Friday, November 20, 2015

Next snippet, Murder on the North Shore

Karonen dragged Cassie to his truck. 
I shouldn’t have hit her so hard! Dead or relaxed weight was heavy. He knew that from experience. Lucky for him, she had made it to the road. Carefully letting Cassie down after dragging her for twenty yards, he jogged back to the truck and drove it to her. With difficulty, he hoisted her partially onto the bed of the truck, and, holding her upper body in place, he hefted the rest of her in. After shutting the liftgate, he closed the tonneau cover, quickly returned to the drivers seat and drove back to his home.
Safely back in her quarters, he waited for her to wake. An hour and a half later, she still had not awakened.
He tried shaking her, yelling her name; nothing worked. Karonen paced inside her cell. This would not do. It had been stupid of him to let her escape in the first place. Now, what do I have to work with?
It was an experiment gone bad. He had only wanted to study her reactions, her emotions, and then glean information from her after recapture.
Cassie stirred, then moaned.
Karonen’s hopes jumped. She’s going to make it! A joyous smile appeared on his desperate looking face. He went to her, feverishly arranging her on the bed as she continued to moan. She’ll be okay, she’ll be okay. He didn’t need another companion gone bad. 
The fisherman had been an error. He faulted his judgement for taking him in the first place.
Six months prior to chancing upon Miss Bandleson on the Superior Hiking Trail, he had made the mistake of taking Tom Hecimovich, a younger man than he who was strong and determined. Eventually, Mr. Hecimovich needed to be dealt with in a most severe manner. His body would never be found; Karonen was sure of that.
The palpable relief he now felt released all emotion from him. He sat on the folding chair he kept in Bandleson’s room, and breathed deeply and buried his face in his hands. Five minutes later, after resolving to trap another male, he walked over to Bandleson. 
She opened her eyes and stared at him.
“Welcome back, Cassie,” he said warmly.
She closed her eyes again and turned her face away. He patted her arm and then left.
Pausing at the gate to her chamber, he glanced back, as if he wasn’t quite sure she was all right. Karonen was satisfied when he observed her move to her side; he latched the gate.
“Good night, Cassie,” he said.


Ten hours later, Cassie opened her eyes again. She moved from her side to her back. The bed she lay in was comfortable, to the point of annoyance. She didn’t want to be comfortable in her prison. Anger and despair filled her head as she ruminated about her lost opportunity for escape.
Thinking of escape again, she took stock of her functioning body parts; she moved her arms, legs, fingers, and toes. Everything worked, although her ankle and head still hurt. Cassie also noted she was not chained in any way. She was surprised, but happy for that circumstance.
Her “room” was a rock and timber chamber with a bed, a small bookcase filled with classic literature, a round, wooden table, a mirror, a thick area rug covering half the floor, a chandelier hanging from a massive timber in the center, a portable toilet, and a wash basin. A bucket of fresh water was always provided. At least it always seemed fresh. If she thought of the “room” as a bedroom, it was much larger than anything she had ever possessed. It was probably thirty feet by fifteen with a ceiling height of ten. She could put a children’s basketball court in here, or a wine rack near the folding chair, or flowers on the shelf above the bed. 
She was disgusted with herself. Don’t start thinking of this place as a home. It’s a prison!
While staring at the walls, Cassie stood, walked to the nearest one, and ran a hand along it until she had circled the room. Why isn’t it damp? It should be wet, at least a little. She pondered the question, but didn’t resolve it. During her stay of nine days or so, she couldn’t be sure, the question had never occurred to her before. It doesn’t matter. What difference would it make? 
She sat on the bed and sighed deeply, holding her face in her hands.
I can’t believe I ran right into him! Idiot.  Next time I won’t make the same mistake.
She heard the familiar sound of footsteps and readied herself for the appearance of Mr. Karonen.
“Good, you’re awake. You had a rough night so I brought you croissants, cheese, and meats. The cheese is a nice Blue Castello. It has a soft, buttery and tangy taste. I’m sure you’ll love it,” Karonen said. “And the meats are fresh from the tourist trap right down the highway. The water is from my tap, good Lake Superior water.” He smiled, and placed the tray he had meticulously arranged on the table near her bed. 
The tourist trap down the road? She filed another note in her head. Cassie said nothing, but stared at Karonen, who looked like a jovial grandfather.  She thought, What was wrong with this man?
Karonen seemed to wait for her to speak, so finally, she said it without emotion. “What is wrong with you? Why are you doing this to me?”
He flinched a little before he said, “The croissant is warm and you will want to spread the cheese on it before it gets cold. Please enjoy your meal and we’ll talk later.”
“Mr. Karonen, we need to talk now.” Again, she said it evenly, which seemed to take him off guard.
It was his turn to stare. She stared back…waiting for him to speak.
“I collected you.”
“You collected me.”
He looked away, as if he was searching for something on the wall to her left. She turned to where he stared. On the wall was the photo she had noticed before, but never given much thought. It was a young woman, not pretty, but pleasant looking.
He continued to stare at the photo as if he were immersing himself in every fine detail and extracting every scintilla of emotion he could from it.
“Who is she?” She finally asked.
“Methodist was her name,” he said.
She noted the word ‘was’.
“Do I remind you of her?” She asked.
He smiled wryly. “No,” he said, and then shook his head. The action seemed to relieve him of his absorption with the photo. “No, you are nothing like Methodist.” He paused slightly before he backed from the cell and latched the gate. “I’ll come back for your plate later.”

