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One Soul’s Journey Virtual Book Tour

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Second Collection of Short Stories Book 2 of The Soul Series

Fictional Humor Short Stories

Date Published: 01-25-2023

Publisher: Magic Zoe Publishing

One Soul’s Journey is an eclectic and extraordinary collection of short
stories.

The ingredients: imagination, a dash of real life, inspiration, and lots of
love. If you’ve read and loved her first collection, “For the
Soul,” this book will delight you.

Praise for The Soul Series

5.0 out of 5 stars

“Delightfully charming short stories”

“Excellent book. A must-read”

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EXCERPT

A CHILD’S MUSINGS ON AN UNJUST WORLD

“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”

Martin Luther King

As a young child, I was taught early on the difference between right and wrong, injustice, and rude behavior. Those were lessons that followed me to this day. 

Several times around the age of twelve, we rode the rail transportation of the Rock Island Lines to ferry us four kids back home from Illinois to Colorado after summer vacations. My parents would drive us to my grandparents’ home, and then they would send us back on the train.

At that time, my grandfather would find a porter. His instructions were to watch over us. He was to supply us with blankets and pillows and ensure we were well taken care of during our trip. 

Gramps told me, being the eldest, that ‘George’ would be nearby to help us if we needed anything. George did an excellent job of treating us like family. I always hoped my grandfather paid the kind, Black man for his services, but, in later years, I pondered whether that would have been a custom of the times. I learned that all porters were called George as it was easier for ‘White folks’ to remember one name for all people with darker skin color. Even at my young age, I found that preposterous. How disrespectful was it not to use a person’s real name?

Recalling an earlier event, before these rail trips took place, our family took a trip to Arkansas to visit my mother’s brother. I was seven years old. This was before we moved away to Colorado. I remember how hot and sticky it was in that summer heat. Illinois could be humid but nothing like this. The trip was miserable. 

I recalled that my uncle owned a rather large home compared to our small one, where we all shared bedrooms. What struck me as odd was the large dining room table where we sat for our lunch. Fancy dishes and glasses were set out for this noontime meal or maybe to show off. The oddest of all was a Black lady in a black dress with a white apron who served our food. My uncle would tell her what to do and say “that will be all” while we all sat there. Even at a young age, I thought this was rude.  Didn’t these people have manners? Why would anyone treat another person this way? My mom would have paddled me for sure if I spoke to anyone like that. 

After lunch, we strolled around the town square to buy ice cream. Of course, I could read, and for the life of me, I could not figure out why the printed water fountain sign said, ‘for white use only.’ What did that mean?

Then there were signs in the window which read ‘coloreds served in the rear.’ Finally, my questions were answered, first by people-watching and then by explanations from my parents. This was the way of life here. I was so shocked that I had no words. To me, people were people. There should be no difference. How in the world could people do that to each other?

1957-1962 true story.

And my thoughts are still the same. 

About the Author

Barbara Daniels Dena
Barbara Daniels Dena is an American best-selling author and influential
writer of her eclectic short stories in ‘The Soul Series.’

The author’s stories are almost a memoir and are a unique collection of
inspiring short stories of ‘good ole fashioned living,’ along with many past
and present memories and life experiences that tug on the heart, warming
stories, and fictional tall tales and doggie tails delighting readers
worldwide. The books are available on Amazon Books, Kindle, and many fine
online book sites.

Barbara began writing at an early age as a lover of
“Make-Believe.” Today, her writing has developed from memories of
family experiences, various compilations of events in her life, and her love
of animals. She is willing to admit that her vivid imagination plays a role
in her stories. The author is an Illinois native who has lived in many
places; as Barb says, like a free-spirited “Gypsy,” she has lived
and worked in Illinois, Washington, Idaho, and Georgia, but Ultimately,
comes home settling back in the Quad Cities area of Illinois.

She is a proud mother of two grown children. She was a business owner, ran
a Temp Agency, transitioned into her passion for floral design, and opened,
owned, and ran several floral shops. Her favorite flower is the
“Casablanca Lily.” Her favorite color is Red, and when she isn’t
writing, Barbara spends her free time oil painting and enjoys quilting,
knitting, and reading.

