Monday, September 30, 2019

Murder in the Family - Before the Book

Murder in the Family opens with Molly McClelland arriving back in Alabama after inheriting her hoarder aunt's house. But a lot of the tension in the book is based on what she left behind in Missouri. 

The following scene was the original opening of the book, but I deleted it in order to get into the primary story faster. But if you're curious, here's the chaos that Molly was called away from, setting the scene to one of the biggest heartbreaks in the novel. If you've read Murder in the Family, I hope you enjoy this. If you haven't (and why not???), I hope it intrigues you enough to check out the novel. 

Murder in the Family
Before the Book

Sideways rain cast a blinding sheen across the windshield. The wind that drove it rocked the Ford Explorer as if it were a cradle. Its ancient joints squawked in protest, almost matching the jarring ringtone of Molly McClelland’s cell phone.

“You gonna answer that?” Jimmy Catron braked hard. The SUV fishtailed on the rain-slick country road and slid to a halt.

Molly jumped as a blast of lightening lit up the inside of her Explorer and charged the air of the Missouri plain. She lowered her camera and glared at her driver. A crack of thunder almost drowned out her reply. “We’re too close, Jimmy. I don’t want to talk on the phone.”

“Want me to get—”

“I want you to drive! It’s about to get rough.”

“It’s already rough! I can’t drive in this! There’s junk all over the road, and I can’t even see past the hood!”

Sarah peeked over the back seat. “Could be important. This is the fourth time they’ve called in the last half hour.”

“Everyone who’s important is right here.”

A thin, pale arm snaked between the seats, and Sarah Jenkins snatched Molly’s phone off the console. “It’s Russell Williams.”

“I don’t know a Russell Williams. He can leave a message. Sarah, aren’t you supposed to be watching this thing on radar?”

“I am. It’s not—oh, wait!”

Molly’s cell phone flew out of the back seat, bounced off the console, hit Molly’s knee, and landed in one of the camera bags at her feet. “Ouch! Sarah!”

“There’s a hook! A good one!”

Adrenaline surged through Molly as she and Jimmy peered through the rain-drenched windows, scanning the dark and roiling clouds for any sign of rotation. “Where?”

From the backseat came a furious clicking of computer keys. “Um . . . it’s . . . latitude . . . oh!” Sarah’s arm shot between the seats again, pointing straight ahead of them. “Take the next right. Should be County Road 64.”

With a long sigh, Jimmy Catron stepped on the accelerator and slung the sturdy, hail-beaten SUV into the turn, pushing them north across a wide expanse of farm fields. A hard blast of west-to-east wind caught them as he did, and the muscles in his wiry arms tightened as he struggled to keep the vehicle on the road. His dark hair flopped down over his forehead, and he jerked his head to throw it back.

Pea-sized hail pinged off the Explorer and sideways torrents of rain continued to slash at them. In fields on either side, young corn stalks bent double, and miniature soybean plants undulated and thrashed like a wild green sea. Then, through the deluge, Molly spotted what they had come to find and pounded the dash.

“There! There! Eleven o’clock. Sarah, text the station. We should be ready to start streaming soon. It’s falling right out of the sky. Here.” She handed the still camera over the back seat to Sarah, then dug her video camera out of the bag between her feet. “Get us as close as you can.”

Jimmy Catron pushed the SUV toward the storm cell, leaving the road to cross through a bare field, the Explorer bouncing and jerking over rain-sodden clumps and furrows. He skidded it to a stop as the rain and hail suddenly vanished. “I think this is it. There she blows.”

They all stared. A silvery white finger of clouds snaked out of the sky, wispy at first, then filling out the funnel shape with a solid grayish white. Its tip poked into the ground with a roar of a swirling vortex, and the air around them turned yellowish, then green.

