Showing posts with label Patricia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patricia. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 8, 2025

Bringing my Heroes Home

 It's official, y'all. With the release of the fifth and final novel, the menopausal superhero series is now complete!

 

This has been the work of a little more than ten years, and there's a lovely symmetry in that the first book came out in 2015, and the final in 2025. 

Origin story: This series started because I watched an X-men movie with my husband, and we were talking, as we often do, while we walked the dog afterwards. I was joking that the underlying message of X-men stories is always that hormones cause superpowers, and if that was the case, menopausal women should have the corner on that market!

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 He laughed and told me to write it down. So I did. 

And to my surprise, it was more than just a little joke--it was the opportunity to create a group of female characters finding community, purpose, and love while they deal with the changes wrought in the life by changes in their bodies. Metaphorical AF, right? 

The journey: Writing them was cathartic, joyful, and sometimes heartbreaking, bringing together my personal struggles and fears surrounding aging, friendship, and what perimenopause was doing to my body, my brain, and my life alongside my lifetime love of superhero stories. 

 

The shirt says "what doesn't kill you, mutates and tries again" 

I LOVE how I ended the series, and can't wait to share this with readers. 

The whole series is available direct from the publisher as an ebook bundle: 

buy here
 

You can also get it a book at a time from the Big River site, or request it from your favorite bookseller in paperback or hardback. 

The series in order:

 

 

Going Through the Change, where it all begins. Meet Helen, Jessica, Patricia, and Linda/Leonel and laugh and cry with them as they struggle with the sudden development of unusual abilities amid their busy lives, and find each other along the way. 

Part of what I wanted to explore is what a heroic life might look like for a woman with a grown-up life: a career, children, a household, a partner. Responsibilities. This book was the start of all of that.  

 

 

  


 

Friend or Foe, a novella, serves as a bridge story between the first and second novels, and a peek inside the mind of the mad scientist who caused all this trouble in the first place, Dr. Cindy Liu. 

This novella is also included in Agents of Change, which collects the novellas and short stories in a single volume.  

 

 

 

 

 


 

In Change of Life, the second novel in the series, all the characters are dealing with the aftermath of the events of book one: the affects on their relationships, families, jobs, and psyches. The plot centers around Patricia, the Lizard Woman of Springfield, and her quest for answers and vengeance. 

This book introduces Daniel Price, one of my favorite creepy villains. He's been body hopping for a hundred years in a a quest to extend his own life, with no regard to who gets hurt (or killed) along the way.  

 

 

  


 

 In Face the Change, our heroes come together to work for the Unusual Cases Unit of the mysterious Department run by the Director and learn about hero life in the spotlight. As they fight The Six, a mysterious group of psychic villains, they deepen their personal connections, finding strength in each other.  

An unexpected romance came into play in this one. I LOVE it when my characters surprise me. 

 

 

 

The Good Will Tour is another novella, which works pretty well as a stand alone if you want to try the series at low investment.  Jessica "Flygirl" Roark and Leonel (formerly Linda) "Fuerte" Álvarez set out to build community good will with a celebrity visit to the local hospital and end up needing to save the day when a desperate earthquake causing woman shows up demanding experimental treatment for her wife. 

This novella is also included in Agents of Change, which collects the novellas and short stories in a single volume.   


 

 


 

Just when our heroes thought they had things figured out, a mysterious power spike challenges their control of their abilities in Be the Change. 

I had a wonderful time expanding on Patricia's backstory in this one, introducing her mother, stepfather, and some information on her siblings and half-siblings. And Daniel Price is back because he was too good not to bring back. 

 

 

 

 


 

And here's the new girl in town: the series ender: Change for the Better. Readers will probably have noticed that Jessica "Flygirl" Roark has been…odd. Things escalate in this book and the menopausal superheroes have to scramble to save one of their own, while they face down enemies within and the return of Daniel Price and the shadowy mystery man, Bertrand Dietrich.  

I'm really proud of that final fight scene and that last chapter will hit you right in the feels. 

 

 

 


 

Through Thick & Thin is a collection of side-stories for the menopausal superheroes. It’s confession time in "Coming Out as Leonel." Join Patricia, the Lizard Woman, as she unravels the puzzle of Dr. Cindy Liu's disappearance in "The Right Thing," and then see her softer side (and her "better half," Suzie) in "Underestimated." Get ready for a wedding, and a heroic rescue, in "Flygirl's Second Chance."

These can be read separately of the novels, but I think you'll enjoy them more if you've already read at least books one and two. They're also all included in Agents of Change

 

 

 


 This anthology collects the novels and short stories into a single volume. 

  • Friend or Foe
  • The Good Will Tour
  • "Coming out as Leonel" 
  • "The Right Thing" 
  • "Underestimated"
  • "Flygirl's Second Chance"  

(this might be my favorite cover in the series, combining the silhouettes we used for the novels with the stripes or rays we used in the short work) 

 

 

 

I have some readings from all this work available on YouTube or in the Menopausal Superheroes slideshow on the "Read My Work" link in this website.  

