The Dreyfuss Trilogy

Changeling * Lucifer's Stepdaughter * Moonchild


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Showing posts with label Changeling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Changeling. Show all posts

Sunday, 14 October 2012

Sample Sunday October 14th

Although it's Fragments that's taking part in Efestival of Words 'Trick or Treat' event, I can't let Hallowe'en month pass without letting you have some vampire tricks, so an excerpt from Changeling, whereby Dreyfuss and Joanne square down at the moment of the reveal... and you have to wonder what you'd do in the same circumstances.

Psychological torture ahead, trigger warning... Joanne has been a prisoner for almost a year and knows only that Dreyfuss is insane.


They very rarely ate breakfast in the dining room.  Either they did not share the meal, or they ate on the breakfast bar in the kitchen.  He had laid out the breakfast ware formally, and placed bacon and eggs on her plate.  She was moving them around her plate, with just enough being consumed to avert comment.  Not that anything was going to avert comment today.

‘I am pleased that you are feeling better this morning.

‘Yes, thank you.  I’m much better.’

‘Good, it was unfortunate, that you became so… indisposed.’

She managed to get another scrap of bacon in her mouth, taking a drink of water to try and drown it down. 

‘Joanne, I have been meaning to have a talk with you.  Perhaps now would be a good time?’  He sat back, settling into the chair, the meal dismissed. 

She adjusted her own pose exactly, sitting in quiet attention, moving her body slightly to angle more to him.

‘First of all, let me say that I do understand your... reticence… in the matter of your time here with me…’

She tuned out everything, but listening.  If he was pontificating, best not to let something important go unheard.  She found if she focussed tightly on his lips, and how they formed his words, the rest of the room would fade from her view.  Slowly blink out to nothingness, and dim in colour and detail.  Something she often worked on when left on her own for any length of time: how long to stare at a fixed point long enough, and watch the room fade from her peripheral vision.

‘…do you agree?’

‘Yes Jonathan, I do agree.’

Best just to repeat his phrase.  If she embellished, or reduced, he could get testy.  Testy?

‘Good, then I am happy for this to be out of our way.  You really do have to accept this.’

She was nonplussed.  He’d not mentioned whatever it was she’d have to accept.  Had he…?  He was looking at her for a response.  She felt her way along the words, slowly.

‘I will, of course, accept anything you say, Jonathan.’ 

‘Excellent!  I should never have doubted you.’ 

He really was acting totally out of sorts.  She clamped down on following that thought, using her energy to keep focussed on his lips.

‘It is important you accept my true nature utterly.  You should, after all, feel privileged.  It is a rare, and exceptional honour, to know a vampire.’

The room exploded back into colour and detail.  So sharp, and so fast was the change, she felt she’d heard a shock wave.  Her breathing was faster, her palms sweating up.  She ordered her body to remain still, whilst she sought to bring her focus back purely to him. 

Her eyes had flared so wonderfully... the pupils expanding so quickly, it was if they were devouring the light.  This was much more like it…

He leaned forward towards her. 

‘I am content that you understand so well.’  He timed the pause to her heartbeat, moving into the silence as her body tipped into panic.  She would taste wonderful!  He reached out his hand.  ‘Give me your hand.’

She instinctively raised her left hand and offered it to him.  She didn’t like that this is how her body had reacted, but equally, she didn’t want to argue with it.  She was still trying to work out some way to hear, and process, his madness.  She had worked very hard, at refusing him the label of mad.  It wasn’t a label she could cope with.  Faced with such evidence of his own delusion, there was little escape: he was mad and she, in turn was utterly doomed. 
He grasped her hand firmly, pulling her into his space more completely.  His left hand holding it from underneath, the fingers of his right hand trailing over her opened palm, in that obscenely suggestive manner he’d first displayed last week in the kitchen.  She felt her mouth flood with saliva, as the bile rose.  She swallowed hard, again aware of how complex and difficult it was, to swallow down fear.

