Book Title: Tell The Truth; The Devil Won't
Genre: Christian Fiction
Paperback: 288 pages
Publisher: Urban Christian (October 27, 2015)
ISBN-10: 1622868196
ISBN-13: 978-1622868193
Publication Date: October 27, 2015
Author: Colette
Harrell
About
The Book
The full-figured Esther Redding doesn’t realize it,
but she desperately needs a change. Her Cinderella tiara is tarnished, and her
glass slippers cracked.
No longer any one’s knight in shining armor, Briggs
Stokes always had a soft spot for Esther. She was in his blood, and he didn’t
want a transfusion. When he returns to Detroit, he decides that nothing will
keep him from her door. Well, nothing . . . but the once reformed bad girl,
Monica Stokes Hawthorne, Briggs’s ex, who wants to be his—give me one more
chance, again—wife. The resulting tug-of-war that ensues may be the catalyst
that destroys the person they both love the most.
More than one household is upset when the prison
doors swing open and a “rehabilitated” Roger, Esther’s ex, returns home.
Following Roger is a sinister force so malicious that no one in their community
will be left untouched.
When truth is held hostage by lies, mayhem ensues.
And when it does, the lives of Esther, Briggs, Monica, and Roger are forever
changed.
Don’t blink—pray—these shenanigans are too shocking
to miss . . .
The second stand-alone book in the Heaven over Hell
trilogy.
About
The Author
Colette Harrell, wants you to know that she’s like
you, God’s chosen vessel. She has come to be a gift, to be an encourager and a
light that reflects God’s goodness.
She’s a wife, mother, author and playwright. A
Detroit native, she currently calls Ohio home. She holds a master’s and is a
Director of Social Services. Writing with humor and compassion to engage and
minister to the human heart. Her motto is: whatever you do, do it “for love
alone.”
Her newest novel, Devil Get Behind Me! Will thrill
this January 2016. It is filled with wisdom and humor. This adventourous love
story goes where Ms. Harrell loves to tread, down an unbeaten path. No
millionaires rescuing damsels in distress—although she enjoys these reads
herself—but real people, falling and getting back up.
The Devil Made Me Do It was her debut novel. It was
Nominated for First Fiction for the Phyllis Wheatley Book Award. It has been
held as one of Black Pearl Magazine’s, top ten Christian fiction books for
2014. And, Read Between The Lines radio show, named it as one of its overall
top ten books for 2014.
Her sophomore novel, Tell The Truth, The Devil Won’t
will cement her as an author to watch.
Excerpt
Chapter One
It was dead cold. The air crackled with the sound of
ice-covered tree branches crashing onto cement sidewalks; it was an unnatural
arctic day, even for Harlem. There were motorists stranded on every major
highway as an epic ice storm settled over the length of New York City. And
while the air over those highways was filled with road rage, explicit language,
and hunger pains, the contrasting hush of the opulent brownstones on 132nd
Street was shattered by an eerie scream that filled the bitter air.
Monica Hawthorne, the ex-Mrs. Briggs Stokes, stood
shaking uncontrollably. Her beloved, risked-everything she-had-to-have-him
husband of one month, Randall, lay in a pool of blood on their imported
Brazilian cherry kitchen floor. If Randall could, he would have stood up and
told her for the tenth time that ten thousand dollars for a floor was too much,
and just because she could buy it didn’t mean she had to. But Randall couldn’t
utter a word. She watched horrified as his blood seeped into the natural
grooves of the wood, giving credence to the fact that maybe the cost was too
much.
Monica blinked, but he wasn’t getting up or giving
her advice about her newly acquired wealth, because standing over him was his
newly divorced wife, the ex-Mrs. Meredith Hawthorne. This
She-Spawn-from-the-Pits, with her six hundred-dollar hairdo mussed, her
designer clothes askew, and her chest heaving in spastic breaths, clutched the
knife that once protruded from Randall’s chest. Words of explanation weren’t
necessary; the vivid picture painted its own morbid story.
Monica was spellbound. She was in her own home. The
ordeal of leaving one husband to claim another’s was behind her. The guilt had
been laid aside. The shame stamped down, at least temporarily. It was Randall
and her against the world. But it had all just changed drastically.
Snapping to, Monica shrieked, “Oh sweet Jesus! What
have you done? You crazy—!”
Her cries were halted by the demented gleam in the
ex-Mrs. Hawthorne’s eyes. The maniac’s focus switched from Randall to her, then
back to Randall. Mrs. Hawthorne had gone mad, crazy, bonkers, craycray.
Monica’s head hurt at the thought that she was still
addressing this woman by what was rightfully her new name. It bore
psychological study that she could only think of the witch as Mrs. Hawthorne.
For over three years the woman had railed it at her, negating Monica’s right to
ever wear the title. She’d stood in haughty arrogance and promised in divorce
court that she would never relinquish it. At the time, Monica didn’t care; she
felt Mrs. Hawthorne could keep the last name, as long as she had the man. Now
she felt she had been short-sighted. If in the middle of a bloody rampage, she
thought of her that way, then who was she?
The murderous interloper looked on in glee as blood
bubbled out of Randall’s mouth. Monica observed her spiteful approval as
Randall’s hand feebly stretched over his wound, but failed in mustering the
strength to staunch the flow of his river of life. His eyelids
fluttered—pausing, fighting to focus as he scanned beyond Mrs. Hawthorne’s
face. His eyes settled on Monica’s outstretched hands.
“Randall,” Monica whispered. She swayed in agony.
Time was grinding to a stop, like an old-fashioned
watch discarded in a moth-eaten hope chest, it would soon end, and Randall
would be done. She needed a way to get close to him, but Mrs. Hawthorne stood
as she had for the last three years, directly in her path.
