It's a Sunday thing...
Each Sunday, Weekend Writing Warriors hosts a fun new blog hop. If you would like to participate, link to the list at http://www.wewriwa.com/ and post eight sentences from a published or unpublished work to your blog on Sunday. Follow the same link on Sunday to read excerpts from other authors.
SNIPPET SUNDAY
Each Sunday, fellow writers on the Facebook page, Snippet Sunday, share excerpts from their work on their blogs. To read more follow this link, https://www.facebook.com/groups/SnippetSunday/461163367303186.
This week's eight comes from my recently released romantic suspense novel, The End. Here's the set up... Ellie's husband, Tab, a part-time writer, part-time cabbie, has been dead almost a year.
This week's eight comes from my recently released romantic suspense novel, The End. Here's the set up... Ellie's husband, Tab, a part-time writer, part-time cabbie, has been dead almost a year.
I’d put
the idea of reading his final words aside, but then I couldn’t stand it
anymore. I had to read what he left behind.
When I opened the
file, I expected to read something sentimental and just a little cheesy,
something with a made-for-television happy ending. I expected to cry like a
baby when I read his final words. Tab was the most dramatic man I’d ever met.
Instead, I became
engrossed in a thriller that read so real I wondered if he had written a true
story. All the plot needed was a realistic ending.
And the end came to
me in the middle of the night.
Here's the blurb...
Sometimes the end is only the beginning...
Almost a year after her husband dies, Ellie Marston opens
the file for Tab’s last manuscript, a thriller so compelling it reads like a
true story. His manuscript needs an ending, so Ellie writes the obvious
conclusion. The same morning she types The
End, her career as an assistant district attorney falls apart. Accused of
throwing the high profile Patterson case, she resigns in disgrace. The only
friend she has left in the criminal justice system is Det. Paul Santiago, a man
she has worked closely with on numerous cases. While she was married to Tab,
she squashed her growing feelings for Paul, determined to make her
deteriorating marriage work, but circumstances after Tab’s death bring Ellie
and Paul together.
Ellie’s paranoia increases as she becomes convinced
Patterson is harassing her, certain that someone is searching her belongings
for any hidden evidence she might have that would reopen his case. It becomes
clear there was a conspiracy to release Patterson. She seeks help from her former
co-worker, Presley Sinclair, but soon discovers Presley is deeply involved in
the subsequent cover up. Worse yet, Tab’s affair with Presley drew him into the
twisted conspiracy as well.
Together Paul and Ellie attempt to uncover the conspiracy in
the District Attorney’s office, the set up that forced her to resign. The key
to the mystery is hidden in the pages of Tab’s manuscript. Once Paul and Ellie
come to the correct conclusion—Tab’s manuscript is a true story and Ellie’s
added ending is the only logical outcome—Ellie attempts to reveal Patterson’s
hidden partner in the District Attorney’s office, but the co-conspirator she
uncovers is not whom she suspects. Danger swirls around her as she steps
further and further into the conspirator’s trap.
***
I hope you enjoyed the eight and the blurb. The End is only 2.99, that's less than the cost of a gallon of gasoline. Less than a gallon of milk. Click on the book cover above for the purchase link.