Congratulations to GoodReads winner!

November 6, 2009 at 8:53 pm (contest, fiction book, mystery, romance, romantic suspense, suspense) (, , , , , , , )

teddyCongratulations to Ramona Gault who won an autographed copy of the hardcover edition of LET THE SHADOWS FALL BEHIND YOU in the GoodReads contest.  You can win an autographed copy of the new paperback edition.  The contest runs until November 23, 2009 and is open to GoodRead members in Canada, the United States and the UK.  If you love sharing the books you read with others, GoodReads is the place to be.  

ENTER CONTEST

 

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Roads Unravelling Excerpt: The Chair

February 11, 2009 at 2:30 pm (Uncategorized) (, , , , , , )

The Chair

 

 

As far as Willa could tell, the road to the farm, thirty kilometres west of Saint John,  hadn’t changed in twenty years.  It wound past the hill where she had picked blueberries every summer, and over the creek.  She stared out the truck window, jerking forward as Don shifted gears. The house was gone, burned down long ago.  The clothesline pole leaned drunkenly.  The root cellar had caved in, and the outbuildings looked ready to follow suit.  The barn was a hollow-eyed shell.  Fireweed, ragwort and thistles overran the gardens.

      Willa could feel the tension in her shoulders loosening.  She stretched and yawned.  She had spent years ignoring the farm when, all along, there hadn’t been much left to ignore. 

      Don pulled over to the side of the road.  Engine running, he opened the driver’s door and leaned out to get a better look.  He was as lean and wired as Willa was plump and unhurried.  “Goddamned soft and curvy,” he had said on their fourth date.  “Curvy as a double-scoop.”  Corny as day-old chowder, Willa had thought wryly, but she couldn’t resist letting herself slip, effortlessly beneath his cliched charm.  She knew perfectly well that Don was a dreamer, the worst kind, impetuous, high-strung and stubborn.  But he was also honest and fearless and couldn’t walk by a stroller without waggling his fingers in his ears. 

     “This is it, chicka.  It’s ours.  All ours.”  Don slid back inside the truck, grinning like a fool.  Ten years after they met, he was still a salt-and-pepper, leather-skinned version of James Dean.


     “Sure it’s ours, all ours.” Willa laughed as he pinned her into the corner of the cab, popping the buttons on her shirt.  She made a half-hearted effort to shoo him away.  Temporarily.  Remember what Emily said–”

     “Shit.  Who cares what Miss Pucker Lips says?  It’s ours, chicka.  All ours.”   His head slid down her breast.

     Temporarily,” Willa whispered into his hair.  It smelt like peppermints and smoke.  The farm might have changed in the past twenty years, but she hadn’t.  Willa still hated the place.

         ***

They quickly developed a routine.  After scrubbing and bleaching away all the ingrained remains of chicken shit and horse manure, they slept in sleeping bags on the floor of the barn.  Don would rise first and go out to start a fire, fill the coffee pot and dig the eggs out of the cooler.  In a way, it was as if they were just on another camping trip on the Cabot Trail.  But when Willa pulled her sweater over her nightgown and stepped outside to gaze at her surroundings, the truth hit home.  She skewered bread on a two-pronged stick and sat on an upturned log, staring at the sparks and ashes spinning towards the sky.

     Willa knew everything about the farm there was to know.  It was boring, simple as that.  A trap.  She had always had that feeling as a kid and, as she’d grown older, had had to fight the conviction that she was its prisoner.  If Willa had had her choice, the farm would have been the last place she would have chosen to live. 


     Last spring, to her and her cousin, Emily’s, astonishment, their grandmother had left them the farm in her will.  Willa had wanted to take the family lawyer’s advice and sell it immediately, but life had taken an unexpected turn.