Her favorite book is “Death Be Not Proud” by John J. Gunther. Her
first love will always be playing with her fur baby; a little Yorkie named
Zoe. She continues to write from her cozy nook as she gazes over a pond full
of geese and ducks. On many days it is more gazing than writing.

 

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The Crimson Fathers Virtual Book Tour

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Deiparian Saga, Book 2

 

Epic Fantasy / Post-Apocalyptic

Date Published: 11-01-2022

Publisher: BHC Press

 

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In a post-apocalyptic world where tyranny and medieval torture reign
supreme and witch burnings are an everyday occurrence, a top Witchfinder
must confront the very Church he serves when he learns of its dark past and
twisted plans for the future.

With the Fifth Order in complete control of the Church of the Deiparous,
Malachi Thorne and his friends must find “the Flame,” a powerful
weapon which may be the only chance they have of halting the evil of the
Crimson Fathers.

As they navigate the Tex’ahn lands and work with the resistance,
Thorne discovers a devastating secret that may destroy them all and
everything they have worked for.

Filled with swift action, unusual creatures, dungeon crawls, and an
engaging cast of characters, The Crimson Fathers is a must-read for fans of
epic fantasy and post-apocalyptic fiction.

The Crimson Fathers tablet
 

EXCERPT

Thorne knew the guards were still pursuing them. They were not going to give up just because their quarry had gone down a tunnel. He resumed walking. It occurred to him that if someone could map these passages, the freedom fighters could make good use of them. It would be an excellent way of moving around the city unobserved. He tried to think if he knew someone in the Cartulian Order he could trust—someone who might know something about the tunnels or could help make a serviceable map.

Amelia tapped his arm.

“What?”

“I’m sorry,” she said. “You didn’t answer when I called you.”

“My apologies. Just lost in my head.”

She pointed into the blackness. “We’re coming to a big opening.”

He looked, even though he knew he could not see beyond the light of their torches.

“How far?”

She shrugged. “Sixty, maybe seventy feet?”

Thorne glanced back at Tua and Teska. “Keep your weapons ready. And watch our backs. We don’t want to get ambushed from behind.”

They crept forward again, the smoke continuing to lead them. The foul odor—like fishy mud and decay—grew stronger. Thorne thought it seemed brighter up ahead. As they reached the opening, he saw why. There were phosphorescent fungi everywhere. It clung to the walls, offering them ghostly translucent light. It covered boulders, and patches dotted the tunnel floor.

And the buildings in front of them.

Thorne stopped. His eyes widened, and his mouth fell open. He stared in disbelief.

“It’s a— It’s a city.” Amelia gasped.

Tua and Teska stepped up beside them.

“Damn, would you look at that,” Teska said in surprise.

“A city,” Thorne whispered. In the peculiar light, his face seemed to glow with amazement. So it was true after all!

Stalactites hung from the ceiling like fangs. The sickly green light created a disorienting, alien panorama. Parts of pre-Cataclysm buildings the color of turds leaned like gravestones. Their tops disappeared into the earthen roof of the cavern. Rows of sagging windows showed only darkness inside. Entire walls had collapsed, and piles of rubble lay in what had once been streets. Rusted shells of auto-mobiles sat here and there, half buried in rock and debris. Two parallel rusted rails lay in grooves down the middle of one street. Water dripped in soft, hollow plops.

The forgotten city sprawled throughout the cavern. They could vaguely see more buildings in the distance. How far it spread beneath Attagon was anybody’s guess. Their footsteps were drumbeats in a mausoleum. The light from their torches sent shadows crawling over stones, doorways and twisted signs, whose messages had long been erased. A series of rocks, too crude to be called steps, led down a few feet into the city. The tunnel continued to their left, winding farther away into the earth.

For several moments, no one spoke. They stood transfixed, gawking in awe at the ancient ruins of yesteryear. It was Tua who broke the silence, his breath forming wispy clouds.

“The guards are coming.”

“Any idea how close they are?” Thorne asked.

“Five minutes, give or take?”

Thorne looked at the passageway to his left, then back at the undercity. He stepped onto the first rock.

“What’re you doing?” Teska asked

He moved down to the next rock. “Hiding,” he said over his shoulder.

“Have you lost your mind? We need to get the hells out of here!” Her voice had grown in volume as she spoke. The last few words drifted back as echoed frustration.

