Thursday, May 31, 2007

Thursday Thirteen #6

Thirteen of My Favorite Ice Cream Flavors!!

1…. Coconut Almond Joy **Mmm. Just like the candy bar.


2... Peanut Butter **not chocolate peanut butter. I'm a purest. It has to be the one with vanilla ice cream


3... Strawberry Cheesecake*** Cream cheese flavored ice cream with strawberries swirled throughout and mixed with candy-coated graham cracker bits.


4... Blueberry Cheesecake **These cheesecake flavors are SO creamy.


5... Caramel Pretzel ** Yes, Breyers has done it again. Caramel ice cream with caramel swirls and choclate covered pretzel pieces.


6... Phish Food **It is a chocolate ice cream with a caramel-marshmallow swirl and fish-shaped chocolate chunks inside. Oh goodness. I'm getting weak.


7... Banana **Love it with hot fudge!


8... Cotton Candy **My five year old turned me on to this.


9.... Rocky Road ** A classic


10... Tin Roof Sundae **Where did they get this name??


11... Chocolate Chip Mint **green or white. I don't care. Gimme gimme gimme!


12... Chunky Monkey **Banana ice cream made even better!


13... Moosetracks **Vanilla ice cream with heavy fudge swirled throughout, mixed with chocolate covered peanut butter cups. MY ALL-TIME FAVORITE!


What's your favorite ice cream flavor(s)??


Links to other Thursday Thirteens!1. (leave your link in comments, I’ll add you here!)

Get the Thursday Thirteen code here!

The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others comments. It’s easy, and fun! Be sure to update your Thirteen with links that are left for you, as well! I will link to everyone who participates and leaves a link to their 13 things. Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!


Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Book Two Blues

MENTAL STATUS: "Worried." My daughter and I have kindergarten orientation today. It's only about an hour or so, but they have the children go through the motions of getting on the school bus and then taking a short trip around town in order to get used to the experience. I don't know how my daughter will react--but maybe I'm being too motherly.

Romancing the Blog's topic yesterday by Karen Gillespie talked about praise for the debut novel of a new author. Check it out. I couldn't have agreed more with it.

I love love LOVE getting my hands on an author's debut book. Not only are you getting a book that has probably entered a few contests, been scrutinized by critique partners, their agent and/or anyone with eyes, but you're getting an original plot and a fresh new voice to boot. This is the book that got them noticed by a publisher and/or agent. The BIG one. This book made them cross the line from wannabe to actual author.

Yay! All good, right? You'd think so, but what about the second novel? What happens when they go and release the second novel?

I can tell you what has been happening to me. I've been getting severely disappointed.

Ugh! I'm telling you it's the worst feeling in the world--next to morning sickness, that is.

I had specifically ordered a certain author's second book--a continuation of their wonderful debut book--to take with me to the Bahamas. I couldn't wait to open it. I almost forgot to breathe as I saw the Chapter One at the top of the page. Finally, after waiting a mere 12 months, I could see the characters I loved in another zany situation. This was going to be the cherry on top of a great vacation.

Wrong. Wrong. Wrong.

The second book was... okay, but it felt forced and not nearly as clever. The characters weren't as likable to me anymore. I wondered about the plot. The author's voice didn't seem as crisp. And I found TWO minor grammar mistakes!


Needless to say, I had to ask myself, Why? Why didn't I like it as much as the first book? Why did that author rush through this second book? Why didn't someone tell the author this book could have been better? And why didn't someone at the publishing house proof read it better?


Well, I'll never have the answer to those questions. All I can say is since this is not the first time this has happened to me, I am now leery of "second" books. I guess I won't set my hopes up so high next time. I feel terrible about that, too.


Does it always have to be this way? No. There have been many authors who have never written a bad book (to me) or have a bomb with their third or even thirtieth book. But for some reason a disappointing second book surprises/frustrates/saddens/ me the most.

But maybe I'm just putting too much pressure on them.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Startin' Off the Summer

IN THE NEWS: According to Happy News, now when you die, you don't have to settle for a regular old hearse. They've now come out with a Harley-Davidson-drawn hearse! A Long Island funeral home chain invested $100,000 in a three-wheeled Harley and carriage-style hearse for bikers who want to go out with a little style. One of the owners of the funeral homes said, ''It's not morbid, it's cool. It's a way for people to always remember your funeral.''
(There you go)


The weather was wonderful yesterday so we spent a good chunk of it at the beach. I built (and my daughter decorated) a giant sandcastle, which I'm happy to report sustained the ocean waves for most of the day. Funny, but my hubby is usually the sandcastle builder in the family, and now I know why: It's therapeutic!


My mind was so clear and relaxed, I hardly noticed all those women who have NO BUSINESS owning bikinis. LOL!


