Please Pretty Lights
Ina Zajac
Blurb: It’s September when good girl Via Sorenson stumbles into a Seattle strip club, drunk and alone on her twenty-first birthday. Matt and Nick—best friends, bandmates, and bouncers—do their best to shield her from their sadistic cocaine-trafficking boss, Carlos. They don’t realize her daddy issues come with a forty-million-dollar trust fund and a legacy she would do anything to escape. She is actually Violetta Rabbotino, who had been all over the news ten years earlier when her father, an acclaimed abstract artist, came home in a rage, murdered her mother, then turned the gun on himself. Young Violetta was spared, hidden behind the family Christmas tree, veiled by the mysticism of its pretty lights whose unadulterated love captivated and calmed her. Now, desperate to shed her role as orphaned victim, Via stage dives into a one-hundred-day adventure with Matt and Nick, the bassist and drummer of popular nineties cover band Obliviot. The rock-and-roll lifestyle is the perfect distraction—until she is rattled by true love. As Christmas looms closer, her notorious past becomes undeniable. How will she ever untangle herself from her twisted string of pretty lights?
About the Author:
Ina Zajac is an award-winning journalist, avid people watcher, and lover of quirk and contrast. Her writing is heavily influenced by her fascination with music, art, and her hometown of Seattle.
Website: http://www.inazajac.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/InaZajacWrites
Twitter: @InaZajac
Excerpt:
Chapter 1
SoHo, New York City, December 21, 2004
*** Via
Back to the wall, Via shuffled through
the candy cane wilderness, careful not to displace piles of presents
or disturb crystal angels. It was so close. Branches prickled against
her chin and neck as she stretched into the corner. Needles latched
onto her green St. Anne Elementary School sweater. After months of
waiting and wondering, there it was—white with a gold bow. She
reached out. Her fingertips grazed the paper, the tag. It would have
her name on it.
“No peeking,” her mother called
from the kitchen. “Cookies are almost ready. Come and help.”
Guilt settled in and crowded out her
naughty curiosity. Mama’s feathery voice lingered in the air, and
mingled with the smell of gingersnaps.
The front door slammed shut. Her body
tensed against the wall as it recognized the rumble of her father’s
approach. Her arm retreated to the safety of her side. The hardwood
floor vibrated his location in the foyer. He wasn’t supposed to be
home from the country yet. He needed his rest.
“Ingrid!” he yelled.
“Violetta!”
He called her Violetta when he was
angry. When he was happy, he said she was the heartbeat of the
universe. Now that she was eleven, she wasn’t a little kid anymore,
but she still called him Daddy. He made her promise she would always
call him Daddy.
His voice was muffled. The floor was
still. He must have stopped to check the front bedrooms, but for how
long? That tummy pain was back, the one that burned from the inside
out; the one Dr. Peyton said fifth graders shouldn’t have. Being
the daughter of Joseph Antonio Rabbotino wasn’t easy. Kids at
school called her Rabbit and were never allowed to come over and
play. The floor trembled more and more. He must be standing
nearby, maybe next to the piano, she thought. She couldn’t see
past the tree’s festive colors, and prayed he couldn’t either.
She had promised to be a good girl.
Her mother’s voice rushed over from
the kitchen. It was shrill. “Oh, my God,” she said. “Put that
down. You’re not yourself right now.”
Put what down? She wondered. Sometimes
he brought home presents or pets.
“You think I’m crazy?” He let out
a harsh laugh she had never heard before. “You think you can drug
me and leave me in Connecticut to rot?”
A bell near her elbow began to jingle.
Don’t be a spaz, she told herself. She had to stop shaking;
she just had to. Being invisible meant being silent, so she leaned to
the right and smothered it. Her other arm met up with something
pointy.
“But, you wanted to go, remember?”
Her mother was talking really fast. “Dr. Goldman said you should
rest, give the new meds some time.”
Daddy had a lot of doctors. Daddy took
a lot of pills.
“I know what you think of me,” he
said. “That the critics are right. That I’ll never paint again.”
“It’s okay, it’s all going to be
okay,” her mother insisted. “But you’ve been drinking. We’ve
gotten through this before. Remember?”
“Why do you do this to me?” he
asked. “Evil little actress. Acting like you love me.”
“I do. You know I do.”
“Liar.”
“Please, put that down. We’ll call
Dr. Goldman.”
“You sent me away. Do you know what
it was like there? Knowing you betrayed me? All you had to do was
love me, but you’ve ruined me!”
“No, you wanted to go. You needed to
rest. Please remember. Please.”
“Where’s my Violetta?”
“Still at school.”
“She should be home by now—home
with us. We should be together now. She hiding under her bed again?”
His words turned and trailed back toward the front bedrooms.
“Violetta! Come when I call you!”
“Mama?” She called through the
branches.
Her mother didn’t seem surprised at
all to hear her. “Shh,” she said, faint but firm. It was not her
normal ‘shh.’ Something was wrong.
Her father’s voice was already
growing louder again. “Violetta!”
“I’m right here,” she tried to
say. She decided that she would come out; then he would be angry with
her, not her mother. But, a strange sound surrounded her, like baby
birds and chimes. It seemed to come through the Christmas tree
lights. She blinked. They were such pretty lights—colors she had
never seen before. Buzzing into a haze around her, they were
mesmerizing.
Shh, it’s
all okay, the lights told her, but not in words.
She felt their meaning in her teeth and
bones.
Come and play with us,
they urged. Come play pretend.
They flurried about. She tried to
speak, but they settled against her tongue like candy-coated snow.
They loved her. She watched them spin and shine and gleam and glow.
They were everything she needed in that moment, and so she relaxed
into the soft aura of Christmas.
Her mother was screaming, “She’s
not here! She’s not here!”
The purest colors were born and danced
within reflections of those who had come
before. You’re
not here, they echoed. You’re
with us. They snuggled in and tucked themselves around
her. Be still, they insisted. This
isn’t real. She
knew they were right. Nothing was real. She was everywhere and
nowhere at all, safe between worlds. Her mother’s golden wall clock
started to ding its hourly announcement—once, twice.
“You did this,” her father said.
A third ding.
“You made me do this.”
Four.
Mama’s voice fluttered. “Remember
who you are.”
A loud noise exploded throughout the
apartment. Ornaments rattled and slipped from their homes, and Via
with them. Her hands came up to cover her ears, but his voice soon
rode the wave of ringing and broke on through.
“Why?” he cried. “Why did you
make me do this?”
Another explosion ripped away the space
around her. She sank down overcome by the bells ringing around her.
Why? Why were the bells so loud? It was a gun, she realized. The
sound vibrating through her was gunfire. Her shoulder came to rest
against the edge of the big box—white with a gold bow. Air came
into her lungs in notches, each tighter than the last. She didn’t
know what to do. Her trembling hand grasped a branch with a candy
cane hanging from it. She began to pull it back.
“Mama?”
Don’t
look, the pretty lights urged
her. It’s not
real. It’s not her.
But it was too late. She had already
peered past the angels—and through to the other side.
“Ma—”
Mouth open, heart lost, she released
the branch and it sprang back into place. Its candy cane held strong.
The pretty lights spoke no more, but hummed and tingled. The murmur
of their adoration grew faint and she began to panic. She curled up
into herself, tight and small, desperate to disappear back into their
protection.
“Please, pretty lights. Please don’t
go.”
She blinked and the lights were just
lights. The floors roared. New voices overtook the fading bells.
People were yelling. People were coming. An alarm shrieked overhead.
The taste of gingersnap dust burnt through the air.
“Please, pretty lights,” she called
out again, even though she knew they were gone.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for visiting!