A Mid-World Christmas Collection is here!

Get yourself a mug of cheer, settle in by the space heater and enjoy these touching holiday tales. Everything you expect from the indie authors of Mid-World Arts is here – gods, ghosts, aliens, and cannibals. Add a touch of Christmas magic, and you have the best sci-fi & fantasy reading your credit chip can buy.
A Mid-World Christmas Collection contains stories from Stephan Michael Loy, Shade OfRoses, and James L. Wilber. Find other great books by Mid-World Arts at midworldarts.com.
Featuring: 
Walter Cheatham’s Cannibal Christmas by Stephan Michael Loy
Paul Meets the Ghost of Xmas Past by Shade OfRoses
Underground by James L. Wilber
And more!
Get it now on Amazon Kindle! Coming soon to all other ebook publishers and in print.
Who is Mid-World Arts?

Mid-World Arts is not a publishing company. We are an artists’ studio, a co-op, a union, in the broad senses of all those words. At Mid-World, we pool our resources. What you don’t know, maybe I do. What you know, you share with me. We help each other navigate the treacherous waters of publication, help each other get from point A to point B without running aground. We’re a brain trust of experience.

This studio community is designed to aid its members in creating literary art, editing it, polishing it, and preparing it for presentation to the powers that be in publishing.

When you buy a book from Mid-World, you’re guaranteed a quality book that’s been edited and re-written by a team of experienced authors!

Please help! All proceeds from A Mid-World Christmas Collection go to getting a booth at next year’s GenCon for Mid-World Arts.
Spread the love and reblog!

Underground by James L. Wilber

In the underground city of Necropolis, Hades is bound by duty, family, and his own alienation. That all changes when he meets Persephone, a true free spirit. Will their love tear apart the world above and below? From the author of My Babylon comes a modern retelling of the Hades & Persephone myth. Underground is a story about the conflict between family and passion. Along with stories from Stephan Michael Loy and Shade OfRoses, Underground is part of a Mid-World Christmas Collection. Find more great books by indie authors at midworldarts.com.

Get it at Amazon or Smashwords

Excerpt:

At breakfast I stopped playing fair. I told the chef to prepare crepes and mimosas. Over hair-of-the-dog and sticky-sweet I tested the waters, seeing how much deeper into this fantasy she would go.

“What else do you want to see before you leave?”

She twirled her glass and thought about it, looking luscious wearing a white bathrobe. “I don’t have any clothes.” She said with a smile and a dare.

Relishing the pursuit, I wanted her to keep chasing. I knew the further she went the more likely she would become lost in the woods. “We’ll have to remedy that. You should go shopping while you’re here anyway. I’m sure you don’t have stores like we have here back home.”

“Good point,” she agreed.

We spent the day goading each other. I perceived a subtext in every word she said. “What do you think I’ll need?” became, “What do you think I’ll need, if I stayed here?” Stayed another day, another week, another month? “What do people wear to the theater?” became, “When are you taking me to the theater?” “Is it okay if I get some lingerie?” became, “Would you like to see me wearing this in bed?”

With us wrapped up in our game, the day passed in what seemed a few dozen glances, touches, heartbeats.

In the early evening she called her mom again. This time I let her have her privacy. Through the walls, I could hear her crying, shouting, and pleading with her mother. After, she came striding out of her room and slapped the phone into my outstretched palm.

“What else do you do around here for fun?”

No need asking her how it went. “You want to see a play or a musical?”

So it went, a repeat performance almost every day. We would hang out, maybe shop, or see a museum, then nightlife. Afterwards we drove ourselves to distraction. A little further sometimes. She had that modern sensibility about how you can do everything but that one thing and still not call it “fucking.” No need to get into details. Suffice to say it was enough to keep me deliriously distracted. When it came down to it, Necropolis really did run itself. Unfortunately, the people topside aren’t so lucky. Every time she called her mom it made her furious. So she stopped calling altogether.

I’m not sure how long this went on. Time runs differently in Necropolis. Never seeing the sun has a strange effect on the brain. You don’t know if it’s been one day or a hundred. Without reservation I would say it was the best time of my life. I was so involved in her and her in me that it took a visit from family to snap me out of it.

Zeus sent his messenger boy, my nephew Hermes, the kiss-ass. When he arrived I had the servants stash him in the boardroom, and by the time I got there he was tapping his fingers and fiddling with his phone like he had somewhere else to be. He could have just gotten up and went and it wouldn’t have hurt my feelings.

“What’s up?” I asked, settling into my seat.

“We’ve got problems.” Straight and to the point, no-nonsense Hermes.

“Yeah, what?”

“Demeter’s pissed.”

I sincerely wanted him to deliver a message for me–that Auntie Demeter could go suck it– but I played along. “Oh, what about?”

He gave the, really, asshole? look. “About Persephone. About her staying here.”

“That’s between her and her mother. Besides, if she’s so concerned why doesn’t she fucking come get her?”

“She doesn’t know Persephone’s here.”

“What?”

“You know, you can be intimidating.”

Yes, I did know that. “And?”

“Nobody’s willing to rat on you. Guess she hasn’t told any of her friends either, except Hekate. And she’d rather not get involved.”

I scratched my beard. “Why are you here? I thought Zeus didn’t give a shit? This was all his idea, you know?”

“I know.”

So the fucker did plan this all along.

“And he’s happy that you’re happy. But there’s been unintended consequences.”

“Like what?”

Another patented, are you a fucking moron? look. “Don’t you watch the news?”

I scratched my beard again. I did watch the news. Or more specifically, I used to watch the news, every day, during breakfast. My breakfasts were now booked with more pleasant activities.

I scowled. “What?”

“Demeter’s gone off the reservation. Nothing’s growing. She refuses to farm anything. Helios has been in hiding. He knows Persephone’s here but he’s afraid of you and afraid of Demeter. Everything’s frozen. You’ve cocked things up nicely.”

I put a hand to my chest, mea culpa. “This was Zeus’s fucking idea. He can fix it. She’s his daughter too you know.” Did I mention that my family tree is more of a shrub?

“It may be Zeus’s idea but it’s about to become your problem. Can you say starvation? Can you say mass immigration?”

The little shit had a point. If people topside began dying off in droves it meant a whole lot more people in Necropolis. Which meant housing and traffic and all those shitty problems I thought I had delegated but would be overwhelming concerns if Hermes wasn’t exaggerating. I would have to get back to work, which meant less time for Persephone. Either way, I was fucked.

“Okay, I’ll talk to her,” I said. “I’ll try to get her to go home for a visit. Or at least call.”

“If I were you I’d make sure she leaves before Demeter finds out where she’s been.”

“I’m not afraid of Demeter.”

He looked me up and down on his way out the door. “I give it even odds.”

Get it at Amazon or Smashwords