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I'm sitting here eating an apple with a big grin on my face. Last night, I
finished BoneSong!!! My 24th novel! Ecstatic doesn't begin to describe the
feeling...
It's been really difficult to keep up my enthusiasm lately. All writers have
down time, when you worry whether you're ever going to become a household name.
Whether your books will ever have a chance of being found in every library, and
every bookstore. For most of us, it's never going to happen.
Novice writers, and non-writers, generally have the wrong idea. They believe
that publication is everything! When you begin writing a novel, you never
realise that you're signing on to be a website designer, publicist, salesperson
- and many times - agent. The reality in today's world of independent publishers
is no money upfront, and minor moneys quarterly. Promotion is generally totally
via the Net, your book is one of thousands on Amazon, and availability does not
equate to sales. Good reviews and contest placements make little difference. If
you do get your book into a real bookstore, and your publisher isn't willing to
pay $10,000, to have your book in a front display, you'll be lucky if anyone
sees it.
An author who was published by one of my former publishers once said she
could count on 250 sales from family and friends. She wanted the publisher to
tell her where she should go from there, to make sales. Frankly, I wondered what
planet she came from! 250 sales??? Most of the time, my friends want to read my
books for free, and I haven't the heart to ask these financially tapped-out
creatures to buy a book. In fact, most relations/friends actually feel hurt if I
hint at such a thing. The reality (painful, yes), is that many of our publishers
don't offer us free copies - they make us buy them. My first publisher made us
buy 25 at a time, if we wanted any kind of discount! Needless to say, I didn't
see my first print books for years! I finally found them at a library, and stood
there goggling. It was an incredible moment, to hold my print books in hand!
Wonderful!
I suppose writing novels can be compared to purchasing a lotto ticket. During
that time your book is under consideration by a publisher, or out there,
awaiting sales, you have the potential for being a winner. The dream is alive
and well, and hope is ever-present. It is only times like this, when I'm tired
and slightly burnt-out, from finishing a book, that I question what I'm
doing.
Instead, I suppose, I should be grateful. I'm 18x published, and the people
who read my work, generally enjoy it.
And I have enough hope, and enough projects ahead, to keep going. I suppose,
if it comes down to it, I'm a writing junkie, with the next fix just around the
corner.
Tomorrow, in fact.
Talk to you soon.
Cheers, ND N. D. Hansen-Hill http://www.fictionwise.com/ebooks/NDHansen-Hille books.htm" title="http://www.fictionwise.com/ebooks/NDHansen-Hille books.htm" target="_blank"http://www.fictionwise.com/eb...
(all my ebooks...except Gilded Folly) http://www.lulu.com/NDHansen-Hill" title="http://www.lulu.com/NDHansen-Hill" target="_blank"http://www.lulu.com/NDHansen-...
(my print books) http://www.NDHansen-Hill.com" title="http://www.NDHansen-Hill.com" target="_blank"http://www.NDHansen-Hill.com (my
under-construction new website) http://www.cerridwenpress.com/productpage.asp?ISBN=1-4199-0409-4" title="http://www.cerridwenpress.com/productpage.asp?ISBN=1-4199-0409-4" target="_blank"http://www.cerridwenpress.com...
(Gilded Folly)
Oh, below is an excerpt (chapter two) from Trolls - to celebrate completion
of book#24!
Chapter Two
R andy slammed his fist
against the sofa back. "Dammit, Shea!" he complained.
"Keep your ‘dammits’ to yourself, Markington!" she said
impatiently. "You’re the one who wanted geological strata. I’ll have the
readouts in less than a minute." She muttered, "Though it’d’ve be better, in my
opinion, if you’d considered the water table instead."
"Always a whinger," Randy retorted. He knew how much it
irritated her. "You know how people relate their well-being to crystals—"
"New Age stupidity," she put in.
"—and how frequently peasant superstitions have been backed up
by—"
"— superstitious stupidity. Save
the lecture for your class, Randy. Zeb’s out there in the dark."
Randy’s voice rose. "And whose fault is that? I
ask for a readout, and she gives me the Periodic Table." He added sarcastically,
"Or maybe it’s the Richter Scale, A to Z." He considered that for a moment. "Any
unusual tremors in that area? Might give us an idea of—"
"Randy—" she cut in.
