Showing posts with label Free Kindle book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Free Kindle book. Show all posts

Saturday, July 4, 2015

Summer Recipes Keeping it Simple


Unlikely Merger is now available and for a limited time, 

Today's recipe comes from Suzy Moore, one of the authors of Unlikely Merger. Suzy has been a blessing to all of us at the WIP/PNP family since we were first introduced in 2013. She's helped us with administrative tasks on several big projects, and we're grateful for her time and efficiency! We were thrilled to have her join us on our latest book.


Marinated Summer Veggies
by Suzy Moore

My grandparents loved summer produce. Grandpa was an avid gardener and Grandma always knew
exactly what to do with the bounty. All summer long there would be a row of tomatoes ripening on the kitchen window sill, and the aroma of green peppers, green onions, and cucumbers hung in the kitchen like a welcome from the garden.

Many of my aunts, uncles, and cousins lived nearby. For the ones that didn't, summer was usually the time they came to visit, so there were lots of get-togethers and potlucks and barbecues at Grandma and Grandpa's house during those months of long days in the sunshine.

My favorite summer recipe is heavy on the "summer" and probably a little too simple to be considered a "recipe", but it's my go-to favorite any time we are attending a summer potluck, or just celebrating the season at home. The smell of the vinegar and cucumbers takes me right back, every time, to my grandparents' kitchen and all of those wonderful childhood summer memories.

There are plenty of variations on this basic rendition, and the amount of each ingredient can be tweaked to suit your individual taste.

You'll need:

2-3 cucumbers, peeled and very thinly sliced
1 large white onion, sliced into thin rings
Equal parts vinegar (I like to use apple cider vinegar) and sugar-approx. 2/3 cup
Dill and black pepper to taste

Layer the vegetables in a bowl and pour the vinegar, sugar and spices on top. Stir well to mix. Cover and let marinate in the refrigerator for as long as you can wait before digging in!

You can also add a teaspoon or so of your favorite oil, fresh tomatoes, chopped green peppers, and any other spices you may like.

Summer fare that is full of flavor and aroma, and simple enough to throw together quickly without missing out on any of the fun in the sun.  Happy summer eating!

****

Suzy Moore loves to get lost in a good story. She has a passion for the written word and for the many ways it can touch and uplift through the sharing of lives, stories, and most importantly the Gospel. She lives in rural Missouri with her husband and five children where she is a homeschooling mom, free-lance editor, and wanna-be farmer of all things natural and delicious. Connect with her on Facebook at her website






Monday, June 29:
            

Sunday, June 28:


Friday, July 3, 2015

Summer Recipes Potato Salad and Cucumbers

Unlikely Merger is now available and for a limited time, 

We invited our authors to share some of their favorite summer recipes. Today's recipe comes from Jennifer Hallmark, one of the authors of Unlikely Merger.

My Favorite Summer Recipes
Jennifer Hallmark

When I think of recipes in the summer, I picture fresh vegetables straight from my garden. We usually plant broccoli, tomatoes, squash, cucumbers, cabbage, potatoes, beets, corn, green beans, and pink-eyed purple hull peas. Yes, the peas are a southern must-have.

I love to share recipes, so today I’ll post two summer staples: potato salad and cucumber salad. It seems no family reunion or church social is complete without potato salad and some fixin’s of cucumbers.

The cucumber recipe is simple. You simple take 6-8 cucumbers, then peel and slice into a large bowl. Mix one cup of mayonnaise with either 2 tablespoons of vinegar or milk, depending on whether you like the vinegar taste. We prefer milk. Then add about a teaspoon of Morton Nature’s Seasons seasoning blend and whisk until smooth. Pour over cucumbers and chill. Enjoy!

My potato salad recipe is not too hard either. I place around four pounds of potatoes in a large Dutch oven, unpeeled, and boil until tender. I find they have a better consistency if I leave the peel on when boiling. Then I peel, and cut into cubes. I add four boiled eggs, chopped, and ¼ cup chopped onion (if you like onion). From here, I estimate. I’ll start by adding 1 ½ cups of mayonnaise, two tablespoons of prepared mustard, and ¼ cup of relish, either dill or sweet. I go back and forth, depending on whether I want the tang or the sweet. A couple of teaspoons of Nature’s Seasons seasoning blend and maybe a touch of pepper complete the salad. I stir it all up and then taste and add mayo or relish until it’s just right.

Yum! Delicious summer recipes, sure to please.

