Showing posts with label Marji Laine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marji Laine. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

New Release from Write Integrity Press

Debut Novel: Romantic Suspense from Marji Laine.
Purchase COUNTER POINT in e-book or print.

Someone wants to complete the final assignment of a murdered hit man.

Her dad's gone, her diner's closing, and her car's in the lake. Cat McPherson has nothing left to lose ... except her life. And a madman, bent on revenge, is determined to take that, as well. Her former boyfriend, Ray Alexander, returns as a hero from his foreign mission, bringing back souvenirs in the form of death-threats. 

When several attempts are made on Cat’s life, she must find a way to trust Ray, the man who broke her heart.
Keeping Cat safe from a fallen cartel leader might prove impossible for Ray, but after seeing his mission destroyed and hearing of the deaths of several godly people, he knows better than to ignore the man’s threats. Cat’s resistance to his protection and the stirring of his long-denied feelings for her complicate his intentions, placing them both in a fight for their lives.

How can a small-town girl survive when ultimate power wants her dead?

Here's the first chapter:


Villa Montes, Chiapas, Mexico

“A boy.” Sevilla clapped his hands. The smack echoed against the bare adobe dome. “He will be a fine boy.” He beat his boot heels on the marble floor. His black beard bounced against his white tunic. “Ha. Go upstairs, wife. Lie down. Rest.”
“I have plans for the afternoon.” Oleta took a step backward, putting the leather sofa between them. Her large eyes wary. But her middle already showed evidence of his child.
“You will do as I say.” He snapped in her direction and put his back to her. His child would be the heir to his business. His kingdom. He must be strong and healthy. “Go now and take care of my son.”
“He is my son, too.” The woman’s voice cracked. She pressed her back against the wall.
She tested his good humor. His eyes hardened as he shot her a glare. His hands fisted at his side, prepared to take action on her insolence.
But this was supposed to be a joyful time. He relaxed his muscles and applied a measured smile under his black whiskers. “Be careful, Oleta. I cannot guarantee that my gratitude will last too far beyond my son’s birth.”
She stiffened. Good. She should be scared. She’d seen enough to know her fortunate circumstances and to be thankful for them.
Sidestepping out of his study, she scurried up the stairs. Her heels clicking like the little mouse she was. Popping in a hollow manner. The sounds grew louder. She gasped as glass broke, echoing in the entrance of his villa.
“Oleta?” He stepped toward the great hall.
Señor Sevilla.” Two from his security. Good. He needed answers.
“Go, check on Oleta. Make sure my son is all right.”
Captain Ortega gestured to the other man. “We must get you to safety.”
“Another drill? These are getting tiresome.”
“They prepare your security team to keep you safe, sir.” Ortega ushered him through the thick hallway to his helicopter hangar.
The other man had seen to Oleta. “Make sure my wife comes.”
The captain touched his earpiece and issued the order.
Sevilla climbed aboard the revving bird and looked back.
Ortega grew pale. “We must go.” He climbed aboard.
“Not until Oleta arrives. She is carrying my son. My heir.” His humor returned. A young prince to carry on his legacy.
The angled roof sections lifted.
“Stop. I will not leave without her.”
“We have to go, Señor.” Ortega strapped a belt around Sevilla and shouted at the pilot.
“I will have your head.” Sevilla kicked at the man, willing him to fall out of the gaping side of the transport. No such luck.
Ortega pulled the sliding door closed as they cleared the roof. Pings hit the heavy metal siding.
“What is that? Is something wrong with the rotor?”
The copter lurched forward and accelerated.
“Gunfire, Señor.”
“You idiot. You left Oleta back there.”
“I am sorry, sir. Fernandez reported that she was dead when he reached her. Shot on the stairs.”
No. Bile gathered in his mouth. “She carried my son. The coming leader of the Montes Cartel.”
“There is no more Montes Cartel, sir.” Ortega shouted over the pounding of the blades. “There is only you, me, and our pilot.”
“What are you saying?” What about his soldiers? His loyal followers? His faithful ones who would die before injury befell him? “The cartel lives.”
“All of your property is under siege except for the bunker near Asmirandu.” Ortega wiped sweat from his eyes with the back of his hand. “A few men there. And the federales know nothing about the compound.”
“Asmirandu.” Sevilla growled the village name. “His home.”
“The missionary?”
“He did all of this. His noble report in the face of fear.” The man would pay. “He has no idea what fear looks like.”
“I will kill him myself, Señor.”
“No.” Sevilla tapped his fingertips together. “I want him to worry. And then see everything that he loves destroyed. As he has destroyed everything that is mine.”
“Most of what he loves is in America.”
“Then I will go to America.” He spat out the hated word. “By the time I am finished with Raymond Johnson, he will understand true terror.”


