Showing posts with label creatures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creatures. Show all posts

Monday, October 20, 2014

DEAD BUT NOT GONE by Kathleen Rice Adams

Dead but Not Gone

By Kathleen Rice Adams

Every year at Halloween, people dredge up every ghost story, spooky campfire tale, and urban legend they can find. Something draws humans to the supernatural, the unexplained, and the patently creepy, even though most of us fervently hope we’ll never experience the phenomena in person.

Ghost stories are nothing new. Neither are ghosts. In fact, quite a few of America’s most famous…and notorious…former citizens reportedly still inhabit their favorite “haunts” a century or more after their corporeal forms left the building.



Abigail Adams
John and Abigail Adams not only left their mark on history as the second President and First Lady, but also as the first residents of the White House. The presidential mansion was still under construction when the couple moved out after John’s single term as President, but Abigail—a tidy, down-to-earth woman—reportedly lingers yet. During the Adams’s tenure at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., Abigail hung her wash in the East Room because she found that to be the driest, warmest place on the property. During the Taft administration, the East Room became a popular spot for hosting receptions. That’s when the President, guests, and staff began reporting a ghostly Mrs. Adams, clad in a mop cap and lace shawl, sauntering through with armloads of spectral laundry. To this day, guests sometimes report a soapy fragrance in the room.



Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton
The third Vice President of the United States, Aaron Burr is best known for the duel in which he killed Alexander Hamilton, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. Although Burr was acquitted of murder in the incident, both he and Hamilton appear to have been so scarred by the bitter political rivalry that haunted them during life that they stuck around after death to do a bit of haunting of their own. The owners, staff, and guests at a New York restaurant located in what once was Burr’s carriage house have attributed flying dishes and moving chairs to Burr’s unseen hand. Similar poltergeist activity has been reported in the Greenwich Village house in which Hamilton died.



Benjamin Franklin
Possibly one of the most brilliant intellects ever to roam the planet, Founding Father, writer, inventor, philosopher, and scientist Benjamin Franklin was more than a bit eccentric. Among his favorite earthly haunts during life was the library of the Philosophical Society he helped found in Philadelphia. After Franklin’s death, the society erected a statue to his memory. Perhaps they shouldn’t have bothered. Reports of his “free spirit” roaming the halls are legion. Less common, but no less credible, are sightings of the statue dancing through the Philly streets.



Andrew Jackson
The seventh President of the U.S., Andrew Jackson could be boisterous, argumentative, and temperamental. (While in office, he beat a would-be assassin to the ground on the steps of the Capitol building.) Old Hickory died in June 1845, but as large a presence as he was in life, nobody should have expected him to leave and be done with it. He didn’t. In 1865, Mary Todd Lincoln reported confronting a “cantankerous” ghost she insisted was Jackson’s swearing and stomping about the second-floor Rose Room, which had served as Jackson’s bedroom. Stomping, cursing, and loud laughter occasionally echo in the space even today, earning the Rose Room a reputation as the most haunted location in a structure with more than its share of resident ghosts.



Jesse James
One of the most notorious outlaws in the American West, Jesse James’s motives remain the subject of debate. Perhaps the American imagination’s unwillingness to let James go is the reason he hasn’t gone. Since the day he died more than 130 years ago, folks have reported unearthly goings-on at the Kearney, Missouri, farm where James grew up. Now a museum, the property is subject to doors opening and slamming all by themselves without setting off security alarms. Lights move inside and outside the buildings, and on foggy mornings, the pounding of hooves, muffled shouts, and gunfire can be heard in the nearby woods.



Enigmatic third U.S. President Thomas Jefferson embodied the clash between American ideals and the reality of the American experience. In the second paragraph of the Declaration of Independence, Jefferson wrote “all men are created equal,” yet he owned slaves and was outspoken in his belief that Negroes were an inferior race. Today, phantom footsteps and happy, if mysterious, humming and whistling at Jefferson’s home, Monticello, are attributed to his presence. Mary Todd Lincoln (who seemed prone to ghost sightings), reported seeing Jefferson in the Yellow Oval Room at the White House. In addition, hauntingly beautiful violin music sometimes emerges from the Oval Office while it is unoccupied. Jefferson was fond of playing the violin while relaxing in the room.



