Happy Autumn!

Autumn actually started on Friday, but it’s hard to tell that it started at all in Charleston. The trees are still green, the air is still muggy and hot, and everyone’s still wearing sundresses and sandals. I plan on going to the beach at least one more time before I put my bathing suits away (yes, I have more than one. I LIVE at the beach during summer!), and while I’ve had my first pumpkin latte of the year I had to get it as a frappuccino.

But I celebrated the equinox on Friday with a harvest feast and the one thing that really makes it feel like autumn to me: the scents of fall.

Mmmmm. You can smell that can’t you? The cinnamon broom whisking all of the negativity out of the house and hanging by the door so it smells delightful every time you open the door. The candle that smells like pumpkin pie, or apple cider, or clove. The oil burner with sandalwood and frankincense. Rosemary and thyme in the kitchen. And best of all? The smell of cooler weather sneaking in at night when the sun’s gone down just a little bit earlier than last night. Take in a deep breath, and let out a happy sigh.

When I start smelling those classic scents of autumn it makes me want to curl up next to the fireplace, notebook and pen in hand, and start writing. Get lost in the woods of Fie Eoin as the leaves change color. Sit on the shore of Loch Ness and pet a kelpie. Go to a football game and snuggle in close with Apollo. Take Mikayla for a horseback ride by the river. Jump off a cliff with Neona.

What’s your favorite scent of fall? Where does it take you when you smell it?

Fie Eoin Friday: Rebecca

Welcome to Fie Eoin Friday er, Rebecca Stories Friday! I’ve been in Archein all week long with Rebecca and Lane because of the 200 word challenge, and since there is currently a tie on last week’s FEF poll I decided to post a little more of Rebecca’s story. We have seen what happens to Veriss in the end, but this little scene explains more about it without going into the bleak details. Plus: Lane! Cause Laney-boy is my favorite (don’t tell Gar) ;)

Rebecca’s Story

Rebecca Baine sat with her back to the white city and her face to the river where it had all started.

No, that wasn’t fair. It had started years before when she decided at the tender age of nine that she would become a Balesi – whatever the cost. This river had been her first mistake, her first true test of “whatever the cost”. This river had cost her all hope of a secret life; last night cost all of her honor and pride. And Rebecca, who was once the second-best apprentice in her class, was now seventeen and knew that she was broken last night more deeply than any other wound could break her.

Rebecca Baine, the fiery sly child who fooled the Council for six years was finally cowed, but she had permission to be an apprentice again and test for her guns.

She was sitting at the river trying to decide if she regretted what she had done. The head of the Council hadn’t taken anything important from her – she had given what he was really seeking to Lane Morgan only a few hours before – but Veriss had come away with her honor and pride. And Lane, well, Lane would be crushed if he ever found out what she had done.

Rebecca jumped as someone touched her good shoulder. She had always been a bit jumpy; a person with as many secrets as her was always jumpy. Breathing a sigh of relief at the owner of the hand, Rebecca pushed her short dark blonde hair back from her face and looked up at him.

“Sorry,” said the uncharacteristically sheepish voice from Lane Morgan. She supposed she had been waiting for him here by the river where they met. “I didn’t see you at breakfast,” he continued, “I thought you might be… I was worried that…” He trailed off with a blush and she had to remind herself that he would be thinking of what they had done together, and not what happened to her later that night.

Rebecca moved over so he could sit. “I hate going to breakfast the morning after I dance. Everyone is staring and telling me how beautiful I am. As if I’m ugly and clumsy all other nights.”

“They don’t get to see you as Rebecca that often,” he pointed out as he sat down next to her. “And you are beautiful.”

“Don’t start that nonsense with me. You know I won’t be won over by flattery.”

He smiled in his ‘I know what wins you over’ way that was just too familiar to Veriss’ smug grin.

“Besides, they are letting me rejoin the apprentices. I will be in class tomorrow. Our false courtship ends today.”

