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Fiction General

Grace

by (author) Vanessa Smith

Publisher
Quattro Books
Initial publish date
Apr 2011
Category
General
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781926802275
    Publish Date
    Apr 2011
    List Price
    $4.99
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781926802268
    Publish Date
    Apr 2011
    List Price
    $16.95

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Description

“If you could photograph the exact moment between innocence and experience, what would it look like?” Why is desire so irresistible? This is the question that faces Grace, a rebellious young dreamer who takes a long-awaited leap of faith when she meets a charismatic stranger. Told through the eyes of the central character,Grace illustrates a transformative sexual experience that comes at an unexpected price, showing us the indelible impressions that the potent combination of desire and self-discovery can leave on a life.

About the author

Vanessa Smith was born and raised in Vancouver, B.C. She graduated from UBC with a B.A. in English Literature. She is a passionate blogger, and her latest blog called Stranger Than Fiction is entirely devoted to exploring the writing process. Vanessa recently relocated to Montreal, where she lives, works, and writes. Grace is her first novella.

Vanessa Smith's profile page

Excerpt: Grace (by (author) Vanessa Smith)

CHAPTER ONE “Can I help you find something, dear?” she asks, from atop a spindly-legged stool. Short and squat, she hooks her truncated limbs over the highest set of rungs. Her knitting flows forth onto the hard packed dirt floor, a pink woollen waterfall cascading over her abundant belly. “No, thank you, ” I reply, continuing to browse. I hate questions like this. It makes all the fine, lightly browned hairs on the back of my neck stand up. I hate them almost as much as I hate help, particularly from strangers. “I’m just looking.” “Well, I can see that, ” she says, “but what is it you’re looking for?” She plucks a pair of glasses from her nose and rests them on her floral-covered bosom. She smoothes out her bird’s nest mane of yellowish-white hair, expertly whipping it into a bun and securing it with a spare needle. “You can’t find what you want if you don’t know what you need.” I murmur my assent, but don’t meet her gaze. I don’t want to encourage the press of her familiarity, and I silently curse myself for leaving my visit so late. Earlier, the aisles of the Flea Market would have been full of prospective buyers; but, at this hour, the crowds have thinned considerably. She smells a sale and launches herself in my direction. “As you can see, ” she says, “I’ve got something for everyone, dear. All kinds of nice things.” Mm-hmm. She does – not necessarily nice – but things nonetheless. Her kick-stand table is piled high with brooches, books, buttons and other bric-a-brac – a strange assortment of items that have even less charm than they do worth. However, as I glance over her wares, I’m drawn to one piece in particular – a cameo pendant – a softly pearled profile set in calcified curls. I lift it from the table, running my fingers over the slightly raised image. It reads like Braille, giving rise to a memory so old I almost have to blow the dust from it. My Nana gave my sister a pendant very much like this once. It was Rachel’s birthday. She was thirteen and wore the piece with a budding womanly pride. I was five and filled with childishness and envy. She guarded it as though it were the Crown Jewels – unclasping it and placing it carefully on her nightstand each evening before she went to bed. I was forbidden from touching it. She said I’d dirty it – the filigreed face – and that I was too young to understand. She was wrong. She didn’t understand. All I wanted to do was hold it. One morning, I took it without asking, pocketing the pendant before kindergarten for Show-and-Tell. I knew it wasn’t mine to either show or tell, but I didn’t care. The secret weight of its presence in my pocket made me feel like someone special – the transporter of important goods – even if they weren’t mine. Naturally, I later lost it in a schoolyard game of hide-and-go-seek. Rachel was livid, and nothing could convince her that I wasn’t the guilty culprit. Of course, I lied, and even constructed a paperclip chain to replace it; however, this act of contrition only bought me clemency from my parents. Rachel accepted the offering – she had no choice – but I don’t think she ever quite believed me, nor forgave me.