Friday, May 19, 2023

BOOK: Lavender Mist of May by Carol Ann Kauffman


 Here is Chapter One of Lavender Mist of May:


Chapter One

Jack Harlan

 

 

 

“Y

ou don’t get it all in life, Cat,” shrieked my mother. “Nobody does. You don’t get to have the dream job and the dream guy and all the love and brains and looks and personality. You have to pick. You have to choose. You have to sacrifice. You have to give up one in order to get the other. That’s life as an adult woman.”

“Mom, calm down. What are you yelling about?”

“I am simply attempting to shake you back to reality, daughter. Carter and Detrick have spoiled you rotten. You live in a damn fairy tale dream world. Penthouse apartment, luxury office, brand new car. Fancy designer clothes, cocktail dresses, and a diamond engagement ring so big it looks fake. Handbags that cost as much as a month’s rent. Somebody cooks for you. Somebody cleans for you. Somebody does your laundry. While you play detective on your own tiny, delusional planet. Wake the hell up!

“How long do you think it will take Carter Larsen to figure out he could have had any girl in the world? He’s tall, dark, and so handsome. He’s a brilliant lawyer with a wonderful personality,” she continued. “He’s charming, sweet, and very smart. He’s the only child of a millionaire. He’s a great cook. He’s organized and has a great eye for design and color. He knows how to do just about everything. He does everything in the apartment. He adored his mother. And he’s mannerly and respectful. Why on earth would he want to marry—”

“Me? Why would he want to marry a plain, boring, average, small town girl like…me? Not particularly beautiful? Or well educated? Or wealthy? Truthfully, I don’t know the answer to that one. I’ve asked myself that same question over and over. I didn’t propose to him, you know. He asked me. Numerous times. So, if you want the answer to that burning question, Mother, you’ll have to ask Carter himself.”

I pulled on my raincoat and stomped out to my car, not even attempting to dodge the giant raindrops. I tore down the street at breakneck speed, sliding all over the empty side streets. I turned into the grocery store parking lot, screeched to a stop, and sobbed.

My mother was caustic, but she was absolutely right. Erick Carter Larsen was way out of my league. I always harbored the fear he would go back to his beautiful, slim, underwear model ex-girlfriend. Yvette. All those things my mother said were true. The only thing I had going for me was I looked like his beloved, now deceased, mother. I don’t know how long I sat in the car and balled like a hormonal teenager on her period before my phone rang.

“Cat, Mr. Harlan is here for his two o’clock appointment,” said Nola White, my secretary, my friend, and my partner in crime and legal matters. I met Nola when she hired me to find out who was stalking her. We hit it off. She had no one and no place to go, so I brought her home. Home, to the Palazzo Castellano, the hotel where I live and work. 

I cleared my throat and said, “I’ll be right there. I’m on my way.”

“Are you okay?”

“Yes, I’m fine. Just a little…wet. I’ll be right there.”

I pulled back out into traffic and proceeded at normal speed to the underground parking lot of the Palazzo Castellano. I parked in my reserved space and took the elevator up to my office on the eighth floor.

 

“Good afternoon, Mr. Harlan.” I eyed the nice-looking gentleman in khakis and a leather jacket, somewhere in his late thirties I’m guessing. Light brown hair with just a touch of grey at the temples. Soft, kind eyes, brown and slightly worried. I dug deep inside to find my most cheerful voice and a smile as I hung up my soaking wet raincoat.  I sat down at my beautiful chrome and glass desk and pulled the gorgeous white leather swivel chair up to the desk.

Nola closed the door.

“How can we at Red Cat Investigation help you today?”

“Hello, Miss Collier. It’s nice to meet you. I have a delicate situation on my hands and I wondered if you could look into a matter of great importance to me… privately.”

“That’s what we do, Mr. Harlan.”

 “Call me Jack…please.”

I reached my hand across the desk.

“Jack. Call me Cat.”

“Cat.” He stood for a moment and shook my hand. “I’m lucky enough to be engaged to a wonderful woman. Beautiful and fantastic. Simone Phillipson.”

“Well, congratulations, Jack.”

“Thank you,” he blushed. “Simone has a child. From a former relationship. A daughter, a lovely girl named Lystra.”

“That’s not uncommon these days, Jack.”

“I realize that. And Lystra is a terrific kid. Cute, sweet, smart, funny. I love her as if she were my own daughter.”

“That’s great.”

“And that’s where the problem lies. Simone won’t tell me who the child’s father is. She won’t tell anybody. She’s never told anyone. Her parents don’t even know. The father is listed on the birth certificate as unknown. I would like to adopt Lystra when we get married. But I want to know what I’m getting myself into. If the guy is alive, I don’t want him showing up at our door to challenge me as Lystra’s father and causing me custody battles down the line. I know if we lost custody of Lystra, I would lose Simone. She is devoted to her child.”

