Heart of Mercy
January 29th, 2014It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!
You never know when I might play a wild card on you!
Award winning romance author, Sharlene MacLaren has released 13 novels since embarking on a writing career in 2007. After a career teaching second grade âSharâ says she asked God for a new mission âthat would bring her as great a sense of purposeâ as sheâd felt teaching and raising her children. She tried her hand at inspirational romance, releasing Through Every Storm to critical and popular acclaim in 2007, and the rest, as they say, is history. She quickly became the top selling fiction author for Whitaker House, has accumulated multiple awards, and endeared herself to readers who canât get enough of her long, luscious and often quirky tales â both historical and contemporary. Her novels include the contemporary romances Long Journey Home, and Tender Vow; and three historical series including Little Hickman Creek series (Loving Liza Jane; Sarah, My Beloved; and Courting Emma); The Daughters of Jacob Kane (Hannah Grace, Maggie Rose, and Abbie Ann) and River of Hope (Livvieâs Song, Ellieâs Haven, and Sofiaâs Secret).
Visit the author’s website.
Mercy Evans has known a great deal of heartache and hardship in her 26 years. She lost her mother at a young age and was only 16 when her father was killed in a brawl sparked by a feud with the Connors family that spans several generations. When a house fire claims the lives of her two best friends, Mercy is devastated, but finds comfort in caring for their two sons, who survived thanks to a heroic rescue by Sam Connors, blacksmith in the small town of Paris, Tennessee. Yet the judge is determined to grant custody only if Mercy is married. Mercy loves the boys as her own, and sheâll go to any lengths to keep themâbut what if that means marrying the son of the man who killed her father? Set in the 1880âs, Heart of Mercy is the first book in MacLarenâs new Tennessee Dreams series.
Product Details:
List Price: $14.99
Series: Tennessee Dreams (Book 1)
Paperback: 336 pages
Publisher: Whitaker House (January 1, 2014)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1603749632
ISBN-13: 978-1603749633
ISLAND BREEZES
It started as a pleasant evening and ended in heartbreak. Mercy takes in the young orphaned sons of her best friends, but has to fight to keep them since the judge has decided they need to have a married couple as their guardians.
Sam is a man still living with his mother, who is constantly whining and trying to manipulate him. He has to escape, but isn’t sure how to go about it.
The judge finally agrees to give Mercy thirty days to find a husband if she wants to keep the boys. She’s desperate enough to advertise for a husband. Sam is desperate enough to answer that ad.
It sounds like a good thing all around except for the feud between their families. It’s a real Hatfield and McCoy type feud. The problem is no one quite knows why it’s still going on after all these years.
Are these two willing to go through all the grief that will be heaped on them from both sides? It will take some real determination to put themselves in that position.
Thank you, Ms MacLaren. I’m looking forward to more Tennessee Dreams.
AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:
his knees and call out to his Maker for leniency. But most took time for
neither, instead racing to the scene of terror with the bucket they kept stored
close to the door, and joining the contingent of citizens determined to battle
the flames of death and destruction. Such was the case tonight when, washing
the dinner dishes in the kitchen sink, Mercy Evans heard the dreaded screams
coming from all directions, even began to smell the sickening fumes of blazing
timber seeping through her open windows. She ran through her house and burst
through the screen door onto the front porch.
up Wood Street carrying buckets of water.
on the run, âLooks to be the Watson place over on Caldwell.â
and Millie Watson!â
been fast friends at school and had stuck together like glue in the dimmest of
circumstances, as well as the sweetest. Millie had walked with Mercy through
the loss of both her parents, and Mercy had watched Millie fall wildly in love
with Herb Watson in the twelfth grade. Sheâd been the maid of honor in their
wedding the following summer.
past. Whirling on her heel, she ran back inside, hurried to extinguish all but
one kerosene lamp, snatched her wrap from its hook by the door, and darted back
outside and up the rutted street toward her best friendsâ home, dodging horses
and a stampede of citizens. âLord, please donât let it be,â she pleaded aloud.
