Showing posts with label Rebecca Hagan Lee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rebecca Hagan Lee. Show all posts

1/13/2015

Get Lost in Regency Romance from Rebecca Hagan Lee

Looking for a luscious historical romance series to sink your teeth into? Check out the The Mistresses of the Marquess from bestselling author Rebecca Hagan Lee. The third in the Regency Trilogy, Ever A Princess, was released this month from Amber House Books. Here's a blurb and excerpt. 

Can a reluctant hero save a runaway princess without losing his own heart?


Adam McKendrick has earned the title “the Bountiful Baron” because of his reputation for helping beautiful blondes in trouble. When a lucky hand at cards wins him an ancient hunting lodge, he travels to the wilds of Scotland hoping to escape his reputation—and the hordes of women pursuing him. He certainly doesn’t expect his prize to include yet another damsel in distress looking for a hero.
Princess Giana has fled her kingdom—and the deadly assassins pursuing her—with only a handful of loyal staff to protect her. When the gorgeous gambler shows up at her refuge to claim his winnings, she has no choice but to pose as his maid. 
Adam’s clumsy—yet stunningly beautiful—new maid seems more inclined to give orders than to take them. He finds her both infuriating and irresistible. As his desire for Giana’s touch begins to consume him, Adam must decide if he wants to once again play the hero…or the rogue…

EXCERPT
In this scene our intrepid hero arrives at his Scottish hunting lodge to meet his new staff, never expecting to find a runaway princess in his bed…

