Pick 2 Day 3 Giveaway

May 3rd, 2013

Each day for seven days I will be giving away books to celebrate my five year blogging anniversary. I will give you at least three books. I will give you links to reviews for these books. Read the reviews and pick two books that you would like to receive and leave me a comment. If you want an extra entry, link to my blog and leave a comment saying so.

There will be a random drawing seven days from the giveaway post. I will post the winner, but also you via email. I’m sorry, but due to the cost of postage I will have to limit the contest to U.S. addresses only.

Today’s books are historical romances.

Good Luck!

How Juggling a Journal Made Me a Heartbroken Lover

May 3rd, 2013

First posted April 1, 2008 – the beginning

I’ve  been writing in journals on and off most of my life.  I chose the name “Island Breezes” for the journals of my later life.  I have to admit that I’ve been unfaithful . I would cling to my journals and write up a fury when I was upset, hurt or in the midst of the many crisis laden times in my soap opera life. Then I would neglect them during sunny days.

Well no more.  I have periodically tossed out my journals like young lovers I’ve outgrown.  Now that I’m more experienced I’ve left them behind for my Sunny Island Breezes.  I did attempt to procure the Island Breezes name for my site, but as I feared an old nemesis stole my first love when I was young and inexperienced on the net.  If I had been “around the block” more times, so to speak, I would not have lost that love to internet land.  I very naively gave an online mini-journal that beloved name and had it callously ripped away from my heart by someone more experienced.  This person purloined my love and tried to sell it back to me as a domain.  Heartbroken, I cried “How dare you,” as I turned my back on that unfaithful love and fled.

Ah, but now I know that  young love can be so very foolish.  When we’re hurt, we can toss it all out, the good along with the bad.  So I wept and vowed I’d not let anyone come into my life and hurt me again.  Only a fool would show back up on the internet for more abuse!

But boys and girls, here I am!  Back with sunny days, lounging on the beach of my mind, feeling the gentle breezes of the palms and ready to let a new love back into my life.

And now you are in on the birth of Sunny Island Breezes.  Share my private island with me and tell me where you would like for us to travel together.  The world is a big, wonderful place.  Fasten your seatbelt.  We’re ready for take off!

Postcards from Misty Harbor Inn Nook HD Giveaway and Facebook Party {5/9}!

May 2nd, 2013

Guideposts Books is celebrating the release of their new Postcards from Misty Harbor Inn series with a fun giveaway and a Facebook party on May 9th.

Misty-Harbor-Series-300
One fortunate winner will receive:

  • A Nook HD
  • Seaside Harmony and Sunflower Summer by Evangeline Kelley

Enter today by clicking one of the icons below. But hurry, the giveaway ends on May 8th. Winner will be announced at the Postcards from Misty Harbor Inn Author Chat Facebook Party on 5/9. Connect with Patti Berg, Pam Andrews, Barbara Hanson, and Camy Tang (who collaborated together under the pen name, Evangeline Kelley) for an evening of book chat, trivia, and fun! There will also be great giveaways (gift certificates, books, and more) as well as a sneak peek at the next book in the series!

So grab your copies of Seaside Harmony and Sunflower Summer and join readers just like you on the evening of May 9th for a chance to connect with the authors and make some new friends. (If you haven’t read the books – don’t let that stop you from coming!)

Don’t miss the fun. RSVP today and tell your friends about the giveaway via FACEBOOK or TWITTER and increase your chances of winning. Hope to see you on the 9th!

Seaside Harmony & Sunflower Summer

May 2nd, 2013

Seaside Harmony & Sunflower Summer
By Evangeline Kelley

The Postcards from Misty Harbor Inn series (Guideposts Books) introduces readers to Caroline, Gracie and Sam as they gather for a vacation where they spent the summers as children, and follows their adventures as they fulfill their mother’s dream of opening a bed and breakfast. As the sisters heal from their mother’s passing, they bond in ways they never imagined and discover evidence of God’s hand in the unlikeliest of circumstances.

A team of four authors come together under the pen name of Evangeline Kelley to bring the unique personalities of each sister to vivid life and welcome audiences to the charming and historic island of Nantucket, complete with cobblestone streets, quaint shops, ferries, sandy beaches and salty air.

Three sisters, a charming inn, hints of mystery and romance, and a gorgeous seaside setting. Summer reading at its finest!

When Caroline Marris joins her sisters, Gracie Gold and Sam Carter for a Nantucket Island getaway, she has no idea how it will change her life. The sisters stumble upon Misty Harbor Inn, the place their late mother loved so much, and Caroline talks her sisters into buying the beautiful but dilapidated inn. But can free-spirited Caroline stay focused enough to make opening the inn a reality? Hand-drawn old postcards draw the sisters into the mystery of Hannah Montague, the young widow of the original owner. Can the sisters uncover the fate of this woman who disappeared in 1880? As Caroline and her sisters work together to make their mom’s dream a reality, they bond in ways they never expected.

?  Misty Harbor Inn officially opens, and Gracie Gold, the middle Marris sister, wrestles with an overwhelming decision. As the sisters learn the day-to-day workings of running an inn, Gracie counsels its first guests, newlyweds whose honeymoon seems to be ending before it begins. Meanwhile, Sam’s discovery of a clue in a secret room sheds unflattering light on Hannah Montague, who vanished from the house more than one hundred years ago. And as Gracie and Caroline welcome guests to the inn, they are delighted to see how God uses it — and them — to deepen relationships and transform lives.

