Good morning everyone! Please welcome author Thomas Grant Bruso to Full Moon Dreaming! He is here to tell us about his new release, Behind the Mask. Thomas will be awarding a $10 Amazon/BN GC to ne randomly drawn commenter via Rafflecopter during the tour. The more you comment, the better your chances of winning. To find the other stops on his tour, go here. Don't forget to look for the Rafflecopter at the end of this post!
Behind the Mask
by Thomas Grant Bruso
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GENRE: Horror,
Mystery/Suspense, LGBT
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BLURB:
Seventeen-year-old
Jesse has a babysitting gig at the Linderman’s house on Halloween. He loves
watching Christie and Dylan and is thrilled to see them dressed up in cute,
creative costumes. When he arrives at their house, Jesse knows it will be a
fun-filled night of pumpkin carving and trick-or-treating.
But Jesse quickly
realizes Halloween is not only about candy, pumpkins, and scary costumes. It’s
known for tricks and ghoulish things and can bring out crazies. While
trick-or-treating, he notices a strange person wearing a glow-in-the-dark mask
watching him from the shadowy street.
The rest of the night
turns into a cat-and-mouse game of survival. Strange things start to happen at
the Linderman’s residence, setting Jesse on edge, making him apprehensive
somebody might be taking the spirit of Halloween too far.
Will Jesse survive
the things that go bump in the night, or will he become just another tall tale
this Halloween?
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EXCERPTS:
I leaned my forehead against the doorframe and closed my eyes, waiting a beat. When I opened my eyes, I watched the vehicle reverse and slowly pull out into the street, braking for children running by. The headlights bounced up and down as the vehicle's wheels rolled downhill along the raised trajectory of the driveway.
As I watched the car drive off, its read taillights blinking
as if in warning, my chest tightened like a clenched fist for some
indeterminate reason, and an uncomfortable heaviness settled inside me. I let
the curtain fall from my slippery fingers back into position, and I leaned
against the wall to catch my breath and bearings.
I climbed the stairs and relieved Christie, telling Dylan he
had to dry off, dress, and get into bed. He turned on his brotherly charm and
debated with me about bedtime. “Your mom and dad were strict about what time
you had to be in bed,” I told him.
“Just go to bed, Dylan,” Christie yelled from her bedroom.
Dylan sat on the bathroom floor, pouting and wrapped in a
towel, as I drained the tub and put away his toys. “I’ll read you a story
before I turn out the light,” I said.
“Batman, please,” he begged.
“Dry off and get into your pajamas.”
He stood and stomped out of the room.
“Stop being a baby!” Christie yelled from down the hall.
“I ain’t a baby!” Dylan shot back.
“I’m not a baby,” his sister corrected him.
I stepped out into the hall to referee their sibling
mudslinging. “I can skip story time,” I said to both of them. “Is that what you
want?”
A unison of “Nos!” shot out into the hall from their open
bedroom doors, the only unanimous decision they’d made as brother and sister
that night ...
I read to Christie, who couldn’t keep her eyes open for more
than five minutes. I gave Dylan a glass of water and set it on his night table.
I ran my hand through his floppy brown bangs that had been spared from the
vomit, and he fell fast asleep from the steady, relaxing raking gestures of my
hand in his hair.
As much I enjoyed story time with the kids, I couldn’t wait
to delve into my quiet corner of the house with a cup of tea. I wanted to start
on my homework, especially after Dylan’s stomach-churning episode.
I pulled the comforter up around his back and reached over
to shut the lamp off. I left the Godzilla nightlight lit up across the room and
cracked the door open ajar. I checked on Christie one last time before heading
downstairs. I poked my head into her room to make sure she wasn’t dreaming.
After I’d finished reading Dr. Seuss to her, she told me that she didn’t sleep
well when her parents were not home.
I told her that I’d be downstairs, and if she woke up scared
to come down, I’d fix her a glass of milk. She felt safer with the door wide
open, she told me. I wished her goodnight and crept downstairs to the kitchen.
I microwaved a cup of water and brewed one of Mrs.
Linderman’s decaf black tea bags for five minutes while I rummaged in my
bookbag for my math homework. Before sitting at the kitchen table, I plated
three chocolate chip cookies from Mrs. Linderman’s fresh-baked stash.
I blew on the hot tendrils of steam wafting up from the
teacup and dunked a cookie. My empty stomach growled at the aromatic chocolaty
smell. I looked around the silent kitchen, chewing and dipping. Peace and
quiet, finally, I thought, resting my elbows on the tabletop and sitting
hunched forward under the yellow globe of light from the stained-glass ceiling
lamp hanging overhead, savoring the deliciously sweet dessert.
Without Christie and Dylan talking and nagging and carrying
on about something, I felt my thoughts winding down, the wheels in my mind
slackening to the speed of a snail. My heightened anxieties dwindled like the
setting sun. I worked on the half dozen Algebra questions for class, showing my
work on separate pages in my notebook, and struggling with a few questions when
a sound from outside jerked me out of my reverie.
I looked up and stared down the hall leading into the living
room. Shadows danced beyond the drawn lace curtain on the front door. I thought
I heard footsteps on the porch steps, but it was the wind tugging on the screen
door, yanking it open, and slamming it against the side of the house.
I thought I had locked it.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AUTHOR Bio and Links:
Thomas Grant
Bruso knew at an early age he wanted to be a writer. He has been a voracious
reader of genre fiction since he was a kid.
His literary
inspirations are Ray Bradbury, Dean Koontz, Stephen King, Ellen Hart, Jim Grimsley,
Karin Fossum, Joyce Carol Oates, and John Connolly.
Bruso loves
animals, book-reading, writing fiction, prefers Sudoku to crossword puzzles.
In another
life, he was a freelance writer and wrote for magazines and newspapers. In
college, he was a winner for the Hermon H. Doh Sonnet Competition. Now, he
writes and publishes fiction, and reviews books for his hometown newspaper, The
Press Republican.
He lives in
upstate New York.
Buy Links:
https://www.amazon.com/Behind-Mask-Thomas-Grant-Bruso-ebook/dp/B09K8RWG7D/ref=sr_1_1
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/behind-the-mask-thomas-bruso/1140394427
https://www.jms-books.com/thomas-grant-bruso-c-224_236/behind-the-mask-p-4043.html
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Thanks so much for hosting! I won't be available to check in until this evening. Good luck, readers!
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