Tuesday, July 31, 2018

The Great Alone, by Kristin Hannah


Image result for the great alone kristin hannahPut this on your summer reading list! I just finished The Great Alone, an epic tale of survival set in the rugged and unforgiving wilderness of 1970’s Alaska. This is only the second book I’ve read by this author, the first being The Nightingale, a captivating story of two sisters who help save lives during World War II. This book was likewise fascinating, and I’m looking forward now to adding all of Hannah’s books (she has many) to my list of must-reads.

Leni Allbright comes to Alaska the same way many people do: in search of a better life. Leni’s father is a Vietnam veteran, returning home with PTSD and a dream of finding a fresh start. One of his dead Army buddies wills him a piece of land in Kaneq, Alaska, and so the family heads north in a dilapidated van with very little money and even less idea of what they’re getting into. Ernt, Leni’s dad, is volatile and tempermental. His stormy relationship with Cora, the mother, is a source of anguish for Leni, who just wants somewhere she can belong.

Immediately the kind, colorful people of Kaneq embrace the Allbrights. Not only do they assist in the cleanup of their critter-filled cabin, they help them prepare for winter. It’s a serious business, since winter lasts eight months and only the toughest survive. Planting vegetables, raising goats, and learning to hunt are only a few of the tasks the Allbrights must learn before they’re ready to face their first winter in the tough Alaskan wilderness.

The story focuses on Leni and her blossoming relationship with Matthew Walker, one of the few boys in the small settlement. Their friendship is sweet—a nice contrast to the ugliness we see going on between some of the adults. The worst of these is Leni’s dad, who aligns himself with the hard-headed conspiracy theorists in the town. He becomes an outspoken advocate against tourism and change in Kaneq.

Over the years, as Ernt grows more and more abusive and irrational, he succeeds in alienating everyone who once helped his family. Leni finds herself at odds between the boy she loves and the father who wants to tear them apart. As another winter descends on Alaska and the Allbright’s tiny home is once more blanketed in snow, their fragile family begins to fracture. When things finally come to a head, Leni and her mother must finally learn what it truly means to survive.

This is a beautifully written tale of love and loss in the wilds of Alaska. Not only does it lay bare a once-forgotten corner of our planet, but it also explores the dark and hidden recesses of the human mind. Man’s struggle against nature, as clearly depicted in the book’s pages, is provoking. But it pales in comparison to the real crux of the novel: man’s struggle against himself.

Sunday, July 29, 2018

Review: Stephen King's The Outsider


Image result for the outsider stephen kingI just finished reading Stephen King’s The Outsider, the latest novel in a line of heart-stopping thrillers from the master of horror. This book only came out a few short weeks ago and I was lucky enough to get ahold of a copy. Although this isn’t my favorite King novel, the story’s setup is masterful and I found myself captivated by main character Terry Maitland’s dilemma of mistaken identity and small-town injustice. When Coach Maitland is suddenly arrested for the murder of a young boy—one of the former members of his tight-knit baseball team—the entire community is outraged. After all, baseball is a big deal in Flint City and Maitland is well-loved, something of a local legend. But as the case builds against Maitland, the townspeople begin to turn on him.

Told from Detective Ralph Anderson’s point of view, the story progresses rapidly. Anderson is a decent guy, friends with Maitland and his wife, but the numerous eyewitnesses are too convincing to ignore. When DNA and fingerprint evidence clearly points to Maitland, even Anderson feels vindicated by the very public arrest made at the ball field in front of nearly sixteen hundred fans. It would seem to be an open-and-shut case.

The twist comes when Maitland’s side of the story comes out. His alibi is ironclad. As Detective Anderson begins to flounder with new doubts about the case, the wheels of justice have already begun to turn. Maitland stews in jail, his reputation growing more tarnished by the hour, unable to defend himself against the powerful evidence. The district attorney is out for blood. Maitland’s wife can’t even leave the house without incurring the wrath of her neighbors and harassment by the press.

And that’s when things really heat up.

