Showing posts with label Barbara Edwards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barbara Edwards. Show all posts

Sunday, December 23, 2018

No Room at the Inn by Barbara Edwards

No Room at the Inn
Chapter One
How much wine was too much? Was such a thing even possible? 
Bottle in hand, Charlene Holloway scowled at the steaming pot of Madeira sauce on the stove. As the sauce cooked down, she was supposed to add more wine, but how much? She’d been too distracted by the array of foil pans the caterer had deposited on her kitchen table to pay close attention to his instructions before he breezed out the door with a cheery, “Don’t worry. It’s foolproof.” It better be.
How long had he said to re-heat the Beef Wellington? Thirty minutes or forty? And the minted carrots? Charley tipped a couple tablespoons of Madeira into the sauce then checked the pastry-wrapped tenderloin in the oven. It looked okay, but what did she know? Thank heaven the guests had chosen pecan pie instead of Baked Alaska or Bananas Foster for dessert or she might risk setting the kitchen on fire. 
As owner of The Foxborough Inn Bed and Breakfast in Dobson’s Ford, Virginia, Charley was used to cooking for guests. She could whip up a batch of morning glory muffins or an omelet jardinière in a wink, but a large formal dinner was well outside her comfort zone. That was why she had referred Mrs. Tisdale to Shenandoah Catering for the elaborate pre-bridal Christmas Eve dinner currently underway in the inn’s dining room. 
Six months ago the Tisdales had booked the romantic, two hundred-year-old inn for their daughter’s intimate day-after-Christmas wedding. The wedding party had arrived that afternoon in a flurry of excited chatter and overloaded garment bags, and Charley and Henry, her right-hand man, had settled them in their rooms before serving sherry in the parlor. They were now working their way through a tureen of cream of celery soup while Charley assembled dinner plates in the kitchen.
She had just pulled the beef from the oven when she heard a clattering against the windows, as if someone were tossing handfuls of uncooked rice against them. Sleet. Her jaw tightened. It had started—the ice storm forecasters had been predicting for days. Why did they have to pick this time to be right? 
The lights flickered and a moment later Henry pushed the swinging door from the dining room and poked his head into the kitchen with a look of concern on his mocha-hued face. “The guests have are finishing their soup. Are the salads ready?”
Charley tossed her head to send a damp curl back where it belonged. “The plates are in the fridge. Can you serve by yourself? I’m tied up at the moment.” She lifted the roasting pan with oven mitt-clad hands.
“No problem.” Henry opened the wide door of the commercial refrigerator and began removing the pear, walnut, and blue cheese salads. When another gust of wind flung pellets of ice against the windows, he craned his neck and peered out toward the barn with a worried frown. The lights flickered again but regained their steady glow. “I hope the lights last through dinner.”
Charley carefully transferred the Wellington to a carving board. “We’ll be fine. We’ve got the fire going in the dining room and dozens of candles lit. If we lose power the generator will run the furnace overnight.”
Henry nodded and loaded a large serving tray with salad plates. “In the innkeeping business, it’s always something. Keeps you on your toes.”
That it did. In the ten years she’d owned The Foxborough Inn, she’d dealt with everything from a woman choking on the engagement ring her fiancé had placed in her champagne glass to the sheriff interrupting a wedding to haul the preacher off for fraud. Once she’d even had to fend off a flock of wild turkeys who decided to invade a tea party in the garden.
Charley held the carving knife poised above the Beef Wellington when a loud knock at the back door almost caused her to drop it. Who could that be? All the guests were accounted for, and no one would be out in this weather unless they had to be. She set the knife on the table, wiped her hands on her apron, and stepped to the door. Through the small glass panes, the porch light illuminated the rugged features of a man she’d never seen before. His cap bore the logo of a building supply company, and a couple days of dark beard stubbled his square jaw, not quite concealing a pair of deep creases that bracketed his mouth.  
He frowned through the glass and banged again when she didn’t respond. “Open up—it’s an emergency!” 
What kind of emergency? Before moving to Dobson’s Ford Charley had lived in Washington, D.C. long enough to learn not to open the door to a stranger without a very good reason. She leaned close to the door, stood on tiptoe, and peered through the window into the darkness. The man scowled, stepped aside, and thrust a teenage girl forward. The girl was small and slim, but with a prominent bulge protruding between the sides of her unzipped black parka. Short, spiky, black hair framed her thin face, and heavy mascara streaked her cheeks, whether from tears or sleet Charley couldn’t tell. 