‘I had wondered, if you had not wondered before now?  About how special my gifts were?’  His index finger was tracing a tiny circle over the mark on her palm.  ‘About how well you heal?’

Everything dissolved.  Her blood; her bones; her brain.  She felt the slump as her body began to list.  His hand kept her trapped to him, even as the rest of her sought to slide sideways onto the floor.  She had fought thinking about this so hard, so completely.  Her memories of how much damage he’d inflicted, had never been matched by her awakenings in a body different from the one her mind had fled.  Bruises would look days old, and cuts and welts old and half healed.  She’d known he was playing with her mind somehow, and had guessed that more than once, she’d been ‘asleep’ longer than she thought.  But the inconsistencies had grown, especially since her release into the flat.  Day and night had a meaning once more, and the rhythm of ‘outside’ could be glimpsed.  Many times she was very sure of falling asleep in an agony of fire, and wakening with the duller pains of healing, when only one night’s sleep had gone by.  Just as she’d been equally sure that sometimes many many nights had gone by, and he was giving play that only one had passed.
She had chosen to ignore it utterly, lest she go mad herself.  This had been a conscious decision, made when she began to wonder if he’d actually really hit her that hard, after all.  Had she really bled?  Had it happened?  Was this life real?  Was she in a mental ward somewhere?  She’d locked it all out of her mind: to hold it in even the slightest measure, would be to drive herself insane.  To question how much pain she’d endured, was to question everything: she did not question on this. 

Ever.

It had been exceptionally hard to keep to this, during the past few days, whilst her shoulder had burned and ached so.  The memory of lying on the floor, not breathing, the fire that had laced across her back.  Yes, it had hurt, but nothing matched the memory of the hit...

‘Do you not wonder about all the little injuries, all healed up?  Your shoulder?’  He raised her hand up, and licked his tongue over her wrist, the tip of his tongue playing over the veins.

She looked away, had no choice.  All was needed to deal with the scream, to stop the scream: the scream could not be released.  She must swallow the scream.
The movement on her hand became more playful, more… sensual.  He was licking and tonguing and teasing her skin.  The licks became slow, playful bites.  His teeth pressed down on her here, there.  His mouth took control of one of her fingers, and he sucked down then moved on.  She kept her face turned away, still working on the absence of scream.
When he finally cut down, into her left wrist, she hardly felt it.  She was so far into adrenaline overload, he could have done much worse, and she’d still not have felt much.  The rush of her fear-soaked blood into his mouth was ecstatic.  He drank down eagerly, licking and pulling the wound open bit by bit. Sucking out every drop he could without actually opening a vein.  He deliberately smeared his game out, along her hands and fingers, and his mouth.  He felt the tingle as her blood settled onto his lips.  He finally drew back, dropping her hand, and twisting back in his seat to sit more normally at the table.  He dabbed his lips with the napkin, making slow and deliberate show of her blood staining up the cloth.
Her hand stayed where it fell, on the table between them.  Her head was bent away from him, her body slack against the chair.  She could have been mistaken for a corpse.  The fire her blood had poured into his stomach was utterly, utterly divine.  She tasted wonderful.

‘Pass the water jug please.’ 

Once more, her body instinctively did as he bid, with no reference to her mind for consent, or refusal.  She was so terribly glad of this, so happy for the instant obedience, she forgave the betrayal.  How could she have fought this so?  Obedience to him was such a wonderful relief... the burden of choice was removed from her.  She took the prompt and poured water into the tumbler at his setting.  Some for herself.  He was using his napkin to dab the blood, her blood, from the corners of his mouth and lips.  Then, he tucked it back onto his lap, and began to butter a soft morning roll.
She re-seated, also fixing her own napkin in place.  The cold and congealed remnants on the plate defeated her, and she pushed it away, reaching instead for a pastry.  That could be moved about and pretended at with ease.
She could not help drying her hand and wrist upon the napkin, removing the last of her blood, and his saliva.  There was a small cut on her wrist: it was not bleeding.  There was no need to wrap it, to compress it.  She pushed her hand onto her lap, under the table, and drank from her water glass with the other.  She could be fine, could obey, as long as she did not think.  She would not think about what he said, and how there could have been pain, and blood, but no injury there now.  She would not think on it.  It was a trick.

