Thursday, March 18, 2021

On tour with The Coffee Pot Book Club - you have to check out this excerpt from Embers by Josephine Greenland #YoungAdult #BlogTour @greenland_jm @maryanneyarde

 Oh, that cover, isn't it beautiful?! I am once again on tour with The Coffee Pot Book Club and today I am welcoming Young Adult author, Josephine Greenland onto my blog. Scroll down to read an excerpt of Josephine's fabulous book.



Embers

By Josephine Greenland



Two siblings, one crime. One long-buried secret. 


17-year-old Ellen never wanted a holiday. What is there to do in a mining town in the northernmost corner of the country, with no one but her brother Simon – a boy with Asperger’s and obsessed with detective stories – for company? 

  

Nothing, until they stumble upon a horrifying crime scene that brings them into a generations-long conflict between the townspeople and the native Sami. When the police dismiss Simon’s findings, he decides to track down the perpetrator himself. Ellen reluctantly helps, drawn in by a link between the crime and the siblings’ own past. What started off as a tedious holiday soon escalates into a dangerous journey through hatred, lies and self-discovery that makes Ellen question not only the relationship to her parents, but also her own identity.




‘Just a bit further, please!’


Ellen wanted to yank her brother off his bike. They’d been cycling around Svartjokk all day, criss-crossing through the town centre, darting along the river and through the park. Now, on Simon’s insistence, they were rushing along the country road out of the town, the dense pine forest surrounding them on both sides. Her top was plastered against her skin, her yellow hair sticky and damp with sweat under the helmet, and her legs ached from the exercise. The day was so bright it hurt her eyes merely looking straight ahead.


‘Ten minutes,’ she called. ‘Then we must go back.’


Simon nodded and swerved off the main road, heading down the forest track. Ellen lingered by the turn-off, taking the chance to catch her breath. The path, a two-furrow track probably used by tractors, forged dead straight through the pines. She’d be able to keep an eye on her brother from here.


Exactly what it was about this place that excited him so much she struggled to see. The town was like the palm of one’s hand, after ten minutes you could navigate it with your eyes closed. It was a transit point, a place you passed through on the way to somewhere else.


There will be plenty to see there, Ellen! Mum had told her. The mining museum, the local history, the Sami…


So far, the mining museum was closed. The history museum showed the same kind of How-did-people-live-in-the-past exhibitions with model villages, hunters and stuffed animals that you could see in any town. The Sami, well they’d be with the reindeer in the forest and on the moors. Or did Mum really think they would stand by the station in their traditional clothes, waving at the tourists getting off the train?


She’d booked the siblings in at the Hostel Polaris beside the train station for five nights. Five nights of counting

trees and iron ore mines. Perhaps Simon was excited now, on day one, but once the novelty of this place wore off…


Ellen stopped her thoughts. Simon had got off his bike and was kneeling on the ground at the edge of the track.


Had he seen something? An animal, an insect?


‘Simon, your ten minutes are up!’


That wasn’t true. Looking at her watch, she guessed five or six minutes had gone, and if Simon had heard her, he would tell her so. But what she needed now was his attention and she did not care if her inaccuracy irked him.


‘Come on, we need to get back in time for the tour!’ She biked over to him and said his name again, louder. Still, he didn’t react. In the sun, auburn tones flashed in his straight, sandy hair. She walked up and peered over his back.


There was a dark spot on the ground.


‘What is that?’ She bent down beside him. Up close, she saw the mark was reddish brown. When she sniffed it, it smelled metallic, like copper.


‘Blood?’ The word left her lips before she could rein it in. She looked around her. Did an animal get injured on

the road? There were no other spots on the ground. The pine trees formed a thick wall on either side of the path and peering through them she saw only darkness.


‘A car has been here,’ Simon said, his voice flat. ‘The grass lining the track is flattened. The car must have reversed and headed back to the road.’


He pointed past her, further down the track. There was a puddle of shiny liquid beneath an overhanging spruce

branch, rainbow colours dancing on its surface. Oil.


‘Why would anyone drive a car down here?’ Ellen said. ‘There’s loads of roots and stones and stuff.’


‘It must be a very old car to drip oil like that,’ Simon said. ‘And look here.’ He pointed at the blueberry bushes in front of them. ‘There’s blood drops on the leaves.’


There was a dark mark, like a squished berry, staining one of the leaves. Another one further along. And there, a strip of plastic.


‘Someone’s carried something into the forest, and the plastic bag ripped. Some of the sprigs are broken.’ Simon

squinted. ‘I think I can see a clearing over there.’


