lawrence nose to nose, his voice rising until he was flat out yelling. Words and phrases like “irresponsible”, “negligent”, “worthless excuse for a father”, and “I oughta kick your ass” were flung at the wobbling parent with stunning velocity. Clark sat staring in wide-eyed awe at their clean-cut, square-jawed, uniformed savior and decided this man would be a great father.

His tirade over, the officer instructed Lawrence to sit on the ground beside the patrol car and stay put, and then approached the children, squatting on his haunches before them. “Scary ride, huh.”

“Yes, sir,” Clark replied.

“My name is Officer Raddich. You guys okay?”

“I think my sisters are,” Clark said, wiping his shirt sleeve across his eyes. “But my chest hurts real bad.”

“Just sit still. That siren you hear is your ride. Your father said you live in the Airport Circle Apartments. That right?”

The children nodded.

“My daddy wrecked our new car, peaceman Radish!” Elizabeth blurted.

“That he did.”

“Mama will be mad,” Elise said.

“Is your mother home?”

“Yes, sir. You gonna call her? ” Clark asked.

“I will real soon, son, but first let’s make sure you guys are all right.”

The ambulance arrived, Officer Raddich huddled with the attendants for a few moments, and then all three of them returned to where the children sat.

“This is Mr. Steve and Ms. Laura,” the officer said. “They’re paramedics, here to take you to the hospital.”

“Is Daddy going to the hospital too?” Elise asked.

“No sweetheart, he’s going with me.”

***

“Darn it!” Clark whispered, failing yet again to reach the spot.

His left shoulder itched like mad, and the mummy-like bandages encircling his torso made it difficult to satisfy. He rocked from side to side. No good. Struggling to a sitting position, he rubbed against the headboard. There. That helped a little.

The hospital sucked. He hated it; too much pain, sorrow, and sad faces. He spent one night there for bruised ribs, the same amount of time his father had spent in jail for DUI. Something called bail. The policeman should have given him a year. The thought of three-hundred-sixty-five consecutive days without the man who brought so much stress and turmoil to their lives brought a fleeting smile to his lips.

He turned his head, looked across the moonlit bedroom at his nine-year-old brother. Like a brick. How could he sleep through their parents’ screaming and yelling? His mother’s high-pitched, weepy voice bounced off every wall in the house. Elizabeth and Elise would be in their beds curled up in balls, whimpering and shaking like newborn kittens. His father said he had drunk only two drinks yesterday and bitched about the inaccuracy of the Breathalyzer, whatever that was.

Two drinks, my butt. More like way over ten.

His dad was telling a lie. A lie Clark and his sisters would have to swallow or suffer the consequences. He buried his face deeper into his pillow, brought it up around his ears in an attempt to smother his mother’s anguish.

Yesterday pictured fresh in his mind. His parents had purchased the new car and his dad was anxious to give the children a ride. Since Mark was still on the downside of a virus, Irene, their mother, decided he would stay home. Undeterred, Lawrence loaded up Clark, Elizabeth, and Elise and assured Irene they would be gone an hour at the most.

Lawrence pulled into the Bamboo Room’s gravel parking lot at two in the afternoon. Rocks crackled and popped under the wagon’s tires as it cruised to the end of a line of vehicles along the south side of the building. They parked next to an oil-soaked red Ford F150, bumping to a stop against a creosoted railroad tie. Lawrence said he would only be a few minutes, that he needed to take care of some business, and ordered them to lock the doors. After he entered the bar, the girls climbed over the front seat and joined their brother.

“Why can’t we go in?” Elise asked.

“Cuz we’re too young. This place is for adults. I think you gotta be eighteen to go inside,” Clark answered.

“Why did Dad bring us here if we can’t go in?” Elizabeth asked.

“How should I know? Now stop asking me.”

“What’s this?” Elise held the cigarette lighter, its end glowing red hot.

“Gimme that!” He grabbed the lighter, burning his thumb. “Ouch! Darn it, Elise! See what you did?” He inserted the lighter in its hole in the dashboard then stuck his thumb in his mouth.

The twins chanted in unison: “Clark’s sucking his tha-umb, Clark’s sucking his tha-umb, baby, baby, ba-by.”

“Shut up! I’m not sucking my thumb. Both of you get in the back seat.”

 

“I’m going in,” Clark announced after three-and-a-half hours of naps, agonizing boredom, fights with the twins and overwhelming pressure on his bladder.

“You can’t go in there, you’re not eighteen,” Elizabeth said.

“It’s okay when it’s an emergency.”

“Then we’ll go with you. It’s our mergency too,” Elise said.

“No you’re not. You’re staying here. Don’t touch anything on the dash, don’t play with the steering wheel, and keep the windows and doors locked.” Before exiting the car, he extracted the lighter and stuck it in his pocket.

Neon Miller, Coors, and Michelob signs appeared to float in mid-air while cigarette cherries flitted about like fireflies in the darkened confines of the Bamboo Room. After his vision adjusted to the limited light he picked his father out of the about-faced line-up sitting at the bar, his familiar blue flannel shirt, brightened by the glow of the jukebox, catching his eye. He sat between a big-haired wrinkled lady and a man Clark recognized as Mr. Red, one of his father’s oilfield buddies. Nicknamed for the blazing thatch of wildness atop his head, the man possessed the biggest belly Clark had ever seen and smoked the longest, nastiest smelling cigars in the whole world; looked and smelled like large burning turds.

He zigzagged between varnished pine picnic tables littering the large smoke-filled room, the soles of his shoes making ripping sounds as he traversed the sticky floor.

“Dad, can we go home now?” he said, nudging his father in the back. “The girls have to go to the bathroom real bad, and I’m afraid they’ll pee on the brand new seats. I gotta go too.”

Big hair and Lawrence turned together, both displaying glazed eyes. “This your boy, Larry?” the lady asked, cigarette smoke exploding from her nostrils like a cow’s breath on a frozen morning.

“Yeah, that’s him,” Lawrence said, slurring words.