Anyhew, after we had the family BBQ and everybody cleared out (after 9PM), the hubby and I caught the ending of Jaws on TV. That movie is such a great way to kick off summer. No, really! I just LOVE that movie (except for the part where Quint gets eaten. That part is gross)


Somehow after Jaws, we found a show called Australia's Deadly Dozen. At the time, it seemed to fit with the theme of scary underwater creatures (like toxic jellyfish with 15 feet tentacles or those rock fish that have 13 spikes on on their back that feel like spears)--until the show moved to land creatures and talked about spiders. Particularly, the Funnel-web spider. One of the worlds' deadliest. Yikes!! Its pinchers can go through a toenail and there's no antidote for it's toxic venom. A human can die within 15 minutes and they're pretty common there.


Wah!


Let me tell you, this show will do NOTHING for tourism to that country. In fact, after watching it, I told my hubby I would never swim or set foot there. No offense, Australia, I know you're our friends and all and you talk cool, but you've got some wicked wicked creatures over there.


But I digress...


So anyhow, that was our kick off to summer. Hope your day was nice, too!


Unfortunately, it's back to "work".

Monday, May 28, 2007

Memorial Day

MENTAL STATUS: "Smug." Every time the Red Soxs win a game, the Yankees lose a game. In the word's of Martha Stewart, "It's a good thing."

Today is Memorial Day in the U.S., a federal holiday that is observed on the last Monday of May. It was formerly known as Decoration Day. This holiday commemorates U.S. men and women who have died in military service to their country.


Many people observe this holiday by visiting cemeteries or memorials. A national moment of remembrance takes place at 3 p.m. Washington time.

Memorial Day is also a time for picnics, family gatherings, and sporting events--and a time to go to the beach and annoy locals who live there year round. (I know because I live at the shore)
A lot of Americans view Memorial Day as the unofficial beginning of summer and Labor Day as the unofficial end of the season.
We're planning on spending the late morning/early afternoon at the beach then family is coming over for a BBQ. I'm putting together some chicken kabobs. Yum.
Have a good one!

Friday, May 25, 2007

Bahamas Recap

MENTAL STATUS: "Alert." I had so much rest on vacation that since I've come home, I've been going to bed late and waking up early--and feeling refreshed!

Boy, I wish I was back in the Bahamas! Oh well. All good things must come to an end. I promised pictures and trip info today and now I'm delivering.

I think I mentioned before that I HATE flying. Not only do I hate flying, but I really hate flying when the pilot announces that 1) the PLANE IS TOO HEAVY and 2) WE NEED TO BURN OFF SOME OF OUR FUEL.

Too much information! I did not need to know those things. First off, a plane is already too heavy. Second, what if they burned off too much fuel and we didn't have enough to get our destination? Huh? Huh? What about that Mr. Smarty Pilot Man?

I can't wait until we can actually do that Star Trek materialization thing from one place to another some day. That will be so sweet. But until then, we have to put up with travel in heavy, cramped whale-like trash cans that have no business being 30,000 feet up in the air.

But I digress...

Anyhew, weather was great when we got there and all week, actually. It did rain a few times but only at night (when we were sleeping) and the day we left (woo-hoo!).

We stayed at the Atlantis, which is my favorite all-time all-inclusive resort.

Here's some pics I took. (Keep in mind this is the third time I've be at Atlantis, so I didn't take THAT many)

Atlantis is comprised of four hotel towers (beach, coral, royal and now the cove), but no matter where you stay, you can use any pool, lagoon, or beach. This is the Royal tower. That little bridge in the center is a suite. It's $25,000 a night with a minimum stay of 4 nights. That's where we stayed. (Kidding)





Atlantis boasts one of the largest aquariums surrounding the hotels and pools. This stingray was SO huge, its wingspan was larger than the spread of my arms. He was beautiful.



This is a new addition to Atlantis, since we've been there. It's the Baths Pool. Large columns with hieroglyphs and rock work structure are around this pool that nearly contains 750,000 gallons of water. My daughter FINALLY learned to doggie-paddle here without any floaty/life vest and was able to swim from the tall rock formation all the way to the other one on the right all by herself!

At Seagrapes, one of the restaurants there, they had Circus Dinner night. My daughter is under his legs.


I took this picture walking back to our hotel from the baths pool. The casino is in the center and our hotel (the coral tower) is on the left. Man-made lagoons are in the center. Some of it you can swim in and some of it is part of the aquarium.

Another new addition to Atlantis: The Power Tower. It features 4 water slides and "The Current" (a mile-long river expedition with 4 foot waves that pushes tub riders thru cool rapids/tunnels/tidal waves/tropical landscapes) surrounds it. Fun!



A picture of the grounds from the beach area, looking out.


The marina. Those are harbor front condos, surrounded by yachts.



My hubby going down one of the many cool slides.

One day we went to one of the scheduled feeding times. This stingray went right up to him like a dog begging for food.


My daughter and I in the underground "Dig". It's a maze of archaeological ruins and excavations with most of the aquarium running through it.