Marie Laveau
The truth about Marie Laveau is so buried in legend as to be indecipherable. Born a free woman of color, she’s often called the Voodoo Queen of New Orleans, but it’s more likely she was a devout Catholic who embraced some African and Creole traditions in her role as a healer. Regardless where she stood on the mystical, Laveau was a beautiful, wealthy woman who remains a source of fascination more than 130 years after her death at the age of 98. People visiting her grave to seek a variety of intercessions have reported seeing the gauzy form of a woman wearing a tignon (a turban women of color were required to wear). The same figure has been seen at the New Orleans house where Laveau’s cottage once stood.



Robert E. Lee
Considered one of the most brilliant military tacticians in history, Confederate General Robert E. Lee led vastly outnumbered Rebel forces to a number of significant victories over better-equipped Union troops. Exhausted by the war and heartsick about the conflict’s toll on his beloved Virginia, Lee lived for only five years after the surrender at Appomattox Courthouse. At his death, it appears he regressed to happier times and returned to his family’s home in Alexandria, Virginia. There, the spirit of a young boy about four years old is thought to be Lee’s. Much like the general in his childhood, the boy is mischievous: He rings doorbells, moves objects, and giggles in the hallways. Occasionally he is seen romping on the lawn with a ghostly black dog and the specters of two young girls who are thought to be his sisters.



Abraham Lincoln
Possibly the most often-sighted ghost in the U.S. is reputed to be the sixteenth President. It seems only fitting that Abraham Lincoln would return from the Beyond, as he was a firm believer in the supernatural. Lincoln’s presidency during a pivotal point in American history and his tragic assassination seem to have bound him to the White House for good. Among those who’ve reported post-mortem encounters with Honest Abe are Presidents Theodore Roosevelt, Herbert Hoover, and Dwight Eisenhower; First Ladies Grace Coolidge, Jacquie Kennedy and Ladybird Johnson; presidential children Susan Ford and Maureen Reagan; Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands, and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill (who, in a tremendous breach of international protocol, encountered Lincoln fresh from the bath, nude). Lincoln makes his presence known in the Lincoln Bedroom, the Oval Office, the Rose Room, and the East Room, where his body lay in state. Lincoln’s ghost also has been reported in Springfield, Illinois—near his grave, walking the streets around the original courthouse, and wandering through his former home.



Dolley Madison
Wife of fourth U.S. President James Madison, Dolley Madison often is applauded for her social grace and elegant taste. The White House Rose Garden was her proudest accomplishment. Evidently, she continues to maintain a proprietary interest in horticulture. When First Lady Edith Wilson directed the staff to dig up the roses, a “very angry” apparition that looked a lot like Dolley chased them from their work. The project was abandoned. Others have reported detecting the scent of roses in several of Dolley’s favorite rooms.



Can you tell I’m fascinated by ghosts? When the opportunity to contribute to the Prairie Rose Publications anthology Cowboys, Creatures, and Calico, Vol.2 came along, I knew exactly what kind of Halloween creepiness my story would include.




“Family Tradition”

A failed bank robber and a phony psychic find their soulmates after she accidentally summons a pair of dishonest-to-goodness ghosts.

Haunted by his kin’s tradition of spectacular failure, bank robber Tombstone Hawkins is honor-bound to prove his family tree produced at least one bad apple. Carnival fortuneteller Pansy Gilchrist has masqueraded as a gypsy spiritualist for so long she’s started to believe her own spiel. When she accidentally summons a pair of real ghosts, dishonesty may not be the best policy…but it’s all they’ve got.

Excerpt:
She had no choice but to play out the con. “What question weighs your mind?”

“I’ve suffered a recent…setback.” A soft chuckle rippled across the space between them. “Ask your spirits how to remedy that.”

“The future is a vast, open plain. Without more to go on—”

“If you’re legit, they’ll know what I mean.”

As if maintaining the ruse weren’t difficult enough. She stalled for time with more deep breaths. “My guide wishes to know your name, so he may call upon the proper advisors.”

Silence expanded to fill the tent before he spoke. “Hawkins. Tombstone Hawkins.”

