Tag Archives: #newfiction

Silently Watching After The Corn Moon

For three days and nights after Luna’s birth, Trine’s life hung in the balance. Caring for the baby fell largely to Jem, allowing Meryn to focus her energies on healing the new mother. The younger vampiress had lost so much blood when she had haemorrhaged post-partum. Every time that Meryn thought she had stopped the bleeding, it started again.

As soon as night fell, Jem was despatched daily to hunt for his partner. Hunting all night, he brought back flask after flask of deer blood in an effort to sustain Trine’s basic needs. The excessive hunting brought on a thirst within him which in turn resulted in yet more hunting. By the third night, he was struggling to find any deer. He suspected that word had spread and that they were hiding from him. In desperation, Jem risked killing a horse that was in one of the fields to the south of the hut. Killing the animal didn’t sit well with him but he was exhausted and knew he only had the strength for one kill.

“Equine blood?” commented his mother, sniffing the flask. “You took a huge risk for this, son.”

“I was careful. Made it look like an accident. Even spilled some into the earth so it looks like the poor creature bled out naturally in its field,” he replied, running his hands through his hair.

“You’ve done well. I’m proud of you,” she complimented warmly. “Rest. I’ve settled the baby. I’ll sit with Trine tonight.”

“What if she wakes up?”

“I’ll fetch you straight away,” promised his mother.

With a weary nod, he acquiesced and headed back upstairs to bed.

As the sun rose over the river to the east, Jem felt a hand on his bare shoulder.

“She’s awake,” Meryn announced, her relief evident in her voice. “And she’s asking for you.”

“Awake?” echoed Jem, eyes wide in disbelief and all thoughts of rest gone.

Meryn nodded, “Come and see for yourself.”

Without stopping to grab a shirt, Jem pulled on his jeans and hurried downstairs. His heart was pounding as he entered the small room.

“Hi,” said Trine weakly. She was propped up on a pile of pillows, with Luna nestled on the bed beside her.

“Hi, yourself,” replied Jem with a grin as he moved to sit on the edge of the bed. “How are you feeling? You ok?”

“I will be,” she assured him then gazing down at their daughter said, “Isn’t she beautiful?”

“She’s perfect,” he agreed. “Fine set of lungs on her too. She’s not always this quiet.”

With a soft cough, Meryn interrupted them, “Trine and I were talking before I fetched you. She needs more blood.” The older woman paused, “Human blood.”

“I was worried you were going to say that,” sighed Jem.

“She’s not strong enough to hunt for herself,” continued Meryn.

“Wait!” interrupted Jem sharply. “I’ve not taken a human life in years. I make do with animal blood. I don’t know….”

“You have no choice here!” snapped his mother. “This girl, your mate, needs human blood.  The best quality blood you can find for her. Not old, weak, watery blood. Young, athletic blood.”

“And how do you propose I do that, mother?” he challenged.

“What about the people who walk and run in the hills?” suggested Trine. “Don’t some of them camp alone outdoors?”

“They do,” conceded Jem. “But I’d need to take you to them. I can’t exactly kidnap a trail runner or a hillwalker and bring them here!”

“True,” admitted his mother. “Is there nowhere close to here? Travel is risky when Trine is still so weak.”

“Killing locally carries too much of a risk,” he countered. “We can’t jeopardise our home. We have Luna to think about here too.”

“Could you transport me to a suitable camping spot?” asked Trine. “I need to make the kill myself.”

“My dear, you’re weak as a kitten. That would be a substantial risk to take,” observed Meryn.

“I know a possible spot,” revealed Jem reluctantly. “I’ve camped there myself in the past. If I transport Trine there, I’ll stay close by to help in case anything goes wrong. Between us, we can do this.”

“I’m not so sure,” began Meryn.

“Mother, make your mind up!” snapped Jem failing to hide his frustration. “It’s the safest way to get human blood without drawing attention to ourselves here.”

“Meryn, we’ll be fine,” added Trine. “Jem won’t let anything happen to me.”

“Fine. It needs to be tonight,” stated Meryn. “I’ll take care of Luna until you come back.”

Shortly after midnight, Jem touched down near a stream about a hundred miles north of the beach hut. He unfurled his wings then quickly scooped Trine up into his arms before she crumpled at his feet. As they had set off, she had barely had the strength to stand. Off to their right, as he had hoped, there was a small blue tent. Scanning the immediate area, he confirmed that it was the only sign of human life for a few miles. He pointed it out to Trine, and she nodded. Treading silently, Jem carried her across the tufts of grass and heather until they were beside the tent.

“Ready?” he whispered as he set her down on her feet. “I’ll unzip the front of the tent. The rest is up to you.”

“I can do this myself,” she stated firmly, a determined look on her face.

“There should only be one person in such a small tent. If there’s a second, signal and I’ll join you.”

“But you don’t….”

“If there’s two, you’ll need me to.”

Reluctantly, Trine nodded. Kneeling on the damp grass, she silently unzipped the opening of the tent. One look inside told her that there were two sleeping occupants inside. She signalled to Jem who nodded that he had understood.

“Take the one on the left,” he whispered. “I’ll pull the one on the right outside. There’s not space for both of us in there.”

Trine nodded.

The next minute or so was a blur. With superhuman speed, Trine entered the tent in the same moment that Jem whipped the second sleeping occupant outside. As soon as the person’s head was out of the tent, he bit into their neck deeply, not caring if the person was male or female. The first taste of human blood was enough to spur him on to drink thirstily. Inside the tent, Trine was feeding on the other unsuspecting occupant. Neither of the sleeping hillwalkers had had time to utter a sound.

“We need to dispose of the bodies,” said Trine when she crawled out of the tent a few moments later.

“Let me put this guy back in,” said Jem. “Then I’ll find their camping stove.”

“Why?”

“We need to burn the bodies. It’s safer that way,” stated Jem, trying to detach himself from the revulsion he was already feeling. “I’ll light the stove. Let the flame touch the sleeping bags and then it will all take care of itself.”

Flames were licking at the sides of the tent as Jem wrapped his wings around Trine to transport them both home. Focusing on the journey, he tried to quell the burning thirst that was raging deep inside his core. A thirst he knew he needed to resist.

Silently Watching Under A Full Corn Moon

With the last light of day glowing behind the hills across the river, Jem stood on the beach staring at the beach hut. It still looked the same from the outside. There was nothing different about it as far as he could tell. No one passing by on the coastal path would realise how drastically it had been altered.

Before they had left the castle following the conclusion of the dark angel’s trial, he has mentioned to Jai that there wasn’t much space in their much-loved beach home for the baby.

“I can help with that,” Jai had promised. “Allow me to go home to my family for two months then I will visit you and show you how to make your beach hut a beach palace.”

At first Jem had been sceptical about the vampire’s promise but Meryn had explained to him that Jai’s gift lay in extending spaces. She described it as an ancient form of earth magic.

True to his word, Jai had arrived a week before July’s full Sturgeon moon, bearing gifts from his Indian family for the baby. Having surveyed the hut and the geology around it, he declared that the rock bed was suitable to extend the hut down into the earth without making any changed to the current exterior or destabilising the structure. The three vampires consulted at great length long into the night before it was agreed that Jai would create a staircase down from Trine’s old bedroom and create three new underground rooms. When Jem had offered to help, Jai had politely declined.

“This magic is sacred to my family,” the Indian vampire had explained. “I need to work alone. Once I have the tunnel started, you must seal the entrance until I return to the surface.”

“Jai!” Trine had protested. “That sounds barbaric even for vampires. I am not sealing you under our house. We’ll lock the door to the room. Will that be enough?”

Reluctantly he had agreed.

“This will take me one month,” he stated as he’d entered the room. The small Indian vampire closed the door before either of them could ask him any further questions.

Over the next five weeks, Trine and Jem heard the occasional rumble of rocks moving but otherwise were oblivious to the changes going on under their feet.

By the time Jai returned to the surface, there were only four weeks left until the baby was due to arrive. Pregnancy suited Trine. With Meryn’s help, the ice maiden had devised a way to get all the vitamins and nutrients that she needed to support her body to carry the baby. Blood alone was not sufficient to nurture the unborn child. Much to Jem’s amusement, Trine developed a more human pregnancy craving in the latter few months of her pregnancy. She was craving ice cream.

The night that Jai finally emerged from behind the locked door, Jem had just returned to the hut with two tubs of cookie dough ice cream that he’d acquired after hours from the local supermarket. He was scooping some into a bowl for Trine when the door creaked open.

“Jesus!” yelped Jem, dropping the spoon he was holding into the bowl with a clatter. “You scared the crap out of me, Jai!”

“My most humble apologies,” said the small Indian vampire with a deep bow. “My work is done. May I show you the new rooms then I must return to my family tonight.”

Awkwardly Trine got to her feet, wincing as the baby kicked her ribs sharply.

“Lead the way,” she said as she smoothed her loose blue dress over her large bump.

Abandoning the ice cream for the moment, Jem followed them into what had been the been Trine’s bedroom. A staircase spiralled down in one corner of the room. In lieu of a handrail, tick rope had been draped against one wall as the steps curled down to the beach hut’s new lower level. With Jai leading the way, the three vampires descended the staircase to the square hallway at the bottom which had three doors opening off from it.

“Allow me,” said Jai, opening the left-hand door. “I’ve left décor and furnishings up to you but each of these rooms is large enough to be a bedroom or if need be, a sitting room or a suite of rooms. They are all interconnected from within the rooms too.”

“How?” gasped Trine, her eyes wide with wonder at the subterranean transformation of their home.

“Trade secret,” said Jai with a wink. “Jem, if you would like assistance to decorate the room I could come back in a few more weeks.”

Shaking his head, Jem replied, “Thanks but I know how to drive a paint roller.” He paused, looking round the first room. “This is awesome. How did you remove the rock and dirt? You never came out the entire time you were down here.”

“Magic,” answered the Indian vampire. “I cannot disclose our secrets. You would need to be part of my family before I could consider revealing that.”

As they moved into the second, more rectangular room, Trine declared, “I have no idea how you did this, Jai, but it’s fantastic. So much space! I love it!”

“Happy to have helped, my dear,” he said with a formal bow. “In winter, these rooms will be warm. In summer, they will be cool. There’s a climate enchantment in place.”

“You’ve thought of everything, haven’t you?” gushed Trine. “Thank you!”

“This is amazing, Jai,” compliments Jem. “Thank you doesn’t seem enough.”

“It’s been my pleasure,” assured Jai warmly. “Now I must take my leave. I have been separated from my family for too long.”

