Terra No Go

GoDespite the hype, I won’t be watching Terra Nova when it premieres tonight. I love dinosaurs and the chance to see one or more of them dining on a person (especially if I could pick said person) would be fun. But to watch this week after week. Um, no. Especially when people deserve to be snack material when they’re the ones who went back in time in the first place and invaded the dinosaur’s territory.
Then there’s the lame premise.
Humanity has destroyed the planet, most plants and animals are extinct. Apparently, we forgot how to clone animals and all those seed banks just vanished over night. Granted, I willing to buy into that bit of stupidity for a good story but then comes the kicker–these destructive and ignorant humans go back in time before Humankind was even around, destroy the planet then and batt a-bing the whole human race never comes into being.
NEWSFLASH: an asteroid didn’t destroy the dinosaurs, time traveling humans did.
Doesn’t that bring a tear to the eye?
Makes me proud.
So there series will be predictable. Man versus dino. Then there’ll be some infighting as the latent ecowarriors realize they’ve violated their sacred code by going back in time to screw up the earth earlier. Then we’ll get some dinosaur action couple by stupid people action. And those rules don’t apply to me action.
And when the ratings start to sag, they’ll introduce a mystery like the smoke thing on Lost to try to revive it.
A much better twist would be to send the people into the future. Imagine the possibilities: any surviving humans would have evolved into something else: Creating instant strife and battle for keystone predatorship. New species would have evolved as sea creatures crawled out of the oceans and tide pools to fill the empty niches on land.
And hey, who knows, maybe there are aliens about.
Anything would have been better than the ceaseless Jurassic Park. And heading into the future would have allowed the writers to flex their creative muscles and, I don’t know, dream up something new.
So past or present, where would you rather be?

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ST. PETERSBURG, RUSSIA By R. Ann Siracusa

In the fourth novel of the Tour Director Extraordinaire Series, All For Spilled Blood, Harriet Ruby, our tour director extraordinaire, and her fiancé and favorite spy, Will Talbot, are on a covert assignment in St. Petersburg,Russia.

Tsar Peter the Great created the city of St. Petersburgin 1703 to be as much like a European city as possible, so nothing there is really old, but wow!  What a wonderful city!  Take the trip with them and visit some of these incredible places.

Where Is St. Petersburg?
St. Petersburg, second largest city in Russia with a population of about 5 million, is located on the Neva River at the head of the Gulf of Finland on the Baltic Sea.  The northwestern part ofRussia that is inEurope.  (Part ofRussia is inAsia.)

Venice of the North
I had heardSt. Petersburg called theVenice of the North, but I was surprised when I got there.  The city is built on forty islands around a network of canals and rivers which are the main lifeblood of the city and contribute to its unique and romantic atmosphere.  The islands are connected by 342 public bridges.

Pulkovo Airport
Harriet arrive in early May at the Pulkovo airport inSt. Petersburg.

Gostiny Dvor
When she needs to buy some sundry items she didn’t bring, she visits Gostiny Dvor, a huge and very expensive department store which is gradually becoming a shopping mall.  It is renowned as the first shopping arcade in the world, and has the international reputation.

There you can shop for anything, such as a Russian Ushanka (hat with flaps over the ears), see a fashion show of the latest styles, or even shop at a supermarket.

Instead, my heroine, Harriet, makes her purchases at a DLT, a modern shopping mall like Walmart, where the ordinary Russian can afford to shop.

The Church On Spilled Blood
When Will arrives a day later, he and Harriet visit some of the interesting places in the city, starting with the Church On Spilled Blood, a Russian-Revival style church, built between 1883 and 1907.  We’ll go there first, because the name ties in with the title All for Spilled Blood as well as the story line.

Everyone questions the “on” in the name of the church, but that’s what it is and there’s a reason.  It is constructed on the spot where Emperor Alexander II was assassinated in March 1881 by a group of revolutionaries who threw a bomb at his royal carriage.

The church was closed in the 1930s when the Bolsheviks went on an offensive against religion and destroyed churches all over the country.  It remained closed and under restoration for over 30 years and was finally re-opened as a museum in 1997.

Karzan Cathedral
Will and Harriet drop by Karan Cathedral on their adventures inSt. Petersburg.  Constructed between 1801 and 1811, this cathedral was inspired by the Basilica of St. Peter’s inRome.  It was closed to religious services in 1929.  From 1932 it housed the Museum of the History of Religion and Atheism.  In recent years, regular religious services had been restored, but it still shares the site with the museum from whose name the word “atheism” has now been omitted.

Griboedov Canal
From the Karzan Cathedral, Will and Harriet walk alongGriboedovCanal, trying to locate the apartment building where Will lived as a child.  [This super-gorgeous spy has a dark and very unusual background].  I know I didn’t take this photo, because that’s ice you see in the canal.  During the winter, the canals freeze over.  So does theNevaRiver.

Bank Bridge
While they are walking along the canal, Harriet wants to crossBankBridge, one of the world’s most beautiful pedestrian bridges, and see, up close and personal, the statues of golden-winged griffons sculpted by famous local sculptor Pavel Sokolov.

Apartment Block where Dostoevsky Lived
They do find the apartment complex where Will lived as a child.  The building is actually where Dostoevsky lived when he wrote Notes From the House of the Dead in 1861.  I’m not sure if this structure is part of the Dostoevsky Museum, because the author lived in several different locations in St. Petersburg.

       

The Hermitage Museum
And, of course, Harriet takes her tourists to theHermitageMuseum…a must see inRussia.  One author writes that “With the possible exception of the Louvre, there is no museum in the world that rivals the Hermitage in size and quality.  Its collection is so large that it would take years to view it in its entirety–at last count, there were nearly three million works on exhibit.”

It was originally constructed as the imperialWinterPalacein 1754 through 1762, and was the main residence of the Russian Emperor.

May Day Celebration / Victory Parade
Russians celebrate the first week in May, starting with the May 1 (Labor Day) and ending with the Victory Day on May 9, one of the most important holidays inRussia.  The Russian people commemorate their countrymen fallen in World War II.  The date marks the surrender of Nazi Germany to theSoviet Union in the Second World War.