Her eyes snapped open. Finally, a chance to regain control of the dodge. “It’s not wise to mock the spirits.”

“Ain’t mocking nobody. That’s my given name.”

“Sounds like you should be contacting the Beyond yourself instead of inconveniencing me.”

The smirk she’d noticed earlier broadened into a full-fledged sneer brimming with sarcasm. “Please go on. I ain’t seen an act this entertaining since I was knee-high to a toad—and that’s been a mighty long while.”

The sparkle in dark eyes, the broad shoulders hunched over the chair, the amusement stretching his lips all spoke of a man for whom a rough-edged kind of charm came naturally. If pressed, she would admit this saddle tramp’s raw masculinity could enchant a less worldly woman. Cleaned up, he might even be attractive.

Too bad he was such an insufferable clod.

Directing her gaze to the crystal ball, she lowered her voice into the singsong rhythm that never failed to lull gullible marks into a trance of their own. “Spirits, Tombstone—” A giggle bubbled upward. She cleared her throat. “Tomb—” She nearly choked trying to catch a snort. Damn the man’s name anyway. “Mr. Hawkins seeks—”

His flattened hand crashed down on hers, practically pressing her palm through the tapestry. She glanced up.




Buy Links:
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About Kathleen Rice Adams

A Texan to the bone, Kathleen Rice Adams spends her days chasing news stories and her nights and weekends shooting it out with Wild West desperados. Leave the upstanding, law-abiding heroes to other folks…even Kathleen’s good guys wear black hats. Find her online at:



CONTEST!! Kathleen will be giving away a digital copy of the Halloween anthology, COWBOYS, CREATURES, AND CALICO, Volume 2 to someone who comments. Be sure to include your email address in your comment for a chance to win.

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

What Spookiness Lurks In Your Backyard?


Author, Tanya Hanson

I’m a California beach girl who loves those cowboys. My firefighter husband and I love to travel and spoil our two little grandsons. We just got back from New Orleans and Savannah! God has greatly blessed us with happiness and health and I’m humbled to have won a couple of writing awards. Find me at www.tanyahanson.com

What Spookiness Lurks In Your Backyard?

One never knows what spookiness lurks in your own backyard! And being October, well, I wonder if the vibes are eerier when we get nearer to Halloween.

Now I’m not talking about bodies buried in Gramma’s garden, or skeletons in the attic. I mean, local places with their own ghostly cachet.


THE MISSION

Like the San Buenaventura Mission of California’s central coast, not far from my homestead. It was established by Franciscan padre Juniper Serra in 1782 (his last) and is sometimes visited by a gray-robed spectral monk! It’s been going on for years. A local woman, awash in family troubles, had just lit a candle when she saw the monk by the church door. He was dressed in flowing gray robes tied around his middle. Although certain she was at church alone, she was not convinced he was a spirit--she even reported feeling warmth emanate from him. But as soon as he smiled at her, he disappeared.

Thing is...Franciscans wear brown!

Hmmmm. How about ghosts in a church? What do you think about that? Or about spooky stuff in general?


THE MODERN MISSION

But that’s not all you get today. I am thrilled to have been invited to be part of the Halloween anthology from Prairie Rose Publications. 


Cowboys, Creatures and Calico, volume one 


Wow, did I have fun writing my first-ever creep-fest. Here’s some  quick words on my story, The Bridesmaid:


It ain’t all white lace and a wing-ding 1880’s bacherlorette bash. There’s a woman drowning in a well.

Except the well is dry...

Four nights in her dreams, a handsome cowboy tries to kiss her...letting Lydia think she's close to finding true love. Off to Colorado for her friend Milly's wedding, she's stunned to realize her cowboy is...Milly's bridegroom.

She's standing right in front of him, the beautiful woman Garner has ached to kiss for four long nights. Milly's bridesmaid. Can he betray his bride...even as his love for Milly turns to terror?




OUTLAW LOVE

And if you don’t mind, since I have your undivided attention, here’s a word or two about my other new release. Outlaw Ahab Perkins has run roughshod through many of my books at The Wild Rose Press, so I reckoned it time to settle down this charming bad boy and let him find his soul and true love.  Which he finally does in Outlaw in Love, last in a trilogy.

