Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Dark Visions: Collections, #5
Dark Visions: Collections, #5
Dark Visions: Collections, #5
Ebook164 pages2 hours

Dark Visions: Collections, #5

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Read preview

About this ebook

Sometimes life leads you down a dark path. A very dark path.

You can succumb to the darkness or find your way back into the light. If you're lucky and brave.

Meyari McFarland collects six stories of darkness to entice you away from the light.

Includes:

Bottling the Cold, Hard Heart

Boiling the Ocean Away

Midwife to Divinity

Controlled Edge

Stars Drifting Ever Upwards

A Lone Red Tree


With an excerpt of the novel City of the Dead.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJun 17, 2019
ISBN9781393327295
Dark Visions: Collections, #5
Author

Meyari McFarland

Meyari McFarland has been telling stories since she was a small child. Her stories range from SF and Fantasy adventures to Romances but they always feature strong characters who do what they think is right no matter what gets in their way. Her series range from Space Opera Romance in the Drath series to Epic Fantasy in the Mages of Tindiere world. Other series include Matriarchies of Muirin, the Clockwork Rift Steampunk mysteries, and the Tales of Unification urban fantasy stories, plus many more. You can find all of her work on MDR Publishing's website at www.MDR-Publishing.com.

Read more from Meyari Mc Farland

Related authors

Related to Dark Visions

Titles in the series (25)

View More

Related ebooks

Amateur Sleuths For You

View More

Related articles

Related categories

Reviews for Dark Visions

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
0 ratings

0 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    Dark Visions - Meyari McFarland

    Dark Visions

    Dark Visions

    Collection #5

    Meyari McFarland

    MDR Publishing

    Special Offer

    The rainbow has infinite shades, just as this collection covers the spectrum of fictional possibilities.


    From contemporary romances like The Shores of Twilight Bay to dark fantasy like A Lone Red Tree and out to SF futures in Child of Spring, Iridescent covers the gamut of time, space and genre.


    Meyari McFarland shows her mastery in this first omnibus collection of her short fiction. Twenty-five amazing stories, all with queer characters going on adventures, solving mysteries, and falling in love are here in the first Rainbow Collection.


    And now you can get this massive collection of short queer fiction, all of it with the happy endings you love, for free!


    Sign up here for your free copy of Iridescent now!

    Contents

    Other Books by Meyari McFarland:

    Author's Note: Bottling the Cold, Hard Heart

    1.

    2.

    3.

    4.

    Author's Note: Boiling the Ocean Away

    Boiling the Ocean Away

    Author's Note: Midwife to Divinity

    1. Cold Comfort

    2. Shadow Traps

    3. Dark Doom

    4. Baby God

    5. Midwife Spells

    Author's Note: Controlled Edge

    09:27 am, Wednesday

    12:27 pm, Thursday

    11:58 am, Wednesday

    17:57 pm, Thursday

    12:18 pm, Wednesday

    15:03 pm, Thursday

    18:51 pm, Wednesday

    Author's Note: Stars Drifting Ever Upwards

    Stars Drifting Ever Upwards

    Author's Note: A Lone Red Tree

    A Lone Red Tree

    Author's Note: City of the Dead

    1. Lava Fields

    2. Growing Pains

    Other Books by Meyari McFarland:

    Afterword

    Author Bio

    Other Books by Meyari McFarland:

    Day Hunt on the Final Oblivion

    Day of Joy

    Immortal Sky


    A New Path

    Following the Trail

    Crafting Home

    Finding a Way

    Go Between

    Like Arrows of Fate


    Out of Disaster


    The Shores of Twilight Bay


    Coming Together

    Following the Beacon

    The Solace of Her Clan


    You can find these and many other books at www.MDR-Publishing.com. We are a small independent publisher focusing on LGBT content. Please sign up for our mailing list to get regular updates on the latest preorders and new releases and a free ebook!

    Copyright ©2017, 2019 by Mary Raichle


    Print ISBN: 978-1-944269-71-5


    Cover image


    ID 56168340 © Grandfailure | Dreamstime


    All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.


    Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be emailed to publisher@mdr-publishing.com.


    This book is also available in TPB format from all major retailers.

    Created with Vellum Created with Vellum

    This story is dedicated to JC. I may not intend to write things you'd like but sometimes it just seems to happen. Enjoy!

    Author's Note: Bottling the Cold, Hard Heart

    Idon’t generally write mysteries. My stories have mystery elements to them but it’s very rare for me to outright write a mystery. This is one of the rarities. The dark places here have more to do with the human heart than anything else.

    1.

    Eliza paused just inside the back fence, heart pounding so hard that her head spun and her stomach churned. Her familiar old yard looked so very barren now. Sandra had stripped out the purple and gold irises that had clustered along the west side of the yard like sunlit storm clouds in the spring. Every single blueberry, concord grape and blackberry bush was gone, torn up as though they were worthless. There was no hope of wine this year, sweet and rich from the fruits of the garden Eliza and Grandmother had spent so many years tending.

    Her old oak tree, trunk bent and twisted from the lightning strike that had killed half the tree when Eliza was ten, was gone. There wasn't even a hummock or stump left. Sandra must have paid to have the stump dug out and the hole filled in before she covered everything in the yard with purchased blocks of dry-edged sod.

    Even the old fence, broad boards that Eliza had once decorated with chalk drawings of suns, stars and moons, was gone. Every single bleached grey slab of wood had been whisked away. In its place was an eight foot tall cold, impersonal chain link fence whose only bit of personality was the green plastic coating over the bare metal. The Chelsey's back yard looked startled at being exposed and old Mr. Quinn's yard all but glowered, shrubs leaning away from the chain link as if offended by its presence.

