SOMEONE’S
LISTENING
Author:
Seraphina Nova Glass
ISBN:
9781525836749
Publication
Date: July 28, 2020
Publisher:
Graydon House Books
Book Summary:
You’re not
alone. Someone’s waiting. Someone’s watching…Someone's listening.
In SOMEONE’S
LISTENING (Graydon House Books; July 28; $16.99) Dr. Faith Finley has
everything she’s ever wanted: she’s a renowned psychologist, a radio
personality—host of the wildly popular “Someone’s Listening with Dr. Faith
Finley”—and a soon-to-be bestselling author. She’s young, beautiful, and
married to the perfect man, Liam.
Of course Liam was at Faith’s book launch with her.
But after her car crashes on the way home and she’s pulled from the wreckage,
nobody can confirm that Liam was with her at the party. The police claim she
was alone in car, and they don’t believe her when she says otherwise. Perhaps
that’s understandable, given the horrible thing Faith was accused of doing a
few weeks ago.
And then the notes start arriving—the ones literally
ripped from the pages of Faith’s own self-help book on leaving an abusive
relationship. Ones like “Secure your new home. Consider new window and door
locks, an alarm system, and steel doors…”
Where is Liam? Is his disappearance connected to the
scandal that ruined Faith’s life? Who is sending the notes? Faith’s very life
will depend on finding the answers.
PROLOGUE
WHEN I WAKE UP, IT’S BLACK AND STILL; I FEEL A
light, icy snow that floats rather than falls, and I can’t open my eyes. I
don’t know where I am, but it’s so quiet, the silence rings in my ears. My
fingertips try to grip the ground, but I feel only a sheet of ice beneath me,
splintered with bits of embedded gravel. The air is sharp, and I try to call
for him, but I can’t speak. How long have I been here? I drift back out of
consciousness. The next time I wake, I hear the crunching of ice under the
boots of EMTs who rush around my body. I know where I am. I’m lying in the
middle of County Road 6. There has been a crash. There’s a swirling red light,
a strobe light in the vast blackness: they tell me not to move.
“Where’s my husband?” I whimper. They tell me to try not to talk
either. “Liam!” I try to yell for him, but it barely escapes my lips; they’re
numb, near frozen, and it comes out in a hoarse whisper. How has this happened?
I think of the party and how I hate driving at night, and how I was
careful not to drink too much. I nursed a glass or two, stayed in control. Liam
had a lot more. It wasn’t like him to get loaded, and I knew it was his way of
getting back at me. He was irritated with me, with the position I’d put him in,
even though he had never said it in so many words. I wanted to please him
because this whole horrible situation was my fault, and I was sorry.
When I wake up again I’m in a hospital room, connected to tubes and
machines. The IV needle is stuck into a bruised, purple vein in the back of my
hand that aches. In the dim light, I sip juice from a tiny plastic cup, and the
soft beep of the EKG tries to lull me back to sleep, but I fight it. I want
answers. I need to appear stabilized and alert. Another dose of painkiller is
released into my IV; the momentary euphoria forces me to heave a sigh. I need
to keep my eyes open. I can hear the cops arrive and talk to someone at a desk
outside my door. They’ll tell me what happened.
There’s a nurse who calls me “sweetie” and changes the subject when I
ask about the accident. She gives the cops a sideways look when they come in to
talk to me, and tells them they only have a few minutes and that I need to
rest.
Detective John Sterling greets me with a soft “Hello, ma’am.” I almost
forget about my shattered femur and groan after I move too quickly. Another
officer lingers by the door, a tall, stern-looking woman with her light hair
pulled into a tight bun at the base of her skull. She tells me I’m lucky to be
alive, and if it had dropped below freezing, I wouldn’t have lasted those
couple hours before a passing car stopped and called 911. I ask where Liam is,
but she just looks to Sterling. Something is terribly wrong.
“Why won’t anyone tell me what happened to him?” I plead. I watch
Detective Sterling as he picks his way through a response.
“The nurse tells me that you believe he was in the car with you at the
time of the accident,” he says. I can hear the condescension in his voice. He’s
speaking to me like I’m a child.
“They said ‘I believe’ he was? That’s not a— That’s a fact. We came
from a party—a book signing party. Anyone, anyone can tell you that he was with
me. Please. Is he hurt?” I look down at my body for the first time and see the
jagged stitches holding together the bruised flesh of my right arm. They look
exaggerated, like the kind you might draw on with makeup and glue for a
Halloween costume. I close my eyes, holding back nausea. I try to walk through
the series of events—trying to piece together what happened and when.
Liam had been quiet in the car. I knew he’d believed me after the
accusations started. I knew he trusted me, but maybe I’d underestimated the
seeds of doubt that had been planted in his mind. I tried to lighten the mood
when we got in the car by making some joke about the fourteen-dollar domestic
beers; he’d given a weak chuckle and rested his head on the passenger window.
The detective looks at me with something resembling sympathy but closer
to pity.
“Do you recall how much you had to drink last night?” he asks
accusingly.
“What? You think…? No. I drove because he… No! Where is he?” I ask, not
recognizing my own voice. It’s haggard and raw.
“Do you recall taking anything to help you relax? Anything that might
impair your driving?”
“No,” I snap, nearly in tears again.
“So, you didn’t take any benzodiazepine maybe? Yesterday…at some
point?”
“No— I— Please.” I choke back tears. “I don’t…” He looks at me
pointedly, then scribbles something on his stupid notepad. I didn’t know what
to say. Liam must be dead, and they think I’m too fragile to take the news. Why
would they ask me this?
“Ma’am,” he says, standing. He softens his tone. This is it. He’s going
to tell me something I’ll never recover from.
“You were the only one in the car when medics got there,” he says,
studying me for my response, waiting to detect a lie that he can use against me
later. His patronizing look infuriates me.
“What?” The blood thumps in my ears. They think I’m crazy; that soft
tone isn’t a sympathetic one reserved for delivery of the news that a loved one
has died—it’s the careful language chosen when speaking to someone unstable.
They think I’m some addict or a drunk. Maybe they think the impact had made me
lose the details, but he was there. I swear to God. His cry came too late and
there was a crash. It was deafening, and I saw him reach for me, his face
distorted in terror. He tried to shield me. He was there. He was next to me,
screaming my name when we saw the truck headlights appear only feet in front of
us—too late.
Excerpted from Someone’s Listening
by Seraphina Nova Glass, Copyright © 2020 by Seraphina Nova Glass.
Published by Graydon House Books
Author
Bio:
Seraphina Nova Glass is a
professor and Playwright-in-Residence at the University of Texas-Arlington,
where she teaches Film Studies and Playwriting. She holds an MFA in playwriting
from Smith College, and has optioned multiple screenplays to Hallmark and Lifetime. Someone's Listening
is her first novel.
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