Congratulations to Nicole and Kerrin, the big winners of Kindle Fires on the Sizzling Summer Giveaway!
If you missed the giveaway, more opportunities to win abound.
Bookish Treasures hosts a New Adult giveaway HERE, where you can win Streamline.
Hop over to Martini Times to win:
Streamline HERE
With Good Behavior (The Conduct Series #1) HERE.
I'm thrilled the third and final book of The Conduct Series (On Best Behavior) will launch 9-24-13. We've been editing like madwomen (not much of a stretch for me) and I'm pleased with the result.
One scene that got the axe was this flashback from Grant's sixteen-year-old nephew Ben. If you've read my books, you know I love to write therapy scenes and flashbacks.
In this part of Ben's therapy session with Dr. Hunter Hayes, he remembers when he was five years old and spent the night at his father Logan's apartment:
If you missed the giveaway, more opportunities to win abound.
Bookish Treasures hosts a New Adult giveaway HERE, where you can win Streamline.
Hop over to Martini Times to win:
Streamline HERE
With Good Behavior (The Conduct Series #1) HERE.
I'm thrilled the third and final book of The Conduct Series (On Best Behavior) will launch 9-24-13. We've been editing like madwomen (not much of a stretch for me) and I'm pleased with the result.
One scene that got the axe was this flashback from Grant's sixteen-year-old nephew Ben. If you've read my books, you know I love to write therapy scenes and flashbacks.
In this part of Ben's therapy session with Dr. Hunter Hayes, he remembers when he was five years old and spent the night at his father Logan's apartment:
His tummy hurt. He’d woken up on the
sofa an hour ago, and he’d tried to wait for Dad—he’d watched “Spongebob” on
the small TV—but he still hadn’t come out of his bedroom. His empty tummy growled like a tiger.
Ben padded over to the bedroom door.
“Dad?” Nothing.
“Dad?” he tried again.
Still nothing. The tiger roared in his belly. He sighed. He tiptoed
into the kitchen and tugged open the refrigerator door. Other than an open can
of beer, a bottle of mustard, and a carton of strawberries, the fridge was
empty. As he reached for a strawberry, he looked over his shoulder, but his
dad’s door was still closed. Ben was about to pop the strawberry in his mouth
when he noticed white fuzz growing on it.
“Euhya.” Shuddering, he tossed the
berry back into its carton. After closing the fridge door, he glanced up at the
cabinets. They were really tall. One time Dad had some cereal up there? With a grunt, he heaved himself up, throwing
his leg over the counter’s side to scramble up on his knees. His breaths came
quick and short. When he opened the cabinet, all he found was some black stuff
in a plastic bag that smelled like Mom’s afternoon coffee.
He hopped down from the counter and the
tile stung his bare feet. As he neared the bedroom door, he called
“Dad?” All he heard was a soft voice, like a hum, drawing him closer. Expecting
to find the door locked, he twisted the knob and just like that he was inside the
bedroom. The covers shifted and rolled, then there was that hum again, this
time louder and more urgent—that definitely wasn’t his dad’s voice—was there
someone under the covers with him? He took a step forward. “Dad?”
His father whipped the comforter off
his shoulders and his bare chest shot up from the mattress. “Jesus Christ, Ben!
Don’t you knock?”
“I-I-I…” As he stumbled backward, a
woman with messy black hair and eyes full of rage popped up from beneath the
covers.
She screeched, “Get out of here, kid!”
Ben raced from the bedroom and parked
himself on the sofa, squeezing his hands together in his lap. When he heard the
mattress shift and his dad mutter “Christ”,
his eyes widened. Dad sounded mad.
Ben took off for the front door—he had to jump a few times to undo the chain at
the top of the door—then flew out to the hallway. It was colder out here
than in the apartment, and he covered one icy bare foot with another as he
squeezed his arms around his thin pajama top. As he panted, all he could think
was I want Mom. I want Mom.
When he heard his dad
shout his name inside the apartment, he scrambled toward the stairs. He’d reached the stairwell railing when the
sound of a door flinging open erupted behind him. “Stay
right there, Benjamin!”
His feet betrayed him when they froze
in place. He felt the hulking presence of his father behind him a second
before his dad’s big paws grabbed hold of his arms. “Don’t you ever leave the apartment!”
"I’m sorry,” Ben whispered.
His father spun him around, leaving Ben
to stare at the hem of his plaid boxer shorts. “Look at me!”
Ben forced his eyes to trail up the
big, bare chest to find his father’s scowl, his mouth in a firm line.
“Why’d you come in my bedroom?”
“Because…I'm hungry,” he squeaked.
His father’s eyes fluttered shut as he
blew out a breath. “Crap.” He opened his eyes and gave Ben’s arms a shake.
“I’ll take you out for breakfast, okay? You just need to wait!”
“I did
wait.” Ben felt his lip tremble.
As one big hand unlatched from his arm,
Ben flinched and cowered. His hands flew up to cover his face.
“Christ! I’m not
going to hit you, okay?”
Sissy tears collected in his eyes, and
all the sudden he was in his father’s arms, his cheek pressed against a hard
wall of flesh. He felt his father’s hand
ruffle through his hair. “I’m sorry, son. Sorry I’m such a shitty dad.”
He shivered as he snuggled into his
father’s warmth, and inhaled the familiar scents of aftershave, sweat, and cigarettes.
“C’mon, let’s get you dressed for
breakfast.” His father’s long strides took them back inside. Then he paused. Ben swiveled his head to see
the scary dark-haired lady with her hand on her hip, staring at them from the
bedroom doorway. She wore underwear and a sparkly pink top, and her voice was
husky.
“Did you bust the pervert’s ass for
spying on us?”
His father clutched him tighter. “No. It wasn’t his fault—he’s hungry and there’s no food. I’m taking him for
breakfast.”
“So I guess we’re done then?”
“Yes, you should leave.” His father
collapsed into the scratchy sofa, still holding him, and reached for his
backpack.
She snorted. “You’re so romantic, Logan. Did you leave me
some money on your bedside table?”
His father bristled. “Not around the
kid, okay? Go give someone else a hard time, Tina.”
“Go f--- yourself, Logan.”
She must’ve returned to the bedroom
because she didn’t respond when his father muttered, “No need when you do it for me.” He unzipped the backpack and dug around for clothes. “Here we go,” he said, shifting him on his lap as he held up a
red Chicago Bulls t-shirt. “Let’s get you dressed.”
Comments
Debra, thanks for the love.
Nicki, Logan's story is still sad but he's in the background for most of book #3.