Hello!
My name is TAS and I’m a perfectionist. Believe me, this is not an easy thing
to be; if others find it difficult to live with me, I find it virtually
impossible to live with myself much of the time: no one suffers from the perfectionist’s
obsession more than the perfectionist themself. Nowadays the term “obsessive-compulsive”
is bandied about so carelessly as to be devoid of any clinical significance, but there is, no doubt, a powerful strain of obsessive-compulsion in
perfectionism—if, in fact, the two terms aren’t actually synonymous. The thought
that there might be a mistake somewhere in my work—even a tiny one—is enough to
keep me awake at night, and I will do whatever it takes to fix problems that do
come to light, even years after publication.
So
it is with my most recent foray into fiction: The Seven Seductions: A Novel
was published in February of this year, and has, to date, gone over with all
the grace of a gaudy lead balloon. As
far as I can tell, no more than five people have actually purchased a copy. Of these, it appears nobody has bothered
finishing the book, and no one who starts reading seems to get much further
than about page 80. (I am basing this on statistics from the Kindle Unlimited
program.)
It
would be easy to cry sour grapes or dismiss this failure as a case of readers
not sharing the author’s “brilliant vision”. But that’s bullshit, and I know
it. The problems with the book lie squarely with me. I tried
readers’ patience, confused them almost from the opening sentence, and wasted
their time endeavoring to demonstrate my own cleverness, offering a surfeit of
unnecessary detail and unsolicited opinion.
I
see this all now with the mad rush to complete The Erotic Writer’s Thesaurus
behind me. In the “down-time” that has followed, I’ve cast about for work to
do, and recognized an opportunity to go back over the novel in order to address
its most serious issues. I strongly believe in this story, and want to share it
with readers. I am convinced that the fixes I’m making will result in a much
more rewarding reading experience, a book truly worthy of its story.
Some
of the book’s problems were pointed out to me when I submitted it to an editor. (Still under the
gun with work on the EWT to do, I thoughtlessly shrugged off some of
these concerns.) Perhaps the most serious problem was a sense of temporal
confusion, the story leaping back and forth in time without preparing readers
for the jumps. Generally, I tried to alternate chapters between the past and
the present, but, particularly in the first chapter, the temporal ambiguity was
rampant and off-putting.
I
have re-written the first chapter to focus it more clearly on a single point in
time, with an emphasis on action, and setting up the basic “problem” of the
story—the initiating event. I have gone through the book to identify and fix
(or delete) other passages that might similarly confuse readers.
Other
problems: again, near the beginning, the book had too many long, digressive
passages aimed at elucidating, explaining or “justifying” the characters and their
actions. Some of these passages have been redeployed to later parts of the
book, where they appear in a more natural context.
Certain references in the novel would frustrate readers who had no way of picturing what was being talked about. All references to Arthur Rackham's Illustrations for Wagner's Ring have been removed, and references to the operas have been re-cast in more general, accessible terms.
I’ve
also tried to identify scenes or sections of dialogue that do not move the
story forward. I have deleted about 8,000 words so far, including an entire
chapter, to better concentrate the storytelling, and keep things moving. The
Seven Seductions is still a fairly long novel at aproximatly 110,000
words, but in the end, I hope, it will be a much better—more memorable—book for
these efforts.
[UPDATE 6/6/18: After one more pass through the book, I have eliminated another 1000 words, spruced up or deleted a few "worrisome" passages, and, generally, made the story a lot more concise and to the point.]
[UPDATE 6/21/18: It's done! The revised version of the novel is available in both paperback and Kindle e-editions.]
[UPDATE 6/21/18: It's done! The revised version of the novel is available in both paperback and Kindle e-editions.]
CHAPTER 1
Forbidden Books
It all started when Gretchen’s sister discovered the dusty old Schwarzbuch upstairs in the attic. A witch’s black book of spells—Lord knows where it had come from. Dawn sure as hell hadn’t asked when she started fooling around with the thing, rattling off the coupled rhymes like punchlines in a jokebook. Innocent enough… until another voice began to speak, reciting the lines with her in disembodied unison. An acrid burning smell filled the air, as something—a brooding presence—took up residence in the girls’ room.
Even after all these years, Gretchen could still see the
spectral outline of the thing her older sister had unwittingly awakened, the
curve of its back illuminated like the sliver of a crescent moon. Livid
handprints had bruised Dawn’s pale inner thighs as the creature held her legs
apart, her belly rippling beneath its invisible weight like waves of
wind-kissed wheat. And Dawn had been beside herself, caught somewhere between
heavenly delight and unspeakable hellish terror, biting the inside of her lip
so as not to cry out and wake their father in the next room.
