*After almost a year, we are finally getting to the last leg of releasing our anthology "The Vampyre Blogs - One Day At a Time". Provided all goes well, it will be available at the beginning/early October, just in time for spooky and weird tales. Helen and I are working on the last story for the anthology even as I write this post. We will be looking for Beta-Readers with hopes for feedback by the middle of September so we can make any final adjustments.
In the meantime, here is a little peek at one of the 24 tales that await you within the pages of this newest installment of our Para-Earth Series.
THE SNOWMAN
By Helen Krummenacker
A
chilly December evening was made cozy not only by the fireplace, but
the scents of vanilla, cinnamon, and ginger from baking in the
kitchen. Marissa turned the radio to a station playing all Christmas
music. Isabella was excited even beyond the average child at
Christmas time, for this was her first Christmas tree, her first time
seeing fairy lights, and even the radio was a novelty for her. She
would sit on the sofa, stare at the tree and get up again every few
minutes to better distribute the ornaments for color balance and even
presentation.
Marissa
and Lisa were helping Nathan with paper chains, a decoration he
remembered from his childhood. The girls were using a ladder to reach
high, but Nathan took care of sites out of their reach. Otto, having
recently surrendered the kitchen to Penny, who was making a couple of
her own favorite treats, had started to show Richard how to wire pine
and holly into swags to place around. “So ‘Boughs of holly’ are
just branches done up to decorate the place?”
“Yes.
Deck and decorate have the same word as a root.”
“Ain’t
that something. I always wondered about that song. Especially the gay
apparel.”
“That
meant jolly, bright colored, festive.”
“And
that makes ‘Johnny Comes Marching Home’ a lot better,” Richard
laughed. The professor was all right by him. Strange and a
little weird how he treated the boss like a kid sometimes, but when
he was around, you always felt a little bit smarter.
Just
then, a new tune came on the radio. “Frosty the snowman, was a
jolly, happy soul--”
“Turn
that off!” Otto snapped. Isabella looked at him in shock a moment
before heading to the radio and pushing the big circle button she’d
learned made these new electric things go on or off. “I’m sorry…
I just do not like that song,” he explained, suddenly aware that
everyone was watching him, puzzled by his uncharacteristic change of
mood. “I really do not like it. You would not like it, either, if
you knew how dangerous that snowman could have actually become.”
“Wait,
Frosty was *real*?” Marissa asked skeptically.
“There
are more things on heaven and Earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in
your philosophy,” quoted Otto, then sighed. “Yes. Frosty was
real, and he was the result of my missing an important detail and
behaving carelessly.”
“Story
time!” Lisa called out.
“Oh,
yes, we have to hear about this,” Marissa added.
“Really?”
Otto asked, as if surprised by the attention.
“Even
I haven’t heard this one,” said Nathan, “and it sounds like a
doozy.”
Otto
took a seat on the sofa, next to Isabella, and the others gathered
around. Richard kept at it with the greenery, but still cocked an ear
and moved so he could see Otto’s face and gestures. Taking a deep
breath, the professor began to tell the tale in a rich, melodic
voice...