The year of 2015 has been a fabulous one for me, to put it mildly. I've succeeded in getting more books published than ever before and embarked on a new Victorian family saga which I love writing. I've also been lucky enough to have one of my books bought for Portuguese translation which has expanded my fan base to Brazil and made me some wonderful new friends there too.
Perhaps the biggest personal achievement this year has been my decision to give up my day job and begin writing full time. It was not an easy decision to make -- in fact it was downright scary -- but I am so glad I took the plunge. Now I can devote more of my time to putting out the stories I want to write and that readers, hopefully, want to read.
Now, heading into a brand new year, I'm looking forward to seeing where the world of publishing will take me next. First up is the release of HOW TO RESCUE A RAKE (January 5, 2016), which will probably be the final book in the Book Club Belles series I wrote for Sourcebooks, Inc. I'll be sad to say goodbye to those characters, but I'm very happy with how Diana's story turned out so I think it's a satisfying end to the series. Who knows, there might be another at some point, but that really depends on readers and on the publisher.
I'm also continuing THE DEVERELLS saga, of course, with stories from more children of the notorious True Deverell -- and maybe some other relatives too. You'll have to wait and see who's next!
Another light-hearted Regency era series will be revealed in 2016 too - The Ladies Most Unlikely will emerge to wreck havoc this spring in THE TROUBLE WITH HIS LORDSHIP'S TROUSERS. So looking forward to that one!
All things considered 2016 is looking busy, bright and...dare I say it ...bouncy.
I hope the new year is full of good things for you. As we wave goodbye to 2015 and set off together into more adventures between the pages, I wish all my readers every happiness for the year ahead.
Jayne
Thursday, December 31, 2015
Thursday, December 24, 2015
Merry Christmas!
If you're looking for a little escape this season, you can pick up A PRIVATE COLLECTION from All Romance E-books for FREE today and tomorrow (December 24th and 25th). Thank you for reading and sharing my adventures with me!
https://www.allromanceebooks.com/product-aprivatecollection-1914045-340.html
https://www.allromanceebooks.com/product-aprivatecollection-1914045-340.html
Sunday, December 20, 2015
Chasing Raven - exclusive excerpt!
Well, in all the excitement last Wednesday I forgot to check in here with the excerpt I promised! Here it is now....
Yet here they were.
Usually his thoughts came in a sensible, reasoned flow, but tonight the cogwheels of his mind were frustratingly stuck upon the image of this woman in riding breeches.
"This is most kind, your lordship," said her mother, leaning forward as the amber tongue of a passing street lamp licked her face. "I'm sure it was a misunderstanding with the gentlemen from whom I borrowed the landau." Her gaze slid sideways to her daughter, who stared out of the carriage window as if the rain was the most enthralling sight she'd ever seen. "We must thank you for saving us so gallantly and going out of your way."
He bowed his head. "It is no trouble, madam."
Her smile widened, and she raised a white-gloved hand to her hair, patting the neat arrangement of auburn waves. "We must repay the favor."
Lady Charlotte was still a handsome woman. In the season of her 'coming out' she had been the most sought after debutante in Town. And then, when she could have had anyone, she eloped with the notorious True Deverell, turning society inside out. The marriage did not last long, and the couple lived separately for years before the costly and scandalous divorce was finally acquired. How must that have affected her daughter?
With a reputation in ruins, the divorcee might have slunk away into oblivion, but her former husband apparently kept her nest feathered and she still had a handful of acquaintances willing to help her. It seemed she also had little sense of shame and a powerful instinct for survival.
Her daughter was equally self-assured and unapologetic, he noted coolly.
In the darkness of the carriage interior, Miss Raven Deverell filled his senses, a pulsing, vibrant creature, a mischief maker who had broken a rule to interfere in his serious sport. Well, since she had laughed at the idea of an apology, he would show her how it felt to have one's day spoiled.
"Your daughter and I met earlier today, madam. At Bourne Lodge in Richmond."
Now the young woman tore her attention from the window and glowered at him. In the darkness of the carriage interior, her face was in shadow, but he saw the gleam of anger in her eyes. Eyes that he knew now were the richest shade of green one might find in the depths of a primeval forest.
"Oh?" said her mother. "I did not know this. Raven?"
"You knew I was with Matty Bourne today, mama," she replied, her gaze lowered as she smoothed her hands over her lap and studied her silk gloves.
"But I thought you were spending the day at a picnic in Hyde Park with a small group of friends. That's what you told me. You said your brother would be there."
"We changed our mind. The picnic was called off, because it looked like rain. So Matty took me to his father's house to show me a new horse. I knew we'd be back in time for the Winstanleys' ball, and I really didn't think it would signify where we spent the day."
There was a thick pause and then Hale muttered, "I must say, madam, I was rather surprised to see your daughter unchaperoned at Bourne Lodge." He was thinking again of a certain pair of riding breeches. Who had got her in and out of them?
That was more bothersome now, he realized, than the trick played against him.
Her mother chided the girl. "Really you should have told me, Raven. What must Bourne's father think of you running about, unchaperoned, with his son? Going to his house alone with him." But Hale saw at once that she only made this protest for his benefit. She looked across the carriage for his reaction rather than her daughter's.
He wondered if Lady Charlotte knew where her daughter was most of the time, let alone what she was getting up to. On the other hand, she could be complicit in her daughter's games. Hale had met many an ambitious mother and witnessed a variety of tricks used in hopes of an entrapment.
Hale cleared his throat and looked out at the rain. "I believe Lord Bourne is soon to be engaged, is he not?"
"I wouldn't care if he was," Miss Deverell replied. "He and I are merely friends." The next words burst out of her on an angry breath. "I do have some friends, surprising as it may seem to you, sir."
He frowned. What the devil was that supposed to mean? "I just wanted to be sure you knew. To save you any...distress. Should you have any expectations—"
"I never do. It is the safest way to protect against disappointment."
After a slight pause, he said, "They have yet to make an official announcement, but it is a settled matter, I understand. By this winter he will be married to Miss Louisa Winstanley."
"What business can it be of yours?"
"Raven! Moderate your voice, young lady!" her mother cried. "I'm sure I did not know that Lord Bourne is soon to be engaged! Now I do, you shall see no more of him." The lady squared her shoulders and exhaled an angry huff. "We've been wasting our time in that quarter, evidently."
"Matty Bourne is merely a very good friend, and I shall see him if I choose."
"Indeed you shall not! There are other men more worthy."
Fuming silence descended over the carriage interior, the two women making their chilly stance on opposite ends of the seat.
Hale, meanwhile, silently congratulated himself. Mere friends, indeed! Whatever had been between them, at least he had put a stop to that now.
He did it for her own good. Not that she would understand or be thankful.
Too soon they arrived at the door of Mivart's Hotel, and he stepped out to help both ladies alight from his carriage. A lamp outside the building cast a wide pool of shimmering, molten gold across the pavement and as Raven passed under it, she turned her head to look over her shoulder, those lively eyes defiant.
"Perhaps you would take tea with us here, your lordship?" her mother inquired as he opened his umbrella for shelter. "Sometime next week." The wide smile once again stretched across Lady Charlotte's face. It was a rather chilling expression, actually, now he saw it clearer. Her eyes were very dark and cold, not like her daughter's warmly inquisitive, teasing regard. Even when Raven's eyes were angry he would rather have their heat making him sweat, than suffer the frosty bite of her mother's hard gaze.
"Regretfully, madam, I am not staying in town."
"I thought, since you were at the ball tonight, you might stay for the rest of the Season."
"No, madam. I had some business to tend at the Winstanleys', but I go into the country again tomorrow. Back to my estate." Back to the familiar, he thought with relief, and away from quarrelsome young women with pert tongues and firm bottoms.
"What a pity," Lady Charlotte exclaimed. "But when you are next in town then."
Making no commitment, he looked beyond her to where Raven stood by the street lamp, that dark hair a gleaming, lush mane over one shoulder, her chin proudly raised. She chose to get wet in the rain, instead of stand under the protection of his umbrella. The dampness did nothing to dispel her terrible allure. Some men, he was quite sure, would be utterly undone by the sight. Weaker men than he, of course.
"Miss Deverell, you dropped this." One arm slowly outstretched, he offered her the small beaded reticule that had fallen from her wrist while she fidgeted irritably in his carriage.
Her lips parted, shining damp in the lamplight. "Oh." Finally she took it from his hand. "Thank you."
