Archive for the ‘Young Adult’ Category

The Summer Set, by Jay Province

Posted: April 19, 2012 by Shaina in Jay Province, Young Adult
The Summer Set, by Jay Province

The Summer Set, by Jay Province

The Summer Set, by Jay Province
Available at:
Amazon

Description:  

In the summer of 1956 two teenagers rescue a drowning woman from the Susquehanna’s turbulent waters, and their predictable lives suddenly veer towards a deadly detour. Shadowy men in black cars start tracking their every movement. A tall foreboding man clutching a snake-headed staff and chain-smoking through a hole in his throat seeks their names.

Fourteen year-old catcher Peter ‘Chumbucket’ Miller and his best friend pitcher Mike DeSorcier begin the summer on a mission to capture the World Series championship of their youth baseball league. Spying on a league meeting from a sweltering attic perch they uncover a group of extra-dimensional beings infiltrating the league. During their breathless escape, the boys discover two things: they are in mountains of trouble and they need help. Assistance (and more trouble) arrives in the form of two daring and mystifying girls – the unusual Karen Croft and the beautiful Jo Munro. Together, the teens must solve the mystery of the Noqumiut before a fateful August lunar eclipse.

Bizarre and comical events trail the foursome’s investigation: Santa and his merry elf magically appear in June running for their lives from a town hall fire; a teen girl flies her Cessna from the scene of a refinery explosion; and a dead body is left as a present on a leather couch – carefully wrapped in a mink coat and holding a red gift bow.

Unlikely sources aid their efforts. These include an Eskimo shaman, a magic stone carving of a lively seal, a ferociously loyal dog, and an opponent from Roswell, New Mexico whose talents (and origins) may literally be out of this world.

The Summer Set is a humorous, intense, action-packed story about friends, enemies and the pursuit of winning it all. The novel is for all story lovers ages twelve and up.

Excerpt:

Chapter One:

Karen imagined when she left her body at death it would feel the same as practice. But even in practice it was never the same twice. That early May evening she felt like pollen rising in the spring air. She lifted dreamily from her body and drifted out beyond her bedroom walls and into the dusky sky. Her unburdened spirit swept overWilliamsport’s rooftops and zoomed to the town clock tower. Three blocks away and far below she saw her friends Peter and Mike heading upThird Street.

Karen toyed with the idea of pulling Mike’s dark hair and pinching Peter’s cute nose. Later, she would casually ask them if anything unusual happened when they were walking home from baseball. She giggled when she envisioned their wide eyes and twisted tongues begging her for details, but she resisted her mischievous impulse. She reminded herself she didn’t know them that well, and her discipline returned.

She watched a woman in a white beret stop and question Mike and Peter. Across the street, a man wearing a black suit and hat unfolded from the rear door of a long black car. He eyeballed the woman, shoved the heavy door shut, and stepped into the shadows to light a cigarette.

Curious to know the man’s business, Karen concentrated her attention on him. His head suddenly jerked up like a bird’s and his sunken eyes seized on her. He snatched his hat off and an inky bloom jetted from beneath the brim, rapidly spreading and clouding her vision. She didn’t see the lashing black tentacle zooming up at her. She shuddered when its filmy tip pierced her and injected its cold venom. In that instant she recognized he wasn’t a man at all, but a Noqumiut.

Clawing in panic at the slimy tentacle, Karen heard her grandfather’s encouragement in the surrounding dark mist: ‘In the shaman’s world a thought is a thing, and fears are bad things. Release your fear. Steady your mind.’ She visualized her body safe in bed and a strong distant tug at her spirit’s silver cord brought her back with a sharp snap. She bolted upright in bed, startled and shaking. She shivered for a moment more and gathered her thoughts. Her mother called from the living room.

“Karen, it’s almost time for the show. I’ll drive you over if you want.”

“I’ll be out in a sec. Don’t worry about me, I’ll walk.”