“Touchdown!” screamed Sarah. She banged on the back of Jimmy’s seat as she and Molly scrambled out of the Explorer. Molly stumbled over loose clods of mud, but her boots held fast. She kept her balance and focused the camera. The air smelled like ozone and soaked earth, a scent that exhilarated her. She aimed at the funnel, zooming in on the tip, which swelled as the spinning cloud stirred up debris, slinging it around in an ever-growing skirt around the base. She followed the funnel up into the dark clouds, where the top of it hooked onto the mother storm. “Come to me, my beauty,” she murmured, as if she were whispering to a lover.

Beside her, Sarah shot rapidly, pausing occasionally to wipe dust and moisture from the clear filter covering the lens. “This is awesome!” she screamed into the wind, bouncing up and down before refocusing her camera.

Molly fell silent, aware that the television station in St. Joseph may have picked up her feed from the video camera by now. She zoomed in on the funnel and held her breath as the base of the tornado widened and grew fatter with dirt and debris. Her t-shirt and shorts fluttered hard against her, and her short mass of thick curls eddied and whipped about in the driving wind, barely held in place by a wide headband. Her skin stung from the wind-driven bits of grain and earth, and adrenaline sang in her blood.

The roar of the funnel drowned out almost all other sounds, and Molly realized it was going to broadside a shed she could barely see at the edge of her viewfinder. She waved one arm to get Sarah’s attention, then pointed toward the shed. They both caught the moment the base of the tornado crossed over, splintering the small building, boards scattering into the wind like dandelion fluff. The tin roof soared upward, caught up in the swirling maelstrom.

Over the roar, Molly barely heard the Explorer horn beeping rapidly. She turned to see Jimmy get out, motioning frantically. Molly, unable to hear, squinted at him, trying to read his lips. He pointed at the top of the storm and repeated himself. This time, she got it.

“It’s shifting!”

Twisting, she looked back at the storm without the camera in front of her. Magenta, purple, and gold lightening danced throughout the cell, and Molly realized the temperature had dropped again. She traced the storm down to the ground, watching the tip dance more to the southeast.

Southeast. Toward us. The tip, digging into the earth and churning up even more wreckage, had definitely turned in their direction. As she watched, the funnel fattened and broadened into the shape of an elephant’s trunk.

“We need to get out of here!” Jimmy grabbed her arm.

She nodded. “Get back to the truck!” She thrust the camera into his hands, and turned toward Sarah. “Sarah!” 

Sarah glanced at her, then kept shooting madly, fully enchanted by the storm. The winds whipped her tank top and shorts tight against her petite frame, and her blonde ponytail stood out almost perpendicular to her head.

The debris escalated suddenly, slicing about in crazy devilish swirls. The roar of the storm had deepened to the thunderous roar of a jet engine, and the hail returned, dime-sized balls that pelted their heads and skin. Molly ran toward Sarah, a slow motion jog against the wind. She snagged the younger woman’s arm. “Now, Sarah! We need to—”

Sarah pushed her away at first, then froze, her eyes widening, her attention on something behind Molly.

Molly had no time to turn. Something hard and flat slammed into her from behind. She and Sarah both hit the ground. Molly, dazed, pushed up on her hands and knees as she heard the SUV grind into the dirt next to them, creating a temporary windbreak. She looked around at Sarah, as Jimmy dropped to her side.

“You okay?” he screamed. Molly nodded and pointed at Sarah. Jimmy crawled to her and froze for a second, all color leaving his face. Then he moved rapidly, screaming at Molly. “You drive! Move!” He scooped Sarah up, holding her close to his chest. Only then did Molly see the blood on Sarah’s face, the spray of it down her chest.

“Oh, Lord, please, no!”

“Molly! Move! Get the back door!” Jimmy sprinted for the SUV.

 Molly grabbed Sarah’s camera and followed, adrenaline forcing all grogginess from her head. She opened the back door, and Jimmy shoved in with Sarah, pushing equipment from the seat onto the floor. Molly tossed the camera into the front and got behind the wheel. She did a donut in the field, heading away from the storm.

Pushing the accelerator hard, she glanced in the rearview mirror. “Jimmy?”

