Hi
Friends!
Welcome
back for day two of my birthday celebration. Nothing like extending the fun
past the actual day! Yesterday I told you about the renaming of my first
series and the future of my current Brides series. Today's post is simpler--just one story to talk about because I promised you an excerpt from the next
"Seven Brides for Seven Cowboys" book – Grace’s story! I've also posted my inspirations pictures for the story. Enjoy! And then read to the end for more birthday present giveaways!
Here’s
a little about the book (title coming soon):
Grace
is one of the Crockett family triplets, whom their father named Grace, Kelly,
and Raquel after his two favorite movie stars: Grace Kelly and Raquel Welch.
Grace is the eldest by twenty minutes and is most reserved of the three—the one
who is slightly OCD, slightly more spiritual thinking, slightly more exhausted
at being what she sees as the least important partner in the sisters’
restaurant business.
Looking
for a chance to make it on her own, she goes home to her family’s Paradise
Ranch in search of her future—and maybe a man who’ll see her for who she really
is, not as a novelty along with her identical sisters or an uptight
perfectionist—which is how her sisters present her to the world. Grace doesn’t need
perfection in a guy, but she does want sensitive, romantic, caring, and safe. After
all, she believes, who wouldn’t?
The
last kind of man she’d ever go for is a two-bit gambler with a precocious child
and an agenda to take away part of her family’s ranch. That’s exactly what Ty
Garraway plans when he gets a job as ranch hand on Paradise Ranch. He’s biding
his time, awaiting the right moment to set his goals into motion.
And
then sweet, smart, very very good
Grace Crockett sets every desire of his heart spinning upside down and
backwards, and makes him wonder if he’s really doing what’s right—even though
it’s all for his daughter.
I’m
so excited to get the next books of this series into your hands. I hope you’ll
wait patiently as it gets finished and ready for your reading pleasure! For now—how
about a little taste of the prologue? I think this will give you a bit of an
idea about our hero Ty. He’s been a little slow to figure out life—except when
it comes to his daughter Teagan, aka “Lucky.”
Hope you enjoy it, and when you get to the end—there’ll be two more
birthday presents for YOU!
Excerpt:
( Set up:
Small time gambler, Ty Garraway, is hosting his poker buddies at his
low-rent apartment, and is in the middle of a hand that could potentially net
him a significant amount of money when a woman from his past knocks on his door
with a movie-worthy cliché of a surprise.)
“She is not my child.”
Crap on a Cheez-it, Ty thought. He
sounded like Michael Jackson.
“Oh, honey, that’s where you’re wrong.”
He liked women, he couldn’t deny it. But
he wasn’t callous, and he didn’t sow his oats without protection. Ever. He’d
learned that lesson from his old man who’d been anything but careful his entire
miserable life.
“Carrie, you can’t do this to a child.”
“Give her to her father? I can, and I’m
about to.” She turned to the girl who hadn’t made a peep and now turned her
face upward. “Teagan, this your dad. I told you about him. See? He’s real.”
Teagan? If that wasn’t
the trendiest name for a kid. Who saddled a baby with a name like that?
“Say hello,” Carrie continued.
The girl switched her gaze calmly to
him. “Hello, Daddy.”
The punch this time was
different—deeper, harder, less expected, and much scarier. Ty sensed the
incredulous stares of his poker mates before he glanced over his shoulder and
saw the four men gaping like they’d spotted Bigfoot, Nessie, and Santa Claus rolled
into one. He couldn’t blame them. Flying reindeer were more believable than the
idea of Ty Garraway as a father.
He’d never know what made him squat in
front of the little girl named Teagan, but when he did, prepared to let her
down gently while warning her not to think of him as her daddy, something
snared the words in his throat. She looked back at him, quizzical and
baby-faced but with a perception far beyond what he thought a three-year-old
should have had. Then her tiny tongue poked from between her lips and twisted
sideways before she bit down on it thoughtfully. Ty’s heart skipped a beat. Any
number of people, even little kids, bit their tongues when they were thinking,
but that added tongue twist . . . how many times had been teased about that
very habit as a kid.
He still did it when he was tired.
A freaking coincidence.
“Look . . .” What did you call a
miniature human? Honey, sweetheart, kid? He shook his head. “Look, uh, Teagan?
I’m not—”
Her little body launched itself at his,
and she wrapped her arms around his neck, snuggling in tightly as if to ward
off a rejection.
“Aw . . .” He bit off a mild curse and
tried to heed the voice in his brain warning him—loudly—to peel the child off
and hand her back to her mother.
