Thursday, August 07, 2014

The Forbidden Stone by Tony Abbott is Today's Kids Kindle Daily Deal

The Forbidden Stone by Tony Abbott

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature The Forbidden Stone by Tony Abbott as today's Kids Kindle Daily Deal.

The deal price of $1.99 is valid only for today, Thursday, August 07, 2014.

The Forbidden Stone by Tony Abbott

The Copernicus Legacy (1st in series)

Publisher: HarperCollins

Price: $1.99 (as of 08/07/2014 at 6:20 AM ET).

The Forbidden Stone by Tony Abbott, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

Wade, Lily, Darrell, and Becca fly from Texas to Germany for the funeral of an old family friend. But instead of just paying their respects, they wind up on a dangerous, mind-blowing quest to unlock an ancient, guarded secret that could destroy the fate of the world.

The Forbidden Stone by Tony Abbott

The Survivors Club by J. Carson Black is Today's Kindle Daily Deal

The Survivors Club by J. Carson Black

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature The Survivors Club by J. Carson Black as today's Kindle Daily Deal.

The deal price of $1.99 is valid only for today, Thursday, August 07, 2014.

The Survivors Club by J. Carson Black

A Novel of Suspense

Publisher: Thomas & Mercer

Price: $1.99 (as of 08/07/2014 at 6:10 AM ET).

The Survivors Club by J. Carson Black, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

Detective Tess McCrae investigates a grisly crime scene in the ghost town of Credo, Arizona. To an ordinary investigator, the evidence suggests a cartel drug hit. But Tess, with a nearly faultless photographic memory, is far from ordinary, and she sees what others might miss: this is no drug killing. Someone went to gruesome lengths to cover up this crime.

The killer's trail leads Tess from Tucson to California; from anti-government squatters in the Arizona mountains to the heights of wealthy society, including the rich and powerful DeKoven family, who've dominated Arizona commerce and politics since the 1800s. But as Tess follows the trail of gore and betrayal, perfect and indelible in her memory, she uncovers far more than one man's murder, and solves much more than one isolated crime.

The Survivors Club by J. Carson Black

Today's Mystery and Suspense Update from Big Fish Games (140807)

Big Fish Games

Here is today's mystery and suspense update from Big Fish Games …

• Our Featured Title is Alabama Smith in the Quest of Fate.

• The current Catch of the Week is Reality Show: Fatal Shot, just $2.99 through Sunday, August 10, 2014 only.

Visit the Omnimystery Entertainment Network for more games of mystery and suspense!

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Alabama Smith in the Quest of Fate

Our Featured Title is Alabama Smith in the Quest of Fate

Alabama Smith is back in an all-new time-twisting adventure involving powerful relics that could alter the destiny of mankind! Join Alabama and his girlfriend, Anastasia, in the hunt for the elusive Crystals of Fortune using the Amulet of Time in this Hidden Object game. Jump back and forth between the past and the present to solve mind-bending puzzles, search for cleverly hidden objects, and stop a shadowy nemesis from finding the crystals first!

A sample version is available to download and play for free for one hour. Also available for  Mac.

Also available for this game:

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Reality Show: Fatal Shot

The current Catch of the Week is Reality Show: Fatal Shot

Uncover the truth behind a shocking on-air murder! Everyone knows that breaking into showbiz can be tough. But for participants on Fright Reality Show, it can be murder. After a man is killed on the set of the hit series, the victim's wife arrives at your office, begging for justice. Follow the clues, from the city streets to the top floors of the station's headquarters to uncover the truth behind this shocking crime. But be careful! Things are rarely what they seem on TV …

A sample version is available to download and play for free for one hour. Also available for  Mac.

Also available for this game:

Wednesday, August 06, 2014

Review: Remains of Innocence by J. A. Jance

Mysterious Reviews: Reviews of New Mysteries, Novels of Suspense, and Thrillers

A Mysterious Review of Remains of Innocence by J. A. Jance. A Joanna Brady Mystery.

Review summary: The storyline of this mystery is incredibly suspenseful, filled with unexpected twists and turns. Though it features one of the more complex plots of the books in this long-running series, it is also one of the best to date. Highly recommended. (Click here for text of full review.)

Our rating: 5 of 5 stars

Remains of Innocence J. A. Jance

Remains of Innocence
J. A. Jance
A Joanna Brady Mystery
William Morrow (July 2014)

Publisher synopsis: An old woman, a hoarder, is dying of emphysema in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. In cleaning out her house, her daughter, Liza Machett, discovers a fortune in hundred dollar bills hidden in the tall stacks of books and magazines that crowd every corner.

Tracing the money's origins will take Liza on a journey that will end in Cochise County, where Sheriff Joanna Brady is embroiled in a personal mystery of her own. A man she considers a family friend is found dead at the bottom of a hole in a limestone cavern near Bisbee. And now there is the mystery of Liza and the money. Are the two disparate cases connected? It's up to Joanna to find out.

Available from Amazon.com  Available from Barnes & Noble  Available from iTunes  Available from Kobo

The Black Garden, A Suspense Thriller by Joe Bright, New This Week from Endeavour Press

The Black Garden by Joe Bright

Endeavour Press is the UK's leading independent digital publisher, promoting and selling ebook editions of works by new authors as well as bringing out ebook editions of out of print books.

We've selected one of their recently published mystery, suspense, thriller or crime titles to feature here today …

The Black Garden by Joe Bright

A Suspense Thriller

Publisher: Endeavour Press

Price: $2.99 (as of 08/06/2014 at 4:30 PM ET).

The Black Garden by Joe Bright, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

Mitchell is a young University student from Boston. One summer he takes a vacation job in a small rural town. The task? Clearing the accumulated rubbish from the house and garden of an elderly man, George O'Brien, and his granddaughter, Candice. But the job is not what it seems.

Slowly Mitchell finds himself drawn into the mystery surrounding the Black Garden and the lives of his employers. Why are the townspeople so hostile? Is it something to do with the garden?

Mitchell must solve the mystery — and do so without endangering George's freedom or leaving Candice even more isolated — before it is too late.

The Black Garden by Joe Bright

Agatha Raisin and the Potted Gardener, An Agatha Raisin Mystery by M. C. Beaton, Now Available at a Special Price

Agatha Raisin and the Potted Gardener by M. C. Beaton

Omnimystery News is always searching for newly discounted mystery, suspense, thriller and crime novels for our readers to enjoy. Today, we're pleased to feature the following title, now available at a special price courtesy of the publisher, Minotaur Books …

Agatha Raisin and the Potted Gardener by M. C. Beaton

An Agatha Raisin Mystery (3rd in series)

Publisher: Minotaur Books

Price: $2.99 (as of 08/06/2014 at 4:00 PM ET).

