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The Night He Came Back

by Toni Sweeney

Book Cover: The Night He Came Back
Editions:Kindle - 2: $ 4.99
ISBN: ‎ B08YWYY1YK
Pages: 249
Paperback - 2: $ 12.99
ISBN: B093KGLT6L
Size: 6.00 x 9.00 in
Pages: 247

Connell Ambers was fifteen when she was raped and left for dead by her brother's best friend. Now, she's a recluse, taking refuge on an island off the Georgia coast.

Ben Reed was found not guilty by reason of insanity and confined to a psychiatric hospital. His doctors have declared him "untreatable," and he's not expected to ever be released.

Tucker McKenzie was doing a favor for a fraternity brother: Just check on Jesse Ambers' sister during his drive to Florida. To his surprise, he finds a woman for whom he feels a startling attraction. In spite of Connell's fears, they begin a tentative love affair as Tuck encourages her to take the first steps toward again leading a normal life.

Then, Ben Reed escapes, leaving a trail of bodies in his wake as he makes his way to Bahia de Sangre island, to finish what he started nine years before...but this time Connell is forewarned and will be waiting for him.

Published:
Publisher: Independently Published
Cover Artists:
Genres:
Setting: island off the coast of Georgia (state)
Languages Available: English
Setting: island off the coast of Georgia (state)
Languages Available: English
Excerpt:

 

The pounding on the door pulled Connell Ambers out of that deep pit called Sleep. She’d been having The Dream again, so she should’ve been grateful, but she wasn’t. Being awake held its own nightmares, ones she couldn’t dispel simply by opening her eyes.

Throwing back the covers, she sat up, spilling Brad Pitt, who’d been sleeping on her chest, onto the floor. She swung her legs over the edge of the bed, wincing as her feet touched the bare wooden floor and one toe scraped a splinter.

Ouch. Got to get that sanded.

The pounding continued.

Boom…boom...

Slow, steady, like a persistent drum.

Boom... Boom… Boom...

But not hollow. With the solidness of a fist behind it.

Like the muted thump of knuckles against soft frightened flesh.

READ MORE

“Where’s my robe?” Eyes still dazed from sleep, she stared around blearily. Come to think of it, where’s my nightgown?

It had been a hot night, nightmare-filled and sweat-drenched. Neither garment was in sight. Favoring her stabbed toe, Connell limped to the window, stepping over Conan the Barbarian sprawled on the floor, while nearly tripping over Mr. Spock who appeared as if transported from Berengaria-1 or somewhere equally distant and darted under her feet.

Boom...boom...

The noise became an unsettling rhythm.

Who the Hell can it be? T

Tico, Maybe? Sent by Mama Sanchez with one of her fresh tamale pies? Guaranteed to put las rosas in your cheeks, chica. Or Papa Pepe, making certain she’d heard the latest weather report and knew a storm was rolling in?

Boom...boom...

“The natives are certainly restless this morning. ”

Conan stretched, yawned, and growled agreement.

Somehow, she made it to the window unscathed, calling, “Quien es? Que desea?” as she leaned out, one knee resting on the window seat. Mr. Spock leaped to the threadbare cushions and began to entwine himself back and forth between her legs, his arched spine tickling the inside of her bare thigh. She placed a steadying hand on the cat’s head.

“Ms. Ambers?”

A man’s voice, and not one she recognized.

Que—”

Wait a minute. He doesn’t sound Spanish.

She shook off the sleep haze and switched to English, asking the question in a cautious growl, “Who is it?”

Damn, how suspicious that sounds. Didn’t she have a right?

She leaned out a little more, peering at the man a story below her.

Shit, a stranger. The total kind.

One hand to his eyes, he backed away from the door into the little yard as he searched the expanse of tabby exterior, found her, and stopped an inch before stepping into the pine needle-filled fish pond.

Good thing, too. She’d hate to see those beautiful boat shoes ruined by pond scum. Stuff was hard to get off.

“Ms. Ambers?”

Damn, he’d seen her.

