by Taylor Dawn
Published by: Booktrope Publishing
Publication date: June 9th 2015
Genres: Adult, Urban Fantasy
Published by: Booktrope Publishing
Publication date: June 9th 2015
Genres: Adult, Urban Fantasy
The List. That Signified Finality.
The Journey. That Would Span The Globe.
The Sacrifice. That Would Decide The Outcome.
The Choice. That Could Unleash Evil On Earth.
The End Is Only The Beginning…
The Sacrifice. That Would Decide The Outcome.
The Choice. That Could Unleash Evil On Earth.
The End Is Only The Beginning…
“You have terminal cancer.”
London Patterson, a seemingly healthy
young woman, had her entire life ahead of her. That was until four little words
brought everything to a screeching halt. As the shock and grief begin to fade,
London decides to map out her last year and embark on an epic journey to
complete a bucket list. She wants to do the things she’s been afraid to do in
her life, step out of her self-contained box, and see the world. What she
didn’t expect was for a mysterious stranger named Adam to breeze into her life
like a breath of fresh air.
Adam offers to help London complete
her list on one condition…that she sees it through to the end. Agreeing on
those terms, the two set out on an adventure of a lifetime. But London soon
realizes that Adam isn’t quite…human. Along their journey odd occurrences
happen that cause London to question who or what Adam is and why he’s helping
her.
Follow London as she checks off her
bucket list in this inspiring new Urban Fantasy novel from Taylor Dawn.
Click HERE
to add to Goodreads
I’d come to believe that we are privy to an
overabundance of petrifying sounds in our lives. Noises that breeze through our
ears enter our brain and cause chills to run down our
spine. We attempt to shake off the feelings that these sounds illicit, but the
sheer terror of them do nothing but brand our skin with gooseflesh and
nervousness. I thought I’d heard most of them already. That I’d taken in the
echoes that strike fear through most individuals. However, I was mistaken.
I undoubtedly found myself absorbing the most chilling of them all. It was
unexpected and I still have trouble convincing myself that what’d happened was
tangible. No, it wasn’t the shrill scream of someone in grave danger. Or
the fictitious screech of a science fiction creature with hefty teeth and an
appetite for human flesh and blood. The one thing that I heard was something
that stopped me dead in my tracks. It put my life at a stand-still, in only a fraction
of a second. I developed tunnel vision when I grasped onto the spine-chilling
noise, my entire body seized up as if I’d been taken over by another life form.
The ability to control what I was thinking was gone, out the window it flew
like a winged creature that’d been set free. What was it? It was
the sound of fear in my own voice. There was an unstable quake when I’d
open my lips to speak and nothing came out. The Words I’d tried to construct
wouldn’t form themselves and I felt as if I’d lost the capacity to communicate.
I’d never had a reason to be afraid of it…until now.
“That can’t be right. Maybe you need to
check it again.” The wavering of my speech told me I was somewhere between
disbelief and denial. Neither of which was welcome near me.
“We went over the results with a fine tooth
comb, Miss. Patterson. Science doesn’t lie in this case.” The expression on the
doctor’s face was dripping with subtle bleakness.
“Well, there must be some other
explanation. Maybe you mixed the results up somewhere along the line.” I felt a
tinge of hope color my weak words.
“Listen, I know this is hard. But I assure you,
there is absolutely nothing wrong with the tests.” The salt and pepper haired
man sat down behind his desk.
“Okay, fine. I’m assuming there’s some sort of
treatment I should start soon?”
I didn’t much care for the grim look that fell
over his face like a mask of doom. “I wish I could say yes. But unfortunately
there isn’t anything we can do. The surgery is too risky. You could undergo
Chemotherapy and Radiation treatment, but if I’m being honest, I don’t feel as
though either would do much good.”
“So I don’t have any
options. This is just…it?”
He slowly nodded. “At best, in a case such as
this, I would say you have a year.”
“A year to do what exactly? Sit in my
house and rot?” I felt my anger bubbling to the surface like an over baked pan
of lasagna.
“I understand your indignation, I really do.
I think maybe if there’re some things you’ve wanted to do, it’s time to start
doing them.”
How could such few words have a blatant finality
to them? How could I come down with a common cold and then find out my life had
been reduced to a handful of months?
“I can prescribe some medication to get you
through the general symptoms, but above that…” He trailed off. He was being
somewhat compassionate I suppose. I wouldn’t want to tell someone they were
dying either, what a crap job.