‘Simon, this isn’t the time for playing detective…’


Simon didn’t listen. His narrow, fox-like face, already red from all the hours in the sun, was fixed on a distant point beyond the trees. He stepped off the track into the underbrush.


‘Wait!’


Her brother stopped. He folded his arms.


Ellen licked her lips. A strange feeling grew inside her, a pulse within her neck, as if she had been stung. She brought a hand to the spot. ‘What if…’


What if what? her brother’s grey eyes said. Hadn’t she been complaining about how dull Svartjokk was?


She looked back from where they’d come. The road was a silver line between the trees.


It wasn’t more than twenty minutes back to the town.


‘OK, then,’ she said. ‘But just a quick look, all right?’


Simon nodded and continued. Ellen prodded her neck carefully. The skin was smooth. No tenderness, no swellings from a sting. Yet the pulse was still there, a heartbeat in her spinal cord.


She shook her head. Perhaps it was just the heat. She stepped off the track and followed her brother, blueberry sprigs snapping under her feet.


It wasn’t long before the stench reached her nostrils. Rot. Decay.


She covered her nose and mouth. A fly buzzed by her ear and she hit at it with her free hand. The clearing was close. Light filtered through the trees, painting yellow tracks in the moss.


Simon was stepping into the opening. Didn’t he smell it?


She quickened her pace. When she reached the light, she froze.


Animal heads were lying in a circle in the glade. Reindeer heads.


They were larger than she’d imagined, maybe twice the size of her own head. They stared at Ellen with their glassy eyes. A fly wandered across a pink tongue hanging from a gaping mouth. She saw teeth, flat and broad, like grey stones protruding from the pale pink gum. Grinning at her.


The animals’ antlers had been cut off and laid in a cross. At the centre of the cross was a large, arrow-shaped rock.


Simon had stepped past the heads into the circle. He turned around, taking in the scene, muttering to himself.


Ellen blinked and rubbed her eyes. Scanned the trees and the shadows circling the glade.


Who would do this?


She stumbled forward, failed to spot a root lurking in the undergrowth and fell face forward. Pine needles and dirt in her mouth. She spat them out, wiped her lips, stood up.


Simon was still pacing inside the circle. He’d covered his nose and mouth with his shirt, but he showed no other sign of being affected by the smell. As she watched, he bent down and ran a hand along one of the antlers, fingers curling over the tip. He continued along the line, until he disappeared behind the stone.


‘Simon!’ Ellen called through her fingers. ‘Don’t touch them! We have to call the police.’ She took a few steps forward, and then it hit her: the death, the stench, the heads. Her stomach heaved dangerously. ‘Simon!’ She fumbled for her phone.


Her brother appeared around the corner of the rock. He bent down by one of the heads, then picked something

from the neck wound and crossed the glade towards her.


‘Look, Ellen,’ he said, holding out his hand.


In his palm was a fly.


‘Simon!’ She reeled back. ‘The bacteria!’


‘It’s strange,’ he said, voice level. ‘All of the flies inside the neck wounds are dead.’


She took a step back. ‘We need to call the police,’ she said again. ‘I’m not doing it here.’

‘But I need to investigate.’


‘You can investigate when the police come. Please, Simon. We have to get out of here.’


She grabbed his hand, ignoring his protests, tugging harder when he struggled against her grip. He wasn’t getting out of her sight this time. Their strides broke into a jog, the jog into a run. When they reached the track, she collapsed by the bikes and her stomach emptied itself. She rolled over onto her back, the taste of bile in her mouth, legs limp as if they’d never be able to walk again, and stared at the distant strip of sky, a blue bridge through the sea of pines.


There was no birdsong, no chirping or tapping. No wind.


From the road a car swished by.


That was all the sound there was.


Doesn't this book sound simply amazing?! You can grab your copy over on Amazon UKAmazon US • WaterstonesUK Bookshop




Josephine Greenland is a Swedish-British writer from Sweden, currently working as an English teacher in Edinburgh. She has a BA in English from the University of Exeter, and an MA in Creative Writing from the University of Birmingham. She started writing novels at the age of nine, but only began writing seriously in English while at university, for her first creative writing course (2015). Since then, she’s had 14 short stories published, won two competitions and been shortlisted twice. Embers is her first novel, inspired by her travels in northern Sweden with her brother, and was her dissertation project for her MA. When not writing, she enjoys playing music, jogging, hiking, and discussing literature with her cat. 

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