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  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  The Man’s World

  Chapter One My Father’s House

  Chapter Two Smoking

  Chapter Three Slow Tequila Drunk

  Chapter Four Jack on the Rocks

  Chapter Five The Daily Paper

  Chapter Six Scissors

  Chapter Seven A Night At the Key Party

  Chapter Eight Something to What You Say

  The Woman’s World

  Chapter Nine Zombie Center

  Chapter Ten Bad Girl

  Chapter Eleven Carla’s Room

  Chapter Twelve The Secret Sins of Amy

  Author’s Note

  About the Author

  When happily ever after has a dark side.

  Allistar Parker has created a collection of stories to excite your darker side of life. Through the eyes of some seedy characters, difficult masters, a zombie, an old Volkswagen, you can experience those moments your mother warned you about.

  The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal. Criminal copyright infringement, including infringement without monetary gain, is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by up to 5 years in federal prison and a fine of $250,000.

  Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage the electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Darkly Ever After

  Copyright © 2013 Allistar Parker

  ISBN: 978-1-77111-533-9

  Cover art by Angela Waters

  All rights reserved. Except for use in any review, the reproduction or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, is forbidden without the written permission of the publisher.

  Published by eXtasy Books

  Look for us online at:

  www.eXtasybooks.com

  Darkly Ever After

  By

  Allistar Parker

  Index

  The Man’s World

  My Father’s House: The camera caught it all.

  Smoking: Sometimes, we learn things the hard way.

  Slow Tequila Drunk: A noir detective finds life too rough in a small town.

  A Night at the Key Party: She got it right, but he got it good.

  Rock, Paper, Scissors: Another child’s game with a twist.

  Something to What You Say: Love waits.

  The Woman’s World

  Zombie Center: Mothers’ Milk Can Heal Anything.

  Bad Girl: Most Husbands Get it, In the End.

  Carla’s Room: She had to have it there.

  The Secret Sins of Amy: An Old Guy’s Confession.

  The Man’s World

  Chapter One My Father’s House

  The grass huts ringed the center of the village, browned from the sun. Over in the rice fields, the oxen stood hoof-deep in water. The church bell tower stood above the grass roofs majestically, as if watching over the people of the village.

  They were hiding from us, waiting for us to appear in their sights. Just one misstep would offer us as clear targets. For now, the jungle leaves covered our march. Soon, we would be out of foliage and exposed to our enemy.

  The only ones left were the young. The rest had been carried off by the insurgents months before. These children, robbed of their childhood, faced the awful choices left by decades of strife in their country. War ravages the young and old alike, but the children, the last seed corn of war, suffered the most.

  Mud squished around my boots as I tried to steady myself for those first few shots. The clicking of my sixteen-millimeter Bolex movie camera set the cadence of my steps. Along the tree’s edge, mixed in among the leaves, facing us with childish determination, were the faces of the young boys and girls, armed and standing ready to fight. They were twelve or fourteen, maybe younger. With no experience, they would soon be massacred.

  The lofty sounds of muttered prayer rolled out of some of our men. Others cursed the job. All of us carried out our usual battle rituals. I knelt down and begged God to spare all of us this insane massacre.

  I believed in God, not that it mattered much. There was never a revelation that said I was anything more than one of his play toys. The thought of some supreme being watching over the earth as a benevolent king vanished with my childhood and dreams of Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny.

  The officers, huddled in the recesses of their comfortable tents, pointed to their maps and shouted orders to us over the radio. A laugh or two escaped their lips as they contemplated the struggle we were about to begin. We could hear the sounds of lunch in the background with each radio contact from them. This scene had become far too normal.

  The first shot echoed across the open field. Then another. With the screams and hollers, the kids catapulted as they froze in their tracks, hiding behind the barn or some tattered structure, their eyes fixed on the enemy ahead. The distinct rattle of an enemy’s AK-47 preceded the bolt slapping sounds of a Ma Deuce stippling a line of bullets through the boys along the tree line. The thunder from a grenade covered the shrillness of a lone soldier screaming in pain, all captured on my camera in brilliant Kodak color.

  I lost my place in this mess, unable to tell where my camera pointed. The richness of the brown and camouflage scenery melted into the iris, swallowing the background of blue so that I didn’t know how close to the fighting I had wandered. Even in the fog of my thoughts, I found a place to hide. A small recess in the ground where I would be safe. Trembling as the film rolled, I continued, steadfast in my duty.

  An explosion rumbled across the open field. The staccato sounds of shots bouncing around me were like musical triplets. The bass line rang from the thumps of the tubes on the hill, scattering shrapnel in the midst of the boys held behind the barn in reserve. I stood to capture the moment on film when, in an instant a single shot rang out from the bell tower.

  After the echo left, I found myself engulfed in utter silence, devoid of my senses except for my sight.