He raised an eyebrow.
"Shut up!" Without another word, she tugged the paper out of
the printer and headed for the door, Randy at her back. She reached for the knob
with one hand, and tossed Randy a pack of gum with the other.
But when she opened her mouth to say something further, Randy
beat her to it. He smiled with saccharine sweetness, then pulled a pair of
sunglasses out of his pocket. "I’m all ready for you." She barely heard his
added, "Even if you ain’t too bright." She was
grinning as she slid behind the wheel.
*
It wasn’t until he was already inside that he remembered the
snake he’d seen that afternoon. At the time he’d been "distracted". He had a
jumbled memory of wriggling reptile, inhaled dust, ancient lamps, and broken
bones—the present overlapping with the past.
At this moment, the most important part of his present was a
beady-eyed scaly slitherer with a forked tongue. That damned rattlesnake wasn’t
the kind of animal he’d come looking for.
He shone the light lingeringly into the dark recesses along his
way, and then, more cautiously, under the jumbled rocks. A glint of eye
refraction, and a slithering movement made him jump. He scrambled backwards,
toppled onto his rear, realised it made him more vulnerable, and leaped, fell
and rolled down the passageway.
He was still on his knees when the tremulous warble whispered
in the distance. As his flashlight spun and settled, its light painting shuddery
etchings across the uneven surface, the whistle grew in intensity. Zeb cocked
his head to listen, then crawled quickly along—forgetting all his resolutions
about waiting for the others.
Forgetting everything except The Whistler, and his need to get
there—before the music stopped.
*
Randy’s stomach sank as soon as he spotted Zeb’s car. "He’s
inside."
"Who’s that?" Shea was looking at a sleek sportscar, parked
just beyond Zeb’s.
Randy climbed out, and sniffed the air. "My business partner,"
he said. "Too curious for his own good."
"Is he inside with Zeb?"
"More or less."
She sighed. "So Zeb doesn’t know he’s there," she said.
Randy nodded. "That’s what I think."
" I think we better get to them
first. If we don’t, Zeb will’ve—"
"—started without us."
She turned to him a little desperately. "Did you bring a
flashlight?"
"No. Why would I?" he retorted, with a trace of sarcasm.
"Dammit."
"I’ll be careful," she promised, but there was that same hint
of excitement in her voice that had been in Zeb’s earlier.
"When are you two going to learn some restraint?" he
hissed.
"About the same time you and Ness do," she replied.
"I should have called Rio," Randy said worriedly.
"Think we’re gonna need him?" she asked seriously.
"He’s good at diffusing things."
"I notice you didn’t mention Ty. There’s restraint for you!"
she hissed.
"I prefer my stalactites on the ceiling, rather than sticking
out of my head—" he began.
They were at the cave entrance. Abruptly, she turned around,
grasped the front of his shirt and yanked him down for a giant kiss.
Tradition. "I love you," she whispered. The air around them
shimmered with a sudden frosty glint that brightened the stirred-up dust to
blinding sparkles.
He ran his hands over her, then sniffed longingly at her nape
and hair. "I know," he replied. He inhaled deeply, then coughed on the dust.
"Damn!" He coughed again, but this time, it sounded more like a growl.
She heard it. "Sly, aren’t we?" she muttered as he took over
the lead.
He chuckled, as he stared at the refracted sheen of crystals
along the roof. No doubt Luke would have a question or two about the source of
light. He shook his head and tightened his grip on her hand. "Absolutely
devious," he said.
*
Luke couldn’t figure out how Devery was doing it—or why. There
didn’t seem to be any point to the man’s movements—yet they were made with a
kind of desperate urgency. He was crawling, scrambling, and at times practically
running between the rocky layers.
At first Luke had thought he was aware of being pursued, and
that it had sent him into some kind of panic. Now, he’d decided the man was
largely oblivious to anything but his goal. He hadn’t slowed, nor had his speed
picked up when Luke had yelled his name.
Maybe he’s wearing a Discman?
Can’t hear a thing over his "sounds"?
