HAPPY MONDAY! If there is such a thing. I think it's about as likely to encounter as a unicorn or a bad picture of Channing Tatum. <----in other words NEVER! :) hehe
Okay, so I know there has been a lot going on in the last two weeks, before Pocketful of Sand released. I've had a ton of giveaways and contests and comments and posts and all sorts of fun stuff. I'm sorry that I have yet to respond to a lot of things, but rest assured that I will be catching up with ALL OF IT this week.
When I scheduled the release of Pocketful of Sand, I didn't realize that it would collide with so many other important things. It was set to come out on March 15th, which was a good date it seemed. As it turned out, there was a signing on March 14th, but I thought to myself that I could probably work around that, so I didn't panic. But then I had a small change in a deadline with Berkley, which put my third Tall, Dark and Dangerous book DUE on March 15th as well. Sooooo, I had to finish that book by March 11th so that I could leave for the beach for a signing on March 14th and then focus on Pocketful's release on March 15th. Although a bit crazy and hectic, that didn't sound completely out of the realm of possibility, so I was hanging in there.
Then all hell broke loose. LOL
My mom found out on the 12th that her first chemo appointment would be on March 19th, we had an unfriendly neighbor at the condo at the beach, my book went live on some sites a day early and the parking garage ceiling collapsed on my car release day morning. When we got back home, I had a half day to recover when my editor called and said she had edits for me that she needed by Wednesday, on the day when I was supposed to leave to travel to Virginia to be with my mom during chemo. So, I spent the following two days holed up in my office doing edits and then left for Virginia by the skin of my teeth on Wednesday afternoon. I spent Thursday at the hospital with Mom, which was traumatic for her because, among other things, they thought she was having a reaction to the chemo. I stayed with her until yesterday (Sunday) to make sure she wasn't going to have any problems, as the first three days are critical.
And now I'm back.
I say allllll that to say this: I'm so sorry I've been so sporadic in my posting and responding. The only thing I could really do was schedule posts to Facebook so that no one would think I'd fallen off the face of the earth. But THANK YOU SO MUCH for your patience, because now I'm back in the saddle and ready to tackle EVERYTHING!
So...
If you've been notified of winning something, I'll be mailing out all swag packs, paperbacks and other goodies early next week. I'm going to sort through everything and get packages ready this week. If you haven't heard back from me after you've submitted something, I'll be doing that today, too. In other words, expect to hear from me this week and to get your package(s) in about two weeks.
Thank you for being awesome and understanding. 2015 is trying to whip my butt, but I'm determined to stand my ground:) hehe *pulls self up by bootstraps* I'm going in, y'all! Wish me luck!
p.s. I know I've said it before, but I think it bears repeating. Often. THANK YOU A MILLION TIMES FROM THE VERY, VERY BOTTOM OF MY HEART to everyone who read and loved and left a review and told a friend about Pocketful of Sand. Your love has been incredible and overwhelming and AMAZING. Just like y'all. I'm grateful right down to my very bones. <3 <3
Monday, March 23, 2015
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
Pocketful of Sand Ma-HOO-ssive giveaway!
The last few days have been CAA-RA-ZAY! I traveled to Myrtle Beach for a signing on Saturday, my book went live early and then Sunday the parking garage ceiling collapsed on our car and we had to drive home much later than expected. Yesterday, I got edits back from my editor and she needs them by Wednesday. O_O Can you see my head spinning off? hehe That's why I'm a little late in posting about this giveaway.
To celebrate the release of Pocketful of Sand, I'm doing a bagful of giveaways:) Whoop! It includes:
What do you have to do? Nothing difficult at all! In fact, there are many ways you can enter. You can purchase your copy, leave a review, share a meme, or just share your favorite quote. See? Easy peasy. The giveaway will extend through Friday then winners will be chosen and posted on the Rafflecopter, which is visible on every participating blog, including this one. Sooooooo, hop on and get your entries now!
a Rafflecopter giveaway
To celebrate the release of Pocketful of Sand, I'm doing a bagful of giveaways:) Whoop! It includes:
- 2 $50 Amazon gift cards
- 10 Pocketful t-shirts
- 10 Pocketful swag packs plus hourglass necklaces!
What do you have to do? Nothing difficult at all! In fact, there are many ways you can enter. You can purchase your copy, leave a review, share a meme, or just share your favorite quote. See? Easy peasy. The giveaway will extend through Friday then winners will be chosen and posted on the Rafflecopter, which is visible on every participating blog, including this one. Sooooooo, hop on and get your entries now!
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Sunday, March 15, 2015
Pocketful of Sand IS HERE!!!!
Y'all, I am so incredibly happy to be typing this post because that means the wait is over! It's heeeeeeeere! Cole and Eden are finally live! Wahooooooooooo!
