Today is the release day for my new book THE DECEPTION OF DEVIN MILLER! I’d love for you to check it out. It’s only 99 cents until Saturday as an early bird special and also as a thank you. On Saturday, it’ll go to its regular price, $2.99. Be sure to tell your friends and neighbors about Devin. Thanks for having me here on release day! Enjoy the excerpt from chapter one.
Who would you trust if you didn’t know anybody, but they all knew you?
Chapter One
I heard the
voices but couldn't place them in the darkness.
Your prom dress is in! You'll look fab
when your bruises disappear.
Cooper feels really bad, you know? Wake
up so he can stop moping.
What were you thinking?
Come on, Sweetie. Open your eyes for
me.
You got what you deserved. You get
that, right?
I hate being here. Seriously? You
couldn't have waited for my side of the story? Of all the people to be stuck
with…
I couldn't
move, couldn't answer any of them. I tried but everything felt so strange like
I was at the bottom of a pool after diving from the board. Voices were muffled
and came in and out. I didn't know how long I'd been in the darkness, but I
knew I wanted out.
One day, the
dark water started swirling around me. Like coming up after a dive, the current
roared in my ears. Rising to the surface, I opened my eyes and gasped for air
that didn't immediately come.
Everything was
blurry. I had no idea where I was. All I knew was there was something shoved
down my throat keeping me from breathing, and I fought to jerk it out. How in
the world could I breathe better beneath the surface than I could with my head
above water?
"Hey,
calm down. Stop pulling it," a distorted male voice echoed in my ears. I
felt pressure on my arms as if something was holding me down. Terrified that
this thing was going to hurt me, I fought harder.
"Stop,"
the voice ordered more firmly. "Quit! Ugh… I'll go get the doctor."
Doctor!
Nothing made
sense after that. People ran in with distorted eyes telling me not to freak
out. They didn't look human with their twisted faces and larger than average foreheads.
I'd been abducted by aliens?
"We're
going to get this out of you, okay?" someone said, a man by the sound of
his deep, raspy voice, while standing over me and holding the tube coming from
my throat. It was uncomfortable to say the least, and I gagged as it slid out
of my mouth. Thankfully once it was gone, I could breathe again. The weight
lifted from my chest and my lungs filled with the air I put into them.
As I calmed
down a bit, the people began taking more of a normal shape. I noticed they didn't
have gigantic heads, and they were, in fact, dressed like medical personnel. I
scanned the room and assumed from the dull walls, pain chart hanging across
from me, and the wide door to my right that I was in the hospital, which made
sense with the all the beeping and tubes.
What I didn't
know at the moment was how I got there.
"And she
just woke up?" A man with a graying beard and blue scrubs asked the young
guy in black standing next to him.
"Yeah,
just like that. Scared me to death — relatively speaking of course."
I remembered
that voice. I'd heard it in the darkness. Not the scary voice that was too
whispered to recognize. The unhappy one.
"Okay,
you stay here and sit with her while I call her parents."
"Sit with
her? Me? Why? I have other patients to see."
"You go
to school with her, right?"
"Well,
yeah, but…"
"Then the
others can wait." The man in blue smacked the other guy on the back. "Don't
look so sad. Maybe you'll even make a friend." I heard laughter in the man's
voice as he left the room, leaving me there with this guy I didn't know at all
though he told the doctor he knew me.
"Do you
need anything? Anything at all," a female nurse, I guess it was a nurse,
asked from my right side. I followed the sound of her voice until I saw her
face then kept going until I saw a tall pole with a line coming out of it.
Presumably my IV.
What in the
world was I doing in the hospital?
I shook my
head as an answer because my throat felt raw from the miserable tube that had
been so rudely shoved down in it. The nurse lady patted me on the shoulder — they
liked to pat here — and told the other guy she'd be back in a few minutes and
to try to get me talking. What if I didn't want to talk? Did I want to talk?
Talking seemed painful, and what in the world would I talk about to a stranger?
She handed me
the nurse call button and left. The chaos had died down, and it was just me and
the strange guy.
He seemed
irritated and a little nervous as he pulled one of the little blue,
uncomfortable-looking hospital chairs closer to my bed, but not close enough to
touch which I appreciated. I clung to the nurse call button as tightly as I
could just in case he started freaking me out.
As he sat
there like a lump, I studied him. He seemed familiar and I felt like I should
know him from somewhere, but I didn't. He had jet, more than likely unnaturally,
black hair, cut short around his ears and longer and floppier on top. It was
fixed with some sort of styling gel or maybe it just laid like that on its own.
How he styled his hair wasn't exactly important in the scheme of things.
He had big
beautiful blue eyes, the kind of blue that were so light you couldn't look away
if you tried. The blue popped thanks to a trace amount of black liner around
his eyes. It wasn't an ungodly amount: no raccoon eyes by any means. But it was
enough make them stand out. I really liked it. It suited him. His nose was on
the bigger side and had a rounder appearance, but he definitely wasn't
unattractive. On the side of his neck, I saw something that looked like a
hickey. Seemed a bit inappropriate to wear a hickey to a hospital.
By the way his plump lips fell in a straight,
stern line I could tell he definitely wasn't happy. I didn't know if it was me
personally he wasn't happy with or the situation in general. It couldn't have
been me. I didn't know him.
"Welcome
back to the land of the living," he said finally with a hint of agitation
in his voice. Was he always so bitter? "We were — they were worried about
you."
What was I
supposed to say to that? Um… "Thanks." My voice came out harsh and
not feminine at all. It made me a bit embarrassed that this not so bad-looking
guy had to hear me sound like a thirty year smoker, but it wasn't like I could
help it. I didn't put the stupid tube down my own throat.
"I guess
I should say that you gave everyone quite a scare." He leaned his elbows
on his knees and stared at me. It wasn't a happy stare.
"Sorry
about that." And I was. I just wished I knew who everyone was or why I scared them.
His eyes squinted,
and I felt my face flush. Why was he looking at me like that? He took a l-o-n-g
deep breath before speaking again. When he did, he didn't sound as angry. "Are
you okay?"
Want to read more? Find it on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Deception-Devin-Miller-ebook/dp/B00E20WOHG/ref=sr_1_3?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1374348562&sr=1-3
Barnes and Noble: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-deception-of-devin-miller-kelly-martin/1116121655?ean=2940148477785
Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/338946
About the Author:
Kelly Martin a southern girl who writes... a lot. She is the
author of SAINT SLOAN and Grace Award winning, CROSSING THE DEEP. By day, she
is a teacher. By night, she has her hair in a bun and her fingers on a
keyboard. She loves God, is addicted to chocolate, and would rather write than
sleep. Kelly loves a good mystery and believes in Sherlock Holmes.
You can find her at http://kellymartinbooks.blogspot.com/
She's also on twitter: https://twitter.com/martieKay
And on facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Kelly-Martin-Author/136506059763138
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