“I wanted for you to be real,” she said.
The earlier sensation of a boxer’s
fisted knuckles slamming into his chest returned, morphing into fingers that
grabbed his heart and squeezed. Not knowing what else to do, he supported her
by her tiny little butt and stood. Teagan laid her head on his shoulder, and something
inside heated and melted. The sensation terrified him.
“Looks like the bonding happened in
record time.” Carrie gave a quick, satisfied nod. She pulled the girl’s tiny
suitcase through the door and propped it against the wall. Reaching into the
bag she’d set down earlier, she pulled out a thick manila envelope. “Everything you need is in here, Ty. She’s a
good kid. Take care of her.” She held out the packet, and when he didn’t take
it she set it on Teagan’s suitcase. With a shrug she turned to leave.
“Oh no you don’t. Hold on just a go—ol
dang minute.” Again he narrowly avoided cursing and pulled Teagan from their
embrace to set her on the floor. “You cannot walk out and leave me with a kid
who doesn’t have a clue who I am. I have no way of taking care of her. What do
you mean, your husband knows she’s not his?”
“I told him she was, but when he needed
some medical tests done there was a reason to do a DNA match. It was pretty
obvious I’d lied. If I’m staying with him, you’re the only choice there is for
her.” She nodded coolly at the child in his arms.
“Carrie, for crying out loud.”
“Sorry.” She turned away again.
“Stop! How do I get in touch with you if
she needs you?”
Carrie halted. Her eyes betrayed
nothing, no regret, no sadness, not even the light indicating crazy. “Oh she
won’t. Will you baby?” She regarded Teagan as if the child were a stray she was
leaving at the pound. “I’m not the warm maternal mommy type, anyway. She’s
spent most of her time with my parents, and they’re gone now. Good bye, Ty.”
He pleaded with himself to run after her,
and imagined spinning her around to shake sense into the freaky red head.
Teagan’s face stopped him. She, like her mother, didn’t cry, but she was the poster child for utter sadness.
Good God in heaven what must she be thinking? What did a three-year-old even
understand? Weren’t they temper tantrums waiting to happen? Or was that a
two-year-old?”
Another wave of panic, pure and
absolute, swept over him, crashing him into rocks of uncertainty and freezing
him in place with no clue what to do or say.
“Daddy?” she asked.
“Don’t call—”
He
halted. He’d just been wondering what she was thinking—worrying about her
feelings. How could he crush her further? This wasn’t her fault.
“Hey,” he said. “I’m sorry about your
mom leaving you here like this. Are you okay?”
He didn’t even know if she understood
everything he was saying, but to his shock she took the pointer finger of his
left hand and gripped it as if it brought her comfort. “Mommy and Daddy Curt
don’t want any little girls. Do you? If you do, I’m okay.”
She had the face of an angel, the
stature of a small child, and the diction and vocabulary of a ten-year-old. Or
a six-year-old. Or maybe all three-year-olds talked like this. He had no
freakin’ clue. But her eyes bored into his as if she were trying to read the
answer there, and when he couldn’t turn away, she smiled as if to encourage him.
It was tentative, questioning. And there were those enormous, brown, baby deer
eyes again. A fresh new swell, big as a surfer’s dream wave, rose up and crashed
over him—but this time it was protectiveness. He couldn’t keep this helpless
creature for any length of time. He’d find out who she really was and then find
her true relatives. But until then he could try, despite the four gamblers, two
cigar butts, and ten empty beer bottles that made up most of his décor, to keep
her safe for the moment.
“You know what? Tonight I do want at
least one little girl. And I promise. We’ll find a way to get you back with
your mom where you belong.”
“I could just belong here,” she said.
“That would be easier.” She pronounced it ‘easy-oh’ the first sign of baby talk
he’d heard.
Panic reared its ugly head again. Oh, it
so would not be “easy-oh” to have her there. It was the furthest thing from easy—or
even possible—he could imagine. He didn’t know where she was going to sleep
tonight—forget about forever.
“Well, well, pops.” Pete was the first
to break the awkward silence. “Are you going to introduce us?”
His four fellow hold-’em partners
converged, and another surge of protectiveness spurred Ty to help the child
take off her back pack, which sported Hello Kitty—the only child toy thing he
recognized. Then he lifted her into his arms again.
“What’s your whole name?” he asked.
“Teagan Ann Garraway.”
He nearly dropped her. “Garraway?” he
asked. “When did you get that name?”
“It was Miller. Mommy said I have a new
last name now.”