****

Jennifer Hallmark: writer by nature, artist at heart, and daughter of God by His grace. With over 200 articles and interviews on the internet, her attention has moved to southern fiction and YA fantasy.


Her first book published in early 2014, a multi-authored romantic comedy novella, called A Dozen Apologies. She is currently shopping her YA series, Journey of Grace: Realm of Ecclesia, and a contemporary southern fiction novel, When Wedding and Weather Collide.


She is also part of two compilation projects to be released later this year. Unlikely Merger is a romantic novella, a sequel to A Dozen Apologies. She’s also contributed to the anthology: Not Alone: A Literary and Spiritual Companion for those Confronted with Infertility and Miscarriage.


Jennifer shares a writer’s reference blog, Writing Prompts & Thoughts & Ideas…Oh My! with friends, Betty, Tammy, Allison, Karen, Cari, Holly, Anne, Robin, and Betty B.


Jennifer and her husband, Danny, have spent their married life in Alabama and have a basset hound, Max. Their daughter Mandy is married to Tim, and has given them two beautiful granddaughters, Ava and Sadie. Their son, Jonathan, is currently working in the food industry and trying to complete his degree in business.


She loves to read detective fiction from the Golden Age, watch movies like LOTR, and play with her two precious granddaughters. At times, she writes.


You can find Jennifer on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest.


Monday, June 29:
            

Sunday, June 28:


Tuesday, June 30, 2015

That's When the Crazy Started ...

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


My Craziest Summer
Guest Post by Julie Arduini


I was in my early 20’s, fresh out of college and ready to start a new life. I was at a crossroads because I was new in my relationship with Christ but clueless how to live in a way that was pleasing to Him when I was still hung up on what others thought of me.

Entrusted
Available on Amazon & Kindle
I was also new in my first real job, matching senior citizens with not-for-profit agencies. It was a position that gave me the opportunity to network with the community. My friend wanted to help me along, so she invited me to join the local service club in town. Although I felt young, awkward and lost amidst a sea of older men, I decided to participate with her.

That summer the club was having a big meeting at the local hotel. It was a big deal and the members were expected to be there. Enough time has passed that I don’t remember what the agenda was, but I do recall being bored.

Bored and me never have a happy ending.

The leaders called for a break so I decided to explore the other conference rooms in the hotel. Another woman joined me and together we headed for the hallway where the walls seemed to shake from the rockin’ music.

“I think it’s a wedding reception.” I gestured for her to follow me as I decided to walk by.

And that’s when the crazy started.

A man from inside the party, where alcohol was definitely flowing freely, pointed to me and waved me in. I shook my head, panicked that I would be the pioneer wedding crasher long before Hollywood decided to make a movie about it. The guy wouldn’t take no for an answer and went into the hallway. He begged me to join him, taking me by the arm, and leading me inside.

Part of me was excited, it was the kind of unpredictable fun college had been. Yet, as a new Christian, the place was full of choices that were going to lead me down a path I didn’t want to go down anymore. Most of all, trespassing.

“I can’t be here. I’m not invited.”

He grinned, his glassy eyes full of spunk. “Don’t worry. I’ll vouch for you.”

I tried to back out. “I have a meeting. I really can’t be here.”

He reached for my hand. “C’mon, let’s dance. Bob won’t mind.”

I looked around trying to find who this “Bob” was.

The stranger continued. “He’s my best friend from college, the groom.” Then he dropped Bob’s last name. A name I knew.

I jerked my hand away and headed for the door. “That’s my dentist. I can’t be here.” I thought about when my next appointment was. Of all the times to have an appointment, it was Monday. I had a hard enough time facing the guy. He was young and resembled Top Gun Tom Cruise. Something my mom didn’t miss when she sent his news article to my college mailbox.

“You know him? You have to dance with him. Let’s go.” Oh this guy wasn’t giving up.

By then I was in an all-out panic. I back-pedaled out of there so fast that the college friend couldn’t keep up. I high-tailed it back to the stuffy meeting prepared to sit straight and pay attention for the rest of the day. And I breathed a prayer that Dr. Bob would never, ever know I crashed his wedding.

Monday came and I felt confident I was in the clear. I wasn’t sure why the guy was cleaning my teeth instead of being on a honeymoon but I wasn’t going to ask. He asked how I was and I gave the most uninterested tone I could muster.

He continued getting the tools ready, fixing the seat, turning the headlamp thing on. “Anything interesting happen this summer?”

I opened my mouth and he inserted the plaque-scraper-thingy. Even if I wanted to talk, I couldn’t, so I shook my head. Nope. Not one thing. Especially not Saturday at the hotel where his reception was.