I’d thought medical professionals were supposed
to heal you? They would diagnose the issue and bam you were handed a
bottle of antibiotics and better within a week. But unless he had a freaking
miracle stashed beneath that prescription pad, I was toast.
“If you’d like someone to talk to, I can
recommend someone.” He began to extend some sort of business card across the
desk toward me.
I abruptly raised myself from the chair that
felt as if it were squeezing the life from me. “Thanks, but no thanks.
I’d rather not waste the time I have left lying on a sofa and spilling my
problems to a stranger.”
It was difficult holding my anger at bay.
Counting to ten while I exited the medical facility helped but the urge to hit
something was a fierce impulse to fight off. Did I cry? For some reason, I
didn’t at that moment. I can’t say why either. I wanted to, but the
tears wouldn’t come. They stayed hidden in their little duct homes while I
walked around seeing red.
Cancer of the Liver is what they called it.
Yeah, he’d given me some mumbo jumbo scientific name for it, but all I heard
was the ‘C’ word. The word that no one wants to hear in their lives. The word
that rips hope away from the person being diagnosed, and replaces it with
desperation and depression. With a disease like that, you’d think I was a
raging alcoholic who did nothing but fill her days by holding down a bar stool
while finding the bottom of a bottle. But I wasn’t. I didn’t touch the
stuff. So how was it I became strapped with a terminal disease such as that?
Why was this happening to me of all people?
I know life isn’t some kind of tranquil
state that we float through without a care in the world. I would be utterly
stupefied if I honestly believed that. No, life is a series of unfortunate
circumstances that lead us to make decisions we don’t really want to make. What
to have for breakfast, what to wear, and even what to say to the person
occupying the seat next to us on the city bus. We don’t really put much thought
into it all, but what are we really doing here? Why were we put on this
planet for only a miniscule amount of time? Is there some grand plan that we
aren’t seeing, like a big picture that has our entire life mapped out already?
Up until the dreaded news, I’d thought life was
something to take for granted. That I could wake up every day and be guaranteed
tomorrow. It’s hard to believe that everything can be changed in the course of
a few ounces of blood and a doctor’s visit. I continued to shake my head
wondering what really happened, was I dreaming of all of this? I wish I
was. Things would be easier that way. But such as life, nothing is easy.
We’re screwed no matter which way we go, and end up paying the consequences for
it every day of our lives.
I made a decision. I wasn’t going to sit around
and watch myself waste away like a banana rotting slowly on a counter. Nope, I
was going to live my life like I just didn’t give a crap anymore…well, not in a
negative way. I was going to throw caution to the wind, balls to the wall, take
no prisoners and do the things I’ve always wanted to do. You could call it my
bucket list, or my death list, whatever you feel comfortable with is alright by
me.
My life is timed; I have an expiration date
stamped on my rear like a yogurt container in the dairy section. After my time
is up, that’s it. I don’t get a free pass. I’m okay with it now. I have to be.
If I weren’t, I’d be that banana…I am not a banana.
But in the end I’ll get to laugh and smile at
the things I’ve accomplished with my time on this earth. I can’t wish my fate
away, I can’t find a genie in a bottle on a desolate stretch of beach to grant
me more time. I’m accepting it like you’d accept a second place trophy in a
one-legged man’s butt kicking contest.
At least I was given a year. To some it
might seem like a small amount of time, and truly it is. But when you’re given only that long
to live, it can in a way, seem like an eternity. I’ll do the things I’ve wanted
to do because in the end…no one can save London
Patterson.
C.D. Taylor/Taylor Dawn began writing as an item to check off
her bucket list. She resides in the southernmost part of Illinois, right
on the mighty Mississippi river. She enjoys the quiet country life
with her husband, son and the many farm animals that make up the rest of
the family. She. decided that farm life was just a little too
mundane, so she started writing erotica and fantasy to liventhings up, so
far so good. C.D./Taylor entered cosmetology school right out of High
School and practiced the art of hair styling for 12 years. When she
isn't writing, she can usually be found sitting around a table making
people laugh. She has always wanted to be a standup comic. She loves
pulling practical jokes, dresses up in a costume every Halloween and
believes that dancing is the key to a happy life (even if you aren't a
good dancer). She believes that life shouldn't be taken
too seriously, we will never get out alive anyway. More than
anything, she is a kid at heart, she doesn't believe in bedtimes, eating
everything on her plate, or having ice cream only for dessert. Her
favorite quote is by Dr. Seuss..."Why fit in, when you were born to
stand out."
No comments:
Post a Comment