5/3/18

Romance Snippet:


 It's funny how the writing process goes -- I was working on a new story, a contemporary romance, which is a switch for me, when suddenly there was a knock on my right brain door.  Two characters were standing there, acting as if I'd expected them -- Gwen and Adam.  

Where'd they come from?  And how did my right brain recognize them, along with the fact that it came up with a title for a new series, right then and there:  The Mr. Librarian Romance series?  My left brain was tapping at the window, trying to remind me about the other story I was working on.  But no matter what I did, Gwen and Adam kept surfacing -- as I drove home from work, as I worked in the garden, as I tossed and turned in bed at night.

So I finally gave in, let them stay, put the other story aside -- my apologies to those characters, but they seem the patient type -- and started in on this one.  

Contemporary, in the first person (which I'm not sure about, but thought I'd try) and located on Cape Cod, which I love dearly.  

* * *


A Love Long Overdue
a Mr. Librarian Romance


ONE


"So, did you hear about the new librarian?"

"What happened to the old one?"

"Hello?  Remember, she retired just before the holidays last year."

I munched on my chicken caesar wrap, keeping one eye on a lazy fly that kept circling my plate.

"Hmmm, no, can't say I remember that.  But then again I'm not at the library that often.  Actually, never, now that I think about it."  Who had time these days, working two part-time jobs to make ends meet didn't leave me much time for reading.  I was lucky if I remembered to DVR my favorite television series. 

Julie glanced over at me, her eyes squinting in deep thought.

"You work too hard."

Understatement if I ever heard one.  I laughed.

"You're right.  So who's the new lady librarian?"  I downed my ice tea.  God, who knew it would be this hot in May, especially on the Cape where the ocean breezes usually didn't warm up until later in June.

"Ha, no lady -- it's a guy!" 

"No shit. A guy?  Must be an old fuddy-duddy, an absent-minded professor type, uh?"  I stretched out my long legs, noting how white and pasty they looked in the midday sunlight.  I wondered if I could squeak in a few tanning sessions between jobs.  Probably not; better to just keep wearing jeans and long skirts.  It'd be cheaper, too.

Julie poked me with a long, hot pink fake finger nail.

"Nope, got that wrong.  He's hot.  Very hot.”

"On a scale?"  Our measuring system for new prospects.  Although it never seemed to be accurate.  How many times had Julie and I given a guy the "hot" or "very hot" rating, only to find out he was a dud, a doofus, a big fat zero.

"Most definitely a nine; maybe even a ten."  She stretched out her legs after finishing off the cheeseburger and fries.  Even though Julie's legs were short, they were so tan they made my eyes water.  But then again, Julie was rolling in dough, her salon and spa business the busiest place in town.  It was the local watering hole for most of the women over twenty, a place where you could hunt and gather gossip, learn tips about who to date and who to avoid like the plague, and indulge in a free glass of wine after 3 o'clock most afternoons.

"What makes him a ten?  And what's his name?"  I watched as a fishing boat pulled into the harbor, a few seals following in its wake, hoping for the cast-offs.  I recognized the boat and spotted Hank steering inside the small cabin. My current on-again, off-again beau.  Good looking but not too much upstairs.  A beer and Boston Celtics kind of guy, which was all right with me.  For now, anyway.  I couldn't handle anything deeper at the moment.  The rest I’d held off on because . . . well, not sure.  Maybe my libido was running on empty at the moment.  Two jobs and college loans to pay off could do that to a girl.  Except I wasn’t a ‘girl’ any longer.  Closing in on the mid-thirties mark, I figured I was nearing ‘crone’.

Julie signaled for the check and a refill on her coffee. She looked over at me, and I started to break a sweat.  Julie had a way about her that unnerved me more times than I liked to admit.  Her stare was like a laser, picking up on my ticks and twitches, when I was due for my period, or a highlighting of my somewhat dull brown hair. 

"Get this -- he's from Scotland, thirty-six, tall, dark hair and blue eyes.  Be still my heart!"

"Name?"  My mind was abuzz, trying to picture a tall, dark, brooding Scotsman.  I wondered if he wore a kilt.  Every woman in the world probably wonders what’s under the kilt.  Definitely crunch time for that tanning parlor.

Julie closed her eyes for a second, conjuring up the guy's name. Obviously, she'd spent too much time taking inventory of his physical aspects to remember his name.  Which made me wonder how many women in this small town had done the same already.  Where had I been during all this brouhaha?

