Author: Simon Wood
ISBN: 978-1-4523-2690-0
Page count: 274kb
Genre: horror
Price: $1.99 (eBook)
Simon Wood is an ex-racecar driver, a licensed pilot and an occasional private investigator. He shares his world with his American wife, Julie. A longhaired dachshund and five cats dominate their lives. He’s had over 100 stories and articles published. His short fiction has appeared in a variety of magazines and anthologies, such as Seattle Noir and Thriller 2. He’s a frequent contributor to Writer’s Digest. He’s also the Anthony Award winning author of Working Stiffs, Accidents Waiting to Happen, Paying the Piper and We All Fall Down. As Simon Janus, he’s the author of The Scrubs and Road Rash. His current thriller, Terminated, came out in June. Curious people can learn more at www.simonwood.net.
Tell us about your book:
Dragged into Darkness is collection of Twilight Zone-esque stories. The world is a dark place, even in daylight. The book features tales of horror from the subtle to the extreme. The characters are ordinary people ripped from their daily routines that are thrust into a dark world and their lives will never be the same. In The Eye of the Beholder, Dr. Gareth Troy empathizes with his tortured patients’ disfigurements a little too much. For Grace in Purely Cosmetic, reaching her target weight is all that matters. In Acceptable Losses, Captain John Clelland has struck the worst of bargains for the lives of allied soldiers. In Runway Three-Seven, a pilot is forced to land his crippled aircraft on a runway that can’t possibly exist.
How long did it take to write the book?
The stories were collected over several years. The book was originally published in paperback in 2003 and it featured the strongest stories I’d written at that point and the most popular stories with my readers.
What inspired you to write the book?
The more I wrote the more I recognized a theme developing in my work. It wasn’t a conscious theme, but it was certainly one I identified with on a personal level—and it’s in the title, Dragged into Darkness. People lose their way in life and they take a path they can’t escape. This is juxtaposed to the idea that people, by no fault of their own, are sucked into a world they can’t escape. Either way, these characters are tested—some will succeed while others will be found wanting.
Talk about the writing process. Did you have a writing routine? Did you do any research, and if so, what did that involve?
I write full time now, but I wasn’t back then. I was writing one story in my lunch hour each day, getting around 500 words every day, and at night, I wrote a different story between 8 and 10pm. At the weekends, I edited what I’d written during the week.
There’s not a lot of research that went into the short stories. One of the nice things about speculative fiction is that you get to build worlds that operate to your own rules. That said, some of the stories are inspired by firsthand knowledge, personal experience or news stories. Runway Three-Seven is about a pilot in distress. I’m a private pilot and I was forced to make an emergency landing. It remains one of the most terrifying experiences of my life. The granddaughter of a World War II veteran inspired Acceptable Losses. With short stories, there’s a lot of freedom to let my imagination run riot.
What do you hope your readers come away with after reading your book?
I hope, first and foremost, that people will be entertained—and a little spooked. There are some fun stories in the collection as well as some real devious ones, so I hope can cause a shiver or two and force some people to check under the bed before they go to sleep.
Where can we go to buy your book?
The eBook is available from Amazon Kindle, Smashwords and the Apple iBookstore.
Any other links or info you’d like to share?
Website: www.simonwood.net
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/simonwoodwrites
Twitter: http://twitter.com/simonwoodwrites
Excerpt from book:
An excerpt from Acceptable Losses
The landing craft bobbed clumsily on the waves. The damned things were so unstable when they didn’t have a full accompaniment of men to act as ballast. Captain James Clelland’s six-man team was no substitute. The ride back would be better. The boat would be full.
They were half a mile out and Clelland could see the carnage on the beach. He didn’t want to look at it or think about it. There would be plenty of time for that when they arrived. There would be sights and sounds that would eat through his soul for a lifetime. He leaned on the side of the boat and stared into the sky, ignoring the flotilla of boats approaching the beach in a fan formation.