“They are getting closer,” Tua reported.

“Yes, hiding,” Thorne said. “They’ll think we kept to the passageway. We can wait for them to pass.”

“And what if they come down there looking for us?” she snapped.

Thorne smiled. Teska Vaun might have black hair, but there was no covering up her redheaded ferocity. “If they come down, which I don’t think they will, we’ll have the element of surprise. We can choose the best place to make a stand, if necessary.”

“Did you eat crazy bread for supper?”

Tua followed Thorne. Teska looked back into the tunnel. She cursed, motioned Amelia ahead of her and joined the procession down into the silent, freezing necropolis.

Thorne had never imagined a city actually existed beneath Attagon. When he was small, he had wondered what such a city would be like. But as he got older, he came to believe—as adults do when they lose their childhood curiosity—that it was all just a myth. Tunnels for Church officials to move about unseen, he could accept. But an entire city, fallen and forgotten beneath the streets? That simply was not possible.

And yet here he was, staring at the impossible as he stepped off the last rock and onto a street that had not seen the sun in well over a thousand years. Probably more. Tavern talk claimed that Attagon rested atop a pre-Cataclysm city once known as Chattanga or Chantoga or Chantanooga or something like that. As the River Tense rose and fell and flooded over the years, the land around it shifted and sunk. After centuries of silt deposits, sinkholes, erosion and earth turbulence, the lower part of the old city disappeared. And every few hundred years, the city streets had been raised, regardless of whatever was below them. Overhead, Attagon still had the remains of some of its pre-Cataclysm structures. But down here, the foundation of the city dug its roots into a bygone era.

Thorne led them quickly but carefully into the city. He avoided areas where they might leave footprints that would give them away. It felt like walking through a mummified corpse. The death that surrounded them was so archaic that it had crumbled to dust, ground into powder for the earth to reclaim. They were in the midst of atrophied history.

As they picked their way around rubble that was antediluvian when the first Heiromonarch was chosen, small creatures fled in all directions. Most were rats, sleek and dark, their eyes glinting blue in the abnormal light of torch and lichen. Thorne preferred not to guess what they lived on down here. The creatures disappeared into the numerous piles of rubble, avoiding the large holes that speckled the ground. Each hole was about a foot in diameter and sank straight into the ground. He recoiled from the first one he bent over to inspect. The stench of rotted meat rose from it.

“Keep your eyes open,” he instructed as he gave each hole a wide berth.

A few insects skittered from the invading torchlight, but most were dormant until warmer weather returned. There were plenty of cockroaches, however, and again Thorne was clueless as to what they found to eat. They were unafraid of the torchlight, probably because they lived in this half-lit world. This was their domain, and they did not scatter like those above. Thorne’s boots crunched them into gooey smears when they moved too slowly.

They saw an occasional snakeskin, cracked and flaky white, but it was too cold for them now. Bats screeched and took flight whenever the group ranged too close to a building. Their leathern wings sounded like rain as columns of them spiraled up into the darkness.

Crumbling buildings like decayed teeth stood to their right and left. Some leaned; some had collapsed into their foundations. Once-stout wooden walls were reduced to pulp or desiccated by vermin. Arches had collapsed. Once-decorative millwork had rotted away. Rusted pipes crossed overhead or simply ended in midair. Gritty sand mixed with the stone and dirt, indicating that at some point it had been used to fill in depressions or shore up foundations. Bricks lay scattered about, the mortar on them having turned to powder ages ago. Ice filled the mudholes and potholes.

They found bones here and there. Most were from cats, raccoons and rats. They did see an occasional human skull or ribcage. Aside from the stench rising from the holes, the place smelled like a muddy riverbank.

Not surprising, Thorne thought, considering how easily the river floods.

“In here,” Thorne said. He pointed toward a building with arched windows. They navigated over detritus and slipped inside the hollowed-out framework. Then they waited.

Not long after, they heard voices. Thorne peered through a hole in what remained of a wall. A knot of constables and deputies emerged from the tunnel. They halted and looked around, dumbfounded. Two Crusaders pushed through them.