And if that's not enough Menopausal Superheroes for you, you can also read another short story, "Intervention", exploring the background of Patricia and Cindy Liu in Theme-Thology: Mad Science or read a couple of free holiday stories I created for my newsletter subscribers: O Scaly Night (Patricia's version of Santa Claus is…violent) and (Flygirl's son gets to see her in action) Max's Mommy

If you find me or my publisher, Falstaff Books, at a convention or other in-person event, you can also get the very cool omnibus edition (second volume coming soon), and I hope to be able to share links for audiobooks in the near future.  

I'm working on a book tour this fall and winter to celebrate the completion of this series, so you may have a chance to come see me in your neck of the woods!  

Thanks to all of you who came along with me on this journey. Writing is great, but we need readers to make it worthwhile and I am so pleased that so many of you have connected to my characters and found escape and expression with me in these stories. 

May you find strength when you need it, joy in friendship, and love in one form or another.  

Monday, September 5, 2022

An Interview with the Sidekick: an Open Book Blog hop post


Welcome to Open Book Blog Hop. You can find us every Monday talking about the writing life. This week, we're interviewing some of our "minor" characters.  I hope you'll check out all the posts: you'll find the links at the bottom of this post. 

So, let me introduce you to Suzie Grayson, from my Menopausal Superhero series. Suzie is the youngest character in the series who isn't someone's child, and one of the few non-powered characters in the main circle of heroes. 

Series Book Covers, by arrangement with the publisher


She entered the story as Patricia O'Neill's intern in book 1 Going Through the Change, and was there when Patricia's powers erupted and by her side as she built her hero's life as The Lizard Woman of Springfield. Some might call her a sidekick, but Suzie would object to that portrayal. 

Me: Hello, Suzie, Thanks for joining us here on Balancing Act today.
Suzie: My pleasure. It's not every day I get a private audience with our author.
Me: I hope you don't feel neglected.
Suzie: No worries. I've got surprises in store for you yet!
Me: (laughing nervously) Let's get to it. I know that people tend to underestimate you. I love writing those moments when they find out that they should have given a little more thought to the cute blonde. Do you have any favorite moment like that in our books?
Suzie: Well, of course my favorite is the short story about me: Underestimated.
Me: That is a good one! I really loved it when you turned off the generator by throwing your shoe into it. Quick thinking!
Suzie: That was a good moment, though I was more proud of the way I escaped from the chair they had tied me to.
Me: Classic sidekick moment. Though, of course, you didn't sit around waiting to be rescued. 
Suzie: No way. Patricia needed me. 
Me: You guys have a special relationship. 
Suzie: (laughing) Sure. You could call it that. There's nobody like her. But let's just call it what it is: she's my girlfriend. 
Me: What's that like? Working with your significant other?
Suzie: Well, it's never easy to work with Patricia, and it hasn't gotten easier since we started dating. But she's learning that I don't need protecting any more than she does. I'm really excited to see what you settle on for us in the next book!
Me: (sigh) Me, too. It's been hard, writing the series ender. 
Suzie: (winking) We can always come back for side stories later. It doesn't have to be good-bye!
Me: (brightening) You're right! 
Suzie: Of course. I almost always am. 

So glad you had the chance to meet Suzie, a feisty, determined, and brilliant young woman who is a delight to work with on the page. You can find her spotlight story in my Menopausal Superheroes short story collection: Through Thick and Thin. 

book cover by arrangement with the publisher


Now that you've met Suzie, click on the Inlinkz party below to meet some other great characters in my colleagues' work. 

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Thursday, August 20, 2020

Book Birthday! Through Thick and Thin

 


Today is my book birthday! The sixth release in the Menopausal Superhero series made her debut today. Through Thick and Thin is a collection of short stories, featuring Flygirl, Fuerte, and The Lizard Woman of Springfield in both their costumed and civilian identities. We've got an impending wedding, a daring escape, superpowered rescue, and heartfelt friendship moments, all within a slender volume you could read in an afternoon. 

The older I get, the less excited I am about actual birthdays…but book birthdays? They're awesome! Projects come to fruition and out there in the world looking for an audience are WAY more exciting than merely surviving to be another year older. 

But, I still like cake, and you can be sure I celebrate each and every book birthday with chocolate :-)

Check out this back-of-the-book blurb. 

Hidden in the space between chapters lurk other stories. What came before and after, and meanwhile. The other side of the story, including the part our heroines didn’t know. This collection peeks around those corners of the Menopausal Superhero series.

Through Thick and Thin will get you up close and personal with your favorites. Fuerte wasn't always Fuerte - or male. It’s confession time in "Coming Out as Leonel." Join Patricia, the Lizard Woman, as she unravels the puzzle of Dr. Cindy Liu's disappearance in "The Right Thing," then see her softer side (and her "better half," Suzie) in "Underestimated." Get ready for a wedding, and a heroic rescue, in "Flygirl's Second Chance."

These aren’t your father’s superheroes. Whether you’re already a fan or are just meeting these characters for the first time, the menopausal superhero series explores what it means to be a hero at any age or stage of life.