"Adam.  Adam Carmichael.  Nice, uh?"  There was that laser stare of hers again.  I kept my head averted and my eyes on the fishing boat, then waved to Hank when he looked up and spotted me.  He gave me that half-grin that used to make my heart beat faster, but now it just kept thudding steadily in my chest.  Thump, thump, thump.  Slow and steady.  Visions of muscular legs and a kilt interefered with my thought process. 

"Adam Carmichael," I said, liking the way it sounded, the way the name rolled off my tongue.  I slapped my legs, stood up and stretched to my full five foot, ten inch height, flipping the thick rope of braid over my shoulder.  Riding a bike around town in this heat required that masses of hair must be relegated to a braid or I'd internally combust.

"I think it's time I renewed my library card," I chirped, wanting to hit the road before Hank headed our way.  Not that I was avoiding him.  But then again there was a new guy to investigate, possibly with a kilt.  I reached for my shoulder bag and handed Julie a ten dollar bill.  "Will that cover it?"  She waved it aside. 

"First off, you never had a library card in your life, dumb-ass.  And second, keep that ten and come by for your highlighting. You're looking a bit peeked these days.  You need more zip." 

We walked out to the parking lot, and I snagged my bike from the side of the cafe.  Yup, zip, that's what I needed.  Zip in my hair, zip in some of my body parts.  Mostly my body parts.  They'd been dormant for so long, I sometimes wondered if I had moved into menopause and not even realized it. 

Zip. Adam Carmichael, male librarian.  Well, I could think of worse things, but seducing a librarian, a bookish-geek type who happened to be hot-looking wouldn't be a bad way to spend the summer months now, would it?  Life on the Cape was looking up.

I swung myself onto the bike and skimmed along the side road, heading for the main drag that would eventually bring me up to the library.  But at the next stop sign, I paused for a moment, looking down at the pale legs, the cutoff shorts, the cheesy t-shirt.  I fingered the braid while I assessed my appearance.

Nah, this wasn't going to work.  I needed a shower, the highlights, some make-up first.  I'd have to dig through my trunk for a summer dress, my winter clothes still hanging in the closet. But it wouldn't hurt to ride by the library, would it?  Maybe Adam Carmichael would be outside taking his lunch break or sitting on one of the park benches, chatting with the patrons.

I took off once again and a few minutes later crested the small rise in the road.  The Jefferson Library, built in the late 19th century, sat on a hill overlooking the town.  It had one of the best views -- or so I heard, seeing as I'd never stepped foot inside the library in all the years I'd lived here. 

Avoiding the cars at the traffic circle, I pulled onto the sidewalk and continued on foot until I could rest the bike against a tree and observe the front doors.  Mothers and toddlers were surging out, while several seniors tried to move past the tribes and get into the building.  It was school break week, so several teens were lying on the grass, soaking in the sun; two of them were tossing a Frisbee half-heartedly.

And then I saw him. It had to be Mr. Librarian.  He towered over everyone else, wavy dark hair tickling against the open collar of a crisp, white shirt. My fingers started tingling wondering how it would feel to run them through those waves.  Would it feel like silk?  Or maybe thick and wiry? 

As he approached the teens, I thought, oh yeah, here it comes.  He's going to ask them to stop, to move away, blah, blah, blah.  Just like old lady what's her name.  I leaned against the tree and waited for the confrontation.  The teens looked up as he drew closer, their expressions taking on the typical I'm bored, I don't want to be here mask.

I noticed that the cut of his khakis was nice and snug around his hips and butt.  A very nice butt, too.  I'd expected a flabby butt from sitting around reading all day.  And glasses.  He wasn't wearing glasses, which should be part-and-parcel of the librarian uniform, shouldn't it? 

He stopped and raised his hand.  The teens looked at each other and then one of them tossed the Frisbee.  Hard.  The thing sliced through the air at least two feet over his head.  Carmichael made a deft leap and caught it.  No wobbles, sweet and clean.  He was grinning like a kid as he let go the Frisbee with a snap of his wrist, low and swift, skimming the grass, making the other teen lunge for it, catching it just in time before he hit the ground. 

I couldn't hear what they were saying to each other, but it was clear that Carmichael had just made two new friends.  Not too shabby, Mr. Librarian, I thought.  And then he looked over in my direction, lifting one brow in question.  I leaned back, trying to slip around the tree trunk, but not before he smiled and gave a half-wave. 

Shit!  He’d caught me scoping him out, staring at him. Maybe he really did wear glasses, maybe he was near-sighted.  Yeah, right.  And maybe I'm blonde, stacked and have oodles of money in the bank.  I yanked the bike and headed off in the opposite direction, pedaling as fast as I could.  I'd take the back roads to my little apartment and re-think this librarian thing.

