Growl
Author: Ashley Fontainne
Publisher: RMSW Press
Pages: 315
Genre: Gothic Horror/Suspense
Format: Paperback/Kindle
Book Description:
My name is Sheryl Ilene Newcomb. And yes, my
initials are S.I.N. A funny little piece of whimsical humor my parents found
amusing when I arrived.
Then, it turned out to be true. Looking back
with wiser eyes now, my family and I concluded that the events leading up to my
transformation started the summer I turned nine. But the day we realized there
was a problem, and no turning back, was a week before I started my senior year
at Junction City High. The day the fangs and claws appeared and the monster
inside of me emerged.
When mutilated corpses appeared near a pile of
brush down by Caney Creek, everything changed. Because evil woke up and
growled, its ominous rumblings heard by every living thing in Locasia County , Mississippi .
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Excerpt
It
was all over—for now. The ending completed, and the living nightmare of what
happened in our sleepy little town nothing more than a permanent stain embedded
in my mind and body. I stared at the words on the page, the white paper covered
in bright blue ink. The empty pages behind it waited, impatient for me to add
more. They sat in mocking silence on the desk in front of me. A twinge of
apprehension slithered up my back.
What am I doing?
During
the last three months, I thought I’d done a decent job of stopping the
memories. None of what happened was something anyone could be prepared to
endure. No longer did the vile sounds and unbelievable images pop up during the
middle of the day. I felt a sense of pride I stopped them without the use of
medication. With the support of my mom and dad and the Lord above, I worked
daily to bury the horrific events.
I
shivered at the disturbing recollections. When the crystal clear images of the
final battle exploded inside my head, they turned my slender torso into a
shivering pile of goose bumps. I was unable to stop the screams of agony and
anger when my mind replayed the events at night. Physical and mental anguish
would slam into my body and soul as I fought not only the animal inside of me,
but the one that stared at me from inside my mind.
The
eerie visions of the final confrontation were as terrifying in my mind’s eye as
the actual day they occurred. Dark, jade-green eyes lit from within bored
through my own with their anticipatory killing stare. The growl from its furry
throat would seem as loud in my memories as it did when it happened. The flexed
muscles of the creature jerked in its readiness to shred me down to a bloody
pile of mush. The bright moon’s rays shimmered off of its stark white fangs.
One swipe of the enormous paw or bite from the strong jaws would end it all. My
cries of sorrow erupted at night when the images of the dismembered corpses
appeared inside my mind. They were seared into my memory banks. I hadn’t
experienced a moment of heart-stopping, frozen-to-one-spot freakouts in two
months during the daytime. I whittled them down to only haunting my dreams at
night.
Progress,
plain and simple.
A
sound caught my attention, so I lifted my stare from the ruled, white paper on
the desk and looked out my bedroom window. My sharp, one-eyed gaze glanced over
to the pool and settled on the old, rusty swing at the edge of our backyard. I
recalled with a slight smile the day last week when I took my first step out of
the house and sat outside for almost an hour. The warmth of the sun and the
gentle urges of my mother’s voice lured me into the water—at least the shallow
end. I considered it a big leap in my recovery progress since I had developed a
strong distaste for water. I had sat on the bottom step, the cool water barely
up to my shins, and fought the urge to run back inside and lock myself inside
my bedroom. The task of quelling my paralyzing fears had taken every ounce of
mental strength to overcome. It was beyond weird at my age, but I felt safe in
my adolescent bedroom. It was my territory. But I also knew it would become my
prison if I didn’t learn to live outside its four walls again. Like a normal,
sane person lives.
A
quiet snicker from my lips bounced off the walls of my room. Sanity. Normalcy.
Those ships sailed away eons ago,
pulled under the dark waters of the mighty Mississippi
River , never to be seen again.
About the Author
Award-winning and International bestselling author Ashley Fontainne is an avid reader of mostly the classics. Ashley became a fan of the written word in her youth, starting with the Nancy Drew mystery series. Stories that immerse the reader deep into the human psyche and the monsters that lurk within us are her favorite reads.
Her muse for penning the Eviscerating the Snake series was The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas. Ashley's love for this book is what sparked her desire to write her debut novel, Accountable to None, the first book in the trilogy. With a modern setting to the tale, Ashley delves into just what lengths a person is willing to go when they seek personal justice for heinous acts perpetrated upon them. The second novel in the series, Zero Balance focuses on the cost and reciprocal cycle that obtaining revenge has on the seeker. For once the cycle starts, where does it end? How far will the tendrils of revenge expand? Adjusting Journal Entries answered that question: far and wide.
Her short thriller entitled Number Seventy-Five, touches upon the sometimes dangerous world of online dating. Number Seventy-Five took home the BRONZE medal in fiction/suspense at the 2013 Readers' Favorite International Book Awards contest and is currently in production for a feature film.
Her paranormal thriller entitled The Lie, won the GOLD medal in the 2013 Illumination Book Awards for fiction/suspense and is also in production for a feature film.
The suspenseful mystery Empty Shell, released
Ashley also hosts The WriteStuff, a popular BlogTalk Radio show, each Friday night at
For More Information
- Visit Ashley’s website.
- Connect with Ashley on Facebook and Twitter.
- Find out more about Ashley
at Goodreads.
- Visit Ashley’s blog.
- Contact Ashley.
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