Chapter One: A Hush at Midnight by Marlene M. Bell

 

Title: A Hush at Midnight

Author: Marlene M. Bell

Publisher: Ewephoric Publishing

Publication Date: October 1, 2024

Pages: 368

Genre: Mystery

Marlene M. Bell brings distant friends together in the rural South only to have one of them become the victim of a brutal crime of passion.

Once celebrated for her show-stopping pastries and irresistible desserts, former celebrity chef Laura Harris is now making headlines for a far darker reason.

Laura has been accused of murder.

How could this petite chef have brutally smothered the beloved small-town matriarch, World War II ferry pilot veteran, Hattie Stenburg? Hattie wasn’t just a pillar of the community; she was Laura’s confidant and mentor. The shocking twist? Hattie had made recent changes to her will, bypassing next-of kin and leaving her entire fortune and historic estate to Laura.

As Laura scrambles to clear her name, she uncovers sinister secrets lurking beneath the town’s idyllic surface. The real murderer is always one step ahead, leaving taunting clues and threatening Laura to leave Texas—or face deadly consequences. With time not a luxury, Laura must untangle the web of deceit before the killer makes her the next victim.

A Hush at Midnight is available at Amazon.

 First Chapter:

Stenburg, Texas – Friday evening

A killer sunset plunged toward the horizon, casting its tangerine glare on the Stenburg Estate’s green metal roof and aging bricks. Since her hasty arrival from the Los Angeles area last year, Laura Harris had sought out the renowned East Texas skyline for its towering thunderstorm clouds and the lemonade-pinks at twilight.

        The colors gave her a sense of calm before the inaugural trip to see her elderly mentor and dearest pen pal, Hattie Stenburg. Laura last visited with her in California—over a decade ago.

        As Laura skirted a large puddle in her Subaru and stopped along the shoulder of the roadway, she parked the car, turned off the engine, and exited the driver’s side. She breathed in air filled with pungent smells of wet pine needles and dampened leaves. Laura had passed through the April shower a few miles east of the Stenburg town limits sign. Leave it to the Stenburgs to live in a town named after themselves.

        Snaggled grapevines across the road on Hattie’s property sat stoic and graying in long horizontal rows from the oil and gravel highway road to the classic red brick two-story at the top of the hill. The vines showed no signs of new growth even though T-posts held the outstretched limbs twisted within wire and sagging driplines. Gnarled stumps had been left behind from a time when the Stenburgs had added varietal grapes to their company’s wine processing vats prior to Warren Stenburg’s death nearly eight years ago—before Laura’s dad took over as the Texas corporation’s chief executive officer.

        Neglected grapevines aside, the sight made her homesick for the old days with family. Laura leaned against the outer door and marveled at the vibrant wildflowers alive and welcoming between the lifeless vines covering at least twenty acres. Texas bluebonnet spikes in brilliant cobalt shades, fiery orange Indian paintbrush, and Drummond phlox in salmon and variegated pinks splashed the land, possibly in conjunction with the Highway Beautification Act of 1965, thanks to Lady Bird Johnson’s care of the state as First Lady, during LBJ’s term in office. Laura had heard that wildflower seeds were sown along Texas highways each spring to enhance the countryside.

        The white stucco house built on the slope looked like a newer addition next to the colonial belonging to Hattie. Acreage stretched between driveways, the vines dividing two homes from different eras. Hattie’s vineyard could’ve served as a makeshift property line if the 1970s ranch-style residence belonged to a neighbor.

        Laura had no idea what arrangements the Stenburgs had with others on their hill overlooking the town. She hadn’t visited Hattie’s place before. Perhaps another Stenburg family member lived there. She’d ask about the house if they didn’t get sidetracked on other subjects. A face-to-face conversation spanning Laura’s eleven-year absence would take time. She’d been away far too long from someone who felt more like her grandmother than a casual friend.

        If memory served, the last time she’d met with Hattie was during the Decade of DeeDee, Laura’s younger sister. It was a tumultuous time for the Harris kids trying to keep their winery, tasting room, and restaurant afloat during a down economy. Laura was thirty-six back then, and tired of the heated sibling arguments by the time she left the Celestemore Vineyard Restaurant in Northern California to strengthen her chef’s career. The celebrity chef opportunity in Los Angeles had saved a pending disaster between two hot-tempered sisters and a brother who preferred to stay neutral. When Laura headed south, she felt that her move had preserved the family winery named for their mother, Celeste.

        Laura shoved aside bitter memories and sighed.

        She’d left a great job and moved to Texas to be with her parents, and she would do it all again.

        Laura scanned the neighbor’s rocky driveway as steam rose from the wet stones. The parcel of land in front of the mid-century-modern with dark brown trim had nothing planted on it. Instead, it featured numerous ruts made by rain pelting the sandy soil season after season. Where the vines ended, a wide driveway long enough for a semi-truck and trailer to pass led to the residence. Not one fence separated the properties nor lined the county road as a boundary, which seemed strange to Laura. She’d come from a community with manicured yards and well-marked concrete drives.

        She turned her focus on the long entrance leading to Hattie’s American Civil War-era home, not actually seeing what was there. Instead, Laura’s heart thumped with longing. She’d left a comfortable life to begin a new chapter with her parents in the woodlands of Texas, but now that her mother had lost her battle with cancer, Laura felt lost. She questioned the emotional decision to uproot herself with such finality when friends and colleagues had stayed behind. The wedge was as real as a stake driven deeply into Texas soil.

        Laura returned to her bucket seat and drove toward Hattie’s place, absently checking for the earring backing, which had a habit of falling off. She glanced at the time on her dashboard, hoping Hattie had finished her evening meal. She was anxious to taste the custard-filled profiteroles Laura made for her.

         Light struck the old two-story home at odd angles, projecting vertical shadows on the wraparound porch from four ornate pillars on either side of grand steps fit for royalty. She slowed to gaze at the sinking colors of a dying day as if she could absorb their final warmth and quell her many insecurities. Leather driving gloves did little to soothe her cold fingers wrapped around the Subaru’s steering wheel.

         On her right, halfway between the county road and Hattie’s estate house, the vineyards were gone. A weathered old barn about the size of a small cottage stood alone, tractor disks and other implements rusting outside. Missing exterior planks in eight-foot lengths exposed a dark loft space. There were no visible windows for light or air, from what Laura could see. A tin Texas star and an oxidized roof lifted at its peak, leftover damage from storms throughout the decades. Meandering pine and pecan trees, some dying with absent leaves, lined the driveway entrance on either side leading away from the barn. Long ago, someone had planted the mature magnolia for shade in addition to the flowers it produced. Snowy petals formed huge blooms the size of formal charger plates. The trees were as ancient as the barn, marked by their awesome height, broken branches aloft, and trunk circumference.

        As expected, the grounds were meticulously cared for, as Laura remembered Hattie liked. Everything about the Stenburgs’ preferences included order and symmetry. All had their proper place in the scheme of things. A white panel van from Stenburg Nursery had parked near the home, and a man in a logoed black polo came out of the back carrying a full flat of pansies in the fading daylight. A variety of baby blue forget-me-nots and multicolored snapdragons already lined the flower beds, and low-growing sweet white alyssum flanked the outer borders, giving Laura the feeling she’d entered a conservatory for Texans, and not a residence.

        Landscapers working at dusk for Hattie made Laura smile. The ninety-three-year-old wanted things just so and at a time of her choosing. Her World War military training had a way of bleeding through all situations and personal preferences. Laura admired her friend’s habits.

        Tall flagpoles flew the red and white with a single star on a blue field. The Lone Star flag of Texas. The Stars and Bars crisscross flag flew next to it, reminiscent of the American Civil War Confederacy. A fitting tribute to the property’s history—in modern-day 2010. Between the flagpoles, a gray chiseled rock displayed a faded metal plate too small to read from the car. Undoubtedly, a Texas historical marker because the builder of the Stenburg Estate had post–Civil War connections. Hattie had remarked on the history of the home, which was built between the 1860s and 1870s Reconstruction period.

        Laura swerved around the van and rolled to a complete stop several yards from the porch, taking in the magnificence of the house belonging to the elderly widow she assumed still lived alone. The home reminded her of a giant breadbox made of brick and mortar, with three visible fireplaces. White dormers shot through the rooftop, breaking up the flat surface.

        She spotted a pair of rocking chairs on the porch with a woman sitting in one of them. Hattie had been spry and mobile under her own power while in her eighties. When Laura had mentioned her upcoming visit with Hattie to her dad, he warned of new developments and to prepare herself for the decline. Of late, Hattie used a cane or a wheelchair to get around the house.

        Laura leaned closer to the windshield and squinted for a better look. The hair’s shorter and whiter, but I’d recognize her narrow face and inquisitive stare anywhere.

        Other than the landscaper, no person or corgi dogs wandered the grounds. The Stenburgs loved their short-legged corgis. The passing storm could’ve sent them indoors, but it didn’t seem likely Hattie would be left unaccompanied if that were the case.

        Laura waved through her open window and caught a glimpse of the gaunt face in the side mirror. Her own reflection. She should’ve used concealer to hide the dark smudges beneath her eyes, a result of middle-of-the-night bakery duties, but at least her shoulder-length, highlighted hair had kept its shape in the humidity and her lipstick was still intact. She’d take two out of three.

        When she removed her driving gloves and stepped out to close the car door, Hattie made no acknowledgment at first. Then, she donned a pair of glasses and gave a timid wave back.

        Hattie was also hard of hearing, which made her constant letter-writing much more enjoyable for her and Laura. The telephone only frustrated Hattie. That, and she thought cursive writing and good penmanship to be a dying art. She would never give up handwritten letters because it was a more personal way to communicate, and writing gave an aging woman so much pleasure. As long as she could hold a fountain pen, Hattie had sworn a solemn oath to write every day and never wear anything “as distasteful as a hearing aid or use a confounded cellular phone,” as she’d put it.

         As Laura mounted the concrete porch steps, her tongue tasted foul from the quick cup of coffee she’d downed prior to leaving Coldspell. And she’d forgotten Hattie’s desserts on the floorboard.

        She briefly turned to go back, changed her mind, and decided to retrieve them from the cooler box later.

        “Laura? Good gracious; have you gotten taller?” Hattie’s blue-veined hand clutched the cane, wobbling the handle as she lifted herself out of the chair with difficulty.

        “Let me help you.” Laura dropped her purse clumsily and jumped to Hattie’s side, snagging her lap blanket from the chair and saving her from a topple.

        The soft crocheted piece against Laura’s face and shoulder smelled of Hattie’s fragrance. Laura savored the warm, penetrating scent that combined hyacinth and jasmine flowers. Hattie’s husband, Warren, had sent her the Southern Kiss perfume when he found out she’d volunteered her aircraft ferrying services during World War II. He asked her to wear it and think of him marching in Europe. Laura’s heart welled with pride, knowing how their harrowing yet fascinating beginning helped win a world war years before Laura was born.

        “It’s so good to see you.” Laura’s eyes misted as she took Hattie’s frail hand in hers and squeezed. She feared a hug might break a bone or knock her off balance. “What you must think of me taking so long to visit.”

        Hattie stood a little hunched, resting on her four-toed cane. She appeared awe-struck by Laura’s presence. Perhaps she hadn’t imagined Laura would ever come to Texas and thought her fading vision had deceived her. Hattie’s light denim-blue eyes gazed into hers as if trying to decipher Laura’s thoughts. In her nineties, the fragile limbs looked hardly capable of carrying Hattie without the help of something more substantial like a walker or wheelchair.

