Author: A.L. Bryant
Publisher: HSW Publications LLC
Pages: 279
Genre: Supernatural Christian Thriller/Horror
On New Year’s Eve 2021 the staff at St. Ann ’s Hospital witness a medical miracle
when a semi-conscious woman walks into
the emergency room. The Jane Doe has been stabbed multiple times and as the
staff struggle to keep the woman alive in the end all they can do is stand back
and watch as their mysterious patient revives herself.
Glory wakes up in St.
Ann ’s Hospital gravely injured from an attack she
cannot remember. However, her memory loss is no ordinary amnesia and she is no
ordinary patient. Much to the shock of the hospital staff Glory heals at three
times the rate of an average person. Soon the administration hears of her
unique case and waste no time convincing the recovering Glory to be a part of
an experiment to discover the origins of her power.
Once outside the comforting walls of the hospital it becomes
apparent that healing is just a small portion of Glory’s capabilities.
Abilities that to Glory’s distress are becoming increasingly unstable. Deciding
that the hospital’s experiments are in vain, Glory embarks on her own Journey
to discover the source of her power, unaware that she is a major pawn in a war
between two secret organizations.
The two syndicates continue to clash in their fight for
control and their battles result in several casualties. The crimes of their
warfare surface and draw the attention of Dennis Wilson, a NYPD Detective known
for solving his cases in the first forty-eight hours. Dennis follows the trail
of bodies out of curiosity. But when his curiosity causes the deaths of his
loved ones Detective Dennis becomes obsessed with the case.
In his overzealous attempts to find the murderer Dennis
becomes the syndicates’ next target. Now the Detective must run for his life
and the only person capable of saving him is the very person he suspects.
Blessed: The Prodigal Daughter is a hybrid of
government espionage and supernatural Thriller. This novel is intended for
audiences 18+ that seek an edgier outlook on Christian fiction. Blessed: The
Prodigal Daughter is the first installment of the Blessed trilogy.
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Enjoy this excerpt:
With a slight hesitation, Glory
examined the entrance. Using the corner of her jacket she tested the knob, not
overly surprised when the door opened easily. Behind her, she could still hear
the muffled sounds of the girl’s sobs. Glory stepped one foot through the door
and paused. She turned sideways and looked back out into the yard. With one
foot inside the house and one still on the porch, she stared at the girl, whose
eyes were as wide as her own. The side of her body that remained outside of the
house felt light; she could feel the breeze whip her clothing. She raised her
hand and, as expected, it lifted easily. Glory looked down at her other arm,
the one in the corridor of the house. Sweat drizzled down her brow as she
struggled to lift it.
Making sure
to keep her voice light, Glory nodded in the direction of the gate. “Go home,
I’ll get Mitch and he’ll call you afterwards.” She waited until the girl nodded
reluctantly and disappeared.
Feeling a strong urge to leave,
Glory turned as quickly as she could and closed the door behind her. Instant
darkness. She pulled out the cell phone Dr. Stephens had helped her purchase
shortly after she left the hospital, and turned its flashlight on. She had not
paid the bill in a long time, so she had no service, but Glory still kept it
charged. The corridor was short, maybe two or three large steps long. A staircase,
which dominated the space in the narrow corridor, stood against the left wall. Glory
shined the light up the steps trying to determine where they led, but the
light’s range was too short.
Examining the staircase carefully
to make sure it could hold her weight, Glory began ascending. The house had its
own gravity; every step felt like moving through quicksand. By the time she
made it to the top, she was winded. She leaned against the wall, shining her
light around the area while she rested. She stood in another corridor, much
larger than the first one. A solid wall lined one side; several doors, some of
them mere centimeters apart, lined the other. She pushed herself away from the
wall and walked to the first door, covered her hand with her jacket, turned the
knob, and pushed the door. It gave way only slightly before it refused to open
any farther. She tried pulling the door, but it could only be opened inward.
She pushed one more time, shining a light through the narrow opening to see if
she could locate the blockage—silently hoping it wasn’t the boy—but nothing met
the light. Frustrated, she moved on to the next door, only to encounter the
same problem.
