The halloween treat, p.1

The Halloween Treat, page 1

 

The Halloween Treat
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The Halloween Treat


  The Halloween Treat

  K. M. Bishop

  Copyright © 2019 by K. M. Bishop

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form, including electronic or mechanical, without written permission from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

  This book is a piece of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This book may not be re-sold or given away to other people.

  If you are reading this book and book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return it to the seller and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the author’s work.

  Published: K. M. Bishop 2019

  kmbishop@authorbishopkm.com

  Created with Vellum

  Contents

  Author’s Note

  Blurb

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Epilogue

  Excerpt

  Author’s Note

  Stay connected with K. M. Bishop

  Also by K. M. Bishop

  Author’s Note

  The Halloween Treat is a full-length standalone novel. At the end, I’ve included an excerpt from my Best Seller, His Secrets.

  The Halloween Treat concludes at around 95% on your device.

  Happy Reading!

  XO, K. M. Bishop

  Blurb

  It was haunted.

  It was passionate.

  It was Halloween.

  I met a hot stranger at a costume party.

  He was exactly what I needed to get over a nasty breakup.

  Our connection was sweeter than candy.

  His fiery touch gave me all the right kind of goose bumps.

  And then reality caught up with us.

  It wasn’t just the night that was haunted.

  Our pasts were too.

  We were being held hostage by our secrets.

  Could we battle the old scars and be true to each other?

  Or were our demons going to get the better of us?

  Chapter One

  Debbie

  I took another look at my beautiful Halloween costume sitting beside me laid out on my bed and grimaced with a sickening feeling in the pit of my stomach. It was such a beautiful dress. I’d wanted to go as Snow White this year, but I was going to add a bit of flair to it to make my Snow White a bit sinister just for fun. I’d even had the tailor make some special alterations to the cut of the dress to make it sexier. I didn’t normally dress up like that, preferring a more casual T-shirt and jeans approach to my basic wardrobe. But Halloween was the one night of the year where you were free to be someone else. You could become whoever you wanted to be.

  And right now, I wanted to be anyone else but Debbie Helms.

  “Daniel,” I muttered to myself. “You bastard.”

  Just the mention of my fiancé’s name filled me with anger and disgust. But beneath all of that was a mountain of hurt.

  We’d been together for almost a year when he proposed. He had taken me out to a romantic dinner and completely shocked me with the ring. Before I knew it, I was engaged and we were planning a wedding with a tentative date scheduled six months from now.

  Everyone was so happy for me. And I was happy. I was truly living the life I’d wanted and always dreamt of, at least as far as my love life was considered.

  And then it all changed. I’d noticed that Daniel was being aloof, a little distracted, and it just seemed like all of the romance in our life had just disappeared. When I finally confronted him about it, he told me that he didn’t want to get married. He had thought things through and decided he was too young to get tied down and that he wanted something else out of life. So, six weeks after I thought I had happily ever after, we were done.

  It was awful. I felt like someone had just removed all remnants of hope and happiness from my life, and I was left as an empty shell. It had taken me days to come out of my room and even pretend to have an interest in anything. It was like being in some kind of zombie limbo state where nothing seemed real anymore, or at least nothing seemed important to me.

  Especially, not some silly Halloween dance.

  Shepherd’s Mills was notorious for throwing a huge Halloween party every single year. It was an older town with a big history, full of stories about spooky happenings and paranormal events that couldn’t be explained. Of course, no one knew if any of those stories really happened the way the old timers in town said they did, but it was fun folklore anyway. I’d always loved it and I looked forward to the party every single year.

  But this year it seemed silly compared to the dreadful feelings I was dealing with.

  I pulled up a picture of me and Daniel on my phone. It was still the wallpaper on my main screen. I hate that I hadn’t been able to force myself to remove it.

  “Why, Daniel?” I asked the picture. “What did I do that made you stop loving me?”

  I’d asked that question to myself and my mother almost non-stop since Daniel dumped me.

  “People change,” my mother Judy said. “People change, baby, especially at your age. You are twenty-three years old. Your life has just started; don’t sit there acting like the entire world just ended. It may feel like that right now, but it hasn’t.”

  My mother always knew exactly what to say and how to say it, to make me feel better. She just had that special calming ability. I wasn’t sure if it was something all mothers had, a special bond with their babies, or if it was just something unique to us.

  “I know,” I said through clenched teeth and a river of tears. “But we were supposed to spend our lives together. And suddenly he just decided he didn’t want it.”

