Shift – Mirror Mirror

Continued from Scene twenty


Keith was sitting on the front porch when we arrived with a scratch on his face.

“Looks like two of us need tending too,” said Mr. Wilcox as he slammed the truck door.

“Jeff, what the hell have you done to yourself this time.”

“A nail in the foot, Doc.”

“Alright, come on inside. I’ll have Nicky look at it while Christain and I take care of some business downstairs.”

“You want to borrow my old catchers mask.”

“Nicky, Jeff’s back.”

“Again, Mr. Wilcox, what am I going to do with you?” asked Nicky.

As I followed Keith downstairs, we stopped halfway as the whole staircase began a slow descent, two stories down to be exact. When it stopped, we made our way down a hallway to the last door on the right. “Kate, this is Dr. Decker; I’m going to come in and talk to you. You won’t be restrained unless you act out again.”

Spiting through the small opening, she yelled, “Go away, you fucking bastard! Why have you locked me in here, you’re not the police.”

“Your right; I’m not. I’m your friend. We’ve known each other for years. You have amnesia.”

“Fuck you! I don’t have amnesia. And my name is not Kate. It’s Carol Wiseman.”

“If that’s true, where were you born?”

“Cincinnati, Ohio, I still live there. My address is 2205 Baker Street.”

“But you’ve been living in a homeless camp for years. Why not go back home?”

“I tried, but my boyfriend said he would kill me if I left.”

“When did you meet him?”

“I don’t remember; Jake was just there one day. I had a bad trip, and he—.

“Is something wrong?”

“I’m not sure. Do you have any heroin? I need some heroin! The voice is coming back.”

“You don’t need heroin. I can make the voice go away.”

She stepped back from the door, crying. “All I need is heroin.”

As we entered you could see mindless scratches along the wall made from a screw taken out of the bed frame. In the corner stood Kate. “Not him, you, by yourself.”

“He’s my assistant. I need him to take notes.”

“I’m not a lab rat.”

“No one said you were. And I promise to give you all the heroin you want if the voice doesn’t go away.”

While his promise may have comforting Kate, or Carol, or whoever she was. It did not comfort me; I knew what he meant.

“You Promise?”

“Yes, now lie down on the bed. I want to use a hypnotic technic I developed to help people who hear voices.”

“Other people hear voices?”

“Yes. And I want to know what yours is saying.”

“You don’t have to put me under for that. I’ll tell you what it says. It says, ‘I’m not me, look in the mirror I’m not me.'”

“And what do you see when you look in the mirror?”

“Me, you dumbass. What the fuck did you think I was going to see?”

“Christian, get the mirror out of my bag.”

“Kate, take this mirror and tell me what you see.”

Her eyes flashed. “A crazy woman, I see the crazy woman,” she yelled, hitting me in the head with the edge of the mirror, causing it to shatter, its pieces reflecting multiple faces.

Before I could look up, she fell to the floor shaking. “Get on top of her, Christian, and hold her down while I give her a shot.”

A few minutes later, we were standing outside again, looking through the small opening. A cut on my face and a new scratch on his. “Carol, look at me. What’s the crazy woman’s name?”

“Kate,” she replied softly. Her name is Kate.”

Continue to scene twenty-two



Shift is an online work of fiction.

This is the first draft of my manuscript Shift – Don’t judge a book by its cover. I am writing it online in sections as I go. So feel free to comment, good or bad. If you see mistakes, point them out.

The story centers around shapeshifting.

I’m currently working on chapter Ten.

Shift – A Happy Home

Continued from scene eighteen


The couch made my back hurt overnight, but she got the point. Seven years older or not, things were going to change.

“Get up; we’ve got some decisions to make.”

Apparently, the argument wasn’t over.

“It’s six o’clock in the morning. It can wait.”

“No, it can’t. Every decision I make involves our family. So get your ass up off the couch. After all, you’ve been a shifter for well over a week now. So you should be capable of making decisions about our family and the lives of shifters you barely know. And the dynamics of tribal politics should be a breeze for someone with your fortitude and knowledge. I don’t know what I was thinking when I made those DECISIONS without you.”

“You knew what I meant yesterday, so come down off your high horse. I get it; I’m not there yet as a shifter. But I’m going to be your husband and the father of our child. So a little respect on your end isn’t too much to ask.”

I waited for a harsh reply, but she stumbled over her words.

“You’re––well, I guess….”

Her phone rang saving her from having to say more.

Hanging up, she turned, arms crossed. “Looks like your man brain is needed after all. Decker wants help with Kate’s therapy.”

“They already have her?”

“That’s right, Elysians wast no time when their families lives are at stake. Now come into the kitchen and eat the breakfast I cooked for you.”

After breakfast, she smiled and led me to the front door, where she said, “Don’t work too hard today. I’ll be sure to clean the house and have dinner ready when you get home.”

Her sarcasm was not lost on me as I drove off in her old pickup truck. Looking back through the rearview mirror, I saw her blow a kiss, and I could not help thinking I should have kept my big mouth shut.

Continue to scene twenty


Shift is an online work of fiction.

This is the first draft of my manuscript Shift – Don’t judge a book by its cover. I am writing it online in sections as I go. So feel free to comment, good or bad. If you see mistakes, point them out.

The story centers around shapeshifting.

I’m currently working on chapter Ten.

Shift – Atlantis

Continued from scene nine


“Really, Atlantis excites you? You didn’t act this surprised when I told you I could shapeshift.”

“I thought you were kidding, but I’ve learned to take everything you say and do seriously now.”

“Well, I guess that’s a positive.”

“Can you show me the Atlantis text?”

“No.”

“Why not?”

“There isn’t any; my knowledge of Atlantis comes from the memories of my parents and their parent’s parents.”

“You can recall all of their memories?”

“Not all. As information gets passed from one generation to the next, bits and pieces get lost in the clutter. They’re there but harder to find. It’s taking me years to retrieve our somewhat compete shifter history.”

“Will I be able to retrieve it one day?”

“No, our ancient history can only be accessed by those with pure pedigrees. Meaning everyone in their family tree was given the gift by a parent.

“Those who obtain the gift through a teacher have a recorded history that’s been muddled by the memories of the plague’s younger children.”

“So you’re basically calling me a mutt.”

“Basically, but you’re a cute little puppy, and I love you just the way you are.”

“You know, you’re starting to hurt my manhood a bit with all the cute talk.”

“I’m sorry, babe. I’ll try to cut back. After all, the father of shifter royalty deserves respect.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“It means I’m pregnant.”

Continue to scene 11


Shift is an online work of fiction.

This is the first draft of my manuscript Shift – Don’t judge a book by its cover. I am writing it online in sections as I go. So feel free to comment, good or bad. If you see mistakes, point them out.

The story centers around shapeshifting.

I’m currently working on chapter Ten.