  The sun’s rays shone on the field as I viewed the whole process from above. I drifted past the bell tower window and saw the girl, no more than sixteen years old, ratchet another round in her rifle. She pulled the trigger without emotion, killing my sound man. I watched his soul rise from his body until he crashed through the clouds and out of sight, followed closely by the dead boys of the field.

  The ragged clothes and unkempt hair of these kids somehow made the whole situation more palatable to us. The girl was too young to know about killing someone, to not feel anything as she watched someone die. She was a throw away child in a useless country, the victim of some far-off dictator whose quest was for power was at the expense of those young children. For the child’s lost youth, I was sad. For the child’s lost life, I cried.

  I felt strangely safe as I rose through the clouds, hovered over the earth still draped in a blue hue. Crashing into space left me speechless. I was floating, but not at my will or my direction. I was drawn to that place, dark and murky, as if pulled along the way. The darker it got, the less I felt until my eyes closed in sleep.

  Waking on a lawn, I looked across the green, lush field of freshly cut weeds. In the foreground stood a stately old mansion, one like my father restored for our family to live in. The wrought iron rails were entangled in vines and weeds, and the English boxwoods had grown high enough to cover the first floor windows. The whitewash on the b
ricks was faded and failed to cover the redness behind it. The woodwork had lost its charm, as the bare wood rotted in places. All manner of critters roamed the rooms as the missing windows allowed them access. I thought I was in heaven, but I must have found hell.

  My camera was still around my neck, so I filmed the building. It might be disheveled, but no one could deny its majesty and beauty. Perhaps, for my sins, I was sent to hell to reclaim this house. Perhaps if I did, God would reclaim me. I didn’t know, but it felt good to film something so beautiful. Not the least of my joy was filming something devoid of blood and guts.

  As I stood in the rough grass, my camera to my eye, a man placed his hand on my shoulder. “This is your mansion, Son, but it is not ready, yet. You must return home so that I can prepare this place for you.”

  The gentle touch of the man startled me. I looked across the field, searching for a glimpse, but I found none. All I saw was a pretty young woman standing by my house, working on a small hole in the wood. Naked and unashamed, she skillfully worked her way around the hole until the hole vanished from sight.

  Standing, she turned in my direction. Walking slowly, I could vision her beauty in the lens of the camera, slim waist, hourglass figure, and a smile that covered her face. Those blue eyes stared at me as if to invite me along the path she was taking. Holding my hand, she dragged me through the jungle, gently touching my arms once in a while.

  “Would you like to touch me while we walk?” she asked.

  I didn’t know how to react. The torturous desire to touch her breasts was held back by the thought of defiling this beauty with my lustful mind. In the end, I just held her hand.

  We stopped at a pond just short of the field. I watched her settle onto a rock a few feet from shore. She dangled her feet in the water and her hand, disconnected from her thoughts, brushed her pubic hair, twisting it a few times before starting her pattern all over again.

  The camera caught it all, from the first stroke of her hair until she was writhing in ecstasy. Her fingers gently rolled over her lower lips and down across her clitoris. With her eyes closed, I thought maybe she had forgotten I was here. The intense strokes turned to a deep pounding of her pussy. And when I thought she was through, she started again.

  Her body telegraphed her orgasm by shaking and convulsing. Her legs stiffened as she opened her eyes to the sun. A small moan followed a vocalized pronouncement of pleasure. She came.

  “Back to work, young lady,” the man said.

  I lowered my camera so that I could meet this man, but all I saw was a Navy Corpsman frantically working on my chest wound. Flat on my back in the blood-soaked mud, I felt the cold prick of fear climbing up my spine. I held my camera tight to my side as they rolled me onto a litter. The bouncing trip to the Huey sent bolts of pain across my chest with each step until they racked me in a bunk.

  They returned my camera to me several weeks later, untouched by others. I often watch the footage of the house when I am down or blue. Just knowing there is a restored mansion waiting for me is comfort enough. But I often wonder what happened to that girl.

  Chapter Two Smoking

  I sat in the chair staring across the room at the barroom beauty sleeping on the motel bed. Her long legs stretched across the spread to dangle her feet over the edge. I loved the peaceful look on her face, the comfortable semi-smile curling in an expression of satisfaction. Her sensuous smell of perfume and sex drifted in my direction.

  Smoke poured down my throat into my lungs, rushing passed the reflexes and standing taut against my tightening chest. Rainbow cascades of exhaled gray and white smoke flowed out of my mouth while I studied her flesh. With the final breath, I knew that one more time with her would be too much. I packed up my gear and left, sticking her with the motel bill and no explanation for leaving.

  The cold had set in for the night. The black asphalt seemed to run on for hours, a slippery mess hiding trouble in that shiny black ribbon than most people can imagine. The old VW Beetle hummed along the pavement without a care or complaint. Even the cars scattered in the ditch didn’t phase either me or the car. She just kept humming that old tune as I rode the beast into the next adventure, maybe a gentle hearted woman in some deserted dive on the wrong side of town or some slick trick in a slinky dress. Whatever the road held, she would find it.