Well, I think that's it. Whew! We didn't have time to visit the Dolphin Clay (dolphin interaction where you can swim with and feed dolphins). The food is fabulous, too. I could do a whole post on that, I think.
But I won't. Don't worry.
Have a great weekend!

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Thursday Thirteen #5



I'm hungry right now, so here's....
Thirteen Interesting Things
I've Eaten In My Lifetime (and liked)


1…. Snails ** Escargot, really. But snails are snails no matter what you call them. And they're yummy drenched in all that butter and garlic.

2.... Frog Legs **Tastes like chicken. Really!

3.... Raw quail egg ** To clarify, it was a quail egg broken on top of a piece of sushi and eaten all together. So it's not like I just cracked a quail egg in my mouth or something. I mean, sheesh! I have some standards.


4.... Raw octopus** It kind of goes with the whole sushi thing, but this was kind of weird because it was so tough to chew.


5.... Ostrich **When I saw this on the menu at a local restaurant, I had to order it. Or more accurately, I had to have my hubby order it so I could try it. It's been a while, but I don't think it tasted like chicken. Isn't that a surprise?


6.... Buffalo** Hey, when in Montana...


7.... Caviar** I had the cheap stuff and the $$ stuff in all its salty goodness.


8.... Oxtail** Just had this when I was in the Bahamas a few days ago. Tasted like veal mixed with gelatin.


9.... Rabbit** Sorry Bugs Bunny.


10.... Alligator** Now this DID taste like chicken!


11.... Foie Gras** Do you actually know what this is? It's the liver of a duck or goose that's been overly fattened up. Is that the correct phrase? Oh well. Gross, yes. But delicious.


12.... Gefilte Fish** Maybe this isn't interesting if you're Jewish, but since I'm not, I found it very interesting-but only somewhat tasty. Maybe I had a bad batch or something.


13.... Cow Brains** Yes. Cow brains. And I'm ashamed to say, I had it more than once in my life and nobody even held a gun to my head. My mom made this a few times when I was growing up. Kind of strange to see a brain soaking in your kitchen sink when you come home from school, but I think you have to in order to devein it properly. Oh. Okay. I'll shut up now.



The sad thing is I had much more than thirteen things to put on this list, so I had to pare down my list immensely.


Eat anything funky lately?





Wednesday, May 23, 2007

I'm Baaaaaaaaaack!!

IN THE NEWS: According to FOXNews, "Akano Nzerem, 54, of South San Francisco, is charged with felony counts of domestic violence, mayhem, false imprisonment, battery and making criminal threats.
Nzerem told police he was provoked by his wife attacking him first and calling him a short man, according to the district attorney's office.
Police said Nzerem shoved aside his 16-year-old daughter when she tried to intervene in the argument. He then allegedly grabbed his wife in a bear hug and bit off her lip.
Police recovered the lip from the floor but doctors were unable to reattach it. Nzerem's wife said authorities have exaggerated the extent of her injuries."


Hey! I'm back from my vacation!

So how have you been? Good, good. Okay, shut up now. Sheesh! Enough about you. Let's talk about me.

Well, I told you I was some place hot. And I was. I was....

In the BAHAMAS!!!

Yay! We had a great time! And I even managed to avoid any burning--even with sunscreen that had an expiration date of 4/07. Ooops. That must have been why it was so cheap. You have to remember to check those things.

I'll chat more about the trip on Friday, since tomorrow is Thursday Thirteen and right now I must get ready because I have a busy day back. I have to take my daughter to the zoo for her last day of preschool, I don't have the cookies I said I'd bring, and long story short... I must get fingerprinted this afternoon. LOL!

So let's recap some stuff I've wanted to get off my chest since I left:
1) American Idol.
Melinda was voted off!! I was shocked. But then my hubby went on the explain the age of the people voting.
So I said, "But I voted."
My hubby: (looking surprised) "You did?"
Me: "Yep."
Hubby: "Well, did you vote for Melinda?"
Me: (suddenly feeling guilty) "Uh, no. I voted for Blake. In fact I gave him more than one vote." (Actually, 19 times courtesy of the redial before it was busy and I couldn't get thru anymore)
Hubby: (with smug expression) "I rest my case."
In my defense, I just assumed people were voting for Melinda. I thought a Melinda/Blake showdown would be more interesting.
By the way, my hubby predicted Jordin and Blake from the VERY beginning. And he likes to remind me of that fact.

2) 24.
Does anybody watch this show? I do. Was it me? But I didn't think the season finale was much of a "cliff hanger". In fact, it was tame/lame/zzzzzz.
You're suspect 24. But I'll give you another shot in January.

Well, that's all for now. We'll talk more later.

So what was everybody up to while I was gone?

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Last Post for the Week

MENTAL STATUS: "Relief". Vacation time has come again.

Yes, I'm going away on vacation tomorrow. I know, I know. It won't be the same without me.

