Showing posts with label The Kincaids. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Kincaids. Show all posts

Friday, August 11, 2023

The Kincaids by Caroline Clemmons

 Stephanie Suesan Smith writing for Caroline Clemmons this week.

One of my favorite series written by Caroline is The Kincaids.  This was Caroline's very first series.




 The Kincaids starts out with The Most Unsuitable Wife.  Drake has to marry by the age of 30 or see the ranch he grew up on and runs go to a hated cousin.  Pearl is responsible for her two siblings.  Someone is targeting all three of them, but she doesn't know who it is or why.  Drake and Pearl meet while Drake is buying horses for the ranch, and decide they can solve each other's problems by marrying.  Of course, then they have to learn to live with each other and deal with whoever is after Pearl.  This is one of the few sensuous books Caroline has written.



The Most Unsuitable Husband begins with Sarah.  Her mother dies and Sarah goes to settle her affairs.  Nate, her stepbrother whom she doesn't know, also goes.  When he finds out he has been reported dead and Sarah sold the saloon he believes is his, Nate decides to swindle Sarah out of everything.  Sarah, meanwhile, has found three orphans she needs help with.  She turns to Nate, who takes the opportunity to ingratiate himself with Sarah.  Can Nate ignore his growing feelings and swindle Sarah?  Can Sarah forgive Nate when she finds out his original intentions? Sensuous



Rena is hidden when men kill her husband.  She sees it but can't stop it.  Rena is determined to go after the men and kill them.  Storm is on the path of the men who killed his best friend and his best friend's wife.  He is a federal marshall.  He finds Rena, buries her husband, and wants to drop Rena off at the next town so he can continue the hunt.  Rena refuses to stop, so Storm marries her on paper to save her reputation while they hunt.   Storm is injured, and Rena has to help him and get the bad guys.  Will Storm want to stay in the marriage when they finish their hunt?  Will they get the bad guys? Sensuous



A beautiful woman in disguise running for her life; a man who hates deception and lies; and the event that almost destroys them.

Katie Worthington has lived with her beloved grandfather since her parents’ death. When he is killed by men she had thought were close friends and realizes she is their next target, she takes off and joins the circus. Hiding as Dorothy Duncan, a circus kitchen worker, offers her a chance to get out of town without being seen. By the time the circus reaches Kincaid Springs, Katie has dyed her auburn hair black and become Maharani Shimza, the new fortune teller. Things go wrong when she is attacked in the fortune teller’s tent, and she lands in protective custody at Judge Kincaid’s home.

Gabe Kincaid came to Kincaid Springs to work in his great-uncle’s law office and get away from those who had deceived him. He’s certain the fortune teller is spinning one yarn after another. When first the body of a local man is found behind the circus tent and then the previous fortune teller is killed, he realizes Katie is telling at least part of the truth. But, why do questions about her past terrorize her more than threats at the circus?

Can Gabe determine the circus killer before he strikes again? Will Katie be safe at the Judge’s home? Will her past catch up to her? Can love blossom between Katie and Gabe or is too much stacked against them? Sensous



A destitute widow; a reformed con man; the danger that links them…

Betsie Galloway Hirsch has escaped Memphis with her son. Her gambling husband tricked the wrong people and they’re demanding Betsie pay his debts—or else. She’s come to Kincaid Springs to stay with her mother and seek a safe place for her son. Being so far from her former home, she feels secure. That is, until danger confronts her.

After 34 years alone, Michael “Monk” Magonagle is falling in love with Betsie and is fond of her son. Monk is certain she is not free of the men her late husband cheated. Although he is not a violent man by nature, Monk is willing to fight for Betsie’s safety. He and the men of the Kincaid family prepare to meet the enemy.
How can Betsie and Liam be protected from the approaching danger? Will she and Monk be able to forge a love that endures or will one of them be silenced forever? What toll will the enemy exact? Sensuous

I love this series.  I hope you will enjoy it too.




Wednesday, October 30, 2013

WOOHOO! OFFICIAL RELEASE DAY FOR THE MOST UNSUITABLE COURTSHIP!

WooHoo! Today is a big, big day for me. This is release day for THE MOST UNSUITABLE COURTSHIP, book three of the Kincaid series. I am super excited.

Thanks to readers who loved the first two books so much they requested Storm’s book. THE MOST UNSUITABLE WIFE, book one, is about Pearl Parker and her marriage to Drake Kincaid. She is the eldest sister who cares for her two half-siblings, Storm and Sarah. Drake needs a wife to inherit the ranch he's run since his parents death. Pearl needs to leave Piper's Hollow, Tennessee as soon as possible. But trouble follows the group to Texas.



