Archive | August 2016

Free Short Story: The Vampire’s Mark

Eilean Donan castle night yellow and lights reflected off water text (640x480)

The Vampire’s Mark

Copyrighted by Terry Spear

 

Misty Wellington stared at the shop, the windows dark and dreary, tendrils of smoke drifting in the air from incense, flickering flames of candles—a Goth hangout. So why was she here?

Again?

Ever since one of her hunter girlfriends dragged her here, she couldn’t stay away. And yet, she hated the strange exotic fragrances, the dusty bottles claiming love potions and cures for any and every ailment, the darkness. Even the woman who ran the shop added to the gloomy atmosphere. Emaciated, she dressed in long black gowns like she was stuck in an earlier time, still in mourning for a loved one, except for the twelve silver balls piercing her ears and the one in the right brow. Her hair—black spiked with gray streaks—looked like she was prematurely graying. Her face, though gaunt, had an ageless beauty.

Her fathomless black eyes affected Misty the most. The way they seemed ancient and all knowing. The woman wasn’t a vampiress, but something else, Misty would bet her life savings. Something else that was as old as time, evil, or just fed up with living. Misty wasn’t sure. The woman seemed as unhappy and dark and moody as the store.

Misty rubbed her shoulder where the vampire had marked her as a child, the scar burning whenever she felt uncomfortable. And right now it felt as if a sword was slicing right through it. But if she drove off and didn’t enter the store, she’d return later, before it closed. She couldn’t help it. Something drew her back, day after day. She didn’t know what she was looking for. The woman’s shop was always full of new items—that looked just as old as anything else that had sat on the shelf for years—but Misty knew the thing she needed was here.

Letting out her breath in exasperation, Misty threw open her car door, and climbed out. Today, maybe she’d find what she was looking for, and then she’d never return here again.

Two Goths stared at Misty as she pulled the squeaking door open to the shop, an old bell jingling her entrance. In her old blue jeans and T-shirt proclaiming, “Save the Frog, Forget the Prince!”—her long blonde hair curling about her shoulders, and not a piercing anywhere, she figured they thought she looked pretty strange, coming in here.

The owner was running an adding machine in the back office, the way she always did at first, allowing the customers to look their fill before she greeted them in her somber way. Misty figured nobody would dare steal from her, or she’d cast a curse on them, or something.

The Goths whispered behind her back, but with her enhanced huntress hearing, she caught the conversation.

“What does she think she’s doing in here?” the girl with the shaved head said. “I mean, look at that getup! It screams boring.”

The guy snorted. “She’s a wannabe. But too scared to take the first step. Plain uncool, if you ask me.”

Yeah, but if Misty jerked down her T-shirt and exposed the vampire’s jagged white scar across her shoulder, would that impress them? She bet they didn’t have any cuttings that looked that wicked and lived to tell the tale.

She glanced at a shelf of dusty jars filled with liquids, streaks of colors blending and shifting as if they had a life of their own, mesmerizing the viewer, their ancient labels blurred, unreadable. She imagined the contents weren’t FDA approved. But she was curious what they claimed to do for the customer.

Incense and burners covered several shelves and one wall was filled with racks of clothes, black, black, and more black. The Goths were rifling through them. The guy pulled out one featuring a skull with a nose ring and showed it to Misty, raising his brows as if asking her opinion. She wanted to shake her head, her real opinion—it looked too comical to be sinister enough, if that was the look he was going for.

She shrugged. He snickered. She smiled inwardly.

She saw an antique looking jewel box, the jewels encrusted in dust and she opened it up to see a red velvet lining and a place to insert a ring. And then she saw it—a gold ring with a ruby on top, calling to her to put it on, begging, luring. Heart beating rapidly, she set the box on the shelf and closed it.

“Special today only,” the owner said, coming up behind Misty so quietly, she hadn’t noticed her there before. Chills swept down her spine and goosebumps dotted her skin.

Misty shook her head. “No, thanks. Don’t need rings. Never wear them.” She lifted her hands to show her unadorned fingers, two showing a band of white where she’d worn two different rings—one from her fiancé and the other from her mother. Both stolen from her a year ago while she was sleeping, her fiancé and mother both dead from an encounter with a vampire.

She swallowed the lump in her throat. She knew vampire hunters were at risk, just as cops and firefighters were in their line of work. Yet, she’d never thought he and her mother would die. Never thought he wouldn’t be there to protect her, just like she never thought she wouldn’t be there to protect him or her mother either.

She looked at the box again, the jewels on top fake, but simulated to look like emeralds, amethyst, and blood red rubies. And dusty, she reminded herself. She didn’t need any more dust collectors. So why did she turn to ask the woman how much the box was?

“For you, ten dollars.”

She hadn’t even asked the price yet!

“Thanks, don’t need it. I don’t wear rings.” She thought she’d made the point already. She didn’t want the ring in the box. It was huge and gaudy. Pretentious. Fake. And the ring box, silver, jeweled, not her style. She preferred ordinary, plain, contemporary.

