by Annora Soule
Shifter Mountain
By Annora Soule
Copyright 2014
WGA registration 2014
Cover Design by the Author
Cover Art/Stock: Ollyy and John Larson, obtained through Shutterstock and Pixoto
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Synopsis
Curvy, young hillswoman Kay Mandrell finally has gotten up the courage to run off her abusive, sadistic husband with a sawed-off shotgun. But her no-good man is more dangerous than most. Her husband comes from a long line of skinwalkers who can shapeshift into any form they wish, and most humans are powerless against them. Now Kay finds herself living in fear day by day, waiting for her husband to reappear and seek revenge. The last of her kin living on Scopes Mountain in Tennessee, she is vulnerable and alone.
Jordan Lawless is a Country and Western superstar recording artist whose own family hails from Scopes Mountain, but his mother took him away from there when he was just a child. When his mother dies, Jordan records a cover of her favorite Bluegrass song High on a Mountain. In honor of his mother’s memory, Jordan decides to shoot the music video on Scopes Mountain, curious about where he was born.
His manager and producer, however, try to discourage him from taking a film crew into this part of Appalachia. So does his mother’s best friend, who manages the Nashville club where Jordan first got his start as a singer and musician. Scopes Mountain also is nicknamed “Shifter Mountain” because of the legends and rumors of skinwalkers inhabiting the area. These legends have ensured that even the most adventurous hikers and campers never set foot there.
When Jordan tracks down the perfect setting for the music video, however, it happens to be on property that Kay Mandrell’s family has owned for generations. When Jordan and the film crew arrive on Shifter Mountain, he immediately falls in love with Kay, but he can tell he must proceed cautiously. Kay has learned the hard way that the touch of a man usually brings pain and destruction. Then with Jordan, she learns that it is safe to experience passion with a man who adores her instead of abuses her.
Standing between the woman he loves and a rival evil in the form of her Ex, Jordan learns of his own family’s skinwalking legacy. He finds himself caught between his supernatural generational past and the hard road he must go down in the future in order to win Kay’s love and trust, as well as to save both their lives.
Chapter 1
Kay’s breath caught in the back of her throat as her lungs constricted with abject fear. For a moment she thought she might faint, but she didn’t.
A panther paced around the cabin. With each furious glance, the animal commanded Kay back further and further into a corner. Already the panther had clawed at her, leaving scratch marks on her thigh, ripping her cotton nightgown. She had tripped twice, but she had managed to scramble back upright each time.
Then suddenly, he jumped on her, knocking her down. The animal climbed on top of her, the bulk of its weight shifting to its back paws, which pressed into Kay’s belly. Then the panther stepped off almost immediately, circling the room. He lept high onto a large, wooden wardrobe.
Before Kay could pull herself up from the floor, the panther jumped from the wardrobe, dropping with its full weight onto her abdomen. The pain was like nothing she had felt before. And that’s when she started to bleed.
Kay was three months pregnant.
She could hear the panther speaking to her in her mind, in her husband’s voice.
The panther was, in fact, her husband.
“You fat cunt,” the panther hissed. “Maybe I had to marry you, but I don’t plan on having children with you.”
No, no, no she thought, agonizing to herself.
Before he had shifted, he already had punched her twice in the stomach.
In panther form, Cephas was not necessarily any scarier than he was in human form, but he was more dangerous. In his sleek, black form, Cephas was all muscle and raw, primal instinct. In human form, he was just a nasty son-of-a-bitch.
Kay had been born into a skinwalking family. Her father and her brothers, all dead now, had been shifters. She and her mother had learned to tiptoe around them, when their moods went dark. The slightest thing could set them off, and so they learned to be passive, to never complain. Still, her father would shift — often into a mountain lion — and take out his frustrations on her mother, pacing around their home, growling and snapping. Unlike Cephas, however, he never actually physically attacked her mother. He just didn't care that his rages scared both his wife and his daughter.
When she was 16, her mother and brothers died when their cabin burned down in the middle of the night. Only she and her father escaped. Three years later, her father arranged a marriage between her and the eldest son of the Mandrell family. He had cancer and wanted to see her 'taken care' of. When Kay protested, her father had carried on about how much he cared about her and how she needed to be married. How she had little schooling and no means of taking care of herself.
The reality was, she was forced into it when the Mandrell brothers made veiled threats to her father that either Kay would marry a Mandrell, or she would marry no one because she would disappear altogether.
Kay still could not get up off the floor. The wind had been knocked out of her. Also, the cramping had started, so she knew it was a pretty good likelihood that she was going to lose the baby.
When Kay had first discovered she was pregnant, she was in despair. Having been trapped in an abusive marriage since she was 19 years old, she always had kept alive the fantasy that one day she might escape. Having children with Cephas Mandrell, however, meant that she would be stuck here on Scopes Mountain for good. But then, as the weeks wore on, maternal instinct took over, and she started separating the child from its father within her heart.