        “Two visits from the Harris clan in the same week. Your father was here a few days ago.” Laura had missed Hattie’s infectious smile. “Come. Let’s be on our way before Moon Pie returns from her evening walk with Jordan. She’ll muddy up your jeans and those cute boots.”

        Moonie, the resident Welsh corgi, had been mentioned in many of Hattie’s letters but not a peep about a person named Jordan.

        The door to the estate house magically opened, and stale air followed the ponytailed brunette in a gray sweatshirt and baggy sweatpants standing there. She wore no makeup but had an enviable clear complexion and natural glow about her cheeks. Laura thought she looked about forty, maybe older. The harshly dyed hair seemed too strong a color next to her creamy light skin. Were they being watched by a care worker or a relative? It would make sense that Hattie needed an extra pair of eyes on her most of the time.

        The woman swooped in wearing a serious frown and rudely seized Hattie’s upper arm away from Laura. “Watch your step,” was scarcely audible.

        “Hey, be careful with her. Can’t you see she’s fragile?” Laura wanted nothing more than to push the newcomer aside and guide Hattie through the entrance cautiously. “Is she hurting you?” Turning toward Hattie, Laura waited for a reply.

        “I can get along myself, Nicole.” Hattie tugged free and shifted more weight onto the cane, raising the small suction cups toward the kitchen. “Please make us a fresh pot of coffee and bring my pastries.” She stopped and faced Laura standing behind her a few paces. “That downpour gave me a chill. How about a nice shot of whiskey to warm you up?”

        No matter how much Hattie had changed physically, thankfully some things stayed the same.

        “I’d better pass. It’s a long drive to Coldspell.” Laura grinned at the whiskey reference she knew all too well. Hattie had a custom of eating sinful desserts and following them with the unusual whiskey chaser. It was something she and the other fly girls had done between trainer and bomber ferry flights during the war. Hattie’s mission during the conflict had been ferrying planes in Texas after they were assembled at their aerospace facilities and needed at military bases.

        “Okay, I’ll make another pot, but I wouldn’t drink more than a cup. You know how coffee keeps you awake at night.” The woman referred to as Nicole was now standing next to a coffee maker perched on an oversized island in the middle of a blue-tiled kitchen. From there, she had an excellent view across the island into the large room where Laura and Hattie stood. She ignored all but her duties—including introductions. Her occasional glance toward Laura reminded her of an overprotective parent on guard around a stranger. The unfriendly vibe coming from Nicole was as thick in the room as a crème brulée. Laura doubted that she was a relative because of her unemotional coolness toward Hattie, or perhaps they’d recently had an unfinished disagreement before her arrival. And the barometric pressure change probably had everyone grouchy or preoccupied.

        Laura stroked the soft shawl on her shoulder as she stood in the huge great room, with its vaulted ceilings and a winding staircase leading to the second floor. From the comfortable living space with a recliner, rocker, and overstuffed couch situated at the window, to the overly blue kitchen, she suspected some renovations had been made to the interior since the home was built. Those changes would no doubt include the mahogany paneling, white painted surfaces, and bright tile in a remodeled kitchen with a center island. Hattie liked to cook and would’ve demanded updated counters and cabinets.

        Five generations of Stenburgs had raised their children in the estate house. The Stenburg women, all except Hattie, had large families to carry on their treasured lineage. In the thirty-nine years she and Hattie had been friends, Laura knew of no kids in the Warren Stenburg household, whether by choice or having sustained a personal loss during the marriage. Laura always thought they would’ve made magnificent parents.

        All ninety pounds of Hattie slowly ambled over to the vintage rocker and plunked down in it. Next to the rocker stood a large black leather recliner, made for a big man’s frame like Warren’s. The dark and dreary living area redeemed itself with a collection of porcelain statues and natural purple amethyst clusters. Every spare nook and crevice held painted, posed animals, and Victorian figurines wearing nineteenth century period dress—all of them watching over Hattie.

        Laura suspected they were mostly Staffordshire, collected during vacations to the UK and Europe. Hattie’s amethyst geodes were known to strengthen intuition and imagination, in addition to their healing properties. The glistening violet crystals must have been significant to the many Stenburg trips to South America.

        Laura spun in a circle, digesting the space she’d only read about in Hattie’s letters. “This is an amazing home. I came close to imagining what it looked like, and I love the personal mementos from trips abroad.”

        “I hoped you’d see it one day, Laura.” Hattie swiped at a tear. “God granted me one of my wishes.”

        Of note, the living area was void of devices such as a television, a turntable for records from their youth, or anything computerized. Instead, the end table next to Warren’s recliner held old classic books with gilded edge pages, from the few titles Laura could read.

        Hattie had told her that their evenings, spent next to the fireplace, were for quiet reading and discussions about Warren’s days at the office—a catching up of sorts on their activities.

        All picture windows had been draped shut, and the house smelled of wood paneling in need of a cleaning; sickly sweet tobacco still permeated the room from a lack of ventilation. Hattie’s late husband had smoked big cigars and favored a pipe in the afternoons, as she recalled. Laura abhorred smoking of any kind because tobacco smokers reeked of ashtray odor.

        Her dad had smoked cigarettes while he worked himself up the ranks of the Stenburg Corporation. She’d begged him to stop the habit, and when he finally did, she rejoiced. He had finally taken responsibility for his health, albeit too late to save her mother from suspected secondhand smoke lung cancer.

        The angora lap robe grazed Laura’s ear as she placed it over Hattie’s polyester pants. She received a weak thank you followed by a deep, syrupy cough.

Hattie patted her chest and coughed hard for some time to clear her lungs before she was able to breathe normally again, which scared Laura.

        “What can I get you?” Laura glanced at the side table for a glass or pitcher of water but only found a tray holding one orange prescription bottle, a box of valerian root sleep aid, dog treats, and a pack of tissues. Laura’s dad had commented on Hattie’s bouts with pneumonia earlier in the year. Her lungs were still heavily congested.

        Nicole reappeared next to the rocker with a bottle of cough syrup and a teaspoon. “She’ll be right as rain in a minute. Here ya go, hon.” She pushed a stray lock of hair behind one ear and set the syrup on the tray. She then forcefully pulled Hattie forward to fluff the flattened pillow at her back. “There. That’s better.” And just like that, the caregiver sped off to the kitchen to add more donuts to a plate.

        “There’s something special for you in the car,” Laura said, leaning close to Hattie’s ear. “I’ll just be a minute.” She crouched toward her at eye level. “Is it possible to talk in private?” She sent a glance over her shoulder to Nicole, who continued working steadily at her task.

        Hattie patted Laura’s hand, indicating that she understood. “I’ve missed you, dearie,” she said in a stage whisper.

        The super short bangs and brittle white hair were long enough to reach Hattie’s jawbones. Her flat hairstyle and translucent complexion made her look less sophisticated and so much older than the last time they’d visited in person. How long had it been since someone had taken Hattie for a manicure to clip her long nails, or sit for her hairdresser?

        Hattie had a standing hair appointment with her beautician each week—a decade ago. Her hair was so long and laid at odd angles, as if Nicole or someone else had taken a set of pinking shears to it. Worse yet, the defeated look of surrender written in sorrowful eyes came from a woman unrecognizable as the vivacious person she used to be.

        The drastic change was a sober reminder to Laura of losing her mother and how close Hattie was to the same ending. She stifled a cold shiver. No one was immune.

        “How long before coffee’s ready?” Hattie asked Nicole. “I need more cough medicine, and… take my grocery list to your mother. Go with her.” She pointed to the door. “You know what I like.”

        Nicole wordlessly walked to the rocker and removed the tray with the meds by its handles. She set it on the coffee table and replaced it with a pile of glazed and candied donuts, enough to feed a small family.

        “Is there anything else? It’s late. I’ll go shopping for you another day.” Nicole smiled sweetly at Laura, possibly to avert the heat from Hattie’s glare.

        “Tonight,” Hattie said authoritatively. “You know how I hate backtalk. Laura and I have lots to discuss. In private.”

        Laura motioned Nicole over to a corner away from Hattie. “I’ll stay until you get back. She’ll be fine.”

        Keys rattled in Nicole’s sweatpants pocket as she walked to the kitchen and removed a slip of paper from the refrigerator door. “I won’t be long.” She shot Laura a sideways glance and marched in an awkward gait out the front door.

        “Thought she’d never leave.” Hattie giggled. “That girl hovers over me and won’t take a hint. Now, tell me what’s new at the bakery and all about that pilot of yours. I want all the juicy details. Don’t leave anything out.” Hattie straightened the white blanket over her knees and clasped her hands together.

        “We have a nuisance brewing at the bakery but we’re busy.” Laura moved toward the hearth to hide her feelings about a workaholic guy. Hattie could read faces well. “Nothing earthshattering on the Lucas front. I’ll see him again on his next layover. He had to slide in for another pilot this weekend. An aviator’s life. Unpredictable. You know how it is.”

        A monumental sepia-toned picture hanging over the brick and stone fireplace caught Laura’s eye, and she moved closer to investigate. She flipped the wall light switch to brighten the print’s details. A youthful Hattie in an oversized shirt and pants stood next to a four-engine bomber with a pin-up style girl painted on the fuselage.

        “An iconic shot. Tell me about this one.” Laura pointed to the woman in the photo. “That’s you next to the bomber, isn’t it?” She’d remembered that particular aircraft from descriptions in long talks with Hattie. The girl standing in the photo resembled how Hattie would’ve looked in her twenties. Forties pageboy hairstyle and all.

        “Me at Avenger Field in Sweetwater. That was ol’ Sheila Mae, the big girl. One of the biggest birds I’ve ever had the privilege to ferry. Did you know that B-17s take ten people to fly them on a mission?”

        Laura scrutinized the giant silver aircraft and how small Hattie looked standing next to the wing.

        “If you’re wondering about my baggy clothes, the girls had to wear military-issued men’s gear because all the clothes were made for men. Women flying trainers and bombers were unheard of until the WASPs, which stands for Women Airforce Service Pilots. Flying in theater was a men-only job back then. The girls asked to fly in combat, but General Peterson turned us down. He wouldn’t be responsible for women drivers getting blown out of the sky or something like that.” Hattie sighed. “The only things that kept our pants from falling around our ankles were extra wide belts and lots of elastic.” Hattie slapped her thigh and grinned, followed by a cough.

        “How did you reach the pedals to fly something that huge?” Laura couldn’t imagine that petite women like herself had an easy time of it in the plane’s cockpit that Hattie had referred to as a Fortress.

        “We rigged the seats with pillows so we could see above the instrument panel. We had to work out other things, but a few of us put our heads together and got it done.” Hattie reached for a glazed donut and held it up. “Try these with your coffee; they’re delish.”

        “I have something you might like better. Will you be okay for a couple of minutes? I left the cooler in the car.”

        “If it’s something made by your hands, I can’t wait.” Hattie set the donut on the plate and licked sugar from her fingertips. “Go ahead.” She flipped her hand toward the door. “Surprise me.”

        Laura and Hattie ate the chocolate-glazed profiteroles and drank coffee for at least half an hour, catching up on so much lost time. Although writing letters was a nice pastime, it couldn’t replace a personal interaction where facial expressions said more than reading words on a page. Laura was glad she’d listened to her dad’s advice about driving a couple of hours to see her old friend. How Laura had longed for Hattie’s sense of humor and hearing the crazy recounts about her flying days.

        Their near-fatal accidents were terrifying and the tales about frying donuts in their rooms and getting thrown out of the men’s local bar made Laura temporarily forget her irritation with Lucas Olsen, her latest companion of six months.

