Vision
by Lisa Amowitz
Publisher: Spencer Hill Press
Release Date: 09/09/14
Synopsis:
The light is darker than you think…
High school student Bobby Pendell already has his hands full-he works almost every night to support his disabled-vet father and gifted little brother. Then he meets the beautiful new girl in town, who just happens to be his boss's daughter. Bobby has rules about that kind of thing. Nothing matters more than keeping his job.
When Bobby starts to get blinding migraines that come with scary, violent hallucinations, his livelihood is on the line. Soon, he must face the stunning possibility that the visions of murder are actually real. With his world going dark, Bobby is set on the trail of the serial killer terrorizing his small town. With everyone else convinced he's the prime suspect, Bobby realizes that he, or the girl he loves, might be killer's next victim.
VISION
by Lisa Amowitz
Bobby stared
at the evergreens reflected in the silvery water. He’d offered to bring Dad
down here and carry him into the boat. He was certainly big enough to carry him
now.
“Nope,” Dad
had said flatly. “My fishing days are over. My ass is never getting in a boat
again.”
With his work
schedule, Bobby had never found time to teach his eleven-year old brother Aaron
to swim, so that left him out.
Whatever. Dad drowned
his troubles in beer and guitars. Bobby could never tell if people came to the
Woods Café to see the wheelchair-bound vet strum his heart out because they
enjoyed the music or to honor his sacrifice. Didn’t matter. At least it got Dad
out of the house, and drummed up some business for Dad’s best friend, Jerry
Woods.
Dealing with
Dad wasn’t easy, but self-pity was a luxury Bobby couldn’t afford. Someone had
to work, and bussing tables at the newly reopened Graxton Grill six nights a
week left Bobby little time for anything else.
A loud splash
from beside the boat jarred him from his drifting thoughts. He peered into the
green depths, hoping to spot Mongo, Dad’s name for the legendary bass he had
been trying to catch ever since he could hook a worm.
The dark
waters stirred, pulling the boat slightly backward. Bobby dipped the oars into
the water to paddle away from the disturbance, but the gently insistent pull
kept him from making progress. The boat was being slowly dragged into some kind
of current and had begun to pick up speed.
In his whole
life, Bobby had never seen more than windblown ripples on Scratch Lake. Mongo
was rumored to be huge, but he doubted striped bass grew large enough to churn
up the waters like that.
Bobby thrust
the oars into the water, paddling harder. The back of his head hurt. And the
harder he rowed, the more his head throbbed like a dull drumbeat. A whirlpool
was forming. No fish could ever disturb Scratch Lake like that.
Unnerved,
Bobby yanked at the engine cord, but the motor only coughed, sputtered, and
went quiet. The boat was captive to the steadily spinning water and Bobby could
only squint helplessly into the depths as the headache hammered behind his
eyes.
The lake’s
center was rumored to be fifty feet deep. No one really knew, but as the boat
sped in dizzying circles, Bobby could see clear down to the lake bottom inside
the whirlpool’s tapered funnel. He gasped. Spread-eagled on the slimy rocks, on
a bed of pond weeds, lay a pile of bones, a split, unmistakably human skull resting
on the top.
Bobby
swallowed hard, breathing fast and shallow.
It can’t be
real. I’m not seeing this.
He’d been so
eager to get on the lake that morning he’d forgotten to eat. And he should
have. The headache was creeping to his eyes, and now he was seeing things.
Feeling and experiencing things that couldn’t be happening.
The pile of
bones at the bottom of the lake was as sharp and clear as a photo.
Nausea
clutched his insides. His head felt like it was about to split open. Bobby
clamped his eyes shut. Sucking in deep breaths, he tried to slow the rising
panic and listened to his heart slam against his chest wall. He had to get a
grip and get away before the water dragged him and his boat to the bottom of
the lake.
This can’t be
happening.
Was it a
migraine? His mother had suffered from those.
But did
migraines make people hallucinate?
In the
distance, Pete’s barking bounced off the opposite shore. The ache at the back
of his head now a white-hot knifepoint, Bobby paddled wildly to break free from
the water’s pull, but he made no headway.
The boat
continued to spin slowly at the edge of the vortex. Bobby tried to peer down
into the whirlpool to make sure the horrible thing was gone, but his sight was
filmed with a deep red overlay, a black smudge at its center, obliterating
details and reducing the world to a featureless bloodstain.
No matter how
many times he blinked, he couldn’t see the water that smacked against the metal
flank of the boat. He could barely make out the dim outline of the hand he held
up in front of his face.
What the—?
Shit.
The pain was
too much. Again, he groped for the throttle and tugged at it three times, but
still the damned engine wouldn’t catch.
The pain bore
down on him, the red film thickening to a dark mass.
He couldn’t
see at all. He could only feel the boat slowly spinning, stuck in the water’s
strange rotation.
“Pete!” Bobby
called out at the top of his lungs, “Pete!”
And then, as
abruptly as it had started churning, he felt the water go still.
Pete’s
nervous bark reverberated across the lake. Unable to see, Bobby dipped the oars
into the water and began to paddle slowly toward the distant sound, praying he
was headed in the right direction.
There’d be no
fish for dinner this week.
Lisa has been a professor of Graphic Design at her beloved Bronx Community College where she has been tormenting and cajoling students for nearly seventeen years. She started writing eight years ago because she wanted something to illustrate, but somehow, instead ended up writing YA. Probably because her mind is too dark and twisted for small children.
BREAKING GLASS which will be released in July, 2013 from Spencer Hill Press, is her first published work. VISION, the first of the Finder series will be released in 2014, along with an unnamed sequel in the following year. LIFE AND BETH will also be released in the near future, along with graphic novel style art.
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I am so excited for this book. Thank you for the chance to win and I appreciate the excerpt!
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