New Ghostly Tales Arrive for Halloween

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By the middle of October, there are usually many articles listing the best scary tales for Halloween’s annual celebration of the paranormal. But this year, editors seem to have less interest. Real humanitarian horrors abroad and mass killings at home may have sated the appetite for imaginary frightfulness. But I personally still welcome escape via a good ghost story’s vicarious terrors, vaporous threats that vanish with the last page. And there is a choice of new, well-reviewed spine-tingling fiction this year to satisfy that yen.

 

head full of ghostsStart with Paul Tremblay’s much-lauded A Head Full of Ghosts, a tale about a reality-TV demonic possession as recalled by the troubled narrator, a young woman who was a child at the time her sister was supposedly transformed by a demon. But steel your nerves; Stephen King, per Amazon, has said, “A Head Full of Ghosts scared the living hell our of me, and I’m pretty hard to scare.”

 

 

little girlsAlso new this year is Little Girls by award-winning horror author Ronald Malfi: A woman returns with her husband and young daughter to a childhood homestead after her father’s unnatural death, resurrecting unhappy memories and an uneasiness exacerbated by unexplained deaths, sinister neighbor children and eerie “bump in the night” events.

 

 

 

the uninvitedFor less modern ghostly doingsThe Uninvited by Cat Winters, another award-winning author, is set in 1918 amid the fear and panic of the great influenza outbreak, as a young woman with the “gift” of seeing uninvited ghosts of loved ones–visions always heralding an impending death–struggles with the implications of her otherworldly revelations. Don’t be discouraged by its bleak history; The Uninvited is “healing and moving rather than scary,” per the Kirkus review.

 

 

visitantFinally, I’ll include The Visitant: A Venetian Ghost Story by Megan Chance. Its American heroine disgraces her family and is sent to nurse an ailing man in a decaying Venetian palazzo owned by his friend, an impoverished nobleman, with both men seemingly in thrall to a dark force within a house of tragic secrets. I admit the Venetian setting is my main draw. If none of these appeal, see a selection of all-time scariest books: http://flavorwire.com/419194/the-50-scariest-books-of-all-time/view-all/

ABOUT  KATHERINE SHARMA

Katherine Sharma’s family roots are in Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas. But after her early childhood in Texas, she has moved around the country and lived in seven other states, from Virginia to Hawaii. She currently resides in California with her husband and three children. She has also traveled extensively in Europe, Africa and Asia, and makes regular visits to family in India. After receiving her bachelor’s degree. in economics and her master’s degree in journalism from the University of Michigan, Katherine worked as a newspaper and magazine writer and editor for more than 15 years. She then shifted into management and marketing roles for firms in industries ranging from outdoor recreation to insurance to direct marketing. Although Katherine still works as a marketing consultant, she is now focused on creative writing.

Haunted Love Trail

A Zombie Bride in Love
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“Okay, I guess that’s everyone-oh, hold on. There’s Brandon,” Charlotte Ripley said as she stood at the back of the hay wagon. Shaking her head and cross­ing her arms, she added, “Late as usual.” But I could tell from her smile that she wasn’t really angry with him.

Spotting a motorcycle turning the corner of the old farmhouse driveway, I cringed.
Ever since I’d been in a car accident a year ago and spent a week in the trauma unit of the hospital, and then three  weeks in a physical rehabilitation facility, I dreaded

looking at motorcycles. There was no protection at all! Didn’t this guy realize the danger? At least half of the ether amputees I’d met while I was hospitalized had lost their limbs because of motorcycle accidents.

Taking a deep breath; I shook my head and decided to concentrate on my surroundings. After all, we were here tonight to do a trial run of the haunted hayride.

Tomorrow was opening night and we had to be ready to put on a good show for the next three weekends before Halloween to raise a lot of money for breast cancer research.

No use trying to talk sense into people who were risk-takers.

The sun was turning the amber fields shades of pinkish-blue as it began to set behind the trees, and an early October breeze was kicking up just enough to make it feel like Halloween.

“Sorry I’m late,” the tall, dark-haired guy hollered from the parking lot, bending to set his helmet on his bike. Well, at least he had enough sense to wear a helmet. That was something, I supposed.

We were all sitting on bales of hay stacked on a wagon and I could hear various people who were sitting clos­er to the tractor calling out greetings to the guy. Since I’d been one of the last ones to board, I was seated near the back. And after Charlotte reached over to hug the fellow, she gestured to the empty seat on the hay bale next to me.

I smiled and nodded and tried to scoot over a bit, but the elderly woman next to me didn’t get the hint, and I soon found myself hip-to-hip with the biker.

“Hey,” he said, smiling at me as the tractor took off. Within seconds, the tractor hit a bump, throwing me against him as the woman next to me almost slid to the floor.

“Whoa,” he said, reaching out an arm to brace us in our seats. “Hey, Phil,” he hollered to the man driving the tractor, “Learn to drive, will ya’?”

He obviously had a rapport with the other volunteers who chuckled and joined in the teasing.

“This is going to be the witches’ area,” Charlotte was saying as she pointed to a spot by a crumbling stonewall.

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“Spooky,” Brandon said, leaning close to me. I’ve always loved the scent of leather, and I found myself wanting to lean over to get a better whiff. Then I shook my head, remind­ing myself I was here to volunteer and I had a perfectly good boyfriend at home.