Agatha Raisin and the Potted Gardener by M. C. Beaton, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

Never say die. That's the philosophy Agatha Raisin clings to when she comes home to cozy Carsely and finds a new woman ensconced in the affections of her attractive bachelor neighbor, James Lacey. The beautiful newcomer, Mary Fortune, is superior in every way, especially when it comes to gardening. And Agatha, that rose with many thorns, hasn't a green thumb to her name.

With garden Open Day approaching, she longs for a nice juicy murder to remind James of her genius for investigation. And sure enough, a series of destructive assaults on the finest gardens is followed by an appalling murder.

Agatha seizes the moment and immediately starts yanking up village secrets by their roots and digging up all the dirt on the victim. Problem is, Agatha has an awkward secret of her own …

Agatha Raisin and the Potted Gardener by M. C. Beaton

Murder in the Mystery Suite by Ellery Adams, a New 1st in Series Mystery Introducing Jane Steward

Murder in the Mystery Suite by Ellery Adams

Omnimystery News is pleased to present you with one of this month's new 1st in Series titles, a mystery, thriller or suspense novel that introduces a recurring character (or characters) …

Murder in the Mystery Suite by Ellery Adams

Jane Steward, Book Retreat (1st in series)

Publisher: Berkley

Murder in the Mystery Suite by Ellery Adams, Amazon Kindle format

What we know about the character: Tucked away in the rolling hills of rural western Virginia is the storybook resort of Storyton Hall, managed by Jane Steward, catering to book lovers who want to get away from it all. For more information about her first murder, see a synopsis of the book, below.

Who would resort to murder?

To increase her number of bookings, resort manager Jane Steward has decided to host a Murder and Mayhem week so that fans of the mystery genre can gather together for some role-playing and fantasy crime solving.

But when the winner of the scavenger hunt, Felix Hampden, is found dead in the Mystery Suite, and the valuable book he won as his prize is missing, Jane realizes one of her guests is an actual murderer. Amid a resort full of fake detectives, Jane is bound and determined to find a real-life killer. There's no room for error as Jane tries to unlock this mystery before another vacancy opens up …

Murder in the Mystery Suite by Ellery Adams

Death Trap, A Jessie Arnold, Alaska Mystery by Sue Henry, Now Available at a Special Price

Death Trap by Sue Henry

Omnimystery News is always searching for newly discounted mystery, suspense, thriller and crime novels for our readers to enjoy. Today, we're pleased to feature the following title, now available at a special price courtesy of the publisher, HarperCollins …

Death Trap by Sue Henry

A Jessie Arnold, Alaska Mystery (10th in series)

Publisher: HarperCollins

Price: $3.99 (as of 08/06/2014 at 3:00 PM ET).

Death Trap by Sue Henry, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

Up north, the summers are brief … and winter, like death, is cold and long …

Recovering from knee surgery that will cause her to miss the upcoming dogsled racing season, champion "musher" Jessie Arnold feels empty and bored — so she grabs an opportunity to fill her days manning the Iditarod booth at the Alaska State Fair.

But murder becomes an attraction here as well — an especially brutal one — when the corpse of a small-time hoodlum slain by a double-blade axe blow to the skull turns up on the fairgrounds. Jessie shouldn't get involved, having already seen too much violent death in her lifetime.

But strange connections are linking the killing with a child's kidnapping … and with the sudden disappearance of her own beloved lead sled dog. Soon friends old and new will be pulled in as well when the unthinkable occurs: Jessie herself vanishes without a trace.

Death Trap by Sue Henry

Avoidable Contact by Tammy Kaehler, New in Bookstores during August 2014

Avoidable Contact by Tammy Kaehler

Today's featured new hardcover mystery, suspense, or thriller title scheduled to be published during August 2014 is …

Avoidable Contact by Tammy Kaehler

The Kate Reilly, Racing Series (3rd)

Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press

Avoidable Contact by Tammy Kaehler, Amazon Kindle format  Avoidable Contact by Tammy Kaehler, Nook format  Avoidable Contact by Tammy Kaehler, iTune iBook format  Avoidable Contact by Tammy Kaehler, Kobo format

For a list of more new hardcover titles to be published this month, visit our New Mysteries page for August 2014. For new paperback mysteries, visit The Mystery Bookshelf where a selection of August 2014 mysteries, novels of suspense, and thrillers are shelved.

More about our featured title, below …

Racecar driver Kate Reilly is suited up and ready for the start of the legendary 24 Hours of Daytona. But what lies ahead is not just a racing challenge but a harrowing test of her will and nerve off the course.

Even before the green flag waves over Daytona International Speedway, Kate receives word her boyfriend Stuart is hospitalized nearby in a coma, fighting for his life after a hit-and-run. Stunned by the news, Kate can do nothing better for Stuart than complete her scheduled laps driving her team's car. But more shocks follow as Daytona's clock starts ticking. An on-track accident ends tragically. Some of her complicated family is spotted with other teams — why? And an eyewitness claims Stuart was run down deliberately by someone from the race paddock.

Alternating stints behind the wheel of the team's Corvette with stretches of quizzing colleagues and searching for clues, Kate circles the police and taps every possible source — friend, foe, and family — to find out who's after Stuart and why. As the race clock counts down to zero hour, Kate must come to terms with her own fears rising from her past and decide who she's willing to trust. Only then can she identify who's willing to kill to keep a secret buried.

Avoidable Contact by Tammy Kaehler

The Counterfeit Lady by Kate Parker, New on the Mystery Bookshelf during August 2014

The Counterfeit Lady by Kate Parker

New on the Mystery Bookshelf during August 2014 …

The Counterfeit Lady by Kate Parker

The Georgia Fenchurch, Victorian Bookshop Series (2nd)

Publisher: Berkley Trade

The Counterfeit Lady by Kate Parker, Amazon Kindle format

To see more new paperback titles scheduled to be published this month, visit The Mystery Bookshelf for August 2014. For new hardcover mysteries, visit New Mysteries where for a list of August 2014 mysteries, novels of suspense, and thrillers is provided.

More about our featured title, below …

Who would suspect antiquarian bookseller Georgia Fenchurch of leading a double life — as a private investigator for the clandestine Archivist Society in Victorian London? When England's national security is compromised, Georgia must pose as a titled lady to root out a spy …

A cousin of Georgia's dear friend, Lady Phyllida Monthalf, is brutally murdered in her home during the theft of blueprints of a new battleship designed by her husband — who now stands accused of her murder … and treason. The Duke of Blackford, in service to Whitehall, enlists Georgia and the Archivist Society to assist in the investigation. Playing the part of the duke's new paramour, Georgia gains entry into the upper echelons of London's elite, where amidst elegant dinners and elaborate parties a master spy schemes to lay hands on the stolen plans.