Hale almost smiled, but restrained himself from giving her any encouragement. Wouldn't want her to think he had any interest of that nature. She was a wicked brat looking for trouble, but at least he had served her a warning not to meddle in dangerous wagers ever again.
Hopefully, he had served her a warning. At least, he thought that was what he'd been doing with her.
Alone in
her bed chamber, Raven sat at her dresser, opened her reticule and found a bank
cheque written for one thousand pounds. His handwriting was very neat, very
orderly, and there was his signature.
Sebastian
Rockingham Hale.
The tall, sloping pillars of the "H" were grandly struck against the paper by a determined, confidently wielded pen.
So he had paid the wager, but left it in her hands. Why give it to her, instead of Matthew? She looked at her reflection in the mirror and shook her head. There was nothing to be gained by trying to understand that man's motives. She would likely never see him again.
Slowly she ran a fingertip over his signature.
What did Matty call him? A self-righteous prig. Exactly right!
Perhaps the Bourne family had asked Hale to intervene and separate her from their son?
Her shoulders slumped. She rested her elbows on the dresser, her head in her hands.
She was not in love with Matty, so she could not be genuinely angry about his potential engagement. But she could be exceedingly cross about an officious man she'd only just met trying to manage her life, spoil her fun, and tell her what to do. As if she was a child. Nobody else had ever got away with that, so why should he?
"It's a very good thing that you don't own me, your lordship, and I don't have to listen to you."
"Would you listen to me if I did own you?"
He was possibly the oddest, most vexing and interfering man she'd ever met in the entire course of her life.
When she buried her face in one puffed silk sleeve, she was surrounded by the richly spiced scent of a very distinctive cologne water.
He had marked her, she realized, appalled. He had marked her all over as if he did, in fact, own her. Or he planned to.
From 'Chasing Raven' - The Deverells Book Three. (copyright Jayne Fresina 2015)
This is the latest installment in a Victorian family saga.
'Chasing Raven' and the two previous books, 'True Story' and 'Storm' can be purchased by clicking on the cover images shown on this blog.
Thank you for reading!
Jayne
He watched
Raven Deverell across his carriage and cautiously considered, once again, the dangerous
extravagance of everything about her— from the rich darkness of her hair, to
the blossoming shape of her lips, the thickness of her eyelashes, the fullness
of her figure. Too much of everything, he mused. What was it that man at the
ball had called her? A handful. No, she was more than a handful. She was an
over-spilling, cartload of trouble, teetering along without a sober driver and about
to lose its balance.
He had
given her fair warning about that young cad, Bourne, and that should be it.
There was no need for him to follow her out of the ballroom and continue the conversation.Yet here they were.
Usually his thoughts came in a sensible, reasoned flow, but tonight the cogwheels of his mind were frustratingly stuck upon the image of this woman in riding breeches.
"This is most kind, your lordship," said her mother, leaning forward as the amber tongue of a passing street lamp licked her face. "I'm sure it was a misunderstanding with the gentlemen from whom I borrowed the landau." Her gaze slid sideways to her daughter, who stared out of the carriage window as if the rain was the most enthralling sight she'd ever seen. "We must thank you for saving us so gallantly and going out of your way."
He bowed his head. "It is no trouble, madam."
Her smile widened, and she raised a white-gloved hand to her hair, patting the neat arrangement of auburn waves. "We must repay the favor."
Lady Charlotte was still a handsome woman. In the season of her 'coming out' she had been the most sought after debutante in Town. And then, when she could have had anyone, she eloped with the notorious True Deverell, turning society inside out. The marriage did not last long, and the couple lived separately for years before the costly and scandalous divorce was finally acquired. How must that have affected her daughter?
With a reputation in ruins, the divorcee might have slunk away into oblivion, but her former husband apparently kept her nest feathered and she still had a handful of acquaintances willing to help her. It seemed she also had little sense of shame and a powerful instinct for survival.
Her daughter was equally self-assured and unapologetic, he noted coolly.
In the darkness of the carriage interior, Miss Raven Deverell filled his senses, a pulsing, vibrant creature, a mischief maker who had broken a rule to interfere in his serious sport. Well, since she had laughed at the idea of an apology, he would show her how it felt to have one's day spoiled.
"Your daughter and I met earlier today, madam. At Bourne Lodge in Richmond."
Now the young woman tore her attention from the window and glowered at him. In the darkness of the carriage interior, her face was in shadow, but he saw the gleam of anger in her eyes. Eyes that he knew now were the richest shade of green one might find in the depths of a primeval forest.
"Oh?" said her mother. "I did not know this. Raven?"
"You knew I was with Matty Bourne today, mama," she replied, her gaze lowered as she smoothed her hands over her lap and studied her silk gloves.
"But I thought you were spending the day at a picnic in Hyde Park with a small group of friends. That's what you told me. You said your brother would be there."
"We changed our mind. The picnic was called off, because it looked like rain. So Matty took me to his father's house to show me a new horse. I knew we'd be back in time for the Winstanleys' ball, and I really didn't think it would signify where we spent the day."
There was a thick pause and then Hale muttered, "I must say, madam, I was rather surprised to see your daughter unchaperoned at Bourne Lodge." He was thinking again of a certain pair of riding breeches. Who had got her in and out of them?
That was more bothersome now, he realized, than the trick played against him.
Her mother chided the girl. "Really you should have told me, Raven. What must Bourne's father think of you running about, unchaperoned, with his son? Going to his house alone with him." But Hale saw at once that she only made this protest for his benefit. She looked across the carriage for his reaction rather than her daughter's.
He wondered if Lady Charlotte knew where her daughter was most of the time, let alone what she was getting up to. On the other hand, she could be complicit in her daughter's games. Hale had met many an ambitious mother and witnessed a variety of tricks used in hopes of an entrapment.
Hale cleared his throat and looked out at the rain. "I believe Lord Bourne is soon to be engaged, is he not?"
"I wouldn't care if he was," Miss Deverell replied. "He and I are merely friends." The next words burst out of her on an angry breath. "I do have some friends, surprising as it may seem to you, sir."
He frowned. What the devil was that supposed to mean? "I just wanted to be sure you knew. To save you any...distress. Should you have any expectations—"
"I never do. It is the safest way to protect against disappointment."
After a slight pause, he said, "They have yet to make an official announcement, but it is a settled matter, I understand. By this winter he will be married to Miss Louisa Winstanley."
"What business can it be of yours?"
"Raven! Moderate your voice, young lady!" her mother cried. "I'm sure I did not know that Lord Bourne is soon to be engaged! Now I do, you shall see no more of him." The lady squared her shoulders and exhaled an angry huff. "We've been wasting our time in that quarter, evidently."
"Matty Bourne is merely a very good friend, and I shall see him if I choose."
"Indeed you shall not! There are other men more worthy."
Fuming silence descended over the carriage interior, the two women making their chilly stance on opposite ends of the seat.
Hale, meanwhile, silently congratulated himself. Mere friends, indeed! Whatever had been between them, at least he had put a stop to that now.
He did it for her own good. Not that she would understand or be thankful.
Too soon they arrived at the door of Mivart's Hotel, and he stepped out to help both ladies alight from his carriage. A lamp outside the building cast a wide pool of shimmering, molten gold across the pavement and as Raven passed under it, she turned her head to look over her shoulder, those lively eyes defiant.
"Perhaps you would take tea with us here, your lordship?" her mother inquired as he opened his umbrella for shelter. "Sometime next week." The wide smile once again stretched across Lady Charlotte's face. It was a rather chilling expression, actually, now he saw it clearer. Her eyes were very dark and cold, not like her daughter's warmly inquisitive, teasing regard. Even when Raven's eyes were angry he would rather have their heat making him sweat, than suffer the frosty bite of her mother's hard gaze.
"Regretfully, madam, I am not staying in town."
"I thought, since you were at the ball tonight, you might stay for the rest of the Season."
"No, madam. I had some business to tend at the Winstanleys', but I go into the country again tomorrow. Back to my estate." Back to the familiar, he thought with relief, and away from quarrelsome young women with pert tongues and firm bottoms.
"What a pity," Lady Charlotte exclaimed. "But when you are next in town then."
Making no commitment, he looked beyond her to where Raven stood by the street lamp, that dark hair a gleaming, lush mane over one shoulder, her chin proudly raised. She chose to get wet in the rain, instead of stand under the protection of his umbrella. The dampness did nothing to dispel her terrible allure. Some men, he was quite sure, would be utterly undone by the sight. Weaker men than he, of course.