Maybe Hank was okay.  I'd just stick with the familiar, the known factor.  No stress, no embarrassing moments like just before.  And maybe I'd spend the rest of my life popping beers and watching the sports channels with Hank. 

Nope, not going to happen.  Wheeling the bike onto the back porch, I secured the lock and sat on the top step, staring out into the garden that wrapped around the backyard of the three-family house.  Daffodils and tulips dotted the beds under flowering spikes of forsythia.  In the far corner, a large magnolia tree swayed in the warm breeze that lifted its tentacles of creamy white, star-like blossoms.  It made me think about the Japanese paintings I'd seen in the MFA in Boston years ago, a place I retreated to often when I was slogging my way through college, finally earning my degree in accounting.

And where was I now, almost ten years later?  Working two jobs, crunching numbers for two local CPA firms.  Exciting stuff, uh?  Something had to change and soon.  I didn't know what, but I just knew that if I didn't make something happen, my life would continue to slide along, day by day, year after year until one day I found myself filing for Medicare.

I yanked up a weed that was coming up through the step, squashing it in my hand with more force than necessary.  I'd watched my mom and dad slide along like that, always making plans to do something -- travel, install a new kitchen, move to the city once the kids were grown and out of the house.  But they never did.  Like Hank, it was television, sports, news, dinner, then bed.  Same thing the next day, the next week, the next year until they died.

I sighed.  This rummaging about in the past was doing me no good at all.  Live for today, plan for tomorrow.  I jumped up and climbed the back stairs to my apartment on the third floor.  I flipped on the AC in the living/dining/kitchen area, all one large space under the eaves of the house, then stepped into the bedroom at the opposite end of the house and hit the AC button, moving it to high.  The top floor tended to trap the heat from below, so I spent most of the year in shorts and t-shirts even if it was snowing outside.  Sometimes I think the second job was just to pay for my electric bill.  But with three dormer windows, east, south and west, each with a tiny balcony, I was more than content with my third-floor aerie.  The views alone were amazing and the light was incredible.

Hitting the speed dial of my cell, I made an appointment for a tanning session later that afternoon, then called Julie to see if she could squeeze me in for a touch-up.  After a good long soak in the tiny shower, all scrubbed and cleaned from head to toe, I applied a honeysuckle-scented lotion and did my toe nails in a soft, bronzy shade.  Forget about my fingernails -- I tended to gnaw on them ever since I quit smoking eight years ago.  There was little to work with there. 

The hair I would leave for Julie to deal with.  I moved off to the closet and squirreled around in the trunk holding my summer clothes and came up with a dandy pair of white jeans and a navy-blue V-neck top, the deep blue setting off my hazel-green eyes.  Some mascara and a dab of toned lip gloss, finished off with a pair of silver hoop earrings, completed the ensemble.  I stepped back and looked in the full-length mirror on the back of the bedroom door.

Okay, not to panic.  Still in good shape.  Flat tummy, tight ass, pale skin fairly well covered up for now.  Hair will be tackled shortly.  Since I'd be driving my clunker there was no need for the braid.  I'd let the hair do its thing, loose and somewhat wild, tiny corkscrews framing my face.  But Julie would tame those down. 

Shoes or sandals?  I crawled on the floor next to the bed and reached under, feeling for the familiar ballet flats dotted with flowers.  Cute but not silly.  I blew off the dust bunnies and wiped the flats down with a damp wash cloth.  I made a note to vacuum under the bed, not just around it.

I had some time before the tanning session, so I puttered around the place, scooping up the week's debris -- newspapers, tissues, yesterday's dinner still sitting on the coffee table.  I refilled the bird feeder attached to the kitchen window, then decided to cut some flowers for the apartment. It needed color after the long winter months.  I dashed down the stairs again and out into the yard.  My landlord, Homer Anderson, always kept the side door to the bank of garages unlocked, so I picked up a pair of small shears and headed toward the daffodils. 

The sound of a car caught my attention as I leaned down and started snipping.  A door slammed and footsteps sounded on the gravel driveway.  I glanced over my shoulder and almost fell over.  Thank god for the surrounding shrubs because there was Adam Carmichael heading down the driveway toward the front of the house, carrying a large duffle bag and another slung over his shoulder.  Then he disappeared around the corner of the house.  I sat down hard on the grass.  

Oh, come on, this must be a dream!  No, a bad nightmare.  Mr. Librarian living in the same house as me?  It couldn't be.  Maybe he had an evil twin, a doppelganger?  Maybe that chicken caesar wrap was bad and I was suffering from food poisoning? 