Perfectly good boyfriend. Yes, Charles was good in all ways. He was there for me after the accident, he was a phone call away whenever I needed help, and he was the one per­son I could rely on above all others. Good ole’ reliable Charles.

But my heart didn’t beat double-time when Charles’s hip rested against mine. And I didn’t find myself wanting to get a better whiff of Charles. Why did I feel like a traitor even thinking about this man next to me?

“Is that you?” I heard a deep voice ask.

Brandon was asking me some­thing.

“What?” I asked, snapping out of my Charles revelry.

He motioned with his chin toward Charlotte who was pointing to an old schoolhouse. “Zombie Bride. . .that’s you, right, Lily?” Charlotte was ask­ing.

“Oh. . .yeah. I’m Zombie Bride,” I said, glancing at the surroundings so I’d know where to go tomorrow night when we were to perform our haunt­ings along the trail.

Charlotte started talking about the various other monsters along the trail and Brandon leaned close again, “Is there a Mr. Zombie?” he asked, his voice holding a hint of humor.

“Yes—I mean, no,” I said, turning to face him, noticing his dark features and eyes for the first time. “I mean. . .”

He laughed and his face crinkled in the most glorious way. It was obvious that he spent a lot of time outside and had smiled a lot. He was about my age, and looked as reckless as they come. Just what I didn’t need. I’d had enough recklessness to last a life­time.

On my drive home, I couldn’t get Brandon’s face out of my head. I kept picturing his slow smile and sexy appearance.

With a sigh, I tried to picture Charles. Dependable, reliable. . .safe.

We’d gone out to a bar one night about a year ago. I was the designat­ed driver and stuck to drinking sodas all night. It was a good deal —we both took turns being the sober driver. I wasn’t particularly fond of alcohol anyway, so I usually offered to be the one to hold the position. Not that Charles drank much. He was basical­ly a social drinker.

But the guilt he felt after the acci­dent—when a drunken pickup truck driver hit us head-on after crossing the double yellow line—was evident from the moment I woke from my surgery after the accident.

“It should have been me,” he’d sobbed, sitting next to my hospital bed. He’d had some cuts and bruises, but had miraculously escaped serious injury.

I, on the other hand, had multiple broken bones and required surgery to remove the bottom half of my left leg. I’d been fitted to wear prosthesis and since then, life was very different. It didn’t matter how many times every­one told him it wouldn’t have mat­tered who was driving—we still would have gotten in the accident—he felt he had some blame.

As he sat by my bed on that day, he swore to me he would take care of me forever. And he had for the past year. With a smile on his face, he’d been there every time I needed him.

My cell phone chimed as I turned onto our street and I flipped it open, seeing Charles’s name on the dis­play.

“Hey,” I said, “I’m almost home.”

“Okay. Just checking. See you in a few,” he said and then hung up before I could even respond.

I loved him. There was no doubt about that. Except. . .lately he was becoming more like a mother hen than a boyfriend.

We had a great turnout at the haunted trail the first Friday night. I wore someone’s old bridal gown—torn and shredded in just the right places to make me look spooky. And one of the witches helped me do my makeup—white base with red eyes and lots of mascara.

We had a blast. As the tractor ambled by, I’d do my little zombie bride bit: walking out from behind an old well with my arms reaching for the kids and parents in the hay wagon. They’d scream and laugh and go fur­ther down the road where I could hear more screams and laughs as they encountered other monsters and ghosts.

And the best part was the money we raised. By the end of that first weekend, we’d raised over a thou­sand dollars to benefit breast cancer awareness and research. And there were two more weekends to go!

I had only seen Brandon one time since that first night and he waved to me as he and two other guys with chainsaws walked by. No leather this time, but he filled out the flannel shirt and pair of jeans in a very sexy way.

The second weekend was even more successful than the first. Word had spread that our haunted trail ride was not only a bargain, but also scary-in-a-fun-way for families. Lots of kids and parents turned out for the ride.

With a smile on my pale zombie face, I started heading for my car at the end of the night. I’d stayed late to help Charlotte count the money and fill a bank deposit bag. Her husband was taking her to the bank to make the deposit, and I waved as they drove off once they saw I was safely in my car.

The three-quarters full moon added a nice touch to the dark autumn night, and I found myself wishing the full moon would be out for our last weekend of haunted rides.

When I bent to turn the key in the ignition, my car groaned, but it wouldn’t turn over. After two more tries, I sighed and took out my cell phone. No service. Even if I had ser­vice, I had a sinking feeling Charles had probably taken some cold medi­cine and zonked out for the night.

A rap on my window almost made me hit my head on the roof. The spooker had become the spookee tonight, I thought.

Brandon—still in his flannel shirt and blue jeans, but without the chain­saw—was standing next to my car.

I tried to open the window, but real­ized that without the motor turned on, the automatic windows wouldn’t work. Instead, I opened the door.

“Dead battery?” he asked.

“I don’t know. Won’t turn over at all,” I said, shaking my head. “And my boyfriend is home sick.” I threw that last part in to keep myself safe in case he got any ideas…or maybe it was to keep myself from getting any ideas about him.

“Pop the hood,” he said, pointing with his chin to the front of my car as he moved that way. “If we’re lucky, it’s just a loose wire.”

