Showing posts with label Under Cover series. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Under Cover series. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Wednesday Briefs: Rose and Thorne #2 (1.2) and Moving Forward #2 (1.2)

Happy Wednesday and Happy Hump Day! If it's Wednesday, it must be time for some Flash Fiction from the Wednesday Briefers! Every week we bring you our best flash fiction, stories between 500 and 1000 words, inspired by one of our prompts!

Last week, I introduced you to Vinnie, a mugger, and a Pekingese. What comes next? Read this week's Rose and Thorne and find out. Also, join Marshall and Lee at Partners for some fun! Don't forget to see what the other Briefers are up to. Their links follow my tales. Enjoy!

Rose and Thorne #2 (1.2)


If I’d been possessed of the proper agility, I would’ve tossed those ungainly stilettos from my feet with one well-aimed kick so I could do battle on a more even footing. But, in truth, I was nowhere near that well-balanced. Plus the damn things were strapped on pretty tight. I’d made sure if I went down, they were going with me, considering what they cost.

Didn’t matter. I had the situation under control anyway.

I countered the perp’s kick with one of my own. But I didn’t waste my time going for his ankles. Instead, I directed my knee toward more tender regions and thrust up, hard. These legs might be pretty, but they have muscles to spare.

I caught him completely by surprise. Here he was thinking he could just grab my purse, take the money, and run. Plus he had that thinking I was a helpless female thing going on. The strong preying on the weak mentality. Well, he had another think coming. He let out a high-pitched squeal and toppled over backward. Unfortunately, he never let go of my bag, and as entangled in it as I was, the momentum of his fall carried me with it, and I plopped right on top of him, momentarily losing my breath.

“Hells bells!” I managed to get out as I yanked on the strap which bound us together. His eyes were watering with pain, but they were also glazed with horror.  And well they should be, considering the situation. My falsies were smashed flat against his chest, and we were lying eye-to-eye and horizontal to one another in a far too intimate fashion. Bet he hadn’t bargained on that when he targeted me as his victim.

“What are you? A man-woman or somethin’?”

A what? I felt my irritation rising by the second. I guess my voice had betrayed my gender, although I would have thought my face would have done that already at this proximity. Either I looked better than I thought I did or his standards for womanhood were damn low. Then again, it was dark.

“Hang on, Vinnie, I’m coming!”  Ethan’s deep voice echoed in my earpiece. My knight in shining armor.

The perp’s eyes narrowed and he began to growl. That set off the Pekingese, whom I’d forgotten about. It began to yip again, although I couldn’t be sure which of us the dog was barking at.

“You’re no lady, you’re a cop!” he snarled—the mugger, not the dog. 

“Yeah, and you’re under arrest, asshole!” I automatically reached for the cuffs which normally hung from my belt, then remembered I wasn’t wearing a belt, and the cuffs were inside the purse. Shit. Well, I could rectify that. Once I got into a better position.

I pulled back on the bag with all the strength I could muster and managed to pry it from the mugger’s tight grasp.  The purse and I tumbled backward onto the damp grass. Success was mine!

Or not.

I reached for my piece, keeping my eyes trained on my prisoner, but I discovered to my dismay it wasn’t there. Maybe he’d managed to sneak it out of my skirt when I was lying on top of him. Instinctively, I ducked down, searching for cover.

The Pekingese was still barking for attention. Afraid the noisy pup might get hit by a stray bullet, I aimed one high-heeled foot at it, as if I intended to kick it. “Go on, get back!”  I hoped I could scare it into running off, but no such luck. The animal gave me a quizzical look, as if it wondered what my problem was, then continued to bark.

Still keeping low to the ground, I wondered why, if the perp had my gun, I wasn’t being shot at. That’s when I saw the gleam of something lying in the grass at the dog’s feet. I realized what it was about two seconds before the mugger did. We both dove for my gun, colliding in mid-air. His head rammed painfully into my jaw. This time I ended up on bottom, staring up at him, his knees unpleasantly close to my fake chest. My skirt had bunched up around my waist, and a slight breeze crept unpleasantly between my thighs, but I didn’t dare try to yank it down.

“Dude, we really have to quit meeting like this. Now listen up while I inform you of your rights.”