After the Indian vampire had departed, Trine and Jem sat discussing how they were going to decorate and furnish their three new rooms. As Trine devoured her ice cream, they debated colours, eventually agreeing on a pale neutral colour palette for the walls. Jai had already laid beautiful wood floors throughout the lower level that would tone in with any colour choice.

“Been a while since I’ve done any painting,” mused Jem, thinking back to his previous life and the hour spent decorating his family’s home back then. “Actually kind of looking forward to it.”

“How long will it take?”

“A few days. A week tops.”

“What about furniture?” asked Trine, licking the last drops of her ice cream from the spoon.

“I can transport some from my old house or we can get new stuff. Up to you.”

“I’ll have a think,” promised Trine, wriggling into a better position in the chair.” Your little princess is restless.”

“Probably a sugar high from all that ice cream,” he teased with a smile. “Won’t be long til she’s here. We still need to stock up on baby supplies too.”

“I’ll make a list,” said Trine. “Meryn said she’d bring some essentials. She’s arriving next week.”

“Guess I’d better decorate a room for her,” laughed Jem, appreciating the human normality of it all.

A soft noise on the shingle behind him brought Jem back to the present. He didn’t need to turn around to know that his mother had arrived.

“Still looks the same,” Meryn commented as she came to stand beside him.

“Looks can be deceiving,” said Jem with a lazy grin. “Jai has worked miracles with the place. Wait til you see inside.”

“I’m sure he has,” agreed his mother warmly. “And how’s our mother -to-be?”

“Fine, I guess. Getting bigger by the day.”

“Has she been able to hunt?” quizzed Meryn.

“Not for a few days. She said she felt too heavy for it. I think she’s worried that she accidentally hurts the baby.”

“Then you’ll need to hunt for her,” stated Meryn plainly. “She’s going to need all of her strength. Ideally, she needs fresh blood daily until the baby arrives. You’ll need to keep the blood warm for her to ensure its at its best.”

Jem nodded, “How hard is this going to be for her? One of my other children was a C-section. I’m guessing that’s not an option here.”

“It’s a last resort,” admitted Meryn. “Any birth takes effort. They don’t call it labour for nothing, but Trine is young and healthy. Vampire labours are different to most human labours. They tend to be short and intense.”

“How short?”

“Less than three hours. I’ve only attended a handful. Vampire babies are rare creatures.”

“But she’ll be ok, won’t she?”

“I’ll take good care of her. Of both of them,” promised Meryn, trying to sound reassuring. “Now, are you going to help me inside with these boxes?”

Turning round, Jem noticed a pile of boxes and a wicker moses basket sitting on the beach behind them.

When they entered the beach hut, Trine was sitting crocheting a tiny white baby bootee. She set her work aside and struggled to her feet to greet the senior vampiress. Her baby bump made their embrace awkward, but she twisted to the side to wrap her arms around Meryn.

“Someone’s blooming,” complimented Meryn with a smile. “That bump looks lowers. I’m not sure that you have much longer to go, my dear.”

“It feels different today,” admitted Trine, resting her hand on her swollen abdomen. “The baby’s seemed restless too. Lots of movement.”

“Baby knows what she needs to do,” assured the older woman warmly. “Your job is to help her.”

Behind them, Jem had brought in the pile of supplies that his mother had brought with her.

“Jeremiah, pass me that brown leather bag, please,” said Meryn. “The rest, apart from the square box, can go in the nursery.”

“Meryn, have you brought an entire baby department’s worth with you?” giggled Trine when she saw the pile of boxes.

“Only essentials to see you through the first six weeks,” replied Meryn. “Now, let’s get you into the bedroom so that I can check you over. Jeremiah, remember what I said about blood. There’s collecting flasks in the green box. Can you fill them for me, please?”

“Any preference of source?”

“Something rich. Deer would be ideal.”

“Leave it with me.”

Lightly Jem touched down in the shadows beside an empty factory unit a few miles to the east of the beach. He hadn’t wanted to stray far, and he was confident that he would find deer in the woodland that bordered the factory’s deserted carpark. Scanning the treeline, he watched and waited, sensing that there were deer close by. Sure enough a couple of minutes later, two young bucks sauntered out of the trees onto the grassy embankment in front of the building. Before either of them picked up on his scent, Jem swooped in killing them both. Fighting back his burning hunger to feed, he filled the four flasks that he had brought, tucked them inside his shirt and then turned his attention to the second deer.  Already the blood was cooling but he drank eagerly, feeling the blood’s richness filling his veins. Once his hunger was satiated, Jem took care to hide the carcasses in the undergrowth near the road. If anyone found them, they would assume that the animals had been struck by a car or a delivery truck.

Just as he was checking that the flasks were secure before he headed for home, something caught Jem’s attention. It was faint but just as had happened months earlier back at the castle, he heard a whisper of a voice pleading for his help.

“Anna?” he thought as he focused on the voice.

“Help me, Son of Perran.”

The cry was barely audible, but it was there and there was no doubt in his mind that the voice belonged to the dark angel. The question was how… how as she reaching him when her magic was bound? Shaking his head as if to rid himself of the voice, Jem spread his majestic wings and soared soundlessly into the night.

The moon had fully risen by the time he touched down in the shadows on the shore cast by the beach hut. Glancing up, he noted that the moon was almost full. When he entered the hut, both vampiresses were sitting crocheting by the fire.

“Perfect timing,” declared his mother. “Fill Trine’s glass before that blood cools.”

“A fine vintage it is too, if I may say so myself,” he joked as he emptied the first flask into the large crystal goblet. “It’s limited to four flasks. I advise you to enjoy them while they are fresh.”

“Not all of them,” interrupted Meryn. “I need to keep two aside.” She held out her hands and accepted the flasks from her son. “Excuse me while I go downstairs to keep these warm.”

Jem stared after his mother as she disappeared downstairs.

“Best not to ask,” said Trine softly.

“I won’t,” he replied, pouring himself a glass of wine.

“Meryn thinks the baby will come in the next day or two.”

“I thought there were still a couple of weeks to go?”

Trine shook her head, “Apparently not.”

Looking deep in thought, Jem pulled over a stool and sat gazing into the flames in the woodburning stove.

“Jem,” prompted Trine softly, “You look worried. What’s wrong? Did something happen out there?”

Deciding against mentioning hearing Anna’s pleas for help, he replied, “Was just thinking about my kids. Thinking about their births….”

“You must still miss them.”

He nodded, “They’re adults with kids of their own now.”

“Do you ever….” Her words faltered on her lips.

“Only my daughter lives near here,” he revealed. “I’ve seen her twice from a distance since…well…you know.”

“You’re allowed to miss them, and you’re allowed to talk about them.”

“It’s easier if I don’t,” he stated without lifting his gaze from the dancing flames. “Better they believe I’m still missing. They must assume that I’m dead by now.”

Reaching out to touch his slender shoulder, Trine said, “You’re going to be the best father to our little princess.”

Two nights later as the full moon rose, Trine let out a sharp gasp as she rose from her seat by the fire. Grabbing at her rock-hard bulging belly, she flashed a panicked look across to Meryn.

Calmly the older woman got to her feet and said simply, “It’s time.”

Trine nodded.

“Help me to get her downstairs,” she instructed Jem.

“I can manage,” protested Trine, hating being fussed over.

“If you’re sure, my dear,” agreed Meryn. “Take it slowly. If you feel another contraction building, stop and let it pass.”

Trine nodded as she headed for the staircase.

“What can I do?” asked Jem, looking almost as scared as his partner.

“Wait there,” said his mother bluntly. “I’ll call you if I need you.”

“I want Jem with me,” called back Trine.

“Let me get you settled, my dear, then he can come down,” compromised Meryn following the younger woman down the spiral stairs.

Alone in the living room, Jem began to pace nervously. What if this all went horribly wrong? Vampire births were dangerous. What if Trine died in labour?  What if he lost them both? He pushed those thoughts to the back of his mind. In his heart, he knew Trine was in the best hands.

“Jeremiah!”

His mother’s voice rang out clearly from the foot of the staircase. Within seconds, he was standing beside her.

“Is everything ok?”

“Everything’s fine,” she assured him. “You must promise though to do exactly as I say once we are in the birthing room. No questions. No debate.”

He nodded.

“Your primary role is to keep Trine calm.”

Again, he nodded.

Inside the smallest of the three new rooms, Trine had changed into loos shift nightgown and was standing leaning against the wall, as a fresh contraction ripped through her.

“Don’t fight it,” coached Meryn, rubbing Trine’s lower back. “Let gravity help here.”

“I’m trying,” gasped Trine.

“You’re doing fine,” assured Meryn, signalling to Jem to step forward. “Why not lean on Jeremiah for support? Put your arms over his shoulders and allow him to take some of your weight.”

Three more strong contractions tore through Trine in quick succession as she clung onto Jem. Following his mother’s lead, he praised his partner and rubbed her back as he nuzzled nose into her neck whispering that he loved her.

“I need to push,” groaned Trine as the next contraction began to build rapidly.

“Let this one pass then I’ll check for baby’s head,” said Meryn, reaching for a bottle of hand sanitiser. “The longer you can stay on your feet, the easier this will be.”

“Easy!” yelled Trine, her blue eyes blazing with anger. “There’s nothing easy about this!”

“I know, my dear,” soothed the older woman as the next contraction held Trine in its iron grip. “Jem, hold her, while I take a look.”

Lifting the hem of Trine’s nightgown, Meryn reached underneath to check the baby’s progress. She gauged that she wasn’t as fully dilated as she had hoped. As yet, Trine’s waters hadn’t broken, and the older woman sensed that might be slowing things down. Muttering a quick spell as the contraction peaked, Meryn initiated the membranes’ rupture. A flood of dark liquid flowed down Trine’s pale legs fresh blood streaked among it.

“Lift her onto the bed,” snapped Meryn, her concern clear from her tone.

“Meryn!” pleaded Trine as Jem laid her down on the bed, propping her up on the pile of pillows.

“it’s fine. Baby’s just a little distressed. Settle back and let me take a closer look.”

The baby’s head was crowning when Meryn checked, much to her relief. Gently, she applied some herb infused oil to encourage Trine’s body to relax and stretch to accommodate the baby’s head.

“On the next contraction, bear down hard,” Meryn instructed as she lay her hands on top of Trine’s stomach.

Trine could only nod as she felt the pressure build rapidly. She reached out for Jem’s hand, crushing his fingers as she pushed as hard as she could. With barely a moment to take a breath, another contraction gripped her.

“Push as hard as you can, my dear,” encouraged Meryn, keeping her hands on the young woman’s taut belly. “Keep pushing.”

