Release date: July 21, 2015
Subgenre: Young adult paranormal
About An Aching in the Bone:
Carolina Brown finally has the life she’s always dreamed of. She lives
in a fantastic house with a family who loves her. She is following her
dream of being a chef (just like her idol Gordon Ramsay) and she even
has a horse of her own.
So what if she’s still a hermit? All she wants is for things to stay exactly as they are.
But, like it or not, things are changing. Cara’s family enter her in a province-wide Junior Chef competition; one she knows she’s going to fail miserably at. That creepy boy from next door lurks behind every tree and, worst of all, her beloved friend Henry is losing his zest for living.
When forces from outside threaten Cara’s world she will stop at nothing to protect her family.
So what if she’s still a hermit? All she wants is for things to stay exactly as they are.
But, like it or not, things are changing. Cara’s family enter her in a province-wide Junior Chef competition; one she knows she’s going to fail miserably at. That creepy boy from next door lurks behind every tree and, worst of all, her beloved friend Henry is losing his zest for living.
When forces from outside threaten Cara’s world she will stop at nothing to protect her family.
Excerpt:
Phineas walked over and gave the horse a
final pat before climbing stiffly through the fence rails. He limped down the
narrow deer trail, pushing automatically through the damp ferns and ducking to
avoid half-fallen logs. He didn’t need a flashlight. He’d walked this path so often;
he could do the trek in his sleep. His steps faltered the closer he got to the over sized
rental house his parents had temporarily taken over.
Warning bells went off in his head, screaming
for him to get out of there as fast as possible. Go back, steal the horse, and
ride off into the night. Go anywhere but inside.
He
stopped, half-turning to look up the path behind him, weighing his options. He
stood rigidly, fists balled at his sides, wracked with indecision.
Finally,
he shook his head with a sigh and hunched his shoulders in defeat. He was only
a teenager. Where would he live if he ran away? How would he feed himself and a horse? He didn’t have a
job or money or any skills at all. He’d never been to school in his life, though
he’d begged to go. If he ran away, they would track him down and drag him back.
Phineas scuffed the rest of the way up the
path, his head bowed. He was sore and tired right to his bones—way older than
his fifteen years, as if heavy weights dragged behind him in the dirt, chaining
him to a life he hated.
The
house was completely dark except for a tiny stream of light escaping around the
blankets tacked over the windows. It gave the place a vacant, haunted look; as
if bad things happened behind those doors.
He was halfway up the steps when the front
door inched open and his father’s head peered out. The dim light glinted off
the crooked tinfoil cap his father almost always wore when he got nervous. It
covered his blond curls like a misshapen silver melon.
Phineas groaned. His dad was clearly having a
bad night. He looked like someone dressed up as a cartoon Martian for
Halloween. Only for his dad it was no joke; he was deadly serious.
“Hello,” his dad whispered, blinking
near-sightedly into the darkness. “Is that you, son?”
“Yes, Dad,” Phineas said reluctantly. There
would be no turning back now.
“Oh. Good. Well, you’d better get inside. He’s here and he’s not happy.”
“He’s insane,” Phineas grumbled under his
breath. He stepped into the dirty front entrance way and kicked off his shoes.
They landed in the corner with a sodden squelching sound, splattering muddy
water on the wall. The mess didn’t matter, though. Nobody cleaned or tidied
anything here.
His dad shushed him loudly.
“Shhh!
He’ll hear you!”
He raised a finger and held his breath,
listening intently. His other hand fidgeted anxiously with the worn silver edge
of his battered foil hat.
“He’s in a foul mood,” he hissed. “He blames
us for not catching the creature sooner, Phineas. He’s thinking of withdrawing
his funding or—or worse.”
Amazon
About Genevieve McKay:
Genevieve Mckay is a freelance writer, short story author, and
first time novelist. She lives on the West coast with her two and
four-legged family in the wilderness. When she isn't busy creating new
worlds she enjoys playing outside, riding horses and preparing for the
zombie apocalypse.
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