‘Do not worry.  There will be no infection, or bleeding.  Vampire blood protects against all that.  It will heal very quickly.’

As she slowly forced the pastry into her mouth, and down into her guts, tears welled up into her eyes, and spilled soundlessly down her face, dampening her blouse and the napkin.


Chapter Thirteen

The next few days passed in torpor, her actions supported by her routine.  Her mind appeared frozen.  Her body moved through the different phases of the day, the meals counter pointing the emptiness.  When he spoke, she obeyed.  When he moved, she followed.  He spoke to her incessantly about his being a vampire, and what that meant for her.  She took everything silently, passively.  Three times he took blood from her left wrist.  Three times she didn’t react.  He beat her twice, both times savagely, as her heat in his veins was causing him immense problems with his temper.  He managed to not feed from her, after the beatings, which could have killed her.   She took the beatings silently, and for once, he cursed that.  That had not been what he was looking for: he required reaction from her, some sense of independence.  He was not going to allow her such a total retreat: he knew this was as much game plan as anything else.  Her heartbeat, breathing and scent betrayed her: she was aware.  She was just choosing not to show it.
After a week, when her appetite was failing badly, and she began to show signs of serious dehydration, he acted.  He was not happy with how fast he was having to act, he felt his hand was being forced, which did not sit comfortably with him.  However, he would not be deceived in this fashion; the word ‘fool’ was not one to be applied to him, under any circumstance.  Besides, she would sink into real atrophy if this kept on: that he had seen before, many times.  Sitting her at the breakfast bar, he poured a large glass of raw goat’s milk in front of her.  Her hand reached forward automatically, to do his bidding.  He staved her off, and she sank back in the chair.  Lifting his wrist over the glass, he slashed it open, and his blood spilled in.  Nothing came from her, not even a flare of her pupils.  He stirred the glass until it became an even pink colour.  Then he pushed it towards her.

‘I am both vampire, and your master.  Drink of me.  Take of my body, my blood.’

She stood up, turned her back, and walked to her room.
Well satisfied with his judgement, that he had called her out, he placed the glass into the fridge.  There was to be no hiding from this.  She would accept his authority.  She would bend her will to his, even as she sought refuge in closing down her mind.  If she wanted to dabble with melancholia and depression, he would supply it for her in abundance.

The fridge and cupboards took a little while to empty, but he wanted that done first.  Second was closing down the steel shutters on all the windows, locking out the light, hence the need to empty the fridge first.  He took the light bulb out of the fridge, and from most of the sockets, leaving just enough light that she could not fall over her own feet every two seconds.  The heating and hot water went next.  Finally, he dimmed the lights in her room and bathroom, and spent a few fiddly moments getting the cameras to switch to infra-red, just in case.   There would be no wrist slashing or rope swinging when he was not present.
His plans set, he moved through the days with exactly the same rhythm as before.  Three meals were laid out, all of them in the dining room, and she had to sit through them.  Not that it took long to eat a slice of bread or a small bowl of boiled rice, or a cup of gruel.  Her forcing herself to eat had been cured by a few days of actual hunger.  Hunger will not be denied, and she had never really understood, or experienced that.  She now ate everything in front of her, and scraped the bowl clean.  When he had not objected, she licked the bowl out.  She drank copious amounts of water, to try and stave off the hunger, but soon found this made her ill and did not fill her as she had presumed.  Water was not food.
She tried not washing, or dressing to his standard.  He laid raw her lower back, without the subsequent benediction of his blood, and left her to heal as best she could on the calories allotted her.  She had resumed grooming. 
He made a point of telling her he had not used his blood to heal her quickly, and that he would continue to leave her to heal without him.  She had been soaking the blouse off her back in a cold water shower for a week, before it healed enough not to leak and stick to her.