Thorne motioned for everyone to stay low and remain quiet. He had been sweating while they walked but now found himself shivering. He dug his hands deeper into his coat pockets. Thanks to the acoustics of the cavern, he had no trouble hearing their pursuers.

“What in all the bleedin’ hells is that?”

“By the Church…”

“…bloody cold down here.”

“…it’s a bunch a buildin’s!”

One Crusader turned to the stunned Churchmen. “Silence!” His voice tolled like a death knell and echoed back.

“You think they’re down there?”

“Go back, all of you,” the second Crusader said. “Return to the surface.”

A brown-skinned deputy with long black hair looked at him. “Whatta ya mean go back?”

“Go back. That’s an order. We’ll follow them from here.”

“The hells you will!” someone said. “We gotta run those thieves down!”

Cockroaches scurried around and over Thorne’s boots.

Teska, Tua and Amelia were out of sight but positioned so they could see what was happening.

The Crusaders grew irritated. The first backhanded the brown-skinned deputy, sending him careening against the rock wall. The second Crusader slid the broadsword from the scabbard across his back.

“Never question our orders!” he barked. “Do as you are told, or I will gut you where you stand.”

“You shits!” a tall deputy exclaimed. “We ain’t afraid of you! There’s four times as many of us as there be of you.”

The second Crusader swung the sword as if it weighed no more than a quill pen. The blade finished its arc, trailing blood. The tall deputy’s head struck the floor, bounced and rolled down the stone steps. The first giant unsheathed his sword and leveled it at a constable’s midsection.

“Go,” he growled, “while you still have life in you. We will track the fugitives.”

Grumbling, but not too loudly, the men gathered up the corpse. One went to retrieve the head. The first Crusader held the constable at sword point. The other cleaned his blade.

“Ye going down in there?” a different constable asked. He was sufficiently out of sword range.

“No need,” the Crusader said. “They will have stayed with the passageway.”

“Begging yer pardon, but how do ye know? There’s a million hiding—”

A scream reverberated throughout the necropolis.

Everyone except the Crusaders flinched.

The deputy who had picked up the head was entangled in what appeared to be roots coming out of the ground.

“That’s why,” the second Crusader said as he watched without emotion.

The deputy screamed again. Then Thorne realized they were not roots.

They were tentacles.

Dozens of them wrapped the deputy as he continued to shriek. More tentacles encircled his torso and legs. His arms were pinned to his body. Between screams there was a moist, slurping noise.

A constable started toward the stone steps, but the first Crusader stopped him with a hand on the chest. “No,” he said, his voice detached and hollow. “He is already dead. You go down there, you will be as well.”

“B-But we can’t just leave ’im t-to that!”

By now the deputy’s agonized shrieks had become hiccupping squeals. More tentacles latched on to his body.

The creatures the tentacles were attached to wiggled out of the holes. They were like earthworms, pale white in color, almost transparent, and reeked of putrefaction. Thorne had heard of them before but had never seen one in person. He estimated them to be two to four feet in length. Shiny, viscous slime covered their ringed bodies. Fifteen or twenty of them slithered toward their catch, their tentacles stuck to every available piece of skin. They had no eyes, only lamprey-like mouths nestled inside the ring of tentacles.

“You cannot save him,” the Crusader reiterated to the assembled Churchmen.

“What the fuck are those bleedin’ things!”

The first Crusader sheathed his sword. “They are called Galorme. ‘Madworms,’ by their more common name.”

The deputy continued to twitch but made no further noise. More Galorme surfaced. Tentacles quested here and there. Thorne held his nose and breathed through his mouth.

“M-Madworms?” Amelia whispered to Teska.

“Move out!” the second Crusader yelled. The men took their headless colleague and retreated into the tunnel. The two Crusaders turned and continued forward into the other passageway.

Thorne silently counted to a hundred before moving. His knees hurt from crouching. Tua indicated that he heard nothing beyond the squelching and sucking of the worms.

“I-I have never seen anything such as this,” Tua mumbled. He buried his nose in the crook of his arm.

“Me neither,” Amelia said, horrified. Even in the phosphorescent light, she looked pale. “Wh-What are those things?”

Thorne rubbed his knees before straightening up. He sounded funny as he tried to talk without breathing through his nose. “Like he said, they’re known as Galorme, but people usually just call them madworms.”