Or maybe he just wants to throw me off his track—to lead me
away from what he’s really after.
From whatever he’d found in the
cave that afternoon. Happy accident, or had Markington’s bumbling concern led to
some secret cache? That Devery didn’t want anyone to know about?
There was another possibility: this may have been Markington’s
way of admitting some healthy competition. Maybe Devery was getting too greedy,
or too dictatorial. Maybe Markington felt the only way to protect his share was
to admit someone else to the mix.
What else were they hiding? This wasn’t Luke’s first pursuit,
but it was certainly his strangest. He’d been trained in lipreading, and the
conversation this afternoon hadn’t been difficult to interpret. There was
something here, and instinct told him it must tie in to his investigation. But,
now that he was God-knows-how-many feet under the ground, he knew he’d made a
mistake. He’d followed Devery too soon. Now, he could well have Markington on
his tail. Luke’s "divide and conquer" approach was beginning to feel more
foolish all the time.
But, he couldn’t forget his discomfort, when confronted by them
both. Markington had changed from "bumbling" to "dexterous" in the blink of an
eye. As much as Luke wanted to catch them in the act, he had very definite
qualms about confronting them together in a place like this. He had no desire to
make this his burial ground.
He had a choice: follow Devery further, and literally drive him
underground—or get out, before Markington turned up.
Get out...
He’d never liked caves, even if
this one was worth investigating. Catching Devery in the act suddenly didn’t
seem nearly as important as catching a breath of fresh air. He’d find a way to
track Devery’s path tomorrow, with a team for back-up.
Now, the big thing was to retrace his steps, before Markington
wiped out his trail. Luke slipped on the glasses and stared at the infrared
markings. A bright red beacon to
the exit...
He’d taken only a few steps when
the weirdly screeching screams sounded in his ears.
*
Zeb slammed his hands over his ears, then stood shaking. He was
drenched with sweat, weak and nauseated.
Displacement. The rock beneath
his feet was wobbly, and his eyes were seeing two places at once, both dressed
in shimmers of glimmery blue light. The scenes, so distinct in everything from
time of day to climate, were overlapping, and in those moments, he couldn’t
decide which was which, or where he belonged. As always, he was terrified at his
own confusion, but experience had taught him there was only one way to resolve
it. He forced his focus to narrow. Like a horse with blinders, he looked
straight ahead, ignoring the scene playing out beyond.
Nothing but rock. Coarse rock, of white limestone with
crystalline intrusions, weird fans and pointed stalactites, swirls and bubbles
and irregular holes. Rock with light and shadow; pools of unseen depths lying
just beyond the reach of his flashlight. It was all a puzzle, a maze.
He could hear them now. The crunch and tap of claws on rock.
Almost automatically, it seemed, his eyes sought the scrabbling creatures his
ears had promised.
They were small and unbelievably wary. At first, they were
indecipherable from the limestone, but he knew it was like a Magic Eye puzzle,
where a 3D image is hidden in plain sight. As Zeb’s eyes rested on the rock
surface, his vision blurred and his focus changed. The features—faces, feet,
claws—were suddenly there.
Now you see it, now you
don’t...
The wee things surfaced, arising
out of the blue-tainted rocky molecules, just as, at other times, in other
places, they sometimes lifted out of water or wood. Arising, taking shape,
becoming distinct, like multicoloured patches lifting from an irregular quilt.
Only a mirage, until they formed shadows.
Until they began to move. These were sparsely-haired, with
huge, saucerlike eyes, long beaked noses, and spindly arms. The arms were
gesturing wildly now, in his direction. Not angry, and not curious.
Frightened.
Uh-oh.
He had to make this quick. At any
moment they could scatter. And if he didn’t record what he was seeing, Randy
would never forgive him.
I should have
waited...
But he couldn’t, and Randy would
understand. His resistance this afternoon had been a first.
Maybe it fooled Randy as much
as it did me.
Which is why he’s taking
so damn long to get here... The
ignoble thought made Zeb feel like a prick. And it didn’t help—he still felt
guilty. He’d been too impatient, and hadn’t bothered to wait. There was no
getting around it: Randy would have wanted to see these beasties himself; to put
a name to them. Something to drop into a lecture, with a lively description that
would capture his students’ imaginations. The kind of legendary invention that
had earned Randy his reputation—and an overload of students.