"Miss Deverell, you dropped this." One arm slowly outstretched, he offered her the small beaded reticule that had fallen from her wrist while she fidgeted irritably in his carriage.
Her lips parted, shining damp in the lamplight. "Oh." Finally she took it from his hand. "Thank you."
Hale almost smiled, but restrained himself from giving her any encouragement. Wouldn't want her to think he had any interest of that nature. She was a wicked brat looking for trouble, but at least he had served her a warning not to meddle in dangerous wagers ever again.
Hopefully, he had served her a warning. At least, he thought that was what he'd been doing with her.
* * * *
The tall, sloping pillars of the "H" were grandly struck against the paper by a determined, confidently wielded pen.
So he had paid the wager, but left it in her hands. Why give it to her, instead of Matthew? She looked at her reflection in the mirror and shook her head. There was nothing to be gained by trying to understand that man's motives. She would likely never see him again.
Slowly she ran a fingertip over his signature.
What did Matty call him? A self-righteous prig. Exactly right!
Perhaps the Bourne family had asked Hale to intervene and separate her from their son?
Her shoulders slumped. She rested her elbows on the dresser, her head in her hands.
She was not in love with Matty, so she could not be genuinely angry about his potential engagement. But she could be exceedingly cross about an officious man she'd only just met trying to manage her life, spoil her fun, and tell her what to do. As if she was a child. Nobody else had ever got away with that, so why should he?
"It's a very good thing that you don't own me, your lordship, and I don't have to listen to you."
"Would you listen to me if I did own you?"
He was possibly the oddest, most vexing and interfering man she'd ever met in the entire course of her life.
When she buried her face in one puffed silk sleeve, she was surrounded by the richly spiced scent of a very distinctive cologne water.
He had marked her, she realized, appalled. He had marked her all over as if he did, in fact, own her. Or he planned to.
####
This is the latest installment in a Victorian family saga.
'Chasing Raven' and the two previous books, 'True Story' and 'Storm' can be purchased by clicking on the cover images shown on this blog.
Thank you for reading!
Jayne
Monday, December 14, 2015
CHASING RAVEN - Coming Wednesday, December 16th
Raven Deverell laughs her way through life - and through men - on a dare and a jest. She's having fun, never letting anybody too close, and thumbing her nose at the strict rules of society. Why comply with standards set by the upper classes, since she's been told she will never belong there? And she wouldn't want to, anyway.
As one of those infamous, rebellious Deverells, she does as she pleases and nobody would dare get in her way.
Until a stray wink from the back of a horse brings her mischief to the disdainful attention of Sebastian Hale.
Born to duty and a title, Hale lives his life by those proper rules, and he will not let this wayward young woman -- in a most improper pair of men's riding breeches -- set his world asunder. She might think it amusing to masquerade as a male jockey and claim victory over his horse, but this is one wicked, reckless game she won't win. As the Earl of Southerton, he is a man above reproach, a man who can make or ruin a reputation. And he doesn't like to lose.
The scandalous Miss Deverell has chosen the wrong opponent to wager against this time.
Perhaps she has finally met her match.
Excerpt to come on release day!
Latest and breaking news can be found on my author page here:
Friday, October 30, 2015
Trick or Treat?
Treat, of course!
For all my readers, here is the promised excerpt from "A Private Collection", which was re-released in one volume this week. In fact, I decided to give you a full chapter, introducing you to the three Blackwood brothers and their father's mysterious house. In this chapter, the brothers have come home to attend eccentric Randolph Blackwood's funeral and they are about to learn that his last will and testament is not quite what they expect.
Well, maybe they should have expected it!
Happy Halloween!
Copyright Jayne Fresina 2015
For all my readers, here is the promised excerpt from "A Private Collection", which was re-released in one volume this week. In fact, I decided to give you a full chapter, introducing you to the three Blackwood brothers and their father's mysterious house. In this chapter, the brothers have come home to attend eccentric Randolph Blackwood's funeral and they are about to learn that his last will and testament is not quite what they expect.
Well, maybe they should have expected it!
Happy Halloween!
Adam’s carriage,
having raced at lethal speed through the village of East Lofton ,
slowed abruptly and lurched down a narrow, winding drive. Sunlight dappled the
carriage interior, fluttering between the yew trees that were once trimmed into
fat cones, but now prickled with straggling branches and strayed rebelliously
out of their neat forms. Under the crunching wheels, the gravel also showed
neglect. Speckled with pert dandelions and angry thistles, it no longer led the
way with surety and grandeur, but seemed only to suggest their meandering
course as if it really mattered little whether anyone found their way or not. Through
the trees, he sighted fields of knee-high grasses that were once rolling lawns.
He’d heard that his father, in a peevish fit, had dismissed all the ground
staff except for his gamekeeper. An under-gardener, apparently, had
inadvertently cut down his favorite old tree, or some such nonsense, and he
took out his wrath on the entire staff.
As the carriage
trundled down the long lane, Adam looked out with hard, resentful eyes. He
hadn’t been to The Grange in a little over five years and it was a surprise to
find the house still standing. There it was, coming into view now around the bend,
sooty chimneys spoiling the innocent swathe of cornflower blue sky. The walls
were now almost completely coated with ivy, but mellow gold stone showed
through in places, catching the sun’s rays, absorbing them so the house glowed
like pirate’s treasure trapped in a sprawling green net of seaweed.
With the
knowledgeable, discerning eye of an architect, he could appreciate the fine,
noble lines of the building, even under all the decay, and he sadly recognized
the years of abuse it had suffered through neglect and carelessness. Beautiful
houses sometimes fell into the wrong hands, he thought glumly, just as people
often did.
Adam slouched back
against the leather padding of his rocking seat. After a two day journey from London he was stiff and
sore, his mood decidedly sour. His father’s sudden death had caused him to
leave behind the company of Miss Matilda Hawkesworth, an impeccable young lady
he’d finally, after careful consideration of all the pros and cons, selected to
be his bride. He knew her family disapproved the match, but fortunately Matilda
was headstrong and already, at just twenty-one, in control of the fortune left
to her by her father. With his engagement newly forged and on tentative ground,
he hated to leave London
and, with it, young Matilda under the daily haranguing of her aunt. He couldn’t
risk the marriage falling through. Therefore, the sooner he got this wretchedly
inconvenient funeral out of the way the better. And why the devil their
father’s solicitor insisted on meeting all the sons here at the house he
couldn’t imagine. Surely all the finances were straightforward. The house would
be sold, the contents auctioned off. There was nothing he wanted to keep in
memoriam of his childhood in that house, or of his father’s reprobate life. Turning
a new leaf himself, he’d sooner forget all that.
At
last the wheels rolled up before the uneven stone steps, narrowly missing a
broken urn laid on its side, a bunch of dry, crumbling, brown flowers spilled
across the gravel.
Not
waiting for the step to be lowered, Adam swung open the carriage door and leapt
down, a long, disheartened sigh oozing between his tight lips. On the inhale,
he swallowed the musty dampness of old earth and rotting leaves. A familiar,
thick scent here in this place, no matter what the season. Except in the
deepest snow of winter, he thought, reconsidering, remembering the last time he
was there, Christmas 1882. The air had been crisp and clear, the ground coated
in a fluffy blanket of several inches. The snow was always prettiest in the
country. He’d walked in it that Christmas Eve, coming home from the church,
insisting his brothers went on ahead in the carriage without him. Of course,
he’d had an ulterior motive to walk in the snow and freeze his toes off. He’d
wanted to see Lina and try one last time. Fool. See what he did for her? And
she was never grateful.
He
swore softly under his breath. Don’t start thinking about her.
Better
get inside the house and get it over with. There would be memories, of course. He
was prepared. He could deal with them. Shoulders straightened, fists curled, he
took the stone steps three at a time, his impatient stride quickly crossing the
threshold, passing through the wide open door and into the cool, dark house.
Almost
at once he heard the echo of voices. His brothers were already there and they’d
started without him. As the youngest, he was always insignificant in their
eyes. They were probably dividing the spoils between them, not that he wanted
anything. It was the principle. Cursing, he blamed his lateness on the damned
carriage getting lost and taking a round-about route through the village. He
would have been here half an hour sooner, if not for that mistake.
Following the
sound of voices, he hurried along the narrow passage with its damp-stained,
flaking walls and chipped tiles. Memories crowded in of walking along this
passage in trepidation, sent for by his father who, having caught him in some
misbehavior, waited to give him a few stripes with the cane. He remembered,
too, playing skittles there when rain kept him indoors, the rolling rattle of
the ball, the clacking of the wooden skittles as they bounced against the floor
and the walls.