  There was no particular place to go. My parents had died to me years ago. They never understood the strains of my life or the worn out, tired feeling of coping in my own house. I had worn out my stay at Johnny’s. Even old Marine buddies get tired of your troubles after a while. Maybe I shouldn’t have buffed his wife’s backside in a fit of passion. Learning boundaries has always been a problem for me.

  Another cigarette helped to ease the pain of leaving another lonely girl in a motel. The cooling led to a rehearing of the moans echoing in my head. In a few miles, she was a memory, a bleary vision I could hardly picture in my mind. Like the dozens of others, that night was one more number that held the calendar together, connecting the last one to the next day when another woman would paste her mark on the day. Memories come and go. The last one had done both. Her job finished, I could start thinking of the next girl. Or maybe the first. Either way, the night was long and the road was narrow, a two-piece puzzle I seemed to love the best.

  The first girl I left was the hardest. I picked her up on a southern road outside of Memphis just before the summer ended. In a bar on the outskirts of town, I found her sitting at a table, crying her eyes out. She was cold and alone, with a hint of wandering in her hair. I knew the feelings all too well. When she cried out, we left together, hoping it would last forever, or at least until the hurting stopped.

  We made Bristol in time for the rains to cover the roads in sheets of water. I parked the old VW near a tree and we wandered into that motel for the night. The moldy smell covered up most of the stench of tobacco. I fired up the television and searched out an ancient sitcom for some laughs. She had other plans.

  Standing in front of the television, she rolled her shirt over her head, letting her breasts flop against her rib cage. Her fingers lingered over her nipples, making them strained and plump. The buttons on her jeans popped open one at a time, leaving the tops of her panties exposed. Mousy brown hair caught my eye when she slid her fingers into her clothes and stripped them away. Just the sight of those curly locks beckoned me to run my fingers through the tufts of hair and delve into her precious garden.

  The long, cold search for some tender touches had left me starving for affection. I wanted to touch someone, anyone, and quench this lustful drought in my soul. The feel of a soft woman in my arms was just what I had craved. Saved from a sexual thirst, she saved my life.

  We kissed. We drank each other’s spirit. Grappling hands curried every single sensual spot on our bodies until there was only each other in the world and satiation was our intimate secret.

  I came. The breadth of my roar deafened the mice and cockroaches in the room. As I leaned against the bed struggling to catch my breath, she tensed her back and moaned into the cool air. I’m never sure if women come or just fake it for my benefit. I caught the shivers in her spine as my hand kept her from falling. Never had I felt such a volatile orgasm come from a woman.

  I lit a cigarette from the bug’s lighter. There was a hint of musky taste hanging on the filter of my cigarette, like they’d been stored in the swamp or something. I sucked on it, choking as I tried to take it all deep into my lungs. It wasn’t long before the gray-white fog overtook me in a hacking, choking fit. I decided girls were more my liking.

  The sun set as I found the road that led to our town, the small spit of land where my family still lived. There were tiny villages and post offices dotting the way, each a marker of how far I had strayed. Jester’s Landing melted into Harvey’s Farm, then came The Old Mill Pond. I knew that in a few hours, I would come face to face with my past and the things that made me begin this rolling parade of painted women and long stretches of drunken night
s.

  I don’t know what happened between me and my wife. After our son died, we just couldn’t talk anymore. There was softness to her words as she finally summoned up the courage to ask me to leave. She displayed a strength I had never seen before. It was like those final months together had made her stronger. That revelation brought me to the place where I could feel lucky just for the experience of being with her all those years, but also realizing that she needed a place without me in it. My love was finally moving on, but without me. She was better off.

  Her gentle kiss was not reassuring, nor did it heal the hurt pulsating in the depths of the hole in my heart. Even though intellectually, I knew I had to leave, nothing in me ever wanted to stay so badly before.

  I spent the night in the den, the place where my son and I had played since his birth. There was something about that room that made missing him a little less painful. The air still carried his scent. The room held that magic only a father could feel.

  In the morning, I said goodbye to him and headed down the hall for one last breakfast in the kitchen.

  She met me at the counter with a biscuit, some sandwiches, and several hundred dollars in cash. I kissed her, one last time.

  I left my house in the woods, packed up my kit in a back pack and headed down the road, a drifter. I needed every little town in all those far off places, just so long as they had a menial job with low pay and a lower expectation of me than any of my family ever allowed.

  I stopped at Tom Delaney’s car lot to see what two hundred dollars would buy. Sitting by the curb, the old V.W. looked tired and sad, just like me. I sat in the seat trying to get used to such an old soul. She felt right. The seat needed work. There were bad places all over. The inspection had run out and no one knew how many miles she had traveled. She was me.