“Suit yourself.”

Misty perused the shop some more, looking for who knew what, amazed at how few customers the woman had, but she also had new merchandise to fill in the dusty spots where old merchandise had disappeared. Misty didn’t see anything she wanted, like usual, glanced back at the ring box again, and she swore it was as if everything around it vanished and a soft glow surrounded it.

She should just leave. No way was she taking that ugly thing home with her. Ten dollars was a total waste of money. She’d see it sitting next to her blue glass vase of fresh lilies and the current book she was reading, Forbidden Love, about a vampire who loved a huntress but they were star-crossed lovers forever unless they could break a curse.

How many times had she wished she had someone to love her like that? Not a vampire though. She was a huntress like the heroine in the story, but still, she loved how much they loved each other all the way back to the Highlands of Scotland and for all eternity.

Misty stalked back to the jewelry box and lifted the top. The ring wasn’t there.

Okay, so this was too weird. She closed the box, opened the box. No ring.

She set it on the shelf, turned, and walked out of the store as the owner called out, “Come back anytime.”

It made Misty think of the lyrics from the song “Hotel California,” that the person could check into the hotel anytime he liked, but he could never leave.

Her hand on the door handle of her car, she stopped in place. She had never been interested in anything in the store before. She had never felt anything like the compelling urge she had to hold the jewel box, to see the contents inside. And what was up with the ring and then it just vanished?

She let out her breath and stalked back inside. So she was going to waste her money on one stupid jewelry box, but maybe this would end the morbid fascination she had with the store.

She grabbed the box up and went to the counter.

“You will not be disappointed,” the woman said.

Misty was already disappointed that she would shell out her hard-earned money for something she truly didn’t need and most likely would get rid of at the first opportunity. Working as a library clerk barely paid the bills.

“You will love the emerald. It’s very old, but worn by Lady Desmond centuries ago.”

“Emerald? It had a fake ruby stone. Well, I mean, I thought I saw a ring, but then it wasn’t really there.”

“Ruby?” the woman said frowning as if that was not a good sign at all. She quickly wrapped it up. “That is odd.” But then she pasted on a sinister smile. “Enjoy. May you find what you’re looking for.”

Misty stared at the woman in disbelief. That’s what she’d hope this was. The item she’d been looking for and that would end this bizarre obsession to come here. Ugh. She took the black bag and headed out the door.

Emerald? Ruby? Yeah, whatever.

She got into her car and meant to go straight home, put away the groceries she’d picked up, and do some laundry. She stuck her key in the ignition and couldn’t start the engine, not with wanting to see if there truly was a ring in the box and she had imagined it wasn’t there. She glanced at the black bag sitting on the passenger’s seat. There was no ring in the box.

She pulled the wrapped jewelry box out of the bag and unwrapped it. Then she opened the lid. Inside was the “ruby” ring.

No. Way.

She reached in to touch it, to prove to herself it wasn’t there. But when her fingers touched it, the gold was solid and warm. She slipped it on her finger to prove to herself it was real and not just her imagination.

And then she was standing in woods, misty, dark, spooky. A startled raven flew out of the brush right in front of her, making her scream. An omen of impending death, or a messenger of life.

The shop and the rest of the town had vanished. Her car. Everything gone but the woods. A raven cawing unseen.

The ring. She tried to pull it off, but it wouldn’t budge.

The sound of fighting off in the distance, swords clashing, made her look in that direction. And then horse’s hoof beats pounded the ground headed straight for her.

She expected to see the headless horseman. Or the vampire wearing a cloak and riding like the wind, the one who had marked her that he was coming for her.

Not a brawny Highlander wearing a kilt, shirt, and padded leather vest, and a fierce scowl enough to frighten anyone into their grave. If that wasn’t enough, he was wielding a targe and sword, as if he was ready to cut her in two.

She dropped the stupid jewelry box, threw up her hands in defense, yes, yes, she should have run off. Right. From a man on horseback? Come on. She knew that wouldn’t do any good.

Instead of cutting her down, he scooped her up and muttered in some ancient language, held her tight, and kissed her. “Lady Everline, you have returned to me. You are mine once again.”

Now this, she could live with!

The End

Hope you enjoyed the story and feel free to share with your friends!

old cover

Forbidden Love

Ebook By Terry Spear
Category: Fiction » Literature » Fantasy (paranormal)
Huntress Alena MacLeod is given a mission: work undercover to discover a rogue vampire’s secretive work, then terminate him.Ephraim MacNeill, aka Sutton Bastrop, knows Alena is his Elizabeth MacLeod from an earlier time, and he’s determined to return to the past and right all the wrongs to end the curse placed on the love of his life before it’s too late—again.Together, they must risk all to stop a war between a newly formed Brotherhood of rogue vampires, tired of the status quo, and the League of Hunters, who have ruled for centuries over the vampires—both changed during the Black Death—some of the survivors becoming vampires, and others hunters of the same.