Always . . . in my way.
Rage bubbled into a go-for-broke moment. Monica
launched forward and charged Mrs. Hawthorne with a Joan of Arc warrior’s roar.
The sound of the impact and responding grunt was dulled by the body that
crumpled to the floor. Monica gambled . . . and lost. Her body fell inches from
Randall’s.
Her hands bloodied, Mrs. Hawthorne rocked in despair.
She had meant to take her time with the slut, but her offensive attack had
taken her by surprise.
Then . . . Monica moved. What she was witnessing had Mrs. Hawthorne’s keening wail ricochet throughout the
spacious brownstone. She glowered in anguish, howling as Monica’s fingers
inched toward Randall’s, and they entwined even in their near-death status.
She watched in ghoulish repulsion as the almost
loving tableau played out before her. Her eyebrows arched as she made out
Monica’s pleading words, “Jesus, help us.”
A rattle of air descended from Randall . . . and then
stillness.
In slow motion, Mrs. Hawthorne turned in robotic
movements away from the scene. Her steps faltered when she heard Monica’s
fading voice, “Father, why hast thou forsaken me?”
The prophetic words washed over her as she stood in
cold resolution. Shaking it off, she strutted away from the two people who had
humiliated her in public and had caused her heart to bleed dry for three
unbearable years.
Randall had won his freedom, imprisoning her in her
own madness in the process.
She had sworn to Randall’s dying mother, there would
be no divorce. Tears gathered at the end of her hawkish nose, dribbling onto
her twice-a-week, spa-waxed upper lip, then streamed down her
cosmetic-tightened neck.
She was Mrs. Meredith Hawthorne, of the Hawthornes,
and failure was foreign to her. In agony, she backtracked, and stumbled,
tumbling over the bodies. Blindly, Meredith wiped her eyes, reared back, and
spit in Monica’s face. Still feeling empty and unfulfilled, she stared, craving
the ability to wake Monica and kill her again.
Rising, she noted Randall’s discarded, prized Civil
War-era, matching pearl- and jewel-handled knives. She blew a kiss at him, and
left the knives there. It was only fitting Randall have ownership of what he
demanded in the divorce decree. What better way to deliver his bounty, then to
use it as the method of obliteration for both he and his tramp?
Mrs. Hawthorne reached into her purse and pulled out
her derringer. Acting as a lover whose desire is close to fulfillment, she
caressed it. Her insides churning, she panted, taking one last glance at the
co-conspirators to her destruction. She could answer Monica’s final question.
God had forsaken Monica because she was a Delilah home wrecker. What Mrs.
Hawthorne wanted to know, was why He had forsaken her.
She lay the letters for her children—who never
called—on the solid mahogany credenza, then her purse. All she’d had was the
facade of a happy life. She’d paid for it in an avalanche of tears as she
played dumb blonde to Randall’s neglect and numerous indiscretions over the
years, anything to keep him home. And how had he repaid her? By falling for a
nasty, ashy-prone, ghetto rat. The slut’s resulting pregnancy, and his request
for a divorce, “so he could be happy” was the Joker’s wild card. How many
wrongs was she expected to endure?
She looked around and hiccupped laughter—a
great-granddaughter of the confederacy ending up in a brownstone in Harlem?
Well, rise up every long-buried plantation owner and move over. I’m coming in,
and from this gaudy, overpriced slum.
In the middle of her cynical chuckle, she bit her
lip. She was stalling and knew it. The gun shook in her hands as she placed the
barrel to her temple; lips pressed together, she focused on the brightness of
the moon, brilliant against the frigid dark sky. The trigger was pulled, and
the gun clattered to the ground. Once again blood seeped into the Brazilian
cherry hardwood floor.
It should now have been quiet in the apartment.
Instead, after the booming sound of the gunshot, you could hear through the
intercom three things: the startled cries of a newborn, a phone ringing, and a
feeble whimper.
The air was clear and sweet with the aroma of citrus
floral and the essence of myrrh. Large winged inhabitants fluttered about on
missions of supreme purpose. Above, two hovered in midflight, one apparently
holding the other from takeoff.
“Why do you hold me, Zadkiel? I must go. Did you not
hear Monica scream? I am hers, and she is mine. Monica thinks that God has
forsaken her. I am here,” he bemoaned. What the guardian saw split him in two. He
could not linger.
Zadkiel pulled the guardian angel back, his wings
clutched, and held him firm through the struggle. “Stand down. She cries out in
fear, not faith. We are not charged to react to tears, but we are rewarders of
faith. What is occurring is heartbreaking, but you have not been given leave to
interfere.”
The guardian wanted to push at Zadkiel’s wings, but
that would have been disrespectful. “Oh, why do the humans act this way? Must
they torment and cause such pain to each other? They have left a child and
though Monica has not been innocent for many years, her screams of pain bring
too many hurtful emotions to the forefront. How can you float above it all?”
“I am not above anything, but we must be obedient to
our Lord of Hosts. He has not given us permission to intervene; a greater good
must be coming.” Zadkiel then telepathically shared with him how he kept the
sounds of Randall’s and Monica’s pain in the background of his thoughts. “I am
empathetic to your feelings. I have learned that our God knows all and His will
is the only way. He did not create this mess, but He will make a way out for
the innocent babe. Go sing a song of praise. It will ease your soul.”
Large expansive wings flapped in decisive strokes as
a voice of power and beauty soared over majestic heads. As other voices joined
in song, the angelic choir trumpeted the holiness and sovereignty of God.
Contrary to the chaos, He continued to reign.
In another realm, the gates of hell rattled in
anticipation of the eventual capture and consumption of the new souls. It was a
two-course meal: adulterer and murderer, their favorites.
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Website: http://www.writespirit.org/ColetteHarrell/
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