On the run from his gang, having robbed his own sister, outlaw Ahab Perkins has no place to go but good. He’d give his heart to Teresa in a single beat...if the beautiful woman in gray weren’t a...nun.

Unbeknownst, Teresa Avila is as wanted as Ahab, hiding out in disguise at a rundown mission. After her crimes and her evil stepfather’s abuse, she’s convinced she’s not good enough for any man, not even the outlaw she’s falling for.
Enter a burned-out homestead, an abandoned little girl and a kindly sheriff...can both find love as they guide their souls out of darkness?


Give Away Alert!! Tanya will be giving way a Kindle copy of the Cowboys, Creatures, and Calico, volume 1 anthology to one commenter and a Kindle copy of Outlaw Love to another commenter.  Be sure to include your email address to enter. 

Friday, October 10, 2014

Interview With Cher'ley Grogg


Cher'ley Grogg, Author

Cher'ley writes different genres. The Journey Back--One Joy at a Time, a devotional book,

Stamp Out Murder, a cozy mystery, and The Secret in Grandma's Trunk, a YA novel. Cher'ley

co-authored Small Town America and West Virginia Memories. Her stories are included in the 

anthologies Boys Will be Boys, Creatures, Crimes, and Creativity, and Cowboys, Creatures, 

and CalicoShe has many poems, short stories and articles published online and in print books. She 

enjoys painting, fishing, reading, walking, dancing, and long baths. She loves the Lord, her husband, 

children, grandchildren, and great grandchild. Cher'ley, her husband, Del, and their Carin Terrier, 

Tootsie, have seen the country through the windshield of their big white Freight-liner.


Author Website 


THE INTERVIEW 


What is the most adventurous thing you’ve ever done? 
Adventure. Life is an adventure and I live it to the fullest. Recently I faced my fears and Hang-glided, Parasailed,and climbed a Lighthouse and then went out onto the balcony.
What adventure would you like to have that you haven’t done yet if money and skill were no problem?
Travel the World.
Who are some of your favorite authors?  What commonality do you see in them?
Jeffrey Deavers and Sue Grafton are two of my favorite, but I have many more. Recently I’ve been reading a lot of unknown authors and they are very good. I don’t see a commonality, except I mostly read mysteries, or suspense.
I believe color says something about a person’s personality.  What’s your favorite color?
At this point in my life-Purple. When I was younger it was yellow, but really I like all colors.
If you could have a do-over life, what one thing would you do differently?  What would you do again?
I’d do the things I love earlier in life. Again, I would marry my husband and have my children.
What is your writing process from conception to finished MS?
Conception starts with a spark of an idea, I develop characters, drop them in a place, then do a brief outline. I do a lot of research and edit many, many times.
Are you a planner, panster or both?
I am both. I start with a loose outline, change it and add to it as I go.
How did you research for your book?
Visit places, the library, interview people and Google.
What is your all-time favorite movie?  TV show?
“Wizzard of Oz” and the “Shirley Temple Show”.
How important do you feel writing workshops are to any writer?
I have taken many courses and writing workshops. I go to at least 3 conferences a year. I belong to many writing groups. So to me it is very important,
If you could learn one new skill, fear and money no deterrent, what would it be?
To pilot a plane.
If you had a million dollars to donate to any one charity, what would it be?
The Salvation Army, because I believe they spend most of their money back to help people. The second one would be Hospice, because they make people’s last days on this earth easier on the paient and the family.
What advice would you like to give to an aspiring writer?
Don’t listen to too much advice. Read a lot. I’d susgest starting out with a thorough outline so you won’t droop in the middle and you’ll know where you are going. It never made any sense to me to write what you know, which I heard a lot. Do your research and write what you want. Take as many classes and workshops as you can.
Did anyone mentor you or help you along the way?  Please tell us about your mentor and what you feel they contributed to your writing career.
I had instructors that were helpful, but they didn’t go out of their way that much. I paid a writer, who I admired to help me in the beginning. He helped me a lot, but he was a perfectionist and we never got the first chapter completed before I moved on to something else. That was 2 years later.
What is the best advice anyone ever gave you?
Get a Dictionary, and a Thesaurus. Learn to use all the writing tools available to you.
If you could live anywhere in the world you wanted to, where would it be? (Language is no barrier)
Where I presently live. I live there because I like it. There’s trees and a creek in my back yard, and a river runs along side my front yard. I would just straighten the road out a bit.
Where do you write? 
I write on our 18 Wheeler truck, on my front porch, in my swing, on my back deck, in my bed, in my office, in restaurants, and I’m sure there are other places.
How much time do you devote to writing each week?  Do you have a day every week that you take off?
Some weeks more, some weeks less. More in the winter. No, I have to write when the opportunity is there.
What is a genre that you have not attempted that you would like to try?
Humor, I loved the style of Erma Bombeck.
Is there anything you would like readers to know about you?
I love life, my family, my dog, God, and my very favorite thing to do is laugh.

