The Elect 15, part 4 of 4: Wicked

Emily could still move, but it was like wading through molasses.  She noticed the students on either side were immobile, so that danger was at least neutralized.  Then she noticed Lisa and Libby were standing still.  Emily stilled, to conserve her strength as well.  Latasha struggled for a bit longer, but eventually fell to her knees and could not continue.

“Well, well.”  Abby came down the library steps.  “And to think, I was once afraid of your power.”  ac abby 3She walked between them and examined them, like an art patron might examine statues.  Then she returned to the steps and faced them.  “I knew you would come here.  Appropriate, don’t you think?”  She teased them, but at once it was not funny.  Something like fire rose up in her eyes and the women felt the heat of it.  “This is the same place where you killed my mother.”

“You were her secret ingredient that made the formula work.”  Lisa spoke.  Emily was not aware they could still speak.

“Yes, I was,” Abby calmed again.  “And I may do it again if the price is right.  Of course, this time you won’t be there to stop me.”

Emily risked a slight move to look more squarely at the girl.  Abby had to be really stupid.  With her power, she could make people shower her with money.  Why was she worried about squeezing a few dollars out of some scientists?

“But now I think I need to decide which one of you actually killed my mother.  Not that it will really matter in the end.”  She came down to walk among them again and appeared to scrutinize them closely.  Finally, she pointed at Emily.  “I think it was you.”  Emily spoke before the girl could do ac emily 4anything.

“So how do you like being the most popular girl in school?”  Emily could tell.  This girl was a dork in high school.

Abby paused.  “That’s right.  I am.”  She had not considered that.  “I can’t wait until my high school reunion.  Certain rich bitches need to learn a lesson, I think.”

While she spoke, Libby pulled her knife slowly from her secret pocket.  Abby was close enough.  One swift thrust to the heart would do it.  But Abby must have caught a glimpse of the metal in the corner of her eye.  She yelled again.

“Stop!”

Libby stopped and Abby spoke with the fire again in her eyes.  “Old lady.  You are too old to live.  You can be first.”

“No!” Lisa yelled, but it was too late.  Abby opened her mouth and fire came forth like the fire of aab student fire dragon.  It was like a flamethrower, and it engulfed Libby so quickly she did not even have time to scream.  In a few seconds, she was no more than a stump of charcoal, and the others were in tears.  Abby laughed.

“They burn witches, you know.  I think turnabout is fair play.”  She turned again to Emily.  “Tormenting you is so much fun, I think I will save you for last.”

“No more, witch!”  The call came from the path to the science building.  There was a man running toward them and he had a samurai sword in his hand, raised to attack position.

“Stop!  Stop!  Stand still!  Stop moving!”  With each word, Heinrich slowed, but he never quite stopped.  Either the witch was at the limits of her power, or she was drained from her fiery execution of Libby, or she was stretched too thin.  In any case, Heinrich was at a walk, dragging his feet forward, but he was still coming.

Abby stepped back, afraid for a second.  She rose up in the air ten feet above the ground and ordered, “Hold him!”

Emily found herself move as though she had no control over her own motions.  She stepped up to Heinrich and grabbed him by the belt.  Lisa stepped behind the man to take him by the shoulders.  Latasha, still on her knees, stretched out to grab him by the ankle.  Heinrich stopped, but even as he stood still, Emily let go.  She kept her fingers in place, but she could resist to the point where ac heinrich 5she did not have to hold the man.  Lisa also lifted her hands a fraction from the man’s shoulders.  Latasha was the last to figure it out, but soon enough there was nothing to hold Heinrich back.  He paused, only because he had to time things just right.

“That’s better,” Abby said.  She smiled again and acted like this was all a big joke.  “Did you know I can do anything?”  Abby stayed where she was in mid air, ten feet up.  “Just think of the possibilities.”

Emily could think of a lot of possibilities.  She figured Abby might not think of very many.  The girl really was not that bright, and with a close-up look at the girl, Emily decided that she was not very good looking either.  She was rather plain and Flabby was not an inappropriate name.

“So you make mindless drones of your fellow students?”  Heinrich asked.  He was thinking something.

“They worship me as they should.”  Abby responded.  “I am worthy of all worship.  I am a goddess.  I am the goddess.”ac heinrich 7

“You are nothing but a spoiled brat.”

“How dare you!”  A force like flame came from Abby’s eyes and struck Heinrich right in the chest.  He staggered.  The girls had to steady him, but he returned his eyes to glare at the girl.  Once again, she had flipped her attitude in a mere second.  “How interesting,” she said.  Emily got the impression that the eye blast probably turned more than one person to dust.

“You are not a goddess,” Emily said.  She imagined she knew what Heinrich was doing.

“I am!”  Abby stomped her foot in mid air and got angry again.  Power poured out from her eyes, hands and hair, but fortunately for Emily it was unfocused.  “I deserve to be worshiped.  The whole world should worship me, and it will as soon as I am fully-grown.  You will see.  I am worthy of praise.”

“Your mother would be ashamed of you,” Lisa said.

ab student electrics“My mother would not!”  Abby just got angrier than before.  “And so what?  You killed my mother.”  Power started streaking from her body like little bolts of lightning.  “You all need to die,” she said, and it looked like she was about to bring all that power into focus when something stuck out of her chest.

It was a knife thrown from behind.  It went straight through the heart.  Abby looked down and suddenly had a concern other than her immediate anger.  The knife slowly began to back out as the witch focused on getting rid of the weapon and healing herself at the same time.  It took whatever energy she had left.  Emily found she could move again, though still only slowly and she was very stiff.  The students who had come up on both sides of the drama were also beginning to move slowly and stiffly, and there were sounds of them coming back to life.

Abby stayed ten feet up, but it was clear she had to focus everything else on staying alive.  Heinrich waited, and just before the knife vacated the witch’s back, he took two giant steps and jumped ten feet straight up.  Abby looked up at him even as his sword sliced true.  The knife and her head both fell first.  Then Heinrich fell back to his feet while Abby’s body just fell.

“Help me,” Heinrich yelled and it took the others a moment to realize what he needed.  He steppedab stud burning to the nearest tree and tore off a big branch.  Then he began to strip it of its smaller branches and twigs.  Latasha helped.  Emily and Lisa gathered some other wood.  When Heinrich had the tree branch stripped, he made a great shout and rammed the branch a good two feet deep into the frozen ground.  They piled the firewood around the base while Heinrich tied Abby’s body to the impromptu stake with some twine he had in his coat pocket.

“The only way to kill a witch this powerful is to behead her.  But witches must also be burnt, to be sure.”  He pulled out a lighter and some lighter fluid he had in his other pocket.  It made an interesting bonfire.  Then he fetched the head.  When he set that in the flames at the feet of the body, they all saw the eyes open and the mouth opened as well, like Abby was screaming.