But there comes a time when I need to break away from the daily grind of blogging and whatever I do that fills my days/weeks at home with my child. That means no cooking, no cleaning( especially vacuuming), and most importantly no outside stress from family. Whew.

You have NO idea how I'm looking forward to this vacation.

But, on the other hand, for all of you that also means no chit-chat nonsense from me, no more vacuum talk, oh, and no Thursday Thirteen this week. No Thursday Thirteen? Yes, it's true. It makes me sad, too. Don't worry. I've already thought of a really "sick" one for next week.

Mu-wah-ha-ha-ha. (evil laugh)

I'll leave you guessing where I'm going, but rest assured I will be some place HOT and relaxing.

So, take care, ladies (and a few gents), and know I will be back with stories of my adventure to and from and, of course, plenty of great pictures!

(Promise to miss me while I'm away.)

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Vacuum Obsession?

IN THE NEWS: According to World Magazine quick takes, "Rather than calling 140 employees slated for firing into the office for individual terminations, managers of a struggling department store in the U.K. opted for a less tactful approach. The bosses of Robbs pulled the fire alarm to draw the entire work force into the parking lot. There a manager read a short statement delivering the en masse firing to stunned employees."
(Ouch!)

Well, the dirt on my carpets must really be bothering me, because I can't give up the vacuum talk. I've been researching vacuums nonstop on the Internet for the past week, and I'll tell you, there's a wealth of information out there. Unfortunately, all the information has done nothing but confuse me further. Wah.

And no, the Dysons I'm looking at are not central vacuums. I've had central vacuum in one house I'd lived in and couldn't deal with wrestling with the big long hose. It was like getting a taste of what firemen must go through. Believe me, if I were on that firetruck, the house would be burned to the ground by the time I had the hose organized. I know it's me. I've got problems. No shock there.

The vacuums I'm dreaming about are ordinary uprights--although not ordinary in price. Did I mention they're not cheap?

Okay, here's the first contender: The DC 14. I guess I'm looking at this one because it's the most reasonable in price, and I heard the suction was amazing.

Cue the ooohs and aaahs

The second contender: DC14 Animal--You got love a vacuum called "the animal". I think it's named that because it's supposed to be great for animal hair, but it makes me think it would just rip those dust bunnies to shreds. Yeah, go get 'em!!

Plus the purple color is so pretty. A bonus!

cue more ooohs and aaahs.



I'm going to do a little more research today. But something in the back of mind is telling me there is no "perfect" vacuum.
Dang.
Oh well. Today is supposed to be BEAUTIFUL, so I'll just sit outdoors (do some critiques for my partners) and ignore my dirty floors.
Do you have anything planned for today?

Monday, May 14, 2007

You Can't Always Get What You Want

MENTAL STATUS: "Sad". Heard some depressing news yesterday that I can't quite mentally shake.


Well, despite some sad news and my daughter having a one ring-dinger of a bloody nose in the morning, I had a very nice Mother's Day.

My hubby even cleaned out my car yesterday--which I'm embarrassed to report is a bit of a black hole. (The one area of my life I just "let go".) Wow. Thanks, dear. Life begins today.

Anyhew, I received some wonderful gifts and then went out to dinner with my mother and my brother and his family. So all in all, it was great day.

But...um...I was kind of hoping for another gift--that I obviously didn't get. A gift that my hubby verbally told me he was NOT getting me but I was hoping for anyway.

A vacuum.

Yeah, I know. You probably side with my hubby. A vacuum doesn't say "Happy Mother's Day and thanks for all you do." It sort of says "Happy Mother's Day and thanks for all you do. Now go clean the floors. You keep a slovenly house."

But I don't care. I really wanted one anyway. I mean REALLY wanted one. Not just any ordinary vacuum, though. I wanted the Rolls-Royce of vacuums.

I wanted a Dyson.

The vacuum I have now sucks--and not the good sucks. I'm very hard on vacuums and seem to go through them about every 2 years, so at this point in my life I'm sick of it and just want the best.

When I explained all this to the hubby, he shook his head. I remember physically seeing his foot come down on this issue as well. There was no way he was going to get me a vacuum for Mother's Day. In fact, he told me just to go out and get the darn thing if I wanted it so badly.

But I can't justify spending that kind of money on a vacuum. I'm cheap when it comes to certain things. So I was hoping he'd make the decision for me. No such luck.

Now I don't know what to do.

Would you buy the Dyson or do you think there's a better (and cheaper) vacuum out there?

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Happy Mother's Day


"Happy Mother's Day" means more
Than have a happy day.
Within those words lie lots of things
We never get to say.

It means I love you first of all,
Then thanks for all you do.It means you mean a lot to me,
And that I honor you.