Connell ducked back inside the room, reaching for the first thing available to cover herself. The curtain. Holding the frayed and shabby length of lace before her like a veil, she leaned out again.

“Ms. Ambers?”

Can’t he say anything else?

She asked him.

He seemed slightly taken aback, dropped the hand, then immediately put it up again. The morning sun was bright, rising directly out of the sea and over the house, shining into his eyes.

Very blue eyes. Even from a story up, she could see their brilliant sky-hued color.

“Uh…sorry. I… My name’s Tucker Mackenzie?” His voice went up in that lilt Southerners used, making a statement sound like a question. He stopped. Waiting. As if he expected her to recognize his name.

“Is that supposed to mean something?”

“Well, I…” He stuttered to a halt, thought about that. Tried again. “Perhaps not.” Fell silent as if mulling over his own statement. Tried once more. “I saw the painting you did. At Pepe’s?”

Oh, God, he’s seen that daub I gave Papa Pepe.

That silly little pastel she’d weakened one day and shown the old man after he brought her grocery order; when he made such a fuss over it, she succumbed to a fit of generosity and made him a gift of the thing.

That’ll teach me. Never be generous with friends. Especially if they own a business where they might display it.

“...and I was wondering if I might see some more of your work?”

“I don’t sell paintings.” She made her answer curt. It was easy. It was the way she felt. “The Artists’ Colony’s on Isla Buena. Try there.”

“But—”

Withdrawing inside the window, she dropped the curtain and aimed herself at the bed. Halfway there, the pounding started again.

Boom.

“Ms. Ambers?”

Boom.

“Ms. Ambers.”

He was getting into a regular rhythm. Had a nice beat, too.

With a sigh, she turned and trudged back to the window. They could probably hear that noise all the way to the mainland. Better shut him up before he woke her nearest neighbors on the block facing the island.

“Look…” Irritated to the point of being unmindful of her nakedness, she leaned out, feeling breasts brush the windowsill as she shouted down at him, “I said, I don’t sell. Now, go away.”

He backed up again, on the path this time, crunching leaves and twigs under his feet.

Honestly, someday, I have to make myself sweep the walkway. Maybe in the next century.

By now, she’d gotten a better look at him, though he was too far away for her to actually see his face but she got a general impression of regular, acceptable features. Dark, curly hair. Not overly-long but long enough And those blue eyes.

Vefry nice.

Good clothes, too. Slacks, lightweight sweater over a white shirt. A shirt and sweater in this weather? Very preppy. Very proper. Probably had a blazer in the car, with his school emblem embroidered on the breast pocket.

Ben had been clean-cut, too. He was wearing his college letter jacket when they arrested him.

“Won’t you just—”

Connell stepped back, pulling the shutters closed. She waited, peering through the louvers, looking down.

He stood there a moment longer before his shoulders slumped slightly. Turning, he walked through the opening in the wall. The defeated set of his body startled her. Once outside, he looked back once before thrusting his hands into his pockets and making his way through the nearly knee-length grass to the white Mustang convertible parked six feet past the end of the dirt road.

Bet there’ll be stains on those Kenneth Coles, Too bad. Green doesn’t go too well with charcoal-gray.

Just before he reached the car, he stooped and snapped off a stalk of wild aster growing in a crack in the wall. He looked back at the house again, twirling the little white flowers around and around in his fingers. Tossing the sprig onto the passenger seat, he squared his shoulders, got into the car and drove away.

Connell waited until the Mustang disappeared through the trees, roiling a cloud of dry-dirt dust behind it, before she opened the window again. The dust floated into the air, spread and dispersed.

She stared at the spot where he’d picked the flower.

“That’s where I’ll go today.”

The place where wild asters grow in the crevices of a stone wall. Today, she’d make that the new boundary line of her world.

The first three weeks she was in the house, she hadn’t set foot outside, not even opening the door except to let the animals in and out, and accept grocery deliveries or thrust out a hand to take the mail from the postman who very graciously parked his little vehicle and walked to the door stoop instead of leaving it in the box at the turn-off. He made a special trip to do that, driving over the bridge connecting the island to the little town of Stella. Somehow, Jesse had arranged it with the post office there. She didn’t know any of the details, didn’t care.

