When She Left- Chapter One

It’s been six years since she left me. It happened so fast I couldn’t even grasp what was happening. I sit there and watched everything that was going on. The paramedics came in and my brother stepped away from his CPR. They brought out so many devices to try and bring her back. While two of them worked away trying to bring her back one of them stepped over to me.

“We’re going to load her into the ambulance,” he said looking me in my eyes.

He didn’t pay any attention to my brothers who were standing in the middle of the room with their heads bowed and crying. He recaptured my attention as it drifted off towards them wondering why he was talking to me instead of them. It didn’t dawn on me because it was of my age. Twenty is such a young age to lose a parent in the manner I did. I started to slip away looking over at them working on her.

“Hey, we’re going to load her in the ambulance,” he said restating what he had said to get my attention again. I looked back at his eyes. “We’re going to do everything we can for her on the ride over there. We will not stop, but,” he said trailing off a second making sure I was paying attention to what he was saying. “I don’t want you speeding there or doing anything reckless or stupid. Take your time,” he said staring at me in the eyes so I knew what he was saying.

He made it final for me. I followed the ambulance to the hospital. I wasn’t crying. I was numb. My mom was my world. I gave up everything to stay with her because I knew my days were limited being with her. My SAT scores were stellar and a lot of colleges wanted me to be a part of their alumni. I decided to stay home from the universities and go to local colleges so I can still be with her every day.

It was two weeks until my final day before I graduated with my associate’s degree. My mom pushed me through college because I was the first to attend and make it through to a degree. She had went through therapy and continued her therapy on her own.

“I will walk those bleachers and walk into that gymnasium to see you accept that degree,” she told me smiling at me. “You don’t know how proud I am of you. What are you going to do afterwards?” she asked me sitting on a chair in the living room.

“Well, I been thinking of transferring to a bigger university so I can further my degree. I can get an apartment off campus and split everything with Heath,” I said looking up over at her from the book I was reading.

Heath was my best friend. We had tried the dating thing but we were made to be friends instead. Mom always told me that she thought he secretly loved me and didn’t want to lose that feeling in a relationship. I wished she were right.

“Well, I guess my deal with God is finalized,” she said walking around the room with her cane exercising her legs more. “My last baby is all grown up.”

Not many people knew what she meant by that unless you were family. Mom had a hard life toward the end of her days. She was in her forties when she had her first round with her heart. I was in elementary school. I was five. I was so scared. There were years between me and my older brothers and sister. They were in their 20’s and she was close to it. I would’ve been so lost if she had left me then. She asked God to keep her alive long enough to raise her last kid. She came home a few days later on medications. Apparently, he was listening.  A lot of things would be different now if she would have died then. Actually, a lot of things are still different now.

When I got to the hospital, I found my sister, Kelly, waiting there for us. She lived in another county so instead of going to the house where she knew they would be transporting mom to the hospital, she came to the hospital hoping to talk to her. She met me at the door and we threw our arms around each other.

“It’s going to be okay,” she whispered into my ear. I wanted to believe her nut a part of me knew better because of the paramedic’s words to me.

A doctor walked up to us and asked, “Are you all here for Mrs. Deborah Thompson?”

We nodded. We glanced at each other with the tears welling in our eyes waiting for the line that came next.

“Come with me,” he said walking us to a small chapel. “If you wait in here, someone will come by to speak with you.” He motioned us inside.

The numbness that had overtaken my body was melting and I could feel the realness of the situation. I sit down with my sister and the rest of our family walked in. They all hugged us offering comfort. My one brother didn’t come. He accepted what had happened. She had died in his arms. He felt the life leave her body.

A woman walked in. She was dressed in professional clothes. She must’ve been a social worker. She looked at everyone gathered in there her eyes resting on each of our briefly. Hers stopped at me and she faltered with his words. She looked away to someone who was less likely to break down.

“I’m sorry,” she said with her voice shaking slightly “We did everything we could to save her.”

I lost it. Everything I had held back from that morning until that moment came gushing out. One of my family members wrapped me in their arms trying to comfort me but there is no comfort for a broken heart. It wasn’t fair. She went too soon. I hadn’t even started living life. I always said I’d never have kids but there was still a chance I would.  She would never meet them if I did. Her mom died similarly. I never met her mom. I was the only one who didn’t.

“We have her in a room if you want to go and see her one last time before we ship her to the mortuary,” she said waiting for any of us to stand up and walk with her. We were all in a state of disbelief. “Just follow me,” she said finalizing her words.

We all followed her through the emergency room halls. She came to a more secluded hallway and the curtain was drawn in the room. My heart felt like it was going to just collapse in my chest and quit working. We stepped through the door and everyone gathered around the bed she was on. I stood towards the foot of the bed staring at her. I couldn’t move. My body was slowly going into shock. Everyone in the room disappeared around me. I was in a tunnel looking at her laying there. I wanted to go to her bedside but I couldn’t move. I couldn’t think.

After several minutes, I walked over to her bedside and slunk to my knees beside her. No words could escape my mouth even though I wanted to yell and scream. I wanted to beat something. I wanted to break a bone something to take the pain away that I was feeling inside. Everyone was afraid of me having a nervous breakdown. As soon as I knelt beside her bed they were pulling me away to leave. I didn’t want to leave. I wanted to stay with her. I didn’t want to leave her laying there. If I stayed, she was still here with me. If I left, it made it even more real than what it felt.

I couldn’t hear anyone talking around me in that room. At least I thought that. I registered everything afterwards, later on that day. We all walked outside of the hospital. The family exchanged hugs telling us the same worn out line everyone hears. “Sorry for your loss. We all loved her.” In actuality, they didn’t give a rat’s ass about her. This was my dad’s side of the family. We didn’t associate much with them because our mother told us we were better than them.

Even though I drove there, I rode back to my house with my sister. I guess everyone thought I couldn’t drive myself home. I don’t know if they would’ve been right or not. Dad didn’t come to the hospital neither. He knew when they took her out of the house she was gone.

We didn’t necessarily get along as well as children should with their parents. Before mom had her stroke, I was moving out after a fight with my dad. It was kind of a make or break situation in our relationship. But, I loved him more that day.

Kelly and I walked into the living room and looked over where mom slept in her hospital bed. There was a stain on the floor where she had vomited during her last hours. Most nurses trained would have known it was one of h=the final stages of life. After taking classes to become a nurse I later learned that. I wish every day I would’ve called 911 sooner. Everyone says she was too far gone with the septicemia she had from an unknown infection. There’s still the possibility she could’ve been saved. You have no idea what it feels like to live every day after that thinking you were the reason she died. I did.