ISLAND BREEZES

I read the wrong book first, but it turns out that Sunflower Summer is a good stand alone read. Reading Seaside Harmony made a lot of what happened then stand out more.

These two books show three sisters’ desire to make their mother’s dream come true. That was a dream of living on the island year round.

These very different sisters have to learn to work and live together in harmony as they restore and run an old inn.

Along the way they become intrigued with the mystery surrounding the disappearance of the original owner’s young widow.

I would really like to spend time at this inn in real life and get to know the sisters better. They already feel like friends. I’m looking forward to the next Postcards from Misty Harbor Inn.

***A special thank you to litfuse for providing review copies.***

Evangeline Kelley is the pen name for the writing team of Patti Berg, Pam Andrews & Barbara Hanson, and Camy Tang, the four authors who collaborated to create Postcards from Misty Harbor Inn. Each of them has published novels individually, but this is their first series together.

Pick 2 Day 2 Giveaway

May 2nd, 2013

Each day for seven days I will be giving away books to celebrate my five year blogging anniversary. I will give you at least three books. I will give you links to reviews for these books. Read the reviews and pick two books that you would like to receive and leave me a comment. If you want an extra entry, link to my blog and leave a comment saying so.

There will be a random drawing seven days from the giveaway post. I will post the winner, but also you via email. I’m sorry, but due to the cost of postage I will have to limit the contest to U.S. addresses only.

Today’s books are Amish/Mennonite.

Good Luck!

How to Tame a Flying Mouse

May 2nd, 2013

Another favorite from the past.

I’ve finally been able to get my mouse under control enough to write my welcoming post.  I shared some of my coffee (just two drops) with my old mouse and he, being the ungrateful wretch that he is, did not appreciate it.

Ummm!  I can still taste that cup of coffee.  It was darn good and my generosity should have been rewarded with smiles and hard work.  Instead, no matter how I pampered, dissected and bathed him with the finest of canned air, he remained stubborn.  I sweet talked, coerced, begged, threatened and cried.  It got me no where!  Ungrateful little wretch!

I babied and coaxed him.  I lavished special attention on him any time I was home.  He teased me and would work properly just long enough to get my hopes up.  Then he would bulk, stall, skip around and defy me.  I work long shifts on the weekend, but came home eager for my date with that cute little mouse.  Oh, how I sweet talked him.  Ungrateful little wretch!

I gave him one more chance this morning before dashing out to the Office Depot on the corner and replacing that little hunk of junk with a new, shiny, happy mouse.  This little baby will not get the chance to share any of my coffee.  I’m afraid he might be as fickle and unappreciative as my former friend.

This little one is taking me to new heights.  He flies.  I’m having to work very hard to tame him a bit.  He runs all over the place and flies off the page every chance he gets.  But he makes me smile.  I’m going to fly with him.   Join me every day and go flying with us.

Pick 2 Day 1 Giveaway

May 1st, 2013

Each day for seven days I will be giving away books to celebrate my five year blogging anniversary. I will give you at least three books. I will give you links to reviews for these books. Read the reviews and pick two books that you would like to receive and leave me a comment. If you want an extra entry, link to my blog and leave a comment saying so.

There will be a random drawing seven days from the giveaway post. I will post the winner, but also you via email. I’m sorry, but due to the cost of postage I will have to limit the contest to U.S. addresses only.

Today’s books are cookbooks.

Good luck!

The Library is a Dangerous Place

May 1st, 2013

I’m revisiting some of my first posts in celebration of five years of blogging. Join me in some fun reading.

I love books! I make frequent trips to our local library.  I love just walking through the door and seeing all those wonderful books.  It boggles my mind to think of the number of authors who live there amidst all those words.  Very often I don’t take the time to linger.  I’m usually running through a list of errands and not allowing myself sufficient time to actually enjoy the library.  I use our library’s internet system to request books and go pick them up when I receive an e-mail telling me they are ready for pickup at the branch near my home.  Last week I made a stop to return some DVD’s and pick up books that were waiting for me.

This time I got into trouble as soon as I walked in the door.  There’s a four-sided rack there which holds books for sale.  Usually I can walk past with only a glance (okay, a glance at all sides), but I got caught up before I realized it.  I walked out of there with the three books that were on hold for me, plus I bought ten more.  Hey, they all cost less than eight dollars, so I didn’t clean out the bank account, but the reason I use the library is because it’s unsafe for me to go to a bookstore.  I’m trying to pay down debt and that’s not going to happen if I’m in a huge room full of books that want to come home with me.  I’m going to have to suck up the will power before I go back in there tomorrow.  No, I didn’t get all those books read yet, but I received another one of those e-mails telling me I have another book waiting to be picked up.  A bit scary, isn’t it?

My library purchase included three stitchery and craft idea books (visions of making all my Christmas gifts this year.)  Some of the books which leaped off that rack and into my waiting arms were in the realm of health care.  That includes a book on reflexology, one on homeopathic remedies, Eating Well for Optimum Health by Dr. Andrew Weil and one called The Diabetes Food & Nutrition Bible. Also in the food category was a cookbook from Carnival Cruise Line.  How could a former Carnival employee resist that?  The last two books are Living the Lord’s Prayer and one called The Worst-Case Scenario Survival Handbook: Travel.  Now that one looks a bit funky.  When I flipped through it a few of the things I encountered was how to stop a car with no brakes, how to ram a barricade, and how to survive a volcanic eruption.  Don’t worry, I’ll share some of these fun things with you.  Tell me what you want me to share first.