Harriet and Will are inSt. Petersburgover the first week in May.  In fact, much of the action takes place on the day of the Victory Day parade at the end of the week’s festivities.  It can get rowdy, and there were plenty of police around, but they don’t see any action in the novel and no parading policewomen.  It did rain, though.

I hope you had fun traveling with Harriet and Will inSt. Petersburg.  My advice: Don’t travel there in the winter.

BIO

R. ANN SIRACUSA is involved in many activities, but her two passions are foreign travel and writing fiction.  This talented author combines those loves into novels that transport readers to exotic settings, immerse them in romance, intrigue and foreign cultures, and make them laugh.

After receiving a degree in Architecture from UC Berkeley, Ann traveled toRome,Italy, where she worked for an Italian architecture and urban planning firm.  She married the Sicilian policeman she met at the Fountain of Love on her first day there.  When she and her husband returned to theUnited States, they settled down to career and family.  But the travel bug never left her.  While working for thirty-seven years in her chosen career, Ann made time to travel and began to write fiction that incorporated many of her experiences and observations.

Today, she is retired inSan Diego,California, and writes full time.  Her first novel was published in 2008, and since then eight additional works have been published by Sapphire Blue Publishing.  All For Spilled Blood is the ninth.

 

ANN’S LINKS

Website:                      http://www.rannsiracusa.com
Currently being reconstructed and a little hard to use right now, but there.

Facebook:                    http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1358230809

Good Reads:               http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/2993012.R_Ann_Siracusa

My Space:                   http://www.myspace.com/459512067

Twitter:                       http://twitter.com/AnnSiracusa

You Tube
Family Secrets             http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=53ZnnJzeR2s

