Excerpt from Inside the Grey
“Stop struggling. I don’t want to kill you. I just want answers.” Brayden wrestled with the man to hold his head hard without slicing his neck but the man’s hat started to come away and slid across his head. Heavy ropes fell from the cap. Like a shot hitting him, Brayden realized what they were—thick, burgundy braids—and threw the person to the ground in horror. “You’re a woman!”
“Quick-witted aren’t you?”
“I could have killed you,” Brayden shouted as he slapped his forehead in exasperation.
The woman stood and dusted herself off. She scooped up the cap, coiled her braids and shoved the hat on her head. “You didn’t seem so all fired worried about killing me when you thought I was a man.” With arms outstretched, her deep blue eyes glared at him. “Easier to kill me now?” She snorted. “Didn’t think so.” The fiery wench swiveled and stomped off. “I’m leaving.”
“Come back here. I’m not finished with you,” Brayden bellowed. He picked up the pistol and cocked the hammer. “I’ll shoot.”
The brazen female flipped her hand with an apparent wave of dismissal and kept walking.
Excerpt from The Inn at Little Bend
PROLOGUE
Everyone yearned for spring to blossom early that year but Virginians rooted deep in the mountains knew that winter would never succumb without a fight and feared a powerful assault. It came. An onslaught of storms battered the area with blizzards heaving drifts four to six feet high. The deep snow left the roads impassible, and a weary man cursed the force of that assault as the wind clawed at him and his tiny, fragile bundle. The horse under him plodded endlessly while he kept his head lowered and tugged at his collar. Nevertheless the cold wet flakes were persistent.
The night was pitch-black, as black as the dark thoughts which filled the man's heart and mind. The day's last hours unfolded in his head like the rehearsals of a macabre play. Even now it seemed to him a performance, a drama one watched and pitied and then went home.
Swirling winds ripped through the night, stealing the man's hat and carrying it into the darkness. The man muttered a virulent oath when the cold penetrated his graying hair. The gusts came in waves in the same cruel manner the pains, just hours before, had savaged his daughter's unyielding body while she tried to deliver her bastard child. A widower and deprived of the aid of a doctor or midwife, the distraught man had tried his best but it hadn't been enough to save his daughter's life. Even now his daughter's screams rifled his brain.
The product of a brutal rape, the newborn was sorrow and pain incarnate. The man had kept the pregnancy hidden in order to spare his daughter further humiliation but now she was gone forever, and the child he'd pulled from her body was huddled against him. He had expected the baby to be born dead but when it uttered a cry, a strange resentment suffused him and he suddenly hated this intruder who'd stolen his daughter from him, the only remaining part of his beloved wife. In a moment of crazed madness, he'd imagined smothering the tiny creature but instead he had left the babe in the messy bedclothes and gone to saddle his horse. He had no family left, few friends and no hope and he didn't want to remain in that place with its painful reminders. Returning to the small white house, he had splashed lamp oil over everything and rolled a burning log from the fireplace into the center of the room. The fire had spread quickly as he hauled the tiny, bloody burden to his shoulder and ran out the door. The horse shied when the inferno suddenly engulfed the structure but calmed when they turned and slowly walked away. With his shoulders hunched against the howling winds the man had taken up his burden and ridden into the darkness.
The distraught man wanted the child gone from him but wondered if he possessed the cruelty to carry out the deed. Mile after mile he journeyed, fraught with indecision. The babe lay silently in his giant grasp as if somehow knowing its fate hung in the balance.
A faint speck of light appeared in the distance and the man turned his horse to veer away from the light; he had no need of the others now, he had to finish what he started—or did he? He pulled the horse to a halt. Opening his bundle he somehow hoped the child had died for want of mothering. A flailing arm nudged his palm, and he realized the determined creature still lived. His conscience nagged at him. Despite his hatred he conceded that the child had not asked to be conceived and forced into the This world. The man wheeled his horse around and headed toward the light. He spurred the animal, driving it onward through the whipping wind before he changed his mind. When he reached the house, he placed the wrapped child on the doorstep and galloped away, never once looking back.