Now I wonder what’s going to happen when I walk through those magical library doors tomorrow.

Madeline’s Protector

May 1st, 2013

It 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!

Today’s Wild Card author is:
Vanessa Riley
and the book:
Madeline’s Protector
White Rose Publishing (April 19, 2013)
***Special thanks to Tyora Moody for sending me a review copy.***
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

The Regency and Victorian eras have always been a magnetizing draw for Vanessa Riley. Even as she worked to complete her doctorate in Mechanical Engineering, she made time for renaissance fairs and any novel or cinematographic work depicting these genteel societies of old. Perhaps, the attraction arises from the kinship she feels with the period being brought up in the restrictive Southern Bible Belt with its stringent definitions of decent behavior and life expectations. Perhaps the common denominator to this appeal is her own thirty day Christian courtship or even the arranged marriages of her uncles; each is emblematic of the nuptials of those earlier times.

A technology muse like Dr. Vanessa Riley is probably not the immediate choice to write about haute ton English society set in the 1800?s. With her most recent published work being “Reducing Deformation by Phase Manipulation,” the common visceral reaction is that Providence has given another mule a voice to tell His story. Nevertheless, this mule uses her determined spirit and dogmatic tenacity to master the subject and to discover the hidden nuances of a character making him believable, her human and both ready to be used of God.

Vanessa holds a doctorate in mechanical engineering and a masters in industrial engineering and engineering management from Stanford University. She also earned BS and MS in mechanical engineering from Penn State University. She has been a radio anchorwoman and church announcer. She is a member of the American Christian Fiction Writers Association and Romance Writers of America.

Today, Vanessa juggles mothering an eight year old, her seventeenth wedding anniversary, engineering, writing and speaking at women’s events. She is known for her humorous delivery of poignant truths. Vanessa is currently, editor in chief of an online social network, www.busymama.net.

Visit the author’s website.

SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

If all the young men of England leapt off a cliff, Madeline St. James wouldn’t care. Then she’d have peace. Her nightmares of courtship would end, and she’d cozy up with a Psalm in her aunt’s quiet sculpture garden.

Yet, a chance meeting and a bullet wound change everything, and Madeline must trust the Good Shepherd has led her to the altar to marry a dashing stranger, Lord Devonshire.

Death and pain are no strangers to Justain Delveaux, Lord Devonshire, and he vows his dutiful bride will be kept safe and in her place. Though this compromised marriage is in-name-only, his wife and her unwavering faith both intrigue and allure him. Perchance when he thwarts his brother’s killer, Justain will tempt the unpredictable Madeline with the comfort of his arms.

But can Madeline and the stubborn earl forge a true bond before the next disaster strikes?

Product Details:

List Price: $16.99

Paperback: 354 pages

Publisher: White Rose Publishing (April 19, 2013)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 1611162262

ISBN-13: 978-1611162264

ISLAND BREEZES

You’re going to need to park that box of tissues by your chair for this book’s ending. This certainly isn’t a “man meets woman and they ride off into the sunset” type book.

It starts with violence as Justain is caught up in the role of Madeline’s protector. Just when one of them thinks he or she knows what is going on, confusion reigns. Between the two of them, they have a lot of hurt that needs resolved.

Both are determined to protect the heart from further damage. It seems as though even marriage will separate them. Can either learn to trust enough to be vulnerable?

AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:

