Category Archives: #tuesdaytease

#tuesdaytease 7.30.24

So I’m trying to figure out what comes next in the publication schedule, and it’s my Dickens book on 11.11. Then, my Love, Lattes, and the Holidays book on 12.10. I’ve talked about them for a bunch of times, so i think today I’ll talk about the 4th HEAVEN’S MATCHMAKER book ( which isn’t written yet, just plotted.)

So, for the tease, here’s the premise of… YOU’RE MY MATCH ( CHARITY AND KOLBY)

Her job as an assistant wedding planner means everything to Charity. She’s got a bullet-point plan for her future, and she’s not about to let anything get in the way of her goals. But a drunken hookup with a coworker – a guy she’s had a hate/hate relationship with from the get-go – may put her plan in jeopardy.  Charity has to ensure her boss never finds out about her indiscretion. But every day, it’s getting harder to hide how much she wants a repeat of that amazing night.

His life is a series of one-night stands and Kolby’s not about to change his status for anyone – not even the little fireball who’s been the bane of his existence since the first day they met. Why, then, are his eyes always straying to Charity when he should be concentrating on work? And why does being around her suddenly make him want to be a different kind of man? A better one? One who thinks about…the future?

These two polar opposites need to decide if they want a future together or a life without the other in it, because an emotional volcano is churning and it’s about to erupt.

Now…to write it. LOL ~ Peg

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#tuesdaytease 7.23.24

So I don’t give teasers on things I’m still working on for a first draft, but today, I feel like being different.

LOL.

On the docket for a 2025 release ( don’t ask me why because i don’t know the date!) is another FBI book. This one’s not about Kella and the SPCD team, but a totally different story and team. The title is CHILDREN OF THE PROPHET. I have the cover, so ta-da…

Once upon a time I was obsessed with WACO, JONESTOWN, MANSON, et al, and read everything I could about cults. When the 25th anniversary of WACO happened a few years, I started to get an idea. What happened to the kids? What happened to the children who were taken before the tragic fire? Where were they today and how were they faring?

An idea sparked: write about them. But make it a suspense about how the past never really dies. So, COTP was imagined.

Here’s a little of the opening…. and remember- this is raw and unedited, so don’t come at me for spelling/typos/tense issues.

Not yet, anyway (LOL)

Chapter 1

Tuesday night, June 28, 6 p.m.

 “Have a good night, Dr. Engersol.”

Blythe smiled at her nurse. “You too, Penny. And thanks for all your help today. I couldn’t have gotten through it without you.”

“It was a busy one, that’s for sure.”

Since she was a firm believer in speaking stuff into the universe you wanted to happen, Blythe said,  “Here’s hoping tomorrow is a little easier.”

“Your lips to God’s ears.”

Blythe hadn’t believed in a God for a while, so she simply bobbed her head once as she slid her car keys out of her purse.

The parking lot was empty save for her old and reliable Subaru and Penny’s new SUV.

Settled behind the wheel, Blythe sighed, long and deep. Exhaustion oozed from every cell in her body. Penny’s statement had been spot-on. It had been a busy day. Twenty-eight office patients in addition to the two she’d seen at the hospital before starting her official hours. As one of only three family practice docs in the small rural town, Blythe’s days were typically long and demanding. Today, more so than usual.

Too tired to even think about cooking, she pulled her cell from her purse and gave in to a craving she’d been feeling for weeks by ordering a loaded pizza for pickup from the town’s only pizzeria. It wouldn’t hurt to have one night devoid of salads and organically grown and grass fed proteins. Besides, Joy loved pizza.

After placing the order, she pulled out of the parking lot and called home. When the answering machine clicked on she was mildly surprised. Her nanny typically picked up.

“Hey, you two,” Blythe said after the recording ding signaled. “You’re probably out back playing on this lovely evening. Just wanted to give you a head’s up. I’ll be home in about twenty. Just heading to Ralph’s to pick up a pizza for dinner. And I can practically hear you clapping, Joy Charity Engersol. Set the table and I’ll see you both in a bit.”

The main street of Cable, New Hampshire, population 25,678, boasted a local pharmacy, a Quick-E-mart, a real estate office and three bars, in addition to two family style diners, one Chinese food restaurant, and Ralphs, the local –and to date only – town pizzeria. The police and fire departments bookended the wide street, with City Hall nestled smack in the middle between them. The north side of the street housed the Catholic church, the south side the Lutheran one. If a family practiced Judaism they needed to drive a half hour to the next town over to attend Temple. The hometown newspaper, which put out two weekly editions and a Sunday special, ran its operation from the old Woolworth building situated next to the police station.

Cable’s hospital was small but served the community of the five surrounding towns and villages well. Gossip had it a big health care conglomerate was looking to purchase the facility. Blythe heard the rumor from one of the hospital nurses a week ago, but nothing else since. As one of only five attending physicians in town, she figured she’d be approached one of these days about the proposed takeover. Was it bad of her to hope it never happened? She loved the small, insular community where she’d built her practice while raising her daughter. Neighbors knew one another, greeted each other on the streets in passing, but were private enough not to encroach ask too many questions or dig too deep into pasts.

The parking lot of Ralph’s was busy for at Tuesday June night. Once school let out for the year, the pizza joint – a favorite with the middle and high school crowd, would be packed every night until curfews were called and well-meaning parents intruded on the private lives of their offspring.

Thank God Joy is only ten. I don’t know how I’m going cope when she turns into a teenager.

Blythe figured if she still believed in prayer, she’d be sending up quite a few when her daughter’s teen years rolled around. Since she no longer did, she’d need to find an alternative to dealing with what she hoped wouldn’t be a moody, angsty teen like she saw every day in her practice.

Blythe eased her car into a vacant spot. The noise level inside Ralph’s brought forth memories of the early morning egg gatherings she’d been raised on. The hens would cluck, cackle and squawk when she’d reach under them to grab their morning contribution to breakfast, many times aiming a well-honed sharp beak at her roaming hand.

“Hey, Doc, “ Ralph Tremont called from behind the counter. “Yours is coming up in about five minutes.”