âOh, God, keep them safe. Jesus, JesusâŠ.â But her cries vanished in the
scramble of bodies crowding her off the street as several made the turn onto
Caldwell in their quest to reach the flaming house, which already looked beyond
saving.
and up through a hole in the roof. Like hungry serpents, flames lapped up the
sides of the house, eating walls and shattering panes, while men heaved their
pathetic little buckets of water at the volcanic monster.
Phil Marshall. He and a couple of deputies on horseback spread their arms wide
at the crowd, trying to push them to safety.
gathering mob until the heat so overwhelmed her that she had no choice but to
stop. Besides, a giant arm reached out and stopped her progress. She shook it
off. âWhere are they?â she gasped, breathless. âWhereâs the family?â
his sad, defeated eyes telling the story. âDonât know, Miss Evans. No oneâs
seen âem yet. We been scourinâ the crowdââhe gave another shake of the
headââand it donât appear anybody got out of that inferno.â
throat and choked her next words. âThey were at my place earlier. I made
supper.â
rose above the crowd.
emergingâstaggering rather like a drunkardâfrom the open door and onto the
porch, his arms full with two wriggling bundles wrapped in blankets and
screaming in terror. Mercy sucked in a cavernous breath and held it till
weakness overtook her and she forced herself to let it out. Could it be? Had
little John Roy and Joseph survived the fire thanks to this man?
cloud of smoke. âLooks to be Sam Connors, the blacksmith,â said the sheriff,
scratching his head and stepping forward.
almost ethereal, strode down the steps, then wavered and stumbled before
falling flat on his face in a heap of dust and bringing the howling bundles
with him.
ran to their aid. Mercy yanked the blankets off the boys and heaved a sigh of
relief to find them both alert and apparently unharmed, albeit still screeching
louder than a couple of banshees. Through their avalanche of tears, they
recognized her, and they hurled themselves into her arms, knocking her
backward, so that she wound up on her back perpendicular to Mr. Connors, with
both of the boys lying prone across her body. In all the chaos, she felt a hand
grasp her arm and help her up to a sitting position.
chillinâs out of the way oâ them flames foâ you all gets burned.â She had the
presence of mind to look up at Solomon Turner, a former slave now in the employ
of Mrs. Iris Brockwell, a prominent Paris citizen whoâd donated a good deal of
money to the hospital fund.
help her to a standing state. By the lines etched in his face from years of
hard work in the sweltering sun, Mercy figured he had to be in his seventies,
yet he lifted her with no apparent effort. âThank you, Mr. Turner.â
pleading with wet eyes to be held, while Joseph, six, took a fistful of her
skirt and clung with all his might. âCome,â she said, hoisting John Roy up into
her arms. âWe best do as Mr. Turner says, honey. Follow me.â
perishing house a long perusal, tears still spilling down his face. John Roy
buried his wrenching sobs in Mercyâs shoulder, and it was all she could do to
keep from bolting into the house herself to search for Herb and Millie, even
though she knew sheâd never come out alive. If the fire and smoke didnât kill
her, the heat would. Besides, before her eyes, the flames had devoured the very
sides of the house, leaving a skeletal frame with a staircase only somewhat
intact and a freestanding brick fireplace looking like a graveyard monument.
Her heart throbbed in her chest and thundered in her ears, and she wanted to
scream, but the ever-thickening smoke and acrid fumes burned to the bottom of
her lungs.
âI know, sweetheart, and Iâm so, so sorry.â Her words drowned in her own sobs as
the truth slammed against her. Millie and Herb, her most loyal friends. Gone.
to move away from the blazing house, so she forced herself to obey, dragging a
reluctant Joseph with her. At the same time, she observed three men carrying a
yet unconscious Sam Connors across the street to a grassy patch of ground.
Several others gathered around, trying to decide what sort of care he needed.