“I understand. You want to get all your ducks in a row. Does your fiancĂ©e object to DNA testing?”

“Yes. Strongly. She told me to leave it alone. In fact, she demanded it.”

“So, she doesn’t want you to adopt Lystra?”

“She has no problem with my pursuit of the adoption, but she refuses to have any discussion about Lystra’s father. But I travel for business, sometimes out of the country. Simone works for an online marketing company, so she can work anywhere with an internet connection. We could travel all over the world. That’s been my lifelong dream. We could see all the wonderful sights out there together. As a family unit.

“Presently Lystra is in private school with a very flexible schedule. But as she gets older, that’ll change. I want to legally adopt Lystra so we can be a real family. And when we take her out of the country, I won’t have to worry about challenges to Simone’s custody. I think Lystra wants that, too. It’ll make us feel like a family unit. That’s where the ‘privately’ part comes in, Cat. Simone can’t know what we’re doing. She can’t find out I’ve gone behind her back to find out about Lystra’s father.”

“No problem. I’ll need some information on Lystra and Simone. Let’s see what I can dig up without a DNA test first. Maybe, we’ll get lucky. You know, it’s easier to prove who the father isn’t with a DNA test rather than who is.”

“I have some dates and locations for you,” said Jack.

I took notes as Jack recited a litany of names, dates, and cities.

“I’ll get right on this, Jack.”

He laid a hundred-dollar bill on my desk. “Here’s a deposit. Call me on my cell phone.” He scribbled the number on the corner of my notepad. “Thank you, Cat.”

Mr. Jack Harlan left the office just as my cell phone rang.

 

“Cat,” said Jean Houston, “I just walked into Carter’s apartment in Manhattan and…”

I froze. Was she going to tell me she walked in on Carter and his beautiful underwear model ex-girlfriend in the throes of passion and love-making. I held my breath.

“And I’m in the living room,” continued Jean, “and it’s the creepiest thing. Carter has a giant oil painting of a woman who could pass for your mother or your older sister above the fireplace.”

“No, Jeanie. There’s nothing creepy about that. That’s Carter’s dead mother, Donna Larsen.”

“No. It’s creepy. And it’s not a good oil painting. It’s an amateur job.”

“Yes, it was painted by a family friend.”

“Why put such a bad painting in a prominent place in the apartment? It’s creepy.”

“No, he was devoted to his mother. He says I reminded him of her.”

“So, he has a red-head fetish? Men don’t look for a woman that reminds that of their mommies. They look for someone who reminds them of their grandmas.”

“Thank you, dear. You’re starting to sound like my mother. Well, Carter’s grandmother was a redhead, too. Patrice Larsen. She’s deceased, also. Is…Carter there?”

“No. We had coffee together after we left the courthouse. I have some research to do for him before court resumes on Monday. He said he was catching a flight back home to you tonight. He should be there soon.”

“Okay, thanks.”

“So, I don’t have to worry about finding other redheads tied up naked in the closet or anything like that?”

“No, Jeanie. No need to worry. Open all the closet doors you want. How could you think such horrible things about Carter? You like him.”

“Yes, I do. And I’m grateful for the job and all. But I don’t trust men.”

“I get it. Get some rest. Talk soon. We’ll do lunch.”

“Soon. Lunch. With pie.”














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Thursday, May 18, 2023

TV TIME: 100 Million B C (You Tube)


We were really desperate for something to watch. Nothing on regular TV seemed any good. We exhausted our streaming service selections. 
So we settled on this delightful selection from You Tube.

The storyline goes something like this: It's the 1940's. A team of Navy SEALS is sent back in rescue a team that was sent back in time before. 
Despite strong characters and heroic efforts, something goes terrible wrong.

We enjoyed it. 
















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Wednesday, May 17, 2023

INTERVIEW: British Young Adult Author Margaret Egrot



Margaret Egrot

Coventry

UK



 

Good morning, Margaret! And welcome back to Vision and Verse. What's new with you. Tell us about what you've written.

 Silent Echoes is a novel about three generations of the same family. Saving Grace is a YA novel about the friendship between two teenage girls growing up in difficult circumstances and the older girl’s efforts to save her friend from sex traffickers. And Alex Still has Acne is a YA novel about two teenage boys, trying not entirely successfully, to deal with problems in their own families. I also write short stories, including a collection (Cast Off)based on female characters in Shakespeare, and plays.



What is your favorite genre to write? 

It is usually the genre I am currently writing in. At the moment I am working on a play – which is basically a series of monologues about being a woman – so that is my current fave genre.



Favorite food.

Thai king prawn green curry



Tea or coffee? 

Both. I religiously alternate between the two, starting with a strong tea first thing in the morning and ending with a decaff coffee in the evening.



Pizza or ice cream? 

Ice cream (rum and raison flavor, since you ask)



Wine or beer or soda?

 Beer



Where would you like to visit?

