Devyn Dawson’s Killing Me Softly *Blog Hop*

Welcome to my stop on Devyn Dawson’s Killing Me Softly Blog Hop! She’s got an awesome giveaway happening AND she’s sharing Chapter 1 with us today! Woohoo! Keep reading for all the blog hop deets, rafflecopter, and awesomeness! Enjoy!



Blog Hop!
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For The Writer’s Voice, I’m giving away this handmade rose that I made from one of my books. There’s a separate Rafflecopter for the rose.




July 15 – August 3, 2014

Fabulous Prizes!


 Guitar Pick Necklace

 


USAF Coin
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Killing

Me Softly Blog Hop Schedule
July 15 – August 3, 2014

July 15
Michelle Muto                                                    www.michellemuto.wordpress.com
Candy Smith                                                       www.purpleshadowhunter.blogspot.com

July 16
Amber Clark                                                       www.bookloveramber.blogspot.com

July 17
TBA

July 18
Brea Essex                                                         www.breaessex.com

July 19
Kendall McCubban                                            www.bookcrazy123.blogspot.com
Erin Danzer                                                        http://www.authorerindanzer.com/

July 20
Melissa Stickney                                                www.crazybeautifulreviews.blogspot.com

July 21
Kristi Strong                                                        www.strongnovels.blogspot.com
July 22
Amy Jones                                                           www.amyjonesyaff.blogspot.com


July 23
Kris Kendall                                                        www.ireadselfies.com
Mandy Anderson                                                www.twimom101bookblog.blogspot.com

July 24
Tiffany Perry                                                      http://strreviews.blogspot.com/

July 25
Amy Stogner Avid Reader Amy                         www.avidreaderamy.blogspot.com

July 26
Lisa Hines                                                           www.heffroberts.blogspot.com

July 27
The Writer’s Voice

July 28
Trish Davy
So Many Books So Little Time                       http://manybooksnotime.blogspot.com//




July 29
Tia

Bach                                                             http://www.depressioncookies.com/                                                       

July 30
Carlyle                                                                www.worldsawaybookblog.blogspot.comJuly 31


Devyn Dawson


August 1


Raine Thomas                                  http://rainethomas.com/blog/










Clean New Adult Military Romance


Killing Me Softly
By

Devyn Dawson
www.devyndawson.com


Preface


   I glance down at my black

pointy-toed high heels and realize they’re the most uncomfortable shoes I’ve

ever worn.  Andy’s mom let me borrow a

pair of Andy’s shoes since we wear the same size.  It will take me a while to think of her in

the past tense.  Looking around the room

all I see are strangers.  None of these

people knew her like I did.  No one knew

the way she loved soft furry blankets and in the summer she loved softy silky

pajamas.  They didn’t know that she spent

more time praying for her friends and animals than she did for herself.  No, they didn’t know those things, and they

never will.


   My best friend, Andy, died four

days ago in a car accident with her boyfriend Doug.  A car crossed over the center lane and hit

them head on.  The police say they died

instantly.  I talked to her exactly ten

minutes before the crash, she told me she was going to stop by on her way

home.  We’ve always done that; stop by on

our way home from shopping to show what we bought.   Doug took her to Dallas to pick up a guitar

and to go shopping. Andy’s parents have money. They spoiled her, but she never

acted spoiled.  She was kind and

giving.  For her birthday, her dad gave

her a prepaid credit card.  She had to

keep her grades up, if she did, he’d load a thousand dollars on the card every

month for a year.  That’s more money than

I make at my job. When I go shopping, I hit the thrift stores and yard

sales.  Just because I don’t spend tons

of money on clothes, doesn’t mean I don’t look like I do.  There’s a thrift shop not too far from here

that I find the best deals.  If the

outfit doesn’t fit me, I do the alterations myself.   My money is from my job at the vitamin store

in the mall. Eight dollars an hour doesn’t go far when you’re the bread winner

in your family.