“Fair enough,” Latasha said.  “For what she did to Ms Libby.  Ms Libby did not have a chance to scream either.”  She sounded angry, but immediately turned to Lisa and cried into her shoulder.

Emily went to the library door.  She was not surprised to find Pierce there.  He took her hand and walked her over to pick up his knife.  He cleaned it expertly and put it away.  Then he kissed her.  She hardly had the energy to kiss him back, but she certainly felt warm all over.

“So was this the reason you were activated?”  Lisa asked.  Heinrich looked at her and shrugged.  He did not know for sure.

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Monday, the Elect, chapter 16, the Best Laid Plans… Don’t miss it

ac j school bus 2

The Elect 15, part 3 of 4: Run for Your Life

It got dark enough.  Emily dared not wait any longer.  She knew the door would give her away and might even set off the fire alarm, but that could not be helped.  She also knew there were bushes nearby.  She once shoved her friends into those bushes.  She would have to improvise.

It turned out no alarm sounded, at least no audible alarm, but the door made plenty of noise on its own.  Fortunately, it felt dark enough for her to blend into the landscape.  Being a student of the right age, and being dressed like every other student, suggested she might blend in with the ab student pointingcrowd.  She imagined passing herself off as one of the hunters rather than the hunted.  She was mistaken.  The first student that saw her shouted, “She’s here!”  Emily cursed and wondered how that student could see her and so clearly, while she could hardly make out if the student was male or female before he shouted.

She ran, straight for the front of the library.  A crowd began to gather on the path to block her way, but when they bunched up, she veered at the last minute and bypassed them.  They followed, of course, but they were a bit slow to react.  Emily thought it might be a side effect of the spell, or at least she hoped so.

She got almost to the street when she found her way blocked by three young men who were watching the street and something across the street.  They stood by the corner of the building and turned toward her as she approached.  One made a grab for her, but Emily ducked so he missed.  The second got the palm of her hand in his chest, which knocked him to the ground.  The third took a swing at her, but again she ducked and the blow glanced off her shoulder.  It was probably ab trenton police 9as hard as the young man could punch, but she shrugged it off and quickly got to the back steps that lead to the street.  Lisa was not there.

A car pulled out from a lot across the street and screeched to a halt in the road.  Emily recognized Lisa’s car and dashed for it while Ashish rolled down the window.

“I can’t come closer,” he yelled as Emily passed through the invisible wall.  She slowed at the sensation, but then perked up.  Ashish pointed.  “They just headed down that side of the building.”  Emily cursed.  If she had veered right instead of left, she would have run right into them.  Then she looked up as she began to run again.  The three young men had arrived, but stayed behind the wall.  Fortunately, these also reacted slowly and she got on the library path before they reached her.

There were students scattered all along the path, most getting back to their feet, at least those that could.  Emily did not stay to play.  She wove a pretty pattern to get through their ranks without hitting them or being hit.  By the time she got to the front of the library, she saw Lisa, Libby andab students running Latasha coming in her direction.  The thirty or so that bunched up to prevent her from entering the library were on their heels.  Emily prepared to turn around again.  She felt a dozen already banged up students might be easier to get by than thirty fresh bodies.  She waited only a second for the others to catch up to her.  Then no one moved at all.

Abby was on the library steps, laughing, and she shouted.  “Everyone stop and stay right where you are!”  The power that emanated from her was incredible.

The Elect 15, part 2 of 4: Disturbing

Lisa looked up when she felt the disturbance in the air.  She felt it in her chest, like a loud bass note booming in a car.  It felt twisted and distorted, and simply wrong.  Lisa did not have to wonder.  She knew instinctively that the witch was active. She began to search around her desk, frantic for her phone.

“Here.”  Ashish picked it up from beneath a pile of papers.  It was set to vibrate and Lisa feared she may have missed something, but she could not worry about that just yet.  She called Emily.  Emily’s phone was off so she left a quick message and phoned home.  She was not surprised when Libby ac lisa a2answered.

“Bobby is the last one off the bus.  They need to stay inside.”

“Right.  We will be right there.”  Ashish got ready.  He swore he felt nothing.  As they roared off to Lisa’s house, Lisa called Latasha before Latasha could call her.

“I didn’t know what it was.”

“You are much closer to the university.  How is your family?”

“Fine,” Latasha said, before she realized what Lisa was asking and said, “Give me a minute.”  She took more than a minute.  “They are fine.  I don’t think they even noticed anything.”

“Good.  Whatever the effect of the spell, it must have had a limited range.  We will be right there.”  Lisa hung up and checked her missed message.  She went pale.  She tried Emily again, but still no ac libby 3answer.

“Heinrich,” Libby spoke up from the back seat as she got in the car

Lisa nodded, took a deep breath and called.  He was at the airport and would be at least an hour getting back.  “On his way,” Lisa reported and then she tried hard not to tell Ashish to hurry up.  She looked in the back seat.  Libby did not appear to be worried at all, but that only made it worse.

Ashish pulled up to the curb and Latasha jumped in the back with Libby.  The university was not far, but Lisa was at a loss as to where to go.  She did not know what was happening.    They just sat there for several minutes until the phone finally rang.

“What is going on?”  Lisa spouted.

“Hush.  Just listen.  I can’t talk long.  Abby has cast a spell of some kind.  She has the entire student body bewitched.  They are hunting me.  Come to the back of the library building.  I will meet you there.  Tell Ashish to stay away from the campus and keep the police away as well.   I don’t know if the spell may still be active or have some residual effect.”  She hung up.ac emily 4

Emily heard noises in the hallway.  It was dark out, or nearly so.  She hoped in a minute she could slip out that back door and slink through the shadows to the library.  She did not know what else to do.

The voices got close, and Emily dared to peek.  Bernie stood there, and he had an old style police revolver.  Emily thought the idea of Bernie with a gun was frightening, but she did not blame him.  The whole student body had gone crazy.  Clearly, Bernie just wanted to defend himself.  Emily got within a breath of showing herself when she heard two students come in the doors.

“The window is open in the old lab room.  She may have come in and exited by the window.”

“Or it might be something to throw us off,” Bernie said.  “I have others checking the basement and up the back stairs.  We need to go up this way so she has no way of escape if she is here.”

Emily slammed her back to the wall and crouched down as low as she could.  She heard their steps and Bernie’s shoe shuffle above her head as they climbed.  Now she was worried.  Apparently, Abby’s spell made no distinction between student and staff.  Probably every human being within range had become her willing slave.  Emily became afraid.  She wondered how far the spell went and how many people that included.

ac ashish 2When Ashish let the women out by the library, he really wanted to go but knew better.  He said he could feel it a little even there on the street.  He needed to back up to be safe, but he would wait for them.  The women all stepped up on the library steps and they felt it much more.  It was almost like walking through an invisible wall.  The street was safe.  The campus was Abby-land.