Myanmar. My son lived in Thailand for 10 years and I planned to go to Myanmar, which is just over the border, when visiting him. But a coup and Covid put paid to that plan. And now he and his wife are back in the UK.



Favorite musical artist.  

Paul Robeson, Johnny Cash, Louis Armstrong. 



Do you listen to music when you write?

I need complete silence when I write.



What makes you laugh?

 I’m easy to please. Any comedy (play, film, sit com) so long as they get the timing right. 

Ditto stand up comics e.g. Bill Bailey. My dog – who thinks he can bully me into taking him out just by giving me a fixed stare. It works.


Favorite work of art or sculpture. 

There’s just too much good stuff around to have a favorite.


How old were you when you started writing? 

I won a prize for a story written for the Brownie magazine when I was 8. (Sad not to have lived up to that early promise)





Do you 
plan out your book with outlines and notecards? Or just write? 

I find if I do extensive planning, the mojo for writing the damn thing has evaporated.



Oh, that's the best answer to that question I've had in the ten years ai've been hosting these interviews!!  

Describe your perfect evening. 

A long hot bath with a good book. (Whilst my husband does the washing up and takes the dog out). 





Where do you get your inspiration? 

My YA novels came out of my work in Probation and Social Services. Silent Echoes was an exercise in writing with deaf protagonists so I couldn’t rely on things being overheard etc. to move the plot forward. It was based on my experience of living with a deaf grandmother.



What do you do when you get a writer's block?

Try to convince myself that I don’t want to be a writer anyway (and hope inspiration returns of its own volition). And I keep my blog going, writingandbreathing.wordpress.comevery week, to convince myself all is not lost.



Who is your favorite author? 

I admire George Eliot most, and I enjoy all Jane Austen’s work. Dodi Smith’s, I Capture the Castle is my favorite book since the age of 13.



Best book you ever read. 

I love my old edition of the Collins Dictionary as it gives a brief history of a word, not just its meaning. I check something in it at least once a week – the Internet isn’t always right.



Last book you read. 

Isidora Sanger – Born in The Right Body (a collection of essays written by a doctor about the impossibility of changing your sex, and the physical and mental harm medicines and surgery to try to do this causes, especially for young girls)



What would you do for a living if you weren’t a writer?

As a young woman I would have liked to be a mountaineer/guide, but injured my hips in a fall so that option was out. have never earnt much as a writer, and had to have a ‘proper’ job for years. But I now have a pension so the pressure is off. Hence, I am now very lax at marketing my work (and maintaining a writing discipline).



Who is the one person who has influenced your personal life the most and why? 

On the whole I have had a happy life, thanks to my husband (and son)Which must have had a very detrimental affect on my creative angst. I do wonder what masterpieces I could have written if I’d suffered more.



If you could sit down and have a conversation with ONE person, living or dead, real or fictional, who would it be and why? 

I’d like to listen in to Leonardo da Vinci bouncing his ideas around with a group of his friends. He just seems to have been fizzing with ideas on all sorts of things.





What advice would you give someone who aspired to be a writer? 

Don’t overthink – just do it. Then, when you’ve proved to yourself that you have the motivation to write rather than do other things – like staring out of the window – join a writers’ group or sign up for a writing course.


 

More good advice! Thank you for taking the time out of your busy writing schedule to be with us, Margaret. I've enjoyed this interview. You are delightful and I think my audience will agree. Come back and see us anytime.


Link to Margaret's last visit here on Vision and Verse:

https://www.blogger.com/u/1/blog/post/edit/7343419041396488238/4596026082332844103




Do you have some links for us to follow you?


Links to my books and social media

You can find all my books and short stories on Amazon books, At least one story always free. ALL BOOKS FREE ON KINDLE UNLIMITED 

www.amazon.co.uk/-/e/B00RVO1BHO

 

fb.me/margaretegrot.writer

 

Twitter: @meegrot

 

www.writingandbreathing.wordpress.com

 

 

And Alex Still Has Acne – An adventure story for teens of all ages. £6.99, e-book £1.99. Free on Kindle Unlimited. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Alex-Still-Has-Acne/dp/B08LNFVRLY

getbook.at/AndAlex

CAST OFF. Short stories about Shakespeare’s women. £6.99, e-book £1.99. Free on Kindle Unlimited. https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B08M8BKZKHgetbook.at/CastOff

Saving Grace. What kind of trouble has Grace got herself into? And can Courtney save her before it is too late? £6.99, e-book £1.99. Free on Kindle Unlimited. https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B08P9LFG7N getbook.at/savinggrace

Silent Echoes. Loosely based on family memories. The Carters seem just like any other family. Apart, that is, from the life changing events nobody wants to talk about. Will history just keep repeating itself? Ebook-£1.99, Print-£7.99.getbook.at/SilentEchoes













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Note:

Vision and Verse does not store any personal information like email addresses, home addresses, etc. We do not give any information to third parties. And cookies? We eat cookies.