  Andy didn’t spend the money on

things just for her, no, she would buy things for an after school program she

worked for as a volunteer. She would give you every dime she had if you needed

help. When she went shopping for herself, she would buy a matching outfit for

me.  She would always say that I was the

sister she always wanted.



  Linda, Andy’s mom, is making her

way over to me, her grief is written all over her face.  I stand up and wrap my arms around her thin

body and in that moment the magnitude of what happened hits me like a brick

wall.  I start to tremble, but I force

myself to keep it together until I get home.

That’s when I’ll have the luxury of breaking down.



   “Sugar, how are you holding up?”

Linda asks.  One of her friends leans

over and hands her a fresh martini.



  “I don’t know,” I shrug my

shoulders.  “It doesn’t seem real, does

it?”




   “She loved you so much,” I smell

the alcohol on her breath as she kisses me on the cheek.  “You’re welcome here any time, you’re part of

our family.  If that daddy of yours gives

you any trouble, you come over and you can sleep in Andy’s room.  She’d want you to be here with us, you know

that.”



   “I know.  If you don’t mind, I need to go home and

check on my dad.  They changed his meds

this week.  As usual, he’s been in one of

his moods.  Never mind all that, if you

need anything, I’m number five on your speed dial.  I’ll drop off the shoes later this week.”



   “Holland, keep the shoes, I don’t

need them back.  Go check on your dad,

I’m going to try to get everyone out of here at a decent hour.  My head hurts too much to deal with so many

people.  I love you, Holly, don’t you

forget it either.” Andy’s the only person who ever called me by my childhood

nickname.  When I started high school, I

went back to my given name, Holland. Linda pulls me in for another hug, this

one is tighter and longer than the last one.

In my head I can hear Andy complaining that her mom is getting

mushy.  I smile at the thought.



  “I love you too.  I’ll be by soon.”  She’s hugging me as if she’s holding onto a

piece of her daughter for dear life.



   Most everyone here are family or

friends of the family.  A few people from

high school came to the funeral, but everyone bailed before the graveside

service.  If it were anyone other than

Andy, I would have done the same.   My

heart is heavy in my chest and tears threaten to come, but I suppress them so I

can get home before I start the water works.



   My street is ten streets away from

Andy’s house, but the neighborhoods are polar opposites.  Her street is lined with manicured lawns and

matching brick mailboxes at the end of each driveway.  Several people on our street have taken their

mailbox down because some kids drove by with a baseball bat and dented in the

metal mailboxes.  A couple of the

neighbors have cars parked in their yard and many of the houses have some type

of car up on car ramps or a jack.  Andy’s

neighborhood is filled with houses with three bedrooms and two or more

bathrooms.  Ours isn’t.



  I pull into the driveway that is

cracked from neglect and hot Oklahoma summers.

Our small two bedroom house is dark red brick with white trim that could

use a new paint job.



  The screen door bangs closed as I

step into the living room.  Dad is right

where he was when I left this morning, asleep on the couch.



   “Dad, it’s after two.”  I say it loud enough for him to hear me.



   He pushes himself up to a sitting

position.  “How was it?  Is her mom holding up okay?”



   “It was as nice as a funeral can be

for an eighteen year old girl.  Her mom’s

okay, she’s a strong woman,” I say harsher than intended.



  “When will you go to the store to

buy groceries?”



   The only question he cares

about……food.  He doesn’t give a crap about

the funeral, he’s been sitting on the couch all day.  He sits around and feels sorry for

himself.  “Dad, I told you I don’t get

paid until Tuesday.  Your Social Security

check paid the bills.  I have thirty

dollars for gas.  That’s all the money we

have in the bank.  There’s stuff to eat,

just not what you want.   Give me a few minutes to change for work and

I’ll make you some supper.”



   “You’re working on the day of your

best friend’s funeral?”  He asks, posing

as the concerned father.