She extended a bony hand, roughed up his longish blonde hair. “Handsome little booger. Got them big goddamn eyes just like your daddy; blue as my favorite nail polish.” She thrust her right hand to within inches of his nose. “Look!” Her voice was dense and raspy. She sucked from the cigarette with Cruela DeVille-like puckered lips and exhaled another plume of white smoke. Clark coughed. His eyes stung.

“What you want, son?” Lawrence asked.

“I need to pee, and we wanna go home.”

“Why didn’t you say something? The john’s over there beside the cigarette machine.” He picked some coins from the bar. “Get me some Camels on the way back.”

“You need to check on the girls, Dad. They need to pee, too.”

“Yeah, ah… right. You just get to the pisser.”

Their new car ride culminated an hour later in the accident on US 101 after a harrowing trip that challenged any amusement park ride Clark had ever been on in his short life. The wreck was almost a relief.

He eyed his slumbering brother. “Please God,” he prayed, “make Mark stop peeing the bed. He’s getting whipped too much, and I can’t stand to hear him scream. It makes me hurt inside. And please make my dad stop drinking and cussing and being an all-around bad father. Amen.”

 

He glanced at his brother again, wondering if Jesus was listening this time.

 

Chapter 2

IRENE BURIED HER NOSE in the Bible for three days following the accident, searching it like a repair manual for divine guidance on how to mend her defective husband. Clark wondered why his mother even bothered to scold his father anymore. There had been a time when her strong and forceful rants ignited hope in him, but after hearing the same monotonous arguments and threats again and again and never seeing any change, he determined she was like the boy in the fairy tale who cried wolf way too often. Consequently his spirits no longer inflated when he heard her threaten to leave and take the kids.

At dinner he noticed his brother evil-eyeing the dreaded green beans and okra. Mark sat across from him, Elizabeth to his left, Elise across from her. A parent sat at each end of a scarred, rectangular picnic table that looked like it could’ve come from the Bamboo Room. The boys exchanged resigned expressions, knowing there was no way out. They would have to sit at the table and eat the nasty-tasting vegetables even if it took all night. Clark knew because he had to do it once before he wised up. He sat hunched over a plate of fried okra until three o’clock in the morning. That’s when he awoke face down in the crap. With most of the serving plastered to his forehead, nose, and cheeks, he had no problem swallowing whole the tiny portion left on his plate. The other part he just washed off. Now, knowing the futility of resistance, he swallowed (not chewing was key) everything he didn’t like without a peep.

“Mother, pass the corn, please,” Mark said.

She reached for the plate, but Lawrence intercepted it. “No corn or anything else, period, until he eats some green beans and okra,” he said.

Irene dished out a portion of each onto Mark’s plate. “Try your best, son.”

“Suck your thumb today, Elise?” Lawrence asked.

The kids, knowing she had, looked to their mother with wide, pleading eyes.

“She only did it a couple times,” Irene said. “She’s getting better every day.”

Lawrence reached for the Tabasco. “Gimme your hand, Elise.”

She hesitated, tears streaming down her flushed cheeks.

Clark’s eyes swelled with moisture. “Dad, don’t. Please?”

“Shut the hell up, boy! You’re getting a little too big for your britches. Elise, gimme your hand, damn it!”

She extended a quivering arm, and Lawrence shook a dozen or so drops of the hot sauce onto the digit.

“Put it in your mouth. Now!”

“Lawrence, there’s no need for this.”

“Shut up! In your mouth, Elise.”

With chest heaving and tears raining on her roast beef, she inserted the spicy thumb. At that moment Clark knew time had come to do something, anything, to strike back at their tormentor.

Two hours later the theme music to The Love Boat signaled bedtime. Clark wished he could stay up and watch it. Heck, it was only eight. Most of his friends got to stay up till nine. While Mark, Elise, and Elizabeth stood, he lingered on the sofa.

“Thought I told you to get to bed,” Lawrence said. “Think you’re somebody special, or what?”

“No, sir. I’d just like to see this show. All my friends get to watch it,” Clark replied.

“Well that’s too bad. Just go on and float your boat down the hall to your bedroom.”

“Yes, sir.”

After loving kisses for Irene and perfunctory pecks for Lawrence, the kids scuttled to their bedrooms. A question replaced the resentment Clark felt over not being allowed to watch The Love Boat: Would Mark wet the bed or not? Before last night, it was just a given. He always peed the bed. But yesterday was different; Mark’s bed had remained dry.

Clark’s aching ribs caused him to curtail his usual habit of waking at two o’clock in the morning, checking his brother’s underwear and bedding, and changing them if necessary. Expecting the worst the next morning, he was pleasantly surprised. Maybe this was the beginning of the end of the peeing thing. He sure hoped so. He was tired of deceiving his father, who labored under the impression Mark hadn’t wet the bed for over a week.

Clark came out of the bathroom after brushing his teeth and asked, “So you think you can make it two nights in a row?”

“I won’t do it tonight, guaranteed.”

“How can you guarantee it?”

“Never mind. Just wait and see.”

“Hope so. We can’t keep tricking Dad. Sooner or later he’s gonna find out, and we’ll both get the belt.” Clark killed the lights and they climbed into their beds.

Fifteen minutes passed, then: “Clark?”

“Yeah?”

“You asleep?”

Clark made a sound that fit somewhere between a sigh and a whine. “Does it sound like I’m asleep?”

“No, guess not.”

“Whataya want?”

“Just wondering.”

After a few moments Clark asked, “Whataya want, Mark? I’m sleepy.”

“Ever get tired of being the dad?”

“What you talking about?”

“You act more like our dad than Dad does.”

“You’re crazy. Now go to sleep.”

“See what I mean?” Mark said.

“Just cuz I told you to go to sleep means I’m like a dad? I don’t think so. That’s stupid.”

“It’s the way you say it and other things too.”

“What other things?”

“Like the way you help Mom do things without her even telling you to.”

“Any kid would help his mother.”

“Not just for nothing, without being told.”

“How do you know?”

“I don’t, and the girls don’t, and none of our friends help without being told. But you volunteer.”

“So? Big deal.”

“And you try to take care of us,” Mark said. “Even Mom.”