If you've been meaning to check out my series, this short story collection is a great introduction to the characters and concepts as well as my writing style and the drama-dy (part drama/part comedy) tone of the books. And it's available through Kindle Unlimited if that's how you roll. Paper copies will be available in the next few days. 


Can't wait to bring you more of these characters in 2021, but for now, please check out the series, and if you've read them, leave a review! Reviews are even better than cake. 

Saturday, June 27, 2020

Reading my Own Work

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I'm settling in to write novel #4 in the Menopausal Superheroes series. I've been on a hiatus from writing in that series for two years, not because I was done telling the stories but for business reasons (short version: old publisher fell apart, got rights back, republished with a new company. Details in this blog post). 

Throughout 2020, I've worked with Falstaff books to bring out two novellas and a collection of short stories (due out in August!) in the series, but these are all things that I wrote in 2015-2018. So, editing put me back in this universe again, but not in the same immersive way as actively writing with these characters. 

To get into the right head-space, I decided I had best re-read my own series, making notes about seeds I had planted or threads I had begun that might be developed for books 4 and 5. 

The good news:  I still LOVE these characters and this world. My menopausal heroes still amaze me with their bravery, honesty, and caring. I can hardly wait to spend the next few months fighting, living, and learning alongside such fabulous imaginary friends. 

And re-reading my old work is not making me cringe. I worried it might. Sometimes, it's like that--you learn so much across a writing career, and reading work by "past me" can make me want to snatch it back and do it over. I do think I'm a better writer now than I was in 2015 when the first novel came out, but I still think 2015 Samantha was a damned decent storyteller with a creative premise and good emotional engagement. 

I love the energy I'm catching from the characters: 


Wish me luck guys! I'll be working to recapture the magic and energy and form it into something new. Something you can read in 2021! 





Tuesday, June 16, 2020

Switching Gears

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I've been working on a novel for about a year (a gothic romance, working title The Architect and the Heir). It's going well and I want to keep plugging away on it. I gave myself "until school ends" to finish a draft…and I failed to do so. 

I made great progress, especially considering that I do this part time and you know…COVID, police violence, terrifying fascism rearing its ugly head everywhere. If 2020 is the year of seeing clearly, I sometimes wish I could back to being blind. 

And now, I have to shelve A&H and switch gears, hard turn to starboard. 

The reasons are positive. I have a contract! That's a lucky position for an author to be in: knowing I have a publisher ready and waiting for my book, willing to help bring it out there into the world. 

But contracts come with deadlines--external deadlines, imposed because of schedules for editing, proofreading, cover art, etc. My next deadline is January, which means it's time to set down Devon and Victor and pick up the Menopausal Superheroes again or I won't make it. 

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I'm also coming back to this series after a nearly two year break during which I worked primarily on other fiction: short stories, editing for work that already been submitted, and another shelved novel before this one. So, I'm feeling a little daunted. 

This is the first time in my writing career (all five years of it) that this has happened to me. I've heard other writers talk about juggling different projects and now I finally understand how wrenching it can be to slam on the brakes and screech to a halt, leaving good rubber on the road, so I can keep my promises. It's not that I don't love the other projects, too--I totally do! It's just the moment of switching gears that hurts a bit. 

I'm hopeful though, that Devon and Victor will be there waiting for me when I come back to them. I've made good notes about where the story is going. I have already managed to set it aside three times in the past few months to complete edits on novellas for the Menopausal Superhero stories, and each time I fell back in within a few days. 



Any advice for me on switching gears and finding my groove on the new thing quickly? The clock is running guys, so I need to get this booty moving! I'd love to hear your ideas in the comments!

Monday, January 22, 2018

Why I Love the BFF


The DIYMFA book club question #7 asks about favorite supporting character archetypes: villain, love interest, BFF, mentor, and fool.

I can think of supporting characters that have won me in every one of these categories, but my favorite?

I think it's the BFF, although I'm not sure I'd name them that. She enters the story as support for the Main Character: a friend, a colleague, something like that. She doesn't seem like she'll be all that important, but it turns out that she has hidden skills and depths, that she understands what the Main Character needs even better than the lead understands herself. She might be dismissed as merely the sidekick, but, often, she is more a hero than the hero.

Where would Frodo Baggins have ended up without Samwise Gamgee? Buffy Summers without Willow Rosenberg? Mary Tyler Moore without Rhoda?



When it's done well, these characters surprise you, without coming out of left field. The writer has laid the groundwork, given the relationship time to build, dropped hints about the skill and insight of the sidekick. And then: POW! Right in the feels!

My own character of this sort is Suzie Grayson. She enters my Menopausal Superhero series as an intern to Patricia O'Neill. You know? The Lizard Woman of Springfield?

Patricia O'Neill as drawn by Charles C. Dowd
Patricia doesn't need anyone. At least that's what she likes to think. So, it's a real surprise to her when this young woman she described as a "twerp" and "little twit" becomes her greatest ally. Hopefully, my readers will get #allthefeels when the big moment comes, just as I did writing it.