Heath’s Point, Texas

“We’ve lost contact.”
The shout, spurred on by a January gust, flew past Cat McPherson without fully engaging her brain. “You did what?”
Violet Alexander rarely came to the diner at sunset, but Cat’s focus was on the needy people who waited in the treacherous cold for dinner. She stepped off the stoop of Mac’s Diner, handing a boxed meal to a dirty-faced man dressed in clothes much too large for him. “Do you have shelter for tonight?”
He nodded.
“Got him a spot near mine, Miss Cat.” Dash, a regular for as long as Cat could remember, put his hand on the younger man’s shoulder. “I’ll take care of ’em.”
She smiled and handed Dash a meal. The man’s wide smile showed his gratitude. “You such a blessing, Miss Cat. Can’t tell ya how thankful I was to know you’d keep serving meals after your daddy passed.”
Cat’s mouth twitched. She wished Dad were there. Talking about Jesus. Praying over the meal. How could she ever fill his shoes? “Sunset dinners are way too important to let them go.” And she’d do everything in her power to keep the diner profitable, as long as Dad’s silent partner didn’t get in the way, if only to keep serving these dinners.
Rubbing her hands on her blue jeans, she hoped to ignite heat and restore feeling to her fingers. Vi came closer.
Cat paused. Her hand steadied the rolling cart just inside the door. The chilling gale rested a moment. A warm breath from the heater inside caressed Cat’s frigid cheeks. “I’m so sorry, Vi. I couldn’t hear you over the wind.”
She caught a glimpse of Violet’s face. The woman’s puffy, red eyes, a contradiction to her usually flawless makeup, shook Cat from her routine. The rare sight of a not-having-it-all-together Vi shoved the words back through Cat’s brain, this time engaging it. We’ve lost contact.
The nerve endings along Cat’s spine filled with ice. The wind picked up, whipping her curly ponytail into a knotted frizzle. She grasped the edge of her red wool coat as the gale snatched at the hem. Trying to shout over the force of the blast used all her energy, and she struggled to form the single syllable that came out as a broken whisper.
“Ray?” Her heart lurched at the name she hadn’t uttered in months.
Vi bit her bottom lip.
Cat’s breath came in sharp gasps as her eyes locked onto Ray’s mom. “Is he all right?” Surely the message contained more information. Some hope. He had to come back.
But the woman stood silent as tears pooled against the bottom rim of her eyes.
No.
Dash laid a hand on her shoulder. “I can finish handing out these here dinners if you need some time.”
She stared at him for a full second, her thoughts whirling to some wilderness where Ray was trapped, unable to return, or maybe … Shutting her eyes against her worst fears, she nodded. “Thank you.”
“Come inside.” Vi pulled Cat out of the frigid air and into the diner, warmed from hours of grilling. Aromas of stale frying oil mixed with freshly baked chocolate cake failed to offer Cat their usual familiar comfort. Her mind refused to settle on one thought. Like when the doctors told her they could do nothing more for her father.
This couldn’t be happening. Even with Ray’s silence when he left for his mission field, she still dreamed of a future together, the ministry they had spent hours talking about. Was that dream gone forever? Lifting her eyes, she hoped to ask more questions.
Vi lowered into the nearest chair. Her hands folded in her lap. Her gaze somewhere between the edges of the red laminate table.
Oh God, comfort Violet right now.
Cat couldn’t imagine losing Ray, but when Vi looked at him, she saw her baby. Unwilling to allow her angst freedom, she hurried into the kitchen. She had to get control of her emotions. Before she caused Violet even more pain.
Cat grabbed a pair of sodas from the fridge and rejoined Vi. The hollow clomps of her boots on the black and white checkerboard linoleum reverberated in her chest. Empty. Alone.
She pushed the ache aside and set the Dr Pepper in front of Vi. “Have some. You’ll feel better. Or can I get you some of Grady’s leftover cookies?”
“No, no. I’ll be fine.” She tugged a napkin out of the table canister and folded it. Resetting her can on the makeshift coaster, she popped it open.
Cat opened her Diet Pepsi and observed the woman, her eyes still rimmed in red, though wiped dry. Petite with short, highlighted hair and the same chocolate eyes as Ray. If anyone had a right to crumble it was his mother, but Vi stood strong. Coming to offer comfort to Cat instead.
“What is the board doing about it?” Cat wrapped her hands around the can and took a sip, forcing the bubbles down with a loud gulp.
Vi stared at her soda. “They’ve contacted Ray’s ministry partners, but those missionaries live over a hundred miles from his village.”
“Wherever that is.” Cat chided herself immediately for letting her frustration have voice. Especially around Vi.
But the fact that Ray had told her nothing, advancing no trust whatsoever, cut as deeply as his leaving her behind. Almost as deeply. Taking the future they expected to share for himself and leaving without her was a betrayal she could never forget.
But she’d always expected him to return.
“Ray’s journal noted an appointment to preach last Sunday at the little church he helped to build, but he logged in nothing further.”
“Haven’t they contacted the US Embassy? Called the police? Anything?” Surely there were ways to find him. She bounced her right leg.
“Things are different in other countries, Cat. You know that.” She sniffed.
Cat laid her hand across Vi’s. “We’ll find out this is just a mistake. I bet you hear from him tomorrow. He’ll be fine and have a good laugh at the worrywarts back home.”
Sad eyes lifted. “I have learned that some of the surrounding villages have been contacted.” She pulled another napkin from the canister and rubbed her nose.
“So, maybe he went someplace else. Maybe he tried a new place and has yet to update his journal.” Cat could believe that. And Vi needed other options to think about besides …
“Someone from one of the communities responded to the contact.”
Cat glanced at Vi’s reflection in the darkened glass of the storefront. The woman opened her mouth and shut it again. Beyond that virtual mirror, the small group that had huddled outside dispersed with their dinner packages.
“What did they say?” Despite the warmth of the diner, she shivered and jumped as Dash opened the door.
He shoved the cart through, staying well outside the doorframe. “You all right in here?”
She waved at him. “We’re okay. Thank you for your help.”
The old man whose girth didn’t match his nickname stepped back a few steps and waved at Cat through the window.
“Probably as close to being inside a building as Dash has been for some time.”
Vi’s jaw muscle twitched briefly. The corner of her mouth angled downward.
Cat’s attempt to lighten the air failed. “Oh, Vi, you know God is with Ray. You told me yourself how He led him to the mission. Don’t give into fear now.”
Brave words. And she tried to believe them.
Tears brimmed Vi’s lashes again. “There’s word that the mission fell under attack.”