Shropshire, England, Iron Country, August 5, 1821
“Stop, thief!” Madeline St. James grabbed the coarse sleeve of the man who stole her guineas, but he shook free and dashed away.
“Give those back, this instant.” Mouth open, pulse racing, she stopped her pursuit. A scream bubbled in the pit of her stomach, but she pursed her lips. A St. James never made a public scene or conceded defeat.
The thief reached the other side of the vacant courtyard, well ahead of a wagon rumbling up the cobblestone lane. He shot her a toothless grin and traipsed to the main building of Tilford Coaching Inn.
The dray and its lumbering horse team swerved closer, but if she waited one more second, the thief would escape her view. Another man would’ve taken advantage of her. Not again.
Picking up her weighty skirts, she sprinted onto the slick rocks of the road. The silver hem of her long carriage dress slapped at the mud. Better to be dirty than a victim. Cupping her palm to her eyes, she scanned for the thief.
The man bounded up the stone entree. He’d vanish like her driver, amongst the sea of gaming travellers.
She lengthened her stride to intercept him.
One high step too many, her boot heel caught in the sagging silk, tripping her. The air pushed from her lungs as she fell flat. The soggy earth saturated her layers to the shift and petticoat. Her injured elbow stung anew.
Wheels squealed. Hooves clomped the cobbles. Soon the horses would be on top of her, stomping and kicking.
A couple of tugs and yanks couldn’t fish her boot free. No escape this time. Abba Father, forgive. She turned her head and braced for the onslaught.
A band of iron gripped her stomach and hauled her from the muck. She went limp, sprawled against the hard chest of a rescuer. He pulled her off the lane and under one of the overhanging galleries of the inn.
Wind slapped her cheek as the horses swept past. No one held the reins. The wagon swung wide, crashed into the inn’s main building, and flipped to the ground. Ejected barrels hit the whitewashed wall and sprayed foamy liquid.
Madeline’s breath came in heaves, and she clutched the titan arm sheltering her. No fainting. No need to lose more dignity.
One of the draught horses loosed from its tether and galloped to the emerald pines scalloping the surrounding hills. The other roan remained with the wreck, lifting its crooked leg. Poor lame creature.
An old man rushed out of the inn and cut at the horse’s strap. “Bring my gun. This one needs to be put down.”
With an awkward hold on her middle, her rescuer spun her, perhaps to keep her from seeing the cruelty. He needn’t be concerned.
The past two weeks had numbed her to violence. Yet, God kept her as He did again today. “Thank you,
Providence/ but please…spare the roan.”
“You’re welcome, but it’s Devonshire, Lord Devonshire.” The low voice kissed her ear, heated the pulsing vein along her throat.
How could this man sound calm? They both could’ve died.
He flung open the door to an onyx carriage and eased her onto the floorboards. “Are you injured, miss?”
“No.” She rubbed her arms and gazed at her rescuer. He was very tall, enough to make her feel dainty even at her Amazon height. With broad shoulders and a solid chin, she couldn’t have sculpted a more perfect hero. “The horse, sir? Can you help it?”
“Stay put. This mere mortal will see what can be done.” He grabbed his top hat from the seat and marched away. His elegant form, straight posture, disappeared into the growing crowd.
It didn’t matter she sat on the floor, chilled in her clothes, imposing demands of a stranger. Even against this errant horse, Death shouldn’t win. She’d seen its victories too often, with Mama’s passing seven years ago and Cousin Thomas dying this past spring.
She squeezed her throbbing elbow. Falling aggravated the sprain.
A quick shake of her foot didn’t release her trapped kid boot but tore the lace trim on her gown, Mama’s carriage dress. A lump formed in Madeline’s throat. She missed Mama so much.
A few choice words shouted from the crowd and a round of loud snickers interrupted her woolgathering.
Lord Devonshire returned and rubbed the scruff of his neck. “It cost three guineas, but your nag will be kept by the innkeeper’s daughter.”
“I’ll repay you, sir. My abigail has my reticule.” She swallowed gall. The thief took most of her money, but surely three coins were left.
He waved his hand. “I’d rather not be a paid fool.” Leaning along the door, he stared at her with irises bluer than a summer day.
What could Lord Devonshire learn from her disheveled appearance? She didn’t mind his gaze. Since travelling to Shropshire, grey ash painted the clouds, no doubt from the ore foundries. No sunny skies like Hampshire.
“Now to be of true assistance.” He reached under her hem, gripped above her ankle, and freed her boot from the tangle of silk. The warmth arising from his gloved hands seared her thin stockings. “Not broken.” He released her foot to dangle through the entrance.
Shocking and bold. Though dressed as a gentleman in buff buckskins and an azure tailcoat, this definitely wasn’t someone with whom to be alone.
Her wits returned, and she bounced out of the carriage. “I’ll get your payment.”
“Wait.” Deep and commanding like Father’s voice, his words stopped her. “I saw you trip trailing the miner.”
She pivoted and clasped her hands across her ruined pelisse. Mud covered the delicate puce rosettes embroidered on the bodice.
“You were very brave to run after him.”
“Bacon-brained would be a more apt description.” A raindrop splashed her forehead. Her bonnet must have fallen in the commotion. She wiped her brow. The cold balm of mud smoothed against her skin. Her heart sunk, and she wrenched off her soiled gloves. If her cheeks weren’t already scarlet, they should be.
He shortened the distance between them, a smile tugging at his full lips. “In mining country, the strikes have set everyone on edge. Some resort to crime. There’s a would-be highwayman on every corner. You must take care around Tilford.”
A fortnight ago, his concern might’ve warmed her, but not now.
“Father of Heav’n!” Mrs. Elsie Wilkins, Madeline’s abigail, ran to her.
“Y’ weren’t to leave the livery.” The good woman wrapped her stubby arms about Madeline’s hips. “Too much for m’ heart.”
In vain, Madeline pushed at Mrs. Wilkins’s indigo redingote to keep it from soiling, but no force could stop the woman’s bear-like embrace.
Madeline’s trampled bonnet peeked from the motherly woman’s reticule. Dredged in dirt, the hat’s ostrich plume lay crooked. Even in haste, her abigail took care of Madeline.
With another clench, Mrs. Wilkins finally let go. “Y’ face?” She yanked from her pocket a crimson cloth and scrubbed Madeline’s chin.