But most of all, I guess it means
That I am thinking of
Your happiness on this, your day,
With pleasure and with love.
by Nicholas Gordon

Friday, May 11, 2007

Tribulation House by Chris Well

IN THE NEWS: According to Fox News, "iPods can cause pacemakers to malfunction. Electrical interference was detected half of the time when an iPod was held just 2 inches from the patient’s chest for 5 to 10 seconds. In certain circumstances, the devices could cause problems with heart devices from 18 inches away."


Well, it's not the first of the month, but I am doing a special Fiction In Rather Short Takes post, since Chris Well is the founder of FIRST.

This is his new book, Tribulation House.



And here's the first chapter:

CHAPTER ONE.

I might as well just tell you right now, I killed Reverend Daniel Glory. Back there at the church, in his study.

But this is my story. Don't let anyone tell you different. My dad always said we all write our own story. Of course, I guess that's why it worked out so well for him.

Why did I kill Reverend Daniel Glory? Sure, it was an accident. More or less. At least, I think it was.

I don't know, we were arguing about the Rapture and it kind of got out of hand and then I just --
Wait. Wait. I'm getting ahead of myself. Let me back up.

This all started about three months ago, when Reverend Daniel Glory told us we needed to do our Tribulation House earlier than --

Oh. Wait.

Okay, I guess this actually started last year when Marvin Dobbs left the church. Our church.

The Last Church of God's Imminent Will.

A year ago last summer, Marvin left with some of the other families to start a new church, and he took his Armageddon House" multimedia show with him.

You do know about Armageddon House, right? Every Halloween for the past three or four years, Marvin and our team put together a special multimedia presentation explaining the Great Tribulation, which ends with the Battle of Armageddon.

Wait -- you don't know about the Great Tribulation? It's that seven-year period between the Rapture and the Triumphant Return of Jesus Christ, as described in the prophecies of Daniel and Ezekiel and the Apostles Paul and John. After the Lord Jesus takes His Bride home, there are going to be seven years of horrible judgment inflicted on those who are left b --

What? The murder of Reverend Glory? I'm getting to that.

Well, anyway, when Marvin left to form his little offshoot splinter group, we discovered he had actually trademarked the name "Armageddon House." Imagine that.

When the board at church met to discuss the matter, we considered doing Armageddon House anyway without him. Just reconstruct it from memory and copy or use materials from previous years. Use the same name, business as usual. Just ignore the cease-and-desist letter, let God and His angels work that out.

But we decided we didn't want to be associated with Armageddon House anymore. I mean, if Marvin and his new "fellowship" planned to stage their own Armageddon House, the risk of confusion in the marketplace was enough to rebuild ours as a brand-new event.

Which is how we ended up with Tribulation House. It was an opportunity for a new beginning. We went through a whole list of potential names -- I came up with Kingdom Come, but was voted down -- before we settled on Tribulation House.


We sat down and worked through the whole grid. Instead of imagining how to simply explain or show a picture of each bowl of wrath and each trumpet of judgment, we created an entire theatrical event.

Yeah, we could have set up the charts and graphs and the overhead projector. But today's audience, this last generation, they're kind of jaded about flannel graph presentations, know what I mean?

These kids today, with their Spongebob Squarepants and their American Bandstand and their Buffy The Vampire Slayer, they need the bells and whistles and the like.

The kids don't need a lot of explanation. They need a demonstration.

You see, that was the challenge, wasn't it? It's one thing to say "the moon was blackened" or "the waters turned to blood" or "men were stung by enormous flying scorpions" -- but how do you make it happen right here, right before their eyes?

In the end, we created Tribulation House: A full-sensory immersive interactive dramatic theatrical evangelistic event that simulates what it will actually be like to live through the events of the Great Tribulation. An entire full-service prophetic experience.

You'd be surprised how much of it we accomplished with sound and light. We developed the various rooms throughout the church basement. Some college kids created soundscapes for each event. We wrote up a full script for the actors; they played everything from people caught up in the events, to the world armies fighting the Most Holy, to the father of lies himself, bound and thrown into the pit for a millennium.

The murder of Reverend Daniel Glory? I'm getting to that.

So we were working out the blueprints for creating Tribulation House as a major theatrical evangelistic full-sensory ministry outreach. We had debated the merits of various slogans for the event -- the leading contenders were WE'LL SCARE THE HELL OUT OF YOU; GET RIGHT OR GET LEFT; and THE TIME IS CLOSER THAN YOU THINK. While the first slogan was a favorite of several board members, for its bracing, truthful stance, in the end we worried that the neighbors would misunderstand. So we went with the second slogan, for its simple, instructional message.

And I remember that our chief carpenter, Bill Broadstreet, was giving us his estimate for the physical construction to be done on the project. Suddenly, Reverend Daniel Glory burst in with some news.

"Friends!" There was a glow on the Reverend's face unlike we had seen before. The man stood there in the doorway to the church basement, leaning against the doorframe, wheezing to catch his breath. "Jesus is coming back!"

