Never
take for granted where you came from... or where you may end up.
SYNOPSIS
My name is Kendall Carrington—or so I thought…
When 17-year-old Kendall gets pulled over during
an impromptu joy ride, she not only discovers she is not the girl she thought
she was, but neither is anyone else. Kidnapped when she was young, she is
thrust back into a life she doesn’t remember. One where her name is Danielle
Tucker and betrayal seems to be lurking around every corner. No longer able to
decipher the truth from the lies, she enlists the help of blue-eyed hottie
Lincoln Hunt on her quest for truth.
Will she come to terms with her new life? Or will
she go running back to the only home she’s ever known?
COMING
IN JULY...
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Leddy
Harper had to use her imagination often as a child. She grew up the only girl
in a house full of boys. At the age of fourteen, she decided to use that
imagination and wrote her first book, and never stopped.
She often calls writing her therapy, using it as a way to deal with issues through the eyes of her characters.
She is now a mother of three girls, leaving her husband as the only man in a house full of females.
The decision to publish her first book was made as a way of showing her children to go after whatever it is they want to. Love what you do and do it well. Most importantly Leddy wanted to teach them what it means to overcome their fears.
She often calls writing her therapy, using it as a way to deal with issues through the eyes of her characters.
She is now a mother of three girls, leaving her husband as the only man in a house full of females.
The decision to publish her first book was made as a way of showing her children to go after whatever it is they want to. Love what you do and do it well. Most importantly Leddy wanted to teach them what it means to overcome their fears.
www.leddyharper.com
PROLOGUE
The winding, two-lane highway was deserted at that time of night. It was
just me and the stupid cop behind me. His lights nearly blinded me in my
rearview mirror. Red and blue. Panic crept in and set my heart racing as I
pulled onto the right shoulder, hoping he’d pass on his way to something more
important.
He didn’t. He pulled over behind me. Terror flooded my senses and my
hands convulsed as I rolled down the window, my mind going through all the
things I could’ve been doing wrong. I hadn’t been speeding, my lights were on,
I didn’t weave or pass improperly—there were no cars to even pass.
The officer walked up to my window with his hand on his belt. For a
second, I thought he was going to grab his gun. Instead, he pulled out his long
flashlight and shone it onto my lap where my hands were twisted together.
“License and registration, please, ma’am.”
How in the hell would I get out of this? I had no license—never had
one—and the car was registered under someone else’s name. I reached into the glove
box and pulled out the registration, hoping he would forget all about my
license.
“Your license, too, please.” Of course, he wouldn’t forget that.
“I’m sorry, officer, but I left home without it. I was just running up
to the gas station for some headache medicine. I wasn’t even thinking when I
left.” I wasn’t exactly lying; I was going to need something for the headache
his blinding lights were giving me.
He crouched down far enough to see into the car; it was the first time I
got a good look at his face. He was an older man, probably in his late forties,
with graying hair. He had a cleanly shaven face and green eyes that seemed so
familiar, but it was hard to see in the dark.
The beam from the flashlight hit my face and I moved my hand to shield
my eyes. I waited for him to say something, but he didn’t. Instead, he stood
there, shining his light on me and, from what I could assume, staring at me.
I did not need this. An older man using his powers of the law to get
what he wanted. I refused to do that. He could throw me in jail for all I
cared. I would not suck or spread
anything for this pervert.
“Excuse me, officer, but is there some reason you’re doing that?” I
longed to have the light out of my eyes, off of my face. My sudden headache
intensified and my panic levels reached an all-time high. Sweat beaded on my
forehead and in my armpits. I couldn’t stop shaking, and I struggled to keep my
voice steady.
He lowered the beam back to my lap. I couldn’t decide what was worse,
him gawking over my face or my vagina. At least I wasn’t being blinded anymore.
“What’s your name, young lady?” I had expected him to sound perverse,
but he didn’t. He sounded concerned, almost like he would when talking to a
child. I guess compared to him, an eighteen-year-old would be a child. But I
had been through far too many things to be seen as one.
“Tiffany.” I knew not to give my real name. Billy had told me time and
time again. I’d had the name picked out since I was fifteen, since Billy had
come and saved me. I hadn’t had to use it yet. But I said it with such
certainty that my real name very well could have been Tiffany, not Kendall.
“Your full name, please.”
I probably should have already come up with one of those. I used to have
one picked out, but as I got older, I didn’t like it anymore and just never
found a new one.
“Stark.” I berated myself for saying it. I had glanced up at the sky and
saw the stars, and in that moment, Stark had become my last name. I had no
doubt he knew I’d lied. My voice didn’t sound nearly as confident as it had
when I’d said my first name—or as I should say, my make-believe first name.
“Give me a minute, if you will.” He vanished behind the car. I could
still hear him, though. He stood far enough away that I couldn’t make out his
words, but I could hear the depth of his voice.
He wasn’t gone long. He came back to ask more questions. My middle name,
my birthday, where I was from. Each answer I gave him, he responded to the
radio on his shoulder, and a crackling voice would sound back something inaudible
to me.
“Ma’am, you are not showing up in the DMV records for this entire state.
This car is registered to a male, and you have no way to prove your identity.
I’m going to need to take you with me. Please open the door and step out with
your hands up.” He set his hand on his belt again. This time, I knew it rested
on his weapon.
“I’m sorry, officer, but you have yet to tell me why you pulled me
over.”
“Your tag light is out. Now please, remove yourself from the vehicle.”
My tag light. My life crumbled to insignificant pieces because of a
fucking tag light that costs a whopping five dollars.
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