2008 Willamette Writers Conference

Posted by dani on May 31 2008 | Comment now »

The 2008 Willamette Writers Conference is August 1-3rd at the Portland Airport Sheraton Hotel.  For more information, visit: www.willamettewriters.com

Latest Release: Clackamas Literary Review XII

Posted by dani on May 31 2008 | Comment now »

June 5, 2008. 

The Clackamas Literary Review is a nationally distributed, semi-annual print journal which promotes the work of emerging writers and established writers of fiction, poetry, and creative nonfiction. An excerpt from “Tuatha de Diablo” is being featured.

www.clackamasliteraryreview.org

Get your copy of Clackamas Literary Review XII today at www.Amazon.com

Excerpt from Tuatha de Diablo

Posted by dani on May 29 2008 | 2 Comments »

My blade slid from the creature’s chest with ease, making a slick sound as it went.  I was grateful not to wrestle it out of a bone; I’ve lost a few good knives that way. The vampire’s body slumped to the ground beside his dead associate as twin red rivers flowed around my feet.  They must have recently fed on something. 

Or someone. 

The two inanimate forms at my feet had been dogging me for the past four days; they’d kept to the shadows and just outside my peripherals.  I’d managed to stay one step ahead of them although if they’d been scoping me out for a snack or revenge, I’d probably be dead already.  And If I said this attack had come out of nowhere, it would be a lie – the truth was I’d gotten tired of taking measured steps and constantly throwing glances over my shoulder.  This alleyway ambush had been on my mind all evening as I’d plotted and planned.  I’d taken to carrying a silver dagger long ago by force of habit; nothing like being prepared.  It’s fairly common knowledge that silver will take down a shifter, or any sort of were-creature for that matter, but anything through the heart means the end of a vampire. 

The knife I still gripped was smeared crimson, as were my hands.  I couldn’t walk down the sidewalk looking like I’d just killed someone; what would people think? I used the shirt-tails of the blond one to wipe the blood off as much as I could.  His hair was dirty and smudged with filth usually found on hidden corners of the street.  His dead eyes stared off into oblivion and I made the mistake of thinking of him before he turned.  I bet he was handsome with sky-blue eyes.  Whose son was he?  If he had been homely or disfigured, would I have the same temporary remorse?

 A crimson splatter ran up my forearm and fused with the tiny hairs on the surface of my skin.  I stared at it for a long moment.  Was I imagining the tingling burn that crept there along my flesh in manifested penitence?   I had to remind myself he was no longer anyone’s someone; he was a vampire and needed to die. 

You need to leave here.  Now.  That was my inner-self talking to me.  Put your hands in your pockets, avoid the busier avenues and go home.

 I stood and took one last, lingering look over my kills.  I wish I could have taken a snap-shot of the moment my destiny changed paths; I’d tape it to my mirror as a testament to listen to my inner self.   The world in which I’ve found myself is invisible; a sub-culture walking among modern man.   And it’s true that I’m the rare mortal, am fairly new to the game and I didn’t arrive here by choice.  Vampires and me – which is the monster?

Suddenly silent strobes of red and blue lights stabbed into the alley.  The busy sounds of downtown faded away until all I could hear was the sound of my own heart pounding in my ears.  Like a trapped rabbit I searched frantically with my eyes for escape.  There wasn’t even a hope.   The three industrial-stained brick walls rose up on three sides to form an imprisoning ‘U’.  A gallery of dark windows were above me at an impossible height.    Nowhere to run to baby…nowhere to hide.

“Hands in the air where I can see ‘em!” A powerful voice commanded.

 My hands were in the air and I held them at a safe distance away from my body.  Why had I not noticed the thick coppery scent in the air until that moment? 

“Turn around - slowly!” The voice never waivered in its authority, “keep them up!”

I obliged him.  Three more black-and-whites arrived in a flurry of controlled chaos.  Armed officers jumped out, weapons draw and each barking their own set of orders. “Don’t move! Don’t move!”  “Down on the ground – now!”  “Down, down, down, down!”