Blythe waved and miraculously spotted an empty two-seat table in a corner. After making a beeline for it, she sat and pulled out her phone. There were no messages or texts from either Joy or MaryElena.

Odd.

She dialed her home number again, then her nanny’s cell her gaze taking in the packed pizza parlor. While the phone rang, she spotted Benjamin Reed enter, remove his hat, then run his gaze around the room. It was a gesture she’d seen the police chief make often, and one which she was well versed in making as well.

His gaze lit on her and a tiny nod accompanied by a half smile came her way. Mary Elena’s answering machine kicked in right then, so she left a message, this time ending with call me before disconnecting.

“Seems like this is the hot spot to be tonight,” Ben said as he maneuvered his way to her table. “’Evening, Doc.”

“Chief.”

Blythe pasted a smile on her face. Since moving to Cable and taking over the job from the then retiring chief Dudley Comstock, Ben Reed had made an impression with the town elders as a staunch civil servant and with the females of the community as an eligible bachelor. Word on the street had it the man had never been married. If the available women of the town had anything to say about it, that situation was going to be corrected as soon as possible.

“Having dinner out tonight?” he asked, lifting a foot to a chair rung and leaning an elbow on his bent leg. His stance was calculated to give off a relaxed and easygoing vibe. It only served to put Blythe on edge. The attention of government authorities, police in particular, always made her nervous.

“Waiting for a pie to go,” she told him. “Special treat for tonight.”

“Special, eh? Someone’s birthday?”

It took everything in her to keep the tepid smile on her face.

Why were the police always so nosy? And why was Ben Reed so interested in her?

“Nope. Just a long day and I don’t feel like cooking.”

“I hear ya. Some weeks it seems like I live on take-out because I don’t have time to cook a decent meal. Long days turn into long nights way too often.”

Blythe knew decorum dictated she should ask the man to sit, but a well healed caution and lifelong distrust of lawmen kept her from the offer. She did wonder, though, how a tiny community like Cable could be so full of criminal acts to keep the chief of police up late at night. One of the main reasons she’d decided to come and settle in the area was its reportedly low crime rate.

Instead of giving voice to the question, Blythe gave him her version of a sympathetic expression, the one she used on people who tried to get her to open up and talk about her past.

Reed must have taken her bland smirk as a silent invitation to sit down and commiserate while they waited, because he nodded and he pulled out the chair. Blythe’s pulse kicked up a few beats. Just when it looked like she’d be forced to make unwanted and benign small talk with the man, Ralph called her name from the counter. She couldn’t rein in the relieved sigh that blew from her lips when she stood. Reed halted in his tracks.

“Well, that’s me. Enjoy your dinner, Chief Reed.”  She gave him a hopefully not too bright smile and jogged up to the cash register.

The heat from Reed’s gaze as he tracked her while she paid and then bolted from the place burned a hole dead center in her back. She didn’t need to look over her shoulder to know he was following her with his eyes. With shaking hands she hit the fob on her key ring, opened the passenger side door and tossed the boxed pizza on to the seat with more vigor than she’d intended.

Great. The cheese’ll probably be stuck to the top now.

With an exasperated breath, she put the car in drive, checked her mirrors and pulled out of the parking lot. One quick look out the drivers’ side window and she spotted Ben Reed standing in the doorway to Ralph’s, his hat still in his hand, his eyes still trained on her.

It didn’t take a genius to figure out the man was interested in her. It wasn’t coincidence that he routinely showed up where ever she found herself, be it the gas station when she was filling up and he just happened to drive the squad in for a few added gallons, or those times she’d been going down one aisle in the quick-e-mart, tossing items in her shopping cart, only to spot him coming from the opposite direction, an empty basket dangling from his arm. Or even tonight as he just happened to come into Ralph’s on the one night she’d decided pizza for dinner was a good thing.

The man was interested and letting her know it without coming right out and saying so.

Not that she’d ever encouraged him. One thing Blythe knew for certain was getting personally involved with a man of the law was something to be avoided at all costs. But she also knew drawing attention to herself was the wrong thing to do as well and while she drove down Main Street, she gave herself a few choice words about how her behavior might churn up the Chief’s curiosity. Blythe didn’t need anyone being curious about her. Being curious lead to all manner of things she wanted to avoid at all costs.

Turning from the paved county road onto the winding, gravel-strewn one leading to her home, Blythe told herself to calm down, take a breath, and forget about it. Ben Reed was just a man. One she didn’t need and had no thought she ever would.

She hit the garage door opener and pulled in. With the still-piping hot pizza box in her hand, she came into the kitchen from the garage connecting door.

The room was empty and a quick glance at the table showed her it hadn’t been set.

“Hey, I’m home and I’ve got chow. Where are you, two?”

There were two glasses on the kitchen counter, small chunks of not-melted yet ice in the bottoms. The rest of the kitchen was spotless, a testament to MaryElena’s mild cleaning OCD.

Blythe moved from the kitchen to the hallway.

“Joy? MaryElena?”

Her voice echoed through the house.

The afternoon sun was low now, the living room still lit well from the sun filtering through the glass patio doors. They were closed and a quick peek through the glass into the fenced-in backyard showed it empty, the swing set still, the patio furniture in place and unused.

“Where the heck are you two?”

Mild irritation laced her voice.

Methodically, Blythe moved about the house. First, to her nanny’s tiny bedroom off the kitchen, which smelled faintly of roses from the air freshener that sat on top of the small dresser. The bed was made, as always, the hospital corners crisp and tight, the room neat without a speck of dust.  

Then, on to the den.

Empty. The television was cold when Blythe touched it.

Up the stairs to the second floor. Joy’s bedroom to the right of the staircase was its usual chaos of strewn outfits she’d tried on for the day flung across her bed, her required summer reading books on the floor next to it, and a few dresser drawers partly opened. Her daughter’s habit of pulling clothing items from her closet and drawers and never putting anything back in place was a growing concern to a mother who liked everything Marie Kondo tidy.

The bathrooms next, then on to her own bedroom, and the small home office she’d fashioned for herself. All appeared as she’d left them that morning.

“This is ridiculous,” she murmured to the empty rooms. Annoyance pushed the mild irritation to the sidelines. “You could have at least left me a note.”