In true King fashion, the second half of the book takes on a supernatural twist that grows darker by the page. A sinister entity moves through the town, taking what it wants, playing mind games with the citizens of Flint City. Anderson and Maitland—along with the few others they’ve convinced—risk their careers, and ultimately their lives, to investigate the evil that lurks in the town’s darkest corners. The last few chapters proceed at breakneck speed, hurtling the reader to a highly satisfying conclusion.

Stephen King has always been one of my favorite authors, and this book definitely delivers. The characters he develops are fully fleshed-out and sympathetic, even the bad ones. His plots are intricately woven and masterfully conveyed. Despite the “horror” label most of his books garner, they’re not only about blood and gore. If that was the case, he wouldn’t have such a loyal base of readers. King seems to have hit upon a winning formula for success: he woos us gently at first, building the tension bit by tiny bit. The worlds he creates are vividly real. The protagonists are complex, likeable, and more than a little bit flawed. Silently we root for them. Then, when the really bad stuff finally happens--which it always does-- we're fully on board, one-hundred percent, biting our nails down to the nubs and staying up long past midnight to reach our destination: the final page. And when we do, it’s always with more than a tinge of regret that the ride is over so soon.

Tuesday, July 17, 2018

THE GIRL FROM COLDRIVER finally up on Amazon!


I'm so excited to finally share with you my new book, THE GIRL FROM COLDRIVER, up on Amazon this week! This is a 285 page YA contemporary fantasy, a coming-of-age story in the same vein as Cassandra Clare's City of Bones and Kami Garcia's Beautiful Creatures. Here's a brief synopsis:

When city boy Drew comes to small-town Coldriver to live with his Gran, the most exciting thing he can hope for is to finally play center on the high school basketball team.  Instead he discovers that Coldriver isn’t like anywhere else on earth.  Ruled by the ley lines that intersect the town and the magical power of the arts, the people of Coldriver hold to a different set of values.  In this twisted reality statues come to life, music can literally blow your socks off, ballet is king, and a mere poem can kill. 
                                                              
Against this strange and unexpected backdrop, Drew meets Cadence.  At first she seems like the perfect all-American girl.  She’s gorgeous, smart—she even plays violin in the school orchestra—and they seem to click perfectly.  But when Drew discovers that Cady is next in line for the matriarchal power of the clan that rules the town, he is drawn swiftly into a labyrinth of danger.  Someone’s trying to kill Cady, and now it looks like they’re after him, too.  

Together with his new best friend and basketball sidekick, Banjo, Drew goes on a quest to discover what’s really going on in Coldriver.  Spurred by his own weird dreams about a long-dead Russian girl and a glowing green stone, Drew finds himself in a race against the clock to save Cady.  Unless he can discover a way to reverse the magic, Cady’s fate as the next Matushka on the sundown of her seventeenth birthday will be sealed.  And with a cast of crazy Stepanov relatives all vying for Cady’s birthright, Drew is afraid she might not survive that long.  The only way out is to realize his own connection to the town and the power of the ley. 

Get yours on Amazon today! If you like it, I'd love a review!

Monday, June 11, 2018

Review: The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood


Image result for the handmaid's tale bookThis summer I’ve been reading lots of dystopian fiction, and another one that’s gotten a lot of buzz lately is Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale. (The new Hulu series might have a lot to do with that.) I haven’t seen the show yet, but I’m pretty sure I read this book back in the 90’s and wanted to read it again to refresh my memory.

Originally published in 1985, the story is set in future New England, where women’s rights have been overturned. In the new patriarchal Christian theonomy, called the Republic of Gilead, women are segregated by the color of their clothing. The wives of the Commanders wear blue; handmaids wear red; Marthas (the cooks and housemaids) wear green. Econowives wear striped clothing and young, unmarried girls wear white. The entire story is told through the eyes of Offred, a young woman who attempted to flee to Canada with her husband and daughter when the Sons of Jacob launched their revolution in the U.S. and began curtailing women’s rights. The family is caught before they reach the border and Offred is separated from them. She is taken to a re-purposed high school and indoctrinated as a handmaid by the “Aunts”.

