Beautiful Evil Winter
by Kelly K. Lavender
Published:
November 6th, 2014 (2nd edition)
Genre: Suspense
Thriller
Recommended Age:
18+
Beautiful Evil Winter, a Russian Action
Thriller, earns a list of accolades including an Eric Hoffer Award for
“…writing of significant merit” and a Readers’ Favorite International Book
Award. The novel takes place in the 1990s after the fall of the USSR, a time
reminiscent of the unforgiving, gunslinging days of the frontier west. When
mild-mannered Ethan and fiery Sophia board a plane bound for Russia, they hope
to secure their son’s safe passage back to the US. An innocent encounter with
the Mafia de-rails their plans. Suddenly, they become a target of the
iron-fisted Mafioso that wields total control of Russian adoptions. What can
make matters worse? An inexperienced untrained adoption coordinator who must
complete the legal process and insure a safe return to the US. How much
hardship can a couple endure when faced with do or die events? When hope fails
and suffering prevails, what’s left?
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The
conversation with Natasha on the phone last night burns in my brain.
“Adoption
very risky in Russia now. The ban make Mafia watch money very close.”
“This trip big gamble for you. I work
to keep adoption away from Mafia. If I do not, police arrest you for human
trafficking or Mafia take you. Better to go to prison. My name not appear
anywhere, only yours. Phone will be disconnected. And I never know you.”
“Hello, folks. This is your pilot I
apologize for the delay. The maintenance crew is working diligently to insure
the safety of our trip. Thanks again for your patience.”
I glance over at Ethan, who’s dozing
now.
“Honey?” I place my hand on his arm,
but he doesn’t stir. Probably, the fatigue finally caught up with him, or...
maybe he drank a cocktail, in which case he’ll be comatose. I think I’ll go to
the restroom before the plane takes off. “Be back in a minute.”
I
carefully unclasp my seat belt and try to skitter by him without disturbing
him. As I walk past the rows on either side, I glance at the tendrils of ear
plugs reaching upward like small sun- seeking plants, and the hand-held
devices, passengers attached to them like farmers admiring prized vegetables
pulled from the fields.
As I reach the door, the occupied
sign forces me to pause and begin to turn around. Suddenly, I hear the click
of the door unlocking.
What luck! I’ll just dash in and
dash out. Hopefully, I won’t have to hold my breath to stay in there. My face
twists in repulsion at the thought. A haggard looking middle-aged man with a
large paunch emerges and smiles too brightly at me.
That look—that look of recognition
like I’m a favorite relative, but I’m not. His lids half close as he squeezes
past me taking his slow sweet time. And he looks back at me before he stumbles
down the aisle way.
Yuck.
I push the door open and inhale a
shallow breath. The smell of pump soap greets me. All clear. I can breathe.
Ting, Ting. The strained
voice of the stressed-out flight attendant echoes through the tiny bathroom
cabin.
“Within the next twenty minutes, The
Captain will be turning on the fasten seat belt sign. Until then, you can use
your electronic devices. We apologize for the inconvenience”
Turning from the sink to the
opposite side to grab paper towels, all 5’2” 115 pounds of me twists like a
corkscrew to move around. A quick swipe of the towels, a glance at my nostrils,
a push of the level, and I’m free to escape into the main cabin.
As I near my seat, I notice that
“Mr. Too Brightly” is sitting next to Ethan.
Damn!
I have to sit next to him! Looks like comatose Ethan has just re-positioned
himself to face the aisle way. Why doesn’t this plane offer two across seating
instead of three?
My steps slow, but I don’t want to
wake Ethan up to swap seats since he’s so tired.
As I stand next to our row of seats,
Mr. Brightly realizes with a dazzling repugnant smile that I’ll be seated next
to him.
“Don’t tell me you’re with that
guy,” he says, gesturing at Ethan. “He’s out cold.” Between the screaming baby
and me trying to wedge past him, he hasn’t moved an inch.” He smirks, his smile
now a beacon of light.
I grit my teeth and carefully squeeze
by Ethan’s knees grabbing the headrest of the seat in front of me for support.
Glancing back over my shoulder, I see him looking at Ethan.
I focus on the seat space next to
him, zeroing-in on the instructions on the pocket pouch for my seat. Someone
scribbled in red pen, HELL A MILE HIGH.
As I wiggle into my seat and grope
for my seatbelt, he watches my every move.
“Lucky me!” he says as he cranes his
neck over my armrest to glance down my V-neck shirt.