GIVE AWAY ALERT! Cher'ley will be giving away a copy of COWBOYS, CREATURES, AND CALICO Vol. 1 anthology to someone who comments. Please include your email address in your comment if you wish to enter. 



COWBOYS, CREATURES, AND CALICO, VOL.1 Halloween Anthology
Prairie Rose Publications

Wild Injuns, Wicked Trains, and Cerulean Blue by Cher’ley Grogg

Margaret Branson rides the train to the Wild West to get some sensational stories for the Eastern newspaper. She meets resistance from the odd residents in this small Nevada town. But she’s full of grit and determination.
“I’m here to stay until I have a newsworthy story,” she tells the young sheriff with the cerulean blue eyes who urges her to keep on moving.

Raymond Simpson is a man of few words and plenty of action. Seeing that Margaret is set on getting her story, he leads her into the wildest adventure she’ll ever face—and one she can never leave, even if she wants to.

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Interview with Lorrie Farrelly


Lorrie Farrelly

LORRIE FARRELLY is the author of a Western historical romance trilogy, contemporary romantic thrillers, and sci-fi/paranormal romantic thrillers. A graduate of the University of California, Santa Cruz, and Northwestern University, she's been a Renaissance nominee for Teacher of the Year, a ranch hand at Disneyland’s Circle D Ranch, and a “Jeopardy!” television quiz show champion. Western historical romance TERMS OF SURRENDER and time-travel romantic thriller TIMELAPSE are 2014 Readers’ Favorite International Book Awards winners, and TERMS OF SURRENDER is also an Orange Rose Award finalist. Lorrie and her family live in Southern California.



INTERVIEW QUESTIONS


What is the most adventurous thing you’ve ever done?
A: As a college kid, I used to borrow a horse and ride alone up into the mountains above Santa Cruz, California. There were lots of trails and old fire roads, but it was very isolated and remote. Now I wonder what I’d have done if I’d ever encountered trouble, but at the time, it was exhilarating freedom! (And the horse was a sweetheart, too!) 
What adventure would you like to have that you haven’t done yet if money and skill were no problem?
A: I’d love to be a paleontologist on a dinosaur dig – preferably with a team digging up a giant T-Rex that I’d get to keep!
Who are some of your favorite authors?  What commonality do you see in them?
A: I have a huge list, and I add to it almost daily as I discover wonderful new writers! I will say, though, that some of the writers who most influenced me are Elizabeth Lowell, Linda Howard, Rod Serling, Richard Matheson, Stephen King, Harper Lee, and Robert B. Parker.  They are all incredibly imaginative, and each has the ability to capture our minds and emotions with only the written word. They remind us what it is to be human, and they reveal the best and the worst of our natures.
I believe color says something about a person’s personality.  What’s your favorite color?
A: Blue. It seems to me to be both serene and dynamic. Sky and water, crisp open spaces, clear streams, and deep oceans. Forget-me-nots.
If you could have a do-over life, what one thing would you do differently?  What would you do again?
A: I wouldn’t change anything, not even my mistakes. (And there have been some doozies, believe me!) But everything has brought me to where I am today, and I cherish that.
What is your writing process from conception to finished MS?
A: When inspiration strikes, I write like crazy. When it doesn’t, I screech at my characters (while tearing at my hair), “What’s the matter with you?? For crying out loud, tell me what you do next!” If I’m writing a historical novel, I do a lot of research first, then go from there. And proofreading and good editing are critical!
Are you a planner, panster or both?
A: Pantster. I make it up as I go along. Sometimes I’ll write scenes out of order and then work my way to them. I’m definitely not an outliner, and I’m too impulsive to plan a story all out first.
How did you research for your book?
A: I decided to set my story, “The Sheriff of Hel’n Gone” in COWBOYS, CREATURES & CALICO, in a part of California that I was familiar with – the Gold Rush country of the Sierra Nevada foothills. As it’s a supernatural story, I didn’t need much more than a map and my imagination.
Lorrie and Buck

