Monthly Archives: December 2021

Armera Virtual Book Tour

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Sci-Fi & Fantasy

 

Date Published: 12-09-2021

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Two unlikely companions search for a kidnapped wizard in this fantasy novel.
 
The land of Armera is orbited by the moons of Vesti, colonized long ago by wizards escaping the planet’s terrible wars. Armera survived these conflicts, and benevolent wizards have returned to the planet, forming a Wizards Council to broker relations between the two civilizations. But now, DeMartize—Vesti’s greatest wizard—has been kidnapped by the evil twins Kal and Sak, and the colony blames the council. With war threatening, the high wizard Mernes the Mad brings together his 14-year-old apprentice, Peterzik, and Cedric, a 14-year-old “hero rescuer and thief,” for the job of saving DeMartize. Peterzik’s knowledge and Cedric’s accomplished thievery make them the perfect pair. 
 
Guided by a vision from the council, the two set out on their long and dangerous journey across challenging terrain. They’re beset by many daunting creatures to fight, negotiate with, or trick to get past; these include the Snow King, a fire dragon, a water monster, and a kingdom of bats. And the duo will still have to defeat the powerful and wicked twins, hoping to rescue DeMartize before war is declared. 
 
 

 

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EXCERPT

Chapter One

Meeting

The first meeting of our two heroes. The happenings that took place after that, including an important basic lesson on baby dragons and a duel with a Toad Master.

Long, long ago, there stood a forest. As forests go, the oldest one on Armera. Its memory went back to the beginning of time. The trees recalled the first forming of the planet when they, as young saplings stood touched by the creative hand of God. An old group of trees, with deep thoughts. When man in his haste and ignorance, began to walk what he called Armera. In his stupidity, he taught the trees to talk. The trees explained their love of nature to man, and man gave the trees their names, and names for each type of plant, and animal, for man was the Namer of all things. Man, who couldn’t stand anything without a title, also titled the Forest Forgotten. The trees accepted the Namer’s name, content in the knowledge they shared with man, for the trees were very wise.

On the day when our tale starts in the Forest Forgotten, it was as always, a sunny day. On Armera it was never cloudy unless magic troubled the land. The flowers put on their brightest colors for spring. All the plants and animals looked happy to see new life again after a long cold winter, so they dressed accordingly. The older trees talked quietly to each other around the edge of a big clearing.

Cedric peered carefully from behind the branches of a huge walnut and felt clever for hiding. The old tree didn’t even snap at what in normal conditions he would have considered a “pushy human”. It looked much too involved in having an interesting conversation with a Laughing Lily Bush.

He wore a green and gold tunic with striped hose, green and yellow dotted gloves, and shoes and hat which contained a green and yellow feather. At fourteen, he was tall, handsome, and confident.

Hair of silver braided back from his high forehead and black eyes sparkled as he searched about the landscape. Stepping out from behind the oak, he walked cautiously around the area, then tripped over a short stump. The Lilly laughed. He stood and saw…nothing! How boring! For he was always ready to kill a dragon in the woods or slay a Toad Master. Now I am going to write about baby dragons, so if you already know about them, skip this next section.

 

A Brief History of Baby Dragons

At the time of this tale, dragons, or Toad Masters were high on the hunting list for any hunter or professional hero in the forest. They multiplied too quickly and were always hungry during early stages. This massive hunger caused them to eat defenseless young talking trees and laughing lilies. Baby dragons couldn’t  be hunted for it was the law. Babies needed to reach full-grown status to be hunted by man. They ate trees or flowering plants, full-grown dragons went after different game, they devoured treasure searchers, and anyone who were after their jewels, also dogs cats, and young children. No one in his right mind would search for a dragon alone. Dragons are well armored with gold and jewels on their bellies. They are like gigantic flying Galapagos iguana. Their wingspan can be up to forty feet, they range in color from yellow to silver and green. The gold dragons are the worst, for they are usually female and mothers. They are excellent hunters of people and a destroyer of towns, and they train their babies to be as cruel and mean as they are. Mothers show babies lots of gems. They take their favorites and these are added to their stomachs in a secret dragon ceremony. No human has ever seen this ceremony.

Diamond ones are considered valuable to hunters, as are dragons covered with any one gemstone. Gold dragons with rubies or emeralds are considered fierce. But every dragon is not worth the same amount of effort or money to kill. So, one learned to be picky. There are teams of professionals in Armera for such hunts, and they are well-paid, for such adventures are dangerous.

Hoards are protected by dragons in the hills, and they contain millions of gems. Such hoards are much too valuable for the average person to lose. They always try to find out where a dragon keeps their hoards before killing one. This way they can kill it, take the treasure, and become rich. Enough on the dragon subject, let’s get back to Cedric.

He hadn’t seen a dragon, grown or little in a while, and was quite disappointed. One wonders what Cedric was doing and on such a sunny morning. From his looks and clothes, he would never be mistaken for an average forest ranger or tourist, and he was neither. Curiosity drove Cedric to be in the woods that day. Curiosity, which can kill us all. An unusual piece of mail arrived at his home.

