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Trust Walk

Descend into a world of dark and light, a world in which karma is real.

In "Walking After Midnight," a Year's Best Horror Stories selection, a man sinks in self-pity as he drives home in a snowstorm after a long day's work, his wife recently deceased, his son a casualty of war decades before. In the swirling snow, he swerves to avoid a man at the edge of the road. The truck flips and fatally injures the driver, but he won't die alone.

In "Contrition," a car strikes an aged Japanese man, slamming him to the ground, but he shakes off the impact as though nothing's happened. Weary of cheating death, he meets a woman at a war shrine honoring men he knew and fought with. She looks familiar, and she should. She died with countless others, tortured to death under his unit's command. Now she's come for him.

In "Mama's Boy," another Year's Best Horror Stories selection, screams in the night lead a young boy to a house where he discovers a young man crippled by battle injuries and trapped in the tormenting care of his aged, dying mother.

In the title story, "Trust Walk," a college student, depressed over the loss of her lover, participates in a class activity designed to explore faith and security but learns that the only ones completely trustworthy are dead.

The 35 stories collected here explore the motivations of the human spirit, the qualities that lead us into temptation as well as deliverance, that make even the most ordinary among us extraordinary.

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C.S. Fuqua's books include Big Daddy's Gadgets (novel), The Swing: Poems of Fatherhood (2008 EPIC winner Best Poetry Collection), Music Fell on Alabama, Divorced Dads(nonfiction), Notes to My Becca (nonfiction), The Native American Flute: Myth, History, Craft (nonfiction), and the Deadlines audio novel series. His short fiction and poems appear widely in publications as diverse as The Christian Science Monitor and Year's Best Horror Stories. He has worked as a newspaper reporter, magazine editor, English tutor, furniture and flute craftsman, janitor, respiratory therapist, gas station attendant (when such things existed), salesclerk, and many other jobs not worth mentioning. He is now a full-time freelance writer, which is to say he's in constant debt.