Here are the rules of the game. Below, you'll find an excerpt from Isolation's first chapter. Pick your favorite sentence from the excerpt, copy and paste it on social media along with the Amazon buy link, and tag me @katietateauthor. So, for example, your social media post will look like this:
"Wordsworth parked his butt against the door like a giant hairy roadblock." https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0948NQGTS @katietateauthor
(You can even copy this one, if you like, but I think it'll be more fun to see different lines.) I'll choose and notify a winner on Monday. Good luck and thanks for playing! Here's the excerpt
ISOLATION
CHAPTER ONE
The
birds heralded the storm, as they always did. They liked to be the bearers of
scuttlebutt. Although, as Lizbet had learned long ago, not all birds were
created equal, and some species were much more reliable than others. Not that
they lied, very few creatures had the ability or cunning, but rather in their
haste to be the first in the know, some blurted out misconceptions and
half-truths.
Not
that Lizbet had much familiarity with liars—or people, in general—but she’d
read of several, as Rose, her mother, had accumulated an impressive library
over the years. Not that Lizbet was in any position to know what was and was
not impressive library-wise, or any otherwise, since Lizbet herself had never
been off the island she and Rose called home.
The
howling wind drowned out the calls of birds, and the chatter of squirrels and
chipmunks. Opossum, skunks, and fox sought shelter in the forest’s thickets.
Rats and mice scurried to find hidey-holes. Lizbet fetched an armful of wood
from the shed to stoke the fire while her mother gathered candles.
Wind
rustled the tarp protecting the woodpile. The pine trees, used to standing
straight and tall, moaned as the wind whipped through their canopy, and bent
them in directions they didn’t wish to go.
“A
man approaches,” Wordsworth whined, terror tainting his words.
Lizbet
looked over the German Shepherd’s furry head to the storm-tossed sea. The
Sound, normally a tranquil gray-blue slate, roiled as if shaken by an invisible
hand. Lizbet couldn’t see anyone, but her heart quickened. “Are you sure?” She
saw nothing but a curtain of rain, an angry sky, and churning tide. The gulls,
who generally swooped above the bay, had wisely found shelter. The otters, too,
had disappeared, and for once the noisy, boisterous sea lions, were silent.
The dog
nodded. “He’s lost, but hopeful.”
“Hopeful?
Of what?”
Wordsworth
shook his head. When another flash of lightening lit the sky, his ears flattened
and his tail drooped and he cowered as the thunder boomed.
“Come,”
Lizbet said, “let’s go inside. Only an idiot would be out on the water today.”
“He’s
no longer on the water,” Wordsworth whined. “His
boat has landed.”
Lizbet
peered into the storm, saw nothing more than before, and added another log to
her collection. Their cottage was made of stone, but the adjacent shed which
housed the woodpile, gardening tools, and bird seed, was constructed of
recycled wood. Wind blew through the slats and rattled the shake roof. The
cottage would be warm and dry in a way the shed never could.
Wordsworth
whimpered again. Lizbet knew he longed for the comforts of the house as much as
she did, but she also understood he had an important job to do, and he would never
back away from protecting her and her mother from strangers.
“There’s
no one there,” Lizbet said, stomping toward the cottage. She climbed the steps
and pulled open the Dutch door. The warm comforting scent of the crackling fire
mingled with the aroma of ginger cookies welcomed her in.
Rose
stood at a large pine table, stacking the cookies onto a plate. Lizbet stared
at the number of cookies, knowing that she and her mother would never be able
to eat so many. Her mother was waif-thin with flyaway blond hair as
insubstantial as her slender frame.
“There’s
a man in the cove,” Lizbet said, wondering if her mother already knew, and if
so, why she hadn’t warned her.
Rose
kept her gaze focused on the cookies and blushed the color of her namesake. She
was as fair as Lizbet was dark. We are as night and day, her mother
would say, Together, we are all we need.
“Are
you expecting someone?” Lizbet demanded.
“No,
not really, but I…” Rose’s voice trailed away.
Lizbet
clomped through the kitchen to the living room, weaving through the stacks of
books to the fireplace. She dropped her logs onto the hearth, placed her hands
on her hips, and marched back into the kitchen. She hated surprises, but she
was also curious.
“Who is
this man?” Not Leonard, the postman—her mother would never blush for the
potato-shaped letter carrier. Besides, Leonard would never venture to the
island in a storm. He only came every other Tuesday. Today was Saturday.
“You
don’t need to worry about him,” Rose said without meeting Lizbet’s eye.
“Why is
he coming? Will he bring books?”
Rose
laughed, but it sounded strange—strained and nervous. Lizbet decided that she
already disliked this man. She plucked a cookie off the plate.
Rose
looked up sharply, an expectant look on her face.