Mail was delivered twice a day, and on holidays three times a day. The postage rates were cheap, for telephones and pony express weren’t invented in Armera yet. The one-way people kept in touch with each other was by writing, and the service continued to be well-used by the citizens. As any self- respecting hero rescuer and thief would, Cedric always collected his the second it got dropped off. Many times, he spoke to the flying mailman as he arrived at his door. Like him, others also enjoyed the common sight of the mailman. Bad weather permitting, Cedric waited for him every day.

Well, on this one day, Cedric’s mail seemed more interesting than usual. In last evening’s mail, a weird message came. Now in Cedric’s line of work, as a thief, and rescuer he always got weird letters. So, what he received last night needed to be unusual indeed for him to notice its strangeness, if you get my meaning.

All thoughts turned to the packet again as he stood, and he took it from his cloak’s secret pocket in the lining. The letter and the map came folded into expensive red and green velvet envelopes, these envelopes, were not at all easy to purchase in Armera. Such paper needed to be designed by a wizard. Normal artists didn’t have the skill. He confirmed the location by opening the map. Yes, Cedric was in the right spot. Pulling out his trusty army green Armera Scout compass, and he checked his position. He had been an Armera Scout from the time he was six to ten. All thieves in training joined the Scouts to learn survival skills for the wild. “Yes,” he thought to himself, “This is the correct spot.” He reread it again, out loud, and under his breath. Here is what it said.

Sir:

You have offended a lady and my honor! So, I challenge you to a DUEL in the meadow twenty-seven northwest of the city Var. Meet me in the east center section of the Forest Forgotten, on the two hundred and twentieth Demark Day.

I am,

Petertik

Looking again at the spidery, refined signature he realized that at least he would be fighting an educated person. He refolded and placed it and the compass back in the lining in his cloak for safe keeping. From the first moment as Cedric studied the handwriting, he became curious. Searching his vast file of names and pictures of faces that he collected from his early childhood as a hobby, no such person was found. When he chose his profession of stealing, and rescuing he turned from hobby to profit therefore the file became important. But he found no Peterzik listed. As he sat before his homely fireplace, and he ran his memory over his few years of hazardous existence, and he could recall no one named Peterzik. Cedric asked his mother; she didn’t know a Peterzik. His father couldn’t be asked because he died in a meteor shower when Cedric was four.

The new cleaning person Cedric hired at the local trader’s market last week didn’t know a Peterzik. None of his fellow associates in the Thief Union of which Cedric was an important member, knew a Peterzik. So, Cedric wondered as his glance moved over the grass again, who’s this Peterzik? No one could tell him. Why is Cedric so interested dear reader in finding out? Because he wanted to fight him!

First, it had been the slowest tourist season anyone could remember on the planet of Armera. A rumor existed of war boiling off world, from the moons of Vesti, that did not encourage tourists. No sane person would take a vacation where war might start any minute. Hardly any of the off-worlders, who grew up on the moons of Vesti,or noble on-worlders who lived in the outskirts of Ver came into the city for pleasure. The rumors said that many of the wealthy houses stayed in the guardianship of house wardens, who guarded the homes until their masters’ return. Many of the homeowners left for off-world. The wealthy would not be coming back to Armera until the war ended, or peace reigned. The rich only waited for the first blow. And they were not the only people who sensed a feeling of doom for Armera. These thoughts were felt by almost everyone in the whole region, with money or not. No one could imagine how the rumors of impending war started.

Anyway, basically no one of importance remained in town who could be robbed. Even though Cedric reputed to be an excellent hero rescuer and thief, he needed someone to work on, he couldn’t rob air. One million thieves appeared registered in the city of Var. Over one half of them on layoff, the union unable to support its membership in this odd dry spell, which means it took drastic measures. More of them reported being laid off every day., He was the best purse cutter on the planet so Cedric ignored the layoffs. In fact, just a few days ago Cedric recently cut the purse off the Mayor of Var. The Mayor had been carrying ten thousand dollars and Cedric was now a little flush. The union became so very excited by Cedric’s robbery, last night they threw him a party, for being one of the best young robbers in the city, and he was proud to be a member.

The reason Cedric answered the letter was curiosity about this Peterzik. Besides, he needed some fresh air. Especially after his late night out last night. Air would help to clear his head. The cool air made Cedric yawn widely.

Last night of running around the streets with friends looking for someone to rob had caught up with him today. Too much running around entered his life lately, and he must slow down. He didn’t want to turn into a night owl at fourteen. He glanced up and noticed the sun marching toward its zenith. There were still had three hours until the appointed time mentioned in the letter. The whole group of trees and bushes seemed silent. Except for the Laughing Lily Bush and the Old Oak Tree.

“HA !” said the Laughing Lily, “Big old gorgeous Tree, don’t you flirt so much with me, or I will have to tell your old wife.”

“HO!” He replied, “You wouldn’t dare. You’re the one who started it.”

They both stared at each other in anger and silence returned.

Slipping to the ground and resting his back against the old friendly oak’s trunk, he  decided to take a nap. Time did not stand still while Cedric slept on. A few hours passed. Cedric turned in his sleep, and his body rolled near a happy fern.

“Be careful friend! Don’t crush my leaves,” said the fern as it moved a leaf away from Cedric’s head.