The sound of footsteps returned, so I did a fast crawl on my hands and knees until I was hidden under a large evergreen.  Peeking through the branches, I could see Carmichael pulling bags of groceries from the local market out of the trunk.  He turned and looked out at the back yard, frowning.  He put the bags back and started to walk toward the garden. 

I looked over my shoulder to see what was bothering him.  The shears and daffodils lay only about ten feet away where I had ditched them before finding my hidey-hole.  I scooted back a bit more, not breathing, watching him draw closer.  He stopped and looked around, then bent down to pick up the flowers and shears.  He turned his head.  I froze.

*   *   *
Would you like to see more? 
Stay tuned for Romance Snippet Wednesday!
 

3/20/18

Free for Spring!

 https://www.books2read.com/u/4jKVkX

(with the exception of Amazon)

I knew when I ended the first book in the series, Snowbound Seductions, that I had to write a love story for Lady Alexandra and the good Major. Betrayed in Brighton carries a different tone than the other two novellas in this series. For the first time, I created a "bad guy" -- wow, that was fun! -- and brought back some of my favorite characters from Snowbound Seductions, such as Lady Caro. But ultimately, it was digging deeper into Alexandra's grief, Pendleton's frustration and their abiding love that made this story one of my favorites. I truly hope you enjoy Betrayed in Brighton.
 

Book Two in The Merry Widow series features the fiery Lady Alexandra Chase and lusty Scotsman, Major Pendleton. Sent behind enemy lines to track down a traitor, Pendleton disappears just before the Battle of Waterloo. One year later, Lady Alexandra still waits for his return -- if he's alive.

After escaping imprisonment, Pendleton returns to England, still undercover, anxious to reach Alexandra. But now he's a hunted man, the traitor at large and intent on destroying him. Will they ever be together again? Will Alexandra and Pendleton survive long enough to find out?


Happy Reading and Happy Spring!


2/13/18

Final Days of Freebie Ebook!

A special for Valentine's Day --  Passionate Persuasions is now FREE at the following sites:   Apple iBooks, Barnes & Noble Nook, Kobo and other international distributors [Apologies to Kindle users -- Amazon does not allow a freebie unless it's under the KDP Select program].

And, of course, your honest review is most welcome!  

1/23/18

Comfort Food

Winter seems the perfect time to take a break from writing, scouring Facebook and Twitter, scrambling for those book reviews and to simply step back and take a deep breath.  Because, despite the weather now, we know that spring will be here in a matter of eight weeks or so.

And if you're into gardening like I am, that means another stress level, although one I welcome -  at least for the first few weeks until my back is screaming in pain if I have to lift one more bag of garden soil or mulch!  But that hard work pays off when I gaze out on the back lawns and drink in the view of English roses, clematis twining up through the deck railings, the colorful pots of impatiens and dahlias -- oh, my heart sings then.  But I digress -- that's down the road.  

Right now I wanted to do something with my hands.  Crochet?  Knit?  No, did so much of that during the late summer and fall.  Painting?  No, not really.  

Something with my hands; something I could eat.  Eating in winter is a big thing for me. So I decided to make bread.

But not just any bread.  Artisan bread.  You know the kind -- big and round and crusty, where you pull off hunks of it and slather it with butter. Yummmm!  

Luckily I found a recipe online (click here -- so how generous I can be when my tummy is full?) -- which did not require kneading.  Cool!   Very simple to follow --

And here's the result:


Now isn't that a thing of beauty, I ask you?  And in that recipe, the woman mentions other things you could add, such as rosemary, cheese, cranberries, etc.   

Well, I'll probably be making a few more of these before I return to the computer and begin working on the next romance.  What am I planning on?  It'll be something different than my regencies -- always trying to stretch myself as a writer.  So stay tuned -- or better yet, sign up for my newsletter and be the first to find out more! 

Happy Baking! 
Claire

1/11/18

New Reading List for New Year

Well, it's time for a change!  Oh, sure, I'll still be reading my romance novels (already have a stack waiting by the fireplace), but I still have this feeling that I'd like to expand my reading choices, to stretch myself, both as a reader and a writer, sort of replenish the well of inspiration.

So here's my new reading theme for 2018 --  Armchair Travel!  Yes, it's easy, not costly and yet I can travel as far and as wide as I'd like, when I like.  Doesn't that sound wonderful?  And, in the meantime, these books may spark the little gray cells as to new venues for my romance stories -- it's a win, win, as far as I'm concerned.  Once again, I am not providing links to purchase;  this is purely for your exploratory pleasure! 