Adam shivered as a gust of wind blew across the lawn, but he managed to fit the front door key into the lock. He was wet, cold, and thoroughly road weary and had spent the last few miles of the journey looking forward to a roaring fire, a hot meal, and a bed.
“I know you’re in there.” He lifted his hand to bang on the door once again. “Open up!” Adam shouted one final warning, then turned the key in the lock and pushed open the door.
The door flew open, crashing against the interior wall with a thud that shook the frame. The key bounced out of the lock and skidded across the marble entry while a man and a woman dressed in nightclothes leapt back to avoid the torrent of cold rain. Adam stepped over the threshold, grabbed hold of the front door, and slammed it shut.
He leaned his back against it, breathing heavily as he removed his hat and raked his fingers through his hair. “I’m Adam McKendrick.” Adam dropped his hat on the marble-topped table in the entry hall and offered his hand to the other man. “You must be Gordon Ross.”
The older man retreated, shaking his head as he stepped away from Adam’s outstretched hand.
Adam withdrew his hand and frowned. “Then, who?”
The woman stepped forward, responding with the answer to Adam’s question before the man could form a response. “Staff,” she replied in a thick Scottish burr. “I’m Isobel Langstrom and this is my husband, Albert. We’re part of the staff.”
“Staff...” Adam breathed a sigh of relief. “Thank God.” He removed his mackintosh, shaking the water from the folds as he glanced around for a place to hang it.
Albert took the coat from him.
“Thank you.” Adam left the couple standing in the foyer and started up the staircase. He took the stairs two at a time. “I’ve been traveling all day. I’m wet, cold, and tired. I’d like a roaring fire and a soft bed as soon as possible. And please see that my horse is tended to right away.” Pausing at the top of the landing, he asked, “Where’s the master suite?”
“Last one on the left,” Isobel replied automatically, “but, my lord…wait…” She started up the stairs behind him.
Adam waved her off. “No need to show me,” he said. “I’ll find it.”
He heard the low noise and recognized it as a warning growl seconds before he opened the door of the master suite. “What the devil—” The air left Adam’s lungs in a rush and a series of white-hot stars danced against a black background as the base of his skull thudded against the hard floor.
He couldn’t see his attacker until he was flat on his back with a hundred plus pounds of a massive animal—an ugly shaggy-coated brute that appeared to be some sort of missing link—a cross between a dog and a Shetland pony—standing on his chest. The soft glow of the lamplight illuminated the brindle-colored fur on the dog’s legs and the white fur of his underbelly. A flash of light sparkled off the dog’s neck, and Adam realized he was staring at a black velvet collar trimmed with gold braid and studded with what appeared to be paste diamonds. He lifted his head to get a better look, and the dog growled another warning.
“Wagner! Cease!”
The beast was obedient, responding immediately to the command. Unfortunately, he responded instantly by lying down. Adam’s head connected with the floor once more. He let out a groan and another whoosh of air as the dog’s elbows pressed against his stomach.
“Wagner, you may have killed him!”
The animal whined at the rebuke, shifting his weight as he buried his nose in the hollow beneath Adam’s left ear and his elbows deeper into Adam’s ribs.
“Not quite.” Adam gasped the words.
“Good,” his rescuer breathed. “You are alive.”
Blinking hard to clear the stars from his eyes, Adam looked up and beheld his savior standing in the center of the bed. He groaned again, this time in abject disappointment. His savior was blond and beautiful and female, and if the length of her legs was anything to go by, very nearly tall enough to look him in the eye. Her body, silhouetted through her long white nightgown by the light from the table lamp behind her, was slim and curved in all the right places. A thick rope of tightly braided hair hung past her hips and she bore the delicate, classical facial features that had graced the canvases of great painters for centuries. He couldn’t see her feet, buried as they were in the mound of bedclothes, but he supposed they were as classically beautiful as the rest of her.
“What the hell is this? Who the hell are you? And what are you doing in my bed?”
Her eyes widened in shock. “Wagner is one of the finest wolfhounds ever bred, and I am Her Ser—” she began in a haughty tone that set Adam’s teeth on edge.
“Our daughter!” The shout echoed through the room, covering whatever it was the girl was about to say.
Adam turned his head in time to see Isobel rush through the doorway. He looked from Isobel to the Amazon standing on the bed. The top of Isobel’s head was several inches below his chin, and Albert was only an inch or so taller than his wife. “Your daughter!” Adam’s tone of voice held a healthy measure of disbelief.
“Yes,” Isobel and Albert nodded in unison. “Our daughter, Georgiana Langstrom.” Isobel turned to the girl. “Georgiana, meet Mr. Adam McKendrick from America, the new owner of Larchmont Lodge.”
“How do you do, Mr. McKendrick?” she dutifully replied.
He stared at her as she extended her hand with the grace of a prima ballerina and waited patiently for him to take it. Adam rolled his eyes. Beauty appeared to hold an entitlement all its own. His sister, Kirstin, would have responded in exactly the same manner. All the world was a stage—populated by blondes aspiring to be great tragediennes. Adam didn’t know whether to laugh or to cry, to shake hands with her or crawl to his knees and pay homage.
He settled for indignation. “How do I do? How do I do?” He sputtered. “I’m lying flat on my back in the middle of the floor with a hundred-pound dog on my chest. How do you think I do?”
“Rude.” Georgiana narrowed her gaze at him. “And there’s no need to be rude, Mr. McKendrick.”
“Really?” He tried to shove the dog off him, but the beast refused to budge. “I can think of a dozen reasons—beginning with him.” He glared at the wolfhound.
“Wagner! Off!” She pointed to the dog, then patted her thigh. “Come!”
Wagner obeyed, first by standing on Adam, then stepping over him in order to hurry to his mistress’s side.
Adam pushed himself to his feet.
Wagner growled in warning once again and Adam growled back.
Georgiana clucked her tongue at him. “‘Manners make the man,’” she quoted. “William of Wykeham.”
“‘She speaks, yet she says nothing,’” he retorted. “William Shakespeare.” Adam smiled. “And if we’ve concluded this war of quotations, I’ll take the opportunity to remind you that you haven’t answered my question.”
“What question was that, Mr. McKendrick?” Georgiana pretended ignorance.
“What are you doing in my bed?”
“We didn’t know when to expect you, sir,” Isobel hastened to explain. “The attic quarters need cleaning and repair and the beds are short and narrow…” She sighed. “And, as you can see, our Giana is taller than most girls. So tall that her feet hang off the mattresses.” She shrugged her shoulders. “But the master suite has a huge bed, and we saw no harm in allowing her to sleep in comfort until you arrived. If that has offended you, then I beg your pardon, sir.”
“You must not blame my parents for wanting to provide the best for me,” Giana told him.
“Why not?” Adam lifted an eyebrow in query.
Giana smiled her most angelic smile and fluttered her eyelashes at him. “To do otherwise would be against their nature.”
The smile and the fluttering lashes almost worked, but Adam had been raised in a household of consummate actresses. Wheedling and coy feminine wiles no longer had the power to sway him. Especially when he sensed that employing them wasn’t part of the Amazon’s nature. He liked her better when she challenged him. “Is its size the only reason you happened to be in my bed?”
Giana blinked. “What other reason could there be?”
“I’m a very wealthy man,” Adam said.
“How very nice for you,” Giana politely replied.
Adam inhaled sharply, swallowed his breath, and began to cough.
Giana waited patiently for him to recover from his fit of coughing. She stared at him with an expectant look on her face.
“I’m also young and healthy.”
“Then you are to be congratulated, Mr. McKendrick, for I understand that Scotland can be a very harsh land. You are very fortunate to have youth and health on your side, for one cannot overestimate their importance. I feel quite certain that those qualities will go a long way in alleviating the hardships one encounters here.”
Adam was fascinated by the words that came out of her mouth each time she spoke. Her words sounded like English, but he couldn’t quite grasp the meaning. Nor did she appear to grasp the meaning of his. Maybe it was because he was American and she was…well…foreign. But the Amazon couldn’t take a hint.
“I’m also generally considered to be reasonably attractive,” he informed her.
She cocked her head to one side and studied him. “I do not agree.”
“You don’t?”
“No, I do not.” She sighed. “I do not wish to find fault with the opinions of the people who have commented on your appearance, but I would have to say that you are more than reasonably attractive—”
Adam grinned. “More?”
“Of course,” she replied matter-of-factly. “I have only just made your acquaintance, and know nothing of your character, but I would judge your outward appearance to be very attractive.”
“Is that so?” Adam gave her a slow, appraising glance.
“Yes, Mr. McKendrick, it is so.” She frowned, unable to understand why he insisted on questioning her answers or why he appeared to have difficulty understanding her English. Although it was not her native tongue, Giana knew her command of the English language was exceptional because her mother had taught her to speak it, and her mother had been a cousin to Queen Victoria.
“You must have been aware that I’m a bachelor.”
“No, Mr. McKendrick, I know nothing of the details of your private life.” Giana frowned even more.
“What have they to do with me?”
“Let’s see,” Adam drawled sarcastically, raising his hand and pretending to count on his fingers. “What could the details of my private life have to do with you?” He paused for effect. “Especially since I’m young, healthy, wealthy, and reasonably—no, make that very—attractive, unmarried, and the owner of the bed you’re currently occupying.” He looked up at her. “I would have to be extremely unenlightened not to realize that, in most circles, I’m considered to be quite a catch.”
“In most circles, perhaps,” Giana informed him. “But not in mine.”
Adam cocked an eyebrow once again. “Indeed?” He’d have to be an extremely unenlightened man not to realize that the daughter of his new housekeeper and butler had just declared her circle closed to him.
Adam had deliberately baited her, but her answer still stung, and Adam didn’t know whether to find the idea amusing or pathetic.
Isobel stepped forward. “Come, Giana, we’ll leave the McKendrick to settle in here while we find you another bed.”
“Wait.” Adam glanced from mother to daughter. “Tell me what you’ve heard about the Bountiful Baron?”
Isobel was clearly puzzled by the demand. “I don’t understand.”
Adam turned to Giana. “What about you?”
Giana lifted her chin. “That baron is not among my acquaintances.”
“Then you can stay where you are,” he said. “For tonight. But tomorrow you and the dog find someplace else to sleep.” Adam lifted his chin and gave her his most winning smile. “You’re welcome to sleep indoors, but fancy collar or no, the dog sleeps outside.”
Giana glared at him, her nostrils flaring in anger. “You cannot…” she sputtered.
He grinned. “Sorry, sweetheart, but I outrank you. You may be tall, but I’m taller and I own the place.” Adam turned his back on Giana and headed for the bedroom door.
The other occupants of the room gasped.
“What?” Adam paused in the doorway and glanced over his shoulder at the Amazon standing in the center of his bed. Her mouth gaped open, and he noticed for the first time that the ribbons threaded through the neckline of her nightgown were black and untied.
Giana was stunned. She knew, even if he did not, that he was in the presence of royalty, and one simply did not turn one’s back on royalty. Since she could not bring her royal status to his attention, she settled for chastising him for his rudeness. “Manners, Mr. McKendrick,” she called out in a too-sweet singsong voice. “Shall we find you some? Along with your warm fire and comfortable bed? Because you seem to have forgotten yours again.”
   “Not at all.” Adam put his thumb and forefinger up to his forehead, inclined his head, and pretended to tip his hat to her. “Pleasure meeting you, George.” 