He shook his head, not looking up from Sarah’s face. “Drive, Molly. It’s bad.”

She drove, but reached over, pulling her camera bag out of the floor. She scratched around in it till she found her phone. Russell Williams had called again. His name shown like a beacon on the phone. Molly ignored it and called 911.

Her GPS got them to a crossroads far away from the storm cell, where the helicopter met them. Jimmy had done as much as he could to staunch the blood flow from Sarah’s face and head, but she remained unconscious. Several of her wounds still oozed puddles of blood that smeared through her hair and over Jimmy’s clothes, filling the SUV with its unmistakable metallic smell.

The EMTs were waiting as Molly screeched the Explorer to a stop. They clustered around, helping ease Sarah from the backseat and onto a gurney. Only then did Molly get a good look at the grayish, slashed face of her friend. Fear deepened within her, making her ache and tremble.

His voice shaking, Jimmy had explained that a large board had hit both of them, but the end that clipped Sarah had nails in it. Molly would have bruises; Sarah had puncture wounds, some of them deep. One, possibly, into her brain. The EMTs raced back to the helicopter with the gurney, motioning that one of them could go. She pushed Jimmy toward the helicopter, and he didn’t hesitate. He pulled up in beside the EMTs, as one slid the door shut.

Backing up, Molly watched the rotors spin faster, and the airborne ambulance lifted off slowly, then gained speed rapidly as it turned and headed for St. Joseph. As it disappeared into the distance, Molly felt the last ounce of energy seep out her. She sagged heavily against the side of the Explorer.

So close! They’d been standing next to each other! A single board had hit both of them. Yet here she stood, bruised, while Sarah had been critically injured. The thought that Sarah could die seized through Molly like an electric shock. Her knees gave way, and every muscle quivered as the adrenaline drained from her. She sank down in the dirt, sobs heaving out of her. The words that jerked from her weren’t a prayer; she begged. “Please, Lord, save her. Please.”

Through the open door of the Explorer, Molly could hear the sound that had plagued them all morning. Her cell phone rang again. 

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Murder in the Family is now available at Amazon

Thursday, September 26, 2019

Author, Center Stage: Kelly Irvin, Mountains of Grace

Kelly Irvin is back! This time she has given us a delightful romance set in an Amish community in Big Sky Country. And she's offering a print copy to one of the readers who comment below.

Let’s start with a description of Mountains of Grace. 
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Mercy is content with her life as an Amish schoolteacher. But when wildfires threaten her Montana home, everything she thought she knew turns upside down.

Mercy Yoder loves her students and her life in the tiny village of West Kootenai, nestled at the foot of Montana’s most northern mountains. And she is in no rush to get married . . . much to the disappointment of her parents. In fact, she has turned down the one marriage proposal she’s received. Her beau Caleb can’t bring himself to tell her he loves her, stoking her fears that they simply aren’t right for each other.

When a devastating wildfire threatens to destroy her beloved community, Mercy and her family evacuate to the nearby town of Eureka. There she meets Spencer McDonald, an Englisch smoke jumper. Her conversations with him are unlike any she’s ever had with a man. She finds his directness and ability to express his feelings refreshing and completely different from Caleb, who is tightlipped about his past.

But what would her family and community say if Mercy chose a relationship with an Englischer? Is Mercy willing to give up all she has known and loved for someone who finally understands her? Or can Mercy find the love she has always longed for closer to home?
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What was the inspiration for this story/what led you to write it?
I regularly read The Budget Newspaper, which is field with reports from Amish “scribes” from Amish communities across the nation. In 2017 a scribe from West Kootenai, Montana, reported on the impact of the wildfires on this tiny community near the U.S.-Canada border. I started researching the fires and found a Youtube video interview with an Amish man whose family lost their home. Another video featured an English homeowner who was rebuilding with the help of the community, including the Amish families. I found it so interesting and heartwarming who the community came together to rebuild regardless of their differences. I wanted to share these stories—albeit fictionally—with readers.

