This week is going by quickly! I've been working on Cherri's book, all royalties of which will go to help cover the unpaid medical costs they garnered before Peyton was sent to St. Jude's. I'm also working on a short story follow-up to the Torq short I had out, How the Mighty Have Fallen. If any of y'all read that, you might remember Larry in there, the man who goaded Hadrian to make a play for the dom of his dreams. Larry doesn't allow sex in his scenes, and he has his reasons, but the right dom just might fulfill all his needs.
Back to Cherri's story, which will be the first in a series titled Wild Ones, and the book itself is Deadly Prey. It was only supposed to be about 30k, but it's looking to be between 40-50.
I mentioned this before-- its about coywolf shifters, and you can read up on coywolves here:
http://www.fieldandstream.com/blogs/field-notes/coywolves-emerge-as-super-predators?src=SOC&dom=fb
Here's a bit of rough cut from it, unedited of course.
Wild Ones
Deadly Prey
Copyright 2015
Bailey Bradford
Chapter
One
Jack Tucker watched his brother
retrieve the rifle from the gun cabinet. “Um. Rhett? What’re you doing?”
Rhett didn’t even glance back at him as
he loaded the gun. “What does it look like I’m doing? You been living in the
city so long you forgot how a Wyoming rancher lives?” Then he did look over his shoulder at Jack, and Jack
kind of wished he hadn’t.
He hated seeing that judgment in his
brother’s eyes, and knowing he’d never be good enough for Rhett, never be the
man his brother was. “No,” Jack mumbled, “I didn’t forget.”
Rhett sighed and turned until he faced Jack.
“Look, that was uncalled for. I’m…I’m sorry, okay?”
Jack was so startled by the apology
that he gulped and couldn’t think of a word to say.
Rhett grimaced. “Yeah. Well, okay.
Gotta check on some tracks Eddie said he found leading from his property to
ours. I’ll be back in a few hours.” He left, striding from the room without
seeming to hesitate.
Jack groaned and closed his eyes. Of
course Rhett didn’t hesitate—he never had. Rhett always knew what to do, and
how to do it, and who he was, and that he was right… Except, he apologized to me, and it screwed my head right up.
“Worse than it already is,” he
muttered. Jack couldn’t stop himself from touching his left side, where his
bruised ribs throbbed as the pain meds wore off. He was lucky, very lucky, that
Rhett hadn’t pushed him on the ‘accident’ that had sent Jack running home from
New York, and possibly into the unemployment line. His boss hadn’t been happy
with Jack taking off, even with a medical note as an excuse. Jack hadn’t told
Rhett much about any of that. As far as Rhett knew, Jack had fallen down some
icy steps, and that was all he was going to ever know about the incident.
Jack replayed his brother’s apology in
his head and somehow it mingled in with Alex’s. Cold fear trickled down Jack’s
spine and his gut cramped hard enough to make him worry about the dinner he’d
just eaten.
After several minutes of trying to calm
himself down, Jack stood and left the office. He’d wanted to sit and talk with
Rhett about finances and try to decide if he should offer to let Rhett buy him
out. Jack wasn’t made to be a rancher. He wasn’t made to be a New Yorker,
either.
Jack didn’t know what he was supposed
to do in life, and at the age of twenty-seven, he kind of thought he should
have had an inkling.
His cell phone was ringing when he
stepped into his bedroom. Without looking, he knew it was Alex calling. “Who
else would it be?” he huffed. It wasn’t like he had any friends left.
Rather than check to see how many times
Alex had called and how many texts he’d sent, Jack turned the phone off then
stuck it in the nightstand. He eased himself onto the bed, then took a couple
of Tylenol 3’s and washed them down with the rest of the water he’d brought in
earlier.
The glass was old and familiar, and he
felt a pang of regret as he looked it over. Green glass, nothing special about
it, yet he remembered so much as he stared.
He could see his mom in the kitchen,
fixing a pitcher of tea, talking to him, and listening as he told her about his
day at school or the chores he’d had to do around the ranch. She’d always been
so kind and understanding, Jack had to believe she’d have been okay with him
being gay. He’d spent many afternoons in the kitchen, helping her prepare meals
or just basking in her presence. Losing her had almost broken him.
For a few more minutes, he let his mind
go back to happy childhood days. His dad wasn’t in nearly as many of those good
memories, but Chauncey Tucker hadn’t been a bad man. His dad had been more like
Rhett—stoic, focused on the ranch and less on the people around him.
Jack ran one finger around the rim of
the glass. He was surprised, really, that there were any of the old things
left.
The sound of gunshot startled him so
badly he jerked and nearly sent the glass flying.
“Shit!” He winced as he pushed it back,
then stood as quickly as he could manage.
Another shot rang out, then a third,
and fear quickly overtook every other sensation he’d felt until then.
Rhett had always been an ace shot. If
he’d had to use three bullets, then there was something bad outside—a bear or a
whole pack of wolves.
Jack didn’t like guns, but he went and
got one from the gun cabinet anyway. He loaded it as he walked to the front
door, and hoped like hell Rhett wasn’t hurt.
As soon as he stepped outside, the fine
hairs at his nape seemed to stand up and vibrate, like some kind of primitive
survival instinct warning alert system. Jack froze, his back to the door as his
hear slammed hard against his ribs.
Another shot sounded, and it jolted
Jack into action. “Rhett! Rhett!” He rushed down the steps and toward the
direction the shots had come from. “Rhett! Are you okay?”
When Rhett didn’t immediately answer,
Jack ran, careless with the gun, aware of that but unable to make himself do
anything other than find his brother as soon as possible. “Rhett!” He stumbled
over something on the ground and almost fell before he managed to flail enough
to keep himself upright.
Pain tore down his injured side but he
ignored it as he called out for his brother yet again. He cursed himself for
not thinking to grab a flashlight. The sky was overcast and there was no
moonlight to assist him in his search, and once he was past the barns there was
no light coming from the house or other structures, either.
Jack realized that the cattle in the
closest field were making enough noise to drown out his voice or Rhett’s,
making it impossible for them to hear each other.
The sounds of the gunshots must have
scared the cattle. Jack worried about a stampede, but he’d never seen any of
the critters take out a fence, so he dismissed the idea. “Rhett!” His throat
burned as he hollered again.
Lightning streaked across the sky,
blinding Jack for a moment, then thunder followed and he couldn’t contain his
startled yelp as his ears rang from the sound.
Or his shriek when six pairs of glowing
yellow eyes appeared between him and the fence line.
“Shit!” Jack skidded to a halt and
hoped he could steady his hands, and force himself to do what he had to do.
4 comments:
Okay, want more. Hooked already. Can't wait for you to get it published.
Cool. The photo looks like some sort of fox wolf! And lovely to know exactly who the proceeds will go to.
Ok, that was great. Waiting for more patiently. ( did It sound like I said that with a straight face? ha ha :) )
Loved it.
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