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by Eric Beetner

By Michael Pool

  Texas Two-Step

  By Robert J. Randisi

  Upon My Soul

  Souls of the Dead

  Envy the Dead

  By Rob Riley

  Thin Blue Line

  By Sandra Ruttan

  The Spying Moon (*)

  By Charles Salzberg

  Devil in the Hole

  Swann’s Last Song

  Swann Dives In

  Swann’s Lake of Despair

  Swann’s Way Out

  Second Story Man

  By Scott Loring Sanders

  Shooting Creek and Other Stories

  By Linda Sands

  3 Women Walk Into a Bar (TP only)

  Grand Theft Cargo

  Precious Cargo

  By Ryan Sayles

  The Subtle Art of Brutality

  Warpath

  Let Me Put My Stories In You

  Albatross

  By John Shepphird

  The Shill

  Kill the Shill

  Beware the Shill

  By Nathan Singer

  Blackchurch Furnace

  By Anthony Neil Smith

  Yellow Medicine

  Hogdoggin’

  The Baddest Ass

  Holy Death

  All the Young Warriors

  Once a Warrior

  Worm

  Psychosomatic

  The Drummer

  Choke on Your Lies

  XXX Shamus

  By Liam Sweeny

  Welcome Back, Jack

  Presiding Over the Damned (*)

  By Art Taylor, editor

  Murder Under the Oaks: Bouchercon Anthology 2015

  By Ian Truman

  Grand Trunk and Shearer

  Down with the Underdogs (*)

  By James Ray Tuck, editor

  Mama Tried 1

  Mama Tried 2 (*)

  By Nathan Walpow

  The Logan Triad

  One Last Hit

  The Manipulated

  By Lono Waiwaiole

  Wiley’s Lament

  Wiley’s Shuffle

  Wiley’s Refrain

  Dark Paradise

  Leon’s Legacy

  By George Williams

  Inferno and Other Stories

  Zoë

  The Selected Letters of the Late Biagio Serafim Sciarra

  By Eric Miles Williamson

  East Bay Grease

  By Jim Wilsky

  Sort ’Em Out Later (*)

  By TG Wolff

  Exacting Justice

  By Frank Zafiro and Eric Beetner

  The Backlist

  The Short List

  The Getaway List (*)

  By Frank Zafiro and Jim Wilsky

  Blood on Blood

  Queen of Diamonds

  Closing the Circle (*)

  Down & Out: The Magazine

  Volume 1 Issue 1: Reed Farrel Coleman (featured author)

  Volume 1 Issue 2: Bill Crider (featured author)

  Volume 1 Issue 3: Barry Lancet (featured author)

  Published by ABC Group Documentation, an imprint of Down & Out Books

  By Alec Cizak

  Down on the Street

  Breaking Glass

  By Brandon Daily

  A Murder Country (*)

  By Grant Jerkins

  Abnormal Man

  A Scholar of Pain

  By Robert Leland Taylor

  Through the Ant Farm

  Published by All Due Respect, an imprint of Down & Out Books

  By Greg Barth

  Selena: Book One

  Diesel Therapy: Selena Book Two

  Suicide Lounge: Selena Book Three

  Road Carnage: Selena Book Four

  Everglade: Selena Book Five

  By Eric Beetner

  Nine Toes in the Grave

  By Phil Beloin Jr.

  Revenge is a Redhead

  By Math Bird

  Histories of the Dead and Other Stories

  In Loco Parentis (*)

  By Paul D Brazill

  The Last Laugh: Crime Stories

  Last Year’s Man

  By Sarah M. Chen

  Cleaning Up Finn

  By Alec Cizak

  Crooked Roads: Crime Stories

  Manifesto Destination

  By Pablo D’Stair and Chris Rhatigan

  You Don’t Exist

  By C.S. DeWildt

  Kill ’Em with Kindness

  Love You to a Pulp

  By Paul Greenberg

  Dead Guy in the Bathtub: Stories

  By Paul Heatley

  FatBoy

  By Jake Hinkson

  The Deepening Shade

  By Preston Lang

  The Sin Tax

  Sunk Costs

  By Tom Leins

  Repetition Kills You (*)