Nor could Gretchen ever forget the way Dawn appeared
afterwards, lying there naked, breathless, wanton, her flesh aglow, eerily
transfigured by the demon’s lust. There in the gloom, Dawn had assumed the
guise of a wayward angel, a creature reflecting the infravisible light of
another world.
“It’s amazing, Gretch,” she kept murmuring as if in a
trance, “just amazing… amazing… amazing…”
Bad enough if that were all, but The Nameless One had
set its deathly eye on the younger sister from the start, and Gretchen’s life
would never be the same. The demon had seen something in her that night,
discerned potential the way a teacher intuits a spark of brilliance in a
promising student, something dark and restless like itself, yet even more
potent for the very flesh that contained it and fed it unceasingly. Was it her
vulnerability—her doubt—that drew the creature to her? Or had her heart called
out to the shadows, her desires, so long denied, like a magnet, irresistible to
the darkness at the demon’s core?
The entity had been relentless in its pursuit, dogging
the younger sister, stalking her, spying on her, finding her wherever she tried
to hide. “You are mine,” the creature declared, and Gretchen could feel its hot
breath like a breeze out of Hell rustling the delicate hairs on her neck, its
voice low and harsh in her ear, pouring out an endless litany of seduction,
hungry—so insatiably, urgently hungry—for her. The demon’s nightly entreaties
were tinged with a weary impatience, as if it were an effort to keep its
appetites in check or mask its true intentions, the petulance and cruelty that
filled its unhuman heart.
At other times the incubus would try to court her,
leaving small gifts under her pillow or in her “secret place” in the garden
shed, odd tokens to entice her, little polished stones, agates, amethysts and
quartz, gaudy glass beads and loose pieces of jewelry that Gretchen could never
be caught wearing in public, pins and broaches, unmated earrings, delicate
silver chains. Even books—these frightened her most of all because she could
not resist them, and the demon, itself being an entity born of a book, seemed
to know precisely what she wished for. Gretchen had always loved to read,
though it was considered a frivolous pastime in her father’s house.
The creature still came to Dawn nearly every night,
filling her head with erogenous longings, dreams of lust, seduction and
surrender, or, sometimes, taking her outright as she slept. Unable to move or
speak, Gretchen could only watch as The Nameless One lifted her sister off the
bed, carrying her nearly all the way to the ceiling. Dawn would moan dreamily,
her naked body suspended nearly eight feet above the floor, born up by
invisible arms about her waist, breasts pointing skyward, head lolling back,
hair streaming down like a golden waterfall. The creature seemed to make a show
of manipulating her limbs, twisting and contorting her body into strange
positions, all the while fondling, touching, caressing… more. And after the
phantom had sated its need—amused itself with this bizarre airborne ballet—Dawn
would appear to float back down to the bed. The incubus would lay the
still-sleeping girl beside her sister, pulling the covers up over them, gently
tucking them in.
A slave to dread her whole life, no fear had ever been
greater than the one Gretchen knew on those terrible nights; the thought that
somewhere, deep down in the dark reaches of her soul was a dormant seed of
desire, a part of her that wanted to be ravished, taken and used the way The
Nameless One had taken her sister. A part of her that wanted, truly,
desperately, madly, against all she had ever been taught—against all she had
ever believed—to say yes.
Gretchen had grown up to become a nun. The demon had
been silent since the day Sister Mary Chastity took her solemn vows. Nearly
seven years now, yet the memories still haunted her. And were those same
feelings still calling out to the creature, drawing it like a beacon to her bed
in the hallowed silence of the night? “My
love…” the demon’s voice was a dry, rasping hiss like the far-off rustle of
dead leaves. “Remember the bargain you made...”
The thing hovered above the bed, its presence a perplexity, like the image of a
starless night sky reflected in an ink-black pool, the surface disturbed from
time to time by subtle undulations, tiny ripples, barely perceptible, belying
an illusion of perfect stillness. She sensed its attention, its eyes, cold,
lifeless, legion, hidden yet undeniably there within that veiling cumulus of
gloom. Felt its gaze consuming her like something crawling underneath the skin,
feeding on her fear, its hunger boundless, insatiable.
“Remember your
promise...”