“I fought a witch once,” Libby said.  “But never one like this.”

“Is this the back?”  Latasha did not want to think about the witch too hard.  She certainly did not want to hear about one.  Lisa looked at the girl, and Latasha explained.  “Because this is the side that faces the street.  I would have called this the front.”

Lisa thought about it.  “You may be right.”

Libby just sat on the steps and had to stand again.  She groaned.  “The flesh is willing but the bones are weak.  Arthritis,” she said.a library 8

Lisa led the way.  It had turned fully dark by then, but she hoped to avoid an encounter with any students who might be near.  She honestly did not know what to expect until a young woman saw them sneaking along the building and shouted.

“Intruders!  Intruders!”  A dozen young people came up and the women were going to have to fight their way to the other side of the building.

The Elect 14, part 4 of 4: Finding

Emily turned slowly and shuffled her way back to her room.  The campus was quiet, but she did not really notice.  She had Pierce on her mind and wondered how serious they might actually be.  She would not be nineteen for another two months and that still felt very young.  He was closer to twenty-four, not that it mattered.  Emily hugged her coat for warmth and briefly wondered why February, the shortest month, always felt like the longest month.

Emily unlocked the door to her room.  The first thing she noticed was a red rose on her desk. ac emily 8 There was no Shakespeare this time, but she smiled all the same.  It appeared as if Pierce was having the same thoughts she was having.

Jessica was not home at the moment.  That was fine.  Emily had some work to do and then she had to gather her stuff since it looked like sleeping over at Lisa’s might be a regular thing for a while.  She felt the urge to go to the campus center, but ignored it.  She did not need a latte.  She needed to catch up on some work so she buckled down, but it did no good.  The urge for the campus center nagged at her and of course, she could not avoid the Pierce fantasies.  After a time of being unable to properly concentrate on her schoolwork, Emily went next door.  Maria was not home either but her door was curiously unlocked.  Emily poked around and found Maria’s phone.  That really made her curious.  Maria was never without her phone.

Emily stepped back into the hall, Maria’s phone still in her hand, and realized the whole dorm was unaccountably quiet.  Normally after supper, the halls and lounges would be full of people trying hard to avoid studying.  Now there was only stillness.

There was a sudden bang in the stairwell and Emily was startled.  Two students came bouncing down the stairs and crashed open the door to the outside.  Emily stepped over to see the two head for the campus center.  It did not feel right.  Suddenly nothing felt right.  Maria’s phone rang and ac melissa 3Emily answered it.

“Hello?  Maria?”  Emily heard the voice and knew instantly who it was though she had only talked to the girl a couple of times.

“Melissa?  This is Emily.  Maria is not here right now.  What is it?”

Emily felt the hesitation on the other side of the line.  “Emily?”

“You remembered something.”  Emily’s intuition acted up.  “You can tell me, I’ll be sure Maria gets the message.”

“It’s just…” Melissa still hesitated.  “It’s just I remembered that girl’s last name.”  Melissa did not have to say which girl.  Emily knew she was talking about Abby.  “It is Swenson.  She is Abigail Swenson, the professor’s daughter.”

Shit!  Emily did not say that aloud.  Instead, she said, “What else?”

“I remembered the campus center.  There is a conference room upstairs.  That girl was talking about turning it into her shrine.”  Melissa sounded finished, but Emily did not need any further information.  The urge to go to the campus center was still in her system.  She thanked Melissa and promised to call back as soon as there was news.  Then she exchanged Maria’s phone for her own.  She had Lisa in her contacts.  Damn!  It was voice mail.  She left what information she had a student cent 2and started to run and crashed out the same door by the stairs that the two students had crashed out of moments before.

Emily was not surprised to see Jessica and Maria in the campus center, posted at the bottom of the stairs.  They were there to stop her.  They could not, but it took a minute to get by them without hurting them.  Of course, Maria and Jessica were not home.  Their eyes looked empty, but it was them, all the same on the outside, and it would be them again if Emily could do anything about it.

“Don’t worry,” Emily said as she peeled Jessica’s nails off her arm and flung the girl to the floor.  “I’ll get you back.”

She took two steps at a time and burst into the room to find Abby sitting on the floor, staring with red, blank eyes of her own.  The girl said one unintelligible word, and that became just like a pebble dropped into a still pond.  Something, some force or wind came from her and expanded out well beyond the building.  It knocked Emily to the floor as it went by.   When she sat up, she had the terrible urge to worship the bitch, but this time that feeling could not find a place in her mind to grab hold of her, and she did not get intoxicated.

ac abby w6When she looked up, she saw Abby staring at her, wondering how her magic fared.  Emily answered by pulling her knife.  Abby looked mad, but only for a minute before she spoke.  “It’s too late, you know.”  She began to laugh and pointed at Emily with the words, “Kill her.”  There had to be fifty students in that room eager to do whatever Abby said.

Emily threw a chair through the nearest window and then followed the chair.  She dropped from the second floor, got a small glass cut in her upper arm and imagined the others could not follow her in the two-story jump.  She was surprised to see several students jump after her.  They mostly got hurt, a couple rather badly.  She did not wait around.  She could still hear Abby’s giggle as if the girl thought this was all such great fun.  Abby came to the window and applauded as Emily rushed off across the campus.

Emily still had her knife and her most important weapon, her phone.  She thought first of the a library 1library.  She imagined there were secluded places among the books where she could hide and make some calls.  To her surprise, the students came roaring out of the library front door, yelling at her and throwing whatever came to hand, books, notebooks, backpacks, pens and pencils.

“My God, how far did that wave travel?”  She did a u-turn and turned up the speed with which she could easily outrun even the swiftest pursuer.  She ran around the science building and ducked in the back door.  There was no one in the downstairs hall so she ran the length.  She kicked open the door to the lab room she blew up.  They were rebuilding the room and there signs of progress everywhere, including the lab desks all pushed together in the center, gas piping snaked all over the floor, and wallboard stacked in the corner.  Emily opened the side window, the one she went through before, and kicked out the storm window.

a science 2She checked out front.  They were gathering from the library, the student center and the nearby dorms and spreading out again in every direction.  They were hunting, and several looked ready to come up to the science building, though Emily clearly and deliberately ran around the building to make them think she headed for the engineering school.  Emily raced across the hall to the front stairwell and pulled herself into the shadows behind and beneath the stairs.  There was a fire alarm exit door if she needed it.  She hoped she would not.  She had to call Lisa, but for the moment, she had to remain quiet as she heard the students come in.

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Monday, the Elect chapter 15, Abbyland…don’t miss it.

 

The Elect 14, part 3 of 4: Searching

Lisa came to campus in the morning with a court order and plenty of back up.  It turned out there were seven Abby’s in the student body, but as Emily looked down the list she was sure none of the ones listed was the witch.