Deprived of the man's warmth, the babe uttered a piteous wail and, in time, awoke the matrons of the house.
"Lord, have mercy; Hazel wake up and see what's making that racket."
Hazel belted her wrap and shuffled to the door. “It’s a baby!” she uttered as she squatted next to the bundle. She unfolded the blanket. "Flora, she's a newborn; the whole cord's still attached."
"Best put her by the fire because she's probably cold as ice."
"Who is she?" asked Hazel. She removed the bloody swaddling blanket and wrapped the baby in a towel she grabbed from the table. "Where did she come from?” She clipped the cord and bound it. “What'll we call her?"
Flora grunted while she blew at the cup of milk she’d poured from a pot near the fire. "Will you stop your jabbering? It's obvious she's a nobody; that's why she was left here. It doesn't much matter what we call her. Call her Grayson."
Hazel put her hands on her hips. "You can't put that name on a child."
"Why not? She probably won't last more than a few days at best." Flora sipped her milk.
"Then she'll need a decent name to put on her headstone."
Flora threw up her hands. "What for? If she came from decent folks she wouldn't have ended up on our doorstep. Mark my words, she's the doing of sinners.” She opened wide one of the baby’s eyes with her thumb and forefinger. “Look at her eyes—they're black like sin."
The baby wailed at the intrusion, and Hazel snatched the child away. "Flora, you keep your superstitious ways to yourself. This is an innocent child and whether she lives or dies is up to the Almighty, not you or me. Now get her something to eat while I clean her."
Flora dragged her feet into the next room, muttering to herself.
Hazel picked up the wailing child. "Have to admit, child, with those eyes the name Grayson does seem to fit you." She sighed as she hurried with her chore.
Sometime later—loosely wrapped and poorly fed—the baby girl fell asleep. An entry of her arrival was scrawled as no more than a footnote in the December page of their record book; a smudged scrap of newspaper noting “Old Kinderhook’s” lost fight marked the page. Ignored as a scrap of life and left in a crate by the side of the hearth Grayson Ridge strove to live, named after the orphanage on whose doorstep she was found.
Excerpt from Season of the Shadow
PROLOGUE ˜
He rode alone; no one noticed him. His clothes and demeanor rendered him unremarkable. His wide-brimmed hat pulled low covered thick wavy black hair and screened his face as he passed. Though he wasn't old, nearing a mere score and eight, years of suffering and privation had ravaged him immeasurably. But even the aging and the full shaggy beard could not obscure the proud set of his broad shoulders and the distinctive features of his aristocratic lineage.
Had the passersby discerned the scalding fury behind the cold blue eyes, they might have remembered him. But they couldn't, and they didn't. He passed through towns and villages without anyone realizing he'd been there.
He journeyed silently through dreary days and unbearable sleepless nights. But he rode with a single goal and nothing left to fear—that made him dangerous.
Squinting against the agony of the throbbing thunder in his head, he vowed to make them pay. He would make them know how it feels to be helpless and afraid; how it feels to wake up not knowing yourself; how it feels to have nightmares so terrifying that sleep becomes an elusive luxury; how it feels to have to fight your way back from the gates of hell itself.
They wouldn't know him, of course. He'd been gone nearly a decade, and the scars of those long years had taken their toll on his appearance. But he knew who he was, he knew what they'd done to him, and he was determined to make them pay. He hoped, as they slept tucked into their beds, that they had frightening dreams. He hoped they were afraid. They should be afraid, because he finally remembered who he was. He was Fletcher Stedman, and he was going home.
* * *
Nearly two thousand miles away, Kyndee Brock's wailing could be heard throughout the house as she threw down her starched linen napkin and fled hurriedly from the elegant dining room. "I won't and you can't force me!"
"I can, and you will!" her brawny father called after her. "You mark my words; this wedding will take place!"