“We need a room,” the man yelled through the door.
Henry appeared at her side. “What’s all the fuss?”
Charley half-turned. “They want a room, but we’re full up.”
Henry peeked across her shoulder. “We’ll figure something out. Look at that child. We can’t leave her outside in this storm. It wouldn’t be right. Besides, it’s Christmas Eve.”
Charley reached for the deadbolt and the doorknob. Henry was right, of course, and if the pair turned out to be axe murderers on the run, at least he had the old hunting rifle he used to scare off foxes from the chicken coop. She opened the door, and the man ushered the girl inside.
“Thanks.” His voice was gruff as he yanked off a pair of old deerskin gloves. 
Charley eyed him closely than turned her attention to the girl, who shivered and tugged at her coat with small hands clad in black fingerless gloves. They were an unlikely duo. He was tall, sturdy, and weather-beaten and looked to be more than twice her age. Maybe he was the girl’s father. That would account for his sour expression. She appeared to be no more than seventeen or eighteen years old and at least seven months along. 
Too bad she couldn’t help them. “I’m afraid we don’t have any rooms available. We’re booked solid for the next two days.”
The man took off his cap and slapped it against his thigh, knocking bits of sleet onto the wide pine planks of the kitchen floor. When he raised his head his dark gaze held a hint of desperation. “We’ve got to have something—anything. The roads are too bad to drive further, and I can’t make her sleep in the truck.” He tipped his chin toward the girl, who swayed on her feet.
“Here, child, you sit down.” Henry swung a kitchen chair under her before she collapsed.
Charley sized up the situation. She had a dozen guests in the dining room who would be expecting their Beef Wellington any minute and a half-dead pregnant girl in the kitchen. Henry was dressed for serving; she had on worn jeans and an oversized sweater. “Henry, if you’ll slice and plate the beef—the sauce is in that pan on the stove—and add the carrots from the foil pan in the oven, I’ll take care of this young lady.”
“No problem.” He moved to the island and picked up the carving knife.
Charley opened the fridge. “I’ve got some soup.” She turned to strangers in her kitchen. “Do you like split pea and ham?”
“Whatever.” The girl might have been going for a classic, surly teenage response, but the exhaustion in her voice spoiled the effect.
The man removed his coat and hung it on the back of a chair. “Thanks. That sounds great. By the way, I’m Joe Matthews and this is Maria.”
Charley poured the soup into a large saucepan and set it on the stove. “Pleased to meet you. I’m Charlene Holloway, but everyone calls me Charley. Why don’t you have a seat. The soup will be ready in a couple of minutes.” 
Joe joined Maria at the kitchen table. 
Charley stirred the bubbling pot. “What brings you out in weather like this?” 
“We’re on the way to Roanoke,” Joe replied. “My folks are expecting me for Christmas.”
Just him?  The girl must not be related. 
Charley set two steaming bowls on the table, along with crusty chunks of French bread. “What about you, Maria?”
The girl picked up her spoon without raising her head. “I’m just on the road.”
“Where are you headed?”
“Wherever. It doesn’t matter. As long as it’s away.”
Charley sent Joe a quizzical look.
“Maria told me she’s from New Jersey. I picked her up on the highway a mile or two south of Staunton. I’m a contractor there.”
At that moment the lights flickered twice and went out. Maria’s spoon clattered in her bowl, but before Charley had a chance to react, they bloomed back to life. 
Henry pushed through the swinging door. “I think maybe I’d better go out and check that generator. It looks like we might be needing it.”
“Take the big flashlight,” Charley said, “and that slicker hanging by the door.”
Henry retrieved the industrial-sized flashlight from the pantry, and slipped out the back door. About ten minutes later he was back, along with a bone-chilling blast. He shoved the door closed and shrugged out of the slicker. “The generator’s ready to go, but no one’s going anywhere tonight. I ‘bout killed myself trying to get back up the steps. There’s a thick coat of ice on everything and it’s still coming down.”
Charley glanced at Maria, who had started eating again, then turned to Joe. “I’m so sorry, but we really don’t have any rooms left. Every single bed is taken.”
His dark eyes burned with resolve. “We’ll take anything—even a stall in your barn if you’ve got extra blankets.”