In addition to all the release information below, you'll find a short video from me that explains why this book is important to me, something that I've alluded to several times. I didn't want to tape it earlier because it's a tiny bit spoilery, but now that the first few chapters have posted, you already know, so it no longer matters:)
And now, without further ado, POCKETFUL OF SAND.
Get it on Amazon | iBooks | Barnes & Noble | Kobo | Google Play
“She’s beauty for my ashes. And I’m hope for her heartache.”—Cole Danzer
I don’t know what makes a great love story. Is it that instant attraction when boy meets girl? The passionate kisses and the fairy-tale ending? Or is it a lifetime of tragedy, paid in advance, for a few stolen moments of pure bliss? The pain and the suffering that, in the end, you can say are worth it for having found the missing piece of your soul?
The answer is: I don’t know. I don’t know what makes a great love story. I only know what makes my love story. I only know that finding Cole when I did, when Emmy and I were running from a nightmare, was the only thing that saved me. That saved us. He was more broken than I was, but somehow we took each other’s shattered pieces and made a whole. If that is what makes a great love story, if that is what makes an epic romance, then mine…ours is the greatest of them all.
Contains material that some may find disturbing. Not intended for readers under the age of 18.
Get it on Amazon | iBooks | Barnes & Noble | Kobo | Google Play
This is the sandcastle I was telling you about. I met the man who built it. I saw his raw red hands. It's as though, even then, Cole was trying to get my attention. He did. And I don't think he's left my heart since he dug in:)
New York Times and USA Today bestselling author M. Leighton is a native of Ohio. She relocated to the warmer climates of the South, where she can be near the water all summer and miss the snow all winter. Possessed of an overactive imagination from early in her childhood, Michelle finally found an acceptable outlet for her fantastical visions: literary fiction. Having written over a dozen novels, these days Michelle enjoys letting her mind wander to more romantic settings with sexy Southern guys, much like the one she married and the ones you'll find in her latest books. When her thoughts aren't roaming in that direction, she'll be riding horses, swimming in ponds and experiencing life on a ranch, all without leaving the cozy comfort of her office.
In addition to all the release information below, you'll find a short video from me that explains why this book is important to me, something that I've alluded to several times. I didn't want to tape it earlier because it's a tiny bit spoilery, but now that the first few chapters have posted, you already know, so it no longer matters:)
And now, without further ado, POCKETFUL OF SAND.
A story of heartbreak, loss, redemption and second chances: Pocketful of Sand from New York Times bestselling author M. Leighton
Get it on Amazon | iBooks | Barnes & Noble | Kobo | Google Play
Add it on Goodreads
“She’s beauty for my ashes. And I’m hope for her heartache.”—Cole Danzer
I don’t know what makes a great love story. Is it that instant attraction when boy meets girl? The passionate kisses and the fairy-tale ending? Or is it a lifetime of tragedy, paid in advance, for a few stolen moments of pure bliss? The pain and the suffering that, in the end, you can say are worth it for having found the missing piece of your soul?
The answer is: I don’t know. I don’t know what makes a great love story. I only know what makes my love story. I only know that finding Cole when I did, when Emmy and I were running from a nightmare, was the only thing that saved me. That saved us. He was more broken than I was, but somehow we took each other’s shattered pieces and made a whole. If that is what makes a great love story, if that is what makes an epic romance, then mine…ours is the greatest of them all.
Contains material that some may find disturbing. Not intended for readers under the age of 18.
Get it on Amazon | iBooks | Barnes & Noble | Kobo | Google Play
Add it on Goodreads
This is the sandcastle I was telling you about. I met the man who built it. I saw his raw red hands. It's as though, even then, Cole was trying to get my attention. He did. And I don't think he's left my heart since he dug in:)
New York Times and USA Today bestselling author M. Leighton is a native of Ohio. She relocated to the warmer climates of the South, where she can be near the water all summer and miss the snow all winter. Possessed of an overactive imagination from early in her childhood, Michelle finally found an acceptable outlet for her fantastical visions: literary fiction. Having written over a dozen novels, these days Michelle enjoys letting her mind wander to more romantic settings with sexy Southern guys, much like the one she married and the ones you'll find in her latest books. When her thoughts aren't roaming in that direction, she'll be riding horses, swimming in ponds and experiencing life on a ranch, all without leaving the cozy comfort of her office.
Saturday, March 14, 2015
Pocketful of Sand, Chapter Four
FOUR
Eden
Thirteen days later
OUR LITTLE COTTAGE is quiet when I get up. I pull Emmy’s door shut on my way to the
bathroom. She sleeps like a rock unless she has a nightmare, but I like to keep
her cocoon as peaceful as I can until she wakes.