Karen rolled from her bed and picked through her closet to change clothes. She didn’t want to involve her mother in such dark matters, but she wanted her grandfather’s opinion. She knew from experience the Noqumiut were very dangerous. She wondered whether Peter and Mike were safe.

*     *     *     *     *

“I saw a chopped-off finger yesterday,” Mike announced. “It was on my dad’s desk.”

Chumbucket and Mike were in a hurry to get home from practice. Chumbucket avoided stepping on cracks while he searched his duffel bag for a lost apple.

“The Case of the Missing Finger,” Chumbucket narrated darkly. “I’ve been waiting for this episode of Mike’s Amazing Stories. How did it get on his desk?”

“He said an FBI agent fromCaliforniawas coming to pick it up.”

“What do they want it for?”

“It matched the print of some guy that died in a shoot-out in 1954.”

“That’s pretty cool. Where did your dad find it?”

Mike removed his baseball cap, folded it and stuck it in his belt. He produced a cheap comb from his baseball jersey to feather and smooth his tousled pompadour. He quickly checked his hair placement with practiced hand pats. Satisfied, he pocketed the comb.

“The finger came from the door of Martin Flint’s T-Bird. Some guy reached inside and tried to grab his keys while he was necking with Susan Hebb on the Route 33 Overlook. Martin zoomed away before the guy could grab them.”

“So the finger came off when Martin pulled away?”

“Probably. My dad found it on the door’s rubber seal. There wasn’t any blood. It was like the finger was already dead and just snapped off. It could have been a prank.”

Chumbucket imagined the bloodless finger lying on the desk. The image both horrified and fascinated him.

“Martin was lucky. He probably carries a rabbit’s foot like mine.”

“Chum, that rabbit’s foot is pure superstition. It sure wasn’t lucky for the rabbit.”

“It’s lucky for me,” Chumbucket grinned. He pulled the lost apple from his bag. He held it out for Mike to admire, and quickly snatched it away.

“Where did you get it?”

“Jo stopped by my locker and asked if I wanted it.”

“And? Anything else?”

“Nothing else – she said it was a lunch leftover.”

“A leftover?” Mike frowned. “No way. Jo has a plan for everything she does. You’ll find out.”

Chumbucket inspected the surface before polishing the apple on his uniform sleeve and chomping through its glossy skin.

“Not bad. Pretty juicy.”

He took another bite. His eyes widened in disgust at the sight of a half worm dangling from its burrow in the apple’s flesh. He dashed to the curb and spit the mash in the gutter.

“Gross! A worm! Ppptthh! Ppptthh!”

“Ah, so Jo does have a plan. A brain worm. Ingenious. It’ll eat its way through and come out your ear.”

“Mike, cut it out, ppptthh,” Chumbucket spit a last bit and they continued on their way. “You don’t take anything seriously – sometimes even baseball isn’t serious to you. The big game is tomorrow and you weren’t even listening to Coach. You really pissed him off.”

“So what? Coach gets pissed at me all the time.”

“Did you have to smile when he said the league was having problems?”

“I wasn’t. I was smiling at Jo flying over the ball field and jiggling her wings. I wish she would take me up someday. I hope the league stays in town, and I hope we win the World Series, not just the puny city title. But if my every wish and hope came true I’d be Pope. Actions are the only thing that matter.”

“Okay, Captain Action. Just so I know we’re serious about the same thing – winning it all.”

The boys continued up the block. A brown sedan rolled by on its lonely way out of town. Mike pointed up the street to a woman tugging at the locked door of a building. She stopped and cupped her hands to look inside the glass.

“She may as well stop trying,” Mike said. “The FBI office closes at five. There’s no one there.”

The woman knelt at the building’s entrance. Chumbucket looked at Mike with knit eyebrows.

“What do you think she’s doing?”

“She’s trying to slide something under the door. It might be stacks of cash, or spy papers. Maybe we’ll see when we pass her.”