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Chapter Three of Fiona

Chapter 3
The cab thumped in and out of a pothole. A shoulder bumped his. Hugh
Gurnsey-Barrett, sixth Marquess of Kingslea, ninth Earl of Bookingham,
locked his jaw. Cold brushed his exposed flesh. He hunkered further into his
borrowed sailor’s jacket. Awareness zapped his skin, electrified the hair on his
neck and arm. For an instant, flowers perfumed the air. A heartbeat later the
acrid coal smoke belching from thousands of chimneys stung his nose. The
flame flickered in the lamps as another chunk of missing cobblestones personified
Houseman’s displeasure.
Leather creaked. Wood groaned. The small interior tilted to the left. His
companion slid against his side. Her thigh flattened against his.
“Perhaps you’d prefer to drive. You have the necessary accouterments, I
believe.”
“My expertise resides solely as a passenger. Not that I haven’t tried to
drive.” A smile teased her lips. Her gaze flitted to his before scampering back to
admire the horse’s head. “I simply don’t have that magic touch.”
Yet, she did seem to have bewitched him.
Bewitched. Logic railed at the fanciful notion. The lady’s attraction lay in
her presence, a presence that extended his adventure. Kingslea forced the sentiment
from mind. There could be no other reason. He wouldn’t allow it.
The lamp’s golden light bathed her high forehead, pert nose and stubborn
chin. Such scrutiny exercised his powers of observation and had absolutely
nothing to do with a fascination for her person or her unusual accomplishments.
White satin-clad fingers tucked a strand of loose hair behind a delicate ear.
They returned to her lap and clasped her black-clad ones. Mismatched gloves.
Amusement rattled his control.
“Have you found yet another fault with my attire?”
Blue eyes pinned his gaze. Irritation flashed in the azure depths, tightened
the delicate skin around her eyes. Guilt lashed his pleasure. This night’s adventure
had bruised her delicate complexion. His poorly verbalized surprise had
furthered her discomfort. Well done, Kingslea. Shall we move up to snatching
candy from babes?
Charm had never numbered among his assets. Neither did social grace.
Hell, the list of his failings was endless. Parallel lines appeared on her forehead.
Still, only a cad wouldn’t try to make amends for his crass bumbling.
“Who could fault perfection?” The praise tripped from his lips. Perhaps
he had learned a thing or two in the past five years.
Her thick lashes met then parted. Pleasure bloomed in her cheeks.
“But you are looking for something.”
“Always.” Restlessness prodded his relaxed muscles. He was always looking
for something. The captain’s logbook poked his belly. He had thought he had
found it, yet the dawn’s light revealed no solutions, only more mysteries.
First, the collector of vouchers. Now the woman.
No, not woman. Lady. An American lady.
“Fiona.” Her name whispered across his palate. His gaze dropped to her
blue-clad thigh. He’d never understood the attraction of a trim ankle, but such
a well-formed limb…
His mind recalled the press of her bottom against him like a favored
memory. Heat simmered in his gut. God help mankind should women ever
take to wearing trousers.
“Is something amiss?” Her hand rested on his forearm.
His hand covered hers. So small and delicate, yet powerful, too. Heat
seared his flesh, branding his brain with images better suited for the bedroom.
His bedroom, with her black hair tumbled around her shoulders. Kingslea
blinked away the images.
“A man should have some control.”
“You handled the situation admirably.” She squeezed his forearm. “Please
don’t allow your passionate nature to overset your nerves.”
“Passionate nature?” He ignored the spurt of pleasure. Her personality
contained as many facets as the stained glass windows in St. Paul’s Cathedral
did shards of color. Whereas he—he was a pane of clear lead glass. Kingslea the
Cold. Bookingham the Bore. The adolescent taunts, the adult classifications.
“I can assure you, madam, I do not have a passionate nature.”
“No, of course not.”
His mouth opened. The words intended to disabuse her of such a foolish
notion never materialized. His teeth clicked together. If she wanted to see him
in such a manner…
Kingslea shrugged off his thoughts. It was the disguise—bronze skin,
weathered features and ragged clothing. Sailors battled the elements every day.
The rational explanation echoed in his hollow chest.
“It was very kind of your coachman to wait.”
“Houseman? Kind? Such words rarely dwell in the same sentence.”
Another pothole rattled the cab. Fiona braced herself against the grip but
still bounced against him. He ignored the ache filling his chest as she scooted
away.“
The damp and an injury had more to do with Houseman’s patience than
any kindness.”
By rights, the valet-cum-coachman should be recovering from his gunshot
wound instead of charging all over London. Unease shook Kingslea’s equanimity.
The bullet would have ended his life if Houseman hadn’t interfered. Another
errand for an anonymous debt collector. A deadly errand. Still, what
could possibly connect the retrieval of personal letters and the theft of a captain’s
logbook?
What besides his stepmother’s penchant for whist?
“Hugh.” Her hand tightened on his. “Hugh?”
Kingslea shoved aside the disjointed thoughts. He would find the connection
later. His gaze followed the curve of his companion’s smooth cheek before
settling on her eyes.
“Yes, Fiona.”
“Thank you for leading me from the shipyard. I had been wandering those
lanes for at least an hour without much luck.” She tugged her cape close. “I
shudder to think what would have happened if Bosson had found us in one of
those narrow alleys.”
“Bosson?” Suspicion itched Hugh’s skin. How did the woman know the
sailor?
“You know, the Revere’s first mate. His attentions had become a trifle too
forward since Captain List disappeared last night. Or, more precisely, the
night before last.” She smoothed the thought from her forehead. “He was
planning something. Something unpleasant. I thought about leaving when the
captain didn’t return for dinner, but Milton talked me out of it. Now, I’m glad
he did.” Fiona beamed at him. “Your rescue is certainly something I will tell my
grandchildren.”
Doubts solidified, connected divergent tracts of thought. His stepmother
had been eager for him to redeem her debts. All too impatient for him to make
tonight’s trip. Bloody hell. The woman had baited her trap well. His folded
arms contained the rage roaring to life in his breast.
“You timed your arrival perfectly. A dashing prince stepping from the mist
just when I thought all was lost.” Admiration blazed in her eyes.
“Hardly a prince.” Bitter residue coated his tongue. Merely a second son
who had the misfortune to inherit a penniless title. A title his stepmother
seemed determined to auction off to the highest bidder. Preferably an American
heiress with a bottomless purse. Did the Marchioness know how unconventional
her earmarked daughter-in-law was? Perhaps Elspeth thought to
mold her as she had worked to reform him?
“Certainly, a more noble man could not be found in all of England.”
“You’d be surprised,” Kingslea said dryly.
So his stepmother had decided to bring Polite Society to his door, since he
refused to cross its threshold. Only one question remained—Was Fiona Grey a
pawn in his stepmother’s machinations, or was she party to the plot?
“London’s aristocracy would be better for your admittance.” Candor
blazed across her features.
Hope flickered before he extinguished the flame. He had been fooled once
before.
Lilly’s porcelain complexion replaced Fiona’s smiling face.
r r r
“Don’t you see? Once the duke has his heir we can be together.”
“And you will be another man’s wife. Marry me, Lilly. Now, before it is too
late.” Raw need was in his words.
“Father would never settle for a second son. He wants a title for his
money, and your brother is far too healthy.”
r r r
He shook off the past.
“I dub thee Sir Hugh the Rescuer, Knight of the London Dock and Protector
of its people.” Fiona touched her bullwhip to his shoulder.
“I prefer to remain as I am.”
She shrugged. “Just as well, I think only a queen can knight a man.”
Shadows moved in the mist. Shop clerks and street vendors rushed along
the sidewalks. London was awake. Awake and aware. Someone was bound to
notice Fiona’s arrival. Her chance of a match would narrow if someone told of
her arrival with him. Not that anyone would look beyond his disguise.
But if his presence compromised her, honor would provide the means for
his stepmother to get her way. A wise man would leave Fiona before the trap
was sprung. Kingslea settled into the leather. This enemy required further
study.
“Hugh?” She turned her large blue eyes on him.
“Yes?”
“Why are you dressed as a sailor?”
He started, shaking off his lethargy like a dog did water on his coat.
“That is what I am.”
“True, your disguise is almost complete.” Fiona smiled.
Coy or cunning? Kingslea scratched his chin. A day’s growth of beard
rasped his skin.
“I can assure you my clothes are those of a genuine sailor.”
“Of that, I have no doubt.” Humor snapped in her eyes. “But you have
recently repaired the shoulders.” Her touch danced over the stitches closing a
popped seam. “This herringbone stitch is not in keeping with the long stitch
used by a man of the sea.”
Hugh caught her hand and dropped it into her lap. Blast! Leave it to a
woman to notice something as mundane as stitching. A woman…
“Perhaps I have a wife to repair my clothing.”
“Perhaps, but your hands are too soft for a sailor.” She clasped his left hand
between hers. Her thumb brushed the soft pads then stilled. She cleared her
throat then tucked the black-clad hand behind her back.
“Of course, most sailors’ coloring doesn’t bleed onto their collar.” She
waved her white-gloved hand near the lamp, highlighting the reddish brown
streaked across her gloves. “A true salt’s tan covers more flesh than his shirt,
whereas I’d bet your sun-kissed skin stops an inch or two under your sleeves.”
The truth of her logic burned Kingslea’s neck, stained his cheeks. She had
ripped the disguise from his person while maintaining her own mask. Better to
retreat than to find yourself at the altar. He touched his hand to his chest.
“You have found me out, madam.”
She blinked once and cocked her head to the left.
“Yet I have discovered nothing.” Her dichromatic palms flashed at him.
“I fear you have discerned too much.” On impulse, he caught her gloved
hand and raised it to his lips. Tingles raced across the sensitive flesh as gardenias
and soap overwhelmed his senses. He dropped her hand and banged his
fist on the roof, driving her touch from his skin. “Houseman. Stop here.”
“Please, I—”
The cab halted near a towering elm.
“I have pressing business.” Kingslea tossed the door open and jumped
from the cab. Green and brown swirled as he pivoted. The door slammed shut
as he stepped back. “Houseman will see you safely to your destination.”
“At least tell me who you are.”
Who he was? Who was she? Pawn or plotter? He would know once the
captain’s logbook was claimed.
“I am whoever I need to be.” He touched his forehead and sketched a bow.
“Safe journey.”
“And to you as well.” She raised her hand in salute than held the back of it
to her cheek.
Kingslea felt her gaze on him as he picked his way through Hyde Park.
Soon he would reach Speaker’s Corner. Soon he would have proof of his stepmother’s
duplicity.