“Mother takes care of herself.”

“Huh-uh. Remember that time she thought we had a plumbing leak and you went under the building to look when the maintenance guy didn’t show up?”

“That was no big deal.”

“I wouldn’t do it, spiders and snakes and remember that time Mom said she heard something outside the living room window and you went and got Dad’s rifle and clicked the bolt next to the window and we heard somebody run away? The girls and me were really scared, and Mom was too, but you weren’t.”

“I was scared,” Clark said.

“Really scared?”

“Really, really, scared.”

Clark turned his back to his brother. “Now go to sleep.”

“There you go again.”

Clark had just entered the ether zone when he heard, “What about Annie?”

“Who?”

“Remember Annie? How you saved her? Were you scared then?”

“Darn it, Mark.”

“Were you?”

Yawning, he said, “Not at first, but after it was all over I got real scared. Now go to sleep or I’ll get Dad.”

“O-kay. Seeya tomorrow.”

“Night.”

 

Just past two Clark awoke to a noise that sounded like a whimpering puppy. He sat up in bed, rubbing his eyes, careful not to make any sudden moves that would cause pain to shoot through his sides. He looked at the other bed. Couldn’t really see anything at first, but then slowly his eyes adjusted to the muted light. Mark lay like a comma, facing the wall. Clark struggled to his feet, crossed the room, and sat on the edge of the bed.

“What’s wrong with you?” he asked, poking Mark’s back.

More whimpering.

“Hey, what’s wrong with you?”

Mark rolled over. In the darkness, Clark could barely make out a look of pure agony on his brother’s face.

“It’s my dick,” he said. Sounded like he was trying to hold back tears.

“Whataya mean? What’s wrong with it?”

Mark shoved down his underwear. “Look.”

“Can’t see; too dark,” Clark said. “Watch your eyes; I’ll turn on the light.” He stumbled over a pair of shoes to the light switch, flipped it on, stood for a moment blinking against the attack of sudden brilliance, then moved back to the bed.

“Now what the heck’s wrong with your thing, man?” He gazed down at Mark’s penis and gasped. Its head appeared enlarged and dark purple. “Whoa…! Damn! Did something bite you? A spider? A wasp?” He’d slipped. He admonished himself for cursing.

“Put a rubber band on it.”

“You did what?”

“Can’t you hear? I said I put a rubber band on it.”

“Geez. I need a closer look. Hope the heck the rubber band doesn’t break.” Careful lest he touch it, Clark bent over till his nose hovered three inches above the wounded member.

Mark twitched.

“Don’t move, darn it!”

Sure enough, he had quadruple-wrapped a thick rubber band around his penis, now buried deep in the foreskin just beneath the head.

“Why’d you do that? That was stupid!”

“I’m tired of Dad going off on me.”

“You didn’t pee the bed last night, why’d you think you needed a rubber band tonight?”

“I didn’t sleep at all cuz I was afraid. I knew you couldn’t get up, and I wanted some z’s.”

For an instant Clark felt like crying. No way could he let his brother see that. “We’ve gotta get it off before your weenie dies, man. I’ll get some scissors.” He slipped out into the hallway, sneaked to the kitchen and found a pair in a drawer next to the refrigerator. When he returned his brother’s hands were cupped around his penis as if handling a wounded sparrow.

Mark’s eyes enlarged, the whites becoming dominant, as Clark approached his ailing member with scissors that appeared to him as big as pruning shears.

“You sure you can do this?” Mark asked.

Clark covered his eyes with one hand for a moment. “No. I gotta get Mother.”

“No way. Dad’ll find out, and I don’t want Mom to see it. She’s a girl.”

“If I try it, dude, you might end up peeing like a girl. You want that?”

“Go get Mom, darn it, and don’t call me dude.”

Irene twitched and repositioned herself when he nudged her arm. Lawrence’s raucous snoring had drowned out his murmured, “Mother.” He knelt beside the bed, having crawled on his hands and knees from the doorway. He nudged her again, harder this time, and she stirred, fighting to embrace consciousness.

“What? Who is it?”

“It’s me, Clark. Mark’s in trouble, he needs you. And don’t wake Dad,” he whispered.

“What’s wrong?”

“You’ll just have to see for yourself… shhh!”

Irene slipped out of bed and followed her son down the hall to his bedroom. One look at her youngest boy’s face told her something was terribly wrong. “Are you sick again, baby?”

Mark shook his head as his mother sat beside him on the bed.

“Well, what’s wrong?’

He reluctantly uncovered his crotch, exposing his strangled penis.

Irene’s hands flew to her mouth. “My Jesus, Lord!”

“I told him it was dumb,” Clark sing-songed.

“For God’s sake, Mark! Why in the world…?”

“You know how nine-year-olds are, Mom,” Clark blurted. “He was playing with the rubber band, fell asleep, and his weenie is paying the price big time.”

“Just shut up, Clark. Get me some scissors,” Irene said.

“Got ‘em.” Clark handed the instrument to her.

“Baby, it’s important that you stay perfectly still. Do you understand?”

Mark nodded.

The scissors neared his crotch and Mark’s eyes transformed into small kaleidoscopes of panic and fear. Clark rolled his eyes to the ceiling half-expecting to see a small purple penis lying on the floor, if he ever gathered the nerve to look. He held no doubt in his mind that blood would spurt freely from the place Mark always had trouble containing liquid. After a couple yearlong minutes simultaneous sighs from Irene and Mark signaled it was okay to look, and Clark watched relief displace pain on his brother’s face.

Irene rose to her feet, a wry smile on her face. “Let this be a lesson to both of you. This is not the kind of rubber to use down there.”

“What’d she mean by that?” Mark asked after his mother had left the room.

“Tell ya later.”


Chapter 3

 

IN A PREVIOUS INCARNATION the Airport Circle Apartment community was a bustling army/air force base. After the Korean War, the government closed it down and dropped it in the county’s lap free of charge. Santa Barbara County, in turn, converted the federal freebie into low-cost public housing. Rents were assessed according to each family’s means, and a population consisting of Caucasian, Latino, African American, and a dash of Asian contributed to a vibrant and congenial cultural stew; mostly because nobody had anything valuable enough to lord over anyone else.