She tugged her phone from her pocket and pressed her Nanny’s speed dial number again.

Somewhere in the house, the ringtone MaryElena had assigned to her employer pinged, soft and faint.

“What the—”

Blythe followed the sound. Down the stairs to the first level. Through the hallway.

It was louder in the kitchen, but still muffled.

It’s coming from the basement.

A growing sense of unease pushed the previous pique away.

Blythe slowly pulled open the basement door only to have the noise stop abruptly. With a shaky finger, she pressed the speed dial again. Within seconds, the tone started up, the sound jingling up the stairs. Blythe reached out a hand and flicked the light switch on the wall to illuminate the darkened room below her.

Cautiously, she took each step down the wooden staircase, gripping the handrail with fingers now visibly trembling. The basement was the one area in the house she’d yet to refinish, promising herself at least twice a year she’d call a contractor and a painter to make the area which ran the length of the house a space where Joy could bring her friends to play and hang out. A finished basement always added to the resale value of a house, too, something Blythe kept in the back of her mind at all times.

Step by step she slowly descended the wooden stairs, one hand clinging to her phone, the other the rail. The stairs were as old as the house and needed to be redone along with the basement. They creaked and groaned with each move Blythe took from one to the next. There was no way she could be silent as she descended. At the bottom rung, the ring tone cut out again, but not before Blythe ascertained it was coming from the laundry room off to the left of the staircase.

“MaryElena? Joy? You guys down here?”

Silence surrounded her.

“If this is some kind of prank, I’m not amused.”

Willing her feet to move, Blythe cautiously crept towards the laundry room, holding her cell phone out in front of her as if it were a weapon.

“I swear, Joy Charity Engersol, I will ground you until you’re fifty if something jumps out at me.”

Placing one hand on the doorjamb separating the laundry area from the basement proper, Blythe angled her body behind the wall and peeked her head into the tiny room. Nothing, as she’d feared, flew out at her.

But an odor she was intimately familiar with, did. The metallic, copper-filled stench of fresh blood hit her hard and hot. A swell of nausea pushed at her throat.  At the same time she understood what it was, she saw the cause.

“Oh, sweet Jesus.”

Blythe bent to the fallen form of her nanny. The young girl was on her back, her arms flung out at her sides, her right leg bent at a critical angle. Her neck was sliced from ear to ear, blood from the wound a crimson colored wave. That told the doctor in Blythe whatever had attacked her had done so very recently. Vacant, brown eyes, the irises beginning to glaze over, stared up at Blythe. MaryEllen’s cell phone was gripped between her fingers.

Even instinctively knowing the girl was dead, Blythe’s training forced her to check for a heartbeat. She pushed two fingers to the girl’s outstretched wrist, waited, and felt nothing.

Blythe bolted upright. Her gaze darted around the small space searching for her daughter.

“Joy?” This time she allowed her voice to scream the name, over and as she ran around the width of the basement, throwing open the doors to storage closets nestled into two of the faux walls. When they proved empty, she catapulted back up the stairs at a breakneck speed.

“Joy?” The power behind her shriek made the chandelier in the dining room tremble.

Heart banging against her chest Blythe punched in the emergency code on her phone as she continued to move through the rooms, searching, silently praying to find her daughter.

Back in the kitchen, the county dispatcher answered. Blythe dragged in a deep breath and willed herself to calm down.

“Courtney, it’s Blythe Engersol.”

“Hey, Doc. You got an emergency?”

“I need…help. I just got home.” Her fingers started tingling and the fringes of her vision began to blur.

Breathe. In…out.

“My…my Nanny’s been killed. And my daughter’s missing. I can’t find her. Courtney, I can’t find Joy. Please. Please send help. Please.”

The rest of her vision turned hazy, the tingling in her hands shooting up her arms, her grip of the phone beginning to grow slack. It took every ounce of strength she had to hold on to it. With her free hand she reached out and bolstered herself against the marble counter top.

“Stay with me, Doc. I’m calling the Chief and the deputies now. Are you in the house?”

“Ye…yes. I’m here.”

“Are you alone?”

“I think … I’m not…sure.”

“Listen, Doc. Leave. Go outside and wait for the Chief. Sit on the curb or something, but don’t stay in the house. I’m gonna stay on the line with you, okay? Go. Now. Right now. Go outside and wait.”

“Leave? I…can’t. Joy…Joy’s not… she needs me. She—”

Her vision tunneled, and all she could see was the countertop in front of her.

Oh, please don’t let me faint.

 “I’m…”

“Doc? Doc?”

The light winked out as if she’d extinguished a candle. The last thought Blythe had as slid to the tiled kitchen floor, the phone bouncing from her hand across the hard surface, was that she needed to find her daughter.

Intrigued?

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#teasertuesday 7.16.24

We’re still celebrating CHRISTMAS IN JULY Over on the CHRISTMAS COMES TO DICKENS FB page, so here’s a little tease from my 2024 addition, A CHEF’S KISS CHRISTMAS. SO, if you read last year’s entry, DON’T MESS WITH THE MISTLETOE, you will recognize Julia Charles here today. Things have changed for the lovely waitress in this past year

At one point, the noise level rose considerably, and his head flicked toward the swing doors. They blew open as someone pushed them so hard that they bounced back against the wall and then flung forward again as a unit. Amy’s outstretched hand held them at bay, her other hand wrapped around Julia’s upper arm. The younger woman was waddling, the advanced state of her pregnancy evident today.

“Tony,” Amy barked, “Get me a chair.”

He’d been around kitchen emergencies his entire life. Grease fires, ovens shooting flames from food catching fire, a fryolator overheating, a mishandled knife or two. He recognized the urgency in Amy’s voice.

Like a lightning strike, he shot to the office and returned with Amy’s desk chair.

Julia, sweating and panting, eased down into it with her mother-in-law’s and his help.

“Now RayLynn already called for an ambulance, darlin’,” she told the younger woman as she patted her hand, “and I’m gonna call Michael right now and start the Charles’  family phone tree.” She pulled her cell from her apron pocket and pressed a single button.

