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Archives for May 2013

Breathe

May 29, 2013 2 Comments

BreathePic

Book Description:  Alex thought she had married the man of her dreams: successful, gorgeous, and delighted by her small-town charm. When he walks out six months later, proclaiming to have ‘found himself’ (with the help of a stunning yoga teacher), she ‘finds herself’ alone in an unfamiliar city, vengefully drinking through his prized wine collection, living on takeout, and refusing to answer the door. When this fails to cure her broken heart and bruised ego, she reluctantly allows her new friends to intervene. Slowly, Alex learns to define success on her own terms; she discovers the secret to love in all its forms, and the perfect flying crow pose, one breath at a time.

Excerpt of “Breathe” by Kate Bishop

Namaste

(Day 1)

Candles . . . Check.

Music . . . Check.

Corset, thigh-highs, whip, hat, and cowgirl boots . . .

Really?

Had it already come to this?

Apparently so. Embarrassing as it was, I felt desperate to get Tripp’s attention. To feel close to him. To recreate the electricity and attraction that had made us sprint to the altar in the first place. It wasn’t long ago that he would dash home from the office for a quick “lunch” with me. Surprise weekend getaways were standard then, always at some pet-friendly hotel overlooking the Pacific.

Tripp never forgot to include my dog, Billy, in the beginning. And the horses-he loved to watch me ride. Some nights, we’d sneak into his family’s stables where their racehorses were groomed for glory.

He didn’t even care if his mother got wind of it.

But lately things had started to change. One evening, I’d slipped my arms around him and whispered, “Let’s go for a ride in the moonlight tonight.” He was standing with his back to me, staring out the French doors into darkness.

“Sorry, what?” He stepped away from me, pulling the curtains closed.

“A ride,” I said. “You and me.”

He turned and walked past me, one half of his button-down un-tucked, his tie hanging loose and off-center.

“Tripp, honey? Hello?” He was back to staring out the window, this time over the kitchen sink. “Where are you right now? Come on, ride with me. I’ll let you be the cowboy,” I teased. But he didn’t laugh. He didn’t even smile.

“Babe, it’s like we’re on different planets, and I’m two feet away from you.” I walked over and peered with him into the night. “Someone getting naked out there?”

Nothing.

“I can’t explain it, Alex. I feel like there’s more than this.” He turned and gestured vaguely to the room.

I looked around. We were standing in the kitchen of our Craftsman “cottage” which, by any standards outside Marin County, California, would be considered a palatial shrine to Frank Lloyd Wright.

“More than . . . our house?” He couldn’t be having an existential crisis, could he?

We were newlyweds.

“No, I mean all this.” He waved his arm in a bigger arc.

“Oh. Well, yeah. Of course,” I said and hopped up on the counter, hoping to distract him. “The world is a mysterious place. And I am game for exploring all of it with you.” I smiled and reached for him with my feet, trying to pull him toward me.

He took a step back and shook his head again.

“I’m going through something, Al. I need space.”

“Maybe it’s all that yoga you’ve been doing. Too much standing on your head.

Let’s take a vacation. A real vacation. No conference calls, no early classes at the Club. Let me take care of you. Maybe Jamaica? We’ll ride horses through the surf . . . ”

“Alex.”

“Okay,” I said with a shrug, attempting to look unfazed. “Just trying to help.”

Resting my heels on the drawer pulls, I leaned forward onto my elbows as if sitting on a fence. “So,” I said casually.

“So,” Tripp replied, glazing over.

My stomach tightened. What was going on here? Tripp was usually so direct and engaging.

“Is there anything I can-” I started.

“No, Alex. I just wanted you to know that I’m operating from a deeper place now.” He nodded solemnly. I looked at him, my gorgeous, take-charge, marry-me, won’t-take-no-for-an-answer husband.

“So is Deepak Chopra a new client or something?” I tried one last time for a laugh, a kiss, a tousle, anything, but he just looked at me blankly. “Babe?”

“Okay.” He clasped his hands together. “I’ve got to go pack.”

He left the next morning for what I thought was a business trip in Atlanta.

Initially, Tripp didn’t correct me, but eventually he confessed that it was, in fact, a retreat. A spiritual retreat: yoga, meditation, healing . . . And as unenlightened as it sounded, I felt like he was cheating on me. With himself.

“I want to be with you. Could I come?” I said from our massive bed as I watched him get dressed. Tripp’s interest in yoga had been a shock to me, despite the fact that it had long since become the world’s trendiest fitness obsession, one I myself had resisted. Regardless of the latest celebrity testimonial, to me, yoga would always be my mother’s thing, New Age-y and fringe-y. But in those moments before he left, it was beginning to feel like a deal breaker. “Really.” I’d almost convinced myself. “I want to come.”

Tripp remained focused on his packing.

“Honestly, I’m not sure you’re ready for this kind of work, Alex. Just enjoy the solitude. I think you could benefit from some time alone with your thoughts.” He came over to kiss me goodbye, and I sat up, letting the zillion-thread count sheet fall away from me. But he was gone too quick to notice.

***

Billy and I met Tripp at Mount Bachelor, Central Oregon’s favorite ski destination, where I was working a weekend shift as the on-mountain concierge.

Mostly, I directed harried parents to the nearest restroom. It was something of a rebound job, having recently returned from what I assumed was a stereotypical attempt at living in New York. My morale was fragile at best and my bank account was drained. That afternoon, Billy was curled at my feet as Tripp approached the desk with his client.

“Hi.”

He rested his elbow casually on the mahogany counter between us. His eyes sparkled. And when he smiled, I melted. I honestly did.

“Hi.” I smiled back, feeling like I had gained a thousand feet of altitude.

“Can you recommend a restaurant for us this evening?” He kept his eyes on mine.

“And by us, you mean?” I nodded toward a man I assumed was his friend, who was leafing through a ‘High Desert Museum’ pamphlet, decked head to toe in fresh from-the-box Patagonia. The mountain’s ragtag ski lodge crew always mocked out-of-town weekend warriors, but I found them fascinating. They reminded me that the world was a big place and gave me hope that, although New York had not worked out, I too, might someday, somehow, avoid a lifetime of county fairs in good ol’ Sisters, Oregon.

“Yep, that would be my date,” he replied, his blinding smile drawing me in.

I tore my eyes away to look over at his friend.

“Well, he sure looks ready for some action out there,” I said in a low voice.

Tripp twisted around to look at him over his shoulder.

“She likes your goggles, man.” He turned back to me. “So. Dinner,” he said

with a little smile. His eyes were as blue as the sky behind him.

Go for it, Alex. Just do it.

I leaned forward.

“Yes?” he asked.

“It’s about your date. My guess is that two hours in this powder, and he’ll be glued to the wet bar in his room tonight. Are you sure you don’t want to reconsider?

Mount Bachelor’s got some pretty cute lifties, and I think Skye’s on this afternoon.” I pretended to scan a list of lift operators on duty.

Tripp leaned toward me, his eyes glittering with amusement. “That ‘date’ is worth over half a billion dollars. Makes the glare of his one-piece ski suit a little more endearing.” We considered the spectacle for a moment. The Ski Magazine cover boy looked up from his map of downtown Bend.

“Okay, okay. I can hear you over there. Could you hurry it up, Edwards? I’m suffocating in this damn suit. Tell you what, man, next time I pick the meeting place.

Cabo.” He ripped off his goggles and looked at them, then held them up for me to see.

“These are pretty awesome though, right?” They both laughed. I liked these guys.

Unlike most of the resort’s seasonal millionaires, they seemed to have a sense of humor about themselves.

“Alright,” I said, looking back at Tripp. “Let’s find you boys a restaurant before your friend passes out.” I considered my choice of words. These ‘boys’ had at least ten years on me. I looked down at my list of endorsed restaurants and then set it aside.

“My favorite place in town is Sushi Max, but if you don’t like sushi-”

Tripp interrupted me. “Sushi’s perfect.”

I waited for him to check with his friend. He didn’t. Instead he continued to stare at me, making my heart race. I began to move things around on the desk. What was going on? Guys didn’t intimidate me. Jeff Otto, Garth Merck, Chris Cotton-my big brother Jackson’s high school posse-all my life they were relentless, but not once was I ever thrown by their teasing, harassing, or flirting. And those guys were rodeo stars. If they didn’t knock me off center, no one could. Right? I looked up again at Tripp’s blue eyes and shock of blond hair, and felt weak. I cleared my throat.

“Okay, here’s a map.” All business, I circled the restaurant and pointed out the route. My hand grazed his, and it felt like a current was coursing between us. I’d never experienced anything like it.

“You like sushi, Alex?” Tripp asked, glancing down at my nametag.

I looked down to catch my breath, then recapped my highlighter pen and looked into his eyes. “Of course. I’m from the High Desert. Don’t you know we’re renowned for our land fish?” Bad joke.

He laughed.

His friend called over again. “Tripp. Seriously. I am dying over here.” He now had plopped, spread-legged, onto one of the leather armchairs. Tripp appeared not to hear him, and kept his eyes on mine. He put his hand over the map.

“Why don’t you join me, then.” It wasn’t a question.

Standing there, his body so close to mine, I felt like I might just fall into a heap on the floor. Everything about him was irresistible: the light in his eyes, the sound of his voice, the way he smelled. It was like the first time I saw a pack of wild mustangs.

The world felt infinite.

“What about your friend?” I asked, ignoring the pulse in my ears.

“He’s got plans. Right, Jim?”

Jim gave him a half-wave. “I don’t care what you do, Edwards. Just get me to The Lodge for some Scotch and a soak.”

Tripp turned to me. “Yeah, he’s got plans.”

I looked at him: tall, powerful, perfectly groomed, but still slightly rugged. A thoroughbred. He carried himself like he owned the place, but it didn’t seem like arrogance, just conviction. And I loved him for it right away.

“So we’re clear,” I said. “I’m not responsible for your sugar daddy over there pulling the plug on his account with you.”

“Ah, Jim’s been a client forever. He’s not going anywhere. I’m a pretty likable guy.” That smile again. I couldn’t breathe.

“Well,” I said, feigning reluctance and bending down to pet Billy, who grounded me in any situation. “I guess I could join you then.”

“Is that your dog?” he asked.

“Sure is.” I stroked Billy’s head, and he leaned against my knee.

“What happened to him?”

For a second, I didn’t know what he was talking about. I was so accustomed to Billy’s one ear. “Oh. His ear? I think it was a gang initiation. Isn’t that awful? I found him at a shelter in New York.”

“Does he have Pitt Bull in him?” Tripp took a step back.

I burst out laughing. “No, he’s a Jack Russell-Beagle mix. Does he look especially ferocious? I hope you’re not afraid of dogs,” I teased, “because Billy and I are a package deal.”

Tripp bent down and cautiously pet his good ear. “Does Billy like sushi, too?”

“Yep. Loves it,” I answered. It was sweet to see this self-assured man be tentative around a creature as harmless as Billy.

“Okay, then. A table for three. I’ll book it.” He pulled out his phone. “And tell me where you live, so I can have my driver pick you up.”

“Driver? Are you serious?”

He leaned in. “It’s all show. For the clients.”

“Oh, right.” I smirked. “I can see that you don’t enjoy it at all.”

“Think you can handle a driver for one night?”

“I suppose,” I answered, flirtatiously drawing out the syllables. For a second there, I did wonder about giving a stranger my address. But who was I kidding? I was back in Central Oregon, once again desperate for some excitement. “It’s thirty-five Old Post Road in Sisters. And tell your driver that the chickens are even fiercer than Billy, so he may want to wait in the car.”