Gasping, Trine collapsed back onto the pillows.

“Baby’s head is almost out,” reported Meryn. “Another big push and that’ll be the hard part over.”

“I can’t,” wailed Trine.

“You can and you will!” stated Meryn firmly. “As soon as that contraction builds, push with all you’ve got, girl.”

Stunned into silence, feeling utterly useless, all Jem could do was Trine’s hand and watch.

“Push!” commanded Meryn sharply.

A scream tore from Trine’s throat as she pushed with the last of her remaining energy.

“Head’s out.”

Swiftly, Meryn worked to untangle the umbilical cord from round the baby’s neck before Trine instinctively pushed again. One final push and the baby slid out into Meryn’s arms with a soft whimper.

“You have a beautiful baby daughter.”

Before either of them could reply, the baby began to wail, her piercing cries suggesting she was hungry. Gently, Meryn laid her on Trine’s stomach then turned to her son.

“Do you want to cut the cord?”

Numbly he nodded as he accepted the surgical scissors from his mother. With a trembling hand, he cut through the touch knotty cord then watched as Meryn tied it off and smothered it in a paste. Wrapping the baby tightly in a soft blanket, she handed her to him.

“Meet your daughter, Jeremiah,” she said smiling proudly at him before turning her attention back to Trine.

The new mother lay propped up on the pillows totally exhausted. Her naturally pale skin was almost as white as the cotton pillowcase.

“Trine, my dear,” began Meryn. “We need to deliver the placenta now.”

“I can’t.”

“Let me massage your belly to encourage a contraction then give me one more push. The best push you can,” requested Meryn, her strong hands already working the flaccid skin of Trine’s belly.

“Pain….” gasped Trine, arching her back. “Pain!”

“Damn it,” muttered Meryn. “Jem, out the baby down. I need your help here now.”

On the bed in front of them it was clear that Trine was losing a lot of blood.

“What do I do?” he asked, eyes wide in horror at the scene unfolding in front of them.

“Stem the flow with this,” instructed Meryn, passing him a clean towel. “I need to get the placenta delivered. We need the blood from it for the baby then I can use magic to heal Trine.”

Doing as he was told, Jem held the towel in place, pressing firmly praying it was enough to stem the flow of blood.

“Step aside,” ordered his mother sharply as she pushed her way in. “Trine, one push. Just one.”

With a groan, the exhausted ice maiden used the last of her strength to push as the older vampiress guided the placenta free. She bundled it into a bowl then immediately turned her attention back to Trine. Muttering incantations in a language that Jem had never heard before, Meryn worked hard to stop the haemorrhaging.

“Mother?” Jem began softly gazing at his seemingly lifeless partner lying on the bed.

“She’s sleeping,” she assured him. “We’re not out of the woods yet but I’m confident she’ll be ok.”

“So much blood….”

Meryn nodded, “Too much.” She picked up the dish holding the placenta then used a large syringe to draw all the blood from it.

Jeremiah, pass me the baby… unless you would like to do this?”

Slipping a rubber teat over the end of the syringe where the needle had been moments before, Meryn handed it to him, “Let her feed. Don’t let her suckle too fast. She needs to take all of that slowly and steadily.”

“Don’t babies drink milk?” he asked looking bemused.

“They do but vampire babies need the blood from their placenta as a first feed. It strengthens the bond with the mother among other things.”

“What other things?”

“Vital nutrients. Antibodies,” Meryn paused. “Humans could do well to learn from our practices.”

In his arms, the baby sucked hard on the teat. Her eyes were closed as she drank thirstily. Marvelling at her perfection, Jem watched her rosebud moth suckling hungrily. Her long eyelashes were dark as were her tiny eyebrows. There was a light covering of dark hair on her head that was just visible under the folds of the blanket.

“Did you feed me your placenta blood?” he asked curiously.

“I did but I never told your father,” Meryn revealed quietly.

The second that the last drop 0f blood left the teat the baby’s eyes flew open. She gazed up at Jem with her mother’s blue eyes.

“All done,” he said softly, easing the teat from her mouth.

Behind him, he was aware of Meryn working on Trine and could sense magic in the air.

Objecting to her feed being over, the baby began to cry.

“Jem, the deer blood is in that wooden box,” said his mother, pointing to the corner of the room. “Be careful, the box is hot.”

“What do I do?”

“Take out one bottle. There’s a teat on it already. Let her feed,” instructed Meryn. “It’ll be a few hours before she can get a milk feed from her mother.”

“Is she ok?”

“For now,” replied Meryn. “The bleeding has stopped. I need to keep an eye on any signs of infections. The next day or so will be crucial here but I’m hopeful. I’ve given her something to make her sleep. Rest is as good a healer as any magic at this point.”

“I can’t lose her….”

“I know, son. I know,” nodded his mother. “Let the little one feed then we’ll bathe her and get her dressed properly.”

While Meryn bathed the baby, Jem sat holding Trine’s hand, running his thumb over her cold skin.

“She’s beautiful,” he whispered, his emotions threatening to overwhelm him. “Wait til you hold her. She’s perfect.”

The ice maiden stirred. Her eyelids flickered,

“Rest. Meryn’s given you something to help you sleep.”

He watched as Trine’s eyelids flickered again and her lips moved as she tried to speak. Despite his vampire hearing Jem didn’t catch what she said. He leaned in closer as Trine repeated one word, “Luna.”

“Are you trying to tell me her name is Luna?”

He felt Trine weakly squeeze his hand.

“Luna,” he repeated. “I like that. Simple.” He paused, “And I know what to do.”

It was a still clear night with dawn still an hour or so off. The full moon was casting a shimmering trail of light across the river when Jem stepped outside holding his baby daughter in his arms. Carefully he carried her down the stone steps onto the beach then made his way down to the water’s edge. Standing in the full moon’s light, Jem gently peel back the soft white blanket and let the moonlight bathe his tiny daughter.

“Welcome to the world, Luna.”

In her cramped cell in Level Zero, the dark angel sat on the edge of her narrow cot bed visualising the full moon that she knew had risen above the castle. She felt a shift in her senses. Her connection to the runner was fragile but it was still there despite the bind on her magic. In her mind’s eye, Anna saw him present his newborn daughter to the moon. The dark angel smiled to herself, secure in the knowledge that there was still a glimmer of hope.

Silently Watching Beneath the Pink Full Moon

Once the court chamber was empty and Anna had been returned to her secure cell, Jefferson suggested that The Thirteen take a short break before returning to the chamber to discuss the decision. When they reconvened an hour later, the curved table had been rearranged to form a circular table that was more conducive to a group discussion.

“We’ve heard all the testimonies. We’ve listened to the revelation about the blood groups. Are we agreed that we have sufficient information to allow us to reach a fair and balanced verdict?” began Jefferson formally.

“We do,” replied the others in unison.

“Thank you. In view of the blood group complication, are we in agreement that our sister Anna should not be put to death?”

This time there were some rumblings of disagreement.

Stefan was the first to speak, “The bloodlines add a new dimension to this trial. I think Meryn should be afforded more time once this is concluded to research our blood ancestry in greater detail but, from the evidence we have heard so far, I am not in favour of the death penalty for Anna.”

“I agree,” said Michael, his Southern drawl slower than ever as he chose his words. “We need to preserve the bloodline.”

“But if we imprison Anna for the rest of her days, she’s not going to be doing anything to support the preservation of that bloodline,” observed Trine. “She’ll not be allowed to create more of us. She’ll simply fester in a cell. Why not just put her to death now?”

“Death’s too easy for her,” muttered Hannah sourly. “She’s a monster!”

None of them disagreed.

“Are we agreed that Anna is guilty of all the charges brought against her?” asked Jefferson, looking round the table for consent.

“No,” said Meryn, much to everyone’s surprise.

“Explain,” instructed Jefferson, intrigued to hear which charge Meryn thought Anna was innocent of.

“This is where I wish we had adopted the Scottish legal system and could draw on “not proven” as a verdict,” sighed Meryn. “I am of the opinion that Anna is guilty of all but one of the charges. I don’t believe she is guilty of forcing Jeremiah into our vampire way of life.”

“You don’t?” exclaimed Miguel and Manuela together.

“I don’t. I heard my son’s testimony. She gave him a choice. He might be guilty of making a poor choice, but I don’t believe Anna forced him into his transformation entirely against his will.”

“That’s a rather charitable train of thought, Meryn,” observed Jefferson. “But I disagree entirely. The years of hell she subjected your son to are a crime in themselves.”

“Are they?” challenged Meryn sharply. “Did any of you actually hear him complain about the choice he made when it was offered to him?”

“No. He didn’t complain. Not once,” agreed Trine. “If he was angry about the transformation, Jem had plenty of opportunity to kill Anna, but he didn’t. He adapted to life as a vampire.”

“Let’s take a vote,” suggested Jefferson. “If you think Anna is innocent of the charge relating to Jeremiah, raise your hand.”

When he counted, there were eight raised hands.

“By a majority of three, Anna is cleared of the charges relating to unlawfully transforming Jeremiah into a vampire,” concluded Jefferson. “For consistency, raise your hand if you find Anna guilty of all remaining charges.”

All twelve hands were raised this time.

“Thank you. Raise your hand if you are in favour of sentencing Anna to death.”

Four hands were raised when Jefferson counted.

“So, we are agreed by a majority vote that Anna will be spared the death penalty,” he stated. “Now we need to agree how best to imprison her securely.”

“We could incarcerate her here,” commented Meryn calmly. “That would allow easy access to observe her and run more detailed blood analysis.”

“Or we could return her to my tower in Italy,” added Alessandro.

“I’d feel safer if she were kept below ground,” said Stefan. “I still suspect that we haven’t fully discovered the extent of our sister’s powers. She relies heavily on moonlight. Let’s keep her away from the sun and the moon.”

“I agree,” nodded Meryn.

“Is there not too much magic here to imprison her safely?” asked Jai. “You are correct. We do not know her full power. She needs to be kept where she can’t draw strength from the magic in the air around us.”

“A valid point, Jai,” agreed Jefferson. “Do we have any locations that are free from magic and secure enough to contain her?”

“We need to place wards around wherever we imprison her,” commented Jean-Claude. “Can we bind her so that cannot draw on the magic around her?”

“Yes, she will need to be bound. The strongest way to do that is to bind her to one of us but that’s not practical,” replied Meryn.

“Meryn’s right,” nodded Jefferson. “So, we need an underground location that we can seal with strong wards.” He paused, “Stefan, are there any empty cells in Level Zero?”

“There are two.”