Tua frowned. “Why madworms?”

Several of the creatures slithered toward a black opening beneath a rubble pile. A dozen or more worked together, using some of their tentacles to drag the deputy’s body. They quested along the ground, feeling their way toward the gaping hole as effortlessly as if they could see it.

Thorne paused and swallowed. The back of his throat tasted like phlegm, and he felt his stomach roll. He used the fingers on one hand to block his nostrils.

“It’s because of what they do to their prey,” he said.

More tentacles appeared from beneath the debris, guiding the body down into the earth. Thorne closed his eyes when he heard a faint moan as the deputy slipped out of sight.

“Oh my God!” Amelia cried. “H-He’s still alive!”

Thorne nodded. “Madworms drain most of the blood from their prey. Then they take them into their warrens. They’ll”—he cleared his throat—“they’ll keep him alive and incubate their young inside his body. When the offspring are old enough, they’ll…chew their way out.”

Amelia gagged and covered her mouth.

“And their prey remains alive the whole time?” Tua asked. Even his tanned complexion had lost color.

“Once a madworm starts drawing blood, they inject a kind of paralyzing poison. Victims can’t move, but they can see and hear and feel everything that’s happening to them. That’s why they’re called madworms. Their prey goes insane long before they ever die.”

Amelia turned away. She bent over with her hands on her knees and vomited.

“It’s a cruel, vicious form of death,” Thorne agreed. “But madworms aren’t intelligent. They’re simple creatures, like ants or birds. It’s just their way of surviving.”

“Yeah, nasty way of doing it,” Teska said.

Amelia shrieked. She stood trembling, finger pointing toward the archway they had used to get into the building.

Dozens of madworms crawled over stones and debris toward them, leaving pearly trails behind them.

 

Amelia screamed again, hands clenched in front of her mouth. She remained frozen as the foul-smelling things wiggled closer. Thorne moved across the rubble to help her. As he did, a deep rumbling came from beneath his feet.

“Shit!” He threw himself forward.

The rumbling grew louder. Stones grated together. The ground shook. A loud crash blasted through the cavern. The place where Thorne had just stood collapsed. The gaping pit sucked in rotted wood, stones, bits of metal and everything else nearby.

Thorne hit the debris hard, knocking the breath from his lungs. His hand flew open, and his sword clattered down the newly opened slope and into the sinkhole. The sound of tumbling rocks echoed from below. Dirt billowed in the air. Thorne lay on his back, holding his chest, mouth working like a fish.

Teska and Tua grabbed Amelia’s arms. They pulled her back and away from the madworms. More slithered through the arch.

Teska leaned out a window. Madworms crawled from their holes, tentacles flailing. She knelt beside Thorne. “Are you okay? Can you get up?”

He wheezed an acknowledgement, but she had to help him. More debris tumbled into the sinkhole.

“Back against the wall!” Tua yelled. He extended his arm for Teska to steady herself and Thorne. Amelia cowered behind him.

Thorne finally pulled in a lungful of the rancid-tasting air into his lungs. “D-Damn it! L-Lost my sword—”

“Never mind,” Teska said. “Head that way.” She pointed to the right. There was enough room to navigate the edge of the sinkhole and keep them away from the madworms. She led the way, Thorne at her back, Amelia behind him. Tua brought up the rear.

They climbed through a window on the other side of the building. There were no worms here, so they hurried down the buckled street.

Behind them, the rumbling came again, louder this time. The ground shook so hard it threw them off their feet. Rocks and dirt rained from the darkness overhead. Bats flitted and screeched through the air. The ground kicked and groaned. The building behind them shuddered and broke apart, collapsing into the hole with ear-splitting finality.

Coughing dust from their lungs, everyone stood and surveyed the damage. Nothing remained of the building except a handful of stones on top of one another. The pulped, glistening bodies of madworms writhed and twitched throughout the rubble, their stench even more abominable in death. A hole at least a hundred feet across blocked their path back to the safe room.

“Come on,” Thorne said, wiping cold dirt off his hands. “That’s bound to have alerted those Crusaders. We need to find another way out of here. Fast.”