Looking down, Tripp smiled as he typed and said, “You’re a funny girl.” Then he slipped his phone back into his pocket, patted the counter twice, grinned at me one last time, and said, “See you tonight.”

I watched him walk away and felt like I was floating.

What just happened?

All afternoon, I couldn’t stop smiling, thinking about him, and replaying our conversation. As my shift was about to end, I was lost in full-blown fantasy about our imminent date when I began to consider the cold, harsh, un-sexy reality of my life: twenty-five years old and broke, living at home in a small mountain town, three hours from the nearest city, which was Portland, of all places. Self-doubt began to creep in; there was no disguising my lack of direction from Tripp, or my parents. In fact, just the night before, they were dropping hints at the dinner table.

“So Alex,” Dad had said over the fondue pot. “This could be the perfect time for you to look into vet school. Fulfill that childhood dream of yours.”

“Mm-hmm.” I’d twirled my fork and fought the urge to remind us all that I was no longer a child.

“You do have a rare gift with animals, honey,” Mom had agreed. “You could even take classes right here at COCC.” She’d looked over and smiled expectantly.

“Just something to think about.”

“Hmm,” I’d said again, glad to have a mouthful that made answering impossible. They were clearly thrilled to have me home and seemed to think I should stay in Sisters forever. But I held out hope that a fulfilling life was waiting for me somewhere else, somewhere far, far away.

An employee shuttle bus dropped me off on the main road. Walking up our long dirt driveway, I could hear Mom mending tack in the barn. Normally, I would visit the stable after a long day at work, but instead I scooped Billy up and tiptoed through the side gate, across the back deck, and in through the sliding glass door. Once in my room, I threw open the closet and proceeded to try on its entire contents at least three times. I left a note on the kitchen table, ducked out the front door, and went back down by the road to wait for Tripp’s town car. When I arrived at Sushi Max, he was standing outside. He opened the door and escorted me out of the car like I was royalty.

“What, no Billy?” he teased.

Tara Duncan, the former captain of Pioneer High’s cheering squad, was crossing the parking lot with her husband, Bruce, doggie bag in hand. They stared at the car and then at me, but I slipped behind Tripp, not wanting to make awkward conversation. This was embarrassing, actually, as I had been Pioneer’s Eco-League president, and was known for riding my bike everywhere. Also, I hadn’t really broadcast the news about my return from New York.

We were seated at a table with an orchid and one small candle. When our server placed a complimentary appetizer between us, Tripp leaned forward to examine it. I watched as he squinted, smiled, and said something funny. He was even more gorgeous than I remembered.

“So you went to Reed College. Good school. Steve Jobs and all. You said you brought your horses?” Tripp sipped his wine, something French that he’d ordered with perfect pronunciation.

“Just horse. Singular. Winger. I think that was the hardest part of being away in New York, having to leave Winger here,” I said, taking a bite of tuna roll smothered in wasabi. I blinked and couldn’t help fanning my mouth.

Tripp watched me, smiling. “Do you still have him?”

“Yep. He’s fourteen. I used to rush home from school to ride him. He was the first horse I was allowed to train on my own.” I took another bite, avoiding the wasabi this time.

“Our family owns horses as well,” Tripp said. “Racehorses.”

I looked up suddenly. Racehorses were notoriously mistreated.

“Don’t worry,” he said as if reading my thoughts. “The Edwards Family herd is cared for very well to say the least.” Tripp placed his chopsticks on the small square plate in front of him. “We’ve had horses for generations. They were my father’s passion. He used to take me out to groom the new ones.”

“Don’t you have groomers?”

He shrugged. “It was something my dad and I used to do together. My mother didn’t even know about it.” He looked out the window for a moment.

“Sometimes, we even rode together.”

“Rode your racehorses?” The idea sent actual chills up my spine.

“My dad wasn’t one to follow the rules.” He looked back at me.

I struggled to stay focused. “Where do your parents live?” I asked.

“My mother lives in Marin. My father passed away.” He took another sip of his wine.

“I’m sorry.” I put down my glass.

“It was a while ago. Summer before junior year at Andover. I never went back,” he said.

I waited for him to say something else, but he was quiet.

“Do you have any siblings?” I asked carefully.

“Two brothers and a sister. We all went to Stanford and stayed in the Bay Area. Tatum’s a doctor. The rest of us are in finance,” he recounted casually.

“But what about your mother? Did she remarry? Is she . . . okay?”

“Louise?” Tripp’s laugh surprised me. “I guess you could say that my mom is the Edwards family CEO. It keeps her very busy, which she loves. Now.” He leaned back and placed his napkin on the table. “Your turn. Tell me about New York.”

I hesitated, overwhelmed by the details of his world. A world I’d observed in New York as if through a thick pane of glass.

“Well, there’s not much to tell, really. It didn’t work out,” I finally answered before finishing the sake in my cup. Tripp refilled it.

“And why is that?” he asked, looking into my eyes for a long moment.

I considered my answer. “I guess I was just along for the ride.”

It was supposed to be an adventure. Our great escape from small town life in the Pacific Northwest. My best friend, Haley, had been planning it ever since I could remember. We’d met the day she blew into town, riding shotgun in her mother’s convertible Chrysler. At the beginning of what was supposed to be a cross-country road trip, they’d stopped at Pappy’s Pizza for lunch and directions. Trish noticed that the place was filled with handsome cowboys, found a rental on the community bulletin board, and decided they should just stay put right there in Sisters. Haley was beside herself and swore she’d make it to New York if it was the last thing she did. I was there when it all happened, eating a slice at the counter. We made eye contact but didn’t talk. Two weeks later, she recognized me on the school bus and sat next to me. I was part of her plan from that day forward. We were twelve.

In New York, it made perfect sense that Haley floated like cream to the top. She’d been preparing for years. When I did 4-H, she studied French. And while I was focused on roping and riding, she was all about fashion and film. She did try to help me, though, assigning books and articles and movies to get me in a ‘New York state of mind,’ but I never had time for all that. My life at the ranch was busy and full. And later, in college, I was consumed with playing catch-up, learning about social issues and global crises and all the other realities I’d been sheltered from. Still, Haley emailed me regularly, sending links and counting down the days ’til graduation and our triumphant move to the Big Apple.

But.

No matter how much black I wore, no matter how much or little I said, how hot, cool, aloof or impassioned I was: I wasn’t a New Yorker. Eventually, the neighborhood pickpockets and purse-snatchers really got me down, especially after Haley moved to her boyfriend’s place uptown. And one night after work, I found the words “Go home” spray painted in fluorescent green on my apartment door. I went in and packed my bags.

“You still with me?” Tripp asked. I blinked and looked up at him.

“Sorry.” I shook my head and laughed. “Yeah. New York. I guess I didn’t have it in me. Wasn’t hungry enough. Isn’t that what they say?”

Once again he held my eyes. “What are you hungry for, Alex?” His gaze was penetrating.

Gulp.

I felt my whole body respond. I blushed, coughed, and took a sip of water. I had to look away to compose myself.

What am I hungry for?

Yesterday, I had no idea. But in that moment, I couldn’t imagine wanting anything more than what was sitting across from me. Watching me. Waiting for this  dinner to be finished so we could leave. Together.

“Oh, the usual,” I said instead.

He twirled the wine in his glass.

“So, were you working in New York?” he prompted.

“I worked for Hill Holiday. A friend found the job for me.” One of Haley’s mom’s ex-boyfriends, to be exact.

“That’s a great firm. Did you work with Mike Salmon or Keith Hutton?”

I laughed. Those men were executives. Michael Salmon was the CFO, and Keith was the chairman of the board. I was on the thirteenth floor in a cubicle that faced the bathroom.

“No, not much contact with those guys. If we had crossed paths, though, I’m sure they would have appreciated the turquoise, studded cowboy hat I wore on my first day.” I raised my glass and smiled.

“You didn’t.”

“Oh, yes, I did.”

Tripp clapped, threw his head back, and laughed, making my gaffe seem charming.

“New York can be tough on your own,” he acknowledged.

“Actually, I went with a friend. She’s still there. Loves it.” I wondered how Haley was doing. We rarely saw each other once she married Karl, and hadn’t spoken since I moved home several months ago.

“Well, it’s not for everyone. I did my time there, too. Couldn’t wait to get back to California,” he said in a tone that made feel me that I was being let off the hook. I sat back in my seat, sighed, and smiled at him.

“Come to Marin next weekend.”

“Are you serious?” I asked.

“Yes. I want to take you riding.”

I flew to Marin the following Friday, first class, Billy with his own seat in a carrier beside me. Tripp and I were engaged three months later.

We got married two months after that.

***

Now here I was, eleven months to the day after we met, naked and pacing in my favorite fancy boots, awaiting Tripp’s return. It seemed Ray LaMontagne was crooning too mournfully, so I clomped over to skip the song. “Let’s try something a little more light-hearted,” I said to the in-wall sound system. Next up was Van Morrison’s ‘Tupelo Honey.’ Moody, but definitely romantic. It would have to do. I’d combed my memory for every fantasy, idea, and desire Tripp had ever expressed.

Tonight, I vowed, we’d do it all. With determination, I readjusted my stockings, put on the turquoise cowboy hat, and cracked my whip.

When I saw headlights illuminating the garage door, I bolted back to our bedroom (clomp, clomp, clomp), dimmed the lights, and propped myself against the king pillows. The whip’s handle poked my side. “Ouch!”

Legs crossed. Hat tilted. Hair to the side. No, forward.

I was sweating.

Two minutes went by. Then five. Then eight. Tripp was rustling around in the kitchen, and I heard Billy bark outside. I was about to get up when he finally walked into the bedroom with Billy at his heels, flicked on the lights, and tossed a pile of magazines and papers on the bed. Without a word, he opened the French doors and said, “Back outside, Bill.”

He dropped onto the banquette at the foot of our bed with his back to me.

“I’m exhausted,” he said, loosening his tie and unbuttoning his shirt. Tripp always dressed formally when he traveled, whatever the destination. He stood and walked to the closet without looking at me, then turned to go into the bathroom.

“So, how was it?” I called, taking off the hat and then putting it back on.

Tripp emerged and leaned against the nine-foot, cherry wood doorframe, toothbrush in hand. He looked around the room as if he didn’t recognize it. Finally, his eyes rested on me for a second. I cocked my head to the side and started to say my big line-‘Care to climb on, cowboy?’-when Tripp interrupted.

“Did you ride today?” He was back to gazing at something through the French doors, although it was dark outside.

“No,” I replied.

“What’s with the outfit?” He still wasn’t looking at me.

“I was attempting to seduce you,” I said, tossing my hat on the floor. “But something tells me you’re not in the mood.”

He looked at me again. “Cute.”

“Clearly not,” I said, reaching for a cashmere throw to cover myself.

“Al, just let me take a shower. I need a few minutes.”

“Okay,” I said. Allowing myself to feel hopeful again, I posed for him one last time and said, “So do you want The Cowgirl, or just a gorgeous naked woman in your bed?”

He offered a meager smile and said, “Just my wife, please,” then disappeared into the bathroom.