What is your all-time favorite movie?  TV show?
I’m not sure I can narrow it down to one! My favorite movies range from To Kill a Mockingbird and Gettysburg to Jaws, The Empire Strikes Back, and Raiders of the Lost Ark. My favorite “sleeper” movie of all time is Séance on a Wet Afternoon, with Kim Stanley as an unstable, unsuccessful medium who convinces her husband (Richard Attenborough) to kidnap a child. She believes she will gain fame and success as a clairvoyant by giving “supernatural” clues to the police. This movie has one of the best twist endings I’ve ever seen. (As does the original novel by Mark McShane.)
As for TV shows, my all-time favorite is The Twilight Zone, but I also loved westerns. As you might imagine, my current favorites are Sleepy Hollow, The Strain, The Walking Dead, and Hell on Wheels. And I love anything by Ken Burns!
How important do feel writing workshops are to any writer?
A: I think it depends on the needs of the writer. I’m sure there are some excellent workshops out there that many writers would enjoy and benefit from. However, I find most workshops make me feel very anxious.
If you could learn one new skill, fear and money no deterrent, what would it be?
A: I’d like to rescue and rehabilitate marine wildlife.
If you had a million dollars to donate to any one charity, what would it be?
A: I’d choose an organization like United Way, which would distribute the money to areas of greatest need in community health, shelter, and education.
What advice would you like to give to an aspiring writer?
A: Read! There is no better way to understand the power and flow of language than to read well-written books by talented authors. Remember, too, that writing is communication. Technical writing skills are as important as creative ones, and can be learned.
Did anyone mentor you or help you along the way?  Please tell us about your mentor and what you feel they contributed to your writing career.
A: I had wonderful teachers in school. Through them, I came to understand that the arts, history, and literature are all connected, and none exists without the others.  Those teachers pushed to read, and the more I read, the more writing became natural to me.
What is the best advice anyone ever gave you?
Treat those you love, and those who love you, the very best you can, because love is precious, and not easy to come by.
If you could live anywhere in the world you wanted to, where would it be?
 (Language is no barrier)
A: Actually, I love where I am. (California) There’s such an abundant diversity of both nature and culture. I could, however, do without our “seasons” of earthquake, fire, mud, and drought!
Where do you write?
A: At the kitchen table, mostly. I’m a great tuner-outer. My husband threatens to hang a sign around my neck that reads, “Huh?” 
How much time do you devote to writing each week?  Do you have a day every week that you take off?
A: I write when inspiration strikes. Lately, I’ve been writing short stories (like “The Sheriff of Hel’n Gone”) because, with an almost-2-year-old grand-toddler at home, it can be challenging to find long periods of time right now to concentrate on another novel.
What is a genre that you have not attempted that you would like to try?
A: I’d like to do a straightforward ghost story. Actually, the first thing I ever wrote professionally was a novella about a remote, haunted lodge. (Yes, I know – très original…LOL) But it was a good story, and I often think about dusting it off and having another go.
Is there anything you would like readers to know about you?
A: I’d love readers to know how much I appreciate them, and what a pleasure it is to share my stories with them.
CONTEST ALERT! Lorrie will be giving away an abook copy of Cowboys, Creatures, and Calico, Vol. 1 to a commenter. Be sure to enter your email address in your comment to enter.

Lorrie’s contribution to COWBOYS, CREATURES, AND CALICO, Vol. 1 western anthology from Prairie Rose Publications.

COWBOYS, CREATURES, and CALICO Vol. 1
Prairie Rose Publications

Lorrie Farrelly's contribution: THE SHERIFF OF HEL’N GONE



The Sheriff of Hel’n Gone by Lorrie Farrelly is a supernatural tale of a western lawman who must live one hellish Halloween night over and over, until a young woman from the future finds her way back to save him.