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The Fun with B movies

I love B movies. Especially the old horror/scifi movies. This last weekend thanks to a cold that won’t quite leave, I got to watch plenty of them on Netflix. Below are some of my favorite things that occur.

1.) Women scream, even the competent, professional ones.
2.) People freeze in terror, even though the threat isn’t a new one and they already were running from the first time they’d spied the villain/monster.
3.) Very few pick up a handy board, stick or rock to swing at the creature/villain.
4.) No one runs away while John/Jane are getting slaughtered. they conveniently stick around until the killer/monster is done before starting to run again.
5.) No one gangs up on the killer/monster.
6.) No one lames the obnoxious person in the group so everyone else can get away.
7.) Scientists don’t actually take samples or do work, but there’s always electricity sparking for no reason, condensers that aren’t attached to anything and lots of colored liquids.
8.) People always split up, even when they’re told not to because of the danger.
9.) Sex kills. Doesn’t matter when the movie was made if you’re making out or doing the wild thing, the killer is going to get you. Bet Freud would have something to say about that.
10.) The noise must always be investigated.
11.) Some one must always fall when running and hurt their ankle.
12.) Even the smallest branches can pin you in place until the killer/monster catches up with you.
13.) Most don’t try the lightswitch but if they do and it doesn’t work, they still don’t have a problem going into the dark basement.

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Errors in Books

I belong to many lists, groups and boards. Lately, I’ve begun to notice much grousing about the number of errors in books–usually aimed at indie and small press books. Having judged enough contests from both large (NY), small and indie publishers, I can tell you I’ve found errors everywhere. Yes, some are grossly unprofessional, and others are relatively minor. I even find them in my own voracious reading habits, when I’ve trained myself not to look but to enjoy.
I have yet to read a book by any publisher that didn’t contain any errors. Heck, I’ve even heard about a copy of the Bible that has mistakes.
Do the errors stop me from reading a book. Usually not, even when they’re egregious. I stop reading a story when the story-telling is bad. That’s the author’s fault, not the editor’s (although they share some of the blame).
And a bad story will stop me from following an author.
But not necessarily bad grammar. Case in point:
Several months ago, during a writing break, I discovered a new author and checked out her rather significant backlist. It was in reading these books that I tripped over an example of bad editing. The hero was hunting the villain using his spore. I stopped. Reread the line. Yep. Still a mistake. Then I giggled and went on reading. I was enjoying the story to much to stop. In fact, the same mistake repeated in 3 books in the series. These books are NY Times bestsellers and it is a very big NY Publisher. What was the editor so embarrassed the mistake when through the first time, that they couldn’t own up to the mistake so they kept repeating it or did they honestly not know the difference?
For your edification:
Spore: a walled, single- to many-celled, reproductive body of an organism, capable of giving rise to a new individual either directly or indirectly. (dictionary.com)
Spoor: a track or trail, especially that of a wild animal pursued as game. (dictionary.com)
Now as you can clearly see, the spoor was used in tracking, not reproduction and the last was the correct homonym, not the first. Most people probably don’t know or appreciate the difference. I happen to be a Biologist who’s worked as a Microbiologist. I’ve looked at spores, but I’ve never, ever hunted. So the mistake made me giggle.
It didn’t make me stop reading the author, dun them with bad reviews or malign their publisher by saying they were incompetent. Books are written and edited by people and having been through the process enough, I know that mistakes will always get through.
I don’t really care as long as the story entertains me.
That’s why I spend my time and money with a book.

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Lisa Mondello joins us today

Linda, thank you so much for having me on your blog today!

Thanks for being here Lisa.

My name is Lisa Mondello and I write both secular and Christian fiction in many forms! I say that because unlike some authors who just write westerns or paranormal romances, I write a little bit of everything!

But today I’m going to talk about my new series, Fate with a Helping Hand. This series was written over 10 years ago. However, only two of the stories were published in small press. All I Want for Christmas is You (Available as a 99 cent download on BN.com and Amazon.com) was the first book to be published. I love Christmas stories. I could write one every single year! In fact, I’m one of those readers who stockpiles Christmas stories during the holidays and reads them one right after the other. The second book in the series is The Marriage Contract, a romantic comedy. The third stories, The Knight and Maggie’s Baby, is a brand new book that has never before been published. I’m excited to have all 3 of the books in the series now available for readers to enjoy.

One of the things that is unique about these three stories is that I drew from what I knew to write them. You may have heard people say that writers should write what they know. I did. I have lived and spent lots of time in the three different Massachusetts towns that these books are set in. I call them the 3 corners of Massachusetts because All I Want for Christmas is You is set in the western part of the state. The Marriage Contract is set in Westport Massachusetts on the beach that I used to frequent when I was growing up. (I still love it there.) And The Knight and Maggie’s Baby is set in the Boston area. I drew a lot of inspiration from the time I lived in Boston in my early twenties while I was writing this book.

I love writing about what I know. But I also love learning about new places. In a few weeks I will have another book available for sale. Nothing But Trouble is set in Wyoming’s Wind River Mountain Range and features a sexy bull rider who acts as a trail guide for a month and falls in love with a pampered socialite with something to prove. Although I’ve never been, I hope to one day visit these mountains.

To celebrate the release of my Fate with a Helping Hand series, I’m giving one comment poster the chance to win all 3 of the books, available in ePub, Kindle, Nook, Kobo, PDF or Mobi formats.

Fate with a Helping Hand:
Book 1: All I Want for Christmas is You
Book 2: The Marriage Contract
Book 3: The Knight and Maggie’s Baby (Never before released)

All three books in the series feature a little “someone” who gives fate a hand to push the hero and heroine together in order for them to realize they’re in love

The entire series is available on Amazon.com for Kindle, BN.com for Nook and Smashwords.com for all other formats.

I love hearing from readers! Visit me at http://www.lisamondello.blogspot.com.