Amazon  US  UK   Canada  Australia  Germany

B & N

 Audible

 

Terry

“Giving new meaning to the term alpha male where fantasy is reality.”

Connect with Terry Spear:

Website: http://www.terryspear.com

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/421434.Terry_Spear

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TerrySpearParanormalRomantics

Twitter: https://twitter.com/TerrySpear

Wilde & Woolly Bears http://www.celticbears.com

Bad Squirrel

bad squirrel (771x800)He’s a bad squirrel because I say so. He’s tipped over the seed tray, which means my puppies will eat the seeds and then Tanner will get me up all night to let him out because seeds are not digestible.

But really, is the squirrel being bad? Or just being a squirrel? The latter of course. And that’s what happens with perceptions.

Gulf fritillary butterfly on kaleidoscope wings spread behind flower1 (792x800)Beautiful Gulf fritillary butterfly on the kaleidoscope butterfly bush playing peek-a-boo. The butterfly is a good guy. He’s colorful and adds beauty to the landscape. But how did he come to be a butterfly? He was a voracious, plant-eater! So in one form, sweet and beautiful and innocent. And in another–just as bad as the squirrel. Perceptions. Yet he is just being a caterpillar/butterfly.

Ruby Throated hummingbird text 648x528And then there is the ruby-throated hummingbird! Beautiful. Here he was feeding off the pentas flowers. But I will say that he’s very territorial. He chased off another hummingbird and he dive bombs me sometimes. lol But I can handle it. They’re beautiful! So see? Even if there’s a negative, I still see them as akin to fairies in the garden. Perceptions.

Have a great day and hope you don’t have any naughty squirrels in your life!

Terry

“Giving new meaning to the term alpha male where fantasy is reality.”

Connect with Terry Spear:

Website: http://www.terryspear.com

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/421434.Terry_Spear

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TerrySpearParanormalRomantics

Twitter: https://twitter.com/TerrySpear

Wilde & Woolly Bears http://www.celticbears.com

Fog is Beautiful

Fog before sunrise, summer

Fog at Dawn

Fog at Dawn, spring

fog, purple butterfly bush, bumblebee 001 (800x533)

Fog after sunrise, summer

bend in the road in fog (640x479)Fog in Scotland when we drove around a bend in the road, October.

fog 005 (800x533)Fog in Crawford, Texas, winter

fog and peach orchard pastel (640x427)Fog in a peach orchard, my next door neighbor’s, pink flowers blossoming in spring.

Terry Eilean Donan (800x452)magical rainbow Eilean Donan (427x640) pretty rainbowFog bow over Eilean Donan Castle, Scotland, September.

Fog is beautiful. Evocative, mystical, spooky, beautiful.

Foggy Days Remind Me of Fall

Foggy Days Remind Me of Fall.

Fog in Scotland, Morning Sunrise

Fog covering the loch in Scotland, Morning Sunrise, September

Fog is fall, winter, spring and summer. spooky fog loch at Eilean Donan Castle (640x427)Reflection of the fog in the loch. Beautiful.

Terry

“Giving new meaning to the term alpha male where fantasy is reality.”

Connect with Terry Spear:

Website: http://www.terryspear.com

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/421434.Terry_Spear

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TerrySpearParanormalRomantics

Twitter: https://twitter.com/TerrySpear

Wilde & Woolly Bears http://www.celticbears.com

More Fun with Alex Markovich’s Photos

Alex has generously offered for writers and artists to use some of his free photos in your blog.

Free images for poets. Part Three. Abandoned Summer Houses. Twelve pictures

tree image Alex MarkovichThis is Alex Markovich’s photo. I love the textures, the clouds, the depth, and the light white on the foreground vegetation.

I’m learning how to use overlays to evoke a different drama or mood so I was playing around the picture.

So here, I added a Layer Mask of Color– Green, then invert the layer mask (control I), and painted over the area in the background I wanted to darken a bit. Then I added blue in the same way for the sky. When you invert, it takes the color away and then you brush it back on to the area where you want it. So for me, it was the sky. I added sun rays also to give it some drama.

With the layer mask, you can change it to different kinds of blending modes–Overlay, Soft Light, Multiply, Darken. I usually switch around to see which works best for me. Then you can also change the opacity, and if one is too dark, you can lighten.

But you have to have a story, right? It was transitioning from winter to spring in the picture above, the flowers just appearing in white blossoms in the foreground, the trees and shrubs in the background just lightly green.

But then autumn came all of a sudden and turned all the spring colors into fall.

tree image Alex Markovich sun rays, darkened background, lightened foreground

I can turn off and on changes I have made so that I can see what the picture looks like without some of the changes.

tree image Alex Markovich sun rays, no green on background, lightened foregroundThis was with no green on the background. Notice with a little darker background, like in Alex’s original photo, it gives it more depth.