At his father’s
library door he paused. A woman laughed softly. It didn’t sound like his father’s
housekeeper, Mrs. Murray. In fact, he’d never heard Mrs. Murray laugh. Thrusting
open the door, he strode in, ready to confront whichever young trollop his
father had lately taken up with. She needn’t expect to get anything out of the
old man’s will, no matter what she did for him. It would be just like Randolph to take up with
some filly at the eleventh hour and indulgently write her into his will.
The
angry words died on his tongue. The library was empty.
The
drapes were pulled back, the windows open. The black hearth stared out blindly,
all the cinders swept away, the coal scuttle standing empty. His father’s chair
was moved against the wall, the rug rolled up so the floor could be cleaned. The
tart scent of vinegar still lingered. On the mantle, his father’s old skeleton
clock kept time. The polished glass dome reflected Adam’s tall shadow as he
passed walking to the window.
He wondered if the
voices he heard had drifted in from outside, but there was no one in view, just
a bird perched in the ivy watching him with a curious black eye.
Flimsy sunlight
touched his face, but not enough to shake off the chill of the room. He heard
the laugh again, as if she tried to stifle it. Was that violets he smelled? He
closed his eyes. He had no choice. Her hands were around him, her cool fingers
covering his sight as she played this foolish game. His first instinct was to
turn and confront her, but he banked it when he felt her move closer and the
fullness of her breasts brushed teasingly against the back of his jacket. There
was a slither of silk, a soft rustle of lace. The damned woman was
half-undressed, teasing him with her body, pressing against him while she kept
her hands over his eyes. And it was a sumptuous body, all tantalizing curves
and intriguing crevices.
“Guess who?” she whispered.
His throat was
dry, his tongue too thick. Lina. He couldn’t say it, but he knew it was her. He’d
just never known her playful like this.
“Oh, young Master
Adam! You did make me jump, sir.”
He spun around on
his heel and found the scarlet-faced housekeeper standing in the open doorway
holding a bucket in one hand, mop in the other.
“I didn’t know you
were in here, sir. I didn’t hear you come in. Gave me an awful shock.”
His own heartbeat
was still strangely scattered. “The front door was open, Mrs. Murray, so I
didn’t ring the bell.”
“Well, I was just
finishing off the floor, if you don’t mind, sir.”
After a beat, he
realized she was waiting for him to leave the room. “Ah yes. Of course. Are my
brothers here yet?”
“Not yet, Master
Adam, but we expect them shortly. If you go through to the morning room, you’ll
find a fire in there, and I’ll put a pot of tea on as soon as I’m done here.”
Tea? He needed a damn brandy now. Exiting
his father’s library, he grabbed the half-full decanter and a glass from the
tray on the sideboard. Liquor was one thing the old man always had plenty of. The
walls could fall around his ears, but the wine cellars and crystal decanters
were always well stocked.
“Oh, young Master
Adam,” the housekeeper exclaimed as he was leaving.
“Yes, Mrs. Murray ?” He propped one
shoulder against the doorframe.
“My condolences,
sir.”
“Hmm.” He turned
up his lip and swung away, pacing back down the passage. Lifting the crystal
stopper with his mouth, he poured the brandy as he went, too impatient to wait
until he reached the morning room.
Lina. He could
still feel her whispers as if they were caught in his ears. Like those old
spiders webs clinging to the plaster acanthus scrolls above the front door. Her
honeyed lips were all over him, leaving sticky marks in some very wicked
places. Miss Matilda Hawkesworth would not like that at all. She would probably
faint at the mere thought of venturing near those particular places. If she
knew they even existed.
He’d expected
memories, prepared himself for them, but this was not a memory. It was a
fantasy, and it was enough to make him reach for the brandy after six months of
sober living to impress Miss Hawkesworth and her family.
Guess who? Who else? Lina. No other woman had ever
affected him the way she did. Sometimes he thought it was simply because she’d
rejected him and he couldn’t bear it. No other woman since he turned sixteen
had ever turned him down. If he wanted a woman, he had her, no messing about,
no poetry, roses, declarations of love and all that nonsense. No, it was always
quickly had, quickly forgotten, never regretted. But the fantasy of Evangeline
was so strong even after five years he could taste her scent in the back of his
throat. And he’d never even kissed the woman.
He found the
morning room, nudged open the door with his elbow, and crossed the worn carpet
to a saggy, faded, chintz armchair. As he settled into the old, battered
cushions a cloying, fusty odor rose up to assault his nostrils. He wondered
when anyone last sat in the chair. It was once, apparently, his mother’s
favorite room. He wouldn’t know, of course, since she upped and left when he
was little more than a baby. She did him a favor, he reasoned darkly. His
mother taught him early on never to trust a woman. They were flighty,
unreasonable witches. Old Randolph
was right about that.
Raising a glass to
his departed parents, he ceremoniously tossed back the brandy. It scorched the
back of his throat and made the bridge of his nose hurt. Miss Hawkesworth would definitely not approve,
but what the eye didn’t see…
Besides, although
he’d sworn to turn over a new leaf, it was very difficult to be on one’s best
behavior at all times and he had, after all, just lost his father. Ought to
make allowances. Grief and all that…and Miss Hawkesworth was safely out of the
way in London .
He poured another
brandy and watched the fiery colors dance in his glass.
Just like her
eyes.
Not Miss
Hawkesworth’s eyes, which were…he couldn’t think suddenly, couldn’t remember
what color eyes she had. Green? Blue? Brown? No idea.
But these other
eyes, the ones that gleamed like brandy through cut crystal, belonged to Lina.
Damn her. For the
past five years he’d tried not to think about her and, away in London with his busy life,
he managed quite well. Now those dangerous hankerings returned, as did the
painful, humiliating smart from her stinging rebuke. The wound was still green.
“For heaven’s sake, you’re just a boy. Go
away and grow up. Find someone your own age to play with. It’ll be a cold day
in hell, Adam Blackwood, before I let you into my bed.”
Did she still live
nearby? With her husband? She couldn’t possibly love that great stupid oaf. The
village doctor was not on her level in so many ways, yet Lina married him to be
safe from men like Adam Blackwood. Five years ago he hadn’t understood why she
would marry a man like that. Now he was older and wiser about many things. People
married for countless reasons of convenience and duty, seldom for passion.
A lot had changed
for Adam in the years between. He discovered, however, that his turbulent need
for her remained the same. If anything, despite recent attempts to curb his
more troubling appetites for Miss Hawkesworth’s dainty sake, thoughts of
Evangeline and what it would be like to have her were far worse than before.
His brothers used
to tease him saying it was a case of Adam wanting every woman he saw until he’d
had her. But he knew this was different. She wasn’t like every other woman.
He morosely
contemplated his glass, chin sunk to his chest. Lina. The first moment he saw
her, he wanted her. It was a new discovery for a young man of twenty-three
accustomed to getting things when he wanted them. Walking across the common, a
tall woman with perfect symmetry and regal bearing, she reminded him of an
angel on an Italian fresco. He always had an eye for a fine structure be it
made of marble, stone, or flesh and blood, and Lina was pure art, a moving
statue of the Madonna. Shimmering rays had caught on a brooch at her throat and
reflected up over her sad face. She was unearthly beautiful. He’d never seen a
woman so striking, apparently careless of it. She’d looked out of place, making
everything around her seem bland and dreary in comparison.
And then Alf White
threw the punch that felled him.
He didn’t put on
the gloves anymore. Miss Hawkesworth wouldn’t approve. She’d ventured a few,
delicate inquiries about his broken nose, but he never told her the truth of
how he got it, never told her about the first time he saw Lina, or how she’d
haunted him ever since.
He drank another
glass of brandy, hoping to somehow erase thoughts of her. But sprawling in and
out of the chair, he suddenly felt her presence again, kneeling between his
legs, her fingers skillfully working over the fastenings of his trousers. He
was shocked. What was she…?
It was another
fantasy, of course. He’d had them before, but never quite so….real.
He spat out a low
curse, fueled by a lethal combination of brandy and pent-up desire. Resistance
seemed futile. No one was watching. Miss Hawkesworth was two days away in London , he reminded
himself. And Adam Blackwood was a stranger to guilt. It was one thing he had in
common with his father, not that he’d ever admit it.