Because of environmental contaminants, most of the women in this society are now sterile. Offred is part of a small class who are reproductively healthy. She is assigned to one of the Commanders to reproduce offspring for him. This is a coveted position, but we get the sense that Offred doesn’t feel too happy about the situation (who would?). There are rules the handmaids must follow, designed to keep them in check. When the Commander initiates an illegal friendship with Offred, inviting her into his study to play board games and read his books, she is conflicted about the arrangement.

Offred learns about the Mayday resistance from one of the other handmaids. She develops a relationship with one of the household employees and discovers he is part of this movement. He offers to help her escape.

I don’t want to give away the ending, but it certainly doesn’t wrap things up in a nice, neat package. This is a thought-provoking book. Atwood does a great job building this world and creating a sense of mystery. Since it was written more than thirty years ago, in the days before cell phones and internet, some of the plot devices feel slightly out-of-date. But it still works. This is a haunting cautionary tale that garnered several awards and launched Atwood’s career. Put it on your summer must-read list if you haven’t already done so, and then join me as I settle in with my popcorn to watch the series!

Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Review: Wool by Hugh Howey


Image result for wool hugh howey
I just finished reading Hugh Howey’s Wool, the dystopian page-turner that everyone’s been talking about, and I have to say I absolutely LOVED it! This is the first book in the Silo Saga. The story is set in a post-apocalyptic world, where the survivors are living in a gargantuan silo buried deep in the ground. In this first book, we don’t know exactly why they have to live in the silo, except that the outside world, as viewed from the big screens in the uppermost level, appears bleak and abandoned. We imagine some sort of biological weapon or nuclear holocaust has been unleashed on planet Earth. The world Howey has created here is fabulous. Except for the weird up-top politics and secret executions carried out in the dead of night, I want to live in a silo! Everyone has a job to do, and from a young age kids decide how they will contribute. Teenagers ‘shadow’ adults in fields they’d like to specialize in: mechanical, IT, farming, portering (which consists of hauling stuff up and down the vast staircase that spans all 130 levels), security, etc. When they’re experienced enough, they start earning ‘chits’.

The opening scene is a cryptic one, in which Holston, the sheriff, is contemplating the death of his wife and weighing his own mortality. He is sent out to ‘clean’—the ultimate punishment for crimes against the silo. Mayor Jahns, a tough old lady who has run the silo for years, appoints a new sheriff and that’s when the real trouble begins. Juliette, the beautiful, resilient girl from mechanical, has no experience in law enforcement but nonetheless makes the daunting trip up-top to begin her new assignment. This riles Bernard, head of IT, who has his own agenda for the silo. Mayor Jahns winds up dead, and Juliette begins to suspect she was murdered.

Juliette’s secret investigation into the darkest secrets of the silo leads her to numerous revelations. First, Bernard and his colleagues in IT seem to know more than the rest of them about what’s really going on. Second, the world outside the silo may not be exactly the way it’s being portrayed on the big screens. Third, someone very, very badly wants to keep everyone inside.

Things come to a head when Juliette’s probing questions come to the attention of those who are really in charge of the silo. Everything she cares about is suddenly threatened: her friends in mechanical, the young man she’s falling in love with, her entire way of life. What happens next and how Juliette survives and fights back make for a fascinating read.

This book is a must for anyone who loves dystopian fiction. Howey’s writing is crisp and illuminating. I devoured this book, and you will, too.