Suddenly behind a group of happy ferns, a twig snapped. A human foot trod softly there. A faint rustle of nervous laughter rang from the Laughing Lily near the old oak. Snoring he slept on.

Into the clearing stepped a striking teen, dressed in deep red and midnight black velvet. This was Peterzik, over six feet in height, thin, with straight long black hair cut neatly to his shoulders, eyes of a piercing blue, the type of eyes that have sharp intelligence in them. His coloring was white and pale. Yet the main thing that people remembered when they met Peterzik, was his grace. For he moved into any space with the ease of a dancer, a tango dancer, always smooth. The way he dealt with other people was smooth. Part of his charm was tact. Crossing into the middle of the grassy area, he didn’t trip over the stump like Cedric. His eyes fell on Cedric, who still sleeping peacefully. He coughed, every five seconds or so seeking Cedric’s response. There wasn’t one. He frowned more deeply, and gracefully, he walked closer to Cedric and coughed again louder. Cedric didn’t respond. Closer he stepped, until he stood above Cedric, Peterzik cleared his throat. Turning in his sleep, Cedric didn’t hear him. Peterzik briskly shook Cedric awake.

“Uh, What?” asked Cedric sleepily.

“I am Peterzik, wake up!” hissed Peterzik .

When he turned over, Cedric faced the strange voice with a degree of caution and opened one eye half-way. What he saw was a very tall teen, threatening above him, who looked to be alone. Stretching out a hand for support Cedric pushed himself to his feet. Upon rising, he rubbed his eyes. Then facing Peterzik squarely and looking into his steel blue eyes he asked, “How have I upset you sir?”  Cedric noticed that he had never seen Peterzik before today. Remembering people was his job, and such a memorable face he would have remembered.

“Sir,” answered Peterzik calmly using all the proper forms of address, (the proper forms of address being, to remove one’s hat, bow, and then proceed to talk to one’s opponent with you hat in your hand) “You have offended me by living and insulted a lady I love.”

Now Cedric stood quietly for a moment and thought about what Peterzik had said. Our Cedric had a reputation of being a teenage idol about town and prided himself on being dashing. Cedric knew one or two young girls who had given him much more than just a passing look . While he thought all this, his eyes strove over Peterzik’s appearance, he was rather handsome and intense. If things had been different, he quite possibly could be his friend. But staring at Peterzik’s face with the strong frown, he noted that he looked determined. Then Cedric realized that he would have to duel him. The look of concentration on Peterzik’s face made anything less than a duel impossible. The young girl in question Cedric hoped was worth the trouble. Because Peterzik standing there, looked to be to Cedric a true-hearted zealot.

Cedric slowly he drew his sword. Peterzik took a hair from his head he ran it along the edge of the blade. The one strand of hair parted in half. Cedric was quite impressed with Peterzik’s ability at sword sharpening. Stopping dead in front of Cedric, Peterizik screamed, “Die Blackguard!”

Cedric yelled, “Defend thyself accuser.” Then he took out his sword. Both opponents circled each other, looking for a way to begin to attack the other. Then they made eye contact. By mutual consent both stopped and proceeded with the basic fencing rules of defense.

Both saluted and took enough steps forward so each of their blades contacted for the first time. Then, something happened.

A huge golden thunderbolt of lightning hit the short space inches between our two heroes. All thought of a duel between them vanished from their minds as a cloud of black came up from the ground in the same space where the thunderbolt had struck. The trees, lilies, and ferns, who had been talking with marked interest and placing bets, as our heroes started their fight instantly stopped when the smoke arose. All trees and bushes stood unmoving and strangely silent. The whole area was bathed in eerie darkness.

Then out of the darkness, from what seemed to be all sides around them rose a voice. It was loud and spoke from stereo speakers. The sound was recognizable to all creatures. The voice was that of a Toad Master.

About the Author

Constance Meccarello-Gerson

Constance Meccarello-Gerson was born in Poughkeepsie N.Y. She is a graduate of Florida Southern College with a BA in Acting. She also attended the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. HB Studio, Actors Studio, in NYC. She is a member of SAG, Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Si Omega. Her MFA in Acting is from Brooklyn College. She has appeared on TV, film, and on stage in NYC. For 20 years she taught as a mentor and teacher of English and Theatre arts for the New York City Department of Education and for the University at Santa Cruz. She also taught for ten years as a Speech Coordinator at Touro College. She was an executive at Bloomingdales. Her writing as appeared in Reflections, also in the Best American Poets series. Currently she lives in NYC with her husband Alain, a parrot named Benji, and lots of fish.

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Solomon’s Porch Virtual Book Tour

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Inspirational / Mystery

 

Date Published: 08-10-2021

Publisher: Elk Lake Publishing, Inc.

Time.

Solomon is running out of it.

A broken and forgotten man fighting the demons of dementia, he longs for the past when both he and his beloved military town of Ginger Ridge once thrived.

When his stooped body collides with the hardened realities of the present, Solomon lies in a coma as an unidentifiable victim of a hit-and-run accident in a faraway city.