     Since the mine in Sydney, Nova Scotia, had closed the year before,  Don had been swaggering around their walk-up apartment.  He’d go to night school, he said, make a few bucks under the table helping out his cousin, Nathan, who owned a contracting firm, rebuild the engine in the truck, regrout the bathroom.   But by the time his pogie ran out, he’d stopped his prancing.  He could no longer pretend that the situation was  temporary.  He’d doze on the Lazy Boy in front of the TV all day.  Willa would come home from the library, where she had been hired to repair and bind damaged books, arms full of volumes of Better Homes and Gardens, and discover that he hadn’t even bothered to start supper.  She grew alarmed.  They seemed to have reversed poles.  The more lethargic and laid back Don became, the more high-strung and sleepless Willa became.  By the time she went home to Saint John, New Brunswick to visit her mother, Beth, at Loch Lomond Villa, Willa’s nails were raw and ragged.  She’d developed a habit of jumping at sudden movements or sounds. 

     Her cousin, Emily, showed up at the home during that visit, the bracelets that circled her arm from elbow to wrist clanking loudly to announce her arrival.  She planted a lipstick butterfly on Beth’s cheek, then turned to Willa.  “Oh, Wilhelmina, I was hoping I’d run into you.  The nurse told me she expected you around twoish.”’ She dumped a gold-wrapped box of Ganong’s on Beth’s lap.

     “Willa.  My name’s Willa.”  Willa reached over to help Beth unwrap the cellophane off the candy.

     “Hey!”  Beth swatted at Willa’s hand.

     Emily made a show of cooing over the birthday card and nightgown Willa had given Beth.  When Beth’s cheeks were bulging with caramel-laced nougat, Emily folded her arms across her chest and leaned against the wall.  “I’ve had a brain wave,” she announced.


     “Ungh?”  Willa sucked greedily on a chocolate-covered cherry, eyeing the gold-plated badge on Emily’s lapel.  It read Coastal Realty, Agent of the Month.

     “As co-inheritors of the farm, we hire a contractor to renovate the barn into a trendy loft.  Then we put it up for sale before the bottom drops out of the market, and double our profit.”

      Willa fought the urge to wince, and reached for another chocolate.

     “Or…..”  Emily paused and gently extracted a piece of lint out of Willa’s hair.  “You and Don could fix it up.  He isn’t engaged at the moment, is he?  I’ll pay the labour costs, and fifty percent of materials.  You can deduct your fifty percent from the split on the final sale.”

     Willa dropped the chocolate back into the box.

     “I mean, if you’re worried about money.”

     Willa stood up and smoothed her rumpled skirt.  “We aren’t worried about money.” 

      Willa had driven back to Nova Scotia calculating how much she and Don would save living rent free for six months and whether or not she could afford to drop her contract with a local antique store that auctioned rare books.  Don eyed her suspiciously while she explained the plan, but by the time she was finished, he was whooping and hollering that this was payback time because they could use the profits for a down payment on a house and quit pouring rent money down the drain every month. 

     Now, every morning, Willa chewed her toast  and watched Don poking at the fire.  While she would worry about the consequences of quitting her job at the library and leaving the antique store high and dry,  he would stand back and size up the barn, eyes shining.  He would strut back and forth swilling his coffee, jabbing a finger in the air as he explained how he was going to leave the ceiling large and open and airy and put in a huge window overlooking the fields.  He’d build flower boxes and paint them periwinkle blue, the colour of Willa’s eyes.


      Willa followed behind him during the day collecting debris in the wheelbarrow.  She would bring it outside and sort what could be burnt and what had to be hauled to the dump.  But she had no desire to explore, no desire to head outside the small circle of familiarity that she and Don were forming.  When Don went to Kent’s to buy materials, she stayed behind.  She had no need to go into Saint John other than to visit her mother.  She let Don take care of replenishing the groceries and ice for the cooler.  Whenever Don left in the truck she would sit on a log facing the barn, reading one of the books she had brought with her.  The book, in a way, acted as a partition.  It blocked out what lay beyond the parameters of Don’s excitement, the sheer joy he received in being a working man, a man with hopes and dreams again.

     Occasionally she would find Don watching her with a puzzled expression.  He would call her to help out with a task, to hack-saw or hammer, pencil in measurements, sand support joints.  But Willa, who was normally ultra-efficient, had become like one of the carpenters on the old television show Green Acres.  Like Alph and Ralph, she was all thumbs and couldn’t seem to keep Don’s instructions straight.  He would shake his head and chuckle and shrug when she went back outside and buried her nose in her book.  Willa figured that he was so caught up in his new creation that he couldn’t care less what she did.  Until the last week of July rolled around. 