Meet Rebecca Hagan Lee

After arming herself with a degree in fine arts and experience in radio, television, and film, Rebecca Hagan Lee wrote her first novel Golden Chances. Since then, she’s published numerous bestselling and award-winning novels and three novellas. She’s won a Waldenbooks Award, a Georgia Romance Writers Maggie Award, several Romantic Times awards, been nominated for an RWA RITA Award, and has been published in nine languages. She currently lives in Georgia with her husband, her two beloved Quarter Horses, and a miniature schnauzer named after literary icon Harper Lee. 

Visit Rebecca’s website http://www.rhaganlee.com
Join Rebecca on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/rebeccahaganleeauthor 



Her Regency series includes: Ever a PrincessAlways a Lady and Once A Mistress. All three are available from Amber House Books. 

E.E.: Where did you come up the idea for your Mistresses of the Marquess series?
Rebecca: The idea came from a vision in my head of George Ramsey, the Marquis of Templeston, fighting  to save himself and his lady friend as his yacht was sinking off the coast of Ireland. I wanted to know what sort of legacy a man like George would leave behind and how it would affect his heirs. Then, I decided to follow the legacy through his English son, Drew, during the Regency period, his Irish son, Christopher "Kit", during during the early Victorian era, and through his European granddaughter, Georgiana, during the late Victorian era. I liked the idea of following George's unconventional family through different circumstances and time periods.