“So, Julie. How did you like my wedding reception?”

Busted.

Thankfully, he laughed and asked why I didn’t dance with him and made sure his friend in his state treated me right. But I could never look Dr. Bob in the eye again.

That was a crazy summer.


****


Julie Arduini’s passion is to encourage readers to find freedom through surrender. She knows it has to start with her so she admits she’s surrendering “the good, the bad, and---maybe one day---the chocolate.”

She desires in her fiction to not only bring hope to those struggling with surrender issues, she wants to highlight the various Upstate New York settings she enjoyed for over three decades. Entrusted,Entangled, and Engaged pay homage to the beautiful Adirondack Mountains.

Julie is also one of the authors in the sequel to A Dozen Apologies,The Love Boat Bachelor.

She holds a BA in Communications from the State University of New York at Geneseo and is a graduate of the Christian Writers Guild. She’s a member of American Christian Fiction Writers and the 2011 winner of the JournEzine Christmas Contest. Every other Wednesday she blogs at the popular site Christians Read. She enjoys reviewing books and encouraging others at juliearduini.com.

When she’s not writing, reading or blogging she enjoys taking amateur nature pictures and nurturing youth. With a heart to encourage others, she enjoys interacting with readers through social media and can be found throughout social media @JulieArduini.

She resides in NE Ohio with her husband and two children and is blessed to be a step-mom to two adult children and son-in-law who reside in Wisconsin. All of them know not to mess with her chocolate stash.

Behind the Scenes of Unlikely Merger:

Monday, June 29:
            

Sunday, June 28:


Saturday, June 27


Saturday, June 20

Write Integrity Press: Vote for the Hero!


Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Invitation for Writers

We're inviting writers to participate in our next collaborative novel, the sequel to The Love Boat Bachelor. This new book will release on Kindle June 15, then in December, we'll release all three stories - A Dozen Apologies, The Love Boat Bachelor, and the new book in one print volume in both print and digital formats.

As we did with A Dozen Apologies, we're offering the opportunity for writers to submit chapters for the novella, based on the story synopsis and first chapter that we'll provide by e-mail upon request. 

To be considered, you'll write two chapters of 2,500 to 3,500 words each in the specified character's third-person, deep POV. This story will be much like The Love Boat Bachelor and its predecessor, A Dozen Apologies in that the readers will get to vote for the hero they think will be the best man for our heroine. There will be nine or ten authors writing heroine chapters, along with a first chapter written by the creator of the heroine and the final chapter written by the author who creates the winning hero. 

There are eight WIP authors writing chapters. We will select one - and maybe two - contestants to participate in the final project. The winning contestant(s) will be offered the same contract as the other participating authors.

The deadline to submit chapters is April 15, 2015. 

If you wish to enter, please send an e-mail with the subject line SEQUEL INFORMATION, and we'll send you the information by March 1. [UPDATED: Information packets will be sent out March 3.] Send your e-mail to editor[at]writeintegrity[dot]com. 


Learn more about The Love Boat Bachelor, the characters, the authors, and more with these links.

Interviews with the authors of The Love Boat Bachelor:
Fay Lamb’s On the Ledge:




Marji Laine, Joan Deneve, Betty Thomason Owens, and Theresa Anderson:
            Shannon Vanatter’s blog

Julie Arduini:
            The Love Boat Bachelor is Free

Write Integrity Press:
            Dream Valentine Dates



The Love Boat Bachelor on Kindle. Learn who the readers chose as Brent's true love! And see how his story ends? Or is it just beginning?




Sunday, February 15, 2015

Dream Valentine Dates

We're celebrating romance all week at Write Integrity, so we asked our authors to share with us their dream Valentine date.

Jerusha Agen: I’ll know when and if it happens. [She added a smiley to that comment!]

Julie Arduini: I’d love to return to the Adirondacks. We went to Lake Placid in Fall 2000, and the place we stayed was beautiful. I’d love to go back to Mirror Lake Inn again and walk the streets and browse.

Theresa Anderson: The sky’s the limit? Money is no object and time is not a factor. I'd travel to Italy or England and cozy up in a cottage along the coast with my favorite man, and live a simple life building relationships with locals and loving on neighbors. Then, I'd pause time so it remained Valentine's Day until I got bored and ready to return home. Ah! just the thought is relaxing!