Rebecca turned away from him as she said it, but she still caught the look of surprise that replaced his cheeky grin. Lane recovered quickly, knowing firsthand what kind of liar his best friend was and also what kind of men the Council was made up of. Fate could work as hard as it might, it would never sway those men to change their minds about a woman Balesi.

He grinned again, probably thinking he caught her in a lie. “When did you speak to the Council then? As I remember it you were a little busy with me last night.”

Without a pause to consider Rebecca said, “This morning before breakfast.”

She watched as Lane’s face fell and her heart broke for him although she remained outwardly stoic. “They said they would take their chances on my failing. I’m becoming too difficult to keep under their control as Rebecca.” She shrugged at his hurt and confused expression. Better she break his heart this way then by telling him the truth.

“But… last night… I thought…” Lane struggled for the right words and brought his hand up to brush her shoulder. Rebecca jumped again and flinched at her own reaction. She was never this jumpy with Lane.

“What’s wrong, Rebecca?” He turned to her with concern, careful not to touch her again. “Did I hurt you last night? I tried to be careful, but it was my first time.”

Rebecca was torn between laughing and crying – as if Lane could ever hurt her! She couldn’t remember a time he hadn’t pulled back from a punch or thrown her a little too softly in practice. She let out a soft laugh, “No worries, Lane, all my bones are still well intact.”

She brought her newly healed right arm up in an arch to demonstrate. Lane accidentally broke her collarbone four months back while roughhousing, which was how the Council found out she was a girl in the first place. That was why they banished her from the apprenticeship, and that was why she agreed to the terms of having a chance to test for her guns before she knew what her end of the bargain would entail.

Lane’s concern didn’t disappear with her laughter. “I thought after last night,” he tried again, watching her face, “maybe you would decide to stop your quest for the guns.” He didn’t say ‘and be with me’ but she knew it was there just under his words.

“Oh Laney-boy,” Rebecca smiled gently at him. In truth she had been ready to give up her double-life as Robert Baine, Balesi apprentice, after Lane left her rooms last night. “There is one problem with that; I’m of marriageable age as Rebecca.”

“Yes, and you could have married me.”

“No, Lane. You’re only fifteen. You aren’t a Balesi yet. While you were in class my father was showing me off to real Balesi; trying to make deals with their fathers to set my future in stone.” Rebecca glanced at Lane who was clearly in shock – it had not occurred to him that Donald Baine would choose anyone else to marry his daughter off to. “Thank Gan he didn’t make any agreements yet,” she said as a truce.

“But we were openly courting!” Lane cried. “Everyone saw us together!”

“I know,” Rebecca replied calmly. “That was the whole point; to buy me time.” Lane flinched at that – she wasn’t even going to admit that she had enjoyed courting him. It was going to all be for her damned guns; everything always for the damned guns. “But people were starting to talk, my father was getting restless, and we would have very easily been written off as young lovers and disregarded.”

Lane sat dejected, head in his hands, silent for a long time. Finally he brought his head up and crossed his arms over his knees. “So we are back to Robert and the endless lies and deceits?”

“It seems so, yes.”

“I hate Robert.”

“You’re best friends with Robert.”

“I’m best friends with you.” He caught her hand and kissed the back of it gently as she jumped again. “One last day of courting?”

She pulled her hand away and stood, brushing off her skirts. “No. No more courting. I need to get ready; I need to focus. I’ve been out of practice for too long.”

“But, Rebecca.” He caught the hem of her skirt so she wouldn’t walk away.

“I’m sorry Lane, but this is the life I chose long before I met you.” She pulled her skirt away from him and walked back towards the imposing white gates of Archein.

——

And don’t forget to vote in last week’s poll! We’ll be back on the normal FEF schedule next week!

The Dark Tower

There’s this author out there, you may have heard of him. His name is Stephen King. Ring any bells? Yeah, I thought you might know of him.

I am terrified of ghosts, and I don’t like gore, and The Shining is probably the most boring movie I have ever watched. But I am obsessed with the Dark Tower series. Like, if Cuthbert knocked on my door and asked me to leave my husband and run away with him I wouldn’t even think twice. We’d be riding off into the sunset on Glue Boy, talking to that bird skull that he liked to wear around his neck. It probably wouldn’t last long, because I don’t think he bathed much, but it would be a fun affair while he smelled nice.