I gathered a few things to spend a couple days with Kelly. I couldn’t stay in the house. It haunted me. We walked over to my one brother’s house, Joe. He was the one that didn’t come to the hospital. His youngest daughter, Kayla, was there. Her bus hadn’t ran when mom died so he told her to stay home from school. She ran up to my sister and me and hugged us.

“Is mawmaw okay,” she asked peering up at us.

I closed my eyes fighting off tears and looked over to Kelly who was trying the same. We glanced at each other and looked over to Joe who was putting together a shelf trying to get his mind off the situation. He acted as if he heard nothing from his daughter. We looked back to Kayla.

It was Kelly that spoke, “No, sweetie, mawmaw didn’t make it,” she said struggling to hold back the tears that welled and brimmed out against her will.

It’s hard trying to stay strong for everyone else when you’re dying inside yourself from the pain and grief that surround your heart. Kayla hugged us tighter and cried. Joe started crying.

“You ready to go,” I asked Kelly trying to shake off everything. She looked at me shaking her head yes. We walked back out of the house and made our way to the car in silence. We didn’t really talk much on the way to her house. The silence was our solitude. If we didn’t talk about it, it wasn’t real.

The hard part came next. My sister’s kids were at home waiting for her to come back and let them know what had happened with their mawmaw. These kids were young. Her oldest son was turning 8 in a couple of days. The middle child was her daughter she was 6 turning seven in a couple of months. Her youngest son was four.

We walked in the house and her kids were in the den watching TV. When they saw us walk through the door and into the house, they jumped up and ran to us.

“Mom, is mawmaw okay?” the oldest asked with the other two on his heels waiting for an answer.

“Come sit down with me,” Kelly said walking over to the couch. I sat down on an opposite side while they all gathered around her on the one end.

“My babies,” she said looking each of them in the eyes. She raised her head trying to push the tears back where they were streaming from. “Mawmaw died this morning. You all know how sick she was,” she said choking on each word.

The words sunk into the young children like bullets. They all broke down crying. They understood even at their ages what death meant. I hugged each one that walked over to me and held them tight like they were my kids and I could take away their grief and pain.

The day went by in a blur. It went from day to night so fast. I called a few of my friends and told them what had happened. They cried with me.

The next few days flew by. I remember going to plan her funeral with Kelly. I can’t even remember who all was in the room with us. I don’t remember if my brothers or father was there or not. I clung to my sister those few days.

We weren’t the closest of sisters because of our age and how far she lived away. What I do know is this brought us closer together than anything else could have. For four gruesome days, we kids were the closest we had ever been.

Her wake came so fast. It was being finalized so fast that she was gone. My best friend from elementary school through high school came to the viewing. She cried beside me as we stood there looking at my mother in her casket of white and gold. She wanted to stay longer but her mother had to tear her away from me to leave. She didn’t want to be there when our family started to roll in. It wasn’t that she didn’t know them or like them. She knew it was a private moment we needed to share with our family.

We each chose jewelry to put on my mother to be buried with. Every grandkid put something in there with her along with each of us kids. We chose a song that would loop fine throughout the wake. To this day, “Bittersweet Symphony,” plagues me when I hear it.

After it had calmed down and most of the people had left, I set on the couch across from mom’s casket writing her a letter. I’m she sat beside me reading every word and crying on my shoulder. I honestly can’t remember what I wrote but the bare facts were I didn’t know how to go through life without her now. I sealed it in an envelope and wrote “To Mom,” on the front of it.

What I had been holding back for three days broke through the flood gates. I broke down at her side. I clung to her side begging her to come back. Everyone around me at that moment started crying as if it was finalizing for them too. My oldest brother, Stephen, pulled me away from the casket and threw his arms around me. I was uncontrollably crying. I couldn’t stop. A piece of my heart was blowing away in the wind and was to be buried the next day.

The viewing was at his house so I stayed there that night. Everyone was offering me valium or Xanax to take afraid I was going to have a bad break down. I declined. I knew I needed to feel everything I was feeling. I couldn’t live in a fairytale thinking she would miraculously come back or it wasn’t really happening.

The following day was the day all of us had to really prepare for. I had gotten the pastor from a church I had attended in high school to officiate her funeral. He had met my mom once. She wasn’t a church goer but she was a devout Jesus follower. She loved all things God, Jesus, and angels. He had prayed for her health in our house on a surprise visit one Sunday when I didn’t show up to church.

We all sat in the funeral home with family gathering around us. There were more people there than I had thought would come. I sat with Kelly and her husband. She had left her kids with her mother in law. She didn’t want them to have to experience something this tragic at such a young age.

Everyone made their way to the casket for their final goodbyes to mom before the funeral began. Stephen was up there first out of the kids. He looked in at the casket with his head bowed and walked back and sit down not showing his face to anyone. My second brother, Joe was next. He stroked her hair talking to her in a low voice. I don’t know what he said but I know it had to be how much he loved her. He sat down with his wife with tears coming down. Kelly and I went up together.

We looked down at the casket and I fought the breakdown once again. We were both crying letting the tears flow like they should. I felt a hand on my shoulder and looked up to see Stephen and Joe followed. We all stood together looking down at her casket crying. We had seen our aunt walking around taking pictures so we would all know what had happened in our numb state. She snapped a picture of all four of us standing there with mom. It was the first picture since I had been born that we were all together in. A bittersweet moment so to speak.

The funeral procession followed this moment. The pastor did a really good job and we walked to our cars. I rode with Kelly to the memorial plot we chose. We all sat in chairs in front of the casket at the grounds while the pastor went through his final words of the procession. We all walked to the casket and stood one final time. They had to drag me away. Joe on one side and Stephen on the other walked me back to my sister’s vehicle while I broke down again. I had begun twitching from the anxiety of the day.

I was still in a haze when we got back to Stephen’s house. Everyone was laughing and talking trying to lighten the mood. I sat and just snacked on the platters laid out on the table. It wasn’t until all the people had cleared out and left me with my brothers and sister. It was the warmest I had felt in years surrounded by them. Even though it brought us together for one last moment as a family, it was also what tore us apart. It was the last time we were together and happy. Every moment from there on was a forced moment of smiles. We were never close to begin with so we drifted away easier than ever.

I lived with Stephen for a few months and the strain got in between us during personal matters. I felt like I belonged nowhere. I had lived with Joe prior to mom’s death and it didn’t work out. I phoned my sister one night asking if I could live with her.

