This post is longer than usual and certainly different from my others, but stick with me on this one. Iโm sharing more than the opening chapter to my book, Dark Eyes, Deep Eyes, currently wending its way through WestBow Pressโs publishing maze.

Dickens got it half-right.
It was the worst of timesโthat Thursday afternoon in late May,
ย the day I got the kind of call no one wants to get.
ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย โSarah Daniels
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Chapter One
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โNiiiickkk, Niiiickkk.โ Lullaby smooth, her voice cooed in Nickโs ears. He snuggled closer.
โI love you, Brittany.โ
Warm and comforting, her body shifted.
He hugged her tight.
She stiffened.
โBrittany, whatโs wrong?โ
โBrittany? Iโm not Brittany.โ
Not โฆ Brittany โฆ Not โฆ Who? What?
A startled Nick woke and found a strange girl staring at him with wide bullet eyes. Where was he?
A car. His car. From a darkened dashboard, the clock glowed 3:37.
โWho are you?โ
โWell, Iโm not Brittany, whoever she is.โ
Had he been dreaming? Or was this the dream?
โBut who are you?โ
The young woman pressed against the passenger-side door and gripped its handle. She was call-the-cops scared and ready to bolt. She seemed as clueless as Nick.
Had he kidnapped the girl? Nah, thatโd be ridiculous. Why would he make an idiot move like that? He didnโt do stupid. Not regularly. Not ever.
Well, had they done the dirty deed? After all, they were alone in a car in โฆ? In โฆ? Where the heck were they?
An unlit Benniganโs signโmust have been the one in the neighborhood. Nick wasnโt far from home.
So had they been intimate in Benniganโs parking lot? He couldnโt remember, and he wasnโt about to ask whatโs-her-name. Say, I have no idea who you are, but I was just wondering. Did we get it on last night? Yeah, bet sheโd love that.
A second question popped into his head. By the way, how was I? He laughed.
โWhatโs so funny?โ
She asks, whatโs so funny? Look, girlfriendโgirlfriend? I donโt even know her nameโbut this whole situation reeks of hilarious. โNothing, nothingโs funny.โ
The girlโs hand tensed on the handle.
Oh, horse turdsโthat didnโt look good. Well, of course it didnโt look good, ya jerk-face. Given the circumstances, whoโd blame the girl for being scared? Strange car, strange guy.
But he wasnโt strange. Just your average, everyday brilliant, good-looking guy. Another chuckle. A tighter grip on the handle; big, dark eyes wide as hubcaps.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, lady friend. Donโt go there. Please, please, please donโt go there.
Well, Mr. Brilliant-and-Beautiful, say something. An eat-โem-up fragrance drifted his way. โYou smell good.โ
โWhat?โ
โI mean youโre delicious.โ Just brilliant, Nicky boy, just brilliant. How can the girl not think sheโs in the car with the next Jeffrey Dahmer? โIโm sorry. Iโm just a little confused here. Do you know who I am? Because โฆ well โฆ uh โฆ I sure as hell fire donโt know who you are.โ
Bigger eyes, quivering lips. This definitely wasnโt going well. Nick started to place a hand on the girlโs shoulder. Bad idea. She pasted herself against the door.
โIโm sorry. Iโm sorry. Iโm sorry. That was a dumb thing to say. Really, I am sorry. Let me start all over.โ He held out a hand and smiled, hoping he didnโt look too dopey or โฆ devious. โIโm Nick.โ
The girl stared at the proffered hand but remained in her corner. โLavender.โ
โLavender? For real?โ This all seemed so dรฉjร vu.
She relaxed, even smiled. โYeah, my parents are a little weird.โ
โIโm sure theyโve got nothing on my old man.โ
Nick could picture his father sitting in the living room reading his extra-thick, holier-than-thou Bible. The moment Nick told him the story about Lavender, his father would look over his reading glasses, cluck his tongue, then go to the bedroom and pray for Nickโs damned soul.
The carโs tension deflated. The girl released the door handle and slumped in her seat. Nick yawned.
Lavender, strange name โฆ for the weird girl โฆ in his car โฆ
Bigger yawn. Daddy dearest wouldnโt like โฆ strange girl โฆ in weird car โฆ with Jeffrey Dahmer โฆ No โฆ Not Dahmer โฆ But weird girl โฆ strange na โฆ
***
Okay, in less time than it takes to shave, I put two characters and a small world in your headโincomplete personalities and place, yes, but two people in a darkened car nonetheless. All done in less than five minutes of reading.
The writing of the scene, of course, took me longer than that but it didnโt take days. And, the first chapter changed several times with an Iโve-lost-count number of revisions. But, even with multiple rewrites, the scene still didnโt take days to produce.
Still with me on this one?
Some people have trouble with this line in the Bible.
In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.
Or this one.
And God said, โLet there be light,โ and there was light.
Those verses all come from the opening chapter of Genesis. They state flatly that the author of Creation and its ensuing story is God. Like I said, some people have trouble with that.
They especially have trouble with the idea that He did it all in less than a week.
Iโm not among that group. Although the created-in-six-literal-days isnโt something Iโm going to get hung up on. People have questions that neither theologians, geologists, nor polygamists can answer with certainty.
You can argue radiometric age dating, gravitational contraction, tidal friction, erosion, fossilization, and any number of other things you wish. I am curious about those kinds of discussions, and I do have questions I would love to ask someone more learned than I (and that leaves the field pretty much wide open).
But hereโs what Scripture says and, as an author, what I have little difficulty in believing. God created the universe and all thatโs in it, both seen and unseen, from parts smaller than atoms to things bigger than galaxies.
How did God do it?
He told a story.
Question: Do you think the idea that God created the universe by speaking words/telling a story too simplistic? And, of course, I want to know what you think of my opening chapter (although to be honest, if it sucks, it’s a little late now to make changes).
In honor of MLK Day, I recommend this article by Jeff Goins: 5 Lessons from MLK on Living, Leading, & Communicating.
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