  By Marietta Miles

  Route 12

  By Mike Miner

  Prodigal Sons

  By Mike Monson

  A Killer’s Love

  Criminal Love and Other Stories

  Tussinland

  What Happens in Reno

  By Chris Orlet

  A Taste of Shotgun

  By Matt Phillips

  Three Kinds of Fool

  Accidental Outlaws

  By Rob Pierce

  The Things I Love Will Kill Me Yet: Stories

  Uncle Dust

  Vern in the Heat

  With the Right Enemies

  By Michael Pool

  Debt Crusher

  By Chris Rhatigan

  Race to the Bottom

  Squeeze

  The Kind of Friends Who Murder Each Other

  By Ryan Sayles

  I’m Not Happy ’til You’re Not Happy: Crime Stories

  By Ryan Sayles and Chris Rhatigan

  Two Bullets Solve Everything

  By Daniel Vlasaty

  A New and Different Kind of Pain

  Only Bones

  By William E. Wallace

  Dead Heat with the Reaper

  Hangman’s Dozen

  Published by Shotgun Honey, an imprint of Down & Out Books

  By Hector Acosta

  Hardway

  By Rusty Barnes

  Knuckledragger

  Ridgerunner

  By Aaron Philip Clark

  The Science of Paul

  A Healthy Fear of Man

  By Angel Luis Colón

  The Fury of Blacky Jaguar

  Blacky Jaguar Against the Cool Clux Cult

  By Marie S. Crosswell

  Texas, Hold Your Queens

  By DeLeon DeMicoli

  Les Cannibales

  By Chris DeWildt

  Suburban Dick

  By Christopher Irvin

  Federales

  By Nick Kolakowski

  A Brutal Bunch of Heartbroken Saps

  Slaughterhouse Blues

  By Preston Lang

  The Carrier

  By R. Daniel Lester

  Dead Clown Blues

  By Lawrence Maddos

  Fast Bang Booze

  By Mike Miner

  Hurt Hawks

  By Tom Pitts

  Knuckleball

  By Ryan Sayles

  Goldfinches

  By Max Sheridan

  Dillo

  By Albert Tucher

  The Place of Refuge

  The Hollow Vessel (*)

  (*) Coming soon

  Back to TOC

  Here’s a sample from Terrence McCauley’s The Devil Dogs of Belleau Wood. Net proceeds benefit the Semper Fi Fund.

  Chapter 1

  Belleau Wood near Paris, France

  June, 1918

  As the Kaiser’s shells exploded around me, I lay as flat and still
as I could behind the fallen tree trunk.

  I didn’t move and was too scared to try. Chunks of earth and rock and wood rained down on my back. The shock from every shell rattled my soul. I tried to scratch and claw and burrow my way as deep as I could beneath the tree trunk. I would’ve dug to China to escape all that hell and noise, but I’d lost my entrenching tool further back down the hill; back when the shelling started.

  All I could do was pray to God the trunk would be enough to save me. And if it wasn’t, I prayed my death would be quick. I knew plenty of other guys who hadn’t been so lucky that day. Between the sounds of incoming shells and explosions, I could hear the screams and moans of my fellow Marines around me on the hillside.

  If I hadn’t already screamed myself hoarse by then, I would’ve been screaming, too. There wasn’t any shame in it since no one could hear me anyway; not over the sound of the Kaiser’s artillery. Screaming was the only thing that relieved the pressure from the explosions.

  I kept expecting my sergeant to call me a coward and drag me by the neck from behind that tree. The bastard had been yelling at me from the second I’d been assigned to his squad a week before. He’d been riding me all that morning, too, especially after the German snipers opened up on us. He even yelled at me after I shot three of them; demanding to know why I’d missed two. He yelled at me for not lobbing my grenade long enough and killing ten instead of just the five I took down.

  He was still yelling at me when shrapnel from a German shell ripped him in half. I knew I should’ve felt something for the poor bastard. Relief that he was dead. Remorse that he’d died while yelling at me. But I didn’t feel a damned thing. I didn’t have time. I just stayed as low and as flat as I could against that tree and waited for the world to stop exploding.

  Despite everything I’d seen, heard and smelled that morning, I never let go of my rifle. That much of my training had stuck. “Lose your rifle, lose your life,” they’d drilled into us before they shipped us over here.

  But I’d already learned that much from walking a beat back in New York, so I didn’t need much convincing. I’d also been shot at plenty of times while on the job, so people trying to kill me didn’t bother me. I’d been kicked, punched, thrown around, had knives pulled on me, chairs, bats. Hell, I even had a guy threaten to blow us up with a stick of dynamite on a construction site once. I figured France would be like everything I’d faced back home, except with prettier girls and more trees.

  I was wrong.

  Nothing prepared me for the screaming or the blood or the artillery or the stench and misery of combat. Every exploding shell rattled my bones and my insides; making me feel parts of myself no man should feel. Every impact drove me one step closer to losing my mind. The only thing that kept me grounded was the feel of that Springfield rifle in my hand because I knew that rifle was my chance at living. It reminded me of who I was and what I was doing there. It was something real I could cling to while the world crumbled and burned.

  It was also empty. I thought I had an extra clip in my pack or maybe I’d gone through that, too. Things had gotten real hazy real fast after I’d killed those Germans and the first shell went off. I couldn’t remember if I’d gone through my ammo or if I had any left. Hell, I’d even lost track of how long I’d been hiding there. It could’ve been five minutes. It could’ve been three hours. I didn’t know because it really didn’t matter. Nothing else mattered except that damned shelling.

  I don’t know how long I’d been laying there before I realized the shelling had stopped. My ears were still ringing and I hadn’t been able to hear the blasts for some time, but I’d been able to feel the impact of the damned things well enough. I didn’t feel them anymore.

  I shook my head; trying to clear it and realized my ears were clogged with dirt I was about to raise my head above the log and get my bearings when a hand pushed me flat as he dove behind the log as well. I felt chips of wood hit my helmet and I realized the shelling might’ve stopped, but we were still under fire. Fucking snipers.