In any case, it
was only a fantasy. No harm in that. So he moved his knees further apart, a
slow-burning heat gathering in his loins. Oh, she was good, her hands
incredibly soft and yet firm, knowing their way around. Now here came her
mouth, hot silk tantalizing until he wanted to squeeze his legs together and
thrust. But he couldn’t because she was there between them, her shoulders
holding his thighs apart.
He reached one
hand down for her hair and felt thick, heavy, satiny locks fall through his
fingers and caress his thighs. He didn’t have to look down at her to know her
hair was dark, almost raven. Not like the fair-headed Miss Hawkesworth. Not at
all.
He groaned,
pressing his head back as she took him fully into her mouth and the damp silk
tightened around him, her tongue wrapping around his crest.
He held her head
with both hands, fingers entwined in her hair.
This was wrong. He
should stop this, stop her.
She didn’t want
him, gave him his leave without the slightest tenderness. She was a heartless
creature.
But he couldn’t
forget her, couldn’t give up the fantasy.
“There you are! I
see nothing changes, little brother. Still can’t find a willing female, eh?”
His eldest brother stood before him, laughing uproariously at his own joke.
Adam sat up, hands
going immediately back to the brandy decanter. “Harry, I was relaxing.” The
sooner he got out of here and back to London
and civilization the better. He looked down at his trembling hand. Was he
coming down with something? He’d only been inside this house twenty minutes and
look what happened.
“Relaxing? You
don’t look very relaxed, little brother.” Harry crossed over to the fireplace
with an easy swagger, still chuckling. Mud splattered his riding boots and
fresh, spring air clung to his clothes as he passed Adam’s moldy chair. “Where’s
Luke?”
“How should I know?
Probably buried his nose in a book somewhere and forgot the time.”
“Don’t swig all
the brandy. I’d wager my horse it’s the first thing he’ll ask for.”
Adam threw his
brother a bleak scowl. “We shouldn’t encourage his over-indulgence.”
“What about your over-indulgence, little brother?”
Harry eyed the decanter.
“I know my
limits.” He raised his glass. “This is my first in six months.”
Eyes rolling,
Harry turned his back to the fire and warmed his seat.
“You rode all the
way here on horseback, Harry?”
“No, I’m staying
at the Carbury Hotel. Came down yesterday.”
“Oh.”
A sparrow chirped
through the window and Adam’s fingers tapped against his glass. The brothers
hadn’t seen one another in a few years and should have had a great many other
subjects to discuss, but as usual they floundered in a mire of trivia.
Riding crop idly
tapping his boots, Harry ventured, “Pleasant weather.”
“Yes.” Not that
they could feel it in this house, which seemed to have its own climate.
“Journey from London all right?”
Adam splayed his
fingers around the rim of the glass. “All well and good until we got to the
crossroads. Blasted coachman decided to take a ‘shortcut’ through East Lofton . Set us back a good half hour.”
Harry chuckled
wryly. “Didn’t go and make a pest of yourself with that doctor’s wife again,
did you? Isn’t that where she lived, the one you were besotted with?”
“I wouldn’t know. I
don’t remember.”
“I do. You cost me
plenty when you took a fall in that fight, too busy looking at her to defend
yourself. I’d never seen a man go down so straight and hard, like a damned
tree.” Harry strolled back and forth before the fire, hands rubbing his seat. “Well,
just make sure you don’t get any ideas in your head about her again, little
brother. I heard her husband came here to complain to father about you. Wouldn’t
be surprised if he’s loading a shotgun right now, if he knows you’re back.”
“For your
information I’m getting married soon.” Adam pushed himself a little more
upright in the sagging chair. “Unlike you, I stick to one woman at a time.”
Harry laughed
genially. “Always seemed like a terrible waste to me. A man is only young
once.”
“Still spending
time with those twins, Harry?” Adam couldn’t recall their name, didn’t really
matter.
Not even to Harry.
“Good Lord no. Kept calling ‘em by the wrong name in bed and they upped and
left. Took offense, it seems.”
“One might imagine
they were accustomed to the confusion, being twins.”
“Yes,” Harry gave
a rueful grin, one hand scratching his dark curls, “but I called them by other
girls’ names, not theirs. Never mind. More trouble than they were worth. Think
I might give the two-legged fillies up for a while. Take a bit of a holiday.”
Dubious about
that, Adam smirked at the toes of his boots. “How’s the cotton mill, Harry? Business
doing well?”
“Well enough. Always
room for improvement though. You should come up and visit.”
“Hmmm.” He sank
his lips into the brandy, thoughts of a gloomy, northern, industrial town
giving him further chills. Adam preferred the mellow country of the south. It
surprised him that his eldest brother should take fondly to the north with its
soot belching chimneys, low grey skies, and craggy, unwelcoming land.
“I hear you’ve
done well for yourself, Adam. Aren’t they calling you the boy wonder since that
last place you designed in London ?
What was it, a museum or art gallery or something?”
“I’m not a boy,”
he murmured darkly, glowering at the carpet.
“It’s just a
figure of speech.”
A figure of speech
he didn’t care for.
Harry knew him
well enough to change the subject. “Saw your coach horses in the stables, Adam.
Handsome beasts. Must have set you back a pretty packet.” Women and horses were
on an equal plain in Harry’s mind, just as appreciated and just as collectable.
A sudden ruckus in
the hall announced the arrival of their brother. When they heard him curse
wildly, falling over something and crashing heavily into the wainscoting, they
knew it couldn’t be anyone but Luke. A few moments later he barged into the
quiet morning room, rubbing his shoulder and limping.
“So the old
bugger’s finally gone, eh? I thought this was just another trick of his.” He
rubbed his tousled sandy curls and staggered for the brandy decanter. “I need a
drink. And then we can get this over with.”
Thursday, October 22, 2015
A Private Collection
Next week - October 28th, Twisted E-Publishing is re-releasing my Victorian trilogy "A Private Collection." This time the three stories, originally published as separate e-novellas (Engraved, Entangled and Enraptured), will be available in one volume, as both e-book and print.
If you like Victorian romance with a touch of naughty, you may want to take a peep.
I'll have an excerpt to share with you on release day next week. Until then, here is the back blurb.
Happy Reading!
If you like Victorian romance with a touch of naughty, you may want to take a peep.
Happy Reading!
When the estranged sons of wealthy eccentric Randolph
Blackwood return home for his funeral and discover he has left them a private
collection of three amateur oil paintings, they have no idea how this simple
bequest will change their lives. The
notorious Blackwood brothers are not known for their appreciation of fine art,
but they are familiar with their father's love of elaborate pranks. Yes, the
old man is still laughing at them from beyond the grave. For in order to
collect their share of Randolph's fortune, they must return— in person— the
three scandalous, nude portraits to the women who once posed for him. And that
turns out to be a little more complicated than a simple delivery.
Once they were Randolph Blackwood's muses; now they've moved
on with their lives. Lina is widowed and trying to lead a quiet, harmless life,
while hiding a dark secret about her true desires; Daisy struggles to manage a
respectable hotel against family opposition and overwhelming debt, and Claudine
runs the 'Whitechapel Improvement Committee', a mysteriously busy charity home
for handsome young men, funded by some of the most elegant and unhappily
married ladies of Victorian London.
As the three Blackwood brothers set out to complete their
task, they only have business on their minds and no intention of being
distracted. But their father knew them better than anybody and he chose these
three ladies for a very special reason. The true inheritance this mischief-maker
leaves to his sons is neither the paintings nor his fortune. It is something far
more valuable.
Wednesday, October 14, 2015
Things that go bump...
One of my favourite times of the year --Halloween-- is almost upon us. I love watching classic old horror movies and I've always wanted to write a really scary story. Maybe one day I will, but the closest I've come to it so far is SOULS DRYFT, which is a ghost story of sorts, complete with a haunted house and things that go bump in the night. But at its heart its a romance -- actually two romances set in two different time periods. It's about second chances and fate and...well, a lot of things I suppose. I like to think that every reader will find something new in the story -- something special for them, so I'll leave it up to you to decide what it's really about.
Since it's that time of year for ghosts, ghouls and goblins, I thought I'd share an excerpt from SOULS DRYFT. Hope it will get you in the mood!
The taxi bounced slowly down the rutted lane, the driver’s face grim as he contemplated the high grassy tufts, tall angry thistles and deep gullies. He kept asking if I was sure this was the right road. I sat forward, gripping his headrest, searching for landmarks. It was much more overgrown than the last time I visited, but finally I saw the flint and pebble wall, where Marian and I had practiced handstands, and the elaborate, rusty iron gates that seemed too grand and ornate for the house.