Every day he filled a glass with the milk and his blood, and left it in the fridge.  At every meal, it sat by her plate.

The long hours she had spent sitting in the living room, watching the sunlight, had become long cold cramped hours in the hall, looking at the faint line of daylight that he allowed to spill under the closed study door.  He kept the shutter up in there, and left the electric lights to blaze, so that when he opened the door, light spilled everywhere into the darkness that enclosed her. Which was then firmly closed off from her when he closed the door behind him.
By the end of the second week, she was talking and crying out in what little sleep she could manage.   She often burst into crying as he left a room.  Silent sobs and a flood of empty tears, spilling down her cheeks, unchecked.
He took blood from her every two to three days.  He would flick open her wrist with a scalpel, and drink a toke: a token.  Again, he would comment that he would not be gifting his own blood to heal her, and left each little cut to heal on its own.  He explained that he could take blood without pain, but since he was rejecting his truth, he chose to do it this way.  When infection took hold, he administered antibiotics.  Each time she had to swallow a capsule, he reminded her that if she accepted his blood, his nature, she would be healed by now, and out of pain.  She never commented, but the hand was always raised to him on request: he had her body completely.  Her mind, her spirit, was almost his.

Almost...

Three weeks in, his sleep was disturbed by a slight ping, and he quickly took the back route into the study and the screens.  She was in the kitchen, standing in front of the fridge.  She opened and shut it several times.  Her hand reached in once, but withdrew.  She closed the door and returned to her bed, curling up in a ball under the sheets, crying and rocking.

Almost there.

She lasted another two days, which somewhat impressed him.  It was at lunch, a bowl of plain rice, when she broke into wracking sobs.  He remained calm, letting her take the lead.  Her hand reached for the glass.  She was shaking so much she spilled some as she tried to lift it.  She needed to use her left hand, to steady her right one, as the tumbler was lifted, and brought to her lips.  Again, some slopped out the sides, staining her top.  It took a few moments before she could stop crying well enough to let the glass touch her lips.  She drank, and swallowed.  He let her have two mouthfuls, before taking the glass from her.

‘Not too much.  You will not cope with the richness, right now.’

She nodded to him, tears continuing to spill down her face, her chest rising with the effort of trying to calm.

‘Go through to your room, and lie down.  I shall bring you something else in a few moments.’

She retreated, still holding onto her sobs.  He basked in the glory as he set the flat back to rights.  Shutters up, heating and hot water on.  Light bulbs replaced, although he switched them all off.  Her eyes might take several hours to re-adjust.  The restocking of the fridge and cupboards took a little time, and he heated through some clear broth for her and put it in a flask as he went.  Finally, he moved the light levels up in her room, before going in with a tray containing the flask, a yoghurt and a banana. 
She was under the sheet, silently rocking to and fro.  He placed the tray down, and lay down beside her, gathering her in his arms, she turned to him, and cried some more.  He stroked her hair, and sang lullabies to her as she shook.



Sunday, 16 September 2012

Sample Sunday September 16th

Since the Changeling excerpt was so popular last week, have another one.

This is how to escape a vampire.  

Or not.

If you leave nice comments, I'll let you have the rest of the chase next week.  :-)
-------

Dreyfuss has employed three stooges, whom he's named Mary, Mungo and Midge.  Joanne does not know they exist, having only seen Dreyfuss for the previous eighteen months of her kidnapping.


Gone, gone, gone.

Saturday, 8 September 2012

Sample Sunday September 9th

This week's Sample Sunday is an extract from Changeling.  Changeling has been a lot on my mind, as I've been reading myself back in Lucifer's Stepdaughter, and so I've been reading about Helene.

