Prompt Openings: Gambling

spinning-cover-2x3I am not a gambler … in any sense of the word. BUT I was asked to write a short story dealing with games of chance. While SPINNING failed to make the cut for the anthology I wrote it for, I was pleased with the resulting tale. I hope you enjoy the opening 😀

BRETT D’AGOSTINO LEANED AGAINST the roulette table, hands clasped, eyes haunted, as he watched his life careen around a wheel of blurred red and black in the form of a little white ball. How had this happened? How could his entire existence be riding on a wheel of fortune?

He’d always been a solid citizen. The man who rose every morning with the dawn, dressed in a white shirt, dark pants, well-shined shoes, knotted on a conservative tie and, after a sensible breakfast of oatmeal and orange juice, made the commute to his office.

Numbers were his expertise. Accounting his profession. He knew the odds, probably better than anyone at the table other than the croupier, but that hadn’t stopped him from placing his chips and calling his bet, “Seventeen to the maximum, with approved override.”

Now all he could do was wait. With his heart in his throat, sweat beading his brow, his hands clasped to keep them from shaking. He’d signed his home over to the bank, scraped together every penny he could and then told management he wanted to place one make-or-break wager. Two hundred thousand dollars rode that wheel. When the ball dropped, he’d either be able to book passage to Arcturus Prime, or he’d be penniless, his family homeless.

How could he have been so stupid as to bet his family’s future on a spinning ball?

How could he allow his son to die?

He’d cast his lot with the Fates. He would live or die on the vagary of chance … and so would Jeremy.

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Prompt Openings: The Right to Vote

suffrage-2x3Writing this story was a departure for me since straight historical — no time travel or paranormal themes — is not my genre of choice.

I had written a blog post several years ago encouraging women voters to exercise the rights that our foremothers suffered to earn for us. I knew when I began my research for that post that my right to vote hadn’t come freely, but I hadn’t realized the extent to which “suffrage” and “suffering” were related when it came to women in the early 20th century. When I remembered that research, “Sisters in Suffrage” was born.

I hope readers will agree that this fictional tale of women’s suffrage in the United States is particularly apropos in this election year.

Here then is the opening to Sisters in Suffrage:

I WAS NINETEEN YEARS old that cold November night in 1917. Even though the world was at war, a pretty girl of good family such as myself should have been attending dances and being wooed by handsome young men. I should have been accepting my place in society as a wealthy man’s decorative bride. Never should I have been subjected to the humiliations of prison nor beatings at the hands of brutal guards.

Never should I have had the audacity to stand sentinel to my beliefs with a banner in hand in front of the White House.

I had made my choices and they had led me to a night of terror.

*~*~*

THOUGH MY HEART POUNDED with excitement and my mind buzzed with nervous questions, I strode confidently along the street, my navy skirt and linen petticoats swishing around my ankles, the lace of my starched white mutton-sleeved blouse brushed my chin, and a little feathered hat perched jauntily on my upswept dark hair. The air was redolent with flowers from Lafayette Park and birdsong lilted in the breeze. In short, it was a beautiful summer day in Washington, D.C.

I stopped before the stately three-story home that housed my destination, Alice Paul’s newly formed National Women’s Party. Had I done the right thing in coming here? I’d defied my father, who was even now assiduously seeking an advantageous marriage for his only daughter. I’d left his home and protection without permission. Had I made a wise choice? My heart hammered in my chest and my throat constricted. Panic near to choked me.

I closed my eyes and willed myself to calm. Too late for misgivings now. I had arrived. Opening my eyes and breathing in the sweet summer air, I studied the women who moved purposefully across the lawn and porch, who threaded in and out the ornately carved front door. Young women barely old enough to be out of short skirts, matrons who would look at home with children round their knees, and dignified matriarchs who might be holding court over large family gatherings. A full range of the feminine spectrum. My panic eased. This was where I belonged, these were my equals, my sex, but more than that, my sisters in suffrage. For we were all here for one purpose: to join Alice Paul in demanding that our government, as represented by the man who resided across

the park in the White House, hear and respect our voices.
I settled my face in what I hoped was a pleasant expression, lifted the latch on the

front gate, and stepped onto the stone pavers that led to the porch. A young woman separated herself from a group gathered around a long table and approached, her golden hair shining in the afternoon sun.

“Hello,” she said with a smile. “Are you new? I don’t believe I’ve seen you here before.”

I licked my lips and straightened my shoulders. “Yes, I’ve only just arrived from New York.” I glanced again at the women who chatted and laughed as they worked around me. “Is this the NWP?”

Her beautiful, liquid-brown eyes widened and filled with a fervent light. “Oh, yes. Have you come to join us?”

I held out my gloved hand, which she immediately clasped with paint-stained fingers. “I have. My name is Emily Tuttle, and I’ve come to stand sentinel with Alice Paul.”

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Prompt Openings: Family Expectations

familydaze-cover-2x3And another tale about Dani Erickson, a perfectly normal teenage girl who just happens to be a hereditary demon hunter.