When I cut out the blue layer I had added to the sky, it makes the picture appear more vintage.

But then fall storms began to darken the sky…

tree image Alex Markovich sun rays, darkened background, vintagetree image Alex Markovich no sun rays, darkened background, lightened foregroundHere, I removed the sun’s rays. The sun’s rays that I have actually has a darker background, so it darkens the whole picture, which is why adding the sun’s rays in the others shows more darkened tree or shrubs in the foreground than in the one with no sun’s rays. I can brush out the darkness, but I liked it like it was, giving more detail to the textures in the foreground. It’s just a matter of preference.

A light and cheery day. But then…spring came in all of a sudden, greening the background, and showing the power of the flowers in the foreground.

tree image Alex Markovich sun rays, green and white and aquaI loved the hint of white on Alex’s shrubs/trees out front though, and I love green, so I kept trying to turn the picture more green. And here you have it. Change the Color balance to more cyan, and blue, and then I had my greens and whites. 🙂 And I like the blue-green skies, though you can tone them down to make them look more pastel blue. 🙂

And that’s my fun for the morning. Off to finish bears and my word count!

Have a colorful day! 🙂

Terry

“Giving new meaning to the term alpha male where fantasy is reality.”

Connect with Terry Spear:

Website: http://www.terryspear.com

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/421434.Terry_Spear

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TerrySpearParanormalRomantics

Twitter: https://twitter.com/TerrySpear

Wilde & Woolly Bears http://www.celticbears.com

Fun with Photos Using Alex Markovich’s Abandoned Summer House

Alex Markovich has some lovely free images for writers to use to create little stories. Or poetry.

So I took one of his beautiful shots of abandoned summer houses and played with the coloration to make it more moody, or something. His is beautiful, by the way, just like it is.

2016-04-23-10-58-00-2_fotor Alex-Markovitz

2016-04-23-10-58-00-2_fotor Alex-Markovich

golden abandoned summer house Alex-Markovich

Free images for poets. Part Three. Abandoned Summer Houses. Twelve pictures

All of the photos are beautiful, but it’s like a story. When you add a character, it makes it all the more interesting. Think of it. A flood is washing homes away down the river, and yes, it’s horrible, but see a person struggling to hold onto the roof of one of those homes, or a horse swimming in the debris, then it’s terrifying. You can’t rescue the house, but you sure want to rescue the person and the horse.

In this image it evokes all kinds of ideas. A woman caught between different worlds of existence. A woodland fairy who was caught sneaking into the abandoned cottage. A woman seeking shelter from the pending rainstorm.

2016-04-23-10-58-00-2_fotor Alex-Markovich blue

yellow highlights Northern Lights Alex-MarkovichA mystical Northern Light night…

Thanks for the fun, Alex!

Terry

“Giving new meaning to the term alpha male where fantasy is reality.”

Connect with Terry Spear:

Website: http://www.terryspear.com

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/421434.Terry_Spear

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TerrySpearParanormalRomantics

Twitter: https://twitter.com/TerrySpear

Wilde & Woolly Bears http://www.celticbears.com

It’s One of THOSE Mornings…

A fae morning, where they mess with me because I haven’t been working on THEIR story. I swear it!

First, no Internet. No matter what I did, I couldn’t get it to work. So I tried working on my story (am behind because I had to work on two large bears. Mostly done. Need noses and bear paws embroidered), then I made changes, and tried to save. Word hung up. So I tried to restart my computer. Everything was frozen.

So I’m just getting on again, but in the meantime, I went to get my tea, and I spilled it all over the counter. Now if that isn’t the fae at work, I don’t know what is!!

The Dark FaeDoesn’t she look like she could be causing me trouble? Yep!

So I’m trying to get back on track…

closeup of a moth (800x768)-Recovered

Okay, so off to get my 2nd cup of tea!! And hopefully most of it will stay in the cup this time!

Have a great day!!!

Mine is great! 🙂 Now…

Terry

“Giving new meaning to the term alpha male where fantasy is reality.”

Connect with Terry Spear:

Website: http://www.terryspear.com

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/421434.Terry_Spear

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TerrySpearParanormalRomantics

Twitter: https://twitter.com/TerrySpear

Wilde & Woolly Bears http://www.celticbears.com

Does a Bachelor Male Wolf Decorate His House for Christmas???

Such is the question I was pondering last night before I went to bed and still was pondering this morning.

My frame of reference include just a few men and I can’t imagine any of them decorating a house for Christmas as bachelor males. Even my mother wasn’t going to after my dad died, but I went over and decorated for her every year. She loved to decorate, but just found it a chore later on. Me? I always decorate for everything, even if I don’t believe I’ll have company, because for me, it’s special and it makes me feel good. Now, my next-door neighbor is big on lights….even for Halloween, he tells me!