I pulled the lever and climbed out to stand next to Brandon. Even wearing flannel, he still had the leather smell. And standing dose to him, with only the moonlight to light the night, made it feel strangely romantic on the old farmhouse grounds.

“No loose wires,” he said, moving out from under the hood. Suddenly we were face-to-face, close enough to kiss. Close enough to smell the scent of. . .was it cinnamon? On his breath.

I backed up a step and cleared my throat. “So it’s not the wires. I guess it’s either the battery or the starter.”

He raised a brow and his lips curved into a slow, sexy smile. “A woman who knows cars…”

“Not exactly,” I said, feeling my cheeks warm under his direct gaze and flushing at his almost compli­ment. “I had to replace the starter on another car a few years ago.”

He let out a whistle. “So you kill all your starters, eh?” he asked, a full-out grin splitting his face.

“What? I.. .” Then I realized he was teasing me and I shook my head. “I guess I’ll call road assistance.”

I pulled out my cell and flipped it open. “I’ll be fine. I’ll wait in the car.” I didn’t want him to go. And that scared me a little. Heck, it even scared me a little more than waiting alone in the dark at a haunted trail. Now that was saying something!

He put a hand over mine and the warmth from his skin shot up my arm like hot cocoa through my veins—sweet and steamy. “Or. .” he said. “You could leave your car here and deal with it in the morning.”

“Call a cab?” I asked. “I guess that might be easier—”

“No. I can give you a ride.”

“What? No!” I said.

He shrugged. “I have an extra hel­met.”

Swallowing, I wondered how long it would take a cab to get here. Even if I called road assistance, what if they couldn’t fix the car tonight? He was right, I couldn’t get much done in the dark. Waiting until tomorrow was a good choice.

“Thanks,” I said, flipping open the phone, ready to call directory assis­tance. “I think I’ll go with the cab.” He smiled and nodded.

I dialed the number, but nothing happened. No service.

 

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Brandon raised a questioning brow when I closed the phone.

“No service,” I said, sighing and looking around. Why should I be surprised? We were out on an old aban­doned farm in the middle of nowhere. Service towers were miles away.

“Try mine,” he said, holding out his phone.

“Thanks,” I said. No service on his phone either, so I handed it back, shaking my head.

I could walk. But it would take me all night. I lived ten miles away.

Brandon must have seen my dilemma, because he said, “My dad’s pub is five minutes from here. I can drive my bike there, get his car, and come back to get you. You’ll be okay for a few minutes?” he asked, moving to his bike and picking up his helmet.

I wasn’t scared of being alone. I could sit in my car and lock the doors and I’d be plenty safe. Yeah. . .a little scary. But the thought of him going to all that trouble to go get his dad’s car and then come back, made me rethink my worries. He was trying to be nice and I was stuck in my ways.

After all, he drove his bike a lot, so that meant he was experienced, right?

“Could you drive me on your bike to the pub and then borrow your dad’s car from there? Or I could take a cab from there?” Before he could answer, I held up a palm to stop him.

I had one last roadblock to smash before I could agree to go on his motorcycle. “I have a prosthetic leg. Lost the lower half of my leg in an accident a little over a year ago.”

He smiled, nodded, and handed me a helmet before turning to move toward his bike. Over his shoulder he said, “Thought I spotted a different gait to your walk.”

He said it like it was no big deal.

After I strapped the helmet on, he handed me his leather jacket. I was only wearing my zombie bride dress with a pair of jeans underneath.

“You’ll need this,” he said. I nod­ded and shrugged into it, reveling in the smell and the warmth.

The cool night air filtered past us as Brandon guided the motorcycle along the farmhouse driveway. I held my body away from his, holding on to his sides with my hands. But as we picked up speed, I found myself inch­ing closer and wrapping my hands tighter. Not that it felt unsafe, it just felt like we needed to be one unit on the bike to keep it steady.

I’d always thought I’d feel scared and unprotected on a motorcycle. That’s the way it looked when I saw them going past me on the street. But this was different. A whole new per­spective. Nothing but cool air around us. Somehow instead of freaking me out, the freedom relaxed me. I let myself relax against Brandon, inhal­ing the combined scent of leather and fall leaves.

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When the trip ended, I found myself in the parking lot of a brightly lit pub. I was almost disappointed that the ride was over.

“Want to come in for a decaf or do you want me to get the keys to the car and we’ll get you home?” he asked.

“Decaf would be great,” I said, craving a cup of hot anything after the chill of standing outside for so long. I pulled his jacket tighter around my neck and let myself savor its scent one last time. It wasn’t just the leather, I realized, it was his scent too. If I could bottle it, I’d make a million dollars. But I wasn’t in the mood to share.

Inside, the exposed wooden beams and Irish music playing low in the background made me feel instantly welcome. And in a corner wooden booth, Charlotte—the woman who was running the haunted trail—saw us come in and waved and went back to chatting with her hus­band.

“Dad,” Brandon said to the gray-haired, bearded man behind the bar. “Couple of decafs?”

“Sure thing,” the man said, sending a giant smile my way. He filled two mugs and turned to place them on the bar top in front of us.

“Dad,” Brandon said, “this is Lily. Lily. . .my dad, Frank.”

“Nice to meet you,” I said.