And wondering, to myself, if Joanne still exists.

If that's confusing to you, read this... 

...except you can't, too late! ----

Tuesday, 14 August 2012

The Dreyfuss Sleeping Challenge

Can you sleep with the book anywhere near your bed?  Apparently not, for some...  




The things that cheer up writers!  I suppose, I better finish Lucifer's... tap tap tap tap....

Saturday, 10 September 2011

Drink For Me... First Vampire Feed...? Sample Sunday September 11th.

An excerpt that reveals the creative and self-editing processes this week: under the blue pencil.  Two earlier versions of a pivotal scene in the final book.  Neither made it through... the blue pencil scored through them.

The two excerpts below, are Very Old, and Quite Old.  Raw writing, no editing.  I did correct the spelling and grammar, but they have not seen the eyes of an editor.

Both concern the moment my erstwhile main protagonist, is offered human blood to finish her transformation to vampire.  Both contain a lot of ‘tell’ as opposed to ‘show’.  First draft.  But you may find the similarities, and the differences, between these earlier versions and the final version, interesting.  What happens, how it happens, is roughly the same.  Who she is offered, and how she reacts: different.  Most writers have scenes that disappear, or change substantially.  You might enjoy seeing the process...  

            It started as a dull ache in her jaw. Once, after she had had a wisdom tooth removed, she had developed a jaw infection. The pain was similar, like a throb that became so deep as to be painful. After a few hours, it spread round her whole mouth, the pain in her front teeth the worse, like the gums were being slashed with a razor. Another few hours and she was feverish, hot, sweaty and her spine ached. By the end of the second day, she was in a confusion of pain and fever. She had not slept. She could not eat. She could not drink. Water, when she sipped it, became like liquid glass in her throat, and she soon retched it up.

            The pain in her mouth faded, to be replaced by a dryness, a parched agony that took over all her other senses. All she was became thirst, hunger. She watched television avidly, watching as the phosphor dot images of people, walking, living, breathing people tormented her. She held her face next to the screen, and threw herself away from it in disgust. As the third day dawned, she found herself flinching from the sun as it rose. She knew this aversion was psychological, but as she watched the golden rays warm the garden, her heart shrank, and she ran from the light. Stronger even than the pain, was the need in her for him.

            When was he coming? Where was he? What was he doing?

            Each noise she heard around her, each rustle and sigh from the old house, from the garden, from the birds and animals around her.

            Was it him?  Was that the door?  Where was he?  How could he leave her, to suffer like this?

Saturday, 9 April 2011

Chapter 4, Changeling

This is the final sample from Changeling.  The entire first four chapters are now here, for everyone to read.  They are also available to download as a PDF, free, in exchange for a tweet, here.

Chapter Four

Her back was once more against the door, her legs, aching and cramped, brought round in front of her.  How could she have let herself go all floppy, all silly and stupid, to lie down and cry, hoping she would die from the pain of it…?  How could she?  The anger burned in her mouth.  She was a stupid cow.  She was a complete fool and no matter what she was going to get out of this.  The voice approved, told her that was a good thought, she should hold on to it.  It wasn’t all she needed to hold on to.  Sitting up had released another sensation in her body.  Her bladder was bursting.  The dark was once more around her, her body once more wedged against the door, and the need to go was suddenly with her.  Strong, insistent, as if she had been ignoring it for some time.   Now what was she going to do?

His finger lightly stroked the switch, pulsing, sensing, judging.  Stand up little bird, stand up for Daddy...