The woman stood when they neared and she looked in both directions. She tapped her open palm with a thick envelope. Chumbucket noticed a large ruby dangling at her neck. Her brown eyes attracted his attention and she smiled at him.

“Hi. May I ask you guys a favor?”

“If it’s quick,” Mike answered. “We’re in a hurry.”

The woman smiled at Mike, but spoke to Chumbucket.

“Can I look at your duffel bag? I want one for my nephew, but I don’t know how much a bag like that will carry.”

Chumbucket dropped his bag to the ground and opened it for her inspection.

“It carries a lot of stuff. My dad used it during the war. It holds all my baseball equipment, including my catcher’s gear.”

She read the stenciled lettering on the bag’s side.

“Peter ‘Chumbucket’ Miller. You have an unusual nickname, Peter. Where did you get it?”

“Mr. Scott, our league commissioner, gave it to him,” Mike said. “Chum is fish parts used to catch big fish. Chumbucket can catch anything.”

“Do you have a nickname, Mike?”

Mike pulled at his collar and turned his head to avoid the woman’s eyes.

“Some people call him ‘Showboat’,” Chumbucket answered. “But he doesn’t like it.”

“I never liked mine either, Mike – ‘Maddie’. Can I ask you one last thing? You’re both from here. Tell me if you recognize the men in that car.”

Their eyes followed hers to the long black car idling on the opposite side of the street. A man in a dark hat and suit stood beside the car smoking. The man quickly looked away and up at the clock tower. He seemed to see something and took off his hat, perhaps to get a better look. Mike turned back to the woman. He noticed the envelope in her hand was gone.

“Never seen them before,” he said. “What about them?”

“Maybe I’m crazy, but I think they’re following me,” she said. She stared at the car for a moment until Mike scuffed his shoe noisily on the sidewalk. “Oh, forgive me. Thank you for stopping. It was nice meeting you both.”

“You’re welcome. Nice meeting you. Come on, Chum.”

Mike hurried on. Chumbucket shouldered his bag and read the writing on the glass door: ‘Department of Justice – Federal Bureau of Investigation’.

“If you don’t feel safe, you’re welcome to come with us.”

“Thanks for the offer,” she laughed. “Don’t be surprised if I look you up sometime. I might have a look at your duffel again.”

“Okay by me. See you later.”

Chumbucket jogged to catch up to Mike. Rounding Court Street he looked back a last time and saw the black car prowling towards the woman. She darted across the street and he heard the faint clatter of her heels as she disappeared down Market towards the bridge. The car turned slowly, stalking her movements. Chumbucket stopped.

“Mike, I think that car is following her. She might really need help. I have a bad feeling.”

“She said she’ll be okay, she’ll be okay.”

“What happened to Captain Action? You go on ahead. I’m going back.”

Mike cursed under his breath when he found himself racing acrossThird Streetwith Chumbucket, through an intersecting alley and edging the last five feet to Market. The black Cadillac zoomed past them and headed back toThird Street. Distant cries for help pulled them past rows of warehouses towards the bridge. They found a man on the riverbank gesturing towards a drift of tangled wood.

“A woman jumped from the bridge. She waved her arms like she meant to flag me down and then over she went. I watched her drifting in the water towards that pile of logs. It’s probably forty feet to the water where she went in. I’d go after her, but I can’t swim.”

Chumbucket looked to Mike.

“You’re the one with the Rescue Merit Badge.”

“It’s a bad time you’ve chosen to remind me of it. Mister, you go call the police. My dad’s on duty – he’s the chief – Chief DeSorcier. Tell them to get here quick, and bring blankets.”

Mike stripped off his baseball uniform, shoes, and socks. He left his pants on for decency. Chumbucket watched the bare soles of his feet running into the cold waters. Mike ran in up to his chest before stretching into a dive and swimming towards the dark heap on the drift pile. He reached the woman in about a minute. He towed her limp body on his hip, keeping her head above water while paddling to shore with his legs and free arm. The current washed him fifty yards downstream. Chumbucket ran through the undergrowth, wading out to meet Mike as he came near shore.