Joan Deneve: For me, I've found the secret to romance is to take the focus off getting the love and attention one might crave and concentrate on giving it instead. Something I might find romantic would bore my husband to tears. So I would want to pick something we both would enjoy. My husband has mentioned a place that he would like to visit and I have to say, it's one of the most romantic things I could think of. After forty years of marriage, he wants to revisit, and recreate, the night he asked me to marry him. His idea! That's what makes it so romantic. Signal Mountain, Tennessee. It is now four hours away from where we live, and it would be a perfect day. We love road trips. I get butterflies in my stomach just thinking about it. So here's the key: Whatever you love to do together ... that's romantic.

Fay Lamb: Ha! I just told my husband my Valentine's dream day would be for him to take his mother out all day while I stay at home. And, no, I'm not joking.

Betty Thomason Owens: If I’m dreaming, I dream big: Musha Cay, David Copperfield’s private island in the Bahamas. Valentine’s Day because it’s warm there, but not here. But if we’re not dreaming, I have a favorite little Italian restaurant here in Louisville where they make everything from scratch, including the tiramisu, which is the best I’ve had anywhere. Difabio’s Casapella…

What's YOUR dream Valentine date?

Don't forget, The Love Boat Bachelor is FREE on Kindle right now! Learn who the readers chose as Brent's true love! And see how his story ends? Or is it just beginning?

And check out the author interviews on

Fay Lamb’s On the Ledge:
Spotlight on Author, Betty Thomason Owens: Port of Call: Grand Cayman with Eliana Grayson






Sunday, February 1, 2015

The Big Game Aboard The Love Boat Bachelor

Brent is in the Caribbean, having just left Aruba and on his way to Bonaire. I've been assured he's a football fan, so he'll catch the Super Bowl on one of the ship's many TVs, but it's anybody's guess who he's rooting for. Will you be watching the game?

We've had a whirlwind week full of adventure around all our blogs, so today, we'll give you a chance to get caught up on all the happenings. Here are some links in case you missed them:

The Love Boat Bachelor

Chapter One - Departing Charleston
Chapter Two - Cozumel with Nora Laing
Chapter Three - Grand Cayman with Eliana Grayson
Chapter Four - Limon, Costa Rica with Renee Kessler
Chapter Five - Aruba with Alyssa Laroche

Come back Monday for Bonaire and the next bachelorette!

Since we're asking our readers to decide Brent's future, Fay Lamb caught up with all the bachelorettes after their encounter with him so we could get more acquainted. She interviews them On the Ledge:

Interview with Jerusha Agen, brainchild of The Love Boat Bachelor
Nora Laing
Eliana Grayson
Renee Kessler
Alyssa Laroche


Brent's been e-mailing his adventures (or misadventures?) to his sister Roselle, and due to some fancy tech work, Marji Laine was able to snag those e-mails for our reading pleasure.

Dear Sis from Outside Charleston
Dear Sis from Cozumel
Dear Sis from Grand Cayman
Dear Sis from Limon, Costa Rica
Dear Sis from Aruba


This cruise has really given me cruise fever - I want to go on one so much! Elizabeth Noyes is our in-house cruise expert and has provides some excellent tips for cruising, in her series Tips from a Savvy Cruiser:

Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Part 5


Monday, we're headed to Bonaire, so come join us. Tuesday and Wednesday, we'll meet the final bachelorettes, and then Wednesday afternoon, we'll open voting so YOU can choose the woman you think best fits Brent Teague.

Also, starting Wednesday, you can send in your list authors you think wrote which chapter for a chance to win. Once you think you've figured them out, send me an e-mail (editor [at] writeintegrity [dot] com) listing the chapter number, the heroine name, and the author you think wrote that chapter. The person who identifies all of them correctly will receive a prize. If more than one gets all the right answers, then we'll have a drawing. If no one has all the right answers, we'll award the prize to whoever has the most correct answers (random drawing if there's more than one.) The winner will receive Kindle versions of all our books and a $50 Amazon gift card! To get you started, we'll let you know - Jerusha Agen wrote Chapter One. But she didn't write one of the heroine chapters, so make your choices from the other seven authors.

We'll be announcing a special contest for writers in the next few days, so stay tuned!

And just in case you're visiting us for the very first time, The Love Boat Bachelor, releasing on Kindle Valentine's Day, is sequel to last year's bestseller, A Dozen Apologies.