How much time had gone by now was unclear, but Kay’s nightgown was slick with streaks of blood. With a lash of his tail, Cephas shifted in the dim light of the cabin and stood upright as a man. He looked Kay over with disinterest, then turned away. He grabbed for himself a beer from the fridge.
He set the beer on the kitchen table, then grabbed his jeans that were left slung over the back of a chair. He stepped into the jeans, pulling them up and buckling his leather belt. He stretched a dirty T-shirt over his head, then shoved his arms through the sleeves of a red flannel shirt.
Cephas was tall as a man, well over six feet. His jawline had a hard edge and he had some scars scattered along the side of his left cheek, left over from when he had chicken pox as a kid. His hair was thick, but greasy with sweat, and he hadn't shaved in a few days.
Kay knew she was no match for him. In their bloodline, only men shifted – the women could not. She was not strong, and she knew she had nowhere to run to. But as she watched Cephas from behind, a dormant rage began to bubble up inside.
And she knew that a loaded sawed-off shotgun rested near the backdoor.
After two failed attempts, Kay finally successfully got up off the floor, limping away from the kitchen. Cephas paid her no mind as he sat at the kitchen table, drinking his beer.
How she managed the strength to lift the gun, she did not know, but within moments Cepha
s was staring at his wife down the barrel of the gun.
At first he just laughed.
“What the hell do you think you’re doing?” he asked.
Kay cocked the gun and said nothing. Her vision shifted suddenly, almost as if she was viewing the whole room through a fisheye lens — like she was floating back, almost out of her body, and it was someone else — some other woman whom she didn't know — who was holding the shotgun and pointing it at her husband.
When he heard the 'click', suddenly it occurred to Cephas that Kay might be serious. A bully by nature, when confronted by someone who might actually stand up to him for real — not something he had a whole lot of experience with — Cephas found himself unexpectedly nervous. He stood up, his heavy frame looming over that of his wife, and he did something that to an objective observer would obviously be an act of sinister desperation — truly screwing with her mind.
A shimmer briefly lit up the dark, and Kay found her herself pointing the gun at…Herself.
Cephas had shifted not into a panther this time – but into the very image of his wife.
Kay's breath went slack. The barrel of the gun lowered just a hair for a mere second, but she steadied quickly, determined and horrified at the same time.
She knew he could do it — turn into a human. All skinwalkers could shift into whatever form they wanted. But, she had never seen him actually taken on the image of another human.
Kay now stared into her own sad, brown eyes, and felt crestfallen as she saw the mirror image of herself: Bedraggled, bloody, unshapely, and worn-out before her time.
She looked like hell.
Well, to be fair to herself, she thought, she had been LIVING in hell for the past few years, so of course that's what she looked like. The sight alone made her start to tear up, but she tried to keep her aim steady.
“You're not going to shoot me," Cephas said to Kay in her own voice.
Well, it was almost like her own voice, but it had a tin-like echo that gave away the magick of the illusion.
“Where would you go? You have no family left, you have no money, and you’re completely worthless. Plus, do you really want to go to prison for murder?”
Kay swallowed. For years she had hated herself. And, right here, right now – right in front of her – was the image of her very self, telling her exactly how pathetic she really was.
“Put the gun down,” her mirror-image told her.
Kay steadied herself and let out a brief sob. There was no point in hating herself any longer. The only hope she had was in hating Cephas — and only Cephas. Then she squeezed the trigger, effectively shooting the image of herself she so despised.
As soon as the blast ripped apart Cephas’ shoulder, he couldn’t hold up the shift. Kay’s mirror-image melted away. In its place, the recognizable image of her husband scrambled for the front door.
She knew there was no going back now. So Kay kept her sights on him and let off another shot. Cephas was scrambling down off the front porch, and he managed to dodge the second bullet. Several paces away from the house, he turned around, staring incredulously at his wife. Then he headed off into the night on foot, leaving his car behind.
Kay lost track of how long she stood her ground there on the front porch, waiting for him to come back out of the woods. Adrenaline had kept her from collapsing. She was still bleeding, slowly.
Cephas never reappeared that night. It would only be a matter of time, though, before he returned with his brothers to put her in her place.
Instead of heading back inside to the medicine cabinet in the bathroom to try and take care of herself, she stayed outside. If she miscarried, Kay wasn’t sure how long it would actually take, but she felt powerless to stop it. What will be, will be, she thought.
Miscarriage or not, she found she still had a clear will to live for herself, at the very least.
Kay limped toward a rocking chair on the porch, painfully settling in. She eased herself back and laid the rifle across her lap. She vaguely was aware of the fact that a miscarriage could go very badly and that she could hemorrhage. She could actually die now.