“We don’t even know her last name,” Lisa paced.ac lisa 2

“Amina says she is being blocked and Melissa can’t remember it either,” Maria reported as she played with her glasses.  Just to keep things even, Emily ran her hand through her hair.  It was not as short as it used to be.  Soon enough, it might be normal length for a girl her age.

“Have you talked to Heinrich?”  Lisa asked.

Emily nodded.  “Haven’t you talked to him?”

Lisa shook her head.  “We are not on the best of terms at the moment.”

ac emily 7Emily understood.  Latasha.  “He says finding a witch is not easy.”  He said it was not as easy as finding a rogue elect.  “Apparently when they are young they don’t know how to contain or disguise themselves so they tend to broadcast all over the place.  Finding a general location, like the campus is easy, but picking through the broadcast fog to find a specific location is not.”

The police spent all afternoon banging through one dorm room, office or classroom after another.  They came up empty.  Lisa had hoped they would find her.  She had also hoped the girl was raised to respect her parents and elders, and might hesitate to fight the police directly.  She doubted that was the case these days.  Lisa knew if this witch was a rebellious teen, she could easily fight, and from all indications, she feared that would be a serious battle.

When they found nothing, Lisa insisted Emily go with her to her house.  They planned to sleep three with one awake at all times to watch.  It was probably not the best plan, but what else could they do?

Emily caught up with Pierce the following morning.  He came to tell her he had an off campus errand and would not be back until late.  Captain Driver was also off campus again, taking another weekend in Washington.  Emily wanted to ask what was so special about Washington, but she ac pierce 2suspected it was his kids.  He was divorced and she did not ask because she did not want to be nosey.

Emily looked at Pierce.  She hated to be away from him.  But then, he was looking at her in the same way so she figured it was safe to feel what she was feeling.  She thought to hold him.  She thought to kiss him.  She thought about delaying his errand by taking him back to her room.  They had only done it that one time before Christmas.  She imagined it was time for another visit.  She imagined she would not mind if they made it a regular thing, but she was good.  She let him go and only stared until he waved and vanished behind the trees on the path to faculty parking lot, C.

The Elect 14, part 2 of 4: Dreaming

“Granger isn’t involved,” Emily said.

Pierce countered.  “Unless she was involved and the one controlling the experiment decided she was expendable.”

Emily thought, but shook her head.  “There haven’t been any more attempts on her life.  And she was not around during the zombie attack at the library.”

“Circumstantial.  She may have made up with the ones in charge and I was not around when the zombies came in force.”  Emily looked up at him.ac pierce 7

“I was,” he admitted.  “I was with Bernie the campus cop, keeping a safe distance.”

“Good thinking,” she encouraged him.  “But mostly there hasn’t been an attack or any sign of zombies since before Christmas.  It has been over a month and nothing.”

“Maybe they can’t get the formula right since Swenson is no longer with them,” Pierce suggested.

“I don’t think so.  Swenson was the type to keep meticulous records.  She still had Owen’s freshman paper on file from a year ago.  Maybe they can’t get the magic component right.  Heinrich said he smelled magic on the zombies.  That may have been the trigger to make it all work.”

“Maybe Flabby isn’t cooperating,” Pierce suggested.

ac emily 4Emily shook her head again.  “Maybe Abby isn’t the one we should be concerned about.  Maybe there is another witch in town.”

Pierce sat up straight.  “How likely is that?”  This was clearly a new thought for him.

“No less likely than three elect being in this same little town together.”

“Hi.”  Jessica bounced up from the dance floor with a new boy.  “Pierce and Emily, this is Dylan.  Bye.”  Dylan just had time to wave before he was dragged out on to the dance floor again.

“The Undead are in rare dance form tonight,” Pierce said.

“I heard they play from Boston to Raleigh, mostly colleges and places like the Hive.”  Emily made it a conversation.

“Yeah, but they’re from Philly, so we get them a lot when they’re home.”  Pierce spoke, but his eyesac pap priest were elsewhere.  Emily followed his eyes.  “Papadopoulos,” he said.

“The antiquities professor?”  Emily looked close.  The man was sitting with three others.  Two looked fairly young, big and ugly.  The third was dressed in a robe like some Orthodox priest.  “I imagined him older.”

Pierce nodded.  “It was his grandfather that collected and brought the stuff from Europe during the war.  He persuaded a Greek shipper to front for the buildings to house it all and make the work space to study it.”

“Gorgon?”

ac pap 1Pierce nodded.  “Papadopoulos was the one who explained to me about the lower basement levels.”

“Do you want to say hello?” Emily asked, but Pierce caught her hand and shook his head.

“He is a strange fellow.  Probably comes from breathing so much dust.”  He took Emily by the hand and led her to the dance floor.  It was a wonderful evening.  Emily went to bed happy.  Too bad the night was so difficult.

Jessica was still out when Emily laid down to sleep.  She had plenty on her mind, but was too tired to think about it.  Pierce gave her a real workout, but it was good.  She did not stay awake long.  She dreamt about being in the student center on a busy afternoon.  The people there stared at her.  She felt self-conscious and tried hard not to notice as she bought her latte.  She sought out a back corner where she could be inconspicuous, but the eyes followed her.

Across town, Latasha tossed in her bed.  She was running in her sleep, running from the police who had all become zombies and put Latasha on the menu.  At the same time, Lisa huddled with ac lisa house 2her children.  The dogs were all around the house.  She could hear them scratching at the doors, trying to break in when the phone rang.

Lisa bolted up, but needed a moment to clear her head.  It did not clear quickly so she had to reach for the phone in her fog.  It was Libby.

“Wake up.  Wake all the way up.  The witch has got into our dreams.”

“What?”  Lisa asked before she understood.  “Call Latasha.  Get her up and walking.  Have her mother wake her if she has to.  I’ll get Emily.”

Libby said nothing.  She hung up to dial.

Emily was presently in the hands of a half-dozen men who held her out like a lamb of sacrifice.  The women in the center had the knives.  Emily did not see Abby, but she sniffed the air and it smelled familiar.  Something in the back of her mind said witch as her phone rang.  She was already half-awake, retreating from the attack as hard as she could.

“Hello?”

ac abby 3“Emily, get up.  The witch is in your dreams.”

Emily sat up and shook her head.  “I know.  I figured that out.”  She heard Lisa take an audible breath as they heard a third voice on the phone.

“That was just to say hello.  Now I know where you live.”

Lisa and Emily hung up the phones as fast as they could.

The Elect 14, Nightmares: part 1 of 4

Maria answered her phone, “Ola, Maria”

“Hello Maria?  This is Melissa.”

”Melissa?  I was just thinking about calling you.  How are things in Vermont?”

“Fine.  And there?”

“Good.  Emily and Pierce are getting along great.  She loves him, you know, and he really loves her.ac maria 3  You can see it in his eyes every time he looks at her, lucky girl.  Jessica is on boyfriend number umpteen.  I can’t remember.  I don’t know if Amina dates.  She says her parents are really strict about stuff.”