Charley stiffened and stood a little straighter. Was he trying to make her feel guilty? No way was she going to put a carpenter named Joe and a pregnant girl named Maria in her barn on Christmas Eve because there was no room at the inn. She’d sleep out there herself before she let that happen.

Wednesday, November 21, 2018

By Reservation Only available in Audio for the Holidays

By Reservation Only, the first book in the Deerbourne Inn Series will be available in Audio for the holidays. It was a learning experience to pick a reader, then listen to each chapter read by someone else. It takes time and I just finished with a relieved sigh. I think it sounds great. Hopefully my readers will agree.
listen to a sample

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1r04T1B70Vl5VJ-4FWM_aelElTBUMSHsq/view?usp=sharing


Link: http://a.co/d/atQwzPx


By Reservation Only, Book One in the Deerbourne Inn Series, is an ongoing saga about the people who visit or live at the Inn. the stories vary from contemporary romance to historical romance, a ghost story and a mystery. and thats only the start. http://a.co/d/atQwzPx


The second book, Hope's Dream (Deerbourne Inn) by Peggy Jaeger 
Link: http://a.co/d/gu5d0Kaby  is out November 5

Buy links:

Amazon //WildRose Press // Kobo 

You can connect with Barbara here:

website // Blog // Amazon // Facebook // Google + // Pinterest 

Sunday, October 21, 2018

By Reservation Only is released! by Barbara Edwards

By Reservation Only, the first book in the Deerbourne Inn Series came out and i am wildly happy. With the help of The Wild Rose Press authors I had tons of promo Tweets, sharing on Facebook and visits to blogs. I can’t report being in the top 100 in sales, but I can say I hit 300 in my genre. 

Buy Link: http://a.co/d/atQwzPx


By Reservation Only, Book One in the Deerbourne Inn Series, is an ongoing saga about the people who visit or live at the Inn. the stories vary from contemporary romance to historical romance, a ghost story and a mystery. and thats only the start. 


http://a.co/d/atQwzPx

The second book, Hope's Dream (Deerbourne Inn) by Peggy Jaeger 

Link: http://a.co/d/gu5d0Kaby  is due out November 5. Available for pre-order.

Please follow, friend or like me. I love to hear from my readers.
Amazon Author’s Page http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B003F6ZK1A





Sunday, October 7, 2018

#New release: By Reservation Only by Barbara Edwards

Please join me in celebrating the release of By Reservation Only Book 1 in the Deerbourne Series from The Wild Rose Press on October 8. Buy Link: http://a.co/d/atQwzPx
Available for pre-order.

By Reservation Only from The Wild Rose Press
The Deerbourne Inn. New kitchen, new owner, new future--all rooted in three hundred years of history.


Blurb:
It's the grand opening of The Deerbourne Inn! Award-winning Chef Nathan Harte has worked long and hard to restore this historic property in Willow Spring, Vermont. He’s ready to greet his guests with fine cuisine, comfortable rooms, and maybe even a ghost or two. 
He's escaping the rat-race of the city for a slower more rewarding life, but is he ready to deal with a broken arm, a quirky arsonist, and a long-ago mystery? And what might he find up in the 300-yr-old attics?

Excerpt: 
Since the inn was quiet, Emily pulled on a long t-shirt and opened the door. Her heart fluttered. She was disappointed Nate wasn’t waiting for her in the dark passage. She blew out a frustrated breath and opened one of the bedroom windows to let the fresh breeze blow in. A whip-poor-will called from the hill.
The comfortable bed beckoned her. Flowery potpourri scented the bedroom air. She lay on top of the handmade quilt and stared at the ceiling. Sleep eluded her. She lost count of the times she turned over, punched the pillow, yawned.
An owl hooted from the nearby woods. The call of the whip-poor-will sounded closer. The curtain flapped and the scent of smoke tainted the air. Her watch claimed it was only twelve thirty, not nearing dawn. She swore and rolled over again.
Someone knocked on Nate’s door and called his name. Emily pulled on her pants and sneakers before she opened her door.
“What’s happening?” Her pulse raced. Smoke, she smelled smoke.



Bio:  I’m Barbara Edwards, a native New Englander, and a graduate of the University of Hartford with a Master’s degree in Public Administration. I write poetry for myself and novels when I need to tell a longer tale. I’m fascinated by the past so naturally turned to writing historical romance. The dark paranormal stories evolve from nightmares. The romance comes from my belief in people’s basic goodness and longing for love. 
  I lived in Florida for several years and am past president of the Central Florida Romance Writers and a member of Romance Writers of America.
When I returned to Connecticut, I founded the Charter Oak Romance Writers, a Chapter of Romance Writers of America, along with several close friends.
My husband is a retired Police Sergeant. We share an interest Civil War re-enacting and travel the Eastern states to participate in events. I love visiting museums, galleries and battle sites, gathering information for my stories.
I taught Romance Writing at Manchester Community college for three years.
I’m fond of gardening and growing antique roses with limited success. 
Most of my exercise is when my Belgian Shepherd, Keeno, demands a walk. 

Please follow, friend or like me. I love to hear from my readers.
Amazon Author’s Page http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B003F6ZK1A



Saturday, July 7, 2018

fireworks at my house by Barbara Edwards


The fourth of July is also time for my family picnic. the town has a firework show in the park next door. everyone brings food and we enjoy being together. 
The volunteer fire department parks an engine close to the houses in case a shell starts of fire. After its over, they will walk the woods searching for any problems.


The fireworks are so close, we need to lay on blankets to watch the show.


I took some pictures to share.