Thursday, May 10, 2018

First Comes Love, Then Comes Lilith


     I could already tell it was going to be a bad day. 
     I’d roused at four a.m. to the high-pitched cackle of the Wicked Witch of the West.  Dave, my boyfriend, had gotten hold of my cell phone several days ago, downloaded the ringtone as a joke, and I had yet to figure out how to change it.  The caller had been Gwyneth, one of my regular clients, begging me to meet for breakfast in a 24-hour bagel shop one street over from the office. 
     It didn’t seem to matter to Gwyneth that we were noshing on cinnamon bagels with cream cheese before the sun was even up.  Bleary-eyed and bed-headed, the cashier had to ring up the order three times before he got it right.  The only other customer was a homeless-looking fellow with stringy gray hair and a shopping bag full of old clothes, nursing a cup of cold coffee and scanning the Jobs section of the newspaper.   
     “Couldn’t we have done this during your regular Thursday appointment?” I murmured, barely suppressing an eye-roll/yawn combo that I knew probably made me look like a morphing werewolf.  Gwyneth was well-known around the office as a D.Q. of infinite proportions, albeit a likeable one, and she knew how to get under my skin.  All she’d had to do on the phone was utter the name ‘Geoffrey’ and I’d come running. 
     Gwyneth ran one ridiculously long purple fingernail around the rim of her double-latte.  “By Thursday, if you don’t help me fix this, I’ll either be dead or sucked into the demon dimension.”  Her lipsticked mouth quivered poutily. 
     Ignoring the thinly-veiled threat, I sighed.  “Tell me again what he said.”
     “You mean Geoffrey?”                                                           
     “Yes, Geoffrey,” I snapped.  “Your chief Warlock, or whatever he is.”
     “He said if I didn’t give him my love potion he was going to tell Frank about Mortimer.”  She blew a tendril of silky black hair out of her face in exasperation. 
     “The guy you’ve been seeing behind Frank’s back.”
     “Yeah.  But I can’t give him the potion.  It’s not written down.  It’s all in my head, and it’s mine.  Anyway, it wouldn’t work for him.  He’s a warlock.”
     “Did you tell him that?”
     “Only a thousand times.  Warlocks never listen.”
     Suddenly I had a thought.  “You didn’t use your potion on Mortimer, did you?”
     The witch’s body stiffened visibly.  “Of course not.  Don’t be ridiculous.”  Her eyes flicked to the left, indicating she was lying. 
     I let out another sigh.  “Oh, Gwyn, you always say you want to be more ordinary—‘live more like a regular human’ I think is the way you put it—and then you tamper with one of the most beautiful, natural things in the universe.  Love can’t be bought with a potion, sweetie.”  I felt my therapist training kicking in, despite the earliness of the hour and my body’s urgent need to retreat to a horizontal position for at least another couple of hours.  “You’re manipulating Mortimer the same way Geoffrey’s manipulating you.”
     Gwyneth laughed.  Not quite a cackle, but close.  The homeless man’s head swiveled around to stare at us.  “That’s rich.  Geoffrey’s also threatening me with Lilith if I don’t give him the potion.  Can you believe it?  He hates Lilith.”
     If there was ever a classic love-hate relationship, it was the one between Geoffrey and Gwyneth.  As chief Warlock of the greater Phoenix area, Geoffrey had ties to Gwyneth’s coven.  He’d dated at least half the witches there and helped most of them out of one jam or another over the years.  (From what I could tell, witches were notorious for getting themselves into sticky situations.)  He was mostly a good guy.  Okay, his yellow cat-eyes were slightly unnerving, but he had a gorgeous smile.  The only times he acted irrationally—sometimes violently—were the times when he felt someone had crossed him. 
     “You know what happens when you get sucked into Lilith’s realm?” Gwyn asked casually, nibbling one of her fingernails.  “Bite marks.”
     “Bite marks?”
     “All over,” she said, running her hands over the length of her well-kept physique.  “Lilith bites her…subjects.”
     I sighed.  Half the time I didn’t know what to believe.  “You need to talk to him, Gwyn.”
     “I—”
     I held my hand out.  “He cares about you, Gwyn.  Remember that time he helped you draw that protection circle around your house?  When your ex got out of jail and was on the rampage?”
     “Yeah, Geoffrey was actually pretty great then.  He stayed with me all night while Tippy stood outside, yelling and screaming and throwing things.  We watched True Blood reruns and ate four frozen pizzas.”
     I’d heard the story.  It still seemed a little cold-blooded that Gwyn wouldn’t at least hear her ex out.  Granted, Tippy’d been as drunk as a skunk and was back in jail by morning, courtesy of the Phoenix police department.  “Or that time Sadie used that deep voice potion on Frank and he thought she was your dad on the phone?  She practically had him peeing his pants in fear.”
     Gwyneth cackled again, remembering.  “And Geoffrey reprimanded Sadie.  Told her she was breaking the Wiccan Rede.  She had to go to his cabin in Vail for three days, basically under house arrest, although I didn’t really see it as punishment at the time.  Still don’t.  I mean, Vail?  C’mon.”
     “The point is, Gwyn, Geoffrey is not going to send you back to Lilith.  He’s not cruel.”
     Gwyn seemed unconvinced.  “He really wants that love potion.  And if he tells Frank about Mortimer, I might as well move back to New Jersey.  You thought Tippy was bad?  Frank’ll kill me.”
     “Who would you rather have trying to kill you,” I persisted, “a lazy human who can barely get off the couch to make his own sandwich, or a half-insane Warlock who’s made deals with demons and killed at least three people—”
     “—that I know of—”
     “—in order to get his job?”
     Gwyn dug her palms into her eyes in frustration.  Her heavy makeup was already smeared, and her hands were shaking. 
     I pulled one of her hands away from her face and brought it down to the table, squeezing with affection.  Even though Gwyn drove me bonkers on a near-weekly basis, I still considered her my friend.  “And if your love potion isn’t going to work for Geoffrey anyway, then what’s the big deal?”
     A light came on in her eyes.  She smiled.  “You’re right, of course, as usual, Meredith.”  She leaned over her bagel and kissed me on the cheek.