E.E.: Will you be doing any new American historical romance this year?
Rebecca: Yes. I am working on a new Borrowed Brides book, THE RUNAWAY BRIDE: ISABEL, which will connect with Giana and Adam from EVER A PRINCESS through Adam's friend, Murphy O'Brien. The book begins when Murphy finds an injured Isabel on his doorstep and realizes she's come seeking the Bountiful Baron.

E.E.: What was the first story you remember writing?
Rebecca: BOBO AND DUCKIE when I was nine.

E.E.: Which movie best represents your writing style?
Rebecca: A WALK IN THE CLOUDS starring Keanu Reeves.

E.E.: Do you write while listening to music? If so what kind?
Rebecca: I do listen to music while I'm writing. I can't start a book until I create a playlist for it. Each book has it's own soundtrack. I prefer lyrics and story songs, but I listen to a lot of classical music and Broadway, and movie scores. Whatever strikes my fancy and seems to fit the story line.

E.E. What other sound or noise do you love?
Rebecca: I love the sound of my husband's laughter.  

E.E.: Where do you read and how often?
Rebecca: I read on my Nook every night before I go to sleep. I lie in bed and read until I get sleepy or until I finish the book--whichever comes first.

E.E. What’s your favorite cartoon character?
Rebecca: I love the "old" cartoons. Huckleberry Hound, Yogi Bear, Quicksdraw McGraw, Snagglepus, and Foghorn Leghorn. But my absolute favorite is Yosemite Sam--especially when he's the Knight riding the Dragon.  "Whoa, I say W-h-o-a dragon...." Then, "Dragons are so stupid."

E.E. Do you have a favorite villain?
Rebecca: Captain Hook from PETER PAN.

Today, Amber House Books is giving away a $25 Amazon gift card to one lucky commenter. You can use it to buy the series!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

12/23/2014

E.E. Burke's Best of the West Holiday Hoopla!

What's more fun than getting a stocking full of books? Winning FREE books for the holidays from your favorite authors! 

Today, I'm hosting a Holiday Hoopla with some of the wonderful authors I've featured this past year in my Best of the West series of interviews. 

They’ll give us a peek at what they've got planned for 2015 and share some favorite memories. Plus, they're showering us with gifts!  

I can't think of a better way to celebrate, can you? Grab a hot chocolate, throw a log on the fire and let's get started with:

KAKI WARNER
Hi, Elisabeth! I’m very excited to join you for your Christmas bash. Thanks for inviting me. 

Glad you could make it! Can you share with us the best thing that happened over the past year, or your best Christmas gift?

My visit to Scotland. It was the culmination of a lifelong dream, and far exceeded my expectations. It’s a wonderful country, stunningly beautiful, steeped in history—both uplifting and tragic—and proudly inhabited by the friendliest people I’ve ever come across. They certainly know how to welcome “back” all the descendants of their countrymen-and-women who were forced by wars and clearances and economic oppression to seek prosperity elsewhere. I understand what it means to “Come home to Scotland”. It also left me with a folder full of ideas for a Scottish-set contemporary romance. We’ll see.

Best Christmas gift would be when I got my first horse. Sadly, I was in college at the time, and I think my parents finally relented because they thought it would take my mind off the exciting young man I wouldn’t shut up about. It didn’t. And now 48 years later, he’s still pretty exciting. I had to trade him in (the horse) when we married, but I kept the saddle, of course. He (my husband) still won’t wear it, though. Crab.

What project are you working on for the coming year?

I am very excited (and a little sad) about this final book in the Heartbreak Creek saga, Thomas and Pru’s story. It’s titled Home by Morning and will be released July 7th.  This mismatched couple began as secondary characters in the first Heartbreak Creek book, and have since become the thread that weaves through all six books in the Runaway Brides and Heroes of Heartbreak Creek trilogies. I have never had characters so capture the imaginations of my readers. With each release throughout the two trilogies, I have gotten letter after letter asking when I would write Thomas and Pru’s story. It was a difficult book to write, and a difficult series to end, and I hope it was worth the wait


Here's a sneak peek:

Thomas Redstone—a former Cheyenne warrior seeking new purpose by following the ways of his white grandfather—is returning to Heartbreak Creek, Colorado when he decides to give the woman he loves one last chance to accept him into her life.

Prudence Lincoln’s beauty and education have brought her little joy. Envied by blacks for the advantages she’s had, and reviled by whites for her black blood, she’s proving herself by helping ex-slaves prepare for newfound freedom. Thomas has no place in her future, no matter how much she loves him.