Monday, January 26, 2015

The Love Boat Bachelor: Chapter One

UPDATE: 
Poll closes Saturday, Feb 7, 11:59 PM Eastern

Are you ready to set sail on The Love Boat? We're excited to bring you our Valentine 2015 collaborative novella, The Love Boat Bachelor. Each weekday, for the next eight days, we'll post one chapter here on the blog for your reading pleasure. As you read, keep in mind that we're going to call upon you to choose YOUR favorite heroine - we want YOU to pick the woman you think makes the best love interest for our hunky hero, Brent Teague. On the afternoon of Wednesday, February 4, we'll open voting for three days, Feb 4-7, to let you choose his true love. Then, on February 14, we'll release The Love Boat Bachelor in its entirety on Kindle, with an ending determined by your votes. 

Now, sit back and soak up some sun as we launch this fun story! Be sure to check out the links at the end of our daily posts - our authors have some fun things lined up for your "shore excursions." 




THE LOVE BOAT BACHELOR
Chapter One

Brent Teague felt nothing as he stood on the cement landing of the cruise terminal and stared at the huge ship docked in front of him. No excitement, no sadness. Even the dread he’d been feeling had lessened into a numb absence of emotion.
A yawning opening and long, too-narrow ramp slowly sucked a line of laughing passengers into the boat. Their chatter and raised voices reached Brent’s ears as a droning hum. Why was he doing this?
Something wet dropped on his head. He slid his hand over his closely shaved hair then looked at his moist palm. Great. Rain.
Weren’t cruises supposed to be all sunshine and smiles the whole way?
Not for him, apparently. Like the story of his life.
More drops spattered Brent’s head and face as he squinted at the boat. Just because he’d made the drive from Spartanburg to Charleston didn’t mean he had to go through with Roselle’s harebrained scheme.
A ringing sound came from his pocket.
Brent pulled out his smartphone and looked at the screen. Speak of the—He halted his unkind thoughts and took a breath before pressing the phone to his ear. “Hey.”
“You on the boat?” Roselle’s irritated tone held her assurance that he wasn’t.
He waited. Here it came.
“Just get on. I ain’t gonna watch you in no funk anymore.” His educated sister’s impeccable English gave way to the ghetto-speak of their childhood.
“I’m not in a funk.” Not exactly. If he didn’t count the squeezing feeling in his chest that never seemed to go away. “I’m just not sure what I’m supposed to do.”
“You supposed to get on the boat, that’s what you supposed to do.”
He swiped at the raindrops that streaked down his forehead and cheeks. “Running away never fixes anything.”
“Didn’t we just talk about this?” Roselle’s voice pinched with the rhetorical question. “You wasted six years on that chick before you finally got a life. You ain’t gonna waste no more.”
“It’s not like that. I just … need to figure out what God wants me to do now.”
“You told me you were sure what He wanted when you started the pastor thing.”
Brent tried to swallow the lump in his throat. “Yeah. I thought I was.” What if he had been wrong? He was so sure God had called him to be a pastor, but he had been sure about other things, too. Namely the woman who had always held his heart.
“Just go on this cruise until you figure it out. You’ll still get to play pastor and whatever on board. At least you’ll get away from her. Why she had to come back and stay here, I’ll never know.”
That mystery Brent would give his right arm to solve. He’d been happy, had life all figured out, until Mara came back. Why couldn’t she have returned for the reason he thought? Why would God bring her into Brent’s life again only to have her marry someone else and settle in Brent’s hometown?
Brent’s chest squeezed like every other time those questions plagued him.
“You thinking about her again now, right?”
He couldn’t lie, so he didn’t say anything.
“Brenton Teague, you get on that ship, or I’m coming to put you on it myself.”
Brent could just see her hallmark stare that always came with that tone. Nobody messed with that look. “Danny said the chaplain boards with the staff so find whatever special ramp they got and get on the boat.”
Brent nearly smiled at the image of her in his mind, hands on tiny hips and her short, puffy twists of hair bobbing on her head. He wiped more water off his face. “I’m getting soaked anyway. I guess I could get on board, if only to get out of the rain.”
“Nicely put. Have a good trip.”
“Thanks. You—” Brent stopped talking when the background noise on Roselle’s end cut off. He looked at his phone.
Call ended.
She never was one for good-byes.
Brent sighed and picked up the wet duffel bag he had set by his feet. Only one living relative, and it had to be a bossy older sister.
Amusement tugged at the corner of his mouth as he bypassed the crowded walkway packed with passengers holding umbrellas over their heads. Bossy as Roselle was, he suspected he’d still miss her on this trip.