The more she thought on it, the worse it became.  It soon blotted out all but the pain in her back, even her throat became less demanding than the pressure, the actual physical pain that was starting to build in her groin.  It was absurd to her, totally surreal, that of all things to concern her, pinned as she was on the side of that door, she was being driven wild by the need to pee.  Even the voice agreed that this was silly, stupid, ridiculous.  What could they do?  She and the voice thought it over.  They both came to the same conclusion, the only sensible conclusion there was: she should pee.  Let it out, get rid of the pain and concentrate on the door.  Sitting up there, in her brain, full frontal: an idea.   It wasn’t an appealing idea.  Sensible yes, appealing, no.  She changed her mind, arguing with the voice: it was a terrible idea?  The voice, she discovered, was somewhat of a fair weather friend: it didn’t answer her back.  It had gone away, gone in the now grinding pressure of holding herself in.  It was no good, she was going to have to move, sitting here on the hard floor wasn’t helping.  She was going to have to stand up, leave the door alone, and try and work out where she was.  She dimly realised that not wetting herself, crumpled on the floor, in the dark, was more important to her than holding onto the door.  She didn’t understand it, but there it was.  She took a deep breath and scrambled awkwardly to her feet.

Flick.

Saturday, 2 April 2011

Chapter 3, Changeling

Next week, on Sunday April 10th, I'll both put up Chapter 4 as the last full chapter sample.. and launch.  Eeek!

*shaking quivering terror*

Chapter Three

The first thing she was truly aware of was a cramp, low in her back.  She wasn’t sure exactly when she became aware of it, how long she’d been listening to her body groan, but slowly, carefully, the awareness that this was real, her back was hurting, she was asleep, or had been, settled in her mind.  It was dark, too dark; that wasn’t helping.  Where was it, that it was this dark?  Not her own bedroom for sure.  Not her lumpy bed and rickety windowsill, traffic noises seeping through with the streetlights.  The bed beneath her was straight, even with her weight on it.  The dark around her, absolute.  She closed her eyes and tried to concentrate on waking up.  Her mouth was dry and filthy, caked with gunge.  As she struggled to push her body awake, to sit up, make sense of the confusion, she flitted her tongue round and round, desperately seeking moisture.  The pain from her back was sharp and fresh as she pulled forward, making her wince.  What on earth had happened that her back hurt so?  The question sat in her mind, trying to make some sense to her.  She fumbled around, feeling the soft bed that surrounded her.  How big could a bed be?  She leaned to the side, reaching for an unseen edge, trying to find an end to this smothering softness.  Her head spun, dizziness almost overwhelming her.  A nausea rose within her, she gagged.  She wasn’t going to throw up, she wasn’t going to throw up.  She certainly wasn’t going to throw up until she had worked out where she was.  She dropped back on the bed, closing her eyes.  She’d moved too fast, the dizziness got worse not better.  She groaned, which turned out to be a worse move than flopping back on the bed.  Her throat felt awful, like she’d swallowed crushed glass.  Hot and dry and raw all at the same time.  As she lay there, trying to control her panic, her breathing, her dry mouth, her head began a wicked beating.  Thrum, thrum, thrum.  If this was a hangover, she didn’t want to think about what she’d been drinking.  Her back had eased slightly on lying back, but when she tried to move upwards, it screamed protest once more.  Fear started to edge out panic: what had she been doing that had hurt her back?  Whatever the answer was, she wasn’t sure she wanted to know about it, not yet. 
Gritting her teeth she forced herself to sit up, sitting straight up on the bed.  The wave of nausea hit again, as did the dizziness.  She rode it out, clutching a sheet to her face, concentrating on not throwing up, not passing out and not going back down into the bed.  The thrumming threatened to split her head open, but she kept on in there.  The feeling of sickness passed, as did the dizziness.  Her back stayed raw and sharp, but got no worse.  As the thrumming finally started to ease off, she became aware of a harsh rasping breath in the room beside her: laboured, dangerous.  She almost screamed, clamping her hand over her own mouth, the noise stopped.  Fear froze down her spine, blocking out all thoughts of her back, her pain, her headache.  She clutched herself tightly, knees automatically raised to tuck under her chin.  The rasping breath started again.  She scrunched her eyes tight shut, tears squeezing out of the edges, and once more clamped her hand over her mouth, anything to make herself disappear.  The noise stopped again.  She held her breath, better to hear the darkness: nothing.  The moment stretched and broke.  She let the trapped air in her lungs out, the movement forcing more pain from her throat, her back, her head.  The rasping started again.  A whimper fled from her throat and was out into the darkness before she could help it.  She again held her breath, this time her hands flying up to cover her head, her chin tucking down, seeking protection from her knees.  The rasping stopped.  As she lay there, tight and curled, awaiting whatever monster was in the room with her, she thought this through.  An idea occurred to her.  Lifting her head, she gasped in some air, once more releasing the bottled up feeling in her lungs.  The rasping started once more.  She held her breath.  The rasping stopped.  She breathed out.  The rasping started up again.  Relief flooded through her, limbs turning liquid; she crumpled once more back onto the bed.  It was her!  The noise she’d heard, that awful rasping breath, it was her own.  The darkness, the silence in the room, it had fooled her. 