“The flight attendant let me change
seats. Person next to me was sick. She coughed all over me,” he says, waving
his hand in front of his face as if shooing flies.
A
puff of whiskey more noxious than cigarette smoke wafts my way. My nose
wrinkles in disgust.
“Now, honey, tell me all about you,”
he says patting my white knuckles which grip the armrest.
“I’m too tired to talk.” Turning
away from him, I grab a blanket and reposition my entire body as close as
possible to Ethan’s seat.
“Okay, well, I’ll get comfortable.
Must finish my movie,” he announces as he shifts around in his seat and loosens
his tie.
From the corner of my semi-closed
eye, I see him push off his shoes and remove his socks. Wiggling his now naked
toes, he grabs his iPad and powers it on.
Gathering
the blanket closer, I relax and try to drift away.
“Aw, Melissa, moan for me, “ a
breathless male pleas as he grunts.
“Yes, yes, that’s it!” A female
pants in reply.
A glance reveals more than I want to
see, a totally naked couple pleasuring each other.
I feel my cheeks redden with anger. There
are children on this flight!
As I glance across the aisle, I see
a Mom hugging a toddler acutely aware. Her sour expression says it all as she
positions her child’s head in the direction of the seat window. Re-adjusting my
body, I turn to face him, carefully choosing my words.
“Look, you may enjoy that movie, but
a lot of people wouldn’t—especially the parents of children on this plane. If
you’ll angle your screen toward the window and turn the volume down or use your
ear plugs, I think several passengers will be grateful.”
“Mind your own business, bitch! I’ll
watch whatever I want in the seat I paid for!” His eyes gleam. He enjoys
this too much.
In my peripheral vision, I can see
slack-jawed Mom across the aisle, her toddler now in the arms of his Dad. Her
gripping hand like a talon, flexing as waves of rage engulf her. I see fury
fill her eyes and heart—morphing her into a predator and a protector of her
young.
Gripping the hand rest, I reach up
for the call button. Immediately, his hand covers mine.
“You didn’t say that you don’t like
porn,” he says with a smile as his hand squeezes mine.
My eyes glitter with cold, hard
hate—hate as tangible as a slab of black marble. Hate that maims and kills,
without regret.
“Let me be clear,” I hiss.
“Your movie disgusts me as much as
you do! Leave me alone, and don’t talk to me!”
Turning my upper body away from him,
I grab a pillow and blanket—positioning myself toward Ethan and away from him.
“And I let my fingers do the walking
walking walking—all the way up your back.”
With unbridled fury, I turn and slap
him with the force of my pent-up anger—anger at his moronic behavior, anger at
having to sit on the tarmac for two hours and anger at having to deal with
idiocy all along this journey.
Chuckling, he touches his now
red-striped cheek.
I glance over at Ethan for help, but
he’s still comatose, only a gunshot wound would wake him up.
Where’s that flight attendant? I did
manage to push the button.
Some little kid is crying in the
background. The 5-year-old girl adjacent to us is wearing white socks
splattered with dirt. She’s picking her nose and staring at us in wide-eyed
wonder.
Finally, a tall, heavyset flight
attendant hurries down the aisle looking irate.
“What’s going on here?” he demands.
In a well rehearsed move, he kicks
Ethan’s boot to wake him.
“What? Why did you kick me?” Ethan
whines as he rubs his eyes, finally looking back and forth between me and
Brightly. “Good God, what’s going on here?”
“I was just asking myself the same thing,”
says the flight attendant, shooting daggers at me.
Clearly, he thinks this is all my
fault.
Rising to his feet and stepping into
the aisle, Ethan blinks in disbelief, then grabs my arm and yanks me out of my
seat to stand beside him.
“Are you ok?”
I nod, my lips trembling.
As Ethan turns to face Brightly, I
watch him straighten his body and fold his arms across his chest, blocking
Brightly into our three-seat space. But instead of looking at the jerk in the
eye, Ethan stares out the window behind his head.
Anger bubbles in the pit of my
stomach, and this time not at Mr. Brightly. A thought that haunts me
re-surfaces. Why is Ethan always so non-confrontational? You’d think he was
Perseus managing Medusa. Sure, no one wants to brawl, but shouldn’t a husband
take a stand when it’s necessary to protect his wife? I don’t know what would
happen if I was in serious trouble—trouble that he couldn’t talk his way out of
or rely on someone to fix. Got to hold on to the hope that his resolve would
trump his reluctance— that he’d defend me. Looking away from Ethan, I grit my
teeth in disapproval.