Cassie looked down and plucked a croissant from the tray. She spread a thick mass of the Blue Castello cheese on it, and then took a large bite of heaven. 

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Free book promotion beginning November 13, 2015 and ending November 17, 2015

The following books will be free during the dates stated above: Trust Me Now, Cassandra's Moon, and Brothers: Tale of the River Rats.

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Another unedited snippet from "Murder on the North Shore"

Her ankle burned; it still bore the marks of leg irons. Reflexively, she rubbed it with both hands. The night was black, interrupted only by a sliver of light from the moon. Sitting on a rock, surrounded by trees, Cassie Bandleson wondered where the hell she was. The opening in the hill that she had crawled from was several hundred yards away. Which direction? She scarcely knew anymore. 
Perspiration dripped from her face to the arm of her flannel shirt. She strained to see anything that would help her decide which direction to run, because run she must. He could return and discover she was gone. Distance needed to be put between her and her prison of ten days, twenty…she really didn’t know how long. There had been no way of telling day from night, only her sleeping patterns helped her estimate the time. Her best guess was that she had been a prisoner of the man for eighteen days.
Cassie stood. Trying to ignore the pain, she stumbled through the dark, brush tearing at her clothes, rocks smashing into her knees, and tree branches swatting her head. My God, I’ve got to make it out of here! Run! 
Her legs pumped her forward as her steeled heart ordered her body to move, and move quickly. She extended her arms and hands in front to protect her face from all obstacles, seen and unseen. Cassie didn’t wonder how her body could take this punishment; when you are running for your life, you don’t care. You just… move.
She pushed forward, the forest seeming to rise up against her, tearing, clutching, ripping at her clothes. And then she fell and tumbled, slamming into trees and boulders before coming to rest at the bottom of a ravine. Breathing heavily, she slowly tried to move her limbs, first her arms, then legs. She laughed. All’s well.
Hearing the rumble of some sort of vehicle in the distance, her hopes rose. Go that way. She literally pointed with her left hand and unconsciously limped toward the sound, but more carefully now. Take it slow.
Following the ravine, which seemed more like a cut in the hillside, she knew she was descending; her momentum was always downhill, even if she couldn’t see well, she could feel it.  The shallow walls of the ravine gave her a sense of being protected. She even started to believe it.
Voices! She heard voices; she was sure of it. Picking her way toward the sound, she was able to tell it was from a radio talk show, playing much too loudly. Maybe it was a couple of kids parked, making out, whatever, they were going to get a surprise from a beaten up, struggling hiker. She smiled as she worked her way closer.
She stood in the shadows, observing, looking for signs of life from the pickup. It was getting later. The radio talk turned to jazz. No kids would be listening to jazz. She turned and melted further into the forest, sneaking a worried peek back at the truck. The dome light was on. Someone had opened the door. She started moving away faster and breathing harder. It was him! Soon she was flailing at branches and running, her heart pounding so hard she thought it would burst from her chest. 
A tree branch caught her in the eye, causing an involuntary scream to mini-erupt from her mouth. Tears came quickly. Hysteria was near as she realized he might have heard the cry. Now, nearly blind in one eye, lost in the night, body aching, she calmed herself as best she could and limped away… until… a flashlight beam illuminated her. Hysteria took full hold, and she turned the other way, screaming, crashing through the brush and trees with the beam of light partially showing her the way until she emerged on a gravel road.

Thunderous footsteps were close behind. She screamed as loud as she could and turned to face him. She flailed her arms and struck out forcefully. The light enveloped her, and pain wracked her head as she went down, crying…and then darkness.