Title: Twice Upon a Time
Fairytale, Folklore, & Myth, Reimagined & Remastered
Author: Joshua Allen Mercier
Publisher: Bearded Scribe Press
Release Date: 14th January 2015
BLURB from Goodreads
Fairytales don’t always happen once upon a time. Fables don’t always have a happy ending. Sometimes the stories we love are too dark for nightmares. What if waking Sleeping Beauty was the worse thing the Prince could have done? What if Rapunzel wasn't in that tower for her own protection—but for everyone else’s?
Assembled by The Bearded Scribe Press, Twice Upon A Time combines classics and modern lore in peculiar and spectacular ways. From Rapunzel to Rumpelstiltskin, this unique collection showcases childhood favorites unlike anything you’ve ever seen.
Both traditionally-published and independent authors will take you on a whirlwind ride through fairytale and folklore, myth and majick. Cherished stories are revisited and remastered into newly-treasured tales of hope and heartache, of adversity and adventure.
Featuring stories from Bo Balder, AJ Bauers, Carina Bissett, Rose Blackthorn, S.M. Blooding, Rick Chiantaretto, Richard Chizmar, Liz DeJesus, Court Ellyn, S.Q. Eries, Steven Anthony George, Dale W. Glaser, Jax Goss, K.R. Green, Kelly Hale, Tonia Marie Harris, Brian T. Hodges, Tarran Jones, Jason Kimble, Shari L. Klase, Alethea Kontis, Hannah Lesniak, Wayne Ligon, RS McCoy, Joshua Allen Mercier, Robert D. Moores, Diana Murdock, Nick Nafpliotis, Elizabeth J. Norton, Bobbie Palmer, William Petersen, Rebekah Phillips, Asa Powers, Joe Powers, Brian Rathbone, Julianne Snow, Tracy Arthur Soldan, C.L. Stegall, Brian W. Taylor, Kenechi Udogu, Onser von Fullon, Deborah Walker, Angela Wallace, and Cynthia Ward.
Edited by Joshua Allen Mercier. Cover artwork by Luke Spooner.
Assembled by The Bearded Scribe Press, Twice Upon A Time combines classics and modern lore in peculiar and spectacular ways. From Rapunzel to Rumpelstiltskin, this unique collection showcases childhood favorites unlike anything you’ve ever seen.
Both traditionally-published and independent authors will take you on a whirlwind ride through fairytale and folklore, myth and majick. Cherished stories are revisited and remastered into newly-treasured tales of hope and heartache, of adversity and adventure.
Featuring stories from Bo Balder, AJ Bauers, Carina Bissett, Rose Blackthorn, S.M. Blooding, Rick Chiantaretto, Richard Chizmar, Liz DeJesus, Court Ellyn, S.Q. Eries, Steven Anthony George, Dale W. Glaser, Jax Goss, K.R. Green, Kelly Hale, Tonia Marie Harris, Brian T. Hodges, Tarran Jones, Jason Kimble, Shari L. Klase, Alethea Kontis, Hannah Lesniak, Wayne Ligon, RS McCoy, Joshua Allen Mercier, Robert D. Moores, Diana Murdock, Nick Nafpliotis, Elizabeth J. Norton, Bobbie Palmer, William Petersen, Rebekah Phillips, Asa Powers, Joe Powers, Brian Rathbone, Julianne Snow, Tracy Arthur Soldan, C.L. Stegall, Brian W. Taylor, Kenechi Udogu, Onser von Fullon, Deborah Walker, Angela Wallace, and Cynthia Ward.
Edited by Joshua Allen Mercier. Cover artwork by Luke Spooner.