“Excellent,” stated Jefferson. “I propose that we imprison Anna here in Level Zero. Raise your hand if you agree.”

Six hands were raised.

“A split vote,” he observed. “It would appear that I have the casting vote here.  I vote that we incarcerate Anna in Level Zero indefinitely.”

“It will be done,” agreed Stefan plainly. “The guards will need a few hours to prepare her cell and to strengthen the wards.”

“Fair. I want her down there by moon rise.”

“It will be done,” agreed Stefan.

“Thank you,” replied Jefferson. “Let’s reconvene in the chamber in thirty minutes to deliver the verdict.”

Alone in his chamber, Jem lay on the bed going over his testimony. Had he missed anything? Did he cast the dark angel in too negative a light? Could he have chosen his words more carefully? Had he really finally admitted what he’d known deep inside for years that he loved her?”

Suddenly he was aware that someone was scrying his mind. The touch was faint, but it was there. Over the years, he had learned to keep the “barriers” up to prevent unwanted intrusions, but he could definitely feel someone probing around. Then he heard it. A faint voice from far away, saying simply, “Help me.”

Anna! It had to be her.

Common sense told him to reinforce his barriers; his heart told him to listen more closely.

“Son of Perran, help me.”

This time the voice was cleared. As he’d been taught, Jem stilled his mind and focused his thoughts on an inanimate mundane object, in this case the doorknob, to prevent the intruder getting past his barriers.

“Please help me.”

A knock at the door startled him back to reality.

“Enter,” he called, trying to sound calmer than he felt.

One of the court officials entered, “It’s time to return to court for the verdict, sire.”

All thoughts of the voice in his mind were momentarily forgotten as he followed the court official along the now familiar passageways to the courtroom. Without a second thought, Jem returned to his usual seat to await the arrival of The Thirteen.

The courtroom fell silent as The Thirteen entered the chamber and took their seats at the table, now returned to its elongated curved shape. In front of Jem, Anna stood still and silent, bound by fresh binds cast by Alessandro.

“I’d like to thank you all for your patience,” began Jefferson warmly. “This trial was always destined to be lengthy and complex, but I don’t think any of us appreciated just how lengthy it would prove to be.” He paused. “Some of you may be surprised by how swiftly we’ve reached a unanimous verdict. For all bar one of the charges against our sister Anna the verdict was clear, having heard the testimonies.”

He paused again to gather his thoughts before continuing, “Anna, daughter of Tristan, The Thirteen find you guilty of all charges bar one. We find you not guilty of the charges in relation to Jeremiah. The Thirteen have agreed that Jeremiah fully understood the choice you gave him prior to the initial failed partial transformation.”

Much to his surprise, Jem found himself breathing a sigh of relief at the verdict.

“Anna, The Thirteen sentence you to a lifetime confined to Level Zero here in the castle. You will be taken from this chamber direct to your cell. You are forbidden from hunting. You are forbidden from practicing magic. You will be bound in your cell to always be truthful. Magic wards will defend your cell. Those wards will alert The Thirteen if you attempt to tamper with them.” He signalled to Alessandro and two of the senior officials to come forward. “Gentlemen, please escort Anna to Level Zero.”

A knock at her chamber door startled Trine as she was packing her things in preparation for returning to her normal suite of rooms.

“Enter,” she called brightly.

If she was surprised to see Jefferson enter the room, she did her best to disguise it.

“Apologies for the intrusion, Trine,” he said warmly. “I’m leaving tonight and wanted to offer my congratulations before I left.”

“You know?”

Jefferson smiled and nodded, “I do and in the interests of protecting us all, including your unborn child, I chose to turn a blind eye to your condition. This babe is the first in hopefully a long line of new purebloods and needed protection. To your credit, you and Meryn did a fine job of concealing the presence of a fourteenth pure blood round the table. There was no need though.” He smiled, “I had already cast a protective enchantment over you that prevented the others from sensing your delicate condition.”

“You could find yourself before the Court of the Elders if anyone were to find out,” commented Trine with a smile.

“I think Stefan would have ensured I had a fair hearing,” laughed Jefferson, reaching out to embrace her. “This pregnancy won’t be easy, my dear. Please follow Meryn’s guidance. If anyone can see you and the babe safely through this, it is Meryn. She supported my wife through both her pregnancies a long time ago.”

“Thanks, Jefferson.”

“No need to thank me, my dear,” he assured her. “Till next time.”

“Till next time,” she echoed as he left the room, leaving the door ajar.

Several hours later, Jem stood alone on the castle ramparts, gazing out across the mountains towards the full moon. It was a crystal-clear night. After so long seated in the underground court chambers, he was relishing the fresh air that was filling his lungs and the brush of the breeze against his skin. Once Anna had been taken away, the seal had been broken on the court and witnesses were all free to leave. Many had already departed, keen to return to their homes. He had returned to the chambers he shared with Trine to await her return.

Two stars that appeared to be shining brighter than the others caught his eye. Silently, he wondered which ones they were.

“Hey,” the familiar voice startled him.

He glanced round to find Trine standing beside him.

“Hey,” repeated Jem, slipping his hand into hers.

“Oh, it’s good to breathe fresh air,” sighed Trine. “I’ve missed it more than I’ve missed hunting.”

“Same,” he replied. “Hopefully it’ll soon be our salty beach air we’re enjoying.”

“Hopefully,” agreed the ice maiden resting her hand on her gently swollen stomach. “A few more days.”

“Why not tomorrow?”

“Meryn wants to teach me how to cope with my pregnancy,” she explained. “Vampire babies are rare. Vampire pregnancies are complicated. It’s not like a human pregnancy. The risks are higher.”

“It’ll be fine,” he promised her softly.

“I hope so,” she said with a smile.

Pointing to the full moon, Trine said, “Did you know that this full moon is the Pink Moon?”

Jem shook his head.

“I think it’s a good omen,” she continued. “A good omen for our daughter.”

Silently Watching Before the Pink Moon

Living quarters within the sealed court lacked the luxury of the rest of the castle but with some persuasion, Stefan had managed to make his private study homely. A log fire crackled in the hearth, casting dancing shadows on the walls of the dimly lit room. It had been a long day in the chamber with several witnesses called forward. Checking over the timeline and list of names, he knew that Jem would be called the following day or the day after at the latest. He was the final witness.

A knock at the door broke into his thoughts, startling him back to the present. Before he could grant the visitor permission to enter, the door opened just long enough to allow Meryn and Trine to slip into the room.

“Good evening,” he greeted them warmly. “This is a pleasant surprise.”

“Evening, Stefan,” greeted Meryn brusquely as she took a seat beside the fire. “We need to talk.”

“Trine,” began Stefan, noticing his daughter’s worried expression. “If this is about Jem testifying tomorrow….”

“It’s not,” interrupted Meryn sharply.

Kneeling on the floor beside her father’s chair, Trine whispered, “I’m pregnant.”

Momentarily lost for words, Stefan stared at her in disbelief.

“Well, say something,” snapped Meryn impatiently.

“That’s the best news I’ve heard in a very long time, my dear,” said Stefan taking his daughter’s hand. “You know the risks?”

Trine nodded.

“When is the baby due?”

“September,” replied Trine softly. “Mid-September.”

“So, you’ve known about this for a while?”

Again, Trine nodded, “Jem knows too.”

“I assumed he did,” commented Stefan gruffly. “The trial will be over long before them. You’ll both be safely back in your beach hut.”

“Stefan, that’s not the pressing issue for now,” interrupted Meryn. “This baby is a pure blood. The first of the new bloodline. Trine has advised me that she thought she felt it moving earlier. Her first trimester is complete. This child is now a child in its own right. It counts….”

“It counts as one of The Thirteen,” finished Stefan, realising where the vampiress was going with the train of thought. “It’ll break the wards over The Thirteen. The trial will be declared void.”

“Exactly!” stated Meryn. “We’ve put too much time and effort into this to let Anna simply walk away on a technicality.”

“I agree. We’re so close to the adjournment for a decision,” agreed Stefan, sharing their anxiety. “Is there a way to safely conceal Trine’s condition from the others?”

“Stefan, you know I can’t practice magic down here!” Meryn reminded him bluntly. “It would trigger the wards sealing the court.”

“True.”

“If we can’t weave magic, is there a potion that could help?” asked Trine quietly.

“Potions are dangerous,” cautioned Meryn. “I don’t want to risk causing any harm to you or my grandchild.”

“Well, we need to come up with something, Meryn!” barked Stefan. “And fast!”

“Crystals,” suggested Trine calmly. “If we can use a potion to enhance the tranquil properties of the crystals, it might be enough to quieten the baby as long as I remain calm too.”

Meryn nodded her approval, “Not a bad suggestion. In fact, right now, I suspect it’s our only one. But, Trine, how can do you think you can remain calm while Jem gives his evidence?”

“I can only try.”

“Do we have access to the crystals that we need for this?” asked Stefan.

“Possibly not but they should be available on request from the guards if I feign insomnia or mild anxiety at the prospect of my son giving evidence. Even assuming that they check with Jefferson, he’s hardly likely to refuse my request,” replied Meryn. “I have the basic ingredients for a sleeping draft in my travel trunk. If I can enhance that and soak the crystals in it overnight, this might just work.”

“So, how will this actually work?” asked Trine.

“You’ll need to secrete the crystals in your robe as close to your womb as you can,” advised Meryn.

“I can do that,” promised the younger vampiress.

“Fine. We have a plan,” nodded Stefan, trying to hide his anxiety from his daughter.

“Agreed,” said Meryn as she got to her feet. “Trine, come to my chamber an hour before dawn.”

Having said goodnight to both Stefan and Trine, Meryn returned to her own small chamber. In her absence the fire had burned down and, as she tossed a fresh log into the hearth, an idea struck her. She could use the energy from the flames to enhance the power of the crystals. Hurriedly she opened the catch on her travel trunk then opened a small hidden compartment concealed in the lid and pulled out a small black velvet pouch. She tipped the contents into the palm of her hand. Gazing down at the selection of small crystals, she picked out a piece of smoky quartz, black tourmaline, and clear quartz. As an afterthought, she added a piece of haematite and a piece of amethyst. Slipping the polished stones into the deep pocket of her robes, Meryn then rang the bell to summon one of the court servants.

“Good evening, Mistress Meryn,” greeted the junior official when she opened the door a few minutes later.

“Good evening,” she replied warmly. “I’m hoping you can help me with a little something.”

“If I can, ma’am.”

“I’ve not been sleeping well. Tomorrow’s going to be a long day. I’ve run out of my nighttime tea and seem to have misplaced some of my crystals.”