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Fiona by Linda Andrews (chapter Two)

Chapter 2
— Ha! Milton glided between the three men. See how he places himself between
your person and those cads? Not that flesh would stop anything at this
range. Ghostly hands measured the distance between the pistol and her rescuer’s
chest. No, indeed. Milton clapped his hands then frowned at the lack of
sound. I’ll wager the bullet smashes through him and lodges in you.
“Milton.” Under her cape, Fiona set her hands on her hips. Someone must
have chiseled “Rest in Peace” off his tombstone. Someone who hated her.
The stranger squared off against Bosson and his henchman. They seemed
to have forgotten her altogether. She had to think, while she had time.
— Oh, right. I’ve sworn off betting. Arms crossed his translucent chest as he
tilted his head. Really, Fi, it’s not as if I can die again. Gray lips puckered. The
pout was sharp against the yellow fog.
“Not now,” Fiona hissed. Why had she ever mourned his passing? Why
had she ever wanted a spirit of her own? She could have waited for Gran. Enjoyed
those blissful solitary years. Unease troubled her conscience. Surely,
mentioning him a time or two in passing wouldn’t have caused this haunting?
— You should have heeded my advice. Hiding that telegram from your parents,
haring off to England and slipping off the boat. Milton wagged an unsubstantial
finger at her. Really, Fi, you’re positively reckless with your life.
Outrage tightened her throat and immobilized her vocal cords. She was
reckless with her life! The man had died trying to win a race! He adjusted the
cuff on his best suit, but rose tinged his shadowy face. She’d talk to him about
recklessness later.
“Oi thinks we’ll cage these pigeons in the alley.” Bosson jerked his pistol
towards the narrow street.
Fear iced Fiona’s spine. Would she die just as the new day dawned? Would
Mam and Da remain ignorant of her fate? If only Uncle Andrew had met the
boat. If only…
Scenarios swirled inside her skull. It served no purpose other than to
paralyze her will.
Her fingers swept over the Colt shoved into her waistband. The pads
bumped over the C-S-A carved into the grip. Too bad Da never let her practice
with his gun. Now, when she needed the expertise, she was liable to shoot her
rescuer rather than Bosson.
Her hand dropped to her whip, caressed the cool leather then brushed the
hemp lasso. Which would be most effective against her enemy?
“The lady stays.” The growl rumbled from deep between her rescuer’s rigid
shoulders.
“Now, why would Oi do that?” Crooked yellow teeth flashed in Bosson’s
sneer.
— See, I was right. A smug expression enveloped Milton’s shadowed face.
He’s a trustworthy fellow. Led you out of that hell, and now he’s willing to die for
you.
Leave it to Milton to take credit for a fortuitous coincidence. No doubt he
would gloat for weeks about his triumph over the shady sailors. Air hissed between
her teeth, freeing her muscles of irritation. Of course, she still had to
triumph over Bosson.
Fiona shoved at her rescuer’s shoulder. Heat seared her palm, muscles
trembled. Her view remained blocked. She stepped to the side. He shadowed
her movements.
His hand shot out, closed around her hip and held her firmly behind him.
“You’ll leave the lady alone to avoid bloodshed. Yours.”
His answer rumbled inside Fiona’s skull. Her gaze slid over his broad
shoulders to the white-knuckled fists, down his muscled legs and stopped on
his worn shoes. No doubt her rescuer could take Bosson in a fair fight.
But the pistol emphasized the edge held by the old salt.
Alarm thundered in her chest. Truly, any blood spilled would be his. Leading
her from the river’s edge was one thing, this was another. She tossed the
warm velvet cape over her shoulder.
Fiona Grey took care of herself.
Her hand hovered over her cache of weapons. John Bosson was nothing
compared to the obstacles she’d overcome. As soon as her Don Quixote stepped
out of the way, she’d prove it.
— Pluck to the backbone. Though I still say he’s hiding something. Transparent
fingers met in a pyramid underneath Milton’s pointed chin. Look—only
two days on English soil, and I already have the habits of that chap from the papers.
That chap from the papers. Milton was no more Sherlock Holmes than
she was Watson. Heaven knew she made a better detective. Too bad Milton
offered nothing more than distracting commentary.
“’E’s a bit nickey for a swell.” Bosson tapped a tobacco-stained finger
against his temple.
“Leave now, and I’ll spare your life, Bosson.”
Fiona blinked. Her rescuer was obviously mad to take on a pistol with
fists. And just how did he know Bosson? Later. She’d think about it later.
Leaning, she peered around his shoulder. Think, Fi. Think. You must stop
him before he gets you both killed.
Bosson’s eyes narrowed to slits. “Kill me, ‘e says. Open yer peelers. Oi’ve
the barker, and me mate has the shiv.”
Crimson followed the knife’s progress along his rumpled companion’s
finger. Milton clapped his insubstantial hands.
— I say, this is better than that shoot-out in Phoenix.
Fiona glared at him. This was nothing like the gunfight in Phoenix. There,
both men had been armed…
Armed. Her hand closed around the revolver’s grip. She relieved the
weight pressing against her belly. Cold steel ringed her finger. With a flick of
her wrist the gun spun. She caught the barrel with a slap then ran the butt of
the weapon down her rescuer’s arm and tapped the top of his hand.
He patted her hand.
— Give him your gun, Milton hissed in her ear.
Fiona’s throat burned with a silent shout. What did he think she was doing?
Trying to hold the man’s hand? Wood smacked bone. Her rescuer grunted
and dropped his hand from her hip. Was he ignorant of her offer or had pride
stopped him from accepting the firearm?
Frustration clawed her. Men. Mr. Darwin’s time would have been better
spent studying the mysteries of his own gender’s behavior.
“You won’t get what you want.” Boredom saturated the stranger’s provoking
statement.
Fiona sighed. Maybe the man wanted to die on the docks. Well, he’d rescued
her, she would return the favor.
“Oi thinks oi will.” Bosson sneered.
“You’re very much mistaken.”
— The chap’s liable to talk the man to death. Don’t worry, Fi. I’ll give them
what for. Milton spat into his palms then raised his fists. One jab than another
found its mark in Bosson’s stomach. Dirty fingers rubbed the first mate’s belly
as his frame shuddered from Death’s touch.
— I did it, Fi. I did it. You saw him shudder. That was me. Milton pummeled
the man a few more times. Wait till I tell Gran. I’ll bet I could knock the
gun from his hand.
Golden light infused his translucent form as he raised his fists above his
head.
“Wild Bill.”
She glanced at the pistol. How difficult would it be to fire? Surely, she
could hit the rather large target Bosson presented.
Milton’s head jerked towards her.
— Eh?
“Wild Bill,” she hissed. The code from their childhood pastime penetrated
his skull. Seconds ticked by until understanding lit his features.
— You want me to distract them like Brianna used to do to your parents
while we hid the evidence of our shows.
Fiona jerked her head. His smoky chest puffed out.
— Right.
Fiona transferred the gun to her other hand. Steady fingers jerked on the
leather thong hooked around her belt. Her whip tumbled into her right palm.
She eased one step to her right. No hand rose to stop her. Another step. The
men’s attention was completely focused on each other. With the third step, she
cleared her human barrier. She pinched the whip’s handle. The lash uncoiled
down her leg and lay like a rattlesnake waiting to strike.
— Ahh, the whip. Excellent choice. Milton rubbed his hands together. I’ll
take the knife, you can take the gun. He drifted into position and raised his
hand. Ready.
Bosson lifted his chin. The instant his finger twitched on the trigger, Fiona
flicked her wrist. The whip cracked. Metal clattered to the ground a second
before the blast ripped through the fog.
“What the hell!” her rescuer cursed.
Time slowed. Bosson clutched his hand to his chest. Blood dripped
through his fingers. His partner stared at the knife winking at his feet. Rage
twisted Bosson’s features. He lurched at her rescuer.
Fiona stepped forward, aiming the gun at his paunch.
“I wouldn’t.”
Bosson halted mid-step. His beady eyes trained on the shiny Colt.
“It’s quite old but functions perfectly.”