By the sixth one, Glory started to
wonder if any of them were meant to open. With each door, she put more strength
and effort into her shoulders and arms, desperately trying to force her way
through. By the twelfth, she was exhausted. She took a deep breath and shoved
her shoulder against it. The door swung open, Glory stumbled two feet, and fell
through the hole behind it. She fell through one story of the house into an
open room and into the much bigger hole in that room’s floor. She fell through
another story and into another room with another hole. She hit hard rock and
slid until she landed on her back. Her head hit the floor and her eyes
instantly clouded from the impact.
Glory’s breath and sight came back
simultaneously. Slowly, she sat up with a grunt as she brought her right hand
to her ribs. Not only had her pack survived the fall, but she had managed to hold
on to her phone. Standing up, still favoring her left side, Glory began dusting
herself off. Her hands shook and she took a deep breath to dispel the effects
of the adrenaline still rushing through her body. Turning on the light so she
could look around, Glory shifted her feet. Taking a small step forward, she
tripped on something, but managed sustain her balance with a small hop to
dislodge whatever had caught her foot.
Glory turned the light downward to
look at the ground and saw a piece of cloth clinging to her boot. Ruffles—the
cloth was filthy, covered in dust and grime, but the ruffles still maintained
their shape. Forgetting herself, Glory reached out and ran her fingertips over
the cloth, smoothing the dirt away so she could see the color. Her fingertips grew
warm and her eyes widened as she realized what she had done. Too
late, she snatched her hand away.
“This is so exciting!” A young
woman in a blue ball gown tightened her grip on her friend’s arm, her gloved
fingers long and delicate. Looking a little less interested, her friend, a tall,
thin brunette, pried the girl’s hands from her arm, but her friend only returned
them with slightly less bruising force.
“Yes, well, if my father knew I was
here, it would be the end of me.”
“That’s what these are for, silly.”
The young woman flipped her blonde hair behind her shoulders and tapped her
masquerade mask with her folded fan.
“I shouldn’t have let you talk me
into this. I have a bad feeling.”
“You are thinking far too much. Now
tell me how beautiful I look and then let’s go get some refreshments.”
The brunette stood back and
pretended to consider her friend. “You look positively stunning as always,
Annabelle. Your dress is lovely; I could never pull off so many ruffles.”
Annabelle waved the last statement
away. “Nonsense, Sarah, I’m sure you would look just as lovely in ruffles. I
don’t know why you insist on wearing such drab garments.” She looked her friend
up and down, a frown on her face as she examined the dark green dress that
covered Sarah, from its unfashionably high neckline down to the slightly
pointed toes of her boots.
Sarah grimaced. “My father does not
agree with today’s fashions. He thinks exposing shoulders, wrists, and cleavage
is unseemly.” Trying to distract her friend from her dress, she made a show of
looking around. “This is an extremely odd house, isn’t it? Why would he build a
staircase directly at the entrance?”
“For that matter, why build a
staircase that only goes to the top floor when there are four flights in
between?”
“We’ve been here less than an hour
and I’m already confused. So many corridors and staircases.”
“And how many rooms are there,
anyway? There are doors everywhere you look.” The girls spoke frantically now,
their intertwined arms squeezing together as they became more excited.
Annabelle turned to her friend.
“Let’s explore the house more.”
About the author:
A.L. Bryant was born and raised in St. Petersburg FL.
She became interested in writing at an early age; an interest that depending on
the circumstance brought punishment (detention for passing out the latest
installment of her novella during class) and praise (being chosen for a youth
writers conference at the Poynter Institute.)
A.L. Bryant gets her inspiration from both her mother and her Great
Grandmother. Her mother recently published an inspirational children’s book
under a pseudonym and her great grandmother is South Carolina ’s first published
African-American female author and playwright.
Until recently writing had simply been a pastime for A.L.
Bryant who although she attended several writing courses, graduated with a B.A.
in International Business. It was shortly after her second job as a Financial
Office Manager at a Goodwill correctional facility that she realized she loved
writing more than anything else. It would still be some years before she would convert
the short story she wrote in college into a novel.
Besides writing, A.L. Bryant loves traveling the world. God
has blessed her with the opportunity to visit a total of seven countries. She
has studied abroad in Seoul
and has traveled throughout Kenya ;
two locations she researched for her Blessed
series. Her dream is to visit every country in the world.
Her latest book is the supernatural Christian thriller
horror novel, Blessed: The Prodigal Daughter.
SOCIAL LINKS:
Twitter Link: https://twitter.com/ALBryantHSW
Facebook Link: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100029069148653
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