“Are you seeing anyone?”

“No.”

“Good,” Melissa said.  “I mean not good, but I’m not either, and it wouldn’t be so bad if maybe we could be roommates next year.  I mean, I don’t know anyone else there.”

“You know me,” Maria said.  “And you know Emily and Jessica, and you met Amina.  Oh, and do you remember Mindy?  She is helping Amina with her history paper for Professor Schultz.  Little redhead—lived on your floor, originally?”

Melissa was silent for a minute.  “I think so.  She seems nice.”

“So you see?  You have friends.”  Maria paused and let the silence stretch out.  Since talking to Melissa after Christmas, Maria learned to let Melissa have time to frame her thoughts.

ac melissa 1a“Maria,” Melissa waited, but Maria let her finish.  “I had a bad dream—a nightmare.  I dreamt that Abby started making everybody into Abby worshipers.  All of you got taken by her spell, except maybe Emily.  I don’t remember Emily in my dream.  But it was terrible and I did not have near the power to stop her.”  Melissa grew quiet.  Maria spoke after a minute.

“I haven’t talked about Abby.  I figured it was something you probably wanted to forget.  But, since you mentioned it, it looks to us and Detective Lisa that Abby is planning something. I hate to ask you to think about it, but anything you can remember, like maybe Abby’s last name would be helpful.”

“I will—think about it,” Melissa said, and her voice brightened.  “It is the least I can do for my friends.”

“And roommate,” Maria said, and she could feel Melissa smile right through the phone.

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For those who are following this story, you are welcome to skip this part.  But for those who may be new, here is how it works.  The story began in November of 2015 and that is easy to access.  Just click on the archives button and select November and you can read the story from the beginning…and then December…and then January up to the present post.  Each chapter is posted in 4 parts: M, T, W, and Th.  To read the complete chapter 14, begin today and check the blog on T, W, and Th.  If you want to wait until Friday (Sat or Sun) the entire chapter will be on the blog under “recent posts” and can thus be read all in one sitting.

If you feel like you have come in the middle of things and are a bit confused…well, you have.  But hopefully, this has been written in a way where each chapter is reasonably complete, like episodes in a television show.  Please read the whole chapter…and if you want to skip going back to the beginning for now, a chapter or two should get you up to snuff on the characters and what they are dealing with… but you have to read the whole chapter, please…

I have enjoyed writing this.  I hope you enjoy reading it.  Whatever you read, Happy Reading

a a happy reading 1

 

The Elect 13, part 3 of 4: The Children

Libby Carter got out of the passenger side after a moment.  She let Lisa help her out, though she really did not need it.  Working with Latasha and killing zombies had reinvigorated her.  Then again, her arthritis was hurting in her knees and wrists, but what should she expect at eighty-eight.

“Lovely home.”

“Thank you, but you haven’t seen the inside yet.”ac libby 6

“No, but I can see your husband…Josh?”  Lisa nodded.  “I can see he takes good care of the outside.  I am sure inside will look just as lovely.”

Lisa knitted her brows.  “I don’t exactly have time for much cooking and cleaning.  Just remember, I have three children who have done who knows what while I have been at work.”

Libby tried to remember their names.  Lisa had to tell her.

“Bobby is thirteen, Adam is ten and Megan is seven.”

“The Ballerina.”  Libby remembered that much.

ac lisa home 4They stepped inside and Lisa breathed.  It did not look too bad, considering.  The couch even had all its little pillows in place.  “Have a seat.  I’ll just be a minute.”  Lisa stepped to the stairs.  “Kids!”  There was no response.  She smiled back at Libby and looked like she was about to go up and see what the problem was when they both heard a sound out back.  Lisa went to the sliding glass doors and Libby got up to look as well.  Sometimes moving felt better than sitting still.

All three children were running around the yard, laughing and playing something like tag.  Megan was giggling in the way she did, and Adam looked so serious.  “Adam is always so serious,” Lisa said.  Libby watched as Bobby slowed down so Megan could tag him.  Then he turned and played monster and she shrieked, ran and giggled some more.

“Lovely children,” Libby said.

There was a little snow in the corner of the yard left over from an early January dusting.  Adam began to pelt his siblings, and they turned toward him, but did not get far.  A dozen dogs came like a wild pack out of the yard next door.  They were not little dogs, but Dobermans, German Shepherds and several Pit Bulls.

“Mama!”  The children screamed as the dogs dragged them to the ground and began to tear them ac lisa house 2up.  Lisa could not get the sliding door open.  She tugged, and cried, but it would not budge.  Libby put her hand to the knob, not to help, but to hold Lisa’s hand instead.

“It’s not real,” Libby said, and the whole scene in the back yard vanished.  It was never there.  At the same time, letters as red as blood formed on the glass door.  They said, “Maybe next time.”  Then the letters faded and vanished as well.

“Mom?”  Bobby tumbled down the stairs followed by Adam and Megan.  “We didn’t hear you come in, but Adam saw your car in the driveway.”  Libby stood quietly by the back door and watched.  The kids could not understand why their mother was suddenly hugging them and crying.

###

Heinrich lifted his head.  He took a big whiff of air, then sighed, like a man suddenly disappointed.

“I didn’t think I was doing that badly,” Emily protested as she dropped the point of her sword.  It was Saturday morning and Heinrich said it was a good time to work out all the stress from the week.  Heinrich looked at her, but seemed focused on something else for a minute before he spoke.

ac heinrich 4“It isn’t you,” Heinrich said with a sad look on his face.  “I have an errand to run.”  He stepped over to open the cabinet and put his and Emily’s swords inside to be locked up for safe keeping.  “Besides, the library is open by now and I believe you have a history paper to finish.”

Emily groused, but turned to put on her coat and pick up her backpack.  She had clothes to change into in case they worked up a good sweat and she needed a shower, but that morning she felt they barely started before they finished.  She failed to notice Heinrich as he slipped several knives into his pockets.  He quickly put his trench coat over all.

Emily waited at the door for Heinrich to come out.  She thought how she picked Catherine the Great because Heinrich was in France during those days.  Amina picked some obscure Italian artist and philosopher, but she said Mindy helped her find some information in abstracts and reference works.  Heinrich locked up the Gymnasium and said good-bye when they parted.  He sounded serious, and Emily almost asked what the trouble was, but at the last, she thought the library was probably a good idea.

The Elect 13, part 2 of 4: Bewitched

“Hi Emily.”  Jessica bounced up to the table with a boy in tow.  It was yet another one.  It seemed like she was going through the entire student body.  No doubt, enjoying the full college experience.  “This is Jacob.  This is my roommate.”

Emily managed to say, “Hi” before Jessica dragged the poor boy off somewhere else.  Emily downed her latte and watched.  Then she closed her book with the thought that her history class ac emily 1was not as much fun as she thought it would be.  Heinrich was a serious historian and he expected no less from his students.  She gathered her things.

