With Memorial Day just behind us, I want to continue to draw attention to those who with honor serve in America's Armed Forces and who willingly risk their lives to keep us free. I feel privileged this week to share a small portrait of one of America's military wives -- Author Anne Greene.
Anne is married to one of America's honorable servicemen. She delights in writing about alpha heroes who aren’t afraid to fall on their knees in prayer, and about gutsy heroines. Anne writes both historical and suspense novels. She makes her home in McKinney, Texas. She and her hero husband, Army Special Forces Colonel Larry Greene, have visited twenty-five countries.
A visit to Scotland resulted in Anne's award-winning Scottish historical romances, Masquerade Marriage and Marriage
By Arrangement. A Texas Christmas Mystery also won awards.
Take the time to look them up on Amazon. Both are excellent reads.
Anne's Women of Courage Series spotlights
heroic women of World War II. The first book, Angel With Steel Wings, is also available on Amazon.
To escape her past, Mandy McCabe test pilots planes as part of the Women Air Force Service Pilots.
DESPITE THE OPPOSITION
Major Harvey Applegate lost his WASP wife and doesn’t want any more women killed on his watch. He fights to close the program.
DESPITE THE PAST
They fall in love.
Shirley: I love the short portrayal you placed on the back cover. Tell us a little more about this story.
Anne: Angels With Steel Wings is a story of a woman in a man’s domain set against the dynamics of World War II is a can’t-miss scenario. Angels With Steel Wings paints a vivid picture of courageous pilots facing death in the air while struggling with love on the ground, and wraps it up in a unique twist that will challenge all you knew about the “Greatest Generation.” Steeped in history and framed by faith, this is a tale that takes readers into a world now all but forgotten, and lands in a place that touches the heart in a special way. To know how far we have come, we must understand where we started, and Angels With Steel Wings takes us back on a thrilling trip in time that informs as it entertains. I think this is one flight you won’t want to miss.
This book was endorsed by Ace Collins, the bestselling author of numerous books,
including the WW II series, “In the President’s Service.”
including the WW II series, “In the President’s Service.”
Shirley: Your second series takes us again to Texas.
Anne: It's called: Handcuffed
In Texas. The first book, Holly
Garden, PI, Red Is For Rookie, now available on Amazon.
RED IS FOR RACE
Tracking a kidnapper is an unusual assignment for a private investigator. But Matt is Holly’s lifelong friend. During the race to save him, Holly discovers a lot more than she bargained for. Matt’s in love with her.
RED IS FOR RISK
Holly’s world has never been more dangerous. Her mother’s convinced Holly will end up dead. Holly needs Stryker’s savvy and expertise and is eager for his help, though she risks her heart with the danger-loving man.
RED IS FOR REVENGE
Stryker’s past returns to haunt him. The kidnapper wants revenge. Stryker’s willing to give his life for the woman he loves. The risky, revenge race transforms Holly from a Rookie into a Pro. But between the two men turning her life upside down, can Holly take the heat?
Anne: Holly Garden, PI, Red Is For Rookie, is the first book in a new Stephanie Plum-type mystery series. Except Holly has a Christian world view.
A rookie private investigator tracks a kidnapper poised to kill her best male friend. Will she find her friend in time to save his life? A seasoned PI from a competing firm dogs her footsteps. So why is she falling for the guy? Will she trust her heart to the life-long friend or the danger-addicted PI?
In this first book, Holly progresses from rookie to experienced PI. She gains confidence in her ability to perform her job. She grows from questioning her career choice to realizing she’s in the center of God’s will. She discovers she can be a Christian light in the dark world of criminals. She recovers from being left at the altar and having no love life and discovers two to-die-for men love her. She’s primed for the new PI job the Lord sends her way.
Shirley: This book has also won awards I understand.
Anne: HOLLY won 2nd place in the Daphne du Maurier contest, finaled in the Genesis Contest, won 2nd place in the Fool For Love contest, and 3rd place in the Heart of the Rockies contests.
Anne: HOLLY won 2nd place in the Daphne du Maurier contest, finaled in the Genesis Contest, won 2nd place in the Fool For Love contest, and 3rd place in the Heart of the Rockies contests.
Shirley: Before we share an excerpt of HOLLY, what motivates you to write?