 

 

About the Author

J Todd Kingrea

My first novel, “The Witchfinder,” was released on September 23,
2021 by BHC Press, and was nominated for the Pushcart Prize. It is the first
installment in my Deiparian Saga trilogy. The second book, “The Crimson
Fathers,” was released on November 1, 2022; the final installment,
“Bane of the Witch,” is slated for release sometime in 2024. BHC
Press has also contracted to publish my horror novel “With a Blighted
Touch” (working title) in 2023.

I have written two non-fiction books: “Carrying on the Mission of
Jesus: Rediscovering the Mission, Identity and Purpose of the Church”
(2013, Dove Publishing) and “Bullied! Confronting and Overcoming Six
Major Obstacles to Church Effectiveness” (2016, eLectio Publishing),
and regularly contribute Blu ray reviews for “Screem”
magazine.

Contact Links

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The Walk-On Virtual Book Tour

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Commercial Fiction

Date Published: February 23, 2023

Publisher: Acorn Publishing

 

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In the twilight of his NFL career as a middle linebacker for the Chicago
Storm, Mike “the Steelman” Stalowski masks his physical pain and
mental anguish with alcohol and painkillers. The fan favorite has a rebel
image and a notorious reputation, and he plays a violent gridiron game
fueled by inner rage. 

While estranged from his wife and living in the fishbowl environment of
professional sports, he unexpectedly meets the fresh-out-of-college Kim
Richardson. She sees through Mike’s star persona to who he really
is—a kind guy from the Southeast Side of Chicago who has never
forgotten his humble blue-collar roots. The lives of the star-crossed,
seemingly mismatched couple collide during a whirlwind romance that
culminates in a tragic series of events.

The Walk-On is a timeless tale of love and loss that explores the
consequences of personal decisions and the rewards of faith, redemption, and
hope.

 

Early Reviews

“An interesting read where star linebacker Mike Stalowski confronts the inevitable challenges every NFL player faces as they transition to their post-football life. His experiences may seem exaggerated, but they are still very real.”

Gary Fencik, Chicago Bears, Super Bowl XX Champion

 

“Despite his NFL fame and bad-boy attitude and antics, I empathized with the humble guy from a blue-collar background fighting painful emotional and physical demons. . .Ultimately, The Walk-On is an incredible story of love and loss, with faith and mentorship fostering hope for the future.”

Bill Rancic, Author of the New York Times bestseller, You’re Hired

 

“Just like the protagonist’s very fast sports car, The Walk-On will leave you, from the very first paragraph, just a little breathless as you navigate all the sharp turns that come fast and furious at the reader. . .”

Jean Becker, Author of the New York Times bestseller, The Man I Knew: The Amazing Story of George H. W. Bush’s Post-Presidency

 

“The Walk-On is a fascinating story of self-sabotage and redemption. A page-turner!!!!” 

Mary Pat Kelly, Bestselling author of Galway Bay, Of Irish Blood, and Irish Above All

 

The Walk-On tablet

EXCERPT

He fumbled for his radio. “Squad…645. Confirmed vehicular rollover at Belmont Avenue exit, Lake Shore Drive. Send CFD stat, copy…stat.”

“645, copy. CFD enroute.”

He ran toward the vehicle, an older coupe with big tires and mag wheels. A wet blanket appeared to be wrapped around the base of a nearby tree trunk.

Pointing his LED flashlight in that direction, George discovered a young woman with a gaping laceration above her left eye. Her head and neck were snapped back like a broken Pez candy dispenser. Glass shards were sprinkled over her bloody face. Her eyes were fixed and vacant. A shredded sweater exposed her torso and a wingless angel tattoo above her left hip. Gibson checked for a pulse — her slender wrist was limp and lifeless.

Gibson noted the STORM 52 vanity plate, assuming it was a football fan’s show of affection. The driver, a tall stocky white male wearing sweats and a hoodie, was alive. His forehead oozed blood. The front seat passenger, a smaller black male, also had a bad head wound. Both were unconscious. Neither wore a seatbelt.

Their legs appeared to be trapped under the twisted remains of the mangled dashboard. The car’s front end had collapsed into the engine compartment. Probably lost control and rolled it.

Gibson took another look inside the wreck, stunned by his sudden recognition of the driver’s long, blue-streaked blond hair, wet and matted with blood. He quickly called for license plate verification. After what seemed an eternity, his radio crackled.