The hardwood
floors are chilly under my feet as I pad silently to the stove and grab the hot
water kettle. I love our place. For
whatever reason, be it the charming wraparound porch or the big oak in the
front yard, or the soothing beige walls and cozy old fireplace, this feels like
home. Already. And we haven’t even been here two full weeks
yet.
I glance up as
I pour water into the kettle. My stomach
flutters when I see him. He’s there. I
hoped he would be.
Every morning
since we moved in thirteen days ago, the man we saw building the sandcastle has
been working across the street at the cottage diagonal from mine. Rain or shine, he’s there. I don’t know who he is or why he draws me to
my window each day, but he does.
I find myself peeking
out at him often. More often than I
should, probably. But as hokey as it
sounds, something about him speaks to me. Calls to me almost. And I can’t shake
it.
I mean, he’s a
pleasure to watch, of course. And that’s saying a lot coming from someone like
me. Physically, he’s all that a woman
could ask for–tall, fit, ripped in all the right places. Most days he wears nothing but faded jeans,
work boots and a tool belt. Sometimes a
baseball hat. Rarely a shirt. And if ever there was a body made to go
around shirtless, it’s his. But that’s
not what pulls me to the window time after time, day after day. It’s not even the tattoos scrawled up his ribs–the
one on the left reading “always”, the one on the right reading “never”. No, there’s something else that brings me
here to watch him. Something…more.
I’ve noticed
that whether he’s hammering or scraping or carrying something through the door,
he has this intense solitude about him.
It’s as though the world has abandoned him. Or maybe that he’s abandoned the world. I
can’t put my finger on it. I only know that it’s decidedly incongruous with a
man who looks like he does.
I think about
him being on the beach that day. Building a sandcastle like it was the most
important thing in the world. It was
strangely haunting for a man who looks like he does to be so…alone.
Maybe that’s
what draws me–his isolation. I can’t be sure of course, but something tells me
that he doesn’t have much of a life outside his job. He arrives sometime before I get up, which is
early, and stays to work late, long after I give Emmy her bath. He eats lunch
on the lawn by himself and I’ve never seen him talking on a cell phone or
engaging the few people who pass by. He
just appears to be alone. All alone.
We’ve fallen
into a strange rhythm of sorts. It’s
just one small thing, but it seems significant somehow. Every day, at some point, he will catch me
watching him. Every day, he has. And every day he holds my gaze, even from so
far away. It gives me chills, the way he
stares back at me. But then he frowns,
just like he did at the beach that day, before he turns away. It’s like I make
him think of something he doesn’t want to think about. And my need to know what that is increases
with every day that passes. Need, not want.
I’m not sure if
brokenness is discernible with nothing more than our casual contact (if you can
even call what we have “contact”) or if this is all in my head, but for some
reason that’s the word that comes to mind when I see him–brokenness. Someone who’s broken.
From the
outside, he’s practically perfect. Well
not even practically perfect. He is
perfect. Flawless. Breathtaking.
But he’s too quiet, too withdrawn, too…solitary for someone as handsome
as he is. Maybe that’s why I think he’s
broken. Surely in a town this size,
every single woman within ten miles would be banging on his front door,
offering to help with whatever he might need.
Or want.
And yet, he
doesn’t seem to have anyone. I’ve
noticed that his ring finger is empty, too.
As empty as his life appears to be.
Maybe he’s got
dark secrets that keep the town at bay. A
scary skeleton in his closet, a maniacal monster under his bed. That’s probably reason number one, the only
one I should need, to stay far, far away from him. And that’s exactly what I’m doing. Mostly because he stays away from me, never
offering to come over or speak when we go outside. He just keeps to himself and
I do the same.
But still, he
pulls me.
So here I am.
Watching. Waiting, it seems. On what, I don’t know. But I often get the feeling that something is
about to happen. Only it never does.
A loud banging
at my front door startles me and I spill coffee down the front of my
shirt. I grab a napkin and wipe at it as
I run, rushing to the door before whoever it is can wake up Emmy. She’s a late sleeper. Sometimes I think God made her that way to
protect her.
I peek through
the square of glass at the top of the plain wood door and find Jordan smiling
up at me. She looks surprisingly
bright-eyed and bushy-tailed this morning, considering how she most likely
spent her night.
I snap open the
dead bolt and unlock the knob. “Hi,
Jordan.”
“Hiya, sweetie,”
she says, pushing past me and carrying a brown cardboard box into the living
room. From that first morning when I met
her, she’s taken to me like her long lost best friend.
She’s never
come to my house before, but evidently she’s been inside it at some point prior
to my arrival. She plops the box down on
the coffee table and then perches on the end of the sofa like we do this every
day.
“I always loved
this material,” she says, rubbing her hand over the velvety cinnamon-colored upholstery.
“You’ve been here
before?”