Kyndee sought the solace of her room and slammed the heavy wooden door. She threw herself onto the canopied bed and sobbed miserably into her pillow.
"Fletcher, where are you? I need you." But she knew he wouldn't be coming to save her. Fletcher was gone—had been gone almost ten years without word. Sometimes, when she was alone, she imagined he was still there with her, the way he used to be whenever she needed him.
Fletcher Stedman had been her best friend. They'd grown up together and had been inseparable, like two puppies trying to sit in the same spot. Their wealthy fathers' Virginia plantations shared a border; she and Fletcher had planned to be married one day and build a beautiful house right on the property line. To seal their plan, they recited the marriage vows to one another on a beautiful sunny day while nesting in the shade of their favorite tree. Their union was sanctioned by love if not by law.
She heard the other girls had thought him handsome and dashing, and he was; but to her, he was simply Fletcher, and she still loved him more than any man—alive or dead. She remembered the way the wind used to ruffle his luxuriant coal-black hair and give him a rakish look. He'd always cast her that sideways glance with his dark blue, indigo-tinged eyes from under dusky lashes, then tilt his head just enough to tease her into surrendering to whatever daring and reckless scheme he had cooking in his brilliant head.
Her door opened and heavy padded feet shuffled across the floor. "You're crying over him again aren't you, child?" asked Maggie, the family servant and Kyndee's longtime friend. "Ain't no use, girl. It's been too long now; he ain't never comin' back."
"Oh, Maggie, there are days when I still can't believe it, when I feel he's here with me."
"He is, honey," Maggie offered compassionately. "He'll be in your heart forever, but your daddy's right; you got to go on with your life."
Kyndee ignored the last statement; even now she didn't want to think of a life with anyone but Fletcher. Wiping her eyes with the back of her hand, she sat up and hugged her knees. "Maggie, remember the fracas I caused for Fletcher when I fell into the river?" She sighed as her mind wandered back to the time Fletcher didn't want to take the long way around the river; he goaded her into crossing by a tall tree that had fallen across the river in a storm.
He had crossed first, of course, to show her it could be done. It had been easy for him. Nearly seventeen at the time, he'd been superbly built with broad shoulders that were neatly wrapped in hard corded muscles. The impressive strength tapered to narrow hips, supported by long lean legs. When she saw him last, he was six feet of exuberance and growing taller with every passing moment.
That day his sturdy frame wavered back and forth across the fallen log, arms outstretched for balance and, for a moment, looked as if he would fall. Her heart had jumped. But when she screamed and cried out to him, he'd simply smiled and laughed—his wonderful, warm hearty laugh. She had furiously crossed her arms with a vitriolic pout but it was difficult to be angry with him. His dazzling devilish smile was wide and inviting, his teeth straight and white.
Jumping safely from the tree, he'd then seized a long narrow stick from the thick brush and, threatening an invisible enemy, feigned a vicious fight with his wooden sword. He moved with a swift and easy grace as he grunted and parried, groaned and lunged until victory was his. Panting and jubilant, hands on his hips in an imperious stance, he'd called to her from the other side.
"Come, fair damsel, I have slain the fiery dragon, and thy way is clear." He made a wide sweeping movement with his arm and bowed deeply. "Don't look down, my lady," he told her in his rich, deep resonant voice. His inviting arms were outstretched to her. "Look straight ahead; look at me."
It had always been easy for Kyndee to do that. She could have gazed at him all day—at his pitchy hair gleaming in the sunlight, at the sensual warmth of his smile, the profuse length of the dark eyelashes, the fine straight nose, the chiseled line of his cheek and jaw. His total demeanor was one of well-bred confidence.
Not willing to be outdone, she'd snatched up her full skirt and took her first tentative step. The first half of the journey was fine. But then he made her laugh, told her what he wanted to do to her when she reached him. He described in vivid delectable detail his reward for her victory. How she had giggled at his wicked suggestions, feeling a hot blush creep up her neck but when her hand flew to her mouth her balance fled. She lost her footing and plunged to the frigid water.