Dani is the answer to her grandfather’s cherished dream – a seventh seventh. Unfortunately, since his dream was of a seventh son of a seventh son, he’s unaware that he accomplished his goal…and Dani’s not about to fess up.

Here’s the opening to Family Daze, Dani Erickson’s third published adventure!

I SEE DEMONS and they’re not pretty. Take the goblin hovering behind Ms. Hockinson’s chair for example: scaly, maroon skin; long filthy claws; sharp, protruding teeth; only vaguely humanoid. The nasty creature stood erect, clothed in a torn, brown tunic. His eyes, black and malevolent, glittered with intelligence, and something else, something truly disturbing … dark amusement.

A shiver of anticipation zinged along my spine. I was born to battle demons. Me. Not one of my six older brothers. I might be the youngest child and only girl, but I was also the one heredity had chosen—and this idiot had wandered onto my turf. He had no clue how dead he was. Yet.

I weighed my options while I sized up my opponent. A glance at the institutional clock clinging to the wall above the chalkboard behind Ms. Hockinson’s desk informed me that the school day would end in five minutes. Classmates squirmed in their desks, surreptitiously gathering their belongings in anticipation of the longed-for final bell.

The demon examined the class, his gaze moving from student to student while one clawed hand encircled my teacher’s throat. He smacked his lips and a long thin tongue darted between his teeth to lick Ms. Hockinson’s ear.

She cleared her throat and flicked a hand toward his face as if warding off a pesky fly.

The clock ticked nearer the hour, and then the unthinkable happened. The second hand stopped, suspending time.

Every person in the room stiffened, frozen in mid-action just like the clock. Everyone, except the demon and me. No way was I going to be stuck in Ms. Hockinson’s social studies class until the end of time! That demon was going down.

The demon grinned, and I launched my attack. Sliding out of my chair, I jumped to the top of my desk, flipped over Jeremy Brody’s head and landed in a crouch before Ms. Hockinson’s desk. On the way to standing I yanked twin stiletto blades from the concealed sheaths sewn artfully into my favorite high-top boots.

“Well, well,” said the demon. “What have we here? A human immune to the ravages of time?” He licked Ms. Hockinson’s ear again and stroked her neck. “You must wait a bit, my tasty morsel. One of your students needs my attention.”

He released my teacher and hurtled across her desk.

I skipped sideways, letting one stiletto trail across his midsection.

The stroke surprised him. He glanced at his bloodied belly, roared, and lunged.

I danced away, using my knives as I’d been trained — like a picador with a bull. Wounding him with small, precise cuts designed to sap his strength and enrage his ego.

We scuffled briefly, but silver blades and sacramental preparation gave me the edge. I leapt and rolled, bounced and twirled, and each time a hand passed his flesh, my blade left a mark.

At last, he staggered toward Cynthia Larrabee, intending to take a hostage to shield his escape. He had waited too long.

I raced past my desk, exchanged stilettos for backpack and withdrew the sword from the concealed scabbard running down its back. With an aerial leap that would’ve done a ninja proud, I landed between the demon and his target, momentum carrying my sword arm through a perfectly timed arc. The demon’s head flew to the opposite side of the room while his body crumpled at my feet.

I leaned over the remains, cleaned my blade on his tunic and, pulling a vial from my pocket, sprinkled holy water over the body. Moving quickly, but carefully, I made my way back to my desk, stowed my stilettos, sheathed the sword, straightened my hair and resumed my seat. I looked up just in time to see the demon fizzle out of existence, along with all traces of his blood. The second hand resumed its circuit around the clock face and the final bell of the day rang.

Ms. Hockinson dabbed her handkerchief across her neck, looked up with a frazzled sigh, and called, “Class dismissed!”

I smiled to myself, stood and shouldered my backpack. Sometimes, being a hereditary demon hunter rocked. Too bad Grandpa would never know that his self-imposed breeding program had worked. He hadn’t attained his goal of a seventh son of a seventh son, but he’d gotten his ultimate desire: me.

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Prompt Openings: Pulse Pounder

SilverTipped-Cover-6x9As I mentioned in an earlier post, thrillers and pulse pounders aren’t really my area of expertise. However, it’s good to stretch and try new things 😀 I was actually very pleased with the story this prompt produced. Here’s how it starts…

MY COUSIN EVAN THREW A PARACHUTE at my head. I dodged, caught the pack and shrugged it on, fastening heavy buckles with awkward fingers. Crap! I was barely awake. I didn’t need this shit. I needed answers.

Where the hell were we? What was happening? Why did I need a parachute?

“No time for questions,” Evan yelled. “Just secure the chute and get to the door.”

I obeyed. My heart pounded, accelerated by a surge of adrenaline. A couple of minutes ago I’d been sound asleep, exhausted from the week of twelve-hour workdays I’d put in to prepare for this trip—a man could only take so much abuse before he crashed. Next thing I knew, Evan was shaking me awake, shouting that we had to jump, and lobbing a parachute in my face.

“Have you ever jumped?” Evan shouted over the roar of wind and the sputtering engine of Uncle Ben’s four-seat prop plane.