In fact, this is Cuthbert. She turned out to be a girl, got it on with Alain, and ate her babies in true Stephen King fashion. I also had a Jake (whose untimely death while I was at a pony convention ended the mouse infatuation) and a Ka.

And you thought the pony obsession was weird, didn’t you?

I started a DT role-playing game because I was so obsessed I didn’t want the seven (huge) books to end. I made my finest Mary Sue out of a female gunslinger who fell in love with… you guessed it… Cuthbert. I wrote so much DT fanfiction that it eventually morphed into Lane’s Girl and the Rebecca Stories (yeah, you know who Lane is now, don’t you?).

I still say Thanke- Sai. Every Day. And I believe in other worlds. Don’t you?

Have you read the Dark Tower series? What book was your favorite? And if you haven’t, which Stephen King book is your favorite? And if you have ready any of his books, why not? Go now!

Go now, there are other worlds than these.

Top Ten Countdown – Music Blogfest!

“Counting down our top tunes of all time! Music moves us. It inspires us! Now, tell the world YOUR ten favorite songs of all time. The Song, the band – why does it move you?”

Welcome to the Top Ten Countdown Music Blogfest! I have a feeling that my list is going to be wildly different from most on this blogfest, if only because I listen to different music than most of the people I know in real life. And since all of my favorite songs remind me of a character or a scene, you aren’t likely to find Casey Kasem’s Top 40 in here.

#10: Baby Blue – Dave Matthews Band. Much like Wilco’s One Wing (which didn’t make the cut) this song makes me cry every time I hear it. It’s this line: “I confess I’m not quite ready to be left”. I can’t help but think of Lane watching Rebecca die (over and over and over in all those worlds, but mostly in Lane’s Girl). And if I try to stop thinking of Lane and Rebecca then Gar and Kindra crowd in and that makes me cry doubly hard. So while most of the other songs on this list make me happy, Baby Blue makes #10 because it tears my heart out and leaves it sobbing on the floor.

#9: See The World – Gomez. On to something a little happier. For years I had no idea who sang this song but whenever it came on the radio it made me think of Gar. It’s still his song, as far as I’m concerned, although I can imagine him singing it to Kindra (or, you know, thinking it at her, since she would make merciless fun of him if he sang to her).

#8: What I Wouldn’t Do – A Fine Frenzy. This song sounds like spring to me. It sounds like going on a trip with your best friends and walking in patchy sunlight under spring-green trees. It makes me think of the beginning of Book of Souls, when Neona, Sean and Alicia begin their journey and their spirits are high.

#7: Sprawl II – Arcade Fire. This is the only song on the list that doesn’t remind me of a specific scene or character. But I like it. I Love it. It’s the beat, and the slightly-wavery voice of the lead singer, and the lyrics, and the fact that it makes me want to dance circles around the living room in a frilly skirt with my dogs.

#6: Come Alive – Foo Fighters. This song started out as Holly’s for the scene when she finally snaps and attacks the manticore. Then it became Karigan’s for the scene when Bar attacks her. Then everyone started sharing it and now this song can be used for any character and any novel (although it still makes me think of Kari and Holly first). I love songs that can do double-duty like that. Plus, it’s one of those pump-you-up-and-get-you-out-of-bed-in-the-morning songs.

#5: Whoa Mule – Black Crowes. I like the weird songs on albums. The ones that most people don’t really care for or against. They tend to be my favorites, and Whoa Mule is one of these songs that most people probably don’t think about. But it’s one of my favorite songs ever.  It sounds happy, day-dreamy, like everything is going to be good if you just give it a little bit more time. It’s also Holly’s happy-song.

#4. One Sweet Love – Sara Bareilles. Before any story or character this song makes me think of my husband. He travels a lot for work, and it makes me think of sitting outside on the beach, watching the sun go down and the waves come in, and waiting for him to come back. “No ordinary wings I need, the sky itself will carry me back to you” is my favorite line and it always reminds me of him when he is gone (or when he’s here and I’m at work).