“I’m sorry to hear that. What do you need me to bring you?”

“Some lavender and chamomile tea with some valerian added for good measure. I also need a piece of selenite and some moonstone,” requested Meryn with an innocent smile. “Oh! And a piece of labradorite if you have one.”

“Leave it with me, Mistress Meryn. I’ll be back in a few minutes.”

“Thank you,” she said sincerely as the young man prepared to leave the room.

Less than ten minutes later, there was a soft knock at her door, before the junior official entered carrying a round tray. A small tea kettle and cup sat in the centre, a black pouch containing the crystals lay beside it. There was a fresh sprig of lavender lying on the tray too.

“I took the liberty of adding some freshly cut lavender,” the servant explained as he laid the tray on the small table beside the fire. “My grandmother swore by it. She slept with a fresh sprig of lavender under her pillow every night.”

“Thank you. That was truly considerate of you,” replied Meryn graciously.

“Sleep we’ll, Mistress Meryn,” said the servant as he left the room, closing the door behind him.

Instead of pouring the tea into the cup, Meryn gathered the crystals together and added them to the tea kettle. Deciding to take a chance, she chanted a simple sleep enhancing spell over the hot liquid, praying that if the light magic was detected that she could pass it off as a desperate act to get a good night’s rest. Carefully she hung the small kettle on the hook over the fire. Taking the lavender spray in her hands, she inhaled its distinctive aroma before crushing it and tossing it into the flames.

With her work complete, the senior vampiress retired to her bedchamber for the night.

As arranged, Trine slipped unseen through the corridors to Meryn’s chamber before dawn. Both vampiresses were dressed in their blue robes ready for the long day ahead in the courtroom.

“Did you manage to get any rest, my dear?” asked Meryn as she reach out to retrieve the tea kettle from its hook.

“Some,” replied Trine, the dark shadows beneath her eyes suggesting otherwise. “I had a thought.” She paused. “I brought some white silk. Perhaps we could soak it with the tea as an additional layer of protection.”

“We could,” agreed Meryn. “But we’ll need to be quick, if it’s to dry before you need to enter court.”

Working quickly, Meryn drizzled the cold lavender tea over the centre section of the band of white silk. She then fished out the crystals and laid them in a grid on the damp silk.

“How will we hold them in place?” asked Trine recognising that the grid formation strengthened the crystals’ powers as long as they didn’t touch.

“I’ll stitch a layer of silk over them and stitch them in place. It’ll create little pockets for them,” explained Meryn, already snipping a section from the end of the piece of cloth.

Deftly, the older woman sewed the crystals in place then carefully bound the silk cloth around Trine’s hips.

“Sew it in place,” suggested the younger woman. “That removes the risk of it coming undone.”

With a nod, Meryn added a row of stitches to the cloth, keeping it flush with Trine’s still slender body. Once Trine let her blue robe cascade down, the band was easily concealed.

“Pray this works, child,” said Meryn, sounding a little anxious. “Now, go. We’ll be collected and escorted to the chamber in a few minutes.”

“Thank you,” replied Trine, hugging the older woman on impulse.

“Thank me when this is all over.”

Sleep had eluded Jem and he yawned as he took his seat in the courtroom. Gazing round, he took in the now familiar scene. Over the weeks and months, he’d grown accustomed to seeing his fellow witnesses, the court officials, The Thirteen in their blue robes and Anna. However, as The Thirteen entered to take their seats, Anna turned round to face him. Their eyes met. Their gazes locked. He shivered as he felt the dark angel stare into his very soul.

“Court is now in session,” boomed one of the officials.

Anna turned back to face The Thirteen, the moment past.

“I’d like to invite our final witness to come forward,” began Jefferson calmly.

With sweating palms, Jem walked the short distance to the chair that had been placed to the left of The Thirteen.

“Jeremiah, know that circle you are about to enter binds you to tell your whole truth,” reminded Jefferson.

Feeling his heart pounding in his chest, Jem took a seat and sat facing The Thirteen ready to answer their questions.

“In your own time, please tell us how you first encountered our sister Anna.”

“I first saw her one Halloween. I was out running, and she appeared in the road in front of me,” began Jem slowly.

“Did she speak to you?” asked William.

“Actually, I spoke first. I thought she was in fancy dress for trick or treating. Said something like “good costume”.”

“Did she reply?”

“All she said was “soon” then she flew off into the night,” he replied, recalling the scene vividly.

“And when did you next meet our sister Anna?” asked Alessandro.

“Not for about eight months. Was around the middle of June. I was out running after dinner with a friend. I’d got ahead of him on the trail. I spotted a dead deer in the middle of the path. Its throat had been ripped out. I was looking back to see where my friend was and when I turned back round Anna was in front of me. She was close. She reached out and touched the tattoo I have on my arm. I closed my eyes for a second then I heard my friend coming up the path behind me. When I opened my eyes, she was gone,” explained Jem. “Turned out she’d bitten me, but I never felt it.”

“Bitten you? Drunk from you?” quizzed Miguel sharply.

“She’d pierced the skin at my neck. If she fed, it could only have been a few drops,” replied Jem. “The next time I saw her, Anna …she referred to me as “forbidden fruit” then said we needed to talk. We didn’t have that talk for a couple of months. She was waiting for me at the graveyard in the village where I live. She said she needed to tell me a story. Turned out the tip of her fang had broken off in my neck which was why the wound wouldn’t heal. Anna also said my blood had poisoned her. She said we were related. Said in over two hundred years, she’d not seen anything like it. Then she offered me a choice.”

“A choice?” echoed Jefferson.

Jem nodded, “The choice to either be like her or to kill her. I asked why I would want to be like her. She proposed a partial transformation that would mean I’d age more slowly, run faster and be able to keep running for years. She gave me a week to decide.”

“A partial transformation is rare,” commented Jai, who had rarely spoken in court. “It takes nurturing to sustain. It’s a delicate balance. It has to come from a place of deep love.”

Jem shivered at the memory of the conversation where Ann had pressed him for an answer. Clearing his throat, he said, “Anna advised against a full transformation. I was married. I had young children at the time. She suggested a full transformation might increase the risk that I’d harm one of my kids.” He paused. “I get I got sucked in. Got caught up in the mystique of it all.”

“When did this partial transformation take place?” asked Stefan calmly.

“One week later. She said it needed to happen after the moon had risen on the night of the next full moon. She called it the Blessing Moon. Cursed moon more like.”

“I’m intrigued,” interrupted Amelie. “Describe to the court how Anna completed this partial transformation, please.”

“I’ll try,” said Jem. “It was a long time ago.” He paused again then continued, “I met her at the graveyard, and she transported me to her mausoleum. Her home. She had things laid out on a black cloth. She put some holy water in the cup to keep the transformation pure. I thought that was strange.  She added moonstone dust, white agate powder, opal dust, oak and mugwort. She then added some of my blood. We took the cup out and under the light of the full moon, she filled the cup with her blood and told me to drink it.”

“Then what happened?” prodded Amelie.

“She transported me home. Told me to sleep,” continued Jem. “She gave me some mugwort to take every day and pouch with the remains of the stones she’d scraped the powder from. Told me to carry it always.”

“And did you?” asked Meryn out of curiosity.

Slipping his hand into his trouser pocket, Jem withdrew a worn green velvet bag. “Yes.”

“Interesting,” mused Jefferson. “How long did this partial transformation suffice, Jeremiah?”

“About four months.”

“Then what happened?” prompted Jefferson.

“I developed a blood rage. Almost attacked my son. Anna called it Rabbia Sanguigna. She then taught me how to hunt to satisfy the cravings. I kept up the mugwort to stop my wings from forming.”

“There are recognised ways to quench Rabbia Sanguigna,” commented Amelie. “I’ve studied it. Did our sister Anna try anything to stop the rage?”

Jem nodded, “She gave me a blood potion. I can’t remember what all she added but it involved the stones in the pouch plus another blue one and some oak. She also said I needed to drink the blood of my living vampire relative.”

Meryn flinched visibly at his words.

“And did you?” asked Stefan, staring intently across the room.

“Yes. Anna was gone until New Year. She brought me two flasks of blood that I drank,” he replied. “It was my mother’s blood.”

“What happened next?” encouraged Jefferson.

“I never saw her for three or four months. She turned up one night as I was leaving work and told me the partial transformation had failed.” Jem paused, unsure how to reveal the next part of his tale. “That summer my Rabbia Sanguigna flared one day. I had noticed that it got worse around the full moon but usually I could control myself. This day I didn’t. I met an injured cyclist on my way home from work. No excuses. I lost control when I saw his blood. I fed from him and killed him. Anna gave me fits that night after work for being so careless. She said I had speeded things up because I killed him at the full Buck Moon. I’d also stupidly missed a few days of the mugwort tea I drank.”

“And after that your wings began to bud,” surmised Jefferson.

Jem nodded, “Anna tried to slow their growth.”

“How?”

“She gave me a concoction to pour into the wing buds every month. She also designed a tattoo for me to have inked around the buds. Whatever was in that concoction burned like fire and hurt like hell when I poured it into the holes, I pierced in my back each time.”

“Did you get the tattoo?” asked Stefan. “I’m guessing that the design was part of the enchantment.”

Jem nodded.

“Can you please show the court?” requested Jefferson, curious to see the design.

Feeling slightly embarrassed, Jem unfastened his shirt and removed it before turning his back to The Thirteen. He could feel them staring at the intricate Celtic pattern that spanned his upper back.

“Thank you,” said Jefferson warmly. “Please continue.”

Having put his shirt back on, Jem continued, “Anna sent me away with a box of glass phials and a supply of moss to cover the holes. I had to pierce two holes in the wing buds each month, pour in one phial of liquid then cover the holes with the moss. I followed that regime for twenty-five years then I ran out of phials. Once they ran out, my wings grew quite quickly. I panicked and reached out to her for help. She came but she told me I was on my own. Before she left that night, she did admit that she’d failed me.”

“Was that when you moved to your beach hut?” asked Trine, finally feeling bold enough to address her partner.

“Yes.”

“And that’s when we became aware of your existence,” added Stefan calmly.

“Jeremiah,” began Jefferson. “Did you know before you first met our sister Anna that vampire blood flowed in your veins?”

“No.”

“Even though your own birth mother is a pure blood and a member of this council?”

“I never suspected a thing until Anna mentioned that she needed my mother’s blood.”

“That’s to the credit of Meryn,” interjected Stefan bluntly. “She was keen that Jeremiah live a human existence.”

“Jem,” said Jean-Claude, who had remained silent throughout. “May I ask you a question?”

Jem nodded.