     She was handing nails to Don when, suddenly, he grabbed her wrist, eyes challenging hers.  “Go into town and get me a cold beer, chicka.”

     “Can’t,” she said quickly, turning away from him.

     He cursed under his breath.

     She glanced calmly over her shoulder.  “I’m bringing all the trash to the dump.”


     Don sprang off the log.  “I don’t know what the hell your problem is, girl, but I’m getting fed up with this little game–”

     “Game?”  Willa’s eyebrows rose.  She tossed the nails into the pail.  Sweat ran down her brow.  She folded her arms across her chest.  “Emily’s coming tomorrow with an interested buyer.  Do you think that big pile of crap is going to impress her?”

     Don stared for a minute, then scooped his shirt off the floor.

     “I’ve got to clean it up.  Wheel it down to the garbage dump–”

     “Bullshit,” Don muttered, stomping out. 

     Willa felt a flutter of panic growing beneath her ribs.  She hated fights.  She hurried after him, trying to grab the tails of his shirt.

     He swung open the door of the truck, jerking back.  His eyes were dark, as bottomless as the well.  “Are you ashamed of me, Willa?” he demanded.  “Is that it?”

      The question was so unexpected, it knocked the wind out of her sails.  Her hand flew to her mouth. 

       “‘Cause I can’t figure why else you won’t go into town with me, not for groceries, or a cold brew, or just a ride, when I’ve been busting my ass, sweatin’ gumballs–”

      “Of course I’m not ashamed of you!  Whatever made you–?”

      “The hell you ain’t!” he growled, jumping into the truck.  “You go into town once a week to visit your Ma.  But when I ask you to come with me, the answer’s always no.  So I figure it must be me you don’t want your old friends to see.  Don’t take a rocket scientist to clue in to that one, chicka.”

     “No!  Wait–”


     Long after the tires had bumped down the road, Willa stood staring.  Sometimes Don was so dense she wanted to bop him one.

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Excerpt from Roads Unravelling: Rosemary’s Time

December 11, 2008 at 2:32 pm (Uncategorized) (, , )

 

I hope you enjoy this excerpt from my book “Roads Unravelling.”

Rosemary’s Time

 

 

 “D’ya smell God in the air, Claire?”

     “Yeah.” I flush with pleasure.  The sun is warm on my head.  Spring smells delicious.  I clutch packets of seeds in my hands, peering up at Granny Banty.  She’s perched on the stepladder, pouring soil out of a koolaid jug into the eavestrough.  Opaque pull-on rubbers, the type crimson-lipped ladies wear to church, cover her slippers.  Varicose veins knuckle her calves.      

     It’s May long weekend.  Granny Banty’s planting herbs in the eavestrough.  When my Daddy, Edon, comes home from driving truck, he’ll shake his head and say she’s a nutcase if ever he saw one.  He’ll threaten to get a chain saw, and cut the huge oak branches that shield her herbs from the rain and wind, if she doesn’t plant them in flower pots like normal, sane folk.

      I’ll listen through the screen after he’s gone indoors for the pop of a beer can, the creak of the chair.  In my mind, he’s John Wayne, home, safe and sound.  All the bad guys have been run out of town. 

     The jug plunks into a clump of grass. 

     “Seeds.”  Granny Banty’s hand comes down. 


     I rip one corner off each packet and place them, standing up, in her palm.  Already, the different scents hint of wonders to come: Basil, Mint, Rosemary, Thyme.  Warm brown eyes share my excitement.  Her arm swings up.  I imagine her fingers drawing furrows in the  earth, seeds fluttering to their nests. 

     I pick up the watering can, hugging its belly to mine.   Despite Granny Banty’s warning, I’ve filled it too full.  I gaze at the back of her head, counting the rows of tight curls.  I’m the only one she lets help with a Toni.  She always angles the mirror over her shoulder, telling me how to hold the tissue and twist each roller.