Outside Asmirandu, Chiapas, Mexico

¡Pégalos!” Get them.
Voices of the hooded attackers chasing Ray Alexander echoed under the canopy of trees. He stumbled over briars and weaved between gnarled trunks. Branches slapped his face as he followed the man who pulled him from a chaos of shouts and gunfire at the small church he helped to build.
Dodging the vine tentacles, he pushed aside the fronds of invading plants along an invisible path. His lungs burned. His shoulder screamed pain. Dislocated? Keep moving. He focused on the man, Miguel, a recent transfer to his mission team. He dared not lose sight of him.
Not here. Especially not now.
Voices somewhere behind him called out again. His own crashing boot steps far overwhelmed the sounds of his pursuers. Had he widened the gap?
Miguel halted then folded his frame into the fronds of a large fern. Huffing, Ray tucked himself behind a giant elephant ear leaf nearby. He struggled to listen over his heaving chest. His blood-stained shirt clung to his limp left arm.
Shouts began again. Farther away, he felt sure this time.
“Are you okay?” Miguel’s hoarse whisper blended with the jungle noises.
Ray nodded. He yanked the leather belt from his waistband. Lassoing his middle, he lashed his useless arm to his torso.
Miguel bobbed his head. Time to move on.
A steep ditch lay on his right, and Miguel dropped over the edge. Ray slipped from his cover. Without hesitation, he scooted down the ridge. Angular trees provided regular braces on the way. He practically fell against the first, catching himself with his good arm. The same technique worked for the second descent. Reaching for the next trunk, he stepped into a rotted log. The misstep propelled him into the rough and broken bark, left-shoulder first. He gritted his teeth against a choked cry. Pain blinded him. Miguel glanced back and changed course, but Ray waved him on. Breathing deep, he pushed off the tree and forged ahead.
His rescuer hesitated while Ray closed the gap. At the bottom, a gully with a trickling stream provided them with secretive travel. Downed trees and boulders made the path look like something out of a video game.
But the men searching for them weren’t playing.
“Not sure how many are dead at the mission.” A man’s low voice in sharp Spanish staccato floated down from behind the heavy undergrowth on the ridge above them. Obviously he’d been involved with the attack.
Ahead, Miguel paused and held up his hand. Ray halted.
“The missionary got away, but we’re looking for him.”
Ray went cold. He’d received threats from the drug cartel when he helped to shut down their traffic within his area. His actions had even flushed out the powerful leader of the cartel, Sevilla. But that placed Ray in a precarious position. The policía hadn’t arrested the drug lord yet, but Ray was hopeful. Could Sevilla have arranged for the attack on Ray’s mission? Was he really that powerful?
After a pause, the one-sided conversation above him continued. “We believe he headed to Dumaus, and when we find him, we will bring him to the compound as instructed.”
Ray recognized the village name. He hoped Miguel had a different destination planned.
“Say again? The signal here is not so good.” The man’s voice rose. His footstep tramped closer in the undergrowth on the plateau.
Miguel motioned for Ray to crawl beneath the overhang created by a massive Montezuma Cypress on the edge of the eroded ravine. Soundlessly, Ray darted for cover, hunkered under a cascade of exposed roots.
“I’ve passed on the explicit instructions. Raymond Johnson will be taken alive.”
A sliver of fear danced around the back of Ray’s neck. Using a fake, utterly common, last name struck him as overkill at the onset of his mission. Now he thanked God that this powerful man couldn’t trace him or his family. Good thing there weren’t any other Johnsons in Heath’s Point. But then, no one knew his hometown either.
The man’s voice faded, but his intent had been clear. People—friends and brothers in Christ—had just given their lives so some insane man could prove his power to Ray. Sevilla gave little thought to the people of the church. He only wanted to destroy the pastor.
Guilt added more weight on his already heaving chest.
They waited for the silence to deepen. The music of birds and animals marked the absence of the phone-using marauder. Ray worried their delay allowed the hunters to get ahead of them. What if he and Miguel caught up to them while trying to escape?
Finally, Miguel stepped out and climbed up the roots.
He shimmied back down, rejoining Ray underneath. “I see no one.”
“I must thank you. I owe you my life.”
“You owe me nothing, my friend. I am happy I came to Asmirandu when I did.”
Only a few days before the raid, Miguel had arrived from a village to the north. He’d brought with him some supplies for the mission and a letter of introduction from a missionary Ray had met a few times.
Miguel wiped the back of his hand across his forehead. “I saw the men heading for the mission, but I could not run fast enough to warn you.”
“I’m still in your debt. I don’t want to think of what might have happened if you had not pulled me out the back door.” In truth, Ray didn’t want to think about the raid at all, but he expected the scene to revisit him again and again.
Miguel took the lead again. They broke through the forest cover far too quickly to suit Ray. Miguel dashed across a large field of head-high grasses. Ray accelerated, but his guide disappeared into bobbing reeds. He hoped his steps remained straight. An accidental circle to return the way he came promised disaster.
Shots rang out behind him. The assassins had caught up. At least gunfire confirmed he ran in the right direction.
He climbed a hill. More shots went off. Running in a dark brown shirt through the waving tan stalks, he stood out like a cockroach on a wall. Ducking low, he veered right. Twelve paces. Then peeled to the left for seven. The soft pffft of bullets finding ground nearby made him dart right again.
Reaching the crest, Ray escaped into the shelter of thick forest.
Miguel waited for him inside the dark shadows. “Do you need to rest? We could stop.”
“No!” His burning lungs couldn’t waste air on words. And the crack of a shot hitting a nearby tree propelled him on.
Miguel led him through the outer edges of the Montes Azules Reserve that lay in Chiapas. The shouts from behind them faded, finally stopping altogether. Ray followed his guide’s breakneck pace, desperate to reach safety before the dimness of jungle became the blackness of night.
They slowed to a jog when the growth thickened. Several times Miguel stopped to help Ray push through walls of vegetation. His shoulder ached and his cheek stung with every drop of sweat that found its way to a cut he’d received during the attack. Thankfully it stopped bleeding.
Thoughts of Cathy filled his head—the way she looked running through the hayfield, her bright red hair standing out among the stalks. Leaving her behind tore him apart but, at least, his lone departure kept her safe. What would he have done had she been at the mission with him? He shuddered.
With God’s help, he hoped to see her again, though he knew things would never be the same between them.
Ray lost sight of Miguel in the filtering light. He’d ducked into a low arch in a mass of vines. Ray saw no other way around the layers of underbrush. Like the Going on a Bear Hunt book his mom used to read to him, the living barrier allowed no access around, over, or through the bushes. He had to follow Miguel and crawl under heavy branches. He thanked the Lord that he had tied up his arm to keep the lifeless thing out of the way.
He hit all fours—well, threes—hopping like a lame dog. He struggled through the labyrinth, army-crawling for the last few yards. Working his way out, Ray left the great wall of jungle. A western road that led to San Salbitaso lay under his knees.
At least the path didn’t go near Dumaus, though the hunters might have changed course.
Ray’s memories of the vicious surge, led by the four hooded men, hurt worse than the throbbing of his shoulder and his cheek put together. He had no idea who or how many, but people died in that little stucco building. His people. They had depended on him. He let them down. He didn’t know how deeply the assassin’s knife had slashed his cheek, but nothing cut as deeply as the consequences of his failure.
All of his failure.
Miguel stopped to look at his cheek before the setting sun removed all chances of seeing anything. “Your cut looks bad, amigo. Better stop and clean it.”
“The airfield’s close, right? Wait ’til we get there.” Ray didn’t pause. Let Miguel catch up with him for a change.
Hesitations caused this problem in the first place. Ray received threats but didn’t take them seriously. Well, he believed them now. With people he cared for at risk, he dare not let his guard down.
He jogged to the rise above San Salbitaso. The valley spread below him like a panoramic photograph. The last rays of the sun illuminated the tiny village of thatched roofs cradled between two rocky hills. Though he likely viewed the beauty for the last time, he dared not pause to create a mental picture, as the camouflage of the jungle no longer protected them. The little-used road gave direction, but if Miguel found this washed-out, two-rutted track, those hunting them would have no problem. The remaining light faded. Dusk worked in their favor. He picked up the pace.
Safety neared, but uncertainty threatened to blast a hole in the net.