Two miles west of the complex the main dirt road transecting the community became a paved thoroughfare that circled the regional airport, hence the name. A maze of smaller dirt roads meandered between the fifty-three lime green, multi-family buildings, and every evening around five the complex became engulfed in great brown clouds of dust spawned by hordes of homebound pickup trucks. Consequently, around four-thirty, women all over the neighborhood could be seen racing to communal clotheslines in a mad dash to rescue their laundry from the billowing grime.

Weller Memorial Park, named after a dead mayor, bordered the property on the north side. To the south, up the road fronting the Ralstons’ apartment, sat Olgrin’s family grocery and it seemed as if the store owner’s life mission was to make sure everybody knew everybody else’s business. Mrs. Olgrin had once been Irene’s best friend and Clark felt sure, as did his mother, that everyone in the neighborhood heard about Mark’s bed-wetting problem at her store from her big, fat mouth.

Fifth-grader Clark and fourth-grader Mark walked to Lakeside Elementary, located about half a mile east of their home. Walking to school posed no problems for them, they enjoyed it. Midway between their apartment and the school the highway department had cleared a forest in preparation for a new state road, and the boys loved to frolic in the giant Eucalyptus carcasses littering the landscape. They had liked the trees even better when they were living. Standing tall, straight, and majestic, they offered a wonderful environment for fantasy. On any given day the boys might’ve faced the Sheriff of Nottingham in Sherwood Forest, or the Tin Man, Scarecrow, and Lion in the Emerald Forest of Oz. But the bulldozers had destroyed their portal into other worlds, and now the imagination would have to run amok to think the place was anything more than an aromatic graveyard.

After school on a bright blue Tuesday afternoon, Mark and Clark rested on a fallen tree after jumping from trunk to trunk like bullfrogs to lily pads while firing dirt clods at each other. A cool breeze off the sea whistled through the dead limbs, rustled desiccated leaves, and mussed the boys’ hair. In the distance, earthmoving machines could be heard going about their destructive business.

“Why’s Dad so mean?” Mark asked between rejuvenating gulps of air.

“Don’t know. Maybe he doesn’t like kids.”

“Then why’d they have us?”

“Good question,” Clark said.

“Think he loves us?”

“Huh-uh. He doesn’t act like other fathers.”

“Whataya mean?” Mark asked.

“Like he’s only come to one of my ballgames and he was drunk. Stumbling all over the place. I felt terrible and told Mother I didn’t want him to come to any more games. Other fathers don’t do that.”

“What’d Mom say?”

“Told me to hush.”

They fell silent for a few moments before Mark began tossing dirt clods at a large knothole on a tree fifteen feet away.

“Clark?”

“Yeah?”

“Dad ever told you he loves you just for no reason?”

“Not for any reason. You?”

“Never.”

“Mother told me most men think it’s sissy to say it,” Clark said.

“I don’t.”

“Don’t what?”

“Think it’s sissy. It makes me feel good when Mom says it to me, and it makes me feel good when I say it back to her.”

“You love me?” Clark asked.

“No, silly. Boys don’t do that.”

“Why not?”

“I told you, cuz we’re boys. Boys don’t love other boys.”

“Dad’s a boy.”

“That’s different. Dads are supposed to tell their children they love them, boy or girl. I will when I have kids.”

“Me too.”

They watched as a large flock of scavenging blackbirds landed thirty feet away and began wreaking havoc on the felled forest’s insect population.

“Think you’ll ever stop pissing the bed?” Clark asked as he threw a clod at the feathered foragers. The birds hopped in unison as if skipping rope, parachuted back to earth on ebony wings, and returned to their arthropod feast.

“Hope so. I can’t take too much more of that belt.”

“Why can’t you stop?”

“Cuz I dream about it.”

“About what?”

“That I’m at the pot taking a pee, smiling, all proud of myself, and by the time I wake up me and the bed are soaked,” Mark said, exasperated.

“Try to dream about the desert or something.”

“The desert?”

“Yeah, there’s no water there.”

Both broke into spontaneous laughter, a good while since they had done that.

“I’m tired of the way Dad treats us. I’ve come up with a way to get back at him,” Clark said.

“How?”

“By stealing things from him. Things he likes.”

“Like what?”

“Don’t know; anything he likes.”

“He’ll beat your butt if he catches you.”

“Us,” Clark said.

Mark raised an eyebrow as his tummy turned. “Us?”

“Yeah. You, the girls, and me. He won’t know who did it.”

“I vote no. I get the belt enough as it is.”

“Listen! You never listen to me, Mark. Might as well be talking to that big fat ugly tree trunk over there, or Dad.” He sighed and continued. “You know those polished rocks Mr. Wilkes gives us every time we go see him?”

An old friend of their father’s, Roy Wilkes polished rocks of various colors into shiny beauties as a hobby. His son, Jimmy, was Clark’s best friend.

“Yeah.”

“We’ll steal his stuff and leave one of those rocks. It’ll drive him crazy.”

Mark frowned, then his flushed face broke into a big grin. “We’ll call ourselves The Rock Club!”

“Not bad. I like it. The Rock Club. Yeah, that’s cool. Now this is our secret. You can’t tell any of your friends or even Mother. Especially not Mother.”

“You got it. Clark?”

“Yeah?”

“Does Mr. Wilkes still drink? I mean like beer and wine and stuff.”

“No, he stopped.”

“I thought so, cuz him and Dad don’t go places together anymore.”

“Yep, he quit.”

“Just like that?” Mark asked.

“Jimmy said he joined a special club called AA, and they helped him.”

“AA? What’s that?”

“Jimmy said it’s kind of like Boy Scouts for men.”

“They go camping and hiking, things like that?”

“No, but Jimmy said it was because of AA his dad started polishing rocks.”

Mark’s face scrunched toward his nose. “Really? Why?”

“Jimmy said Mr. Wilkes is like a dirty old rock being polished till it shines. Said it was a meta something. Metaphor. That’s it.”