“A time or
two. I dated the guy who lived here
before you.”
“Dated?” Jason
says from behind me as he walks in carrying another box. “You don’t date.”
“Why the hell
don’t I date?”
“You’re like
the town bicycle. You give rides. You don’t date.”
“Uh!” Jordan squeaks,
insulted. “Are you hearing this?” She seems incensed, but then, just as quickly
as she got riled, she waves him off and her smile returns, feathers no longer
ruffled. I can’t decide if their mean
banter is all teasing or if they have a love/hate relationship. “So, your
landlord had some things ordered. Wanted
us to bring them over when they arrived.”
“Landlord?” I
ask in confusion. “I thought Jason was
the landlord.”
“Nah, he’s just
a lackey.”
“I’m a property
manager, not a lackey,” Jason replies sharply.
Then he turns to me. “The owner was
going to replace a few things before you moved in, but there was no time. Better late than never, though, right?”
I nod, a little
uncomfortable with my space being so abruptly and unexpectedly invaded. “What kinds of things are we talking about?”
“New
microwave,” he says, indicating the heavier box he was carrying, “new blinds
for the kitchen and a new coffee maker.”
I perk up at
the mention of the coffee maker. “That’s
nice. I’ve been boiling water every morning.”
“Well, not
anymore,” Jason says with a smile.
Jordan gets up
and wanders to the kitchen, stopping to stare out the window as I so often do.
I wonder if she sees the sandcastle guy. Then I wonder if she knows him.
“Damn,” she
says on a sigh. “It’s a shame to cover that view with new blinds,” she
says. That’s how I know she sees
him. There’s nothing spectacular about
the view except him. She turns her big
smile back toward me. “Unless that’s why
he sent the new blinds.”
“Why who sent
the new blinds?”
“The owner,” she answers emphatically. “Cole Danzer.
He must’ve noticed they were missing.”
I join her in
the kitchen, glancing out to where the gorgeous handyman is measuring a piece
of wood.
“How would he
know?”
“Well, I guess
Cole’s not blind and can see from a hundred feet away,” she declares with a
laugh, tipping her head toward the window.
“Wait, so he is the owner?” I ask, admiring the
way the muscles in his shoulders shift as he works.
“Yep. Cole
Danzer.” There’s a dreamy sigh in her
voice that matches her expression.
“Crazy Cole is
what we call him,” Jason says as he reaches between us to lay the blinds across
the sink.
Jordan
gasps. “We?”
“Yes we,” Jason confirms with a frown. “You’re the one who started it.”
“No, I call him Crazy Hot Cole. But you’ve never called
him crazy at all.”
“That’s because
I work for him.”
“So what, you
don’t work for him today?” To this, Jason
says nothing, but I can see his nostrils flare.
“Ohhh, or is it because you like our lovely little miss Eden? And you don’t want her getting any ideas
about the beautiful hunk o’ man across the street?”
“Jordan, just
shut up. You don’t even make any sense,” her brother replies petulantly.
When Jason bends
slightly to apply himself to removing the blinds from their box, Jordan points
down at him and mouths behind his back “He likes you!”
“Jordan, go
open the store. Come back for me in an hour,” Jason snaps.
“Fine,” she
huffs. “Walk me out, Edie.”
Edie?
That’s a new one, I think.
Jordan reaches
for my arm and loops hers through it, practically dragging me to the front
door. She pulls me out onto the small
wraparound porch, but doesn’t stop there.
When she keeps walking, I start to resist.
“This is far
enough, Jordan. I’m a mess!”
I think about
my straight black hair in a ponytail, my oval face and hazel-gray eyes devoid
of makeup, my coffee-stained T-shirt and pink shorts that say “Juicy” on the
butt. I feel my face heat with embarrassment.
She stops and
stares at me. “You’re gorgeous. Now come with me.”
Before I can
argue, she tugs me into the yard.
Automatically, my eyes find their way to Cole the instant he comes into
view. He’s still in the yard, but now he’s moving his ladder.
“Hi, Cole,”
Jordan bellows, causing my stomach to drop to my bare toes. The grass is covered in a chilly, early fall
dew that coats my feet. I catch my
breath when Cole glances up at us, his brow drawing immediately into a
frown. He doesn’t respond. He just holds
perfectly still, his long fingers curled around the ladder, forearms straining
and biceps bulging. “Have you met Eden
yet?”
As Jordan drags
me across the pseudo-cul-de-sac, I can feel his eyes on me, the startling blue
penetrating all the way through my clothes to my skin underneath. Goosebumps break out on my legs and arms and,
to my utter humiliation, my nipples pucker.
The heat of his gaze and the cool of the morning is too stark a contrast
for my body not to notice.