     “Got the water jug?”

     “Yep.” I swell with pride.

     “Key-rist!”

     The back door bites my tailbone.  

     “How many times do I hafta tell you to stay outta my way!”  Shawna’s dark eyes flash. 

     “Jayzus, you!” Granny’s mouth tightens.  “Apologize or march right back round.”

     “Aunty Shawna’s super-sorry, turdface.”

     “Shawna!”

     “Hell, Ma, if Claire didn’t flap around with her head in the clouds, she’d see me coming.”

     “Watch yer lip–”

     “I’m late.”  Black T-shirt, mini-skirt, fringed vest swing up the hill.  The smell of Taboo and Export A drift. 

     I stare at the ground, cheeks burning.  I want to see Rosemary.  My friend, Rosemary.  Water from the overturned can runs off the stoop, through the dirt, puddles round a grey stone until it disappears under milky clouds.

                                                            *** 


“I hate you!  I hate your fugging guts, you pissy kussy shlippy gashole!!”

     Having hurled every nugget mined from the bleakest corners of his seven-year-old soul, Darren’s attempt to confront me once and for all crumples.   He leaps off the couch and runs down the hall.  I watch for puffs of smoke, sniff for burning rubber.   But all I smell is mothballs and turkey.  

     “Happy Thanksgiving,” I mumble, trying to ignore the pangs of guilt.  They insist that this, the shattering of Darren’s Kodak moment, is all my fault. 

     Last week, I filled our suitcases and loaded them into the car.  My marriage was over.  I loved my husband, Arthur, but there was no fixing what I had broken.  I could not bring myself to admit to Darren that we were leaving for good.  I had a small nest egg that would keep us going for a few months.  Arthur had owned the house before we were married, and, as far as I was concerned, he owned it still. 

     I threw our suitcases into the car and numbly followed the ribbon of highway to New Brunswick, back to this shack on the Kennebecasis River, unable, despite racking my brain for hours, to think of anywhere else to go.    

     The key was under the mat, just like Aunt Liz had always claimed it would be if I ever had an urge to visit.  I told Darren that I had only come here to cook Thanksgiving dinner.  Then, we would move on.  He deserved a decent holiday at least.  Now, I had ruined even that. 

     I glance at the gold-flecked mack tack peeling off the aquarium, the mismatched TV trays, the fold out couch.  The living room borders on spacious compared to the kitchen, with its narrow, slanting floor.  The cupboards house a mish-mash of gas station glassware.  But there is, I admit grudgingly, an odd comfort in the familiar.


     Every night on our journey from London, Ontario I lay awake in our motel room mulling it over.  How did Claire Reed, part-time mother, part-time food bank volunteer, end up rotting in a dingy bar when she was supposed to be brooding over Tolstoy in a Philosophy of Art night class?  Was that really me, surrounded by tacky Rococo and cheap Sauterne, waiting for my lover,  Reginald, to appear?  Each time he left, the quiet despair did not.  I’m racked with guilt, not for the infidelity, not any more, but because I simply don’t understand why.

     I get up off the floor and step over the hand-held video game.  A large crack runs through its middle.  I knocked it off the book shelf, which I accidentally bumped while dancing with a bunch of carrots.  The dance, performed to the tune of Skin-a-marinky-dinky-dink, was my attempt to get Darren to smile.  He hasn’t since we left home.  I’d rehearsed a speech about new beginnings bringing adventure and challenge.  I never got that far.  The video game tumbled off the book shelf.  When he turned it over, all the frustration that had been building in those bony fists exploded.  My ribs still ache.

     I have lost all sense of time when I finally get up and lift the lid on Granny Banty’s roasting pan.  The turkey is cold.   I should have carved it long ago.  An annoying lump swells in my throat and suddenly the kitchen’s a rolling blur. 

     Oh Darren, my sweet baby boy, what have I done?