        “Is Nicole a close friend of yours?” Laura asked. “You’re lucky to have someone staying with you.”

        “She has her own place with Edith next door.” Hattie took another sip from her third cup of coffee. “Nicole lives at home to help out her mother and comes here to fix my meals and straighten the house. All but Warren’s office beneath the staircase. I keep his door locked with a special key.” Eating the last of her pastry had left custard on her lip. “Nicki’s a good kid. I don’t know what I’d do without her and Jordan, my groundskeeper.”

        Two questions answered. Jordan cut the grass and did general maintenance on the property outside, while Nicole took care of Hattie’s indoor needs from the white house next door. Laura wondered what lay inside Warren’s office.

        “Is there something I can clean or move for you in his office while I’m here?”

        “All in good time.” Hattie held one eye in a wink longer than needed. “The Alamo’s behind that door.”

        A conflicting statement if there ever was one.

Laura laughed as she worked through the puzzle. “Don’t tell me; Warren collected Texas battle memorabilia and you, the Staffordshire pieces?”

        Hattie nodded. “Right-e-o. I’ve gathered almost every piece of Staffordshire made, large and small. The bigger specimens are upstairs.” Her eyes swept the staircase as she gripped the rocker armrest, then turned her pinpoint gaze on Laura. “I’m glad you stopped by, Laura.” She held up one bony finger. “You do look taller, though.”

        A smile stretched across Laura’s face. “I wish. Still four-foot-eleven inches in bare feet.”

        Hattie whisked crumbs from her lap blanket. “I adore French pastry, and your profiteroles were crackerjack. Time for a potty break.” She rocked forward with the help of her cane, tossing the throw blanket aside.

        Neighbor Nicole banged through the front door with bags of groceries on a trolley cart, traipsing to the kitchen. She pulled along her heavy burden on squeaky wheels. 

        “I’ll help you to the bathroom. Point me in the right direction.” Laura set her coffee cup down, taking Hattie’s arm.

        Hattie chuckled. “Did I ever tell you how I found Jordan trespassing in my barn?”

        “What?”

        “A few years ago, when I could still check the outbuildings in the mornings, I caught him sleeping in there and helping himself to the drinks in the little fridge. He was stranded on the road between towns. Poor fellow. He needed a job, so I put him to work.”

        Laura was surprised at how easily Hattie had offered the stranger a job.

        “I had the vacant guesthouse in back and needed the help. Mutually beneficial, as Warren would say. The guest’s quarters are over there around the corner.” Hattie pointed to her left and began coughing. “Sometimes, he takes Moonie.” Another deep-seated cough. “It keeps the little nubbin out of trouble.” Hattie’s coughing grew in intensity, and she had trouble taking breaths in between.

        “Hattie, catch your wind.” Laura planted her feet, catching her friend as she lost her balance and swayed on her cane. Her coughing could bring about an embarrassing accident, and Laura knew how prim and proper Hattie would hate that. “How far to the bathroom?” she asked Nicole.

        “Just go. I can handle her.” Nicole arrived on the cane side of Hattie with a fresh bottle of cough syrup. “Take a swig.”

        Laura’s jaw dropped. “You’ve got to be kidding. Let her breathe normally first. She’ll choke.”

        Hattie patted her chest and cleared her throat as she brushed Nicole’s hand away. Between coughs and gasps, Hattie managed a goodbye wave for Laura.

        “I’ll stay with Hattie tonight,” Laura addressed Nicole. “Leave the groceries for now. Hattie needs her rest. I can sit with her.”

        Laura’s dear pen pal managed a smile and a short wink.

        Nicole folded her arms. “She doesn’t need you. I’ll even sleep on the couch if that makes you feel any better.”

        Laura was shocked by the neighbor’s wisecrack in front of Hattie.

        “You aren’t making me feel better.” Laura turned to Hattie. “Will you be all right if I leave now? I’ll stay if you want.” Laura hoped that Hattie would ask her to stay, but it was up to her.

        Hattie paused, looked sadly into Laura’s eyes, then nodded. “We’ll talk again soon, my girl. I’m fine.”

        Grabbing her leather bag from the floor, Laura’s tears welled, spilling down her cheeks. She hated to leave Hattie with someone as uncaring as Nicole. Laura made one last turn to watch the pair move along the hardwood floor and around the staircase.

        She exited into chilly blackness on the porch amid a chorus of croaking toads and nighttime crickets.

        Almost to Coldspell and full of misgivings, Laura couldn’t shake her feeling of dread for Hattie’s sake. Why did she allow Nicole to steer her away? She should’ve stayed with her mentor and not bowed to the will of a neighbor she knew nothing about.

        Laura had to drive back to Stenburg no matter how late it was.

        She glanced at the clock on her dash, beyond caring what anyone thought about an after-midnight visitation. Even if she had to nap in her car to make the trip back to Coldspell, she wouldn’t rest until she knew that Hattie was okay.

        An inky blanket hung over the property when she arrived. Not a single porch or barn light shone from the Stenburg Estate. Living this far out from town, Laura couldn’t imagine why a dusk-to-dawn light hadn’t been installed. She’d mention it to her dad. Her headlights beamed on the front door and bay window, bright enough to wake someone sleeping on the living room couch. Laura left her Subaru in park with the engine running and jogged up the steps. She knocked quietly on the huge glass pane. If she could rouse the neighbor without waking Hattie, better yet.

        A dog barked in the distance. The only sound for miles. Moon Pie should’ve been with Hattie, but Laura picked up no sound from inside the estate house. Surely, Hattie’s pet would notice visitors.

        The barking continued, perhaps from a nearby shelter for stray animals.

        Laura cupped her hands and peered through the window but was unable to see past the dark glass cloaked by heavy curtains. She knocked more firmly with her knuckles. Other than raising goosebumps on her arms, no one inside rose to open the front door.

        Nicole had lied about staying with Hattie and sleeping on the couch.

        Laura’s heartbeat quickened as she pounded on the massive door, calling for Nicole or Hattie to let her inside. No human or pet could sleep through the noise she was making. She tried the door and found it as it should’ve been. Locked.

        “Hattie! Is anyone in there?” Laura kicked her boot at the door in frustration.

        She checked the kitchen and bedroom windows that were too high for her to climb through even if she were lucky enough to find one unlocked. She ran along the wraparound porch, calling for Hattie—her car’s right headlight spotting the way from porch to grass.

        The further she went toward the back of the house, the louder the barking became.

        Hattie had mentioned that Moon Pie stayed with Jordan in the guesthouse.

        Wake Jordan. He’ll find Hattie.

        Laura ran to her car and drove behind the building to where the guesthouse connected to the estate via a concrete breezeway. There, she found a sharp-eared corgi with her nose pressed against the window, scratching with her claws and raising all kinds of ruckus.

        Where is Jordan, and why is Moon Pie alone in the guesthouse? Laura’s tingling senses told her the scene was all wrong.

        She slammed the Subaru into park and faced the dog from the other side of the narrow four-foot window near the guesthouse’s entrance. Laura tried to open the locked metal door by the knob, then gave a strong shove with her shoulder. All she received for her trouble was a sore arm. When she made eye contact with Moon Pie once more, the dog wriggled its rump, whining and whimpering. Crouching to Moon Pie’s level, she placed the flat of her hand on the outside screen, trying to soothe the irate dog with her words. A small gap below the sash showed her that Jordan had left the window slightly ajar for the dog.

        Laura caught a whiff of something she couldn’t describe.

        Moon Pie had her red nylon lead attached at the collar, as if she’d been dropped inside abruptly.

        “Sweetie, I’m coming in.” Laura removed a driving glove, pried the screen from its runners with her nails, and threw it aside.

        Moon Pie stuck her nose through the opening and sniffed.

        “Don’t bite my fingers.” She replaced the glove on her hand and with all her might, lifted the sash from the gap, sliding it up and open. Enough to squeeze her small frame through sideways.

        Moon Pie jumped out then came back to follow her inside, barking madly at her feet. Her boot caught the dog, throwing Laura headlong into the wall. “Honey, quiet. I can’t think.” Laura groped the painted surface with her palm until she found a light switch and flipped it on. 

        She stood in a bedroom.

        Someone lay still on the mattress. Deathly pale.

        A crawling sensation moved up her spine. Jordan. As she walked closer to the person, she realized the body was that of a female, partially obscured by a bed pillow. Laura took several labored breaths and sped around the footboard—watching for the rise and fall of the woman’s chest.

        A fleeting thought of Nicole went through her mind, quickly dashed by the person’s hair color. Bitterness filled Laura’s mouth and she swallowed hard. Her worst fears had come true.

About the Author:

Mystery at a killing pace.

Marlene M. Bell has never met a sheep she didn’t like. As a personal touch, her fans often find these wooly creatures visiting her international romantic suspense, thriller, and cozy mystery books as characters or subject matter. 

Marlene’s multi-award-winning Annalisse series boasts numerous Best Mystery honors for all installments including the newest IP Best Regional Australia/New Zealand, and Global Gold Award for the fourth cozy mystery from down under. 

Her children's picture book, Mia and Nattie: One Great Team! written for the younger crowd, is based on true events from the Bell’s Texas sheep ranch. Suitable reading for ages 3 - 7 years and beyond, a Mom's Choice Gold Award winner, and Eric Hoffer Award Grand Prize Short List winner. 

Website & Social Media:

Website ➜ https://www.marlenembell.com 

Twitter ➜ https://twitter.com/ewephoric 

Facebook ➜  https://www.facebook.com/marlenembell 

Goodreads ➜ https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/17642396.Marlene_M_Bell




Chapter One: The Mirror by P.K. Eden

 

Title: The Mirror

Author: P.K. Eden

Publisher: The Wild Rose Press

Publication Date: October 14, 2024

Pages: 390

Genre: Urban Fantasy

What if you found out the artifacts from the fairy tales you loved as a child were real and one of them just predicted your death?

That’s the dilemma Scientist Ben Michaels faces when Siene Dower, descendant of the Brothers Grimm, tells him that Snow White’s Magic Mirror sent her to stop him from getting into the cab that crashed and burst into flame right before his eyes at the intersection at Penn Station, New York City. Does practical Dr. Michaels dismiss everything he knows about reality and science and follow the curious and beautiful woman who just saved his life?

The Mirror is available at Amazon.

 First Chapter:

Germany 1945

“Where is it?” 

The SS Commandant’s voice sounded like a snake hissing to the bloodied figure tied to a chair in front of him. “Where you and your kind will never find it,” the man said. He smiled through swollen lips, defiance in his tone.

The SS officer prepared to strike the bound man’s face again when a knock at the door stopped him. He lowered his arm. “Kommen.”

A young soldier entered. He raised his hand and simultaneously smacked his heels together as he had been trained to do. “Heil!”

“Report,” the officer ordered.

“The house was empty except for the old woman.”

“Did you search thoroughly?”

The soldier let out a frightened breath. “We did and found nothing.”

A sneer curled the senior officer’s lip. “Bring the woman here.”

For a moment, the soldier’s exacting stance buckled, but he quickly pulled his shoulders back. “She killed herself before we had a chance to question her.”

“Fool!” The commandant spat out before opening a cut on the cheek of the young solder’s face with a punishing, black leather-gloved backhanded slap. “Get out!” 

The soldier covered his bleeding cheek with one hand and backed away. Once at the door, he saluted and quickly left. 

A low snicker filled the room elevating into a guttural, choking laugh. 

The Commandant turned slowly.