#3: The Mystic’s Dream – Loreena McKennitt. Whenever I need to calm down I put this song on. It’s relaxing, it makes me think of mountains and Fie Eoin and the twins. When it’s time to start working on FE this is the song I play, and it is often the first song I play when I get to work in the morning. It’s an easy way to get into the business of the day and get my mind in-tune.

#2: In My Head – Anna Nalick. This song makes me think of Lane in a way that almost makes him real. When we first moved to Charleston and my husband was working all summer in a different city and was only home on the weekends this was the song that brought me through that horrible, lonely time. And I can honestly say that this song started me on the path to writing as more than just a hobby. It’s because of this song, and Lane, and my loneliness that I decided I wanted to do this writing thing as well as I could. That was six years ago, and I’m still struggling to fulfill that dream, but whenever I’m lonely, and feeling down about writing, or missing my husband this song can still pull me through.

#1: All Souls Night – Loreena McKennitt. I could fill this list with just Loreena McKennitt songs and call them my top ten of all time and it would be the truth, but the two in this list stick out in my mind. All Souls Night is the sound of a festival in Fie Eoin. Any festival. It makes me want to dance around a bonfire in the middle of the night and drink wine out of a clay mug and look up at a sky full of more stars than I have ever seen.

And those are my top ten songs of all time. What are yours?

For more top ten songs, visit the Music Blogfest on Alex’s blog!

Hitting the Wall

I’ve done it. After a good solid run of organizing, typing, editing, storylining and writing I’ve finally hit the wall as far as most things writing-related go. I’m exhausted mentally. I’ve been trying all week to get the third chapter of Fie Eoin to my writing group, and while I read and cross things out and write new things above it and in the margins, I just cannot get it to do what I want it to. I can’t write anything new. I stopped in the middle of the scene with Kaye and Timin and nothing else is coming. Kindra’s silent. Lane’s been silent for weeks (as evidenced by the fact that I haven’t put up Chapter 3 of Lane’s Girl either – what is it with me and Chapter 3′s?). I’ve had a little luck storylining the sequel to the Top Secret Project, but I still have no idea what happens in the middle of the first book. And there are still about 20 pages of Fie Eoin that are in order and just need to be hole-punched and put in the binder. 

I don’t even have the energy to punch a hole in 20 pages and stick them in the correct spot in a folder.

Brain, meet Wall.

But guess what? I know how to get out of this. I know how to climb that wall. It’s called The Lady of the Light, and it’s been sitting on my nightstand for weeks, waiting for my creative chutzpah to run out. The language is so beautiful, the scenery so vivid, the characters so deep, that it always inspires me to write. To write better. Work harder. Make my WIP sing as much as the story of Auraine and Marcus. And in the meantime it gives me a world away from my commitments and my stresses, and lets me relax a bit until I can take up that pen and write again.

How do you get over that wall? Is there a familiar story that can always do it for you?

Point of view. Or rather, a certain point that I view things from.

I’m starting to think that I might be kind of weird.

No, hear me out now.  Really.

Last night I was writing some Fie Eoin, because I sorta, kinda, am really in love with it, and I realized that I always look at Fie Eoin from the southeast.  Whenever I see Fie Eoin in my mind, I’m looking from the southeast.  No matter where I am in the village.  If I’m in the center of the village then Kindra’s tent is directly to the left of me, the High Priestess’ two over to the right.  The HP’s tent is directly east (where the sun rises – woah boy the symbolism!), but I always kind of look between the two.  Even inside the tents I look from the southeast at the tent.  I never stand in the doorway and look into the tent – I’m always looking from behind a cot.  It’s the weirdest thing.  And I just realized it last night.