Everyone had been told she was an invalid. That was Jesse’ cover story. Her brother did all the planning, about the groceries, taking care of all details of utilities, made certain someone from Mama Rosa’s stopped by at least once a week if a delivery wasn’t made. To be certain she hasn’t lying at the bottom of the rickety staircase with a broken neck or something as dire.

I don’t want you alone there, Connie.

Too bad. It’s what I want, Jess. It’s what I need.

At first, she crouched in the living room on the loveseat or huddled in the four-poster upstairs, not even looking out the windows. Then, she’d seen the ocean from the kitchen window—somehow the world looked much safer framed within the wood of a window sash. That cool, undulating strip of sun-on-water beckoned to her and continued its call, until she got out her easel and canvas and began to paint the scene. For a while she lost herself in the beauty of the sunlight and the ocean as it rushed into the little bay surrounded by sea oats and mounds of rust-colored gaillardia dotting the sand making up part of her backyard.

Mr. Spock was the one who made her finally leave the house.

He’d caught a bird, dragging it onto the front stoop. She’d opened the door, stood there watching him maul the poor thing. At last, goaded into action, she darted out, grabbing the cat by the scruff of the neck. She startled the animal so he opened his mouth, releasing his captive who fluttered away without so much as a peep in gratitude.

After that, the trips got longer, if not easier.

She made herself walk to the middle of the path. Then to where the gate had been, each step an agony hardly worth the little glow of triumph she felt afterward. At least, that’s what she told herself, but she knew she had to do it.

That first trip had been the longest.

It happened at noon, the sun beating down, reflecting off the water behind the house, off the stones on the path, dappling brilliantly through the trees. Birds were singing, the dogs barking inside. There was so much noise and light and confusion.

She was inundated with sensations…a sense of disassociation…too much air surrounding her…sounds beating down...all ganging up on her... She wanted to cower and cover her head with her arms, protecting it sink to the ground and roll into a tiny cowering ball…

She gritted her teeth and clenched her hands, felt nails cutting her palms as she forced herself to take the shaky next step, then another...

...one foot up, one foot down...

You can do it... It’s all right. Come on, just a little more...

By the time she reached the stack of stones forming the end of the wall where the gate should have been, she was exhausted and frantic, shaking like someone with a violent chill. One hand wavering wildly, she reached out, slamming the palm down on top of the highest stone like a child tagging someone, shouted, “You’re it!” She raised her head and looked wildly around, the shrieked, “I did it. Hear? I did it.”

Wishing Ben could’ve heard.

Then, she dashed for the door and the security of the house as fast as she could.

Once inside, the fear set in again, worse than ever, legs trembling, hands shaking, sweat pouring like someone had thrown a bucket of cold water over her. Even her teeth chattered and she fell to the floor in front of the empty fireplace.

Curled into a stricken little ball on the sooty hearth, arms wrapped around her head, she lay there for a full ten minutes until the spasm passed…

…while Conan and Brad Pitt and Spock sat beside her, whimpering in sympathy.

Afterward, as she made chamomile tea in the kitchen, relying on the herbs for comfort, she forced herself to think of what she’d done, relishing that minor moment of triumph.

She’d actually gone outside and returned, unscathed.

Unscathed? Had her little trek really left her untouched?

It couldn’t go on, she knew that. One day, she either had to cure herself or seek professional help, like they were trying to give Ben.

Not like Ben.

He was a prisoner, confined at the Hardesty Center outside Milledgeville, confined by bars and stones, while she…? She was a prisoner as well, held in chains by the neurons and electrons in her brain, daily replaying the memory of what he’d done.

He was the guilty one. She was the victim. But if that was so, why was she the one still suffering?

Who’ll be the first one set free?

* * *

Connell Ambers had been fifteen when Benjamin Reed, her brother’s best friend, raped her.

Ben and Jesse met in high school, been best buds from freshman to senior years. They’d gone to the University of Georgia together, been roommates, then pledged to the same fraternity before splitting up. Ben moved into the frat house, Jess stayed in an apartment in town. Most of the time when they came home, they rode together. Ben was at the Ambers’ home almost as much as he stayed at his parents’.

