I am happy to be hosting a stop on the blog tour for DREAM KEEPER by Amber R Duell! I have an excerpt to share with you today check it out and enter to win the giveaway below!
About The Book:
The Sandman is seventeen-year-old Nora’s closest friend and best-kept secret. He has to be, if she doesn’t want a one-way ticket back to the psychiatrist. It took her too long to learn not to mention the hooded figure in her dreams to her mother, who still watches Nora as if she’ll crack. So when Nora’s friends start mysteriously dying gruesome deaths in their sleep, she isn’t altogether surprised when the police direct their suspicion at her. The Sandman is the only one she can turn to for answers. But the truth might be more than she bargained for…
For the last five years, the Sandman has spent every night protecting Nora. When he hid the secret to the Nightmare Lord’s escape inside her dreams, he never expected to fall in love with her. Neither did he think his nemesis would find her so quickly, but there’s no mistaking his cruel handiwork. The Nightmare Lord is tired of playing by the rules and will do anything to release his deadly nightmares into the world, even if that means tormenting Nora until she breaks.
When the Nightmare Lord kidnaps Nora’s sister, Nora must enter enemy territory to save her. The Sandman is determined to help, but if Nora isn’t careful, she could lose even more than her family to the darkness.
Check out the book trailer!
Now on to the excerpt!
Now on to the excerpt!
Excerpt
2
NORA
Shadows danced in the soft warmth of the white mini-lights strung
around my bedroom. I hopped around my bed, fumbling with the buckle on my
sandals, and tossed my purse in the corner. Something hard—probably my phone—thwacked against
the light blue wall.
“Whoops,” I muttered, then growled at the metal hook locking my
footwear in place. There were places to go, people to see. Or, rather, one
person, and it was already hours past our usual meeting time. I jerked at the
stiff strap. “Get off.”
Finally, it popped, and I kicked it triumphantly into the corner with
my bag. The other came off without any trouble, and my stomach fluttered in
anticipation. I tugged off my jean shorts and stepped into a pair of plaid
pajama bottoms, leaving on the ribbed tank top I wore out tonight. Who cared
that a glob of nacho cheese stained the front? The Sandman certainly wouldn’t.
Climbing beneath the cool sheets, I dragged in a long breath and
released it slowly. A small grin played on my lips as I stared at the lights
hanging overhead. Then I shut my eyes and waited. Waited for sleep to claim me.
To deliver me. But my body was too tense, and my mind still flipped through the
day’s events—as ridiculously boring as they were. When the
highlight of your day was painting your nails a new color, what was there to
mull over?
After a handful of long minutes, I opened my eyes again and bit my lip.
I could ask. It had been… Actually, I couldn’t remember the last time I asked him for anything. Even this. But I had
to be up early for work tomorrow and we’d already missed out on hours together.
A grin crept across my face.
“Sandman,” I whispered, and closed my eyes again in preparation. “Help
me sleep.”
It came swiftly then, sweeping me gently from my world to another as
easily as the breeze carries a feather. I curled my toes, feeling the
powder-like sand of the Sandman’s beach beneath my bare feet, and opened my
eyes. The endless blanket of bright stars, the luminescent waves, the Sandman… This place, this
dream, was like coming home.
“Sorry I’m late,” I called with a smile in my voice. The light aroma of
lilacs filled my lungs and I sighed, content. “Natalie and Emery dragged me to
a party to celebrate our final first day of summer vacation.” By this time next
year, we would all be high school graduates and legal adults—neither of which I
was ready to think about. I stretched my arms over my head and fought a yawn. “Sandman?” There was no reply. I dropped my
arms and spun, searching for a glimpse of the familiar black-clad figure. This
was our spot—the place directly below the brightest star. My brows
lowered in confusion. So why wasn’t he here? He was
always here. “Where are you?”
