Dark Muse (34 page)

Read Dark Muse Online

Authors: David Simms

Tags: #adventure, #demons, #music, #creativity, #acceptance, #band, #musician, #good vs evil, #blind, #stairway to heaven, #iron men, #the crossroads, #david simms

BOOK: Dark Muse
4.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

 

Coming Soon…

The next tale of “The Accidentals”

 

As Muddy dreamed of performing on a massive
connection of paths, on a stage which reached out to the north,
south, east and west, farther than any eye could see, something
looked back at him.

Many sets of eyes sought him out as he played
a Jimi Hendrix song, one he knew would become part of his next
adventure. Still, sweat beaded on his skin as the strange glares
began to burn at his flesh.

He opened his eyes and the song ended
abruptly. Zack? Did he have something to do with this?

Awaking had been its own adventure lately.
First, the dream of his mother, second, Zack’s disappearance, and
then the crazy times across the River. He had a bad feeling about
this one and somehow knew everything they had just endured was
nothing compared to what lie ahead. His band—The Accidentals. They
needed to change it back before Zack became strong enough.

Could they?

The moment they met in Muddy’s basement, he
tore into the band, immediately regretting his words. They were
likely just as scared as he was—or should have been. All had
answered his text message and arrived within the hour.

“Did someone cross over?” Muddy fumed. “If
someone did and left the door open again—”

“No,” Poe said, her voice quivering a bit.
“Someone
opened
the door.”

“On this side?” Otis already twirled his
sticks. “Or the other?”

Muddy turned back towards his home.

Zack.

“Does it matter? The door is open and you
remember what happened last time that happened. But that’s not all.
I have the strangest sense that many more nightmares are headed our
way.”

Otis turned left and right. “For us? Coming
after us?”

Poe faced westbound. “Does it matter? I had
the dream too. That’s twice, now, that we’ve shared a dream.”

“Of crossroads?
Our
crossroads?” Corey
finally opened his mouth. He had only talked when he needed to but
now Muddy knew he thought of one thing, one person. He prayed she
was truly alive.

“Maybe she found a way to come here.”

Muddy had begun to shake his head as if some
being from the other side had invaded his skull. “No. No,” he said
to himself and then louder. “No. This is worse.” He nearly dropped
his guitar when his hands shook too much. Whether it was out of
fear or anger, he couldn’t tell. “No, someone
invited
them.”

“Them?” Poe gripped his hand. He wished to
hold her close, but didn’t. The foreboding that something would rip
apart everything they knew squeezed at his heart like a vise.

“Them. Plural.”

The air around them shimmered. Something or
someone was coming through.

By the time Muddy raced to the hospital his
worst fears were confirmed. Zack no longer lay in his bed. Only
empty sheets remained.

He brought back his brother but had he saved
him? Something else returned with him. Something that he knew would
wind up destroying all Muddy knew and loved.

A strange sensation washed over him as he
realized he had been duped. “No, no!” He sprinted as fast as he
could to the house and bolted down the stairs to where he left the
band.

The rehearsal room stood devoid of any of his
friends. All the remained was a now familiar cross shape. The edges
around it still shook and when he looked inside, he nearly jumped
back up the stairs.

No, his friends. Zack. His father.
Everything. He bit back his fear and ran forward with all his
might.

When the world stopped spinning, he opened
his eyes to discover something worse than he could ever
imagine.

No, not here. Not now. We’re dead already—we
just don’t know it.

In the distance, he noticed that the basement
was still visible as the shimmering began to fade. All of band’s
instruments, the special ones, lay on the floor where they’d likely
dropped them.

As he felt the sweat run down his arm, his
heart bursting through his chest, he realized fate had given him a
sliver of hope.

His hands clutched his own guitar. But what
could he do? Especially here.

Zack, or what was left of him, had sent the
band far away. Far enough for those who lived beneath the River to
awaken and travel to his world.

What it took in return frightened him
more.

This time, he thought, the music might not be
enough to save any of them.

 

 

About the Author

David Simms now lives in the Shenandoah
Valley of Virginia with his wife, newborn son and two furballs
after escaping New Jersey and Massachusetts. A special education
teacher, college English instructor, counselor, music therapist and
book reviewer, he moonlights in the Slushpile band on lead guitar
with F. Paul Wilson, Heather Graham and Alexandra Sokoloff,
performing across the country. His short stories have been
published in various anthologies and he is currently working on the
sequel to Dark Muse and a historical thriller about one of the
country's darkest secrets.

 

Feel free to email him about Dark Muse,
music, books, or life at
davidsimmsmuse.com

 

 

 

 

 

Turn the page for more books available
from Fire and Ice Young Adult Books

 

Also Available
From Fire and Ice Young Adult Books

 

Last Ghost at Gettysburg
A T.J. Jackson Mystery

by Paul Ferrante

 

High school freshman T.J. Jackson thinks his
summer will be a drag when his widowed dad dumps him off for a
vacation with his Uncle Mike, a park ranger at the Gettysburg
National Battlefield, Aunt Terri, and his geeky adopted cousin
LouAnne.

But T.J. is in for a few surprises. For
starters, Gettysburg isn't the boring Civil War town he expected. A
ghostly Confederate cavalier has been terrorizing nightly visitors
to the battlefield. And LouAnne isn't so geeky anymore—she's become
a sassy beauty who leaves him breathless.

Things escalate when the cousins, aided by
T.J.'s quirky friend Bortnicker from back home in Connecticut—who
also has his eye on the lovely LouAnne—attempt to solve a murder
mystery that has the local police, park rangers and paranormal
investigators in a panic. Because how do you stop an undead killer
from 1863 from wreaking havoc in the 21st Century?

 

 

Also Available
From Fire and Ice Young Adult Books

 

An Age of Mist

by G.B. Colwell

 

"An Age of Mist" is set in an alternate world
where the sun never shines and the land is covered in mist and fog
nearly all of the time. What begins as a classic tale of another
world develops into something much deeper. As we follow the
protagonist, the young Santori, it becomes apparent that he faces a
far more menacing element to this world than simply the absence of
sunlight. It recounts Santori's coming of age as he struggles to
protect his family, and the battle for their survival against an
unimaginable evil. It is a story of myth and legend becoming
nightmare and the indomitable spirit of mankind to live and fight
another day.

 

 

Also Available
From Fire and Ice Young Adult Books

 

The Well-Told Tale of Kaity Monday

by Eddie Jones

 

A biased, sometimes meandering account of a
girl who wished to be something she wasn't, The Well-Told Tale of
Kaity Monday is first and foremost a tale, one that is well-told.
Kaity Monday is the only girl in history to have experienced life
as a tree. Before this, she lived underground with parents who made
it abundantly clear, through telling her, that they didn't love
her. When it is suggested to Kaity that she go above ground and
never return (by her father, Grey, and her mother, May, both of
whom hate Kaity) she finds it offensive, exciting, and then
tiring.

Coming into contact with a man named Mildy,
who is undeniably and obviously evil, Kaity makes the immediate
mistake of trusting and following him, only to find that the next
days of her life would be spent in the body of what many passersby
have described as an oak.

 

 

Other books

Untouchable by Linda Winstead Jones
The Bachelor List by Jane Feather
Afterwife by Polly Williams
Vineland by Thomas Pynchon
Sex Practice by Ray Gordon
Black Magic Sanction by Kim Harrison
Eva by Ib Melchior
A Few Days in the Country by Elizabeth Harrower
Grai's Game (First Wave) by Mikayla Lane
El inquisidor by Patricio Sturlese