Whisper by Ava Claire
Publication date: April 4th 2014
Genres: Contemporary, New Adult
Mia Kent lives a charmed, tortured life.
Fresh off the success of her teen drama TV series Carolina, California, movie executives want her to headline their blockbusters, and record executives are vying for the chance to release her first solo studio album.
When Mia turns eighteen, she spreads her wings–and makes more mistakes than she can count. What the world doesn’t know is that her mother is much worse than any drug she could shoot into her veins, and despite her best efforts, Mia can’t quiet the screech of her past nor the cacophony of fame.
Until she meets him.
Liam Walker knows all too well what it’s like to fall from grace. A soulful rocker with a one-hit wonder under his belt, he believes in love–and he believes in Mia. He doesn’t know how to save what’s left of his career, but he knows that they belong together. He breathes for her.
If only she would let him in…
Fresh off the success of her teen drama TV series Carolina, California, movie executives want her to headline their blockbusters, and record executives are vying for the chance to release her first solo studio album.
When Mia turns eighteen, she spreads her wings–and makes more mistakes than she can count. What the world doesn’t know is that her mother is much worse than any drug she could shoot into her veins, and despite her best efforts, Mia can’t quiet the screech of her past nor the cacophony of fame.
Until she meets him.
Liam Walker knows all too well what it’s like to fall from grace. A soulful rocker with a one-hit wonder under his belt, he believes in love–and he believes in Mia. He doesn’t know how to save what’s left of his career, but he knows that they belong together. He breathes for her.
If only she would let him in…
EXCERPT
Copyright
2014 Ava Claire
The sun shone through sheer
curtains, making Jenna’s hair glitter. Her blonde hair was messy, golden
strands sticking out every which way. When she smiled at me before scrambling
to find her shoe, my heart swelled in my chest.
Jenna stood tall before me in her
mix-matched sandals, dirty Outer Banks t-shirt, and flowered leggings. I was
sure my heart would burst from my ribcage. She didn’t care about any of the
things Mom forced down our throats. I smiled down at her, wanting to remember
her this way. Before she cared about stuff like shoes or makeup or hair or what
other people thought of her. Before she became me.
I pulled her in for a hug,
pressing a kiss on top of her greasy, unwashed head. I didn’t even mind.
She peered up at me strangely and
I covered the tender moment with a cough. “Ready to go? I want to--”
“Mia!”
Mom’s voice sawed through the
moment, but I struggled to ignore her. We were home now. Here, I was just Mia.
I wasn’t struggling actress Mia. Or the next big thing (according to my mother)
Mia.
She’d been parading me from
casting call to casting call, stretching from our house in Eastern North
Carolina to Los Angeles. If I had to grin as she loudly proclaimed that I was
the most talented one in the room, then proceeded to lose her shit when I
wasn’t chosen, I would lose my shit. I just wanted to be a kid.
I just wanted to hang out with the little sister I’d hardly seen in the past
few months.
Most of my friends could barely
tolerate their younger siblings, but I loved Jenna. She marched to the beat of
her own drum and looked at the world in such a beautiful, innocent way. There
weren’t any kids in our neighborhood, so it was just the two of us and we spent
the lazy summer afternoons exploring the woods behind our house. Jenna’s
imagination built castles with moats and fire breathing dragons; we accepted
top secret spy missions from some faraway Queen. Sometimes we even went on an
African safari. Jenna was four years younger but when we played, I shed my
eleven year old self. I went to a place where there were no tables lined with
people staring at me; staring right through me as they abruptly called for the
next girl. A place where I didn’t have to watch my mother’s face go from animated
and excited to crestfallen and devastated.
“Mia!”
Mom’s voice was louder now. Approaching pissed off.
I hated how Jenna flinched, her
bright blue eyes going round. “We don’t
have to go, Mia.”
I forced a smile. “Of course we
do, silly! I’ve been looking forward to this.”
Almost on cue, the bedroom door
swung open and all the happiness was ripped from the room. I turned toward my
mother’s angry face. I’d seen pictures, so I knew that once upon a time she was
pretty, but now she just looked irritated all the time. Her tanning bed orange
skin was stretched over bone and when she smiled, it never reached her gray
eyes.
“Mia, I’ve been calling you!” She
didn’t even acknowledge Jenna, even though she’d barely said two words to her
since we’d been home. “You know I don’t like to be ignored.”
Her skin was the color of
tangerines, she had on so much makeup that it literally looked like she was
wearing a mask, and she topped it off with a bright pink velour jumpsuit with
the word ‘Juicy’ stamped on her butt. Coupled with her nasally voice and need
to invade people’s personal space, you couldn’t ignore my mother if you tried.
I gave her a wilting glare. “What
is it, Mom?”
Her icy eyes flashed, but she let
it slide, clapping her hands together with glee. “I have the best news--we got
a callback from Candy Cereals!”
We’d packed so many casting calls
in our three day Hollywood trip that all the companies blurred into a
technicolor ball of misery.