Okay I was bluffing, playing for time. Neither one of us had managed to come up with the gun. It lay mere feet away, next to the dog. He’d finally calmed down and stared between us, tail whipping back and forth.

 The question was who was going to get to my gun first? Did I feel lucky?

Well, did I?

He was watching me like a cat keeping an eye on a mouse hole. I could almost follow his thoughts—should he or shouldn’t he go after the weapon—as he kept the gun clearly in his peripheral vision. Same as I did.

The trouble was he appeared to have the advantage over me, seeing as he was on top, and he wasn’t exactly a lightweight. Still, I wasn’t worried. I’d gotten out of worse scrapes before.

 “You have the right to remain silent—” I began my litany.

“Are you fucking kidding me?”

I felt his weight shift ever so slightly. I knew he was going to go for it; his eyes signaled his intentions. And I knew I had to get to it first. My common sense told me muggers weren’t usually killers. But in the right situation, give a desperate man a gun and things could go horribly wrong. Did I want to bet my life on the milk of his human kindness?

“Don’t do it,” I warned him.

He didn’t listen. With a strangled cry, he leapt for my gun….

to be continued

Moving Forward #2 (1.2)

“Why don’t I show you how old men get?” Lee rose as he spoke, his hand held out to Marshall. “If you think you can keep up, that is.”

“Shee-it, son, you done been challenged,” Rye hooted. The entire table broke up into raucous laughter and whistles, and cries of “Go get’em!” which could have been directed at either one of them.

Lee’s eyes positively gleamed with mischief. Marshall knew this wasn’t just a challenge. It was Lee’s way of saying all’s right with their world, and nothing and no one could tear them apart. They were going to live and love and have a damn good time doing it.

“I’ll take that challenge.”  Drawing himself up to his full height, he laid his hand in Lee’s.

“Seeya boys,” Lee called back as he led Marshall onto the dance floor. They assumed the position. Lee placed his right hand at the small of Marshall’s back. Taking Marshall’s right hand in his left, across his body, they joined the other dancers in the promenade.

They’d done these steps together so often, they could have done them blindfolded. Marshall followed Lee’s lead. He loved the promenade, which was definitely a couples dance, but at Partners no one blinked an eye whether it was a man and a woman, two men, or two women. In fact, at one time it wasn’t uncommon for two men to promenade together when there was a scarcity of women. Of course now it was done for other reasons.

Marshall loved it when Lee spun him about, under his arm, or when they twisted in elaborate patterns that often earned them applause from their fellow dancers. Neither one ever missed a step, even if they were seemingly focused more on one another than the dance floor. When the dance was done, Lee pulled Marshall into his arms and kissed him, shutting the rest of the world out.

After a couple of promenades, the music switched to line dancing, and they kicked up their heels a little more before heading back to the table. While they’d been out on the dance floor, a newcomer had joined the table. Marshall recognized him as the obnoxious server who’d stepped on his foot . The same one whose tongue hung to his knees every time he looked at Lee. Marshall started to scowl, until he realized the man’s attention was all being given to Rye. In fact, he was practically sitting in Rye’s lap. Guess he didn’t have to worry none about him tonight.

“Not tonight or any other night,” Lee assured him.

Marshall’s jaw liked to have dropped. How had Lee read his mind? Lee leaned in to him as they took seats across from Roy, who was talking to Slim. “I know you well enough to know how you think,” he murmured. Marshall had to admit that was true for sure.

He glanced around the table. “Where’d Denver go? Back room?”

Rye stopped making goo-goo eyes at his current love interest long enough to respond, “He got a phone call, said he’d be right back. Something about a cousin, I don’t remember exactly what he said.”

Marshall  snorted inelegantly, but didn’t make the comment that was on the tip of his tongue about Rye having his head too far up his date’s ass to notice an atom bomb going off.  

Lee jerked a thumb in the direction of Rye and Blondie. “What’s up with that?” he asked Roy, who shrugged. Slim did likewise.

“Apparently they hit it off well enough to exchange numbers and meet up tonight,” Roy said. “I’d introduce you if I could, but someone here hasn’t had the manners to do it yet.” He raised his voice with his last words enough to actually catch Rye’s attention. Rye grinned good-naturedly at the ribbing.