The room was silent. We all stared. At first, we wondered why he was saying this right then. After all, he preached on this topic every week. But then he dropped this bomb: "And I know when!"

Okay, that was a new one. Collectively, everyone in the room gasped. One of us, I don't even remember who it was, asked, "When, Reverend?"

"October 17."

Five months.

"5:51 a.m." Reverend Daniel Glory waved the papers clutched in his hand. Later, I would wonder what he was waving at us. His Bible study? His calculations? All I know is he grinned ear to ear and said, "The Rapture is going to happen at 5:51 a.m. on October 17."

Everyone around the meeting table reacted differently. Some were stunned into silence, others screamed with joy. One noisy woman loudly sobbed and clapped.

Reverend Daniel Glory came into room, face aglow with thrill and exhaustion, and dragged a chair from the wall over to our table. He sat, waiting until everyone was silent again. "I now have incontrovertible proof that the Rapture takes place this coming October."


I'm sure I grinned bigger than anyone in the room. "What reason do you have to say that?"

Reverend Daniel Glory looked at me and winked. "Why stop with one reason, boy? I got one hundred and seven of 'em!"

Of course, you know what this meant. We were going to have to step up the production of Tribulation House.

(I still can't believe it's not Kingdom Come.)

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Thursday Thirteen #4

I'm feeling mushy for some reason, so hold on to your hanky.
Thirteen Songs that Never Fail to Bring Tears to My Eyes
EACH and EVERY Time I Hear Them
**************************************************

1…Don't Talk by 10,000 Maniacs** This song talks about a couple dealing with alcoholism. Depressing stuff. Thus, the tears.

2...You Are Loved (Don't Give Up) by Josh Groban.**"Don't give up /It's just the weight of the world/ When your heart's heavy I will lift it for you" kills me every time.

3...Landslide by Stevie Nicks** This song is about a father-daughter relationship. But actually, when I first heard it, I thought it was about a divorce. Either way, tears flows.

4... The National Anthem. **Heaven help me if I ever trained for the Olympics and won a gold medal. Someone would have to get out the heavy duty bear tranquiler gun and sedate me, because I'd be balling my eyes out within the first chord.

5... Holy Night.** I think this is the most beautiful Christmas song written, and if you're a Christian, the lyrics are most humbling. Tears come every time.

6...Safety Dance by Men Without Hats.** Okay. This song brings tears to my eyes for a totally different reason all together. This song just cracks me up. And if my husband is in the room dancing to it, tears of laughter come flowing even faster.

7...Wishing You Were Somehow Here Again from Phantom of the Opera. **In the show, Christine is at the cemetary singing about her deceased father and wishing he were alive. Ugh. Tears.

8... The Prayer by Celine Dion.** Have you heard these lyrics? All I can say is thank God half of them are in another language or I'd really need extra tissues.

9...Where are you Christmas? by Faith Hill.**Christmas is not a sad holiday, but with lyrics like, "Where are you Christmas /Why can't I find you /Why have you gone away /Where is the laughter /You used to bring me /Why can't I hear music play" Ms Hill hill managed to make me cry.

10...The Good Life by Tony Bennet.**I don't think this song is meant to be sad. It just makes me think of life and what you value. So the tears come.

11...Jesus, Take the Wheel by Carrie Underwood.** This song was nominated for "Song of the Year" at the Grammy Awards--with good reason. The tear factor.

12...Daddy's Little Girl by ??.** Who cares who sings it. I danced to this song with my father when I got married. Now, when I hear it at other people's weddings, I get choked up.

13...I Loved Her first by Heartland. **It's about a father's love for his daughter. But I still have not heard this entire song. I can't. I start to cry and end up changing the radio station. I looked up the lyrics to post and I couldn't even do that because I started to cry why I read them. Sheesh. I'm such a crybaby.

Well, that's it. Pass the tissues. (I promise to do something more upbeat next time) LOL!!

Get the Thursday Thirteen code here!

The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others comments. It’s easy, and fun! Be sure to update your Thirteen with links that are left for you, as well! I will link to everyone who participates and leaves a link to their 13 things. Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Tagged Again!

MENTAL STATUS: "Happy". I'm going to have a lot of free time today--something I haven't had in quite awhile. Maybe I will garden and do some writing.

Just when you thought you've learned everything you've ever wanted to know about yours truly... my fellow writer friend, Angelle, has tagged me to expose even more stuff.

Yikes.

But I'll give you a choice. You can either read some facts about me or hear me complain about pet peeves over at Passionate Critters.

It's in your hands. Decide wisely...

Here we go.. 8 Random Facts/Habits About Me:

1) (Fact) Last night I saw a JC Penney commercial that brought tears to my eyes. **you know, the one where the mother is walking along the sidewalk, holding hands with her little girl and then you see it go full circle with the daughter then holding hands with her little girl. I'm getting choked up just thinking about this.