Zeb smiled. And if by some chance these gnome-types were
unidentified—unknowns, by folktale standards—Shea would have wanted to list
their characteristics, and enter them in her database.
The least Zeb Devery could do was capture them on film. He
pulled the camcorder out of his pack, but each little movement seemed to set the
gnome-types off. They were skittish, uneasy, and something in their fearful
energies transferred itself to him. The click and scrape of their nails seemed
unnaturally loud, and he noticed the way they were peering around; those big
eyes squinting in the brightness of his flashlight. He watched as three
separated themselves from the others, and crawled, batlike, up the steep walls:
their bony limbs jutting at awkward angles as they clung to the rock face. They
were staring at the pooling greys and blacks, beyond the reach of Zeb’s
light—ears perked at an angle towards something he couldn’t hear.
A sibilant whisper cut the air, and gooseflesh danced down
Zeb’s arms. The gnomes were suddenly frozen in place, like barnacles to a rock.
Zeb realised the only thing still in motion in the cavern...was him.
Maybe
not. The sibilant sound came again,
and Zeb could have sworn it was closer.
They hadn’t come alone. There was a predator lurking—something
he hadn’t seen.
It wouldn’t be the first time. When the damned whistle came, it
set Zeb off—and he was out of control. Driven. The need to follow it through
became a compelling force, and he couldn’t let go. They all knew it—Randy, Shea,
Ty, Rio, Ness—so they mounted expeditions now, to document and catalogue. They’d
left the wild, slack, dive-in-with-the-sharks stuff behind. They let Zeb chum
the waters, but nobody went for a swim. They’d had too many injuries in the
early days, with too many unexplainable repercussions.
This afternoon was a first, and it had fooled them all. Zeb had
thought, for once, that he was doing things on his own terms. But it was no
different from before. He should have realised that once he’d been touched by
the whistle, he’d never be able to walk away. Not without seeing it
through...
He flushed. It had been years since he’d acted this
irresponsibly. He knew better than to go it alone.
Dammit if he hadn’t blown it again...
The background sibilance echoed briefly, then suddenly rose, to
a low-pitched, reverberating hum. It was all the gnomes needed. In a panic, they
dove off walls and leapt, in a scurryingly awkward frenzy, across the rocks.
Their screeching cries filled the cavern.
Send them back! Send them all
back!
Zeb fought to concentrate. He focussed on the rock wall;
focussed on that particular zone of deafness where the only sound was a
peculiarly sweet whistle...
He was nearly there. The displacement, the confusion, the
overlapping frames of movement...
He might be deaf, but he wasn’t blind. If anything, he was
seeing too much right now—on too many levels.
Something was coming at him. The hair lifted on the nape of his
neck, and his heart pounded with terror. His legs twitched with the need to
flee.
Sweat broke on his brow, but he stood his ground.
Overlap it with that other vision...the one that would lure it
away—that would make It as driven as he’d been moments since.
He had it. The wings fluttered irregularly as the predator
turned. The beast was so close he could feel the wind ruffle his hair—could
smell the rancid breath of the carnivore...
He’d done it, and the knot in his gut loosened. It was heading
back towards the rock face, and it was being chased by its small gnome-prey. For
an instant, Zeb felt a qualm of dismay. The gnomes, drawn just as the hunter
was, were unable to stop themselves. They’d be walking right into the predator’s
mouth—returning to certain death...
*
Luke ran. He’d never heard anything like it before, but he knew
it wasn’t bats. Some kind of animal, maybe, but he couldn’t take a chance. If it
was a human animal, the guy was in terrible pain.
He nearly outran his light, and twice he stumbled, and nearly
fell. By the time he made his way to Zeb’s hiding place, he was panting and
furious.
And more than a little sure he was being played for a fool.
*
A beam of light suddenly burst into the cavern—and right into
Zeb’s eyes. He lost it all—his vision, his qualms, his equilibrium, his focus.
His hearing was back—he knew, because an angry voice bellowed his name.