The only time I look from another direction is during the wedding scene (who gets married? I’m not telling!) when I look from the southwest.  I only do it for a moment before I’m back in the east.  I only look that way while Susan is being killed, because I wouldn’t be able to see her from the southeast (and who doesn’t want to watch someone being killed at a wedding?).  It’s the same in Aleda – I look from the southeast.  Same in Gaerlom (you would think I’d look at the village from the ocean, but no, I look from the forest which makes no real sense).  Same in Fie Obsid.  Same all throughout Pike’s Revenge.  What is this obsession with the southeast?

I started thinking of other stories, and what direction I look at them from.  Let’s see, Apollo? Southeast, unless you are in his house, where it changes to northeast.  After Ancient? Southeast until they get to the Mississippi Ocean.  Phooka Tales?  hmmmm, yep, southeast.  Even the manor is on the southeastern shore of the Loch Ness.  Lane’s Girl? Ah Ha!  I look at Lane’s Girl from the north.  I can prove it, just take a look at the drawing of Archein I made on a sticky.  The main gate is to the north, and the hidden gate to the west, and this is always the way I look at Archein – from the north.

So really this post has no reason behind it, other than to illustrate the face that I don’t like to look at things from the west.  Unless I’m standing on Sullivan’s Island Beach, which I will be doing all next week!  Don’t expect any posts from me while I’m on vacation ;)

Sticky #55

 

I’m pretty sure that everyone who writes has that one phrase that they rely on and always turn to in every story.  It’s kind of like having that one character that you kill in every story (what? I’m the only one who does that?).  It’s the fall-back phrase, or something that rings so true for one character, but then also rings true for another character…and another…and that one too.  In any case, I have one of those phrases, and mine is “I’m stronger than you think”.

I don’t know why that’s my go-to phrase of choice.  Maybe because my characters like to fight.  In this sticky, Kaye from Fie Eoin is saying it, but I know Lane Morgan says it in one of the Rebecca Stories, Holly Thompson may not say it in Phooka Tales but she could, and I’m pretty sure one of my newest characters says it also (whether it’s Anna or Neona I can’t say, because I keep getting them confused).  In any case, all of my characters are stronger than you think (except Rebecca, who is weaker than she lets on), and so am I.  It makes me feel good to write that sentence.  It makes me feel – well – strong.  To be inside someone’s head as they challenge another person with their strength – that’s how I’d like to think I am.  I’m the person who is stronger than you think.  I’m the person who has this deep well of strength (whether physical, mental, emotional, ect) that bubbles up at the least expected times.  I’m the one who can finish what you can’t finish and can plow through when everyone else sits out at the sidelines. 

I’m the one who is going to finish against all odds and write this book and EDIT this book and eventually get published.  I know I will.  Because I’m stronger then you think I am.

Lane’s Girl, Chapter 3

“Thanks for walking me to my room Lane, I appreciate it.”

Kelly, who was slightly shorter than Rebecca, looked up with a genuine smile.  It was the Midsummer Night before Mika’s birth, and Kelly was dancing for the first time at the Midsummer Festival, taking over for Rebecca who claimed she was feeling too old and ugly to dance this year.  When Kelly proposed a certain dance to Rebecca – one that had been Rebecca’s favorite in fact – they mutually decided that Lane would have to dance opposite, being the only man in Archein who knew the steps (he had been Rebecca’s dancing partner for many a Midsummer).

Lane shrugged the thanks off.  “I’ve had bad experiences with dancers being taken advantage of after that dance.  I’d like for it not to happen again.”  He looked in the direction of his own apartment before turning back to Kelly.  “There’s probably no need to worry, but lock your door tonight, just in case.”

“I will.”  Her hand was on the knob, but she was facing him.  “Would you like to come in for a minute?  Make sure everything is safe?”

He looked back down the hallway; what he really wanted was to make sure his wife was safe.  She left the Feast early, pleading an upset stomach and tiredness.  He wasn’t sure he believed her (he was never sure he could believe Rebecca) and wanted to check on her.  The last time she left Midsummer early she was kidnapped by Veriss and poisoned, and that is what caused first miscarriage.

“Lane?”  Kelly waved her hand in front of his face so he would look back at her.

“Huh?  Yeah, ok.  Real quick.”