The captive lifted his battered face. “You see Herr Schmidt, we will do anything, give anything, even our lives. The search is over for you and your kind. You will never know the future before you live it.” He smiled through bloodied teeth. “That is, if you live.”

Schmidt felt his rage rise. He grasped the man by his chin so he could not look away. “By now your wife is dead and it is only a matter of time before we find your son. When we do, we will take the treasure from his dying hands.”

The prisoner locked his gaze on Schmidt. “You will never find the shard.   Never! It’s over for you.”

Schmidt shook his head. “I beg to differ.” 

In a movement almost faster than the eye could see, he pulled a black Lugar from its holster and shot the prisoner through his right eye. The man’s head lolled forward, and blood dripped onto the floor. As the sound of the gunshot faded, the phone jangled on the desk near the window. Schmidt strode across the room, his boots tapping a cadence on the wooden floor. He snatched the receiver from the cradle. 

Was ist das?” 

He felt his entire body go cold as he listened to the voice on the other end. Slowly he laid down the receiver and turned to the dead man slumped in the chair. He loaded another round into the chamber of his Lugar. 

“You were right, old friend. It is all over. The Americans are coming.” He shot one more round into the dead man and left.

In the streets, chaos reigned. People ran in all directions, some carrying suitcases or bundles, some fleeing with nothing but the clothes on their backs. Women held crying children and clutched the hands of toddlers. Older children and men who had not been conscripted into the German Army pushed wagons or carts loaded with personal possessions. The screaming of women and crying of frightened children sporadically overlaid the sound of bombs exploding in the distance. 

Anger and foreboding clutched at Schmidt’s heart. He had to get home. His breath came in short gasps as he wound his way through the panicked crowd. The irony of it all; he should be inheriting the world, not counting the minutes to his end.  

He and his family were Taltos. Once loyal members of the Primogens, a secret society possessing some of the most secret and mystical articles not known to man. Taltoians were a rogue sect bent on eliminating the Primogen protectors and using the objects for profit. For centuries, in the undercurrent of society, Taltoians fought the Primogens to regain the artifacts, but Primogen Sentinels, Council Loyalists, like the one he’d killed only a few minutes before, stood steadfast against them.

The old man wouldn’t tell him the whereabouts of the shard from Snow White’s Magic Mirror. The shard, a piece broken from the artifact to deactivate it, would lead him to the mirror. Once the mirror was whole, he would control the spirit inside. Depending on what he asked, he could either alter the future or use what he saw to fit into his plan. 

As part of the Fuhrer’s preoccupation with the mystical, Schmidt had been charged to find out if the stories about the Mirror were true and if so, to bring it to Berlin to help with the war effort. Schmidt had other plans for this magical object, but now the war and the approaching Americans changed everything.

The Sentinel was dead, and his son was surely on his way to Rome or some other Primogen sanctuary. The shard would be hidden once again to ensure it and the mirror was not united unless needed for some noble cause. Though he and Taltoians would not hesitate to use the mystical powers the mirror possessed for unrestricted gain, the Primogens exercised restraint and stayed away from altering the destiny of mankind except in dire circumstances. 

After opening the door to his home, Schmidt became acutely aware of the silence.  Normally, he would hear the strains of a concerto played on the grand piano by his daughter accompanied by the sweet humming of his wife. Today however, the quiet was deafening. He closed his eyes, his heartbeat returning to normal. They were gone. Before leaving to interrogate the Primogen Sentinel, he arranged for their safe passage out of the city and made his wife promise she and his daughter would pack and leave. For the first time in days his smile was genuine.

He walked to the bar on the far side of the living room and pulled out a bottle of Schnapps. After pouring a healthy portion, he lifted his head and saw his image in the mirror on the wall. The once confident man he saw now looked defeated. Slowly he smiled at the quirk of fate. He saluted and drank the shot in one long gulp. 

For the second time that day he pulled the Lugar from its holster and cocked the trigger. He parted the lace curtains on the window with his forefinger. A few people still rushed through the streets as the sound of the war grew closer. There was no way he would sit in an American prison camp until his fate was decided. 

His laugh came out like the hysterics of a madman. I can see the future after all, he thought, right before he put the Luger to his temple and pulled the trigger.

About the Authors:

P.K. Eden is the alter ego of multi-published and award winning authors Patt Milhailff and Kathye Quick whose debut novel FIREBRAND was lauded as comparable to the Harry Potter series, garnered 5-Star reviews, and won numerous  Reviewer’s Choice Awards.

Born long, long ago in a place not so far away, Shenandoah, Pennsylvania, Kathryn Quick has been writing since the Sisters in St. Casmir’s Grammar School gave her the ruled yellow paper and a number two pencil.  She writes contemporary and career romances, romantic comedies, historical romances as well as urban fantasy. 

Kathye has twenty fiction books in print with various publishing houses and one non-fiction compilation of her town’s history at the behest of the Manville Library Bord.  She was honored to have been named an Amazon top 100 Romance Author for Ineligible Bachelor published by Montlake Romance. Other works include a three book  Grandmother’s Rings Series – Amethyst, Sapphire and Citrine, a rom-com series that follows three siblings as they use their Grandmother’s Rings given to them by their mother to find their soulmates. 

Because she has been fascinated by King Arthur and his knights for almost forever, her series Beyond Camelot, Brother Knights, is her vision of how the majestic kingdom may have survived after Arthur. Two books are written in this series with the third and final still in concept.

She is a founding member of Liberty State Fiction Writers and has been a part of Romance Writers of America and New Jersey Romance Writers.

She is married to her real-life hero, Donald, and has three grown sons, each having romantic adventures of their own. Her two grandkids, Savannah and Dax, happily cut into her writing time but she still manages to get a few pages done each day.

Website & Social Media:

Website www.Kathrynquick.com

Twitter ➜ https://x.com/KQuickAuthor

Facebook ➜ https://www.facebook.com/KathrynQuickBooks/

Instagram ➜ https://www.instagram.com/kathrynquickauthor/

Goodreads https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/217228581-the-mirror

***

Thanks to novelist and editor, Dr. Nathasha Brooks-Harris who invited Patt Milhailff to write for several TRUE CONFESSION lines of magazines where she learned tight and entertaining writing and resulted in the publication of more than two hundred short stories and articles.

One of Patt’s most gratifying experiences was when she moderated a standing room only workshop at the African American Romance Slam Jam in 2004 and has since enjoyed speaking engagements at libraries, book clubs and other forums. 

She was awarded 2009 Author of the year and 2010 Mentor of the year by Romance writers of America, New York City Chapter, a terrific organization that helped her to obtain valuable lessons and insight while on her writing journey. 

Patt is also featured in A Dream Deferred, A Joy Achieved, a non-fiction novella by Charise Nesbit a co-producer at Tyler Perry Studios, about foster care, as well as being included in two of Times Bestselling Author Zane’s anthologies. 

Patt is one half of the writing duo P.K. Eden along with Kathye Quick, authors of Firebrand,  that received a five star Affaire de Couer Reviewer’s Choice Award. 

She is also a member of Liberty States Fiction Writers the home of a magnitude of talented writers and fellow authors and is the author of nine novels.  

Patt was raised, and educated in New York City, residing in  New Jersey, and has since relocated to Delaware.  

Social Networks for P.K. Eden:

Follow on Twitter: https://x.com/PKEdenAuthor 

Follow on Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/P.K.EdenAuthor

Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p.k.edenauthor/

Chapter One: Dragged Down Deep by Michael Okon

 

Title: Dragged Down Deep
Author: Michael Okon
Publisher: Chelshire Publishing
Publication Date: November 28, 2024
Pages: 331
Genre: Action Adventure/Monsters

Logan Osborne has spent his life chasing the shadows of the past.

As a child, he watched helplessly as his father was snatched from a fishing boat by what he swore was a mermaid. No one believed him then. No one believes him now.

Determined to prove that mythical creatures exist, Logan is drawn back to the small coastal town where his nightmares began after another mysterious disappearance stirs the waters.

Teaming up with his pragmatic colleague Elliot Sheppard and his fiercely loyal friend Penny Swanson, Logan dives headfirst into an adventure packed with danger and deception. As they dig deeper, the trio faces resistance at every turn—a secretive agency with its own agenda, a suspiciously unhelpful police force, and Logan’s old flame, who may know more than she’s letting on.

What they uncover is far darker and more terrifying than Logan ever imagined: the truth about his father, the secrets of Minatuck, and the horrifying reality of the Mermaid of the Hamptons.

Will Logan and his friends expose the lies that have haunted him for years, or will they be Dragged Down Deep into the swampy, secretive underbelly of a town that guards its mysteries with deadly intent?

Dragged Down Deep is available at Amazon.

 First Chapter:

Arizona High Desert

They say the early bird gets the worm, and that was the only explanation for Logan Osbourne to be hanging by his bloody fingernails from a six-story cliff in the middle of nowhere.

     He shifted uncomfortably, his leather jacket creaking, the sun rising over a ridge so that the intense rays burned through his clothing. 

     His boots were not made for climbing, but they were well worn and flexible enough to allow him to find a sturdy toehold on the rock wall. He wasn’t dressed for scaling rocks, didn’t have a shred of that kind of equipment. He had never thought to bring it along. The steady grumblings of the guide he’d hired drowned out the sweet morning bird calls. 

     “I told you that you could get a better look from that ridge over there,” complained Kangee Singing Voice, whose first name translated to “Raven” in his native Sioux. He wore an eagle feather in his jet-black hair probably as a nod to his ancestors who once roamed these hills. Logan smiled indulgently at him knowing the guide considered it part of the show and was a good photo op for the tourists. Though the man was safely ensconced on an outcropping of rocks ten feet below Logan, his agitation was apparent by the nervous movements of his hands. Logan saw him gesture with one finger to a smaller plateau on the other side of the basin. “Didn’t you get good enough pictures from across the valley?” The guide’s brows were lowered with consternation. “I mean, you have a zoom lens.” Kangee raised his voice, as if Logan couldn’t hear him. “This land is sacred, man, I could get in a lot of trouble for this.”

     “I know.…I know.…” Logan said soothingly. He was not really listening to Kangee’s litany. He wished Elliot Sheppard, his colleague and best friend were with him instead, but noooo, he drew out the word in his head. Elliot had decided to run home to do a food tasting for his wedding. Once Logan’s eyes spied the nest from the other side of the canyon, he had to get closer. It was as if a giant magnet was pulling him up that cliff.

     This was a once-in-a-lifetime experience, possibly the scientific find of the century. Food was food, Logan had told Elliot. Why someone would waste time eating something that ended up as sewage, Logan shook his head at the thought. He frequently had to be reminded to eat. It was not important to him. He found it distracting, to say the least. It drove his aunt crazy every time visited her.

     The guide’s grating voice interrupted his musings. “You don’t belong here. You’re no Sherpa, and this isn’t Mt. Everest,” Kangee whined.

     Logan let go of one hand, letting himself sway from the cliff. He hung on with one muscular arm, as though hanging from a jutting boulder was something he did every day.

     “Dude,” Kangee wailed. “I don’t want your death to be on my insurance.”

     Logan eyed the guide’s ratty clothing. “Seriously, you’re insured for this?”

     “I told you I was a professional.” Kangee’s voice was indignant, which brought a smile to Logan’s lips. It was hard looking pissed off while clinging to a rock wall sixty feet in the air. “For Christ sakes, move onto the ledge.”

      Logan accommodated him by placing his feet firmly on an overhang. “Better?” he asked. For him, it was a great feeling. Logan closed his eyes, enjoying the sun warming his face. A light breeze ruffled his hair. He sighed with contentment. The relief was short-lived, the guide’s glare hijacking the moment.