Of course, he required medical attention, but Mercy felt too weak and dizzy to
tend to him. Best to let the men put him on a cart and drive him over to Doc
Trumbleâs. Besides, she highly doubted heâd welcome her help. He was a Connors,
after all, and she an Evansâtwo families who had been fighting since as far
back as anyone could remember.
started, with a dispute between Cornelius Evans, Mercyâs grandfather, and
Eustace Connors over property lines and livestock grazing in the early 1830s.
There had been numerous thefts of horses and cattle, and incidents of barn
burnings, committed by both families, until a judge had stepped in and defined
the property linesâin favor of Eustace Connors. Mercyâs grandfather had gotten
so agitated over the matter that his heart had given out. Mercyâs grandmother,
Margaret, had blamed the Connors family, fueling the feud by passing her hatred
for the entire clan on to her own children, and so the next generation had
carried the grudge, mostly forgetting its origins but not the bad blood. The animosity
had reached a peak six years ago, when Ernest Connors had killed Oscar
EvansâMercyâs father.
somethinâ orange cominâ from upstairs, so he got in bed with me, and after a
while that angel man comed in and took us out of arâ bed.â
knees to meet Josephâs eyes straight on. His were still red, his cheeks
blotchy. She thought very carefully about her next words. âWhere were your
parents?â
to their bedroom. John Roy anâ me talked a long time about scary monsters anâ
stuff, but then, after a while, he went to sleep, but I couldnât, so I got up
tâ get a drink oâ water, and thatâs when I heard a noise upstairs. I looked
around the corner, and I seed a big round ball oâ orange up there, and smoke
cominâ out of it, and I thought it was a dragon come to eat us up. I runned
back and jumped in bed with Joseph and tolâ him a mean monster was cominâ tâ
get us, and I started cryinâ real loud.â
waited and waited for the monster to come after us, but instead the angel saved
us. I think Mama and Papa is prolly still sleepinâ. Do you think they waked up
yet?â
swallowed a tablespoonful of acid. Her own eyes begged to cut loose a river of
tears, but she warded them off with a shake of her head while gathering both
boys tightly to her. âNo, darlings, I donât believe they woke up in bed. I
believe with all my heart they awoke in heaven and are right now asking Jesus
to keep you safe.â
and get us?â Joseph pointed a shaky finger at Sam Connors. The big fellow lay
motionless on his back, with several men bent over him, calling his name and
fanning his face.
thatâs not to say that God didnât have something to do with sending him in to
rescue you.â
between frantic sobs.
to Doc Trumbleâs house, but then Harold Crew said heâd spotted the doctor about
an hour ago, driving out to the DeLass farm to deliver baby number seven.
on Mercy. She knew what folks were thinking. She worked for Doc Trumble, she
had more medical training and experience than the average person, and her house
was closest to the scene. But their gazes also indicated they understood the
awkwardness of the situation, considering the ongoing feud between the two
families. Although the idea of caring for him didnât appeal, sheâd taken an
oath to always do her best to preserve life. Besides, the Lord commanded her to
love her neighbor as herself, making it a sin to walk away from someone in
need, regardless of his family name.
close. âPut him on a cart and take him to my place,â she stated.
other than themselves, several men hurried to pick him up and carried him to
Harold Crewâs nearby buggy.
each boy. âYou can stay out at my sisterâs farm. She wonât mind adding a couple
oâ more youngâuns to her brood.â
announcement. Mercy hugged him and John Roy possessively. âTheir parents were
my closest friends, Sheriff Marshall. Iâd like to assume their care.â
know as thatâs the best solution, you beinâ unwed anâ all.â
go. Their parents were my closest friends. Theyâre coming home with me.â She
took both boys by the hands, turned, and led them back down Caldwell Street,
away from the still-smoldering house and the sheriffâs disapproving gaze.
Overhead, black smoke filled the skies, obliterating any hope of the nightâs
first stars or the crescent moon making an appearance.