PURCHASE LINKS
EXCERPT
from
Fire & Ash by Joshua Allen Mercier,
a
dark fantasy retelling of Little Red Riding Hood
THE cold, autumn gusts ripped across Salem’s port,
stirring the angry waters, stirring the angry spectators gathered before the
gallows—gallows which had not, until this day, been used since the Trials
several years back. Men, women, children—all bore hateful eyes and twisted
faces. All bore a deep-seeded fear of the woman before them; they watched and
seethed, anger building like fire fed by the winds, waiting for answers, for
closure, for justice—for the devil’s death. Constance Archer stared at the sea
of faces; she despised all of them, save two—two faces that weren’t supposed to
be there. Her daughters, Rhiannon and Rowan, hid in the small grove of trees,
but she could still see their watery, green eyes piercing through the shadows,
their stares stabbing their fear and pain and confusion into her. They weren’t
supposed to see her like this. With the gag still tightly secured about her
mouth, however, her muffled pleas for them to leave went unheard. Where was
their grandmother? Constance’s fiery locks were drenched with tears. Her heart
ached. For them, for herself, for her husband, Jacob. She shouldn’t have let
the rage overtake her; she knew that now, now that it was too late. “For the
crimes of witchcraft, how do you plea?” Even though the thick rope around her
neck made it difficult to escape it—to forget—the reverend’s voice jolted her
back to reality. “Not guilty,” Constance replied through the gag, unsure if her
plea was understood. “Executioner, please remove the gag from the accused.” The
reverend’s statement was cold. They had known each other since they were
children, but he was but a stranger now as he stood before her. He was once so
compassionate, so caring—what had changed? The executioner approached Constance
with apprehension; she soon understood why. Despite the black hood covering his
face, his scent—sweet, woody, musky, like freshly-sawn wood mixed with perfume
and sweat—immediately revealed his identity: William Black. He removed the gag
with haste and stepped across the gallows with a speed she hadn’t witnessed him
have in years. How fitting that the town adulterer would be the one to hang
her. She wondered who the woman had been, the one whose scent lingered on his
clothing and skin. Surely it wasn’t his wife, Catherine. It couldn’t be. She
had killed her, in a way, the memory of the act flooding back to her nearly
causing her to faint. Seems Catherine and her husband didn’t understand the
meaning of marriage; then again, neither did Jacob (apparently). Catching him
with Catherine was the most heart-breaking of all. Wyatt Thatcher cleared his
throat. “Mrs. Archer—your plea, now that we can hear you.” Constance stared at
her old friend, pain and tears welling in her eyes. “Not guilty.” “If not for
witchcraft, how do account for the brutal way you murdered Catherine Black?
Surely, you were possessed,” countered Reverend Thatcher. “I didn’t murder
Catherine Black. As I told you all before, she was attacked by a beast.” She
wasn’t lying, but she wasn’t telling the whole truth. The truth wouldn’t save
her, and she couldn’t have her daughters hearing it. They weren’t supposed to
be here, but calling attention to them now would only make matters worse.
“You’re the beast!” a woman’s voice sounded from the throng. “Witch!” said
another, followed by her husband’s jibe, “You’re Satan’s whore!” Reverend
Thatcher held his hand to the crowd; without a word, they fell silent. It
wasn’t their first execution; it probably wouldn’t be their last. His attention
turned to the defendant, but his eyes remained downcast, staring at the rough
wood of the gallows as if it were the most interesting sight he had ever
beheld. Constance knew why Wyatt Thatcher wouldn’t look at her, knew he
couldn’t show a hint of weakness or compassion for her lest he be hanged, too,
for sympathizing with the Devil. Satan was in Salem Village that day—no doubt
about that. But it wasn’t Constance or Reverend Thatcher. The Devil stood in
the crowd, reflected in the eyes of every spectator. His hunger bellowed in
their calls, their taunts, their glares, and it wouldn’t be satisfied until her
limp, lifeless body waved in the autumn winds like a banner for their tainted
justice, a flag of their blood-stained victory over evil. Wyatt’s hardness
broke, even if for just a second, Constance the only witness to the silent tear
soaking its fleshy path across his regretful face. “And please explain to us
why you were covered in her blood.” “I’ve told you all this before, Wyatt...”
Using the reverend’s first name stirred a wave of gasps from the crowd, forcing
her to pause. “I carried Catherine into my house to try to stop her bleeding,
to prevent her death.” That was a lie; it was what she wanted everyone to
believe, but it had been all for naught. It had only sealed her fate. “And what
of your husband’s disappearance?” An icy gust of wind blew through Constance’s
locks of red hair; with it, Thatcher’s own coldness returned. “Did you use
witchcraft to dispose of his body?” “My husband was attacked, too, his body
dragged into the orchard by the beast.” That was a lie, too. She couldn’t tell
them the truth—that she had, in a fit of rage after seeing Jacob and Catherine
naked in the orchard, cursed her husband’s appetite for flesh. The curse had
gone horribly wrong...
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