His lips curved into a giant smile and he leaned an elbow on the bar. “Nice to meet you, too. Love your makeup.”

My hand flew to my face. I’d forgot­ten all about the white makeup and red eyes!

“Why didn’t you remind me I still had this gook on?” I asked Brandon, playfully jabbing him in the ribs.

“I like it.” He tilted his head toward his dad. “So does Dad!”

For the next few minutes, the three of us bantered back and forth, having fun at each other’s expense. . .well, mostly my expense. It was a nice break from my everyday routine and felt good to be around such happy people.

The bar wasn’t crowded, just a few couples at the bar and a few more sit­uated at the dozen or so tables and booths in the room.

When the conversation turned to cars and car batteries, I excused myself and headed to the restroom to wash my face.

Charlotte was in there already and when I told her I’d forgotten about the  makeup, she giggled and handed me some paper towels.

I didn’t know you and Brandon were an item,” she said, leaning back to watch as I scrubbed off the white base.

“Oh. . .we’re not. My car wouldn’t start so he’s giving me a ride home.”

She raised a brow and leaned to get me some more paper towels. “He’s a great guy. His mom was my best friend before she passed away two years ago.” Passing the towels to me, she added, “She’s the reason I started the haunted trail fundraiser.”

I stopped scrubbing to look at her. “His mom passed away of breast cancer?”

She nodded slowly. “He was there with her every moment, until the end.”

Big, bad motorcycle man was also softhearted. Not that I was exactly surprised. “How sad for their family,” I said.

“Well, her memory lives on through this trail. It’s great to have you helping this year. You’ve been a big help.” She looked down at her watch. “Well, past my bedtime, me and my sweetie better get home!” She leaned in to give me a hug and left.

When I walked back into the bar, Brandon stood and sent me a slow smile. “Ah, it’s you behind that zom­bie makeup.”

I laughed and it felt good to laugh so much in one night. When had life gotten so serious for me? Seems that at my house, every conversation with Charles revolved around being care­ful and taking small steps to recovery. Wasn’t I already recovered? How long had I been living in a bubble?

Brandon held up a set of keys and dangled them, handing me my mug. “I promised we’d only be five minutes and we’ve been a half an hour, so here’s your release. Got the keys to Dad’s car and ready to deliver you home.”

I took the mug he offered, cupping it between my hands and gazed up at him. I could feel my lips twitch into a smile. “Can we take your bike instead?”

The ten-minute ride seemed like two and when he pulled into my dri­veway, I didn’t have an excuse to hold onto Brandon any more. My heart dipped low in my chest, disap­pointment at having to say goodbye bothered me. This wasn’t right.

But man, oh, man did it ever feel right.

I shrugged out of the jacket and thanked him, stepping away from the motorcycle so I wouldn’t be tempted to give in to this attraction I felt for him. But right then and there I decid­ed Charles and I needed to have a serious conversation.

“Thanks for the ride,” I said, giving him a small wave when what I really wanted to do was hop back on his bike and take off into the night with him. “See you next weekend,” then worried that he might take my words to mean something else, I added, “er, at the haunted trail.”

“You’re lucky to have someone who cares so much about you,” he said before sliding his helmet over his head and taking off down the street.

I stood outside and watched until his taillights were a small red dot in the distance, wondering if he was talking about Charles. . .or himself.

I crept up the steps to our bed­room, careful not to wake Charles. If he was still fighting this cold, he’d need his rest and it was going on mid­night now.

I opened the bedroom door a crack and Charles rolled over in bed, but didn’t wake. When I looked at the medicine bottle, I realized he’d had a few doses of the nighttime syrup and was going to sleep a long time regardless of the noise I’d make.

Deciding he’d sleep better alone, I pulled the covers up to his chin, grabbed my nightshirt, and started to leave the room.

“I take care of you, you can’t take care of me,” he said.

I stopped, hand on the doorknob, waiting to hear him explain. When I turned, I saw he’d drifted back to sleep, and had probably not even been awake. Subconsciously, he hadn’t wanted me to help him. This guilt trip had to end.

The next morning, I brewed a pot of strong coffee and started reading the Sunday paper, looking for places for rent.

By the time Charles got down­stairs, looking much better thanks to a good night’s rest, I’d already called a few places to make appointments to see rentals later this afternoon. Now for the hard part..

I didn’t want to hurt Charles, but what I realized after a night of soul-searching was that I was hurting him more by staying with him than I would be by leaving him. I knew in my heart he was standing by my side because of some misguided duty he felt. The love that had once been between us had died. And it probably would have died regardless of the accident.

“You look a lot better,” I said, pour­ing him a cup of coffee and adding two teaspoons of sugar, as he liked.

“Yeah, I feel pretty good,” he said, taking the steaming mug and sliding into a chair at the table.

I took a deep breath and blew it out and he stared at me over his coffee mug as I took a seat. Then set it down without taking a sip. “Okay. What is it? I know that look.”

This was like a bandage— I had to rip it off fast. “Charles,” I said, feeling tears well up in my eyes. I could not hurt this kind man. But I wouldn’t be hurting him. I was doing what needed to be done.

He leaned toward me, his brows knitting in concern.

“I don’t think we belong together anymore,” I said. The words came out in a rush, and I hadn’t padded them with any kindness at all. Quickly, I added, “I appreciate everything you’ve done for me. You’ve gone above and beyond anything I ever would have expected. I’m healed as much as I am today because of you.”