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Three People on a Journey

Unlikely Merger is now available and it's on sale for 99 cents!

We recently provided a writing prompt to our authors: If you could take three people on summer vacation, you'd take [who] and [why]. We told them they could take real or fictional people, from the past, present, or future.

Today, Marji Laine shares her thoughts:

Three People on the Journey
by Marji Laine


If I could take 3 people on a trip with me, I’d bring my sweet hubby, my brother, and my sis-in-law. And it’s not just because they’re family. Bubba and my Hubby are very close. Bubba’s wife and I were roommates in college and are still best friends.

And, in truth, we’ve vacationed several times together, laughing for miles over the silliest things like business signs, trivia questions, and any abnormal fellow traveler we might see along the way. Not unlike the road trips with my girls.


Again, in this case, it’s the journey and the companions that make the trip fun. With such wonderful people with me, the destination doesn’t even matter.

****

Marji Laine is a wife and homeschooling mom with teenage twins left in the nest. Having just released her debut novella Grime Beat, she spends her non-writing time transporting to and from volleyball, directing high school classes at a local coop, and leading the children’s music program at her church. From suburban Dallas, she loves to create scintillating suspense with a side of Texas sassy. She invites readers to unravel their inspiration, seeking a deeper knowledge of the Lord’s Great Mystery that invites us all.








Monday, June 29:
            

Sunday, June 28:


Tuesday, June 23, 2015

What's a Boom-Hunt Road Trip?

UPDATE: Unlikely Merger is NOW available! We will offer
the book FREE on Kindle July 1-July 5, 2015!

Today, we welcome author Marji Laine. Marji's been a regular around WIP since she won our very first chapter contest for The Christmas Tree Treasure Hunt. She created the character of Mercy Lacewell for The Love Boat Bachelor, and developed the plot for Unlikely Merger. She also developed one of the heroes for Mercy, but we can't tell you which one just yet!

Road Trips 
by Marji Laine

I confess: I’m a homebody. I am quite content to stay at home and consider quiet time to write to my heart’s content to be a vacation. However, I’ve taken some memorable vacations!

As I was growing up, we would take two to three-week road trips, dragging our tent camper behind us. We traveled west all the way to Idaho through New Mexico and Colorado and came back to Texas by way of Mt. Rushmore. Another year, we traveled up to Boston and back. I got to enjoy my very first experience with a water slide before water parks even existed!

But my favorite road trips are like the one I just took with my girls and a neighbor. As I was writing this blog, we heard a boom. The girls and I climbed into the van and went on a boom-hunt. Didn’t find anything, but drove around for a half hour laughing, chatting, and searching the skyline for whirling red and blue lights.

Spontaneous trips like that are the most fun to me. We took a trip not long ago to the small towns north of the metroplex just to photograph some unique things. Long horn cattle, strange vehicles, old buildings. We sang, imitated animals, laughed – a lot!

The same happens each year when we take our annual trip southward to the bluebonnet region.
Gorgeous pictures and always fun. Sometimes we even have deep conversations over circumstances, scripture, and future hopes. These trips have strengthened the relationship I have with my kids more than any other activity. I feel so blessed that our homeschooling affords us the opportunity to set out almost anytime we feel like it.

I can tell you, I will treasure these un-extraordinary journeys forever. Maybe because the trip rather than the destination is the best part.

****


Marji Laine is a wife and homeschooling mom with teenage twins left in the nest. Having just released her debut novella Grime Beat, she spends her non-writing time transporting to and from volleyball, directing high school classes at a local coop, and leading the children’s music program at her church. From suburban Dallas, she loves to create scintillating suspense with a side of Texas sassy. She invites readers to unravel their inspiration, seeking a deeper knowledge of the Lord’s Great Mystery that invites us all.


More for the Journey:

Tuesday, June 23


Monday, June 22

Write Integrity Press: Let the Road Trips Begin

Saturday, June 20

Write Integrity Press: Vote for the Hero!

Friday, June 19

Write Integrity Press: Unlikely Merger Chapter Eleven

Thursday, June 18

Write Integrity Press: Unlikely Merger Chapter Ten
Marji Laine: Shake It Up
Carole Towriss: Reuben’s Home Samo

Wednesday, June 17

Write Integrity Press: Unlikely Merger Chapter Nine
Marji Laine:  No Joy in Mudville

Friday, December 13, 2013

A Ruby Christmas FREE

Today is Friday the 13th!

Today is 12 days before Christmas!

Today is the release of A Ruby Christmas!

As our gift to readers, A Ruby Christmas will be FREE on Kindle for the next four days - Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday! Grab your copy while you can, and tell all your friends, too.

You'll find all eleven chapters in the book. For the past nine weekdays, we've shared the first nine chapters and some of the stories behind the chapters, and devotions about things Ruby learned on her adventure. If you'd like to go back to those blogs as you read the book as a whole, here are the links.

Read Chapter One here.
Read Chapter Two here.
Read Chapter Three here.
Read Chapter Four here.
Read Chapter Five here. 
Read Chapter Six here.
Read Chapter Seven here.
Read Chapter Eight here.

Thank you for joining us on this grand adventure. We hope you're enjoying the book!

For all of you playing the Pinterest contest - the last picture posted yesterday on Pinterest and on Phee Paradise's blog. Make a list of the differences you spotted in all nine photos and send us the list by Sunday, December 15th, midnight Eastern time. (Send to MagnificentHope [at] yahoo [dot] com. We'll notify the winner on Monday.