Blurb: Courageous frontier lawman Tom Reeves is doomed to relive the worst – and last – Halloween of his life, until the day he rescues archaeologist Hallie Constantine from the wreck of her Jeep. The question is, can she rescue him?

Excerpt:

Tom paused, then reached in his bloodstained vest pocket and pulled out a pocket watch. He clicked it open, studied it. Hallie leaned over to see it as well.
                “The second hand’s not moving,” she observed.
                “Nope,” Tom agreed. “Quit workin’ quite a while ago. I just wondered if this time around it might be … well, never mind.” He snapped the watch shut, dropped it back in his pocket.
                “Here,” Hallie said, taking out her cell phone. “I’ve got it.”
                She showed him the faintly glowing screen.
                “11:42,” he said grimly. “We ain’t got much time, Hallie. Be midnight soon.”
“What happens at midnight?” she asked, her voice low with apprehension. “Will the whole thing, all this mess,” she gestured as though to indicate the whole town, “will it all reset? Will it start all over again?”
                He sighed. “I don’t know. It always has before, when I die.” Hallie squeezed his arm, and he gave her a brave, rueful smile. “But,” he went on, “there’s … something, and I can’t even rightly say why, but this time it feels … it feels like it might be the end. I think it’s my last chance, Hallie. I think you’re my last chance.”

The other contributors to Cowboys, Creatures, and Calico, Vol. 1 are:

 The Bridesmaid by Tanya Hanson
Four nights in her dreams, a handsome cowboy tries to kiss her...letting Lydia think she's close to finding true love. Off to Colorado for her friend Milly's wedding, she's stunned to realize her cowboy is...Milly's bridegroom.
She's standing right in front of him, the beautiful woman Garner has ached to kiss for four long nights. Milly's bridesmaid. Can he betray his bride...even as his love for Milly turns to terror?
The Beast of Hazard by Sarah McNeal
Joey Wilding isn’t certain what’s killing the livestock in Hazard. Some believe it’s a bewitched beast, others a wolf gone rabid. As the town veterinarian, he’s seen mutilation before, but not like this, as if some-thing enjoyed the killing.
When Clare Beau asks Joey to help her injured wolf-dog, and begs his discretion, he begins to suspect he has found the Beast of Hazard—and its beautiful mistress. But as he walks through the woods after dark, something more ominous than any wolf stalks him from the shadows.
The Legend of Venture Canyon by Shayna Matthews
Marah’s world revolves around trickery and deceit. She is destined to dance for money, for no man has ever successfully freed her from the traveling prison. Some have tried, and failed. No one wants to become part of the show. No one.
Venture is a man who abhors lies and deception, but sometimes curiosi-ty can take hold of a man, in very forceful ways.
Wild Injuns, Wicked Trains, and Cerulean Blue by Cher’ley Grogg
Margaret Branson rides the train to the Wild West to get some sensa-tional stories for the Eastern newspaper. She meets resistance from the odd residents in this small Nevada town. But she’s full of grit and de-termination.
“I’m here to stay until I have a newsworthy story,” she tells the young sheriff with the cerulean blue eyes who urges her to keep on moving.
Raymond Simpson is a man of few words and plenty of action. Seeing that Margaret is set on getting her story, he leads her into the wildest adventure she’ll ever face—and one she can never leave, even if she wants to.
Wanderer, Come Home by Linda Carroll-Bradd
A recent widow on an 1874 Texas ranch, Vevina Bernhard lives with her 4-year-old son and a few hands. In charge for the first time in her life, she is frustrated she can’t get anyone to believe her land is haunt-ed. The sight of mysterious lights at night arouses her Irish supersti-tious nature and she wants to learn the truth.

Kell Hawksen is a wandering cowboy just released from the Texas Rangers who is tracking a stage robber. They meet in town after her failed attempt to get the sheriff to investigate, and Vevina hires him. Over the week before Halloween, they grow close. During the Samhain celebration, fire breaks out on the ranch, and Vevina and Kell battle both the danger and the depth of their true feelings. Will a justice-seeking wanderer find solace on a ranch with a widow determined to protect her land?


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