The duke is no stranger to the world of international espionage, but Georgia is out of her element in more ways than one. She must not allow her genuine attraction to the duke — or her obsession with finding her parents' killer — to distract her from her role. But when a mysterious stranger threatens to expose her, the counterfeit lady may be in real trouble …

The Counterfeit Lady by Kate Parker

The Concrete Blonde, A Harry Bosch Mystery by Michael Connelly, Now Available at a Special Price

The Concrete Blonde by Michael Connelly

Omnimystery News is always searching for newly discounted mystery, suspense, thriller and crime novels for our readers to enjoy. Today, we're pleased to feature the following title, now available at a special price courtesy of the publisher, Little, Brown …

The Concrete Blonde by Michael Connelly

A Harry Bosch Mystery (3rd in series)

Publisher: Little, Brown

Price: $2.99 (as of 08/06/2014 at 1:00 PM ET).

The Concrete Blonde by Michael Connelly, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

The Dollmaker was the name of the serial killer who had stalked Los Angeles ruthlessly, leaving grisly calling cards on the faces of his female victims. Now with a single faultless shot, Detective Harry Bosch thinks he has ended the city's nightmare.

But the dead man's widow is suing Harry and the LAPD for killing the wrong man — an accusation that rings terrifyingly true when a new victim is discovered with the Dollmaker's macabre signature.

So for the second time, Harry must hunt down a death-dealer who is very much alive, before he strikes again. It's a blood-tracked quest that will take Harry from the hard edges of the L.A. night to the last place he ever wanted to go — the darkness of his own heart.

The Concrete Blonde by Michael Connelly

New This Week: The Advocate's Felony, The Advocates Series by Teresa Burrell

The Advocate's Felony by Teresa Burrell

Omnimystery News is pleased to present a mystery, suspense, or thriller ebook that we recently found by sleuthing (as it were) through new or recently reissued titles from independent publishers during August 2014 and priced $4.99 or less …

The Advocate's Felony by Teresa Burrell

The Advocates Series (6th in series)

Publisher: Silent Thunder Publishing

Price: $3.99 (as of 08/06/2014 at 12:30 PM ET).

The Advocate's Felony by Teresa Burrell, Amazon Kindle format

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

When Attorney Sabre Brown's phone rings at 2 a.m. she's shocked to hear from her brother, Ron, who has been in Witness Protection for the past seven years. Someone has discovered his whereabouts and is trying to kill him — and possibly Sabre as well.

Sabre and her private investigator, JP, leave sunny San Diego to find her brother who has gone underground. Based on a single clue, they begin their search in the cold, wintry Pacific Northwest. They soon discover that the six felons whom Ron testified against have been released from prison. One by one, they are being murdered.

Sabre and JP race to find Ron and stop the next bullet. As the clues unfold, they're unsure if someone is trying to kill Ron or protect him. Or is Ron the killer? Could Sabre's beloved brother have changed during his long absence and is he now seeking vengeance? Sabre risks her relationships, her career, and her life to seek the undeniable truth. Is Sabre's love for her brother overriding her sound judgment and if so, is there a final bullet with Sabre's name on it?

The Advocate's Felony by Teresa Burrell

An Excerpt from The Witness by E J Henry

Omnimystery News: An Excerpt courtesy of E J Henry
The Witness by E J Henry

We are delighted to welcome novelist E J Henry to Omnimystery News today.

E J's debut novel of suspense is The Witness (Roaring Silence; July 2014 ebook), a book described as "a filmic novel with sharp pacing and clear visuals, hopefully combining tension and control to provide a compelling story in the thriller/mystery genre."

We are pleased to introduce you to this book with an excerpt from it, the first three chapters. (E J will be with us again in early September, when we'll have the opportunity to discuss it in more detail.)