I walk into a store that is decorated like this and I want my place to look like it, though it won’t be decorated quite as homey as this. And for the first time in years, I won’t have a fireplace. 🙁 But I have a lovely big patio, and that is worth much more to me. 🙂 Yes, it does get cold here. I would sit in front of the fireplace at my daughter’s house and enjoy the warmth on a winter’s day.

Salado Christmas 2012 002 (605x800)Christmas is coming (640x427)So tell me, if a guy is an Arctic wolf and has decorated for Christmas in his home on the lake in northern Minnesota, what does it look like? He’s an Arctic wolf, but not from the Arctic…He’s from Seattle.

 

White Wolf Christmas

White Wolf Christmas

So what do you think?

Terry

“Giving new meaning to the term alpha male where fantasy is reality.”

Connect with Terry Spear:

Website: http://www.terryspear.com

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/421434.Terry_Spear

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TerrySpearParanormalRomantics

Twitter: https://twitter.com/TerrySpear

Wilde & Woolly Bears http://www.celticbears.com

One Last Job–Free Vampire Senior Citizen Huntress Story

Okay, so first off, I wake this morning thinking I needed to do something this morning. Well, it’s trash day. That must be it. I have nothing on my calendar. So what else could it be? I’m running around, wracking my brain, coming up with nothing. But it just seemed like there was something else I was supposed to do. Something IMPORTANT. Other than taking out the garbage, working  on bears, working on word count, doing critiques, writing my blog. JUST SOMETHING.

I’m out with the puppies, cleaning up after them when I see the most awesome sunrise ever. So I dash into the house, puppies right on my heels, grab the camera, and dash out the front door because you know sunsets and sunrises don’t wait for anyone.

It was the perfect vampire sunrise!

And that triggered what I was forgetting!!!!!  My special something for Monday! A free short story: One Last Job. And boy, can I relate. Can you?

sunrise stormy drama (800x533)
https://s3.amazonaws.com/embed.animoto.com/play.html?w=swf/production/vp1&e=1471270797&f=uowCNMD1fXU18l3ogOGEZw&d=0&m=p&r=360p+720p&volume=100&start_res=720p&i=m&asset_domain=s3-p.animoto.com&animoto_domain=animoto.com&options=

One Last Job

by Terry Spear

 

Ida Mae Bremerton studied the cloth that bound her wrists as the faint glow of candlelight flickered off one of the walls. She shook her head at herself in the dark great room. All she could think of was her niece, Rachel Bremerton, whose uncle, her brother, didn’t believe in women hunting vampires. Give me a break! But then again, Rachel had fallen in love with a vampire! Still, he had been a hunter. Ida Mae was glad her branch of the family didn’t see anything wrong with women huntresses.

“I can’t believe I could get myself into this same predicament, twice this week. I must really be losing it!” She sighed deeply, not giving up, just…thinking. The vampires’ minions had tied her up while the vampires slept until this evening.

 

Glancing at the sliver of a crack in the heavy drapes that covered the floor-to-ceiling-length atrium door, she frowned to see the light fading fast. “They’ll be coming for me soon.” She wriggled and struggled until she was finally able to pull her hands free of the cloth. “Good thing their henchman can’t tie knots worth a fig!”

 

Freed, Ida Mae ran to the blackened glass door, her arthritis pinging in her left knee. She jerked the door open to see the sun setting in an orange ball of fire. She bolted down the path to her car and pulled the door open. After sliding into the driver’s seat and slamming her door shut, afraid the sound would alert every vampire in the house she was there, she poked her key into the ignition while the sweet scent of garlic filled the interior of the Trans Am. She glanced down at the passenger’s seat to see her necklace of garlic curled in a loop.

 

“That’s what I forgot to wear,” she mumbled under her breath. Not that she really thought it worked, as in repelled vampires, but it was her good luck charm. Not once had she been captured by a vampire’s blood bonds while wearing it.

 

After mashing down the gas peddle, she braced as the car lurched forward, then roared around the circular drive of the old Victorian mansion. She turned back toward the south side of the city, Dallas,…and home.

 

When she drove into her driveway, she was surprised to see her sons’ cars parked there already.

 

“Mom!” Thomas, the eldest exclaimed, hurrying out of the house to greet her. “We’ve been worried something awful!” He glanced down at the red marks on her wrists. He frowned at her as he put his arm around her shoulders and led her into the home. “Tell me you didn’t go after them on your own.”

 

They’d had this discussion before. Her sons wanted to use caution. She wanted to take the vampires out before they increased their numbers. That was the difference between the good ones—the ones who lived among them and behaved, and the rogues, who turned people against their will. “I guess I forgot to tell you the plan.” Not really. She had her own plan. In fact, she and her deceased husband would have done this together. She didn’t know why her sons were so restrained all the time. Don’t delay, get it done, was her motto.

 

“You’ve been doing an awful lot of that, Mom,” her younger son said. “Forgetting the plan, I mean.”