That’s not what he was listening for, though. There was
another, underlying wash of sound as a soft sibilance gave way to a vibrating
hum. The next moment it was all clouds of choking dust and gnashing teeth, yells
and screeching cries, skittering bony legs and arms, and yelps of human
disbelief. A heavy body slammed Zeb back, into the rock, and jagged claws pinned
him there. He opened his eyes, as unbelievably jagged teeth came down.
Tearing teeth...
He gagged at the stink of ordure,
kicked and squirmed, but the thing was sucking up its victory now, and draining
him dry.
Wizened Devery husk littering
the cave floor...
In the background there was a
furious howl.
It was the last thing Zeb remembered.
*
Jesus H. Christ!
He couldn’t take it in—couldn’t
assimilate the scene. All his training, all the scenarios, all the crime scenes,
all the test runs: nothing could have prepared him for this. In those other
times, those other places, there’d been evil, and premeditated wickedness,
passionate blood and butchery, and dispassionate termination. Dispatchers and
dispatched, killers, victims and would-be homicides, depravity and cold-blooded
amorality...but at least the
fuckin’ predators were human!
And then, he couldn’t think any
more. His world became a scrambling, screeching mass of bony arms and legs as
the gnomes latched on and climbed him like an overgrown stalagmite. They were
panicked and tiny, but in sheer numbers, their weight far surpassed his own.
Luke tried to shake them off but they clung to him, as they’d clung to the rock
only moments before. Clung to him and froze. His world was suddenly a place of
beak-nosed bald monsters with acetone breath and terror in saucer-shaped eyes.
In slow motion, Luke and his weighty burden toppled—landing in
a crunch of rock and squirming bodies. At the same moment, his gun went off,
resonating the roof with a horrendous blast. The gnomes—the ones that could,
anyway—that weren’t crunched beneath him—scattered. Luke was left lying there,
with the stink of gunfire strong in his nose.
A shudder of movement fixed his eyes on Sebastian Devery. The
man was still squirming weakly, but there was no way he was fighting his
adversary off alone. The monster— th-the Thing—had him pinned.
Luke knew he would never look at moths the same way again. This
one was enormous, with a heavy body, dusky brown wings that twitched
continuously, and enormous antennae. It had clawed feet, and a siphon tongue,
that was sucking the life out of the man—Luke was close enough to see the dark
pulsing through the tongue. As it fed, the antennae uncurled, then coiled up
again with each gulp. Luke had a sudden urge to gag.
He rolled over on to his stomach, and pushed himself up on his
knees. Devery wasn’t going to last long. He lurched to his feet.
It was the stuff of nightmares, but it wasn’t the first time
he’d tackled a killer. Don’t
think...
As he dove for one of those
enormous, jagged brown wings, he heard a horrible howl at his back.
Oh, shit!
Then it was all wing dust and
flapping and scraping, claws and slamming rock. He sucked in wheezing breaths,
of mingled moth dust and earthy air, but he hung on. The overgrown moth was
squirming and giving out some kind of shrill whistle, and the tongue was curling
over the thing’s head and trying to poke at his eyes now.
Luke was flopped from side to side. It was deliberately trying
to scrape him against the stalactites, he realised, and he froze. He’d never
expected it to be smart—never expected it to have more than a moth’s reasoning
power. The idea of a monster with a brain was so much worse than an animal
acting merely on instinct.
It’s not real, Hamilton. None
of this is real. You hit a pocket of bad air, or had one too many run-ins with
rock.
The moth whipped him around so fast, that he could barely cling
to the wings. Apparently, those clawed feet were a lot more manoeuvrable than he
would have ever guessed. It was trying to break him off now, in any way it
could.
Luke’s head whammed against the rock, and his world went
momentarily black. When he opened his eyes it was to a whirr of motion as a
man—Luke could swear it was Markington—hit the moth with a blow that send dust
and blood flying everywhere.
Luke lay there, staring a little blankly at the scene, as
Markington picked up the moth as though it weighed nothing, and flung it,
Frisbee-like, across the cavern.
Not
real, Luke thought distantly. He
pushed himself up on one elbow, and sought Devery’s body.