"There it is!"
The driver pulled over, peering doubtfully through his windscreen. "You sure you don’t want me to wait?"
I told him I’d be fine. I could always walk to the village from here. It was no more than a ten minute stroll as far as I remembered. Marian and I used to walk there on fine days to buy sweets and comics. When he drove away, I did suffer a twinge of second-thought, but it passed when I pushed on the gate. The warbling shudder of the old hinges, the deceptively complacent sound, perfectly mimicked the call of a wood pigeon. Whenever I heard the five-note coo of those birds on a lazy summer afternoon, I thought of Souls Dryft.
The blossom was in full glory; the air was sickly sweet, blown around the side of the house from the old orchard. I took a great breath of it, drinking it down greedily, and then I opened my eyes.
The house was always falling down. Not toppling over, but sinking slowly into the earth. It was a bulky, unprepossessing creature, lurking there in the grass like a toad, waiting for unsuspecting insects to pass within striking distance of its sly, quick tongue. My mother, who didn’t have much time for the picturesque, thought the best thing to be done with Uncle Bob’s house was to level it and start again. But when Marian and I spent those idyllic summer weeks there, the precarious, leaning walls, creaky stairs and uneven floors all added to the charm and adventure. Surrounding the yard, there were several buildings. The smallest one, Aunt Rose had referred to as, "the necessary". We loved going outside to use it, preferring the novelty of an ice-cold toilet seat and wind whipping under the door, to that fancy indoor plumbing we could use any day of the week at home.
I still remembered Aunt Rose’s voice— soft and creamy, all the vowels melting slowly off her tongue. She laughed a great deal and was never angry, even when Uncle Bob played tricks on her; like the time he told her that her budgie had laid an egg and, for weeks, she watched over the smooth, white, pebble-shaped object, telling everyone about it, marveling over the miracle about to hatch. Finally she took it to the vet in the village, where she was informed that her budgie’s egg was, in fact, an Imperial Mint.
I smiled sadly at my reflection in the window, thinking of Uncle Bob sitting there alone all those years, with only the voices in his head for company. The window was left ajar and when I pushed it with my fingers, it swung open all the way. Caught up in the adventure, I crawled over the stone ledge and into the house, scraping my knee in the process. I hadn’t felt this much excitement since I was twelve and Marian fell out of a rowboat.
The ground floor was converted, some time ago, from one large room into three, with a small pantry and an added on bathroom beyond that. Uncle Bob rarely used the other rooms, preferring this one that looked out toward the gate. After Aunt Rose died he said he was looking for her to come back, as if she’d just nipped out to the shop in the village for a packet of custard creams. Today the windows were filthy. I didn’t remember them being that bad before, but at home our mother had kept everything so spotless, it was a relief to go to Aunt Rose’s house and wallow in a little dirt. These days a woman called Mrs. Tuke came up from the village three times a week to "see to" Uncle Bob, which meant she gave the place a rough going over with a broom and did his laundry. Apparently, Mrs. Tuke didn’t do windows. As I studied the small, crooked glass panes, I realized the marks I’d mistaken for random fingerprints in the grime were letters written on the outside.
emoc sah ynneG
I stared at the window. Above me the wooden beams creaked and stretched in the warm air. Or were they footsteps passing up and down in the rooms above?
At the foot of the staircase, there was a door meant to keep out those drafts that still found their way in, even with all the windows and chimneys closed. It was warped and rotted, the paintwork chipped, a large portion of wood missing from the bottom, as if an extremely hungry dog once had a go at it. The door still creaked, just the way I remembered, and the whisper of a breeze tumbled down the tilting stairs, disturbing the fragile remnants of a cobweb above my head. Out of respect for the house’s unseen residents, I tiptoed upstairs and onto the narrow, musty landing. Each bedroom door had a rusty, iron latch with a loop that hung down. It was once a favorite game of ours to run along the hall, setting all the latches rocking.
Then, one day, the latches stopped, all at the same time – some midswing – before they suddenly began rocking back the other way, even faster. After that, Marian, being a wimp, would never go upstairs alone again.
Our old bedroom door required several shoulder thumps to open, and the cloud of stagnant air was so thick I could bite it. Clearly no one had been inside for some time; yet, when I went to open the window, there was an apple core on the ledge and it was still white, as if someone just took their last bite before setting it down.
I sat on the bed, resting my hand on the pillow. Of course, it must have been the sun that made it so warm, as if another soul just rose from it.
"You took your time coming to me."
Waves of sun moved in a gentle ebb and flow around the room, just like the voices. It lifted me, held my spirit and warmed it.
"I came when I could, I do have other things to do with my day."
"For Pity’s Sake, ‘tis only a little wound."
"Stockings?"
"Like recognizes like."
"Stockings?"
The sunlight dimmed. Someone shouted up from below, "Hello! Is anyone there?"
I jumped. Whoever entered the house, uninvited, they weren’t shy about trespassing on our property. I called down from the landing, "This is my great uncle’s house. What are you doing here?"
He appeared at the foot of the stairs. "Grace?"
So this is where he was heading on that train. "How did you get in?" I demanded, stomping down the stairs.
Looking over his shoulder toward the door and then back to me, my torn jeans and scraped knee, he said, "It wasn’t locked. I suppose you didn’t try it first."
"How did you get here and…what…what are you doing here, Downing?"
"I got here from Norwich in a hired car and as for the second part of your question – I think I should ask you the same. This is private property."
Immediately, my hackles were raised. "I beg your pardon?"
"This house belongs to my family," he replied, faintly bemused.
"This is our house. Souls Dryft belongs to us."
"You mean, Saul’s Drift."
Angry pride coursed through me. "I know what it’s called, because it belongs to my family."
"Right!"
He thought I was joking again. I was sickened by the idea of that lovely old place falling into his mercenary, pirate hands. "My great uncle’s wife was given this house as a wedding gift from a relative when they married."
His eyes narrowed, protecting that plush cobalt from the melting heat of my wrath. "The house belongs to me, and I have the documents to prove it. The people who lived here were only tenants."
My fingers curled around the banister. What did he know about anything? He was only a figment of my imagination.
"I’ll probably have it torn down," he added. "We could fit four or five homes on the land." Then he said, "Your mouth’s hanging open."
My ribs pressed on my heart. "This house belongs to my family."
He shook his head. "I assure you, it’s mine."
"Uncle Bob said…"
"You mean the old guy that lived here? Aren’t they sending him to the nuthouse?"
I froze.
"Off his proverbial rocker," he added.
"And you’re qualified to diagnose that because…?"
His lips tightened, while he considered whether the sticky-faced child before him was old enough to be told. "He was found sitting in the lane, in a pair of underpants."
"At least he had something on."
"Pity they weren’t his underpants."
"What?"
"They belonged to the woman who comes in to clean for him three times a week. They were her underpants."
No one told me that, of course, yet pompous Richard knew. And he meant to take that house away – the house poor Uncle Bob loved and entrusted to me. To me.
I took a deep breath. "For your information, Uncle Bob died last night."
He winced, inhaling sharply. "I’m… sorry. That explains why you’re so emotional."
I couldn’t believe I was having this conversation with a construct of my own imagination. Of course, he took things that didn’t truly belong to him. Dress it up all you like with fancy names like ‘property developer’, but he was a pirate and that was what pirates did.
"Where are you going?" he asked, as I pushed by, storming out into the yard. My gaze was fixed on the way ahead, to the castle ruins at the end of the lane. I couldn’t get this straight in my overcrowded head, and I needed time alone, to think.
(Copyright Jayne Fresina )
SOULS DRYFT available here:
Amazon US
Amazon UK
Amazon CA
Tower
Since it's that time of year for ghosts, ghouls and goblins, I thought I'd share an excerpt from SOULS DRYFT. Hope it will get you in the mood!
The taxi bounced slowly down the rutted lane, the driver’s face grim as he contemplated the high grassy tufts, tall angry thistles and deep gullies. He kept asking if I was sure this was the right road. I sat forward, gripping his headrest, searching for landmarks. It was much more overgrown than the last time I visited, but finally I saw the flint and pebble wall, where Marian and I had practiced handstands, and the elaborate, rusty iron gates that seemed too grand and ornate for the house.
"There it is!"
The driver pulled over, peering doubtfully through his windscreen. "You sure you don’t want me to wait?"
