Found,
Near Water
by
Katherine Hayton
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BLURB:
Rena
Sutherland wakes from a coma into a mother’s nightmare. Her
daughter’s is missing – lost for four days – but no one has
noticed; no one has complained; no one has been searching.
As
the victim support officer assigned to her case, Christine Emmett
puts aside her own problems as she tries to guide Rena through the
maelstrom of her daughter’s disappearance.
A
task made harder by an ex-husband desperate for control; a paedophile
on early-release in the community; and a psychic who knows more than
seems possible.
And
intertwined throughout, the stories of six women; six daughters lost.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Excerpt :
On the
fifteenth of March 2007 I came home after a short day’s work, and
Emma wasn’t there. Jacob was, but he was unconscious on the bed and
from the smell of him he hadn’t got to that state accidentally.
There
were the police asking endless questions. There was the media
attention and my daughter’s photo pasted across the front page of a
lot of newspapers. She didn’t look anything like those photos. She
was living, breathing, full of motion and life and energy. She would
snuggle in next to me on a weekend morning and run a length of my
hair through her pudgy wee hands and exclaim in admiration ‘Mummy.
You’re so pretty.’
I
thought that not knowing was the worst thing I could ever endure. Not
knowing if she was in trouble or needing my help or in pain. I
worried that she’d been taken by someone that would hurt her, then
I worried that she’d been taken by someone who would love her and
care for her and in a year or two she’d have forgotten I ever
existed. Not knowing was killing me.
But it
turned out that knowing was far worse. When I went to the hospital to
identify my beautiful girl’s broken body - that was worse than not
knowing. When I buried her in the cemetery and compared the size of
the gravesite to the other freshly buried bodies - that was worse
than not knowing. When I drank myself to sleep on the anniversary of
her sixth birthday, and realised that I would likely be doing that
until my life ended - that was worse than not knowing.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AUTHOR
Bio and Links:
Ever
since I was three year’s old I’ve been reading everything I can
lay my hands on. It’s been my passion, my solace, my comfort. I
used to look forward to Wednesday nights which were the time that my
mother would take me, and any of my siblings who wanted to go – so
usually just me, to the library.
It would
be wonderful, thrilling, and risky. I was only able to take three
books out each week, and only one of those could get a free pass on
fees. If I picked the wrong one I would be stuck with it for a whole
week. Not only stuck with it, but I’d have to read a bad book cover
to cover because otherwise I’d have to do something else, and that
was not really what I was after. I did go outside, and played
outside, and watched TV like any normal kid, but that was just stuff
you filled in time with until you could read again.
Throughout
my childhood there was never anything I wanted to do but become a
writer – it seemed the only natural progression to my life. Then I
crawled inside a bottle for fourteen years, and when I popped back
out I was working in an office job in a travel agency, my mother was
dead, and I was clueless as to how I was meant to get my life back on
track.
About
the time I started to seriously study the craft of writing, something
that used to come naturally to me but had grown incredibly hard
through lack of use, I also had a change in career path into
insurance (not as big a change as it might seem as it was really from
one office job to another with a brighter future and better career
path.) I started to challenge myself in my professional life, and my
personal life, so instead of focussing in on writing I instead tried
out a range of different hobbies, followed up on fleeting interests,
tried to learn to play the saxophone which my partner was glad was a
short-lived affair, and generally did all of the things I should’ve
spent my teens and twenties doing but hadn’t.
But of
course I always circled back to writing. Reading and writing. My
passion remains the same but instead of skimming widely across any
and all genres I’ve narrowed down and done a deep-dive into crime
fiction which has been my favourite for over a decade now.
I love
the fact that I’ve been reading the same genre of fiction for more
than ten years now, and still find new and interesting things with
every book that I pick up. Now I’m trying to bring something new
and unique to me to the genre. And soon I might finally get back on
track to being the person that I always wanted to be.
Amazon
Links:
Author
Page: amazon.com/author/katherinehayton
Kindle:
http://amzn.com/B00LNUMCZ2
Paperback:
http://amzn.com/0473279932
Twitter:
Blogger:
Facebook:
Goodreads:
Website:
Giveaway:
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Thank you for hosting
ReplyDeleteForget the excerpt - Just the Blurb is enough to get me hooked! :)
ReplyDeleteGood luck with the release!
ReplyDeleteTrix, vitajex(at)aol(Dot)com
Thanks for hosting me today Amanda. Thanks also to any of your readers dropping by to have a look. Cheers, Katherine.
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed the excerpt!
ReplyDeleteJaw dropping GOOD!
ReplyDelete