I threw myself back and sprawled on the bed. It was time to rethink my strategy. I sat up and winced at my reflection, ridiculous in the glare of overhead light. Then it dawned on me: Tripp said it himself. He didn’t want some cartoonish seduction; he just wanted me, his wife. Maybe that was the problem: I was trying too hard, and Tripp just wanted the real thing. I peeled off my costume and slipped into the steamy shower beside him. Inhaling the scent of sandalwood soap, I watched the curves of his back for a moment.

Then I reached for him.

“Alex!” He jumped forward and bumped the shower nozzle. Gripping his head, he spun toward me. “What are you doing?”

Stunned by his response, I wondered the same thing. Tripp leaned over and turned on the second showerhead, clearly indicating that I should move over. I dutifully stepped under the other downpour of water and turned to face Tripp, who was consumed with the task of lathering himself. The sight of him inspired my determination.

“We should name our house Twin Falls,” I joked.

Tripp didn’t say anything, but the pounding of water was loud, so maybe he didn’t hear me.

“Here we are, alone together,” I tried in a louder voice. “Tell you what, king-sized beds and double showers aren’t doing anything for marriage these days . . . ”

Tripp looked over at me without saying anything. He was soaping his chest now, and I was succumbing to frustration.

“Well, babe, can’t wait to hear about your adventure. Must have been pretty intense ’cause you’ve barely said a word to me. I’ve missed you, you know.”

I paused; then, against my better instincts, I reached for him again, suddenly self-conscious.

Tripp stepped back, this time hitting the back of his head.

“Shit!” he said.

“Forget it. This was clearly a bad idea.”

Tripp grabbed for my hand.

“Sorry. Let’s just talk when I get out.”

We looked at each other for a second.

Talk?

When Tripp finally turned off the water, I had retreated back to the bed. I thought about trying to look sexy, but my track record had been so horrendous that I went for an attempt at cute. Tripp liked the pink cashmere robe, so I threw it on, failing to dry myself completely. It felt like being wrapped in saran wrap and smelled like the barn after a rainstorm. I wanted to pull the covers over my head. Instead, I cinched the robe and put on some lip balm, reasoning with myself. He was exhausted. He just needed space. I leaned against the pillows and grabbed a magazine from the stack Tripp had deposited on the bed. It was Yoga Journal.

Yoga Journal?

I opened to a page that had been dog-eared.

Dog-eared?

Anusara in Atlanta:

Yogini Lauren Gates on visualization, playful practice, and the benefits of aromatherapy.

I proceeded to leaf through what was basically a ten-page centerfold spread, the voluptuous model performing what could only be called contortion yoga. My heart sank as I scanned the pictures, a leg behind her head here, a perfect backbend there. I pulled the robe tighter across my chest. Tripp obviously had studied these pictures.

Then I saw the post-it.

“lgates@cosmicabundance.com” was printed in purple felt-tip pen with the words “Come back soon, Warrior!” written underneath.

I gasped.

My stomach flipped.

I jumped to my feet and began pacing again, a thousand awful scenarios racing through my head. Just then, Tripp strolled out of the bathroom looking so hot that I wanted to scream. His towel hung from his waist and the muscles of his perfectly toned abs were tan. Tan? Why was he tan? And what were those red circles all over his torso? He looked liked he’d been in a fight with a mechanical tennis tutor.

“Tripp, are you tan?” I squinted. “And what are all those marks on your chest?”

He was riffling through the blue-shirt section of his closet. Stopping for a moment, he looked down at his sudden case of gargantuan hives and sighed.

“Cupping, Alex,” he said, annoyed by my scrutiny.

“I’m sorry, what?” My towel turban flopped to the side.

“Cupping.”

Yes, Tripp, I heard you the first time.

“What’s ‘cupping’? I thought you were doing a meditation seminar or something.”

“I was on wellness retreat,” he emphasized the words as if I’d have trouble understanding. When had our communication broken down so completely?

“Okay, so is ‘cupping’ part of your new enlightenment strategy?” I asked.

Tripp hated when I was sarcastic, but he was being just plain shady. Sarcasm was more than deserved. I mean, you can’t switch the Wall Street Journal for yoga porn and think your wife won’t ask questions. Not to mention the mysterious tan and suspicious skin condition. It was like Invasion of the Body Snatchers.

Sarcasm was more than deserved.

“Cupping, Alex, happens to be an ancient acupressure technique that opens your energy channels. You ought to try it. You seem stuck.”

Stuck? Was he being sarcastic now? Who did he think was trying to get things moving here?

“My energy channels are open,” I retorted, not sure what that even meant. He was speaking a vaguely familiar language that I associated with my mom.

He sighed again. “Alex,” He spoke to the row of gleaming shoes that lined his closet floor. “You’re a beautiful woman. And I love you. But I don’t think that you . ..”

He hesitated, then turned to meet my eyes. “I don’t think that we’re at the same place in our lives.”

My throat was suddenly very dry.

“Do you understand what I’m trying to say, Alex?”

I swallowed hard and croaked, “Would you please stop using my name?”

He stood in front of me and put his hands on my shoulders. I felt like a trapped animal. My eyes darted around our bedroom. What was happening? The Oriental rug, the hardwood floors, the Pratesi sheets and Cartier alarm clock. What once had seemed so impressive suddenly seemed only menacing.

“Alex, I’m leaving.”

I gagged on a wisp of highlighted hair that had sprung from the towel and stuck to my lip balm. Tripp liked my hair blonde. I’d had it done that day.

“What?” I sputtered.

“I’ll let you take a minute.” He turned and walked into the bathroom.

I followed him, stumbling over a pile by the door: boots, corset, thigh highs . . .

“What do you mean ‘you’re leaving’?”

Tripp turned from the mirror where he was preparing to shave as if nothing had happened. As he stared at me, I felt like one-eared Billy at a dog show.

Flawed.

Judged.

“Stop looking at me like that! You can’t tell me it’s over and then look at me like that!” I yelled. He smiled mildly.

“Alex, you need to connect to your Truth. I can’t tell you how. That’s your journey. I can only tell you that I can’t follow this path with you anymore.

My truth isn’t here. I found my Authentic Self.” I was beyond insulted. It was one thing to hear this stuff from my mother, who, if nothing else, lived her mundane ‘truth’ day after day, but not from a man who has eight sets of identical platinum cufflinks.

“You found what, where?”

“My Truth is in Atlanta, Alex. I found a place where my spirit can truly soar.” He started shaving.

The light bulb went on, and with the flip of a switch, I went from pissed to full on enraged.

“Wait a minute-your piece of ass is in Atlanta! Let’s not get confused here.

Would your ‘Truth’ happen to be a contortionist with perfect boobs? Holy shit, Tripp, are you sleeping with-with Lauren-Lauren-” I spun around, looking for the magazine.

“This isn’t about sex, Alex. Lauren and I are united at a soul level, which

I don’t expect you to understand. We’ve traveled through many lifetimes together.” He put the razor down and rubbed his smooth jaw line.

“What? Are you talking past lives with me, Tripp? Six months ago, you believed ‘God’ was a nickname for Microsoft. Can you please speak the actual truth here?”

“Like I said, I don’t expect you to understand. I found my path. Yoga has taken me to my true self, my higher self. None of this stuff really matters.” He was looking at himself in the mirror. “Lauren has been my guide.”

I looked at him in cross-eyed disbelief, then ran to grab the Yoga Journal.

Panting, I returned to the bathroom, opened to the dog-eared page, and shoved it in his face.

“This woman opened your soul with some . . . ” I pulled the magazine back, furiously scanning the article. “Lavender and eucalyptus?” I was seething.

“Seriously?”

I threw the magazine at his face and missed. It hit his chest pathetically and flopped to the floor. He stepped over it and went back to the bedroom, slid into his jeans commando-style, and picked up his suitcase, still packed.

“Alex, I’m sorry it has to be this way, but there is no talking to you about this.”

No talking to me?

“How are we supposed to talk when you are never here?” I cried.

“This was a mistake, and I haven’t known how to tell you. I’m leaving, Alex.”

I ran down the hall after him, caught my robe on a drawer pull, and lost the entire thing. Who makes robes out of cashmere anyway? When I finally wrestled it back on and reached the door, Tripp’s black Range Rover was sailing down the street, a large sticker on the rear window proclaiming, “Namaste.”

KateBishopPic**About Kate Bishop:  Kate Bishop is the collective spirit of three friends with a shared passion for writing, yoga and a good, old-fashioned (or New Age) love story. Breathe was inspired by their experiences both on and off the mat and was born of a genuine desire to throw some love, light and laughter into the mix.

Kristin Tone graduated from Bowdoin College with a B.A. in Psychology and received an M.A. in Education from Lesley University. A yoga teacher and an educator, she currently teaches at  PS1 Pluralistic School in Santa Monica, CA.

Talie Kattwinkel earned a degree in Women’s Studies and Creative Writing from the University of Arizona. She currently specializes in bodywork and healing.

Bridget Evans attended the University of Maryland where she studied education. She taught in the Marin County school system for ten years and co-created OUTWORD, an outdoor writing program for children. She is also a yoga teacher. All three women are mothers to small children.

**Contact Kate:  Website  Facebook  Goodreads  Twitter  Publisher: Diversion Books

**Click HERE to visite Kate’s other stops on the CLP blog tour!

Filed Under: Breathe Tagged With: Books, Breathe, CLP blog tours, Kate Bishop, Yoga

Nikki Mahood

May 21, 2013 6 Comments

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About author, Nikki Mahood:  Nikki Mahood was born in Dublin, moving to the UK in the late eighties as a child, she has resided in North Yorkshire ever since.  Distance didn’t just make her heart grow fonder, it made her mind grow too, her grandmother provided the stationary, usually adorned with Ponies of some sort and they wrote to each other regularly.  So began her writing career, starting with silly poems to send her family and nurtured by a love of reading, her overactive imagination and an obsession with Josephine March of Little Women.

Without setting out to write a book, a taster course for The Open University brought Fallon Magee into Nikki’s imagination, followed shortly by one Abner Hagarth-Smythe and suddenly what started as a character exercise became a novel.

After two years of unsuccessful submissions, the idea of self publishing was raised and so began the evolution of Fallen from a manuscript, to a novel, to a Kindle, hopefully yours too.

Nikki works full time and writes whenever possible, watches far too many movies and dedicates a good hour a day to scrolling through Pinterest…

INTERVIEW

Why do you write?  I write because I don’t know what to do with myself if I don’t. I work full time and write whenever I can.  I think Josephine March (from Little Women) really inspired me, my Mum gave me the book as a child and I’ve read it at least once a year ever since.  I see a lot of myself in Jo, not least the writing side of her.

Who is your favorite author?  Hmm, this is difficult, I’ve met so many awesome authors lately, via social media, I read everything that Carey Heywood writes and am a huge fan! Historically I devoured every Patricia Cornwell and Freya North book going and I still read Freyas.  I guess I can’t nail one down universally, it’s absolutely subjective to my mood on any given day.

What was the writing/editing/publishing process like for you?   I went into the whole self publishing thing after a frustrating couple of years of submissions. I was so proud of myself for completing Fallen that I thought the pro-forma letters sent by Agents very tough.  With Fallen I was very arrogant, stuck it on Lulu, made family buy it and didn’t really do much else, expecting people to find it, buy it and make it into a movie.  Being accepted into Chicklit Goddesses has helped me realise that I’m responsible for a lot, editing and proofing, something I’ve done alone so far and my reviews proved it to a detriment to my writing.  I’m going to do it properly this year with Forgotten!

