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All Hallow’s Eve, a time for tricks, treats and magic…
Marie is a lonely woman, who lives an isolated life running her
family farm. She hasn’t found a special someone among the
local men. As she fantasizes a sexual encounter with the man of
her dreams, a strong wind comes up from nowhere, stirring the
ragged clothing of the scarecrow that guards her fields.
Later that evening, after the last of the pumpkin-buyers and
trick-or-treaters has gone, there’s a knock on the door.
Images from the horror movie she’s been watching whirling
in her head, Marie cautiously answers. A handsome stranger with
a magnetic gaze waits on her doorstep—and claims he’s
come for her.
Magic has brought love in a most unusual package. Logic and common
sense evaporate under the spell of the evening and Marie experiences
the love of a lifetime all in one night. But in the morning her
visitor is gone. What sacrifice will it take to turn her fantasy
man back into flesh and blood?
Reviews
Mrs Giggles, 79
Ms Dee happily strings me along, having Sam and Marie bond and
know each other with increasing urgency and even desperation as
sunrise approaches. I am surprised to find myself cringing when
the sun finally rises and Marie goes, "Nooooo!" Ms Dee
portrays Marie as this lonely yet likable woman well enough that
I find myself going "Nooooo!" along with her.
The Romance Studio, Janie, 4 stars
I was hooked from beginning to end I just couldn't stop reading
it until I knew what would happen between the two main characters.
It was fun reading how Marie had to believe that a wish could
really come true. Sam seems to know and understand her completely.
He accepts her as she is faults and all. This story made me want
to believe that maybe someday I can find my Sam. The love scenes
between them are hot, and there are quite a few sexual encounters
between Marie and Sam. This story contains very explicit love
scenes and language.
Excerpt:
At last her candy stash ran dry and her patience wore thin from
answering the doorbell all evening. She flipped off her porch
light and changed from her witch’s dress into a stretched-out
tank top and sweats. She washed off her age makeup to reveal her
own smooth, oval face and brushed the snarls out of her shoulder-length,
honey blonde hair. She had just stretched out on the couch to
watch the black-and-white, classic version of The Fly, when there
was another knock on the door.
“Christ. Get a clue,” she muttered. “No light
mean no candy, stoopid.”
But the knocking went on and on. Steady and even, in perfectly
spaced intervals. Knock... Knock... Knock. It was kind of creepy.
The hair on her arms prickled. She sat up straight, trying to
remember if she’d locked the door. The knocking grew louder,
more insistent.
Marie stood up with a sigh. This had better not be some stupid
teenage practical joke like a flaming bag of poo. On the other
hand, flaming poo would be preferable to being raped or murdered,
she thought as a tingle of unease tickled her spine. Flipping
on the porch light, she opened the door a cautious few inches,
ready to say, “I’m closed for the night. No more candy.”
Standing on her doorstep was a tall, lanky man in a long dark
coat. His face was angular and broad across his high, prominent
cheekbones. His glossy black hair was straight and ended shaggily
at his collar. A lock of long bangs fell across his forehead and
over his straight, dark eyebrows. Slanted, almond eyes gazed at
her intently as if he knew her.
For a split second she felt she knew him too, but she couldn’t
place the face. “Yes? Can I help you?” She closed
the door a half-inch, ready to slam it shut if he did anything
weird.
“May I come in?” His voice was low and husky and sent
an unexpected shiver of lust through her body. It vibrated from
her belly to her crotch like tickling fingers.
“Um, no, you can’t. Do you need something? Is your
car broken down? Lost a trick-or-treater or something?”
She scanned his body.
He was wearing an old-fashioned, long coat at odds with his threadbare
navy pants and the scuffed work boots on his feet. “No.”
“Look, I can call a wrecker, a friend or family member ...
the police.”
“No, thank you.” He shifted from one foot to the other
as if uncertain of his balance and continued to gaze at her with
an expectant look in his eyes. Was he waiting for her to ask him
in?