“Met-a-phor? That’s weird,” Mark said.

“Maybe, but it must work. Mr. Wilkes stopped drinking.”

“You think we could get Dad to polish rocks?”

“Probably gotta be a member of the club.”

“I wish Mr. Wilkes would invite Dad to join.”

“Me too,” Clark said. He pushed himself to his feet, stuck his hands in his pockets and extracted a dollar bill and some change. “I got enough for Cokes. Want one?”

“Yeah, sure. Where’d you get the cash?”

“Dad’s dresser. Want a Coke or not?”

“Let’s go.”

The boys dropped from their perch and picked their way through the debris field to the dirt road leading to Olgrin’s. Clark kicked a discarded Hire’s Root Beer can lying in the road toward his brother.

Mark kicked it back. “Wonder why some kids get good parents and some don’t.”

“Beats me,” Clark said.

They walked in silence for a while, ping-ponging the can with their feet before Mark said, “Brother Eddie says God can do anything, right?”

“Right.”

“So why can’t he help me stop peeing the bed? I ask for help every night.”

Clark didn’t answer his brother. “Last one to Olgrin’s is a nerd!” he said, then took off running as fast as he could.

Continued….

Click on the title below to download the entire book and keep reading

Stan Thomas’ The RoCK CLuB>>>>

Thriller Readers Alert! Stan Thomas’ The RoCK CLuB is KND Brand New Thriller of The Week & Sponsor of Hundreds of Free & Bargain Mystery & Thriller Titles – Now 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, Stan Thomas’ The RoCK CLuB. Please check it out!

The RoCK CLuB

by Stan Thomas

4.8 stars – 6 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

In 1982, Clark Ralston was eleven years old, his beloved little brother was nine, and his gorgeous and precocious twin sisters were seven…

Fiends and monsters in most adolescents’ lives are conjured up fantasies or characters from a Grimm Brothers fairy tale or the like, which produce an occasional nightmare. The ogre that bedeviled the Ralston children was not a fleeting fantasy or a dark creature in a bad dream after a scary movie. Their antagonist was an ever-present alcoholic and abusive father.

In an effort to visit some retribution on the source of their fear and angst–something no child should ever feel in their own home–Clark initiates an innocuous little distraction called The Rock Club, an exclusive band of juvenile mercenaries determined to torment and befuddle their father…

Nineteen years later, commitment-challenged Clark is trying to distance himself from his stunning, hero-worshiping sisters. When his girlfriend accepts an internship at San Francisco General Hospital, he jumps at the opportunity to create space between himself and his suffocating siblings and moves from L.A. to the Bay Area.

Clark loves everything about San Francisco: the Victorian architecture of its urban neighborhoods, the cable cars, the eccentricity and diversity of its citizenry, and the plethora of different smells and unique ambiance of the city. He’s even beginning to feel like he’s getting over his fear of commitment until The Rock Club pulls an encore. And this time it’s not so innocent… this time it’s deadly.

5-Star Amazon Reviews

“The Rock Club is without doubt one of the best books I’ve read in a very long time, and I love to read. Read it in one sitting. The author has a style of writing that takes the reader into the scene. I don’t believe I’ve read a writer that evokes more raw emotion than Thomas does. The story is about siblings who rebel against their abusive father in a very creative way, and the fallout it creates in their lives years later. It is poignant, provocative, funny, tragic, uplifting, and it’ll keep the reader guessing until the very end.”

“I loved, loved, loved this book. It had everything in it, I couldn’t put it down. It isn’t often that you find a book that competes with the big boys. You will not be disappointed. This author has it down grabbing all the love, hate, violence and emotion wrapping it all up in a great book. I can’t say enough about it. Stan Thomas you delivered!!!”

KND Free Thriller Excerpt of The Week Featuring Truman’s Spy: A Cold War Spy Story by 5-Star Suspense Novelist Noel Hynd

On Friday we announced that Truman’s Spy: A Cold War Spy Story by Noel Hynd 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:

Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

It is early 1950, the midpoint of the Twentieth Century.

Joe McCarthy is cranking up his demagoguery and Joseph Stalin had intensified the cold war. In Washington, J. Edgar Hoover’s FBI is fighting a turf war with the newly founded Central Intelligence Agency. Harry Truman is in the White House, trying to keep a lid on domestic and foreign politics, but the crises never stop. It should be a time of peace and prosperity in America, but it is anything but.

FBI agent Thomas Buchanan is assigned to investigate the father of a former fiancée, Ann Garrett, who dumped Buchanan while he was away to World War Two. And suddenly Buchanan finds himself on a worldwide search for both an active Soviet spy and the only woman he ever loved. In the process, he crosses paths with Hoover, Truman, Soviet moles and assassins, an opium kingpin from China, and a brigade of lowlife from the American film community.

Truman’s Spy is a classic cold war story of espionage and betrayal, love and regret, patriots and traitors. This is the revised and updated 2013 edition of Noel Hynd’s follow-up to Flowers From Berlin. The story is big, a sprawling intricate tale of espionage, from post-war Rome and Moscow to New York, Philadelphia and Hollywood, filled with the characters, mores and attitudes of the day. And at its heart: the most crucial military secret of the decade.

 

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

CHAPTER 2

 

In the third week of December 1949, Washington, D.C. was shivering through its coldest winter in a dozen years. Ice hung from the cherry trees along the Potomac. A mantle of snow adorned both Jefferson and Lincoln Memorials. Even Pennsylvania Avenue, where traffic crawled in both directions, seemed more like New Hampshire than the center of the American government.

In the White House in the waning days of the old decade, things were warmer. Sixty-three-year-old President Harry S. Truman dug in for an increasingly acrimonious battle with the Eighty-first Congress. He fought with the nation’s legislators over everything from increased social security benefits to public housing to his scaling back of military expenses in the post-war era.

If Truman looked for solace in the tide of world events, he found none there. In 1949 the President had succeeded in breaking the eighteen-month Soviet blockade of West Berlin with massive American airlifts of food and medical supplies. But Joseph Stalin was freshly invigorated at home. He had so thoroughly terrified the heads of his puppet governments throughout Eastern Europe that he merrily launched a new generation of purge trials in Russia.