— ♦ —

The Witness by E J Henry

CHAPTER ONE
2014, Sussex, England

THE OLD MAN SAT QUIETLY IN THE high-backed green leather chair to the left of the open fire, as the embers glowed gently in the vast cast-iron grate. The chair was worn and faded with the passage of time and constant use. Much of his last five years had been spent in this chair, reflecting on the past and on whether his guest would ever receive his letter and respond to the invitation.
   His guest had at last responded and was now waiting patiently in the shadows, sitting silently on the comfortable brown sofa. The only illumination in the room came from those subdued embers. It was a warm night but cold was now the old man's constant companion as his life drew close to its end.
  The ornate mantelpiece clock chimed the half hour. His guest's fingers pushed back the cuff on his left wrist: 11.04. The hands on the wristwatch never moved. Time stood still for the expensive Patek Philippe watch and always would do so. It had belonged to his father and he would never contemplate taking it to a jeweller for repair.
  The old man stirred at the sound and leant his withered frame towards the fire. He stirred the dying coals with a slim black poker, grim determination etched into his gaunt features. The claw like hand trembled with the exertion as this simple task required a monumental effort. Satisfied with his work he grunted and fell back into the chair, exhaling slowly. His guest noticed how heavily the old man's skin had been mottled by age, the outline of every bone prominent in the faint firelight.
  The old man took a sip of heavily watered whisky and replaced the glass with an unsteady hand onto the elaborately carved small wooden side table. After minutes of silence he began. The waiting was over and his guest was now alert and expectant.
  "Life is a strange journey." He coughed quietly at the effort of speaking those few words. The old rheumy eyes stared into the middle distance, his body immobile and wasted in the ill-fitting, traditional grey suit. He did not wear the suit often nowadays, but this was an important occasion. His guest said nothing in reply. He had waited a long time for this moment. A few more minutes or even hours was of no significance. He was patient beyond his young years.
  The voice, weak and slow, cut through his guest's thoughts. "We each journey along the path of life. For some it is long and for others surprisingly short. Some journey alone, some with partners, children or friends, but at the end of the day the reality is stark. We may be joined on the journey some of the way, but ultimately we all start and finish it alone. In absolute isolation."
  His head drooped forward until the chin rested gently on his sunken chest. The once aquiline features had been cruelly ravaged by the passing years and illness. After several more minutes, his guest coughed politely and the old man came awake with a start. He cast his head around the room until he found his bearings again. On noticing his guest he smiled weakly, almost apologetically.
  "Some people walk the path by careful, steady steps. Others rush on, headstrong and confident. Many keep their heads down, seeing nothing, whilst some take a moment to stop, think, and look around." The clock on the mantelpiece chimed nine. He waited for it to finish before continuing his monologue.
  "The path can be as straight as a Roman road or as meandering as a country lane. Whatever route we take, it always comes to an end. I suspect I am now close to that end." He smiled to himself, eyes fixed on the fire, and then turned to view his guest, a flicker of animation and energy now running through the frail body. He raised a hand and pointed at him.
  "You want me to tell you about him." It was a statement rather than a question but his guest nodded, emphasising the movement so that the weak eyes could register his action. He ignored the trembling hand, which was still pointing at him. "It was a strange journey for him. He bolted down the path with arrogance, but with no real direction or purpose." The old man laughed quietly to himself, lost in his reflections. It was a faint, gentle sound, followed by a slow shaking of the head. "But one day he was checked on that path by events that changed his direction completely and his whole perception of the journey."
  For the first time in many hours his guest spoke. His voice was soft and cultured. "I would welcome all you can tell me, Father Cuthbert. As you will appreciate, his life is very much a mystery to me." The old man nodded slowly. His guest remained impassive and looked around the room whilst he waited. He noticed, not for the first time, the heavy, dark velvet curtains drawn tightly closed across the large, stone mullioned window. The room was stiflingly hot and the atmosphere oppressive. The faint smoke from the fire did little to mask the odour of damp and decay.
  The old man's hand dropped gently back into his lap, but his gaze stayed on the young face in the shadows. "As you wish. You, above all, have the right to know." For the next two hours the old man recounted his memories of George Fellows to his guest. The manner of the telling was laborious and often ponderous, but his guest remained totally transfixed throughout.
  As the clock chimed 11, the old man lay back in his chair and sighed. Even in the dim light his guest could see that he had become markedly pale in appearance. Within seconds his fatigue was replaced by agitation, his face showing a mixture of confusion and pain. His guest rose uncertainly from the sofa, as the old man clutched at his chest with his right hand. With his left hand he reached out for a small bottle of pills on the side table. His grip failed him and the bottle fell to the floor. His guest approached the chair and retrieved the fallen bottle. He laid a hand on the old man's withered shoulder.
  "What's wrong, Father Cuthbert?"
  The old man's breathing was becoming laboured and his face was etched in agony. "Please," he gasped, pointing to the pill bottle in his guest's hand. "Place one of those tablets under my tongue." His guest looked down at the label stuck to the brown bottle, clearly a prescription drug from its appearance: Glyceryl Trinitrate — to be taken when needed.
  The old man leaned forwards in the chair, both hands clasped firmly to his chest. His eyes were closed and his breathing ragged. His guest unscrewed the cap from the small bottle and tipped a tablet into his open palm. The old man opened his eyes and stared in confusion as his guest began to cry and then let the tablet fall from his hand onto the floor.
  The guest retrieved a short letter from his own pocket, read the faded ink slowly and then placed it on the fire. He resumed his seat and watched as the flames flickered into life for a brief moment. Thirty minutes later there was a soft knock at the door. The middle-aged housekeeper entered. She smiled gently at the guest and looked caringly at the old man lying back in his chair.
  "He's been still the last half hour or so. I didn't want to disturb him."
  The housekeeper was apologetic as she led the guest through the dim hallway towards the front door. "Thank you for coming. He rarely receives visitors but I'm afraid he tires very easily." The guest nodded in understanding as the housekeeper opened the front door. He stooped slightly as he went through the low doorway and out into the gentle summer night. He had much on his mind.
  He called to the housekeeper as he walked down the path. "I'll call again tomorrow if that's okay?" She smiled in reply and watched him go down the path to the gate.
  The visit of the guest was a strange occurrence. She had been looking after Father Cuthbert for five years now, ever since he had retired and moved down from Oxford to his old cottage. In all that time he had rarely had visitors and never an unannounced person such as this one. The guest had come out of nowhere but had been made very welcome by Father Cuthbert, who had never spoken to her of an intended visit. Strangely, the visitor never offered his name on arrival and she had never thought to ask him.
  The housekeeper went into the kitchen and tidied up for the morning, leaving Father Cuthbert sleeping in the front room. Thirty minutes or so later she went to wake her charge and help him up to bed. She could not wake him.
   "Doctor Harris. I am sorry to disturb you at this hour, but you are needed." The housekeeper talked to the Doctor for a short time and then sat down in the front room, waiting and listening. The house was in total silence as she regarded the old man in his chair.
  
  Five minutes later she answered a soft knock at the door and invited Doctor Harris into the hallway. She could smell the whisky on his breath as he brushed past her. "Praised be Jesus Christ," muttered the Doctor.
  "For ever. Amen," she replied automatically and led him into the front room.
  The housekeeper waited patiently by the door until the Doctor had finished his cursory checks on the immobile body. Little examination was needed. She knew the answer before it came. Doctor Harris straightened up from leaning over the figure in the chair and looked at her compassionately.
  "Yes. Dead I'm afraid. His heart had to give up eventually." He reached for the pill bottle on the table and picked it up, but did not notice the discarded tablet on the floor in the dim light. "It looks as though he has been taking these, but they only help the symptoms, you know."
  The housekeeper said nothing in reply. There was nothing to be said. The only person she cared about, or really knew, had been taken from her. The Doctor wrote out the medical certificate of cause of death: ischaemic heart disease and chronic bronchitis.
  He handed the certificate to her. "I'll call the undertakers for you, my dear." She smiled faintly in appreciation and the Doctor left without a further word.
  The housekeeper stood alone in the front room, looking down at the body in the chair that had once been her charge. She knew that it was wrong of her not to see the Doctor from the house but she could not leave Father Cuthbert. She shook her head in sadness and sat down on the sofa. She would stay with him that night. He should not be left alone, even in death. Tears welled up in her eyes and she sobbed gently until sleep came to her, many hours later, as the birds began to sing in the new dawn.