Anne: My highest hope is that my stories transport the reader to an awesome new world and touch hearts to seek a deeper spiritual relationship with the Lord Jesus.
Shirley: Do you have a scripture that inspires you?
Anne: My scripture comes from three verses in Psalm 37: Delight yourself in the Lord and He will give you the desires of your heart. Commit your way to the Lord; trust in him, and He will do this: He will make your righteousness shine like the dawn.
Shirley: How can the readers learn more about you?
Anne: Visit me at http://www.AnneGreeneAuthor.com.
I also write a novel teaching class at my blog www.anneswritingupdates.blogspot.com.
Anne: My highest hope is that my stories transport the reader to an awesome new world and touch hearts to seek a deeper spiritual relationship with the Lord Jesus.
Shirley: Do you have a scripture that inspires you?
Anne: My scripture comes from three verses in Psalm 37: Delight yourself in the Lord and He will give you the desires of your heart. Commit your way to the Lord; trust in him, and He will do this: He will make your righteousness shine like the dawn.
Anne: Visit me at http://www.AnneGreeneAuthor.com.
I also write a novel teaching class at my blog www.anneswritingupdates.blogspot.com.
I am also looking forward to giving away a print book
to one person who leaves a comment.
LEAVE US A COMMENT.
TELL US WHAT DRAWS YOUR ATTENTION TO A BOOK AND WHY
THE GENRE?
THE COVER?
THE BRIEF DESCRIPTION ON THE BACK COVER?
THE ENDORSEMENTS?
THE AWARDS AND NOMINATIONS?
THE AUTHOR?
AN EXCERPT?
HOLLY GARDEN EXCERPT
As I turned away to retrace my
surveillance route, my gaze swept across a man I hadn’t noticed before. He
stood near the ballroom door with his back to me. I did a double-take. An
off-duty cop. I could spot one a mile away. The way he walked, stood, and
observed his surroundings. A cop couldn’t disguise his identity. Calm,
professional, strong, he looked as though he controlled the world. With legs
braced wide, right foot behind, he kept his piece away from the crowd. Even
from the rear the guy looked cocky.
Someone
touched my shoulder. I jumped. While I’d been eyeing the cop, Matt had crossed
to my side of the room.
“Who
invited the police?” Matt jabbed a thumb toward the ballroom door.
“My
question exactly. Maybe one of the rich types demanding extra protection. Or
maybe the cop’s moonlighting as a bodyguard.”
Matt rubbed
his clean-shaven chin. “Maybe. Don’t know.”
“Whatever.
I’ll find out.”
“You do
that.” Matt sauntered back to patrol his side of the ballroom.
I planned
to check the cop out, but didn’t want to meet him this way. I had an image to
project. I was an investigator. A professional. Strong. Independent. Cool.
Granted, I had a lot to learn, but I sure didn’t want to be seen on Valentine’s
night appearing to shop for a man at a meet-a-thon. In a town as
closely-connected as Dallas, if we met in the line of fire–and I had no doubt
we would—he’d never take me seriously. Some time tonight I’d inform him I was
actually working.
I policed
my half of the room then headed back toward the Champion Wrestler table.
Big, warm
fingers grasped my arm with just enough pressure to make me brake and take
notice. The dark-haired, fine-looking man extended his other hand. A sense of
recognition nagged me. But I didn’t know him.
He sat with his back to the wall at
the Attorney table catty-cornered to
the wrestlers’ enclave. I shook his waiting hand, feeling warmth and solid
strength I hadn’t expected to find in a lawyer’s grip. He wore his dark suit
like other men wore uniforms. Daring. Proud. Indomitable. Candlelight reflected
mystery in his brown eyes. With the kind of smile you see on a man given an
unexpected dish of ice cream, he stood and offered me the empty chair his
polished wingtips had guarded. With the chair now free, a bevy of females flew
over from different tables and circled him.
“Sit a
while.”
His compelling expression excluded
everyone in the room but me. It was an invitation I didn’t want, but my feet,
aching from the unaccustomed spike heels, did. So I slid into the seat.
“Thanks, but just for a minute.”
Sophisticated
women glared—shoppers vying for the attorney’s attention. He flashed them a
smile and motioned to the nearby Champion
Wrestler table. “Those men want to meet
you.”