I went to the ground on my stomach with arms outstretched from my body.  My heart raced in an unhealthy way and I took a deep breath to try to calm myself.  It didn’t work.  All four officers swarmed me and I tried not to cry out when one planted his knee in the middle of my back while another did the same at my neck.   Hands were all over me as they searched, found and relieved me of my weapons.  They were none too gentle in the process. Only three words streamed through my mind – I’m so fucked…

 

Excerpt from Highway Prophet (in production)

Posted by dani on May 28 2008 | Comment now »

The night was a cool, black shroud that Kat wore like a drunken friend.   Its damp fingers tried to crawl inside her clothing but she kept it at bay with a fleece coat bought at a second hand store. 
               Neither twinkling of stars nor the brilliance of the moon illuminated the northern Washington sky for neither could penetrate the blanket of clouds overhead.  Kat drew in a deep breath and filled her senses with the earthy flavors of cedar and moss.  And dead things.   She closed her eyes - a pointless effort in the pitch black - but it helped her to focus on what could not be seen.   Her mind stretched out and silently opened the doors to that which had wordlessly beckoned to her.

The nearby river rushed as coyotes heckled and somewhere farther still a cougar screeched – a sound reminiscent of tortured women giving an effect which has sent grown men running for the shelter and comfort of home and rifle.  Small creatures rustled in the trees overhead while larger things crept nearby.  A twig snapped under the weight of something and the nocturnal chatter of the forest fell abruptly silent.

But none of these things frightened Kat. 

The dark was her familiar, as were the things that crept there.  She called the shadows friend and they called her kin and together they lived a symbiotic existence.   She had been born unto a destiny that she neither understood nor did she question; God works in mysterious ways does He not?   It was her relationship with those shadows that propelled Kat down the American highways and cross-roads and thus into the lives of strangers.  Some of her mingling endeavors were joyous while others ended in tragedy but Kat had no more power over the outcome than she had over the waxing or waning of the moon.

The rustling in the darkness grew louder as something approached from out of the night.  Kat’s nose began to pick up the scent of decaying vegetation mingled with a hint of unwashed body – not the fetid stink of the homeless or neglected junkie full of artificial ingredients and chemicals - this was the scent of a wild human; organic and pure.   She smiled.

Hoakicipapi Granddaughter,” a shadow whispered.

“Hello Grandfather.”  Kat’s smile widened.  “It’s been a long time since you’ve visited me.  I was beginning to believe you’d forgotten about me.”

“As long as you carry the dust of my bones, I am always with you.”  The stooped figure of an elderly man materialized from out of the night.  “You just might not always see me.”

High clouds overhead parted to reveal a half-moon that spread a gentle glow across the landscape.  Kat did not need the light to recognize the silver braids that framed the ancient face of her friend whose skin was the color of the desert rocks and was as worn.  She did not know Grandfathers true name for she had always referred to him as just that - Grandfather - a title of respect.  The two had walked together for two decades, since Kat was a little girl of six.  Their paths had crossed by happenstance, though she knew there was no such thing, and she had never been quite sure who had found who.  

 “Was it you who brought me to this corner of the land?”  Kat inquired.  Are those who wander truly lost?

“Did you not enjoy your journey?”  Grandfather asked.  He frequently answered Kat’s questions with a question of his own; every sentence a lesson wrapped in syllables.

“I thought I wanted to see the ocean.  But the waves were frenzied by the north wind.  So I drove inland instead, not quite knowing why.”

“Isn’t a tree, at times, only a tree?”  Grandfather parlayed.

“Yes.  But sometimes that tree is dying and waiting to fall.”

“And what happens to the forest if the tree falls or if it only dances in the breeze?”

Kat pondered the old mans question.  Everything in life reacted and interacted as one.  “Life goes on,” she concluded.

“Does it?” 

A nearby barking cut off any answer that may have sat on Kat’s tongue.  She startled and turned, but saw nothing there.  When she returned her attention to Grandfather, he had vanished.  Just as suddenly as he had appeared, he had disappeared back into the night.

The clouds returned to cover the moon once again. A strong breeze rose from the valley below to send a draft through the layers of her clothing.  It wouldn’t do Kat well to catch a chill.  It was time to continue her journey.   Her stomach growled in agreement. 

After one last gaze into the darkness Kat turned on her heel and crunched across the gravel to her old VW bus that served as both transportation and home.   Everything she owned was stored inside, which wasn’t much but it was all she needed.  She liked to think of herself as a free-spirit, riding the wind and following where it took her.  That perception was better then thinking of herself as a runaway. 

Professional Affiliations

Posted by dani on May 01 2008 | Comment now »

Active member of Willamette Writers: www.willamettewriters.com

Member of Sisters in Crime: www.sistersincrime.org

All of my work is registered and copy protected by Writers Guild of America, West: www.wga.org