  My mother paused and took a deep breath, which I knew was my mother’s universal signal for “I’m about to lay down some harsh truth, so get ready for it”.

  “Honey,” mom said. “Are you sure there wasn’t someone else?”

  I couldn’t even find the words to respond to that thought. I had managed so far, to keep something that utterly devastating out of my head, but here it was, staring me down like a runaway train about to run me over and I was tied to the tracks.

  “It couldn’t be…” I said. But it made sense. I knew it was very possible. It was just a theory, an idea, nothing more at this point.

  But I had to know.

  That night I went to Daniel’s place to ask him point blank if he was with someone else. And if so, exactly how long had this slime bucket been two timing me?

  Daniel wasn’t there when I arrived. After banging on his door for a few minutes and then realizing his truck was not parked in his garage, I decided to head into town and see if I could locate him in one of his favorite haunts. I knew this might be borderline stalker behavior on my part, but I was so fired up I just didn’t care. When I wanted something, I went after it. That was a trait I’d always possessed, and it had gotten me in a speck of trouble or two in my life. But I am my mother’s daughter and when I am lit up you’d better step out of the way.

  Just as I reached my car Daniel drove up in his truck.

  And he was not alone.

  There was a pretty, sexy blonde girl with him that took me a few minutes to recognize. When it finally dawned on me who the slutty looking stranger was, I couldn’t believe it. Hell, it was almost laughable. Was this really the type of girl Daniel wanted in his life? Or was he just having fun for now?

  Valerie Reynes.

  I was a year behind Valerie in high school. Valerie was miss popularity, head cheerleader, Homecoming Queen, and Prom Queen. She was sexy and bubbly, but all of the girl’s in the school knew her as being notorious for going to parties, getting wasted, and then getting into bed with whatever guy (or guys) were close by. It was a reputation that Valerie didn’t even seem ashamed of. Hell, she almost flaunted it.

  And it only served to increase her popularity somehow.

  Daniel rolled his eyes and sighed deeply, clearly annoyed, as he stepped out of his truck and saw me standing there. He threw Valerie his house key and asked her to wait inside for a moment.

  Valerie actually had the audacity to wink and smile at me as she passed. What a skank. I could have strangled her on the spot. Looking back, I had to admire my own restraint.

  “What are you doing here?” Daniel asked. His arrogance was so profound. Why hadn

’t I ever noticed it before? Had he kept it well hidden or was I just so in love I was willing to look past the glaring flaws in his character that seemed so obvious now?

  “Well, I came to ask you a question, but it looks like I have my answer,” I said.

  I turned away and started walking towards my car.

  “What the hell are you talking about?” Daniel asked.

  I spun around and glared daggers at him.

  “How long have you been seeing this slut behind my back?”

  Daniel laughed. “How is it any of your business? We are done.”

  “Yeah, we are done,” I said. “I just wanted to prove to myself exactly how big of a slime ball you are.”

  “This is what I didn’t want to look forward to for the next sixty years,” Daniel said. “I’m twenty-three years old. I’m young. I want to live. I’m sorry if I hurt you. I never should have proposed.”

  “Then why did you? Why did you propose if you were feeling this way?”

  Daniel shrugged. “I guess I succumbed to peer pressure and family pressure. You know how old fashioned our parents are. They kept asking me when we were going to get married, get our house with the white picket fence, and have kids. I heard that constantly and it just seemed like it was what was supposed to happen. I made a mistake. It isn’t what I want right now.”

  “Wow, I never thought you would be so gullible as to be worn down by other people’s comments. I’m glad we broke up; you saved me a lot of heartache and pain.”

  I got in my car and drove away without so much as glancing back at the jerk.

  And now I was alone in my room, on what was usually my favorite night of the year, and I was feeling sorry for myself. I figured I’d stay in and binge watch some Netflix with a big pint of ice cream. It felt like the right thing to do.

  I was still staring at my phone and the happy picture of me and Daniel. After a few moments I threw it down on the bed in disgust. God, why couldn’t I just move on? Just let it go and delete that stupid picture. It was just so hard. I never thought I would go through something so difficult.

  Daniel wasn’t the first serious relationship I’d had, but he was the most intense for sure. From the get-go we had just clicked, and everything snowballed from there. I’d say I knew I was deeply in love with him after about two months. It was almost scary fast, but it was a thrill ride, a true whirlwind romance.