     Logan casually leaned over to look at the other man’s face. Kangee was beet red with rivulets of sweat pouring down his round cheeks.

     “No, today you’re the Sherpa.” Logan pointed to him. He reached up, exploring the next protuberance of rock with his fingers, looking to gain purchase and haul his body upwards, then added, “Hardly Mt. Everest. This is barely a hill.”  

     Logan considered telling him about his trek in the mountains of Turkey or the time he actually did climb Mt. Everest in Nepal, then decided against sharing the information. Kangee wasn’t interested in much beyond the promised two hundred-dollar bills folded neatly in Logan’s back pocket.  

     Logan’s foot slipped, sending loose debris below. Kangee ducked dramatically, making Logan roll his eyes. Logan paused, letting the tiny avalanche cease while he scanned the vast canyon. Its beauty was breathtaking. It looked like a fiery cauldron with orange and red rocks. The stone was flecked with mica so bright, it made him squint. Looking down, he watched a crooked creek wind its way through the rocky canyon floor sparkling like a silver ribbon. Stacked giant boulders dotted the landscape in shades from sand to rust.

     He searched the horizon, noting that the cliffs’ flattened surfaces made them resemble tabletops, the corners rounded from years of running water. The sun was a dazzling yellow ball burning his eyes. There was not a cloud in the sky.

     “Hold on, for Pete’s sake!” Kangee yelled, dodging a second minor avalanche. “All you said you wanted were some pictures! I’m going to get thrown off the reservation!” He began a stream of complaints Logan had listened to for the last forty-five minutes escalating as they climbed higher. “You’ve gotten plenty of shots already. You never said anything about going up the mountain.”

     Logan looked at the unrelenting sunlight, wishing he’d worn a hat. His dark hair was plastered to his head from the shimmering waves of heat. He should have left his jacket back at the car, along with Kangee, he thought ruefully. 

     It wasn’t even nine in the morning, and it was stifling. His newly inked tattoo itched, the bandage chafed by the strap of the canvas bag he had over his shoulder. 

     Elliot said he had been too hasty with the tattoo; Logan wasn’t even sure he got the colors right. But the shop was there, the tequila was flowing at a steady rate, and he barely felt a thing. 

     The inked skin bothered him less than Kangee’s complaints. “Well, I’ve come too far to go back at this point. You can return to the jeep, Kangee. I can see where I need to go and don’t need your help anymore.” 

     Logan glanced down at the rental. The black four-by-four looked like a dung beetle against the desert floor.

     He knew it wasn’t much further to his destination. The nest was above him, just over the next outcropping of rocks. Though it was well hidden, a colorful shell stood out in the desert landscape, and when he spied it from the other side of the canyon, he took off racing up the side of the cliff like King Kong climbing the Empire State Building, Kangee whimpering like a baby behind him.

     He estimated the distance to the next ledge where the thorny nest rested, the smooth shell of a giant egg within reach. His heart hammered with excitement. He could see the top of the speckled blue surface of the humongous egg resting there. Maybe he should have included a tattooed egg on his shoulder as well. It was gorgeous, the color as bright as the Arizona sky above him. Looking at the vibrant shell, Logan knew seeing it through a camera lens couldn’t do it justice.

     It was so close, Logan’s fingers itched with anticipation of touching the smooth surface of the shell. He had hoped to get a glimpse of the legendary creature, a few pictures with the camera the university had loaned him. Logan knew photos would not be enough. He never dreamed he’d be able to see an actual live specimen. Living, breathing proof of the mythical Thunderbird was within his reach.

“I’m not going to hurt it,” he said more to himself than Kangee, his tone soothing. “I just want to examine it.”

     He flexed his sore hands, gritty from the sand embedded in them. He had done it, finally done it, and when he returned to the campus, close up pictures of the egg in hand, plus some sort of DNA sample, not only would he get the elusive grant money but also the promised chair to start up a new department in Cryptozoology. His team would be the first to be acknowledged, accredited, and recognized for the course of study in this new field of science. It was long overdue in his opinion, not that anybody cared what he thought. More importantly, he’d beaten Aimee to the finish line. She would have stolen the egg.

     A grin spread across his tanned face, his teeth gleaming from the stubble of his beard. He wished he had a cigar to celebrate. Maybe tonight, when he Skyped to inform Elliot of their discovery. He would include Elliot, they were partners, after all. Partners in crime, he added with a laugh. They’d done some serious rule breaking together over the years just to get in the vicinity of a cryptid. 

     They’d been researching the legendary bird for a long time. Sacred to many of the indigenous tribes of North America, it was called the Thunderbird because of its powerful wings, which were said to have created thunder for the world. 

     This past year, both Logan and Elliot had interviewed Native Americans such as Kangee from Vancouver to Mexico, cataloging their folklore, searching for a common thread. Whether it was Lakota, Ojibwa, or Sioux, Logan was convinced the great bird could be found outside the realms of their mythology. Sightings were rare, they learned, but they existed, becoming more commonplace recently. It was as if there were an explosion of people seeing the mythical creatures.

           The two known photographs were grainy and looked doctored, but still the stories persisted. There had even been a half-baked special on one of the cable networks. It was a laughable production and did more to relegate his field to fiction than any of the pictures that popped up in the National Enquirer.

     The trail had started months ago with the tale of the capture of a huge creature in Mexico, its wingspan the length of a barn. Someone had called his mentor, Professor Haversham reporting the information. The professor validated the data, giving the leads to Logan and Elliot with the intent to bring in reliable proof. Elliot respectfully bowed out of this trip, but Logan wouldn’t let anything interfere with his pursuit of evidence.

     The mythical bird was reportedly hidden in the jungles of the Yucatan, but the political climate and drug wars made traveling there both dangerous and nearly impossible. 

     Logan took off for a few weeks. School was out, and he traveled there on a hunch, a pocketful of pesos and two leads to meet Guillermo Sanchez. All care of Professor Haversham. 

     Six hours on one plane, four on another. Twenty minutes later he negotiated a fare for a three-hour ride with a driver who spent the entire time practicing his English, babbling about his recent trip to Cincinnati.

“You sure you want to go there?” he asked when Logan rattled off the address. “It’s not safe, not a good place for Americans. I can take-”

“No, it’s all good. I have a meeting.”

“I’m not sure I want to go there.”

Logan didn’t even look up. “There’s an extra twenty in it for you.”

“Forty.” the cabbie demanded.

Logan nodded once. “Okay. Let’s go.”

“Really?” The cab driver’s eyebrow rose over his sunglasses. “With who?”

“Who what?” Logan asked without looking up. He was reading his notes.

“Who are you meeting?”

Logan said nothing for a minute then asked, “You taking me there or do I have to find another cab?”

“I got it, man. It’s your money.” He pulled out abruptly from the parking space preventing Logan from getting out of the car. They drove for a bit, the silence allowing Logan to close his eyes. It wasn’t long before the cabbie resumed his small talk. Logan suppressed a sigh, as the inquisitive driver circled back to the topic. 

     “Why are you here, man?” the cabbie asked. “What kind of meeting?”

     Logan gazed out the window without a response. He stopped sharing what he did for a living to avoid the inevitable eye-rolling and snide comments. Most people didn’t understand, their responses varying from condescension to contempt.

          The driver placed his sunglasses on the top of his head, his dark eyes watchful. “You a narc or something?”

           Logan shook his head with a smile. “I’m a tourist. I like to immerse myself in the local culture.”

     The driver’s lips thinned, his eyes darting to the mirror as if to study him.

     For the rest of the trip, the vehicle was thick with sullen silence. 

           Logan started with the first lead, taking them to an address in a small village that appeared deserted. The driver pulled over, twisting so his arm draped over the back seat. “Look everybody is gone, this is not a good sign.”

“Maybe they’re taking their siestas.” Logan’s voice was bored.

“You think this is funny?  Told you it’s no good, man. I don’t want no trouble. That will be fifty dollars more. Not pesos.”

“There’s not going to be any problems.” Logan held up his hand, a folded twenty in his palm. 

“I’ll take my money now.” The driver reached out for the cash.

Logan snatched his hand away. “When I get back. Don’t forget, we have another stop.”

The driver shook his head. “You’re crazy.” 

     Logan leaned over the front seat and pointed to the address. He looked down at the numbers on his crumpled paper. “That’s it. That’s the place.” 

“Look, the first sign of trouble, I’m out of here. With or without you.”

“Suit yourself.” Logan slid across the seat to exit the cab when a green weathered door of the colonial style building swung open, revealing a man with a gun slung over his shoulder, his hard face staring at them. 

  Logan sighed. This was not a good sign. Still, it wasn’t the first time he’d faced a hostile situation. Once he explained, paid them the necessary bribes, he was confident he could get the information he needed. It wasn’t as if he were there for anything but science. He opened the door placing one foot on the pavement.

“Trouble!” the driver shouted. “Hold on.” The cabbie punched the gas and took off, jerking Logan into the smelly back seat, the door swinging shut.

      “What the- Why are you leaving?” Logan yelled back. “He wasn’t pointing the gun at us.”

      “Yet! I told you the first sign of trouble we’re outta here.” The cabbie tore down the street, his forehead sweating. “Town belongs to the Ramira Clan. They are bad dudes. Nobody gonna talk to you. I ain’t gonna end up in a ditch. You’re not paying me enough. You looking to score drugs, or something?”

      “No! Not at all.”

      “I can get you-”

      “I said, I’m not interested,” Logan interrupted. 

The cabbie shrugged, then said, “You have two stops. Gimme the next address.”

     “Go back. I won’t be long.” Logan tried to reason with him. “I’ve done this before. It’s no problem.”

     The driver never slowed the car. “Then pay me what you promised. I’m leaving you here. I’m not staying,” he grumbled turning face-forward blabbering in a mixture of languages.

Logan spoke to him clearly in Spanish. “I’m doing nothing illegal. You don’t have to be scared.”

The driver responded with a spate of curses, then followed with, “I got a wife and three kids. I don’t need no cops, you get it, man?” 

“I’m not doing-”

“It’s not you. It’s them. They don’t ask questions. What are you looking for?”
          Logan weighed the value of sharing the information. He learned to be careful of talking about his job. Fighting the impatience building in his chest, he said, “Look, I’ll pay you double what we agreed.”

     He heard the driver say, “You’re nuts man. It ain’t worth it. You can see, ain’t nothin’ there but criminals.” Logan saw him staring at him through the rear-view mirror.  I don’t think you’re a tourist.” The driver waited for an answer, then mumbled, “Tourists don’t come here.”

     Logan sat back. He watched the taxi driver’s face, fear imprinted on his features. 

Twisting, he glanced back at the narrow streets, his trained eyes looking for clues. The guy was right Logan had to admit; there didn’t appear to be anything big enough to store a bird of that size.

     He shrugged, then rummaged through his knapsack for his notebook. Opening it, he found the sticky note attached to the inside flap of his leather planner. “Alright, then take me to the next stop.” He rattled off another address in a little-known town further south. 

     “If you looking for drugs, I can-” 

“I said, I’m not buying drugs.”

The driver made a left, getting onto the main road.

     They rode in silence for a while.

     “Who is Ramira?” Logan asked.

     “Better you don’t know,” the cabbie said, his gaze sharp. “Ramira controls everything in this area. If you don’t want drugs, what kind of business do you have with them?”

      “I’m looking for something.”

      The cabbie laughed. “What you do, you know, do for work?”

      Logan scratched his sweaty neck. “I’m a teacher… a researcher.”