Saturday, 26 March 2011

Chapter 2, Changeling


Chapter Two

She was aware of a vague feeling of disquiet as they walked across the Square.  She wasn’t quite sure where she was going, what time it was.  Fumbling, she looked at her watch, to be met in turn with his smile and those eyes.  She forgot why she had wanted to know the time, returning his smile and wondering if she was boring him with her chit chat.  He seemed so relaxed in her company and she responded to his confidence.  He hailed a taxi and she found herself staring at the West End as it passed.  She felt warm, rested, secure.  He smiled and nodded at her, patting her hand, caressing her shoulder.  It was all so very wonderful, so very exciting.  To find such a companion by sheer accident, to have such a relaxing evening in the face of the earlier disappointment.  She studied the lights as they passed, wondering if perhaps she’d had a bit too much to drink.  There was something niggling at the back of her mind, something uncomfortable.  She tried to put it away from her as the cab stopped, she didn’t want to lose him for lack of giving him her attention. 
They were in the sudden quiet of a back street.  She smiled as he opened the cab door, inviting her out with a dignified flourish.  He was so romantic.  She thrilled inside, a secret smile of pleasure at the thought.  In the shadow of tall buildings the air was cooler, cleaner.  As he paid the taxi driver and his face bent away from hers, she felt her mind once more straying.  There was something she was worried about, what was it?  It was lost as he smiled again, encouraging her to walk with him.  He opened a door, ushered her in.  There was the faintest scent of citrus, something tangy.   Small, enclosed, yet neither intimate nor comfortable.  Where was she?  It was a lift, moving silently up.  She giggled as she watched the lights on the panel flicker.  Oh dear, she had better not have any more to drink.  She didn’t want to appear sozzled, leave a bad impression.  The disquiet returned as she stood outside a heavy wooden door, her companion pressing buttons on a glittering steel panel.  Something about what he was doing made her realise how expensive the door was.  Expensive doors were heavy, solid: immovable.  That door was expensive. 
She turned, to look back for the lift, see if she could work out where she was.  His hand reached down and touched her chin, pulled it gently towards him.  He kissed her then, for the first time, and the ground swayed under her feet.  Oh yes, this was it, this was it!  He was the one, the one she had been waiting for, longing for.  She smiled, leaned into him, felt his clothing against her.  Smooth, sensual.  The door opened and she was walking inwards, his hand gently covering the small of her back.  She could feel his coolness through her dress, excitement flooding her.  She took a step forward, hesitated, stopped.   Something was wrong, something was very wrong.  It was dark where they were heading.  She turned, to move back, but his hand was on her shoulder, cool and demanding, what was it she wanted to say?  She opened her mouth to speak, and he was there again, kissing her, swallowing her up.  There really wasn't anything wrong; it was all rather exciting.  She was as light as a feather, dancing, being carried through the air by his charm.  Pale colours flowed around her, lights moving as they walked.  The stars above her head were swirling, dancing with them as they moved.  Dark green splashes of colour whizzed by.  Her head lolled back, losing contact with his body.  He tipped her forward again, and she snuggled onto his shoulder.  This was so very fine, so very very fine.