“Unit 645, Illinois plate STORM 5-2 comes back on a passenger car. A 1970 Chevrolet coupe registered to Steel Trap, Inc., 2020 North Lincoln Park West, Chicago.” The dispatcher hesitated. “Registered owner is Michael J. Stalowski.” An eerie pause. “Copy?” Gibson shivered and recalled two vehicles blow past him minutes before he was dispatched to the scene.

It wasn’t long before the fire department rolled in with a show of force, working quickly and methodically with the Jaws of Life to peel back the classic Chevy’s roof like a tuna can lid. Both male victims’ legs were trapped. Every precious second mattered in the race to extricate them. Within minutes, their stretchers were loaded into waiting ambulances.

The paramedics’ preliminary assessment of Mike Stalowski’s injuries indicated a broken right tibia and severely lacerated right wrist and forearm, gouged by flying glass. The passenger’s right foot was almost severed at the ankle by shards of jagged steel. The paramedics, fearful the skin and muscle connecting his shattered ankle bones were in danger of tearing off, hoped they could get him in the hands of surgeons before he bled out. 

The lifeless female was carefully loaded onto a backboard. A neck collar was secured and an oxygen unit began to pump into her lungs. Paramedics worked feverishly to establish vital signs. Defibrillator paddles failed to jolt her heart. Despite the monitor’s stubborn flat line, they continued their valiant efforts all the way to the Northeast Metro ER. The wails of the three sirens overlapped in the stillness of the early morning hour.

By the time the ambulance trio arrived at Northeast Metro, a Channel 5 news mini-cam van was already positioned at the ER ramp, after picking up emergency responder radio transmissions about a vehicle crash possibly involving two Storm players. Gibson and three CPD escort squads set up a security perimeter to keep the ambulance entrance ramp free and clear. Quickly challenged by the arrival of additional media jockeying for position and curious early-rising pedestrians, the perimeter was expanded, sending the cameras and reporters down the block.

Despite their efforts, by dawn the hospital was swarming with local and national media. Head Coach Don Castro and Mike Stalowski’s agent, Shel Harris, rushed to the hospital. No one could fathom the catastrophic tragedy unfolding on the heels of last night’s devastating loss.

Reporters and camera crews engulfed Shel Harris as he approached the emergency entrance. Local Channel 7 sports reporter Ryan Donegan stuck his microphone in Shel’s face. “Mr. Harris, what can you tell us about the accident that put the Steelman and Christian Blackwell in the hospital?”

About the Author

Richard Podkowski,

Richard Podkowski, a native of Chicago’s South Side, began writing
fiction while studying criminal justice at Loyola University Chicago.

As a United States Secret Service special agent, Richard protected U.S.
presidents and foreign dignitaries and investigated major domestic and
international financial crimes. After retiring from the Secret Service in
2003 as a supervisory special agent, he became a management member of a
Fortune 100 company’s global security group. For the last several years,
Richard has been a private sector strategic security consultant.

Inspired by professional athletes who lived in a fishbowl under constant
media scrutiny and made life-altering mistakes, Richard wrote The Walk-On.
Other projects include a holiday rom-com manuscript and a crime story. In
his free time, Richard enjoys riding his road bike, working out, and making
Christmas ornaments. He currently resides with his family in Los
Angeles.

 

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The Lost Journals of Bud Wiper Virtual Book Tour

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Middle-Grade Fiction

Date Published: 03-10-2021

Publisher: Morgan Publishing

 

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“Help!! My head is being lowered into the swirling vortex of a
toilet!”

My name is Teddy, and I’m in the 6th grade. It’s my first day
at a different school, and so far, the only person I know is Zane, the
school bully. I was just your everyday kid trying to stay off
everyone’s radar, but when I met my new best friend, Bud Wiper,
everything changed.

Bud is a 6th grade millionaire from 60 years ago.

Yep, that’s right, Bud Wiper is a treasure hunter from the
1940’s who left behind his journal full of life and adventure, and
even though we’ve never met, I think he might be the only thing that
gets me through the 6th grade alive.

The Lost Journals of Bud Wiper is a fantastic story of bravery and
friendship, perfect for kids, middle school students, and adults.