The only sound was the soft hush of waves lapping the shore. I turned
again, squinting down the beach, but there was no hooded figure in sight. My
heart skipped a beat. The dream seemed to yawn open, the emptiness pressing in
on me from all sides. He had to be here somewhere. A pit formed in my stomach,
and I staggered back, unsteady. He had to.
The beach was an addiction I didn’t know how to cure myself of—didn’t want to cure myself of. For every time I had to pretend this place
didn’t exist, the Sandman was there to absolve me of the
lies. There to make me feel like I was good and sane and normal. It didn’t
matter that he was also the reason I didn’t feel any of those things were true
when I was awake. The Sandman was my anchor, holding me firm when life tried to
wash me out to sea. Without him… I swallowed hard. Without him, I would be
a ship without sails.
“Sandman!” I jogged down the water’s edge, my pulse drumming in my
ears. “I’m here.”
But he wasn’t.
THREE THIRTY-TWO.
The clock on my nightstand glowed green, the colon blinking in a slow,
torturous rhythm. I tapped my fingers on my stomach. The Sandman had never been
a no-show before. And if he wasn’t there, maybe that meant they were right, and
he wasn’t real.
No.
I refused to believe that. My mother meant well, but I couldn’t face a
lifetime of pill-pushing psychiatrists. One white-haired doctor tossing around
words like personality disorder and delusional was enough. By the time the
final doctor deemed the Sandman a simple outlet for me to process my parents’
divorce, the damage was done.
Don’t worry about it, he said. It will pass, he said.
That was five years ago.
The divorce was a distant memory. My father moved across the country
and my mother remarried, but the Sandman became a permanent fixture. One I’d
learned to never, ever talk about.
What’s going on? I pushed the thought toward the Sandman even though I
knew he couldn’t hear me. There was only one call that reached from this side
of the Dream World to his, only one cry capable of bringing him here, but it
never stopped me from trying.
I flung the sheets back with a huff and grabbed an oversized Lund
Valley Community College sweater from the end of my bed. Natalie hoped we would
go there together next year but… I wrinkled my nose and glanced at the
dresser drawer where my sketchbook was carefully tucked between scarves. If I
went to college at all, it would be for art, but that was a big if. No one in
my family knew I drew, and if my mother was going to let me major in something
“impractical,” she would want to at least see my work. Unfortunately, each page
featured a majestic beach and a man hidden beneath a hood. Both things I was
supposed to have forgotten long ago.
Tugging the sweater over my head, I made my way through the dark
hallway toward the stairs. My mother and step-father were both working the
night shift at the hospital and my sister could sleep through anything, yet I
found myself tip-toeing down the hall.
I paused outside Katie’s door and listened to the steady, heavy
breathing on the other side. Part of me wanted to wake my sister up to talk
about what happened, but the other part of me—the part that
remembered the piercing fluorescent lights of a therapist’s office—knew better. Katie had teased me about the
Sandman when we were younger, but she never treated me differently. However,
now we were older.
Barging into her room to complain that my imaginary friend
hadn’t shown up that night might alienate the last blood relative I could rely
on.
Although Katie annoyed me like no one else, I loved her more than I was
irritated with her. I needed my big sister on my side—even if it meant
hiding a huge part of my life. So, I stepped away from her door and crept
silently downstairs to the kitchen.
Maybe because I was about to steal someone’s box of frozen Thin Mints.
Sorry, not sorry.
Mist curled out of the open freezer, and I reached behind the chicken
before a shrill, heart-wrenching scream tore through the house, squeezing the
air from my lungs. It was made of nails and teeth and death. Of danger and
fear. My eardrums rattled. Each nerve stood at attention, electricity buzzing
over my body.
“Katie?” I yelled, frantically abandoning my pursuit of the cookies.