Hard/paperback or eBooks?  Any books!! Any media, reading is what’s important. Whatever you read, reading can only expand your mind and give you a drive to do things you might not have tried otherwise. I know that if I have children I will do exactly the same as my Mum did and get them reading Classics from a young age.

Where is your ideal writing location?   A coffee shop, my laptop on the table and a steaming mug of coffee in front of me! Sunday mornings used to be great for that, but my lactose intolerance put pay to my latte habit!

How many drafts of your books do you typically write before they’re published?  I’m kind of strange, I write blocks in documents and try sew it all together at the last minute, I’m learning that isn’t maybe the best way of doing it! I do change each chunk on a daily basis, a lot of evolution happens to my characters from the initial writing to the completion of the story.

What’s on your desk?  Notepads, a 8/9 inch pile of them! A folio I bought on a whim too! Oh and graffiti, my desk is an old school desk, with the lid and storage bit and all!

If you’re not writing, then you’re probably…:  Watching a movie, reading or at work, not in that order!!

A writer must have…:  Incredibly supportive friends and family, who do stupid things that you can rip off for your books. Most of the silly stories in my books are real things that I’ve altered to suit. That and a lot of equipment, I use my phone, tablet, laptop and notebooks all the time, that’s why it takes me so long to write a book. Because I’ve got stuff everywhere!

What is your favorite word?  I don’t know if I can swear here, if I can, its Bollocks, I love that word and if I can’t, its Epic, which I overuse and sound stupid and undereducated doing so!

Can you tell us about any of your upcoming projects?  I’m starting to knit together the third book in my series, Forgotten, I’m hoping to release it in the summertime, its sticking with Fallon and Abner, but skips forward about five years from where we left them in Forever. A lot has changed for them, and its happening again, possibly worse too! Its become a labour of love as I’m not sure I’ve made the right choices for my characters, because I forget that they aren’t real people. I’ve connected with a lot of people who have suffered major brain traumas via the charity Headway. They’re inspiring and I hope to be able to do them justice, there are a lot of people out there living every day with the devastating effects of traumatic brain injurys.

Nikki’s books!

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**Contact Nikki!:  Website   Facebook   Twitter   Amazon

**Additional comments by Nikki!:  I want to thank Isabella for having me here and for founding the Chicklit Goddesses group on Facebook. I can’t say enough the value of having a network of such supportive and inspirational writers to bounce ideas off and even just to moan at.  There’s no underestimating the power of that when you’re the minority in your friends and family, even community.

Filed Under: Nikki Mahood Tagged With: Books, Chick-Lit, Fallen, Forever, Guest Interview, Nikki Mahood, Writing

The Lake House

May 20, 2013 1 Comment

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CHAPTER 1

The last few snowflakes drifted to the ground. The nor’eastah, as they called it in New England, had passed; its brutal wake of snow and ice transformed the landscape into a winter wonderland. Downy blankets covered the tree branches, and silver moonlight reflected off the ice-hardened snow. The earth bowed its head in quiet prayer, and the stars awakened from under dark clouds. The wind died to a thick silence that Victoria Rose felt she could almost touch.

She walked along Nagog’s paved road in black high-heeled boots. Cold seeped through the thin soles as salt pellets rolled and crunched under her feet. She’d left Nagog in her late teens, and except for two winters, her visits had been restricted to a few weeks here and there or the summer months. For the past fifty- five years, she’d lived mostly in Southern California’s warmth. There, boots were only an accessory, and there was no need for heavy sweaters underneath a thick, cumbersome jacket. At the moment, a hideous bright blue parka, a loaner from her child- hood friend Molly Jacobs, covered her upper body and made her feel like the Michelin Man.

When Victoria had landed at Boston’s Logan Airport earlier that afternoon, the heavy winds whipped the snow into furious spirals, and she realized she was unprepared to face the cold of her childhood home. When Molly met her at the baggage claim, her friend’s pillow-like body had encased her in a hug and her white hair pressed against Victoria’s chest. “You’re home,” she said, as fellow passengers bumped past them. Molly lifted her head and her blue eyes brimmed with tears. Molly was brown sugar, cinnamon, and vanilla. She was homemade bread cooling on the kitchen windowsill. Warm, doughy hands smooshed Victoria’s angular cheekbones, and Victoria could hear Molly’s thoughts—this day had been too long in coming.

“You’re holding up traffic,” Molly’s husband, Bill, barked as he moved the women away from the escalator.

In the five years since Victoria had seen Bill, his girth had ballooned and the rock-hard fat, so detrimental to an older man’s health, pressed against his pant seams.

“Traffic was awful,” he said. “Billions of taxpayers’ dollars for new tunnels, and the ceiling collapses. They closed the roads and we got stuck in gridlock. I tell ya, no one knows how to build things anymore.”

Victoria slid her arm around his belly, kissed his cheek, and tousled his thin, salt-and-pepper hair. The crinkles around his eyes turned up and reminded her of the little boy who liked to drop spiders in girls’ laps.

Three rose-embroidered suitcases fell onto the conveyor belt, and Bill motioned for the porter. As they walked toward the parking garage, Molly pulled the blue parka from a shopping bag and took Victoria’s red cashmere coat.

“Fashion might work on fifty-degree nights in Malibu, but not here.” She held out the sleeve as if Victoria were one of Molly’s five great-grandchildren. She zipped the front and pulled the hood over Victoria’s head, tying the strings tight. The shiny fabric crushed her short blond waves. Molly stripped the silk scarf from the red coat and wrapped it around Victoria’s neck and mouth.

“Now you’re ready for winter,” she announced.

Victoria continued to walk as she looked at the snow-covered neighborhood illuminated by the moonlight and the metal lan- terns that dotted the street. It was a scene straight from a Thomas Kinkade painting.

The community had been built in the early 1920s by Victoria’s parents and their friends—factory owners and businessmen from the Boston area. Nagog Drive was a quarter-of-a-mile half loop with nine Craftsman bungalows surrounded by thick, knotted oaks, pines, and maples. The five homes across the street from the beach shared a large circular backyard. The other four homes were tucked into the woods along the lake—two on either side of the beach. Every house had a view of the water.

Nagog had been meant as a summer residence, but in 1930, four months after Black Tuesday, the community settled in per-manently. The families banded together, determined to keep their factories open as the American economy fell apart; what one neighbor had, everyone shared. It allowed them a lifestyle of private schooling for their children and protection from the outside world’s strife.

Victoria’s boot slipped on a patch of black ice, and she tightened her stiff muscles to stop the fall. With small steps she skated until her feet found traction against the snow on the side of the road. A broken hip wouldn’t be a good homecoming, she thought.

Throughout the small lakeside community, most of the houses were dark.

The cold tickled her back, and a shiver pulsed up her spine. She pushed her gloved hands deep into her pockets and looked toward Molly and Bill’s place nestled on the side of the beach, behind bare hundred-year-old maples. Smoke plumes rose from the brick chimney and the light was still on in the kitchen. The brown clapboards and snow-covered pitched roof reminded her of the gingerbread houses she’d created with her granddaughter, Annabelle.

It was too dark to see the tree house in the big oak behind their home. An architect had designed it with two rooms and a wrap-around porch. When she was little, Victoria and her girlfriends would play tea party while the boys played cowboys and Indians. On hot summer nights, the porch became their stage as Victoria directed her friends in shows performed for their parents.

Victoria shivered, breathing in air that froze her lungs and reminded her of a snowflake’s taste. As children, she and her friends would lie in the snow with wings outlined around their shoulders as they closed their eyes, opened their mouths, and waited for that one special crystal to touch the tip of their warm tongues. Those were the days when it felt like fairies sprinkled golden dust on Victoria’s path so that her feet never had to touch ordinary ground. Days when the sun broke through the clouds, as if an angel’s light reached out from heaven, a sign that everything that sparkled and shined was meant for her.

Time had passed too quickly, Victoria thought. Three generations of Nagog children had played in that tree fort since those days. At seventy-four, how much time did she have—another fifteen or twenty years?

The year of her daughter, Melissa’s, birth, Victoria woke one morning and saw a crease next to her eye. For years, she’d checked daily to ensure that its appearance hadn’t deepened. Thick moisturizing creams were lathered and hundreds of dollars paid to Hollywood salons that promised everlasting youth.

There came a point, after she became a grandmother, when she saw a stranger in the mirror who didn’t match the woman inside. Now her cheeks were smooth, but her eyebrows drooped. Her neck had a thin wattle, and she couldn’t find that first line in the wrinkled fan around her eyes.

Still, she looked better than most women her age. Years of exercise and good nutrition kept her willowy figure firm, and she was proud to say that her abdominals were rock hard. There were teenagers who couldn’t boast the same.

But at this stage of life, what was left? In society’s eyes, living was for the young.

Victoria’s heel broke through the icy snow and her calf sunk into the white drift as she made her way across the beach. With each step she fell deeper, the snow covering her boots as she walked to the picnic table next to the lake. She used her sleeve to hack and push at the white mound until she cleared the seat. The cold stung her backside. Plumes of steam encircled her gloves as she blew to warm her numb fingers.

The full moon reached its highest point, illuminating the expanse of shimmering snow that covered the lake. In her mind, she could see the blue-gray water and the gritty sand the color of maple sugar crystals hidden under the snow.

She’d learned to ice-skate on this lake. Each winter the fathers of the neighborhood would shovel off a large square, and the girls would put on white skates and glide across the ice. Victoria and her friend Sarah would hold hands and spin in circles, laughing as they went faster and faster. The boys chased pucks with hockey sticks while the fathers went farther out on the lake and cut holes in the ice to fish.

Victoria looked to the edge of the beach where the sand met the woods. The raft that had been pulled in from the water for the winter months was covered with snow. Victoria smiled as her memory wandered back to the hours she’d spent on that raft with her childhood friends.

Five bubbles of pink gum grew as the circle of teenage girls in bathing suits lay on their stomachs and blew as hard as they could. Nagog Lake’s waves danced and slapped against the rusted steel drums that held up the wooden platform they floated upon. Muffling giggles, they blew harder, their faces turning red in the bright sunlight. The gum smelled like cotton candy and its aroma filled the air. The sticky material stretched thin and they leaned their heads closer to one another, their eyes wide and smiling as the sides of their bubbles touched. A horsefly buzzed around their heads, and they tried to shake it away without breaking the delicate pink circles.

Victoria closed her lips. From deep within her throat she vibrated the count of three. On three, the girls pressed their faces closer together, trying to pop the bubbles. When the bubbles finally burst against the girls’ cheeks and chins, laughter erupted, and they peeled the candy from their skin.

Victoria pulled a sticky piece from her long, wavy, golden hair. “Bubblegum is one of the world’s best inventions.” When her father had brought her to the World’s Fair last fall, he’d bought her the biggest jar of bubblegum she’d ever seen. She rationed the candy throughout the year, sharing it with her inner circle of friends.

The five girls rolled onto their backs, their heads in a circle, and watched the fluffy clouds sail across the blue sky. Victoria snapped and popped her gum, knowing that her mother couldn’t hear her being unladylike this far out on the lake. She adjusted the strap of her red bathing suit. Unlike the other girls, whose suits covered their stomachs, Victoria had four inches of bare skin above her waist. Though her mother hated the suit, her father had allowed it.

Molly pointed her finger toward the sky. “I see a heart.”