In Asia, the North Korean government made ominous noises about reuniting their country in a manner they saw fit, and using their huge army to do it. Nearby, General Chiang Kai-Shek and his pro-American Kuomintang Army had been driven from the mainland of China to Formosa. The U.S. consular staff would soon follow. In Europe, the Fourth French Republic teetered on the brink of ruin. Even in England, Truman’s final and most loyal wartime ally, Winston Churchill was out of office.

From the perspective of the American capital, enemies were ascendant and friends were halfway into their graves. It was a time when the support of public opinion deserted the President and galvanized around the conservative senator Robert Taft, grandson of the three-hundred-pound former president, as well as the increasingly vocal, hard-drinking, and mean-spirited Joseph McCarthy. There was even talk that if the lid could be kept on the little guy from Missouri for two more years, a possible presidential candidacy by Dwight Eisenhower, the former supreme allied commander, might rescue the country.

Ike was the president of Columbia University. If only he would announce whether he was a Democrat or a Republican, matters would be clarified. I was just five years after a war that compromised all humanity, and already the world was again on its way to hell in a hand basket.

As a final response to Pearl Harbor, the United States had sought to reorganize its intelligence community in 1946. The Japanese attack on Hawaii had taught a lesson. Inquiries during the world war had revealed that there had been significant indications before December 7, 1941, that Imperial Japan was up to something. Crates of documents, retrieved after the fact, had lain around unused and unnoted by American military and naval commanders in the years 1939 through 1941. Information that could have saved thousands of lives had been ignored.

Why? No single effective unit of the government had been equipped to assemble and analyze foreign intelligence. Thus, in the early months of World War II, President Franklin Roosevelt created the Office of Strategic Services, the nation’s first official espionage and counterespionage agency. But after the war the OSS ran afoul of special-interest lobbyists. The military intelligence services and the FBI of J. Edgar Hoover insisted that in peacetime the OSS would only duplicate the efforts of existing agencies. Eventually President Truman came to agree and abolished the OSS

Within a few months, however, the President acknowledged his mistake. Whatever the faults of the 0.S.S., it had been a single agency collecting and evaluating foreign intelligence and sending the information into the Oval Office. Without a central agency Truman received an avalanche of contradictory, superficial reports.

One day, confused, irritated, and ill informed, he exploded to his Secretary of State, James F. Byrnes. “As soon as possible,” raged the President, “we’ve got to get somebody or some outfit that can make sense out of all this stuff!”

Truman expressed the same wish in identical letters sent on January 22, 1946, to his military adviser, Admiral William Leahy, Secretary of War Robert Patterson, Secretary of the Navy John Forrestal, and Secretary of State Byrnes. These four men were asked to consider themselves as the National Intelligence Authority. They were to plan, develop, and coordinate all foreign espionage and counterespionage activities.

Within a few weeks the four had assigned funds and personnel from their own departments to the authority. They formed what they called the Central Intelligence Group. To head the new C.I.G., Truman appointed Rear Admiral Sidney W. Souers as the Director of Central Intelligence.

The appointment caused grumbling in official Washington. Souers was an admiral in the naval reserve and his civilian employment was currently as an executive in the Piggly Wiggly grocery chain in Truman’s native Missouri. He had no experience in intelligence matters. Or, as some Capitol wags put it: “He wouldn’t recognize a spy, but he sure knows fruits and vegetables.”

Yet President Truman wanted a reliable method of being kept informed. So this, for a while, satisfied him. But the setup was unsatisfying to many others, including the directors of military intelligence and J. Edgar Hoover, all of whom continued to fear the erosion of their own powers.

There was also another man who found the arrangement unsatisfactory: Allen Dulles. Dulles had been one of America’s most successful spies during the two world wars. Princeton-educated, from a staunch Republican family, Dulles nonetheless had the President’s ear and friendship.

Dulles agitated for a change in the intelligence system. Dulles had spent World War Two in Switzerland where, as the Swiss Director of the U.S. Office of Strategic Services, he had worked on intelligence regarding German plans and activities. He had wide contacts with German émigrés, resistance figures, and anti-Nazi intelligence officers, many of them staunchly anti-Communist.

Simultaneously, General Hoyt S. Vandenberg of the Army Air Corps succeeded Admiral Souers in June 1946. Vandenberg was named chiefly because he was the nephew of the powerful Senator Arthur Vandenberg, and managed to last only about as long as his predecessor, slightly less than a year. He in turn was succeeded by Rear Admiral Roscoe Hillenkoetter, whom Truman personally didn’t like and whom he privately referred to as “a third-rate navy guy.” America’s new spy establishment, in other words, was off to a staggering start.

Yet, during Hillenkoetter’s tenure, Congress passed the National Security Act, unifying much of the American defense establishment. The act also replaced the National Intelligence Authority with a new structure called the National Security Council. Similarly, the Central Intelligence Group was abolished and replaced by a stronger and more independent unit.

It was called the Central Intelligence Agency.

Its purpose was to gather and coordinate information from outside the forty-eight states. The agency would have no official police or law enforcement powers. And, in turn, the new CIA was to be responsible, in theory, at least, to the National Security Council. President Truman then appointed Allen Dulles, as the agency’s first director.

Thus the embryonic CIA moved into the battered old complex that formerly housed the United States Public Health Service at 2430 E Street in the gashouse section of Washington known as Foggy Bottom.

The complex bordered on an abandoned brewery and sat amidst a squalid jungle of underbrush, enclosed by a wire fence and topped with barbed wire. From this location, and for many years thereafter, little green government buses ferried passengers, frequently mysterious men bearing secret messages or documents, to and from the Pentagon and the White House. And at this humble inception, the one-hundred forty-acre spread that would eventually house the CIA in bucolic Langley, Virginia, was merely a gleam in Allen Dulles’s eye.

But it was a beginning. And like most beginnings, it had its awkward moments.