She was due for her Thursday afternoon workout with the man.  He was teaching her the saber, which he said was still a fit weapon in some corners of the modern armed forces.  She thought she might have a few sharp questions for him as well, like why he picked on her in class.  Far from being the teacher’s pet, he seemed to expect her to do twice as well as any of the others.  It was not fair, she thought, as she happened to look up.

There was a rather plain looking young girl surrounded by a dozen young men and women who all looked like the pick of the litter.  They were doting on the girl’s every move and every word, like she was some sixties guru who knew the secret of life.  Abby was the name that came to Emily’s mind, and it did look a bit like some cult worship.  She shook her head and prepared to turn away, ac abby 3when Abby looked up and caught Emily’s eye.  Abby smiled and waved at her.  Emily returned some sort of smile and walked to the door.

Before she got outside, Emily felt a sudden intense urge to run back, throw herself at Abby’s feet and tell the girl how beautiful she was.  Emily only paused briefly before she stepped out for some fresh air.  The girl was not that good looking.  Maybe Emily loved her, but Abby was not that good looking.  Flabby was maybe a better name.  And anyway, she did not love her, she loved Pierce.

Emily staggered to the science building and found Pierce.  “Kiss me,” she said.  “I love you, I don’t love Abby, even if I do.  I would do anything for her, I mean you.  Pierce, you.”  She felt intoxicated, but fortunately, Pierce knew what to do.  He carried her most of the way and kept talking to her to keep her mind focused on him.

“Where have you been?”  Heinrich yelled as soon as they stepped into the gymnasium.

“Hello, Santa,” Emily said.  “Why are you such a mean teacher and such a nice man?  How can that be?”

“She’s bewitched,” Pierce spoke quickly.

“Here, set her down, here.”  Heinrich cleaned off a bench with a sweep of his sword.  Fencing gear ac maria 1and a stack of towels scattered across the gymnasium floor.  Pierce set her down gently, and Emily smiled up at them.

“Two nice men.  The one I love and,” she paused to think.  “The one I don’t know about.  Those are very complicated feelings.”  While she babbled, Heinrich concentrated and rubbed his hands hard together.  “Did I mention that Abby is wonderful?”  Heinrich touched her and Emily went unconscious.

By the time Lisa arrived with Latasha and Libby along as requested, Emily was beginning to come out of her stupor.

“Put these on,” Heinrich spoke to the women without any preliminaries.  He handed each an amulet that held a small blue stone on a golden chain.  “These were hard to fabricate on short notice, but they should afford you some protection as long as you don’t get too close to the witch.”

“Witch?”  Lisa asked.

Heinrich nodded.  “And a very powerful one who is not even fully grown.  She had Emily swooning, though Emily resisted.”

Pierce helped Emily sit up and Emily confirmed the words.  “I fought it, but the urge to become an Abby disciple was very strong.”

ac lisa 1“And these?”  Lisa asked.

“Like amplifiers for the natural resistance you have.  That is one of the things your goddesses forgot.”

“What, to make us witches too, like the council?”

“No.  I have no such power,” Heinrich said and pulled out his own blue amulet.  The women saw where he chipped away pieces of his own stone to make theirs.  “But my resistance to magic is generally stronger than yours and I have some ability to reverse some of the things a witch can do.”

“Thank God for that,” Emily said as she stood and began to feel more herself.  Abby no longer had any hold on her.

“We need to find this witch and put an end to whatever scheme she has in mind.”  Libby spoke in a calm and serious voice.

Heinrich shook his head.  “She probably does not yet know what she wants.”

“So maybe we can talk sense to her?”  Emily said, but it was really a question.ac Heinrich 2

“Witches don’t understand sense,” Heinrich took a deep breath before he explained.  “Magic is a skill, a talent like any other.  A surgeon will not save every patient.  A lawyer will not win every case.  So magic will sometimes be a bad thing even when the intentions are good.  But once a witch turns to the dark side, if I can use that term, they no longer respond to reason.  They only respond to power and getting what they want.  Great power over nature and people is worse than any drug ever invented.  The darkness can be hard to resist.”

“And right now she sees us as a competing power and a threat.  She may be hard to find.”  Lisa drew her own conclusion.

“I would not worry about finding her,” Heinrich countered her thinking.  “She will show herself as soon as she figures out what she wants.  She will also look for a way to neutralize your threat and then we will all be in the soup.”

“Hey.”  Emily noticed something.  “Pierce is wearing an amulet, too.”  It was just as blue as the others.  He smiled for Emily and showed her.

ac pierce 5“Right now, he is our only inside person in the biology department,” Heinrich said.

Lisa finally put her necklace on and nodded.  “There may still be a link there or a lead to the zombie lab,” she said.  “But Pierce, if you find anything suspicious, call.”

Pierce showed the knife in the inner pocket of his jacket.  “I’ve been practicing.”

“No!”  The women all shouted at him, Emily loudest of all.

“There is one other thing.”  Heinrich interrupted.  He was thinking on another track.  “The witch herself may be connected to the zombies.  I smelled the magic when we fought them.”

“Something to think about,” Lisa said.

“I don’t like witches,” Libby shivered.

Latasha smiled.  “Witches and zombies.  Just like home in New Orleans.”ac latasha 1

Wizard’s Bane, a short story that crosses the fine line between Halloween and Christmas

Coriander gently lifted the sleeping child’s curly, golden locks and pulled the ancient quilt up to her chin. He tried hard not to wake her. Coriander feared earlier in the evening that his golden, three-year-old girl might be too excited to sleep, it being Christmas Eve and all. He bathed her in warm water and dressed her in her warmest flannel nightgown to protect her from the worst chills in the old, stone castle. He read her a bedtime tale about Santa and the elves, and all of the reindeer, which he remembered by name. And without any prompting, he thought, proudly. Then he kissed her goodnight and sat up in the dark to contemplate what was to come. He feared to think about it.

While he watched her sleep, his little golden haired wonder, he considered his options. He had no a caste bedroom 1friends, no family, no neighbors he could call on. No one would help him in his time of need. He exhaled a heavy sigh. He could not blame them. He was not a good man—and he knew it. But he was far better than the cruel and wicked witch who had vowed to destroy him and who even now was coming to steal his joy.

Coriander sighed when he recalled that bright Sunday morning in June when this innocent wonder that lay sleeping in his bed entered his life and changed it forever. He realized, on that day, this child was his one chance at redemption. He would love her with every shred of love that was in him, however little that might be, and he would protect this child from the cruelty of the world—the same world that taught him to be cruel. He leaned over the sleeping child and kissed that precious forehead once more before he stood and walked ever so slowly to his study.