From the gist of what he’d just heard, Tony deduced Julia was in labor.

He was about to ask her if he could get her anything or help in any way, but the words were never unleashed because the swing door flew open again, and two paramedics from Dickens Memorial Hospital sailed through grasping a gurney.

Questions were asked and answered, a device was threaded around her ample waist with an explanation it was a fetal heart monitor to gage the baby’s heartrate.

Five minutes after they arrived, Julia was secured, monitor in place, along with an Intravenous inserted, and on her way out the door to the hospital.

Amy grabbed her coat from the peg by the back door, and as she shrugged into it told him, “You’re in charge while I’m gone,” before breezing out the door. “Keep my kitchen running.”

He didn’t hesitate before saying, “Yes, Ma’am.” It was only after the doors closed behind her that he realized he’d agreed without any hesitation or worry.

Something to think about later.

For now, there were hungry people in the dining room.

They made it through the breakfast rush, the lunch crush, and the midafternoon lull. Amy had called twice to check on everything and give baby updates. Julia was still in labor, her pilot husband Michael by her side, along with Julia’s eight-year-old daughter from her first marriage, Blake.

She asked him to hold down the fort for a few more hours. Since he’d been planning to, he told her he would.

The last weekend of the month ( July 26-27, ) It will be my turn to take over as a DICKEN’S Author on the FB page. At that time, I’ll reveal my 2024 cover. It’s a beauty!

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#tuesdaytease 7.9.2024 Celebrate Christmas in July!!!

So, In honor of CHRISTMAS IN JULY, I have 2 holiday romance books releasing for the 2024 holiday season. The first is the DICKENS HOLIDAY ROMANCE, A CHEF’S KISS CHRISTMAS, which comes out on 11.11.24. I’ve talked a bit about that one already, so….

The second is a short story/novella in an anthology titled LOVE, LATTES and HOLIDAY TALES. The cool thing about this anthology is that the profits all go towards the charity 4 Paws for Ability, a non-profit organization that matches service dogs with Veterans. How fabulous is that?? The book is available for preorder and is just 99 cents – that’s 25 authors/25 stories for just 99 cents. Come on, kids – what a bargain that is!!!

My story is about a dog trainer and one of her clients…

Here’s a little bit:

Talk about performance pressure.

Ben pointed to my table. We sat, while he held fast to his dog’s leash just in case he decided to bolt again.

He needn’t have worried.  D’Artagnan (and can we just establish how cute that name is ) plopped down between my chair and Juliette’s, his mouth pulled into an enraptured smile as he continued to stare at my little darling.

And that little darling was staring right back, her doggie coquette on full blast.

Ben took a quick look at his dog, seemed satisfied all was well, then turned his attention to me.

“So,” I said. “You’re in the market for a dog trainer.”

He grinned and nodded. “I am, but Dart isn’t my dog.”

That surprised me.

“He belongs to my aunt, who, recently, fell and broke her hip. She’s in a rehab facility for a few months, recouping.”

“I’m sorry.”

He waved a hand at me. “She’s strong and determined, so she’ll be fine. The issue is when she comes home there’s no way she can manage Dart in his present state. He pulls like crazy when you walk him, he’s easily distracted, and I’m not sure she’s going to be able to safely take care of him by herself. He needs to be trained, something she never bothered with.”

“Do you know how old he is?”

“Four. Is that too old for him to learn?”

“Of course not.”

“Even though he still acts like that’s months and not years? He’s a full-on puppy. He doesn’t know his boundaries and he doesn’t listen to commands.”

I refrained from saying he listened to me just fine when I told him to sit.

Here’s the cover for the anthology and my book cover.

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#tuesdaytease 7.2.24

Today, instead of a snippet from a WIP, I’m teasing the cover for my upcoming DICKENS HOLIDAY ROMANCE – A CHEF’S KISS CHRISTMAS.

Successful Chef Anton Saparosa had the perfect life. Great marriage; beautiful and adoring wife; trendy, SoCal restaurant frequented by celebrities – many of them his friends.

Then Covid hit.

Anton’s perfect life dissolved before his eyes. With nothing left to keep him in California, he starts an itinerant cross-country journey searching for something to give his life meaning again.

Happenstance lands him in the tiny town of Dickens just as Dorrit’s Diner is thrown into chaos.

Literary Agent Portia Avon needs a rest. A messy divorce has her craving quiet and the company of her friend and client A.B. Cards, nee Abra Bree. She comes from the western heat of California to the eastern cold of Dickens and plans to do nothing but rest, relax, and read during her holiday stay.

When Portia spots a familiar face in Dorrit’s, she’s confused. Why is Anton Saparosa, one of the most recognizable chefs in California, working as a fry cook in Abra’s mom’s diner, and going by the name Tony Smith?

A question Portia wants an answer to, but one Tony isn’t willing to share, especially with a woman he can’t stop thinking about.

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#tuesdaytease 6.25.25

I’ll be teasing the cover reveal for my newest Dicken’s book in July,but for now, here’s a little something about my 2024 Dickens book, A CHEF’S KISS CHRISTMAS. In this scene, Portia and Tony go Christmas Tree shopping for the diner’s tree. He has no idea it’s a ruse Portia is using to get him out and about…

“I knew this tree would look perfect on this table,” Portia said two hours later while she affixed the last ornament.

Tony lifted his head from his position at the stove, stared across the room at her, then shook his head.

Three times.

Three times now she’d all but bamboozled him into doing something he thought he’d never do or sworn not to.

By the time they arrived at the office to give the clerk the tag for the diner tree, he’d forgotten all about her prompt that he get his own holiday tree, instead, his thoughts turned to food. He’d been playing with the idea of deconstructing an alfredo sauce and using it on poached eggs. Maybe he could take a few hours tonight and whip up a few samples. The idea had come to him earlier in the week when a customer had praised the new tangy Alfredo he’d been using in the diner. Amy had relayed the customer’s compliment and he’d begun thinking of alternate ways to use the sauce.

While Portia had paid, he’d gone to bring the car around from the packed lot. When she emerged from the office ten minutes later, she had a wrapped bundle in her arms and was wearing a smile that more than hinted at a Cheshire cat vibe.