I told him I’d be fine. I could always walk to the village from here. It was no more than a ten minute stroll as far as I remembered. Marian and I used to walk there on fine days to buy sweets and comics. When he drove away, I did suffer a twinge of second-thought, but it passed when I pushed on the gate. The warbling shudder of the old hinges, the deceptively complacent sound, perfectly mimicked the call of a wood pigeon. Whenever I heard the five-note coo of those birds on a lazy summer afternoon, I thought of Souls Dryft.
The blossom was in full glory; the air was sickly sweet, blown around the side of the house from the old orchard. I took a great breath of it, drinking it down greedily, and then I opened my eyes.
The house was always falling down. Not toppling over, but sinking slowly into the earth. It was a bulky, unprepossessing creature, lurking there in the grass like a toad, waiting for unsuspecting insects to pass within striking distance of its sly, quick tongue. My mother, who didn’t have much time for the picturesque, thought the best thing to be done with Uncle Bob’s house was to level it and start again. But when Marian and I spent those idyllic summer weeks there, the precarious, leaning walls, creaky stairs and uneven floors all added to the charm and adventure. Surrounding the yard, there were several buildings. The smallest one, Aunt Rose had referred to as, "the necessary". We loved going outside to use it, preferring the novelty of an ice-cold toilet seat and wind whipping under the door, to that fancy indoor plumbing we could use any day of the week at home.
I still remembered Aunt Rose’s voice— soft and creamy, all the vowels melting slowly off her tongue. She laughed a great deal and was never angry, even when Uncle Bob played tricks on her; like the time he told her that her budgie had laid an egg and, for weeks, she watched over the smooth, white, pebble-shaped object, telling everyone about it, marveling over the miracle about to hatch. Finally she took it to the vet in the village, where she was informed that her budgie’s egg was, in fact, an Imperial Mint.
I smiled sadly at my reflection in the window, thinking of Uncle Bob sitting there alone all those years, with only the voices in his head for company. The window was left ajar and when I pushed it with my fingers, it swung open all the way. Caught up in the adventure, I crawled over the stone ledge and into the house, scraping my knee in the process. I hadn’t felt this much excitement since I was twelve and Marian fell out of a rowboat.
The ground floor was converted, some time ago, from one large room into three, with a small pantry and an added on bathroom beyond that. Uncle Bob rarely used the other rooms, preferring this one that looked out toward the gate. After Aunt Rose died he said he was looking for her to come back, as if she’d just nipped out to the shop in the village for a packet of custard creams. Today the windows were filthy. I didn’t remember them being that bad before, but at home our mother had kept everything so spotless, it was a relief to go to Aunt Rose’s house and wallow in a little dirt. These days a woman called Mrs. Tuke came up from the village three times a week to "see to" Uncle Bob, which meant she gave the place a rough going over with a broom and did his laundry. Apparently, Mrs. Tuke didn’t do windows. As I studied the small, crooked glass panes, I realized the marks I’d mistaken for random fingerprints in the grime were letters written on the outside.
emoc sah ynneG
I stared at the window. Above me the wooden beams creaked and stretched in the warm air. Or were they footsteps passing up and down in the rooms above?
At the foot of the staircase, there was a door meant to keep out those drafts that still found their way in, even with all the windows and chimneys closed. It was warped and rotted, the paintwork chipped, a large portion of wood missing from the bottom, as if an extremely hungry dog once had a go at it. The door still creaked, just the way I remembered, and the whisper of a breeze tumbled down the tilting stairs, disturbing the fragile remnants of a cobweb above my head. Out of respect for the house’s unseen residents, I tiptoed upstairs and onto the narrow, musty landing. Each bedroom door had a rusty, iron latch with a loop that hung down. It was once a favorite game of ours to run along the hall, setting all the latches rocking.
Then, one day, the latches stopped, all at the same time – some midswing – before they suddenly began rocking back the other way, even faster. After that, Marian, being a wimp, would never go upstairs alone again.
Our old bedroom door required several shoulder thumps to open, and the cloud of stagnant air was so thick I could bite it. Clearly no one had been inside for some time; yet, when I went to open the window, there was an apple core on the ledge and it was still white, as if someone just took their last bite before setting it down.
I sat on the bed, resting my hand on the pillow. Of course, it must have been the sun that made it so warm, as if another soul just rose from it.
"You took your time coming to me."
Waves of sun moved in a gentle ebb and flow around the room, just like the voices. It lifted me, held my spirit and warmed it.
"I came when I could, I do have other things to do with my day."
"For Pity’s Sake, ‘tis only a little wound."
"Stockings?"
"Like recognizes like."
"Stockings?"
The sunlight dimmed. Someone shouted up from below, "Hello! Is anyone there?"
I jumped. Whoever entered the house, uninvited, they weren’t shy about trespassing on our property. I called down from the landing, "This is my great uncle’s house. What are you doing here?"
He appeared at the foot of the stairs. "Grace?"
So this is where he was heading on that train. "How did you get in?" I demanded, stomping down the stairs.
Looking over his shoulder toward the door and then back to me, my torn jeans and scraped knee, he said, "It wasn’t locked. I suppose you didn’t try it first."
"How did you get here and…what…what are you doing here, Downing?"
"I got here from Norwich in a hired car and as for the second part of your question – I think I should ask you the same. This is private property."
Immediately, my hackles were raised. "I beg your pardon?"
"This house belongs to my family," he replied, faintly bemused.
"This is our house. Souls Dryft belongs to us."
"You mean, Saul’s Drift."
Angry pride coursed through me. "I know what it’s called, because it belongs to my family."
"Right!"
He thought I was joking again. I was sickened by the idea of that lovely old place falling into his mercenary, pirate hands. "My great uncle’s wife was given this house as a wedding gift from a relative when they married."
His eyes narrowed, protecting that plush cobalt from the melting heat of my wrath. "The house belongs to me, and I have the documents to prove it. The people who lived here were only tenants."
My fingers curled around the banister. What did he know about anything? He was only a figment of my imagination.
"I’ll probably have it torn down," he added. "We could fit four or five homes on the land." Then he said, "Your mouth’s hanging open."
My ribs pressed on my heart. "This house belongs to my family."
He shook his head. "I assure you, it’s mine."
"Uncle Bob said…"
"You mean the old guy that lived here? Aren’t they sending him to the nuthouse?"
I froze.
"Off his proverbial rocker," he added.
"And you’re qualified to diagnose that because…?"
His lips tightened, while he considered whether the sticky-faced child before him was old enough to be told. "He was found sitting in the lane, in a pair of underpants."
"At least he had something on."
"Pity they weren’t his underpants."
"What?"
"They belonged to the woman who comes in to clean for him three times a week. They were her underpants."
No one told me that, of course, yet pompous Richard knew. And he meant to take that house away – the house poor Uncle Bob loved and entrusted to me. To me.
I took a deep breath. "For your information, Uncle Bob died last night."
He winced, inhaling sharply. "I’m… sorry. That explains why you’re so emotional."
I couldn’t believe I was having this conversation with a construct of my own imagination. Of course, he took things that didn’t truly belong to him. Dress it up all you like with fancy names like ‘property developer’, but he was a pirate and that was what pirates did.
"Where are you going?" he asked, as I pushed by, storming out into the yard. My gaze was fixed on the way ahead, to the castle ruins at the end of the lane. I couldn’t get this straight in my overcrowded head, and I needed time alone, to think.
SOULS DRYFT available here:
Amazon US
Amazon UK
Amazon CA
Tower
Tuesday, September 29, 2015
Excerpt from STORM (The Deverells - book two)
Hi everyone! Tomorrow is release day for STORM, the second installment in a Victorian family saga which began earlier this year with TRUE STORY. I hope you'll take the opportunity to catch up on the story, if you haven't already. Here is a little teaser from STORM to whet your appetite!
* * * *
"What made you come so far from London?" he shouted.
"It was Reverend Coles' idea." She sighed, looking around at the mess again. "He made the west country sound so appealing in his letters."
"You've experience as a housekeeper?"
She could lie, of course. The state of his house suggested this man wouldn't know a good housekeeper if he met one. But she decided to be honest. After all, this was a new beginning, a new life.
"I have not," she said, anxiously gripping her teacup.
"What about references? You must have some."
"I'm afraid not."
"None at all?" Deverell exclaimed, emerging from the other room, still in the process of tugging the clean shirt over his shoulders and exposing a tanned slab of naked torso at the same time. "But you can cook?"