He’s suffered only hardship. She was raised in privilege. Their only common ground is the spark between them that won’t die. Yet even as evil forces pull them apart again and their differences threaten to separate them forever, a special child teaches them that courage is a choice, happiness is a gift, and love will overcome any obstacle in their way.

Quote from Home by Morning:

“When I first saw you in Declan Brodie’s wagon, with your shy smile and great, wounded eyes, I knew I would love you, Prudence Lincoln. And later, when I held you in the sacred pool, and spirits trailed ribbons of light across the moonless sky, I knew I would lose you. I accept that. But know this, Eho’nehevehohtse.” Unable to keep from touching her, he framed her face with his hands. It was a moment before he could speak again. “Through all the days I have left…until the last sunset unfurls across the sky and the owl calls my name into the night…I will never forget you.”

I’m also working on a Texas historical that covers a twenty-year span, following a determined heroine from terrible loss, to betrayal, to revenge and ultimately redemption in the arms of the man who has pursued her for all those years.

That sounds like a wonderful way to wrap up your series and start something new. Can't wait until July! Thanks for joining us, and have a Merry Christmas on your mountaintop home.



UP NEXT…BECKY LOWER

Hi, E.E., thank you for inviting me to your Holiday Hoopla.

Glad you could join us. Can you share your best Christmas gift?

I am giving myself an early gift this year in a hip replacement. I want to hike again, something I haven't been able to do for a couple years. I hope by Christmas to be dancing at the foot of the Christmas tree.


What are you working on for the coming year? 

I just received a contract for my novella about the courtship of the parents of my fictitious Fitzpatrick family. It will be released this coming summer. And the 8th book in the series, The Widow's Redemption, will be out in the fall of 2015. I've also started a contemporary series and am working on book 2 right now.

Book 7 in the Cotillion Ball Series--Expressly Yours, Samantha--will be released March 2015. I'm excited about it, since it focuses on the Pony Express. It took a lot of research to get my facts straight, and I learned much more about this little slice of history than I ever thought possible.

Here's the blurb:

    Samantha Hughes needs to get away from her wicked uncle, and, following her aunt’s death, she has one day to escape. A sign in the post office offers an avenue out. She can cut her hair, pose as a man, and become Sam Hughes, a Pony Express rider.
    Valerian Fitzpatrick has defied his parents and stayed in St. Louis for the past year. He doesn't want the weight of responsibility his brothers have in the family business. All he wants to do is ride horses, and, fortunately, the Pony Express is starting up and looking for wiry young fellows.
    When Sam Hughes helps Valerian control a runaway horse, Joseph, Valerian’s brother-in-law, tells him their meeting was destiny. Over the weeks and months that follow, Sam and Val work side by side on the exciting Pony Express. Val assumes Sam is on the run from the law, and helps shield his buddy from the Pinkerton agents. He thinks this must be the destiny Joseph talked about. Although Samantha harbors feelings for Val, he has no idea she’s a woman. Until she suffers a stray gunshot wound and he has to undress her to staunch the wound.
    Friendship turns into attraction and maybe even love. When her uncle tracks her down, she is forced to run yet again. She realizes the danger she’s put Valerian into, having him try to shield her from her uncle, and leaves him behind with a note to not track her down.
    Will he be able to find her, or is he relieved to not have any responsibility again?

We’ll look forward to following your series out West. Thanks for being here today and here’s to you dancing beneath the tree on Christmas morning.


NOW, SYLVIA MCDANIEL

Hi, Elisabeth, thanks for the invite. This year we have a new addition to our home. A puppy! 

That guarantees you'll be busy! Can you share with us the best thing that happened over the past year, or your best Christmas present?

Best Christmas present? I can’t remember…probably a birthstone ring that my parents bought me. It broke the first week – yeah it wasn’t real good quality, so we took it back to the jewelry store and I picked out the one I wanted. It was more expensive and my mother kept telling me it’s too expensive. It was forty dollars, but this was 1969 and money was tight. I insisted and they bought the ring. I still have it today and I LOVE it. It’s one of my favorites. Now the ring is probably worth a couple of hundred dollars – not real fine jewelry, but I still love it.

What are you working on for the coming year? 

The third book in my series, Lipstick and Lead, will come out in February. Here's a sneak peek from Dangerous.