(BTW: Suzie has a *great* side-story (if I do say so myself) in this anthology: "Underestimated")

Friday, December 18, 2015


This story was originally written as part of the Mocha Memoirs Season's Readings tour. I'm proud of this short story featuring Patricia O'Neill, the resident Grinch of the Menopausal Superheroes universe. I hoped the story would find more readers than it it did, so here it is again for the Deja Vu Blog Tour

If you enjoy it, you can see more of Patricia and the other heroines in Going Through the Change. The sequel, Change of Life, is due out from Curiosity Quills in April 2016. 

O Scaly Night

Patricia hadn't planned on being alone for Christmas. It just sort of ended up that way. She'd planned on staying home for a quiet few days with Suzie, until Suzie got the strong-arm to join the rest of the clan Up East. She wasn't ready to take Patricia with her, she said, and Patricia tried to seem disappointed about that to save Suzie's feelings. In reality, she was relieved. She wasn't looking forward to the whole in-laws thing. She'd avoided it for the first fifty-eight years of her life and could happily do so for all her remaining years. Heck, she wasn't even used to being with Suzie herself yet. 

She didn't spare a thought for her own family. What remained of it was spread out and not what anyone would describe as close. In fact, some of it was downright contentious. 

Jessica was doing the newlywed Christmas with Walter, probably embarrassing the heck out of her boys with mistletoe and the whole shebang. Sure, they'd invited her to come by, but she wouldn't be going. God no. She'd rather stab herself in the eye with a fork. Same with Leonel and David, for different reasons. Things were already tense between the two of them. She definitely wasn't going to walk into that family drama. No way. No how. 

She didn't let herself think about Cindy either. It was time to let that friendship go and admit that she might never have known her best friend as well as she thought she had. Besides, Cindy never celebrated Christmas much anyway, saving her holiday energy for Chinese New Year's. 

So, here it was, nearly midnight on Christmas Eve. Patricia had tried holiday movies, one cheesy and one heartfelt, and popcorn, but it all seemed to leave a bad taste in her mouth. She eyed her phone, but the screen stayed stubbornly black. Suzie would probably try to call later, but, even if she did, Patricia knew their conversation would be stilted and awkward. If she called at all, it would be late, after the rest of the family had finally gone to bed. And Patricia had no idea what she'd say. 

Patricia looked out the window. The city of Springfield was awash in lights. Some of the buildings had done up full holiday displays and she could see the flashing reds and greens from across the river. Looking at it, she felt she had to get out. Her spacious condo suddenly felt as tight as a closet and she needed air. 

She pulled on her long coat and stepped out into the night. It wasn't supposed to snow, but the air was crisp and felt good against her skin, clean and fresh. She realized she hadn't been outside the entire day. No wonder she felt so cooped up. Indiana farmland girls like her needed a daily quota of fresh air. She got weird when she spent too much time inside. 

Shoving her hands in her pockets, she headed for the pond on the other side of the complex. There was a wooden bridge over the man-made watering hole, and it was a pleasant place to stand and look at the water, especially late at night when most of the inhabitants of the complex were sound asleep. Patricia often went there when she couldn't sleep. 

The water was very still. The fountain was turned off for the season and there was no wind to speak of. The lake was probably quite shallow, but the way the surface was reflecting the surrounding buildings and streetlights made it seem miles deep. Patricia wished she had brought some bread to toss out for the koi. The ducks and geese were already gone for the season. It might have been nice to see another living thing. 

Leaning against the railing, she turned and surveyed the buildings around her. There were five identical buildings. The condos on this side all had patios or balconies facing towards the lake. Patricia's own apartment had a big window at the end of a hall that afforded her a glimpse of the lake, but she preferred the view from the wall-sized windows in the living room overlooking the city. The lake, in her opinion, was better enjoyed up close. 

A breeze came up and Patricia let her scales rise on her neck and cheeks. Her alter ego was less sensitive to the cold than she was. Patricia hadn't quite figured out why that was, but it was helpful sometimes. She was careful to limit her transformation, though. No reason to ruin a good coat by letting her spikes come through. 

As her scales came up, her vision changed a little as well. Her lizard-eyes could see better in the night than her human ones. She spotted the man standing on the other side of the lake. She hadn't noticed him before, and, so far, it didn't look like he had spotted her. He was standing under a small tree, one of the ones that flowered white in the springtime, but was bare this time of year. He had his back to the lake and Patricia and seemed to be watching one of the apartment windows. She couldn't have explained why, but Patricia felt there was something off about the guy. She watched him more closely. 

In the space of the few minutes she watched, he began and abandoned six cigarettes. Each time he threw the half-smoked cigarette into the grass and twisted his foot on it, moving like he had made up his mind and was going to go do something. Each time, he took a step, then stopped, swung his arms back and forth a few times and retreated to the space under the tree. Patricia began to walk around the lake. She wanted to be within reach, just in case. She continued to watch him as she walked, keeping her steps light and as quiet as she could, glad that her coat was black and wouldn't show up well in the darkness. He never turned. 