2) (Habit) I'm a full-fledged procrastinator. **I'm not proud of that fact. Just throwing it out there.

3) (Fact) I seriously considered changing my major in college from Pharmacy to Criminology after seeing Silence of the Lambs.

4) (Fact) I broke my wrist (both bones) in a "drinking" accident in college.

5) (Fact) I met the hubby on a blind date. **his mom and my aunt put their heads together on that one.

6) (Habit) I'm a terrible time estimator. **if I have to go to CVS and the post office, I'll tell you my whole morning is tied up. Drives my hubby crazy.

7) (Fact) I constantly have strangers (as well as people I know) come up to me and tell me what beautiful skin I have. **You might say my secret is sunscreen.

8) (Fact) When I was pregnant with my little one, I craved cranberries like you wouldn't believe. There was a place in town that used to make the best cranberry/avocado wraps. My cravings got so bad, the owner gave me his card so I could call him when I had the baby. He was going to deliver one to the hospital.

I'm tagging: Cyn, Angela, Chicki, Chelle, Elle, Lainey, Priya and Margo Lukas.

Here are the rules: (if you choose to participate)

Each player starts with eight random facts/habits about themselves.
People who are tagged need to write their own blog about their eight things and post these rules.
At the end of your blog, you need to choose eight people to get tagged and list their names.
Don’t forget to leave them a comment telling them they’re tagged, and to read your blog.

Have a good day!

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Let's Go to the Movies

IN THE NEWS: According to World Magazine, Americans aren't the only ones with low opinions of the French. "A survey conducted by the International Herald Tribune found a whopping 44% of French people took a negative view of their fellow countrymen, outstripping even the United State's negative view of France."

I haven't been to an actual movie theater to see a movie in, oh, probably 5 years. But that's nothing. My hubby hasn't seen a movie in a NJ theater in about 12 long years.

He almost broke his long time record to see The Nativity Story, but it was hard to organize time around the Christmas season. It seemed like we always had either a party or Christmas shopping to do. Thus, his record stands.

Well, this summer it might all change.

Did you know that between now and Labor Day, there will be 115 new movies released? 115!!!
I'm laying odds I just might be able to drag the hubby out to see maybe one movie this summer. Can you guess which one?

Daddy Day Camp? Get real.

The Simpson Movie? Maybe. But I'm not expecting miracles. Having him see two movies this summer is too much to ask.

Spiderman 3? Nope.

Live Free or Die Hard? Actually, that's not a bad guess, but no.

I'm talking about: Rush Hour 3.

Hey, stop laughing!

Have you seen ANY of the Rush Hour movies? They're so good! Chris Tucker and Jackie Chan have such a great cop-buddy chemistry thing going on. Kind of like Beverly Hills Cop/Lethal Weapon with karate moves.

If you have cable, you can't miss a Rush Hour movie, because you are guaranteed one of them will be playing on a given weekend night. We should know. It wouldn't be a Friday or Saturday night without them. I can actually quote lines now.

We've been waiting for this movie for a while. Six years in the making. With that length of time, it's got to be good.

And even if it isn't, who cares? It's a night out of the house for me.

Are you looking forward to seeing any movies this summer?

Monday, May 7, 2007

The Weekend Lowdown

MENTAL STATUS: "Bleh". Feeling achy--and tired of the weather getting cold again. What's up with that?

First, I have a funny story.

The hubby and I had someplace to go on Sunday, so we dropped off our daughter at our friend's house for a few hours. She had this story to tell me when we came to pick our daughter up:

(Keep in mind my daughter is 5 and she has never played Badminton before. It makes the story that much funnier)
My friend: (getting two badminton rackets) "Okay, I just have to find the birdie and then we'll be able to play."

My daughter (looking confused) "We're going to hit a birdie?"

My friend: "Yeah. It's not a real birdie. It's plastic and has a rubber end."

My daughter: "Oh. Do you mean the shuttlecock?"

LOL! My friend loved this story--and so did we. My girlie is so smart.

Well, I had a busy weekend, but the highlight would have to be the Stainton Society Brunch on Sunday. The Stainton Society is a fundraising organization for the major hospital in our area. It was a lovely event held at Caesars casino in Atlantic City, where the guest speaker was Bob Woodruff.

(In case you don't know who Bob Woodruff is... He has worked as a journalist since 1989. In January 2006, he was a co-anchor for ABC News along with Elizabeth Vargas, and then later he became the first American news anchor to be wounded in a war zone in Iraq.)

Before the speaker was announced, they showed the exact film footage Mr. Woodruff and his ABC News team were shooting at the time, just before the bomb hit. He had been hit in many areas but one rock from the bomb had gone completely through his neck and had stopped a millimeter in front of his artery--which would have killed him within seconds. The people around him--including the Iraqi translator traveling with him--immediately applied pressure to his neck to hold off the bleeding until they could get help.

