Today we have an excerpt from Darlene Jones' Embraced.
Excerpt
“More drawings?” Curtis gestured at the papers she held.
Abby looked down at the pages and willed her hand to stop
trembling. The three pages of code drawings seemed to shimmer and shiver with a
life of their own. “Yes. Three pages.From Friday, Saturday, and last night.
They’re pretty … they’re … pretty well done, I’d say.”
But Curtis was no longer listening. He waved the papers she’d just handed him and
almost shouted with excitement. “These are amazing. Way better than the first
drawing you brought us.”
Abby stifled a small grin, but she had to agree. The drawings
outclassed her scratches a million times over. “My friend developed instant
artistic talent.”
“I’ll say.” Curtis shuffled the pages back and forth. He
shook his head slowly and muttered “wow” over and over. Finally he looked up at
her. “Miss D, thanks for getting so many. Now we have four to compare. We’ll
see if there are any repeated patterns or sequences of symbols. Your friend is
great to share these with us.”
“No problem.” Oh God, I’m such a liar.Of course there was a
problem, and not just because she was lying to Curtis. My friend.How lame was that? The mere existence of the pages was
the real problem. Some nights the clickings chattered incessantly in her
fillings, almost driving her crazy. Those were the nights of very little sleep.
The weekend had been eerily silent. That was a new phenomenon since Friday, no
clickings, instead Coder Guy had begun leaving the pages filled with drawings.
Either way—no escaping the code.
A while back, she’d grown tired of sharpening the pencil she
used each night and replaced it with a pen, which was now almost out of ink.
She’d have to remember to get out a new one tonight. Or maybe not? What would
happen if there was no writing utensil?
“What’s so funny?” Curtis asked. Abby hadn’t realized she’d
laughed out loud. The lack of pen wouldn’t stop her night visitor. She stifled
another burst of laughter she knew bordered on hysteria. Truth was, much as the
pages of code scared her, she’d be devastated if no more came. The
person—being, alien, Coder Guy—was an integral part of her life now; his
existence had established a rhythm that kept her balanced. Or so she thought.
Maybe she was completely off her rocker.
Whatever the case, she didn’t want to lose that contact.
Coder Guy’s presence warmed her, kept her from feeling alone and lonely. Oh,
man, I am losing it here. Really
losing it.
When Principal, Abby
Davies, shows Curtis a page of scribbles and asks him to try to figure it out,
Curtis isn’t sure what to think. He likes Miss D and all. She isn’t too bad for
a school teacher. You can talk to her and she doesn’t make fun. But, sheesh, a
secret code from aliens? That’s just too scifi for him. To keep her happy, he
says he’ll help. Thing is, once he starts studying the scribbles, he can
see messages.
Coder Guy, as Abby calls whoever is sending
the messages, wants her to fix things. What things? Abby and Curtis find the
answer when letters with Abby’s signature appear in newspaper offices. The
things asked for come true. But, who’s writing the letters? Coder Guy?Or Abby?
Then the reporter shows up. What is a war
correspondent doing in their little town? He says he loves Abby, but he sells
her story to the world; her face splashed over every television and computer
screen. The next day Miss D and Curtis are the only ones who remember the
reports.
That’s when real fear sets in.
Meanwhile, Yves, who fell in love with Em, has
loved her through her life as Jasmine, still loves her in this life as Abby. He
fumes as one of the rookie gods fumbles communication with her. Once again,
Yves breaks the rules to help Abby, but with deadly results.
Website: www.emandyves.com
Amazon: http://ow.ly/e6vNU
Smashwords: http://ow.ly/e6vPZ
A long time ago, I lived in Mali. Every single day, I wished
I could wave a magic wand to relieve the heart-wrenching poverty. The story
line of my books reflects my desire to wave that wand and make the world a
better place. If only wishes could come true. And of course, every novel needs
its love story, so along with the sci-fi magic, I’ve added the requisite
romance.
Initially, I intended to write “a” novel. The story and
characters took over and the ending of the first demanded another. Two books
became three and three became four.
I've always believed we can't be the only beings existing in
the vastness of the universe. There must be others “out there somewhere” and I
brought some of them along for the ride. The setting stays, for the most part,
within the realities of our world, but I've found that I love the magic the
sci-fi element of other beings can bring to the story.
4 comments:
Great excerpt- thank you for sharing.
An sci-fi alien love story -- sounds great! Best of luck to you!
ooh interesting story! THanks for sharing the excerpt. It'll be too vain for us not to believe that there are other beings living in the vastness of the universe.
Nutschell
www.thewritingnut.com
This is such a cool concept. Great excerpt!!
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