He didn’t say a word, slumped down into his chair and kept his gaze on mine.

“I have to take care of you,” he said.

His words verified what I needed to know. I was a burden. . .a chore. He wasn’t worried about losing me; he wasn’t upset that we were breaking up. He just didn’t know how to elimi­nate his guilt if he wasn’t the one tak­ing care of me.

I leaned toward him and took both of his hands in mine. “Charles. There is no reason to feel guilty for what happened. You and I both know my injuries are not your fault.”

He nodded, biting his bottom lip and staring at me with wide blue eyes. I hadn’t looked at him this closely in a year, I realized. He had tiny lines around his eyes and mouth where there used to be none. Had worry for me done that to him?

“Listen to me. If I let you stay with me over some undeserved guilt trip, then I’d feel guilty for taking you from the life you were meant to live.” I knew I’d hit a nerve when his eyes widened and he sat up straighter. “You have nothing to feel guilty about!” he said.

I lifted a hand, palm out, to empha­size my point. “Ah, but I would if I knew you were staying with me out of some misguided duty.” I shook my head. “I love you, Charles. I always will. But it’s not the same love we had a while ago.”

He nodded slowly and picked up his mug. “What do we do now?”

I smiled, realizing this was going better than I’d hoped. He knew in his heart this was the right thing to do. And the fact that I’d made the first move toward a breakup had taken the burden from him.

“So many people claim to want to stay friends after a breakup, but I have a feeling we can actually do it,” I said, standing and walking to him and then bending to kiss his forehead.

I found a nice apartment a few miles from my job that afternoon, and Charles and one of his friends helped me move my stuff.

By Thursday, the place felt like home and I had a renewed spirit. Charles still called me every night, but I knew he was ready to move on, it just had to be gradual. So I’d let him check on me via phone, but I was hoping the calls would get fewer and fewer as the weeks went on and he moved on with his own life.

Friday had always been my favorite day of the week, but this week I was especially excited. It was Halloween weekend and I’d get to see Brandon again. Maybe—just maybe—things would work out between us.

By Friday afternoon, a light drizzle settled in over the city and, even though we still held the haunted trail, the crowd was thin. To top it off, Brandon was a no-show. When I caught up with Charlotte as she was leaving and asked about him, she smiled and told me his dad was short-handed and Brandon had needed to work at the pub.

After hours of standing in the cool drizzle, a hot drink sounded good. I hadn’t walked into a bar by myself since. . .well, since I could ever remember. But tonight, in order to see Brandon, I would find the courage.

When I pulled into a spot, I noticed the joint was much busier than it had been last Saturday night. No wonder they’d needed Brandon to work.

Inside, the music was loud and the chatter was even louder. I spotted Brandon behind the bar and waved to him as I found the one empty bar stool and plopped onto it. “Coffee?” he hollered over the din.

I nodded, afraid my voice wouldn’t carry over the laughter and conversa­tion.

“Wedding party wants to keep par­tying,” he said, looking around the room.

“They look like they’re having a blast,” I said, warming my hands by wrapping them around the mug.

Someone hollered to Brandon for a refill. “I’ll be right back,” he said.

He got so busy that he only had a split second to refill my coffee during the next hour. Figuring we weren’t going to find a chance to talk tonight, the next time he came around with the coffee pot, I leaned over to him. “Do you have to work tomorrow night, too, or will you be at the haunt­ed trail?”

He cupped his hands over his mouth to make a mock megaphone. “I’ll be there,” he said, laughing and waving as someone held up an empty beer mug and called his name.

The next night the crowd turned out in droves for the haunted trail and we were busier than ever. One hay wagon after another passed my zom­bie bride station and I came at them with stilted, zombie steps.

I’d seen Brandon and he’d waved at me, but only in passing as he and the other chainsaw monsters rode by to their spot.

After the trail closed, I waited by his motorcycle. When he arrived, I gave him a nervous smile and said, “Think I can have a ride?”

He looked over at my car. “Won’t start again?”

I shrugged and looked down at the ground. I wasn’t very good at this flirt­ing thing. Honesty was the best approach, wasn’t it?

“Car’s fine. I just wanted to ride with you,” I said, feeling my heart hammer against my ribs.

He looked off into the distance for a long moment that felt like an eternity and then his gaze met mine and he shook his head.

“I can’t, Lily. I can’t have you that close and not have more. Last week was torture.”

I took a step closer to him. “Then let’s have more.” I wanted more. As I caught a whiff of his leather, I wanted a lot more.

“You’re in a relationship, I’m not—”

“Charles and I broke up. He was great, helped me move and all—”

This time he did the interrupting, pulling me into a tight embrace and trailing his lips down the side of my neck, finding nerve endings where I had no idea nerves were located. Every inch of my body yearned to be touched by his hands…his body.

Without another word, he shrugged out of his jacket, handed it to me and then passed me the hel­met. I straddled behind him, inching as close as humanly possible.

That night, back at Brandon’s place, we found a dozen different ways to pleasure each other and prove that the wait had been worth it. His hands traced paths of pleasure down my body and our mouths searched each other’s.