Bosson’s adam’s apple bobbed.
“Ye ‘aven’t the—”
“Haven’t I?” Her brave words barely penetrated the pounding in her ears.
Stare him down, Fi. Just as you did that hydrophobic wolf at Gillian’s ranch. She
willed her hand not to tremble.
“The territories are a violent place. Why, so far this year, three men have
already expired at my feet.” She forced her stiff lips into a smile. “Of course, it
is only May. I have seven more months to make up the slack.”
“By all means, let’s add to your collection, my dear.” Warm hands closed
around her hand, eased the Colt from her grip. The barrel tapped Bosson’s
forehead and followed him as he straightened. “The Thames won’t notice the
extra refuse.”
“Knew ye two were trouble,” Bosson spat. With a vile curse, he and his
crony turned on their heels and sprinted into the fog.
Victory jangled along Fiona’s nerves. She had done it! Not that she’d had
any doubts…
“Of all the harebrained—”
The world spun as her rescuer whirled her about. He loomed over her, his
face inches from hers. His nostrils flared. White rimmed his full lips.
“Harebrained?” Fiona tossed back her shoulders, jerking out of his grip.
The whip wiggled against the canvas leg of her Levi’s, chased the throb from
her upper arm. “You were unarmed and threatening them.” Her voice rose on
the last word. Warm adrenaline receded, leaving behind cold flesh, a chilling
reminder of what could have happened. She cleared the hysteria from her
throat. “What were you going to do? Attack them with your bare hands.”
“Trust me.” The words slipped between clenched white teeth. He stepped
closer, forcing her to tilt her head back or stare at his adam’s apple. “I am more
than capable of ripping someone limb from limb.”
Fiona retreated a pace. Typical male, bullying when charm failed. Well,
she’d print a special edition just for his pride. No man intimidated Fiona Grey.
Especially not one who gambled with his life.
“He would have shot you before you took the first step.”
“You were more likely to shoot me than he was. Your hands shook so
much I thought the earth quaked beneath your feet.” Her rescuer jammed the
gun into his trouser pocket. “Have you ever discharged a weapon before?”
“Once.” Guilt splashed her anger. She stoked the embers, felt warmed by
the rush of rage. How dare he make her feel guilty? Her quick thinking had
saved his life.
“Once! And that gives you leave to wave it in front of a man?”
“It is not difficult. Point and pull the trigger.”
“Point and pull…” His blunt fingers delved into his brown locks, cutting
white furrows across his skull. Anger and fear warred in his brown eyes.
Fear. He had been afraid for her. His concern blanketed her, smothering
her fury.
“I did attempt to hand you the pistol, but you kept patting my hand like I
was some sort of faithful hound nipping at your heels.”
“You tried to give me the gun?” Shock colored his question. His brows
met over his nose.
“Of course. I am well aware of my limitations. The only reason I took Da’s
gun—”
“Your father gave you a weapon?” He crossed his arms over his chest and
glared down at her.
“Not…precisely.” The truth bumped against her lips. Fiona resisted the
urge to chew on her fingernails. Her reasons had been sound, and the gun had
proved useful.
“How precisely did you end up with your father’s revolver?”
She raised her chin and looked him in the eye. He would not make her
regret her actions. He would not.
“I took it.”
“Indeed.” His left eyebrow soared halfway up his forehead. “You’re
deucedly lucky, Miss—”
“Fi–Fiona.” She cleared her throat. “Given all that has transpired…”
He nodded. “You’re deucedly lucky, Miss Fiona. I doubt many experts
could have knocked a gun out of a man’s hand with one shot.”
“Oh, but I didn’t use the firearm, Mr…” Stagnant breath filled her mouth.
Would he reciprocate with the use of Christian name? Her heart thudded
dully in her ears.
“Hugh.” He blinked then nodded once as if agreeing with a voice inside
his head. “Please call me Hugh.” A dimple flashed in his left cheek. “And while
I beg to disagree with a lady, I distinctly heard…”
Hugh. Her rescuer’s name was Hugh. And he still thought of her as a lady.
Joy breezed through Fiona,curving her lips.
“Alice did sound like a shot, didn’t she?”
“Alice?” Confusion furrowed his brow. “Is she your…your late companion?”
Late companion? Their first conversation rushed back to Fiona.
“Oh, no. Alice was a wretched girl at Miss Maple’s Academy for Young
Ladies. She did not approve of much—and of me, in particular. Mister Greenbottom
had struck it rich in the mines before my father, and well, she thought
that entitled her to certain privileges.” Including passing judgment. Fiona
shook out her fists.
“You should have seen her face when she found out that all her daddy’s
gold couldn’t get her into New York society whereas Da’s mother practically
ran it.” Fiona snapped her mouth shut. More information knocked against her
teeth. She had already stepped so far from propriety she might have to circle
the globe to get back in.
“I’m afraid I don’t understand.”
“When I began to practice for our Wild West show, I pretended Alice was
the target. It became a code. I would tell Brianna that I wanted to play with
Alice, and my sister would make certain my parents never found out about the
whip. After a couple years, I just called her Alice.” Fiona tugged on the lash.
Finger-thick leather snaked across her palm.
— I called her Alice first, Milton huffed. I suppose this will be just another
thankless task performed by the dead.
“You used a whip?” The words strangled in Hugh’s throat. His eyes bulged
in his head as they traveled over her flannel shirt, down her Levi’s, flicked over
her boots then whisked back to her face.
“I thought it better than the lasso. I am quite proficient in both.” Unease
itched her spine. She glanced over her shoulder. Nothing menacing lurked in
the shadows. She turned back to her companion. A purplish cast hung over his
face. Disappointment pinched her insides. The excitement must have been too
much for him. “I think—”
“I bloody well doubt that.” Hugh closed the distance between them in one
step and jerked her cape closed, pinching the ends together with one hand. He
raised his free hand and placed two fingers to his lips. An earsplitting whistle
rent the air. “Good God, woman, you should have at least dressed.”
“My attire is perfectly acceptable.” She plucked ineffectually at the fingers.
“Oh, I see—you’d both rather I slithered out a ship’s window in a dress and
bustle.”
“You climbed out a ship’s window?” A vein throbbed at Hugh’s temple.
The man obviously suffered from a nervous condition.
Fiona patted his hand. She’d give him one of Brianna’s soothing tonics.
And perhaps take something to slow her racing heart. Except the tonics were
still on the ship with her trunk. Ah, well, she’d just have to use her voice. Brianna
always quieted at the sound of her voice.
“Well, I couldn’t very well walk across the deck while Bosson entertained
his guest.”
“I suppose it never occurred to you to stay put.” Muscles corded his neck,
like strands of rope lashing his head to his body.
Fiona’s temper frayed. A nervous disposition excused only so much. She
raised herself on her toes and stared into his chocolate-colored eyes.
“I waited for two long days.”
“Proper young ladies do not—”
Hooves clomped on cobblestones. Harness jingled. Black filled Fiona’s
peripheral vision. She turned to stare at the hansom stopped along the curb.
“Mil…er, sir. Madam.”
The carriage rocked as the burly man jumped from his perch behind the
passenger’s seat. The lantern in his beefy fist cast a jaundiced pall over his broken
nose, pockmarked cheeks and puckered lip.
— Egad, I’ve spied corpses who looked less gruesome. Milton soared between
the newest threat and her. You cannot intend to go with that…that brute. I’ll hail
another cab, Fi.
Two pistols winked from the brute’s open coat. Beady eyes peered into the
yellow mist while he fingered one revolver.
“Your carriage, milady.” Hugh bowed and offered her his free hand.
— Dammit, Fi. Milton stopped in front of her, arms spread wide. Red
suffused his gray body. Don’t you dare climb into that coach.
“Perhaps this conversation would be best suited for a rapidly retreating
cab.” Ignoring Milton, Fiona slipped her hand in Hugh’s. She’d ride with the
devil to get to her uncle’s house. Fortunately, a ride with Hugh promised to be
much more entertaining.