Confusion laced the edges of my shaky voice, but I was already racing
across the kitchen. Instinct twisted my gut, telling me to turn and run, to
save myself, but I couldn’t. Not if my sister was in trouble. Not if someone
had broken in when no one was home to help. Not if Katie was hurt and scared. I
propelled myself up the stairs to the second floor, my skin itching me to go
faster, faster, faster. Katie’s door was still shut at the front of the
hallway. My breath shuddered, and I reached for the handle, pausing with
apprehension. The metal was cold in my palm.
“Katie?” Her name came out as a crackling whisper and I forced myself
to inhale. Then exhale. Inhale again. My hand shook as I twisted the knob.
I eased the door inward. Without a barrier between us, the sound cut
through me like a knife. I slapped a palm against the wall, hitting the light
switch, and flinched at the sudden brightness. At what it might reveal.
Katie lay flat on her back, her eyes shut tight, with the sheets
snarled in a ball at the end of the bed. Sweat poured down her face, plastering
her pink hair to her skin. The wild scream continued, unrelenting, her jaw
stretched wide, her neck muscles protruding. But everything else was in its
rightful place. Nothing was broken. The lock on the window hugged its latch.
I stepped into the room and spun, bumping into the dresser. My pulse
thrashed; it mimicked Katie’s scream in pendulum beats. Loud then muffled then
loud again.
“Katie?” My voice felt tight. I knelt on the mattress and shook my
sister’s broad shoulders. “Wake up.”
The scream cracked. Katie sucked in air as if she were drowning and
began again, just as terrified. I used the back of my wrist to wipe the
moisture from my forehead. My nails dug into her shoulders, and I shook her
rigid body with every ounce of strength I had. The more I yelled her name, the
more desperate, more savage, my voice became. Black spots danced in my vision.
Nightmares were one thing, but this was something else. Something beyond that.
I shook the dizzying fear away and darted into the bathroom across the hall.
I returned with a Dixie cup of cold water and leapt onto the bed. The
water hit Katie’s face with a splash. “Come on,” I shouted to no avail.
I fumbled for Katie’s cell phone on the nightstand. If our mother
didn’t know what to do, she could send someone who did. My thumb hovered over
the direct number to my mother’s unit when a quick, metallic burst of air
whooshed in from the hallway. A shiver ravaged my spine, and Katie’s pitch
reached new heights. I slipped from the bed, my hip smashing into the floor.
The phone fell from my hand, seemingly in slow motion. I lunged for the door,
and slammed it shut, leaning my back against the wood.
I couldn’t think.
Couldn’t... I couldn’t...
The walls seemed to shrink, boxing me in. Trapping me.
Above the screech, a deep chuckle rumbled in the hall. My heart rose to
my throat, and I dove for the phone where it had landed on the rug. I managed
to dial nine before Katie’s scream cut off. Palpable silence penetrated the
room. My rapid breathing mixed with my sister’s, and I edged up onto shaking
knees. Katie rolled onto her side with a twitch.
“Katie?” My voice came out as a squeak.
She snuggled into the pillow, and her breathing returned to normal.
Okay. She was okay. I turned my attention to the space at the bottom of the
door. There was probably no one out there anyway. My sister’s screams threw me
off after a confusing night, that’s all. I was merely tired and scared and was
likely imagining the whole thing.
But before I called anyone, I had to be sure.
With the phone clutched in my hand, I crawled across the room to where
the bright yellow handle of Katie’s tennis racket leaned against the wall. I
gripped the hard foam and held it to my shoulder. I didn’t want to leave Katie
alone but what choice did I have? I couldn’t call for help if no one was out
there. My mother would have a field day.
Clenching my jaw shut to keep my teeth from chattering, I dialed two
one’s before opening the door. If anyone was on the other side, it would only
take a single touch to call for help.
I eased out, holding the racket in front of me, and flicked on the
hallway light. The stillness slammed into me like a brick wall. “Okay, okay,
okay,” I chanted under my breath. This was stupid. And yet… at
five-foot-three and a hundred and ten pounds, an intruder wouldn’t necessarily need to be armed to overpower me.