For those of you just joining us, here's what we're talking about:

A Ruby Christmas

Ruby Joy Buckner, cowgirl, has never left the Lone Star State, but at her father’s request, she takes her faithful canine companion and travels the world in search of Nativity pieces. As Ruby collects the pieces, she also collects a few unexpected surprises, including an awareness of the beauty in other cultures, and quite a menagerie of new friends, thanks in part to Yippee Ti Yi Yo who charms everyone they meet.

Ruby’s budding awareness of life outside Texas opens her eyes to a world of whimsy, and the Nativity pieces she collects are unusual. Will her father approve her eclectic collection … and the changes that travel brought to Ruby’s world?





Tuesday, December 10, 2013

A Ruby Christmas Chapter Seven

UPDATE: A Ruby Christmas is FREE on Kindle 
Friday, December 13 through Monday, December 16. 


Read Chapter One here.
Read Chapter Two here.
Read Chapter Three here.
Read Chapter Four here.
Read Chapter Five here. 
Read Chapter Six here.

A Ruby Christmas
Chapter Seven
by Marji Laine

As excited as she was about visiting Paris, Ruby couldn't shed a foreboding that tensed her neck and back. It started at the airport, with its absence of any English whatsoever. Thank heaven, Arno Brideau had a sign with her name on it, or she'd still be wandering around. Wearing straight jeans and a stylish scarf, the slender Arno helped her gather her luggage and the dog crate. He seemed pleasant enough, chatting in a heavy nasal as they took a thirty-minute subway ride, or as Arno called it—the Metro. They emerged from the Metro onto the tree-lined streets of the historic city. Yet her nerves persisted. The gawking of the folks on the street didn't help much. Yippee took it in stride, but Ruby hated feeling like a carnival clown.

“Dis eez de place.” Arno shifted her bags to one side and opened the door of the blue painted store front. Coiffure de Bleu. She'd Googled the name online before the flight, so the upscale beauty salon didn’t surprise her, but the name still sounded funny.

Several customers sat caped in spinning chairs, their hairdos in various stages. “Why Hair of Blue?” She waited until Arno led her to a back room before asking.

“Ah. It is a chic name, no? Aimee uses a special technique. She adds a bluing agent to make hair very black.” He led her to a set of stairs.

Arno's own stormy hair probably came from his wife's technique. “So it's blue hair 'cause it's black?” Ruby shook her head but followed Yippie upward. Confusion compounded her former nerves. Maybe this jaunt hadn't been such a sweet idea after all.

Her boots echoed on the hollow stairs no matter how soft she tried to step. Her heart pulsed the echo by the time she hit the second flight. Still Arno led her upward. Who ever heard of an eight-story building without an elevator? The simple bag she'd hung on her shoulder felt like it contained old bricks by the time Arno finally stopped, somewhere between level four and the top.

Ruby lost count but joined him on the narrow landing, puffing away. No wonder the man was skinny as a fencepost if he climbed this mountain every day.

He smiled, slipping a key in the bolt. “It eez a workout, no?”

“Yes.” She'd have to cut out all the rich food and get back to normal eating when she got back home. And maybe take in them new-fangled Zumba classes.

“Have a seat.” He carried her bags through a door to the right.

The fear niggled again. She scratched under Yippee's chin, whispering more to calm herself than him. “This is silly to feel nervous. What a sweet couple to take in a complete stranger like this.”

Well, not complete stranger. Aimee's mom and Ruby's mom had been college roommates. Still that seemed a pretty thin connection.

She had little time to think about it, though. Shoes clicked on the steps outside seconds before Aimee burst into the room.

Yippee jumped up and gave a short bark.

“Ah. You must be precious Ruby?” The petite woman grabbed Ruby's face and pulled it close, making a kissing sound on each side of her cheeks. She looked over Ruby’s shoulder. “Arno, you have an errand, no?”

Arno smiled and bowed in grand fashion. “I will return.”

Before Ruby could wonder about his secretive mission, Arno left. She pulled on her right braid, twisting it around her fingers.

“Ah. And this is Yippee. Aw, chien doux. Sweet puppy.” She knelt and scratched Yippee, who, of course, ate up every bit of the attention. The black hair spread to Aimee as well, though her original color had been a sandy blond like Ruby's. At least that was the way she'd looked in the picture her dad showed her. The bluing made a difference though. Gave an exotic, almost Asian look to her features.

Aimee rose and gave Ruby another hug. “I am so glad to have you here.” She released her, holding her at arms' length. “How was your flight? Eezee?”

“Uh, yeah.” She felt like a ten-year-old who couldn't loose her own tongue.

“Well we are going to make your visit très magnifique. Your first time to Paree ... it must be extra special.”
Ruby could warm up to this subject. “I've been so looking forward to this stop. I love history and all of the architecture. It's gorgeous.”

“You have seen nothing yet. But first we will take care of the important matters.” She took her by the hand and grabbed the leash that Ruby had set down beside her. “Come, Yippee. We have much to do.”

“The Nativity piece. I've been trying to get the feel of a place before choosing that.”

“No-no. We will help you choose that on your last day. First we must get you ready.”

She trotted down the stairs, keeping pace with Yippee without effort. Even going down, Ruby began breathing rather hard at such a run. “What do you mean I have to get ready? I have a Sunday dress if I need it.”

Aimee laughed. “Chère amie. You are a grown woman, no?” The smaller woman stopped at the bottom stair and looked up at Ruby, several inches taller. She seemed to be waiting for an answer, but the facts made it obvious.

“Yes, I'm fully grown. What does that have to do with anything?”

“You are like a little girl. How long have you worn plaited hair?”

She didn't understand the word plaited, but anything referring to Ruby's hair must have been about her braids. “I've always worn it in braids. Just easier that way.”

“Is not eezee like what I will do. You see.”

Truth dawned. “Wait. You're not talkin' 'bout cuttin' my hair?”

“Mais oui, chéri. Yes, of course.” Aimee pulled her along. “Your father did not tell you about his request?”

No way! Daddy asked her to do this? How could he? “N-no.”

“Ruby, you have learned much from your voyage, yes? You have changes on the inside.”

Ruby nodded.