“I love you, sissy, but I don’t think it’s a great idea. Every person who was close to me that moved in with me we ended up fighting and our friendships ruined,” she said to me at three in the morning. I was crushed. I was being forced to move back in with my dad. It’s not that I didn’t want to live with him. I was over our fight months before. It was the fact she had died in the house. Of course he wanted me to live with him. He had been asking me to move back the entire time I lived with Stephen. Stephen explained why I couldn’t and he understood but it still hurt.

Even though I moved back in with him, I still spent nights down at Joe’s house with his daughters. He had four and the oldest two were right around my age. I went through a couple of guys during these few months. Of course they all weren’t meant for me. One later turned out to be a baby murderer and I was relieved I hadn’t stayed with him. These failed boyfriends, however, led me to the love of my life and to where I am today. When I moved in with him and out of my dad’s house, my life changed forever. My dad was sad that I moved out as fast as I had moved in, but it was a life change that I needed. I fell in love that summer. A strong love. The university I was going to transfer to screwed up my enrollment so in the end I wasn’t attending the university the following fall. So, my life without my mom began heartache and love all rolled into one.

A lot of events happened after that summer. I got pregnant and lost the baby. I was terrified of losing my new love. But, he stayed with me and stayed by myself. I could never understand why he loved me or if he actually did. I was devastated when I lost that baby. It was another part of me that was blowing away in the wind. Another part of me that died. Another part of me that was put in the ground and would never exist in my lifetime.

It was my first baby. My chance to feel what my mother felt with us kids. It was if I weren’t meant to have that feeling as if it were a punishment for my inability to save my mom. It was exactly a month before her one year anniversary of her death. It shaped a lot of my thoughts from there on. Your first baby is supposed to be your pride and joy. I had held it in my hands waiting for Kelly to arrive to take me to the emergency room. It was another moment in my life where I slipped off into the abyss. Even though time moved freely, it felt like it stopped with me.

I had been in the hospital with a bad infection for a week prior to the miscarriage. I don’t know if it was the medications or if it was the infection made me miscarry. Either way I was shattered from the whole year. Things got a little better afterwards. I became pregnant again with a little girl. She was the light I was missing in my darkness. Even though it didn’t seem to others I was in the dark, I walked the abyss searching for myself. She was what pulled me out of the dark veil that clouded my mind. My world revolved around her keeping her safe and healthy. I would go to hell and back to ensure it.

My life started all over again when I had her. She grew up healthy and lively. Two years later I was popping out baby two, a healthy bouncing baby boy. Even with the two children, I still felt a hole where my heart used to be. When mom died, I gave up everything I had joy in. One of my joys was my writing and spiritualism. I soon got back in contact with my so to say guru and began writing and actively partaking in my spiritualism again. That’s when the dreams began.

It started off briefly, mere glimpses of her in my dreams. I didn’t have a chance to talk to her. I was aware in my dreams that she was dead, but just seeing her face lit my life up. The brief moments soon began to turn into conversations. My deep spiritualism told me that there was a reason she was coming to me. It was a gift for your departed loved ones to visit you in your dreams. So, I started paying closer attention to her appearances in my dreams.

Sometimes when she appeared, it wasn’t even a dream I was supposed to have. There’s a certain gift called dream walking where you can go into other people’s dreams. I have this gift. I remember one night not too long ago, I had a memory dream. I’ve done deep contemplation on the meaning behind this dream. Not only was my mother in it, but my mother’s mother who I never met in this life. She died three years before I was born. I described her voice to my sister and she said it sounded exactly like how she remembered her voice as a child. After telling my sister what was in the dream at three in the morning, we deducted that my dream was her memory. I was a small child, which it’s not unusual for me to change people in my dreams, and playing with a jewelry box with pearls. When I told her this, she said, “That’s my memory!”

I explained in detail what everything in the house looked like and without a doubt, she said it was her memory. I don’t know why or how it’s even possible to have dreams of someone else’s memory, but I experienced it. I have paid even closer attention to my dreams since then. There have been a few occasions where my dreams align with my sister’s dreams. We haven’t really been able to pinpoint the meaning behind the similarity of our dreams but we have taken a deep spiritual note on them.

Whenever our mother is in our dream, there is a hidden message. Sometimes the message is out in the open, but other times it is much deeper and takes a lot of meditation to figure out the meaning of her message. The largest message she could give us is a simple one. She keeps returning to us because we are the only ones who are open to her in a spiritual sense. The message is she wants our family to tape up the torn pieces between us and become a family once more. It is the most difficult request she could ask as well.

This family fell apart six years ago when she died. We don’t have family functions anymore. We don’t even see each other anymore, aside from my sister and me. Most would say I’m nuts thinking my mom is visiting me in my dreams. They try to say it’s just my subconscious trying to comfort me. I have had too many dreams with messages for me to believe it’s just my subconscious. They have helped me along these past few years so much.

My mother’s largest message to me personally was to quit blaming myself for her dying. I keep thinking if I had called 911 sooner, she would still be with us. I was so tired from lack of sleep that I checked on her throughout the night but didn’t pay any mind to how she was acting. It ate away at me like a disease and still to this day they “what ifs” plague my mind and heart. But, it is what it is. If she were supposed to have survived this time, she would have. My mother made a deal with God. If he let her live long enough to raise all of her kids, he could take her with no fight. Two days after I told my mother my plans for going to a larger university and continuing my college education into a bachelor degree, she died.

“I did what I asked to live to do. I raised my last baby. You’re all grown up now. God can take whenever he chooses to now,” she said as we sat in the living room at Joe’s house.

It made me tear up but I didn’t think nothing more of it…until the day she died. I truly believed if I hadn’t told her that, she wouldn’t have let God take her. My mother visits me so I will know she doesn’t blame me for anything and I shouldn’t blame myself. Her visits have helped me grow in mind and spirit and I’m so glad she opened the door from heaven to visit as much as she has. I try to do what she asks me to in my dreams. I have succeeded with a lot of them, but I cannot return this family back to the way we used to be. A train cannot run on a torn track. You can never go back to the way things used to be.

Joe has two new kids the same age as mine that I haven’t even been able to hold. The only sibling that has been in my kids’ life has been Kelly, and she has been the best aunt they could ever ask for. That’s how broken the family is.

I can’t really think of what I need to talk to my mother about when she visits me in my dreams. I need clarity on how I can get the family to act like a family once again. My dreams have been hard to remember lately and I wonder if the answer to my question is just locked away in my subconscious. I don’t know if I’m supposed to try now or in a few more years. I fear the longer I wait the harder it will be. We’re practically strangers with our age difference as it is. Stephen is 42, Joe is 41, Kelly is 33, and I’m 27.