     Fumbling with the pantry door, I yank Granny Banty’s homemade quilt down from a shelf.  I  spread it onto the linoleum, fold it in half, then quarters.  I lift the bird by the basting strings.  They’re greasy, hard to grasp.  The turkey swings through the air.  It slips and bounces over the wedding rings sewn with Edon’s flannel shirt.  I wrap it up and carry it to the rocker by the window facing the river. 


     I’m vaguely aware that cold grease is soaking on to my knees, that what I’m doing is absolutely absurd, but it doesn’t matter.  I cradle the bundle to my breast.  It feels right somehow.  This is how Granny Banty used to hold me.  I start to sing, bewildered that I remember the hush-hush, milk-warm, after-a-bath-words.

      Little one, little one

      Fat and all alone

      Mommy’s gone to Moncton

      Daddy gnaws the bone

      Show us a dimple

      Kootchy-kootchy-koo

      Granny’s an old fool

      But she’ll have to do.

      I frown, thinking of Rosemary.   Rosemary!   And I finally admit, with a start, that she has been there all along, flitting between sunlight and shadow, across the miles, across the years, stalking me like a ghost.   I promised myself I’d forget about it all.   Wore my willpower like a crown.  I am startled and shamed by the sneaky, blinding betrayal of self.

 

                                                           ***

To read more see:

http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss_b?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=Kathy-Diane+Leveille

 

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Where do stories come from?

November 19, 2008 at 11:23 pm (Uncategorized) (, , , , , )

herbs1Rosemary: Antioxidant, immune system booster.

 

Thyme: Fights colds and flu, immune system support.

 

The title for the short story “Rosemary’s Thyme” in my book “Roads Unravelling” was inspired by my love of herbs.  On my daily walks along the river, I noticed something growing in the eaves trough of an old house by the shore. I began to imagine the kind of character who might pick that unusual spot for a garden on purpose.  A quirky grandmother emerged in my mind’s eye, but her granddaughter, Rosemary, quickly elbowed her way to the front of the stage.

 

It’s sad to see the garden disappear as the last of the leaves fall from the trees.  But I still enjoy the harvest through the winter via the herbs I gathered and dried in the fall: Bee Balm, cat mint, lavender, thyme, sage, mint.  There’s nothing nicer than catching a whiff of a dish in the slow cooker seasoned with fresh herbs:

 

Stuff a small roasting chicken with:

2 garlic cloves

3 sprigs of rosemary

1 lemon sliced

 

Place breast down over 3 cubed potatoes and 4 cubed carrots in a slow cooker.  Cook on low 6-8 hours until juices run clear.

 

It’s interesting that cat mint, which gets our feline friends revved up, has the opposite effect on humans.  In fact, Herb of Herb’s Herb Farm in Cambridge Narrows, tells me that just stripping cat mint leaves off the stalks for drying puts his wife to sleep. Nature’s remedies are full proof.

 

Starting in December, I’ll be posting excerpts from some of the stories in “Roads Unravelling” starting with “Rosemary’s Thyme.”  So fill up the slow cooker, sit back in your favourite chair and enjoy.

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Review for Roads Unravelling

November 11, 2008 at 3:37 pm (Uncategorized) (, , )

roadlHow nice to read reviews for “Roads Unravelling” on Chelle Cordero’s blog for the Friday book offering:

http://weblog.xanga.com/cce613/680780330/book-review-roads-unravelling-by-kathy-diane-leveille.html

Drop by and leave a comment for Chelle.  She’s amazing.

Kathy-Diane

shadowsfall@kathy-dianeleveille.com

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The setting in Let The Shadows Fall Behind You

October 29, 2008 at 5:36 pm (Uncategorized) (, , , )

Here is the oil painting Evening Tide that my husband and I purchased at a charity fundraiser last week. It’s painted by artist Helga Lobb who moved to Canada from Germany in 1967.  She took several photographs of the coast and then collaged her impressions. My husband and I have often traveled along the Atlantic on the motorcycle at dusk.  I’ve seen the light assume this ghostly ethereal appearance.  Whether I like it or not, it’s the setting that enters all of my fiction: the river I live beside and the ocean it runs into.  The fundy coast is the back drop in Let The Shadows Fall Behind You.

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