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A Lesson for Life

A man is walking by a manicured lawn where gardeners are busy at work. Something startles him and he jumps back onto a metal rake. The teeth of the rake shoot through the sole of his shoe and stab into the heel until bone stops it’s progress. The man limps to the doctor where the wound is irrigated until there appears to have no more artifacts to wash out.
Fast forward a year.
The man’s ankle is swollen. Given his age and diet, is it gout? Or perhaps time catching up to a break he’d had when he was a younger man causing arthritis. Maybe he landed wrong stepping off the curb and he’s sprained it. He makes an appointment with the doctor but before the scheduled date arrives, he feels dizzy and nauseous. One morning there is blood and pus leaking from the swollen area. A visit to the doctor drains it, and stitches it up.
Fifty years ago they might have been the end of it. It would, in time, have been the end of the man too.
You see the rake drove a particle into the bone and it lodged there causing an infection that went septic. There were no red lines traveling along the veins of his leg. The infection traveled through the bone, causing an inch of heel bone to be removed to reach the healthy part. Furthermore, the man will be on antibiotics for six weeks, taken intravenously to make sure the infection doesn’t kill him.
He could have lost his foot.
Fifty years ago, he probably would have.
A hundred years ago, he probably would have died after living for months with the draining absess.
Disease is a funny thing. If the man didn’t have such a strong immune system the problem might have been diagnosed earlier or it could have gone septic faster, killing him before modern medicine could intervene.
Who hasn’t stepped on something, driving it into our foot? Who hasn’t cut themselves working in the yard?
Be aware that even minor problems can become big issues–whether health wise or life wise. Take care of things while they’re still small and manageable. More importantly, listen to your body, your loved ones, your friends and family.
Everything means something and everything can teach us something.

