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Sunshine Lady
Sunshine Lady
Sunshine Lady
Ebook45 pages35 minutes

Sunshine Lady

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(Note: Sunshine Lady is a short story.)

Letitia Huger knows her time on this earth is short. The year is 1887. Her lungs are rebelling against her, and the man she loves has run away with another woman.

Wracked with pain, Letitia races against time and nature to get her affairs in order.

First order of business: design a tomb that allows the light of the sun to shine on her face forever.

Second: use her witchcraft to curse her husband and his kin for all time.

Third: die—and wait for the horrific, final reckoning.

Inspired by a true story.

* * *

Sunshine Lady is a 5,100-word short story, just one of six short stories in the Arm of Darkness collection.

The full collection, sold separately, contains six short stories of horror: Skullworm, Roadhouse, Glow, Kin, Sunshine Lady, and the origin story, Arm of Darkness.

Author Joseph D'Agnese is a frequent contributor to Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateDec 20, 2013
ISBN9781310339790
Sunshine Lady
Author

Joseph D'Agnese

Joseph D’Agnese is a writer and journalist who lives in the mountains of Western North Carolina. Though he writes about the Middle Ages, he considers himself a Renaissance man. He is the author of Blockhead: The Life of Fibonacci.

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    Book preview

    Sunshine Lady - Joseph D'Agnese

    Sunshine Lady

    Sunshine Lady

    A Short Story

    Joseph D’Agnese

    Nutgraf Productions LLC

    Sunshine Lady

    Published by Joseph D’Agnese at Smashwords

    Smashwords Edition

    Copyright © 2012 Joseph D’Agnese

    First e-book publication by Nutgraf Productions LLC, December 2013.

    Cover art copyright © 2013 Jason Gurley jasongurley.com


    This e-book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. All rights reserved. No part of this e-book may be reproduced in whole or in part, scanned, photocopied, recorded, distributed in any printed or electronic form, or reproduced in any manner whatsoever, or by any information storage and retrieval system now known or hereafter invented, without express written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

    josephdagnese.com

    In this e-book

    Sunshine Lady by Joseph D’Agnese

    Letitia Huger knows her time on this earth is short. The year is 1887. Her lungs are rebelling against her, and the man she loves has run away with another woman.


    Wracked with pain, Letitia races against time and nature to get her affairs in order.


    First order of business: design a tomb that allows the light of the sun to shine on her face forever.


    Second: use her witchcraft to curse her husband and his kin for all time.


    Third: die—and wait for the horrific, final reckoning.


    Sunshine Lady is just one of six short stories in the ARM OF DARKNESS collection. The full collection contains six short stories of horror: Skullworm, Roadhouse, Glow, Kin, Sunshine Lady, and the origin story, Arm of Darkness.

    To learn about special offers and events, and to claim your free e-book, sign up for the author’s newsletter

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    Sunshine Lady

    1. The Client, 1887

    The dying woman had beautiful hair. It was the only thing about her that looked fully alive. It was the color of a Carolina wren, and very long. Just how long was difficult to gauge, since the woman did not stand up much any more.

    She wore a dress of purple velvet with a fine lace collar. She was bundled excessively for spring, it seemed; the weather had begun to climb into the mid-seventies. From her settee she peered at the undertaker as if he were a potential lover. Indeed, he would be the last man on earth to touch her.

    I think you will recall that all along I have termed it a strange request but not an insurmountable one, he said. I’ve made some discreet inquiries, and I’m happy to say that we now have samples which arrived by train from Chicago only this morning.

    He gestured at the boy, his sister’s son, who carefully lifted two boxes from the carriage and carried them to the porch of the boarding house. The boy was young, no more than

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