“What’s that?” he thrust his chin toward the bundle when she got in the car.

She turned to him and with her eyes wide, chin dropped a hair so she could zero in on him, she said, “A freshly cut tabletop tree. It’s barely thirty-six inches.”

Glaring at her, his own eyes narrowing, he said, “For Abra?”

“Nope.”

She popped the P with a flare.

“Portia.” She’d have to have a hearing loss to mistake the warning in his voice.

“Anton,” she said back, using the same tone.

“Don’t call me that.” For some reason, he rolled his head right and left.

“We’re in your car, silly. No one can hear us. And before you have a conniption,” she held up one hand, effectively silencing him, “It’s a gift.”

“A gift?”

She nodded and said, “There you go repeating everything again, but yes. It’s a thank you for helping me today.”

“I didn’t help you at all,” he countered. “When you called me and then we wound up at the tree farm, I thought it meant you needed help with cutting one down.”

“Initially, that was my thought. But it seemed easier, once we got here, to have the farm hands to it. They’ll do a great job and deliver it, too. But you came with me, gave up your one free afternoon, and because of that I wanted to say thank you, and getting you this tree is my way of doing it.”

He could argue, but he’d look like a real loser if he refused the offer of the gift.

But… “I don’t have anything to decorate it with and like I said, I’m not investing in a bunch of things that I won’t be taking with me when I leave.”

“No worries.” She pulled out her phone and gave him the directions to the town’s secondhand store, Curious Curios.

“And we’re going there, why?” he asked, pulling onto the county road.

“Because they have a package waiting for me that I need to pick up. They don’t deliver. And before you say a package, in that deep, smokey, sexy voice,” he clamped his mouth shut because he’d been about to do just that, “Yes, a package. It’s filled with used ornaments and tree trimmings the owner picked out for me.”

“When?” was all he could think to ask.

“What?”

“Not what. When?”

“When, what?”

The force and breadth of the sigh he expelled fogged up the front windshield. “I feel like I’m in a bad Yogi Berra movie and it’s déjà vu all over again.” Another exhale, this one followed by a cleansing inhale meant to calm him. “When did you arrange for a box of ornaments to be filled for you?”

For the first time in all their interactions, awkwardness descended upon her face and body. Shoulders slumped under her coat; mouth pinched in one corner as if lost in thought; brows flirting with one another, a delicate crease bifurcating them; even her color heightened a bit as her cheeks pinked.

“Portia?”

She closed her eyes, took a deep breath, then opened them again. “I spoke with her on the phone this morning. Told her what I needed and then trusted her to get everything ready for pick up.”

He digested that for the time it took to wait for the traffic light they were stopped at to turn back to green. As he pushed down on the gas pedal he said, “You planned this whole thing, didn’t you? This outing to the tree farm. Me going with you. Getting me that tree. Heck, you were probably even the one who convinced Amy to get a real tree for the diner.” He tossed her a quick glance before concentrating back on the road. “I’m right, aren’t I?”

She stayed silent for an entire block. Then, slowly, she began to nod, until a weak, “Yes,” escaped from between her lips.

“Why? Why did you go to all that trouble? Just for me to have a…holiday tree?” He shook his head. “That makes no sense.”

She turned to him then, and from the corner of his eye he could tell she was nervous.

About what? Him figuring out what she’d done? Her doing it? This was all just crazy.

You’ll have to read the book to find out why she’s so invested in getting him out of the house…

Release day is 11.11.24

Cover reveal starting July !

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#tuesdaytease 6.11.24

Okay, this one is going way out of my comfort zone because I haven’t even gotten past chapter 3 yet, but since everyone liked RETRIBUTION, I’m doing another 2 FBI books. One isn’t a Tucker/Kella/et al book and one is. The teaser today is from the one that isn’t and it’s (tentatively titled) Children of the Prophet. It’s about a cult, 25 years after a catastrophic event occurs – think Branch Davidians.

Here’s the (tentative) cover:

I’m still structuring the book, but here’s a little of the opening. Premise – mom comes home from work and finds nanny and daughter missing…

“Hey, I’m home and I’ve got chow. Where are you, two?”

There were two glasses on the kitchen counter, small chunks of not-yet-melted ice in the bottoms. The rest of the kitchen was spotless, a testament to MaryElena’s mild cleaning OCD.

Blythe moved from the kitchen to the hallway.

“Joy? MaryElena?”

Her voice echoed through the house.

The afternoon sun was low now, the living room still lit well from the sun filtering through the glass patio doors. They were closed and a quick peek through the glass into the fenced-in backyard showed it empty, the swing set still, the patio furniture in place and unused.

“Where the heck are you two?”

Mild irritation laced her voice.

Methodically, Blythe moved about the house. First, to her nanny’s tiny bedroom off the kitchen, which smelled faintly of roses from the air freshener sitting on top of the small dresser. The bed was made, as always, the hospital corners crisp and tight, the room neat, without a speck of dust.  

Then, on to the den.

Empty. The television was cold when Blythe touched it.

Up the stairs to the second floor. Joy’s bedroom to the right of the staircase was its usual chaos of strewn outfits she’d tried on for the day flung across her bed, her required summer reading books on the floor next to it, and a few dresser drawers partly opened. Her daughter’s habit of pulling clothing items from her closet and drawers and never putting anything back in place was a growing concern to a mother who liked everything Marie Kondo tidy.

The bathrooms next, then to her own bedroom, and the small home office she’d fashioned for herself. All appeared as she’d left them that morning.

“This is ridiculous,” she murmured to the empty rooms. Annoyance pushed the mild irritation to the sidelines. “You could have at least left me a note.”

She tugged her phone from her pocket and pressed her Nanny’s speed dial number again.

Somewhere in the house, the ringtone MaryElena had assigned to her employer pinged, soft and faint.

“What the—”

Blythe followed the sound. Down the stairs to the first level. Through the hallway.

It was louder in the kitchen, but still muffled.

It’s coming from the basement.

A growing sense of unease pushed the previous pique away.

