Showing posts with label western. Show all posts
Showing posts with label western. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Dead Reckoning by William Dresden... A Quite Unique Horror Tale!






Long ago chosen by the one called Nyx. The Inquisitor. A handpicked selection of men from the Mohawk Nation. The keepers of the Eastern Gate. 
Their leader, Sixkiller, lit his torch as they rounded the corner of the estuary. His eyes were determined. His face, strong and stiff. There wasn’t much time left. Sixkiller had to warn Jesse. If only Jesse knew the trouble he was going through to protect him. 
Up ahead, the river billowed from beneath the gigantic paddles of the gambling boat called Liberty. Sixkiller knew who awaited him on board the vessel. Desmond, the man in the crimson vest. If you could even call him a man at all. Desmond was more of a shell then anything else. A husk that housed a thing much different. A go-between. The Arbiters called them Doormen. Sixkiller and his warriors were not intimidated by Desmond, the man who held the key, but rather, they feared what he locked away. Sixkiller looked at the moon with patient eyes.
The orb glowed boldly in the night sky. “Hurry,” he said. The warrior Indians picked up the pace of their rowing. Their paddles dredged the water’s surface with uniformed strokes, pulling their streamlined canoes faster across the river as they removed a satchel from his shoulder and opened it, revealing a dark, musty-smelling dried plant. He placed it at the foot of the large double doors and set it on fire. 
The warrior nodded and his men took their places along the windows that lined the casino floor. There, each one lit small bundles of the strange weed. Smoke began to plume from around the windows and doors, seeping through the cracks. A few of the patrons noticed the strange happenings, pointing to the windows. A murmur broke out, but it was too late. The toxin swirled in the air around them. Choking and gasping, they breathed it in. One by one, the men and women that filled the room began to pass out. Before they knew what had happened, piles of well-dressed bodies lined the casino floor. 
Sixkiller opened the doors and entered the room. The Indians moved through the smoke, immune to its affects. Whereas the man at the box stood mouth and nose covered with a damp handkerchief, waiting for them. “Desmond,” Sixkiller said as he approached the man. 
Ten 'to twelve. Just on time,” Desmond said as he closed his gold embossed pocket-watch and tucked it back into his vest. “You didn't really have to do all this,” he said. “We could have met in private...”
~~~



Dead Reckoning

By William Dresden

Whew! This novella may cross genres, but all I can call it is... pure horror! With a historical background bringing in the Mohawk Indians as keepers of the Eastern Gate, which by the way, has more than one meaning historically... This gate seems to be connected to the underworld but in mythology Nyx is the Goddess of the Night... Ok, this is just a little extra from Wikipedia and has little to do with the story, except in establishing some of the characters...

Sixkiller was the leader of the Mohawk warriors and he was trying to find information to support his former partner, Jesse, the main character... So while he's meeting with Nyx, we move into Jesse's life--a life like no other!

Jesse is Dead Reckoning... a Judge. An Arbiter. A Dark Rider. The Un-appointed Law of the Land... and there's nooooo way that I'm going to tell you about his special "gift."


It had been five days since his last Reckoning. Since blood had been spilt. His hands still trembled from the surge of power that had run through his veins. Only now had his dizziness settled enough for him to do what must come next.
~~~


Jesse had awoken after five days during which he was recovering from what he'd done in a tavern not too far away...

Now he was physically able to go back and finish the job...to bury the dead... and to get the dream catcher he had seen... 