 

John was gifted with the bow, Thomas with the sword. She couldn’t have been prouder of her sons. Though she wished they would settle down and give her grandchildren.

 

“Yes, well, I’ve had a lot of things on my mind of late.”

 

They exchanged glances as she entered the kitchen and plugged in the coffee pot. Tom cleared his throat. “We’ve been talking about the matter, and you know after Dad died, you haven’t been quite yourself lately.”

 

“Nonsense,” Ida Mae said. But it was true. She’d missed him terribly. She kept thinking of all the vampires they’d taken down over the years, how they’d do it until they were ready to retire, which was next year.

 

“It’s true. You’ve been forgetting an awful lot lately.” John stared at the coffee pot for a moment, then unplugged it. He shook the pot, then hearing nothing inside said, “It’s dry as the desert, Mom.”

 

“Oh.” Ida Mae grabbed the pot from him and poked it under the faucet. “You’re distracting me.” She was a multi-tasker extraordinaire, but sometimes she forgot one of the steps in the multi-tasking department.

 

“You know, Dad said that the two of you were thinking of retiring from the business.”

 

“Next year. Yes, well, he died before we had a chance. The business is all I’ve ever known. What would you have me do?”

 

“You loved to dance. Why not try the senior citizen’s dance that’s scheduled tomorrow night?”

 

“I can’t retire from my work. You boys need me.”

 

“Of course. But couldn’t you at least take a little time off from your work, until your mind is a little more on the task at hand? It is rather a deadly business after all and—” Tom looked hopeful she’d agree.

 

“The senior citizen’s dance.” Ida Mae nodded. She poured the hot water into her cup, then stared at the clear water.

 

Tom smiled at her, reached into the cupboard and pulled down the jar of instant coffee. “Yes, tomorrow night. Avery and Louise will meet you there. The break from work will be good for you.”

 

Okay, so it was once a week. She could manage a little social life too, but she wasn’t putting the vampire business on hold. She would just work around it.

***

Two weeks later, Tom and John hurried to her home again, and Ida Mae couldn’t understand what the concern was this time. When she greeted them at the door, Tom blurted out, “We’ve been concerned about you! We were ready to call the police. We haven’t been able to get in touch with you night or day!”

 

“Oh, Tom, I’ve met the most marvelous man.” Ida Mae took a deep breath and let it out. She had. He was wonderful! Not the same as her deceased husband, but he was different and just as much fun.

 

“But father,” John said.

 

Tom poked him in an attempt to shut him up, then said, “So you’ve met someone?”

 

“He’s been just marvelous.”

 

John frowned at her as he watched her take a seat on the sofa. “You said that already.”

 

“Yes, he’s taken me out to the orchestra, supper, and movies, you know—the ones I really like—historical, true-life adventures. I’ve been having a wonderful time.”

 

John frowned. “And you met him…”

 

“At the senior citizen’s dance. You were so right. I’ve just had such a terrific time. I’ve even decided to retire from the business for good.”

 

“But…” John said.

 

“That’s good,” Tom interrupted. “You need time to enjoy yourself, Mom. You’ve worked so hard all of these years. It’s time you enjoyed yourself.”

 

“Yes, you’re certainly right about that,” Ida Mae said as she swept a loose platinum-blonde curl off her cheek.

 

“He hasn’t been too forward with you?” John asked.

 

Tom twisted his mouth in annoyance as he shook his head at his brother.

 

“No, he’s been the perfect gentleman. After two weeks, he’s only given me a slight peck on the cheek. He hangs on my every word. I feel alive again since, well, since your father died.”

 

John’s frown deepened. “Don’t you think this is a little sudden like?”

 

“No,” Ida Mae said. “I always knew the time would come, that I would have to quit the job. It’s time for you young folks to continue without me.”

 

“But we have this one job that will take more than just Tom and I to do,” John said.

 

Tom shook his head. “Mom doesn’t need to help us with this bunch.”

 

“Where?” Ida Mae sat taller in her seat. She could quit right after that.

 

“At the old Victorian House on Main Street.”

 

“Ah, yes, that one,” Ida Mae said.

 

“She doesn’t need to help us,” Tom replied as his voice deepened with concern.

 

“She’s been there,” John said. “She knows where their lair is – – she can help us with just this one last job!”

 

And she agreed. The finale to a career of taking down the monsters in the city. She owed it to humankind. To the memory of Thomas. And to all of those who had trained her when she was much younger. She could do this. One last job.

 

***

 

Early the next morning, Ida Mae sped up the drive of the old mansion with her sons following her in John’s Suburban. After parking the cars, they grabbed their gear. Tom glanced over at his mother dressed in her trim pale blue jeans with a shirt decorated in sequined stars and moons. “You know, you didn’t really have to come, despite what John said.”