Blythe slowly pulled open the basement door only to have the noise stop abruptly. With a shaky finger, she pressed the speed dial again. Within seconds, the tone started, the sound jingling up the stairs. Blythe reached out a hand and flicked the light switch on the wall to illuminate the darkened room below her.

Cautiously, she took each step down the wooden staircase, gripping the handrail with fingers now visibly trembling. The basement was the one area in the house she’d yet to refinish, promising herself at least twice a year she’d call a contractor and a painter to make the area which ran the length of the house a space where Joy could bring her friends to play and hang out. A finished basement always added to the resale value of a house, too, something Blythe kept in the back of her mind.

Step by step, she slowly descended the wooden stairs, one hand clinging to her phone, the other, the rail. The stairs were as old as the house and needed to be redone along with the basement. They creaked and groaned with each move Blythe took from one to the next. There was no way she could be silent as she descended. At the bottom rung, the ring tone cut out again, but not before Blythe ascertained it was coming from the laundry room off to the left of the staircase.

“MaryElena? Joy? You guys down here?”

Silence surrounded her.

“If this is some kind of prank, I’m not amused.”

Willing her feet to move, Blythe cautiously crept towards the laundry room, holding her cell phone out in front of her as if it were a weapon.

“I swear, Joy Charity Engersol, I will ground you until you’re fifty if something jumps out at me.”

Placing one hand on the doorjamb separating the laundry area from the basement proper, Blythe angled her body behind the wall and peeked into the tiny room. Nothing, as she’d feared, flew out at her.

But an odor she was intimately familiar with, did. The metallic, copper-filled stench of fresh blood hit her hard and hot. A swell of nausea pushed at her throat.  At the same time she understood what it was, she saw the cause.

“Oh, sweet Jesus.”

Blythe bent to the fallen form of her nanny. The young girl was on her back, her arms flung out at her sides, her right leg bent at a critical angle. Her neck was sliced from ear to ear, blood from the wound a crimson-colored wave. That told the doctor in Blythe whatever had attacked her had done so very recently. Vacant, brown eyes, the irises beginning to glaze over, stared up at Blythe. MaryEllena’s cell phone was gripped between her fingers.

Even instinctively knowing the girl was dead, Blythe’s training forced her to check for a heartbeat. She pushed two fingers to the girl’s outstretched wrist, waited, and felt nothing.

Blythe bolted upright. Her gaze darted around the small space searching for her daughter.

“Joy?” This time she allowed her voice to scream the name, over and over as she ran around the width of the basement, throwing open the doors to storage closets nestled into two of the faux walls. When they proved empty, she catapulted back up the stairs at a breakneck speed.

“Joy?” The power behind her shriek made the chandelier in the dining room tremble.

Heart banging against her chest Blythe punched in the emergency code on her phone as she continued to move through the rooms, searching, silently praying to find her daughter.

Back in the kitchen, the county dispatcher answered. Blythe dragged in a deep breath and willed herself to calm down.

“Courtney, it’s Blythe Engersol.”

“Hey, Doc. You got an emergency?”

“I need…help. I just got home.” Her fingers started tingling and the fringes of her vision began to blur.

Breathe. In…out.

“My…my Nanny’s been killed. And my daughter’s missing. I can’t find her. Courtney, I can’t find Joy. Please. Please send help. Please.”

The rest of her vision turned hazy, the tingling in her hands shooting up her arms, her grip of the phone beginning to grow slack. It took every ounce of strength she had to hold on to it. With her free hand, she reached out and bolstered herself against the marble countertop.

“Stay with me, Doc. I’m calling the Chief and the deputies now. Are you in the house?”

“Ye…yes. I’m here.”

“Are you alone?”

“I think … I’m not…sure.”

“Listen, Doc. Leave. Go outside and wait for the Chief. Sit on the curb or something, but don’t stay in the house. I’m gonna stay on the line with you, okay? Go. Now. Right now. Go outside and wait.”

“Leave? I…can’t. Joy…Joy’s not… she needs me. She—”

Her vision tunneled, and all she could see was the countertop in front of her.

Oh, please don’t let me faint.

 “I’m…”

“Doc? Doc?”

The light winked out as if she’d extinguished a candle. The last thought Blythe had as she slid to the tiled kitchen floor, the phone bouncing from her hand across the hard surface, was that she needed to find her daughter.

And so it begins….

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#Tuesdaytease 6.4.2024

So, I am currently working on my 2024 addition to the DICKEN HOLIDAY ROMANCE SERIES. My book this year is called A CHEF’S KISS CHRISTMAS. I haven’t done a blurb yet, but the story involves a chef-on-the-run-from-life and a literary agent.

Of course it takes place mostly in Dorrit’s Diner, and the story is sprinkled with many glimpses of Amy and her family. This will be my last Dickens book (don’t cry!) and I wanted to make it a goodie. I like what I’ve got so far, so here’s a little glimpse into the first chapter. The cover reveal is coming in July so stick around by following me if you don’t.

Here ya go… the setup = Amy’s cook Winston has had an accident and can’t work. Amy is in dire straights looking for a chef. Enter…our hero.

Crap on cracker.” Amy slammed her fists on her almost non-existent hips. “He was my one hope to take over for Winnie. I need a cook, asap. I can’t feed all these people,” she swept her hand across the room, “manage this place and serve at the same time.”

Something in her tone hit Tony deep in his chest. Part exasperated, part worried, and with a little fear thrown in, she sounded much like his Aunt Connie had when his uncle had his first heart attack and was unable to run their business. Tony had stepped up and never once regretted his decision. His aunt had been eternally grateful, and Tony learned a valuable lesson: helping people is its own reward.

That had to be the reason he did what he did next because he hadn’t felt like helping anyone in a long, long time.

Two years, three months, and eight days to be precise.

“Need help?” he asked Amy.

She narrowed her gaze toward him. “What I need is someone who can cook and run my kitchen, so my customers don’t revolt. Can you do that?”

“As a matter of fact, I can.”

Those narrowed eyes now widened.

“I grew up in a diner. Managed it for years.” He wiped his mouth with a napkin, then rose. “I can give you a hand this morning until things settle down if you’d like.”

Amy’s discerning eye raked across his face, probing, measuring.