MEMOIRS:



A Year in the World: Journeys of a Passionate Traveller by Frances Mayes



Paris to the Past: Traveling through French History by Train by Ina Caro






Thistle Soup: a Ladleful of Scottish Life by Peter Kerr



Sea Room: an Island Lifein the Hebrides by Adam Nicholson






Castles in the Air by Judy Corbett













The Dog who ate the Truffle: a Memoir of Stories and Recipes from Umbria by Suzanne Carriero












(I just love this cover!)  The Woman who Fell from the Sky: an American Journalist in Yemen by Jennifer Steil











A House in Fez by Suzanne Clarke












That Summer in Sicily by Marlena de Blasi












Thousand Days in Venice by M. deBlasi







FICTION NOVELS:





Best Exotic Marigold Hotel by Deborah Moggach












Heartbreak Hotel by D. Moggach













The Hundred Foot Journey by Richard Morais







Do you have any titles you'd like to share on this subject/genre?  Just leave a comment!

"There is no frigate like a book."  Emily Dickinson

1/3/18

Top Ten Romance Novels for 2017:

Here are my Top 10 choices that I truly enjoyed reading this year, both historical and contemporary.  So here goes:


#1:  Breathing Room by Susan Elizabeth Phillips.  All I can say is . . . wow (hear that heavy sigh in the background? That would be me!).  I've read others by Phillips but this was my first and the best. I'll probably go buy my own copy so I can re-read anytime I want!








#2:  Somebody to Love by Kristan Higgins.  Delightful heroine and hero -- believable, too, which is sometimes difficult to pull off.  And, if you're not familiar with Higgins, her secondary characters are a whole world unto themselves!








#3:  Perfect Match by K. Higgins (yes, again!).  This novel is set in her Blue Heron series in upstate New York and, as above, she digs in deep with these two lovers and the extended families in a tiny town of 700+.









#4:  An Improper Arrangement by Kasey Michaels (Regency).  If you love to laugh while you swoon at the sensuous setting and lovers, Michaels does a superb job in this romance.  I've actually read it twice within one year, it was that good!









#5:  Romancing the Duke by Tessa Dare (Late Regency).  A quirky heroine and a hero who broods better than Rochester, this is another delightful take on the traditional historical romance, with an hysterical furry character who steals the scene, especially towards the end (no spoilers here, please)!









#6: Rake's Progress by Marion Chesney (Regency).  Now this is a throwback to the late 1980s / early 1990s when M.C. Beaton was writing romance -- her books are swift, funny with a deft twist of satire on the genre itself.  This is part of her "School for Manners" series -- all good reads, in addition to her other series. If you can find an old copy at your local library, grab it and enjoy!







#7:  Mrs. Drew Plays Her Hand by Carla Kelly (Regency).  Carla Kelly writes a more "gentle" regency with very little sex, but still quite sensuous in her hints and such.  Her writing is elegant and her characterizations real.  If you've never read Kelly, try it.








#8:  Hearts on Fire by Julia Gabriel.  Set along the shores of the Chesapeake Bay area, Gabriel's writing is strong and sensuous (I think this is my favorite word of the day!), and the angst between heroine and hero is palpable.  And if you like quilting, this will just add another layer of enjoyment.








#9:  It Happened in Scotland by Patience Griffin.  Griffin sets her series in the same little town on the shores of eastern Scotland and, once again, quilters from all over the world come to enjoy a retreat in this quaint village -- apparently populated by the most rugged, handsome men in Scotland -- and all up for grabs (pardon my pun)!  Any one of her novels will delight.







#10:  Sweet Talk Me by Kieran Kramer.  Set in South Carolina's low country, Kramer's hero will take your breath away.  Her story and secondary characters, like Higgins, help bring the reader along in this wonderful, fun-loving romance.






So there it is -- my preferred Top Ten Romances for 2017.  Believe me, there are many more I could have added (including my own [blush]), but I find these authors stellar in their craft and in their storytelling abilities.  Notice I did not put any links attached for purchasing as I am not promoting any particular bookseller in print or in digital.  And, yes, some of these titles are not in the bestselling lists of 2017 -- I tend to like to bide my time and not scramble to buy the newest except every once in awhile.

Stay tuned for my next post in which I reveal my "new" reading list for 2018 -- I always have a list going somewhere in my head, which I'll be happy to share with you soon!


A book is like a garden carried in the pocket.
Chinese Proverb

Let's take the chill off!

Yup, it's a tad chilly out there now and we're just into February, so I thought we could use some heat!  If you haven't already ...