By the light of his next cigarette, she was able to make out some details of his face and appearance. She made note of them, practicing better observation as they were training her to do at the Department. He was thirty-five or forty years old by her estimation. White, with dark brown or black hair, worn long enough that it stuck out in wings beneath his knit cap. He had an indeterminate beard, one that could mean he was just a few days unshaven or that he kept his facial hair at that Miami Vice level that had been so popular for a while. His coat was nice, but frayed at the cuffs and missing a few buttons, so that could mean he had fallen on harder times or just that he loved the coat and wore it even though he should be replacing it. He was broad in the shoulders, but not particularly tall. Patricia was sure that if she stood beside him, she'd tower over him by at least four inches. 

The man hadn't done anything except for seem tense and smoke some cigarettes, but Patricia still felt that he bore watching. Maybe she was just bored and looking for something to do. Or maybe there was trouble. Watching him repeat the cigarette-decision-dance two more times, she grew frustrated with waiting. Patience had never been her strong suit. 

Pulling in her scales, she walked up to the guy, being careful to crunch a few leaves along the way, so she wouldn't sneak up on him. "Can I bum a smoke?" she asked. Patricia didn't smoke, but she thought she could fake it, at least as a way to start a conversation. The man jumped. "Sorry. I didn't mean to scare you," she offered, hands spread. The man pulled out the pack of cigarettes and handed her one without comment. Patricia played with it in her fingers for a moment. "Can't sleep?" 

The man turned and looked at her then. Face to face, Patricia could see that he was tired. His eyes were red and watery and the circles under his eyes were deep enough to suggest more than one sleepless night. His eyes flicked over her quickly. Patricia was sure he had categorized her as a harmless middle aged woman, too old to flirt with and unlikely to do him damage. Little did he know. "Yeah," he finally said. 

"Which one is yours?" she asked, gesturing at the windows in front of them. "I'm across the lake, myself." She hoped it sounded like a regular nosy-neighbor kind of question.  She also hoped he had a ready answer.  He didn't. The hesitation wasn't long, but the sigh that accompanied it spoke volumes. 

"If you don't mind, I don't want to talk about it." His voice was even, though the words were clipped. Patricia didn't like the tension she saw in his jaw. 

She laid a hand on his arm. He jumped back as if she had stung him. "You sure? You seem like a man with something on his mind. I can be a good listener." Or at least she thought she could fake it long enough to figure out if someone was in danger here. 

"You got kids?" he asked. 

"Me? Hell, no." 

He laughed in a way that showed he didn't find it funny. He lit another cigarette, the last in the pack. He didn't seem to have noticed that Patricia wasn't lighting hers. "Maybe that's for the best, sometimes. Me, I got four of them. Up there." He gestured at a second story balcony just to the right of the place where they stood. 

Patricia followed his finger. She flipped up the collar just slightly to hide her cheeks and brought up her scales again. She really only wanted the night vision, but, at least so far, she couldn't get the eyes without the facial scales. She'd need to work on that some more.  Once she could see, she could see some signs of trouble. The glass door that led to the balcony was taped, as if it had been broken and hastily patched by someone without the tools or skills to do it right. A jagged impact was evident in the glass. It looked like the glass had been punched from the inside. "What happened to the door?" she asked. 

The man looked her way and Patricia took a step backwards into the shadows while she schooled her face into its normal, middle-aged woman aspect. "I think he hits them," the man said, his voice bleak as the gray afternoon had been.

"Damn." She thought it might be something like that, but she had so wanted to be wrong. She'd seen this story more than once, and not just on the evening news. She remembered her fourth stepfather, the one she'd had arrested. Her mother never forgave her for it. But even at sixteen, Patricia had no tolerance for bullies. He'd bruised her littlest sister, gripping her arm so hard it left finger marks. Of course, they both said it was "just an accident" and that he'd "been drinking" like any of that made it even remotely okay. She wasn't going to let that man hurt one of the littler kids worse before she did something about it. She wouldn't let that happen now either.  "What's the apartment number?"

"Sixteen B," he said. 

"Is he in there?"

"I think so."

"And the mother and kids?"

He shook his head. "At her mother's. They won't be back until morning."

Patricia smiled. The man gasped. "What's wrong with your face?"

Patricia smiled again, her scales filling in fully. "This is the face of justice." She took off her coat and tossed it over a nearby bench, then sat down and took off her shoes. The man just stared at her as she loped off across the lawn and jogged up the steps. 

Patricia, as drawn by Charles C. Dowd
A few second later, she was standing in front of sixteen B, listening. She could hear a television playing. Taking a moment to concentrate and focus, she brought out her full transformation. She heard the cloth ripping as her spikes came out and tore up the back of her shirt, but the top still held together well enough to keep her covered. She almost never wore anything anymore that wouldn't. Raising one taloned hand, she knocked on the door. She was tempted to joke, "Avon Calling," but she knew it was just adrenaline making her giddy.

Through the door, she heard some muffled cursing and heavy footsteps as someone moved to the door. "What do you want?" the man said as he threw the door open. Patricia didn't give him time to react to the sight of her. She place one hand on the door and one on the man's chest, flinging him back as she pushed the door open, then slamming the door closed behind her. 