  I could tell from the man’s uniform he wasn’t just a fellow Marine, but an officer. A captain, but he wasn’t my captain. In fact, I’d never seen him before. I would’ve remembered him if I had. As a cop, I had a thing for remembering faces.

  I could see he was yelling at me, but I still couldn’t hear what he was saying. I dug some of the dirt out of my ears and shook my head clear. My ears were still ringing, but I could hear more of what was going on around me.

  “Keep your fucking head down, Corporal,” I heard the captain yell. “Now that the artillery’s let up, the bastards will be raking the forest with machine gun fire. Might even use mustard gas before they send in more infantry, so keep your mask handy.”

  “Yes, sir,” I said, even though none of it made sense to me. I understood what he was saying, but it was a lot to take in all at once after cowering for my life.

  Even through the dirt and grime on the captain’s face, I could tell he was around my age, maybe a bit older, but still in his mid-twenties. Somehow, he’d managed to make captain pretty quick, which meant he must’ve come from money.

  I hated him already.

  “What’s your name, Corporal?” the captain whispered.

  That one was an easy question. “Corporal Charles Doherty of the Two-Nine, sir.”

  “Good man. I’m Captain Devlin, special liaison between us and the French Army.” He threw a thumb over his left shoulder at a burly man with a Thompson kneeling behind a thick tree. “That dashing fellow over there is Lieutenant Mike Barrows. He’s not a very good shot, though, which is why we gave him the Tommy gun.”

  “Fuck you, sir,” Barrows whispered back. “Nice to meet you, Doherty.”

  I hadn’t heard of either Barrows or Devlin since I’d come to France, but that didn’t matter. They were two more marines than I’d seen in a long time and I didn’t mind the company. “Where’s the rest of your brigade, sir?”

  “Dead,” he said. “Got shredded in the shelling as we came up the hill. Yours?”

  I looked behind me, hoping to see some familiar faces. Stepnowski or Hyland or Biggs or DiNapoli. The only thing I saw were shattered trees and pieces of bodies sticking up out of the broken ground. I didn’t look long. “Same as yours, looks like. I hit a riverbed as a shell landed just behind me. I got thrown forward, then crawled out up here while everything went to shit. You two are the first people I’ve seen in hours.”

  “It’s been less than an hour since they opened up on us,” Devlin told me. “It only feels longer. Still, you got a hell of a lot further than the rest of the outfit.” He nodded at my Springfield. “How are you on ammo?”

  I ejected the magazine and looked at it. “Empty,” I admitted, “but I made every shot count. Grenades, too. There are about ten dead Germans over there that’ll bear that out.”

  Devlin looked over at Barrows. “You see ten dead Germans, Lieutenant?”

  Barrows snuck a look around the tree before quickly ducking back. “Who gives a shit? It’s the live ones I’m worried about.”

  “I’m impressed, Corporal. Killing men’s tough when you’re trying to keep your head down.”

  “I would’ve gotten more if that Kraut machine gun hadn’t opened up on me. And if the shelling hadn’t picked up again.”

  “The bastards seem to have stopped for now,” Devlin said, “but we can’t count on that. I know how they think and they’ll be down here in a minute to make sure we’re dead. We need to move out by then.”

  “I don’t think we’re going anywhere, sir.” I knew arguing with a captain was a dumb thing for a corporal to do, but this was my life we were talking about. “Not with that gunner out there.”

  Devlin dug into his pocket and slapped a five-round clip into my hand. “Make those five count as much as you did the last ten, Charlie. That’s all I’ve got left for the moment.”

  I started to hand the clip back to him, but he pushed it back at me. �
��Keep it. You’re probably better with that damned thing than I am. Always been better with pistols and knives.”

  I tossed the dead cartridge, then slapped in the fresh one and levered a round into the chamber. “What are your orders, sir?”

  “That depends.” Devlin whispered over to Barrows. “Any sign of Cain?”

  Barrows nodded up the hill. “Looks like he’s made it about fifty yards straight ahead. I’m beginning to think that kid is part snake.”

  I’d heard of a guy named Jimmy Cain in my outfit, but I’d never had much to do with him. Cain was also from New York. A distant sort of guy, but good with a rifle. Almost as good as me. “Cain’s from my outfit. Where’d you find him?”

  “Came across him as we were making our way up here. He kept dodging tree to tree ahead of us, even while the shells kept turning everything to dust. Managed to get fifty yards ahead of us when we found you here. He’s in a shell crater right now, trying to get a fix on that machine gun nest up ahead.”

  “Judging by how they’re shooting,” I said, “I wouldn’t put much on his chances.”

  I heard a single shot ring out; clean and crisp like a snapping twig.

  “Cain got the gunner,” Barrows reported. “Right between the fucking eyes.”

  Another crack.

  “Got the feeder, too.” Then, “Uh oh. Didn’t get him clean, though.”

  That’s when I heard screams drift down the hill toward our position. “That bastard will bring every Heine in earshot down on us.”

 

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