As she turned the knob and walked in he put a hand on his gun and moved past her into the small apartment.  Kelly’s room had only a single bedroom attached and the seating area was a little smaller, but other than that it looked just like all the others.  He lit a candle on the small table next to the couch and picked it up to look in the bedroom and make sure there were no men waiting inside.

“Perfectly safe,” he said and set the candle back down on the table.  It cast a dancing glow across them both and he stood awkwardly for a moment before trying to leave.

“Wait.”  She put a hand on his shoulder to stop him.

“I have to get back to Rebecca.”

“Rebecca can take care of herself, she’s a big girl.  A Balesi.”  Kelly trailed her hand down his arm and goose bumps broke out on Lane’s flesh.  “I’m just a dancer.  I’ve got no one to protect me since my arranged marriage fell through.”

“Did it?”  Lane said and looked at the door behind him.  “I’m sorry to hear that.”

“I’m not.”  Kelly took a step closer. “I didn’t want to marry him.”

Lane opened his mouth and closed it again, at a loss for words.  Was Kelly hitting on him?  Lane must be ten years her senior if not more.  “I have to go.  My wife is at home waiting for me with a sick stomach.  I’m sorry.”

Kelly turned to block the door.  “You’re wife doesn’t have a stomachache, Lane, she’s got a broken heart.  But she did it to herself.  This was her idea, for us to dance together.”

“No one else knows the steps.”

“Do you honestly think you are the only man in Archein who could learn that dance?  It’s hard, but any of the men who dance could do it.”  She smiled.  “You’ve been set up, Lane.  By your own wife.”

His eyebrows knitted together as he processed the information.  “No… why would she do that?  Rebecca wouldn’t do that.”  But part of him said that yes, maybe she woul

Kelly laughed humorlessly. “Because she wants you to have a son to pass your title and guns on to.  And she can’t give you a son.”  Kelly looked at him, challenging him to say otherwise, but Lane was silent.  “Rebecca bought me out from my arranged marriage.  Veriss’ rooms have been transferred to my ex-fiancé.  Did you not wonder why Alexander was living in the best rooms in the palace?  The rooms your wife owned?  She traded them for me.  She’s made me a concubine.  She wants me to be your mistress.”

Lane winced.  Not so much at the thought of Kelly as his mistress – she was beautiful and young, and could dance nearly as well as his wife – but at the thought of Rebecca going behind his back to arrange it.  How could his wife arrange for him to have an affair with another woman?

“Rebecca wouldn’t do that.  That’s a lie.”  He said it with more confidence than he felt.

“I’m not lying.” Kelly put her hand on his arm again.  “Rebecca would and did do that.  She wants you to have a son, but she can’t bear it.  Any other man would have arranged his own mistress by now.”

“I don’t care about a son.” Lane rubbed at his forehead.  “I need to talk to her.”  He pushed past Kelly to leave but she stopped him again.

“Just stay here for a while.”  She whispered, pressing close, and he could feel his body respond.  “Just stay here tonight and you can go back to her in the morning, and she will know that she did all she could to get you a son.  Rebecca will be relieved, and I will relieve you tonight.”

“No.”  Lane pushed her and she stumbled backwards into the table.  Without making sure she was ok he opened the door and walked out, pulling it shut behind him with a definitive click.

*****

“Mika, put on the dress.”

She shook the braid Amy put in her hair that morning so it slapped her face, leaving red marks on her cheeks.

Lane sighed – he didn’t need this tonight.  “Put it on, Mikayla.  You’re the one who wanted to go downstairs for dinner, so put on your dress.”

“I don’t want to wear a dress!”  Her voice whined with the threat of a tantrum.

“Then we are making dinner here.”

“No!  I don’t want your gross food anymore.  I want to eat with Aunt Amy.”

“Aunt Amy’s eating downstairs, in a dress.  So put yours on and we’ll go.”

“No.”

Lane threw the dress on the bed and left the room before he said something he would regret.  He sat on the couch in the main room, pressed the heels of his hands into his eyes and tried to breath deep.  Had Rebecca been this hard to deal with when she was a child?  How had Donald ever managed?  Maybe Donald Baine could cook more than ‘gross’ food.  Maybe Donald hadn’t made his little girl wear dresses.