My nerves exploded with a burst of adrenaline, and I leapt from room to
room until each light bulb on the second floor glowed. I checked every closet,
under every bed. The racket shook in my hand. There was nothing. No one. An
irrational spike of anger zipped through me at the possibility of my brain’s
betrayal.
My body moved on its own accord, taking me downstairs one tentative
step at a time. One million potential fates I might encounter, if there was
someone lying in wait, coursed through my thoughts. The joints in my fingers
locked around the phone with my thumb still over the green call button. My
tongue was sandpaper against the roof of my mouth, and I crept through the
living room.
The freezer was still open, rattling in an attempt to keep the internal
temperature down. I chomped down on my lip and inched my way forward to shut
it. The rarely-used alarm system beside the back door taunted me—if only I
remembered the code.
It seemed like it took ages to finish searching the house. I looked
everywhere from the coat closet to beneath the bathroom sink, but it had only
been eleven minutes since I had woken up. No time at all, really. I gripped the
back of a dining room chair to stay on my feet.
There was no intruder. Katie had a nightmare, and my mind deceived me.
Again.
Always.
Only this time, it wasn’t part of my subconscious. I wasn’t asleep.
Katie had screamed. There was a blast of air. Someone had laughed.
I swallowed the fear rising in my chest.
No one believed they were crazy. I wasn’t sure what it meant if I
thought I was unhinged but constantly persuaded myself to believe I wasn’t. Was
I? Wasn’t I? Not even the doctors could agree on an answer. My sanity was a
double-edged sword, and I was fighting to maintain balance on the tip.
I dashed back to Katie and climbed in bed beside her, nestling close. I
tucked the wrinkled sheet around us both and tried to ignore the nausea
curdling in my stomach. Katie was older than me, bolder and more confident, but
in that moment, she felt as fragile as blown glass. I wrapped an arm around her
waist and squeezed my eyes shut. My ears strained to hear the slightest sound
that could signal danger, but no one else was in the house.
No one had laughed.
The Sandman wasn’t real.
I balled the back of Katie’s T-shirt in my fist. He was real enough to
me, and I needed him. Please, Sandman, I called in a silent plea for the second
time tonight—the one only he could hear. Help me sleep.
Amber
R. Duell was born and raised in a small town in Central New York. While it will
always be home, she’s constantly moving with her husband and two sons as a
military wife. Before becoming published, she had a wide range of occupations
including banking, bartending (though she’s never tried alcohol), and
phlebotomy (though she faints with needles). She also volunteered as a
re-enactor at the local Revolutionary War fort and worked near shelter cats
which led to her previous crazy cat lady status.
She
does her best writing in the middle of the night, surviving the daylight hours
with massive amounts of caffeine. Her favorite stories are dark with a touch of
romance and a villain you either love to hate or hate to love.
When not reading or writing, she enjoys
snowboarding, embroidering, snuggling with her cat, and staying up way too late
to research genealogy. She loves to travel and has visited more countries than
states. Kissing the Blarney Stone and hand-feeding monkeys in the mountains of
France will be hard to beat, but that doesn’t stop her from trying to find the
next real-life adventure.
Giveaway Details:
1 winner will win a $10 Amazon Gift
Card, INTERNATIONAL.
Tour Schedule:
Week One:
2/4/2019- Graced
with Books- Review
2/4/2019- A Dream Within A Dream- Excerpt
2/5/2019- Popthebutterfly
Reads- Review
2/5/2019- BookHounds- Excerpt
2/6/2019- Singer of Stories- Review
2/6/2019- Kelly
P's Blog- Excerpt
2/7/2019- Oh Hey
Books- Spotlight
2/7/2019- Two
Chicks on Books- Excerpt
2/8/2019- Reese's
Reviews- Review
2/8/2019- The
Reading Life- Spotlight
Love the cover!
ReplyDelete