Kyndee remembered hearing him scream her name, felt him dragging her from the river. He'd cradled her tightly in his muscular arms, trying to give her warmth from the icy water. He'd rocked her gently; murmured how sorry he was and urgently begged her to please, please open her eyes.
The rest had been a haze. She'd awakened the next morning with a heavy splint on her arm, a nauseating dizziness in her head, and a strict order to stay flat in bed for a week.
"He was a rascal, that one; no denying it," Maggie agreed, sitting on the edge of the bed, the palm of her hand smoothing Kyndee's hair with maternal tenderness.
"Everyone called him a rascal and a scamp but they didn't understand him the way I did." Kyndee could picture him presenting her with his latest brainstorm. Fletcher had possessed a mature and ingenious mind that was far beyond his years. His clever inventions were fondly remembered, mostly for their failures, but he never ceased to amaze her with his ideas and his tenacity.
His father had adored him, but Fletcher often frustrated him beyond bearing; he called his son's tinkerings rattlebrained and constantly demanded he settle down to learning the proper affairs that a plantation owner's son should know. Fletcher had also infuriated his tutors, mainly because he usually knew more than they did and promptly told them so; more than once he was soundly beaten for his impertinence. However none of it had ever seemed to have an adverse effect on him.
Seabrook, Samuel Stedman's plantation, was one of the wealthiest in the State and, as its sole heir, Fletcher had been the crown prince. Even though he'd been raised with countless servants milling about to do his bidding, he was neither arrogant nor mean and could not abide those traits in others. But that was a side of himself which he showed only to those he loved. To the rest of the world he was proud and honorable Fletcher Stedman, a worthy opponent and formidable enemy to all who dared to cheat him. Because confrontation was not something he backed away from, he had his share of scuffles, returning home sporting numerous abrasions and bruises. But his sturdy build and forbidding expression when crossed usually forestalled any violence before it began. He had known the power wielded by his name and position and had used it to its fullest advantage both in righting his grievances and appeasing his lusty insatiable appetite for life. His wit was still legendary as was his wicked daring grin that could have charmed the song from the birds if he so desired it. He was simply Fletcher, which is what she had loved most about him. There was no tree he couldn't climb, no horse he couldn't ride, no aim as true, no problem he couldn't solve in one way or another.
Without fearing God's wrath for her impudence, Kyndee had always thought Fletcher one of His most magnificent creations—not only in his perfectly sculptured physical features but in his recklessly bold yet tender nature as well. Truly Samuel Stedman had sired a unique and brilliant promise of a man in the form of his son.
Maggie's hand on her shoulder brought Kyndee back to reality. "I best go back downstairs. I just wanted to see a smile back on my sweet child's face." After Maggie left, Kyndee locked her door and curled herself in the middle of her bed.
Fletcher could always make her smile and laugh. He could make her cry, too, and he did that sometimes—just because, he'd told her as he'd sensuously trailed his fingertips along her cheek, he wanted to prove to her that he could always make her smile.
Kyndee gripped the pillow closer to her breast. "Fletcher, how could whatever goddess took you for her own have left me here alone to pine for you? Surely I had not been so wicked that I deserved such a fate." She turned over her soft pillow, having dampened one side with the tears that cascaded from her now red-rimmed emerald green eyes.
The day she'd been told of his disappearance had been the most gruesome of her life. It was as if a portion of her very soul had been stripped from her. His loss left a gaping bleeding hole in her grieving heart that never healed. It had sealed, yes, but not healed. She walled it in, day by day, as the hopes of his returning alive grew dimmer and dimmer, until there was nothing left but a wall—harsh and hard and impenetrable.
As the seasons had passed, she'd grown sullen and quiet; although gentlemen paid suit, none came to ask for her hand. Somehow that had pleased her and life had dragged on.
Until now.
