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Elemental Book 1 The Bond

The Bond

Four men are about to discover things are definitely not what they seem ... including themselves.

Declan Makavoy, small town farmer and single father, finds out it isn’t just his thumb that’s green. Ivan Soresceau, a local reporter, who always plays with fire in life and love, is about to discover what it means to be burned. Chester Silberglocke, the ailing but sage chiropractor, finds his death is only the beginning of an atmospheric afterlife. And Vinny Pirelli, the local swimming champ, may make waves in the pool but has no idea he is the last piece in a dangerous and life-changing puzzle.

Seduction and unearthly occurrences are only the beginning in what proves to be a race against time as Declan, Ivan, Chester, and Vinny are pitted against a dark force and face unthinkable horrors as they rely on their friendship to destroy an evil beyond imagination.

Excerpt:
    • The wind carried the unpleasant smell of decay. In the heat of summer, the odor is nectar sweet, but in autumn, decay is unexpected. In the summer, it could be tomatoes left too long on the vine, fresh roadkill or sewage wafting up from the dank sidewalk grates. Autumn chilled the stench, offered it bite and acid. The hair on my neck stood on end. I dug my hands deeper into my pockets.

 

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    • Coming out of the tree-lined path leading to the fields reminded me of emerging from a dream. Overwrought and graphic, like an illustration in a bad comic, the scene unfolded block-by-block, piece-by-piece. The fields were barren, except where remains of gourds and pumpkins jutted from the earth like fevered skulls, things emerging to the cold dreary light. The distant pine trees lined the border of my property like sentries sent from a general to contain the scene. Beyond the trees, the forest appeared a black mass; empty and full at the same time. Perhaps Adam’s body -- or Adam himself -- waited, hidden in the woods.

 

    • They hadn’t found a body.

 

    • Hadn’t found ...

 

    • A new but not unfamiliar wave of pain welled within my chest so I thought I’d burst. Adam was dead. Dead ... How could he be ...?

 

    • Chester turned toward me, his eyes wide. He pointed.

 

    • Antonia sat, facing him. She’d been playing house or school with her gourd-squash students. Her singsong contrasted with the fouled air, unnerving me.

 

    • Behind her, centered in the field, something either unaware or unconcerned with our presence was consuming the remaining pumpkins.

 

    • Some thing.

 

    • “Declan,” Chester breathed, “stay still.”

 

    • The stench coming from the field hit like a ton of putrid bricks.

 

    • “Get her.” I heaved, trying to breathe through the stink. “I have to get her.”

 

    • Chester restrained me with more strength than I thought he possessed. “She must stay still.”

 

    • “What is it?” I asked.

 

    • “I don’t know.”

 

    • Just then a huge crow dove and we watched as the creature reached with a massive clawed paw, grabbed the bird and crushed it. It then stuffed the bird into its mouth and made horrific bone-sucking sounds of pleasure.

 

    Antonia smiled and called, “Daddy, have you seen the goblin?”

 

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