The next year, on Halloween night, we celebrated a milestone at the haunted trail. We raised over one hundred thousand dollars to donate to breast cancer research in honor of Brandon’s mom.

And then, during the celebration, Brandon grabbed my hand and took me to stand by his motorcycle. . . where it had all began last year.

He plucked the hem of my zombie bride gown and lifted the fabric between us. “What would you say about getting a real bridal gown?” he asked, a slow smile spreading over his face as he dropped to one knee.

I gasped and my eyes swelled with emotion. The other volunteers, still in costume, surrounded us in a circle. If they hadn’t been such good friends, it would have been a little creepy to have vampires, chainsaw monsters, witches, and ghosts encircling me.

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Biting my bottom lip to keep from crying, I nodded and Brandon took out a ring and reached for my hand. “This was my mom’s and she would want you to have it.”

To the applause of the monsters and goblins around us, I helped Brandon to his feet and then flew into his arms, knowing we were a perfect fit.

 

 

Novel Cashes In on Sex, Lies & Love

 

fix

In author Lily Temperley’s new novel, Fix: Sex, Lies & Banking, she poses Tina Turner’s classic line — What’s love got to do with it?

Patrick Harrington is handsome, wealthy and successful. He is also a high-functioning addict that craves his next fix. His vices of choice are money and women: taking risks at work and pursuing multiple sexual conquests.

Determined to get what he wants, as he always does, Harrington fixates on Alexandra Fisher — the latest pretty young thing in his office. Relationships are not a test so why cheat? Alexandra Fisher is in love with a man at work. And love makes you do crazy things.

Fisher is marked with a flashing neon sign of vulnerability, a result of both the tragic loss of her father and her limited romantic history. Patrick Harrington, the eternal bachelor and playboy Investment Banker, is happy to exploit her susceptibility and his pursuit of her is relentless. An intense liaison develops.

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Harrington pushes Fisher deep out of her comfort zone, submerging her into his world of deception, depravity and excess. Yet, Harrington finds himself similarly off-kilter, as Fisher teaches him that love doesn’t have to fit the fairytale mold that other women have tried to force upon him. At the risk of their careers, the torrid romance begins to take on a life of its own.

Fix is the ultimate high-fliers diary based on a true story, set in London against a backdrop of banking and greed. A boy meets girl story where rules are learnt to be broken, money is no object and love gives way to ambition.

Read more about the book and the author here

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Why Changing a Tire Is Like Bad Sex

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By Cassie Ciopryna

Mundane, not so fun tasks can sometimes remind us of another particular activity that (should be) fun. We’ve looked at how the dentist can remind us of bad sex—and now we’ve got another one for you. Changing a tire? Bad sex? I mean, we really don’t see the difference here…

  • You have no clue what you’re doing. We’ve all been there at some point. Wait, where does this go? I have to put my finger where? How do I get this thing off? So many questions. And you just want to get it over with.
  • You work up a sweat. Did I plan on exercising today? It’s like 80 degrees and no A/C on. This is turning to be quite the ordeal and very unexpected. I’d rather go back to bed, or sit in my car.
  • You don’t have all the tools you need to get the job done. What’s the thing called that jacks up the car? And what’s that you say you need in order to get off? Well, I don’t have either of those.
  • You feel like you’re being judged. Ok people, yup, just drive by me all alone clueless on the side of the road. And please, don’t look at me this way when I’m down here. Is this working at all? Yes? No? Some sort of hint please!
  • Undercarriage. That’s the only word I need to say here. It’s probably not really necessary when changing a tire, but again, what’s going on?
  • You might have to call someone for assistance. AAA, a good friend, the person next door. . .hey, who knows who might come in handy here! Sometimes you have to do what you think is best and will work out for you in the long run. Just tap me out, please. I’m done.

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(From Never Liked It Anyway, the number one destination for all things break-ups and bounce-back! It’s the place to buy, sell and tell all things ex! Sell your breakup baggage, tell your story and join the community of rock stars bouncing back better than ever! )

 

Southern Gothic: ‘The Night the Hogs Ate Willie’

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By Katherine Sharma

I’m a sucker for Southern Gothic writing–works by authors such as William Faulkner, Flannery O’Connor, Carson McCullers and Cormac McCarthy. So I was curious to read the recently published The Gates of Evangeline by Hester Young, described as a “Southern Gothic mystery debut.”

While a well-plotted mystery with Gothic elements–dream visions, an old mansion and family secrets–the book is more a paranormal mystery/romance with a Southern setting than a “Southern Gothic.”  So what is Southern Gothic writing? It is regional literature using dark humor, religiosity or the supernatural, generational decay, violence and grotesque characters and events “not solely for the sake of suspense but to explore social issues and reveal the cultural character of the American South,” per a combination of definitions.

