Title: The Werewolf on Lowre Few Lane
Author: Bryce Bentley-Tales
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: October 29, 2018
Heat Level: 1 - No Sex
Pairing: No Romance
Length: 49000
Genre: Young Adult Paranormal, young adult, werewolves, Ireland, urban legend
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Synopsis
Thirteen-year-old Colton and his best friend Jade spend their free time investigating a local urban legend concerning an old abandoned house in their hometown in Ireland. The run-down building is said to be haunted and some of the things they’ve seen seem to confirm it.Colton has a crush on foreign-exchange student, Dylan, who is visiting his aunt from America. But Dylan isn’t your average American kid, and soon Colton and his friends are embroiled in more than urban legend and must find a way to save everything they know and love.
Excerpt
The Werewolf on Lowre Few Lane
Bryce Bentley-Tales © 2018
All Rights Reserved
Chapter One
I rotated the zoom dial on my binoculars.
The three-story stone house loomed large in my view.
Jade whispered behind me, “Colton,
what’d you see?”
“Shhh.”
I surveyed the gloomy home from side to
side. The house sat on the crest of a small hill and far from the cobbled
street where I crouched. Spidery cracks filled a couple of the second-story
windows. The paint had faded and peeled, and the rooftop sections were missing
shingles. It had to be one of the oldest residences in Arklow.
“Colton,” Jade said, tapping my
shoulder.
“Jade, you’re breaking me
concentration.”
Huddled near the stone column at the end
of the winding driveway, I inched around the base a bit farther to get a better
look. A light, cool breeze blew, swaying the sea of tall weeds in the house’s
lawn and filling my nose with the scent of dogs.
Deep, guttural barks erupted behind me.
Startled, I whirled before realizing that the noise was just Jade’s ringtone. I
glared while she squatted close to the curb, frantically patting the outside of
her lightweight jacket in search of her phone.
“Are you a complete tool? Turn the
blimey thing off.”
Jade glanced up, her eyes wide. “Can’t
find it.” Then she straightened, grinned at me, and said, “Found it.” She
removed the phone from a side pocket, and the barking grew in volume. Brushing
her lengthy brown hair from her face, she stared at the caller ID. “Oh…it’s me
mum.”
“Shut it off! All of Ireland will know
we’re here!”
She didn’t move but held the smartphone
in both palms. The phone quit ringing finally, and she sighed. “I should go.
It’s probably suppertime.”
“You can’t. This was your idea.”
A loud clanging echoed across the yard,
and we both cowered behind the stone fence post. Adjacent to the old post, a
crumbling stone wall shielded us from anyone standing by the house. When I
poked my head around the ledge, nothing but the motionless tall weeds could be
seen in the yard and the same gloomy look the house had had before. It was dead
quiet.
Jade put her hands on my shoulders, her
mouth next to my ear. “S-see, I told you. You believe me now? It’s haunted.”
I tried to speak, but my mouth was dry.
I brought my binoculars up, gripping them hard with both hands.
“Probably just varmint inside,” I said.
“Aye. And maybe you and your
butterfingers could be captain of the rugby team.”
“Har-har. You think the Kennedy twins
really disappeared inside?”
“I told you. I saw them at the house
when I was with Erin two nights ago. They said they were going inside.”
“Maybe they’re hanging out at the local
pub downtown?”
“Colton, no one has seen those fellas
since that night. They went inside and never came out, sure of it.”
I swiveled the binoculars around,
peering at the large, arched front doorway, which had a wolf face doorknocker.
Jade whispered close to my ear, “You see
anything?”
“Shhh, I can’t focus with your tongue in
my ear.”
“My tongue isn’t in your ear,” Jade
said, her voice irritated.
After a few seconds, she pushed on my
shoulder. “By the way, you find out the new foreign-exchange fella’s story? You
didn’t take your eyes off him in class. I missed a lot while I was away.” She
giggled. “You fancy him, don’t you?”
I cringed, lowered the binoculars, and
spoke in a hushed voice over my shoulder. “Don’t say that out loud.”
“And who’s going to blimey hear us? Just
us and the ghouls at 44 Lowre Few Lane.”
“Dylan. That’s his name. We’ve spoken
barely a couple of words since he started. I took him to Headmaster Collin’s
office on his first day and managed to say hello. And for your knowledge, he is
right bloody in front of the board. I can’t help but look in his direction.”