The hot breath of summer air flowed over Victoria’s skin. The day felt like late August instead of the end of May. “You always see hearts,” Victoria said. “It’s because you’re in love with Bill.” Victoria poked Molly’s side and her friend batted Victoria’s hand away.

Born two and a half weeks apart, she and Molly lived next door to one another and roomed together at Dana Hall, an exclusive all-girls’ school in Wellesley, Massachusetts.

Molly sat up and watched the boys of the neighborhood playing volleyball on the beach. She pulled at the top of her bathing suit, trying to cover the new curves that had blossomed on her petite body during freshman year, and fluffed the short skirt of her blue suit over her thighs. Victoria watched Molly stare at Bill. The rosy color that naturally tinted her cheeks blushed brighter. When they’d returned from boarding school last week, Bill had noticed the change in Molly’s body, and instead of pulling her black hair the way he had since early childhood, he now stared at her royal-blue eyes and stumbled over his words when he spoke to her.

“Victoria, let me braid your hair,” Sarah said. She sat up in her plain green suit and nudged Victoria to move.

Victoria sat at the edge of the raft and dangled her feet and calves in the cold water. Sarah knelt behind her and gently combed through Victoria’s knotted hair with her piano-player fingers.

Sarah, Victoria’s other roommate, loved to play with Victoria’s hair, and many nights were spent with Sarah brushing Victoria’s long locks. The two were often mistaken for sisters—both tall and thin, with pale skin and blond hair. They shared the same classes and danced in the school ballet. It wasn’t uncommon for them to exchange makeup and clothing, and from a distance it was hard to tell them apart.

“I see a dog in that cloud,” Evelyn said. She rolled over onto her stomach and crossed her tiny feet behind her thighs. Her short blond hair had dried into fairy curls around her forehead.

Sarah finished the braids and leaned her chin onto Victoria’s shoulder as they watched the boys play volleyball. Victoria pulled Sarah’s arms around her and stared across the lake. Bill, Carl, Joseph, and James were as inseparable as the girls.

“Do you think Carl is cute?” Sarah asked.

“He’s annoying,” Victoria said. Carl was the shortest of the boys and she could already tell at sixteen that he would be as bald as his father.

“I think he’s funny,” Sarah said. She tugged on one of Victoria’s braids. “You just don’t like him because he called you Frog Face when we were little.”

“I socked him in the stomach more than once for calling me that name and he doubled over. Who would want a man who’d been beat up by a girl?” Victoria teased.

“I don’t think you could still beat him up,” Sarah said. “And who else am I going to choose? Molly’s in love with Bill, Evelyn with James, and we all know at some point you’ll stop pushing Joseph away. The two of you are meant to be together. Or are you going to let Maryland have Joseph?”

Maryland stared up at the clouds and didn’t respond to Sarah’s words. The boys had never paid her much attention. Considered a plain Jane, everything about her was average. She was shy and quiet, always following along with whatever anyone wanted to do. But she was also the first to give a hug if she saw that you were sad, the first to take a barrette from her hair to replace the one you’d lost.

When they were little, Joseph Anderson had followed Victoria around, saving her from the other boys’ pranks. His blue eyes had been too big for his thin face and he had a cowlick even the best hair oil couldn’t tame. He’d brought her flowers and chocolate candies and the other kids made kissing noises to tease her. He’d been annoying.

But over the last few years he’d grown into his features. As he jumped up to spike the ball, Victoria noticed the definition in his bare chest, sending butterflies to her stomach. “You know there are men outside of Nagog we could marry.”

“But then we might not be together,” Molly said as she moved closer to Sarah and Victoria. She leaned her head on Victoria’s shoulder and dangled her feet in the water.

Victoria squeezed her friends’ hands. “We’ll always be together. And no matter where life takes us, we’ll always come back and spend the summers here.”

“And when we’re old like our parents, we’ll live here with our children,” Molly said.

“Friends forever,” Sarah whispered.

The memory faded. Victoria looked across the lake into the empty night. As a child there’d been a silver dock built as a protective barrier from the deep end of the lake. The marker for adulthood had been the day you were allowed to run down the dock and dive into the water. When you could swim out to the raft you were no longer considered a baby. The dock had been removed years ago.

How did this world of childhood fond memories become the place where her worst nightmares had happened? There were nights when Victoria awoke from dreams with her breath caught in her rib cage and the dry, bitter taste of regret poisoning her mouth. She feared that she’d never find release from her sorrow. Guilt, which started as a small grain of sand in the gut, had grown to a boulder that shackled her movement. Worst of all was the feeling of loss—a black hole that sucked life’s vibrancy into its vacuum.

Tears froze on Victoria’s cheeks and she brushed away the new ones that fell. She should retire to bed, but in her family’s home, the place she’d known her entire life, the silence echoed with voices from the past like a child’s imaginary monster when the lights go out.

It was in that house, nineteen years ago, that she’d said good- bye to Melissa and watched her daughter return to God. And it was here on this beach that she’d cradled her granddaughter, Annabelle, in her arms and screamed for help, knowing her angel had barely any breath left in her body.

On the other side of the beach, a light went on in Joseph’s home. Through the bare trees she could see his body move around the sunroom. Her frozen legs were hard to control as she crunched through the snow; more than once she almost fell before she reached the road. Joseph looked out the window and she waved. He returned the gesture and turned off the light.

Behind Joseph’s dark house was a path that led to a secluded beach where the two of them had once shared the most intimate of moments. Images from the past played like a movie in her mind, with big band music as the sound track.

Under the thin tablecloth, cool sand had formed curved beds for their half-naked teenage bodies. Beyond the trees she could see the party lights on the patio and hear the music. Had anyone noticed they’d slipped away?

“I love you, Victoria,” Joseph whispered in her ear.

Though he’d once driven her crazy as he followed her around, now her heart craved him when they were apart. The past year of school had been torture—months went by with only letters to fill the distance between them. She’d thought they’d marry as soon as she graduated, but now he was going to war, and it would be years before she could touch him again.

Joseph swirled his tongue in delicious patterns over her neck. Warm sensations flowed through her veins like powerful energy currents and pooled between her hips. Every cell in her body burst with happiness as his hands moved over her thighs. She tried not to jump when he touched the soft, warm mound, but lightning struck her body.

He pulled away.

No one had explained sex to Victoria. Her heart was split between fear and her desire to seal their relationship before he left for the war.

“Please, it’s okay.” She caressed the dimple in his cheek; her

finger fit the indent like a puzzle piece. The little boy with the thin face had grown into a man with chiseled cheekbones and broad shoulders.

He gently covered her body with his as he kissed her—her heart skipped as her body begged with a need she didn’t under- stand. Pain stabbed through her lower abdomen. Her body tightened and she pulled back from his kiss, biting her bottom lip and focusing on the sensation in her mouth.

His hand swept her jaw and he nuzzled her neck. His warm breath tickled her ear, sending shivers across her arms. “Relax. I’ll wait.”

He drew hearts on her cheeks and placed kisses on her forehead. His fingers combed through her hair. Her muscles unwound. She felt the thickness of his body entwined with hers. The lake’s small waves lapped against the shore and he moved in slow circles to its rhythm. Joseph’s masculine fingers stroked her sides. Her eyes widened at the pleasurable sparks firing in her belly.

Giggles broke free. “I’m sorry I’m laughing. It feels wonderful,” she said.

“You’re beautiful,” he said.

His tongue teased her lips as she began to move with him. Deep hunger grabbed her. Her nails dug into his back. Her thighs tightened around his waist. Explosive, joyous waves shook every muscle. Sunlight blazed through her. Her body went limp, the world went dark, and she floated in peace.

Joseph moaned. “Victoria,” he called out through quick breaths.

She felt him move deeper within her. Their lips pressed, merging together. His orgasm flowed through her, pleasure not of her flesh but of his.

He rolled onto his back and she laid her head against his chest.

The breeze tickled her skin. She touched her body, so different to her now: a pleasurable world to discover.

“Again,” she’d said, tracing his stomach. “Again.”

Victoria shivered as the wind picked up. She closed her eyes and placed her hands across her heart. Her toes felt like icicles and burned with pain. Part of her wanted to walk that path behind Joseph’s house and turn back time to when he belonged to her and not to his wife.

She stared at the quaint neighborhood with its gabled snow- covered roofs, bay windows, columned porches, and decks. The community didn’t seem real. Purity, innocence, and old-fashioned values were safe here, as if a protective bubble hovered over the circle of homes and kept them isolated from the outside world.

Most of her childhood friends had moved to Boston during their working years, but they visited Nagog on the weekends, stayed during the summer months, and celebrated every holiday together. When they retired, they returned, as promised, to live once again in the Nagog homes that had been passed down to them. Victoria had been the only one to walk away and live another life.

In the eyes of many in the community, she’d fallen from grace—and no one had pushed her. As Lucifer had done, she’d made choices that barred her from Heaven.

Had she come home to let her demons take her into death or had she returned to Nagog to find the whisper of wind that swirled between the trees and floated over the lake—the call of a little girl who once believed in magic? In this place where the past had been kept alive, she was afraid to pray for forgiveness. But the truth was that Nagog and her childhood friends were all she had left.

MarciNaultPic**About author, Marci Nault:  In 2008 Marci Nault asked the questions, “What do I want from this life? If I wasn’t afraid, and didn’t play by the rules, how would I live?” Her answer was a life-list of 101 Dreams Come True that led her on a journey of self-discovery and adventure. Having completed almost ninety of her life dreams including publishing her novel The Lake House, Marci knows what it means to take risks, go after her deepest desires, live beyond fear, and to fall in love with life, the world and herself.

**Click HERE to visit Marci’s website!

Filed Under: Isabella Tagged With: Books, Chick-Lit, Featured Book, Marci Nault, The Lake House, Writing

Book Cover Reveal – HEARTBREAK CAKE

May 20, 2013 3 Comments

I’m excited to reveal the cover of Cindy Arora’s debut novel, Heartbreak Cake!

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Business is sweet for pastry chef Indira Aguilar. Her indie bakery, Cake Pan, is fast becoming the talk of the wedding circuit for its unique take on cakes and homespun creations for the modern bride, garnering national recognition and drawing in celebrity clients. But while her professional life is blossoming, her personal life is crumbling.

Indira may have a talent for blending buttercream into bliss, but when it comes to relationships, she’s got a lot to learn. Considering that the love of her life, Josh Oliver is not only married, but also runs the award-winning pastry department of her fiercest competition, Crystal Cove Resort, Indira puts much more at stake than just her heart when she ends her affair with him.

Rumors begin to fly as the small seaside community of Long Beach learns of her secret relationship, and Indira must defend not only her actions, but her wedding business and her reputation while trying to maneuver the choppy heartbreak waters of starting over, finding new love, and facing her past. With the support of friends, family, a fondness for butter, and a determined spirit, Indira may just bake her way back to happiness and possibly into the heart of Crystal Cove’s dishy new chef, Noah. But one thing is certain. Where there’s heartbreak, there must be cake.

**Click HERE to visit Cindy Arora’s website!

Filed Under: Isabella Tagged With: Book Cover Reveal, Chick-Lit, Cindy Arora, Heartbreak Cake, Simon & Fig

The Hole in the Middle

May 17, 2013 2 Comments

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**The Hole in the Middle is free download from May 17-19 only!**

Book Blurb:  I Don’t Know How She Does It for the This Is 40 generation, The Hole in the Middle introduces Sophie Whelan, a woman who has it all – including a hideous boss, a distracted husband, daycare woes, problem employees and a 40th birthday on the horizon. Precariously close to slipping off of the treadmill that is her daily grind, Sophie is startled by the reappearance of Will Shannon, the great unresolved love of her life. As she remembers the vivid drama of their college romance, Sophie confronts the choices she has made in life and in love and looks for the one answer that has always eluded her: what does she really want?