When we stop
within a foot of him, I see his hooded eyes rake me from head to toe. My nipples strain against my T-shirt,
catching his attention on the way back up. I cross my arms over my chest,
praying for this moment to just be over.
He’s silent for
a long time. Long enough to be rude, but
I don’t get the impression that he is. I
get the impression that he’s just thinking.
His frown deepens and for a second it appears he’s going to just turn
away, but he doesn’t. Instead, he props the ladder against one shoulder and
sticks out his hand.
“Cole
Danzer.”
His voice. God! It
makes me want to groan. It’s like a silk
sheet draped over jagged gravel. It
belongs in a bedroom. A dark, warm
bedroom. Where pleasure and pain
peacefully coexist, heightening the senses and curling the toes. It would be sexy in any circumstance, even if
he were reading the encyclopedia aloud or explaining an insurance plan.
Reluctantly, I
straighten my right arm and slip my hand into his. His palm is calloused, his
fingers rough, just like I knew they would be. From the moment I saw them
expertly crafting a sandcastle almost two weeks ago, I suspected they’d feel
this way. They rasp against my sensitive
skin, setting the walls of my stomach into a flurry of rippling activity.
“Eden Taylor,”
I reply.
Despite his
cool exterior and his less-than-friendly expression, his touch is warm and
somehow reassuring, like he could fix or heal or bring back to life whatever he
set these hands to.
Which is
ridiculous and the first indication that I’m probably losing my mind.
I’m not this
girl. I’m not the kind of woman who melts over a man. Any man. But this one does something to me. I get the feeling that, if the circumstances
were right, I’d melt for him. Or with him.
He nods once
and quickly releases me. I wonder if he
felt something, too.
“Jordan,” he
says abruptly, nodding once before adjusting his grip on the ladder and
resuming his work as if we weren’t standing in the yard.
Jordan, still
smiling, takes my arm again and leads me back the way we came, as if that was a
perfectly normal greeting from this mysterious man. When we pass ear-shot distance, Jordan saves
me the trouble of having to bring up Cole.
“Why do all the
hot ones have to be so damn crazy?” she asks, sounding exasperated.
“Why do you say
that? I mean that he’s crazy?”
Without looking
at me, she answers. “Because he definitely is. He’s, like, talks-to-dead-people crazy. One-flew-over-the-cuckoo’s-nest crazy. Twelve-monkeys crazy.” She stops in the middle of the road and looks
me in the eye. “Not that it makes him
any less attractive. I mean, God, what I
wouldn’t give to get that man naked. I’d do him six ways from Sunday.”
She smiles
wistfully and continues walking, half-dragging me along behind her. My mind is spinning with a million questions.
“Does he really
talk to dead people?”
“Yep,” she
replies. “Well, supposedly. I’ve never
heard him, but it’s pretty common knowledge.”
Holy shit!
That’s pretty crazy!
“Who does he
talk to?”
She doesn’t
answer me until we are back in my yard, and even then she lowers her
voice. “His daughter. At least that’s the only one I know of.”
His daughter is dead?
I close my
eyes, resisting the urge to bend over and put my head between my knees. Oh
sweet God! I feel like someone
punched me in the chest, all the air whizzing out of my lungs in a harsh
hiss.
“Hi-his daughter?”
Jordan
nods. “Yep. I think she might’ve died in
a car accident. Nobody seems to know
much about it, though. That or they just
don’t talk about it. You know, out of respect.”
I want to ask
more questions, but I can’t. The words
won’t come past my lips. All I can think
about is my Emmy and what I would do…how I would feel if she…
No. I can’t
think that way. I couldn’t live without
her. I just couldn’t.
“I guess in a lot of ways, his life ended that
day. Had the world in the palm of his hand.
Rich, hot, successful football player, beautiful wife, adorable daughter
and then bam! Gone. Everything.”
“How did it–”
My question is
interrupted by Jason. “Jordan, I told
you to go open the store. Strom Tuggle
just called. He’s been waiting in the
parking lot for fifteen minutes.”
“Oh screw
Strom! He’s just there for his daily
glance at my ass. He can wait.” Jordan
gives me an apologetic look and twirls her keys on her finger. “Stop by the grill sometime. I’ll buy you a
drink and a chicken sandwich.”
“I can’t
really…not with Emmy…” I hike my thumb back toward the cottage, my heart aching
as I think of my little girl, my whole world, sleeping peacefully inside. Alive
and well.
“Oh, right
right. Well, I’ll come to you then. I need a new girlfriend. This town’s in dire need of some not bitches,” she declares with a grin.
“Jordaaan,”
Jason prompts warningly.
“I’m going, I’m
going.”
As Jordan
saunters to the truck, I stand staring after her, wishing she’d come back and
answer my million questions.
Please consider sharing the link to this post on your social media sites. I would be forever grateful!