“You said you were offered a choice,” began the French vampire. “Why didn’t you kill Anna? You knew that was an option before you agreed to the partial transformation. Did you never feel tempted to do it, especially when things failed?”

“Good question,” commented Jem, stalling for some thinking time. “No, I was never tempted to kill her. I thought about it many times especially over the past year or two, but I can’t kill her.”

“Why?” pressed Jean-Claude.

“Because she created me,” replied Jem quietly. “Because a part of me remains loyal to her. Because a part of me loves her.”

“Merci.”

“Are there any further questions?” asked Jefferson.

His question was met with silence.

“Thank you, Jeremiah,” said Jefferson warmly. “I release you from the circle. Your testimony is complete.”

Once Jem had returned to his seat, Jefferson turned his attention to Anna, “You’ve listened to the testimonies of all of our witnesses, sister Anna. Do you have any mitigation to offer?”

“No,” started the dark angel calmly.

“Do you have anything you wish to say to the court?”

“No.”

“Very well,” said Jefferson with a nod. “The Thirteen will now retire to consider the evidence that has been presented to us. Please return to your chambers. A court official will fetch you when it is time to return to hear the court’s decision. I’d like to thank you all for your time and your patience throughout this trial. It has been appreciated.”

With a last glance round at the dark angel, Jem followed everyone out of the chamber with a heavy heart.

Continue the Story …. the party guest ( flash fiction)

She knew she had to leave. Quickly. She should never have come. She should have politely declined the invitation. She didn’t belong here. This all felt so wrong.

Scanning the room, she searched for an escape route. One door led to the kitchen and judging from the laughter coming from there, it was full of guests. The only other door was the one to the hallway. If she could get to the hallway, she could slip out of the front door unnoticed with a bit of luck.

Between her and the door though was her host. He was chatting animatedly, beer in hand, with several guys that she didn’t know. He kept glancing over though as if to check that she was still there. Looking round, she realised that she didn’t know anyone. How had she been talked into this party? She hated house parties. Too many ghosts from her past where she’d been left trying to make polite conversations with wives she didn’t know and had little in common with.

If she left too soon though he’d be offended and that was the last thing she wanted to do. He was the only reason she’s agreed to come.

She had taken great care with her appearance. Now though she felt stupid. He wasn’t going to care about how she looked while he was surrounded by all his friends.

Eventually she saw him excuse himself and head into the kitchen, presumably for another beer. Seizing her chance, she slipped from the room into the hall then out the door.

The cool night air soothed her as it caressed her bare arms. Fortunately, her car hadn’t been blocked in.  As she started the engine, she saw light spilling from the open front door.

His gaze followed her as she drove away.

The Measly Jar of Motivation – An Odd Shoe

Birds were singing in the trees as she made her way through the labyrinth of paths to reach her grandmother’s grave. She smiled when she spotted it basking in the warm sunshine with its gorgeous view of the surrounding countryside.

Kneeling down in the lush grass, she removed the dead flowers from the vase at the base of the headstone and replaced them with the fresh wildflower bouquet she had picked that morning. Carefully she arranged them so that they sat evenly in the vase.

“Oh, Grandma,” she sighed. “I miss you. Miss your words of wisdom. Miss your smile. I wish you were here.”

Her eyes filled with tears, “Alex left me. He’s been having an affair with a woman from work. She’s pregnant with his baby.”

A small bird came to sit on the headstone, its head cocked to one side as if it was listening.

“He told me he never wanted kids!” The words were spoken with the taste of bitterness that she felt inside echoing through them. “I want kids!”

The bird looked at her.

Burying her face in her hands, she sobbed, letting out all the hurt and anger, rage and disappointment. In her mind, she could visualise her grandmother placing her hand on her shoulder and saying, “These things happen for a reason, Ruby. If you’d been meant to be a pair for life, he wouldn’t have been the odd shoe.”

“Odd shoe?” she whispered the words as she held onto the image of her grandmother.

“Never liked that boy. Didn’t make any effort to fit in. He wasn’t a good match for you. I told your mother that.”

“Mum did say you’d be relieved. She told me you weren’t Alex’s biggest fan.”

“He’s a selfish arrogant…” a bird screeching nearby drowned out a string of profanities.

“Grandma!”

“You need someone unique. Someone whose odd shoe matches yours. Don’t waste your time with Alex. You’re too good for the likes of him, girl.”

“Mum said the same thing,” sighed Ruby, drawing comfort from the ghostly conversation in her head.

“Odd shoe, Ruby. Mark my words.”

As she sat by her grandmother’s grave, Ruby dried her tears and reflected on the five years she had spent with Alex. His shoes had always been perfect…as had his clothes and hair and even his nails. He had been the well-polished Gucci loafer to her colourful Converse. In the early days of their relationship, he had adored her quirky sense of style but as he had climbed the career ladder, he had become increasingly critical of her clothes, her hair and her figure…and her job…in fact as she sat in the sun, Ruby recognised that he had found fault with everything that made her who she was.

“You’re better off without him, Ruby.”

She heard her grandmother’s voice clear as a bell.

“I need to go, Grandma,” she apologised as she got to her feet. “I’ll be back next week.”

“Watch out for odd shoes, angel.”

Smiling at the ghostly advice, Ruby headed back to her car. Checking the time, she realised she’d be late to meet her friend at the new coffee shop in town. As she reached her car, a beaten-up vintage VW beetle, she sent her friend a message, “Running late. Be with you in ten, X”.

There was only one parking space left outside the coffee shop. It was beside a red 1970’s VW camper van. As a teenager, Ruby had always dreamed of touring the country, living like a gypsy, in a red VW van. Every time she saw one, she regretted not following that dream.

“Sorry I’m late,” she apologised as she slipped into the booth to sit opposite her friend.

“You say that every time, Ruby,” laughed her friend, used to her tardiness.

“Have you ordered?”

“Not yet. I was waiting for you.”

Their conversation was interrupted by the arrival of the waiter.

“Ladies, what can I tempt you to today?”

Looking up, Ruby found herself gazing into a pair of twinkling hazel eyes. He smiled. Without taking her eyes off him, Ruby placed her order.

As he walked away, she noticed he was wearing odd shoes.

Silently Watching Under A Wolf Moon

Two whole seasons had passed, and the castle was deep in the depths of a third. Winter had arrived.

Standing alone on the castle ramparts, Jem reflected on the past few months. The dark angel’s trial had proven to be a more protracted affair than any of them had envisaged. During the testimony of several of the initial witnesses who were called in relation to Anna’s earlier crimes, details of further crimes came to light. After a long debate among The Thirteen, Jefferson chose to add them to the original lengthy list. This in turn posed a challenge to the court as the witnesses for these newly listed charges were not present in the sealed chamber.

As autumn had arrived, Jefferson had created a fresh outer seal to the court, adding an extra floor of the castle space. This allowed him to lift his original seal and welcome thirty new witnesses into the courtroom.

Day after day, Jem sat along with the other witnesses and listened to the trial. Those first few weeks felt more like history lesson rather than court testimony. The oldest of the charges against Anna dated back to the last decade of the 18th century, less than five years after she had come into her powers. There were five charges that all related to the killing of vampire children who had been the children of mine owners in Devon and Cornwall. Even then her ego had led to carelessness as she had left some of the siblings of those children alive and it was them who now gave their testimony against her.

The detailed testimony of the final sibling triggered a debate amongst The Thirteen when he made reference to Anna’s creator, Tristan’s bloodline. He revealed that it well-known in the area that their vampire blood was tainted and not pure. He implied that this “taintedness” led to their erratic behaviour. To rule out any further issues in that regard, proceedings were halted until blood samples could be taken from Anna and analysed. The job of analysing the samples fell to Meryn. While she worked on them in one of the offices beneath the main courtroom, everything in the court stopped. It took her a week to glean a full profile to bring back before The Thirteen.

Early in the second week of October, the senior vampiress returned to the courtroom.

“Meryn,” began Jefferson. “Can you please confirm if the accusations made by our esteemed Cornish friends carry any truth?”

“There is some truth to them,” confirmed Meryn, glancing at her copious notes. “In due course, we will need to question Anna herself as it appears her history differs from what we have been led to believe up until now.”

“Differs?” echoed Stefan, raising one eyebrow.

“Anna is the daughter of Tristan in the sense that he created her and introduced his “pureblood” ancestry to her blood. However, there is a second pure blood variant present in Anna’s sample. We need to question her to confirm the timeline, but I am of the initial opinion that Anna was half-vampire by birth but was unaware of this. I suspect her natural vampire blood lay dormant until it was combined with Tristan’s. When the two pure bloods mixed, they have in fact created a “super” pure blood, for want of a more scientific description.”

“Is that even possible?” demanded Stefan sharply.

“Yes,” replied William, causing the rest of The Thirteen to turn and stare at him. “We saw that in Salem after the witch trials. Two pure blood families mixed their blood through marriage. The resulting children possessed extraordinary powers that they fortunately chose to use for good rather than evil.”

“Meryn, are you suggesting that Anna’s behaviour is the result of a chemical reaction triggered by bloodlines merging?” enquired Jefferson.

“Potentially but the timeline of the charges leads me to a different conclusion.”

“And that is?”

“I think both bloodlines may be tainted by something. I would need to run more tests, but I suspect that Tristan already had “super” pure blood as we’re calling it, but when Anna’s existing pure blood mixed with it, it created a unique superstrength of the vampire bloodline that we need to explore at a later time,” replied Meryn calmly. “Put simply, I feel that our sister Anna has the purest vampire blood that we have seen for several hundred years but there may be underlying issues here that we are unfamiliar with.  She comes from a very old bloodline.”

“One of the original four families?” asked Jefferson.

“Yes.”

“How long would you need to run further tests?”

“That could be a lifetime’s work,” surmised Meryn plainly. “To get a large enough sample, I’d need a sample from every vampire she has ever created.”

“Do we know how many that is?” asked Jefferson.

“We need to ask Anna that,” stated Meryn, feeling that she was stating the obvious.

Weaving an enchantment first, Jefferson addressed the dark angel, “Anna, you have heard Meryn’s report, so I don’t propose to repeat the facts. Answer one simple question for the court. How many vampires have you created?”

The dark angel stared at him, maintaining a stony silence.

“Answer the question, Anna.”

Unable to fight the truth enchantments that bound her, Anna stared straight at Meryn and answered, “One.”

“One?” echoed Jefferson, somewhat surprised.

“One,” she repeated. “Jem is the only vampire I have created.”

Meryn felt a chill run through her.