Madeline clasped her friend’s wrist. “Dear, hand me my scarf. I’ll do it.”
Mrs. Wilkins shook her head and kept swatting the mud. She didn’t want to come on this adventure, but how could Madeline be without her strongest ally? It must be the Irish blood bubbling in the abigail’s veins, making her so loyal.
“First a broken wheel, now this.” Mrs. Wilkins added a spit shine to Madeline’s cheek then pivoted to Lord Devonshire. “The stable boys said ye saved her. Bless ye.”
“I…I saw the lass fall in the path of the wagon. I
am the Earl of Devonshire. Very glad to be of assistance.” An unreadable expression set on his countenance as he flicked a rain droplet from his sleeve. “Are there others in your party?”
“There’s me–Mrs. Wilkins–and my lady, Miss Madeline St. James.” She stretched on tiptoes and picked at Madeline’s unraveling chignon, reseating pins and tucking tresses. “And m’ lady’s driver, but he disappeared, the no good lout.”
Great. Mrs. Wilkins just confirmed they were alone. Now he’d be obliged to help. Indebted to a man. Could this day get any worse?
The earl rubbed his jaw. His gaze seemed locked on the colourful scarf.
Another drip from the overcast skies splattered and curled into the sable-brown hair peeking beneath Lord Devonshire’s brim. He was too fine looking, too virile to be trusted. Step-mother’s nephew, the handsome Mr. Kent, imparted that lesson before Madeline left home.
“Mrs. Wilkins, hand me my coins. I need to repay his lordship.”
“No, miss. ‘Tis my duty to escort you to your destination.”
Madeline shook her head. “‘Unnecessary.”
“Cheshire. Please take us there.” Mrs. Wilkins dabbed at her coat. “Like a divine appointm’nt, the earl being here.”
“I can’t speak for divinity, but you might say I’ve been waiting on a sign.” He slipped the cloth from Mrs. Wilkins and waved it like a flag. “Someone brave to show me the way.”
“I suppose we have no choice.” Madeline snatched it from him with trembling fingers. She may be bacon
brained but not helpless or a plaything.
“There’s always a choice. Like should I chase a scoundrel or let you freeze?”
She stilled her shaking palms.
He stepped near, removed his tailcoat, and draped it onto her shoulders. With his thick thumbs, he flipped the collar’s revers to cradle her neck. His touch was gentle. “This should stop your shivers. I’ll have my Mason get blankets.”
Hugging herself beneath the weighty wool, Madeline gaped at Lord Devonshire. “Sir, we haven’t agreed.”
“The drizzle will get worse.” He rotated to Mrs. Wilkins. “The young lady was just in my Berlin. Perhaps the visit was too short to attest to its comfort.”
Trimmed in gold, the carriage could overshadow her father’s. Either the earl possessed great wealth or liked the appearance of it. In her experience, both conditions made men pompous or cruel. She rubbed her elbow again.
Mrs. Wilkins curtsied. “My lord, we’ve two trunks in the stables with our brok’n carriage.”
The earl nodded, opened the door to his Berlin, and then plodded the long lane toward the livery of the coaching inn. Was it confidence or arrogance squaring his shoulders?
He didn’t pivot to check on them, not once. Arrogance.
“Come along, Lady Maddie. Don’t get stubborn. Remember your plan.”
Madeline raised her chin, grasped Mrs. Wilkins’s forearm, and lumbered toward Lord Devonshire’s carriage. “Another obstacle to peace.”
Her friend’s cheeks glowed. “The beginning of
peace, child. It’s the beginning.”
If only Mrs. Wilkins could be right. The unease in Madeline’s spirit disagreed.
****
The temptation to look back almost overtook Justain Delveaux, the Earl of Devonshire. He strode faster to the livery. The girl had been spooked. If he seemed anxious, she’d run.
A fire of independence burned in her jade eyes. He’d have to placate Miss St. James and win her trust. Then she’d lead him to the killer.
At the entry of the hay-filled livery, his driver brushed Athena, Justain’s filly. “Sir, are you ready to give up? The informant isn’t going to show.”
Justain stroked Athena’s thick ebony coat, a shade lighter than Miss St. James’s raven locks. “He didn’t. She did. Look behind me. Are ladies entering my Berlin?”
Mason squinted. “Yes.”
“The young one possesses the red cloth signal. She’s the informant.”
Furrowing his brows, Mason shrugged. “You and your jokes, sir.”
“I’m serious. We’re taking them to Cheshire, probably a clandestine meeting. Never thought to look for a woman. Well, not for an informant. The lass will lead me to lynch–“
“Must you wax poetic?” Mason chortled. “Genteel women shouldn’t be left here/ but…”
“Just say it.”
“We need to leave, sir. Something’s afoot.” Mason wiped water from the brim of his tricorn. “The miners
say a blood vengeance rides tonight.”
“We’ll leave soon, with my new acquaintances.” Why was Mason hedging his words? Since Justain was knee-high, the man never held his tongue.
Rain fell in buckets. Justain moved under the stable’s roof.
Mason and Athena followed. He searched his blue-black flap coat and retrieved his treasured silver flask and Justain’s bottle of tincture. “The filly’s cut is sealed.”
“Superb, but no more of this.” Justain pocketed the tincture. “Put away your spirits and say your peace.”
“This chase won’t bring Lord Richard back.” His driver’s voice grated like a rebuke from the old man, Justain’s father. “You’ve other things to contend.”
Justain concentrated on the steady rhythm of the shower. It blocked the memory of Richard’s last breath and Justain’s mounting guilt. He was to blame for Richard dying. Nothing took precedence over avenging his brother.
“Send blankets to my guests. Have the stable grooms load Miss St. James’s trunks.” He trudged toward the Berlin. This couldn’t be a fool’s errand. He hated being a fool.
****
Madeline forced a smile at Lord Devonshire as he leapt into the Berlin. He sat in the opposing seat, tossed his sodden top hat and gloves onto the floorboards, then pushed wet hair from his face. The rain poured hard minutes after she and Mrs. Wilkins entered his carriage, and it hadn’t lessened.
Seeing him soaked eased her slight agitation at him.
“Thank ye, for savin’ m’ mistress.” Mrs. Wilkins snuggled into the corner of his carriage, her greying red curls rested upon the creamy silk lining the walls. “Ye gen’rous to escort us to Cheshire.” She yawned then winked at Madeline. “So noble and so handsome.”
Heat crept up Madeline’s neck. She didn’t need to be reminded of his looks or his bravery. “We are grateful.”
“Be at ease. It’s not often I play the hero these days.” His sable-brown mop shadowed a lean nose and tanned cheeks. “The escapade gave me needed exercise.”