Get it on Amazon | iBooks | Barnes & Noble | Kobo | Google Play
Get it on Amazon | iBooks | Barnes & Noble | Kobo | Google Play
Add it on Goodreads
Friday, March 13, 2015
Pocketful of Sand, Chapter Three
THREE
Eden
A CLUSTER OF bells jingles overhead when I push
through the door of Bailey’s Quick Stop, which is the address that the landlord
gave me when he told me where to pick up the keys to our cottage. A quick glance around shows me the place is empty. I take a tentative step forward, practically
dragging Emmy along. She’s hugging my left leg so tightly I can hardly walk.
“Hello?” I call
quietly.
“Hiya!”
I jump when a
woman with wildly teased brown hair pops up from behind the counter where the
cash register sits. She’s smiling
broadly and holding a frosted glass in one hand. I’d estimate her to be in her
early thirties, maybe ten years older than my twenty-three. With her button nose and big brown eyes, she’s
pretty despite the trouble she seems to be having remaining upright.
“Hi, I’m
looking for Jason Bailey. Am I at the
wrong place? This is the address–”
“No, sweetie,
you’re at the right place. Come ooon
in,” she says, laughing as she throws up an arm and enthusiastically urges me forward. I hobble toward her, Emmy clinging to my leg
as I do. The woman notices her, brown eyes
lighting up when she sees my daughter.
“And who is this?” she asks in a gentle voice.
I reach down to
smooth Emmy’s hair, not at all surprised when I see her sucking her thumb. She’s just staring at the woman like she’s a
frightening alien.
“This is
Emmy. She’s very shy,” I explain. That’s what I tell everyone. It’s much
simpler than the truth.
“All the
princesses are,” the woman says, unfazed.
“I’m Jordan. What can I help you
two lovely ladies with today? We’ve got everything from paint to wine and bait
to bread. We’ve got a grill if you’re
hungry and a bar if you’re thirsty.”
“Just Jason
Bailey please,” I repeat, watching as she tries to collect herself, tugging at
her disheveled shirt and smoothing her disheveled hair.
“Oh, right
right.” She turns her face partly to the
side and yells, “Jasonnn! Get out here,”
the smile never leaving her face.
As is the case
with most small towns, new people stick out like sore thumbs, and Miller’s
Pond, Maine is no exception. It had a
population explosion in 2001, bringing the town tally up to a whopping three
thousand four hundred people. And, now,
three thousand four hundred and two. I
guess that’s why this store has a little bit of everything. No big chain supermarkets
or stores have found their way here yet.
From what I could see on the map, the closest super center is at least
thirty miles away.
“So, what
brings you to Miller’s Pond?” she asks.
I smile and
clear my throat, uncomfortable with her questioning. But I have a carefully composed history
rehearsed for just such an occasion. “Uh,
I was born up in Bangor. Just getting back closer to home.”
“Close, but not
too close, eh? Smart girl.”
I smile at her
observation and add, “Plus we love lighthouses and Miller’s Pond has one of the
oldest ones in the country, or so I hear.”
It’s a pat enough answer, hopefully pat enough to stop her or anyone
else from asking more questions. It’s
all fiction, of course. 100% untrue, but that’s the way it has to be.
“That’s right, sweetie.
You’ve come to the right place. Annnd,
you’ve just made friends with the one person who can tell you anything you need
to know about this town and the people in it.
Besides that, I make a kickass rum and Coke,” she says with a wink, her
voice dropping down to a loud whisper. I
assume that was in deference to Emmy.
“The village
idiot can make a rum and Coke, Jordan,” a man says as he appears in the doorway
behind the counter. He looks to be about
the same age as Jordan and, based on his light brown hair and same color eyes,
I’d say they’re related. “Or, in this
case, the town lush.”
Although his
words are biting, he smiles at Jordan and she laughs, playfully punching his
arm. Her fist slips off and she nearly
falls, but the guy grabs her by the shoulders and more or less props her back up. He’s shaking his head when he finally looks up
to me.
“Jason Bailey,
Jordan’s brother. You must be Eden.”
“I am. It’s
nice to meet you.”
“Is that a bit
of the south I’m hearing?”
My lips curve nervously.
I’ve tried very hard to drop any hint of accent from my voice, so his
observation flusters me. I don’t have a lie ready for that. “It is.
I wasn’t there long, but it must’ve rubbed off.”
He nods,
seemingly satisfied with that.
“And this is
her daughter, Emmy. She’s a shy
princess,” Jordan provides.
I can’t help
noticing the appreciative way Jason’s eyes sweep from my chest to my feet and
back again on his way to see Emmy. He simply smiles at her, doesn’t try to
engage, which is best. When his warm
eyes lock onto mine again, I think to myself that he’s handsome and pretty
obviously interested. At least
superficially. Only I’m not. A normal
woman probably would be. But I’m not
normal. I’d like to be, but I’m not sure I ever will be.