There was a woman with him, and they were surrounded by light.
Through aching eyes, Luke surveyed the rest of the room, and he wondered that he
hadn’t noticed the radiance before. If someone had brought in some fluorescents,
it wouldn’t have been any brighter.
The woman must have heard him, because she looked up, and met
his eyes across the distance. Luke could swear hers were glowing.
Hell of a dream
I’m having, he thought, stumbling to
his feet.
The world seemed to tilt and he latched onto a stalactite for
balance.
"Hold it, Hamilton," a voice said.
"Markington?" Luke muttered.
"The same. Sit down while I look at Zeb..."
Luke leaned against the rock. "Go—" he whispered, relieved. His
brain was assessing what he’d seen; putting it in terms John Colton could
accept. "...into rare
animals—maybe endangered exports. Some kind of bat, and a big
moth..." Smuggling endangered animals
was big money, but it also carried big fines.
The cave had developed a wobbliness he hadn’t noticed before.
He squinted against the pain in his head, and had a sudden feeling someone was
watching him. He turned, to find himself face-to-face with one of the little
"bats". Its eyes were squinted, too, but against the light.
It was squatting against the wall like the bat he’d claimed it
to be, but there was nothing batlike about its toothy grin. "Zshaylok," it said,
in a screechy voice.
"Aren’t you going to say hello?" came Markington’s sarcastic
voice, from the background.
It’s real.
Luke shuddered, and then suddenly,
he was sick, and the little bat shrieked and scuttled away across the rock. Luke
knew he was going down, and put out a hand to break his fall.
"Gotcha!" a voice growled near his ear, and there was a trace
of humour in it Luke couldn’t miss. "Damned ‘business partners’ are more trouble
than they’re worth."
*
"Zeb!"
Shea.
Zeb gave a weak grin. "Head tow’rd
th’ light?" he whispered.
"Not if I get there first."
Randy.
Zeb forced open his eyes. "Glad
you c’d make it."
"If that’s a comment on my dilatory arrival, save it." Despite
the sarcastic note, Randy sounded worried. "You really did it this time, Zeb."
He was applying pressure to Zeb’s shoulder, while Shea applied a makeshift
bandage. "If you were gonna run into a Mahr, you could have waited till we got
here."
Shea shook her head. "The med kit."
"If there’s no stopper," Randy told her softly, "get some
cobwebs—" The fear in his eyes belied the calmness of his voice.
Shea forced a smile, for Zeb’s sake. "Ness’ll have your hide
for this one, Zeb."
Randy asked her worriedly, "Can you find the way out?"
Shea’s eyes flicked to Luke and back, her expression grim.
" Somebody left a trail," she said.
"Don’t look at me," Zeb muttered.
"We all know what kind of trails you leave," Randy remarked,
sniffing distastefully.
"Slurs...s’all I get."
Shea grinned. Her wave was a sudden sparkling of light. The
next instant she was gone, racing back the way they’d come.
"Oww!" Zeb grunted to Randy. "Not so hard." It felt like he was
trying to push his shoulder through the rock.
"Wuss." But, Randy didn’t release the pressure. The Mahr must
have had an anticoagulant in its saliva, and Zeb was still bleeding heavily.
Randy’s hands were shaking, but it wouldn’t do for Zeb to know it. Luckily, the
cavern was dark now that Shea had left.
Except for the dull glimmer of Zeb’s blood. Randy had seen it
before, but it never failed to shock him anew.
"Where’s the Mahr?" A detached voice arose out of the
blackness.
"Uh-oh," Zeb whispered.
"Yes, you’re right," Randy told him calmly. "We’re
screwed."
"It’s dark in here," came the voice again.
"Observant, isn’t he?" Zeb whispered. "So astute."
Randy grinned, then said loudly, "The light will be back
shortly. Don’t move, Luke, before you damage yourself more. That was one hell of
a fall you took."
"Slick," Zeb hissed. "I’m impressed."
"How’s Devery?" Luke asked.
"Devery’s fine," Zeb replied, "considering you knocked me down
that hole." He grinned.