What draws you to continue your stories of the Amish?
A lot of it has to do with the readers. They are thirsty for clean, sweet romances. I have fun writing them. For the Amish of Big Sky Country my husband and I spent a week driving around Northwest Montana visiting Amish communities and doing research. I was able to talk to an Amish family from Indiana visiting a cousin in the Libby community. I found their perspectives fascinating. I never thought I would write Amish romances, but I’m glad I do.

Books about the Amish and their lifestyle choices continue to be extremely popular with readers, but not all of them accurately portray the culture. What one assumption about the Amish communities would you like to disprove?
Readers will react to something in a book they’ve read, saying the Amish don’t do that. You can’t generalize because there is no central church making the rules. Each district votes on its on set of rules called the Ordnung. Those rules can change by vote of the membership. For example, they can decide to have phones in their businesses or ride bicycles with rubber tires or change the style of prayer covering or kapp the women wear. There’s a community in Kansas that uses tractors and often rides them into town as transportation. I read recently about a community in Ohio that allows electricity in the homes. The third book in the Amish of Sky Country, entitled Peace in the Valley, features the Eagle Valley Amish Community, which is charismatic and evangelical. They dance and sing to instruments during their service, which is conducted in a church building. They have bible study, drive cars, and wear regular clothes, yet consider themselves Amish.

In what way does your faith encourage your writing?
I feel as if God gave me a talent for writing and expects me to use it for his glory. It took me a long time to recognize this. Everyone has a job to do in the mission field and mine is writing stories that make readers think about what they believe and why. It certainly makes me examine my own beliefs. The next two books in the Amish of Sky Country particularly ask questions about what Christians believe and how important is the way we worship. Do the rituals matter to God?

If Mercy were your best friend in real life, what advice about relationships would you want to share with her? How would you advise her regarding her growing affection for Spencer?
To go slowly. To examine her feelings carefully.Why would Mountains of Grace make the perfect pleasure read for late summer or early fall?The story begins Labor Day weekend in beautiful Montana. It’s not the typical Amish romance in the sense that readers will see the events through the prospective of five characters, including an English sheriff’s deputy, a smoke jumper, a young English woman trying to come to gripes with a traumatic experience in her past, an Amish carpenter, and Mercy, an Amish schoolteacher. It’s a story of community and how they come together in the face of natural disaster. Readers can enjoy not one but three romances.

What’s your next book?
I have a novella, Kisses and Cakes, that is included in the novella collection, An Amish Christmas Bakery, that debuts October 1, followed by the second book in the Montana series, The Long Bridge Home, which releases February 11, 2020.

Where can readers find you online?
www.kellyirvin.com
https://www.facebook.com/Kelly.Irvin.Author/
@Kelly_S_Irvin
Where can readers find Mountains of Grace?

Best-selling author Kelly Irvin is the author of Mountains of Grace, the first book in the Amish of Sky Country series. Her other works include the Every Amish Season series from Zondervan/ HarperCollins, including Upon a Spring Breeze, winner of the Readers’ Choice Award in the long romance category. The series follows the Amish of Bee County Series, which included The Beekeeper’s Son, subject of a starred review from Publisher’s Weekly, calling it “an intricately woven masterpiece.” Among her other works are novellas in five collections. She is also the author of the Bliss Creek Amish series and the New Hope Amish series, both from Harvest House Publishing. She has also penned four romantic suspense novels, Over the Line, Tell Her No Lies, A Deadly Wilderness, and No Child of Mine.

Kelly’s novels, The Beekeeper’s Son and Love Redeemed, were finalists in the contemporary romance category of the American Christian Fiction Writers (ACFW) national Carol Awards Contest.

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Author, Center Stage: Barbara Cameron, Summer's Promise

Today I'm thrilled to welcome Barbara Cameron to my Author, Center Stage series. I first got to know Barbara and her work at Abingdon Press, and it's been a joy to work with her. Barbara has graciously offered TWO signed copies of the book to readers of this blog. Comment below for a chance to win one! Let's start with a description of her new book, Summer's Promise.

