"Sometimes the ghosts from your past…are
real."
Voices
By Clarissa Johal
Genre: Paranormal Psychological Suspense
Out May 19, 2015
Tour Host: DRC Promotions
By Clarissa Johal
Genre: Paranormal Psychological Suspense
Out May 19, 2015
Tour Host: DRC Promotions
Synopsis
Sometimes the ghosts from your past…are real.
Moira Flynn is arrested for attacking a door-to-door solicitor with
a knife. She claims a voice told her the man was intent on assaulting her. The
trouble is, she was the only one that heard that voice. Moira strikes a plea
bargain and is sent to a psychiatric hospital for voluntary treatment. Dr.
Richard Cassano is hesitant to treat her as schizophrenic, as she does not show
the standard symptoms. As their sessions progress, Moira confesses there are
two voices—and they aren’t voices in her head, but the voices of ghosts. Are
they imaginary? Or are they actual spirits, attached to her for reasons of
their own? As Moira’s doctor uncovers more of her past, he begins to realize
that her ghosts are real. And one of them is determined to drag Moira into the
afterlife with him.
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Excerpt
They got their food
and sat at one of the dining room tables in the corner. Moira pretended not to
notice a couple of raised eyebrows from the other patients.
“How long have you
been able to see them?”
“Who?”
“Your ghosts.”
“For a while,” Moira
replied vaguely.
Adam picked up his
dinner roll and took a large bite. “My guess is longer than just ‘a while.’”
Moira’s attention
was captured again by his green eye, so sharply contrasting his brown one. He
was almost too intense to look at. Almost.
“How did you get the
scratches?” His gaze settled on her cheek.
“One of the other
patients started a fight,” she said, covering her cheek with her hand. “I guess
she doesn’t like me.”
“What’s not to like?
You seem okay to me.”
Oddly, his statement
made her stomach do a flip-flop. “Thanks.”
“You know how some
people are, quick to judge.” He dropped his fork and bent to retrieve it.
Moira pictured
herself reaching over and brushing back the lock of dark hair that fell across
his forehead. She glanced nervously over her shoulder. Jack and Isabella were
strangely silent. Isabella was probably just trying to figure out what childish
thing she could say, but Jack…she knew that Jack was sizing Adam up; he did it
with every man she came into contact with. And she knew he wouldn’t appreciate
her noticing how handsome Adam was either.
“I’m sure they upped
her meds,” Adam said as he tossed the fork onto the table again. “This place
sucks. It won’t do a damn thing but make you spill your guts, drive you crazy
or turn you into a zombie. Last pills they sent me home with made me feel like
my skull was being split with a meat cleaver.”
“So you stopped
taking them?”
“Yep.”
“How did you end up
back here?”
“My brother called
the cops. Lying asshole, I should be used to it by now,” Adam muttered. “I was
staying with him until I got my shit together, but he walked in on me as I was
flushing my pill down the toilet and freaked out.” A look of distress crossed
his face. “Whatever, I’ll be out soon enough.” He finished his roll and started
on an apple. “What did your doctor put you on? Who is your doctor anyways?”
“Um, he hasn’t put
me on anything yet. I see Dr. Cassano.”
“Ahh, Dr. Cassano.”
He raised an eyebrow. “I hear the nurses talking about him all the time.”
“He’s nice enough.”
“I see Dr. Leo. He’s
an asshole.” He spit out the bite of his apple and without getting up, tossed
the rest of it into the garbage, basketball style. “Have you spoken to your
ghosts about leaving?”
“I’ve …tried.”
“They won’t?”
“No.”
“You want me to ask
them for you?”
“Seriously?” She
stayed an initial surge of hopefulness and reminded herself that Adam was in
here because he was crazy. Not like her at all.
“I can try.”
He settled back and
stared right at Isabella. That’s a fluke, she thought. He just picked an empty spot
next to me.
“You need to go,”
Adam said simply. “Moira doesn’t want you around her.” He waited a beat. “Wow,
she’s hostel. Kids can be such brats. I’ll try your other one.”
He looked right at
where Jack stood. The other empty spot next to me, she reminded herself.
“Leave. Your time is
done, tall guy. You have no business being here anymore.”
She felt Jack’s
presence crackle with anger.
“He’s even more
hostel than she is,” Adam said. “Sucks for you.”
Moira felt her hopes
deflate. Well, it’s not as if he can really see them, she thought. “Thanks
anyways.”
He aimed his plastic
cup towards the trash and tossed it. It missed and rolled towards the kitchen
door. “Damn. No points for me.”
The cook leaned out
the kitchen door and waved his ladle at them. “Stop tossing your garbage
everywhere, you’re getting milk on the floor. Somebody’s got to mop that up.”
“I hate that a
culinary genius like you has to do that,” Adam called back with a straight
face.
“Smart ass,” the
cook replied. “You lucky I don’t spit in your food.”
Adam held his hands
up in mock surrender. “I know you say that with love, Nathan.” He picked up his
tray. “See you around.”
Moira watched him
swagger away. It suddenly dawned on her that she hadn’t mentioned Isabella was
a child or said anything about Jack.
Lucky guess.
Meet the Author
Clarissa Johal is the author of paranormal novels, THE ISLAND,
VOICES, STRUCK, and BETWEEN. When she’s not listening to the ghosts in her
head, she’s dancing, taking pictures of gargoyles, or swinging from a trapeze.
She shares her life with her husband, two daughters, and every stray animal
that darkens their doorstep.
*Member of the Horror Writers Association
Connect with
Clarissa
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