      “In a school?” the driver asked.

      “I work in a college,” Logan said. “For a professor.”

      “If you’re researching for something, you ain’t gonna find it here. Ramira don’t like questions. Don’t like… attention.”

      Logan digested the information. Maybe it was a dead end. He’d traveled deep into territories where warlords controlled everything. Oddities were scarce in those situations. Things that Logan sought brought potential attention and he’d learned one thing concerning cryptozoology, most people wanted no part of these discoveries. This made his investigations difficult. If the area was crime-ridden, people didn’t want the notoriety it brought. The flip side, he’d learned, was most villages hid the truth as well, fearing the sensationalism that was usually followed by ridicule and finally, the debunking. It was a tough business he’d chosen, but he never regretted his choice.

      Logan sat back with another shrug. Much as he wanted to stop, he wasn’t suicidal. Well, not much, in his opinion. 

     The second address was located a fifty miles north of Guatemala, a village in the middle of nowhere. Logan got out; his legs stiff from the long ride. His khaki shirt clung to his back; the wrinkled sleeves rolled up revealing his tanned arms. “Stay here.”

      “No way, man. I’m going there.” The cabbie pointed to a sleepy taqueria. “I’m hungry.” He waited, then added, “I said, I’m hungry. I need some money to eat.”

      Logan dug into his pocket and handed him a few crushed bills.

      “You want something, too?” he asked.

      Logan shook his head. “Nah, not hungry.”

      “Okay, but I’m not gonna stop at another place.”

      “It’s alright.” Logan waved him off and walked into the one-story building.

      It was a repair shop, an old ‘48 Ford pickup on the single lift. Light filtered in through a glassless window. The air was thick with the smell of grease and oil. Mariachi music played on a tinny transistor radio that was probably older than Logan. A wooden counter had an antique register, the drawer open, a fly buzzing over its empty interior.

      “I’m looking for Guillermo Sanchez,” Logan said in Spanish.

      The sound of footsteps on the wooden floor, made Logan spin to find a heavyset man walking toward him, a rag in his beefy hands. 

      “What do you want with Guillermo?” he asked.

      “That’s between me and Guillermo,” Logan said. “Do you know where I can find him?”

      “He left yesterday.” He walked behind the warped wood of the counter, slamming the register closed. The bell chimed breaking the silence of the shop. 

      “Can you tell me where he went?”

      “Why should I?” the mechanic eyed him suspiciously. He placed both hands on the counter, the rag bunched in his fist. 

      Logan saw the distrust in the mechanics eyes. He relaxed his stance, allowing the man to size him up. He let the mechanic hold his gaze but kept his face neutral. Waiting for the right moment, he said, “I heard he has something I want… something I’ve been searching for.”

      The mechanic laughed. “Yeah, you and everybody else.”

 Logan’s back straightened, his face alert. “Someone else was here?”

The man nodded. 

“A woman? A woman with dark hair?”

           The mechanic didn’t answer. He wiped the dirty counter as if he were a barkeep. “There are many women with dark hair around here. What are you searching for, señor?” he asked.

      “I think you know,” Logan responded. 

      The mechanic’s face remained expressionless. He pulled a stool over and sat down. When he spoke, his voice was soft. “A chimera. A legend. A story.”

      Logan realized the man was waiting for his reaction. He could be anywhere in the world, whether he was in the mountains of Russia or the Sahara Desert, it was all the same. A slip in his emotions and he would lose the opportunity for information. The sources were weary of ridicule, disbelief, or exploitation.

As if Logan read his mind, the man said, “You want to come here and make fun of us. Take everything and give nothing back.”

Logan kept his face impassive. “No,” he added urgently moving forward. “No, I-”

      The man waved his hand in dismissal, his mouth turned down in disgust. “You don’t respect anything, you people.”

      “Are you Guillermo?” Logan asked. “Did you tell the woman… did you take her to see it?”

      “I told you, Guillermo is not here.” He rose to his feet as if to signal the conversation was over.

      “I have money.” Logan regretted his outburst as soon as the words left his mouth. Rookie error, he admonished himself. He was close, he could feel it. He blocked the man’s path. “I’m not here to hurt it.”

     “Sure. You just want to see the ave diablo?”

     “It’s not a devil bird,” Logan responded. “This is about the truth.”

“So, you want to study it, dissect it, kill it?” The man’s face was intense with hatred.

Logan backed away horrified. “No. I mean, study it, yes, kill it, never! The bird is sacred. It’s a precious part of your culture. People should know the truth. Know of its existence. We have to protect it.”

The man paused, his narrowed eyes sizing Logan up. “Why should I trust you?”

“Because Aimee Dupres will try to find it, first.”

“The woman with the dark hair.”

Logan nodded curtly, his throat tight. “You want me to be the one to discover it.”

The man didn’t answer. The silence built up around them like a thick blanket.

“I need to locate it first.” He paused and thought for a while how to express his thoughts. “We have different motives.”

“What is her motive?”

Instead of responding, Logan asked, “Did you trust her? The woman who was here first?”

The mechanic raised his eyebrows, then laughed a bit. “She will not like the place we sent her. It is what you call a wild, what do you call it? A wild duck chase?”

“Goose chase,” Logan corrected, suppressing a grin. “She’ll deserve it. We’re different.”

“Perhaps I’ll send you on a wild goose chase as well, eh?”

“That’s not the bird I want to see.” Logan smiled. “I am a scientist. A cryptozoologist. I want to prove it exists, validate the legends.”

“How do I know you are telling the truth?” the man demanded.

Logan paused knowing that every word that came out of his mouth could bring him closer to finding the bird. “I am an animal behaviorist. I’m getting my postdoc degree and I work for Professor Arthur Haversham, the most renowned animal behaviorist in the world. We are trying to legitimize cryptids. We want to prove that the mythology is not a fable, but a genuine part of your culture because we respect your people. I have dedicated my life to finding these creatures and proving they are not figments of imagination. They are real, they exist.”

The mechanic sized him up and added, “You are not like the others, I think.”

“Not at all. If the bird is real?” Logan started, waiting to see if the man would confirm the information. “If the Thunderbird indeed exists it will prove the legends of the native people are based in truths. It can be revered and protected for the miracle that it is.”

“Guillermo is not here,” the mechanic said after a lull in the conversation. 

Logan felt himself deflate. Closing his eyes, a sigh escaped him. 

The mechanic studied him for a long time. He went behind his counter and grabbed a pad, then scribbled an address on a piece of paper.

“For real?” Logan asked, hope blooming.

The man nodded. “I don’t know if it’s still there. It may have been taken to a safer

spot. The woman-”

“She’s relentless.” Logan pulled out a wad of bills. 

The mechanic shook his head. “No, señor. We don’t care about your money. We care about the Thunderbird.”

     Logan gazed at the wide expanse of the volcanic highlands; their surface covered with lush greenery. Sweat trickled down his back in the un-air-conditioned cab. The driver shifted impatiently. “I thought you said that was your last stop,” he whined. 

     Logan dug into his pants and pulled out some cash. “Fifty dollars more,” he told him. ”American.”

     “Two hundred, American,” the driver answered. “It’s very far.”

     Logan closed his fist around the money, ready to stuff it back into his pocket. He had been reckless, spending Haversham’s money as if it was endless. But he couldn’t stop, he was so close.

     “Okay, okay. It’s gotta be at least a hundred more, then?” The driver tried to snatched the cash.

Logan yanked his hand away.

“Come on. You gotta give me some of it now.”

     “How long?” Logan asked.

     The driver pulled at his lower lip. “I don’t know. It’s very far. Another hour, maybe more? Depending on traffic. Just give me the money now.”

     Logan looked out at the dusty streets. “Seriously?” he laughed.

     “Okay, okay. I’ll take you straight there, no funny business. Forty-five minutes.”

        Logan shook his head. “Take me and I’ll give you the money there.”

     The driver smiled. “Vamonos.”

     If Logan thought the other village was remote, this was a village that time forgot. 

     The air was weighted with humidity, the road a narrow, twisting path surrounded by dense foliage. There was not a building for miles. The car slowed, and they arrived in a small town that consisted of a rutted main street with four tumbled-down buildings clustered together. 

     Logan got out; his muscles cramped from sitting. The driver dropped him at a cantina, an adobe building with one crude window. “I don’t know how long I’ll be.”

      The driver pointed to a flowering tree. “I’ll be in the shade over there.”

      Logan walked into the saloon, dust motes sprinkling the stagnant air like fairy dust. 

     In the corner sat a man so wrinkled, he looked like a walnut. Wearing a stained white suit, he was hunched over a ceramic bowl, dipping a tortilla into a stew that made his lips smack with appreciation. 

      “I’m looking for Guillermo,” Logan stated.

The old man looked up, shook his head and went back to eating his meal.

“Guillermo?” Logan inquired again. “The mechanic sent me.”

“Eat first,” the man said after a long pause. He jerked his head toward a doorway, shouting for somebody named Teresa.

A woman shuffled out of the back, her face as seamed and brown as the parched earth outside. Her hands resembled the claws of a vulture. Logan considered them as she placed a plate of food before him. The aroma of ancho chilies wafted up. Logan’s stomach gurgled. He couldn’t remember the last time he’d eaten.

The old woman laughed; her dark eyes merry. She made quick movements of her hands toward her mouth in the universal mime of eating. Logan nodded with a smile, took the proffered spoon. He was suddenly ravenous and tired at once and knew he had to eat to survive. Logan tucked into his bowl of stew, spooning chunks of pork into his mouth. 

      Logan finished his meal, sitting back in his chair replete. He suppressed the questions bubbling inside of him, excitement warring with the knowledge that he was close and didn’t want to alienate the old man.

Guillermo pushed his plate away, burping noisily. “You are here for the Thunderbird?”

“Si?” 

Logan nodded wordlessly.

           “Many people ask about the Thunderbird.” He leaned forward as if to confide a secret. “Nobody believes us. After all, we are just simple people.” He made a rude noise.

      “I believe you,” Logan said, watching the man for a reaction.

      “It has been a secret for many years. It’s dangerous to be the holder of this secret.” The old man sat back, picking at his teeth with a dirty fingernail. He took a folded map from a pocket, then waved it in his hand. “Information is not free, and you do not look like a wealthy man.” He placed the map on the tabletop under his empty plate.

      Logan watched the man’s face and replied, “Sometimes it’s not about money.”

      Guillermo laughed and said, “I think you are very smart. Si. You are right, it’s not about money. But how do I know I can… trust you?”

      “How do I know you are telling the truth?” Logan said.

      The man laughed, his yellowed teeth like a collection of pebbles in a riverbed. He pulled out a long green feather from the deep recesses of his suit jacket. The color was as bright as the emerald trees on his uncle’s Christmas tree farm, and just as lush. Logan reached for it, but the man snatched it away, shaking his head. “I don’t think so.” He let it drift down onto the table between them.

      It was like nothing Logan had ever seen before, the shaft was long and thin, broken in the middle, so when Guillermo straightened it, it stretched to over twelve inches. The vanes gave it an oval shape, the barbs iridescent in the fading light. The color natural. This was not fake.

     The man grinned, his face full of pride. 

Logan eyed him warily. He had bought many false leads over the years. He knew he was close, and it didn’t matter how much this man wanted. He would pay anything for the chance to see the bird. He was on his own and had thrown Haversham’s money around like water in order to get here. He had used it all.  He would have to dip into his own savings. He couldn’t call Haversham for more funds, not again.

     The elderly man spit in the corner with disgust. “Others want it, señor. I have heard a woman is searching for it.”