Sometimes it makes me wonder if it is just my subconscious but I hold onto the belief that my mother wants to still be with us in this lifetime. This is one way for her. Her death is what opened my mind up to gifts to receive communications and coded messages from the dearly departed. It may be while I’m asleep, but it helps. It opened up my clairvoyance.

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Helmet to Heart- Chapter Two

Helmet to Heart- Chapter Two

“Alright maggots, today I will be cutting the most from the tryouts. If you make it past today, it doesn’t mean you’re on the team. It just means I liked what you brought to the field today,” Coach Miles bellowed walking back and forth in front of the students lined up to start tryouts. His eyes fell on Sarah at the end of the line. “There will be no special treatment for anyone. Each of you will…

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Helmet to Heart- Chapter Two

“Alright maggots, today I will be cutting the most from the tryouts. If you make it past today, it doesn’t mean you’re on the team. It just means I liked what you brought to the field today,” Coach Miles bellowed walking back and forth in front of the students lined up to start tryouts. His eyes fell on Sarah at the end of the line. “There will be no special treatment for anyone. Each of you will be treated and judged as an equal. Now get out there and show me what you have!”

The line of students ran off onto the field. The team from last year was standing on the field and went through everyone choosing who will be on what team. Jared was the leader of one team. It got down to Sarah.

“You take her man,” one of the players chuckled to Jared. He groaned.

“Alright, Sarah, you’re with me,” he said placing his hand on his hip and staring into the sky with irritation.

The team gathered around Jared as he laid down the play and who had what position. Everyone had been given a position but Sarah.

“What about me?” she asked.

“Just stand there and look pretty,” one of the boys said mockingly, and they all laughed.

She walked up to the boy and grabbed him by the helmet, “Do you want to dance now or later?”

The boy was shocked, and Jared stepped in, “Alright, alright, Sarah, do you want to be quarterback or running back?” The guys laughed.

“Quarterback? Running back? You’re kidding?” they laughed and groaned simultaneously.

“Running back,” she said.

They went over the play and walked to the starting line. Jared looked over to Sarah before he gave the countdown for the play to begin. “Blue forty-two, blue forty-two, hut, hike!”

Jared caught the ball as it was thrust from the ground. He looked up for Sarah and was surprised to see her halfway down the field. He threw the ball to her and her hands met it with ease and grace. She dipped past one of the players that jumped to tackle her. He hit the ground missing. Another player came at her from the right, she swirled around him and he went falling to the ground as well. The last one came from in front of her. She tossed the ball in the air and slid under the guy like she was stealing home. She popped up on the other side of him, caught the ball, and finished in the end zone.

“That’s my girl,” Jared whispered smiling.

The coach was whooping with excitement. By the end of tryouts, there was only ten players left when they had started with over 20. Sarah was at the top of the line and everyone without a doubt knew she wasn’t going to be cut on any day of tryouts.

She looked to her right to the guy she grabbed earlier in tryouts, “Nice game,” she said.

“Same to you,” he said.

“Alright, maggots, hit the showers. Second day same time tomorrow,” he said as they all broke from the line. He pointed at Sarah, “You, come here.”

She walked over to him, “Yes, Coach?”

“Where did you learn to play like that? You were amazing! Just so you know you’re on the team; you don’t have to do tryouts tomorrow unless you want to show them boys up some more,” he said smiling at her.

“Thanks, Coach. Umm,” she said looking over to Jared as he walked with the other guys heading off to the showers, “I was taught by the one and only,” she said looking back to the Coach. He smiled in acknowledgement.

“You let me know if any of these boys try to mistreat you or manhandle you that goes against any type of football regulations. Their ass is grass if they do, you hear?” he asked making sure she understood what he meant.

“Sure thing, Coach,” she said smiling and walking off to the girls’ locker room.

Jared stopped her before she walked through the locker room doors, “So what did Coach say?” he asked leaning up against the wall beside the door.

“I made the team. I don’t even have to come in for tryouts the next few days. It’s a sealed deal,” she said crossing her arms and smiling.

Jared shook his head, “Wait ’til your mom hears about this…” and walked off smirking into the boys’ locker room.

She hadn’t even thought of her mom’s reaction to the situation. She bit her lip in panic. Will Jared beat me to her? she thought to herself as she walked into the locker room to shower.

The cheerleaders were all in their laughing and joking. They eyed her in her football gear and snickered to one another.

“So, Sarah,” Cindy, the head cheerleader spoke up, “Did you make the team?”

“Um, duh,” Sarah said sarcastically.

“Aw, how cute!” Cindy exclaimed laughing. The rest of the cheerleaders joined in.

Sarah turned to Cindy and said, “Out of all the years we have had classes together, do you honestly think your opinion of me or what I do actually means shit to me? I could care less what your bimbo-headed ass thinks.”

Cindy stepped forward as if she were going to punch her.

“Go ahead, hit me and see if I don’t kick your ass.”

Cindy backed off and then smirked, “Well since your ‘one of the guys’ now, I guess I can put my talons back in Jared.”

“Does it look like I care what you do with Jared?” Sarah asked rolling her eyes. “Besides, he’s always been attracted to the slutty ones,” she said grabbing her stuff to head for the showers.

Cindy grabbed her by the hair and pulled her backward. She whipped around, and without a moment’s hesitation, sucker punched her once in the mouth and once in the eye before she was pulled from her by the cheerleading coach.

“Break it up ladies! Cindy, go put some ice on your mouth,” she said and turned to Sarah, “You come with me.”

Sarah followed the coach into her office while the other girls whispered what they thought would happen. Sarah sit down in the chair in front of the desk and the cheerleading coach set behind it.

The coach took in a deep breath, “I know you didn’t start the confrontation. I’m not going to suspend you or anything of the sorts,” she said looking at Sarah.

“So…why did you bring me back here?” Sarah asked.

“You tried out for the football team, right?”

“Yes.”

“Did you make it?” the coach asked leaning in to hear her answer.

“Yes, coach said I didn’t even have to come back for the rest of the tryouts,” Sarah said a little uneasy as to why the coach of the cheerleading squad wanted to know.

The coach smiled, “Congratulations, you’re the first girl to ever impress him.”

“Thanks,” Sarah said smiling.

“Now, go shower. You smell like a man,” the coach laughed.

Sarah stood up and walked to the shower. Everyone had cleared out by the time she was finished. She got back to her locker in a towel and fished her cell phone out of her bag to shoot a text to Adam.

Sarah: Well, I’m officially on the team.