“It’s that woman, for sure. We have to get the water out of her lungs.”

After pulling the woman from the muddy waters, they lay her on her back. Mike knelt at her head, sweeping his hand through her mouth.

“Nothing in her mouth. Collect some brush to prop her shoulders up while I do the arm lifts.”

Mike gripped the woman’s wrists, crossed her arms at the jewel on her chest, and pressed down hard. He released the pressure to draw her arms out, up, and back over her head. He repeated the motions while Chumbucket pushed his collected brush under her shoulders to allow her head to drop back. She began spitting up water. Mike and Chumbucket looked at each other and smiled.

“A few more times. We’ll carry her back to the road when my dad gets here.”

The woman moaned and coughed up more water. She pulled at her necklace and mouthed a few words. Mike placed his ear close to her lips to hear. He removed the necklace and put it in his pocket.

“She wants me to take it.”

The boys carried her to the bridge with Mike supporting her shoulders and Chumbucket her legs. Chumbucket noticed two puncture wounds just above her right ankle.

“Mike, she’s got a snakebite.”

“She’s alive, that’s the important thing. She needs to get to the hospital, fast.”

Flashing red lights signaled the arrival of Mike’s father. Chief DeSorcier pushed into the brush to help carry the woman to his cruiser. They laid her across the back seat.

“Do you know what happened?”

“We were passing by onThird Street. The man who called you said she jumped from the bridge.”

“Well, ain’t this a mess? This is gonna take a while to straighten out. I have his statement. I’ll get your story later, Mike. Are you boys okay to get home?”

“We’ll be okay. Take care of her.”

Chief DeSorcier turned on his siren and pulled away. A small group of interested bystanders shared their excited stories. Chumbucket plopped down on the riverbank and waited for Mike to put his shoes and socks back on.

“Man, you’re Tarzan,” Chumbucket said. “I don’t know who else could have done that.”

“Everyone a swimmer, every swimmer a lifesaver. That’s the commodore’s motto. Lucky for her we came back. She was face down in the water when I pulled her out. I wonder who she is?”

“I guess we’ll find out. Why didn’t you say anything about the necklace or the black car to your dad?”

“The man saw her jump from the bridge. We didn’t see anything. I don’t think she wants anyone else to have the necklace. If my father turns up anything about a stolen necklace or some men in a dark car I’ll say something. Otherwise, we’ll assume it’s hers and keep it safe. Swear you’ll keep quiet about the rescue. I don’t want my name in the news, do you? Those men who were after her might come looking for us.”

“Cross my heart I won’t tell. What did she mumble to you?”

“The same thing over and over: ‘Don’t let them have it.’ She’s probably delirious. I’ve got mud all over me and you don’t look so good yourself. We need to get home and shower before the show. Meet me at the tree house and we’ll head to school together. Karen will have our skins if we’re late.”

The Summer Set, by Jay Province
Available at:
Amazon

Last Rites, by Ethan Cobb

Last Rites, by Ethan Cobb

Last Rites, by Ethan Cobb
Available at:
Amazon, Smashwords, Barnes & Noble

Description:  Sometimes it’s hard to be a priest…when a slayer needs a holy man.
Weldon thought it would be another day of deep spiritual contemplation, until the vampire hunter showed up. Now there are so many questions the scriptures can’t answer: Do the undead deserve last rites? Is it really necessary to wear robes to a bloody slaying? Are all vampires unable to pronounce the letter W?

Thou shalt protect the flock from monsters.

This is a paranormal comedic thriller.

Excerpt:

Weldon sat in the snow contemplating whether the undead should receive last rites. The seminary lacked the answer. He would have to think more on the subject when he had more time, possible after Father Rupert’s Tuesday flower arranging class. Until then, he had other matters to worry about. He rubbed the cross absentmindedly and tossed another garlic clove into his mouth.