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Can she leave everything she knows for love?

Summer Carson has lived near the Amish community in Paradise, Pennsylvania, all her life. Now she's following in her father's footsteps and earning her degree in agricultural science so she can continue his work helping local farmers.In her job at the county extension office, Summer moves between the Englisch and the Amish worlds.

While she sometimes finds herself speaking—and even thinking—in Pennsylvania Deitsch, the transition isn't always easy. But what has come naturally to Summer is her attraction to one of the farmers: Abram Yoder is handsome, steady, and hardworking. He's everything so many of the Englisch men she knows are not. And Summer quickly realizes that she's caught his eye as well.

Can Summer give up the comforts she's always known for a life with this Amish man? And is Abram willing to let her try?
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Sounds terrific! What was the inspiration for this story/what led you to write it?
The Amish and the Englisch interact in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania,, more than they do in  other areas of the country because of the large amount of tourism the area gets. I wanted to explore what happens when a member of each community meets and falls in love. I also wanted to explore what happens when a grown child sees a parent decline in health and has to deal with it. 

What draws you to the Amish?
I’ve been fascinated by the Amish since I saw a buggy roll past by uncle’s farm in Indiana. I was a child and I was so curious about these people who led such a different life from mine.

Books about the Amish and their lifestyle choices continue to be extremely popular with readers, but not all of them accurately portray the culture. What one assumption about the Amish communities would you like to disprove?
Some people view them as odd because they live a harder life than we do—they wonder why the Amish do without electricity which could make things easier. They can’t imagine how anyone can live without things like television.  But the Amish not only don’t mind hard work they embrace it. And their family and community bonds are so much closer than ours because they help each other with work and I feel they communicate so much more than we do because they’re not sitting in front of a television.

In what way does your faith encourage your writing?
My faith keeps me going. Writing isn’t easy even when you’ve been doing it as long as I have. I do believe God put several people in my path to encourage an early interest in writing—an English teacher I had for all four years of high school and a cantankerous but incredibly inspiring city newspaper editor. And my parents took me to church and fostered my religious beliefs. Then the time came when I felt inspired by the way the Amish live their faith every day—not just go to church on Sunday and leave it there. I wanted to write about them and definitely feel God laid a path for me to get published in inspirational fiction. Now I feel writing and faith have become entwined in my life from all these people and events.

If Summer were your best friend in real life, what advice about relationships would you want to share with her? How would you advise her regarding her growing affection for Abram? If you were Abram’s friend and knew his secrets, how would you encourage him regarding Summer? How would your advice differ from that of his best friend in the book?
I really grew to love Summer as a character because she cared so much about her family. But if she were my real life friend I would encourage her to slow down and smell the roses more. She works too hard and worries so much about her mother. I’d tell her she needs to believe she deserves to have a future with Abram. As for Abram, I’d encourage him to talk with Summer more about taking the next step but without giving away the plot I like how he handles the challenge their love faces. I’m not sure he needs my help very much! 

Would Summer’s Promise make the perfect pleasure read for late summer or early fall?
Both! And for Christmas, too, to see how the Amish and Englisch celebrate this the holiday.

What’s your next book?
Thanks for asking! I’ve signed a contract with a new publisher and will be doing a three book series, details to be announced! It’s Amish, of course!

Where can readers find you online?
I’m on Facebook and have a website, BarbaraCameron.com 

And where can they buy Summer’s Promise?
It’s available anywhere books are sold, including these:

Barbara Cameron, who makes her home in Florida, is the author of five Amish series, four titles for Harlequin and Silhouette, three novella collections, and has sold three movies to HBO-Cinemax. She’s also the author of nonfiction titles on subjects as diverse as wedding budget planning, home decorating, and Robert’s Rules of Order. She’s been on both the American Bookseller Association (ABA) and the Christian Bookseller Association (CBA) bestseller lists and won the first Romance Writers of America Golden Heart Award.