He reached the smaller ramp at the far end of the ship where a uniformed security guy stood. Brent bent to pull his ship’s identification card from the pocket of the duffel bag, thankful that he’d already gone through the pre-registration required of employee and passengers alike.
“Teague!”
Brent jerked his head up to see the source of the yell.
“Brent Teague!” Danny Paulson’s grin mimicked the width of his outstretched arms as he charged down the ramp toward Brent.
Brent managed an answering smile of his own as he braced himself for one of his old college buddy’s enthusiastic, back-slapping hugs.
Sure enough, Danny grabbed Brent and bruised his back in a few places before releasing him with a hearty shake.
Brent laughed, not sure how he managed such a cheerful sound. He looked Danny up and down, taking in his pal’s new look in the white uniform. “Aside from the cute hat, you sure haven’t changed.”
Danny chuckled and patted the extra weight he’d added to his tall frame since college. “The cute hat and my insulation, you mean.” He jabbed Brent’s bicep below the short sleeve of his t-shirt. “Some of us don’t have time to sit in the gym all day.”
“Oh yeah. Being a pastor is a walk in the park, man.” Brent slung his duffel bag over his shoulder and presented his identification card to the security guard who’d kept a careful watch on them.
“Hey, don’t blame me.” Another slap on the back. “I only introduced you to Christ. You did the rest.”
Brent raised his eyebrows at Danny as the security guy waved him through. “Or He did.”
“Ha. Yeah. You got that right.” Danny grabbed Brent’s bag off his shoulder and carried it up the ramp before Brent could protest.
Or had Brent become a pastor as his own idea? For the wrong reasons? Brent shook his head at his internal debate as he followed Danny onto the ship. He just didn’t know anything anymore.
Brent tried to get out of his thoughts enough to keep track of the route Danny took to the cabin and the highlights of the ship he pointed out as they walked the decks at his fast clip.
“Hey, there.” Danny nodded to a couple passengers. “Welcome aboard.” He glanced at Brent. “Are you going to thank me now or later?”
Brent raised an eyebrow. “For what?”
“For what?” Danny guffawed. “Getting you a two-week, paid vacation! Man, sometimes I wonder how we ever became friends.”
Brent stifled a smile. “I thought you said there wasn’t any salary.”
Danny swept his free hand in front of him toward the towering ship decks as he walked. “What do you call free passage on this beautiful cruise ship?” He smiled at another passenger who glanced at him. “Welcome aboard.”
Barely taking a breath, Danny swung around and walked backward a few paces while he gave Brent a fake glare. “I don’t think you realize what I’ve done for you, pal. If our last chaplain hadn’t eloped with that waitress, I’d have had a hard time getting you this spot.” He spun to face forward again. “When you fall in love with doing this, it’ll take some fast talking to get you on permanently.”
“Permanently?” Brent stopped walking.
Danny glanced over his shoulder. “Will you keep up?”
Brent caught up with a few long strides. “I’m not doing this permanently. I’m not even sure about the two weeks.”
Danny shot Brent a look as his mouth opened.
“Though I’m very grateful,” Brent added before Danny could start another tirade. “You’re a good friend, Danny.”
“Aw, shucks. Now I’m gonna cry.” Danny’s grin changed to a smooth smile as he greeted more passengers. “Welcome. Good to see you.”
Brent shook his head. “This is ridiculous. It’s like walking with you around campus at school. You still know everybody.”
“Yeah, but I get paid to do it now. Assistant Cruise Directors are like the official welcoming committee. I get paid to meet and greet and schmooze all cruise long.”
“So you were typecast?”
“Funny.” Danny stopped outside a door and unlocked it. “I also get to boss you around with the rest of the staff.” Danny smirked as he led the way inside the room.
“Now you tell me.”
“Your cabin, sir.” Danny looked around the room as if doing a spot check.
“Everything in order?” Brent teased. Hard to believe Danny was actually managing to cheer him up. Danny always had that talent. Maybe that’s why Brent had hung out with him so much after Mara shattered his spirit all those years ago.
“Dude, you are totally soaked.” Danny glanced at Brent’s wet clothes as he plopped the duffel bag inside the door. “Why don’t you change and come up to the top deck when you’re done? Great view from there.”
He’d rather just stay in the cabin and not have to see anyone. The reminder of Mara wasn’t doing his mood any good. But he couldn’t disappoint the friend who had always been there for him. “Sure.”
Danny took off his black-brimmed hat and ran his fingers through sandy blond hair. “Man, it’s great to see you. I’m glad Roselle made you do this.”