Through all of his years, his worst enemy was the witch, Moria of Avila, a powerful sorceress filled with the most noble and magical blood and able to practice the most powerful, ancient and cruel magic. Coriander had little hope against her, but he had to try, because the witch had vowed to take the child from him. It took no prophet to know she would come on Christmas Eve in order to sting his heart in a witch 2the worst possible way and leave him bereft and alone on Christmas morning.

Coriander stepped into his study. Despite the December chill in the stones, he opened a window for fresh air. He breathed deeply several times while he contemplated exactly what he would do. He looked around the room at the walls filled with books, but there were no answers in those tomes. The tables were filled with magical equipment of all sorts, but these simple tools of the art would not stop this wicked witch. She would brush them aside like play toys.

He considered the lab where he kept his ingredients, his cauldron, and other tools to make potions, but there was no potion that would solve this problem. He knew, as he had always known, that this would come down to a battle of wills and magic, and Coriander wondered if he had the will to keep her out. He wondered whose will would prevail—who would end up with the child and who might be destroyed.a wizards study 3

Coriander shook his head before he brushed his gray streaked hair back out of his eyes. His were eyes that glowed as red as his anger, determination, fear and power that surged up from his innermost depths. Those eyes could turn a man to stone, like old Medusa, and they could pierce the armor of the strongest knight quicker and cleaner than any sword. They could set a whole forest ablaze in seconds, but would they be enough against Moria? Not likely.

He heard a commotion in the courtyard inside the castle wall and turned to the window quickly to focus his attention on what he could see. It was Moria, he was sure of it. He could sense her presence. He could smell her musky scent. He could not quite see her, but by his power, he saw the golden shield she projected against the arrows from the wall; arrows that were shot in a half-hearted manner, he noticed. That was a fault that would be corrected, assuming he survived the night.a castle

“Moria is clever,” he admitted to himself. She must have expended some power to fly over the castle wall, and now she stood at the very gate of the inner house. He hoped that expenditure would tire and drain her, but he doubted it. As he turned from the window, he did not give it another thought. He had to settle his mind and heart to focus on his work, to employ whatever magic he could contrive to stop her.

The crystal on his desk lit up with a wave of his hand. He would stop her at the gate where he had a whole squad of the undead ready to guard the door. He saw them first as they came to mind when he looked into the crystal. With a surge of the power that was within him, he animated that decaying flesha zombie guard.

Then Moria stepped into the picture, and with a wave of her own hand, there came a flash of golden light against his red magic. Thousands of worms and maggots sprayed across the steps toward the doorway, attached themselves to the undead and literally covered the zombies from head to toe. The rats that came swarming up from the cellars and dungeons in answer to Moria’s pied piper call were almost superfluous. The flesh of those zombies got stripped in a few short moments, but Coriander still smiled. Though not as strong as their flesh covered cousins, skeletons armed with swords and shields might still be sufficient to a skeleton guardkeep out the witch.

“Betsy.” The crystal in the study conveyed Moria’s word and it showed something else which made Coriander swallow hard. A massive, reptilian head came into view, and Coriander saw the fire in its snake’s eyes. It was a dragon, and in one breath, his skeletons went up like a bonfire doused in oil. That was the weakness of skeletons. They burned like kindling. In a few moments, there was no longer anything to prevent Moria’s access to the house. What is more, Coriander realized that the witch must have flown over the wall on the dragon’s back, so it cost her nothing in the way of energy. Coriander shook his head and brushed back his hair once more while he repeated his words.

“Moria is clever, and resourceful.”

He concentrated on the crystal and sent an illusion, a glamour to make the entrance hall appear to spin in an hypnotic fashion. He knew there was no hope of hypnotizing the witch, but he thought he might disorient her and perhaps cause her to get sick or pass out. There was a slim chance, he told himself, even as he sent his real spell and the room below very quickly filled with dust. The dust was not enough to notice, unless Moria looked real close. If she did, she might catch the glimpse of the faint red glow of his magic attached to each little particle. Even if she saw it, though, he imagined it would be too late. He sent enough dust to be effective, and that was all that mattered.a dragon

The front door exploded and the picture looked very real and very close. Coriander jumped back from the crystal. When he took a breath and returned to concentrate again on the crystal orb, he praised himself for his forethought. He had found a better lock. Even the witch could not simply unlock it and walk in.

Coriander watched as the dragon head butted against the door until it was no more than scrap metal. Coriander’s smile broadened. The door was fireproof too, even against dragons. Moria had to expend herself to gain entry.

He watched as she stepped in and immediately put one hand to her head. She stretched out her other hand as if trying to gain her balance. He watched as she pulled a pair of spectacles out of her bag and slipped them on. After that, she appeared to have no trouble with his illusion, and again he cursed the fact that she did not have to expend any of her energy to overcome his hard work.

a crystal ball 3“Clever and resourceful,” he shouted into the crystal.

“Coriander! Bring me Alicia!” Moria shouted back, but Coriander did not hear as he was busy mumbling.

“Stupid, despicable, horrible creature.” He kept it to a mumble because he figured there was no point in enraging the woman. “Such strength of mind and magic should not belong to such a one as this,” he said to himself, and paused. He wondered how often others had said that about him. He quickly convinced himself that he was not such a terrible man. He had no one who would help him because not one would dare lift a finger against the witch lest they too face her wrath.

He shook that thought far away as soon as his mind was settled on the lie, and he peered ever closer into the crystal. Moria was already beginning to itch and scratch herself. Good. He took a real close look and noticed, not for the first time, how stunning she was. It made him pause and wonder how one could be so gorgeous on the outside and so rotten on the inside.

“No! You will not have her,” he shouted into the crystal in response to Moria’s demand for the child, a crystal ball 2even as the first boils began to break out on Moria’s skin. Coriander kept his giggles to a minimum, but it got hard to stifle himself when a pimple appeared on Moria’s face, followed by the proverbial wart on the nose.

Moria screamed. “I’ll give you no!” A flash of brilliant golden light, strong enough to make Coriander blink and take a step back, suddenly lit up the room below. Coriander felt his knee itch. Then his cheek itched, but he refused to respond. His study remained well protected, even against his own spells cast back at him; but his chin itched all the same.

Coriander looked again into the crystal in time to see Moria cast an illusion of her own. There were three Morias in sight of the crystal, and it was a masterful glamour. He had no way of knowing which was the real one. They split up and he reached for a rendering of the castle to quickly calculate where they would have to be rejoined. “A-ha!” He shouted, grabbed a vial off one of the shelves, and raced out of his study.a castle stairs 1

They would be close, he thought, as he arrived at the spot where an upper hall met a stairway that came up from below. Moria would be close to the goal, but this should do it. He grinned. He took three giant steps back from the spot, uncorked the vial and splashed the liquid all across the floor between him and the stairs. When he was satisfied that the area was well covered, he stepped back around the bend in the hall to wait and watch. He also thought of ways to negotiate, just in case.