At least, he remained humoured. Gratitude should weigh on her spirit, but was his deed happenstance or had he followed her? Miles and miles from Hampshire, and the feeling of being chased refused to quit.
A servant stuck his head inside the carriage. Rain drizzled down his uniform causing the braiding on his mantle to droop. “To Cheshire, my lord?”
Twisting a signet ring, Lord Devonshire glanced toward Madeline and Mrs. Wilkins and then turned to the opening. “Yes, Mason, I haven’t changed my mind. My guests have gone to great lengths to find me. I shan’t forsake them.”
What? Why did the earl think she sought him? What tales men must feed each other.
“Yes, my lord.” The frowning servant nodded and shut the heavy door.
Madeline smoothed her bodice, trying to calm the tickle in her stomach. Father told her every kindness held a price. She’d paid enough for trusting Mr. Kent. The pain from his blows to her side persisted.
“Lord Devonshire, we haven’t departed. Pray help us hire a post chaise to ferry my abigail and me to my aunt?”
“No. I will see this through.” He cleared his throat. “I look forward to our conversation.”
Though the earl’s countenance appeared pleasant with his lips curling, he fidgeted his wilted cravat. Dried, the neckcloth might’ve held a little height in a fashionable sense. Was he one of those pompous dandies? Her scarlet handkerchief did hold his interest.
No. If he were, the earl would’ve let Madeline die than risk wrinkles to his clothes. The parade of fortune hunters Step-mother marched through Avington Manor surely would’ve made no effort. The shrewish woman probably hoped the flock of peacocks supping at their home could convince Madeline to accept her nephew for a mate, a lesser of evils.
The carriage lurched forward. Lord Devonshire reclined as if he posed for a portrait. His steady gaze set upon her.
Did he want his jacket returned? Did her slipping bonnet offend him? She righted it and smoothed its bent feather. “May I at least reimburse the livery expenses for my carriage?”
“Keep your precious gold coins. ‘Tis my honour to serve you, Miss St. James.” He grinned. Smooth white teeth peeked. “The opportunity to pull a headstrong beauty from harm’s way is something I relish.”
“Would you let a thief abscond with your coins?”
His smile dissolved. “No. I protect what is mine, and I’ll avenge what is stolen.”
Few had the patience for her opinions. She rolled one of the silver buttons of his jacket along her thumb.
“Praise be unto Prov…” Mrs. Wilkins snorted a harsh noise, her chin bobbling in the throes of sleep. With a fold and a tuck, Madeline secured the dear woman’s blanket then tugged a book from the abigail’s reticule.
“You two are my first guests in this new coach.” The earl’s tone was low.
He needn’t be concerned about awakening Mrs. Wilkins. After this harrowing day, wild elephants couldn’t rouse her.
Slumping near the window, Madeline glanced at the retreating landscape, the evergreens reflecting in the puddles. She’d enjoy nature now, before they crossed the Severn Gorge. Seeing the bottomless chasm would rattle her frayed nerves. The last time, ten years ago, she took this route with her parents and had curled next to Mama and hid within the folds of her shawl. Abba Father, please allow each of my steps to be surefooted. Tell Mama I miss her.
Lord Devonshire inched closer. Though the carriage rocked with each clip-clop of the horse team, he didn’t sway. His tall frame sat erect like a sleek marble sculpture. “Is there anything I can do to make you comfortable?”
Mrs. Wilkins’s bonnet fell onto her lap, her snores bleating to an embarrassing high pitch. The symphony of snoots quieted, but not before one protracted trumpet.
“No, sir.” Madeline’s cheeks warmed. Explaining her hasty exodus from Avington would lower his opinion of her, not that she needed his good opinion.
Egad. Step-mother was right. Madeline did over think things. She yanked her bookmark, flipped a few pages, and tried to lose herself in the passage.
He rapped the book and lowered it. “You’ll ruin your sight, reading all the way to Cheshire. At our next stop, I’ll have a lantern set down, unless I can capture your interest.”
Another opportunist. Yes, he’d saved her from being trampled, but he was still a man. Did they do anything but seek their own pleasures? Like Mr. Kent.
Kent’s sibilant whispers turned to yells ringing in her ear. He threatened to kill her for refusing his proposal. What type of life would she have if she’d eloped with a man of such vile temperament? She shuddered. Shoving her novel in Kent’s eye darkened it and helped her escape.
“Miss St. James? Are you well?”
“Yes.” She glanced at her wet hero. “You must be cold. I should return this.” She lifted the tailcoat an inch and an ache rippled along her elbow. She clenched her teeth and let the jacket fall back to her shoulders.
“Just damp.” He whipped his sleeves, rustling ivory buttons. “You seem to favour your right arm. Did I injure you in our last embrace?”
“No…no/ my lord.” Her breath hitched, and she sniffed an odour similar to fresh dye. It reeked. She huddled deeper in the tailcoat and swathed her nostrils. The mild fragrance of sandalwood lingered in Lord Devonshire’s jacket. Peace reined in every storm, and this one smelled of safety, like her father’s robes.
The earl shifted his boots hard onto the floor. “Some say confession is good for the soul. Do tell. Why were you at Tilford–a gaming den, no less?”
Madeline wobbled on the tufted cushion. “My carriage broke down. One usually has no choice where this happens.”
“And your driver’s missing? Such a fanciful story.
I love a quality Banbury.” He folded his arms like a solicitor in the midst of an inquiry. “Are you running from or to someone?”
To my aunt in Cheshire, Lady Cecil Glaston. She’s to tour Italy with me.” Well, it would be the plan once Madeline convinced the art patroness. Madeline intended to sculpt such a stirring picture, Aunt would be anxious to see Michelangelo’s David and abandon holding a matchmaking season. After Mr. Kent’s betrayal, Madeline wasn’t ready to belong to any man.
“I think you are running from someone whose wrath you fear. Don’t lose courage. So much trouble is wrought from silence.” For one second, the earl’s sky-blue pools seemed to ripple with hurt before he blinked them clear. “We mustn’t allow this.”
She squinted at Lord Devonshire. Could he know she’d kept quiet about Mr. Kent?
“Help me, Miss St. James, my brave lass?”
Madeline’s heart responded to the plea, thundering within her ribs, but could she be of aid without inviting Kent’s revenge?
Lord Devonshire reached for her hand. “Tell me your secret. My dear, you can trust me.”