Adam: No way! It will be all over the news by tomorrow!! LOL

Sarah: I don’t know about that, but it will be all over the school tomorrow I knocked Cindy for a loop.

Adam: You are just full of surprises today aren’t ya? LOL

Sarah: You busy tonight?

Adam: No, just riding around the city looking for trouble. Why? You want to party =P

Sarah: LOL, I think some celebrating is in order.

Adam: Pick you up in front of the school in 10.

Sarah got dressed, dried her hair and put on a little makeup. She had brought a change of clothes with her to go out tonight. She was dressed in a strapless black and silver shirt and a black mini skirt to match with some cute little black high heels. Just as she was reaching the front of the school, Adam pulled up. Jared was already standing there and the two were talking. They looked up as she got closer to the car. Jared didn’t look too happy.

“What’s the occasion,” he asked motioning around his face to mean her makeup.

“Celebrating,” Sarah said putting her backpack in the backseat of Adam’s Kia.

“Where at?” Jared asked.

“Not sure yet. Where ever the night takes us I guess,” she said sliding into the front seat.

Adam couldn’t help but stare at her. She looked amazing. His eyes started at her face and slid down her body. He was distracted from his gazing when he heard Jared clear his throat. He snapped back into reality and his face grew red.

“Um, I’ll talk to you later, Jared,” Adam said avoiding looking in the passenger seat while Jared stared him down.

“Uh huh, you do that,” Jared said spicily and stepped away from the window.

Adam pulled away and no sooner had they left the parking lot he got a text message.

Jared: You better not do anything inappropriate to her or I swear to God I will beat your ass!

Adam: Don’t be silly. I would never….

Jared: I mean it Adam and keep an eye on her wherever you go.

Adam: Aye-aye captain!

“Who was that?” Sarah asked looking over at him while he stuffed his phone in his pocket.

“It was no-nobody, my mom, she’s crazy talking…off the wall… hey did you call your mom?” he said changing the subject.

“Yea, I let her know I’d be out with you tonight. She thinks it’s a date,” she said looking over at Adam. “I told her I’d let her know if it was or not.”

She smiled a flirtatious smile at Adam, and he gulped nearly running off the road. The outfit she wore clung to her body in all the right places. He felt the sudden urge to just pull over and touch her. “I will beat your ass” rang in his ears and he quickly put the thought aside.

“Adam?” Sarah asked impatiently.

“Huh?” he asked sheepishly trying to focus on driving.

“So, is it?”

“Is what?” he asked confused.

“Is it a date?” she said scooting over closer to him.

“Why do you want to date me? I’m…I’m not a cool…kid,” he said in breaths as she touched his arm and stroked his face.

She leaned into his ear and whispered, “Because you’re so easy to play with,” she said laughing as she moved back into her seat.

“You are so not cool,” Adam said breathing and chuckling to himself.

“All jokes aside though, I would like to have a nice dinner with you one night and see where it leads,” Sarah said tugging at what looked like a mini skirt down into a skirt that hit her knees.

“That’s better,” Adam said with relief, “I thought you were going to rape me while I was driving. What gives? Why you dressed up like that?”

“Personal conquest,” she said turning to look at the city they drove through.

“Uh huh, that tells me nothing,” he said confused

“To be so smart you’re so dumb sometimes, you know that?” Sarah said turning to him.

They pulled up to the local teen club. Adam put the car in park and looked over at Sarah.

“For you to be so smart, you’re dumb sometimes,” he said turning the switch off.

“What’s that supposed to mean,” she asked defiantly.

“Jared likes you. A lot.”

“Well, I don’t like him,” she said turning back to the window as the silence filled the car.

“Well, you could-“ Adam started but was cut off as she leaned over and kissed him. Adam would love to have Sarah but every guy in school knew she was off limits. It wasn’t an announced declaration but more of an unspoken one. Even with the thought bouncing around in his head, he couldn’t help but put his hands on the back of her head and back and pull her closer as the kiss intensified. Every ounce of resistance screamed in his head to stop, to put an end to the urge, but his body wouldn’t listen to him. She sealed their kiss with another small kiss and pulled back with her eyes closed. His heart thudded in his chest, and he was a little shaky from the excitement of what happened.

“I’ve wanted to do that for a while now,” Sarah said easing back into her seat.

“Trust me, you have no idea how long I’ve wanted to,” he said trailing off and trying to gather his thoughts.

“Do you want to go in or do you want to go…talk?” she asked lifting an eyebrow signaling she meant more than just talking.

“Sarah, I would love to go and…talk…with you, it’s just,” he started and she interrupted.

“It’s just what?” she asked a little heated.

He closed his eyes and breathed in. He didn’t know what he could say. He can’t tell her the truth. He doesn’t want to hurt her.

“I’ve never…been with a girl,” he stammered.

It wasn’t a lie but wasn’t the real truth.

“So, I’ve never been with a guy before,” she said scooting closer. “I really like you, Adam.”

He looked up at her and shook his head wordless. He finally uttered, “I can’t.”

“Fine, whatever, take me home,” she said scooting back over to her seat up against the window.

“You don’t want to go in?” he asked.

“No, take me home,” she said and went silent.

He groaned on the inside. He started the car and pulled out of the parking space and headed for her house. They rode in silence. It was clear she didn’t want to talk. As they pulled into her driveway she unbuckled her seat belt and exploded.

“Not a single damn guy in this school will go out with me, or if they do go on a date with me, there is no intimacy what so ever. Why?! Is there something wrong with me?!” she yelled at him and didn’t even wait for him to answer back. She tore from the car and ran to her front door and went inside.

“What the hell is wrong with her?” Jared asked popping up out of nowhere.

Adam, grabbing his chest from fright, said, “Dude, you scared the hell out of me. You can’t just pop up out of nowhere.”

“What did you do to her? Why is she upset?” Jared asked leaning in the window closer to Adam.

“That’s the thing, I did nothing when she wanted more,” Adam said looking down at the steering wheel. “And trust me, I wanted more,” he said looking back up at Jared, “But friends first, huh?” he asked as he put the car in reverse.

“Look, Adam, if she wants to date…you…go for it,” Jared said looking from the car to the window upstairs. “It’s clear that she will never want me, and it’s unfair for me to keep others from her.”

“I think it’s too late for that. She’s pretty pissed. She was practically jumping my bones in the car when I told her no,” he told Jared.

Jared was silent.

“I got to go, dude. See ya tomorrow at school.”

He backed the car out of the driveway and headed out of the neighborhood. Jared stood at the fence that divided the two houses and stared up at her window. He pulled his phone from his pocket and searched through the contacts. Her name pulled up, and he opened a new message window.