  But it was over. I had to move past it. I knew with time I would be fine, but the time was moving by so slowly that it felt like the pain would last forever.

  My phone began buzzing just then. I sighed and picked it up to see an incoming call from Lara Miller, my best friend since we were twelve. We were more like sisters. She’d been so helpful during this time, but there was only so much a friend could do for me.

  “Hey,” I answered.

  “What’s up!” Lara yelled in an almost cheering sing-song kind of way.

  I chuckled. She was hilarious sometimes.

  “Oh, nothing,” I said.

  “Yeah… you are sitting in your room pouting, aren’t you?” Lara asked.

  “I’m not pouting. I’m ruminating,” I said.

  “That is basically the same thing,” Lara said. “You haven’t forgotten about tonight, have you? I can’t wait to see you in your outfit!”

  “I’m not going,” I replied.

  “No! You have to go! It’s the coolest night of the year, hell, in this town period. And you know our town has like nothing else going for it. If you don’t go tonight, then you can’t justify living here the rest of the year.”

  I smiled.

  “I know, but I’m just not in the mood,” I said. “I just want to be left alone and do nothing.”

  “I know you are depressed, and I don’t blame you one bit, but I know that Daniel is not sitting around being lame. He is probably going out tonight and having fun. You should, too. It’s the only way you will feel better.”

  I sighed. I knew she was right, and she was trying to help, but I was just not feeling it.

  “No, I’m staying home. You go and have fun.”

  “But the whole gang is going,” Lara said. “It won’t be the same without you. We all go every year. It’s tradition. Now, you don’t want to be responsible for breaking up a great tradition, do you?”

  “It won’t be any fun if I go. The way I’m feeling now, I’m just going to bring everyone down.”

  Lara groaned. “Ugh! You are impossible sometimes. Staying home and avoiding everyone is not the answer. It’s going to turn you into an old maid.”

  “I know,” I replied. Lara was making some valid points, but I just didn’t want to be bothered. The thought of going somewhere where everyone else was having a good time filled me with dread. I just didn’t see how anything good could come of it for me.

  “It’s just a waste of a beautiful dress if you don’t come,” Lara said. “Besides, you never know who you might meet there.”

  I groaned. “Meeting someone right now is the last thing I want to do.”

  “But it’s the best way to get over a breakup. It doesn’t feel like it, I know, but trust me. I’m basically a psychologist.”

  I laughed. “Having watched every episode of Dr. Phil ever, does not make you a psychologist.”

  “I disagree,” Lara said with false smugness. “Look, everyone really wants you to stop being Miss Debbie Downer and come with.”

  “Ha ha,” I said at her pun. “Well, I’m going to get off here. You guys have fun.”

  Lara said goodbye and hung up. I hated to hear that sadness in her voice. I knew how badly she wanted me to come, but for the life of me I just didn’t feel like moving from my bed. I wanted to shut myself off from everyone and relax tonight.

  But the dance did sound like fun. I just wished I could let go of everything enough to enjoy it. But the fog my brain was wrapped up in was just not going to let that happen.

  I turned on my Television to prepare for my Netflix binge and then went downstairs to get some ice cream. My mother was sitting at the kitchen table putting together a jigsaw puzzle. Ever since I was a kid my mother had always loved those things. I’d see her sitting at the table by the hour putting them together. I didn’t get it. To me it was as much fun as watching paint dry. But she had her hobby, I guess.

  I was the only one of my friends still living at home, but I did not have any shame about it whatsoever. I loved my parents and I loved the house I’d grown up in. I was a single woman with a good job, no debt, and I had modest expenses. I didn’t see the point of spending a bunch of money every month so I could sit in an apartment by myself. This was a good time for me to work and save, which was exactly what I’d been doing since I graduated college the previous year with my accounting degree.

  “Debbie,” my mother said as I was reaching for the ice cream in the freezer.

  “Yeah?” I replied.

  “Sit down, sweetie.”

  I sat down at the opposite end of the table. I could feel one of my mother’s special talks coming on. They were usually enjoyable, and I always walked away with some wisdom, but today of all days, I just wasn’t in the mood.

  Of course, that was usually when I needed to talk to my mom most.

  “Why aren’t you going to the dance tonight?”

  I sighed. “Why is everyone so concerned with me not going? I just want to stay home. I don’t get the big deal.”

  “Debbie, if you continue to punish yourself over something that isn’t your fault then it is considered being self-destructive.”

 

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