          I was just coming out of my office on Thursday, starting a beeline for the fridge for some serious foraging, when Gwyn flew at me from out of nowhere. 
     “Your appointment’s not until three, Gwyn,” I reminded her, glancing at my watch. 
     “Yeah, I know, but I really need to talk to you, Meri.”
     “I’m on break right now.  Come back at three,” I insisted.  Stubbornly, I eyed the fridge. 
     “Everything okay, Meredith?” Norm asked, coming out his door, trailed by the sloping figure of T.J. Vanderschmidt.  T.J. was another regular client in our office, a vampire who spent his nights writing pulp-fiction and seemed to have no friends.  Social anxiety was the official diagnosis.  Norm insisted T.J. was a good guy, but whenever I tried to engage him in the usual conversation, he never made eye contact.  His red-rimmed peepers always hovered disconcertingly over my neck area.  He usually answered my (I thought) engaging questions with barely audible groans.
     “Just reminding Gwyn of her scheduled appointment time.”
     “And how is the lovely Lady Gwyneth today?” Norm asked, kissing Gwyn’s hand.  He always laid it on thick with the better-looking female clients, although he had no interest in the trolls, with their misshapen heads and squashed, bulbous noses, or the fairies, with their peculiar, pointed features.  At least he had some standards. 
     “Horrible,” Gwyn admitted.  “And Meri’s more interested in stuffing her face than helping me,” she added, reading my mind.  She gave a half-hearted wave at T.J. as he shuffled off to the front desk.
     Norm was technically my boss here, since he recruited me originally, but all five of us were equal partners in the business.  Norm handled anxiety and bipolar disorders, Micah handled alcohol and substance abuse, Veronica handled the pervs, and Tyrone handled eating disorders and depression.  I dealt with pretty much everything else, which mostly amounted to marriage and grief counseling, trauma and PTSD, that kind of thing. 
     Now Norm gave me a raised eyebrow, his idea of a performance reprimand.  “Client first, ice cream later, Meri…” he intoned in a sing-song warning.
     I gave him an eye-roll, an expression I’d perfected over the years of working here.  Grabbing Gwyn’s hand, I dragged her over to the battered fridge and opened the freezer compartment.  “How about some Ben and Jerry’s Cheesecake Brownie, Gwynnie?”
     After finding a couple of plastic spoons, we went back to my office, where I slammed the door in Norm’s face for good measure.  Gwyn plopped herself down on my sagging couch and stared moodily at the ceiling. 
     I took my customary spot in the armchair next to her, kicking up my feet on the coffee table and digging into my ice cream.  The pleasure center of my brain fired off virtual exclamation points as my taste buds did their two p.m. happy dance. 
     “I can’t believe this is your job,” Gwyn said accusatorily.  She once worked as a playground aide and she’d come to her sessions bruised, battered and highly sensitized to the shrillness of small voices.  We’d spent two months honing her negotiation skills. 
     “I have to do paperwork too,” I reminded her. 
     She made sudden eye contact.  “You don’t keep a record of anything we say, do you?  I wouldn’t want that.  Our conversations should be confidential.
     “Nothing like that,” I assured her.
     “Good.”  She went back to staring at the ceiling. 
     “Aren’t you going to eat your ice cream?”
     “Men are such insensitive Neanderthals.”
     Which one are we talking about today? I wondered vaguely, but my near-frozen tongue and the sugar-induced haze combined to make it difficult to speak. 
     “I’m talking about Mortimer, in case you care,” she snaps grumpily.  “He says he needs more space.  He’s thinking about taking a camping trip.  A boys-only vacation with some of his buddies.”
     Mortimer was a lycanthrope, and I knew for a fact that the full moon was right around the corner.  I wondered what that vacation would look like.  Gallumphing around the forest with his werewolf friends, howling at the moon and ripping the heads off of squirrels, no doubt.
     “My best advice is to let him go.  Let him enjoy himself,” I said.  I was almost halfway through my tiny carton of ice cream now, and the chunks of cheesecake brownie were getting thick.  Trying to focus, un-sticking my tongue, I added, “Then, when Mortimer gets back, tell him you want to go to Florida.  Stay somewhere really posh.  Like the Breakers.  Or the Edgewater.  Plan it all out ahead of time, buy the plane tickets, everything.  Really treat him.  He’ll never want to go camping again.”
     “I can’t afford that.”
     “You have your parents’ money.  You know, the trust fund?”
     “Daddy would kill me if I used it so frivolously.”
     “Your father’s ninety-two and lives in a nursing home.  He barely speaks.  How’s he going to know?”
     “It just seems so disrespectful.  Her ice cream was starting to drip. 
     “If you want to save your relationship, sometimes you have to be willing to make sacrifices,” I intoned.  “Anyway, what about Frank?  Have you broken up with him yet?”  Breaking up with Frank was one of the goals we had set for her last week.
     “He hasn’t invited me over to watch TV in a while.  I think he might be mad at me.”  I knew from previous conversations that Frank was the one currently paying Gwyneth’s mortgage, a situation she was reluctant to meddle with. 
     “You really need to come clean with him, Gwyn.”
     “I don’t pay you to tell me how to live my life,” she retorted, even though she and I both knew that was exactly what she was paying me for. 
       I sighed, scraping the bottom of my carton.  “Are you going to eat that? Because if not—”
     She slammed her carton down on the coffee table and slid it over with one hand.  “So I take Mortimer on the trip of a lifetime.  Maybe he’ll ask me to marry him if I play my cards right.”
     “You sure you want to do that?” From what I gathered, inter-species marriage was usually frowned on by most covens.  And Gwyn would have to steer clear of Mortimer every full moon.  It would be inconvenient, to say the least. 
     But Gwyn wasn’t listening to me anymore.  She had that gleam in her eye again.  “Yeah, I’m sure.” 
     I started in on her ice cream.  Even though it was melted, I found myself practically swooning.  Glancing at the calorie count on the back of the carton, I realized I needed to get myself a life.  Or better yet, a treadmill.  “What about that thing with Geoffrey?  Did you give him what he wanted?”
     “My love potion?” she cackles.  “Sure did.  He was so smug about it, too.  But it’s not gonna take him long to realize it doesn’t work for him.  Whoever he thinks he’s got on his hook is never gonna get reeled in.”
     “Will he be angry?”
     “Probably.  But then maybe he’ll listen.  If not, I’ll just get Mortimer to deal with him.” 
     There she went, playing her men against each other, as usual.  Who would win?  In a fight between a fangy werewolf and an all-powerful, demon-slaying Warlock, I was pretty sure I knew. 
     “Just be careful, Gwynnie,” I said, reaching out for her limp hand on the coffee table.  “You know how Geoffrey gets.”