 

CHAPTER 3

Unlike the relatively new Central Intelligence Agency, the Federal Bureau of Investigation in was housed in baronial splendor toward the end of 1949. The headquarters were at Constitution Avenue and 10th Street, in a suite of fifth and sixth floor offices at the Department of Justice.  J. Edgar Hoover presided from a corner throne room, surrounded by his ablest assistants in adjoining chambers. This was a straight-arrow squeaky-clean place with light green walls, deep pile carpets, mahogany paneling, and countless American flags. A visitor to the Director’s office,  if he were kept waiting in the anteroom, would be faced with an armada of plaques—given by various religious, fraternal, school, and state police organizations—that heaped praise upon the Bureau and its Director. A revolving rack carried scores of pro-FBI editorial cartoons, mounted individually on hard cardboard backing. If these displays left the observer ready for more, there were also some of the more macabre relics of earlier Bureau adventures.

John Dillinger’s death mask, for example, was in a glass case in the same anteroom, along with the straw boater Dillinger wore when gunned outside a Chicago movie theater. Completing the display was the Corona- Belvedere cigar from the pocket of Dillinger’s bloodstained, bullet-ridden shirt.

Yet behind the scenes, the Bureau increasingly reflected the disparity between the public image and the gritty, sweaty, day-to-day operation of American law enforcement. Though the Director was an American folk hero, Hoover had never led an investigation and had never personally made an arrest. Despite being photographed weekly with an array of weapons, he had never learned to use a handgun. Yet the image of the Bureau before the public had never been more immaculate.

Hoover flitted about the country at his own whim, stayed in the finest hotels as a guest of management, and had his picture snapped hobnobbing with celebrities such as Milton Berle, Shirley Temple, Toots Shor, Bing Crosby, and Jimmy Cagney. Hoover always loved Cagney for his performance as an FBI agent in the 1935 Warner Brothers production, G- Men, a film that molded public perception of the Bureau. And the weekly radio serial, This Is Your FBI, remained a hit in its sixth year on the air.

The Bureau reflected Hoover’s personal biases: he loved capital punishment in all forms, he hated the fact that women could now vote, and didn’t care for people of color. He threw around insults with great freedom: “pinhead,” was a favorite for an agent who was falling into disfavor or soon to be sacked.

There were few far right causes he couldn’t champion.  Almost daily the FBI was preoccupied with cases of a political slant or which emanated from a political favor.  Hoover, completely ignoring the FBI’s charter, personally assigned FBI agents to gather domestic intelligence on people he didn’t like or whom he suspected of un-American activities.

In October 1949, for example, eleven members of the Communist Party of the United States had drawn prison sentences of three to five years apiece for advocating the violent overthrow of the United States government. They hadn’t done anything other than express their opinion. But in the climate of the day, that was enough to land them in prison.

The second perjury trial of Alger Hiss was concluding in Manhattan, also. All indications were that Hiss would go to prison too. The best was yet to come, however, as a section of Bureau spear carriers on the fifth floor inquired into the affairs of one suspected Soviet spy, a disloyal American named Martin Sobell. The investigation of Sobell had also suggested some other American accomplices named Julius and Ethel Rosenberg.

After the war, the U.S. had tried to protect its nuclear secrets. But American had been stunned by the speed with which the Soviets had initiated their first nuclear atomic test, “Joe 1”, on August 29, 1949. The consensus: atomic secrets had been leaked from the American research labs. Whoever had done it was going to pay a big price. That much was a “given.”

On these same premises, in a small, stuffy office in a far corner of the sixth floor, Special Agent Thomas C. Buchanan sat at a black Royal typewriter. He typed out his final account of an investigation involving a securities swindle. Recently put out of business were a pair of Miami-based land developers who had raised money and sold home sites from the Catskills to Sarasota. It was the kind of a case—hundreds of small investors burned by a pair of slick carpetbaggers —that provoked Buchanan’s righteous indignation. The case had ended with indictments, convictions, tons of favorable publicity for the FBI, and the recovery of almost sixty percent of the loot. Within the next month, checks would go out to most of the investors. Buchanan was proud of his work.

He stopped typing for a moment. Buchanan reread his report. One could never be too careful in choosing one’s words. Not only did Buchanan’s immediate superior, Francis W. Lerrick, Assistant Director for the mid-Atlantic region, read all completed files, but Hoover also liked to read reports at random. Here trouble could materialize from nowhere. Hoover’s attention might settle upon anything. One ten-year veteran of the New York office was abruptly transferred to Topeka when his report contained a quote from a Canadian ballistics expert who’d been used as a witness during a trial.

“We keep all foreigners out of Bureau business!” Hoover had said in an aggressive memo.

On another occasion a Special Agent in Atlanta found himself ordered to lose fifteen pounds in three weeks. A final case report had included his medical records, revealing his six-foot one-hundred-ninety-five-pound stature. Hoover had been placed on a diet by his own physician the previous Monday.

Buchanan typed the final two paragraphs. He leaned back in his chair and carefully reviewed the report from start to finish.

Had anyone walked into the office at that time, he or she would have seen a sandy-haired man of thirty-two, a handsome very American looking guy with a square jaw and dark blue eyes. He wore a white shirt and a red and blue striped tie. The jacket of his navy blue suit was draped over the back of his chair and his brimmed fedora, mandatory for all special agents, rested on a coat rack in the corner.

If it had it not been for a turn of fate and the course of history, Buchanan might have been the architect he’d planned on being when young. He had grown up in a comfortable town in the southeastern quarter of Pennsylvania. His mother was the daughter of anti-Fascist immigrants from Italy. From her he learned to speak Italian as a boy. She had come to America as a teenager and now taught the third grade in the local school. His father had been a medical doctor in family practice.

As a teenager Thomas had shown an uncanny aptitude for numbers, sciences and languages. He had set his heart on going to Princeton University, his father’s alma mater.

The turn of fate: A massive heart attack claimed Thomas’s father at age forty-three in August 1932. His mother moved the family closer to Philadelphia, where they took up residence with his mother’s unmarried sister. Thomas was enrolled at a private academy in Chestnut Hill, in accordance with his father’s will. Here he demonstrated again his exceptional aptitude in sciences, math, and language. He took up French and built an impressive academic record.