    Grandmother's house was as unrecognizable. When Eliza moved in at eight, after her parent's deaths, Grandmother had insisted on repainting the house in Eliza's favorite colors. The roof had been covered with new burgundy shingles. Eliza, Grandfather and Grandmother had gleefully painted the siding forest green. The trim had been a rich golden tan. All the doors and window frames had been carefully covered with deep purple paint that made the little rambler look like a grand Painted Lady of the Victorian era.

    Not now. The house was white. The shingles were black. Every scrap of color was gone, just like Grandmother's life was gone, like Eliza's life was over. Only Sandra's desires and tastes remained.

    Except for Miki, her precious little Cavalier King Charles spaniel. Miki, hopefully, was the last bit of life and color left in the house that had been Eliza's home since her father killed her mother and then himself when she was eight years old. Now she just had to rescue Miki and go to jail for crossing Sandra.

    Eliza wished for that old battered fence for more than just nostalgia's sake as she edged carefully across the bricks of grass towards the back door. Anyone passing on the road in front of the house could see her there. With all the greenery gone, Eliza stood out like the sole red rose in a display of pure white lilies.

    It hardly mattered that Eliza had parked her car a mile away and walked down the much quieter back lane that only garbage trucks followed to get here when there was no cover at all in the yard. Someone had to notice her, had to call the police soon. But no, Eliza couldn't hear a single car. The afternoon was still and quiet as suited a Tuesday afternoon in the middle of the month. Everyone in the neighborhood was gone, hopefully especially Sandra.

    Birds sang next door, a strident Bluejay calling its claim to the neighbor's garden worms, a little chickadee trilling as it hopped along the top of the chain link fence. The chickadee cocked its head at Eliza, taking in her wild hair, shaking hands, pale face. Then it flew away as if afraid to even look into Sandra's yard.

    And wasn't that the heart of it all?

    This was Sandra's now. The yard stripped of flowers, trees, shrubs, the fresh sod laid down over the clover Grandmother and Eliza had favored, even the bare black paving stones by the back door with one pristine white-painted iron chair sitting by a carefully centered white ironwork table; it all belonged to Sandra when it had been willed to Eliza.

    The Bluejay shrilled as it took flight in a clap of wings that startled Eliza back into the chain link fence. It clanged, startling her even worse. Eliza bit her lip against a scream that would turn to tears, to panic, to shaking and crouching by the gate instead of going in to rescue Miki.

    Miki, Eliza whispered. I have to save Miki.

    She pressed her hands to her mouth, shut her eyes. No matter how frightened she was of Sandra, Eliza had to rescue Miki. Grandmother had willed the house and everything in it to Eliza. Sandra had gotten the money, the investments she'd always prized over people and pets, but the house had gone to Eliza so that she'd always have a home for herself and Miki.

    Not that the will had stood against Sandra's lawyers.

    2.

    The hot dry air in the courtroom had sucked all the moisture out of Eliza's mouth. Nothing could dry her eyes. A week after Grandmother's death, just hours after the death certificate had been issued, Sandra had showed up at the house with lawyers, four police cars and a summons.

    I'm challenging the will, Sandra had declared, slapping the summons into Eliza's hand. You're to vacate the house until it's sorted out.

    But… Eliza had stared at the summons, stared at the police cars while shrinking into herself, legs shaking. I… Sandra, why do this? If there was a problem all you had to do was say so.

    Didn't you hear me? Sandra had snapped, her chin coming up as she glared down her nose at Eliza. You need to vacate the house. Our court date is on Tuesday. Get on with it.

    And that, according to the lawyers and police, had been that. Eliza had been allowed to take underwear, two pairs of pants and three shirts. Her purse had nearly been taken away from her as she walked out the door to the tiny garage where her ancient pickup had waited. But the worst part was that Sandra's lawyers hadn't allowed Eliza to take Miki no matter how hard Eliza protested that Miki was her dog, not Grandmother's. They begrudged her the right to even feed and water Miki, take her out in the back yard for walks, before the court date.

    On Tuesday, Eliza had gone to court, heart in her throat, and watched as Sandra's perfect pair of lawyers with their impeccable suits and hair that could withstand a hurricane had torn Grandmother apart even though she wasn't yet in the grave. Nothing Eliza had said helped. While Eliza cried, protested, tried to convince the judge, Sandra sat, one leg crossed demurely over her knee, hands still on the white wool pencil skirt that had to cost more than Eliza's monthly wages at the convenience store in town.

    By the time that horrible day was done, Eliza had three books from Grandmother's library, a small monthly stipend from a locked-tight trust fund, and broken dreams smashed around her feet. As the lawyers put their papers away and the judge retreated back into his somber office, Eliza had wiped her cheeks, stood and went to look up into Sandra's eyes. The contrast between them had been so painfully clear. Sandra's perfect white suit made Eliza's hand-knit sweater and worn jeans look unprofessional, childish, worthless.

    I guess that's it, Eliza had said. Um, I'll be by tomorrow to pick up Miki and my things.

    No, you won't, Sandra had said, one perfect eyebrow climbing up her forehead. It's all mine now. You heard the judge.

    But Miki is my dog, Eliza had protested, heart beating faster for entirely different reasons than before. She had always assumed she'd get Miki back. Sandra, I bought her. I raised her. She was only staying at Grandmother's house because of the yard.

    Everything in the house is mine now, Sandra had replied so coldly that Eliza had stepped back, hands clutched to her chest. If you couldn't take care of the dog then that's not my problem, Eliza. It's mine along with everything else. You heard the judge.

    He said that I could get my personal items! Eliza had exclaimed. My photos and clothes and things.

    As if they're worth anything, Sandra had sniffed. She tossed her sleek brown hair over one shoulder, looking down her nose at Eliza.

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1