Mom raised her voice several
octaves, mimicking the voice of a breathy little girl. “‘You can’t just have
one bite’!”
I grimaced, remembering my least
favorite audition. They made me wear a stupid dress and hat, and the man at the
center of the table gave me the creeps. He couldn’t stop licking his lips as he
watched me.
“So I got a callback? That’s
good, right?” I asked, feigning naiveté.
“Good?” Mom frowned with
disapproval. “It’s great, Mia! This is your big break!”
I knew I should have been happy.
We’d been making these trips as far back as I could remember. But dread knotted
my stomach. It was the same dread that
gnawed at me while I sat in the waiting room, ticking off the seconds
until my name was called for an audition.
This wasn’t my big break. This
was going down a rabbit hole I’d never climb back out of.
I looked down at Jenna, unable to
bear my mother’s joy for one more second. Jenna was beaming up at me. So proud.
Her big blue eyes cut over to
Mom. I didn’t miss the fact that her smile dimmed slightly. “Can I go, Mama?”
Mom shifted her gaze to my sister
with an eye roll. “Don’t be silly, Jenna. This is work, not a vacation.” Her
lips curled into the snarl she wore if anyone stood in our way or threatened
the big plans she had for me. “Besides,” she said after a moment, “You’re going
on your own adventure.”
Jenna’s face brightened. “I am?”
“You’ll be spending your summer
vacation at the Wells Home.”
I frowned. That name sounded
familiar. I tried to place it, putting together pieces of memories. Glossy
pamphlets rushed to mind and when it all clicked together, I saw red. “You’re
not sending Jenna to fat camp!”
Jenna’s face fell and my heart
splintered into a million tiny pieces.I’d give anything to take the F word
back. Mom had all but said the word herself: soft, chunky, healthy, plump. The
synonyms bounced off Jenna, but ‘fat’ pierced right through her childlike
bubble. She knew what that word meant.
I kneeled down to Jenna’s level.
“You don’t have to go if you don’t want to.”
“Of course she does,” Mom scoffed
like that was the most ridiculous thing she’d ever heard. She turned on her
heels, refusing to entertain my insolence for one more second. “You’re not
unpacked yet, are you? Be ready to go in ten minutes.”
I was fuming, glaring at the spot
she had stood at long after she was gone. The idea of running away raced through
my mind, but Jenna darting to her closet and lugging out her suitcase put an
end to that train of thought. I’d never leave her.
Never.
I gave Dad a lackluster hug, then
slid into the passenger seat of our beat up minivan. I inherited his olive skin
and sky blue eyes, but that’s where our similarities ended. He let Mom walk all
over him. He did her bidding without question. I wanted to shake him, tell him
that Jenna was special; that she deserved to be a kid and not carted off to
some stupid fat camp. But he just smiled, and robotically pecked my forehead
with a kiss.
“Ready to go?” Mom asked
rhetorically, starting the minivan. Ready or not, we were headed back on the
road. Hurtling toward her destiny for me.
I cast a final look at Jenna’s
room. Her face was pressed against the glass. Even smushed and distorted, I saw
the spark in her eyes. Something innocent and precious that would be snuffed
out the next time I saw her.
GIVEAWAY
Prize - Open INT
-5x 10$ Amazon Gift Card
GUEST POST
Writing Whisper
Most days, I wake up, check my texts and emails, then head over
to jezebel.com and
check their daily gossip round up. It's all tongue in cheek, chuckling at the
crazy things celebrities do or say, and for a few minutes I get to live
vicariously through the rich and famous. To be honest, I envied them. Who
wouldn't want to star in some acclaimed movie, wear drop dead gorgeous designer
gowns and shoes, and live the jet-set life?
Writing Whisper changed my mind.
Whisper tells the story of Mia Kent. Mia is a former child actor
who starred in a popular tv show, Carolina, California. As soon as she hit
eighteen and left the show, she decided to star in projects that were as far
from her wholesome image as possible--unfortunately, her fans didn't make the
transition with her. As her star dimmed, the thing that kept her relevant was
her partying antics: staggering out of clubs, seen with a different guy every
night of the week, seen with drug paraphernalia etc.
While I was writing the story, I wondered what it would be like
to feel like the world expected things from you. That they put you in a box and
that's what you were supposed to be; the same sweet, engaging, well-behaved
girl the world fell in love with...or else you're just looking for attention.
If growing up in the public eye is tough, being an adult when the world watched
you grow up and think they know who you are must be unbearable. Mia is far from
perfect, with skeletons in her closet and hurt that no one gets to see. All the
see is another child actress that crashed and burned when they hit 18.
So now when I scan the gossip news, I crack a smile but I wonder
what we don't get to see. The ugly side of fame that the cameras don't capture.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Ava Claire is a sucker for Alpha males and happily ever afters. When not putting pen to paper or glued to her Kindle, Ava likes road tripping, karaoke, and vintage fashion.
Awesome giveaway
ReplyDeleteI am not really fond of the cover. Thanks for the giveaway though! DamianMom at yahoo dot com
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