Marie felt a creeping sense of déjà vu as she met
his gaze then scanned his body once more. It wasn’t until
her eyes focused on the fedora hat clutched in his hand by his
side that the light flashed on. Her eyes widened. He was wearing
her scarecrow’s clothes. Why was he wearing her scarecrow’s
clothes? Maybe he was a wandering vagrant, a bum who had exchanged
one set of rags for another.
“Well, what do you want then?” She closed the door
even farther, talking to him through a scant few inches of open
space.
A puzzled frown knit his straight, dark brows, as if the answer
was obvious. “I’m here for you,” he said simply.
As if on cue, the wind rose, sweeping through the door and blowing
through Marie’s thin top, raising gooseflesh on her arms
and bringing her nipples to two sharp peaks. Her crotch clenched
and released in a hard spasm that wet her underwear. “You’re
... here for me,” she repeated. “Oo-kay. Bu’bye
now.” She shut the door quickly, blocking out the stranger
and the errant wind. She turned the lock.
For a moment, she stood with her hands pressed against the solid
wood, listening to the ominous silence on the other side, then
she turned and dashed across the house to the window overlooking
the fields. The moon’s pale glow, glimmering through scudding
clouds, lit the round curves of the pumpkins on the ground and
the ragged corn stalks waving in the breeze. She focused on the
‘T’ made from two boards nailed together. It was empty
of the straw mannequin she’d made. Her heart pounded. This
guy was a loony. Who took scarecrow clothes and wore them?
Marie jumped as the steady, insistent knocking started up again--Knock.
Knock. Knock--in evenly spaced intervals that seemed like they
might go on all night.
“Stop it!” she yelled. “I’m calling the
police. They’ll be here in, like, two minutes, so you’d
better run!” She went to the phone and lifted it to dial
911, but paused with only two of the digits dialed. Her finger
hovered over the one as she thought about what had happened earlier
that day. Her earlier portentous feeling was back full force.
The something that was coming was now here for her.
Standing in the field, she’d wished for a lover like the
one in her imagination. She had looked up at the scarecrow and
voiced her desire, “I wish you were alive,” then that
weird wind blew up from nowhere. If her life was a movie, it would
add up to magic.
“Don’t be ridiculous,” she muttered, but set
down the phone. Walking slowly back to the door, she stood on
her side of it and listened to the repetitive thumps for a moment.
“Stop! Stop it!” she yelled again, and the knocking
instantly ceased. “What do you want?”
The muffled voice on the other side of the door replied, “You.”
“Do you know how fucking creepy that sounds?” Her
voice was shrill and hysterical in her ears. “Go away!”
“I can’t,” came the calm reply. “Not yet.”
“What do you mean, you can’t? Turn around and walk
away. Now, or I swear I’ll call the police!”
“I’m supposed to be here. You asked for me.”
Marie was stunned. Horror and an awful excitement coursed through
her. She thought about the classic story, The Monkey’s Paw
with its “be careful what you wish for” motif. She
pictured the man’s angular, vaguely oriental face and realized
who ... or what he looked like. After all, she’d drawn the
primitive image herself.
“That’s crazy,” she murmured then raised her
voice and said haltingly, “What am I, uh, supposed to do
with you?”
There was a long pause then that delicious, warm, rough voice
answered, “Whatever you want. I am made to please you.”
Marie felt a hot blade of lust stab through her at the suggestive
words. All reason and logic fled and only erotic images tumbled
through her mind. Her crotch tightened and released wetly. She
laughed aloud. “No, no, no, no, no. This isn’t happening.
Nuh-uh.”
“Please let me in. It’s already getting late.”
He sounded urgent.
“What does that mean?”
“There’s not much time.”
Marie frowned. She opened the door and peered through the crack.
“Not much time?”
He stood on her porch, broad-shouldered and rawboned, looking
at her with those exotic, soulful eyes. “You only asked
for one night.”
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