One of the Morias came down the hall before a different Moria reached the top of the stairs, but then the one in the hall did not stop and wait for her sister-self to catch up as Coriander had expected. It came on, and his red magic a flashed as the potion took effect. The Moria in the hall stopped, frozen like a well carved block of ice, unable to move, even the least polished pinky.a caste room 1

“Clever.” The Moria on the stairs spoke and the voice grated in Coriander’s ears, not the least because he knew he trapped the wrong one. Moria waved her arm and a touch of her golden magic revealed that the frozen Moria was only a cellar rat, temporarily transformed. It was not entirely an illusion, which was why Coriander could not tell which was real and which was the illusion. Of course, the poor rat would stay frozen in place for several hours before the spell wore off and it could return to the dungeon.

Fortunately, Coriander was not frozen in place, and he currently ran with all speed back to his study. He wracked his brain to think of something, anything! But all he could think was Moria had been cleverer. “Bring me Alicia!” He heard Moria yell. He did not answer.

In the end, there was nothing else Coriander could think to do. The study was to his left hand, but Alicia’s room was not much further along on his right. He had put her to bed in the room he sometimes used to rest from his studies. He did not want her to be far away. He had thought if she was close he would be able to protect her better, but now he wished he had secreted her away somewhere; not that Moria would not have pierced his secret. Now, there was nothing to do but wait. He gave himself little hope. He felt kind of glad that he did not have to wait very long.a castle hall 1

“Coriander. Bring me Alicia.” Moria spoke as she came around the corner.

“No.” Coriander was defiant, but Moria did not hesitate. Her golden magic poured from her hands and Coriander answered with his red magic, and barely in time, but it was enough. In this way, the witch and the wizard stood like statues. They kept each other at bay for a long time. When they stopped, it happened suddenly, as if by some unspoken agreement. Both needed to catch their breath and take a respite from the exertion, like boxers between rounds.

“Coriander.” Moria spoke again.

a witch 1“But it’s Christmas,” Coriander countered and watched carefully as the conflicting emotions ran across Moria’s face. At first, it looked like she might say she did not care if it was Samhane, Beltane and New Year’s Eve all rolled into one; but then she seemed to relent and a look of understanding flashed ever so briefly behind those eyes. Coriander got caught up by the look, but maybe he knew better. He had been fooled by that look once too often.

Moria struck again, and this time, Coriander struck right back with all of his strength. Where the red and golden magic met, there was an orange barrier. It gave off orange sparks like an arc welder at work, only these sparks were much more powerful and much more destructive. The priceless painting on the wall got burned and scratched beyond repair. The very stones in the wall smoked wherever a spark touched as if vaporized in those spots. The floor beneath their feet trembled, and the ceiling above their heads sent down streams of dust as if caught in an earthquake and in imminent danger of collapse. The witch was determined to take the child. The wizard was equally determined to keep the child, and neither made headway; and neither gave up.a magic battle

At last, the magic subsided when both witch and wizard collapsed to their knees, exhausted and worn to their last ounces of strength. Coriander then heard the squeak of the door behind him. He could do nothing about that. He no longer had the strength.

The little girl with the golden curls came out into the hall and blinked because of the bright light. She rubbed her sleepy eyes. “Has Santa come?” Coriander knew the noise would wake her, and he was not at all surprised to hear the girl’s next word. “Mommy!” The girl ran right past Coriander as if he was a slug on the floor, and she dashed into Moria’s waiting arms. The woman found strength in that wonderful hug.

a witch 3“Alicia, darling. It is time to go home.”

“But it’s Christmas.” Coriander whined. He sounded like he had a frog in his throat, like his magic had streamed out of his mouth and rubbed his vocal chords raw. Both he and Moria struggled to their feet, Moria holding tight to her precious child.

“You agreed to every other weekend.” Moria spoke in a voice as uncertain as Coriander’s. “You pull a stunt like this again and I’ll see you get no weekends.” Coriander looked ready to speak, so Moria added, “I’ll get a restraining order!”

“But mommy, it’s Christmas.” Alicia mouthed the words she had heard. “Mommy, I’m cold. Can I have some hot chocolate?”a girl

Moria looked up, but Coriander merely shrugged so Moria spoke. “Of course, sweetie. I’ll make it.”

“Oh, so you don’t trust me?” Coriander spoke at last.

Moria turned and started toward the kitchen. Coriander expected her to say something nasty and cutting in response to his remark, but she said nothing. Maybe she was too tired, and anyway, Alicia aChristmas starspoke into the silence.

“Daddy,” she said, and she held out her little hand and looked at him with those great big eyes. Coriander felt obliged to shut his mouth. He lowered his own eyes and came up close so those little fingers could wrap around his big finger and she could drag him along with them.a christmas star

They say that Christmas is the most magical time of year, but when it is combined with the heart of a little girl with a golden curl, well, there is no greater magic in all the universe.

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Beginning Monday, look for The Elect: Freshman Year, posted as a serialized novel:

The elect are one in a million, maybe one in ten million. They are women chosen at birth and empowered from ancient days by the goddess of old, originally, to protect and defend the home when the men went away, to hunt or to war. Emily Hudson is an elect who has no idea how gifted she is until she arrives at New Jersey State University, in Trenton, and meets another elect—a police Detective, Lisa. Together they find a third elect, Latasha, a high school freshman, and realize that three elect in the same community, maybe even three in the same state, defies all odds. There are not very many elect in the whole world. Then again, maybe three together is by some divine design, because there are things going on in Trenton and around the university which will take every gift they have to give, and then some.

This is a serialized novel, to use the classic term, but neatly divided into “episodes” like a television show. It is jam packed and fast paced to where I have been accused of squeezing three seasons worth of material into a single season. The emphasis is on dialogue and relationships, with enough showing, but a fair amount of telling which on film would be showing…so don’t write and complain about the telling, please. Also, there are quite a number of characters, but again, you must imagine them on film where they would be easier to remember by matching a face with a name. All you really need to remember are the three elect, Emily with her college friends, Detective Lisa, and the local girl, Latasha. Everyone else is either family (mom, dad, brother), friend, co-worker (detective, police officer, teacher) or antagonist of some sort. Oh, and then there is Heinrich…e NJSU 1

The pilot episode will post the first two weeks in November 2015, M, T, W and Th of next week, and then M, T, W and Th of next week. After that, each of the 22 episodes will post weekly (M, T, W and Th) over the next 22 weeks. If you wait until Thursday, you will find all posts for the given episode on the right side of the blog under “recent posts”, plus the last post of the previous episode to help set things in context. Some might want to wait until Friday, or even the weekend to read the whole episode at once. That is fine.

If you miss an episode, or find your way to this story somewhere in the middle, feel free to click on the archives button and select November, 2015. The pilot episode begins it all at the beginning of November 2015. Happy reading. Lets see how good your visualization skills really are.