Jared: Hey

Sarah: Who is this?

Jared: You deleted my number from your phone. Ouch that hurts.

Sarah: Jared really?

Jared: Look I been thinking

Sarah: Well that’s hard to believe but go on

Jared: Would you like to go on a date with me?

Sarah: What Cindy not enough woman for you now? Her black eye is unattractive.

Jared: This has nothing to do with her. This is you and me. I want to take you to dinner.

Sarah: Why?

Jared: I want to go on a date with you why does that need an elaboration?

Sarah: Alright, on one condition.

Jared: What’s that?

Sarah: Stop threatening to beat up guys when they want to date me!

Jared: I don’t know what you’re talking about =D

Sarah: Yea, yea.

Jared: How about the night before homecoming game? That sound good to you?

Sarah: Yea sounds delightful.

Sarah’s mom knocked on her door, “Hey, sweety, your home early. How did your date go with Adam?” she asked walking and sitting down on Sarah’s bed.

“It went how every date went,” Sarah said not glancing up from her homework.

“Aw, I’m sorry. I thought he was a keeper,” she said standing up from the bed.

“Mom, I have to tell you something,” Sarah said putting her pencil down and turning around in her chair.

“What’s that honey?” her mom asked turning around in her doorway.

“I tried out for the football team today,” she said waiting for her mom to answer.

“And, how’d it go?” she asked without hesitating.

“I made the team,” Sarah said waiting for her mom to explode.

“Honey, that’s wonderful!” Her mom exclaimed.

“It is? You’re not mad?” she asked confused.

“Why would I be mad? Now you can spend some catching up time with Jared,” she said and walked out the room.

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Beauty is Fangs Deep- Chapter Three

Beauty is Fangs Deep- Chapter Three

“How the hell could you mess up this bad!”

John awoke to the sun beaming in his eyes and the arguing outside the car. He sat up in the seat and looked around to see where they were. They were back at the diner they had left last night.

“I did exactly what John said. He said to stay on the highway and wake him when we hit Colorado. I made no turns, no turn arounds, nothing,” Duke yelled back at…

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Beauty is Fangs Deep- Chapter Three

“How the hell could you mess up this bad!”

John awoke to the sun beaming in his eyes and the arguing outside the car. He sat up in the seat and looked around to see where they were. They were back at the diner they had left last night.

“I did exactly what John said. He said to stay on the highway and wake him when we hit Colorado. I made no turns, no turn arounds, nothing,” Duke yelled back at Larissa.

“Hey, hey! It’s okay. We’ll get something to eat and then just start back on the road. It’s no big deal. There was probably an exit and this was a bypass highway that looped around,” John said pulling his hoody off.

“Whatever,” Larissa said walking to the burger joint.

“I’m sorry man, I-“ Duke began.

“It’s ok, no worries,” John said popping the trunk and changing his shirt.

He glanced through the window at Michala still reading in the front seat.

“You coming in?” he asked.

“Not hungry,” she replied turning the page.

“It might be the last stop for a while,” he said trying to urge her out of the car.

“Not hungry,” she replied yet again.

“I’ll bring you something back,” he said standing up from the window.

She was pissed at him and had good reason to be. He walked inside with the other two and ordered his meal and something for Michala. Instead of sitting inside with Larissa and Duke, he walked back outside to eat in the car.

The same car that had stopped last night beside theirs was stopped there again. Instead of the man this time, it was the woman underneath of an umbrella talking to Michala.

“Are you sure you don’t have directions,” she asked Michala.

“We got lost ourselves last night and ended up back here,” Michala said sympathetically.

She noticed John walking out of the diner, “John, maybe you can give them directions. They’re looking for…what was it…Stewart?” Michala asked the woman.

“Yes,” replied the woman.

“You past it about 50 miles back south,” John replied. “Head south on this road and take the first exit you see. That’ll put you on your way to Stewart,” he said stopping in front of the woman.

She had sunglasses on. Her hair was dark nearly black in color and she wore the most peculiar dress that looked like a Latin dancing dress. She was the palest person he had ever met before.

“Thank you, young man,” she said walking back to the car. In the sunlight, the tint was so dark, you couldn’t see inside like you could last night.

“You’re welcome,” he said waving his hand.

He climbed in the driver door and looked over at Michala who was watching them pull away.

“What is it?” he asked.

“I don’t know. Whenever they talk to me, it’s like, like I can’t ignore them. Like I HAVE to talk to them. I can’t explain it,” she said still slightly mystified after their departure.

“I got ya some grub,” John said handing the bag of food over to her.

“Thanks, I’m hungry all of a sudden,” she said opening the bag to see what he got her.

She pulled out the fries and started going to town eating. It was unusual behavior for her, but then again she didn’t eat last night neither, which was John’s fault.

“Here’s your drink too,” he said handing her the cup that the diner offered for drink.

She gulped it down and ate the hamburger that was in the bag. She had everything ate in under five minutes.

“I’d say you were hungry,” John said slowly chewing the food in his mouth.

She looked over at his food and then to his face. He smiled. He got the hint and handed the burger over to her along with his fries.

“Thank you,” she said taking a bite of his burger.

“No problem,” he said laughing while chewing his bite of food.

She had slowed down eating and was chewing at a normal pace. He watched her start to nitpick at the food, her tell-tale sign that she was full but didn’t want people knowing she was.

“Give it back,” he laughed taking the burger and fries back.

She continued chewing the mouthful of food as the quiet proceeded to settle in between the two of them.

“Look, about last night,” John began.

“Don’t worry about,” she said looking out the window.

“No, I truly am sorry. Things slipped my mind once I broke it off with Larissa then got the eighth degree from Duke. Apparently, they both think we were screwing around behind their backs,” he said balling the burger wrapper up and tossing it in the bag. “Everything I said in that letter, I meant every word of it,” he said pulling the ring from his pocket.

“Hey, how’d you get that? It was in my-“

“Purse,” he said smiling.

“You little sneak,” she scoffed.

“Michala, I wanted to do this last night, but better late than never,” he said holding the ring up in between them. “I’ve loved you since the day you moved in next door. No matter who I have dated, I couldn’t take my mind off of you. We spent so much time together just being ourselves, we never really did pay much mind to dating each other,” he said taking her hand in his. “I’m not asking you to marry me, I’m asking you to promise to be mine forever,” he said putting the promise ring on her finger.

She couldn’t say anything back, but didn’t get the chance to. He ran his hand up her cheek and pulled her in for their very first kiss with each other. His hands slid from her face to her hair, and she put her arms around his neck. He pulled her across the bench seat of the car closer to him. He kissed her and pulled back numerous times to look at her face. He brushed her hair back from her face and trailed his finger down her cheek.