“Sorry, fellas, guess I wasn’t thinking.”

“What else is new?” Slim quipped, producing more laughter.

“This here’s Stu.” He indicated Blondie with a wave of one hand. “You might remember he works here. Stu, these are my friends. Roy, Slim, Lee, and Marshall.”

Stu was dressed more conservatively than he was when he was waiting tables, Marshall noticed, but he sure enjoyed applying eye shadow and liner, making his eyes appear enormous. Everyone murmured their hellos as the introductions were made and regular conversation resumed.

Marshall scooted his chair back and began to rise. Lee caught his eye, brow raised. “Going to the bar? I was just about to order another round.”

“Naw, just seein’ a man about a horse.” He glanced uncertainly toward Stu, debating with himself if he trusted him not to hit on Lee once he left the table.

“You don’t have to trust him, just me.” Lee squeezed his hand. “Go on. I’ll order that round while you’re gone. Stickin’ with beer?”

“Yeah, draft is good.”

Lee pulled him down for a long, hard kiss. By the time he released him, Marshall felt his toes begin to curl. He knew he was being silly about Stu. Stu seemed more than content to be with Rye. Let bygones be bygones. “Be right back.” He kissed Lee softly, received a sexy smile in return, then headed toward the restrooms at the back of the club.

The men’s room was almost empty. Marshall took care of business and washed his hands. He was thinking about him and Lee on the beach in the Virgin Islands. Lost in thought, he accidentally bumped shoulders with another man. “Sorry,” he quickly apologized.

“You will be,” the man growled.

Marshall glanced up, puzzled. He recognized the heavy-set older man who stood before him. They’d had one dance earlier in the evening. He wondered what his problem was now.

“Excuse me?”

“Who do you think you are, the fucking Queen of Sheba?”

Marshall tried to step past him. “Look, I don’t want any trouble with you—”

The man shoved him hard, catching him off-guard. Marshall fell against the door to one of the stalls.

to be continued

Now see what the other Briefers are up to!

Chris T. Kat        






Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Wednesday Briefs: Rose and Thorne #1 (1.1) and Moving Forward #1 (1.1)

Good morning and Happy Wednesday! September already? Christmas is just around the corner. Almost. I even did my first Christmas shopping! Well, if it's Wednesday, then it must be time for the Wednesday Briefers! We're a group of authors who offer you the best flash fiction we can write, between 500 and 1000 words, inspired by one of our prompts!

As you'll recall, I ended Don't Look Back last week and promised to start something new this week, and I've done that. I'd like you to meet Vinnie and Ethan - Rose and Thorne. I hope you like them. I've also started a second book about Marshall and Lee, called Moving Forward, and I have the first flash of that too. I'll let you know when the first book is available in its entirety as a freebie. I have the cover made already. Hope you like my offerings, and don't forget to see what the other Briefers are up to. Their links follwo my tales. Enjoy!

Rose and Thorne #1 (1.1)


“Remind me again whose stupid idea this lipstick was,” I huffed out beneath my breath. Without thinking, I licked my lips. They felt greasy, and tasted even worse. I forced myself not to grimace, afraid it might crack the foundation I’d slathered on my face.

“Mine, you sexy beast,” came the smart-ass reply in my ear. “I think you got purty lips, mmhmmm.”

“Fuck you,” I growled. “You should be doing this, not me, and you know it. I did it last time.”

“What I know is you look better in a skirt than I do. And out of it, too.”

I felt my cheeks go hot at Ethan’s words. Luckily the darkness hid a multitude of sins and none the wiser. Hopefully, no one else was listening—I knew I’d never hear the end of it.

I pulled a compact from the purple paisley cloth purse slung over my shoulder and flipped open the mirror so I could assess my surroundings. I couldn’t see a damn thing. I growled again. I’d have to move closer to the half-assed excuse for a light this park possessed. The city fathers had been too cheap to install proper lighting, which is why they had this mugging problem to begin with.

“What’s wrong, Vinnie?” Ethan’s concern came through my earpiece loud and clear. He might aggravate me some of the time—or most of the time—but he always had my back.