Aimee, he thought, his heart pounding loudly in his ears. He had to get to it before her. “Can I have the feather? I will pay you for it.”

“Why pay for the feather, when I can give you the entire bird.”

“You would do that?”

The man nodded. “For the right price, I can give you its direction. Nothing more. The rest is up to you.”

“Why?”

Guillermo say up straighter and Logan could see the integrity and pride in the man’s eyes. “It’s about the greater good. You need to get there before that woman, Aimee… Aimee Dupree. Sí?” He nodded.

“She’s been here?” Logan asked.

The man rolled crumbs of tortillas on the table into a ball. “Not yet. But, I have heard of her. She has a certain reputation..”
            Logan felt his face flush. The skin tightened on his scalp. “She can be charming.” He knew that for sure, had gotten lost in her charm. Logan paused hesitating with his next comment. “She has deep pockets. She will pay you more money.”

“For what, so she can capture it? Destroy it? Put it in the circus?”

Logan blurted. “That would be a travesty.”

The sharp cackle of a startled bird broke the quiet. A flock of green and red long-tailed resplendent quetzals exploded from a tree and took off above them. They watched the birds, the national birds of Guatemala, in shared appreaciataion. “A little too north. They’re usually found further south.”

“We love our birds. All our wild life.” Guillermo’s eyes pinned him with hard intensity. He sighed gustily. “It is a problem, senor. You need proof yet we don’t want the bird taken.”

Logan kept his voice as steady as he could. “I would protect it with my life.”

“You see, sometimes money is not the issue,” Guillermo said.

“Then why all the charade about demands for money,” Logan asked.

Guillermo held up a hand. “We have everything we need here. The Thunderbird must be kept safe. With no natural predators, it has flourished, and it is a matter of time before it’s discovered and destroyed. We have to keep it hidden in places where it can have its freedom.”

Logan nodded. “I understand. But if she gets to it first, everything you fear will happen.”

Guillermo waited a beat before replying, “And if you find it?”

 “I can educate the public and keep the Thunderbird protected in its natural surroundings.”

“You cannot capture the bird.”

“I would never take it. We just want proof.”

“Can you promise that?” 

“I must get there before her, Aimee.  How much time do I have before she catches up?”

The man laughed. “Oh, several days. She will not find her way from the jungle for some time.”

Logan tilted his head and asked, “What happens when she does get there?”

“Then it’s on to its next hiding spot, as we have done these past thousand years.”

“What can you tell me about the Thunderbird?”

Logan recorded every priceless story from the man’s vast store of tales. They talked well past midnight. Teresa ushered him into a room with a rusty iron cot that squeaked noisily when he flopped on it. Logan smiled, thinking of the bed he’d shared with Aimee in Haifa last summer. It had been equally as loud. His smile faded; his heart constricted. The Aimee he knew then was not the woman she was today. He rolled over, forcing her from his thoughts. Aimee would turn up, she always did. He had to get there first. He let the stories the man told wash over him, satisfied he would beat her to the specimen.

 Yes, they had seen a Thunderbird. Yes, it was big as a barn. The colors… Logan couldn’t believe the sketches in vivid detail the older man had shared. This bird was sacred. It had been taken away in secrecy by Guillermo. North, to its breeding ground. To safety. Logan had just enough cash to get back to the states, Guillermo refused to take anything. 

     Logan had the map and a destination. That end of the trip was Arizona.

     Another couple of plane trips, all heading back to the States. 

     He called Elliot to wire him additional money and Logan’s pockets were flush again. He’d pay him back once school started in the fall. 

Logan pulled into the small town of Sierra Mesa, Arizona late Sunday night in his rented Jeep, disappointed the tiny museum was closed on Mondays. He cooled his heels at the tattoo shop next door, tatting up his shoulder with his impending discovery. Painful, but worth it, he eyed the colorful image, flexing his lean muscles to see it move. Between the cost, and the risk of infection, Elliot would have called him an idiot and told him to wait until he was back home for such extravagant body art.

Elliot had booked Logan into a small hostel near his destination. It was close to a college town, and he felt at home there among the visiting student population. The hamlet was filled with quaint restaurants and small artsy shops boasting Native crafts in turquoise and silver.

     Using the internet at a cafe, he found a local guide in an advertisement. They met at the museum early Monday morning. The guide shook his head when Logan revealed where he wanted to go. “That’s sacred land. You’re not allowed there.”

He got up, abruptly leaving the building. Logan followed him out.

     “I just want some pictures of the scenery,” Logan called. 

     The guide put on his hat. “No!” he shouted, racing down the steps of the building.

     “Fine. I’ll go it alone,” Logan said more to himself than anyone else.

     Another man was leaning against the adobe structure. He peeled himself away from the wall, coming up silently behind Logan. 

     “I’ll take you,” he said simply. He was as tall as Logan, with the sun-darkened skin of his ancestors. “My name is Kangee Little Song.”

     “You don’t even know where I’m going,” Logan told him.

     “I know where you’re going, and I know what you want to see.”

      Logan nodded, “Yes, I want to take some pictures of the mountains.”

      Kangee smiled slyly. “You don’t want to see mountains.”

      Logan said softly, “That’s right.”

“I can take you.” He tilted his head while he looked furtively around. “I got the supplies.” He pulled a nylon backpack from the ground. “See? It’s like I’ve been waiting for you. I have water, a first aid kit, a flare gun. I’m a pro.”

     The guide was confident, cool, as if he’d done this a million times. Logan was thrilled.

     “Pictures only, right?”

     Logan nodded. “Pictures only,” he confirmed, holding up the Canon camera he had on loan from Haversham. 

     The guided laughed. “The camera in your cell phone would be enough. That’s what most of you people use.”  He paused for a long minute. “It’s going to cost you.”

“Yeah, yeah, sure. No problem.”

     Logan was going after the find of the century. Money was the least important thing to him. 

That particular moment had finally brought him to this spot, dangling precariously off a cliff with his guide.

     Kangee’s incessant complaints didn’t rate high on his list, either, as they hung off suspended against the rock wall. He looked down to see the guide’s glossy head below him. They had started the climb hours ago. He could feel his heart beating like a kettledrum as his feet brought him closer to the summit.

     Heaving himself upward, Logan hooked his boot on the next outcropping, sliding onto the narrow ledge. He lay flat, hugging the warm rock. He placed his cheek against the stone, suppressing his excitement. His eyes smarted, and he admitted wryly it was from relief mixed with joy.

     Logan could swear he heard angels singing. It was right in front of him, bigger than any kind of egg he’d ever seen, the colors vivid, exotic. Having more of a cornflower hue with tiny speckled green spots, the egg lay on its side. 

     Attached to the nest were bright red strands of something light and soft that waved like streamers, as if celebrating the impending birth. 

        Man, Logan thought, Elliot would die if he saw this.

     He had to get moving. He knew they didn’t have much time. He rolled onto the balls of his feet and crouched down; his arms wide.

     Logan reached out, his mouth open in awe, his pulse pumping like a piston, as his fingers wrapped around the fine crimson strand caught in the mess of broken branches. It was a feather, the merest wisp, delicate and intense in contrast to the pale pallet of the desert. Logan separated a couple of plumes. He reached into his pocket for a small plastic envelope used for specimens. He stuffed a feather in, then secured it.

     “What are you doing up there?” Kangee yelled. “Sunbathing?” His voice was worried. His guide wasn’t so cool now. Logan smiled. Kangee held up the expensive camera. “Here, take this. Take some pictures, and let’s go already.”  

     The guide swung the camera in an upward arc for Logan to catch.

     “Don’t drop the camera,” Logan warned, his eyes only on the oversized egg. “You know what? Just hold the camera for now. I don’t need it yet.” He wanted to examine it, revel in the moment.

     Kangee climbed upward, his face coming level with the ledge where Logan now crouched.

     “Where are you going? You can’t touch that!” Kangee whispered.

     Logan ignored him. Reaching out, he gingerly picked up the egg, marveling at its solid weight. His palm caressed the warm surface. 

Here was solid proof. There would be no question of the validity of its existence. “I’ve got it,” he called out to the guide over his shoulder. “Hand me the camera now.”

      He crawled around looking for broken pieces of specimens to take back to the lab.

     “Got what? You’re taking it? Are you crazy? You never said anything about taking eggs!” Kangee was screaming now. He looked wildly around and slipped down a few feet. “I’m getting out of here. You’re on your own, Kemosabe.”

     “Yeah, I hear you, buddy. Everybody for miles around can hear you. I’m not taking anything,” Logan said under his breath, totally absorbed with his find. He looked down to see Kangee sliding down the cliff as if his butt were on fire, the nylon bag with their supplies slapping his back as he went.

     Logan pulled the canvas bag he had strapped to his body, resting it on the ledge. He jerked with a start when the egg suddenly bucked in his hands. Hugging it to his chest, he felt the vibrations inside the hard shell. He would protect it with his life. A slow smile spread across his face. This was more than he could have possibly hoped for. He needed to take some pictures but Kangee had the camera.              

“Are you coming?” Kangee shouted breathlessly from a few feet below him. “Dude, I’m outta here.”

     Logan looked down the steep incline, seeing the top of Kangee’s head. “You’re not going to believe this,” he called down. “I think it’s about to hatch. Come back up. Toss me the camera, now.” He held out his hand, knowing the guide would have to move back up.

     “It’s too far.” Kangee’s back was covered in sweat, his shirt dark with it. “You got a ton of pictures on the other side of the canyon with the telephoto lens.”

      Yeah. But this won’t be fuzzy or grainy. This would be up close, Logan thought to himself.

      “Don’t take the egg, man,” Kangee called up. “They’re gonna flay me alive.” He continued his descent.

      “I told you I’m not taking it. Just bring me the camera. Hurry!”

     The steady tap, tap, tap under Logan’s finger reminded him of his discovery. He felt a vague sense of unease. He didn’t belong here, but it was an unbelievable opportunity. Not only proof, but the possibility of photographing a live hatching.                

 So much rested on this happening. The image of his father’s face flashed in his mind. He wished he could share this discovery with his late father.

     Logan heard the mother bird before he saw her when a keening wail filled his ears. Kangee’s scream of terror came a second later. He glanced down toward Kangee’s shout. Logan stood, speechlessly staring at the beautiful creature.

     The guide’s dark eyes were bulging from their sockets. “Put the egg back! She’s going to kill us!”

     Logan was buffeted by a windstorm created by the mother’s black leathery wings. Outraged shrieks shattered the air. The foul odor of its body filled his nostrils. The smell of death clung to the bird’s dry, weather-beaten wings. “Don’t worry, Mama,” he said softly. “I was only admiring your baby.”

     Shiny, iridescent green feathers covered its chest, a crest of the odd red feathers curled coquettishly around its small turquoise head, strangely incongruous with its reptilian features. The creature was the size of a small plane, with long, calloused limbs that sported twelve-inch sharp claws. 

     As if programmed to respond to its mother, the egg wobbled in his hands, the insistent tapping becoming furious. The mother shrieked like a banshee.

     Logan reacted without thinking, turning to scale down the cliff, realizing he was still holding the egg close to his chest. It weighed about the same as the fifty-pound kettlebell he worked out with in the gym. It felt solid, not fragile as he’d thought it would. 

     He called to Kangee to stop, but he didn’t answer. His back to the rock wall, the guide was standing on a small ledge, his face covered, the camera dangling from his hands.