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Young’s Louisiana locale is a sketched frame for her psychic East Coast protagonist’s sleuthing and romancing of a manly Texan in boots. A Southern Gothic novel’s powerful and authentic sense of place is its dark, inspirational core: decayed grandeur side by side with poverty and ambition; violence and hypocrisy embraced or defied; religious piety sitting on the same bench with perversion and corruption; family trees bearing love and poison; God and the Devil in daily discourse. This macabre and fantastical South is peopled by uniquely grotesque characters with crippled bodies, broken hearts or twisted souls. Or as Southern author Pat Conroy commented in this amusing quote: “My mother, Southern to the bone, once told me, ‘All Southern literature can be summed up in these words: On the night the hogs ate Willie, Mama died when she heard what Daddy did to Sister.'” See this Publishers Weekly listing of the top Southern Gothic books: http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/tip-sheet/article/66013-10-best-southern-gothic-books.html

ABOUT  KATHERINE SHARMA

Katherine Sharma’s family roots are in Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas. But after her early childhood in Texas, she has moved around the country and lived in seven other states, from Virginia to Hawaii. She currently resides in California with her husband and three children. She has also traveled extensively in Europe, Africa and Asia, and makes regular visits to family in India. After receiving her bachelor’s degree. in economics and her master’s degree in journalism from the University of Michigan, Katherine worked as a newspaper and magazine writer and editor for more than 15 years. She then shifted into management and marketing roles for firms in industries ranging from outdoor recreation to insurance to direct marketing. Although Katherine still works as a marketing consultant, she is now focused on creative writing.

True Romance: Nine Romantic Stories

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Who doesn’t treasure a romantic story that touches the heart?

We can all relate in one way or another to the experiences on these pages; the struggle to overcome grief after the loss of a loved one, the betrayal and guilt of adultery, the desperation to make a loved one happy, young lovers facing the hardships of the real world and much more.

Whether it’s a happily-ever-after fantasy, or a tear-jerking heartbreaker, the nine romantic adventures in this TruLove Collection will stay with you forever. Read More

 

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the best of my three loversThe Best of My Three Lovers

“I listened to the howling wind and watched the snow fall around me and waited for death. I had neither the strength nor the will to go on. I had no reason to live. I had destroyed my life years ago when I married Lawrence Williams. Now, I had come to this wilderness searching for the one man who held my heart in his hands. Well, I had found him.”
Read The Story Here

A Thousand Bucks For A Kiss???

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“Attention, gentlemen!”

I heard Julie’s voice over the bar’s PA system and looked over to see her waving from the DJ booth. The DJ was wiping her trademark candy-apple red lipstick off the corner of his mouth. Oh Julie…she could charm anyone with a simple kiss.

Brandon and I were getting married in a week, after five years of dating, and Julie had insisted on taking me out for one last wild night on the town. She’s booked us a hotel in Brighton, where we’d first met. Julie and I started the day with pancakes at our old favorite diner. Then it was off to the spa for facials and matching mani-pedis. We hit a chick-flick matinee and had steaks for dinner. Now, we were at Moxie, our old college nightclub, dancing to Cyndi Lauper and Duran Duran. Julie struck a lot people as a shallow, good-time girl, but with the exception of Brandon, I couldn’t think of anyone I loved more.

But what was she doing in the DJ booth?

“All right, all you handsome boys out there, we’ve got a bit of a game for you. My best friend Libby is getting married tomorrow…” She paused for cheers and applause. A spotlight came up on me, and catcalls flooded my ears. “So here’s the deal. She’s got one kiss, one last bachelorette kiss, to give out to the highest bidder. Bids start at a buck, and all the money goes towards her honeymoon, so bid high! Head over to the bartender and he’ll take it all down, bidding stops when your money is spent! And…” She paused again. “The second highest bidder gets a kiss from the maid of honor!”

I wondered what my last kiss should be like. Closed-mouth? A little tongue? Full-on, backseat-of-dad’s-car-prom-night-frenching? I guess it depends on how much my lips went for…and how good-looking he was. For one second, the horror of having to kiss a sweaty slob in a grease-stained Metallica t-shirt for twenty bucks flashed through my brain. Maybe this wasn’t such a good idea. I didn’t want to be unfaithful to Brandon, after all, and if word got out that I kissed a guy on the eve of my nuptials, that might assure they never happen. I swallowed the rest of my champagne in a single gulp and looked around for the nearest exit.

“Julie,” I had to yell over the music even though she was only a few feet away. “I don’t think this is such a good idea…”

“We have a $1,000 bid on the bride-to-be!” the DJ announced.

Julie screamed and gripped my arm. My heart began to race. A thousand bucks for a kiss? Please let him be handsome, please let him be handsome, please let him be…

Brandon?

My fiance waved from the DJ booth, grinning. Tears welled up in my eyes; this was even more romantic than when he proposed to me , at sunset on my parent’s farm when we were home for my birthday. Never before had I loved him so much in a single rush of adoration.

I ran towards the DJ booth and Brandon met me halfway, sweeping me up in a passionate kiss. The spotlight came up on us and everyone cheered.

“How did you know we were here?” I asked.

“You didn’t really think Julie would let you kiss a frog, did you?” Brandon asked, holding me close.

“I would have kissed you for free,” I said, kissing him again.

“I’m afraid I’ll have to take you up on that offer,” he said. “I don’t have a thousand dollars.”

I felt my heart sink a little, but he knew just how to buoy me up. “I already spent it on our hotel upgrade.”

I knew my man would come through.

But the DJ wasn’t finished. “And our second highest bid, $200, Mr. Steven Chandler, let’s get you up here to kiss the maid of honor!”

Julie squealed when the lights came up on Steven Chandler. He was just her type; tall, with dark hair and sleek, muscled body, willing to spend money to impress her. Okay, so maybe Julie was a little bit shallow. But she’d arranged for me to have one of the greatest nights of my life and reaffirmed my love for my husband-to-be.