“Let them show on the outside.”

“It's just sorta sudden-like. I never really thought about it.” Not that thinking about it would change her mind one iota.

“Well, why don't you think about it? Go outside, walk Yippie, and breathe some fresh air. You'll see that I am right.”

Aimee opened the door for Ruby, and a thin woman in a skimpy skirt entered. She halted in the doorway, a stunned look on her face and stared at Ruby from horn to hoof and backed up again. She spouted something in French, and Aimee jumped with an apologetic look on her face. Ruby caught a few words, no-no and something about her just being a friend, but Ruby scooted before the lady could turn the tirade in her direction.

**

The blue door shut behind her, and she stared at her reflection in the darkened glass inset in the door. She earned glances from the people who passed behind her. Maybe her braids did look misplaced in this high-fashion city. Though her figure sure didn't look like that of a little girl, she stood out among the pedestrians on the street. She latched the leash to the collar and chose a direction.

Yippee's paws clipped the pavement beside her, and her own boot clomps echoed. They sounded about as empty as she felt, though she couldn't put her finger on why she felt that way. Maybe because she'd reached a path that she didn't want to venture down. Disappointing her dad. Yeah, that was what she felt. All through this journey, she'd followed his wishes. But how could he want her to cut her hair?

Ruby walked the pleasant Parisian streets with their mixture of modern shops and old architecture. Yippee loved the tree-lined thoroughfares and sidewalk cafes. The November air was cold, if not brisk. When the wind whipped just a bit, Ruby almost wanted to turn back to the warmth of the shop or to at least get a jacket, but she pressed on with the walk and her decision. On her flight, she had Googled Paris and discovered that the city was divided into sections called arrondissements—each with its own distinct personality. Arno and Aimee lived in the 15th arrondissement, which was awfully close to the 7th where she would find the Eiffel Tower. Despite the cold, Ruby and Yippee continued their trek toward the Seine.

Ruby and the Parisians had one thing in common—a love for canines. Many two legged pedestrians had their four-legged friends either tugging ahead, pulling behind, or feigning tiredness and being carried through the streets.

Remembering the lesson she’d learned in New York, Ruby smiled and said hello as she passed. The greetings were returned in a variety of languages, but Yippee’s language was always returned in kind—a bark, a sniff, and a wag of the tail.

Ruby came upon the Pont de Grenelle, a bridge to a man-made island in the Siene. On the island, facing away from the beautiful city, was the replica of the Statute of Liberty gifted by the United States to France after the French had bestowed the larger Grand Lady to America.

On the bridge, Ruby stopped. “Yippee, look.” She pointed upriver. “The Eiffel Tower.” The steel structure was fully visible in the distance. Ruby leaned on the railing of the bridge and sighed. The Eiffel Tower was meant for romance. If only Jonathan were here. What a romantic place for their very first kiss. That is, if he wanted to kiss her.

He had her so addlebrained. She always thought of love as a whirlwind, taking her up and lifting her high so that she would think her feet could never touch the ground again.

What she was experiencing was a gentle breeze that lifted her spirits and made her dream of what was to come.

She didn’t know which was better.

Of course she’d never really been in love before.

She swallowed hard. She could just imagine Jonathan on the tower with her. She closed her eyes and almost prayed aloud. Instead, she let the dream evaporate. She didn’t want what could have been to ruin what truly was in front of her. “Come on, Yippee.” They’d visit the tower another time.

Not far from the bridge was Parc Andrew Citroën, a symmetrical wonderland of cement, trees, fountains, manmade waterway, glass greenhouses, and open space. The park was named after the automaker who’d had a factory in that very spot. Ruby thought she’d died and gone to heaven. Yippee thought so, too, but they were stopped by a well-meaning man who told her that pets were only welcome in one area of the park. Ruby thanked the kind gentleman and found the White Garden where, sure enough, people and pets romped. “Hey, Yip, let's see what friends you can make here.”

After Yippee sniffed around a bit, he jumped up and tugged on Ruby's right braid. Well that was one thing that would change if she actually went through with hacking her hair off. She couldn't rationalize using it as a good excuse not to cut it, though.

“Okay, Yippee. Showtime.” She unlatched the collar and led Wonder Dog in his best tricks. People laughed and a couple of kids clapped at his antics.

One smiling lady tried to hand her some paper money. Ruby laughed. “Oh, no, thank you. Uh ... merci.”
At that moment, an older fellow in a uniform strolled down the sidewalk and started shouting something at her in French. Ruby straightened. Had she done something wrong? “No comprende. Shoot-fire, that's Spanish.”

The man neared, but his volume didn't lower. Though her smile faded, the lady who offered her money chimed in, also in French. She seemed sincere but gave no help until she reached out and tugged on Yippee's leash.

“I get it.” Ruby reattached it to the dog's collar, and the man stopped yelling, said a few more words, and turned his back on her.

Ruby smiled at the older lady. “Merci, again.”

She retraced her steps toward the salon. Why did she want to keep her hair like this, anyway? She liked her braids okay, but Yippee was the only one who would really miss them. Still, something held her back. She'd worn them for as long as she could remember. Could that be part of the problem, her desire to hang on to the past? Maybe Daddy had been right all along about her. She was afraid to move forward with her life.

But look how far she'd come. She'd not been able to imagine actually traveling to all of these amazing places yet here she was in the city of light.

“Such a silly thing to worry about my hair, God.” He'd carried her so well thus far. Ignoring the wishes of her earthly daddy echoed lack of faith in her heavenly one. Both of them only wanted the best for her.

By the time she neared Coiffure de Bleu salon, she'd made her decision.

**
“Eez tres chic.”

Ruby had been unable to look while Aimee snipped away. Now, she opened one eye and then the other. She hadn’t known exactly what her new friend meant, but she got the gist. Ruby swallowed. Was that grown woman looking back at her from the mirror really her?

“And the natural curl in your hair makes it effèminè.”

Yes, it was her, and Ruby liked the new look. “Makes it sorta fluff out, too.” The mirror across the room reflected the declaration. Her sandy-blonde hair framed her face with rounded waves that stacked up just under her ears. The effect was stinkin' cute.

“Your beau, he will find you …” Aimee waved her hand in cirlces. “… irresistible, I think.”

