|

Mary Frances
|
 |
Mirror Mirror
Casey's mother is missing. For years, she and her father
have combed the woods looking for any trace of the woman and finding none, yet, every year, on the anniversary of the vanishing, Casey still searches. It is her birthday present to
herself to keep looking. How can anyone disappear without a trace and why? Hidden deep in the woods, Casey finally finds the trail that will lead her to her mother but is she on the
right track? Is she on the right side of life? With nothing to lose, Casey goes into the trees and to her mother only to find a life not meant for her. Everything is wrong, yet
right. Everything that is right is now left. Like looking into a mirror with everything reversed, Casey finds it just may be she, is the one who has been missing for all those
years.
Read Excerpt
Buy this E-Book |
|

|
Lantern Jack
Wars leave many scars on the people involved and Jack was
not without his share of scars. He came home, horribly disfigured and soon the myths and legends began. A quiet man, Jack was labeled a freak and tormented by the boys from town.
All he wants to do is grow his crop and be left alone. He finds himself walking the fields in the night to protect them from harm and when the boys come calling, he has a surprise
waiting for them. Sometimes, things really do go 'bump' in the night. |
|

|
The Thirteenth Floor
Superstitions
abound in every building with more than twelve floors. Where is the thirteenth floor and why do they skip it? If there really was an Elevator of Life, which floor would you like to
get off at? Does it depend on which floor you got on or does anyone really get to choose? Take a ride and find out what really is on the thirteenth floor. |
|

|
A Grave Mistake
When Danny's father
dies, his world is suddenly turned upside down. To make matters worse, his mother moves them to a small town where she hopes he'll learn real values in life. What he finds is the
old Mr. Simms and the graveyard down the street from the school and a new friend his own age who is determined to drag him right back into the trouble Danny's mother is trying to
keep him from. How can a twelve year old learn any important lesson from the dead? What kind of secrets are hidden in the old cemetery anyway? Walk through the gate and find out! |
|

|
The Thirteenth Power
“Enter
the little children and come closer to me, for I have waited a long time and you have finally come home.”
Mandy did just that. She came closer and made
herself at home. A new life was hers for the taking and when she found others with the same ideals, she grabbed at the chance to belong. Hoping to form her own coven, the self
proclaimed witch, has a lot to learn and there are plenty willing to teach her. Or will they? Secrets and spells, sage and candles, what do they need her for? Why is she so
important to the others and if there be secrets, who's are they? Waiting for the August moon has put everyone on edge and Mandy finds herself the center of attention. With an old
Book of Shadows to guide her, she soon finds that there are real witches with real beliefs and witchcraft, is not a game. |
|

|
One Shot One Kill
Everyone is good at something and Tracy was good with a
gun. So good, she won all there was to win in competitions. She listened to her daddy and became the best. Too good for the army and bored with the police force, where could she go
to perfect her 'art'? Then, she received the call. After all the years training beside her father in the woods, she was finally going to use the ' one shot-one kill' theory, but
THEY are out there and they do not forget. They hired her to do what she did best and in the end, she finds there is no escape. THEY always come back for you. |
|

|
Madame Cobilet - The Box
Margaret Cobilet (Coh-bee-yay)
was the top in her field in 1978 as far as psychics go. The news media followed her and as she flashed her long nails and sparkling hair, she 'read' what was hidden inside of others
lives. Her uncanny abilities helped solve cold cases for police and she was in demand for public appearances, then there was New Mexico in 1979. A school bus with seventeen children
disappeared in the desert. Margaret was asked to help find the children. With no clues and fewer suspects, she couldn't help. The media turned on her and as they had built her up,
they now tore her down. Labeled a fraud and fake, she took solace in her home on the river and hoped one day, for the one item, the one clue that might help her find the children.
After twenty-five years, Margaret steps from her home and once more, the question is the same, "Where are the children?" |
|
|