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.
Madeline’s Protector



COPYRIGHT 2012 by Vanessa Riley



All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or Pelican Ventures, LLC except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.



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Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated are taken from the King James translation, public domain.



Cover Art by Nicola Martinez



White Rose Publishing, a division of Pelican Ventures, LLC www.pelicanbookgroup.com PO Box 1738 *Aztec, NM * 87410



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Publishing History First White Rose Edition, 2013 Print Edition ISBN 978-1-61116-226-4 Electronic Edition ISBN 978-1-61116-225-7

Published in the United States of America

Psalm 91 for Mothers

April 30th, 2013

It 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!

Today’s Wild Card author is:
Peggy Joyce Ruth
and the book:
Psalm 91 for Mothers
Charisma House (March 5, 2013)
***Special thanks to Althea Thompson for sending me a review copy.***
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Peggy Joyce Ruth and her husband, Jack, are former pastors from Brownwood, Texas. Peggy has taught an adult Bible study each week at her church for the past thirty years. She is a popular conference speaker and continues to teach a weekly radio Bible study called Better Living on KPSM and KBUB.
Visit the author’s website.



SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:

In Psalm 91 for Mothers, Peggy Joyce Ruth takes the concept from her best-selling book Psalm 91 and applies it to her personal experience as a mother and grandmother. With compelling, emotional stories from her life and the lives of others who have been touched by this psalm, she guides you through a personal study, explaining verse by verse God’s promises of protection, provision, and blessing for your children.

Product Details:

List Price: $12.99

Paperback: 192 pages

Publisher: Charisma House (March 5, 2013)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 1616387343

ISBN-13: 978-1616387341

ISLAND BREEZES

This book is not just for women who have children at home. This book is not just for women who have children. It’s for all women whether they have family or are alone.

Psalm 91 is the go to chapter for safety and protection. Just as you might have sought safety in the arms of your parents as a child, you can still seek shelter in your heavenly father’s arms.

This book follows Psalm 91 verse by verse to bring this psalm of protection deeper into our hearts.
AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:

Where Is My Dwelling Place?

He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High will abide in the shadow of the Almighty. —Psalm 91:1

Think for just a minute of where, more than anyplace else in the world, you like to be when you want to feel protected and peaceful. I remember when I was a little girl and would wake up in the middle of the night and feel frightened. I would tiptoe down to my mother and dad’s room and very quietly slip in bed with them. As I lay there—silently listening to them breathe and feeling all cozy and protected—before I knew it, the fear was gone, and I would be sound asleep.

I am sure you can think of something that represents security to you personally. When I think of security and protection, I have a couple of childhood memories that automatically come to mind. My dad was a large, muscular man who played football during his high school and college years, but he interrupted his education to serve in the military during World War II. Mother, who was pregnant with my little brother, and I lived with my grandparents in San Saba while Dad was in the service. As young as I was, I vividly remember one ecstatically happy day when my dad unexpectedly opened the door and walked into my grandmother’s living room. Before that eventful day I had been tormented with fears because some neighborhood children had told me I would never see my dad again. Like kids telling a ghost story, they taunted me that my dad would come home in a box. When he walked through that door that day, a sense of peace and security came over me and stayed with me for the rest of his time in the army.