He sent a helpless, silent plea to his
four friends. They only slapped him on the back with raucous congratulations.
“I think it’s time for us to head out,”
Pete said, but held out his arms first, asking Teagan to come to him. She
shrank closer to Ty’s shoulder.
“Yeah, you’ll be busy now,” Carl added.
“Besides, you won the hand, and I’m all out of betting budget. With a dam…dang low
card three of a kind. Your lucky charm turned up just in time.”
He patted Teagan’s back as he made for
the door. Pete, Mark and Bryce had gathered their belonging and followed Carl
out with good-byes that were far too cheerful and way too sudden.
Once he was alone with the child, Ty
patted her back awkwardly while a fog of confusion and despair settled firmly
over both of them. Even the windfall of bills in the middle of the table didn’t
help.
Lucky?
This was lucky? What in the name of all that was holy was he supposed to do
now?
And
that’s how Lucky gets to be in Ty’s, and eventually Grace’s, life. I hope it
got you a little interested in the story and eager for it to come out. Look for
news sometime between November and January!!
And, in the meantime, be sure to check out Grace's sisters' books, already published!
Harper Mia Joely
Thanks so much
for coming to my birthday party here on GLIAS. Be sure to stay in touch!
I love to play the slot machines every once in awhile. I've definitely won larger jackpots here and there over the years, but more often than not, it's a losing game ... but the entertainment of it is what I enjoy. Seeing the board games we played as kids or TV shoes or movies turned into an electronic game to sit and play is just fun! :)
ReplyDeleteHi Lynn! Sounds like you have the perfect personality for playing the slots--just the right amount of love for them but not too much obsession! I've never played slot machines--maybe I'll have to go watch the flashing lights and see how the luck goes! Thanks for sharing :-)
DeleteDon't know if this counts as gambling, but one year I won the Christmas party raffle at work for three months of underground parking. May not seem like a big deal, but January-March in Minnesota made it a huge win!
ReplyDeleteI dunno--I think that sounds like a pretty cool thing to win. I guess because I can totally verify that having a parking spot in winter in Minnesota would be pretty, um, cool! Nice!
DeleteI love this story already. I never gambled so don't ask me any advice.
ReplyDeleteThis book is so lovable. The little girl is so perfect!!!
Hi Evelyn! What a lovely comment, thanks so much! I hope the story will live up to the blurb -- I'm super excited about it. And I return the love--my granddaughter is named Evelyn (have we talked about this before? Sieve brain...) so I love your name :-) Thanks for stopping by.
DeleteThe only gambling I have ever done was playing a slot machine that was in the firehouse where I grew up... my dad would give me a few coins to try my luck... or the penny sale they used to have... that was fun... but as an adult, the only casino I have seen was on a cruise ship and I was just passing through.
ReplyDeleteWe would be soul sisters, Colleen. I've passed through casinos, too, but don't have the nerve to play. Wait, I lie, I played video blackjack in Las Vegas last May. I spent a dollar and wound up with 50 cents--so I lost only half. Big times :-)
Deletenope
ReplyDeletebn100candg at hotmail dot com
I'm, usually, fairly lucky. When we go to the boat I walk off with more money than I went on with. Last year in Vegas my number even came up on the Roulette wheel... I took that money and ran. I've won $1500 on a scratch off ticket, plus several $100 to $250 tickets. My youngest brother is lucky. He's won $15,000 on a scratch off ticket. Now, my mom, middle brother and sister... they have NO luck. I don't let them near me when I'm gambling.
ReplyDeleteAnd, I'll wait for this next book... but, no where in our contract was patiently mentioned.
Julie! So, you don't let unlucky people go with YOU, but do you ever lend yourself out to people when THEY go? You and your brother could double your money being lucky charms :-)
DeleteAnd you win the point. Our contract actually specifies you won't be patient. I'll go start typing.
Oh my gosh, Liz! That excerpt just grabbed me! What a great story! I can't wait to read the rest. Excellent post, great series...and Happy Birthday!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much E.E. -- I'm so glad it worked for you. I love Ty and can't wait to share him and the story of how he grows into being a true hero! And thanks for the wishes!
DeleteI'm not a gambler at all. I can think of a million things better to do with my money than just throwing it away.
ReplyDeletemarypres(AT)gmail(DOT)com
I'm not a gambler either, although I do admit that once in a while I'll take $30 to the local race track and use it to make $2 bets. If I stick to the limited budget, it's cheaper than a movie. And at least a horse race lasts longer than a roulette spin :-) Other than that--I'm with you!
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