Prolific writer Stephanie Osborn, who we've proudly featured here on MB4 in the past, has graciously offered us an excerpt of her new novella, El Vengador! Perfect for Halloween and just a taste to get you in a spooky mood. Check it out on Amazon!
Aaron Lazar
www.lazarbooks.com
An Excerpt from El Vengador
by Stephanie Osborn
Deputy Sheriff Michael Kirtchner gets an "unknown
disturbance" dispatch call to a remote house trailer in the swamp. There,
he discovers an old woman and a dog, terrorized by a mysterious beast, which he
takes to be a bear. But when he contacts Game Warden Jeff Stuart to come trap
the animal, Stuart tells him to get out if he values his life - this is no
ordinary animal. Is Kirtchner up against a Swamp Ape ― a
Florida version of Bigfoot - or something more...sinister?
Based on a true story.
~~~
“Ma’am?” he ventured. “Ma’am, could you please put down the shotgun?”
“What? Oh ― oh, yeah. Ah’m wavin’ it ever’where, ain’t Ah? Ah’m so sorry.
Ah know better. Ah…it scared me, ya see, and Ah didn’…”
She put the shotgun aside, just inside the doorway. It was then that
Kirtchner noticed she was weeping.
“Ma’am… are you okay?”
“NO! Ah’m not okay! Ah’m scared out of muh mind, officer! Why do ya think
Ah called ya?” she exclaimed in a thick rural accent.
“Why are you crying?”
“’Cause Ah’m just so glad you came! Somethin’ attacked mah house, an’ Ah
thought Ah was gonna die!”
“What was it?”
“Ah dunno. But it was big, an’ it was fast. An’ it stunk t’ high heaven!”
Her voice, already pitched high from stress, cracked and became whiny halfway
through this speech, and upon its completion, she began trembling. Kirtchner
came to her, sat her on the steps, and worked on getting her calmed down.
“Shh, it’s okay. I’m here now. I’ve got my gun,” he patted his holster,
“and you’re safe. What’s your name?”
“Elsie Moore,” she sniffled, glancing about in apprehension, studying the
foliage past his squad car in considerable trepidation. “Uh, Missuz. Ah’m a
widder-woman.”
“Do you prefer Mrs. Moore, or Miss Elsie?”
“Ah dunno as it matters. Don’t nobody ever come out here nohow.” She
shrugged. “Call me Elsie, Ah reckon.”
“Fine, Elsie. So, someone attacked your mobile home?”
“NO! Weren’t no some one! It were a something!” she blurted.
“Shh. It’s okay. How long ago was this?”
She glanced at a battered old men’s wristwatch, then muttered, “’Bout an
hour, hour-fifteen, afore you showed up, Ah reckon. Ah called right aft’r Ah
shot at th’ thang. It musta run off inta th’ woods.”
“And what happened?”
“Ah be damned ‘f Ah know,” Elsie answered, running the last three words
together. “There’ uz this turr’ble smell, wild animal smell ya know, like a
skunk, onliest it ‘uz worse’n any skunk Ah ever heared tell of. Ah got plumb
nauseous, an’ lost mah dinner inna trash can. Then there ‘uz a horrible ruckus
right a’most up unner me ― unner th’ trailer, that is. Metal skreechin’ an’
bendin’ an’ somethin’ roarin’ an’ howlin’ fit to kill. Ah looked out th’
nearest winner, an’ there ‘uz a big ol’… thing… clawin’ at th’ back.”
“A thing? What did it look like?” Kirtchner wondered.
“Ah couldn’ tell ya,” Elsie tried to explain, “on ‘counta it ‘uz half up
unner th’ trailer. Ah could only see its hind end.”
“…Which looked like?” Kirtchner prodded.
“Like a big ol’ furry butt,” Elsie retorted. “Long shaggy brown, or maybe
black, fur, with some green.”
“Green?” Kirtchner straightened up, raising an eyebrow.
“Green,” Elsie reiterated, a hint of defiance in her tone now. “Like… you
ever read ‘bout them jungle critters, them whadda they call ‘em… sloths?”