With nothing to keep him going but flashbacks of relationships from his past, Solomon has no idea what a difference he will make on the future …

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EXCERPT

Time.

Solomon was running out of it.

He rarely made wise choices when pressed for time.

He ached to get home in time for dinner. Sweat trickled from his forehead as he battled the stifling beat-down of the afternoon Georgia sun. At the ivy-covered iron gates to the cemetery, he shielded his eyes and considered his options.

From either direction, the route led home. He was sure of it. 

Why couldn’t I find their tombstones today?

Tombstones and rituals were all he had left.

Except for Sadie Beth. I must hurry!

He loosened his bow tie as he thought about a tall glass of Sadie Beth’s sweet tea. She would be getting worried soon. He checked his watch. The second hand hadn’t circled the dial in years. Still, he couldn’t force himself to remove the timepiece. Sadie Beth had surprised him with it when he’d dropped her off at college.

Always on my mind. Love, Sadie Beth.

He smiled as he remembered the engraving.

As a shiver ran up his spine, he realized the sun had dipped low in the sky. He wiggled his cap back on his head and gripped his cane, using his finger to trace the names etched into the handle. Winnie on one side. Silas on the other. Another gift from Sadie Beth.

Better hurry. Sadie Beth will be waiting.

He winched himself up from the bench and took off at a pace he couldn’t handle. Soon, each breath brought an intense wheeze.

A shiver ran through him.

The paved driveway led to the street, he knew that for certain.

At the end of the drive, he expected to see a stop sign to his left. To the right, down the road a piece, should be the water tower which boasted the high school football legacy of the Ginger Ridge Eagles, state champions from 1997 through 1999. Visible from any direction, he trusted the beacon of the water tower to guide him to Main Street.

But the tower was nowhere in sight.

Solomon chose the road to the right, though it proved more winding and narrower than he recalled. Still, he felt certain the turnoff ahead would fork to the left halfway down the hill, past the faded billboard that read:

GINGER RIDGE – HOME OF FORT BRYCE 

WELCOME HOME, SOLDIERS!

WE’VE BEEN WAITING FOR YOU! 

Ginger Ridge deserved an updated sign. Fort Bryce shut down a decade ago.

Solomon’s heart climbed out of his chest, pounding hard.

“I’ve got to get home in time for dinner.” Solomon’s raspy words dissipated into the weight of the late summer humidity. “Sadie Beth will be mad as a hornet if I’m late again. I’ll stop at the pay phone on the corner to call home.”

The last rays of sunlight took a nosedive behind a thick row of pines. Deep shadows dominated this stretch of road, and darkness was never kind to Solomon.

He groaned and patted his pockets for the flashlight he kept with him.

Nothing.

I must have left it on my dresser.

A whimper escaped his throat. He pressed on, his strength and determination draining with each step.

A rock wedged into one of Solomon’s loafers, biting him in the foot. He braced himself against his cane to check his shoe. His ankle cracked, and a couple toes wiggled through a hole at the edge. He pried the rock out with his finger.

I need to polish these shoes first thing in the morning.

He zig-zagged to the center of the lane and took off as fast as his gimpy legs could carry him in a desperate hunt for the blasted water tower.

About the Author

Janet may not have realized she was a writer at the time, but her earliest childhood memories were spent creating fairy-tale stories of the father she never knew. That desire to connect with the mysterious man in a treasured photograph gave her a deep love for the endless possibilities of a healing and everlasting story.

A wife of one, mother of three, and Tootsie to four, she currently write from her quiet two-acre corner of the world near Louisville, KY.

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Cold Quarry Blitz

 

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A Codi Sanders Thriller

Thriller

Published: June 2021

Publisher: ‎Morgan James Publishing

A cold case from the 60’s comes back to life when a body is discovered in the jail of a small town long buried under a manmade lake.

In Cold Quarry, Codi and her team at the FBI Special Projects division must peel back the evidence and follow a twisting path to uncover a clever terror plot that is nearly complete. With a ticking clock and most of the odds against them, they must fight for every inch to stop those responsible and save thousands of innocent lives.

Other Books in the Codi Sanders Thriller Series

 

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Terminal Pulse

 

A long forgotten cold case suddenly heats up when a related new technology is stolen by a subversive group.

Blind Target

In the modern day, a squad of 1950s Russian commandoes is discovered frozen in a receding Alaskan glacier. Special Agent Codi Sanders and her partner, Joel, are tasked with returning the bodies to Russia, but their operation suddenly gets complicated.

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About the Author

Brent Ladd


Brent Ladd is a successful television commercial director, writer, with hundreds of TV commercials to his name. He is an avid outdoorsman and a Beach Volleyball addict. His work has allowed him to visit some remarkable people and locals around the globe and he loves to include them in his writing. Codi Sanders is built from the many amazing women I have had the pleasure of working with. She defines determination and independence, while still trying to find a place for her heart.

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Cracker Town Virtual Book Tour

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Red Farlow Mysteries, Book 5

 

Mystery

Date Published: 09-14-2021

Publisher: Tirgearr Publishing

 

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Town’s secrets cloak ruthless killer for decades

 

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EXCERPT

Chapter One

 

Red Farlow’s disdain for cold cases ran deep. They dredged up some long-ago, heinous murder when reopened, which haunted him at night and hovered like a black cloud all day. For months.