CHAPTER TWO
1993, Sussex, England

George Fellows was an angry young man but today he had excelled himself. The drive down from London to West Sussex had taken far too long and young Ben, who had been strapped into the car seat behind him, had screamed constantly in his ear. He had tried to drown out the noise with the radio but Katy had not helped, turning down the volume and then changing the station to Radio 4. George had switched the station back to Radio 1 and they had continued this duel for many miles until he had given up and turned the radio off completely. The ill-tempered atmosphere had been fuelled thereafter by Katy constantly telling him to slow down and brake when he did not need to.
  At last they arrived at their destination. Impressive brass plaques on each of the stone pillars supporting the enormous wrought iron entrance gates, declared their destination: The Immaculate Heart Nursing Home. George turned the car through the gates and deliberately accelerated up the driveway, spinning the wheels of his beloved BMW M3 and scattering the well-groomed gravel in all directions. Katy sighed, but did not take the bait.
  The nursing home came into view as they rounded a curve in the driveway. It was a mock gothic Victorian building of vast proportions, nestled amongst finely manicured lawns, mature trees and vivid flowerbeds. George swung the car to the left just before the green and gold signpost identifying the visitors' car park. Katy could not hold back any longer.
  "Slow down, George. This is a nursing home not a race track." He ignored her as he braked sharply and pulled up next to one of several parked Range Rovers, their pristine paintwork sparkling in the late morning sunshine.
  They had come to visit one of Katy's aging aunts and then go on to stay with her parents for a short break, away from London. He had been against the trip from the start and, in particular, this part of it. Aunt Eugene was a devout Catholic in a long line of Catholics in Katy's vast and important family. In George's opinion, a private Catholic nursing home was a claustrophobic environment, smothered by religion and death. It was certainly no place for young Ben, or himself, for that matter.
  George slammed his car door and left Katy to struggle to get Ben out of the rear seat. He smiled in grim satisfaction and lit a cigarette as she attempted to move around in the small space. Although he walked a few paces away from the car he could still hear Katy's scolding words as she attempted to unclip Ben from the child seat.
  "This car is totally impractical, George. I don't know why we couldn't have come down in the Volvo? At least that has four doors and a sensible boot." He knew why but did not bother to reply. Her car drove like a biscuit tin on wheels. At least the M3 had some driver appeal. It was his pride and joy and the only major thing in his life that he had bought with his own money, apart from his beautiful restored Riva up on Lake Windermere. Everything else, from the flat in London to the holidays in exotic locations, was provided for by Katy's money, or rather her family's money.
  "Come on, George. Put that thing out please." Katy had slammed the car door and was now striding towards the main entrance. She had Ben's hand in a tight grip and pulled him along as he dragged his smart new shoes in the gravel. George inhaled the smoke deeply and then dropped his cigarette onto the ground. It was a small but satisfying act of rebellion. He caught up with Katy and Ben as they reached the stone arched entrance way and held open the large oak and glass door for them to enter.
  "Boom! Boom!" shouted Ben, slapping his hands against the door as they walked in.
  "I wish he would stop doing that," muttered Katy in embarrassment. She looked around furtively, to ensure no one had witnessed such a ridiculous act.
  George laughed at his son and patted him on the head. "Oh come on, Katy. He's only a kid. He thinks he can open doors and destroy things with one blast of his superhero hands. There's nothing wrong with imagination."
  She ignored him and focused on a middle-aged nurse coming towards them through the vast, stone flagged hall. Katy's face turned from resentment to serene contentment in an instant. George tousled Ben's hair and listened politely but without any interest to the conversation between them. He was standing next to Katy, but could have been outside the building for all it mattered. George was, as usual, an inactive participant at best, or possibly just a bystander, when it came to discussions concerning her family.
  "Miss Bircham remains stable and surprisingly strong, Mrs Fellows." Katy nodded in appreciation. Miss Bircham had been in the nursing home now for over three years, always stable but slowly following that path to the inevitable end. She still remained absolutely resolute in her faith and confidence in the life to come. George was easily distracted by an old boy in a wheelchair being pushed by a nun through the hallway. He was wrapped in an old-fashioned black overcoat with a strange, dark fur collar, in spite of the hot weather. He nodded in greeting and the old man smiled in return. George fought hard to suppress a grin. His withered head was almost vulture-like, sticking out of the big collar on an impossibly thin neck.
  "Your father was down here only last weekend. What a caring gentleman; so considerate." The nurse smiled at the recent memory and Katy seemed to bask in the reflected glory for a moment. "Shall I show you up to her rooms?" Katy agreed and they followed the nurse up the sweeping stone staircase to the first-floor landing. Katy held Ben's hand tightly as he jumped from step to step. George followed them at a discreet distance.
  Once they reached the first floor they left the staircase and went through a set of swing doors into a long corridor, guarded by a young nurse sitting at an antique-style mahogany desk. She was in deep conversation with a tall, thin priest dressed in a formal black cassock. The conversation stopped as the visiting party approached. The young nurse rose to greet them and waited expectantly for an introduction.
  "This is Nurse Wentworth. She will look after you from here." The nurses smiled at each other and to Katy, who smiled at them. George held back, unable to replicate their happy expressions. "They are here to see Miss Bircham, Nurse." The older nurse then turned on her heels and bowed her head in George's direction slightly, as she retreated through the swing doors. George stepped forward to join the group and held Ben by the shoulders. He was fidgeting and ready to kick off at any moment.
  Nurse Wentworth spoke to them in hushed tones and nodded towards the priest. "Father Thomas is here to visit an elderly resident who is close to the end, I'm afraid." Father Thomas smiled weakly but said nothing. As George studied him he realised that he was even thinner than he had first thought. He had a shock of longish black hair, greying at the temples, which swept back from a high forehead. Movement drew George to his left hand, in which the priest loosely held some rosary beads. With obvious skill borne out of years of practice he slid the beads through his fingers in a constant, rhythmic motion. He was possibly ten years or so older than George, but looked at least 20 years older due to the old style, formal clerical dress and his sombre expression.
  "I'll take you down to see Miss Bircham." The nurse set off down the corridor and the small group followed obediently. George cast a quick look back at Father Thomas. His head was bowed and his lips appeared to be moving in silent prayer. The corridor was long and wide, covered in rich dark blue carpeting. Its walls were panelled and painted a light greyish blue. Each door they passed was made of highly polished mahogany and firmly closed. Nurse Wentworth saw George looking at them as they passed and answered the question before it was put.
  "We close the doors as a mark of respect when a resident is close to the end." George nodded in reply. There seemed little point in saying anything.
  They paused further down the corridor and entered a door on the left hand side, which led them into a small, light sitting room. These walls were pastel green topped by a high, corniced ceiling. Nurse Wentworth knocked politely on an internal door to the left and they entered the inner sanctum of Miss Eugene Bircham. The room was large and bathed in the golden afternoon sunlight. It shone gently through the three windows set in the outside wall, to their right. Miss Bircham was sitting up in a hospital-style bed in the middle of the room, her small head propped up on several large pillows. She seemed to be sleeping.
  "Your niece and her son are here to see you Miss Bircham." There was no mention of George. In this family he did not seem to exist as an individual. At best he was Katy's husband or the father of her child. George noticed that Ben was starting to get restless. Nurse Wentworth looked from him to George and stopped on her way out. "Father Thomas will be administering the Rites a few doors away so I would ask that you keep your son in here, under control, please."
  George smiled at her, although he was seething inside at her patronising and judgmental attitude. "Of course."
  "Hello, Auntie. How are you?" Katy was sweetness itself as she pulled Ben towards the bed to present him to Miss Bircham. She sat down in the comfortable chair to the side of the bed and held Ben out in front of her. George took a standing position a few feet away. The nurse flashed a frosty smile at George, smiled at Katy and her aunt, and then quietly left the room, closing the door firmly but gently behind her.
  Miss Bircham stirred and looked towards Katy. Her eyes focused on her niece and her face took on a pained expression. "I've not been well at all, you know, Katherine. At my age there is not much to live for." The old lady shook her bird-like head and clasped her hands over the large crucifix which hung from a heavy gold chain around her neck. Whether this was a pious act or an involuntary action, George had no idea and no real interest. She seemed pretty strong to him. He was no doctor but there seemed to be good colour to her skin and the eyes were bright, if a little calculating in appearance.
  Katy nodded. "Look, Auntie. I've brought Ben to see you." Katy gently pushed Ben to the very edge of the bed and the old lady placed a hand on top of his wayward blond hair.
  She studied Ben for a moment and then addressed Katy loudly. "He needs a hair cut, Katherine, or he'll start to look like a girl. Not good for a boy to look like a girl."
  Ben snatched his head away and thumped the bed with his little fists. "Boom, boom." He was only three years old but had the voice of someone twice his age. The room seemed to resonate with his shouts.
  "Sorry, Auntie. It's his new thing." Katy shook her head apologetically and yanked at Ben's sleeve. "He thinks he can blow things up with his hands."
  The door opened and Nurse Wentworth stuck her head through the gap. She looked directly at George. "Could I ask, again, that you control your child? We cannot have such noise at this time." Once more she smiled serenely at the other occupants and then closed the door.
  Aunt Eugene ignored her. "That's more like it for a boy, Katherine. A good, strong voice." She nodded encouragingly at Ben and then looked up at George, who had maintained his distance. She was about to say something when the door opened again, this time after a politely quiet knock. A kindly-looking middle-aged lady came into the room pushing a tea trolley. Ben took this as his chance to try out a new explosion technique. He pulled away from Katy and before George could stop him he had smashed both hands into the side of the tea trolley, sending cups and saucers flying, to the dismay of the domestic and the obvious anger of Katy.
  Nurse Wentworth was back at the open door. George could not help but smile at the ridiculous situation. He pre-empted her sour expression. "I'll take him outside to run off some energy." Katy nodded at George with a mixture of cold fury and embarrassment. Before Aunt Eugene or Nurse Wentworth could comment on the incident, George led his son out of the door, mumbling an apology on the way to the hapless lady who was picking up the fallen crockery.