Through a scream of wind, Weldon heard the slow crunch of plodding feet. A man materialized through the clouds at the end of the street. A bent and gnarled walking stick plunged into the snow-covered walkway. An equally twisted and bowed man gripped the old stick. Only the spiked wood plunged through to the muddy base seemed to keep the man from blowing away. His hat brim held fast like it had been nailed to his head like a horseshoe.

You him then?” asked the old man.

I’m Weldon Boniface III,” Weldon said.

Father?”

Almost-Father.”

Almost-Father?”

Well it’s not official yet, but I have taken oaths. A little more time and I will be sent to watch over a town of my own.”

Looks like almost-too-young-to-be–out-without-your-parents’-permission might be a better title,” said the old man. “Well come on then.”

And who am I serving today?” asked Weldon, biting back a less virtuous response.

I thought that was God,” said the old man. Weldon opened his mouth to respond, but was cut off. “The name is Victor, but you may know me as Victor the Slayer.”

The old man turned and trudged down the village main street, avoiding the few carts and carriages left in the snow. At the edge of the town, the base of another mountain ended. The stick sank into the trail. Weldon followed.

A gust screamed past. Weldon’s hand braced against the elements. The gale tugged at the robes.

I don’t see why I had to wear my robes,” sputtered Weldon through the flock of snowflakes blowing into his mouth. “I can read the Bible no matter what I wear.”

Tradition is needed. The younger generation has forgotten,” muttered Victor. He adjusted the cuffs of his aged suit.

The younger generation is not going to have a chance to remember it if I trip over and get sucked dry, all because I wore baggy priest robes instead of a nice sturdy pair of running trousers,” replied Weldon.

You don’t need to worry,” said Victor.

I know. I can outrun you.”

I should have been more selective when I wrote for a priest.”

I was the only priest willing to go. The other two boys below me quit the parish first. With my seniority in the parish, I was ideally suited for this type of work. God may believe in free will, but the parish doesn’t,” grumbled the boy.

Priests used to line up for Victor the Slayer,” said Victor as he stopped. He breathed heavily for a few moments, leaning against the gray conglomerate of stones beside the trail. “They build these trails steeper every year.”

Going down steep trails is usually a lot easier than going up,” said Weldon helpfully. “It’s not too late to get into the inn. I hear they have warm drinks and a glowing fire prepared at all times.”

The air had grown colder the higher they went and now each breath was expelled in great heaps of white clouds. Victor the Slayer waved the milky fog of Weldon’s words aside.

Doesn’t it bother you?” asked Victor.

What?”

The evil. You should try to destroy some every day. That’s my motto.”

Believe me. I do try,” Weldon said. Victor snorted, but remained silent.

The icy trail narrowed almost to the point of needing to balance across the remaining patches of earth. Chunks of the path had long ago fallen and tumbled down the mountain peak. The trail spiraled to the culminating point, which gave a dim light through the winter haze. The outline of a castle was just visible.

We’re in luck, someone’s home,” said Victor.

Yes. We’re lucky,” moaned Weldon. “Just curious. What’s the point of going after vampires, especially at your age?”

Don’t you know what the word pride means? A village letting the beast alone after all these years, it’s preposterous. Does no one remember…”

Sorry I asked,” interrupted the boy raising his hands in submission. “I am just saying any one of the villagers could be here right now instead of us.”

What makes a monster?” asked Victor.

What?”

A monster,” repeated Victor.

Well I –”

The blood,” interrupted Victor. “Born to be evil. Everyone has a calling in life. The vampires are parasites. Hunting vampires is in my blood. I dream about it. There is a ceremony to the event. An order. The beast is the villain of nightmares. The pointed teeth, the cape, and the gloomy castle all point toward the ominous nature of what the thing is. A monster. It thirsts after only one thing. It is a fanatic.”

No vampires near your home I take it,” said Weldon.

None. Most ran away years ago. Reputation flies faster than bats. They were gone before I even showed up at the door,” Victor said.