Chapter 1

CHAPTER 1: MONDAY, DECEMBER 5, 2011

It’s a grey morning in the windswept parking structure across from the hospital, affectionately known as “The Baxter”.  I’m huddled in my minivan with the heat going full blast, gazing out at the unlovely view of the flat, cloudy sky and the forlorn stand of leafless maple trees lining the concrete wall opposite.  I’m not here for the view, though.  This parking spot may be short on ambience, but it has cell phone reception, and I’m surveying the voicemail landscape before venturing into the office.  I punch in my code and wait.

The disembodied voice speaks: You have nine new messages.

Nine.  That’s not so bad.

First message.  Click.  Barry, definitely.  He never leaves messages.

Next message.  Click.  Ditto.  But two hang-ups before nine-fifteen is unusual.  I feel my shoulders start to creep up with anticipatory tension.

Next message.   Message marked urgent.  Uh oh.  “Hi, Sophie.  It’s Barry. I see that you’re not in yet.  I need to speak to you about the Gala as soon as you do get in. There’s a problem and you need to get on top of it.”

Next message.  “Hi Sophie, it’s Anna from the toddler room at daycare.  Scotty is pulling on his ear and seems a little fussy.  He’s OK to stay for now, but if he gets any worse we’ll have to ask you to pick him up.  OK?  Sorry about that.  We’ll call you later with an update.”

What?  No.  I dropped him off half an hour ago and he was fine.  A little phlegm-riddled, maybe, but nothing more.  If I believed in God, I would pray.  Maybe I should anyway, just to hedge my bets.

Next message.   “Hi Sophie.  It’s Janelle Moss.”  The lead volunteer on the Gala, an event controlled by a group of very wealthy women who have intense and competing agendas that I don’t even begin to understand.  Every conversation with these people is a minefield.  Happily, managing Gala volunteers is one of the few things in the office that I’m not responsible for, and whatever the problem, I’m going to punt it right back to Justine.  “I don’t know if you’ve had a chance to talk to Justine yet, but we’re looking at a little change in direction on the creative for the marketing materials.  Happy to chat once Justine has filled you in.  Bye now.”

Next message.  “Sophie, it’s Justine.  Major screw-up at the Gala meeting last night.  We need to talk urgently.  Call me.” Justine is my colleague and sometime friend, when it suits her.  She runs the Event Planning department, which means that the Gala is her problem.

Next message.  “Sophie, my dear.  It’s Lillian.  I was hoping to catch you in person.  How I hate these dreadful machines!  Do give me a call today if you can.  The issue is rather time sensitive, as you young people are fond of saying.”

Lillian Parker has been one of my favorite people on earth since my last year of university, when I lived in her rambling house, paying criminally low rent in exchange for house-sitting services during her frequent sojourns abroad.  Her annual holiday party is this weekend, and I can see the invitation in my mind’s eye now, poking out of the pile in the corner of my desk that I lovingly call my Guilt Stack.  It’s not like Lil to get worked up about RSVPs, which is why the card is still buried in the Guilt Stack, but I’ll move it up to the top of the pile and deal with it once I get into the office – or by Thursday at the latest.

Next message.    “Hi Sophie.  It’s your mother.  Look honey, I know you’re busy but we have to talk about Christmas.  It’s urgent.”

Instinctively, I check the date on my BlackBerry.  Have I lost a week somewhere?  But no, it’s only December 5th.

“First of all – dinner.  I’m going to do a turducken again this year, but did Jesse like it last year?  I know he said he did, but he didn’t have seconds, so I’m not convinced.  Your brother and Dana liked it – come to think of it, did you like it?  Anyway, if you and Jesse are OK, we’ll go with the turducken again, but I want you to be honest with me if you aren’t OK with it.  Anyway, assuming that you are, we’ll go with usual sides – mashed potatoes, turnips, that rice dish that you like and probably some creamed spinach or something.  I was going to do mini shrimp cocktails for the appetizer, but did you tell me that Jesse isn’t eating seafood these days?  If not, I could always just do a soup, maybe roasted red pepper ­– that would be nice with the turducken.  I’ve been talking to your brother about dessert – he says that he doesn’t care, but I know he prefers the pumpkin pie and you always say that you prefer the lemon meringue.  So I guess I could make both, if it’s really important to you to have lem –“

Next message.  “It’s your mother again.  The machine cut me off.  Anyway, call me about dinner.  And then I need you to think about what the kids want for Christmas.  Are you doing stockings at your house or mine?  If you are doing them at mine, I’ll need to get the old stockings out and do a few repairs – they were looking kind of threadbare last year.  And also I’ll need to know if you are bringing everything for the stockings or if I need to buy some things as well.  Are you going to stay overnight here on Christmas Eve?  Because if you are, we’ll need to make a plan for dinner on the twenty-fourth.  Beef might be nice.  Does Jamie still like those transformer robots?  Because I saw a robot kit that looked amazing.  It said it was for thirteen years and up, but Jamie is such a smart little boy, I think he’d really like it.  Maybe it’s something that he and Jesse could do together; Jesse’s been working so hard.  And for Scotty I was thinking that it’s probably time to get him playing hockey; wouldn’t Jesse love that?  Maybe some little skates and a helmet and a stick?  How cute would that be?  I’m around this morning, then out for lunch with Jennie Birkin – you must remember Jennie; you went to school with Andy Birkin.  Then I’ll be back for a couple –“

End of messages.

I feel a little warm and light-headed now, and I pull down my visor mirror for an assessment.  Every day of my thirty-nine years looks back.  Grey coat, grey suit and grey roots: I really need to get my highlights done.  More alarmingly, I can feel an aching weariness in my chest.  I’ve noticed it with some regularity lately, and it makes me nervous.  Some days it’s just a knot of anxiety, but today it feels like the hole in the middle of a donut: empty but for the wind whistling through it.  I know I shouldn’t feel this hollowed out and used up at thirty-nine, but I don’t have time for that kind of reflection today.

I rummage through my purse, and locate my triage kit to deal with the problems I can solve.  I pull out the bottle of cough suppressant and take a long swig that burns going down, and then squeeze a couple of drops of Visine into each eye.  Then I attack the area under my eyes with concealer and everything else with bronzer.  And with that, I’m ready to brave the germ screening desk.

I’ve invested considerable time and energy in my relationship with Max, the guy who has been guarding the germ desk for the past six months; I know the names of his grandchildren and their ages, and how Max developed a herniated disk last year, and that Max’s wife wants him to get a storage locker for his model trains.  And because our conversations have covered extensive areas of Max’s life and times, there has been little opportunity to explore the subject of my health, which is exactly the way I want it.

But today, Max is missing.  Nigel, according to his security tag, is sitting in Max’s chair.  And judging from the length of the line, Nigel takes his job very seriously.  When I get to the front, I consider batting my eyelashes, but I suspect that insouciance of this kind has a shelf life, and mine is getting awfully close to the expiration date.  I give him what I hope is a winning smile instead.

Nigel is clearly unmoved.  He picks up his clipboard and clears this throat.  He’s going to make me do the survey.  I can’t believe it.  Max never made me do the survey.  I wonder if that’s why Max isn’t working here anymore.

“Have you experienced any coughing in the past twenty-four hours?”

“No.”  This is absolutely true.

“Sneezing?”

“No.”  Not more than everyone sneezes when they wake up in the morning, that is.  Take Jesse, for example.  He sneezes practically every morning, sometimes eight times in a row.  It doesn’t mean that he’s sick.  I myself am not a chronic sneezer like Jesse, but there is no reason to draw any dire conclusions just because I was sneezing this morning.

“Vomiting?”

“No.”

“Fever?”

“No.”  I can’t say for sure.  I don’t have a thermometer in my portable pharmacy.  And again, there are lots of other possible explanations for the flush in my cheeks today.

“Flu-like symptoms of any kind?”

“No.”

Nigel peers at me over the top of the clipboard.  If Nigel wants to, he can insist on taking my temperature, and then I’ll be in deep trouble.  But as much as he wants to, he can’t find justification today.  I almost pump my fist in the air as he moves onto the next person in line. But with Max gone, I know this is only a temporary win. Nigel is cut from a different cloth entirely. Society requires people like Nigel; without them there would be no parking officials or mall cops or hall monitors, and we would live in a state of anarchy.  And it’s important to remember this, because I dislike Nigel so intensely at this moment that I’m beginning to imagine terrible events that might befall him, and prevent him from coming to work ever again.  Not death, of course, I’d never wish for that.  A debilitating injury would be quite enough.

For the record, I approve of the hospital’s infection protection measures, at least in a theoretical sense.  And I would definitely comply with them if I were providing front line health care and believed that I posed any risk whatsoever to the hundreds of sick children upstairs.  But I’m the Director of Communications for the hospital, so I spend my days reviewing press releases and dealing with media requests, ducking my boss and trying to persuade my assistant to do some work.  I’m not saving lives.  There are lots of people in this building who do, but I’m not one of them.  And if I followed the letter of the law, and kept my flu symptoms at home, I would have worked exactly thirteen out of the last forty-five days.

In the meantime, though, it’s already nine-ten and I’m late for work.

My assistant Joy is at her desk: a mixed blessing.  She raises her tweezed eyebrows at me and murmurs, “Slow start this morning?” before turning back to her computer, where she is communing with her Facebook friends, or possibly buying designer knock-offs on eBay. But I’m not ready to declare this day a complete write-off, at least not yet, so for now I’ll act as though she works for me, and that we’re both happy about it.

“Good morning, Joy,” I say.  “I need to speak to Justine right away.  Can you find her and see if she can pop by?”

She eyes me with a combination of contempt and petulance, and my request hangs, unacknowledged, between us.  “Your phone’s been lighting up all morning,” she says.  “And Barry’s been by twice looking for you.  It’s about the Gala.”

The Gala is the hospital’s major fundraiser of the year.  It is a lavish dinner-dance for two thousand of the city’s established and upwardly mobile, and it raises over a million dollars for our medical research each year.  It is organized by a committee of well-heeled volunteers, who have lots of extra time and opinions about everything from the shade of the napkins to the font on the tablecards. It is also – mercifully – not in my portfolio, except in a tangential sense, since I oversee the marketing for the event.  I’ve attended a few committee meetings, mostly as moral support for my colleague Justine, but I begged off last night to nurse my cold.

“I’ll go and see him once I’ve had an update from Justine.  So if you could get her for me that would be great.  Thanks,” I say, retreating into my office, and closing the door behind me.

I see my computer sitting innocently enough on my desk, but I’m not fooled.  Recently, I have fallen into the habit of ascribing human characteristics to my computer, and unfortunately, our relationship has taken a turn for the pathological.  This week, I’m having trouble shaking the irrational conviction that my computer is poised for an attack; each morning, I quake inwardly as I push the power button and hear, in the hum of waking machinery, a marauding army of data collecting itself and preparing to barrel over the horizon at me.

I log in, and the screen fills with email; definitely more than twenty… could it be as many as fifty?  I look away in horror. The computer seems to vibrate with a malevolent energy; like a rabid dog, I’m convinced that it senses my fear.   I back away and step out into the hallway. “And, Joy?  Could you please call everyone and postpone the staff meeting?  I’ve got to sort out this thing with Justine.”