   “Yes, I’m working on the day Andy

was buried.  I have to pay the bills, so

working isn’t an option. Your prescriptions will be running out this week, I

need money for your co-pays.  Look, I

don’t want to talk about this right now.”

I set my stuff down as I head down the short hall to my bedroom.



   “Holland, I’m getting better!  Don’t you worry, before long, I’ll be able to

go back to work!”  He shouts out to me.



   He’s told me a thousand times how

he’s getting better.  Per Dr. Paul, his

regular doctor, he’s never going to be fit to work again if he doesn’t go to

therapy on a regular basis.  He’s two

steps away from being placed in an institution.

He was involuntarily committed last October, it lasted for five

days.  Being the selfish person I am, it

was the most sleep I’ve had in years.  He

was safely behind locked doors, and I didn’t have to worry about which side of

him I was going to come home to.



   My little room is large enough for

my full-size bed and a small desk I found at a garage sale.  Most of my clothes are folded up inside big

plastic bins.  Andy teased me about my

organization skills.  She said I’m the

only teenager who puts away their clothes on their own.   I found it easier to strap a bin of dirty

laundry to my skateboard and pull it the two blocks to the Laundromat than to

carry it that far.  I’ve been doing our

laundry since my mom left when I was thirteen.

That was the year my dad lost his job with the advertising firm and everything

spiraled out of control.



   I bend over to tie my shoes and

pick up my keys that fell to the floor.

I double check my reflection in the mirror before rushing out of my room

to make a quick dinner for my dad.

Crap!  I think to myself as I

realize I got more bleach splatters on the hems of my khakis.  Thankfully, Gerrie won’t be working tonight

to gripe at me about buying a new pair of pants.  She find a way to complain about me at every

opportunity she finds.  She hates it when

I wear my long hair down, she says I shed it all over the store. Last year she

got upset with me for not being tan like all the other girls in the mall.  She told me guys would come in to buy

vitamins if I had a tan and wore make-up.



   Andy and I would dream up crazy

come-backs to Gerrie’s insults, but I never used them.



Andy.


 


   How can I face another day without

her humor?  How am I going to deal with

my dad without her encouragement?  How

will I carry on?


***

Chapter One.

Cheeky


Six months later.
 
   “Yes Aunt Laney, I know his

birthday is Saturday.  Dad won’t show up

for dinner, he never does.  He hates surprises

and apparently he hates showers too.  I

know you don’t like to come to our neighborhood, so you can drop it off at the

mall.  I’m working tonight and tomorrow

morning.”

   “Okay, I’ll bring it to you at the

mall.  I’ve reloaded that Visa for you to

get some groceries.  Holland, you can

come live with me, no one would blame you,” Aunt Laney says for the hundredth

time.  She’s my dad’s older sister and

the only family member who still checks in on us.  Her husband is a big corporate lawyer who

represents every big company in Oklahoma.

She was his paralegal, until they fell in love and got married.  To ease her conscience she loads a prepaid

Visa so I can buy groceries and gas.  She

paid off the mortgage last Christmas.

She has no idea how much easier she made my life when I didn’t have to

worry about that bill anymore.

   Things have been looking better

this year.  June moved away and I was

promoted to assistant-manager, which included a two dollar an hour raise.  “Okay, I’ll see you then….and thank you for

helping us by loading the Visa.”

   “Oh honey, you’re a doll.  I’m proud of you for being such a good

daughter to my baby brother.  I hope

you’ve been able to keep your flawless GPA.

You’ve been working so many days a week, it must be hard to keep up your

grades.”

   I can picture her admiring her

fingernails as she talks.  She’s always

struck me as a superficial person by the clothes she wears and the people in

her life.  “Thanks, I don’t have any

choice, he’s my dad.”  I state the

obvious.  “I’m taking online classes, so

it works around my schedule.  Not to be

rude, but I need to go; I have to be at work in fifteen minutes.”

