Welcome to my showcase for MIDNIGHT IN SOAP LAKE which is been hosted by HarperCollins and Harlequin
MIDNIGHT IN SOAP LAKE
Author: Matthew Sullivan
Publication Date: April 15, 2025
ISBN: 9781335041791
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Harlequin Trade Publishing / Hanover Square Press
Price $28.99
Buy Links:
HarperCollins: https://www.harpercollins.com/products/midnight-in-soap-lake
-matthew-sullivan?variant=43103022350370
BookShop.org: https://bookshop.org/a/397/9781335041791
Barnes & Noble: http://aps.harpercollins.com/hc?isbn=9781335041791&retailer=barnesandnoble
Amazon: https://www.amazon.ca/s?k=9781335041791&tag=hcg-02-20
1
Abigail
Something was there.
An animal, Abigail was certain, loping in the sagebrush: a twist of fuzz moving
through the desert at the edge of her sight. The morning had already broken a
hundred. Her glasses steamed and sunscreen stung her eyes—
Or maybe she hadn’t seen anything.
Yesterday, while walking along this desolate irrigation road, she’d spotted a
cow skull between tumbleweeds, straight out of a tattoo parlor, but when she ran
toward it, bracing to take a picture to send to Eli across the planet—proof, perhaps
, that she ever left the house—she discovered it was just a white plastic grocery bag
snagged on a curl of sage bark.
Somehow. Way out here.
The desert was scabby with dark basalt, bristled with the husks of flowers, and
nothing was ever there.
When Eli first told her he’d landed a grant to research a rare lake in the Pacific
Northwest, Abigail thought ferns and rain, ale and slugs,
Sasquatch and wool.
And then they got here, to this desert where no one lived
Not a fern or slug in sight.
This had been the most turbulent year of her life.
Eleven months ago, they met.
Seven months ago, they married.
Six months ago, they moved from her carpeted condo in
Denver to this sunbaked town on the shores of Soap Lake, a
place where neither knew a soul.
Their honeymoon had lasted almost three months—Eli whistling in
his downstairs lab, Abigail unpacking and painting upstairs—and then
he kissed her at the airport, piled onto a plane, and moved across the
world to work in a different lab, on a different project, at a different lake.
In Poland.
When she remembered him lately, she remembered photographs of him.
The plan had been to text all the time, daily calls, romantic flights to Warsaw,
but the reality was that Eli had become too busy to chat and seemed more
frazzled than ever. This week had been particularly bad because he’d been
off the grid on a research trip, so every call went to voicemail, every text into
the Polish abyss. And then at five o’clock this morning, her phone pinged and
Abigail shot right out of a drowning sleep to grab it, as if he’d tossed her a life
preserver from six thousand miles away.
And this is what he’d had to say:
sorry missed you. so much work & my research all fd up. i’ll
call this weekend. xo e
As she was composing a response—her phone the only glow in their dark,
empty home—he added a postscript that stabbed her in
the heart like an icicle.
P.S. maybe it time since remember using time to figure out self life? What kind of a sentence was that? And what was a “self life” anyway? Abigail had called him right away. When he didn’t pick up she went down to the lab he’d set up in their daylight basement. She opened a few of his binders with their charts of Soap Lake, their colorful DNA diagrams, their photos of phosphorescent microbes, as cosmic as images from deep space. She breathed the papery dust of his absence and tried to imagine he’d just stepped out for a minute and would be back in a flash, her clueless brilliant husband, pen between his teeth, hair a smoky eruption, mustard stains on the plaid flannel bathrobe he wore in place of a lab coat. From one of his gleaming refrigerators, Abigail retrieved a rack of capped glass tubes that contained the Miracle Water and the Miracle Microbes collected from the mineral lake down the hill— she sometimes wondered if her limnologist husband would be more at home on the shores of Loch Ness—and held one until a memory arose, like a visit from a friend: Eli, lifting a water sample up to the window as if he were gazing through a telescope, shaking it so it fizzed and foamed. And then he was gone again. She hated that she did this. Came down here and caressed his equipment like a creep. Next she’d be smelling his bathrobe, collecting hairs from his brush. It was as if she felt compelled to remind herself that Eli was doing important work and, as the months of distance piled up, that he was even real. Back when they’d first started dating, Abigail had been the busy one, the one who said yes to her boss too much and had to skim her calendar each time Eli wanted to go to dinner or a movie. Of course her job as an administrative assistant in a title insurance office had never felt like enough, but when she mentioned this restlessness to Eli, finding her path—figure out self life—had suddenly become a centerpiece of their move to Soap Lake. But they got here and nothing had happened. It wasn’t just a switch you flipped. Abigail slid the tall tube of lake water back into its rack. Only when she let go, the tube somehow missed its slot and plunged to the floor like a bomb. Kapow! On the tile between her feet, a blossom of cloudy water and shattered glass. She stood over the mess, clicking her fingernails against her teeth and imagining microbes squealing on the floor, flopping in the air like miniscule goldfish. She told herself, without conviction, it had been an accident. And then she stepped over the spill, put the rack back in the fridge and, surprised at the immediacy of her shame, went for a walk in this scorching desert. It stunned her, how harsh and gorgeous it was. Loneliness: it felt sometimes like it possessed you. She hadn’t spoken to anyone in over a month, outside of a few people in the Soap Lake service industry. There was the guy who made her a watery latte at the gas station the other morning, then penised the back of her hand with his finger when he passed it over. And the newspaper carrier, an old woman with white braids and a pink cowgirl hat, who raced through town in a windowless minivan. She told Abigail she was one DUI away from unemployment, but the weekly paper was never late. And the cute pizza delivery dude who was so high he sat in her driveway on his phone for half an hour before coming to the door with her cold cheese
Social Links:
Author Website: http://matthewjsullivan.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mickmatthew1/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/matthew.j.sullivan.77/
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5690035.Matthew_J_Sullivan
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