The man landed on his butt in the middle of the rug. His eyes grew wide as he took in Patricia. She knew that look. She'd seen it on many different faces in the year since her transformation took place. It was part disbelief and part fear. "What are you?" The man stuttered as he crawled away and got to his hands and knees in an attempt to stand. 

Patricia leaped at him, knocking him onto his back, then standing with a heavy, taloned foot on his chest. "Me? I'm your worst nightmare. A woman who fights back."

The man tried to sit up, but she didn't give him a chance. Using the new moves she had learned in training, she rolled him over and hauled him up, tugging his arms behind his back so he was held low and awkwardly, unable to quite get his balance. She duck-walked him to the balcony door, shoving his head against the doorframe while she shoved the broken door aside. She wanted to make sure the father of these children got to see what happened here. She pushed the man so his torso fell over the railing, then let go of his arms and picked him up by his legs, so that he flailed into open air. He'd be fine if he didn't struggle too much. He tried to scream, but threw up instead. 

"You like to hit people who don't hit back, don't you?" The man didn't answer her. He just sort of groaned. She lifted him a inch or two higher. "I asked you a question."

"They made me mad," he said. Patricia nearly let him fall then, but she didn't really want to make the family deal with a corpse and the police. 

Instead, she pulled him back and let him fall into a heap on the balcony. "You know what makes me mad?" He didn't answer, though he seemed to be gathering himself for an attack. Patricia took a ready stance, just in case he really was that stupid. "Men who think that violence makes them men." Just as she'd suspected, he charged her, telegraphing his move as he clumsily got back into a crouching position, then hurling himself at her knees. She stepped aside, letting him collide with the doorframe. There was a crack. Patricia wasn't sure if it were the man or the doorframe that cracked but it didn't matter. The man was howling on the floor at her feet. 

"Come on, bud. You've got a note to write and some packing to do." 

An hour later, there was a note on the table, held down with a water glass. The handwriting was shaky, but legible. It was full of apologies, and a promise not to come back. It was a promise he'd keep. Patricia had taken his driver's license, just in case she needed to find him. 

By three o'clock, Patricia and the man she'd found by the lake had managed to patch the broken door well enough to hold for a few days. When they had locked the door and replaced the extra key in the flower pot outside, they went back down to the water's edge and stood looking at the water together. Patricia could feel the man's incredulous gaze on her, but she didn't turn to look at him. She handed him back the cigarette she had never smoked. It was still inside her coat pocket. "Merry Christmas," she said, then finished her walk around the lake and headed for home. She might have something to say to Suzie after all, if she called. 
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Monday, December 7, 2015

The Season's Readings Blog Tour

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It's December already! Time for the holidays. This year, I got invited to the Mocha Memoirs Press party where they are featuring some fun holiday reads. Check out the rafflecopter at the end of this post for a chance to win some great prizes and be sure to visit other participating blogs. For my own part, I offer you a short story featuring Patricia O'Neill, the resident Grinch of the Menopausal Superheroes universe. 

If you enjoy it, you can see more of Patricia and the other heroines in Going Through the Change. The sequel, Change of Life, is due out from Curiosity Quills in April 2016. 

O Scaly Night

Patricia hadn't planned on being alone for Christmas. It just sort of ended up that way. She'd planned on staying home for a quiet few days with Suzie, until Suzie got the strong-arm to join the rest of the clan Up East. She wasn't ready to take Patricia with her, she said, and Patricia tried to seem disappointed about that to save Suzie's feelings. In reality, she was relieved. She wasn't looking forward to the whole in-laws thing. She'd avoided it for the first fifty-eight years of her life and could happily do so for all her remaining years. Heck, she wasn't even used to being with Suzie herself yet. 

She didn't spare a thought for her own family. What remained of it was spread out and not what anyone would describe as close. In fact, some of it was downright contentious. 

Jessica was doing the newlywed Christmas with Walter, probably embarrassing the heck out of her boys with mistletoe and the whole shebang. Sure, they'd invited her to come by, but she wouldn't be going. God no. She'd rather stab herself in the eye with a fork. Same with Leonel and David, for different reasons. Things were already tense between the two of them. She definitely wasn't going to walk into that family drama. No way. No how. 

She didn't let herself think about Cindy either. It was time to let that friendship go and admit that she might never have known her best friend as well as she thought she had. Besides, Cindy never celebrated Christmas much anyway, saving her holiday energy for Chinese New Year's. 

So, here it was, nearly midnight on Christmas Eve. Patricia had tried holiday movies, one cheesy and one heartfelt, and popcorn, but it all seemed to leave a bad taste in her mouth. She eyed her phone, but the screen stayed stubbornly black. Suzie would probably try to call later, but, even if she did, Patricia knew their conversation would be stilted and awkward. If she called at all, it would be late, after the rest of the family had finally gone to bed. And Patricia had no idea what she'd say. 

Patricia looked out the window. The city of Springfield was awash in lights. Some of the buildings had done up full holiday displays and she could see the flashing reds and greens from across the river. Looking at it, she felt she had to get out. Her spacious condo suddenly felt as tight as a closet and she needed air. 