 

Unsolved crimes also reminded Red of his failures.

 

A triple murder from 1973 clobbered him with a phone call first thing that morning. He’d investigated a family slain at home. Neither the police nor Red found the killer.

 

Years later, surviving son Randolph Goings wanted to visit Red in Savannah.

 

The private investigator agreed to the meeting and set a time for the next afternoon.

 

***

 

Red felt the day’s heat after he got up the morning of his meeting with Goings, and the cold case burned inside his head.

 

The day broke as warm as the previous evening, and by seven that morning, the thermometer outside his office window read eighty-five degrees. But he couldn’t complain, as the sky was mostly clear, save for nimbostratus clouds gathering to the east. No doubt, they dumped rain miles offshore in the Atlantic Ocean.

 

He checked his phone weather app’s radar, and, sure enough, the rain clouds headed his way.

 

Red pictured Randy Goings at age eighteen in the early seventies. As a young GBI agent, Red investigated—with his boss, Matthew Bailey—the murders of three family members in Valdosta, Georgia. Randy was the son who discovered the bodies of his parents and young sister.

 

That was decades past. Red figured Randy would be in his sixties.

 

Red stepped out his front door. It was a good time to walk the sidewalks and squares of the old southern city. He had other things to attend to. Red picked up the morning newspaper and fondled its rubber band. Birds sang. Cars chugged around Chippewa Square behind the slow trot of a mule-drawn carriage filled with sightseers. The trollies rattled past, always running behind schedule, and carried countless other visitors for their jump-off, jump-on adventures in the old city.

 

Soon, the day would boil up to around ninety-five. But right then, a tolerable one in the morning’s Atlantic breeze.

 

He stepped back into his house and opened up the paper as he walked into the kitchen for coffee.

 

After his brief phone conversation with Randy Goings, Red had doodled his memories of the triple murder. No suspects were arrested. No one held accountable. His hand and pen moved across a clean notebook sheet. A circle started out with a dot and moved into a spiral. He retraced the curved lines, keeping the drawing smooth in places and jagged in others. Blotches from the pen formed, and he moved his nib around in the tiny puddles, spreading the ink to fill in any gaps.

 

Soon he’d filled the page with near blackness.

 

A haunting image.

 

In the morning, Red went about his daily routine, following up on current cases. At one point before noon, he lapsed back into the old case with a productive intent. He thought about and wrote what he remembered about the family in Valdosta.

 

Picking up his notebook and pocketing the fountain pen, Red walked down the street for a ham and cheese baguette for lunch and returned to eat at his desk. Thirty minutes later, the doorbell dinged.

 

Red walked downstairs and, on the way to answer the bell, admired a vase of fresh daisies that sat on a wood pedestal of unknown but stout vintage. His wife Leigh insisted on an array of blossoms in her psychotherapy practice’s waiting area.

 

He opened the door and greeted a tall, gray-haired man in blue slacks and a white shirt. A beautiful woman dressed in a pale peach suit stood beside him. The man carried what appeared to be a large aging briefcase, whose sides bulged against a brass latch.

 

“Mr. Farlow, I’m Randy Goings,” the man said.

 

“Good morning. Come on in the house,” Red said and nodded to the lady. “Ma’am.” He took note of Randy’s polite formality. “Please, Randy, call me Red.”

 

“Red, this is my wife, Linda Barrett-Goings,” Randy said.

 

“It is my pleasure, Linda. Won’t you both please step up to my office?”

 

They followed as Red led the way up the eighteen-eighties staircase to a spacious room overlooking the square.

 

“My goodness, the private investigations business must pay pretty well,” Randy said. Red noted the formality seemed to have eased a bit.

 

“This is my wife’s family home,” Red told them. “She generously allotted space to me after we married a few years back. She’s a psychotherapist. Her office is on the first floor, as you may have noticed from that brass plaque by the front steps.”

 

“I find that very interesting, Red,” Linda said. “I’m a psychology professor at Emory in Atlanta.”

 

He took in Linda’s bright smile.

 

“Well, welcome to Savannah,” he said. “What can I get you in the way of refreshment? I have iced tea, coffee, a variety of fizzy and still waters, and the best espresso this side of Ditta Artigianale in Florence, Italy.”

 

Randy and Linda laughed. She asked for a seltzer and Randy coffee.

 

The Goings went into Red’s office and sat together on his sofa. In a few minutes, Red came in with a tray of the drinks. He returned to the kitchen and prepared two doppios of espresso for himself.

 

They broke the chill of the impending conversation with talk about Savannah. Red already knew the thin, icy path, of course. It came with bad memories frozen over by decades of mourning. The kind you know that in the crying, you can’t bring your loved ones back. But still, those left behind shed tears. For years.

 

“Red, I remember the first time we chatted, right after that horrible night,” Randy said. “In the whole experience, you were the kindest, most sensitive cop who interviewed me. And believe me, I got a lot of tough questions from some hardnosed police detectives and sheriff’s deputies. They, of course, went on the absolute notion that I killed my family. You and Agent Bailey disabused them of the idea. I thank you for it.”