The incubus fondled her breasts and inner thigh, probing and pressing through
the soft linen of her nightdress. The creature had never taken such liberties
with her before, and when he cupped her mound in his leathery palm and
squeezed, Gretchen knew that her body had betrayed her, responding on its own
in spite of all her saintly aspirations, swelling and budding, a million
dormant nerve-endings awakened all at once as the first searing trickle of
moisture invaded her folds.
Invisible claws tore at the front of her gown, rending
it from neckline to hem. The crucifix between her blushing breasts rose slowly
into the air, as if drawn by some ineluctable magnetic force, sparking and
poring smoke before being torn roughly from around her neck. Phantom mouths,
hot and moist, closed around her pebbling nipples, both at once, while still
another claimed her clitoris, all three working in fiendish concert, sucking
hard and fast. The breath was pushed from her lungs as the thing itself bore
down, while something hard and smooth and cool like sculpted glass was slowly
dragged across her mound. The rounded tip traced the curve of her opening,
tilling the dewy furrow of her woman’s lips, pressing insistently against her clitoris
with each impatient pass.
She closed her eyes tightly, preparing herself for
what must surely happen next. There would be no escape this time—escape had
never been a possibility. This consummation had been inevitable from the moment
Dawn read the words in that awful book. Gretchen had always known that it would
come, though she had dreaded it no less intensely, fought it no less fiercely.
Yet now Mary Chastity wondered if it might not be better simply to surrender
and be done with it. Would The Nameless One then at last leave her in peace?
“God forgive me.” The young nun bowed her head, but
not in prayer. Gathering her resolve, her lips silently formed the word that
had waited, poised on the knife-edge of her dreams through a lifetime of
longing and loneliness. She whispered it a second time, questioningly, as if
trying to convince herself. And then she said it aloud, the word her sister had
spoken in another place and time. The word that would damn her soul for all
eternity.
“Yes.”
Sister Mary Chastity held her breath.
Hands invisible hoisted her from the bed, making room
to remove the remnants of the ruined nightgown. The ghostly mouths encircling
her nipples and clitoris let go abruptly as a billion simultaneous kisses
lighted on her skin from all directions, touching her everywhere at once. A
roar of release boiled up from her core like the furious chain reaction that
follows an earthquake under the sea. Mary Chastity threw her head back as she
rode the tidal wave, mouth open wide in wonder, though no sound escaped her
lips. She arched her middle, shoving her pelvis up and up as she threw herself
into the demon’s embrace.
The unseen hands held her spread-eagle in midair above
the bed, her long legs splayed wide apart, her thighs open and ready. The
Nameless One thrust forward in a single earthshattering stroke and, in that
moment, he was all around her, enveloping her body like a halo of dark matter.
“My God!” Mary Chastity cried out as the darkness
began to absorb her. But it was a cry of surrender, an orison of ecstasy.
The monster bulled forward. Merciless in his terrible
hunger, he drove at her again and again, tearing her flesh, battering the walls
of her womb. And suddenly his white hot seed was spilling into her, flowing
like molten brimstone, melting her loins, vaporizing her organs, filling the
hollow interstices of her soul. She cried out again, screamed with all her
failing strength, something that might have been a prayer, before the final
vestige of consciousness was absorbed into the void.
“Forgive me!”
The words returned to her across an abyss of nightmares—dark
distances impossibly vast—her own screams echoing through the ether like
misremembered music, tormented melodies, garbled and twisted, ground out on
some backward-cranked barrel organ.
Am I... am I…
am I... “naked?”
Sister Mary Chastity started up on the bed, coughing
herself awake. Her throat was dry, tight and sore, its spasming cords strained
in protest against the ghost of a notion—the uncanny sense memory of something
that simply could not be, though it had seemed so real only a moment before.
She could still feel the pitiless, claw-like things that scraped her flesh, the
cold, stony pinions crushing her windpipe as she came…
No!
Mary Chastity lifted a hand to her neck, anxious to
reassure herself that nothing was there. And nothing was. “Jesus, Mary, and—”
She was naked. Naked and wet, loins
flooded with unbidden arousal. Her nipples, too, were stiff and sharp, puffed
up extravagantly as if someone had trailed a cold hand across her breasts.
“Oh dear God! He’s found me again…”
A chill of apprehension coiled through her veins, a
rush of recognition. She had known this horror before, this strange infusion of
dread and fascination. Remember your
promise... The creature’s parting words still hung on the air like the
scorching stench of ozone, though the thing that had ravished her in her dreams
was gone, if only for the moment.
Sister Mary Chastity had little doubt that it would
soon return.