Princeton accepted him as a full-tuition student.  Lehigh University, however, offered him a full scholarship in engineering. This was 1936, and his father had not died wealthy. He went to Lehigh, graduated with high honors with a minor in Romance Languages. He wished to continue on for his graduate degree in architecture.

Then the course of history interfered. The Second World War began.

Buchanan served as an infantry captain in the United States Army’s North African and Italian campaigns. He was part of the 1st Armored Division which participating in Operation Torch, a combined British-American pincer operation against Rommel in North Africa. The allied operation outflanked and outgunned their German, Vichy French and Italian adversaries. They bypassed the Axis defense on the Mareth Line in late March 1943 and squeezed the Axis forces until Axis forces in Africa surrendered in 13 May of 1943. The invasion of Sicily followed two months later, during which Buchanan won two silver stars and as many purple hearts. It was, by the terminology of the time, a “great” war, for Thomas Buchanan. Privately, he was happy to have survived it. He never expected to.

As an American officer fluent in Italian, he became an interpreter for his unit, as well as an adviser to the command of the American Fifth Army, following a transfer to a unit where he was needed for his language skills.

His unit encountered dogged resistance from retreating German forces as they moved north.  But Buchanan had been among the first American soldiers to reach the center of Rome late night on June 5, 1944, initiating the liberation of the magnificent ancient city. Rome had been the first of the three Axis powers’ capitals to be taken. Its recapture was a significant victory for the Allies and the American commanding officer who led the final offensive, Lieutenant General Mark Clark.

In Rome the next day, more units of English and American troops rolled in. Massive crowds came into the streets, celebrating, cheering, waving and hurling bunches of flowers at the passing army vehicles. Later, Buchanan watched as Pope Pius XI appeared on the balcony of St Peter’s and addressed the thousands of Italians who had gathered in the square. It was a giddy time, marking a turning point in the war. Almost simultaneously, the Allied invasion of Normandy was taking place, also.

Buchanan stayed in Rome for three months. Then, his reputation as an interpreter growing, he was sent to Paris shortly after that city’s liberation. He was assigned to an intelligence unit, working with officers of de Gaulle’s Free French forces, as well as with the American command. He was next and finally sent on to Berlin, where he worked again in intelligence. For four months he worked daily with officers of the Soviet Red Army, mostly tank and artillery commanders who had helped capture the city. At first, he liked his Russian peers. Quickly, however, he grew to distrust them.

Berlin in those days was a crucible for Buchanan, a learning experience he would never forget. The city was devastated. Utilities functioned sporadically. Civilians wandered in sullen crews, dazed and confused, clearing the streets and looking for missing relatives. Piles of rubble made driving hazardous. A few diehard snipers made any movement even more hazardous.

But the similarities between the four parts of the divided city ended with the physical ruin. The different sectors —- American, British, French and Soviet — reflected the languages and cultures of the occupying forces. West Berlin was an island within the larger East German zone of Soviet occupation. It had a free press and cultural and economic links with the outside world. From the beginning, Soviets confiscated the newspapers licensed by Western occupation authorities. Soon thereafter, they declared the western newspapers “contraband” and arrested anyone in possession of one. They quickly began to tell their people that the occupiers were new fascists, which “explained” why most German Army and intelligence people and scientists had tried to surrender to the British and the Americans. Buchanan, in dealing with the Soviets, quickly learned what a big fat lie their entire system was.

In the bargain, he acquired a skill in the Russian language and learned some subtleties about the American’s wartime ally “of convenience,” such as the difference between Red Army intelligence and the secret state police. In the larger bargain, he got a close candid view of how the Soviets set up little spy cells in the west, the espionage tradecraft often following in the larger path of black market activities and bribes.  He had seen the same thing in Rome with the underworld people who had moved in quickly after Mussolini’s soldiers had retreated.

When he left the military with an honorable discharge in early 1946, he was restless, as well as haunted by the war.  His experiences were never far from his thoughts. At a V.F.W. meeting, he ran into a retired colonel who had commanded his unit in Sicily. The colonel told him that the Federal Bureau of Investigation was hiring.

“The work can be interesting and the employer isn’t likely to go out of business,” the colonel had said. “If you decide not to make a career of it, it still won’t look bad on your résumé. I know some people, Tom. I’ll write you a letter of recommendation.”

Buchanan entered the Bureau’s training school, in April 1946. A fourteen-month tour in Chicago was his first assignment where, by chance, he occasionally partnered with an old Army buddy, a fellow officer whom everyone called “The Bear.” The latter, a fellow officer, had also served in Italy and who had also joined the Feds. It was a pleasant and fortuitous reunion.

Aside from that, Buchanan didn’t have the commanding physical presence or bulk that typified many enforcers of American law, nor did he have the traditional gang busting mentality for which the “G-men” had become the heroes of the gullible public and tabloid press. But he did have an outstanding analytical intellect, a persistent nature and a remarkable instinct for analyzing a crime scene.  This he coupled with an easy, calm, honest manner which was his basic nature, though those who knew him best knew he had his flashpoints: He could resort to quick explosive physical force when pushed too far. The overall equation inspired confidence in people and made them willing to talk to him. As a result, for his age, Buchanan was as fine a detective as the Bureau had to offer.

And yet, and yet.

He also felt unsettled, a man in transition, but from where to where? The war had deeply disturbed him. He found few people he could discuss it with other than fellow veterans. There was pain that he felt but couldn’t describe, things that had happened in combat that he chose not to remember, and faces of enemy soldiers, some alive, some in death, that he wished would go away but which he knew never would.  All of this, he battled every day. Socially, he was normal and perfectly presentable. Privately, he felt his psyche was in tatters and the war had turned him into a reclamation project. But if that was the case, so it was the case with most of the world, and almost everyone who had survived the fighting. So he kept it all inside him, as much as he could.

Continued….

Click on the title below to download the entire book and keep reading

Truman’s Spy: A Cold War Spy Story by Noel Hynd>>>>