    Annabelle McKenzie strode down the wooden sidewalk on her way to the bank. As the family bookkeeper for their bounty hunting business, Lipstick and Lead, it was her responsibility to make certain the bank loan was paid, the farm continued to operate, and supplies were bought, while her sisters had all the fun chasing bad guys and bringing them to justice. Her sisters earned the money, and Annabelle made certain they had a home to return to.
    After their father died, they’d learned his profession out of desperation and become bounty hunters. The job paid better than being a waitress or a seamstress or even a housekeeper. And you only had to answer to the men captured and brought to justice.
Not the randy hands of the owner of a business or his employees.
    Living on a farm alone, taking care of cattle and chickens and gardening, was enough to make any person question her sanity. In the last year, Annabelle had begun to regret agreeing to take care of their land, while her sisters did the hunting.
    She longed for adventure, excitement, danger. Something more challenging than shoveling manure. Only, her sisters disagreed. Meg and Ruby wanted her to remain on the farm.
    Hogwash! It was someone else’s turn to babysit the chickens, harvest the garden, and chase the stray cows.
    This morning, she’d stopped at the sheriff’s office and picked up the latest wanted posters. Tonight, when she got home, she was going to make her sisters understand she needed to get away from the braying of cattle and the collecting of eggs.
    Slap her silly, but she was done!
    Deep in thought about how she would explain to them she craved adventure and longed for excitement, she rounded the corner to enter the bank and slammed into the hard chest muscles of a large dark-haired man. The scent of soap and campfire smoke spiraled through her straight to her center. This was a manly man and Lord knew, they were scarce in Zenith, Texas. Where had he come from?
    His hat was pulled low over his face, and he grabbed her by the arms, halting her progress. Her head fit just below his chin. She looked up at his strong, rugged jaw, and serious face.
    Long black lashes blinked over emerald eyes as he gripped her arms. “Slow down,” he said in a deep husky drawl. He kept his head down, barely looking at her. “There’s still plenty of cash left in the bank.”
    What a condescending, egotistical, handsome renegade. Not an “I’m sorry” or “Excuse me”, but rather a crass remark about the money in the bank. “Maybe you should watch where you’re going.”
    She tilted her head and stared into those dark forest eyes. There was something about him that seemed familiar, yet she couldn’t place him. She’d seen his face. She stared up at him.         “You’re tall enough you should be able to see a woman coming.”
    He nodded, and she stared at the way his shirt fit his strong shoulders and muscled arms. And his lips were full and tempting, made for kissing.
    “You’re right, ma’am. I should see a small package like you, barreling around a blind corner. Maybe I need to replace my spectacles with a pair that can see through walls,” he said, releasing her arms.
    “Maybe you do,” she said, knowing the oversized giant was smarting off to her. He wasn’t wearing spectacles. Where had she seen him before? “What’s your name?”
    A sly smile turned up the corners of his full, luscious lips. “Why? You plan on having me arrested for running into you?”
    The man had an ornery mouth, and she was just the woman to give it right back.
“Maybe,” she said. “I know the sheriff well. It would serve you right for being belligerent and disrespectful.”
    He smiled a wickedly sly grin that sent tingles through her. “You have a really nice day.”
His voice was dripping with sweet sarcasm that made her feel like she’d eaten too many cookies. Tipping his black hat at her, he sauntered out the door.
    Like a kick from a bull, it hit her.
    He was on one of the wanted posters she had out in her saddlebags.

Sounds like fireworks are in store for those two. You'll have to come back in February and tell us more about them. Thanks for stopping by, and may your New Year be filled with puppy love.


ON TO HAWAII AND JILL MARIE LANDIS

Aloha, Elisabeth. Thank you for hosting us this season. I am grateful for everything in my life so it's hard to choose just one "best." Everyday I wake up is the BEST day. 

As far as best Christmas present, well, I've had so many wonderful Christmases it's hard to say, but the best gift ever was the 57 convertible Ford Fairlane 500 that my dad and mom surprised me with on my 16th Birthday, which is in November, so that's close, right?


That's an awesome birthday-almost-Christmas present. I'd say living on Kauai is pretty spectacular, too, as well as being great inspiration. Don't you have a new book coming out next year?

I'm working on my 2015 release, the fifth book in the Tiki Goddess Mysteries entitled...get ready for it.... Hawaii Five Uh-Oh! The madcap, mystery solving Hula Maidens outdo themselves once again while cavorting around the North Shore of Kauai, risking life, limb, and their hectic social obligations as they focus on trying to catch a ring of high end art thieves and still have time for cocktails and shaking those grass skirts.

But since this is a Christmas celebration, we must have presents. I'll be giving away three ebooks from my re-issued classic romances: Sunflower, After All, and Daydreamer.

Jill Marie, thank you for sharing your many gifts with us this year and we'll look forward to chatting with you about your new book next year. Mele Kalikimaka.




NEXT, REBECCA HAGAN LEE

Hi E.E., thanks for the opportunity to give my GLIAS friends a sneak peek of what I'm working on for 2015. I hope you have a wonderful holiday season. Happy Thanksgiving! Merry Christmas! Happy New Year!