She averted her gaze at once, her heartbeat suddenly leaping up into her throat, making it very difficult to swallow. "Yes. No." Oh, what was she saying? "I'm an abysmal cook... but not for want of trying."
"I see. What about sewing?"
"Not a stitch."
"What about laundry?"
"I'm sure I can learn."
"Lighting fires? Cleaning windows?"
Still avoiding his gaze, she tucked that persistent stray curl back under her bonnet brim again. "How hard can it be?" How did she explain that when one lived a nocturnal life, clean windows were unimportant? And fires were for the wealthy who could afford coal— unless they scrambled for it in the Thames where it sometimes fell from barges.
There followed another short silence and then he said, "At least you've got a pretty face. We seldom see the like of you in these parts."
She gripped her cup of tea in both hands and took a hearty gulp.
Don't look up. Don't look...Oh, has he got the damnable shirt on yet?
Then he added, "Those lips alone might be worth the twenty-five pounds a year salary I promised."
Alas, she had to look. What else was a woman supposed to do when a man said such a thing to her? And in front of her son too. Had he no propriety?
Not that Flynn was listening. A quick glance reassured her that the boy was too busy eating bacon and playing with the man's dog.
Her new employer tipped his head to one side, hands paused in the motion of tucking the shirt into his well-worn riding breeches. "Did I speak amiss? You look all...peevish."
"Sir, it is not the sort of comment one should make to one's housekeeper."
He shrugged, only drawing her attention to his wide shoulders again. "You'll have to forgive me, if I'm too straightforward. I'm a country fellow, Duchess. I don't complicate matters. I tend to say what I think, as soon as the thought comes to me."
"I'm sure that causes you many trials and tribulations then."
"Once in a while," he admitted frankly, with a quick grin. "Mostly I manage to avoid trouble."
"Yes. Men generally do. After they've caused it."
He laughed. "Back to that again, are we?"
"I beg your pardon?"
"The inadequacies of men and how we are to blame for all the world's problems. And all because I was honest and said you were bonny, when I might have kept it to myself?"
"I wish you had kept it to yourself," she muttered.
"Can't you take a compliment, Mrs. Kelly?"
"We have scarce been introduced, sir." He had better not think she was that sort of woman. "I wonder what you could mean by it." Kate had been told she was fair of face before, but no good ever came from it, and the men who tried to flatter her had only one intent. If anything, her face was a disadvantage when she sought to make an honest living.
"I meant no harm by speaking the thought aloud, but don't fret." He held up his hands in mock surrender. "I shan't worry you with another, now that I know you're not of a mind to receive any graciously." He said all this in a calm voice, more amused than angry. His eyes narrowed, crinkling at the corners, which explained the thin white lines in his sun-browned face. He must puzzle over a lot of riddles, she thought. "But 'tis a pity if you can't appreciate your own good looks," he added. "I know my face is as scratched up as a pair of old boots, but I value it all the same. It's well lived in and still has its uses. At least it has the required number of features and mostly in the expected order."
Old boots, indeed! Her gaze drifted from his damp, ruffled hair to his thick arms, firm chest and the fluttering tail of his shirt as he continued tucking it sloppily into his breeches. She closed her lips tightly, gritting her teeth.
Now she knew how Eve felt in Eden, with only one man as far as the eye could see. And oh, what the eye could see!
(copyright Jayne Fresina 2015)
* * * *
Hope you are intrigued enough to read on ;)
Storm (The Deverells - Book Two) - available from all good online book sellers on September 30th, 2015.
UK Amazon
US Amazon
* * * *
It was
evident that Storm Deverell lived alone. Several old newspapers— some yellowed
with age and edged with a scalloped pattern of mice teeth— sat folded up on the
arm of a tattered and patched chair, which was the only cushioned seat in the
house. Every shirt drying on that wooden rack had seen better days. Clearly, he
had no one to sew new ones or repair those he had. And he cooked for himself
with a skilled, casual ease that proved he did it often.
"I had
a housekeeper once," he told her, perhaps noticing her critical gaze
taking in the shambles. "But she had to split her time between me and my
father, and he's always been more demanding than me. Now he's getting married
again and she'll be needed there more often, so I asked Reverend Coles to find
me a handy woman."
She
wondered why he had no wife of his own to take care of the house for him. He
looked... healthy enough to manage a wife. Of course, it was hardly a question
she could ask. One of them at least ought to have manners.
He kept a
clean shirt in his hand and disappeared into the scullery. She heard water
splashing from a pump. "What made you come so far from London?" he shouted.
"It was Reverend Coles' idea." She sighed, looking around at the mess again. "He made the west country sound so appealing in his letters."
"You've experience as a housekeeper?"
She could lie, of course. The state of his house suggested this man wouldn't know a good housekeeper if he met one. But she decided to be honest. After all, this was a new beginning, a new life.
"I have not," she said, anxiously gripping her teacup.
"What about references? You must have some."
"I'm afraid not."
"None at all?" Deverell exclaimed, emerging from the other room, still in the process of tugging the clean shirt over his shoulders and exposing a tanned slab of naked torso at the same time. "But you can cook?"
She averted her gaze at once, her heartbeat suddenly leaping up into her throat, making it very difficult to swallow. "Yes. No." Oh, what was she saying? "I'm an abysmal cook... but not for want of trying."
"I see. What about sewing?"
"Not a stitch."
"What about laundry?"
"I'm sure I can learn."
"Lighting fires? Cleaning windows?"
Still avoiding his gaze, she tucked that persistent stray curl back under her bonnet brim again. "How hard can it be?" How did she explain that when one lived a nocturnal life, clean windows were unimportant? And fires were for the wealthy who could afford coal— unless they scrambled for it in the Thames where it sometimes fell from barges.
There followed another short silence and then he said, "At least you've got a pretty face. We seldom see the like of you in these parts."
She gripped her cup of tea in both hands and took a hearty gulp.
Don't look up. Don't look...Oh, has he got the damnable shirt on yet?
Then he added, "Those lips alone might be worth the twenty-five pounds a year salary I promised."
Alas, she had to look. What else was a woman supposed to do when a man said such a thing to her? And in front of her son too. Had he no propriety?
Not that Flynn was listening. A quick glance reassured her that the boy was too busy eating bacon and playing with the man's dog.
Her new employer tipped his head to one side, hands paused in the motion of tucking the shirt into his well-worn riding breeches. "Did I speak amiss? You look all...peevish."
"Sir, it is not the sort of comment one should make to one's housekeeper."
He shrugged, only drawing her attention to his wide shoulders again. "You'll have to forgive me, if I'm too straightforward. I'm a country fellow, Duchess. I don't complicate matters. I tend to say what I think, as soon as the thought comes to me."
"I'm sure that causes you many trials and tribulations then."
"Once in a while," he admitted frankly, with a quick grin. "Mostly I manage to avoid trouble."
"Yes. Men generally do. After they've caused it."
He laughed. "Back to that again, are we?"
"I beg your pardon?"
"The inadequacies of men and how we are to blame for all the world's problems. And all because I was honest and said you were bonny, when I might have kept it to myself?"
"I wish you had kept it to yourself," she muttered.
"Can't you take a compliment, Mrs. Kelly?"
"We have scarce been introduced, sir." He had better not think she was that sort of woman. "I wonder what you could mean by it." Kate had been told she was fair of face before, but no good ever came from it, and the men who tried to flatter her had only one intent. If anything, her face was a disadvantage when she sought to make an honest living.
"I meant no harm by speaking the thought aloud, but don't fret." He held up his hands in mock surrender. "I shan't worry you with another, now that I know you're not of a mind to receive any graciously." He said all this in a calm voice, more amused than angry. His eyes narrowed, crinkling at the corners, which explained the thin white lines in his sun-browned face. He must puzzle over a lot of riddles, she thought. "But 'tis a pity if you can't appreciate your own good looks," he added. "I know my face is as scratched up as a pair of old boots, but I value it all the same. It's well lived in and still has its uses. At least it has the required number of features and mostly in the expected order."
Old boots, indeed! Her gaze drifted from his damp, ruffled hair to his thick arms, firm chest and the fluttering tail of his shirt as he continued tucking it sloppily into his breeches. She closed her lips tightly, gritting her teeth.
Now she knew how Eve felt in Eden, with only one man as far as the eye could see. And oh, what the eye could see!
(copyright Jayne Fresina 2015)
* * * *
Hope you are intrigued enough to read on ;)
Storm (The Deverells - Book Two) - available from all good online book sellers on September 30th, 2015.
UK Amazon
US Amazon
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