“If my theory is correct, I’ll need to test Jeremiah’s blood to confirm it,” stated Meryn as she struggled to maintain her composure. “I request permission from the court to take a sample from him.”

“Permission granted,” replied Jefferson. “Proceed.”

“I’ll need to take him to my office. The equipment is there.”

“A court official will accompany you both. He will record all conversation for the benefit of the court records,” advised Jefferson. “You have fifteen minutes.”

Meryn’s temporary office looked more like a science lab than her usual cluttered book filled study. Conscious of the presence of the court official, she kept conversation to a minimal. She indicated to Jem to take a seat and roll up his sleeve.

“I’ll need to draw a few vials to ensure a sufficient sample size for testing,” she explained as she prepared the kit.

“Just make it quick, mother,” grumbled Jem.

As he spoke, he felt his mother subtly probing his mind, telling him to fake a fear of needles to buy her some extra time.

“How many needles is this going to take?” he asked sharply. “I hope you know what you are doing?”

“Just one,” she said as she laid out the equipment on the desk. “Sit still. I’ll swab the area to clean it, insert the needle then take the samples. One sharp prick is all you’ll feel.”

“Hmph,” he muttered as he felt her probing his mind again.

“Listen carefully. This bloodwork could have serious ramification for you and Anna.”

“How?” he replied silently.

“You already have my pure blood by birth. You have her’s by vampire birth. I need to test my own, but I suspect that you are actually the purest vampire ever created.”

“You have to be joking?”

A sharp stab of a needle made him cry out, causing the court official to jump.

“Shit, mother! That hurt!” protested Jem loudly.

“Sit still,” she commanded. “You moved. I now need to re-insert the needle.”

While she withdrew the needle and slowly prepared a second one, they continued their silent conversation.

“If Anna’s blood is deemed of high enough purity, then despite the charges, the court won’t order the death penalty.”

Meryn paused as she jabbed Jem for a second time. This time he muttered under his breath but relaxed as she began to fill five small vials with his blood. While he watched his deep red blood drain into the thin glass tubes, he listened closely to his mother’s words in his mind.

“It will also confirm once and for all that Stefan will ensure you stay alive. I suspect he will order every one of The Thirteen be tested before today is over to map out the bloodlines.”

“Who all can be linked back to the four original families?”

“I’m not sure. Stefan, William, Jai and myself at the very least and apparently Anna.”

“So, what now?”

“Be vigilant. When the time comes to give your testimony don’t mention your agreement with Stefan. He’ll likely deny it.”

Placing the stopper in the final sample, Meryn declared, “All done. Just need to clean and dress that puncture wound as a precaution.”

With a small bandage wound round Jem’s biceps, the court official escorted them back to the courtroom.

Having re-taken their seats, proceedings continued.

“In your absence, Meryn,” began Jefferson. “The remaining members of The Thirteen discussed the merits of blood profiling before we proceed any further with the trial and agree that we should all provide samples for analysis.”

“Of course,” agreed Meryn calmly. “Testing the blood takes time. I would prefer to test them fully one at a time to minimise the risks of cross-contamination.”

“How much time?” quizzed Stefan.

“Ideally a week per sample.”

“Plus a week to test the samples from Jeremiah?”

“Yes.”

“In that case,” Jefferson concluded. “Proceedings are paused until the January full moon. The Wolf Moon. Everyone must remain with the castle but once we have secured the accused for everyone’s safety, you are free to leave the court chambers. You are not permitted to discuss court proceedings amongst yourselves. Anyone found doing so will appear before The Thirteen to answer to charges of contempt of court.”

There was a low murmur of conversation amongst the assembled witnesses.

“Alessandro. Michael,” called Jefferson. “Please bind Anna to Alessandro once more and move them both to Anna’s cell.”

Standing alone on the castle ramparts on the eve of the full Wolf Moon, Jem shivered. Above him the clear night sky was littered with stars, sparkling like precious jewels. The landscape was blanketed by a recent heavy winter snowfall. It too was sparkling in the icy cold moonlight. He breathed in deeply, enjoying the luxury of the clean fresh air. It might be his last for a while, he thought.

After it’s fourteen-week recess, the dark angel’s trial was due to recommence in the morning.

As he gazed out over the mountains, Jem felt a subtle probe at his mind.

“Good evening, mother,” he thought formally.

“Come to my tower now. I’ll cloak you so no one detects your presence.”

With a sigh, Jem turned his back on the view and headed along the ramparts towards Meryn’s tower. Trusting that his mother’s magic was in place, he walked confidently past several guards before reaching the private spiral staircase that led up to his mother’s study.

Without bothering to knock, he opened the door and walked straight into the room.

“Jeremiah,” she said with a smile. “Take a seat. Wine?”

“Please,” he replied taking a seat opposite her in front of the roaring log fire.

“It’s more blood than wine,” confessed Meryn as she poured two generous goblets. At the same time, she probed his mind to confirm that it was safe to speak.

“Thank you,” replied Jem, accepting the goblet from her. “Fortitude before we return to court?”

“Something like that. I wanted to speak to you before we are separated and sealed back into the courtroom.” She paused. “Tell me again how you met Anna.”

“I first saw her one Halloween. She appeared in the road in front of me when I was out running. She stared at me then flew off. I never saw her again until the following summer. She was waiting for me by a tree when I was out running the trails. She never spoke. She came up close to me. I thought she was going to kiss me but then she vanished. Turned out she had bitten me. Her fang broke and the tip lodged in my neck. Hurt like hell and bled every time I was near her for months. I never saw her for ages then she appeared near the old graveyard one night. Said I was forbidden fruit, and we’d talk soon.”

“Forbidden fruit?”

Jem nodded, “When she’d bitten me, she’d poisoned herself. I never saw her again until spring. I met her at the graveyard. She said we were related by blood. Said it was the bloodline of the man who created her. She offered me a choice. To either become like her or to kill her.”

“Interesting…” mused Meryn. “She was partially correct.”

“Explain,” said Jem, looking at her with a puzzled frown.

“There are two pure bloodlines flowing through Anna. Her own and Tristan’s. When I tested my blood, there was one. When I tested yours, I expected to find three. Anna’s, Tristan’s and my own. I did find three but not the three I was expecting to find. I found Anna’s, Tristan’s and an unknown new bloodline.”

“OK, you’re losing me a bit here, mother.”

“Anna and I are from the same bloodline,” revealed Meryn quietly.

“You’re related?”

“So, it would seem. None of the other members of The Thirteen are from the same one of the four original bloodlines. It would appear our family is weakening as neither Anna nor I have created many new vampires. Tristan’s bloodline is the weaker one within her, despite what she thinks. Ours is the dominant strain.”

“What does this all mean?

“I’m not sure,” Meryn admitted. “But I wanted you to know my findings before I report back to the court tomorrow. It is Tristan’s bloodline that’s tainted with evil. Have you ever felt tempted…”

“Stop right there,” snapped Jem not wanting to hear what she was about to ask.

“Have you?”

“Once,” he confessed. “It was while I was still partially transformed. I didn’t need to hunt then. Anna gave me a blood potion once a week. By the day that I was due to take it I was craving it. One week, the cat scratched my boy. Drew blood. It took all my willpower not to drink from him. I never touched him. I resisted…well, I bit the cat instead and drank from her, but I didn’t kill her.”

“Poor cat.”

“She wasn’t too pleased. When I met Anna that night and told her what had almost happened, she called the rage Rabbia Sanguigna.”

“Of course!” exclaimed Meryn. “How could I have missed it! Rabbia Sanguigna makes sense.”

“It does?”

“Yes,” she stated firmly. “Go! I need to do more research before tomorrow morning.”

Getting to his feet, Jem drained his glass and prepared to leave. “If you need me, I’ll be in my room.”

“I’ll send for you if I need you. In fact, give me another blood sample before you go.”

When Jem was escorted into the courtroom next morning, The Thirteen were already seated at the long, curved table. In the middle of the sacred symbol, Anna stood facing the table, bound by numerous freshly cast enchantments. For a moment, Jem felt sorry for her. Talking about his original meeting with her to his mother had stirred up a lot of memories, some of them better than others. I his heart, Jem knew he still fundamentally cared about Anna despite everything that had happened and all that she stood accused of.

“Court is now in session,” declared Jefferson at nine o’clock on the dot. “I’d like to extend our thanks to all of our assembled witnesses for their patience during the extended recess. I would now call upon Meryn to reveal her findings.”

“Thank you, Jefferson,” said Meryn, getting to her feet. “I have completed my analysis. I’ll try to keep my verbal report simple in the interests of time. I’ve prepared a more detailed written report for each of you. Copies are in front of you.” She paused. “For the benefit of our witnesses, there are four recognised original vampire families whose history can be traced back more than two millennia. Purebloods as we know them can trace their bloodline back to the original families. One of the four families however is on the brink of extinction, for want of a better word. Very few members from this family have married and had children with other purebloods. Members of this family tend to be healers and are less likely by nature to create new vampires. They can be reclusive and are deep thinkers. We’ll call this Family One. When I tested our sister Anna’s blood, I found traces of Family One and Family Three. I tested another of Tristan’s descendants and found Family Three and Family Four. A further descendant revealed Family Three and Family Four. I cannot be one hundred per cent sure with such a small sample group, but it is my belief that Tristan was a mix of Families One and Three but that Three was the dominant bloodline.”

“What about Family Two?” interrupted Alessandro.

“A good point,” acknowledged Meryn. “From the fourteen pureblood samples I analysed, Family Two only ever mixes with Family Two or Four. Intriguing. Something I may study further once this trial is over.”

“You said fourteen,” observed Jean, the French vampire. “But we number only thirteen.”

“My son, Jeremiah, is the fourteenth sample,” reminded Meryn, allowing herself a glance across to where Jem was sitting. “I am from Family One and Jem’s natural father was also from Family One. When I ran the analysis on Jem’s blood, I found something that surprised me. It’s really quite fascinating. He has three different variants of pureblood in his veins.”

“Three? But that’s unheard of!” protested Jefferson.

“It was until now,” Meryn agreed. “The key would lie with Family Three’s weakness for Rabbia Sanguigna. When Anna created Jem, she was unaware of his vampire heritage, as was Jem himself. Jem grew up believing he was mortal. My husband was mortal, and he accepted Jem as his own when we met. I placed an enchantment on my son to quash his vampire blood and traits so that he could live a normal mortal life. This was done with the approval from three members of the Court of Elders.”

“Stefan, is this true?” checked Jefferson.

“Yes. It was approved at the same time we agreed that Meryn could permanently remove her wings. Michael and Alessandro countersigned the decree.”