“Well, it’s a
pleasure to meet you both. I look forward to getting to know you.”
While his smile
is as polite as his words, something tells me his insinuation is anything but
innocent.
I just nod,
thinking to myself that he won’t ever get to know me that well. “It’s been a long
day for us. If I could just get the
keys…”
I figure
offering up an excuse for my lack of interest is the best way to avoid bruising
his ego, and I’m okay with that. Anything to keep out of trouble.
“Of
course. Come on back to my office,” he
says, walking to the end of the counter and indicating yet another door. Once inside, I dig in my purse for the form I
filled out. It’s a single page, nothing
too invasive or complicated. In fact, the…loose
requirements for the rental of this cottage were big factors in choosing
Miller’s Pond. Jason let me secure the
lease via a faxed agreement that didn’t ask for my social security number and he
allowed me to pay six months in advance via a cashier’s check that I mailed in. Now I just have to pick up the keys.
Jason grabs an
envelope from his top desk drawer. It
has Eden Taylor and the cottage’s address scribbled across the front. He opens
it and dumps keys out into his hand, makes a few notes on a paper or two and
then hands them over.
“You know the
address?”
“Yes, we drove
by on the way in.”
“Then welcome
to Miller’s Pond.”
And just like
that, I exhale. Maybe this will finally
be a place we can call home. Home safe home.
Please consider sharing the link to this post on your social media sites. I would be forever grateful!
Get it on Amazon | iBooks | Barnes & Noble | Kobo | Google Play
Get it on Amazon | iBooks | Barnes & Noble | Kobo | Google Play
Add it on Goodreads
Thursday, March 12, 2015
Pocketful of Sand, Chapter One (and two bc it's short)
I'm posting one AND two because two is short and it pertains so directly to chapter one:) So, here we go! Meet Eden, Emmy and Cole.
ONE
Eden
October
EMMY’S FACE LIGHTS up when she runs full speed
toward the water’s edge, chasing the tide out.
My heart warms with her squeal of delight as it chases her right back
in. Back and forth they go, engaging in
the never-ending dance of ebb and flow.
Few times in
her six years of life have I ever seen her so happy, so carefree and
animated. That alone makes this move
worth it. Maybe we won’t have to leave this place. At least not for a while.
Tirelessly, her
little legs carry her as she flees the frothy waves, sandy water splashing up
from her feet as she runs. I watch her play, more satisfied than I’ve been in a
long time. Maybe this will be good for her.
Finally,
winded, she doesn’t turn to run the tide, but keeps coming toward me until she
can launch her small body at mine like a tiny bullet. I catch her, hugging her close so that I can
bury my nose in her neck and inhale the smell of baby powder, fresh air and
little girl.
When she pulls
away, she’s smiling. “That was fun, Momma.
Did you see me run fast? Even the
waves couldn’t catch me.”
Her lime green
eyes are twinkling and her cheeks are rosy from the fall nip in the air. Her
hot breath mixes with the ocean’s breeze to sooth my insides, like maybe
happiness, wholeness is finally blowing in.
“I did! You ran so
fast I could hardly keep up.”
She claps
excitedly. “Can we walk before we go?”
I glance at my
watch. We are supposed to meet the
landlord at his office at three, but we should be in good shape as long as we
head back to the car within the hour.
“Sure, but we can’t stay too much longer.”
I’ve barely
finished my sentence before she’s out of my arms, on her feet and blazing off
down the beach, her long hair flowing out behind her like midnight flames.
This straight
stretch of beach is practically deserted, so I let her run as fast as she wants
to. There’s a great likelihood that I’ll
have to carry her back, but I don’t mind.
I treasure any chance I get to hold her close and pretend that nothing
in the world could ever take her away from me.
Plus, all this exercise means she’ll probably fall asleep in my arms tonight. She’ll be exhausted. I smile at the thought. The perfect end to what’s looking like a
nearly perfect day.
Up ahead, Emmy
stops several feet from what I now recognize as someone building an elaborate
sandcastle. I see her pop her thumb in
her mouth, so I speed up. That’s a sure
sign of distress for her. That and the
way she goes still as a statue, not moving a single muscle. Those are the only outward signs of her
condition.
Without looking
back, as though she can sense my presence when I stop at her side, she reaches
for my fingers with her free hand, squeezing them as tightly as she can.
I squat down,
something I’ve learned is soothing to her.
When she’s anxious, she likes to be able to hide. While she’ll tuck herself behind my legs if
I’m standing, she relaxes more quickly if I’m down on her level where I can hold
her.