“Mm-hmm,” Jade said.
I started to bring my binoculars back up
when Jade said, “Well, I like his accent. Oh, I think he noticed you after
school today. Did you see that? Maybe he likes boys too. You never know.” She
swatted my back. “Are you blushing?”
I shook my head. My face was hot,
though. I had seen Dylan outside talking to a couple of boys on the rugby team.
Our eyes had met, but I’d been quick to look away.
I shifted my weight on my knees. Jade
now leaned against my back, and it was getting hard to bear her weight.
“Oh, Colton, you are so darling
sometimes. I missed you while I was gone the last two weeks.”
“It’s been bloody miserable,” I said.
“I’ve eaten lunch a couple times with Thomas until he was sent to detention.
Tried to eat with Erin, but she just smiles at me.”
“Well,” Jade said, “I’m back now. So
we’ll eat lunch together. Where’s Dylan from again?”
I opened my mouth to say he was from
America but never got a chance. A barking ringtone erupted again. I jumped a
foot in the air and whipped my head toward Jade. She brought out her phone and
stared at it.
I put my hands on my hips and snarled,
“Oh for bloody sake, Jade. You can’t be serious. Put it on vibrate.”
Jade held her finger up, stepped to the
curb, and answered her phone. “Mum?”
I sighed, leaning my back against the
stone column.
“No,” Jade said. “I’m fine. Just out of
breath. I’m with Colton.” Jade stared at me, the end of her mouth curled down.
“Oh, Mum. You’ve too met him. You had him over for dinner five times this
summer. He’s the Asian?” Jade rolled her eyes. “Mum, that’s who I just said.
Colton. It is too what I said. And it’s not impolite. He is half-Asian.
Remember, you thought it right peculiar his mother was from Singapore and the
father Irish, asking me how they ever met.” She looked at me before turning
away and lowering her voice. “Uh, no, Mum. He can’t hear me.”
She walked away from me, but her voice
still carried. “No, Mum, we haven’t seen any packs of dogs. No.” She turned
back, giving me an inquisitive look.
I shook my head. Over the last week, I
had heard from a couple of friends there had been sightings of a pack of dogs,
but that was just rumor.
“Colton hasn’t seen any either.”
I looked at the horizon and down the
cobbled road. The few homes in this part of Arklow stood far off the roadway
and scattered about, giving off a sense of remoteness. With the sun turning
reddish and less than an hour from setting, that isolation magnified the creepy
vibe from the small wood surrounding the manor we’d come to investigate. We
needed to go.
I whirled my finger in the air for Jade
to hurry it up. She stood in the middle of the road, held up a hand to me, and
offered a nervous smile. She told her mother, “We stayed after school and
helped Ms. Griffin with decorations in the auditorium. Yes, for Hollow’s Eve.
It’s tomorrow, remember?” Jade fussed with her hair while she talked. “Oh, Mum,
good grief, you met her too. She’s me sixth-grade history teacher. Sings in the
town choir?”
Rubbing the back of my neck, I sighed
and took a quick gander back at the house from my vantage point. I raised the
binoculars and peered at the porch. A couple of rickety boards stuck up. Close
to the bottom steps, on either side, gray wolf statues sat back on their
hindquarters. They stared straight ahead in my direction.
A shadow crossed over one of the
statues. I moved the binoculars a hair to the right. A black-haired wolf
crouched at the statue’s base, its amber eyes pointed in my direction. I
stepped back and tripped over my feet, landing on a cushion of waist-high
grass.
Jade knelt down to my side. “Colton,
what is it?” She no longer had the phone to her ear.
I pointed to the house. “W-w-wolf.”
Jade’s eyes widened. “Wolf?” She stared
toward the house, shaking her head. “I don’t see anything. You mean the
statues?”
I got up to my feet and tugged on her
hand. “L-let’s go.”
“Okay, good,” Jade said. “I told Mum
we’re going home.”
As I glanced over my shoulder, the black
wolf was gone, but I remained fixated on the statues. I took in a sharp breath.
The statues were no longer staring straight ahead, but instead, the snout of one
of the wolf statues was up in the air as if howling. The second one’s head was
turned toward me.
I sprinted with everything I had.
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