CHAPTER THREE

George and his son were through the swing doors in seconds and took the stairs two at a time. He held Ben easily under his right arm. The boy was shouting in delight as they headed for the main doors. George felt like shouting too. They were both glad to be leaving the oppressive building and oblivious to the reproving looks they received from the staff on their way to the front entrance. The warm afternoon sunshine beckoned beyond the gloomy hallway.
  George stepped out into the blazing, bright light and let Ben down onto his own feet. The sun and the fresh air lifted his spirits immediately. He was unsure why nursing homes always smelt obnoxious, however much you paid them. Dismissing the random thought he took in his surroundings. The grounds in front of the building were mainly laid to lawn. It was a huge space of manicured green giving Ben plenty of room to run about and deplete some of his great reserves of energy. George watched as Ben chased a butterfly around the grass, shouting as he did so. His irritations drifted away as he went to sit down on a nearby bench where he could still observe his son.
  George produced his cigarettes and lit one. "Can I have one of those please?" George turned around in surprise, looking for the source of the voice. He instantly recognised the old man from the hallway, now hunched in his wheelchair in the shadows behind him, sheltered by a large yew hedge.
  "Of course." George passed the packet to him and watched as the old man extracted a cigarette with long, fine fingers. They were emaciated with age but still dexterous. George viewed him with interest. He was clearly very old and infirm. His skin lacked colour but his blue eyes, although sunken into his emaciated face, had a strange penetrating fervour that actually took George by surprise. George lit the cigarette for his new companion and turned to check on Ben. He was still happily running around. The butterfly had gone but his new friend seemed to be a bee.
  "I've not seen you here before. Is this your first visit?" George turned around to answer the question. The old man was happily puffing on the cigarette, watching George through those clear blue eyes.
  "Yes. First time."
  The old man shifted slightly in the wheelchair. "Don't stay too long. This place has secrets you know. Serpents!" He coughed and waited for a response to this radical statement. George said nothing and smoked his cigarette.
  After failing to elicit a response the old man continued. "Who are you here to see?" His physical appearance belied his voice, which was surprisingly strong and deep.
  "Miss Bircham. Do you know her?" George was happy to pass some time with the old chap and put off his return to Miss Bircham's rooms.
  "I do. I know of, or knew, all of them here. Been here a while you see. Almost five years now." There was silence between them as George watched Ben and the old man watched George, enjoying his cigarette with illicit pleasure. "Watch out for the crow." George turned again and looked at him in mild amusement.
  "I will." He was unsure what to make of him or the statement. He was undecided on whether the old resident was fully cogent or a little confused. Either way he was mildly amusing and had lightened the day for George.
  "He is a real serpent. He comes in his old-fashioned garb to see his specials, you know. Not the parish priest for them. Nasty, thin little crow. One of God's soldiers." The old man shook his head in disgust.
  George was intrigued. "Do you mean the thin priest in the old-fashioned cassock? I saw him a few minutes ago in the building."
  The old man nodded and spoke with some disdain. "Nobody wears that garb today except for formal services." He shook his head again.
  George thought, irreverently, how was it possible for such a thin neck to support a head making those rapid movements? Suppressing a smile, which would have been at the old man's expense, he thought it was only right to fill him in with what little knowledge he had.
  "I think he is administering the Last Rites to a resident close to death." Seeing the grimace on the old man's face, George was unsure if he should have mentioned death. It could be a sensitive subject for one closer to it than he was. He had clearly misread the situation, as the old man snorted whilst he continued to puff on his cigarette.
  "He is more an angel of death."
  George turned to see that Ben was about to wander off too far towards the entrance gates. Muttering an apology over his shoulder he ran after Ben and retrieved him yards away from the entrance gates, just as a car was about to drive in. Ben struggled against his capture and shouted loudly in protest.
  As they came back towards the bench George noticed that the old man had gone. He could just make out the hunched figure in his wheelchair being pushed by one of the nurses through some French doors on the ground floor of the main building.
  Reluctantly, George led Ben back to the main entrance and entered just behind a youngish man in a plain suit, carrying a large briefcase. He turned at the sound of Ben's protests. "You've got your hands full," he laughed, gesturing to Ben still held tightly in George's grip. He continued to struggle and shout as they crossed the hallway. George smiled apologetically in response and ignored the frowns and looks of disgust from the staff. He followed the visitor up the stairs and through the swing doors. The visitor nodded a greeting to Nurse Wentworth and then entered the third room down the hallway on the right, closing the door behind him.
  George knew that Ben needed the toilet. He turned to the nurse to enquire about the nearest one, but Nurse Wentworth misunderstood his enquiring look and spoke before he was able to ask. "That's Doctor Harris. He has come to join Father Thomas. Poor Mr Renshaw is very close to the end now. You must ensure there is no further disturbance. There must be no more noise. That door must remain closed at all times until matters are concluded. Those are the express instructions of Father Thomas."
  George nodded with a look of sympathy, although inwardly he continued to seethe over her patronising manner. He politely enquired as to the whereabouts of the toilets. A few minutes later, Ben was finished and they were back in the corridor. George noticed with relief that Nurse Wentworth had left her station.
   As he bent down to pick up a fallen sheet of paper from the desk Ben ran ahead and then, "Boom, boom", he pushed open one of the closed bedroom doors down the corridor on the right.
  George rushed after him and stepped inside the room. He was embarrassed and ready to mutter an apology when he stopped short, unable to register clearly what he was seeing. An old man of nondescript appearance lay motionless in the bed, covers drawn up to his waist. The curtains to the room were almost closed so that the light was subdued, but he could clearly discern two other people in there. One was the Doctor, standing to the left of the bed. He seemed to be in the process of removing a syringe from the patient's emaciated right arm. Ben's unannounced entrance had clearly distracted him as his head was now turned in the direction of the door and his gaze moved up from Ben up to George.