“Meryn, please continue,” prompted Jefferson, curious to know where this was now leading.

“When Anna created Jem, she completed a partial transformation first. However, even that partial transformation was enough to trigger Rabbia Sanguigna in my son, thanks to the presence of Family Three blood. Anna treated this condition with a mix of enchantments. She also gave Jem a potion, once he had been fully transformed, to delay the growth of his wings. She gave him a potion that was to be injected directly into the wing nubs monthly to curb their development. He followed this routine for twenty-five years. During his monthly ritual, some of the potion entered his bloodstream, permanently altering the composition of his bloodline. It has in effect created a new family. This will only be formally established should Jem have any children with a pureblood who has Family Three in their history.”

“A new pureblood family is an intriguing thought, Meryn. A welcome intriguing thought considering the diminishing Family One population but how does this relate to the charges brought against sister Anna?” commented Jefferson.

“Anna also suffers from Rabbia Sanguigna,” continued Meryn. “Although in her case it causes an inherent loathing for anyone with Family Three blood, including herself I suspect. Family Three blood in mortals has many similarities with one of the rarer mortal blood groups known as O negative. The mortal victims that Anna is accused of killing, especially the children, were all O negative as far as I can determine from their medical records.”

“So, you’re suggesting that Rabbia Sanguigna caused her to lose control and commit those crimes?”

“Yes,” said Meryn simply.

“Interesting analysis. Good work,” praised Jefferson looking thoughtful. “I don’t propose that we remove those breaches of the Golden Rules from the list of charges, but I do advise that we take Meryn’s information into account when reviewing them in due course.”

“May I add something else?” asked Meryn calmly.

“Go on.”

“Family One and Family Three blood in combination is toxic to any other vampire with that blood combination,” Meryn revealed.

“Interesting observation,” nodded Jefferson, looking thoughtful. “So, in conclusion, you are saying that Tristan’s bloodline is not tainted with evil but with the effects of Rabbia Sanguigna?”

“Correct,” replied Meryn. “I believe a court precedent has already been set regarding charges related to Rabbia Sanguigna crimes. As a member of the Court of the Elders, I request that this is taken into account.”

“Duly noted.”

Once again confined to the simple court living quarters and separated from Trine for the foreseeable, Jem lay on his bed staring up at the ceiling mulling over the events of the day. Several witnesses had given evidence after his mother’s revelation about bloodlines, and he knew with each testimony that his turn drew closer. Questions from The Thirteen were short and direct yet he was still anxious at the thought of answering them. In his case, Anna was charged with making him a full vampire against his will but, if he was already a pureblood, how could that charge stick?

A subtle movement of the air in the room brought him back to the present. He looked towards the locked door to see Trine standing there.

“Hey,” he said with a lazy smile. “This is a pleasant surprise.”

“Hey, yourself,” she said as she came to sit on the bed beside him. “I can only stay a minute. I shouldn’t even be here. The Thirteen aren’t allowed to talk to witnesses while the court is convened.”

“I know.”

“I needed to see you,” she said taking his hand in hers. “Your mother has woven a cloaking spell over the chamber, but it will only hold for a few minutes before someone detects it.”

“Is something wrong?”

Trine shook her head as her other hand subconsciously moved to her stomach, “I’m pregnant.”

“Pregnant?”

The ice maiden nodded, “Your mother confirmed it earlier. I’ve not told my father yet. I needed to tell you first.”

“A baby?” he said stunned by the news.

“Yes. Our baby. Our unique baby.”

Suddenly, the penny dropped, “The start of a new pure bloodline?”

Trine nodded.

Beginnings…an explanation

It’s now been a few days since I surprised the world by announcing the release of my first collection of poems.

Huge thanks to those who have already pre-ordered.

To those who may have been a little disappointed that it wasn’t a new novel that I was releasing, I humbly apologise and beg that you are patient with me a little longer.

I’m going to make myself vulnerable here and explain the background to Beginnings. Since last summer, when the Big Green Gummi Bear’s health began to decline, I have struggled with writing Book Baby 8. The creative juices just weren’t flowing and the creative fire became dull embers. My original plan had been that it would be Book Baby 8 that was released on 29th February 2024 but that wasn’t to be. My creative muses apparently had a different plan.

I parked Book Baby 8 for a few weeks late last summer then decided to type up what I had written and see if that triggered a fresh burst of creativity. So for several weeks I typed…. in fact I have over 30 000 words typed up. This helped me to re-connect with the tale but things with the Big Green Gummi Bear weren’t good and the real world had to be prioritised over my creative one for obvious reasons. Family had to come first.

At the start of December 2023 I picked up my pen again and began to make some progress once more….then Christmas hit…. and I stopped again…paused not stopped.

I had signed up to take part in Beth Kempton’s online Winter Writing Sanctuary over the latter part of the festive period. It’s a beautifully gentle way to stoke the creative fires. This year though the sparks it ignited were poetic ones and almost on a whim, I decided at the end of December that I would still self-publish on 29th February 2024 but it would be a collection of poems not prose. Cue a flurry of reviewing over 30 years worth of poems and deciding which ones to include and which to save for another day. Within two weeks, I had the project typed up, formatted, the cover designed ( the photo is one of my own so no licencing issues) and the paperback proof ordered. The speed that this project came together with was scary!

The plans are now all in place. Beginnings will be set free into the world on 29 February 2024.

The creative fires are gradually building and its time once more to pick up my pen and return to Book Baby 8. I might actually treat myself to a new pen in the hope that the words flow easier from it. (Weird writer quirk…just humour me on that)

With a bit of luck and a lot of self-discipline, I will have Book Baby 8 ready to release later this year. Wish me luck!

In the meantime, if you want to pre-order Beginnings, here’s the links

Beginnings – a collection of poems – Kindle edition by McCallum, Coral. Literature & Fiction Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com.

Beginnings – a collection of poems eBook : McCallum, Coral: Amazon.co.uk: Kindle Store

There will be a paperback edition available in a few weeks.

Continue the Story – That Bridge

Without thinking, I took the first tentative step. It had finally happened. I had reached the point of no return…. or was I dreaming?

For months I’d been saying “I’ll cross that bridge when I come to it,” dismissing future challenge after future challenge instead of facing up to them there and then.

Clutched in my hand was a well-worn piece of paper. It was the list I had written… the list of many of those future challenges that needed to be faced.

As I stared straight ahead, it looked as though each and every one of them had their own bridge.

Glancing down, all I could see were swirling mists. Just how high up was this rickety old bridge?

Carefully, I took a second step. The bridge shook but it held. Taking a deep breath, I took another small step then another.

In the dark recesses of my mind, I heard a voice say “It’s alright. I’ve got you.” Those words offered just enough reassurance to give me the strength to take the next step…and the next…

Eventually, I made it across the bridge. My hands were trembling. My heart was pounding. I had done it.

I glanced down at the list. The item at top had been scored through. How? Who? Did it matter? I’d crossed that first bridge when I came to it.

Step by step, bridge by bridge, I kept going. Challenge after challenge was scored off the list. I took my time, taking care not to rush the journey.

When I stepped off the final bridge, I stepped onto warm soft sand. The sun was shining, and I could hear the ocean waves crashing ashore just ahead of me.

The Measly Jar of Motivation – Margarita Promises (flash fiction)

As it was her last night in town, she had taken her time getting ready, making an effort with her make-up. Two weeks in the sunshine had added natural blonde highlights to her long hair. Her skin glowed, the strained dark shadows long gone from under her eyes. Glancing in the mirror one last time, she smiled. The reflection smiling back finally looked familiar.

With a swish of her long flowing cotton skirt, she left her Airbnb apartment, walked carefully down the stairs, reaching the boardwalk within a minute, just as the website had promised. Down on the beach, the last of the day’s sunworshippers were packing up. Further along she could see a group of teenagers playing volleyball and beyond that some fishermen with their rods sunk into the sand and their lines cast out into the ocean.

Unable to resist the lure of the sand, she kicked off her sandals, scooped them up by their straps and set off barefoot across the sand, it’s soft grains still warm underfoot from the day’s sun. To her right, ocean waves crashed ashore.

Her heart wasn’t ready to leave; her mind told her it was time to head back to reality.

When she had booked the trip that she’d dreamt of for so long, she’d told everyone “What I really want to experience is sunrise and sunset on the beach.” And she had…every day since she’d arrived.

Tonight would be her last sunset for a while; tomorrow her last sunrise before the Uber picked her up at lunchtime for the first leg of her journey home.

During the long dark months at home, she had checked the beachcam images of the beach and boardwalk daily. As she’d gazed at her laptop screen, she had promised herself when she finally made the trip that she would visit the bar in the foreground of the webcam view and enjoy a drink gazing out over the ocean.

The first night when she’d walked in there alone, her heart had been pounding, her anxieties crashing through her like one of the powerful ocean breakers that were breaking on the shore behind her. Walking into a bar alone was way outside her comfort zone but she knew she had a promise to herself to keep so, taking a deep breath, she walked across the room to the bar. She took a seat on a tall cocktail stool at the bar and ordered a margarita.

She’d done it. Another promise from the list honoured.

Around the same time the following evening, she’d returned to the bar for another margarita. This time it felt less daunting.

On her third night when she’d walked in feeling confident, the bartender had smiled as he saw her approach and began to mix her cocktail. When she went to pay for the drink, he told her the check had been taken care of.

There was someone sitting on the stool next to her usual spot when she entered on her fourth night.

“Chris, mix the lady’s margarita,” the stranger had instructed then turning to smile at her, said, “Good day on the beach?”

“Perfect,” she’d replied feeling a little flutter of nerves.

“Been beautiful today,” he’d agreed before introducing himself.

And so, her holiday margarita ritual had begun.

Each evening he was there waiting for her. A couple of nights they had gone for a walk along the boardwalk; a couple of nights the following week they had gone for dinner. He had been the perfect gentleman, proving to be easy to talk to and a good listener. Gradually, through casual conversation, they got to know each other, the first seeds of friendship sown over their margaritas.

When she stepped up onto the boardwalk from the beach, she found him standing watching her.

“Hi,” she called as she brushed sand from her feet before slipping them back into her sandals.

“Hi,” he greeted her as she walked towards him. “The lure of another walk on the sand too much to resist?”

“Always,” she laughed. “Going to be hard leaving here tomorrow.”

“Then don’t.”

“Pardon?”

“Stay,” he suggested simply, slipping his hand into hers. The fit instantly felt natural to her.

“I can’t….” she began.

Gazing down at her, he said, “What if you gave yourself permission to say yes?”

The next promise on the list waiting to be honoured was “be happy”.