That day, he’d been invited to go with the family to a basketball game. Jesse Ambers and his father were big sports fans. Any event involving baseball, football, basketball, they’d be in the stands, cheering, then returning home to hash over the game and point out flaws in plays while praising winning strategies.

Mrs. Ambers had gone with them, also. Not because she was such a sports maniac but because she liked doing things with her family. Not Connell. She stayed at home. Even that young, she didn’t like sports, couldn’t understand why men enjoyed getting so sweaty and injuring each other while chasing a stupid ball or running from one end of a court to the other throwing another stupid ball into a basket.

So she stayed behind. Alone. Unknowingly waiting for Ben Reed to come back for her.

Which he did.

Excusing himself about half an hour into the game, he made his way to the gymnasium restrooms, then out a side door. The Ambers’ home was near the high school. Friedman Ambers bought it specifically for that reason, the year before Jess became a freshman. Ben came through the unlocked front door just as Connell was exiting the swimming pool in the back yard.

Within the space of twenty minutes, he’d terrorized, raped, and choked her into unconsciousness, leaving her for dead as he calmly returned to the school to seat himself beside her brother and cheer while the Button Gwinnet High School Colonials won the game. They’d dropped him off at his home before returning to find Connell naked and unconscious but still alive, on the living room floor. If his expression was to be believed when he opened the door to find the two men from the Savannah PD standing there, Ben had truly thought her dead and himself in the clear.

Even without Connell’s identification, the blood under her fingernails, the scratches on his wrists, and the evidence from the rape-kit left no doubt as to Ben’s guilt. In spite of all the Crime Scene Unit shows on TV, he’d not thought out his crime very thoroughly, stupidly hadn’t used a condom or tried to prevent any DNA or trace evidence.

In a single session with the court-appointed psychiatrist, Ben was diagnosed with Compulsive-Obsessive-Dissociative Disorder, Pedophilia, and Erotomania. How he’d ever managed to hide it from his parents, classmates, and his best friend, was never determined and was considered nothing short of the best acting this side of an Oscar-winning performance. He’d never exhibited any of the usual sociopathic symptoms, had never harmed or killed an animal, was gregarious and friendly, had even been a Boy Scout achieving the Star rank, a fact his former scout master now wished to forget. After a short but sensational trial, he was very quickly transported to the state mental hospital, and ordered incarcerated there until cured or his death, whichever came first.

In the following turmoil, he’d shown no remorse, never said he was sorry. He had, however, written Connell lengthy letters expressing his love and his passion…how he’d wanted her from the moment he saw her when they’d first met when he was fifteen and she was eleven…how he’d waited until she was old enough to understand the longing he felt for her…how she was his and his alone…

The letters never reached Connell; Ben’s psychiatrist made certain of that. Instead, he used them to formulate his patient’s treatment, none of had so far been successful in any size, shape, or form. Benjamin Reed never got better, never let go of his obsession for Connell Ambers, and until he did, there was no chance in hell of him getting out.

Connell was more fortunate, or perhaps not so, depending on how one wanted to look at it. Once she was dismissed from the hospital, she began therapy sessions designed to help her cope.

Cope.

A nice short word to describe a long, painful process. To help her overcome her fears…of men…of being touched. It had helped to some degree, but only a little, for in the process she developed an even greater fear. A fear of the world outside her living room door.

She hadn’t returned to school.

Couldn’t.

Setting foot off the front porch stoop sent her into hysterics. Was home-tutored so she could get her high school diploma but the hope of a college education was shot down in flames. She got a degree online, expressed an interest in painting, and was supplied with anything and everything she wanted except peace of mind and a willingness to leave the house again.

In the end, she’d moved to the little cottage on Isla de Bahia de Sangre, though getting there by car had been an ordeal in itself, involving the use of blinder-like sunglasses and ingestion of several sedatives. Once the Ambers’ summer retreat, the tabby cottage became her refuge, with no one but the family pets for company. There were no telephone lines, but the place had electricity and running water, so she wasn’t entirely cut off from civilization. There was a television dish for the roof and she had her cell phone and her computer, though she continually forgot to recharge the phone and rarely answered e-mails.

