Get Caught Reading

It’s National “Get Caught Reading” Day.

So, as I type this (when I’m supposed to be finishing up the first round of revisions on my next book), I’m re-reading Stephen King’s The Dead Zone. My husband watched the movie a couple of weeks ago and remarked how it reminded him of current events. That aside, Stephen King can write. 

If I caught the characters in my current release, Omega Moon Risingreading, the hero (Luke Omega) would be surfing the net, reading whatever he found there. Or, more likely, looking at pictures. The heroine (Abby Grant) doesn’t have time to read for pleasure so she would be studying Songwriting for Dummies or The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Songwriting. She’s a young woman focused on her goals.

Omega Moon Rising

 

What would I like to see you get caught reading? I’d say my first book, Moonlight Serenade, which is on sale this week for 99¢.

 

Moonlight Serenade

 

 

Home Town Funky Fact

I’m always curious about the quirks of places. Take my home town of Syracuse, NY.

We have the only one of these . . .

tipp hill light

. . .possibly in the world.

This “upside down” traffic light is located in the Tipperary Hill section of the city. Legend has it that the Irish immigrants threw stones at the traffic signal when it was first installed because they wanted the green on top. Eventually TPTB were pursued to see the light.

There is a little park nearby, called Stone-Throwers Park, commemorating the vandalism.

stone thrower

Does your home town have an interesting quirk?

Date Your Mate Month

May is Date Your Mate Month.

MoonlightSerenade Final Cover with Quote

Tokarz de Lobo Garnier didn’t date Delilah Tenney before he claimed her as his mate.

(Moonlight Serenade, available at Amazon and Barnes & Noble.)

JericoBurned_505x825

Stoker Smith delayed claiming Lucy Callahan, but not for long. Nor did they date in the interim.

(And Jericho Burned, available at Amazon and Barnes & Noble.)

Omega Moon Rising

Their single date is what got Luke Omega and Abigail Grant into trouble.

(Omega Moon Rising available at Amazon)

I guess dating your mate doesn’t include werewolves.

National Mother Goose Day

Today is National Mother Goose Day. In honor of that, I thought I would share a scene from a book that will probably never see the light of day. I entered this book in a publisher contest many years ago. It didn’t win, but a few weeks after the contest ended, I received a letter from an editor at the publisher  requesting the complete. She loved my voice. Ultimately, the publisher passed on the book.

I hope  you enjoy this excerpt. It’s one of my favorites.

The purr of a car in the lane drew Jake out of his funk. Gracie emerged from her nest under the porch to investigate. The goose was better than any watchdog because she was unexpected.

A sporty white Miata stopped next to his truck. Gracie headed straight for the intruder.

Jake swung his feet to the porch. He didn’t rise, waiting instead to see if his visitor was foolish enough to tangle with a goose. The car door opened, and Gracie’s wings came up in her warning stance. Legs clad in light colored slacks swung to the ground. Gracie hissed.

The trespasser ignored the warning. Jake’s hand went to his side, looking for the gun he’d stopped carrying eighteen months ago. His palm itched with longing when he recognized the hat.

The woman who had tumbled his world stood in his dooryard, warily eyeing his guard goose.

Sic her, Gracie, he thought, blood lust overriding the tightening in his chinos.

The goose’s head shot toward Lyra, hissing another warning.

“Nice birdie.” Lyra tried to appease the fowl.

Gracie wasn’t having any of it. Her wing feathers ruffled as she prepared to defend her domain. Lyra stepped forward, ignoring the signs of attack.

Just like a reporter. Can’t see what’s under her nose.

“Ouch!” She jumped back and fumbled with the door handle.

Seconds passed before he realized he was grinning.

Gracie nipped again before Lyra reached the safety of her car.

He waited for her to start the engine, but only Gracie’s triumphant honk disturbed the twilight silence.

“Mallory!” Lyra lowered her window. “I know you’re here. Call off your bird.”

Fat chance. Gracie roamed at will for exactly this reason. And if Lyra didn’t leave soon, Gracie would fly right through the open window and attack, like a scene from a Hitchcock movie. Gracie circled the Miata. The lazy goose didn’t want to exert the energy for flight.

“Mallory!” Lyra’s tone slid from angry to pleading. “I’m bleeding. Your stupid bird bit me.”

Good. Maybe you’ll get an infection.

“I’m not going anywhere until you hear me out.”

That was the problem with reporters. They clung like leeches, sucking the life from their victims. Hadn’t she already stolen too much from him? Now she wanted his time.

Oh, hell. He had time. Time was the only abundance in his life besides his anger.

The car door inched open. Gracie honked, homing in on the crack as if it were food. “Call off your bird!” The door slammed. Gracie glared — if a goose could glare — at the open window.

He had nothing better to do than wait to see who surrendered first — Gracie or Lyra. Both were tenacious. Both were stubborn, argumentative and audacious. Their standoff amused him. The confrontation was better than any sitcom zipping through his rooftop antennae.

He sipped his drink, holding the rough liquid in his mouth.

How desperate for entertainment was he that he actually looked forward to discovering if Lyra Lucas could outmaneuver a goose? He’d been isolated too long.

But if she’d found him, anyone looking for him could trace him. Not that he was hiding. Just out of the picture.

Forcing him to witness Matt’s murder was a threat he couldn’t ignore. He’d spent too much time in O’Flaherty’s inner sanctum to leave without ties. He wasn’t sure why O’Flaherty let him live after Lyra’s exposé. All he knew, all he cared about was that his silence kept his sister and her babies alive.

What if Lyra had compromised their safety?

Fear rode on the breeze, chilling him in spite of the whiskey’s fire in his belly.

“Mallory!”

She wouldn’t surrender. Ego wouldn’t allow a goose to win.

Gracie’s snowy white feathers were nearly luminous in the fading lavender light. Her wings ruffled at Lyra’s words.

“Why don’t you whack her with your Emmy?” he suggested, breaking his silence. “It worked on me.”

“I knew you were here.” The door whipped open, nearly broadsiding his bird. The white Miata resembled a one-winged goose battling with Gracie.

He laughed. Aloud. Laughing felt good.

“This isn’t funny,” Lyra said, as Gracie ducked under the door to nip at a bare ankle.

Blaming the whiskey for his half-aroused state, he planted his feet on floorboards. “You’re trespassing again.”

“O’Flaherty’s back.”

His glass slipped from his numb fingers, spilling acidic liquid on the porch. Silence closed in. Crushing silence. Even Gracie ceased hissing. He tried to force his feet to move toward the kitchen door.

O’Flaherty. The name was better than a secret password.

Didn’t Liar realize O’Flaherty had never gone away? He’d merely lurked in the shadows as he determined the weaknesses of those whose help he required.

The blare of the Miata’s horn split the night. Gracie honked back, as if surrendering to a larger fowl, and scurried toward her haven beneath the porch.