Brent crossed his arms over his chest. “She didn’t make me do it. How do you know I didn’t just jump at the chance myself?”
“Um, I don’t know …” Danny’s mouth angled in a sardonic smile. “Maybe because I’ve been begging you to be our ship’s chaplain for two years, and you always turn me down flat? Does the phrase, ‘Why would I ever want to do that?’ sound familiar?”
“Okay.” Brent waved him off as he grabbed the strap of his duffel bag. “You’ve made your point.”
“Roselle’s right. This will do you good.” Danny’s smile faded as his voice turned serious. “Believe me. There’s a whole world of possibilities out there, my friend.”
Brent plunked the duffel bag on the bed and held up a hand. “Before you start jabbering about fish in the sea, I’d like to get changed. Don’t you have people to greet or something?”
Danny swung the hat onto his head with a grin. “Alas, ’tis true. Contrary to popular belief, the assistant cruise director doesn’t usually accompany staff to their cabins, you know. Only celebrity passengers.”
Brent pressed his palm to his heart. “I’m very conscious of the honor, I assure you.”
“Good.” Danny’s twitching mouth appeared to be barely holding back a laugh. “Oh, you should change into your uniform. It’s hanging behind the door.”
“Uniform?” Brent’s eyes drifted to Danny’s hat. “Don’t tell me I have to wear one of those head toppers.”
“Nope, you’re not important enough for one. But you do get to wear a white uniform and a nametag. We want people to know your name. Makes them easier to approach.”
Brent grimaced. “Right.”
“Try to keep the uniform clean, will you?” Danny saluted with a final grin. “See you up top, soul brother.”
Danny shut the door, leaving Brent with another unexpected smile on his face. Danny never could get the lingo right, but that didn’t stop him from trying.
Brent took the white uniform down from where it hung on the back of the door. So much for blending in as a normal passenger on this trip. He wasn’t going to get a break from pastoring at all if everyone knew him as the chaplain. Danny had promised Brent wouldn’t have to conduct daily services as some chaplains did, since he was only onboard for two weeks, but it looked like he wasn’t going to get away with doing nothing.
The unexpected but required safety drill that was announced over the ship’s PA system, interrupted Brent’s trek to the top deck to meet up with Danny. Since this was his first cruise, he made sure to pay special attention.
As the crowd dispersed, he found himself on the other side of the ship facing a stunning ocean view. The rain had let up, allowing a misty spray from the waves to fill the air, seeping into Brent’s nostrils and touching his lips with salty flavor.
He stopped and leaned his hands on the outer rail, the only thing that separated him from the view of the vast sky and open sea. He closed his eyes and inhaled deeply, letting the smells and sounds soak through him. Maybe a cruise wasn’t such a bad idea after all.
“Don’t you love that?”
Brent jumped inwardly at the feminine voice at his side.
A petite, middle-aged woman with short red hair stared at him, standing only inches away from his side. “That salty, ocean smell.” She let out a giggle. “I’d pay just to smell that!” Her voice lifted with nervous enthusiasm. At least she looked nervous, judging from her trembling fingers that tapped the rail. “So are you in the singles or couples?”
“Excuse me?”
“For the cruise. You know. Our groups.” She glanced down at his hand. “You’re not wearing a ring. Are you single?”
He blinked. Did she always skip around so fast? “Yes. I’m single.”
“Oh, wow.” She let out a breath with a smile, still staring up at him. “The brochure didn’t lie. I thought it was just exaggerating. For advertising, you know? To get more people to book this cruise. My brother-in-law says it’s hard for cruises to hit the single set.”
Either he was more out of it than he thought, or this woman was crazy. He couldn’t glean anything that made sense from her rapid-fire statements.
“I told him I wouldn’t be caught dead on a cruise until I got married, since there’s no point, I told him, but then I saw the ads for this one and all the promises they made, and I said to myself, Patricia, this is your chance and you’ve got to go for it, girl—”
“You’ll have to excuse me, but the cruise director’s expecting me up top.” Technically the assistant cruise director, but why quibble about semantics? Brent’s attempt to sound knowledgeable seemed to do the trick.
The woman’s cheeks turned the color of her hair as her eyes widened. “Oh, my. You’re more important than I thought. Well, if you’re single, I’ll probably be seeing you later. My name’s Patricia, and I do look forward to getting to know you much, much better on this cruise.”
“Yes, ma’am.” Brent gave a short nod as he turned away and headed in the direction he hoped would take him to the higher deck.