  The other occupant was the priest, Father Thomas. He was on the opposite side of the bed. There was an open black bag next to him on the thin bed cover. The thing that George found most difficult to comprehend was that he seemed to be pressing down on a purple pillow, which covered the mouth and nose of the patient. The whole scene was so surreal to George that he was speechless. Before he could properly focus on the scene before him, Ben distracted George's attention, as he started to cry. George pulled Ben towards him and hugged him to his legs. The child was clearly able to pick up the mood in the room, even if he did not understand what was happening.
  The priest transfixed George. It was not so much what he was doing, which was shocking enough, but his whole demeanour. His head was turned in George's direction but, notwithstanding George's presence, he kept the pressure on the pillow. His manner was one of calm detachment, as if smothering the patient, which he was clearly doing, was a perfectly normal thing to do. His eyes, however, betrayed a much deeper and stronger emotion. They showed pure, unadulterated hatred.
  George continued to focus on the eyes, as the reality of the situation became clearer to him. He had to act but what should he do? Shout for assistance or try to physically restrain the priest? It was then that George sensed but did not really register the Doctor moving away from the bed towards him.
  "What are you doing?" George directed the question to the priest and was surprised at the tremor in his voice. The priest ignored him and continued to apply pressure to the pillow. Ben continued to sob quietly into George's right thigh.
  Torn between comforting Ben and moving to stop the priest, George was undecided and stationary as the Doctor came close and jabbed the syringe needle into George's left bicep. The sharp prick surprised him. He turned to confront the Doctor and then looked down in horror as he felt and then saw the syringe pump an unknown liquid into his arm.
  The Doctor held on to his arm and spoke to the priest, without taking his eyes away from George. "Hold the child, Father. Hold the child." George began to panic and held tightly onto Ben, who started to wail loudly.
  Strangely, as the Doctor pushed the door closed with his foot George did not think to struggle. He could feel a warmish, all over body tingling sensation and a strange sense of relaxation. George registered the priest approaching them and the Doctor leaning away to place the syringe into his medical bag, but he was a spectator to these events. The tingling coursed through George in waves and he did not even object as the priest took Ben away from him and held him tight to his black cassock.
  Ben's crying was noticeable but did not concern George. It seemed to be coming from a distance, the voice muffled and somehow remote. He looked across at the Doctor but did not see him. Standing next to him was an angel of dramatic beauty and grace. George was completely overawed by the vision but instantly horrified as it transformed into a vicious serpent, green spittle oozing from its large yellow fangs.
  George screamed out loud but heard no noise as the serpent reared up in front of him. It must have been at least seven feet tall. He tried to move but found that he could not. His legs would not obey his mind. He felt himself collapsing onto the floor but went right through it and into another world below. It was a strange place of red, barren rock and black sky. As he hit the hard ground he tasted acrid dust in his mouth. George tried to roll over but could not move. It was then that his angel came to his rescue and held him close. It was a warm, comforting embrace.
  Through closed eyes he could hear distant voices. "Let me take the child, Father." George could decipher that it was a female voice but had no idea where it was coming from or who the child was. He was now back at his parents' home. The house was the same as ever, bright red brick with a small green garden gate. He made to open the gate but stepped back. The gate was searing hot to the touch. As he looked on, with detached curiosity, the house began to melt and fall in on itself. Out of the molten bricks and blazing furniture there arose a vivid blue tree, metallic in appearance, with bright silver buds, which opened before his eyes into large orange leaves.
  "Let me help you, Doctor. What's happened?" This voice was male but coming from a great distance. It sounded as if it was carried through a tunnel by the echoing quality of the words.
  George's attention was brought back to the tree. There was a single eye on each orange leaf. George counted hundreds of eyes. They were all focused on him, unblinking and identical. He then felt his weight being lifted and turned to see that his angel was carrying him. He felt safe again. Strong but gentle hands took him away from the tree and into a bright white corridor.
  "He seems to have fainted nurse. Have you a room we can take him to?" He thought this was the voice of a doctor. Why he believed that and who the doctor was, George could not comprehend. It perplexed him but he did not worry about it in the slightest.
  The soft hands were changing now. George looked down in grim fascination as each finger grew scales, dripping with red slime. Long sharp talons protruded from the end of each digit. He could feel warm breath on his face that turned hotter and hotter. The skin on his cheeks and nose began to melt under the heat from the breath. George felt real danger and feared for his life. He tried to scream for help but could not catch his breath. The heat was enveloping him.
  Then he was falling, down and down into a deep, black void. He looked to his left as he fell and could make out the figure of a strange man, long black hair and a black cassock. Why was a priest with him? He tried to grab him but failed, as the priest spun out of control and then evaporated.
  "Lay him down gently, please." It was the voice of the doctor again. But who was this doctor and where was he now? George looked up and saw a man holding out his hand towards him. He grabbed for the hand but it slipped through his fingers and he fell further and further, gaining speed as he went.
  George closed his eyes. He was dying. Time and sense evaporated and then became nothing. He was at one with the darkness. A part of it with no free thought, no will and no independent sensation.

— ♦ —

E J Henry is a pseudonym. There are reasons behind using one, but nothing mysterious, he assures us!

For more information about the author, please visit his website at EJHenry.co.uk.

— ♦ —

The Witness by E J Henry

The Witness
E J Henry
A Novel of Suspense

Life can be strange … just one unexpected event … can change everything …

By sheer chance George Fellows witnesses the bizarre murder of a former priest and then … in the short space of seven days, this normal man loses everything: his family, his career and ultimately his life.

21 years later the final confessions of a dying priest shed light on the circumstances surrounding his death. Who will take revenge and why?

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Please Welcome Mystery Author Rebecca Yount

Omnimystery News: Guest Post by Rebecca Yount
with Rebecca Yount

We are delighted to welcome back mystery author Rebecca Yount to Omnimystery News.

We had the pleasure of talking to Rebecca last year when the third of her Mick Chandra mysteries was published, and now the fourth in the series, The Oracle of Baal, has now been released.