Lizbet
contemplated her cookie, suddenly suspicious. Her mother studied and
experimented with herbs and she’d taught Lizbet a variety of recipes.
Dandelions to lighten the mood, lavender to soothe worries, chamomile to bring
sleep, basil to stimulate energy, and gingerroot to make one forget. Lizbet
sniffed the cookie and touched it with her tongue.
Her
mother watched.
Lizbet
smiled, took a big bite and left the kitchen. In the privacy of her own room,
she went to the window and pulled it open. A cold breeze flew in, ruffling the
drapes, and blowing about the papers on her desk. Ignoring the wind, Lizbet
stuck her head outside and spat the cookie out into the storm. She slammed the
window closed.
“What
are you doing?” Rose asked.
Lizbet
started. She hadn’t heard her mother come in. Wrapping her arms around herself,
Lizbet said, “I was looking for the man.”
Rose’s
lips lifted into a smile. “Please don’t worry about him. Here, I’ve brought you
some tea.” She set down a steaming mug on Lizbet’s bedside table. “Gingerroot,
your favorite.”
“Thanks.”
“Want
to come and read by the fire?” Rose asked.
Lizbet
glanced back at the storm on the other side of the window. An idea tickled in
the back of her mind. “In a second,” she said. After plopping down on her bed,
Lizbet sipped from the mug, but she didn’t swallow. Instead, she let the tea
warm her tongue.
Rose
lifted her own mug to her lips and watched Lizbet.
Lizbet
set the mug back down and met her mother’s gaze. After an awkward moment, Rose
lifted her shoulder in a halfhearted shrug and headed down the hall.
Lizbet
bounced from the bed, closed the door, and spat the tea back into the mug. She
poured the entire cup out the window and climbed back onto her bed. She lay
perfectly still, waiting for her mom to re-enter the room. She didn’t have to
wait long.
A few
moments later, her bedroom door creaked open. With her eyes firmly closed,
Lizbet practiced her corpse pose and didn’t even flinch as she heard her mother
steal into the room. Rose tucked a quilt around Lizbet’s shoulders before
creeping back out and closing the door with a whisper click.
Lizbet
peeked open an eye and met Wordsworth’s steady, brown-eyed gaze. “Who is he?”
“I
don’t know,” the dog whimpered, “but
he isn’t scared.”
“How
can you tell?” Lizbet asked.
“The
smell. All emotions have a smell.”
“My
mom—what’s her smell?”
Wordsworth
jumped up on the bed beside Lizbet and nestled against her. “She loves
you.”
“I
know. But I don’t know what that has to do with anything.”
Wordsworth
whimpered again and snuggled closer. “You have to let me out so I can
meet this man.”
“I
can’t. If I do, she’ll know I’m awake. You’re on your own.”
Wordsworth
blew out a breath, stood, shook himself, and jumped down. He went to the door
to bark and whine. It didn’t do any good. Her mother ignored him, which told
Lizbet two things. One: the potion Rose had given Lizbet must have been so
strong that Rose didn’t worry about Wordsworth waking her. Two: Rose didn’t
want to be interrupted.
Lizbet
sat up as a thought assaulted her.
Wordsworth,
as if reading her mind, jumped back up beside her and gazed into her eyes.
“This
man is my father!” Lizbet blurted out.
“You
cannot know this,” Wordsworth whimpered.
“She
loves him enough to drug me just to spend time with him! Of course he’s my
father!”
Wordsworth
moaned a disagreement.
Lizbet
had a lot of questions—mostly because she lived a solitary life with her mother
on an uninhabited island in the Puget Sound. She had faith that all of her
questions would eventually be answered, but the biggest questions in her heart
and mind all centered around her father.
Lizbet
kicked off the quilt and crawled off the bed.
Wordsworth
placed his nose against her thigh, stopping her. “There must be a good
reason your mother doesn’t want you to meet this man.”
“She
never said she didn’t want me to meet him.”
Wordsworth
snorted. “If she had wanted you to meet him, she wouldn’t have given
you the ginger root tea.”
Suddenly
Lizbet hated her mother. “She can’t keep me from my own father.”
Wordsworth
parked his butt against the door like a giant hairy roadblock. “You do not
know he is your father.”
“Of
course he is. Who else could he be? Now move.” She grabbed Wordsworth’s collar
to pull him away. His fur bunched up around his collar, but he wouldn’t budge.
Lizbet
tried the doorknob, but since Wordsworth outweighed her by nearly fifty pounds
the door wouldn’t open. Lizbet flounced to the window.
“Where
are you going?” Wordsworth asked, his ears poking
toward the ceiling.
“To
meet my dad.” Lizbet threw open the window. The wind spat rain in her face and
carried a breath of bone-chilling cold into the room.
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