She’d lived there for five years, seeing no one except those few people necessary for her continued existence…

…until Tucker KcKenzie mentioned to Jesse Ambers that he was going to be driving through Stella on his way to Florida and Connell’s brother asked him to stop by and see how his sister was faring. Tuck agreed—hey, anything for a frat brother. He had no way of knowing that waiting for him on Isla de Bahia Sangre was a young woman desperate to join the world again, and equally anxious to gain the one thing she’d been cheated of by Ben Reed…

Love.

COLLAPSE
Reviews:D.W. Jones on Blood Moon Rising wrote:

Here is one of those books where the cover doesn’t convey what the book is really about. And when I really think about it, the title doesn’t do it the book justice either. The story is somewhere in the middle and it is a good story that has its share of thriller and blood.
The story start ten years after Connell Ambers was brutally raped and almost killed by her brother’s best friend Ben Reed. Since then, she has put herself in seclusion and has barely been able to deal with any contact from the outside world while he was put into a mental institution for the criminally insane.
Then things changed when her brother asked a friend, Tucker McKenzie, to check in on her when he hadn’t heard from her. When he did, something changed in Connell and made her want to change and start living. But then Ben Reed escaped from his prison and went after the one thing that stayed with him for all these years, Connell. And he will do anything to get to the love of his life. Will Connell find the will to live even as the worst nightmare of her life is coming back to her?
Sweeney does a great job with telling complete story full of likable characters like Connell and Tucker. She makes them real showing the emotional toll of each of these characters while making it at times light. On the other side, she showed the disturb side of a psychopath in the single mindness of the object of his desire. The story flows well through most of the book with one or two hiccups.
I recommend this book for anyone looking for a good thriller that is in the vein of the movie Enough.

Linda Bass on Amazon.com wrote:

Connell Ambers was just sixteen when Ben Reed attacked,raped her, and left her for dead. Ben was her brother's best friend and her family treated him like a son, he was tried and deemed mentally unfit to go to prison so his dad had him sent to a mental hospital. that was nine years ago and Connell feared men, the world, and going outside the family's beach cottage ever since.

Tucker MacKenzie, a English Literature teacher at Waverly Academy had promised his frat buddy that he would check on his sister on his way to Florida, but what he never expected was for her to lean out her bedroom window naked as a jay bird, nor did he expect to to fall madly in love and help her get over her fear. Then they learned Ben had escaped and was coming back to Connell!

Toni Sweeney sure has penned a heck of a story that is bound to keep readers rapidly reading and glued to their seats!

Linda Kay Zais on Amazon.com wrote:

Blood Bay is the first book by Toni Sweeney that I have read and it wont be the last. I was drawn from the very beginning to discover how an emotionally devastated woman finds her way back from hell. Connell Ambers is brutally raped and almost killed by her brother's best friend, Ben Reed, at the age of fifteen.

She is so traumatized she is unable to leave her home and has to be home schooled and uses the internet to get her degree. Years after her attack, Connell goes to live on Blood Bay Island in order to live in seclusion with only her pets as company. There she meets Tucker MacKenzie who stops by to check on her as a favor to her brother. With the help of Tucker she slowly begins to live a normal life until Ben escapes and comes after her.
Blood Bay is a fantastic romantic suspense with complex characters and an exciting and riveting plot making it a definite must read!!!!

"Jimbo" on Amazon.com wrote:

Agoraphobic, emotionally fragile and brutalised, Connell Ambers is prepared to live a life of seclusion, a non-life almost, removed from humanity. Night is a “deep pit” for her as she relives again and again “the dream” whilst her waking hours are similarly a “nightmare.”

And then Tucker Mackenzie enters her life.

As they embark tentatively on their romance Connell begins the first step on her journey of self healing.