He came. And for some reason he wanted her. He was Fletcher's cousin: the one who had been taken in by Fletcher's parents when his own parents had been tragically killed; the one who never disobeyed the rules; the one who won over every adult with his overbearing politeness; the one who was so envious of Fletcher he could have choked on his jealousy; the one who was with Fletcher the day he disappeared; the one who now occupied Fletcher's place, his home, and his rights to the Seabrook Plantation.
He was Buck Bannistre, and she was wary of him. Kyndee wasn't exactly sure why she felt that way, but there was satisfied look about him that plagued her.
Maybe it was because he had returned while Fletcher hadn't. Maybe it was because his sorrow over Fletcher's disappearance had seemed a little too great; maybe because his move into Fletcher's position had seemed a little too soon. Maybe it was because his formal adoption as Samuel Stedman's legal son and heir made Fletcher's loss a brutal reality. Maybe it was all those things or maybe it was none of them, she didn't know.
One thing she knew for sure: not even the devil himself could force her into marrying Buck Bannistre. Kyndee covered her eyes with her palms and wept bitterly, knowing and fearing how persuasive the devil could be.
When I was in college, everyone waited patiently for Wuthering Heights with Merle Oberon and Lawrence Olivier to come on the TV. We would all grab our pillows and gather in the common room. We had all seen it numerous times and could quote nearly every line but still, the minute the music started, the cheers would erupt and the tears would flow. During the commercials we’d all scatter to the vending machines but ran down the corridor with the call, “It’s back on.” I have the DVD and even today, the old emotions from those days surround me with the first music notes of the credits.
During those same college days another movie pulled us from our studies—Gone With The Wind. For that treat we had to wait for the rerun to come to the local theater. It played for one week, and we were there everyday. Considering it’s a four hour movie, that week could be renamed ‘dedication’ or ‘lunacy’ depending on your preference but it was a week of utter romance. That kiss when Rhett leaves Scarlett with the rickety wagon, Prissy and Melanie with her baby to go off to war was the quintessential kiss. When Rhett dips within a hair’s-breath of her lips and, in a whisper, begs her to kiss him…once…. Whoa!!! Now that’s a kiss.
For that I would have to say The Inn At Little Bend. Not exactly sure why I would say that, but I think it might be the most fun to produce.
Hmmmm…If Season Of The Shadow was made into a film, I could see Alex O’Loughlin portraying Fletcher. I could see him continuing his role as Fletcher in The Inn At Little Bend as well as Inside The Grey. I think his personality would work well with the other lead characters in all three books. I just hope he could ride a horse well because, considering the setting is mid nineteenth century, Fletcher does a lot of riding.
In Season Of The Shadow, I have many favorite parts but I particularly like the barn scene because my characters actually wrote this scene themselves one (admittedly) weird, quiet night. It is also the scene where my characters put aside their mistrust.
In The Inn At Little Bend, I love the race scene because afterwards Drake reveals the turmoil hidden beneath his sullen mask.
In Inside The Grey, another barn scene earns the top spot. It’s fun, it’s romantic, and the subtle tension between the hero and heroine takes an enchanting twist.
Are your characters based off real people or did they all come entirely from your imagination?
I don’t know about other writers but my characters are composites of people I have met in my lifetime. Depending on what type of scene it is, my hero’s wink might be something an old boyfriend might have done. The way the hero carries himself might be a description of my favorite uncle. The antagonist might be a portrait of someone who has ‘done me wrong.’ It’s really quite fun to ‘paint’ with words to create a character that becomes a real person in your own head. I actually miss my characters when the book is finished because they’ve been my best friends throughout the writing of the story.
With all my books the best enjoyment is being, literally, omnipotent. Remember it’s fiction, and I have the ability to make my characters short, tall, skinny or fat. I can break them or heal them. With so much in the real world that I cannot control no matter what I do, my studio provides an escape where I have the power to fix everything. It’s incredibly cathartic. I write a scene with life’s problem as the inspiration, and I have the power to adjust and readjust like a jigsaw puzzle. Within the safety of my studio, when things work out in the end it’s my ah hah moment.
This sounds like a great series.
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