Please follow, friend or like me. I love to hear from my readers.
Amazon Author’s Page http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B003F6ZK1A


Thursday, June 21, 2018

Over the finish line by Barbara Edwards

After watching Justify win the Triple Crown I couldn't resist the comparison. I'm into the final stretch on my manuscript. I need to write the last chapter and I can submit it to my publisher. I sent my editor a couple updates so she'd be ready.

 
I'm so excited.


The plan is to do the edits and have the book ready to publish on Labor Day weekend. I can tell you to look for my name and new release, but I haven't given it a name yet.
Oh my. lots of suggestions are dancing through my head. (picture sugarplums) and I can't decide. when I do I will let you know.

I can give you a few hints. My manuscript is set in Vermont. I have a handsome hero (no surprise) with conflicts. Hmmm
In the last chapter I have to wind up all the loose threads.

Working like this has been good for me. I plan to keep going with the amount of words daily.  Only they will be in the other works I put aside to do this. I'll keep you informed of my progress. And the name when I find it.

Please follow, friend or like me. I love to hear from my readers.
Amazon Author’s Page http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B003F6ZK1A

Saturday, April 21, 2018

Busy as a bee by Barbara Edwards


I almost forgot to post my blog. This week has been a challenge. I’m researching a new story and plotting the story line. All of a sudden I’m full of energy. The rainy, cold weather isn’t making an impression. I ignored the rain to enjoy the clumps of crocus opening blue and white faces to the sky. the few yellow are far outdone by the others. I even have a hyacinth sneaking out. I love their scent.


So back to my story. Lucky for me its in an era I’m familiar with, northern New England. how can I forget the covered bridge, the granite quarry, the mountains covered with color or green of every shade.

The older towns have beautiful mansions from a time when the factory owners lorded over the right side of the tracks.

I’m thinking about what to name my story. What goes with spice? Herbs sounds a little hard. I can see my hero, know my heroine and what each wants. Certainly not each other at this point.

So I’m spending the next couple months in the green mountains of Vermont with a deadline of July first.

I’ll probably be sharing parts of my story as I run into problems with the plot. 
Did you know that there are scattered family cemeteries on many of the old farms?

 Please follow, friend or like me. I love to hear from my readers.
Amazon Author’s Page http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B003F6ZK1A



Saturday, April 7, 2018

Home in time for more snow by Barbara Edwards


So I’m excited about being home in my space again. I really missed have that special chair and desk where my best writing gets done.
So where do I start? Not back to my novel. First I need to write this blog then do a speech for my RWA chapter tomorrow.

So what else is exciting? It’s snowing again. Not that I saw much this winter. We were colder than normal in the Florida Panhandle but still warmer then Connecticut. 


And we only got snow once. The first in thirty-five years on St George’s Island. The cold did turn the water chilly and affected the turtles. We had three releases to return the poor cold stunned creatures to the Gulf.



The Blue Herons are back in their rookery despite the clear burn that was done in December. And a young alligator is living in the pond next to the volunteer camping. 
One thing I noticed was the sparseness of shells on the beach. I think the cold affected them, too.

Please follow, friend or like me. I love to hear from my readers.
Amazon Author’s Page http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B003F6ZK1A



Sunday, January 21, 2018

What are friends for? by Barbara Edwards


Getting into the routine again hasn’t been easy.  I finally realized I needed to resume the routine I had before all the chaos that broke it into pieces. As you may recall, my husband had cancer. It turned into months of treatment, other issues and finally time for recovery. He just had his second six month cat scan and is still clear.

What a relief. Then I discovered having all the stress relieved didn’t release my creativity.
In fact, I felt empty. 

Writing is a journey. I’ve used emotions and incidents from my life to fill out my plots, but I couldn’t use this. Thinking about what occurred gave me nightmares. the days waiting in the hospital. The recurring chemotherapy treatments. The surgery that lasted hours. Just mentioning it makes my shoulders stiff with tension.

So  how do I take this phase of my journey and turn it into a positive step.
I
 know all the tricks. Take a walk in the woods. sit by a lake or river. Listen to the wind. Look at the stars. Read a book.  I bet you have a special way to refill that empty tank and could share  it.

I tried going to RWA chapter meetings and found the other authors a source of strength. Everyone had serious problems. Everyone was hanging onto their dream of writing that book by their fingernails. It was a comfort and a challenge. They talked me into volunteering to be president. 

So here I am. I’m writing again. Because of my friends.

Check out the on-line class we’re sponsoring at www.charteroakromancewriters.com
Marie Tuhart shares the basic’s of writing erotic romance.

I’m taking it because I still choke at writing love scenes.

Please follow, friend or like me. I love to hear from my readers.
Amazon Author’s Page http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B003F6ZK1A