Jonathan? Oh, no. He’d liked her braid. Would he like this?

Ruby bowed her head. What had she done?

The door to the salon opened, and Yipee gave a joyous bark.

“Here is Arno, and he has a special someone with him,” Aimee’s voice carried a playful lilt.

But Ruby concentrated on the single teardrop that fell on her hand. She wiped it away. This was silly. She’d just made a big change, and she didn’t realize how nervous she would be. If Jonathan …

“Is she not irresistible, Jon-a-than?”

Ruby let Aimee’s words seep in. She lifted her gaze to the mirror.

Jonathan stood, cowboy hat in hand, his mouth parted in surprise.

Ruby stood, turning toward him. And then with a big unladylike whoop, she was in his arms.

“I’ve missed you,” he whispered against her ear. “And you are beautiful, as always.”

Ruby couldn’t help it. The tears flowed, and she cried against him, feeling at home in his embrace.

**

Her last day in Paris—with Jonathan—and Ruby had saved the best for last. After they’d spent several days sightseeing, today they had two locations on their itinerary: the art district for Nativity shopping and the Eiffel Tower for what Ruby hoped would be a romantic temporary farewell.

Jonathan arrived at the Brideaus’ for breakfast, a meal they had both agreed was their favorite and not to be missed together, if they could help it. They spent some time with Arno and Aimee before heading out.

No one pointed at her. No weird stares for her, but Jonathan and Yippee did seem to catch the eyes of the women in the crowd. Ruby had to admit, he cut a dashing figure in his Levis, shirt and jacket, and Stetson. He would be en vogue anywhere on Earth.

Ruby had found a cute new sweater to exchange for her flannel plaid shirt. She bought a puppy sweater of the same royal color for Yippee.

The new style felt good.

“You look happy.” Jonathan laced his hand in hers. “This trip agrees with you.”

“I guess I am. Funny, I felt kinda nervous at first but not anymore.”

He stopped and tucked a wayward strand of hair behind her ear. “You are never alone and should always have joy.”

Wow. Jonathan’s time out on the waves had brought clarity to him. He spoke the truth with such boldness, and his words stabbed her heart with conviction. Not like she'd forgotten her heavenly Father had been with her all along. But she'd let her nerves get to her instead of bringing her burden to the throne. “You're right. I know better. I guess I still have a lot to learn about life.”

He winked. “Just something I had to learn after my dad’s death. I’d spent so much time alone when he was with us, I shouldn’t have felt so abandoned. God had to gently remind me that He has never left me. Now, let’s find the piece for your daddy’s Nativity. Aimee said we’d find it here.”

The shop across the street from a beautiful fountain seemed to overflow with gorgeous Santon figurines. Ruby, and a patient Jonathan, spent a happy couple of hours narrowing down her choice to one. A porcelain Mary who looked more girl than woman, yet held a protective hand out toward her newborn. She held it up for Jonathan’s approval.

He never took his eyes off her. “Perfect.”

**

After their shopping, Jonathan left Ruby at the Brideaus’ and went to his hotel to change. Ruby hurried to get ready, throwing on a pair of jeans and a sweater top.

“Oh, no-no.” Aimee rocked her index finger back and forth. “You want this boy—this man—to commit, do you not?”

How in the world had she figured that out? Ruby could only nod.

“Well, he is not going to do so with …” Aimee held her arms out, palms up, and moved them up and then down. “… with these ordinary clothes.”

“I don’t have anything else,” Ruby advised.

“Oh, that is not so. Your poppa, he planned ahead.”

“He knew Jonathan was coming here?”

Aimee giggled. “From what I understand he did not. Until Jon-a-than asked your poppa’s permission. And this is why we have saved this for tonight.” Aimee clapped her hands, and Arno entered carrying a garment bag and the cutest little boots and hat Ruby Joy Buckner had ever seen. She gave a whoop and ran to him, retrieving her prizes.

“You go.” Aimee kissed Arno and closed the door. “Now, Ruby, let’s create a masterpiece for this wonderful cowboy so he will find his way to Texas and into your heart.”

**

Dusk had fallen as they approached the Eiffel Tower from Champ de Mars. Lights illuminated the structure, making it appear golden. Jonathan stopped and stared upward. “It’s something, isn’t it?”

“You could say that.” Ruby laced her fingers with his.

He looked down and smiled.

She shivered at the look of desire in his sapphire blue eyes. If only she could be sure it wasn’t his excitement over the adventure. He had yet to tell her how he really felt, and she longed for a single hint.

They threaded through the crowd near the tower. Ruby paused when she saw the sign that said no more tickets were available for the top level. Her heart fell. Only someone with a fear of heights would visit Paris and not make a trip to the top, but here they were. It was the second level or nothin’.

Jonathan tugged her forward. “You afraid?” He offered her a mischievous smile.

“No. I was just hopin’ we’d be able to go all the way up.”

He pulled out his wallet and slipped out two tickets. That smile was wicked in its ability to melt Ruby’s knees.

Jonathan slipped his arm around her shoulder, and she didn’t care if they stayed on the ground. The gentle breeze lifted her heart, and she soared atop the tower already.

Once they did make it to the top, Ruby stared out into the night sky. “Jonathan have you ever seen anything so beautiful?” She turned to look at him.

His blue-eyed gaze was on her. “Uh-uh.” He smiled.

She folded her arms. “I’ve been meanin’ to ask you since you got here. Why’d you come all this way?”

“Don’t you know, Ruby Joy?” He stepped closer to the wire and looked out.

“Well, I was told you asked Daddy for his permission.”

“I didn’t want to show up in Paris without it. I happen to know he can shoot the rattle off a diamondback at fifty yards.” He tilted the brim of her leather hat backward. “I was just tired of texting you on a hit or miss. As I said when I arrived, I missed you.”

She had to admit, she’d missed him something awful, too. Funny, when he left Texas, she’d been glad to see him go. Now, she’d die if he changed his mind and didn’t move back home.

“Well, aren’t you going to kiss me or something?” As soon as the words left her mouth, she slapped her hands over her lips. Kind of backward, since she’d already said what she shouldn’t have.

A smile teased his lips again. He stared out toward the Passerelle Debilly, placing his hands on the fence. “No, Ruby, I’m not going to kiss you in Paris.”