“I’ll be
back.” One woman, wearing heavy eye liner, trailed her hand along the top of
the attorney’s chair and threw him a seductive glance before she moved away.
The other ladies stepped over to the strong men’s den.
“Thanks,
man.” One wrestler nodded, his long blonde hair falling into his square-jawed
face.
I turned to
the attorney, a real James Bond type. Unwanted sparks ignited my insides. Too
intense to be handsome and too electric to be ignored, he was big, tense, and
concentrated. I’d never met a man who looked so ready for adventure.
Here was trouble masquerading as charm.
“They’re gonna love this at the
office,” Bond drawled.
I blinked.
The heat in his eyes warmed me like sun-melted chocolate. The challenge in his
steady gaze stiffened my backbone.
“The
office?” I noticed the bulge under his armpit not quite hidden by his
well-fitting dark suit jacket. Tingles trilled my spine.
“Stryker
Black. You’re Holly Garden.”
Recognition
hit me. The out-of-uniform cop I’d spotted standing in the foyer with his back
to me. How had he settled in so quickly? His proximity caused my eyelid to do
its thing. Most people never see my twitch. I hoped Stryker didn’t. The quivers
make me look unprofessional.
“How do you know my name?”
“Looked up
your file at our office.”
Suspicion
brought sudden anger biting into me like the Genesis serpent. To keep my temper
in check I whispered. “You’re a police officer?”
“Used to
be. Now a PI. Ace Investigations.”
I shot to
my feet, snagged a four-inch stiletto on the chair rung and lurched forward,
catching the table’s edge to keep from landing in his lap.
“I knew
it!” Mom.
With my nose inches from his ear, his
masculine scent broke through my protective aura. Trying not to breathe in his
woodsy, nautical aroma, I scooted away.
Because I
wasn’t breathing freely, my whisper sounded weird and nasal. “I want you to
leave. At once.”
“Why should
I?”
I stared
and forgot to lower my voice. “You’re not needed.”
The four
lawyers seated around Stryker perked up. Fat and thin, they gazed at me like I
was a valuable bequest in a contested will. One leaned so far forward on the
table his French cuff dipped into his coffee.
Stryker
remained cool. “I’m sure you’re acquainted with a lady named Violet
Garden.”
My palms turned
sweaty.
My own
mother thought I couldn’t fill Dad’s shoes. She thought I didn’t have the guts
to be a detective. She thought I’d fail. Knees weak, I slid back into the chair
and gazed down. My fingers itched to fiddle with the clasp on my glittery bag,
but I held them still. I couldn’t let the PI see how his words curdled my
self-esteem.
“Security
was the word Ms. Garden used.”
I spoke
low, not wanting anyone else to hear. “She didn’t. She couldn’t.” I clamped my
lips. He didn’t need to know how his words upset me.
“Hard to
believe?” He gave me a hard-boiled, tight-lipped Bogart smile.
Sitting so
close, he didn’t look like a cop. Or a PI for that matter. More like a very,
very sexy bad guy. Mafia or something. My throat closed. How could Mom do this
to me?
“Mom asked
for you? Personally?”
“She asked for Ace’s top man.” His
dark eyes spoke of secrets, hinted of danger. Pulled me in even as they warned
me off.
I
whispered, “Luck of the draw?”
We’d been
talking in hushed tones, but now the PI, a beguiling smirk on his face, spoke
louder. “I won the lottery.”
One lawyer
said, “I’ve got to remember that line.”
The other
lawyers grunted agreement.
Their
responses helped me regain my poise. I turned back to the PI.
“Okay, you work for our competition
. . . and you’re here?” I’d staked out Ace Investigations to see what I was up
against, so why hadn’t I laid eyes on him there? And he was an eyeful. Plus he was feeding me a line. And good at it. Too
good.
I scooted my chair away from him.
Not that long ago I’d been dumped by another charmer. I wasn’t about to nibble
this bait.
Even if I
had wanted to chance another romance, God laid out other plans for me. I had a
new vocation. I had Dad’s murder to solve and his reputation to sanitize. I
needed to prove to the city of Dallas and its entire police force that Dad
hadn’t been a dirty Private Investigator. If I failed, our investigative firm
would dribble on down the drain. I lifted my chin. Even if I had time to spend
with a man, I’d never choose this smoothie. But, I did need to size up the
competition.
