Friday, June 01, 2007

TGIF and snippett

      Howdy! It's Friday! You can't believe how much I've wanted the weekend to come. Well, maybe you could. I think all working people look forward to two days when we don’t have to descend to our desks and face the vicious public. Yeah, my attitude needs adjustment. A fruity cold drink on a white sand beach would do it. Doesn't that sound nice?
      So how are the formatting, editing, and publishing of Murder by Dewey Decimal coming? you ask. The formatting is mostly done. The editing is awaiting the corrections from my good friend Crystal. (She sent Chapter 1 this morning. Only nine more to go.) Then it will go to Frenzied Feline for one final correction read. Then I'll do more one read myself. Then the final formatting. After that, off it and its covers go off to Lulu.com for publishing. Supposedly 10 to 15 days after that, the book will be ready for ordering. I'll order a copy to check it before I open the ordering to the public. I know thousands and thousands of people are desperately wanting to purchase it, but can't yet because (A) it's not published and (B) they've never heard of it or me. Details, details …
      I have decided to purchase the "Global Distribution Package" from Lulu. All that does is make it possible for people to order it from Amazon, Barnes and Nobel, and their local bookstores. I wasn't going to do that, but my sister pointed out that a lot of my extended family didn't have the Net or computers, but they could go to the local bookstore and order the book. If they do, of course.
      Anyway, that's all the news on that. I don't really have any plans for this weekend other than housework. I have a lot of paperwork and filing to do, and I need to gather all the material for Darkness, Oklahoma and put in one file so that I can start writing on it. I have scenes and notes jotted down in various notebooks, and I'd like to have them all in one place so that I don’t waste so much time searching. And of course, laundry.
      My yard needs work, but it's too muddy to do much. I'd like to make it by a garden center and pick up some potted flowers for my front porch. I just have empty pots there now. It depends on what the weather's like. It's cloudy today, and we're supposed to get more rain. I love all the green in the landscape. It's been a few years since we've had this much rain. It's nice to see all the vegetation and trees in full growth.
      My friend TL is interested in Dragons Gather. Unfortunately, DG is not scheduled to be completed until this winter, but for Friday Snippets, here's an excerpt from it. Our hero has discovered that a woman to whom he is attracted is indirectly responsible for the deaths of an entire village.
      
FRIDAY SNIPPETT

From Dragons Gather
Copyright 2007. All rights reserved.