     Two weeks later I was just leaving the office when my phone rang.  Or should I say, it cackled at me, because I still hadn’t changed my ringtone.  The other counselors had already left, except for Tyrone, who often stayed late.  He was still leading his vampire Overdrinkers Anonymous group, and their eerie chants—“I will not overindulge in the delights of the flesh”—were giving me the creeps. 
     “Hello, who’s this?”
     “It’s Gwyn.”  Her voice sounded panicked.  “Remember that little vacation you suggested I take with Mortimer?”
     “Yeah?  What—”
     “Bad idea!  Very BAAD idea!” she shrieked.  In the background I heard the sound of glass breaking. 
     “What’s going on?”
     “Well, we’re at this nice little out-of-the way Bed and Breakfast, relaxing by the pool, when guess who shows up?”
     “Frank?”
     “No, Meri.  Not Frank.  It’s Geoffrey, and he’s wringing Mortimer out like one of those bathroom sponges!”
     “They’re fighting?  But why?”
     “Not fighting.  Geoffrey’s trying to kill him!”  More crashing, splashing, yelling.
     I thought fast.  “Can’t Mortimer just turn into a werewolf and defend himself at least?  Where’s the manager?”
     “They all bolted as soon as they saw Geoffrey.  He was throwing sparks and snarling like a rabid pit bull.  Then he threw open a portal and—”
     Oh no.  Not a portal.  “A portal to where?”
     “Heck if I know!  To Andras, maybe?  Geoffrey used to be friends with him.  Or Lilith.  He seems to have a thing for her.  Anyway, it’s not the full moon until tonight!  Mortimer’s transformation phase is very time-sensitive.  Please, Meri!  Tell me what to do!”  Now I could hear the swirling power of the portal, a conduit to the deepest depths of hell. 
     Good grief.  This was way above my pay grade.  “You have to try to stop him, Gwyn.  Use one of your tricks.  That’s what you do, right?  Some sort of blabbing spell.  Make him talk.  Find out why he’s so mad at Mortimer.  Make them call a truce.  Or the love of your life is going to get sucked into oblivion!”
     In the background, the whirling noise grew louder.  CRASH!  BANG!  Then, with a terrific POP, Gwyn’s phone went dead. 