     Logan assessed the rock shelf where Kangee stood shaking with fear. The entire face of the cliff was filled with ledges and outcroppings for them to hide. The shelf that Kangee stood on jutted out, almost enclosing him. “Squeeze into the crevice. I’ll distract it,” Logan called.

      “Put the egg down!” Kangee wailed.

      “It’s okay. I think it’s going to hatch. Wait!” Logan wanted nothing more than to watch the event.

     Kangee ignored him, scrambling from his perch, frantic to escape. Logan could hear his panicked breaths coming in short pants. If he didn’t do something fast, the guide would hyperventilate. 

     Logan crouched to put the egg down, Kangee’s cry of alarm making him twist. He could feel a powerful wind gusting, making his skin ripple. He wanted to get some closeups, pictures to record the moment but his hands were occupied with the egg. He tried to find his cell phone, but it was out of his reach in his opposite pocket. The excitement overpowered any fear he might have felt.

     The mother bird hovered just above Logan, her sharp talons lashing out, her beak poised. She caught his jacket and pulled him. His feet lifted away from the surface of the rocks. He fumbled, losing his footing, but held tightly to the bucking egg in his arms. 

     He heard the leather of his jacket rip. Logan gripped the ledge with one hand, his fingers leaving their imprint for all posterity in the soft sandstone as he pulled himself back onto a narrow piece of rock below the nesting place. He glanced backward. She was so close to him; he looked her straight in the eye. She moved nearer, trying to wipe him from the cliff face with her flexible wing, her beady orange eyes narrowed with hostility, until she saw her egg poking from the top of his arms. 

     He could swear she looked from him to her egg. The timbre of her calls changed from anger to distress. She fluttered in a frenzy, her movements stirring up a sandstorm of grit that blinded him. His eyes watered, and Logan sighed with resignation.

     This was not going the way he wanted. The Thunderbird cawed loudly, then circled away, hovering out of his line of sight, watching him carefully.

     He spared another look at his guide, satisfied that Kangee was well on his way to the ground. 

     At least he had the pictures he had taken from across the ridge of the nest, he thought, eyeing the camera flapping from its strap on the guide’s back as he raced down the mountain. Maybe he could get Kangee to snap a few shots once he was on the ground.

     “Whatever you do, don’t drop the…” Logan called when he heard Kangee screaming as if he was being tortured. He watched the camera slip off the guide’s shoulder to his elbow and finally down his arm. It hung suspended for a minute, then fell in a graceful arc to the ground.

     It came apart as it bounced off the jagged rocks, landing at the bottom in a million little pieces.

     “… camera,” Logan finished with a curse. 

      Hanging onto the rocks he pushed himself up another level to return the egg to its home. The head poked through the crack; its feathers plastered to its bald head. Logan lost his breath with wonder. 

     Without thinking, he reached for his jacket pocket awkwardly trying to get his cell again, losing his balance for a minute, then grabbed the rock wall. Pictures, he needed pictures. The camera was gone, he had to get something, at least one shot!

     He still had a feather as solid proof, that is, if he didn’t fall off the cliff and smash into a bloody mess next to the camera. 

     Their bag of supplies followed the camera landing in a puff of dust. 

     He could hear the guide yelling like a maniac as he descended. Logan looked from Kangee’s form to the monster hanging in the breeze, observing him. She was going to eat them alive. 

     With a heavy heart, he recognized this was turning into an epic fail. He needed to get this precious bundle to its spot and try to escape, with no record of the event. He watched the mother floating anxiously nearby.

     Pushing upwards with one hand, the other wrapped protectively around the egg, Logan was unmindful of the fact that his new charge chose that moment to poke its razor beak through a small crack in the surface of the egg. 

     The half-hatched chick seized Logan’s index finger, slicing it to the bone. He endured the pain with a long-suffering groan. “Another time, hatchling,” he told it, knowing he had to return it before either he or the guide was turned into dinner. 

     He placed the egg carefully onto the ledge, giving it a gentle nudge so it rolled to rest against its nest. He left a bloody mark on the egg’s surface. His hand throbbed, the blood welling in a ruby-colored gash. 

     Logan slid on his belly to the edge. He maneuvered so that he leaned on his flat stomach, then overbalanced himself enough to plummet downward a few feet, his chin and flank abraded by the rock face as his hands and knees stopped his descent and gripped the soft stone. 

     His palms were scraped raw, staining bloody handprints on the cliff surface. 

     The bird shrieked loudly. The sound bounced off the canyon walls, making Logan wince.

     “Kangee!” he yelled. “Take a picture with your phone!” 

     The bird dipped, swinging toward the guide, who took off like an Olympic runner toward the car. Kangee was out in the open with no cover. The creature pursued him like a fighter bomber, her claws clenched into fists. 

     Logan knew he had to distract it, so he screamed loudly, the sound echoing like a gunshot in the valley. With a loud cry, she wheeled around, looking for all the world like a kite on a string, her gaze zeroing in on Logan, who was exposed on the rocks like a termite. 

     She came right at him and slammed into his body crushing him against the rocks. She attached herself to the wall, enveloping him like a giant moth. 

     He could feel their hearts beating together, the hot breath of hell on the back of his sweating neck. The wings pushed at him as if trying to scrape him off the rock face. Dust rained down where the bird’s talons dug into the surface stone. She gave an ear-splitting shriek of frustration, then ejected from the cliff.

     She flew upwards, circling like a vulture, waiting for him to fall.

     Logan slipped, his feet going out from underneath him. He landed hard on his butt on a short outcropping. He saw Kangee was nothing more than a dot on the horizon, halfway to the town where they’d started from.

     The bird crowed triumphantly. It rose high in an arc, then danced on the breeze, facing off from the other side of the canyon. The wind rippled along the wings, making them look like fabric.

     Logan used the opportunity to rocket down the side of the cliff. His torn fingers gripped the fissures, nails breaking off. His toes dug in, catching himself from falling to the canyon floor. His abused knees were a mess, the skin along with the material of his pants worn away. 

     Logan twisted his head around to get a look at the magnificent creature flapping angrily, stirring up a hurricane. He watched the red crest of feathers on the top of her reptilian head wave at him. 

     He fumbled again for his cell phone from his pocket, his numb fingers unable to grab a hold of it.

     Logan felt tears smart his eyes at this lost opportunity.

     The sound of the bird’s flapping distracted him from giving his loss any more thought. The wings reminded him of the sails of a ship catching wind. His regrets vanished and the cell phone was forgotten as she charged forward, coming at him in a frontal attack, her claws catching the hole of his jacket, ripping it another few inches, dislodging him once more so he slid further down, the rock burning his face. 

     The creature wheeled away, coasting around the canyon, her loud cries surrounding him. With a screech, she swooped down triumphant, once again queen of her domain.  

     Logan wasted no time scrambling, or perhaps plummeting, he later remembered, down to the base of the cliff.

     Kangee’s supply bag lay on the remains of his camera. He reached for it but missed, the returning predator making him dodge for a deep valley between two boulders. 

     He squeezed in the tight ravine. The bird landed above him and pecked through the tall rocks, trying unsuccessfully to get him. 

     He was trapped. He debated if he could wait her out. He eased the phone from his chest pocket, taking a series of pictures as well as some video, his fingers stiff and achy. It wouldn’t be National Geographic material but at least he would have some element of proof.

     Logan looked at his watch. Twelve hours to nightfall, he counted. His blood froze as a new call rent the air from the opposite direction. 

        Hot damn, here comes Papa, he thought wildly. He filmed his attacker, but it moved with a speed that was hard to follow.

     He glanced up at the beast filling the sky over him, wondering just how big the mother bird’s mate was going to be. Her reptilian head looked up quickly, searching for help.

     The hatching mewed from the nest.

     “Hey!” he shouted; his voice raw. “Junior’s calling!” The mother bird watched him; its beady eyes sharp with hostility. 

     The newly hatched chick gave another weak cry, drawing the mother’s attention. She abandoned her pursuit to fly upward in a giant circle. 

     She was magnificent. Logan waited what he thought was ten heartbeats, then rushed from the rocks, reaching out to grab the supply bag, then made a dash for the car.  

     He took off sprinting, his heart beating wildly, the bag swinging from his wrist. Dodging boulders, he wouldn’t look up but concentrated on the objective of escaping alive. He could hear the beat of wings behind him from the other bird.

     Sweat poured from his scalp onto his abraded face, the stinging pain blinding him. He jumped over a small stream, becoming airborne like a basketball player, but felt the hot wind of the monster’s flight fanning his back.

     Logan spared a quick glance, his lips tightening. This one was twice the size of the other, its beak thicker, the eyes angrier. Uh-oh, Daddy’s home. Logan leaped over a cluster of rocks that would have set his high school track coach into a spasm of ecstasy.

     The car appeared around the bend, below him in a small dip. He picked up speed, his boots flying over the ground.

     Logan knew he was close. One leap and he was golden. He backed up, gauging the distance, his breathing harsh in his own ears. Gathering speed to make the dive for the vehicle, he raced toward the end of the small plateau.

     Digging his feet in, Logan sprang forward, jumping to the safety of the car. He leaped high into the air, the bag flying ahead of him, dragging him with its weight. He braced himself for a fall that never came. 

     The Thunderbird grabbed his jacket in his beak and soared high. Logan watched unbelievingly as the ground grew further away. He gathered the nylon bag to his chest, his fingers digging frantically inside. Where was it? He searched; his hands clumsy. 

     The canyon filled with the creature’s screams as he got a bird’s-eye view of the entire area. 

     His palm closed around the butt of a flare gun. Twisting sideways, away from the bird’s face, he pulled the trigger. The pistol erupted in an explosion of bright red light. 

     The monster’s eyes rolled with fear. It stopped dead in midair, hung suspended for a nanosecond, then dropped altitude at an alarming pace. 

     They were falling toward the ground. Logan braced himself for impact. 

     The bird opened its mouth with a loud call. Logan felt the air rush past him as the Thunderbird dropped him.  

     He picked up speed falling toward earth. Closing his eyes, he awaited the crash.

     Logan heard the cries grow more distant as the bird moved upward, guiding his small family to disappear into the horizon.

     Logan plummeted down and landed sideways on a bed of stiff grass, the breath rushing out of him. With numb fingers, he pulled out his cell phone, snapping unfocused pictures of the pale down on the belly of the fleeing Thunderbirds.

      A face floated into his line of view, framed by a curtain of dark curls. 

      “You’re a mess, Logan.” 

      “Aimee,” he whispered, regret tinging his voice.

      He felt her hands run down his limbs, hissing when she patted his tattoo. 

      “You’ll live.” She plucked his cell phone from his numb hand, shaking her head. “I need this.” She bent down to caress his aching cheek. “You make everything so hard.”

      He opened his mouth to reply, his sight wavering, the piercing sun blotting out her face. She disappeared and he wasn’t sure if he dreamed her.

     He lay there wondering why he was three times a fool to want to do this. He rolled flat. The world receded for a moment, and he was back with his father in a boat twenty years ago.

     Oh yeah, he thought vaguely. That’s why.

About the Author:


Michael Okon is an award-winning and best-selling author of multiple genres, including paranormal, thriller, horror, action/adventure, and self-help. He graduated from Long Island University with a degree in English and then later received his MBA in business and finance. Coming from a family of writers, he has storytelling in his DNA. Michael has been writing from as far back as he can remember, his inspiration being his love for films and their impact on his life. From the time he saw The Goonies, he was hooked on the idea of entertaining people through unforgettable characters.

Michael is a lifelong movie buff, a music playlist aficionado, and a sucker for self-help books. He lives on the North Shore of Long Island with his wife and children.

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