What happens next, while not wholly unexpected, is a plot point worthy of Hitchcock in the way it engages us at the visceral level. We learn that the boy who raped and tried to kill her at fifteen has escaped and is coming for her.

Ben Reed in many ways is the personification of evil, someone who can calmly leave his best friend at a football game, rape and leave this friend’s sister for dead, and return “to seat himself beside her brother and cheer while the Button Gwinnet High School Colonials won the game.” A true psychopath in the mould of Max Cady he is intelligent, cunning, logical and patient, in Freudian terms someone capable of deferring gratification to ensure the success of his sick desires. Unlike Cady however, Reed is if anything more terrifying as he is also a fantasist who even views his victim in romantic terms, “When I get out of here,” he promises himself whilst locked up, “I’m going to go far, far away. Just take Connell and find a deserted island somewhere or a cabin on a mountaintop where he could be free to love her and she could love him.”

Many elements, beats, plot points and act structures of a movie and a believe the novel would lend itself very well to this medium. The ending is suitably cinematic with the inevitable confrontation. I was particularly impressed with the way Sweeney contrasted Tucker and Reed’s characters in the moral choice she imposes on the former as I believe this gave the novel extra depth.

Overall an excellent and engaging (if perhaps not wholly original novel) that I would have no hesitation in recommending.

Michael D. Smith on Amazon.com wrote:

Author Sweeney has set a remarkably concise theater stage for probing complex psychological scenarios in her thriller. Three main characters, accompanied by a handful of supporting actors, are focused on a house on the island of Isla de Bahia de Sangre, to which Connell Ambers has exiled herself in order to cope with the trauma of a brutal rape nine years ago. A second location, the mental institution to which her magnificently deluded and cruel attacker Benjamin Reed has long been confined, gives way to a third, the long highway from mental institution to island, showcasing Ben’s progressively psychopathic adventures and representing the taut-to-snapping string of his obsessive attraction to Connell.

As a favor to her brother, Tucker MacKenzie comes to check in on Connell’s island life but winds up posing for one of her paintings and falling in love with her--with someone he understands is severely damaged.

The tight number of characters plus this simple background, which I could see staged as a fast-moving theatrical production, is the perfect recipe for the unfolding of a thriller you won’t want to put down. The plot is gripping but not convoluted, with all necessary background worked in just as you need it.

The house on the island symbolizes Connell’s deep wounds and her isolation, but also her potential for healing. The fact that she’s an artist, and paints what she sees of the outside world from within her inner sanctuary, is an early clue that after nine years of trauma she’s beginning to yearn for new life. Her artistic talent is one tool she’ll unconsciously employ as she seeks to integrate unwieldy new life energies.

My first reaction to Connell’s occasional acting “out of character” was disbelief, but as the novel progressed I understood that her often bizarre responses are is in reality indications of the depth of her trauma, her years of seclusion, and a raw confusion about how to cope with the new input of Tuck.

And what a villain Ben is! It’s creepy to be inside his head and see everything from his over-the-top, delusional, self-justifying point of view. His emotions are so beyond the pale that their raw power gives him extra strength and cunning to take advantage of unfolding situations; he learns how to steal cars at the most opportune moment, how to fashion poison and weapons from found objects, how to track police schedules and adjust his stalking accordingly. When he does these superhuman things it doesn’t come across as mere coincidence but as a frightening outgrowth of high obsession; it’s all eerily believable.

This novel doesn’t need a sequel, but I can definitely see one … because while the lovers have a new life, the problem of evil does remain …


About the Author

Toni V. Sweeney has lived 30 years in the South, a score in the Middle West, and a decade on the Pacific Coast and now she’s trying for her second 30 on the Great Plains.

Since the publication of her first novel in 1989, Toni divides her time between writing SF/Fantasy/Horror under her own name and the pseudonyms Icy Snow Blackstone and Tony-Paul de Vissage. She is also on the review staff of the New York Journal of Books, was an amazon reviewer, and is in the 1% of reviewers for Goodreads. In 2016, she was named a Professional Reader by netgalley.com.

Currently, Toni has written 94 novels with 84 of them have been published. This includes several series.