THE MOST UNSUITABLE HUSBAND, book two, is about sweet, shy Sarah, who goes to see her dying natural mother in St. Louis and settle the estate. There she encounters Nate, a gambler and con man who believes Sarah owes him the proceeds from the saloon she sold. He vows to get that and more from her. But he doesn't count on falling in love with Sarah. And he is surprised at his reaction to the three children they rescue on the way back to Texas.


And now, the trilogy is complete. Life intervened and it’s two months late, but here it is. You might ask what delayed me? What didn’t happen? 

We’re getting a handle on the new place now, but we had a rough move coupled with other major distractions. Today, all is well. 

Don't think this is the end of books about the Kincaid family, though. It's a big family and second cousin Gabe's story is next.
In the meantime, today on Facebook, I’m hosting a Launch Party with giveaways of print and ebooks, Amazon gift cards, and swag. Come on over and join in. 

Monday, September 30, 2013

A PREVIEW OF MY UPCOMING OCTOBER 30TH RELEASE

 With the internet we can “visit” anywhere. No need for a trip to the library with pads of paper, a handful of pens, and coins for the copy machine. With my own research books plus the internet, I’m usually set. I still love the library, but for pleasure reading. Writing is my business.

For my current work in progress, I have the hero and heroine travel through Texas. I pulled out my map, Texas Almanac, and went to the online Texas State Historical Association Handbook of Texas. Fortunately, I’ve driven most of the places on my characters’ journey, but they’re on horseback.

I asked author Paty Jager, who has horses, how far my heroine and hero could ride in a day. It depends on the terrain. Great, so I have to determine the lay of the land as well as what towns were around in 1888. There are a lot of hills on this journey to slow them down until they get to the flatter prairie.

I love writing, and research gets me in the mood even more. Making use of the interesting tidbits I’ve learned fulfills me. Hopefully, they will seem organic and not as if I’m teaching a history lesson.

Federal Marshal Storm Kincaid
My hero is Storm Kincaid from my earlier Kincaid series, THE MOST UNSUITABLE WIFE and THE MOST UNSUITABLE HUSBAND. He is a favorite character for me and I want his book to be especially deserving of him. His heroine is Renata “Rena” Haussmann Dmitriev, a German immigrant whose elderly husband-in-name-only was killed by the men Storm is chasing. 

In the hope of whetting your appetite for the October 30th release of THE MOST UNSUITABLE COURTSHIP, here is an excerpt of the opening scene. The year is 1888 and the place is the Texas Hill Country west of Austin.