Sorrow worked its way from Ruby’s heart and lodged in her throat. She couldn’t breathe. He was here, but he didn’t feel the same way she’d come to feel about him.

He leaned toward her. “Because I’m saving our first kiss for a place much more special.”

Ruby held to the fence as the gentle breeze of love gained speed and swirled around her.

“Come here, Ruby Joy.” Jonathan slipped his arm around her, and she released her hold on the barrier preventing her from being whisked away by the feelings surrounding her. She decided she liked this love that Jonathan offered her. She didn’t need a whirlwind, not with him to keep her grounded.

“I sure am glad that we made this first trip here together,” he whispered against her hair. “I’m happy for the time we’ve had here, and”—he turned her toward him and brushed his hand tenderly against her cheek—”I can’t wait to see you back home in Texas. I love what this trip is doing for you. I can see the confidence you’ve gained.”

She did feel confident, even the next day, as she bid au revoir to Jonathan, who had a later flight back to the States, and to her new friends. The non-English signs all over the airport didn't bother her so much.

Settling in her window seat on the plane, she pulled out her itinerary and the information pamphlet for South Africa. 



Check back tomorrow for Chapter Eight of A Ruby Christmas.

Our authors are blogging all sorts of fun posts, interviews, articles, devotions and more during the next couple of weeks too, so we'll try to keep an updated list so you can visit. Most of them are changing posts as often as we are, so if you see their names listed more than once, check out all the links, because it's a different post.


Tuesday, December 10

For the Pinterest contest, visit Chapter Seven's Pinterest image and Marji Laine's blog
FAY LAMB on INNER SOURCE
PHEE PARADISE hosts MARJI LAINE for guest devotional on Delighted Meditations

From Monday, December 9

From Friday, December 6

For the Pinterest contest, visit Chapter Five's Pinterest image and Jerusha Agen's blog
DIANNE E. BUTTS
FAY LAMB posting on INNER SOURCE
JERUSHA AGEN guest posts at SERIOUSLY WRITE blog
MARJI LAINE Chapter 5 Devotionon Faith~Driven Fiction
MARJI LAINE Devotional about Light on A Woman Like Me Blog
PHEE PARADISE on Delighted Meditations

From Thursday, December 5

For the Pinterest contest, visit Chapter Four's Pinterest image and Ruth O'Neil's blog
DIANNE E. BUTTS
FAY LAMB posting on INNER SOURCE
MARJI LAINE Chapter 4 Devotion on Faith-Driven Fiction
PHEE PARADISE hosts Tracy Ruckman at Delighted Meditations

From Wednesday, December 4

For the Pinterest contest, visit Chapter Three's Pinterest image and Fay Lamb's blog
DIANNE E. BUTTS
JENNIFER FROMKE
MARJI LAINE Chapter 3 Devotionon Faith~Driven Fiction
FAY LAMB guest devotional at Phee Paradise's Delighted Meditations

From Tuesday, December 3

For the Pinterest contest, visit Chapter Two's Pinterest image and Dianne E. Butts' blog
FAY LAMB posting on INNER SOURCE
MARJI LAINE Chapter 2 Devotion on Faith~Driven Fiction
DIANNE E. BUTTS guest article about Christmas at Embattled Spirits
DIANNE E. BUTTS guest devotional at Phee Paradise's Delighted Meditations


From Monday, December 2

For the Pinterest contest, visit Chapter One's Pinterest image and J.A.'s blog to compare photos
Marji Laine hosts Sheryl Holmes
Dianne Butts
Fay Lamb
Marji Laine - Chapter 1 Devotional
Phee Paradise

About Marji Laine

Marji is a home-schooling mom of four with the oldest at UT Dallas. When she can't indulge in her passion for storytelling, she's transporting teenage volleyball players, teaching writing classes at a local co-op, and directing the children’s music program at her church. She loves acting in musical comedy, has directed many stage productions, leads a worship team, sings in her church choir, coordinates high school classes for a large home-school group, scrap-books, crochets, and designs Love Story books for newlyweds. She invites readers to unravel their inspiration, seeking a deeper knowledge of the Lord’s Great Mystery that invites us all.
Visit Marji's website: Marji Laine


Contributing Author to The Christmas Tree Treasure Hunt
** Amazon Bestseller **


Grace takes delivery of a package and her life is turned upside down by nine sealed mystery envelopes from her late grandmother. Grammie’s instructions require Grace to take the journey of her lifetime, not only to far off places, but also into the deepest parts of her heart. As she follows the trail laid out for her and uncovers her family’s darkest secrets, Grace is forced to confront the loss and betrayal that has scarred her past and seek the greatest Christmas Treasure of all.



What do stories about a high school principal with a mean reputation, a doctor searching for his dream car, an ad executive still in love with his ex-wife, a clueless husband, a graduating grad student trying to buy a cup of coffee for his ladylove, and a missionary on furlough have in common? Romance.

Authors Marji Laine, Jennifer Fromke, Lynda Schab, Stephanie Craig, Traci Tyne Hilton, and Peggy Cunningham, each give you a unique story: their Heart Bouquets especially for you.





A Dozen Apologies
Coming Valentine's Day
2014

Mara Adkins, a promising fashion designer, has fallen off the ladder of success, and she can’t seem to get up.

In college, Mara and her sorority sisters played an ugly game, and Mara was usually the winner. She’d date men she considered geeks, win their confidence, and then she’d dump them publicly. When Mara begins work for a prestigious clothing designer in New York, she gets her comeuppance. Her boyfriend steals her designs and wins a coveted position. He fires her, and she returns in shame to her home in Spartanburg, South Carolina, where life for others has changed for the better.

Mara’s parents, always seemingly one step from a divorce, have rediscovered their love for each other, but more importantly they have placed Christ in the center of that love. The changes Mara sees in their lives cause her to seek Christ. Mara’s heart is pierced by her actions toward the twelve men she’d wronged in college, and she sets out to apologize to each of them. A girl with that many amends to make, though, needs money for travel, and Mara finds more ways to lose a job that she ever thought possible.

Mara stumbles, bumbles, and humbles her way toward employment and toward possible reconciliation with the twelve men she humiliated to find that God truly does look upon the heart, and that He has chosen the heart of one of the men for her to have and to hold.