A
cover-up. They were actually going to
try to cover this up. Luke gave a snort of muffled laughter, then grunted as yet
another bony leg kneed him in the side. He thought about what John Colton would
say, if he could see him now, and gave another amused chuckle. Then, he just
coudn’t stop. He snorted, chuckled, grunted, "oww"ed, and laughed. It hurt like
hell, and he didn’t know which was making his eyes weep more, his hilarity or
the pain.
"What’s with him?" Randy asked disparagingly. Dammit if he’d
let Zeb bleed to death while he found out.
Zeb couldn’t take it. With trembling fingers, he fished the
lighter out of his pocket and flicked it.
Luke Hamilton was surrounded—piled high with gnomes, who’d
decided he was synonymous with safety. He was an island of bony arms and legs in
a sea of rock.
"Dammit," Randy sighed. "Nunus."
Luke’s head was still spinning, and he would forever blame his
next comment on his giddiness. "That’s Nunus to me," he said.
*
"I’ve got to send them back," Zeb said grimly.
"Damn right you do, but not till Ness gets here." Randy knew it
was a mistake, as soon as he’d said it.
"No!" Zeb gritted his teeth and tried to shove Randy away. "Get
off!"
"Nope." He tightened his grip. "You’re so fuckin’
prejudiced!"
If he’d hoped to get results with that one he was disappointed.
It was true that Zeb hated doctors—had a phobia about them almost as bad as his
fear of rattlesnakes. It didn’t help that Ness was one of his best friends. They
got along because neither of them mentioned it. The times Ness had been called
upon to patch up other members of their expeditions, Zeb had always made himself
scarce. "Is that what Shea’s doing? Waiting for Ness?"
"Quit squirming. We need Ness for dumbshit there—"
"Good! Haul him out to the entry, so I don’t have to watch!"
"I can’t," Randy told him practically. "He’ll have too much
company."
"Shut up and take your medicine like a man!" Luke said loudly,
then burst out laughing again.
Randy growled.
Zeb, meanwhile, was silent. He’d never tried to do this in the
dark, but there was always a first time. He stared in the general direction of
the rocks, where the Nunus had emerged.
"Zeb!" This time, the growl was directed at him.
The overlap came, but Zeb couldn’t hold onto it. His eyes were
aching, and he felt tireder than he ever had in his life. "Rand—" he
muttered.
Then, he was confused because it was daylight—no, it was Shea.
Someone else was swearing softly, and sticking a needle into his arm. "Go ’way,
Ness," Zeb muttered.
"Fuck you, too," Ness said, but he didn’t move. "You should
start to feel better in a minute, Zeb," he went on, checking the IV. "Stay with
him, Randy, while I check on the other guy."
"Megalomaniac," Zeb grouched to his back.
"Mediphobic. You’re right, though: just give me a white coat
and I can rule the world."
"His name’s Luke," Randy offered. "And those are Nunus."
Luke noticed that the man "Ness" didn’t seem in the least
surprised to see a load of Nunus on his chest. All he said was "Zeb, you’re an
idiot," before waving one hand to shoo them away. After a few minutes’
examination, he told Luke, "Hit your head pretty hard, did you?"
"Concussion?"
Ness nodded. "Hurt anywhere else?"
"No."
"Good," Ness said, and patted his shoulder. "Stay awake. We’ll
get you out of here soon."
In the background, Zeb was saying in a querulous tone, "They go
back!", and Shea was arguing, with obnoxiously saccharine sweetness, "We’ll see
what your ‘doctor’ says." Then came
Zeb’s weary "Shut up, Shea!", and Randy’s "Quit squirming, you dumbshit!", and
finally, just a growl.
Luke watched as Ness raised his eyes in a bid for patience,
before asking loudly, "Anyone have a drink bottle?"
There was instant silence. Ness grinned. "Gotcha."
Shea kicked him. "You moron!"
Randy was grinning
wolfishly, and even Zeb looked amused.
"Now, Sebastian," Ness said with a false smile, "let’s take
care of that other little problem, shall we?"
"‘We’ll’ just do that," Zeb retorted. He focussed on the wall.
It was a lot easier with the light. "Light helps," he commented.
"No excuses this time," Randy muttered.