We asked Rebecca to tell us a little more about the setting for her mysteries, and she titles her guest post for us today "Watch Out for the Nettles: Adventures on the Footpaths of England".

— ♦ —

Rebecca Yount
Photo provided courtesy of
Rebecca Yount

When my American friends ask me, "What is the best way to see England?", I invariably answer, "By foot."

There are literally hundreds of thousands of miles of public footpaths throughout Great Britain. These well-traversed routes cut through pastures, hills, moors, mountains, streams, rivers, and private property. There are no trespassing laws in England, a concept that we Yanks simply cannot wrap our heads around. Access to public footpaths is an ancient tradition that is sacred. Predating the Romans, these byways were first cut through the countryside and villages by farmers travelling to markets to sell their produce, livestock, and other wares. Today, we passionate hikers are the fortunate recipients of the paths they created so long ago.

I've never met a footpath I didn't love. Perhaps I'm easy to please, or a cheap date, but my memories of walking them with my husband are truly ones of authentic adventure.

As a child growing up in central Ohio, I longed for adventure — just not the bungee-jumping sort. Late in life I found it on the paths. One never knows what will pop up around a bend. Perhaps a herd of wild ponies; a gathering of swans; grazing sheep too shy to allow you to come near them; a charging bull; the remains of a World War Two pillbox; the ruins of an 11th century abbey; or a houseboat docked on the river, with friendly residents who take the time to stop and chat. If you're really lucky, they may even offer you a pint.

Local authorities are responsible for the upkeep of the foot paths, some doing a better job of it than others. Hikers are advised to dress in layers, even in the summer. One can start out in sunny 72 degree weather only to face a fierce head-butting storm merely 30 minutes into your walk. Also, always carry an ordinance map. They offer the detail that a regular map will not, and it's all fascinating stuff. Once, we happened upon the remains of an ancient Celtic earth fort that we had located on the ordinance, an ancient treasure that was not in the standard tourist guides or designated on the atlas map. Oh, and carry some bottled water and trail mix, just in case you get lost. Don't count on being saved by your cell phone, either. In all likelihood, you'll be too far from a signal to connect.

Hiking the footpaths is not for the faint-hearted. David and I have frequently gotten so lost, we didn't know north from south. Once we followed the sound of a lowing cow, crossed the pasture it was standing in, and eventually found our way back to the main road. Another time, we followed the sound of traffic on the Old Bristol Road to lead us out of a ravine where we were hopelessly trapped.

And then there are the nettles. My introduction to this prevalent and prickly plant was, shall we say, memorable. Hiking a footpath in Kent, we happened upon an 11th century Norman church and the remains of the old manor house to which it had been attached. While exploring these treasures, I was suddenly seized with the urge. As we were in the middle of nowhere and far from modern facilities, I went farther into the field, unaware that it was teeming with nettles. Then I … well, you can imagine the rest. My bottom throbbed for days.

It is believed that the Romans brought nettles with them when they conquered "Britannia" in the 1st century, A.D. Why did they value these nasty stingers? Some historians maintain they planted them along paths and byways to discourage indigenous enemies from effectively stalking them. Others insist that the Roman soldiers slapped their bare legs with nettles to keep themselves awake and alert during long marches (well, that would do it!). Whatever the case, today's English natives boast that cows, sheep, and goats that graze on nettles give the richest milk and cream, and therefore produce some of the world's finest cheeses. In addition, they swear by nettle tea as a panacea for all sorts of ailments, including arthritis, anemia, and certain skin diseases. Nettles are also used to produce soup, dumplings, and pudding, all professed to be very good for us because this "weed" is extraordinarily vitamin rich. Who would have ever imagined that such a vile plant could do so much good? Just be certain that when you walk England's footpaths, avoid them like the plague; otherwise you'll end up at the local pharmacy begging for relief.

Some years ago, when the Russian ambassador to the Court of St. James retired, he regretted leaving England because it was the only country he'd ever been in that had both a pub and a loo "every 40 feet or so." Well, I don't know about the 40 feet, but as one traverses the footpaths, no matter how isolated the environment, there always seems to be a pub within sight. Even on the paths of Dartmoor, pubs are plentiful on that 365 square mile trek.

Remember, England is much more than high tea and Buckingham Palace. First and most importantly, England is OLD. I mean ancient old. If you have ever read Michael Wood's blockbuster book Domesday (later made into a TV series ), you will remember that sites which pre-date the Romans, such as Iron Age and Neolithic, have simply been recycled over the many centuries. Roman encampments, Saxon villages, and Norman towns and forts were simply built over those original locations. Thus, one can practically kick up artifacts, some going back to the birth of Christ. Veer off the footpaths and walk into a small local museum, and you will be dazzled by the range of antiquities on display. We have little of this in America, which is why I have developed a healthy love and respect for Native American history and artifacts.

So over years of peregrinations, David and I have been: chased by herds of cows; mugged by Exeter ponies who have riffled through our back packs, helping themselves to our snacks: pick-pocketed by livestock, losing a compass; soaked to the skin by rain storms so angry that they came at us horizontally, not vertically; stalked by wildlife; and left to wander in dense coppices with no obvious way out.

"Ah, wilderness," as the playwright wrote. "Ain't it grand."

— ♦ —

Rebecca Yount trained from childhood as a concert pianist, is a
published poet, and worked in education reform, but she always nurtured a passion for storytelling. Coming from a family of writers, it wasn’t hard for her to put pen to paper, but it took an actual unsolved murder to give her the idea for her first novel.

For more information about the author and her work, please visit her website at RebeccaYount.com or find her on Facebook.

— ♦ —

The Oracle of Baal by Rebecca Yount

The Oracle of Baal
Rebecca Yount
A Mick Chandra Mystery

"The most puzzling aspect of Rosalinda Evelyn's suicide was that she shot herself in the head with a Magnum 8mm automatic just five hours after having won the Critics' Choice award for beat actress."

In his most bizarre case, Anglo Indian Scotland Yard Detective Chief Inspector Mick Chandra and his partner, Hong Kong-born Elizabeth Chang, face the challenge of exposing a sex and suicide cult, the Oracle of Baal, which persuades its clients that death is the way to ultimate transformation and eternal truth. But before these vulnerable believers kill themselves, they are coerced into signing over their financial assets to the Oracle's leaders.

The story is carried by a diverse cast of characters: Dr. Solomon Deal, a professor at the University of London who is an expert on cults and cult mentality; Madame Angeline Love, the cult leader, who insists that Baal is only a self-help group; Spencer Arlen, Love's assistant and much younger romantic interest; Susan Evelyn, a victim's daughter, who provides valuable information to Mick about her mother. Finally, Prunella Hamley, who was brutalized by Baal when she attempted to leave the cult. It is Pru who fingers Love and Arlen, bringing them to justice.

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