“Once. In college. With an instructor.”

“Sorry.” He shook his head. “No time for a refresher.” He patted a ring on his own shoulder. “This is the ripcord. Don’t pull it until you’re clear of the plane.”

With that, he turned and jumped.

Fear clutched my throat and choked me. That was it? That was all I got? I glanced wildly around the tiny cabin. A snow-capped mountain loomed beyond the windshield. Uncle Ben had locked the controls and was struggling into his own chute. “What are you waiting for?” he yelled. “Get the hell out of here!”

Words failed. I nodded. Edged closer to the door, clutched the parachute strap near the ripcord, closed my eyes, and stepped into the howling wind of the abyss.

Freezing air numbed exposed skin. Crap! No jacket. No gloves. I tried to pry my eyes open against the rush of wind. Double crap! Why didn’t I have goggles?

Half-frozen fingers clutched the ripcord like a talisman.

Holy Mother of God! What had my jump instructor said? Why hadn’t I taken actual lessons? Why in the name of God’s Left Nostril had I agreed to fly with Uncle Ben and Evan? Everyone knew single-engine planes were death traps. Why wasn’t I sleeping uncomfortably on some commercial flight?

Surely I was dreaming. Yeah. That was it. I was still asleep. Evan would wake me up any second now; laugh at my girly screams of terror. Just a dream. I relaxed as far as my ice-cold skin and chest- and leg-straps would allow.

Yeah. Right. A dream where if I didn’t pull the cord soon, I’d splatter on the ground and never wake up.

Get a grip on yourself, man! You’re not an idiot. You can do this. Force your eyes open, face reality, and pull that God-forsaken cord.

With stoic determination, I pulled the cord. The chute deployed—score one for my side!—and jerked me upright. Thank all that’s holy, I’d managed to get it on right and tight. The rush of air eased, though it didn’t warm any. I glanced up at the silk mushroom above my head, and then tried to make sense of my surroundings. Far to my right I could just make out the white circle of Evan’s chute as it neared the earth. We wouldn’t find each other anytime soon. My hesitation had cost me his companionship in this surreal event. To my left the mountain shone in the early morning light. My heart rate relaxed as I absorbed the stark beauty. When would I ever experience this again? Swaying in the arms of the wind while a hoary old-man mountain stood guard?

A flash of light and a distant roar of explosion jerked me back to reality. That mountain wasn’t benign. It had just eaten our aircraft.

I glanced beneath my feet. The earth approached rapidly. Nothing beautiful about the vast expanse of nature below me; those heavily forested slopes were my enemy. I searched the tangle of evergreens for a town, a farmstead, a road winding through its depths. Nothing. No sign of man. The forest primeval prevailed. And it didn’t look remotely inviting.

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Prompt Openings: Luag and Eibhlinn

The final novel in my Sorcha’s Children series is still in progress, but that won’t stop me from giving you a taste of the opening as it stands now 😀 Since I’ve already decided on the title and have designed the cover, I’ll share those as well!

dd-cover-2x3

Luag sat tail curled around paws in the great gallery of the ice aerie. The great black dragon closed his eyes, basking in the cold solidity of the cavern floor, soothed by the soft susurrus of scales sliding on ice. He inhaled deeply, dragon smoke and the unique tang of glacial ice—the scents of family and home.

Content, he opened his eyes and let his gaze travel up the smoothly carved blue-gray walls to the curved dome with its sparkles of refracted light. Bright passageways led off in every directions, their rounded openings glowing with possibility. The dragons who had created this aerie had been masters of light and space. Their creation never ceased to amaze and delight Luag.

He swung his great head in a slow arc, studying his fellow dragons. So many colors—malachite, bronze, garnet, azure, and every hue in between. Such a range of sizes; from the smallest hatchling to the mightiest dragon. These were his weyr-mates. The dragons he had grown to adulthood among. If fate were kind, they were the dragons he would lead into the future. He bowed his head, fully aware of the honor the aerie did him in acknowledging him as rex-in-waiting.

He had always known and accepted his destiny. Had studied diligently and spent every moment he could find in the company of his rex. For the Rex was not simply the leader of his flight, a dragon to be admired and emulated, he was also Luag’s foster father. The male who had watched over him and his siblings since the moment their eggs had cracked. The adult who had always been there for him, whether to answer the questions of a naive fledgling, or to discuss philosophy with the adult he had become. The Rex was authority personified, but more than that, he represented all that was good and just among dragon-kind. Luag prayed to the First Egg to have a tenth of his mentor’s wisdom when the time came for him to lead the aerie.

A firm but gentle thought nudged the link in Luag’s mind. He opened immediately, welcoming his rex. You’re very quiet today, young black. Is anything amiss?

No, honored one. I’m merely thoughtful.

Brooding, some might say.

Luag’s head snapped up and he searched the hall for his foster father. Their gazes locked across a sea of dragon scales. Brooding, honored one? Why would you say that?

Join me on the ridge, answered the Rex. We can discuss what ails you while we sun.

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