     It was three weeks before I saw Gwyn again.  I hadn’t heard a peep from her and had almost written her off.  Now here she was, coming out of Zales at the mall.  She seemed to be practically floating with happiness, dressed in a crimson high-necked blouse that covered much more of her flesh than usual. 
     “Meri!” she cried, throwing herself at me with her trademark over-the-top enthusiasm.  Hugging me tightly, she seemed unaware that people were stopping to stare. 
     “I thought you were dead,” I said numbly. 
     That cackle again.  “You’re such a kidder!  I’ve been busy, to say the least, and I…well…I guess I won’t be needing your services anymore.”
     “You’re dumping me?”
     “Just as my shrink.  Not as a friend, of course.”
     I stood there, flabbergasted.  How could she do this to me?  I’d become so invested in Gwyn’s day-to-day emotional upheavals that I’d never stopped to consider she might actually outgrow her need for me. 
     Then I saw him coming out of Zales behind her, carrying a tiny bag, grinning widely with his small, pointy teeth. 
     “Geoffrey,” I said warily.  Immediately I was captivated by that golden catlike stare.
     “Meredith,” he nodded.  Handing the bag to Gwyn, one arm encircled her waist possessively. 
     “You’ll never guess what we just did, Meri!” Gwyn chimed in, blushing as Geoffrey planted a kiss on her cheek. 
     Dumbfounded, I watched as she pulled a tiny velvet box from the bag and opened it to show me.  “Isn’t it gorgeous?”
     A gargantuan diamond ring, the kind that says—doesn’t ask—MARRY ME.
     Glancing back at Geoffrey, I suddenly realized why he’d wanted Gwyn’s love potion.  A self-satisfied smirk was plastered across his feline face. 
     “Uhh…just for the record, what happened to Mortimer?”
     “Who?” the two of them asked in unison.  The mall echoed with Gwyn’s cackles.  Geoffrey’s mesmerizing eyes held mine in their amber glow, challenging me. 
     That’s when I saw the collar of Gwyn’s blouse shift slightly, revealing several round abrasions decorating the delicate pale skin beneath. 
     Puffy, raised bite marks still tinged pink with blood.