Joy has been at the hospital for twenty-seven years.  Her seniority guarantees her a position with someone on the Executive Team, but she gets passed around like a hot potato because she has the worst attitude in the secretarial pool.  She is also not particularly competent, and it’s hard to tell if she’s bad at her job because she hates it, or if she hates it because she’s bad at it.  You could spend a lot of time on this age-old philosophical debate about chickens and eggs, but the real take-away is this: getting good secretarial help is not unlike winning at musical chairs: the people who think it has anything to do with luck are usually the ones left standing when the music stops.  Your chances are always going to improve if you’re willing to keep your elbows out, but I, against a mountain of evidence disproving it, have always clung to the belief that civility is rewarded in the end.  And even if I were prepared to sink into the fray, my bargaining power is constrained by the fact that my department, Communications, is a cost center not a profit center, which is to say that we spend money instead of bringing it in.  This is a designation that presages all kinds of large and small disappointments.  It’s the profit centers who hold the real power in any organization, and which are routinely showered with staff and budgets.  Not for the first time, I consider the merits of my career choices.

Joy actually rolls her eyes.  “They’re not going to like it, you know.  It’s the second time this week.  Erica is totally pestering me about getting some time with you.”

“I get it,” I tell her.  “I’ll meet with them today.  I just can’t do it right now.  Can you please let them know?”

Joy sighs heavily and departs.

“Thank you, Joy,” I call after her.  “I really appreciate it!”

Deep down, I suspect that the real reason that Joy works for me is that I am the only person in the office who is willing to put up with her.   As I do each morning, I remind myself that Joy is paid to show up every day and make my life easier.  The fact that she refuses to fulfill this basic requirement calls for a serious conversation with the HR department, but I would rather suffer than invest my emotional energy in a doomed attempt at performance management.  I’m just going to wait until someone with less power than I have is hired, so that I can pass Joy off and continue the cycle of dysfunction.

I should have checked my email first. I feel a little light-headed, and am taking deep calming breaths as Justine appears in my doorway.  Justine is the Director of Special Events and the only person with less actual power than I have on the senior management team.  I feel for her.  Event planning is a career for masochists.  Events can fail for almost infinite and wholly unpredictable reasons.   Providing name tags?  You’d better hope that the temp who is preparing them remembers to include the appropriate honorific after the name of the megalomaniac on the Board.  Using audio-visuals?  Pray that the AV department sends the smart guy who actually knows how to use the equipment and not the stoner who is mailing in his last few years until he can trigger his pension and still hasn’t really figured out how to work those new-fangled computers.  Serving food?  Look out for the myriad of allergies – news to you – that are likely to endanger the life of a major donor.  While you’re at it, hope that the bartender has recovered from the fight with her boyfriend and decides to show up after all.  And here’s the kicker: even if you throw the best event in the world, the volunteers will take all the credit and you’ll be left managing feedback like “Didn’t you think the vinaigrette was a little too citrusy? Can you make sure that doesn’t happen again next year?”

Justine is made from tough stuff, though.  She’s been managing events for close to fifteen years and has nerves of steel.  But today, she looks panic-stricken.

“What happened last night?” I ask.  “Barry is freaking out.  He’s practically stalking me.  What’s going on?”

Justine groans.  “It was horrible, Sophie.  You can’t imagine.”

“I don’t understand.  I thought we were just rubber-stamping approval for the art for the posters and website last night.  It was supposed to be a short meeting.”

“I know,” says Justine.  “Claudio did a great job on the art.  Very sexy – gorgeous models, loincloths, Cleopatra – everyone loved it.”

“So what’s the problem?”

Justine wrinkles her nose as though she has just tasted something bitter.  “They don’t like the theme anymore,” she says.

I’m stunned.  We have spent months trying to get the volunteers to agree on a theme for the evening.  Every single detail flows from the theme – music, entertainment, décor and most importantly from the perspective of the volunteers, wardrobe.  It was a big day when they finally settled on Walk Like An Egyptian, which the volunteers felt provided an aesthetic bridge between the retro cool of eighties girl band music and the sophisticated elegance of the wildly fashionable Halston-style goddess dresses. More importantly from my perspective, the decision allowed us to move forward with hiring an outside designer and getting the promotional materials done.  In truth, the website should have been up a month ago.  We are supposed to start selling tickets next week.

Justine shakes her head.  “Apparently, the fundamental appeal of the Egyptian theme had to do with being able to get the Bangles to perform.”

“The Bangles,” I repeat.  This is news to me.  How did this never come up?  “Didn’t they break up, like, twenty years ago?”

“Well, it turns out that they’re back together.  They’re doing a reunion tour, and Janelle saw them in L.A. last month.  But they’re committed to a long-term gig in Vegas through the spring and can’t do the Gala.”

“Can’t we just get another girl band?”

“I tried that.” Justine grits her teeth.  “Just be glad you weren’t there, Sophie.  It was a freight train.  It couldn’t be stopped.  Janelle converted every single person on the committee in the space of ten minutes.  By the end, everyone agreed that the theme was too stiff without the Bangles tying it together.”

“Stiff?  What about the male models in loincloths, the belly dancers, the palm trees and the dance party in the Pharaoh’s tomb?”  I can’t believe this is happening.

Justine’s smile turns nasty.  “Do you know what the real problem is?” she asks.  “They suddenly realized that they’d all be wearing the same dress. Not that anyone was crass enough to come out and say it.”

“Oh my god,” I say.  “There’s no way they’ll change their minds, then?”

“Nope.”

“I need to think,” I say.  “Don’t cancel anything.”  I suddenly remember Barry.  “What are we going to tell Barry?”

“I think he knows,” says Justine.  “Janelle said that she was going to tell him.”

As if on cue, Joy pops her head in the door.  “Barry wants to see you now,” she says.

“Are you coming with me?”  I ask Justine.

“Not a chance, friend,” she replies.  “My ears are still ringing from the slap down I got from him this morning.  I’m planning on staying out of his way for as long as possible.  Anyway, you can handle him.  He likes you.  More than he likes me, at least.”

“Low bar,” I say.

KateHiltonPic**Contact the author, Kate Hilton!

Email: kate@katehilton.com

Website   Facebook   Goodreads   Twitter

**Don’t forget, the book is FREE May 17th – 19th only!

Filed Under: The Hole in the Middle Tagged With: Book feature, Books, FREE book, Kate Hilton, The Hole in the Middle, Writers

Grannies, Guns and Ghosts

May 17, 2013 2 Comments

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Blurb of “Grannies, Guns and Ghosts”:  Senior snoop, Agnes Barton, has taken up residence in a Winnebago at a campground in East Tawas, Michigan. It’s not the ideal place for a woman of seventy-two to live, but she’s making do. She had planned to start a detective agency with partner in crime, Eleanor Mason, but a snag with the license has them free wheeling it, not that it matters because they are the ones folks call when dead bodies turn up.

A frantic phone call has Agnes and Eleanor racing to the scene of yet another crime scene. Herman Butler has fallen to his death from a third story window, and the widow, Betty Lou, is beside herself with either grief or competing for the Oscars, and it’s up to Agnes and Eleanor to unravel the mystery, which gets more interesting when a ghost is listed as a possible suspect.

This time around, Agnes and Sheriff Peterson can agree, the widow is nuts, but wait, a few days later the ghost ship, Erie Board of Trades, was spotted off the shores of Lake Huron. Ghost hunters, G.A.S.P., hightail it into town, and East Tawas is overrun with ghost sightings.

Agnes and Eleanor must sort fact from fantasy before another body is found or a curse is realized.

CHAPTER 1

I, Agnes Barton, of sound mind and body, promise not to throttle my partner in crime, Eleanor Mason, no matter how much she tries to get a rise out of me. I must have lost my mind when I decided to partner with Eleanor in our new detective agency, Pink Ladies. It seemed like a good idea at the time. Truth be known, she had saved my life. I wonder if I’ll ever hear the last of that? Oh, who was I fooling, she’s the only one I’d want to snoop with. While we are quite the odd couple, we’re also a great team. So what if the official paperwork and licenses are out of date, that won’t stop us from investigating whatever we had a mind to.

Charter Arms couldn’t have made a better pistol than The Pink Lady. What woman wouldn’t love a pink, ultra-lightweight .38 Special. It’s perfect for women to tote around in their handbags. Not that you would call a carpet bag a handbag by any means. Some of them are large enough to conceal an arsenal of weapons, if a body had a mind to do such a thing.

Unlike the fictional bounty hunter Stephanie Plum, I like to keep my sidearm handy. Nobody really gave a squat what a person of a certain age had concealed in their bags. I suppose most younger folks think we all knit and do all sorts of creative things. Oh, I have a creative mind all right, but not creative enough to dodge Eleanor. Poor dear wouldn’t know what to do without our adventures.

I had taken up residence in a camper of all things, parked in a camp-ground in East Tawas, Michigan, on the tranquil shores of Lake Huron. Lucky for me I got a larger spot at the camp-ground and I had adjusted to living in a Winnebago. My house had been fire-bombed during our last case. It’s not so bad. I get to enjoy the misty lake as the sunrises and some of the most spectacular sunsets in Michigan.

I eyed my cat, Duchess, and said, “I hope it doesn’t take ‘til winter for our house to be rebuilt.”

Duchess responded with, “Meow.”

“I know girl, no mourning doves here,” I said to her. I strode by the mirror as I made my way into the bathroom and deep lines formed as I grimaced. I’m still wearing my pink bathrobe with pink ruffles, white sandals covering my feet. My unruly salt and pepper hair was tangled and I tried to work my fingers through the knots. Every dang morning it’s the same thing, my hair looks like a rooster did it in my sleep. Puffy dark circles were apparent, obviously from the restless slumber as my hip ached something fierce last night.

I made my way into the kitchen and poured coffee grounds into my new fancy-dancy coffee maker that is supposed to make a good latte. If I ever figure out how to use the damn thing! It’s only seven in the morning and I’m already cussing, if only in my head at the moment.

I jumped and bumped against the counter and clutched my chest when my door vibrated nearly off the hinges. Whoever could that be and this early?

I pulled back the pink lace curtains to reveal a familiar pair of friendly blue eyes. Eleanor, had her face pressed to the window with both her hands against my door like a lost puppy begging to be let in.

I yanked open the door and watched in amusement as she tried to steady herself, resembling a Weeble Wobble. What is the saying? Weeble Wobble but we don’t fall down.

“Have you been camped outside my door all night waiting for me to let you in?” I body blocked the doorway. I wasn’t ready to let her in just yet.

She puffed up her chest, trying unsuccessfully to act offended. “Of course not, Agnes. I just didn’t want to bother you if your hot-shot lawyer man is here.” She giggled, her large belly jiggling. “Unless you want an audience,” her eyes danced.

She wishes.

“Who?”

“You know perfectly well whom I’m talking about. The last time I came here the camper was rockin’ so hard that I thought there was an earthquake occurring inside.”

“It was earth-shattering.” I frowned. “Andrew Hart has gone back to wherever he came from, just as I knew he would.”

“Did he say when he’s coming back?”