Puffy white clouds passed gracefully across the sky. He was astounded by how similar the clouds were to those back in England. Somehow he expected them to be different, at least exotic. Clouds from the North Pacific should have been different. He didn’t know how or why, but they should have been. Floating on the wrong side of the sky maybe, he thought. He could have watched the clouds all day but the stink was invading his nose. The beach was close.
“Right, kit-up everyone,” Clelland ordered.
“Make way for the Lord Mayor’s Bucket Boys,” Sergeant Williams announced in a pompous, officious voice.
Clelland hated the term that had attached itself to his men like a limpet mine. It had started in the mess hall after their second or third mission. The problem was the phrase was too apt. The real Lord Mayor’s Bucket Boys picked up horseshit after the annual procession. His Bucket Boys picked up something different after the battles were waged. The stench of what they handled was no less disgusting, and most couldn’t stomach the work. Turnover was high. His men always had a choice, of sorts. He didn’t. He was Oracle’s right-hand man. He was the only man perfect for the job.
Clelland tied a handkerchief around his head, over his nose and mouth. Others did likewise. The Lord Mayor’s latest Bucket Boy pulled on a gas mask. After a couple of trips, the mask wouldn’t be necessary. The stench would offend, but not disgust. A handkerchief, scented maybe, was all that was needed for a Bucket Boy.
Clelland tapped the private with the gas mask on the shoulder. “Take off the mask,” he told him.
Confused eyes stared back from behind the mask.
“Take off the mask, soldier. That’s an order.”
The private did as he was told. “Sir, the stink?”
“Harris, it’s in your best interests to keep the mask off. You’ll throw up.”
“But if I have the mask…”
Clelland raised a hand to silence the lad. Hysteria was creeping into the private’s voice. “You’ll vomit. If the stench doesn’t do it, the sight will. So, it’s better to vomit with the mask off than on. Then you won’t have to breathe in the stench of your own spew. So, keep the mask off.”
Williams, not wise-cracking for once, nodded. The Australian knew better than most. He’d been with Clelland since the discovery. “Puke now. Mask later.”
Clelland pulled out a scented rag and pressed it into the private’s hand. “Use it when you’re done.”
Harris couldn’t speak. Fear, anguish, whatever it was Clelland saw in those innocent eyes strangled the private’s vocal chords. In a month’s time, those eyes would be hollow and darkness would be the only thing lurking behind them. Nothing would ever disturb the private again. Clelland knew. He stared into those same eyes in the mirror every time he shaved.
The sapphire blue ocean changed to blood red. Pink caps that should have been white rode the tops of the red waves as they crashed onto the decimated bodies of fallen soldiers.
“Brace yourselves boys,” the helmsman warned.
Clelland’s team grasped handholds and waited for impact. The boat ground to a halt on the beach. The bow door dropped, digging into bloodstained sand and crushing dead bodies. No one rushed off the boat, ready for action. There were no Japs to take on. No one left to kill. Clelland’s men took their shovels and trudged onto the beach ignoring what they trod on. As Clelland disembarked, he patted the vomiting Harris on the back.
The place was different but the story was the same. The Japs had won at the expense of the British. They’d been particularly ruthless on this occasion. Besides the bullet-riddled and grenade-ravaged corpses, he recognized the hallmarks of ritual decapitation and disembowelment. The battle over, they’d set about the wounded with their samurai swords.
Blood from hundreds saturated the beach. Clelland hadn’t realized until he became a Bucket Boy that blood had an odor. It wasn’t unpleasant, just overpowering, suffocating, like being trapped in a room filled with stale air.
The soldiers had been dead some time. Twelve to fourteen hours, by Clelland’s estimates. The blazing sun had had a chance to cook the flesh. What should have been pink had blanched and turned beige. Instead of just the usual stench of shit and rotting flesh, a human barbecue was in progress.