The Lost Journals of Bud Wiper paperback

EXCERPT

Mom slowed the car and turned into what must have been a driveway. Instead of a concrete entry like the other houses in the neighborhood, there was a narrow dirt road. A large brick gate with vines and overgrowth covering it appeared from the woods. In old, rusty looking text, it read: Welcome— Home of D. Bud Wiper.

“D. Butt Wiper, the guy living here is named D. Butt Wiper?” I asked.

 

“Bud Wiper,” Mom corrected me, “and that is Mr. Wiper to you. Please use your manners, Teddy.”

 

About the Author

S.M. Morgan

S.M. Morgan is the author of The Lost Journals of Bud Wiper — A
Middle Grade Adventure. He lives in East Texas with his wife, daughter, and
son, and when not writing potty humor for kids, he is trying to get alone to
read more mystery adventure stories.

When the real world calls him to be social, he can be found canoeing with
his family or trying to convince his wife to watch action movies.

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Saving Christ: Starway Seven Virtual Book Tour

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Starway Seven

 

Religion / Historical Fiction

Date Published: October 14, 2022

Publisher: Dorrance Publishing Co.

 

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Saving Christ is a love story between Jesus and a modern-day woman sent
back in time. Time travel sends the woman to the last seven days of Jesus’
life from a modern viewpoint.

This tale is a new telling of the greatest story ever told, in religious
science-fiction, the first of its kind. We invite you to read along to
discover the human side of Jesus.

Saving Christ: Starway Seven tablet

EXCERPT

What if We Could?
In A.D. 70, Roman Emperor Vespasian sent his son and future emperor Titus to stop the Jewish takeover of Jerusalem. Titus had over 60,000 troops at his command, along with 16,000 support personnel. The Jewish rebels, estimated at around 23,000, held control of Jerusalem for over three years. Vespasian needed to maintain control as this was an insult to Rome and its power, especially to him as Romans did not look kindly upon Jews in outright rebellion to Rome.

It is estimated that between half a million and a million people were killed, mostly Jewish. One of the reasons so many Jews were killed was because many of the troops were Roman soldiers from Turkey and Syria. They had a long history and inbred hatred for the Jews and didn’t care who they killed. Old, young, women and children, no one was safe. They wanted all Jews dead. They massacred much of the remaining Jewish population without mercy. 

At first, Titus wanted the Temple to be spared, but his soldiers wanted the complete destruction of Jerusalem and ultimately, the destruction of the Temple was complete down to the last few bricks, along with almost every important structure in Jerusalem. Nothing was spared, no libraries, no history, and no religious institutions. Thousands of Jews were enslaved and sent to the mines in Egypt. Thousands of other young Jewish men were sent to the arenas to be butchered for the amusement of the Roman Public. To put it simply, Rome had no respect for Jews or any form of Jewish history. To them, it needed to be destroyed.

The reason I bring this up is that it shows that a vast amount of history, especially about Jesus, was destroyed and everybody who knew about it or him were probably killed. I had to read as much as I could to make educated guesses as even the Bible was rewritten, and no one really knows who did it. In all reality, all we have are bits and pieces. So yes, in this book I did the best that anybody could. I tried to be open and not swayed. Many, many hours of thinking, reading, and trying to be logical went into this, because most of the truth is no longer known.

So much history was lost forever and only because Jesus was such a strong figure was anything left of him. Luckily for us it was. Jesus gave us faith, and faith can never be truly lost. So, if we could go back in time, what would we find? A love for Jesus and his words that will be never be lost, along with faith. Please enjoy my version. I almost feel like I didn’t write this story. I’m just telling history.

Francis T. Perry Williams

About the Author

Francis T. Perry Williams graduated with a degree in drama and a minor in
art and music from San Diego State University, where he wrote, directed, and
acted. He’s appeared in sitcoms such as Happy Days, Laverne and
Shirley, Bosom Buddies as well as in the feature, Pennies from Heaven.
He also wrote an episode for Laverne and Shirley.  His first book,
Pollen and the Ring of Harmony is about living in harmony with nature. His
next book, Saving Christ:  Starway Seven is about understanding the
true love of Jesus.  He now lives in Hayden, Idaho surrounded by nature
and wild animals which he protects.

 

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