 

Red nodded as he looked at the couple. He saw well-educated, successful people. People who likely spent their entire careers in a city.

 

“We’re here to speak with you about my tragedy so many years ago,” Randy said. Linda took a tissue from her purse. “My family’s killer was never found, as you know. We want the case reopened and examined from information I have in my father’s files. Too, we think modern crime-solving technology might help to track down the person or people who did this.”

 

Red sipped his espresso. “First, Randy, tell me something of what you found in your father’s files,” he said. “Then, we can discuss the techno stuff.” Randy brought up his worn briefcase, similar to ones Red had seen many times in courtrooms and not unlike his battered leather satchel.

 

“My father left a substantial number of files,” Randy said. He withdrew a folder without opening it. “They include his own manuscripts and articles for professional journals. And his personal notes about patients he saw at Central State Hospital. For many years, I ignored the many boxes. Right after the funeral, the college called and asked that I clear out my father’s office. Luckily, he’d only been there a few months, and most of his hospital files remained in our house.”

 

Randy’s tone became more solemn as he spoke.

 

“When did you start plowing through these?” Red asked.

 

“That’s a long story,” Randy replied. “First, let me tell you I am nearing retirement from the Bernstein, Robb, Goings, and Whaley law firm in Atlanta. I’ll remain available for client matters for many years as life allows.”

 

Red nodded. He listened.

 

“For a long time after the murders, I ignored the files,” Randy went on. “But I started going through them, one box at a time, about ten years ago.”

 

He paused and looked down at the brown-speckled folder in his lap and, with his right index finger, tapped hard on the file two or three times. He appeared close to tears.

 

“I found the patient notes to be interesting,” Randy said and paused. Collecting himself, he went on. “I could not resist delving into them despite Linda’s precautionary advice that I should not. I did this not out of some voyeuristic thrill of reading about other people’s secret lives. Rather, I wanted to find threads that might lead to my family’s murderer or murderers.”

 

Red arose and fetched more coffee for Randy. Linda had barely touched her water. He soon returned with a carafe.

 

“Did you think going in that a patient might have killed them?” Red asked as he poured the black liquid into his client’s cup.

 

“I saw that as a possibility, yes,” Randy said. “Most of his patients were incarcerated for their mental illness after committing a crime. Not all, certainly, but many were killers, whether by rage or perhaps because of their mental condition.”

 

He picked up his coffee and sipped. “I thought one of his patients might have threatened him or revealed why someone killed my family. And who committed the crime. Admittedly, I batted around in the dark. Understand, I’m a trust and estates attorney, not a criminal lawyer, and unsure of what I sought.”

 

Randy shook his head in frustration.

 

“What have you found thus far?” Red asked.

 

“Just this. A man whom my father counseled claimed authorities wrongly incarcerated him for a murder in south Georgia,” Randy said. “Now, I know most prisoners say they didn’t do the deed that got them where they landed. However, this man offered details in his statements of who killed a young woman back in the fifties.”

 

Red’s mental bells went off. “Tell me more, Randy.”

 

The attorney related the story pieced together from his father’s notes. Over several years, a patient talked endlessly about why he was sent to Milledgeville and how it was a mistake. The man had mental issues as a child. According to Walter Goings’s notations, people regarded him as a “retard” and slow learner. The man had a below-average IQ, but he was able to perform certain tasks at school.

 

“Do you know who the patient was?” “That’s the thing. My father didn’t include any real names in his notes,” Randy said. “He had his own system of keeping the files ordered by nicknames he applied to each patient. For anonymity, given the sensitivity of the information. The man in question was called ‘Bible Salesman,’ who sold the Good Book in a place named Cracker Town.”

 

***

 

Two hours into their meeting, thunder clapped over the house. In a few minutes, a cascade of rain thumped against the window panes and pelted the sidewalk and street below.

 

Nobody commented about the sudden downpour.

 

“Any clue as to where this patient was from?” Red asked. “Cracker Town stirs some familiarity. Have to think about it.”

 

“No,” Randy answered. “What I am hoping to find is a legend matching the client’s nicknames with full names. From that, we should be able to track down other information about them through state archives.”

 

Red considered Randy’s line of reasoning. He regarded state records as a major source of intel. By law, medical records were private. Thus, accessing the files, even if found, might prove difficult. Also, the state destroyed records every ten years.

 

“You have a plan. But as you said, the key is finding out that name and the patient’s hometown,” Red said. “As to the technology side of solving cold cases, DNA has reopened a lot of criminal profiles. Past crimes have been solved, and many wrongly incarcerated people have been set free. DNA also has tracked down people who escaped initial judgment for their criminal activity. First off, have you asked the state to reopen the case?”

 

Randy shook his head. “Yes, but no such luck, Red. A defense attorney in my firm approached the state on my behalf. They told him nothing doing without clearcut evidence about the patient’s alleged crime. His contact also cited the number of years that have passed.”

 

Wind gusts tossed trees on the square below and thumped against the windows.

 

Red asked how much they knew about DNA in criminal cases.

 

“That’s what Linda and I have been discussing,” Randy said. He turned to his wife.

