

I Can See You
“Emma stuck her face to the window to watch the rain. Lightning in the background drew a fiery specter in the sky while her eyes traced the water droplets running down the pane like tears.” Emma Willis is ten years old and has a secret. She not only inherited her grandmother’s power of sight, she can accomplish much more. Like most children without siblings growing up amongst adults, she is precocious yet at times lonely. When a murderer is loose in Newark, a maniac with a thirst for killing little girls, she begins to understand why her Granny Dottie called her sight a curse. She will need all her powers to catch a killer and help the people in her life: Detective Hank Apple, her teacher Christina Tyler, and her little family of three. Only … the madman knows who she is!
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Joss Landry
With a degree in commerce, Joss has worked as a consultant for more than twenty years, writing copy for marketing firms and assisting start-up companies launch their business. She recently made the switch from composing copy and promos, to writing fiction and prose. She is developing her style through courses and the support of other writers. She is a member of the Romance Writers of America and is presently working on honing three other novels for publication. Blessed with four children and five grandchildren, she resides in Montreal with her husband, a staunch supporter, and enjoys spending time biking, rollerblading, playing tennis, and swimming. She loves creating stories as she says they fulfill her need to think outside the box.
Excerpt
Emma propels herself to her Aunt Franka’s hospital room.
Later that evening
Emma still had the nose in her granny Dottie’s diary. She’d been hustled from
Abigail’s place to the Marriott, had been asked to postpone her much awaited
meeting with Amelia and through it all she’d kept on reading, learning what
several generations of women had accomplished already.
She’d cried when
she’d witnessed her grandmother’s shrieks about Franka, ranting about the place
as though pacing and pulling her hair out would change anything. She’d hidden
in her room terrified upon learning about Hank being hospitalized. The only
solace she gathered came from the diary’s energy and all the information the
teachings brought her. The book’s writings had kept her from falling apart. Generations
of women that all had one specialty or another and here she seemed to be able
to accomplish the lot of them.
Her grandmother was
finally asleep. Earlier she’d left Emma with a police officer to go see Franka
at the hospital. They didn’t think it was a good idea for Emma to be seen in
public, so she’d stayed in her room.
Now at last the house
was quiet and dark. She had to do something about her aunt Franka, one of her
favorite people in the world.
She got up and
tiptoed to the window. She’d tried to open it but hadn’t been able to do so.
Didn’t matter. All she needed was to dress properly and carry the piece of
paper filled with her notes inside her jacket’s pocket, to remember in case she
forgot the thought and incantation to get home again. She gazed around the room
one last time to imprint its familiarity in her mind. She removed the amulet
she wore on a chain. She didn’t relish leaving the little oudjat behind, but
with the precious stone close to her heart, she would be grounded and unable to
lift off.
She whispered a
little prayer, sat on the bed and crossed her arms as she placed a palm on each
shoulder. Lift me away, oh Universe lift me away so I may fly to best serve
a loved one. In her head she recited the address of the hospital and her
aunt’s room number praying she would land in the right place.
Emma arrived in a room that was dark and quiet.
Street sounds busy and frantic had her hoping she’d landed in the right place.
She opened her eyes and stared at the pale white flask of an IV bag perched
high on a pole as the phosphorescent glow caught the light of the moon’s
crescent through the open curtain. Gently she approached the bed and gazed at
her aunt’s face. Franka appeared peaceful and asleep, and she reached for her
hand lying on top of the blanket.
“Aunt Franka?” Doctors said she’d fallen into a coma
and all they could do was hope she might wake up. She took one of her hands in
hers and rubbed it gently. “It’s okay, Aunt Franka. The bad man is gone. You’re
going to be fine now.”
After cooing to her aunt for a few more minutes, a
soft moan echoed her words. Franka opened her eyes. Immediately she began to
cry as she stared right through Emma. “Emma,” she whispered. “I didn’t tell him
where you are.”
“He’s gone, Aunt Franka. And I’m fine. He doesn’t
know where I am.”
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