  “I’ll see you later.”

   “Okay, I’ll see you this evening,”

I click my cell phone off and close my bedroom door behind me.

   “Dad, your dinner is in the fridge in the

purple container, heat it up for one minute.”

I turn the corner and see my dad sitting up for a change.

   “You’re going to work early, you

should eat breakfast,” he suggests.

   “Dad, it’s four in the

afternoon.  I have to do laundry

tomorrow, so it would be nice if you took a shower and put your dirty clothes

in the hamper.”  He won’t.  He’ll give me excuses why he couldn’t shower

before I got home.   Recently, he

developed a fear of showering in an empty house.  His therapist called in a new medication, but

it only seems to make him more of a zombie and has done nothing for his fear of

cleanliness.

   “Four?  The days sure go by so fast.”  He rubs his hand across his unshaven

face.  He’s not even forty, but you’d

never know by the amount of grey in his beard.

   “Gotta go, Dad,” I hold my breath

and give him a peck on his head.


—­


   Friday evening at Darby Springs

Mall is crowded as usual, leaving the only parking spaces ridiculously far from

the doors.  During my lunch period I’ll move

my car closer so I don’t have to get security to walk me to my car after

work.  I ease the Charger between two

SUVs, barely clearing the one on my right.

Aunt Laney gave me her old one as a graduation gift during my senior

year.  Old to her is anything older than

two years old.  She had only owned this

one for a year before giving it to me.

She even covers the car insurance so it wouldn’t be a burden on me and

my dad.

   “Hey Sam, can you stay until

close?  It’s the fifteenth which means

payday for the military, and they love to come stock up on the protein

powder.  This is usually the busiest day

of the month.”  I glance around the store

to make sure everything is in order.

   “Is that what’s going on?  I had to restock the powder a couple of times

already today.  One guy wanted to return

something, but I told him to come when you’re working.  He said he’d come back tonight,” Sam says.

  “Will you straighten up the display

of Vitamin C?  Someone turned all the

bottles backwards, it was probably a kid.” Sam’s a quirky guy who spends all of

his paycheck on body building powder and his spare time in the gym.  He dates a girl I went to high school with,

she’s rumored to have appeared in a couple of adult films.  She’s a pretty girl but she can’t carry on a

conversation without talking about kinky sex. “I’m going to the back to place

some orders, if you need me just call,” I say as I turn to the back of the

store.

   “Holland?” Sam’s voice booms over

the phone intercom causing me to jump.

   “Yes, Sam.”

***
   “That guy is here with the return.”

   “I’ll be right there.”

   There’s a guy at the register

dressed in jeans and a black t-shirt talking to Sam.  His short light brown hair is definitely Air

Force the way it is perfectly squared off on the back of his neck.

    I remind myself that I’m the assistant manager

and not to be intimidated.

   “Hi, I’m Holland, what can I help

you with,” I ask as I step behind the cashier counter.  Another pretty-boy airman with his deep

dimple and flawless skin.  There’s no way

he’s much older than I am, that’s good because I don’t typically back down to

people my age.  Older guys in the

military scare me, they seem so hard and angry.

   “Hey Holland, Sam here told me to

come back when you’re here to refund this powder.”

   The first thing I notice are his

eyes, pale blue eyes…incredibly pretty blue eyes and smile.  The manager-in-training classes I took told

me to always hold the customer’s gaze.

They obviously never looked into eyes like his.  It takes everything in me not to shift my

eyes away from him.  It makes me feel

exposed as if he is literally looking into my soul.

“Yes sir, is there a problem with

the powder?”

  He’s first to avert his eyes and

look down at the jug of Mega Muscle Protein Powder.  “It gave me a rash,” he replies without looking

up at me.

  Most of the guys who come in are

embarrassed to admit they ended up with a rash. “A rash?  Do you have a photo of the rash?”  Our return policy on store-brand products are

if it gives you a rash, you have to provide a photo.  There’s nothing more disgusting than looking

at a rash on a stranger.