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Ghosts and the Victorians

In 1848 two sisters, Catherine and Margaret Fox, claimed to have talked to the spirit of a man. Together they devised a tapping system to discover that the man, a peddlar, had been murdered and buried in the cellar. The story hit the papers in New York and the Spiritualism Movement began. NOTE: In 1888, Margaret Fox claimed the sisters faked the encounter, but a human skeleton was actually found buried in the walls of the cellar in 1904. Ms. Fox recanted her confession the following year.
Spiritualism-the belief that spirits of the dead residing in the spirit world have both the ability and the inclination to communicate with the living. Anyone may receive spirit messages, but formal communication sessions (séances) are held by “mediums”, who can then provide information about the afterlife. (Wikipedia)
1852- Mrs. Maria Hayden, a medium from the US begins practicing Spiritualism in England. Although there were mediums practicing in England, she is widely credited with giving series momentum to the Spiritualism Movement in England.
1875- Helena Blavatsky, a Russian immigrant who is said to have possessed demonic occult powers, founds the Theosophical Society in New York with Colonel Olcott. The Theosophical Society currently maintains its international headquarters in India. Two of Ms. Blavatsky’s books, Isis Unveiled and The Secret Doctrine, laid the foundations for the current New Age Movement.
Séance- used specifically for a meeting of people who are gathered to receive messages from spirits or to listen to a spirit medium discourse with or relay messages from spirits. (Wikipedia)
Communicating with the Dead
Crystal Balls-is a crystal or glass ball believed by some people to aid in the performance of clairvoyance. It is sometimes known as a shew stone. As early as 2000BC, Celtic tribes in Britain were using crystals for divination. (Wikipedia)
Tarot Cards- From the late 18th century until the present time the tarot has also found use by mystics and occultists in efforts at divination or as a map of mental and spiritual pathways. In the 15th Century, Tarot cards were introduced from Egypt as playing cards. (Wikipedia)
Table rapping- form of communication with spirits of the dead
Mental Telepathy- the transfer of information on thoughts or feelings between individuals by means other than the five senses.
Ouija board- also known as a spirit/fire key board or talking board, is a flat board marked with the letters of the alphabet, the numbers 0-9, the words ‘yes’ ‘no’ and ‘goodbye’, and other symbols and words are sometimes also added to help personalize the board. It is commonly believed to be a way of communicating with spirits of the dead. Similar instruments were used in Ancient Greece, China, Rome
Automatic Writing- Writing said to be produced by a spiritual, occult, or subconscious agency rather than by the conscious intention of the writer

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Interview with Stacy Connelly

What prompted you to write that first book? Did you always want to be an author?

I had always written short stories, but I never thought I could write a novel. Then, my short stories kept getting longer and longer, and finally I realized I was working on novel-length stories.

How do you decide which story to write?

My last few stories have been loosely connected, so I usually pick the secondary character in a previous book who calls to me the most.

Can you tell us a little bit about your latest release?

In Her Fill-in Fiance’, Sophia Pirelli comes home for her parents’ anniversary party with some secrets she’s reluctant to share –she’s lost her job, lost her boyfriend, and she’s pregnant. Her troubles only multiply when she arrives home and discovers her family has welcomed Jake Cameron with open arms, unaware that the man she was starting to care for had been hired to learn her secrets.

I loved the unique twist you created in Her Fill-In Fiance. What inspired such a brilliant idea?

Both Jake and Sophia were minor characters in my previous book, Once Upon a Wedding. Jake was a friend of the hero from that book, and Sophia turned out to be the “other woman” and the reason why the wedding Kelsey planned for her cousin didn’t happen.

Even though Sophia never appeared on the page in that book, I knew she wasn’t a bad person 🙂 and that she deserved her own happily ever after. With Jake and Sophia’s backstory already established, it was simply a matter of getting them back together again–and what better way than a pretend relationship?

Do you plot your stories out or do you just start writing?

I’ve always worked off of loose outlines for my books, and now that I’m selling on proposal, I have to have some kind of synopsis for my editor even though I know the book will likely change as I go along.

What was the funniest thing you learned about your hero/heroine from writing their story?

I wrote a scene where my hero said French Toast was his favorite breakfast which is a little weird because I think I’ve only had French Toast once in my life. 🙂

Which of your characters is most like you and which is least like you?

I think all of my characters have some similarities to me. Sophia tends to keep things inside; she doesn’t want to let anyone know her plans because she feels like she’s failed in the past. I can be like that, too, and tend to overthink things.

As a PI, Jake is someone who sits back and observes, and while I am NOT a private investigator :), I do believe most writers like to observe and assess the world around them. Like Jake, I can sometimes hesitate to actually join in and prefer to stay in the background.

Can you describe your office or where you normally write?

I have an office :), but to be honest, I rarely write there. Normally, I work at the kitchen table or maybe on the couch if I can keep from distracting myself by watching too much TV.

Which came first the plot or the characters?

Since these were continuing characters from previous book, I already had the characters in mind, so it was a matter of figuring out why Sophia had left her hometown in the first place and what would happen if she went back and Jake followed her there…

Have you ever gotten stuck while writing a scene or chapter? How did you overcome it?

I do get stuck, and I try the usual tricks–changing point of view or setting or sometimes moving the scene to a different part of the book. I also try to focus on if I really need that scene and if so, what do I want to accomplish with it?

Sometimes by defining the purpose of the scene, I can work my way around the sticking point.

What is the wackiest thing that’s ever happened to you since you started writing?

I don’t know that it’s really that wacky, but I’ve had a couple of people tell me I need to write their life stories at which time I explain that I write fiction–not biographies!

Did you do any research for you book and, if so, did you find any interesting information that you had to include in the story?

I based the location on a friend’s hometown, so I asked her a lot of questions and went on line for photographs. I’d still really like to visit myself to get a genuine feel for the place.

Where can readers find out more about you?

I have a website at http://www.stacyconnelly.com and I also blog at the Harlequin site as part of the Special Edition blog on the 2nd and 4th Wednesdays.

Now available at Amazon and other places that sell books.

Bio: Stacy Connelly has dreamed of publishing books since she was a kid writing stories about a girl and her horse. Eventually, boys made it onto the page as she discovered a love of romance and the promise of happily-ever-after.

In 2008, that dream came true when her first book, All She Wants for Christmas, was published by Silhouette Special Edition. Two more books followed, including Once Upon A Wedding which was nominated for Romantic Times Best Special Edition for 2009.

Stacy has sold another two books to Special Edition. Both will be out later in 2011.

When she is not lost in the land of make-believe, Stacy lives inArizonawith her two spoiled dogs.

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