My Father, Albert Crow

It was past time for my baby brother to be born, and I found out when I was older that Dad’s outfit at the time was being relocated by train from Long Beach, California, to Virginia Beach, Virginia. The train was coming through Fort Worth, Texas, on its way to Virginia, so my dad caught a ride from Fort Worth to San Saba in the hopes of seeing his new son. He then hitchhiked until he caught up with the train shortly before it reached Virginia Beach. The memory of his walking into that room still brings a feeling of peaceful calm to my soul. In fact, that incident set the stage for later seeking the security a heavenly Father’s presence could bring.

When I think of dwelling in the shelter of God, I have another childhood memory that always comes to mind. My parents would often take my younger brother and sister and me to a lake. There was a wonderful place to fish for perch that very few people knew about, and we children loved to perch fish. It was such a thrill to see the cork begin to bobble and then suddenly go completely out of sight. There were very few things that I liked better than jerking back on that old cane pole and landing a huge perch. Dad had a good reason for having us catch those perch. They were what he used for bait on the trotline that he had stretched out across one of the secret coves at the lake.

Dad and family on fishing trip

Dad would drive the boat over to the place where his trotline was located. Then he would cut off the boat motor and inch the boat across the water as he ran the trotline. That’s what he called it when he would hold onto to the trotline with his hands and pull the boat alongside all the hooks he had baited in hopes that he had caught a big catfish. A trotline was like having about twenty-five fishing poles baited and placed all the way across the lake.

I loved to perch fish, but it was an even greater thrill when Dad would get to a place where the trotline rope would begin to jerk almost out of his hand. That meant he had hooked a fish. It was then that all three of us children would watch, wideeyed, as Dad wrestled with that line until finally, in victory, he would flip that huge catfish over the side of the boat, right at our feet. Money could never buy that kind of excitement! The circus and a carnival all rolled up into one couldn’t give us that kind of a thrill.

One of those outings proved to be more exciting than most, turning out to be an action-packed experience that I will never forget. It had been a beautiful day when we started out, but by the time we finished our perch fishing and were headed toward the trotline, everything changed. A storm came up on the lake so suddenly there was no time to get back to the boat dock. The sky turned black, lightning was flashing, and drops of rain were falling so hard that they stung our skin when they hit. Then, moments later, we were in the middle of a hailstorm with large, marble-sized hail.

I could see the fear in my mother’s eyes, and I knew we were in danger. But before I had time to wonder what we were going to do, Dad had driven the boat to the rugged shoreline of the only island on the lake. There are many boat docks that surround the island now, but back then it looked like an abandoned island with absolutely no place to take refuge from the storm. In just moments Dad had us all out of the boat and ordered the three of us to lie down beside our mother on the ground. Quickly pulling a canvas tarp out of the bottom of the boat, he knelt down on the ground beside us and pulled that tarp up over all five of us. That storm raged outside the homemade tent he had made—the rain beat down, the lightning flashed, and the thunder rolled. But all I could think about was how it felt to have his arms around us. There was a certain peace that is hard to explain as we lay there under the protection of the shield my father had provided. In fact, I had never felt as safe and secure in my entire life. I can remember thinking that I wished the storm would last forever. I didn’t want anything to spoil the wonderful security I felt that day—there in our secret hiding place. Feeling my father’s strong, protective arms around me, I wanted it to never end.

Although I have never forgotten that experience when we were fishing at the lake, today it has taken on new meaning. Just as Dad put a tarp over us to shield us from the storm, our heavenly Father has a secret place in His arms that protects us from the storms that are raging in the world around us.

Fear is running rampant in the world today. Even children who have the security of a home filled with the love of a mother and father cannot help but sense the growing anxiety that is plaguing our schools, our streets, our newspapers, and our televisions. Suicides are becoming a common occurrence. But did you know that this place in God is real for anyone who wants to seek refuge in Him? It is a literal place of physical safety and security that God tells us about in this Psalm 91.

This secret place is literal, but it is also conditional! In verse 1 of Psalm 91 God lists our part of the condition before He even mentions the promises included in His part. That’s because our part has to come first. To abide in the shadow of the Almighty, we must first choose to dwell in the shelter of the Most High.

The question is, how do we dwell in the security and shelter of the Most High? It is more than an intellectual experience. This verse speaks of a dwelling place in which we can be physically protected if we run to Him. You may utterly believe that God is your refuge, and you may give mental assent to it in your prayer time, but unless you actually get up and run to the shelter—you will never experience it. I call that place of refuge a love walk!

Most children have a secret hideout where they feel all safe and secure, hidden away from the whole world. They need to be taught, however, that those places where they feel protected are nice, but a hideout cannot keep them safe from everything. It will be life changing, however, when they are told that there is a place of shelter that will keep them protected from every evil this world has ever known. What a treasure you are leaving them when you teach them that God says He is a place of real safety from any bad thing they can think of in the whole earth—if they will run to Him. And how do they run to God? They don’t run there with their feet. They run to God with their heart! They need to be taught that they are running to God every time they think about Him—every time they tell the Lord that they love Him.

Cullen and Meritt

When our grandchildren Cullen and Meritt were young, they would often stay the night with us. The moment they finished breakfast, each would run to his own secret place to spend some time talking with God. Cullen found a place behind the couch in the den, and Meritt headed behind the lamp table in the corner of our bedroom. Those places became very special to them.

Where is your secret place? Everyone needs the security and shelter of a secret place with the Most High.