And Julie even brought Steven to the wedding.

–Libby Cudmore, New York

Previous submissions can be found here on How I Know I’m In Love

How do you know that this crazy, wonderful feeling is the real thing? Share your experience with others. Tell us in 300 words or less. Send your submissions to trulovebooks@gmail.com and we’ll go over each submission. If we select yours, we’ll feature right here on our site and we’ll send you a free romance e-book!

How Going To The Dentist Is Like Bad Sex

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By Cassie Ciopryna

Going to the dentist can be uncomfortable. Sex with someone new can be uncomfortable too. Sure, sex is great the majority of the time, but we’ve all had those experiences that were, well, less than thrilling. Here’s why a trip to the dentist can make you feel like you’re having some strange, tripped up sexual encounter.

You get squirted in the face more than you’d like to. Ideally, the number of times I’d like this to happen is zero. In reality, this happens a minimum of five times at the dentist. Sure, it might be my own spit or toothpaste or water hitting my cheek, but all that on my face makes me think the same thing as another clearish, white liquid coming at me—not in my eye or hair!

You have a designated spitting funnel. Ok, so this isn’t something that you have IRL during sex, but this could definitely come in handy…AMIRITE?!

Your hair gets pulled. So this only really happens if you have long hair that hangs off the chair as you’re lying back. The dental hygienist/dentist isn’t really looking out for your hanging hair as they slide back and forth to each side of your head. Hair gets pulled with their body leaning against you and wheeling in their wheely chair. It’s not the best hair pulling. But hey, getting your hair pulled is getting your hair pulled.

Your jaw hurts. This shouldn’t be happening in sex if you know what you’re doing (and the guy isn’t holding back). Get down and get it done is what I say! But at the dentist, your mouth is open with something in there for twenty plus minutes. Not fun.

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There’s strange dirty talk. “Let’s take a look inside.” “You have beautiful teeth.” “Let me wipe your face off for you.” “Swish this around in your mouth a little.” “Spit.” “Open wide.” I can only hope these dentists don’t say these same things to their S.O. during hanky panky.

This only happens once every 6 months. Although the dentist is scheduled out 6 months ahead of time, it can still be a little unpredictable when it’s appointment time (who remembers appointments 6 months out?!) Like some single gals, this doesn’t come around too often.

You get up from the chair with messy hair. Just like that, it’s finally over, and you look like a hot mess unsure of what you just experienced.

Why Changing A Tire Is Like Bad Sex

How Bad Sex Is Like…Golf

(From Never Liked It Anyway, the number one destination for all things break-ups and bounce-back! It’s the place to buy, sell and tell all things ex! Sell your breakup baggage, tell your story and join the community of rock stars bouncing back better than ever! )

What’s Behind the Urge to Write?

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By Katherine Sharma

Recently, a friend wondered about whether to write a blog, and it got me thinking about writers’ motives.

  • George Orwell, in a well-known essay titled “Why I Write,” laid out the “four great motives” of authors:
  • Sheer egotism (the desire to leave an individual mark)
  • Aesthetic enthusiasm (pleasure in the beauty of prose)
  •  Historical impulse (to reveal the truth of the world as it is)
  •  Political purpose (to push the world in a certain direction)

Orwell cited political purpose as his main motive for works such as Nineteen Eighty-Four. In contrast, Joan Didion, known for literary journalism in works such as The Year of Magical Thinking, cites an internal intellectual impluse: “I write entirely to find out what I’m thinking, what I’m looking at, what I see and what it means. What I want and what I fear.”

So why do I write? Well, Orwell’s and Didion’s motives may be involved, but, when it comes to fiction, I admit to being driven by an inner compulsion, an ultimately irresistible force of story and characters that demand release into words of pain, pleasure, fear and hope, words that are a revelation both surprising and familiar to me.

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Author Judy Blume has echoed this feeling: “Those of us who write do it because there are stories inside us burning to get out. Writing is essential to our well-being.” Yet the result is not just relief from the pressure of bottled ideas and feelings (author Anne Rice would call them “obsessions”) but incomparable pleasure, which is perhaps my ultimate motive for writing. As Neil Gaiman, author of comic books and the award-winning fantasy novel American Gods, explains, writers “get to feel like both the creator and the audience. Everything is suddenly both obvious and surprising… and it’s magic and wonderful and strange.” In this way, writers and artists share with prophets the special ecstasy of inspiration–whether it comes profanely from within or divinely from above. See what other famous authors say about motives for writing: http://flavorwire.com/303590/15-famous-authors-on-why-they-write

ABOUT  KATHERINE SHARMA

Katherine Sharma’s family roots are in Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas. But after her early childhood in Texas, she has moved around the country and lived in seven other states, from Virginia to Hawaii. She currently resides in California with her husband and three children. She has also traveled extensively in Europe, Africa and Asia, and makes regular visits to family in India. After receiving her bachelor’s degree. in economics and her master’s degree in journalism from the University of Michigan, Katherine worked as a newspaper and magazine writer and editor for more than 15 years. She then shifted into management and marketing roles for firms in industries ranging from outdoor recreation to insurance to direct marketing. Although Katherine still works as a marketing consultant, she is now focused on creative writing.