Dream Catcher hanging against his chest. He pulled it from the man’s neck. It was a simple thing. But it was just what he needed. The Dream Catcher was made of bent sticks and horse hair. Black beads hung on the webbing like thick dew drops. The bells that laced the outside were an interesting touch, a warning when the wind blew. They were placed long after the piece was made, and not by Indian hands. They were an afterthought. Meant to increase its beauty for bartering. That was just what he was going to use it for. Bartering. He knew just the man to sell it to...
~~~

Jesse believed that every body should be buried, so he'd come to dig graves for those who had died during his Reckoning, when he'd killed Samuel Temple... Temple had long ago become a Limmikin or a Wendigo when he had, in order to live after a war battle, ate of other soldiers, until he had become obsessed with the taste...

Now as Jesse  had come to bury Temple and his gang, he made sure that he dug the heart out of each, placing them all in a bag, and burning them...

But while Jesse worked, he heard a wail, a sound that could be a woman... Listening closely he realized that it was coming up from beneath the floor.  There he found Amelie who had been imprisoned. He coaxed her out, placing his own coat around her to cover her nakedness and work to warm her... He would have to take her with him, but as he continued his own activities, he heard other sounds coming from outside... He couldn't see who was doing it, but he found horses--hanging from tree limbs, or twisted around limbs... The blood, the death smell was intense but as he looked around, what he then saw was even worse... Samuel Temple was sitting up against a tree, with his eyes open and watching... Had burning his heart not ensured his death? Only as he crept closer, did he realize that Temple was dead alright, but something had pulled him out of his grave...and started to devour him...

Leaving the Tavern, with Amelie following, he traveled on to Demson Hollow...He was there on his own personal vendetta--he was looking for the murderer of his wife and son...

I think the author's screenwriting abilities has led to his extraordinary ingenuity to create magnificent settings, explicit visionary scenes that readers find unbelievably frightening... His writing is such that he uses every word to keep the story tense, while the setting is western as well as back flashes to the civil war... His demons are recognizable by name but his descriptions make readers cringe, hoping we never have to see this monster...at least until Dresden writes the next book...and later gets the book into a movie script...

Sure there's lots of gore and blood, but they are written not to be a slasher movie, but rather a literary horror tale that comes with vivid scenes right out of the best of past horror writers... Edgar Allen Poe, Hitchcock... Personally, since I'm not really a fan of King, I think this new writer will soon be giving considerable competition to the top horror author of today...  His writing is superb, even with the content... I look forward to seeing what happens to Jesse and all the excellent characters, which even includes a Pinkerton Detective who, I wondered, knew what he was getting into when he met Jesse! But he sure was there for the explosive ending...which was a total surprise for me! Cool!

If you're a horror/fantasy fan, you need to check this one out as a must-read! I rarely read horror into the night...but I finished this one in one sitting, caught up so much in the storyline, that the gory stuff became secondary... That's writing!


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William Dresden is an author and award-winning screenwriting. He spent several years as a script doctor and pursued the dream of writing hollywood blockbusters. Now he mostly writes fiction and enjoys spending time with his family and friends. William currently lives in Virginia with his wife and two children.

Also See Author Interview, if interested...   

Friday, June 24, 2011

Have you Ever Rode a Train? I Have Always Wanted to...Until...

Lahaina, Kaanapali and Pacific Railroad TrainImage via WikipediaThrow The Devil 


  Off The Train


By Stephen Bly




What a fun book to read! Witty, Crisp dialogue from a series of characters that you feel actually lived back in the days... sensitive, touching themes, old-fashion romantic love... Readers will laugh and...cry a little... What more could you ask for! It's not listed as Christian fiction, but it is certainly recommended to that group for their consideration. This delightful book is a western, set in time right after the civil war ended although there's not too much about the west, except as a location toward which a train is going...and oh, yes, there is a saddle as a character, which surely counts toward it being a western, right? And there's really nothing about the war, except about the devastation to families that, in my mind, explains both the actions of the good and bad characters...everybody was trying to survive after so much had been lost...

First, a comment about the book itself. I was privileged to get a hard-back copy which has not only a dust cover but the cover itself contained artwork as well as printing. I got a large print version which was wonderfully easy on my eyes...Thanks go to both the author and the publisher, Center Point Publishing, Thorndike Maine for a truly worthy personal library edition...

Throw the Devil Off the Train (Center Point Premier Western (Large Print))
Nearly all of the story takes place on the train...

Race Hillyard had just killed a man. Two men were planning on stealing from him, in response to the hard times they were facing after the war. Race would have left them both go, but one of them decided to try again... Race was tired, hungry and in a bad mood when he found his seats on the train--I say seats because he had purchased an extra seat so that he could keep his saddle with him...

So when Catherine Draper came on the train, looking for a seat, she naturally became agitated that a saddle was taking up a place she could use... Needless to say, their meeting was not the greatest way to become romantically involved...

But then again, neither were looking for that possibility. In fact, Catherine was on her way to marry a childhood sweetheart and was already using her married name. Of course that was partly because she was also "getting out of town" and hiding her identity for pulling a gun against a lawyer. That story had been blown out of proportion so using her future husband's name seemed the right thing to do... even if they had not seen each other since they were...12 years old...

Race, on the other hand, was looking for revenge and he had the ability to get it since he had been a sharp-shooter during the war. But when the first conflict started on the train--a man talking crazy and acting as if he was walking in his sleep, Race was immediately on the alert and before long, literally throwing men off the train...  He became a quiet sort of hero...except when riled...

He even acted more friendly after he had gotten some sleep... Or, maybe that was because of Catherine... You just knew right away that sparks were flying between those two!

All types of scams surrounding mining (diamonds, gold, silver) were what the bad guys did back in those times. Race's brother had convinced him to put all of their money into such a plan and, when he had lost it all, committed suicide rather than face Race. There were many who were going to pay! And one of them was on that train...and Catherine knew him. It's hard though getting serious about all those nasty issues like killing, blackmail, kidnapping, and much more that happened, when it's so much fun watching the characters on the train and especially Catherine and Race falling in love. But I promise you there's action and adventure to keep your pages turning...all the way up to the point when Catherine finally meets her "intended..."

You just gotta love this one!

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