“Nothing,” I muttered as I wobbled toward the light. These heels were ridiculous. How did women do it? I’d just gained an all-new respect for the fairer sex. They made it seem so effortless, while I possessed all of the grace of a wounded water buffalo. I’d tried opting for flats, but Ethan had nixed the idea. Said they wouldn’t go with the skirt. Plus he said the heels made my legs look longer.

Pervert.

The light pole stood just behind a metallic park bench shrouded by shadowy bushes. I think it was supposed to impart something of a pastoral feel, and maybe it did during the day, but at this time of night it only gave me the creeps. An icy finger climbed my spine, which I hurriedly dismissed.

The bench was a stone’s throw from the paved path which wound through the park, accessible to pedestrians and bikers both. I hadn’t seen much foot traffic tonight, mostly couples, hand in hand, seeking seclusion. Under other circumstances, that could be Ethan and me. Preferably in another park.

The path was about as well-maintained as the park was lit. I stumbled over what I assumed to be a tree root and valiantly fought to keep my balance. I lost the battle for equilibrium and dropped to my hands and knees, tearing my panty hose on the rough surface and skinning my knees and palms. I swallowed my cry of pain and clumsily regained my feet.

Just then something rustled in the bushes. I tensed. My hand snaked toward the gun which I’d tucked into the waistband of my skirt, underneath the jacket. I half expected a menacing figure in a long trench coat to jump out in front of me and flash his shlong. What I wasn’t prepared for was the small Pekingese which emerged from the darkness and flew at me. It yipped excitedly, like it thought I was about to steal its favorite bone.

It was just a dog. I needed to lighten up.

“Vinnie, what’s that noise?”

“It’s a dog, what does it sound like?”

“What’s it want?”

I rolled my eyes, even though I knew he couldn’t appreciate the gesture. “Gee, lemme ask him, Ethan.” I leaned down toward the canine, remembering to offer it my hand first. A stray thought ran through my mind, something about dog’s saliva having magical healing properties. With my luck, that was just an urban legend. Like the tooth fairy.

“You be careful, Vin, you hear me?”

That kinda went without saying.

“Nice puppy, good puppy.” If the dog was a healer, he obviously didn’t choose to waste such abilities on me. He made no move to lick the hand I held out. His high-pitched whine was getting on my last nerve. He’d make a great secret weapon if I ever needed to wake up the dead.

“Please be quiet,” I pleaded with the animal. To my surprise, he suddenly ceased his yapping as if I’d flipped an invisible switch, and he regarded me with a quizzical look. I was impressed with myself. I’d no idea I possessed such power over animals that I could bend them to my will. I’d have to remember that when I was dealing with Ethan in future. But my sense of accomplishment was short-lived.

 A sense of disquiet slapped me like a blow to the chest. Goose bumps played up and down my arms, and the back of my neck prickled. Something wicked this way comes? The darkness felt almost palpable. I imagined it closing around me, suffocating me. I quickly pushed the image away.

Something was tugging at my purse. My first irrational thought was the dog had latched onto it and was trying to pry it away from me, even as I wondered what he’d want with it. That notion was quickly dispelled as the force grew stronger, yanking at the purse with a strength far beyond that of any small animal. If I hadn’t had it looped over my shoulder, my hand entwined in the strap, I’d probably have lost it.

Belatedly, it dawned on me I was being mugged. This was it.

My attacker was not quite as tall as me, but, even in the dim light, I could see he had the advantage in weight. “Let go, lady,” he fairly hissed, “I don’t wanna hurt you.”

“Hurt me, my ass,” I muttered, just as he directed a kick to my shins that threatened to topple me. I wobbled on the heels but didn’t fall.

One point for the good guys.

 to be continued


Moving Forward #1 (1.1)

Marshall felt as though he was the belle of the ball. Or whatever the male equivalent of that might be.

Partners was hopping with its typical Western Night activity. The club was filled to capacity—wall-to-wall men with the urge to drink, dance, and play games, not all of which took place in the bustling game room. The small, private back rooms were high traffic areas on Western Night, and extra servers and attendants were on hand to make sure everything ran smoothly, and see that some sort of order was preserved.