  “That rule on your policy is pretty

intrusive.  When I read it, I was floored

that it was a real rule.”

   Here we go, he’ll turn off the

charm and turn into a douche.  I’m sure

Sam is doing the countdown in his head.

“Yes sir, we must turn in the photo along with the explanation in to our

corporate office.  Our policy is for

quality control and has nothing to do with being intrusive.  May I see the picture?”
He pulls out his cell phone and

scrolls through his pictures before holding it up for me to see.  Sure enough, it’s a rash… on his ass!  He took a selfie of his ass rash in the

mirror. He is standing in his boxers and holding one side of them down and

taking a picture with his other hand.  I

need to call Andy and tell her about this, she’s going to die laughing.  Dammit!

I can’t call her, because she’s dead.

   “I need a print of the picture,” I

snap.  My mood has gone from good to

pissed in two seconds.

   “You really need a picture of my

ass to give me a thirty-five dollar refund?”

   I cock my head to the side, my

go-to defense pose when I’m hiding my feelings from the world.  “I didn’t write the rules, but I follow

them.”  This is the look Andy called my bitch-face.
 
   “Look, I’m not going to go print

off a picture of my ass to get a thirty-five dollar refund.  You can keep the powder and the money.”  He shakes his head back and forth before

taking his receipt and folding it up neatly before returning it to his wallet.

   I stand at the register and watch

him walk out of the store.

   “What happened?”  Sam asks.

   “Nothing, I’m following policy,” I

reply nonchalantly.

   Sam looks at me like he wasn’t

buying it for an instant.  “Holland, one

minute you were okay and the next you flipped and were pissed off.”

   “I didn’t flip.”  I gather up my paperwork to tally out our

sales for the day.  My dad flips, I just

get pissed.

   “I think there’s Pamprin in the

office, if you need it,” Sam says sarcastically.  Good thing I like him or I’d write him up

just because I can.

   “I’m not PMSing and just for that,

you get to mop the floor tonight.”

Without turning around, I head back to the office.  When memories of Andy pop into my head, I’m

reminded how lonely life is without her.

I’ve been going to her grave and sitting there for hours.   She was always my sounding board when it

came to my dad, now I feel guilty for all the times I made her listen to me

complain.  We should have spent more time

doing pranks and laughing at stupid movies.

Now, I’ll never be able to do those things with someone.  Lately, everything reminds me of her and I’ll

either cry or get angry.  It isn’t that

I’m mad at her, it’s I don’t know when the pain will stop.  My therapist says dumb things like, time heals all wounds, or everyone grieves differently.  The therapist was Aunt Laney’s idea since the

health insurance policy she bought for me covers the visits.

   “Knock, knock,” Sam’s voice brings

me back to reality.  “Hey, do I really

have to mop the floor?  I have plans

after work and I don’t want to smell like bleach and dirty mop water.”

   “I told you to mop not take a

bath.  I’ll let it slide this time, but

don’t ever hint for me to take Pamprin again, okay?”

   “Deal.  Your Aunt Laney is in the store, do you want

me to send her back here?”

   “No, I’ll go out there.”

***

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DEVYN DAWSON

   I’ve thought of myself as a writer for as long as I can remember.  I played grown-up with my family, until everyone grew up and left me to figure out what I really wanted to be.  Jumping over the cliff, I took a leap of faith and wrote my first full length novel, The Legacy of Kilkenny.  My love of young adult books, helped mold me into the writer I am today.  The books I write, reflect the types of books I enjoy reading.  Every story I write will have a huge twist at the end, one that often leaves the reader in shock (no pun intended, if you know me, you know why I say that, LOL).  Thank you for considering to read my books.  Happy reading!

Thank you for having me on your blog!



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Published on August 02, 2014 05:01
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