He knew what she saw: a forty-something guy with hair in need of at least two inches chopped off, six days of lazy stubble on his cheeks and jaw and a body that could use a minimum of ten pounds back of the thirty it’d lost in the past two years. A smile hadn’t met his lips in quite a while and he rarely – if ever- struck up a conversation with anyone.

None of those traits exuded trustworthiness and he figured Amy was wary of him because of it.

“Come with me,” she said after a moment’s reflection.

He chugged the remainder of his coffee and followed her through the dining room.

Just beyond the swing doors, chaos ruled.

The two paramedics who’d responded to the 9-1-1 call were trying to load a screaming gent onto the gurney. The cook may be tiny but he more than made up for the lack of height with the volume of his wails.

To him, Amy said, “Wait here a minute.”

She made her way to the gurney, grasped her cook’s hand, leaned down close and said something that quieted him. Then she placed a kiss on his forehead and told the paramedics to break some speed limits getting to the hospital.

Two of the older waitresses surrounded Amy, speaking at once, and questioning how they were going to continue serving if they didn’t have a cook. Amy shooed them away telling them she was taking care of it.

They didn’t look all that convinced, but nonetheless went back out to the dining room with the instructions she’d given them to tell the customers their orders were going to be a few minutes more.

Then she lit on him.

For some crazy reason, he threw his shoulders back and stood straighter.

“Know your way around a kitchen, do ya?”

“Blindfolded,” he replied, surprising himself with his candor.

That piercing glare shot his way again. She reached into a tabletop drawer and pulled out a hair elastic.

“Board’a health rules.” She handed it to him and he pulled his hair up into a man bun.

“I’m gonna get a few of these orders ready,” she said, washing her hands at the sink. “While I do, make me an omelet.”

Like he knew his way around a kitchen blindfolded, he could make a simple omelet in his sleep.

“Any particular kind?” he asked as he moved to the sink, doffed his jacket, then mimicked her handwashing motions.

Amy popped six pieces of bread into the industrial toaster with one hand while the other poured pancake batter onto the griddle in six perfect little rounds. “Surprise me,” she said over her shoulder.

He nodded, then, spotting an apron on a peg by the office door, donned it, scoping the layout of the griddle and its surroundings as he did.

A sense of anticipation pushed him to pull three eggs from the industrial refrigerator along with a container of shredded cheese. Opening it, he recognized the woodsy aroma of Swiss. Onehanded, he cracked the eggs, whisked them, then tossed them onto the griddle while he poured a handful of the grated cheese on top. While that settled, he pulled bacon from the warmer and crushed two pieces between a pair of paper towels then tossed the crumbles on top of the setting eggs. From the spice rack he pulled nutmeg and salt, added them then topped it all off with a pinch of pepper.

When the eggs set to the point they were no longer runny, muscle memory pushed him to take a spatula and fold one third toward the center, then the opposite side until the omelet was folded to perfection. Sliding the spatula underneath it, he flipped it over. Instinct told him the exact moment to remove it, which he did, placing it on a clean plate.

While he did, Amy had been a study in motion, never once stopping while she cooked then plated orders. The waitresses all lined back into the kitchen when Amy dinged the ready bell, took their orders while tossing him a quizzical eye.

Once they were alone again, Amy turned, dragged in a huge breath, and said, “Show me what ya got.”

He handed her the plated omelet and a fork.

Amy inspected it as if she were a general inspecting her standing-at-attention troops. First, her gaze raked over the perfectly pale yellow mixture. Then she raised the plate to her face, took a whiff, one eyebrow lifting.

Zeroing in on him she said, “Bacon?”

“I didn’t have enough time to slice that ham I saw in the fridge. The bacon’s maple flavored.”

She nodded. “Only kind I use. Something else in here. Something…earthy.”

“A dash of nutmeg.”

Now her brows lifted to her hairline. Without a word, she forked a section and said as she lifted it to her mouth, “Color’s perfect.”

Since he knew it was, he kept silent. The very first thing he’d ever learned to cook had been an omelet. It had taken him almost of month of daily practice to know the precise second to remove it from the heat, when it was the best moment to fold it, how the only number of eggs to use would always be three.

He watched her face and identified exactly when the nutmeg and bacon hit her tastebuds. Her eyes went wide, then to half-closed as the combined spice and pork bits sent a savory river of deliciousness across them.

Amy swallowed then shook her head. “You know how to cook anything else aside from this?”

“Name a dish.”

“How are you with pancakes? Sausages? French toast?”

“Just as good as that.” He ticked his chin toward the plate she held. And since he knew his own worth, added, “Maybe better.”

“You know how to do a breakfast run? It’s not easy. In fact, it’s damn stressful.”

He nodded. “I do.”

“I think I’m gonna give you a chance to prove that.” She put the plate down. “If you’re serious about helping out, that is. For today – now – at least. Just to get me through to lunch.”

He had nowhere to be, nothing pressing him for his time.

And, most surprising of all, he realized he wanted to help.

He nodded. “I can do that.”

Julia pushed through the swing doors and waddled to a stop. “Dining room’s getting loud, Ames. How we doing with orders? Should I put up the closed sign?”

The diner owner looked from her daughter-in-law, then back to him, a corner of her lip tucked between her teeth. Then, “No need. We’re gonna be fine.” She stretched out a hand for the orders in Julia’s hand.

The younger woman didn’t look all that convinced, but handed them over then grabbed a clean coffee carafe from the dishwasher.

After reading through the orders, Amy divided them in half.  Handing them to him she said, “Okay, son. Appreciate the help.”

Without even glancing down at them he nodded.

“My name’s Tony, by the way,” he said.

“I know.” She smiled for the first time since he’d come into the kitchen with her. “This is Dickens, son. There’s not much that goes on or happens that gets passed me, including newcomers, even when they’re close-mouthed. Once we get through breakfast we can have a little chat. For now, Tony-by-the-way, I got customers to feed.”

Small towns, he thought, shaking his head.

He didn’t give it another thought as he started the first order in his hand.

And that’s just the beginning. Thoughts, kids?

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#Tuesdayteaser

Love Match has been out for a week now and the reviews are so wonderful I thought I’d give you another insight into the storyline.