 

“Red, we’ve known someone at the state crime lab for years. She filled us in on the reality of DNA criminal identification,” she said. “We know that obtaining the samples might be a challenge, particularly from people who’ve been dead for many years.”

 

Red nodded and suggested the place to start was arranging for Randy to submit a DNA sample for analysis.

 

“After that, we need to try to locate any DNA records of, say, the mother of the young woman who was killed,” Red said. “Roadblocks and decades aside, we can give it a shot. All of what you say strikes familiar chords. I remember something about a young woman killed in the mid-fifties from my investigation into your family’s deaths. She lived and died in Cracker Town, a Damville, Georgia neighborhood. I’d have to consult my files to determine if her case is relevant.”

 

Randy’s voice wavered. “Add to that, Red, my other little brother or sister to be. Killed in my mother’s womb.” Tears rolled down his cheeks. He retrieved a white handkerchief from his pants pocket and wiped his face.

 

“I’m so sorry, Randy,” Red said. “You suffered so much at a young age.”

 

Suddenly, the downpour subsided and settled into a steady rainfall. Randy shook his head. “I never imagined this would be so difficult. All of the horror of those days, weeks, months, and even years come tumbling back.”

 

After a pause in the conversation, Randy asked where the bathroom was. Red directed him down the side hall to the back of the second floor.

 

Red and Linda sat in silence for a few moments.

 

Red spoke first. “He’s a very lucky man to have you, Linda,” the private detective said.

 

Linda smiled. “Red, you just can’t imagine, but I am the lucky one.”

 

Randy returned and sat down. From his briefcase, he withdrew another manila folder, its fresh color contrasting with the older file. “To get started, I’ve copied some records and notes for you to review. On top is the patient ‘Bible Salesman.’ Several others are underneath his.”

 

“What drew you to Bible Salesman’s file?”

 

As the rain continued, a glimmer of sunlight streaked through the window.

 

“As I read the person’s profile, I presumed him to be a male first of all. My father only counseled men in the prison area, or so he told me,” he said. “The notes tell a story that convinced me this man might be innocent of killing the young woman, wherever that occurred. Certainly, I’d like your impressions after reading all of these, but Bible Salesman grabbed my interest immediately.”

 

Randy expressed his doubts that any of the others in his father’s file could have done him wrong. Several had died.

 

“If they passed away and my father marked their files as such, I didn’t include them for you to review,” he said. “In fact, I didn’t review any of those.”

 

Randy handed the folder to Red, who suggested he have a week or so before their next meeting. He asked Randy to arrange to provide a DNA sample.

 

They also discussed Red’s fees and expenses, which Randy agreed to without any questions. He wrote a two-thousand-dollar check to get started. Red gave him a contract to review and sign before they met again, along with a receipt for the initial payment.

 

“Don’t know your schedule, but I have to be in Atlanta in ten days. Tuesday, the twelfth of September,” Red said. “Might we meet Thursday or Friday?”

 

Randy checked his phone calendar. “Yes, why don’t we meet at my Midtown office on Thursday?” He handed Red a card with the address. “You know the building?”

 

“Indeed, I do,” Red said.

 

“I’ll see you there at two then,” Randy said.

 

Thunder rumbled. Rain started again in earnest.

 

They rose from their seats, and Red escorted the husband and wife downstairs. Red handed them his big golf umbrella for the wet walk to their car.

 

Savannah’s beautiful summer day had turned into the more typical weather of the season. He’d have to check on the tropical storm developing several hundred miles east of Puerto Rico. A hurricane potentially in the making.

 

***

 

Red settled into his seat after dinner out with his wife, Leigh. They tried a new seafood restaurant in a shopping mall. They swore never to return.

 

Besides eating bad food, they got drenched in the storm.

 

Now freshly showered and in dry, comfortable clothing, Red looked out the window at the rain falling on the square.

 

He opened the file folder with pages from Walter Goings’s counseling days at Central State Hospital and thumbed through the sheets, all brittle and some torn. Red looked for links to south Georgia and anything indicating tension between patient and therapist. He found very little about anyone who might want to harm Doctor Goings.

 

The fourth file he picked up was code-named Bible Salesman.

 

The man spoke a great deal about the agony of growing up in a small, unnamed town somewhere in Georgia. The man described the ups and downs of his education. He told of one teacher who tutored him after school for several years. When she left his life, he gave up on his education and dropped out of school when he was fifteen.

 

The notes also described the man’s years in the hospital. There Bible Salesman learned about lunacy boards, which presided over countless criminal suspects and ruled they’d be better off in the state mental hospital than a prison. A judge convened a lunacy board and sent Bible Salesman to Milledgeville for treatment after his arrest on suspicion of a young woman’s death.

 

The patient didn’t know why the lunacy board in his county sent him there. He just didn’t understand how things like that worked. Walter Goings tried to explain it all to Bible.

 

Red scanned the other files. According to Doctor Goings’s notes, one patient had been abused by his mother when he was eight years old. He later killed his older sister.

 

Another account described a child’s mutilation by cigarette burns. The man murdered his mother and grandfather for their mistreatment.