Leaning back on the couch and holding a hand over his eyes, Lane wished silently for Rebecca.  She made awful food too, but she only had to say a word and Mika would put a dress on and wear ribbons in her hair and be a perfect little princess.

“I can’t do this by myself, Rebecca,” he whispered into his hand. “I can’t raise her without you.  Not the way she ought to be raised.”

That made him think of what Jonathan said at the river a few days before.  Mikayla needed a mother.

“Daddy?”  She poked her head around the corner of the doorway and looked at him with curious brown eyes.  He had never acted like that before.

Walking out into the main room with the dress on but not fully buttoned up, she grabbed his hand to get him to look at her.  “Daddy, I can’t button it up by myself.”

He pulled her braided head closer and kissed the crown, eyes squeezed shut while Mikayla stood, uncertain and silent.  When he let her go she moved between his knees so he could button the back of it with fingers that were too big to easily handle the small buttons.  When he finished, she turned around with a bright smile. “I’m ready to go downstairs now.”

“Alright.  Let’s go.”

He stood up, his body complaining with the weight of life, and she held his hand as they walked to the Great Hall, which served as a cafeteria area for the Bas class when it wasn’t being used for large festivals.  While Mika chattered happily to Aunt Amy and some of the other women nearby who found her ‘too adorable for words’, Lane barely touched his food and stared into the nowhere land between the real world and his memories.

“Hello, Lane.”

His head bobbed as he caught hold of his surroundings and looked towards the bashful voice.  He tried to conjure up a smile, but it seemed he was no longer any good at hiding his feelings.  There was a time when Lane was so wrapped up in Rebecca’s world of lies that he didn’t know what he was supposed to feel and say and do without a hint from her, and so he learned long ago to put on a good face until he got his hint.  Many days he woke up not knowing if he was a lover or a best friend or an enemy – or hell, if he even existed.  Sometimes he wondered if he wasn’t just a lie himself – someone Rebecca made up to serve her purpose of becoming Balesi, of getting what she wanted.  Maybe now that she was dead he didn’t actually exist.

“Are you ok?”

Lane blinked and turned his head.  He couldn’t place the voice to a name yet and was too disoriented to find the person talking.  “Yeah.  Yeah, I’m fine.”  He rubbed his face to wake himself up further and then found who he was looking for, which hit him like a shock of cold water.  “Kelly.”

She gave him a small, protective smile as she stood close enough to talk, but far away enough that no fabric would rub up against him and no one would mistake her concern for anything else.  She had already done her part in making Lane ashamed to show face in court, she didn’t need to further that now.

“I couldn’t tell if you were bored or upset,” she said.  “I just wanted to make sure you were ok and give you my condolences…”

“It’s a little late for condolences.” He said it more harshly than he meant to.  “It’s been a year.”

Kelly backed down, her eyes roaming the room as if trying to find someplace safe.  “Well, I just wanted to let you know if you ever need someone to talk to or…or anything like that, I’m still in the same room.”

She turned and walked back down the table to where she had been sitting alone.  Lane never realized it before, but Kelly had taken a fall from grace when she accepted Rebecca’s offer.  Her father was upset that his arranged marriage fell through for reasons Kelly couldn’t explain, and as rumors swept through court like wildfire most of the other ladies stopped speaking to her with anything but general niceties.  Being a concubine to a Balesi was something the lower classes were expected to perform, but a woman of the Bas?  That was not acceptable.

Not for the first time that year Lane found his hands resting on his guns.  Jon, trained well to watch in any situation for a pulled gun, noticed and laid a hand on Lane’s arm.

“Let’s take a ride after dinner,” he said before turning to kiss Amy on the cheek and tell her he would be out late.

Lane’s Girl, Chapter 1

Don’t touch my daughter!”  She screamed at the man with the gun, and ignoring the guns on her own hips she ran forward through the dark hallway.