She pulled on her long coat and stepped out into the night. It wasn't supposed to snow, but the air was crisp and felt good against her skin, clean and fresh. She realized she hadn't been outside the entire day. No wonder she felt so cooped up. Indiana farmland girls like her needed a daily quota of fresh air. She got weird when she spent too much time inside. 

Shoving her hands in her pockets, she headed for the pond on the other side of the complex. There was a wooden bridge over the man-made watering hole, and it was a pleasant place to stand and look at the water, especially late at night when most of the inhabitants of the complex were sound asleep. Patricia often went there when she couldn't sleep. 

The water was very still. The fountain was turned off for the season and there was no wind to speak of. The lake was probably quite shallow, but the way the surface was reflecting the surrounding buildings and streetlights made it seem miles deep. Patricia wished she had brought some bread to toss out for the koi. The ducks and geese were already gone for the season. It might have been nice to see another living thing. 

Leaning against the railing, she turned and surveyed the buildings around her. There were five identical buildings. The condos on this side all had patios or balconies facing towards the lake. Patricia's own apartment had a big window at the end of a hall that afforded her a glimpse of the lake, but she preferred the view from the wall-sized windows in the living room overlooking the city. The lake, in her opinion, was better enjoyed up close. 

A breeze came up and Patricia let her scales rise on her neck and cheeks. Her alter ego was less sensitive to the cold than she was. Patricia hadn't quite figured out why that was, but it was helpful sometimes. She was careful to limit her transformation, though. No reason to ruin a good coat by letting her spikes come through. 

As her scales came up, her vision changed a little as well. Her lizard-eyes could see better in the night than her human ones. She spotted the man standing on the other side of the lake. She hadn't noticed him before, and, so far, it didn't look like he had spotted her. He was standing under a small tree, one of the ones that flowered white in the springtime, but was bare this time of year. He had his back to the lake and Patricia and seemed to be watching one of the apartment windows. She couldn't have explained why, but Patricia felt there was something off about the guy. She watched him more closely. 

In the space of the few minutes she watched, he began and abandoned six cigarettes. Each time he threw the half-smoked cigarette into the grass and twisted his foot on it, moving like he had made up his mind and was going to go do something. Each time, he took a step, then stopped, swung his arms back and forth a few times and retreated to the space under the tree. Patricia began to walk around the lake. She wanted to be within reach, just in case. She continued to watch him as she walked, keeping her steps light and as quiet as she could, glad that her coat was black and wouldn't show up well in the darkness. He never turned. 

By the light of his next cigarette, she was able to make out some details of his face and appearance. She made note of them, practicing better observation as they were training her to do at the Department. He was thirty-five or forty years old by her estimation. White, with dark brown or black hair, worn long enough that it stuck out in wings beneath his knit cap. He had an indeterminate beard, one that could mean he was just a few days unshaven or that he kept his facial hair at that Miami Vice level that had been so popular for a while. His coat was nice, but frayed at the cuffs and missing a few buttons, so that could mean he had fallen on harder times or just that he loved the coat and wore it even though he should be replacing it. He was broad in the shoulders, but not particularly tall. Patricia was sure that if she stood beside him, she'd tower over him by at least four inches. 

The man hadn't done anything except for seem tense and smoke some cigarettes, but Patricia still felt that he bore watching. Maybe she was just bored and looking for something to do. Or maybe there was trouble. Watching him repeat the cigarette-decision-dance two more times, she grew frustrated with waiting. Patience had never been her strong suit. 

Pulling in her scales, she walked up to the guy, being careful to crunch a few leaves along the way, so she wouldn't sneak up on him. "Can I bum a smoke?" she asked. Patricia didn't smoke, but she thought she could fake it, at least as a way to start a conversation. The man jumped. "Sorry. I didn't mean to scare you," she offered, hands spread. The man pulled out the pack of cigarettes and handed her one without comment. Patricia played with it in her fingers for a moment. "Can't sleep?" 

The man turned and looked at her then. Face to face, Patricia could see that he was tired. His eyes were red and watery and the circles under his eyes were deep enough to suggest more than one sleepless night. His eyes flicked over her quickly. Patricia was sure he had categorized her as a harmless middle aged woman, too old to flirt with and unlikely to do him damage. Little did he know. "Yeah," he finally said. 

"Which one is yours?" she asked, gesturing at the windows in front of them. "I'm across the lake, myself." She hoped it sounded like a regular nosy-neighbor kind of question.  She also hoped he had a ready answer.  He didn't. The hesitation wasn't long, but the sigh that accompanied it spoke volumes. 

"If you don't mind, I don't want to talk about it." His voice was even, though the words were clipped. Patricia didn't like the tension she saw in his jaw. 

She laid a hand on his arm. He jumped back as if she had stung him. "You sure? You seem like a man with something on his mind. I can be a good listener." Or at least she thought she could fake it long enough to figure out if someone was in danger here. 

"You got kids?" he asked. 

"Me? Hell, no." 

He laughed in a way that showed he didn't find it funny. He lit another cigarette, the last in the pack. He didn't seem to have noticed that Patricia wasn't lighting hers. "Maybe that's for the best, sometimes. Me, I got four of them. Up there." He gestured at a second story balcony just to the right of the place where they stood. 