Zeb smiled. He focussed, and the smile faded as he
concentrated. The whistle was starting up now, but he was shivering so hard he
was having trouble holding it.
Ness was watching him closely. "Not much time," he whispered to
Randy.
Randy nodded, and moved to the other side of the cavern where
the Mahr lay. He was nearly there when, with a whirring of wings, the seemingly
dead Mahr lifted from the rock.
Randy was taken by surprise. It grabbed at him with talon-like
claws, and—the wings whirring ferociously, started tugging him back across the
uneven floor.
A blaze of light entered Shea’s eyes. In a wave of fury, she
waved her hand, and a brilliant white flare exploded in the Mahr’s face.
The Mahr, temporarily blinded by the burst, dropped Randy like
a stone and flopped feebly, navigating now by sound. As the Nunus scurried
across the distance, the Mahr followed the sweet whistle toward the cavern wall.
Luke watched, stunned, as first the Nunus, and then the
man-eating moth, hit the wall. They seemed to cling, briefly, then were somehow
sucked into, and disappeared through, the solid rock.
What amazed him most was the way the others ignored it.
"Didn’t you see it?" he gasped, worrying
for the first time just how bad his head injury was.
Shea leaped over the uneven stalagmites and dropped to her
knees at Randy’s side. Randy, half-blinded still by the intensity of that last
light, grabbed her roughly and yanked her into his arms. "Help," he whispered.
His hands fumbled over her breasts then worked their way south. "Blinded by your
beauty," he explained.
She grinned.
Ness’ voice was long-sufferingly patient. "You okay,
Randy?"
"Better all the time..." At Ness’ silence, he added, "A few
scratches, and lots of—"
"—‘research for your next book’," Ness interrupted. "I need to
get Zeb out of here. You up to it?"
In answer, Randy stumbled over, and cautiously lifted Zeb up
off the ground. Zeb was limp, but Randy did his best to hold him steady. "Still
a little blind," he admitted seriously.
"Shea?" Ness asked.
Shea took Randy’s arm. Her expression held a trace of remorse.
"Sorry," she told him. To Ness she said, "Ready."
"What about him?" Randy asked, indicating Luke with a nod of
his head.
"I’ll get him." Ness was taking Zeb’s pulse. He didn’t look
happy. "Let’s hurry. The sooner we get him out of here, the better."
*
Luke lay there in the dark, the scent of stale urine strong in
his nostrils. He shifted his leg, and heard the rustle of plastic bag and the
tinkle of broken glass. They’d dumped him here in the alley, and hauled Zeb
Devery away, presumably to the hospital.
He would have been feeling pretty damned vulnerable right now
if he hadn’t overheard them talking. Somewhere nearby, Randy Markington was
lurking; standing guard until help arrived.
It was the oddest rescue Luke had ever been involved in. They’d
treated him well—brought him back to town to within three blocks of the
hospital. Brushed him down before stealing his phone and ID.
Buying time.
They’d also rung for an ambulance.
Now, it was a waiting game. Markington was marked with Devery’s glimmery blood
(glimmery?), so he’d put on Ness’ jacket, and was skulking out
of sight. He wasn’t about to abandon Luke Hamilton to the elements—human or
otherwise. He was waiting because he might be a thief and a Mahr-murderer, but
he had principles. The thought made Luke chuckle.
Which brought a shift of movement in the alley.
Not
Markington. This was another
scavenger, out for whatever he could get. He’d steal the jacket off Luke’s back,
the shoes off his feet, the belt off his pants—if he could get close enough. And
if Luke didn’t have enough to offer, the scavenger would make him pay in some
other way. Luke didn’t feel strong enough right now to rout a rat—of any kind.
He tensed, sickness in the pit of his stomach.
Until he heard a warning growl nearby. He could have sworn
Markington was watching from the roof—he didn’t know how he’d descended so fast.
It was, however, undoubtedly the man’s voice. "I wouldn’t touch him, if I were
you," he warned quietly. Another growl. "Back off."
Who the hell were these
people?
Luke was still wondering it the following morning, when he woke
up to John Colton’s unsmiling face.
Trolls (read it all!)
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