Rena Haussmann Dmitriev
Rena Dmitriev snapped clusters of wild grapes from the vines in the ravine near her home. She popped one of the plump fruit into her mouth. Tart and sweet combined, and worth enduring the stifling August heat to harvest. She intended to gather enough fruit to make jelly for the coming year.
Hooves thundered near and caused her to pause and listen. Visitors? No one came to call on this isolated place, and why the rush? She rose and grabbed her fruit pail and hurried down the sandy gully toward her home.
A gunshot almost paralyzed her with fear. Chickens squawked then more shots sounded. An anguished moo from her milk cow stopped her. Her animals, who would shoot her animals? She dropped her bucket and ran as fast as her heavy skirts allowed.
Abram cried, “Pfeiffersburg!” 
She halted and her chest hitched. Her legs trembled and she needed to sit down.  No, staying here offered no refuge.
Abram and she had chosen Pfeiffersburg as their warning word. Before their families were killed and he rescued her, they’d lived in separate sections of Pfeiffersburg in Bavaria. If Abram shouted that alert, it meant trouble had arrived too serious for her to help.
Quickly, she must hide. And without making a sound. She crept to the ravine’s crevice her husband had artfully concealed. Edging her way through the narrow tunnel, she reached the secret place he had built. Abram had shaped a dead tree stump so it looked as if it had been cut down from the middle of the plum thicket behind their home.
In reality, he’d hollowed the dead wood and set it firmly with concealed holes that offered a view of the house and yard. The stump stuck above the tunnel three feet, with a small platform beneath the dirt floor where she could stand. At her right, a small shelf held a few provisions.
From that ledge, she grabbed the box containing a spare revolver. Her shaking fingers removed the gun, but couldn’t use it. What she saw forced her to hold back a scream. Four rough men battered her elderly husband. She held her breath until her chest threatened to explode.
To remain quiet, she gulped down breaths. Her entire body shook while her heartbeat raced. She wanted to help Abram as he had helped her years ago, but knew her efforts would be futile and only result in her death. Peering from each cleverly disguised hole, she surveyed the yard.
Already the barn burned. Slaughtered chickens lay strewn around the ground. Blood from the head of her lovely milk cow stained the ground red. The stench of blood mingled with smoke. Why? Why would these men kill a poor cow and chickens? And why torture a helpless old man? 
Rena forced herself to study the villains and memorized each horrid man’s features. So confident were they, they’d made no attempt to cover their faces. With another gasp, she realized that meant they intended to leave no one who might identify them.
Poor Abram barely lived, but still the men tortured him.
The largest man with long black hair hit her husband. “Where’s your woman?”
Abram’s gasping words were barely audible, “Pfeiffersburg! I told you, she vent to help her sister.”
A man with red hair kicked Abram’s ribs. “Why do you keep yelling that word?”
He’d grown so weak, Abram’s gasps barely reached her. “Ve are from Pfeiffersburg. I vish I vere dere now.”
The large man grabbed Abram up by his shirt and shook him. “You tell me where she’s hiding or I’ll skin you alive. Fresh laundry means she’s here somewhere. Tell me now, old man.”
Abram held fast to his claim. “I vash clothes because she iss gone. A man alone must do the chores.”
“Then why are women’s clothes hanging to dry? I think you’re lying old man.”
“Nein, I am alone. My woman is gone.”
The man she believed to be the leader peered around. “There’s a woman here or nearby. I want her.”
Another man limped from the house. “Lookee here what I found.” He held up Abram’s chest holding their savings and all that Abram salvaged from Bavaria. No, not her dowry! Abram intended that for her fresh start when he died. Without it, who would marry her? Without it, how would she live?
In the same man’s other hand, he held jewelry.  She recognized the chain and her mother’s locket dangling from his hand—a hand with two fingers missing. That locket and a few other pieces represented all she had left of her mother.
Terror changed to anger. What right had these men to steal and kill? She and Abram hurt no one, minded their own business, and worked hard. Now these four evil men took everything, including her husband’s life.
The three-fingered man yanked a tablecloth from the clothes line and emptied the chest onto the square. He knotted the corners together then wrapped the knotted section with a rope he tied to his saddle.
Poor Abram had lasted longer than she could have imagined for a man near eighty. Sobs shook her body and she pressed a hand to her mouth to prevent an outcry.  With a final shot, Abram’s suffering ended. She thanked God her poor husband was free from those brutal men’s pain and torture.
The large man she believed to be the leader scanned the area. Did he sense her presence? Would her hiding place really fool him? He mounted his horse.
The four set her house on fire, pulled the clothesline down, and rode away. Once again, she’d lost everything. The quilt she’d pieced last winter. Curtains she’d sewn. Furniture she’d polished only yesterday. 
What should she do? She had to bury her husband, but what if the men returned? Afraid to move, she clasped the revolver and waited in case they came back to search for her.
She sent up prayers for Abram’s soul and her own safety. Was it wrong to pray while she held a gun? She lost track of time, weeping to herself in great, gulping sobs. Always she had tried to please her elderly husband to repay him for rescuing her years ago. What was to become of her now with no dowry and no one to help her?
The sound of a horse approaching frightened her more than she thought possible. She shook uncontrollably. Had the evil men returned?  
 A new man rode a huge blue roan and led a second chestnut animal. He leaped from his mount with grace that still spoke of masculinity. Tall and dressed in black, he wore one of the broad hats these Texans favored. Handsome and not much older than her twenty-one years, he appeared fit and strong.
The man wasted no time. After a glance at Abram, the newcomer pulled his bandana over his lower face and nose. The blaze consumed the barn in loud crashes. The cabin walls and roof still stood, but greedy flames licked at the contents. Smoke billowed from the small building.
She feared this man might also be a thief, but he rushed into the house.
“Anyone here? Call out so I can find you.”
A few seconds later, he emerged coughing and gasping for air. He removed the handkerchief from his face and neck and wiped away sweat and ash. With quick motions, he retrieved a sheet from the ground and spread it near Abram’s body.
As if Abram weighed nothing, the large man laid her husband on the linen. Using the care one saved for a living infant, he tucked Abram into the sheet. Och, surely such a gentle, considerate man could not be bad.

The stranger stood and looked where she hid. “You can come out now.” He opened his jacket to display a badge on his waistcoat. “I’m a Federal Marshall chasing the men who did this. My name is Storm Kincaid.”

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