The ancient stone of the castle loomed over the snowy field. Gargoyles froze in morbid shapes gaping down. Behemoth wood doors stood as sentinels to the entrance. Flecks of rust peeled off the hinges.

The old man and boy stood facing the castle. The Slayer reached down to his lower back and pushed. His spine cracked into place. He gave a few feeble swipes with his pointed stick. He nodded his head in approval. The boy shook his head in horror.

The storm had died down. Fresh snow sparkled.

Light a torch,” Victor said. “We need to let him know we’re here.”

Weldon pulled a match from his pocket. The soggy head took three strikes before igniting. He turned for the torch, but no one was beside him.

Victor?”

The front door opened and the vampire stepped out. There was a small white dog in his arms. The puppy yapped.

A lone priest?” said the vampire, putting the dog down to run back inside. Weldon searched around him, also confused about being alone.

Not exactly,” said a quiet voice from just behind the vampire. “Prepare for thy doom, foul demon.”

What do you mean foul?” asked the vampire, perplexed. “I’ve been using scented soap.”

Victor wrenched the shoulder around and stared the beast in the ruby iris. Horror crossed the vampire’s face. Victor’s hand swung a wooden stake so splintered the vampire was not sure which protruding point should concern him. The stake stopped two centimeters from the vampire’s nose.

Oh that’s the point I should worry about,” said the vampire.

What. Is. This,” sputtered Victor.

What?”

What are you wearing? Where is your cape?”

The vampire looked down at his brown knit sweater and dark trousers. He shifted his toes in his thick slippers.

I didn’t know everyone was going to be dressed. Trousers are easier to run in,” explained the vampire.

That’s what I said,” agreed Weldon.

Victor threw down his stake. He pushed the vampire’s head back. “Where’re your fangs?”

Do you know how hard it is to eat or talk with those things? I sound like I have a demented lisp. I vant, sauck, vlood…it’s pathetic.”

You do have good enunciation now,” Weldon said. He flinched as Victors eyes narrowed on him. Victor turned back to the vampire.

Do you own this property?” asked Victor.

Of course I own this property; inherited it after my father was staked by Dr. Helsing himself. Who are you?”

Victor puffed out his chest and raised his head. “I am Victor the Slayer,” he said.

Is that Victor Helsing?” asked the vampire hopefully.

NO. My last name is not HELSING,” screeched Victor.

I didn’t mean anything by it. It’s just…you know. The Helsing family name is special.” A distant glaze fell over the vampire’s eyes and he smiled.

I don’t know Dr. Helsing. I am not a distant cousin of Dr. Helsing.” Victor’s voice rose several octaves. “I was not a patient of Dr. Helsing.”

Just asking.”

It’s not your fault,” whispered Weldon. “He’s a bit sensitive about the whole issue. You could pretend you have heard of Victor the Slayer to make him feel better.”

The vampire nodded his head in agreement, but Victor was already trudging across the snowy grounds to the door.

One doctor kills one vampire and he is a celebrity. The vampire wasn’t even awake at the time. A complete hack. Blood everywhere. What kind of professional does that?” muttered Victor as he walked.

It is impressive to see a slayer. I’ve only heard stories, well that and of course the whole thing with Dad,” said the vampire waving his hand.

Not a single one?” asked Victor.

Well, no.”

The villagers must be out of their minds with the number of virgin sacrifices you have taken.”

Never heard any complaints from them, although I like to think I am a lady killer.”

The vampire laughed and nudged the priest’s stomach with his elbow. There was silence. Weldon raised an eyebrow.

Right. Priest,” said the vampire.

Last Rites, by Ethan Cobb
Available at:
AmazonSmashwordsBarnes & Noble

Pride’s Run, by Cat Kalen

Posted: December 19, 2011 by Shaina in Cat Kalen, Werewolves, Young Adult
Pride's Run, by Cat Kalen

Pride's Run, by Cat Kalen

Pride’s Run, by Cat Kalen
Available at:
Amazon

Description:  Seventeen year old Pride is a tracker—a werewolf with a hunger for blood. Taught to trick and to lure, she is the perfect killing machine.