Investigator Rule Number One – know your
enemy.
So, I did
an about face and turned on the sugar. “Stryker, is it?” I smiled sweetly. “I
thought I had every PI in Dallas pegged. Glad to meet you.”
Stryker’s
focused expression didn’t change. “Likewise.” He laid a strong hand on my bare
arm, raising the hair with a single light touch. “Stay a minute more. Tell me
about yourself.”
A male
voice interrupted Stryker. “Let’s be judicious here. Fair’s fair. There’re four
attorneys at this table and one lovely woman. Time to share. My name’s Jeff
Davidson of Davidson, Hillyer & Greene. I’m sure you’ve heard of my firm.
And this is . . . .”
While Jeff
introduced the other three suits, Stryker leaned back and scanned the room,
doing his security thing. With me quickly shaking hands around the table, the
trio of women who’d huddled around Stryker earlier made their move. Rising from
the nearby Champion Wrestler table as if directed by an
unseen choreographer, they mobbed Stryker.
I sucked in
a breath. His mouth hanging ajar, Stryker looked stunned. Three wrestlers stood
too, pushed aside their chairs, and towered over Stryker. I glimpsed Matt
striding across the ballroom toward us, security face on.
The big
blond wrestler, who seemed to be their leader, rasped, “We wasn’t just
twiddling our thumbs over here. We was talking with these ladies.” His
expression looked downright testy. He raised a fist, looking about to deck
Stryker.
The three
glamour girls stepped away from Stryker and melted into the crowd.
Prepared to intervene, I grabbed my
purse and wriggled to the edge of my seat, curious to see what Stryker would
do. This was plain screwy. Were the wrestlers trying to pick a fight?
Stryker’s
face grew leaner, showing clear bone definition. A paper-thin scar slicing
through his cleft chin whitened. He stood and faced the three muscled men,
their crimson cummerbunds flashing.
“So?”
“So, we
want our ladies back.”
“Take
them.”
“Cool it
you guys.” I unclasped my purse, thinking I might need my gun.
The fourth
wrestler jumped to his feet, tipping his chair backward. It landed with a thud
on the carpeted floor. A solid wall of red cummerbunds circled Stryker. I shot
off my chair. One mat-pounder grabbed my arm and hauled me toward his table.
“We want this one too.”
I jerked my
arm loose. My abrupt movement caused my ankle to turn in one of the tricky
stilettos.
“Yeow!” I stumbled. Before I could
catch my balance, I lost the shoe on my twisted ankle, and fell to my knees.
Events
fast-forwarded. Two wrestlers pummeled Stryker. Someone kicked my evening bag.
On hands and knees, I chased it under the Attorney
Table to rescue my gun. I glimpsed Matt confronting the other two
wrestlers, and attempted to squirm out to escort the muscle-jocks to the
nearest exit. Crouched on hands and knees, my dress tightened around me like
shrink wrap and stopped me cold.
A lawyer
squatted beside me. “Let me help—”
One of the wrestlers slammed him
backward with an open palm. With a crash and tinkle of broken glass, the table
flipped onto its side. A white and silver rain of crockery and cutlery poured
down. A plate of romaine lettuce and blue cheese dressing slapped against my
thigh, releasing the odor of salad-splashed velvet. My vision slowed as if I
starred in a surreal movie. Mind scanning possible actions, my skirt creeping
higher above my knees, I crawled free.
Was this a
diversion for a robbery? I had to take control. Still on hands and knees, I
smelled something acrid and sulfuric. The lighted candle centerpiece smoldered
at the edge of the tablecloth. With a soft whoosh, flames leapt to life. I
grabbed the closest thing at hand, a large slab of prime rib probably from the
same uneaten place setting as the salad, and beat the flames with the semi-rare
meat until they died in wisps of smoke beneath charred beef. Smelling cooked
steak mixed with scorched hair and fearful of what I would find, I touched my
eyebrows and bangs. Crispy but still there.
Gasps and
murmurings told me the crowd grew around us. Heavy feet shuffled and I jerked
my hand back to keep it from getting trampled. Fists struck flesh accompanied
by grunts and colorful language. I couldn’t believe such a brouhaha erupted in
our little corner of the big room with so little provocation. Something smelled
fishy and it wasn’t the shrimp cocktail sauce dripping onto the carpet. I was
about to spring to my feet when a body thudded to within an inch of me and lay
still.
