God
Whisperer
By: Kimberely Troutte
Releasing July 15th, 2014
Astraea Press
Blurb
A frightened mother on the run
LONNIE HOGAN has
lived and breathed fear for the eight years she and her son have been on the
run. She cut ties with the past and is hiding out in a small offbeat Danish
community in California. Will the killers find them? She’s ready to run again,
or fight for her son’s precious life, but she won’t let anyone take David.
A desperate man searching for his family…
Few people on St.
John, Virgin Islands, know their favorite doctor, MARK NORTON, is a desperate
man searching for the life that was stolen from him. After hours, he surfs the
internet for leads and retraces paths gone stone-cold to find his missing
family. He’ll do anything to find them and get his son back.
Will sacrifice
everything to protect the boy who hears God…
DAVID HOGAN is a
regular kid, if you don’t count the one-ear thing. He didn’t mind being deaf in
one ear, but it hurt his mom, way down deep, as if she caused it. Why won’t she
see bad things can happen for good reasons? Like the ear surgery that allowed
him to hear God. Talking to God is one of the greatest things to ever happen to
him, even if Mom doesn’t believe it. But the killers can find them now. Can one
little kid save them all?
Buy Links
Author Info
New York Times and USA Today Bestselling
Author, Kimberley Troutte, is
a top 100 Amazon author for romantic suspense. GOD
WHISPERER was inspired by her sweet son who was born with one incomplete ear.
When surgeons created an eardrum and canal for him and he could hear with both
ears for the first time, Kimberley wept with joy and gratitude.
10% of the author
royalties will be donated to the American Society for Deaf Children.
Rafflecopter Giveaway ($20.00 Amazon Gift
Card or Digital Copy of GOD WHISPERER (3))
Link to Rafflecopter Page, http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/share-code/NTIxYWM0YzhjYmFkNDc1MDkxYzA3ZDNmMjhhM2RjOjQxMQ==/
Excerpt
Lonnie sat down next to him and lifted the plastic ear covering.
“All right, time to let that ear breathe.”
David flinched. “How’s it look?”
Big tears dripped off her cheeks.
“Um, Mom. Is it that
gross?”
“Oh, baby.” She kissed him on the forehead. “It’s amazing.”
She didn’t lie. The outside edge of the ear was still wrapped in a
bandage, but my goodness, it was no longer a little nub. He had a new ear
complete with an ear canal. It was plugged with tan-colored goo, but there it
was—an actual hole.
“Amazing is good, right?” David asked.
Pulling him into her arms, she gave him a gentle hug. “So good.”
She kissed his cheek. “A wonderful miracle.” She kissed his forehead.
“Mom, I can’t breathe.”
She released him. “Sorry.”
He looked her in the eyes. “You believe in miracles?”
Lonnie was taken aback. She believed in them a long time ago, but
now? “I just meant we were lucky to find Dr. Mason. He was the right guy for
the surgery.”
“Do you believe in God, Mom?”
Tucking her feet under her, she sighed. “I used to.”
“Why’d you stop? Was it when Dad died?”
“It’s a long story.”
“I’m not going anywhere.”
“You’re right about that.” She rubbed his arm. “Dr. Mason said to
take it easy.”
He narrowed his eyes at her. “You’re so stalling. Tell me the story. What made you stop believing in
God?”
How could she tell him about the horrors she’d been through? David
was eight years old and still believed in Santa. Why wouldn’t he believe in
God, angels, and the tooth fairy? She didn’t want to take any of it from him.
Not yet. He was growing up so fast.
She chose the simplest explanation. “If there is a God, I don’t
understand how He could let bad stuff happen. You know? War, hunger, sickness.
Why allow those things? Especially babies born with—” she did not, nor would
she ever, say the word deformed,
“—with problems? If there is a God, I’m really mad at Him.”
He stared at his knees for a moment as if mulling over her answer.
Turning a hopeful face towards her he said, “Maybe God has a plan. Like, um,
bad stuff happens for good reasons?”
She ran her fingers through her hair. “I don’t know, kiddo. That’s
kind of hard for me to swallow.”
David was silent for a moment and then said, “You’ve swallowed
worse haven’t you?”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“I have no idea.” He
massaged his neck, like his dad used to do. It took her breath away.
“David.” She put a hand on his shoulder. “Why would you say that?”
A strange look passed over his face. It reminded her of the time
when he was three and snuck a gallon of ice cream out of the freezer, hid in
his closet, and ate it until he was sick.
“No clue.” He tapped his forehead. “Since the surgery, thoughts pop
into my head like someone else is in there.”
“What?” Worry flickered up her spine.
She lifted his chin until they were eye-to-eye and studied him. His
pupils were normal, his coloring fine. Except for the giant bandage wrapped
around his ear, he looked like a healthy kid.
“You’re tired.” She put the protective covering back on his ear.
“Rest, now. We’ll see your regular doctor on Monday to change the bandage and
check you out. If he says you can stop taking the pain pills we’ll stop. Maybe
the medicines are making your brain fuzzy.”
“Yeah, that’s probably it,” he said.
But his expression said something else. It was the
ice-cream-sneaking-guilt-face all over again. He was hiding something from her.
Something big.
Thank you for hosting me!
ReplyDeleteI'm happy to.
Delete