Marshall and Lee hadn’t been back to Partners since before Thanksgiving. Mostly because they were busy, but also to put a little time behind them in order to forget the fiasco that was Rhonda. The way she’d tracked them down and tried to ruin their lives was a disaster narrowly averted. They didn’t realize how much they’d missed the place—and how much they were missed by their friends there—until Lee received an email from Slim, checking on them and asking when they were coming back.

They returned to Partners the first week in February. A slight chill hung in the air, necessitating jackets, but not coats. The promise of spring was in the air, and hormones bubbled in the veins of those at Partners. Different men kept coming up to the table Marshall and Lee shared with Roy and Slim and Denver and Rye, asking Marshall to dance. Each and every one of them made sure he asked for Lee’s permission first, which was always given. Lee encouraged Marshall to get out on the dance floor and kick up his heels. Have a good time. And so he went with them, and he whooped and hollered and had a grand old time. But he always returned to Lee after just one dance, and never went with the same man twice.

“Thanks for the dance,” Marshall told a tall, lanky cowboy who’d just escorted him back to their table. Only Lee and Slim were in evidence. The others must be off doing something else.

“You sure you don’t want to go again?” the cowboy asked hopefully, and Marshall shook his head. He reached for Lee’s hand and squeezed it, making it more than evident where his interest lay.

“Thanks but no thanks.” He raised his voice slightly, in order to be heard above the crowd around them.

The cowboy politely tipped his hat and walked away, as Marshall scooted closer to Lee and rested his head on Lee’s shoulder. He felt Lee’s lips graze the top of his head softly.

“Have a good workout?” Lee teased.

“Yeah, it was fun. So when you gonna take me out on the floor yourself?”

“Think you have room on your dance card for me?”

Marshall shifted his head and looked up at Lee. “You know I do,” he said earnestly before he saw the twinkle in Lee’s eyes, and knew he wasn’t being serious. They had an arrangement. Marshall was free to do what he wanted, with whom he wanted, as long as he was honest about it, and didn’t try to hide anything. Marshall knew it was Lee’s way of giving him an out, should he ever want one. To keep him from feeling tethered. He didn’t want an out, and he knew he never would. Dancing with other men was just that—dancing, nothing more. None of those men meant anything to him. Lee was all he wanted or needed. And dancing is where their involvement began and ended.

Marshall wasn’t the only one with a growing popularity at Partners. Lee had received his share of propositions, and he’d done a little dancing himself. Marshall couldn’t very well get jealous over something he was doing himself, and he knew he had no reason to, but he did watch Lee’s partners carefully, just to make sure no one was getting what he considered handsy.

 “You know something,” Lee said, “I have a sneaking suspicion this has got to do with that damn YouTube video.” Marshall and Lee had found themselves the unwitting subjects of a video which was shot at Partners and subsequently posted on YouTube. In the video, they were dancing together, having a damn good time, attracting an appreciative audience to the dance floor. When the music ended, Lee had bent Marshall over backward and laid a huge liplock on him, which produced cheers from the spectators, who’d also taken pictures, as well as a video, of their exploits. The video had almost been their undoing—operative word almost, unwittingly drawing Rhonda to them, with her threats to tell everyone about them and their relationship. But now that was all just water under the bridge, and they were moving forward with their lives—with love and confidence.

“You mean we’re famous?”

“Infamous is more like it.” Lee snorted. “I guess it could be worse.” Marshall understood what Lee wasn’t saying. That the men at Partners accepted them at face value, and liked them without question. They were safe there. They could relax among their friends and simply be who they were.

“I was talking to the owner about that video,” Slim interjected, leaning toward them to make himself heard. “He thinks business has gone up thanks to you two. You’ve put Partners on the map. Gay men all over Texas thank you.” He winked at them.

At that moment, Denver returned to the table and threw himself into a chair, reaching for his beer.  “A man can sure work up a thirst on the dance floor!” he commented.

“Oh yeah? What’s that got to do with you?” Slim punched the younger man lightly on the arm when he scowled.

“I’m a grown man, same as Marshall here. Don’t see you pickin’ on him.”

“Give’em half a chance and they will,” Marshall said. “You know how old men get sometimes when young men get all the attention.”

“Is that a fact?” Lee drawled.

to be continued

Now go visit the other Briefers and see what's going on with them!

Chris T. Kat