“I’m sooo ready for the beach,” she said smiling at him.

He smiled back and kissed her one more time. She sat back down in her seat that had gotten hot due to the sun beaming on it. So, she scooted to the middle of the bench seat. Duke and Larissa made their way from the diner and climbed in the backseat.

“Everyone ready to go?” John asked.

Everyone chimed an answer of yes, and once again, they started off in the direction of Colorado.

Duke started in on the remaining beer left from his 12 pack and offered one to everyone in the car. Larissa accepted while Michala and John declined.

“You know that stuff makes me car sick,” Michala said looking at the beer disgusted.

“I’m driving,” John said laughing.

“You both lost your cool when you graduated school,” Duke laughed and chugged his beer.

John turned the radio on and everyone sang along to the radio. Michala scooted closer to him but he dared not put his arm around her in front of Larissa. He wanted a peaceful trip. The two knew mutually not to let the cat out of the bag about themselves. As John glanced in the rearview, he saw Larissa and Duke quietly talking in the backseat. She was already putting the moves on him, and he was openly flirting back. He hadn’t known that Michala and Duke had called it quits already, unless Duke was trying to make her jealous with his actions.

They had been driving for hours and nightfall was hitting when they came upon lights to the right.

“How in the hell….” John muttered and pulled over in the parking lot.

The diner they were at earlier was the final resting spot.

“See, I told yall,” Duke said leaning over toward the passenger window.

“There were no exits or anything. How is this possible?” Michala asked looking over to John.

“I don’t know,” he said putting the car in park. “Let me go ask them for directions,” he said jumping out and heading in the diner.

“This is way too creepy,” Larissa chimed in the backseat.

It hadn’t been but a few seconds that John had entered the diner that the Jaguar rolled up beside them.

“Well, I see we are all having the same experience,” the gentleman said getting out of his car.

A panic flew through Michala. A gut feeling was telling her somehow they were the ones responsible for this but she couldn’t say it out loud.

“Are yall lost too?” Larissa asked climbing out of the car.

Duke was about to do the same when Michala turned around and shook her head no.

“We have been trying to get to Stewart and followed the other young lad’s advice and still ended up right back here,” he said motioning to the car.

The woman then got out of the car and walked over beside the gentleman. Her eyes burned into Michala’s and she had to look away.

“Our friend is inside getting directions from the diner,” Larissa replied back to the gentleman.

“It won’t be any good. They couldn’t give us directions,” he replied back.

Michala pulled her cell phone out of her purse, and to her dismay, there was no signal. She felt uneasy with the strangers and there was a lull to them that made her look back to them. The woman was still watching her. She withdrew her gaze from the woman to the diner but couldn’t help peaking at her.

John walked from the diner’s doors muttering and cussing.

“So, what they say?” Michala asked glancing uneasily over at their guests.

“They couldn’t tell me anything. Useless!” he replied angrily.

He then noticed the guests at the car and slowed his steps. He looked over at Michala. Her face was white as a ghost, and she slightly shook her head relaying an unspoken message. Hearing John’s voice, the man and woman turned their gaze toward him.

“Ah, there’s the young lad. I see you’re having the same problem as we are,” he said walking toward John.

“Yea, it’s weird we drove four hours away from the diner and still ended up right back where we started,” he replied making his way over to the driver’s door. “Larissa, get back in the car. We’re going to head back towards the house and reroute,” John said jumping in the driver’s seat.

“It was nice meeting yall,” Larissa said turning around and getting back in the car.

“The pleasure is ours,” the woman said following suit.

John started the car, turned around on the highway, and drove back the way they had initially started from. It wasn’t until the lights of the diner disappeared that Michala spoke up.

“Did you feel it too?” she asked looking over at John.

“Yea, I did,” he replied.

“What are yall talking about?” Duke asked leaning up to hear them.

“The last two times we were there, they were too. I just got a creepy feeling about them. I mean how odd is it we’re heading in two different directions and are both getting lost ending up back in the same spot we started?” Michala asked looking from John to Duke.

“Well, I think they’re nice people,” Larissa said scornfully.

“That’s only your first time meeting them. I mean they’re looking for a place less than 50 miles away, driving a Jaguar, and dressed like the Addams’s family. Come on now?” Michala said irritated. “You don’t feel what I do when they come around. It’s like I can’t talk unless spoken too. I can’t think or anything. I’m just drawn into them. I can’t explain it,” Michala said sitting back right in her seat.

Everyone was silent. Michala never talked like this before and it was odd.

“Maybe we should just head home,” Duke offered. “Maybe this trip wasn’t meant to be.”

“Bull! I did not leave the state of California just to be rushed back to it because we’re lost on a highway. We’re going to the beach!” Larissa exclaimed.

“Larissa is right. We should just continue on to the beach,” Michala said solemnly.

John looked over at her. She was just staring straight ahead expressionless.

“Michala, are you okay,” John asked.

She just kept staring straight ahead without responding.

“Michala!” he yelled a bit too loud.

She jumped from being startled and looked over at him. The look on her face terrified him.

“Are you okay?” he asked pulling over on the side of the road.

She trembled and couldn’t speak. She looked into the rear view mirror as headlights appeared.

“Go,” she whispered. “Go! Its them!” she yelled as John saw the headlights in the mirror as well.

He put the car in drive and hit the gas speeding off. He was gaining speed and the headlights were being lost in the space between the two vehicles. He saw a side road and veered off onto it hoping to lose their followers. The road led to an abandoned cabin where he turned the engine and lights off. They heard a car fly by the road in the direction they had been heading. All was quiet.

The four of them climbed out of the car and gathered in front of the house.

“Now this is what creepy looks like,” Larissa said snidely.

“It’s not that bad,” John said walking up the front steps. One of the boards began to creak and bow under his weight and he jumped to the next. “Be careful walking up.”

They each took the steps carefully one by one so the steps didn’t give away to all of their weight. John pushed the cabin door open and walked inside. It was completely bare inside.

“Hello?” he called out.

There was no answer.

“It’s safe to say its empty,” he said walking further into the house.

The rest of the group followed in uneasy. The windows had been busted out and boarded up haphazardly. The curtains were shredded and barely clung to the rods above the windows. There were spider webs everywhere and newspaper littered the floor. It looked as if homeless people crashed here every once in a while.

“Let’s crash here tonight so we know we’re driving the right way tomorrow,” John said turning around to everyone.

“Are you nuts?” Larissa asked.