She actually sounded sincere.  “I don’t know nor do I care. I’m seventy-two and I don’t have the time for the entanglement a man would create in my life.” I cared all right, but I’d never let her know it. If I gave it too much thought I’d be no good to anybody. Andrew left, and I wish under better terms, but me being the stubborn woman I am, we left on a sour note. An argument over coffee creamer of all things, and I crossed the line when I insisted he stay in town, but no sense in regrets now. It’s too late.

**Comments from the author:  If you have ever wondered what Janet Evanovich’s Stephanie Plum would be like as a senior citizen then check out this series. Think Grandma Mazur meets Murder She Wrote.

IMG_2379**Contact Madison Johns:

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Filed Under: Grannies, Guns and Ghosts Tagged With: Book feature, Books, Cozy mystery, Grannies, Guns and Ghosts, Madison Johns

Appetites

May 16, 2013 1 Comment

Book review of “Appetites”

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“Appetites” by Karen Frankola

Book Description:

When Sarah suddenly hears from Harry, the Brit she almost married twenty years ago, she decides now is the time to change her life. Sarah has a great job in Manhattan, but she considers herself too fat to have a boyfriend. Harry is visiting New York in four months and she wants to turn back into the girl he fell in love with. Since she can never stick to a diet, she comes up with a drastic solution.

Sarah asks her sister Max to lock her up in her basement and feed her nothing but healthy meals. Max, a struggling waitress, agrees begrudgingly. She’s skinny, but has her own set of appetites—for drink, drugs, and great-looking losers.

Sarah thinks a summer in Max’s basement will give her a new body, a chance to reconnect with Harry, and the friendship she’s long craved from her sister. But things quickly go wrong. Max’s drinking leads her to neglect Sarah, who figures out how to get out of the basement. Sarah develops an obsession with Max’s boyfriend and manages to fulfill a sexual fantasy by pretending to be something she’s not.

Can Sarah turn back time with Harry or will she and Max kill each other first? Can either sister ever learn to say no?

My Review:

The first thing that caught my eye about this book was the cover, it’s gorgeous!  After reading a blurb of “Appetites,” I was hooked.  I was curious as to how Sarah’s plan would work and how far she would go to be at the weight she wanted.

Once I started this book, I didn’t want to stop.  The characters stand for themselves.  As sisters they’re very different, but in some ways, I found them to be similar.  There were times when I would be fighting for Sarah to stick it to her sister and flee the basement for good, but I liked her determination.  Max’s character was very well written.  For someone who thinks she’s tough, I thought she was a softy who desperately wanted to be more like Sarah.

Parts of the book I was laughing-out-loud, then in others, I was teary-eyed because it’s obvious that Sarah and Max really care for each other, they’re just stubborn.

“Appetites” was a wonder book and highly recommend it as a beach read.

I give this book 4 stars!

KarenFrankolaPic

**About Karen Frankola:  Karen Frankola wrote Appetites to explore the hard choices women make in love and work. Karen spent much of her career writing very short stories at news organizations like CNN and MSNBC, so creating a novel was challenging. She now does a variety of writing for corporations and nonprofit organizations. Karen is lucky enough to work mostly from home, with her dog Rascal curled up under her desk.

Karen grew up near Pittsburgh, where she spent much of her childhood reading books in the cemetery that bordered her family’s backyard.  Karen moved to nine different states and England.  Some of her favorite jobs were teaching journalism at the University of Missouri, working as a television news director, and handling video shoots for Deloitte around the world.  She also spent a summer repairing motors at a steel mill and hopes to soon publish a coming-of-age memoir about that experience.

Karen and her husband Troy now reside  in Durham, North Carolina, where they enjoy watching deer in the woods behind their house, lots of live music, beautiful biking trails, and great neighbors.

Karen is working on a sequel to Appetites and would love to hear what you think of it.

**Contact Karen:  Amazon Author Page   Twitter

**Buy “Appetites” on Amazon

**Click HERE to check out other stops on Karen’s Chick Lit Plus Blog Tour!

Filed Under: Appetites Tagged With: Appetites, Books, Chick-Lit, CLP blog tours, Karen Frankola, Writing

Leigh Bennett

May 16, 2013 1 Comment

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About author, Leigh Bennett:  Leigh Bennett is an Australian author who lives in Melbourne’s Dandenong Ranges with her husband and three sons.  Her first chick lit novel, Flirting with Magick and was released in February 2013.  She is currently working on the next novel in the series, as well as a YA/Urban Fantasy, a mystery, and further chick lit stories.  Her books all feature real characters, drama, humour and always with a happy ending.

INTERVIEW

You’re a stay-at-home mom of three boys, how do you do it?  I’m still trying to work it out actually.  Of course my role as a mother has to come first while my kids are still so young (10, 8, 6) but they are all in school this year so I’m trying to work out some sort of routine.

How do you come up with the ideas for your books?  I think sometimes I’ll get a picture in my head, or a feeling, like a specific atmosphere and I will want to write something around that.  Other times I’ll get an idea through something that happens, for example I’m outlining a novel now that came from an idea after I got tailgated one night.

Describe what a typical day is like for you:  I’m really not particularly good at self motivation or routine so I haven’t quite gotten the typical day thing down just yet.  After I’ve sent the kids to school, I will sit at the computer and try and get a couple of hours of work done, which may not necessarily involve just writing.  It could often be to do with promotion, networking or learning (that’s actually probably code for ‘facebooking and websurfing LOL).  I always have housework to do so a large majority of the day is taken up with that as well, until the kids come home then it’s time for homework and getting dinner ready.

Coffee or tea?  Coffee.  We have two machines at home.  I even named my dog “Latte”  I do like tea too and try to drink a lot of rooibos (red bush)  tea as it’s good for you, apparently 🙂  – just not as much as coffee.

How did you celebrate the publication of your first book?  I think I was so overwhelmed by the whole experience I kind of forgot.  I think we got takeaway (takeout) and I had a glass of wine, but that was it.

If you could be on any reality TV show what would it be?  I do enjoy cooking so probably something like Masterchef, except I think I would have trouble with making up a recipe on a whim. I usually need longer than a couple of seconds.

Who is your favorite author?  Marian Keyes.  I love how she manages to inject darkness and serious subjects into a humourous book.  Or is it that she injects humour into a serious book?

Where is your ideal writing location?  I do wish I had my own room for writing.  But we do have a ‘grown up’ living room where my husband and I hang out so I have my desk there and he either watches TV or plays console games.

Facebook or Twitter?  Facebook.  I do have twitter but I don’t really know how to use it properly.

What’s the one thing that a writer must have?  Music.  Or sometimes peace and quiet.  And coffee.

If you weren’t a writer you’d be a…:  Stay at home mum, which I already am.  But if I wasn’t writing I’m sure my house would be a lot tidier.

Can you tell us about any upcoming projects?   I’m writing the second book in the Flirting with Magick series which is called Flirting with Secrets.   It’s about a young woman coping with grief and moves into her own apartment, which she discovers is haunted.   The heroine is a new character but a couple of minor characters from the first book are featured.  It can be read as a standalone book.

**Contact Leigh:  Blog   Facebook   Goodreads   Twitter

FlirtingWithMagickBlurb of “Flirting with Magick”

When a new-age remedy fixes Abby Williams’ career rut, the twenty-five year old figures a spell could heal her broken heart too…

Suddenly, she’s having hot sex with an even hotter musician, which might work as long as she doesn’t get in the way of his rock stardom. Her work colleague is flirty and fun, but could he be keeping something from her? And now, the guy who broke her heart wants to rekindle their relationship. Can she trust him enough to give it another shot?

So far, it seems Abby’s spell hasn’t worked. Or then again, perhaps it has?

**Buy “Flirting with Magick”:  Amazon – USA   Amazon – UK   Smashwords

Filed Under: Leigh Bennett Tagged With: Books, Chick-Lit, Flirting with Magick, Guest Interview, Leigh Bennett

Chick Lit is Alive and Kicking!

May 15, 2013 18 Comments

KCARC

I’ve not written a blog post in quite a while, so thank you to my followers for being patient with me.  In the meantime, I hope you have enjoyed my posts about featured authors and books.

I’m proud to say that I am a huge fan of the Chick Lit genre.  Without the following authors, I wouldn’t have been inspired to be the Chick Lit Goddess.  For this, I say thank you to Olivia Goldsmith, Jane Green, Jennifer Weiner, Meg Cabot, Candace Bushnell, Jane Porter, and of course, Emily Giffin, for inspiring me.

Through my Chick Lit Goddesses Facebook group, I found something that really made me mad, mad being the nice way of saying it.  On Monday there was an article on The Atlantic written by Emily Matchar titled “Chick Lit Is Dead, Long Live Farm Lit.”  Stemming from the numerous comments on the FB page, I was curious, so I clicked the link and began to read.  Without explaining the article word-by-word, I’m going to share the following sentences that really had me livid.

  • Well I have news. Yes, chick lit is dead (or dying, at least). But in its place, we now have a new genre. Call it “farm lit.”
  • Thanks to the economy, picket fences and scruffy farm hands have replaced stilettos and cute i-bankers in literature aimed at women. (This was the subtitle.)
  • So many of chick lit’s tropes—stilettos! Fighting for your big break in journalism! Cute i-bankers! The hottest new nightclub in the Meatpacking District!—were part of a boomtime economy. These days, we’re mostly wearing flats, journalism is breathing its last gasps, we’d rather throw i-bankers in jail than date them, and cupcake baking seems a lot more fun (and cheaper!) than clubbing.

First off, what the hell is “farm lit?”  I even Googled it, then laughed to myself when no definition was given.  Just because a city girl runs off to a small town doesn’t make it “farm lit.”  In my third book, Somewhere Down in Texas, which I’m still writing, it is about a big city girl who goes back home to Texas, but does that make it “farm lit”?  No!  To me, it doesn’t matter where the setting is.  In Kristina Knight’s books, there are strong elements of country girls and I consider them to be Chick Lit.

Has Chick Lit changed overtime?  Yes, but that doesn’t mean the genre has disappeared.  If anything, I think it’s grown more popular because of modern times.  We want someone to relate to us, so what do we do?  Pick up a Chick Lit.  Have you ever read a Chick Lit and after finishing it, said, “Geez, that’s my life?”  I know I have!  Think how many Chick Lit books Jennifer Weiner and Emily Giffin have written.  How many times have they been at top of the charts?  Between the two of them, they’ve written 18 books, and I don’t seem them stopping soon.

After taking a long sigh, I did some research on the author of The Atlantic article.  Emily Matchar seems to be very opinionated, black and white writer, who sees no shades of grey.  On her website, it said that she went to Harvard.  Now, I’m not saying she was in a library the entire time and didn’t have fun, but the way she bashed the Chick Lit genre so bad, it seems that way.  By the title of her book, which is coming out soon, Homeward Bound seems like it would be a great fit for women in the 1950’s.  There is nothing wrong with, as the quote says on her site, the  “new domesticity” – the re-embrace of all kinds of old-fashioned domestic skills, like canning, bread-baking, knitting, chicken-raising, etc.,” but times have changed.  Women are in the workforce, so what’s wrong with taking a breath and running to the country for a getaway, or even an extended stay?  Nothing!

I want to let Emily Matchar know that Chick Lit is alive and kicking, so “farm lit,” is dead!

I’d love to hear what you have to say, so please leave a comment!

Filed Under: Isabella Tagged With: Authors, Books, Chick Lit Goddess, Chick Lit is Alive, Chick Lit IS not dead, Chick-Lit, Emily Matchar, Farm Lit, Kristina Kight, The Atlantic, Writers

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