Clelland blew his whistle. Soldiers disembarking the four other landing crafts turned to their commanding officer. All of them were close enough to shout to. “Right, gentlemen. The routine is the same as it always is. Take the dog tags, leave the weapons, no souvenirs and…” Clelland’s voice faltered, losing power. “Let’s get these boys back on the boat.”
“Poor bastards,” Williams said.
“I doubt they envy us, sergeant,” Clelland remarked. “They don’t have to do this.”
The Australian mulled the thought over and nodded. “I reckon we’re gonna have to come back for a second go.”
“Then we’ll come back, sergeant.” Clelland was sharp with Williams. He knew he was wrong to snap at the Australian. The man was only making small talk. And God knew they needed something to take their minds off their jobs. He’d make it up to him, a beer in the mess hall tonight. Another to go along with all the others he owed. “Are you finished there, Harris?”
The private ran a hand across his mouth. “Yes, sir.”
“Well, let’s get stuck in.”
Clelland didn’t have to get stuck in. He had rank. He could have overseen the operation without getting his feet wet like a good officer. But he was compelled to be involved. No man should have to do this and setting himself apart from his men didn’t sit well in his stomach. Better he got in the thick of it. His complicitus actions had caused this. If he’d been half the man he should have been, then maybe they wouldn’t be here.
They snagged dog tags, placing the ID plates in the satchels over their shoulders. They shoveled up chunks of men and dropped the pieces into wheelbarrows, then emptied the barrows into the landing crafts.
They were about half an hour in when Williams let loose with the jokes–right on time. He had a never-ending stream of them. Mainly bawdy stuff Clelland had heard in the not-so-classy music halls. He couldn’t remember how many ops they’d been on together but he knew he’d never heard a joke repeated. His gags weren’t just blue. He launched into scathing attacks on the crew and the British in general. It was all taken in good jest. The men forgot they were shoveling human slops as they attacked Williams and Australia. After the bullets, personal attacks strafed the battlefield.
“Alright there, Harris?” Williams called out.
The masked private nodded, his filter hose flapping.
“Harris, you look like a fucking monkey with that thing on,” Williams said.
“Yeah, one wiv an elephant’s trunk,” another soldier chipped in.
“You’re right, mate. A fucking monkey with an elephant’s trunk.” Williams started a chorus of laughter. “You want to lose that thing, Harris.”
Clelland knew it was the wrong time to pick on the private. Williams’ ribbing would have consequences. But some situations were best resolved between the men and not their senior officer.
Harris blew. He tore off his gas mask and threw it. It struck the side of a landing craft and splashed in the surf. A wave carried it back to shore. The private stared daggers at Williams.
The Australian and the men froze, waiting for Harris’ next move. He breathed heavily, as if he was building enough oxygen in his lungs to give Williams the tongue lashing of his life.
But he didn’t.
He sang.
Harris possessed an astounding choral voice. He sang a hymn. Clelland didn’t know which one, not being much of a churchgoer. But it was beautiful.
The men remained silent. Williams nodded his approval to the private and got back to work. The other men followed his lead.
Harris’ voice soared and could be heard across the beach. The men joined in with the private when he came to a hymn they all knew, adding to the heartwarming sound.
Clelland was amazed at man’s ability to cope. He couldn’t believe that beauty could exist in such a place. Why was it when man was at his absolute worst, it inspired others to create their absolute best? Clelland didn’t know the answer to his question. He wasn’t one of those men whose enlightenment raised them above the situation.
As soon as Harris sang, Clelland knew the private would survive his time on the HMS Vulture. Some hadn’t, but he would. He had his singing, like Williams had his corrosive humor. All his men had their outlet, something to put between them and the horror.
Except him. He had an officer’s burden that came with command. He could never distance himself from the job. Oracle made sure of that. He was just a cog in the machine; integral to the monstrous acts committed in the name of war. If he was granted an outlet, it would be to take Oracle’s life.









July 20, 2010
Thanks for having me at the Spotlight.