Patricia followed his finger. She flipped up the collar just slightly to hide her cheeks and brought up her scales again. She really only wanted the night vision, but, at least so far, she couldn't get the eyes without the facial scales. She'd need to work on that some more.  Once she could see, she could see some signs of trouble. The glass door that led to the balcony was taped, as if it had been broken and hastily patched by someone without the tools or skills to do it right. A jagged impact was evident in the glass. It looked like the glass had been punched from the inside. "What happened to the door?" she asked. 

The man looked her way and Patricia took a step backwards into the shadows while she schooled her face into its normal, middle-aged woman aspect. "I think he hits them," the man said, his voice bleak as the gray afternoon had been.

"Damn." She thought it might be something like that, but she had so wanted to be wrong. She'd seen this story more than once, and not just on the evening news. She remembered her fourth stepfather, the one she'd had arrested. Her mother never forgave her for it. But even at sixteen, Patricia had no tolerance for bullies. He'd bruised her littlest sister, gripping her arm so hard it left finger marks. Of course, they both said it was "just an accident" and that he'd "been drinking" like any of that made it even remotely okay. She wasn't going to let that man hurt one of the littler kids worse before she did something about it. She wouldn't let that happen now either.  "What's the apartment number?"

"Sixteen B," he said. 

"Is he in there?"

"I think so."

"And the mother and kids?"

He shook his head. "At her mother's. They won't be back until morning."

Patricia smiled. The man gasped. "What's wrong with your face?"

Patricia smiled again, her scales filling in fully. "This is the face of justice." She took off her coat and tossed it over a nearby bench, then sat down and took off her shoes. The man just stared at her as she loped off across the lawn and jogged up the steps. 

Patricia, as drawn by Charles C. Dowd
A few second later, she was standing in front of sixteen B, listening. She could hear a television playing. Taking a moment to concentrate and focus, she brought out her full transformation. She heard the cloth ripping as her spikes came out and tore up the back of her shirt, but the top still held together well enough to keep her covered. She almost never wore anything anymore that wouldn't. Raising one taloned hand, she knocked on the door. She was tempted to joke, "Avon Calling," but she knew it was just adrenaline making her giddy.

Through the door, she heard some muffled cursing and heavy footsteps as someone moved to the door. "What do you want?" the man said as he threw the door open. Patricia didn't give him time to react to the sight of her. She place one hand on the door and one on the man's chest, flinging him back as she pushed the door open, then slamming the door closed behind her. 

The man landed on his butt in the middle of the rug. His eyes grew wide as he took in Patricia. She knew that look. She'd seen it on many different faces in the year since her transformation took place. It was part disbelief and part fear. "What are you?" The man stuttered as he crawled away and got to his hands and knees in an attempt to stand. 

Patricia leaped at him, knocking him onto his back, then standing with a heavy, taloned foot on his chest. "Me? I'm your worst nightmare. A woman who fights back."

The man tried to sit up, but she didn't give him a chance. Using the new moves she had learned in training, she rolled him over and hauled him up, tugging his arms behind his back so he was held low and awkwardly, unable to quite get his balance. She duck-walked him to the balcony door, shoving his head against the doorframe while she shoved the broken door aside. She wanted to make sure the father of these children got to see what happened here. She pushed the man so his torso fell over the railing, then let go of his arms and picked him up by his legs, so that he flailed into open air. He'd be fine if he didn't struggle too much. He tried to scream, but threw up instead. 

"You like to hit people who don't hit back, don't you?" The man didn't answer her. He just sort of groaned. She lifted him a inch or two higher. "I asked you a question."

"They made me mad," he said. Patricia nearly let him fall then, but she didn't really want to make the family deal with a corpse and the police. 

Instead, she pulled him back and let him fall into a heap on the balcony. "You know what makes me mad?" He didn't answer, though he seemed to be gathering himself for an attack. Patricia took a ready stance, just in case he really was that stupid. "Men who think that violence makes them men." Just as she'd suspected, he charged her, telegraphing his move as he clumsily got back into a crouching position, then hurling himself at her knees. She stepped aside, letting him collide with the doorframe. There was a crack. Patricia wasn't sure if it were the man or the doorframe that cracked but it didn't matter. The man was howling on the floor at her feet. 

"Come on, bud. You've got a note to write and some packing to do." 

An hour later, there was a note on the table, held down with a water glass. The handwriting was shaky, but legible. It was full of apologies, and a promise not to come back. It was a promise he'd keep. Patricia had taken his driver's license, just in case she needed to find him. 

By three o'clock, Patricia and the man she'd found by the lake had managed to patch the broken door well enough to hold for a few days. When they had locked the door and replaced the extra key in the flower pot outside, they went back down to the water's edge and stood looking at the water together. Patricia could feel the man's incredulous gaze on her, but she didn't turn to look at him. She handed him back the cigarette she had never smoked. It was still inside her coat pocket. "Merry Christmas," she said, then finished her walk around the lake and headed for home. She might have something to say to Suzie after all, if she called. 

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