Kept leashed in the cellar by a master who is as ruthless as he is powerful, Pride dreams of freedom, of living a normal life, but escape from the compound is near impossible and disobedience comes with a price.

When she learns her master intends to breed her she knows she has to run.

But Pride soon learns that if she is to survive in the wild, she must trust in the boy who promises her freedom, the same boy she was sent to hunt.

With life and death hanging in the balance the two find themselves on the run from the Paranormal Task Force—officers who shoot first and ask questions later—as well as her master’s handlers.

Can Pride flee the man who has held her captive since birth and find sanctuary in the arms of a boy who has captured her heart? Or will her master find her first?

Excerpt:

California Wine Country

August 23rd, six days until full moon

The click of the lock at the top of the stairwell is my only indication that morning is upon me. My ears perk up and I listen for the coming footfalls. The weight on the stairs combined with the creaking of each wooden step will let me know which handler has come for us this time, which unlucky puppet has drawn the short straw and is stuck with letting the dogs out, or in this case, the werewolves.

Sure, he’ll come sauntering down the stairs sporting a brave face and looking at me with cold, dark eyes meant to intimidate. But the wolf inside me can smell his inner fear. Despite the fact that I’m the one caged, underneath the handler’s cool, superficial shell he’s the one who’s truly afraid.

A long column of light filters down the stairs and I blink my eyes into focus as the bright rays infiltrate the pitch black cellar. I don’t really need to blink. Not with my exceptional vision. But I do it anyway because sometimes I simply like to pretend I’m a normal seventeen-year-old girl, one who can’t see in the dark. It’s nonsense, I know. I’m not fooling anyone. Least of all myself.

The door yawns wider and before the first heavy boot, soiled with old blood that he’ll pass off as wine stains, hits the top step, my senses go on high alert. I never know what morning will bring—or who will bring it.

A breeze rushes down the stairs ahead of the handler, carrying the aroma of the grand estate with it. I push past the metallic scent of dried blood to catch traces of grape juice in the air, a common smell on the majestic vineyard—that and illegal drugs, the estate’s real source of income. Going beyond those familiar fragrances, I breathe deeper and get hints of fresh bread baking in the upstairs kitchen. It must be Thursday. Mica, the estate’s cook, always bakes on Thursday.

In my human form I roll onto my side and lean toward the smell. Wistfully, my tongue darts out and brushes over my bottom lip. There is something about that scent that always entices me and before I can help it I envision myself eating a warm slice covered in rich creamy butter, crispy on the outside, moist and tender on the inside.

My nostrils widen, but I know the bread isn’t meant for me and not even one delicious crumb will pass over my dry lips. Not unless Mica sneaks it to me. As much as I’d love to taste her offerings I don’t like it when she takes chances for me. Disobedience is far too risky for the aging housekeeper. Despite that, my stomach growls in response to the aroma and I fight off the cravings. I can’t hope for bread when it’s unlikely that I’ll even be given a scrap of food today, especially if I can’t please him.

My master.

A boot hits the second step—the handlers always descend slowly—and as I stretch my legs out on my dusty mattress I hear the waking groans of Jace and Clover stirring in their own cages beside me. I glance their way, and that’s when my attention falls on the one empty cage in the cellar. My mother’s den. I breathe deep and fight off a pang of sadness that I cannot afford to feel.

I turn away from the empty cage and stare at the gray cement walls. I can’t bear to look at her den any longer. It only reminds me of how they killed her and how all the pups were forced to watch—to learn that disobedience comes with a price. Guilt and sorrow eat at me to think that she’d died trying to free me.

When step number five creaks, I diligently try to shake off the memories. The handler is close which means I can’t think about my mother right now. I push all thoughts of her aside, knowing that right now I have to think about my father and what he taught me before the master killed him. Never let them see your fear.