So glad you could make it today, Rebecca.  What are you working on for this coming year? 

In December, Amber House Books is bringing out, ALWAYS A LADY, the second in the Marquess series that began with ONCE A MISTRESS, and January 2015 will see the release of EVER A PRINCESS, the final book in the trilogy.  

I'm currently working on an original manuscript set in Regency London and Scotland, called A BACHELOR STILL, the final book in my FREE FELLOWS LEAGUE series. I'm also writing the first chapters of the next BORROWED BRIDES book: THE RUNAWAY BRIDE: ISABEL'S STORY.
      
That's great news for romance readers. Can you share the best thing over the past year, or your best Christmas gift?

I have two best Christmas gifts. The first was when I was eight when I got a Baby Magic doll. I named her Musette. I still have her. She still works and she sits in a place of honor on my bedroom dresser. The second was the Christmas my husband gave me the money for my first trip to England and Scotland.

Thanks so much for joining us. I'll look forward to visiting with you again when your new books are available. Have a blessed Christmas.

LAST (NOT LEAST, I HOPE) E.E. BURKE

Best Christmas present ever? 
My second daughter, Emily, who was born a few weeks before Christmas. What a wonderful gift! Of course, all three of my daughters are the best gifts ever, but having a baby near Christmas was a special treat. Emily just got married his past October. How time flies!

What am I up to for 2015? 
I'll be publishing the next book in the series, Steam! Romance and Rails. Today I wanted to give our GLIAS readers a little teaser. This is an original scene with two characters who will appear in the next book. I'm also sharing a wonderful pie recipe handed down through my husband's family. His mother taught me how to make the BEST cherry pie ever. Her crust is amazing (once you master it).

The Belmont House, Parsons, Kansas, Christmas Day, 1873
   The tart-sweet smell wafting through the hotel lobby made Billy’s mouth water. Any other day, dessert was reserved for guests, mostly railroad travelers passing through Parsons. But this being Christmas Day, there were no trains running and few guests. So who was getting that pie?
   He tracked the tantalizing smell to the kitchen. As he crept closer to a worktable where the source of the wonderful aroma sat cooling, he kept a wary eye on the dainty woman at the sink peeling potatoes. Despite her size, Mrs. Daines was a force to be reckoned with...and she didn’t stand for stealing.
   When he’d first come to live here, he would’ve hooked the pie without a second thought, and if she’d thrown him out, would’ve said he didn’t care. He hadn’t wanted to be stuck with another family that didn’t want him.
   To his surprise, Mrs. Daines turned out to be different from the other folks he’d stayed with. Oh, she scolded him if he went astray, but she was just as quick to praise when he behaved. As time went by, he found he was less inclined to break her rules.
   Might be he could get away with pinching off a small piece of crust. She hadn’t made tasting a crime—yet.
   “Keep away from the pie, Billy.”
   He jerked to an abrupt halt, his finger and thumb a mere inch away from the golden brown crust. She hadn’t even turned around to look. It was like she had eyes in the back of her head. He peered suspiciously at the thick brown hair confined in a net.
   Before she caught him in the act, he tucked his hands beneath his arms.  “Ain’t touchin’, just sniffin’.”
   She turned with a partially peeled potato in one hand and used a paring knife to gesture. “You aren’t." 
   He got her point without the knife. “No ma’am. Told you, I ain’t touched it.”
   One of her dark eyebrows notched up. “Ain’t isn’t a word.”
   Billy puzzled over this revelation. “Then what is it?”
   “Poor grammar. You have better words to use to express yourself.”
   He huffed in disgust. “Not if you keep taking ‘em away.”
   Her lips twitched like what he'd said amused her. She didn’t smile a whole lot, laughed even less. Maybe that was because she worked so hard, running a busy hotel and caring for a crippled husband. She set the potato and knife aside and wiped her hands on her apron. “Tell you what. I’ll give you new words to replace the old ones.”
   Billy was dead certain the new ones wouldn’t be as good as the old. However, he’d try them out if for no other reason than to please the kind woman who’d taken him. Temporarily. His stays never lasted long. He was like a stray cat that folks might feed and keep around for a while, as long as he was helpful, but they didn’t care if he eventually ran away.
   She crossed to the worktable and picked up a plate that contained bits and pieces of baked crust. The spicy scent of cinnamon teased Billy’s nose. “I always end up with extra dough, and found a good use for it. You may have some.”
   He popped a flaky remnant into his mouth. Umm, sprinkled with sugar and spice. His heart sang. So did his stomach. Rather than waiting for another invitation, he scooped up the remaining pieces. “’S’good,” he mumbled around a mouthful.
   When she cocked up her eyebrow he swallowed before he spoke again. Talking while chewing wasn’t polite in front of a lady. Men weren’t so particular. “You sure are a good cook.”
   The sharpness in her gaze softened. When she dropped that starchy expression, she looked younger, almost pretty. Billy liked to think his mother might've resembled her.
   “I’m glad you’re here to enjoy my cooking,” she said.
   “You are?” Surprised delight collided with wary disbelief. He couldn’t recall anybody being glad to have him around, much less happy about feeding him.
   He started to wipe his sticky fingers on his shirt, and then remembered she didn’t approve when did that, so he licked them instead.
   Without batting an eye, she withdrew a faded dishtowel from her apron pocket and handed it to him. “I have a surprise for you."
   “Something I can eat?” Billy cut a glance at the cooling pie.
   Her brown eyes gleamed. “It’s better than pie.”
   “Nothing’s better than your cherry pie.” He was quite sure about that.
   “What about being adopted? Do you think that might be better?”
   His mouth dropped open. Had he heard right? “You…you want to keep me?”
   She nodded. “Yes, indeed.”
   Billy's heart flew up into his throat. Adopted meant he’d get to stay here until he was grown. Be part of a family. Belong. He’d never belonged to anybody. Not even his Ma had wanted him.
   Mrs. Daines started to look worried when he didn't answer. “Don’t you want to be adopted?”
   He knew he ought to say yes, but his heart remained lodged in his throat and it wouldn't budge, no matter how hard he swallowed. For as long as he could remember, he'd wanted a family...but he wasn't sure he knew how to be part of one.
   “If you’re worried about Mr. Daines, you needn’t be. I can assure you he’s amenable.”
   “A-mean…” Billy frowned in confusion. That was a word she hadn’t given him yet.
   “He’s agreed...and I hope you’ll agree." She twisted her fingers together. "It would be best Christmas present I ever received.”
   This seemed too good to be real, like a dream that would dissolve when he woke up. Before doubt and fear got the jump on him, he nodded.
   “Oh, Billy, I’m so glad…” Her reply came out on a rushed breath. She put her arms around him and gave him a big hug. 
   Slowly, he returned her embrace. At first it felt awkward, but after a moment the strangeness faded and a warm, happy feeling surrounded and filled him up. She stroked his hair with a motherly gesture Billy had seen countless women use with their sons. Tears stung behind his eyelids. He blinked hard. Twelve-year-old boys didn't cry like babies. 
   As she drew back still holding his arms, she gave him an honest-to-goodness genuine smile. “Merry Christmas...son."
   Billy swallowed, and at last his throat cleared. “Merry Christmas... Ma" 
   Ma, that was a good word. The best. He took a deep breath and caught another whiff of that heavenly smell. Didn't mothers bake treats for their boys? The biggest grin spread across his face. "Reckon we ought to celebrate with a piece of that pie?”

