Today I'm joining other MFRWauthors in a blog hop. My book is a paranormal romance that goes between colonial America and the present Find all the books here http://mfrwbookhooks.blogspot.com
Blurb:
“Not the children.” Willow Carey is awakened by the remnants of a dream she hasn’t had for years. Today she is to return to Indian’s Sorrow, a house she inherited from her aunt. The inheritance has caused a rift with her twin sister. Her father and stepmother have died in an accident. Though she doesn’t want to go to Indian’s Sorrow, she must take charge of her young half-sister and brother.
Reid Talbot, a man she once loved lives near the house with his family. Now a widower, he lives with his sons. Learning to trust him again is difficult but he also has dreams.
Together, they must learn the meaning of the dreams before the whispers of yesteryear destroy their newfound happiness.
Excerpt:
July 1755
She knelt beside the father of her spirit. Corn Dreamer had raised
her and taught her the ways of healing. She prayed he would wake but feared he
wouldn’t. Sorrow rode the beats of her heart and threatened to spill in a rain
of tears.
"Corn Dreamer, must you travel to the spirit world and leave
this one behind?" Her voice cracked and she caught a breath to still the
ache in her throat. "The men have taken the warriors’ path in answer to
Waraghuyagey’s call. The-Man-Who-Understands-Great-Things speaks for the
redcoats, those men who want our help. What have we to do with the ones who
fail to live in harmony with the land?
Not all the pale-skinned men, she thought. A smile crossed her
face. There was one who often stayed in the village and sat at Corn Dreamer’s
feet to learn.
Near a moon ago, a message had come for Hair of Fire. He had left
the Long House and journeyed west. A shiver crawled her spine. Was he safe? In
these days, danger rode the currents of the air the way carrion birds circled a
kill.
She returned to her teacher’s side and pressed her fingers against
his wrist. What had made him fall into sleep yet not sleep? Why did his heart
flutter like humming bird wings and then slow. She wished for a way to rouse
him for he would know the answer.
"Corn Dreamer, spirit father, medicine man, this woman is not
ready for you to leave. What can this one do to help?"
She closed her eyes and sought among the things he had taught her.
An answer arose. "This one must go into the forest to gather fresh leaves
and bark."
From her sleeping place, she lifted a bark basket by the carrying
strap and left the Long House. As she stepped outside, she heard the children’s
laughter and the voices of the women raised in the growing chant. The sound
chased her sorrow.
Across the clearing, her sister sat with the ones too young to
work with the women. Though born of the same mother and on the same day, she
and Willow by
the Stream had been raised at different fires. On the outside, they wore a
single face as reflected in a still pond, but their inner natures were
different. As the first born, Willow
Who Bends had been given to Corn Dreamer to learn about the ways of medicine
and the spirit world. Her sister had been raised as a woman of the clan.
She drank in the sight of her sister. Soon Willow by the Stream would take a husband.
That was good and right, but the change would further separate their lives.
The small ones giggled. Willow
Who Bends waited until her sister finished the story of the fox and the bear.
Then she approached the group.
"Corn Dreamer is no better. This one must go into the forest
to gather fresh medicines."
"A gift for you." Willow
by the Stream presented a small deerskin pouch. On one side dyed porcupine
quills formed an image of the sun, and on the other precious trade beads
patterned the Three Sisters -- Corn, Squash and Beans.
"Are you not afraid to go into the forest alone?"
"Who would harm a medicine woman?"
"The enemy. Those despoilers and their pale friends move
along the trails like weasels seeking prey."
"They were seen to the south and west a moon ago. This one
will go north and east to the place where the willows grow beside the stream.
Since you fear for me, listen with the ear that opens between us. If this one
finds danger, she will cry a warning."
"This woman will listen."
At the edge of the trees, Willow
Who Bends paused, and for a short time watched the people of the Long House.
Her foster mother and the mother who had given her life worked side by side in
the garden. Four nearly-grown boys practiced with their bows under the eyes of
the warriors who had remained to protect the clan. With a wave, she stepped
into the shadows cast by the forest.
As she moved among the trees, she stopped to gather medicines --
birch leaves, bloodroot, ginseng, bee balm. Slowly, she made her way to the
stream where chill waters swept down the hill to join other streams and form a
river.
The leaves of the willows had darkened from pale spring green to
the darker hues of summer. All the catkins had dropped away. She pressed her
hands against the largest of the cluster.
"Sister Tree, one who shares your name has need of your bark.
Will you let me cut your skin?" She pressed her forehead against the tree
and waited for an answer.
The scream that sounded in her head caused her to stagger. Her
legs refused to hold her erect. She slid to the ground. With a terror that
matched her sister’s, through the link between them, she witnessed the
destruction of the Long House. The faces of the enemy burned into her head.
"Not the children!" The scream caused the earth beneath
her body to shudder.
*****
July 2000
"Not the children!"
Willow Carey jerked into a sitting position. Her heart thudded in
her chest. Waves of terror flooded her thoughts. She gulped deep breaths of
air.
My Places:
http://wwweclecticwriter.blogspot.com
BUY MARK
http://bookswelove.net/authors/walters-janet-lane-romance-fantasy-suspense-medical/
What a "rude awakening" she had! Wow. Nice excerpt!
ReplyDeleteGreat ending!
ReplyDelete