“Rebecca!”  Lane yelled and reached out to grab her back, but his words were drowned out by two gunshots. She jerked backwards twice in quick succession and, dreamlike, fell to the ground just as gracefully as if she had been doing one of her dances.

Lane pulled his own gun and fired as his daughter screamed, “Mommy!”

“Mommy!”

Lane sat up, his heart racing at the scene he expected to see before him.  The long, dark hallway lit only by torches every twenty feet.  The man at the end with his daughter’s arm gripped in one hand and a gun in the other.  Amy standing back, not knowing what to do as the gun smoked and Rebecca – Lane’s precious Rebecca – fell to the floor, two large red stains growing quickly on her tunic.

Lane, who had better aim than his wife, shot the man as his daughter screamed.  He didn’t need to keep the man alive; Lane already knew why he was there and what he was after.  And he had gotten exactly what he wanted – Veriss’ man had finally been successful at taking out Rebecca Morgan; not because she posed a threat, but because of a grudge that hadn’t died with Veriss himself.

And now Rebecca Morgan, who had once been known as Robert Baine, was lying in a puddle of her own blood while her six year old daughter screamed and her husband rushed forward in vain to save her.

“Daddy?”  There was a tug on his arm and Lane looked down to the child next to his bed, her blonde hair dull in the moonlight coming through the window.  “Daddy,” she whispered, as if speaking any louder would wake the dream back up, “I had the nightmare again.”  Her brown eyes were wet with tears as she looked up at him.

Lane gathered his daughter into his arms and hugged her tight, rocking her back and forth while she sniffled into his shoulder.  “I know you did, Mika,” he said as he smoothed her hair, “it’s ok, it was just a dream, it’s over now.”

She shook her head and looked up into his brown eyes.  “No.  It was real.”

“It’s in the past now.  Do you want to sleep in here tonight?”

She sniffled back her tears and nodded, climbing under the covers in the middle of the bed.  Lane already knew better than to ask her to move over – that was “mommy’s spot” and Mikayla wouldn’t sleep there.

Pressing up as close as she could to her father, Mika popped her thumb into her mouth.  It was a habit Rebecca and Lane had tried to break her of, and they managed to get her down to only sucking her thumb at night, but since Rebecca’s death Lane hadn’t been strict about it.  If it helped her sleep through the night let her suck her thumb.

“I love you, Mika,” he whispered as he put his arm around her and kissed the top of her head.

“I love you, Daddy,” she whispered back and clutched his nightshirt with the hand she had just been sucking on.  He didn’t always have to reprimand her to keep Mikayla from her bad habits.

Lane’s Girl, the serialized version

I wanted to take a minute to talk to you about Lane’s Girl, which I am going to start posting tomorrow as a serialized novel on the blog.  I know that we’ve already done the whole Lane’s Girl/Rebecca Stories post, but that’s more about the Rebecca Stories, really, and Lane’s Girl is something else entirely.  But not entirely enough to be its own book (Stephen King would probably have a good court case to sue my ass if I published it traditionally).  It’s also not long enough to be its own book (it’s just over 50k), so even if I made the world they live in different enough from TDK and erased every mention I’ve made on the internet of LG being a TDK-ish fanfic, it would still be a little short for a novel.

I’ve been writing the Rebecca Stories for over six years now, and Lane’s Girl grew out of the TDK fanfic into it’s own little world, with its own form of government and its own bad guys.  I storylined most of it while I was cleaning my apartment to move to a new one (you cannot believe how long it took me to clean the oven that year!)  and then actually wrote it during my first NaNoWriMo in 2005.  By that point I knew the story and the characters so well that it only took me 19 days to write the first draft (which is Extra Weird because 19 is the magic number in TDK).

Lane’s Girl itself is written jumping back and forth between the present and Lane’s memories of Rebecca in the past.  It takes place after her death, but I promise you will see plenty of Rebecca throughout.  It’s also got more cursing in it than most of my current work, which had trended towards the YA/NA genres.

And now you know a little bit of background, which is more than you would get if it was published traditionally :)

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