Ireached the camp, my pulse pounding in my head. Feathen was mending a harness and waved to me. I ignored him. Kassler watched from his wagon. Maladora was not in the women's wagon, but Shellia was.
      Shellia looked at me and gasped. “What’s happened?”
      “Where is she?” I snapped.
      “I … she … Stefean, you need--“
      “WHERE IS SHE?” I yelled, stepping toward Shellia.
      She stumbled back. “She went for a walk. Toward the river. You must listen to me!”
      But I was already heading into the forest. The path to the river was easy to follow even in my state. I saw a glimpse of her gown through the brush. I strode to her, my anger overcoming fear. She was sipping a cup of mulled wine as she walked under the oak trees. She smiled at me at first and then frowned as she registered the state I was in.
      "What’s wrong?" she asked.
      “I was in a tavern, my lady,” I said, breathing like I was in a race. “You hear such interesting things in a tavern. Rumors, stories, truths, you hear everything.” I placed a hand on a tree to steady myself.
      “Stefean, what’s wrong?” she said, taking a step toward me.
      “Duntann,” I choked out. “They killed everyone.”
      “What?” she whispered.
      “They. Killed. Everyone!" I ground out.
      “Oh, gods, no,” she whispered.
      “They died because a wizardling was killed there,” I said. “I killed him. I killed him because you used your witchery on me!”
      She was silent.
      “Yes, I know,” I rasped. “I know you are a mind witch. I know what you did in Duntann. I’ve known all along.”
      “Stefean.” But she did not continue.
      “What will you do now, my lady witch?” I asked harshly. “Will you take my memory? If so, then hurry because I do not want to remember this!”
      “It’s ... it’s not your fault,” she said.
      “Then it must be yours!” I hurled my accusation at her.
      “No, no, it’s not our fault,” she said. “The Dreadmen--”
      “They crucified the villagers,” I said. “They hung them upside down on trees and left them to die. Then they burned the fields and forests. Galekarn decided to make an example of them. They murdered everyone to the last man, woman, and child.” I pointed at her. “You killed them.”
      “The Dreadmen killed them,” she said unsteadily. “I am not responsible for their actions.”
      “A pretty argument, my lady, “ I mocked. “Should we have a soothsayer hold a séance and let you communicate that to the shades of the dead? I wonder how they would feel about it.”
      She threw her cup at me and missed. “What do you want of me?” she yelled. “To feel guilt? I do. To be a slave again? I will never do that!” She brought up a fist. “They held me. They crushed me. It isn’t my fault I was a slave!”
      “You made me kill!” I shouted.
      “It was already in you!” she shouted back. “It was in all of them. All that hate and fear. I could feel it. So much hate and fear. I only released it.”
      “Is that your justification? My gods, those people would have never acted on those feelings. I would have never acted on them. You used your power on me. On those poor, dead villagers. On Shellia--“
      “No, not her,” Maladora cut in. “Shellia helped me willingly. You don’t know her. You don’t know what is in her heart. You don’t know what she believes--“
      “And you do?!” I yelled. “And knowing her heart”--I spat the word--“gives you the right to risk her life? Do you know what the Dreadmen will do to her if they catch us? Do you?”
      Her voice was small. “Yes, I do.” She looked at the ground. “I do.”
      I stopped, horribly aware of how much I didn’t know of her life, of what she had endured as a slave to the wizard. In the quiet, I felt ashamed. My anger faded away. I watched her lovely, still hands. Her hair glinted in the sunlight.
      “If there had been any other way …” she said softly. “I had waited so long for a chance. I took it. I didn’t think … I didn’t want anyone to be hurt. I was afraid of returning to the capital. This was my only chance. The other mind adepts were becoming suspicious of me. I was afraid I would lose the little freedom I had.” Tears ran down her face. “But I did not want others to be hurt. I was only trying to escape. That’s all. I didn’t think they would all be killed. I would have died myself before I would have let that happen, but I didn’t know.” She collapsed to her knees. She wept silently as I stood there.
      “I’m sorry.” I said finally. “You couldn’t have known.”
      I stepped toward her. I couldn’t catch my breath.
      Her emerald eyes met mine.
      I grabbed her arms and raised her up. My world narrowed to her face. The world faded into silence.
      Her eyes were wide and fearful and full of longing. “If you kiss me, how will you know if it is what you want or what I want?” she whispered.
      “My lady,” I said deliberately, “I don’t care.”
      I kissed her cold lips. She was shaking. She pulled away and lowered her head.
      “I will stop if you want me to stop,” I said softly. “Only you must tell me to stop.”
      She lifted her tear-stained face up to me. “Kiss me,” she whispered.
      I kissed her gently and then with more urgency, matched by her own. We fell against each other, hungry, savage. Her mind reached out to mine. I nearly pulled away, but her touch was gentle, an invitation. I gave myself over to it. We were lost together, sharing each other’s pleasure and pain, loss and hope.
      When it was over, we huddled together on the ground on the imperfect bed of our clothes. She held my hand over her breast. I nuzzled in her hair. I was content, but I wanted more of her. I would never have my fill of her. A doubt surfaced. Was she using her witchery on me? Was this passion real? I considered the thought, turning it around to examine its sides, and then I put it down and never took it back up.

End excerpt. Copyright 2007. All rights reserved. No copying or downloading without express written permission.

12 comments:

Crystal said...

WOW This is great!! I really really really can't wait to read more.

I find myself jealous of the other Crystal who gets to read your work before everyone else!

Joely Sue Burkhart said...

Ah, the prices we pay. Very nice.

Anonymous said...

Very good! I'm glad you've begun posting DG excerpts. BTW, knowing my tendency to start or prolong political conversations at Chili’s, I opted not to comment on Thursday's posting, but this took a great deal of self-control. I am only going to say, are you sure you don't want to run?

SBB said...

Thank you, Crystal. I appreciate you taking the time to read it

Thank you, Joely. I'm glad you stopped by.

Thanks, TL. And you were welcome -- even encouraged -- to post on Thursday's post. It was open for that. I'd like to hear your opinions.

Gloria Williams said...

Dramatic and sexy! I liked it.

Anonymous said...

I liked this too, dude. I hop eyou finish it someday soon.

SBB said...

Thanks, Gloria. Glad you liked it.

Slim, thank you. I hope I finish it soon, too!

Ann said...

Awesome! Is this from the beginning of the book? The middle?
Can't wait to see what happens next.

Jean said...

You captured a full range of emotions in this brief excerpt. Well done.

Anonymous said...

Very nice scene. Full of emotion.

Carter said...

You captured his conflicting feelings very well. This is certainly worth continuing. May we see more?

SBB said...

Ann, thanks. The excerpt is from early on in the book about 20,000 words in. I haven't broken it up in chapters yet.

Thank you, Jean.

Carter, thank you. I will be excerpting more from Dragons Gather soon.