“I’d rather stay here than have some lunatic searching the roads for us,” John retorted.

Larissa didn’t say anything back.

“Okay, its settled. Duke, help me get the stuff out the car. I have some camping gear packed in case we broke down somewhere,” John said walking to the door.

Duke turned around and made his way carefully down the steps. The two guys unloaded the car and brought everyone’s stuff inside. John broke open one of the bags and pulled out his camping gear. He turned on a camping lamp for everyone to see inside the room.

“I have one more if anyone wants to sleep in another room tonight,” he said setting it over to the side.

He unpacked four sleeping bags, some pillows, and blankets. He pulled out a case of waters and a case of sodas and loaded the cooler packed with ice with drinks.

“I have some bread and peanut butter also,” he said holding up the loaf of bread and peanut butter for everyone to see.

Everyone grabbed a sleeping bag. Michala unrolled hers in the middle of the floor and put a pillow and blanket on it. John unrolled his a few feet away from her and followed the same steps. Larissa and Duke hesitated.

“Duke and I…are going to sleep in a different room. I just don’t like the idea anyone can open that front door and walk in here with us,” she said picking up the sleeping bag, blanket, and pillow for her.

Everyone was quiet.

“Why don’t yall really tell us the reason why,” Michala said looking at the two of them.

Duke and Larissa exchanged glanced with one another.

“You know?” Duke asked.

“I’m not stupid, Duke. We were breaking up before this trip, and you showed up at my door with her. Come on now, I’m not naïve,” she said shaking her head.

“And both of you are okay with this?” Larissa asked looking from Michala to John.

“We’re all friends. It’s cool,” John said.

“Well, ok then. Goodnight you two,” Larissa said smirking.

She and Duke walked up the stairs to one of the rooms and shut the door. John and Michala could hear giggling.

“Well, those two are going to get drunk tonight,” John said smirking.

“Huh?” Michala asked.

“He took his other 12 pack with him upstairs,” John said pointing to where the 12 pack had sat.

“Oh,” Michala said.

“You look distracted. Are you okay with those two…being together?” John asked scooting his sleeping bag closer to her.

“Of course, why wouldn’t I be? They didn’t admit to sneaking around behind our backs with each other at all,” she said flopping down on her sleeping bag. “You have no idea what it’s like to be cheated on over and over,” she said tying her hair up in a ponytail.

“Yes, I do. It’s one reason it was so easy ending it with Larissa. They have been sneaking around a lot longer than you knew,” he said setting down on his sleeping bag.

She looked over at him, “You knew this whole time and didn’t tell me?”

He looked down to the floor, “I caught them once together in her dad’s car. They swore it was the first and last time…I didn’t want to break your heart being the one who told you,” he said looking up at her.

She sighed, “Well, they got the cue from us. Even though we weren’t dating we acted like we were,” she said situating herself under her blanket.

John took his shirt off. He scooted closer to her and lay back on his pillow with his one arm under his head and the other outstretched for her. She lay down on his arm and curled up beside of him pulling her blanket up over her shoulder. He wrapped his arm around her and kissed her forehead, an age old gesture the two shared. She let out a sign and traced her finger on his chest. She looked up to his eyes and saw them looking right back at her.

“It was obvious how you felt about me,” she said smiling.

“Oh, how so?” he asked flirtatiously.

“You were always staring at me in your rearview mirror, duh,” she said laughing.

He laughed with her, then it grew quiet.

“John, I have something to tell you,” she said biting her bottom lip.

“What’s that?” he asked looking down at her again.

“It’s about college,” she said timidly.

“What about it?” he asked.

“I’m thinking of going to school on the east coast,” she said.

She waited for his response. He was silent.

“There’s this really great program that I’m interested, and I got accepted,” she said.

He still didn’t respond.

“John?” she asked trying to get him to talk.

“Why didn’t you tell me this before?” he asked in irritation.

“Because I didn’t want you getting upset. I was going to tell you when we got to the beach,” she said wishing she hadn’t brought it up.

He sat up and folded his hands together in front of him while resting them on his knees.

“You can’t go that far!” he yelled.

It startled her. She had never seen him this upset before.

“I thought you would be happy for me,” she said sitting up beside him.

“How can I visit you if your 3,000 miles away?” he asked looking at her.

“The decision was made long before your plans came into motion,” she said crossing her arms.

“Please don’t go…” he begged.

“I have no fall back schools. This is the only chance I have. They have an awesome scholarship that I was given to even go,” she said.

“I will pay for your college tuition anywhere else in California,” he said looking at her. “Please, don’t go. Don’t leave me behind.”

“Why don’t you come with me?” she asked.

“I don’t belong on the east coast,” he replied.

They were both silent.

“You promised that no matter where I went, you would be here waiting for my return. Did you mean that?” she asked.

He sighed, “Of course I did,” he said wrapping his arm around her. “It’s just the same day we decide to have a relationship; you drop this on me.”

“I know, but would you have rather me wait til the day of?” she asked.

He pulled her closer to him. He didn’t want her to go and she was too stubborn to change her mind in not going. He was getting ready to reply when there was a loud noise outside.

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Author Spotlight- Bradley Simpson

Author Spotlight- Bradley Simpson

bradley simpson

Bradley Simpson

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Bradley Simpson is a wildly creative individual deeply devoted to storytelling. Roleplaying has been his life’s blood, and brings a lovely spin to the fantasy genre. He lives in a frozen nook of North Branch, Michigan happily with his wife and son where he use to work for an electronic manufacturer until family became his number one…

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Author Spotlight- Bradley Simpson

bradley simpson

Bradley Simpson

Goodreads   Listia   Facebook Author/Book Page


Bradley Simpson is a wildly creative individual deeply devoted to storytelling. Roleplaying has been his life’s blood, and brings a lovely spin to the fantasy genre. He lives in a frozen nook of North Branch, Michigan happily with his wife and son where he use to work for an electronic manufacturer until family became his number one priority.

 

rose of tolarius

An Orcish Dream

An elf prince slays an orc king and becomes cursed to transform into what he hates the most for all eternity: an orc. Now many centuries later, he has at last discovered true love. However, no one said the path to true happiness was an easy one…

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Dreamsbane of Tamalor

Dreamsbane of Tamalor is a light fantasy tale that pits brave adventurers against the evil darkness that threatens to engulf the world.

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Rose of Tolarius

Dwynwen of House Breoch was a weaver and a slave, but she was about to find her life turned upside down. The depths of caring and danger would plunge her quiet wold of tending for her mistress into utter turmoil. Will she lose herself to the madness or emerge triumphant?

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