I harden myself.

Prepare.

Before my master’s puppet even reaches the bottom step, I know it’s the one they call Lawrence, the handler I hate the most. The one with a weak mind, strong back, teeth like baked beans and beady eyes that fit his ugly rat face.

He likes to call me kitten. I have a few choice names that I’d like to call him in return, but I always bite the inside of my cheek to resist the urge. Partly because I’d be whipped and partly because Miss Kara educated me and taught me all about manners. I realize that an educated wolf with manners might sound laughable. In my line of work, however, education and manners are as lethal as a bear trap to those I hunt. That’s how I lure my marks, how I bait my prey. A pretty face and good grace go a long way for a trained killer like me.

My glance wanders to my leg, the one peeking out from beneath my ratty blanket, and my eyes are drawn to the long jagged scar tracking the length of my calf. I grimace. Even with my education and manners, I never forget what I really am. I’m never allowed to.

“Hey kitten,” Lawrence says. Most would think the nickname is a play on my birth name, Pride. But I know it’s the handler’s way of cutting me down, to find control where he feels none. My parents called me Pride because I was their pride and joy. Lions live in a pride and since lions are cats…

He tosses a collar and chain into my cage. “Leash up.”

I take note of the gun in his holster before my glance locks on his. As I give him a good hard stare, he flinches. The movement is slight, but I notice it. Dressed in my knee length nightgown, long hair loose around my shoulders, I might look like an average seventeen-year-old girl—harmless and innocent—but we all know I’m not.

Even though Lawrence keeps his face blank and stares down at me with those dark eyes of his, he reeks of terror. The scent is like a mixture of hot sweat and rotting compost. Oh, it’s not pretty by any means. Nevertheless, the werewolf slumbering restlessly inside me feeds off his fear, thrives on it, so I inhale and draw it deep into my lungs.

Without taking my eyes off his, I take my time to leash up. My movements are slow and deliberate as I position the collar. Metal grinds metal and the sound cuts the silence as I secure it around my neck. The handler winces. So do the older, more obedient wolves that I bunk with.

Jace cuts me a glance, chocolate eyes now milky from old age warn me to behave. I realize he’s doing it for my own good, but this morning I’m cold and hungry and in no mood for Lawrence’s insults. Clover makes a noise to draw the handler’s attention away from me, and all sets of eyes shift to her.

As Clover tries to pacify Lawrence, averting her gaze in a show of respect and making small talk about the weather, Lawrence opens my mother’s former cage and pulls out her cot. He gives it a good hard shake and the breeze stirs the dust on the unfinished boards masquerading as our ceiling. The particles dance in the stairwell light before falling to the cold, cement floor.

When Lawrence tosses the cot into a corner I stiffen. It can only mean one thing. My mother has been gone for a little over a year now, and I know the master rarely keeps a cell empty for long, which makes me wonder when and how he’s going to fill it?

Who will he breed?

I cringe at the thought of bringing puppies into this world, but know it’s not something I have to worry about. The master would never breed a wolf like me. My mother always said I was a survivor, the only pup in a litter of three to make it, but hey, a runt is a runt. Thanks to Darwin and his theory of ‘natural selection’ a runt is a heritable trait that a pack can do without. When it comes to canine reproduction, only one motto dictates: runts need not apply.

Deep in the bowels of the estate’s basement, the master keeps other wolves, separating the strong and young from one another. I’m smart enough to understand that he distances us so we can’t conspire against him or speak telepathically. Wolves can only use telepathy when in animal form, however. Well, most wolves that is. Oddly enough, I along with Stone, an alpha wolf two years my senior, are able to communicate while in our human forms.

Sometimes the master does in-house breeding, sometimes he sends us out to one of his associates—other drug lords who also harbor werewolves. It’s like he’s running a regular old puppy mill in here. Except his puppies kill for him. Which begs the question, what does my master have in store for me today?

Pride’s Run, by Cat Kalen
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