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The Firemen's Dance [MultiFormat]
eBook by John T. Cullen

  Regular     Club
You Pay:  $0.80     $0.68

eBook Category: Dark Fantasy
eBook Description: A beautiful young couple, hoping to overcome their melancholy circumstances, decide to attend the biggest annual bash of their small town around harvest time. The band strikes up a tune and the potluck dishes go around. A great time is had by all, with only one odd footnote.

eBook Publisher: Clocktower Books and Far Sector SFFH (magazine), Published: Clocktower Books, 2003
Fictionwise Release Date: February 2003


13 Reader Ratings:
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Available eBook Formats [MultiFormat - What's this?]: Adobe Acrobat (PDF) [75 KB], eReader (PDB) [35 KB], Palm Doc (PDB) [12 KB], Rocket/REB1100 (RB) [12 KB], Microsoft Reader (LIT) [74 KB] - PocketPC 1.0+ Compatible, Franklin eBookMan (FUB) [84 KB], hiebook (KML) [96 KB], Sony Reader (LRF) [72 KB], iSilo (PDB) [10 KB], Mobipocket (PRC) [13 KB], Kindle Compatible (MOBI) [57 KB], OEBFF Format (IMP) [21 KB]
Words: 3500
Reading time: 10-14 min.
Microsoft Reader (LIT) Format: Printing DISABLED, Read-Aloud ENABLED
Adobe Acrobat (PDF) Format:  Printing DISABLED, Read-Aloud DISABLED
All Other formats: Printing DISABLED, Read-aloud DISABLED


They were late coming home, and Jane wasn't feeling well, and the house was freezing cold. The sports car rolled to a halt on the sprawling lawn, amid autumn leaves, and they got out--an elegant couple, disinherited, stripped down to this poor lot.

Perry knew what was coming as he carried their suitcases to the house. Jane had that look as she stared at their home and brushed stray hairs from her lovely face.

When he opened the door, and the chill hit them, she began to sob: "No-o!"

"Shh," Perry said, taking her in his arms, "I'll light a fire." She shivered uncontrollably as he carried her upstairs. Quickly he tucked her under a pile of blankets and quilts. He knelt by the bed, stroking her arms and speaking endearments. She stared at him bitterly, her eyes beaded with tears.

"There now," he said, "We'll be warm in no time." He rose from her side and went downstairs. In a short time, between the cellar furnace and the living room fireplace, warmth began to fill the house--enough even to open a window toward evening. Jane accepted a cup of hot tea and sat on the bed, sipping. "Thanks," she said, with the first flicker of a smile. She appeared to be feeling much better already.

"We'll go to the dance tonight," Perry said happily, ironing his shirt.

Jane began to dress for the affair. Her way of doing this was in stages. Right now all she wore was her chocolate miniskirt and a lacy beige bra. She sat by the vanity, combing her long amber hair. She was thin and beautiful, Perry thought. She combed languidly, letting the brush rustle through her hair, then letting the hair tumble soundlessly on her bare shoulder. She would look lovely in her dark velvet dress the color of autumn leaves, he thought.

"I'm going to put on some more heat," he said, inhaling the crisp scent of Fall night that came through the bedroom window. An owl mourned outside. The wind tussled the curtains, leaving a faint breath of cold standing water--a pleasant smell, with a hint of this and that: wood smoke; leaf rot; fresh air.

"Do, baby," she said, combing in long lazy motions. She gave him an affectionate look. "Put another log in the living room fireplace too, darling, will you?" He loved her voice--soft, full, sensuous.

He left her at her vanity, a full moon over her shoulder framed in the window. The owl mourned again. He walked out of the bedroom, through the extremely narrow corridor of their old house, and down the cramped stairway. The downstairs was dark. Gloomy shapes occupied the living room, and he had no yen to switch on any lamps. Somehow, it would be like casting unwanted light on his and his wife's plight. They might be poor, but they were young and elegant, and they'd stuck together. They had each other, where before they'd had fortunes. He lifted a thick log of dry oak and threw it in the brick fireplace. Wan flames roiled up around the wood, eagerly licking it with blue tongues. The flue moaned, and sparks spiraled upward from the disturbed embers. The flames took, grew robust, turning orange. He rubbed his hands briskly together, breathed into them, stuck them in his pockets, and did a little dance of pleasure as the fire warmed him.

Now she yelled from upstairs: "Hurry up, darling! Where are you, Perry?"

He heard her clattering around on high heels, searching for a lipstick, a cigarette, a hankie, a dram of perfume.

"I'll be right up." He descended into the cellar on creaky stairs to check the furnace. Reassured by the red glow inside the drum, he rubbed his hands noisily together again and hurried back upstairs. On his way up, he picked up a pair of glasses and a wine bottle from the mantle piece.

"How do I look?" she asked as he came down the narrow corridor.

He whistled.

She saw the wine and made a face. "Not on our way, darling. We can have a few glasses at the dance." She stood tall on stiletto heels, angled sideways, holding a cigarette to her lushly rouged lips. Her dark eyes gave him a sultry daring look while she put her hands on her hips and cocked her tight buttocks toward him. The crushed velvet chocolate-colored mini dress veiled only the sharp angles of her hips and waist. It left her fine back bare, as well as her shoulders which had a pink sheen, as if the soft lamplight loved to fly into every pore in her silky young skin. The light caressed her strong, wiry youthful legs. He clapped softly, thinking her the most sexy woman alive.

"Watch this," she said, wreathed in cigarette smoke. She produced an item of clothing the same color and texture as her miniskirt and, using the tiny eye hooks provided for that purpose, turned the miniskirt into an ankle-length skirt that reached her ankles. "Voila!"

"Bravo," he said clapping.


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