 

“It’s just one last job, Tom. I wouldn’t think of letting you do this one on your own.” She grabbed her garlic necklace, then pulled it over her head.

 

“Got everything?” John asked Tom.

 

Tom nodded, then took a deep breath. “Come on, then. Let’s get this over with.”

 

After the three stepped into the foyer, Ida Mae hurried to pull the curtains aside from one of the windows. John rolled his eyes and whispered, “We don’t have time for…”

 

“Now, John,” Ida Mae replied, “you know I always let the cheery light in while we work. I can’t stand to work in the dark gloom.”

 

She hurried over to two more windows and jerked the heavy velvet cloth aside, then rubbed her hands together to wipe off the dust. “Okay,” she said, “it’s down this way.” She pointed to an open doorway leading to the basement. Most vampires slept in beds in bedrooms, like normal people, but with heavy canopies around their beds. These vampires lived like some bizarre Gothic version of the vampires of old.

 

“Got the flashlights?” Tom asked John.

 

John fumbled around in one of the canvas bags, then pulled one out for each of them.

 

“That’s okay, dear,” his mother said. “I’d like to keep my hands free, if you don’t mind.”

 

Tom led the three down the stairs and as the steps creaked with their weight, the muscles in his neck tightened. The cool dank musty smell permeated the dark room which was pierced only by the beam of the two flashlights. Ida Mae looked for any sign of a window in the basement while her sons examined the crates as they looked for the coffins they assumed would be there.

 

“Here,” Ida Mae whispered as she found a large paint-blackened window.

 

“We need to find the coffins, Mom,” John whispered, pushing a crate aside.

 

“Oh!” Ida Mae shouted as she climbed onto a chair to reach the window, but the rotting wicker had suddenly given way under her weight.

 

Ida Mae fell to the floor. Tom hurried over to help his mother stand, while the creaking of rusted hinges prickled the air. Everyone stood still.

 

“Good evening,” a voice in the dark said, and as Tom and John shined their lights on the face still half-covered in the shadows of the crates, Ida Mae exclaimed, “Kenneth!”

 

Her sons turned to look at their mother and John said, “Don’t tell me you know this man.”

 

“Why yes, he does a great Jitterbug.”

 

“I take it these are your sons, renown in these parts for their trade, Ida Mae,” Kenneth said as he watched Tom fumble around in his bag for a wooden stake.

 

John kept his eye on the elderly man as he said, “What’s wrong, Tom?”

 

“I don’t seem to have any stakes in here. Not a one.”

 

“Oh,” Ida Mae said in a muffled way, as she clasped her hand to her mouth.

 

“Don’t tell me…”

 

“I was cleaning the bag. Maybe I forgot to put them back in.”

 

Kenneth reached down for a bag resting near one of the crates as John backed up toward his mother to protect her from the menace before them. Kenneth pulled a perfectly-carved wooden stake from the bag. John pulled out a cross.

Kenneth laughed. “That’ll keep them at bay, but you’ll need something more to put the poor souls to rest.”

 

“You’re not one of them?” Tom asked.

 

“Hardly. I’m rather surprised to see Ida Mae here, though.”

 

She smiled back at the gentleman. “We never discussed our occupations with each other.”

 

“No,” he said. “Whenever I mention the type of work I do, the lady takes a powder. I’ve found it’s best not to mention it at all.”

 

The air suddenly filled with a foul-smelling substance and the experienced hunters knew that their prey would soon be the hunters if they didn’t act quickly. “Have you any more stakes?” Tom asked as he rushed over to Kenneth’s side.

 

“Grab as many as you need.” Kenneth readied a bow and a wooden stake.

 

“It’s not yet dark out,” Ida Mae said under her breath as the men prepared to face the unseen threat that awakened nearby. She reached for a crate and finding it was stationary, she climbed on top. The window lock was just beyond her finger tips. She turned to see Kenneth release the stake as he let go of the string of his bow and a blood-curdling cry rang out, then echoed off of the walls. Ida Mae jumped off the crate and grabbed one of the flashlights laying on the floor nearby. After climbing on top of the crate again, she shoved at the lock with the edge of the flashlight, but the rusted metal wouldn’t budge at all.

 

Kenneth knocked another stake as Tom wrestled one of the creatures to the floor while his brother readied a hammer to the stake. As Kenneth let the second stake fly, another creature screamed out in pain and dissolved into ashes.

 

“Ida Mae!” Kenneth shouted. “There are too many. Get out of here!”

 

Ida Mae watched as her boys finished the job they’d begun, then grappled with another.

 

“I can’t leave!” she exclaimed. “If this is to be my last job, then so be it!” Then with as much effort as she could muster, she swung the flashlight against the window pane. A slight crack appeared in the window as two more creatures screamed in agony. She struck the window again. The crack spread across the pane like a fissure creeping across the frozen ice. She felt a hand on her leg, threatening to pull her from her make-shift stool, Ida Mae struck the glass again. The sun spilled into the room all at once.