“Oh. Yeah, I think so.”
“Ah caught part of a show on th’ tee-vee,” she said. “Th’ sat’lite dish
ain’t worth much, an’ Ah didn’ see all of it. But they showed ‘em, an’ th’ fur
‘uz kinda green, an’ ‘ey said it ‘uz ‘cause moss an’ algae an’ shit grew in
it.” She nodded sagely. “It ‘uz like ‘at.”
“Oookay,” Kirtchner remarked, pulling out his tablet and swiping across its
pad, taking notes. “Do you think you’re settled enough now to show me where it
was?”
Mrs. Moore drew a deep breath, then popped to her feet as if launched. She
reached inside the door of the trailer and retrieved her shotgun. It was a
Winchester model 1897, he noted absently; a 16-gauge, to judge by the barrel
length, and anything but new. It looked to need cleaning, too. He restrained a
frisson of anxiety with an effort.
“Yeah,” she averred, “but we ain’t goin’ nowheres until you git yer
shotgun, too. Ah knows as yew po-lice types carry ‘em, so yew jus’ go gitchers
right now.”
“You don’t need that. And I have my pistol.” Kirtchner was less than
thrilled with this development. If she gets antsy and shoots that thing, no telling what will happen, he
thought. It doesn’t look like it’s been maintained in a couple of decades. I wonder
when this husband of hers kicked it.
“’At little pop-gun? Agin the beast what attacked mah trailer?” She
gestured at his holster. “Ah don’ think so.”
“It’s a forty-five,” Kirtchner pointed out. “It’ll handle the situation.
Please put down your weapon.”
“Ah ain’t puttin’ it down, mister. Yew ain’t seen ‘at monster. Ah did. Now,
yew git y’r shotgun, or Ah ain’t a-goin’ nowheres ‘ceptin’ inta th’ house, an’
lockin’ th’ door behind me. Yew kin take yer chances.” Elsie tilted her head
up, setting her jaw, determined to stare him down.
So to placate the woman, he got his Mossberg, set up for 12 gauge, out of
the cruiser. He made sure the magazine was fully loaded with magnum shells, and
followed Elsie around to the back of her trailer.
* * *
The scene that greeted him when they got in the back yard looked like
somebody had attacked the rear of her trailer using some kind of giant,
multi-pronged steel fork. The heavy gauge aluminum siding was torn to hell and
back, and it was peeled away in several places starting from the bottom of the
trailer and curling up its side. There were great long gouges, some longer than
2 feet in length, which looked like nothing so much as giant claw marks torn
into the aluminum siding of the trailer. Even the insulation had been pulled
out in places. Some of the gouges had what was obviously fresh blood smeared
along the edges.
-Stephanie Osborn
About the author:
Few can claim the varied background of Stephanie Osborn, the Interstellar Woman of Mystery.
Veteran of more than 20 years in the civilian space program, as well as various military space defense programs, she worked on numerous space shuttle flights and the International Space Station, and counts the training of astronauts on her resumé. Her space experience also includes Spacelab and ISS operations, variable star astrophysics, Martian aeolian geophysics, radiation physics, and nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons effects.
Stephanie holds graduate and undergraduate degrees in four sciences: astronomy, physics, chemistry and mathematics, and she is "fluent" in several more, including geology and anatomy.
In addition she possesses a license of ministry, has been a duly sworn, certified police officer, and is a National Weather Service certified storm spotter.
Veteran of more than 20 years in the civilian space program, as well as various military space defense programs, she worked on numerous space shuttle flights and the International Space Station, and counts the training of astronauts on her resumé. Her space experience also includes Spacelab and ISS operations, variable star astrophysics, Martian aeolian geophysics, radiation physics, and nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons effects.
Stephanie holds graduate and undergraduate degrees in four sciences: astronomy, physics, chemistry and mathematics, and she is "fluent" in several more, including geology and anatomy.
In addition she possesses a license of ministry, has been a duly sworn, certified police officer, and is a National Weather Service certified storm spotter.
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