Stryker.
One look at Stryker’s bloody face and I all but keeled over him.
My pulse spiked, pushing me into
Unthinking Mode. Okay, so I lost it here. Thoughts of my job flew out the
window. But only for a few seconds.
Still on my knees, I fished in my
clutch for my cell, and dialed 911. Dead zone. Resisting the urge to throw the
instrument at a wrestler, I dropped the useless thing back into my purse.
As quickly as the commotion
started, it ended. The dull thud of fists on flesh died. Fingers and knees
digging into the thick carpet, I lifted one hand and pressed two fingers
against the carotid artery in Stryker’s muscular neck. Warm skin. Steady
pulsing.
Lord, please don’t let him be badly hurt.
With all
quiet above me, I assumed Matt held everything under control. I loosened
Stryker’s red power tie and rubbed his big, limp hand between both of mine. His
lashes, fanned across those high cheekbones, looked longer than any man had a
right to own. Other than being a little bloody and lying motionless, he looked
fine. Too fine. But I didn’t have to remind myself that Mom hired him. A twinge
of joy that it was him, not Matt or me lying on the floor, layered in an
uncomfortable guilt that squashed the relief, so I said another quick prayer
for the competition PI.
He groaned and his eyelids
fluttered.
Men’s
polished dress shoes, accompanied by glittering high heels, moved close enough
for me to touch. One wrestler squatted next to me. “Here, let me—”
“No. Don’t
touch him.” I swatted the man’s beefy hand away from Stryker.
Stryker
opened his eyes, relieving my worry about him. But Mom would arrive any minute
for her grand entrance, and I desperately wanted her to gawk at her security being carried away in an
ambulance.
So I said to the wrestler, “I’ve
got to call EMS.”
Furor at
the ballroom doors made me look up. “That was fast. Matt must have gotten
through to EMS.” But doubt nagged my brain. Too fast. Way too fast.
Before I
could follow up my hunch, the crowd opened up and two blue-uniformed men,
carrying oxygen paraphernalia, a stretcher, and a medical kit hustled to the
table.
The EMS
team ignored Stryker who lay concealed by a drooping tablecloth, with only his
long legs and feet protruding. One Medic knelt beside another stretched-out
body. I struggled to my feet, red dress hiked almost mid-thigh, to identify the
victim.
“Matt!” I
rushed over in time to see the medic jab a syringe into my co-investigator’s
limp arm.
Electrical
impulses spiked my nerves. I’d never seen an emergency team do that. The first
medic finished a cursory check for broken bones, then both men heaved Matt onto
the stretcher and hustled him through the crowded ballroom.
Juggling on
one four-inch heel and one bare foot, I elbowed my way through the crowd after
them. “Which hospital?”
They
mumbled something incoherent and disappeared through the hotel’s exterior door.
Lord,
please take care of Matt. He’s a good friend. Keep him safe.
I started after them.
The
blond wrestler clutched my arm, stopping me from following them out to the
ambulance. Then he smiled crookedly, straightened his bow tie, and righted his
cummerbund.
“Don’t look so worried, the PI’s in
good hands.”
I
stiffened. “How do you know Matt’s a PI?”
The
wrestler frowned and clamped his lips.
Shivers
snaked my spine. Something was very wrong.
Hi Shirley, Thanks so much for letting me visit with your readers. You have a wonderful blog site.
ReplyDeleteGlad to have you here, Anne. I wish you the best with your writing. On the question asked above, what draws me to a book first is the genre, then the cover art, then the back blurb, and finally, I check out the author. Checking out the first few pages closes the deal for me.
ReplyDeleteYep, I do the same. But the cover sometimes misleads. I tend to put more weight on what the first few pages say.
ReplyDeletevery pleased to visit this site and joined commented in his
ReplyDeletecara mengobati sindrom iritasi usus,pengobatan tradisional untuk penyakit ayan,cara mengobati emboli paru,pengobatan gusi bengkak dan bernanah,cara mengobati tonsilitis kronis,cara mengobati laringitis kronis,cara meredakan maag kambuh,obat stroke hemoragik tradisional,cara menyembuhkan radang panggul,cara mengatasi pegal di leher dan pundak,obat penghancur lemak jahat,