Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Featured Title of the Day: Meadows of Gold byC.L. Kraemer




St. Patricks Day Anthology –
Meadows of Gold by C. L. Kraemer
Excerpt: Heat Level 1
Book: Heat Level 1

A gentle breeze sighed, undulating the meadow grass lazily and whispering past the forlorn figure slumped on the tree trunk, hands clasped tightly in his lap. Thomas, a forest leprechaun, released a long melancholy breath between his cracked, dry lips. A single plump tear meandered down his stubbled cheek.
Sunlight sent bright shafts of light through the pine boughs and around the wooden pedestal upon which the morose figure resided. Ignoring the dancing beams, the leprechaun pulled a shuddered breath into his lungs and stared at a spot in front of the stump where a crumpled daisy chain necklace lay withering in the warmth of the afternoon. Another plump tear snaked down his unshaven face.
In the distance, a lone figure scuffed up the lane, which crossed in front of the tree stump. Thomas paid no heed to the approaching form, pulling a thin silver flask from inside his rumpled vest. He blindly opened the lid, placed the opened top to his lips and pulled a deep draught from the container. Refitting the cap to the top, he slipped the silver spirit holder back into his vest. His next shuddered breath was interrupted with a hiccup.
The figure on the road drew closer. Thomas raised his head and squinted his eyes. Was it she coming back? He hiccupped and straightened up. Maybe she had been teasing him when she ran away and now she realized how much he cared for her. His eyes brightened and a smile began to touch his lips.
The figure came around the bend and toward him. The last he’d seen her, she was wearing a diaphanous, thin dress. Had she changed? The form nearing him was clad in leather breeches, a braided leather tunic, knee-high, soft leather boots, A sword blade strapped to the figure’s back flashed in the sunlight. Was Cary so angry she meant to cut him in little pieces? His heart began to pound in his chest and inside his mouth his tongue stuck to the roof.
The figure stopped two lengths from him and raised a hand to shade its eyes from the brightness of the day.
Thomas realized he was shaking. This was it… his life was over. He hung his head.
“Thomas?”
The voice was familiar but it didn’t sound like Cary. If it wasn’t her…
“Thomas! What are you doing?” Tiamoon, a warrior gnome of the valley clan, stood with her feet planted shoulder width apart, in her full leather armor on the roadway to her home. She’d just reconnoitered the meadow area for evidence of the marauding night elves. The local hill clan had been raiding the gnome settlements and wreaking havoc on the inhabitants. The gnome community was rallying together to protect their families against further damage.
Thomas narrowed his eyes and looked through his veil of tears.
“Oh, Tia (hic) moon, itsch you.”
Tia rolled her eyes heavenward and leaned toward the wobbling leprechaun, wrinkling her nose in disgust at the sour smell of alcohol surrounding the disheveled lump occupying the tree stump.
“Thomas? How long have you been sitting here?”
“Dunno. What day is it?”
“Tuesday.”
“Really?” Thomas lifted rheumy eyes to meet Tiamoon’s clear blue ones.
“Yes, really. So how long have you been here, Thomas?”
“Uhm, (hic) since Saturday.”
“Saturday!”
Tiamoon stepped to the stump, in the process crushing the daisy chain necklace. She reached out to grab the leprechaun as he dissolved in tears.
“You (hic)… you stepped on (hic) the necklace. (hic) Just like she (hic) stepped on my heart.”
“Good heavens, Thomas, pull yourself together. She who?”
She wrestled the drunken leprechaun to his unsteady feet. His weight surprised her. He was sturdy and muscular beneath the rumpled clothing.
“Cary, the love of my life.”
“Heavens be cursed. Thomas…”
“Wha-a-a?” He turned red-rimmed, green orbs her direction.
“You fall in love with every female who crosses your path.”
“Do not!’
“Really? Okay let me guess… she flirted with you and teased you until she got you out here at the edge of the meadow where you promised to tell her where your secret stash of gold was hidden if she’d kiss you and be your mate.”
His eyes ricocheted in the sockets making Tiamoon’s head hurt.
“You were (hic) sshpying on ussh.”
Tia got her shoulder under his armpit and hoisted him up. She wrinkled her nose at the stale body odor emanating from his clothing.
“No, Thomas. It’s a pattern everyone in the woods knows. Come on. You need a bath, some food and sleep.”
“But what if (hic) she comesh back?”
“Thomas? I can guarantee that won’t happen today. Come on.”
She dragged him along the road. His head was slumped on his chest and his leather shoes were dragging, toes down, in the soft dirt of the two-lane thoroughfare. After a mile of struggling with the leprechaun, she turned down a single file path winding through the trees. Thomas had hiccupped in Tia’s ear through the entire journey, his head lolling from side to side.
She’d reached the end of the path as well as the end of her patience. When the path stopped abruptly at the river’s edge, so did Tia. She allowed the momentum of her pace to transfer to the inert leprechaun.
The moment the figure hit the icy water, he screamed.
“You’re killing me! Gods in Heaven! You’re trying to kill me!”
“For crying out loud, Thomas. Just dunk your head under the water and quit yelling. Maybe if you bathed more often, you wouldn’t chase away the ladies.”
The figure floundered in the icy stream.
“I can’t swim! Tia! I’m drowning!”
“Thomas?”
“Help! I’m drowning!”
“THOMAS!”
The roar echoed through the woods.
“Put your feet down!”
Blustering until his face was crimson, the drunken man splashed furiously. His head went beneath the water and he rose up sputtering, unconsciously standing on the stream’s bottom. He quit flailing his arms.
“Oh.”
“Yeah, oh.” Tia drew her sword and pointed it his direction. “Now get yourself and your clothing sopping wet. If you even think of getting on the bank without attempting to wash off some of that stench, I’ll split you from gullet to gizzard.”
He glared at the gnome warrior until his head started pounding.
“Fine.”
She stood pointing her sharpened blade at him until he and his clothing were sufficiently soaked.
“Now, let’s go. My mom will have some stew to put into your stomach.”
“But I don’t wa…”
Thomas stopped his whine at the glare he was receiving from Tia.
“Lead the way.”

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