She surprises
me when she doesn’t turn into my chest and bury her face like she usually does
in these situations. Instead, she stands perfectly still, watching the man
who’s on his hands and knees constructing the castle. His back is to us and I doubt he knows we’re
here, he’s so intent on what he’s doing.
Obviously he takes his castling seriously, which gives me ample time to study
the scene.
The castle is
taller than Emmy and has at least a dozen spires and turrets of various sizes. It’s probably taken him all day to construct
it. There are even trees in the “castle
grounds” that lead down to the edge of the mote he’s currently digging. The whole thing is pretty impressive. But not nearly as impressive as the guy who’s
building it, I learn once I turn my attention to him.
His hands are
broad and long-fingered, tanned and capable-looking, as though they’re used often
and probably calloused. I follow them up
muscular forearms roped with thick veins and bands of sinew, to biceps that
bulge against the dark blue cotton of his T-shirt. The material is stretched tight across his
wide shoulders, too, which only further accentuates his narrow waist.
I evaluate the
man in the same clinical way that I do the castle–with an appreciation for form
and structure. Nothing more.
That is, until
he turns his shaggy blond head to look at me.
I can tell by the
frown that creases his forehead and shades his bright blue eyes that we took
him by surprise. Normally I would do the
polite thing and apologize, but at the moment my thoughts are as scattered and
hard to catch as my breath.
He’s handsome,
yes. He’s built well, yes. I’m sure in another life or if I were someone
else, I’d be very attracted to him. Only
I’m not attracted to men. Or women. Not anymore. I’m not attracted to anyone anymore.
So then why
can’t I breathe? Why do I feel like I
just fell into a black hole that sucked all the air from the world and dropped
hot boulders into my stomach?
He rocks back
on his haunches, brushing off his hands almost angrily. My insides do a funny little quiver as he
watches me. It’s not really fear or
embarrassment; it’s more like…awareness. Extreme
awareness.
Emmy stirs
where she had gone around behind me to peek over my shoulder, and her movement
draws his piercing eyes. After that, I
think I cease to exist.
As he stares at
her, the color leaves his handsome, golden face, taking with it the frown that he
was wearing. His mouth drops open a
little and I hear the huff of a breath as he releases it. If I didn’t know any better, I’d say he looks
shocked. I just don’t know why he would be.
He gapes at
Emmy for a few long seconds before, wordlessly, he turns away. At first, he
does nothing. Doesn’t move, doesn’t speak. Doesn’t even appear to breathe. Just continues to kneel, facing away from us,
staring at the sandcastle. But then,
after a bit, he returns to his mote. He digs into the sand fiercely, almost
angrily, and I wonder that his fingers don’t bleed.
I don’t really
know whether I should say something or not, so I opt with not. Already he
doesn’t seem too thrilled with our presence.
Another interruption might be even more poorly received.
Just as I’m
rising to sweep Emmy into my arms and carry her back, the man pauses, his head
turning as he catches a glimpse of the clump of daisies buried stem-deep in the
sand in front of the castle. His
shoulders slump visibly. I see his hand start to jut out and then stop, and
then start again. He reaches for one
flower, plucking it from the bunch and twirling it in his fingers. I know I should leave, leave him to whatever
he was doing and thinking before we arrived, but I can’t. Not yet. I can’t, but I just don’t know why.
Finally, he
glances back at us, at Emmy. His gaze
isn’t too direct, almost as though he knows that too much attention is hard for
my daughter. I watch as he extends the
flower, his hand shaking the tiniest bit as he holds it out to her. I start to reach for it, but Emmy surprises
me by grabbing it herself, her slim little hand easing out to carefully take
the daisy from his grasp.
The stranger
gives her a small smile and turns away again.
He doesn’t get to see the way Emmy’s lips curve around the thumb still
stuck in her mouth. He doesn’t get to
see the way she watches him afterward.
“Thank you,” I
tell him quietly.
He pauses,
turning only enough that I can see his strong profile–straight nose, carved
mouth, square chin. He nods once and
then returns to his excavating, as intent as he was before we interrupted.
Puzzled and
flustered, I turn and carry my daughter back the way we came, the scent of fresh-cut
daisies teasing my nose and the quiet hum of my child tickling my ear.
TWO
Cole
WHO THE HELL was that? I think, wondering why I feel like I
just got sucker punched in the gut. I
resist the urge to turn and watch her walk away. Or go after her.
Who the hell was that and
what the hell did she just do to me?
Please consider sharing the link to this post on your social media sites. I would be forever grateful!
Get it on Amazon | iBooks | Barnes & Noble | Kobo | Google Play
Please consider sharing the link to this post on your social media sites. I would be forever grateful!
Get it on Amazon | iBooks | Barnes & Noble | Kobo | Google Play
Add it on Goodreads
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