Glancing down, she noticed a jar of moonshine within reaching distance. She picked the jar up, unscrewed the cap, and took a long, burning sip. Drinking alcohol was not the smartest thing to do while bleeding out, but she was too exhausted to care. And she would rather pass out and die that way, than leave herself vulnerable if Cephas returned. If he came back to kill her, he would probably succeed. But at least she could refuse to go out without a fight — but she would need to be a little bit drunk to numb the fear that might stop her from keeping up the good fight.
She kept up a night vigil until the sun came up at dawn, and miraculously she had not bled out. The bleeding had stopped, and although she felt very weak, she also was very much still alive.
And Cephas still had not returned. He would, though, she knew. And she had no idea what she would do then.
Chapter 2
Jordan Lawless hadn’t been to the Bluebird Café for quite sometime. This was where he had started, though, when he first arrived in Nashville. He had played on Mondays, at Open Mike Night for new songwriters, and then eventually made it to the early evening shows, playing for tips.
Jordan slipped right in through the front door, taking off his cowboy hat to show good manners, without being bothered by folks who already had lined up outside, hoping that someone’s reservations would fall through.
It wasn’t that no one would recognize him. His handsome, rugged face was hard to get out of a woman’s mind, once she laid eyes on him, whether he was photographed in a magazine article, or whether she caught his latest music video. But that’s just how it was in Nashville. Country and Western stars mingled with the locals, shopped at the same supermarkets, and had breakfast at the same diners. Generally the other city residents took it in stride.
Jordan knew that if he lost sight of where he originally had come from, fame and money could ruin him. Even without his meaning to let it. He was finding that wealth could make you start to feel entitled in ways you never expected. So he was careful to surround himself with a manager and entourage who were sworn to keep him honest. He signed contracts with everyone that stated he couldn't fire anyone for at least two years for anything less than embezzlement or truly egregious conduct. What that meant, is that everyone around him was free to speak his mind, tell him off or put him in his place, without being afraid to lose his job.
He had learned quickly that more temperamental celebrities tended to surround themselves with Yes-Men. Then they got hooked on pills and lost all their money.
Once inside the Bluebird, Jordan took a look around the joint. The place was small, with a bar in the back and a modest stage in the front. But the waitresses were rearranging the tables, because tonight the musicians would be set up smack in the middle of the place.
Andrea, the manager who remembered Jordan from way-back-when (as in, when he was a toddler) immediately became alert to the fact that their headliner had arrived.
She threw her arms around him.
“Oh my God, Jordan, I haven’t seen you since the funeral.”
Jordan sighed and hugged her back. Andrea was like an aunt to him, having been a longtime friend of his mother’s. His mother had passed away six months ago.
“How are you doing?” she asked him. “Really – how are you doing? Don’t just tell me you’re doing fine.”
“It’s been a little hard,” he admitted. “A little weird, having no family left. Not that you’re not family, Andrea, but you know what I mean.”
Jordan didn’t have to elaborate on the after-effects of watching his mother fight a long battle with ovarian cancer. He had gone through a bout of heavy drinking, but he quickly realized that too many musicians had wrecked their careers that way. Turning into a drunk was no way to honor his mother’s memory. She had raised him as a single mother, whisking him away from an impoverished life in rural Appalachia. Everything he had att
ained, he owed to her working her fingers to the bone to give him a chance at life.
“I’m actually working on my next album,” Jordan told Andrea.
“Can’t wait!” Andrea said. “Playin’ anything new for us tonight?”
“I just might,” he said with a grin. “Actually, I’m recording a cover of High on a Mountain.”
“Oh,” she said, her voice softening. Andrea pulled back and gave her honorary nephew a look of approval.
“Are you now? You’re not the Bluegrass type, though.”
Jordan shrugged.
“Your momma would be proud.”
“I hope wherever she is – up there – she’ll be singing along.”
High on a Mountain was classic Bluegrass, and it had been his mother’s favorite song. Livy Lawless had sung him to bed with it on more than one occasion, and he thought it would be fitting to honor her with it.
“That’s not all I’m doing, Andrea,” he said. “We’re gonna go up to Scopes Mountain to shoot the music video.”
At this, Andrea’s facial expression changed. A look of darkness crossed it, and this confused Jordan.
“If you don’t mind my asking, why would you want to go back? Your mother took you away from there as a child for a reason.”
“I know, I know,” Jordan said. “But, I’ve always wondered about that place. About my roots. I know she ran from something bad. From my father…But I can’t shake it. I feel like if I do this – go back to that mountain – I might get some closure on things.”
“You should really think hard about this,” Andrea warned him. “Sometimes the past really needs to stay in the past.”
Jordan always had the sense that Andrea knew more about his mother’s past than he ever would, but anytime he pressed her on it, Andrea clammed up.
“Well, I gotta do somethin’ – because here I am playin’ for tips again!” Jordan kidded her.