“What happened here, sir?” – asks
the flight attendant as his eyes lock-in on Brightly.
“Well, I was watching my movie when
this woman became irate with me.” Leaning in my direction, he smiles adoringly,
tilting his head to the right.
Slack-jawed Mom is on her feet now,
pointing at Mr. Brightly. Her eyes full of fire and focused on felling her
target.
“Who do you think you are?” she says.
“Shoving your garbage down our throats and exposing our innocent children to
your trash!” Her moral outrage now silencing the once noisy cabin. Turning to
the flight attendant, she continues—
“He pestered this woman. He put his
hands on her!”
Taking
a breath, she pauses satiated—even if momentarily. With a steady searing stare,
she looks at me, ready to pounce again if needed.
“Thank you!” I say, relieved to have
a witness.
“He was watching porn without ear
plugs. I could hear it very clearly. When I asked him to lower the volume, he
began harassing me. Then, he escalated the situation by putting his hands on
me!” I answer, my indignation incinerating any thought of restraint.
“This man harassed my wife,” Ethan
says to the flight attendant. He should be removed from this p-p-p...lane.” He
stammers.” What are you g-g-g...oing to do about it
An opportunity for me, Ethan’s body
turned toward the flight attendant. In a flash, I lunge for Brightly. Bitch
deserves some justice. “Get away from me! Grab her!” Brightly shouts as he
raises his fore arms to shield his face.
I feel hands on my shoulders now,
pulling me away from my prey. Gritting my teeth, I resist leaning in, my hands
a riverboat paddle wheel of slaps and punches.
“Stop, Sophia! It’s under control
now!” Ethan yells, re-doubling his efforts to tear me away from my quarry.
His arms cocoon me and pull me
back—allowing the flight attendant to drag Brightly from his “foxhole” across
the seats.
Ethan tightens his hold as Brightly
stumbles into the aisle, grimacing. Brightly’s face is ghoulish and green as
his hand reaches out toward the seat back pocket to attempt to grab the small
paper bag poking out. Abruptly, a cough and a stream of vomit flows from his
mouth, clouding the cabin with the sour gut-twisting stench of onions and
whiskey.
Catching the brunt of it, the
splattered attendant gasps. “You moron! You’re coming up front with me to sit
near the Air Marshall!’
“Wait! I have something to say to
him.”
Ethan releases my arms sensing the
passing of the raging storm that lives within me now.
There’s no cup. Could use a sick
bag, but that may arouse suspicion and possible restraint. Must be quick.
Grimacing, I reach toward the floor
and grab a hand full of warm vomit from the putrid pool in the aisle. It feels
squishy and chunky—my gag reflex glows bright red.
Swallowing
hard, I hold my breath for a moment to fight the nausea. As I exhale, I pull
his belt buckle toward my belly with my left hand while my right hand empties
the vomit inside his fly.
“You
want some action? Here’s your action!” I sneer.
With a smile of satisfaction, I wipe
my hand clean on his clothing.
Awards and Honors
- The Eric Hoffer Awards – Commercial Fiction -
Honorable Mention. The Hoffer
Awards spotlight “…writing of significant merit.”
- The National Indie Excellence Awards -
The New Fiction Finalist
- Dan Poytner’s Global EBook Awards-Bronze
Medalist Suspense
- Readers’ Favorite International Book Awards-Triple
Genre Finalist- Suspense, Thriller
and Romance Sizzle
- Readers’ Favorite International Book Awards-Honorable
Mention Suspense
Readers’ Favorite
International Book Awards contestants include New York Times Best-Selling
Authors and celebrities, comedian Jim Carey won an award this year.
My
fascination with fiction began in middle school when I entered a book-reading
contest and won. As an ardent fan of the resonating narrative and the
cliffhanger, I decided to dedicate myself to becoming a skilled writer. When
college professors spotlighted my writing in the classroom, it anchored my
interest in becoming a novelist. I continued to pursue my education at UCLA,
via the UCLA Writers’ Extension Program, where my writing earned praise from an
award-winning author. Of equal and enduring importance, in my life, is a
passion for horses. As an avid, lifelong equestrian and horse owner,I now live
on a ranch with my family,which we share with a menagerie of four-legged
friends. Beautiful Evil Winter is my debut novel.
There is a tour wide giveaway. Prizes include
the following:
·
Winner’s choice of an Amazon or
Barnes and Noble $50 Gift Card.
Giveaway is International.
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