Thursday, 17 March 2011

Chapter 1, Changeling

As we're now in the run down to publication, the next thee Sample Sundays will be the first three chapters.  Whole.  Enjoy.  :-)


Chapter One


The door slammed shut with the deadened finality that comes with the emptying of a living space.  Silence filled in behind her, flooding the rooms with despair.  The air in her bedroom, thick with deodorant, hairspray, floral shower gel and perfume, settled into scented layers around the debris of her work clothes.  The cat, nonchalant about her absence now it had been fed, climbed onto the front room window sill, looking out on its domain of kebab shops and off licences.  Endless traffic piled the corners, hooting and groaning as it snuffed along, pouring stink into the already sickly late afternoon air.  It felt more like the middle of September, than that of April.  The cat preferred the view over the back windows, endless roofs, tantalising birds and other cats to snarl at.  It would wait until the acrid chemical smells in the other room faded, before proceeding to settle in its usual spot, angled out to the inner square of the backs of the houses.  It would mewl and scratch fruitlessly on the glass at the outside wild life: desperate to be free to attack, to chase.  Or so it thought.  Once, a pigeon had settled on an open window sill in the summer’s heat, and the poor cat, comfortable and safe in its window glass world, had hissed in fright.  It was so big, so aggressive, compared to the small fluttering victims of its day dreams, tiny and fragile on the roof spars opposite.  The bird had eyed him coldly, without fear.  The cat had hissed and growled its warning, but it had had no effect.  It was a stand off until the bird flew away, unruffled.  Since then, the cat went into a frenzy any time a bird landed on the other side of the window.  The other side of the closed window.
Had she known it was the last time she’d abandon both the cat, and her flat, she might have washed the dishes.  As it was, she had rushed around the flat, ignoring the smell from the sink.  That morning, as she’d fallen out of bed to find that only her best suit was wearable, she’d planned to come in tonight and clean, ridding her life of the guilt the week had scattered around her.  The resolution had been spurred on by the blissful thought of a Saturday morning lie in.  A pristine flat all around her, requiring no effort on her behalf.  Her change of plans, however, had left her with less than twenty minutes to bathe and change: she had once more ignored the chaos. Stopping only to throw some biscuits in the bowl (tinned food stank the place out) she vowed her allegiance to the hum drum of living; tomorrow.  She’d do it all tomorrow.  Clean out the cat litter, empty the bins, do the laundrette run and find her bedroom carpet under the skin of peeled off clothes that she kicked out of her way to find a matching shoe. Tomorrow would be good enough, and Sunday morning would be the sweet spot, as she lay in bed wondering how to fill a lazy day.  She grabbed her keys and ran, heading off down the stairs at full pelt.
After four days unexplained absence, during which all answer phone messages had been ignored, her boss finally called the mother of her erstwhile assistant.  Mrs Maitland, to the embarrassment of all concerned, exploded into tears at the thought of her only child’s fate.  A day later, after some hemming and hawing, the police were called, forcing open the flat in absence of anyone with a spare key.  They found the dishes partially in the sink, partially on the floor, courtesy of an exceptionally hungry cat.  The cat took its revenge on the probationary policewoman, leaving a trail of claw marks across her cheek.  The sergeant, who had cautioned against such inappropriate action, handed a clean handkerchief over and called in the RSPCA.  Their elbow length leather gauntlets would handle the animal, which had conveniently hidden itself inside the fold down couch in the living room cum kitchenette.  He had never had any truck with people who took free ranging creatures and locked them into tiny fourth floor flatlets, or patted them as if human sentimentality could mitigate a completely empty stomach.  He left his charge dabbing at the blood and had a good look round.

Saturday, 19 February 2011

Thursday, 27 January 2011

Changeling

This section removed, as it was a part of chapter one, which is here in its entirety.