 

The room was filled with shrieks and then only piles of dust remained. “I don’t like working in the dark,” Ida Mae said as John helped her down from the crate. “It’s much more cheerful to work in the light.”

 

Kenneth rushed over to Ida Mae and gave her a warm embrace. “You’re my kind of gal, Ida Mae.”

 

“This was your last job,” Tom said as he gathered up his equipment.

 

“I don’t know,” Ida Mae said as she smiled back at Kenneth. “I believe I’ve had rather a change of plans.”

***

Huntress for Hire

She has her sights set on the worst vampire of them all…

Also Available:

Huntress for Hire

By Terry Spear

 

He’s a hunter turned vampire, she’s a huntress of vampires—he’s needs her cooperation to free his family; she’s trained to kill his kind. Rebel vampire huntress Rachael Bremerton wants revenge against Piaras, one of the most ruthless vampires in Dallas, for the murder of her parents. But when she’s lured by another vampire, Adonis, into the darkness—the same darkness she’s feared since she was a child—she’s torn between her huntress sensibilities and some strange desire to be with the creature she’s meant to despise and destroy. Adonis, a hunter turned vampire, has been ordered by Piaras to bring Rachel to him untouched. In return, Piaras will release Adonis’s family unharmed. But when Adonis first sees Rachael, his hunter desire to have a huntress mate kicks in, or is it the dark heart of the vampire that makes him crave her so? Turning Rachel over to Piaras becomes less of an option. But can he find a way to free his family, claim Rachael for his own, and keep her family from discovering he is a hunter turned vampire—a creature they will all feel obligated to hunt down and kill?

Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Huntress-for-Hire-ebook/dp/B004TMPMC6

B & N: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/huntress-for-hire-terry-spear/1030574315?ean=2940012313928

Kobo: http://www.kobobooks.com/ebook/Huntress-for-Hire/book-uB-NVziowUqyaP70eSYsOg

iBooks: https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/huntress-for-hire/id1037936586?mt=11

 

 

Terry

“Giving new meaning to the term alpha male where fantasy is reality.”

Connect with Terry Spear:

Website: http://www.terryspear.com

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/421434.Terry_Spear

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TerrySpearParanormalRomantics

Twitter: https://twitter.com/TerrySpear

Wilde & Woolly Bears http://www.celticbears.com

Back to Bears…

Blue rainbow bear and baby curves (624x640)I have an order for 1 large blue rainbow bear and 1 pink rainbow bear set to go to Australia!

And two more bears!

I had to get word count last night by hand because the storms were so bad, so I go to turn on my computer and it’s not working! Oops! Had to pull the plug!

Have a great one! It’s still raining, and the temperature is cool, and I’m loving it!

Terry

“Giving new meaning to the term alpha male where fantasy is reality.”

Connect with Terry Spear:

Website: http://www.terryspear.com

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/421434.Terry_Spear

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TerrySpearParanormalRomantics

Twitter: https://twitter.com/TerrySpear

Wilde & Woolly Bears http://www.celticbears.com

You Know You Need Rain When…

Everywhere you go–the grocery store, the post office, the bank–everyone’s talking about it. The woman behind me in line at the grocery store said she’d just texted her husband: It’s going to rain!

Yep. It wasn’t supposed to until Sat night, so I looked at the forecast and it changed it’s mind and said this morning at 4 am. Well, it rained at 7 am. And you know what? I don’t care! Just as long as we get it. But no flooding. Thank you very much. We have heavy thunderstorms starting in 15 mins, and it was nice out, cool even, so I was out pulling grass in the light rain. Yes!

We’re supposed to have rain for around ten days. Yay! But please don’t flood.

airliner storm clouds 016 name (800x533)Do you see the airliner next to that cloud? That shows just how big that cloud is.

storm clouds 023 anvil white and gold (800x533)This is an anvil cloud. I kept trying to get around to get a better angle of the clouds, but the houses were in the way. I considered going around to take a picture around the block, lightning was flashing and it can strike from 10 miles away, so I thought better of it.

storm clouds 009 beautiful (800x533)So the houses just needed to be moved. But on the other hand, I think it’s kind of interesting. Like the tip of the iceberg. Not knowing what lays beyond. The mystery. And as you can see, the system started out at the last picture shown, and then ended up in the massive one way above the homes.

Today, it’s just gray. But that’s okay. Because rain is coming! And I’m 2,000 ahead on word count again! And I have 2 bears orders to get out. And more critiques to do. And…I need to get to work!

Have a wonderful day! It’s cooler here!!! Woohoo!

Terry

“Giving new meaning to the term alpha male where fantasy is reality.”

Connect with Terry Spear:

Website: http://www.terryspear.com

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/421434.Terry_Spear

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TerrySpearParanormalRomantics

Twitter: https://twitter.com/TerrySpear

Wilde & Woolly Bears http://www.celticbears.com