Cody’s divorce hit him hard because he thought, erroneously, everything was fine with his marriage. He had no idea what was really going on with his wife, Cassidy. Once she left him, his entire life changed and with it, he lost some of his confidence and became a bit of a cynic. In this scene, he is talking with his mom and you can tell she is the person he can reveal his true self to without fear or worry.

Shit. I knew something happened. Layla pulled a complete one-eighty by the time she came home.”

Sally’s eyebrow lifted. “And Cass was, obviously, the cause. Layla believes what she said.”

“How could she?” he cried. “It’s not true. I never sle—” he stopped short. It was one thing for your mother to suspect you had sex, quite another to talk about it, openly.

Sally sat next to him at the table and slid a hand on top of his fisted one. “I know you, Cody Angus Fonda. You’d never sleep with a woman just to gain an advantage. It’s not you. It’s simply not. Your head, not to mention your heart, would never let you do something so wrong.”

The tips of his ears felt like they were on fire.

“Apparently Layla doesn’t share your high opinion of me.”

Jane laid her head down on his lap, her eyes tracking his face. Absently, he petted her.

“Did you ever tell her you were interested in buying the house?” Sally asked.

After another gulp of coffee, Cody shook his head. “I kept meaning to. I should have from the very beginning. I know that.” He dragged a hand through his hair. “But after working on the house, spending time with her and then, well.” His mother didn’t need details about their sleeping together. “I was more focused on getting her to stay. I thought she was going to, I really did. But yesterday,” he shook his head, “she told me she’s considering leaving. That the house is too big for one person. Too much upkeep.”

“Did you tell her you wanted to buy it, then?”

“No.”

Sally tilted her head and regarded him for a long while with that all-knowing look inherent in every mother he’d ever known. She was so focused on him, in fact, he started to fidget.

“What?”

“You are one of the smartest men I have ever known, and every day I’m thankful you’re my son.”

“Okay, there’s a but screaming in that sentence, loud, clear, and terrifying.”

Sally reached over and ticked him on the head.

“Hey! OW!”

“Respect your mother, Cody.”

He shook his head, closed his eyes and mumbled something that he knew she couldn’t hear. Then, “What were you going to say?”

She took a breath. “For someone so smart you can be dense at times. Did it ever occur to you that Layla was hurt by what Cassidy said not because of the words but because of the truth that you didn’t tell her, up front, you wanted the house? I’ve got a feeling trust is hard for Layla, with her mother being the way she is, and everything that happened with the loser fiancé. How do you think she must have felt when Cassidy screamed the only reason you were with Layla was because you wanted her house when you never mentioned a thing to her.”

“I would have hoped she’d ask me directly, not just assume Cass was right. I thought she knew me better than that.”

Sally’s phone chimed just then and she tugged it out of her purse.

“Grandma,” she told him. “Hey, Ma. What’s up?”

Cody tuned her out, considering what she’d told him, instead. How many times had he berated himself for not telling Layla his feelings about the house? How many excuses had he given himself why he hadn’t shared his desire to buy it, fix it, flip it? And now look; his silence on the subject had caused her to pull away from him just when things were heating up between them.  And now she was considering leaving town.

What a mess.

He had to figure out a way to get her to understand what he’d done, why he’d been silent, and get her to forgive him.

He needed to come clean, but how? She wasn’t exactly speaking to him and the texts had been so chilly his hand had gotten cold holding his phone when he read them. He supposed he could drive over to her house, take the chance she’d be home and – even more of a chance – she’d let him in.

Cody closed his eyes after finishing his coffee.

“Okay, well, wait until you hear this.” Sally disconnected the call. “It wasn’t only Cassidy who told Layla about you wanting the house. Gran did, too.”

“When?”

“She must have driven over to the Arms right after seeing Cass yesterday. Effie and mom were together, and she asked Effie if you’d ever approached her about selling the house.”

“I never have.”

Nodding, Sally said, “That’s what she told Layla. But then Gran told her about the times you mentioned how much you’d like the house and wished you could buy it so you could fix it and resell it for a profit.”

“Oh, Jesus.” He swiped his hands through his hair again. “No wonder she thinks I’m such a douchebag—”

“Language, young man.”

Cody’s face heated like he’d placed it in a hot oven. At forty years old he shouldn’t feel chastised like a toddler when his mother scolded him.

“This is a nightmare.”

He crossed his arms over his chest, shook his head, and cast his eyes downward.

After a few moments, Sally cleared her throat. “Can I ask you a question?”

He shrugged.

“Promise you won’t brush me off, but really answer it? Truthfully?”

“Okay, now I’m getting scared.”

Sally shifted and ran her hand across his forearm. “I know you better than you think I do, son. I gave birth to you, wiped your tears when you skinned your knees, watched you with pride when your sisters came along and you vowed to be their protectors. It’s been a pleasure and an honor to witness you grow into the amazing man you are today.”

“Still hearing that but.”

She squeezed his arm, then patted it, a small smile tugging at the corner so of her mouth. “I remember the day you told me and your dad you were gonna marry Cassidy. Even though we knew you were too young and had reservations about her, we never said anything, just supported you, loved you, and welcomed her into our family.”

Touched, Cody placed his own hand over the one she still had across his arm.

“I know, mom. And I love you both for it.”

“That’s what family is for.”

“So what’s your question?”

Her eyes, twins to his own in color and shape, ping-ponged between his. She tugged her lips inward and pressed down on them, then, after releasing them again, asked, “You’re in love with Layla, aren’t you?”

The full weight of emotions seeped through his voice when he responded, “More than I ever thought I could love a woman again.”

“Oh, baby.” Sally shifted and pulled him into a hug.

All the sadness, rejection, even the feelings of loss and disappointment he’d been holding in for over three years, pretending didn’t exist, leached from deep down in his soul. He buried his face in her neck as she simply held and rocked him like she had when he was a boy.

“I didn’t think I’d ever feel this way again,” he said against her shoulder. “But somehow, somewhere along the way, she kinda…snuck in.”

“That’s how love works,” Sally said. “When you least expect to find it, wham, there it is.”

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