 

There were serial rapists. A congregant allegedly assaulted his pastor’s wife after she refused to drink battery acid in a North Georgia church service. The notes in this file told a story of sexual abuse, but it was unclear who actually forced themselves upon whom. Did Doctor Goings’s patient assault the woman or had the pastor’s wife herself abused the man as a teenager? Murky waters.

 

A lot of accounts raised many questions; few answers came forth.

 

It was almost midnight when Red decided to pack it in and start again the next morning.

 

As he straightened the files, a torn piece of newsprint fell out of the stack. On it was written a brief note in a shaky hand. “Sorry I mist you Doctor Going. See you soon. Cleet.”

 

The bells tolled in a far-off place inside Red’s brain.

 

Cracker Town.

 

And Cleet.

 

Ah yes, Cleet Wrightman.

 About the Author

W.F. Ranew

W.F. Ranew writes the Red Farlow Mysteries series from Tirgearr Publishing,
the latest of which is book five, Cracker Town.

Ranew is a former newspaper reporter, editor, and communication executive.
He started his journalism career covering sports, police, and city council
meetings at his hometown newspaper, The Quitman Free Press. He also worked
as a reporter and editor for several regional dailies: The Augusta (Ga.)
Chronicle, The Florida Times-Union, and The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution.

He lives with his wife in Atlanta and St. Simons Island, Ga.

 

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Paths of Anguish Blitz

 

Paths of Anguish cover

 

Primeval Origins Epic Saga, Book 1

Science Fantasy, Science Fiction, Epic Fantasy, High Fantasy, Younf Adult, Christian Fantasy, Adventure, Action and Adventure

 

Publisher:Celestial Fury Publishing

A Science Fantasy Epic Saga like no other!

 

Winning 35 literary Awards and Honors!

She scoffs at the legends of long-ago civilizations. He grew up battling deadly dinosaurs. When their lifelines intersect, can Nikki and Rogaan survive humanity’s genesis and the nemesis of our apocalyptic end times…the Four Horsemen?

Bolivia, 2080s. Nikki Ricks dedicates her life to scientific truth. So when the book-smart graduate student discovers a perfectly preserved blue-steel sword among the fossilized bones of a Cretaceous-era dinosaur, she struggles to accept what should be an anachronism. And when the ground gives way, she finds herself plunged into the memories of a prehistoric young man.

65 million years BC. Rogaan yearns to claim a place among his tribe’s heroes. Already a skilled archer and metalsmith, he chafes at his father forbidding him from his planned foray into adulthood by joining the town hunt. Defying his family’s command and going anyway, the brash would-be warrior reveals a forbidden weapon… and draws the attention of an assassin.

With Nikki torn between her physical body and her mental journey, she grapples to hold on to the logic of reality… despite a fierce conviction that a mystical doomsday is looming. And as Rogaan fights to dodge death from a powerful sect, he realizes the world is more complex and dangerous than his wildest imaginings.

Are the tangled senses of this strange pair fated to bring about the end of mankind?

In this meticulously researched tapestry of legends, B.A. Vonsik entwines humanity’s mythologies, scientific discoveries, and religious wisdoms into a seamless whole. Cleverly contrasting modern research with ancient knowledge, this multiple-award-winning novel will leave you breathless and questioning as you delve into its intricacies.

 

Primeval Origins: Paths of Anguish is the visionary first book in the Primeval Origins Epic Saga of science fantasy adventures. If you like prehistoric heroes, fast-paced thrills, and hidden truths, then you’ll love B.A. Vonsik’s apocalyptic legend.

Buy Primeval Origins: Paths of Anguish to wield the secrets of the ages today!

Primeval Origins Epic Saga series banner

 

Multiple Award-Winning Science Fantasy Saga like no other! She scoffs at the legends of long-ago civilizations. He grew up battling deadly dinosaurs. When their lifelines intersect, can Nikki and Rogaan survive humanity’s genesis and the nemesis of our apocalyptic end times…the Four Horsemen?

 

Primeval Origins: Paths of Anguish

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Primeval Origins: Light of Honor

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Primeval Origins: Rise of Serpents

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Paths of Anguish tablet


About the Author

B.A. Vonsik

Multiple-Award Winning Science Fantasy Author and Creator of the Primeval Origins® Epic Saga

– Primeval Origins: Paths of Anguish (7 Awards and Honors)

– Primeval Origins: Light of Honor (11 Awards and Honors)

– Primeval Origins: Rise of Serpents (17 Awards and Honors)

B.A. Vonsik is a 1985 graduated of the United States Air Force Academy and flew as an USAF Special Operations aviator before joining the training and simulation industry. While working in his adventurous careers, B.A. Vonsik spent much of his remaining time creating and detailing the world of Primeval Origins®. Curious about why many of our mythological pantheons seemed so similar despite the cultures creating them having never interacted with each other, B.A. created the Primeval Origins® science fantasy saga based on more than 30 years of his research into our mythologies, ancient alien theory, accepted human history and our undiscovered history, the sciences, modern and future technologies, metaphysical studies, the Bible, Quran, Hindu, and other religions. What B.A. discovered was mind bending and written into the pages of his multiple award-winning science fantasy epic.

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