Violet Sumner has a stalker.
Between her largely dysfunctional family of two and the friends she doesn’t feel particularly close to, Violet thinks he’s the least of her problems. What she fails to understand is that the guy is no prankster and soon people turn up dead or missing. Because of her.
Things change when Violet’s best friend disappears and realization sinks in that the stalker means business. Denial put aside, Violet has no other option but to accept the help of police Sergeant Willard Kelley and his rather sweet protĂ©gĂ©, to come to terms with the seriousness of the situation.
Yet nothing could’ve prepared her for her close up with the psycho.
Who will survive in this tale of obsession and misplaced devotion?
"Can I get a tall black coffee to go, please?" he asked as he whisked past me to the
counter.
Jordan nodded and grabbed the cup,
casting a worried look in my direction. She hadn't missed that I wasn't comfortable
with Colton. Her movements were swift, but for some reason they seemed like slow
motion to me. It took everything I had to glance up at Colton's face. Since when was
he a fan of coffee?
Colton's posture was relaxed as he
leaned on the counter, smirking in my direction. "Fancy meeting you here, Vi," he
fired off cockily. He chuckled as he handed Jordan money with one hand and took
the coffee with the other.
"Well, I'm here every morning. What's
your excuse?" I rolled my eyes as I put my hand on my hip, my spine straightening to
my full height of five-foot-four.
"Decided I needed a little 'pick me up’.
What's better than a nice steaming cup of coffee?" He held up his cup like he was
going to cheers with mine. I clutched my cup a little closer to my chest.
"Didn't you have to drive out of your
way to get here?" I refused to meet his gaze.
"Yeah, so?" He challenged.
"So? Coffee isn't even your thing." I
stepped back and held my chin up defiantly.
"I wanted to come and see a friend. Is
that OK?" He flashed his notorious megawatt smile.
"Colton, we're not friends. Shelby and I
are friends. You and Blake are friends. But you and I, we're not friends." I gestured
between us, emphasizing my point.
"Yeah, because you are the only reason
in the world that I would come here." He licked his lips as he pushed himself into a
standing position. A predatory smile emerged. "Aren't we a little full of ourselves
this morning?"
I could feel all of the blood draining out
of my face and into my feet. Feet that refused to move toward the door. Silently, I
tried to will Jordan to say something, anything, but she had made herself busy
behind the counter. My dry mouth couldn't form any words to rebut what Colton
had said. All that was missing was for me to be standing there in my underwear like
one of those nightmares where you go to school naked, only I was standing in the
middle of Starbucks.
"It doesn't have to be this way. You
don't have to be such a bitch to me. I'm your best friend's boyfriend. Maybe it's time
you come to terms with that." A slow, smug smile spread across his face.
"Whatever. I'm going to be late." I tossed
my hair over my shoulder, turned to wave at Jordan, and fled the store like he was
chasing me.
Monica-Marie Vincent writes Young Adult novels about troubled teens and even more troubled parents. She currently lives in Sacramento, CA although she would rather be in her home town of San Francisco. Thanks to her very put upon husband Monica-Marie is always well stocked with coffee, Diet Coke, and Cheddar Jalapeno Cheetos, so she wouldn't have to move away from her writerly lair to do mundane things like shopping.
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