Grandma's Cherry Pie Recipe
Crust:
2 c. sifted flour, 1 tsp salt. Cut in 2/3 cu + 2 Tbsp shortening
Sprinkle with 4 Tbsp very cold water
Work together (just until blended); gather dough and press into ball. Refrigerate for an hour. (Can be refrigerated until you’re read to use it if you wrap it in saran wrap.
Divide for top and bottom crust. Roll out 1/8 in. thick. Brush bottom with egg white. Tips: water must be ice cold, don’t over handle the dough.
Filling:
2/4 to 1 c. sugar; 4 Tbsp four; ½ tsp cinnamon; ¼ tsp. almond extract; 1/8 t. red food coloring; three 16 oz. cans of TART cherries (in water, Oregon brand is best). ½ c. of the juice.  1 Tbsp butter. Dump cherries into pie shell. Add food coloring and almond extract. Mix other dry ingredients and sprinkle over cherries. Dot with butter. Put top crust over the mixture. Brush lightly with half and half.
Bake 400, 30 to 40 minutes.

Now, on to the presents...
I'm delighted to report our stocking is full. Many thanks to everyone who contributed!

From Kaki Warner: a paperback of her novel Where the Horses Run (second book in the Heartbreak Creek series) and an eBook of her Christmas novella, Miracle in New Hope

From Becky Lower: an eBook of her first in the Cotillion Ball series, The Reluctant Debutante and her latest The Duplicitous Debutante.


From Sylvia McDaniel: the eBook Deadly from her series Lipstick and Lead


From Jill Marie Landis: three eBooks of her classic romances, Sunflower, After All and Daydreamer


From Rebecca Hagan Lee: three eBooks of The Counterfeit Bride, the latest in her Borrowed Brides series.


From E.E. Burke: a complete eBook set of the series Steam! Romance and Rails, including Passion's Prize, Her Bodyguard and A Dangerous Passion.


For a chance to win, just leave a comment and enter the raffle. We'll announce winners on January 2.


What was your best Christmas present ever?

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