What was the woman talking about? How did he fit in with the ship’s advertising? If that’s even what she had meant. He felt like he’d missed most of what she said from the sheer speed of it. Brent shook his head. Hopefully the other passengers on this cruise would be a little more normal.
He started to notice the people he had been too preoccupied to see before. Most of the passengers he walked by seemed to be couples. All very happy, touchy-feely couples. Brent looked away from more than one kissing pair of lovers as he picked up his pace, his gaze falling on the clasped hands of young and old couples he passed, and the cuddling people who clustered at the rail.
Two women in tight dresses with simpering smiles waved at him as he walked past.
Another woman who could’ve been a clone of the other two gave him a similarly flirtatious smile, and he nearly hit speed-walking pace as he glanced away.
Was it the uniform?
A loud horn blared, making Brent jump inwardly again. He’d have to get used to this whole seafaring thing.
The ship was moving by the time Brent reached the top deck. The tension faded from his body as he joined Danny at a quiet spot by the rail to catch the view of the ship’s progress into the open sea.
“I always like to take a second to see this.” Danny stared out at the water. “The beginning’s the best part. Full of possibilities and excitement.” He glanced at Brent. “Feeling better?”
“What do you mean?” Brent hoped Danny wouldn’t answer.
“Well, you looked something like a shell-shocked, drowned rat when I picked you up on shore, old buddy.”
“And now?” Brent crossed his arms over his chest, stalling.
“Now? Just shell-shocked.” Danny grinned.
“If I am, it’s those passengers you have on this ship. What kind of cruise is this anyway?” Brent smiled, trying to lighten the mood away from the interrogation he sensed was on its way. “I hope not all the passengers are so … how shall I put this? Into romance, I guess. I don’t think I saw one person down below who wasn’t with somebody or looking for somebody.”
Danny pushed away from the rail. “Dude, you’re brilliant.”
Brent narrowed his eyes at Danny’s sarcastic deadpan as his temporary boss started walking away.
Danny paused and looked back when Brent didn’t follow. “Wait, you weren’t kidding? You don’t know?”
Brent rested his hands on his hips, his stomach starting to churn. Surprises were never good. “Know what?”
A smile pushed through Danny’s apparent effort to squelch it. He stopped trying to wipe the grin off with his hand and chuckled. “You want to come with me to the theater? I gotta make sure the concert’s ready to go and you’re gonna want to sit down.”
Oh, boy. “No, I don’t want to sit down.” Brent clenched his jaw. Just what had Roselle and Danny gotten him into?
“Well, okay.” Danny scratched the side of his neck, shrugged, then stretched his arms out wide. “Welcome to The Love Boat.”
Brent stared at Danny. The laugh had to be coming. The joking grin. The chuckle. Something.
“Really. I’m serious.” Danny’s smile didn’t waver, but the teasing glint in his eyes that Brent hoped to see wasn’t there.
“The what boat?”
“The Love Boat. We’re a romantic cruise. You know, fourteen days of exotic islands and beautiful sites. We are the romantic getaway for newlyweds and anniversary packages. We even have an advertising campaign aimed at singles: ‘Meet your true love on the trip of a lifetime.’” Danny slid his hands across the air in front of him as if following the words on a banner.
The redhead’s comment about the brochure being accurate added pressure to the squeezing sensation in Brent’s chest. “The brochure didn’t happen to have a black guy on it, did it?”
Danny’s blond eyebrows pulled together. “How should I know?”
“Never mind. I suppose you’re going to tell me it’s too late to get off.”
Danny tossed Brent a grin. “Sorry, pal. I’m counting on you now. And I know how you feel about keeping commitments.” He spun around and headed away. “First stop, Cozumel,” he called over his shoulder as if announcing icing on the cake.
Brent ground his teeth together. He had been set up. Royally set up. Roselle knew he never would have set a toe on this ship if she told him it was some romantic cruise. The Love Boat? Even the name made him queasy.
He needed to get as far away from romance as possible, and here he was, stuck in a hotbed of it for two weeks. He couldn’t be a chaplain to couples in love and certainly not to a bunch of single women trying to catch him like a fish on a hook.
Brent might have been wrong about what God wanted for him and Mara, and he wasn’t sure about his calling as a pastor either. But one thing Brent knew beyond a shadow of a doubt.
He was done with romance.
Forever.


Come back tomorrow to read Chapter Two as we visit Cozumel and meet our first special lady. 

Shore Excursions for Monday, January 26:

Marji Laine blog:

Fay Lamb:

Julie Arduini:
           Cruising Experiences

Marji Laine:

Marji Laine:
Interview on Carole Towriss blog: 8 Reasons Romance is a Joke