When they had gotten him to a hospital and after he underwent surgery, he was in a coma for about a month. While at his bedside, his wife began to write of her experiences with the whole situation. Then together, they wrote about his recovery and life now.

What an amazing and inspiring story. I really want to read their book, In an Instant: A Family's Journey of Love and Healing

He's a wonderful speaker, but does suffer from TBI--Traumatic Brain Injury. He has set up a foundation for this health problem and proceeds from his book go to that fund.

What did you do this weekend?

Friday, May 4, 2007

Are Ya Feelin' It?

IN THE NEWS: According to World Magazine, "A UK family credits their pet parrot, Barney, with teaching their 4 year-old autistic son to say his first words. A speech therapist confirmed to the family that a parrot's slow style of speech and endless repetition can actually help learning-disabled children to talk."

Last night I read the Romance Writers Report. There was an article on "Show and Tell" that particularly "spoke" to me and made me...well, think. But maybe it made me think because we had just discussed this topic in my critique forum a few weeks ago.

Everyone who writes has heard the phrase, "Show, don't tell". Telling too much information instead of drawing the reader into a scene visually results in flat writing. You're reading the words but you can't put yourself there in the book to feel or see what the character is feeling or seeing.

This is such a BIG part of why I like to read. So when I critique something for someone, they're pretty much going to be guaranteed I will point out areas where I want to be able to feel what the character is going through. Unfortunately, for something that is such a big part of my reading, it's something I don't think about with my own writing.

Dang. But I'm going to think about it now. For sure.

For those who don't get the the magazine, I'm going to poorly summarize what Rebecca K. O'Connor said in her article about showing vs telling.

1) use your senses **"sometimes it's not enough to just describe what is being seen."

2) build character**"showing means letting your reader in on our hero and heroine a little bit at a time, giving them interesting tidbits that make us turn the next page."

3) use showy dialogue** "frequently, what is said is the exact opposite of what is meant. How many times does a heroine say, 'I hate you,' when what she really means as she chews her lip and crosses her arms against her chest is 'I am so attracted to you, it's making me crazy.'"

4)give your reader a scene so he/she knows the characters are falling in love but the characters don't know it yet.

5) read showy books** Susan Elizabeth Phillips does a fantastic job of showing. There is always a few points in her books where I feel grabbed in the heart and totally emphasize with a character (even a character I don't like).

For example: in her book, Honey Moon, she uses 3 pages out of her 440 book to hit the reader over the head with how unloved and lonely her character Honey is feeling which is why she's so motivated with her goal. (For time sake, I cut some lines)

"Happy Birthday, Honey!"
Flabbergasted , she saw all of her family standing in a half circle around the kitchen table. Sophie had dragged herself out of bed, Buck had thrown a sports shirt on over his undershirt, Chantal had poured the extra 20 pounds she'd gained into a pair of crimson slack, and, reflected in the lenses of Gordon's new wire-rimmed spectacles, were the flames of 20 pastel candles sitting on top of a birthday cake.
They hadn't forgotten. They had finally remembered her birthday. Tears stung her eyes and she felt years of stored resentment melting inside of her.
"Oh, my... It's--" Her words grew choked. "It's beautiful."
All of them laughed and even Sophie smiled, because the cake wasn't beautiful at all. Three layers tall, it was lopsided and unevenly coated with the ugliest shade of blue frosting Honey had ever seen. But the fact that they had done this for her, baked the cake themselves, made it the most precious gift she had ever received.
"I can't--I can't believe you did this." She struggled not to cry.
"Well, of course we did it," Chantal said. "It's your birthday, isn't it?"
They were off by one day, but that was meaningless. She was filled with joy, love, and an aching sense of gratitude.
Gordon gestured toward the cake. "I baked it, Honey. Me, myself and I."
I helped, " Chantal threw in.
"We all helped," Buck said, scratching his belly like a beardless Santa Claus.
Their faces glimmered before her, soft, beautiful, and beloved in the golden light of the flickering candles. She forgave all their foibles and knew she was right to have stuck by them. They were her family. She was part of them and they were part of her, and every one of them was precious.
"All of you--I" She tried to tell them what was in her heart, but the feelings ran too strong and her throat constricted.
"Come on, Honey. Cut the cake."
"Cut it, Honey. We're all hungry."
She laughed as Buck thrust a large knife into her hand and pushed her toward the cake. "Blow out the candles."
"Happy birthday to you, happy birthday to you..."
She blew out the candles, laughing through her tears. Once again, she tried to find the words that would express what this meant to her.
"Cut straight down through the middle," Gordon said, directing her hand. "I don't want you to ruin my artwork."
A tear dripped off her chin as she pointed the knife into the center. "This is wonderful. I'm so--"
The cake exploded.
Screams of laughter erupted as chunks of chocolate flew everywhere. Cake shot up into Honey's face, clots of blue icing stuck to her skin and clung to her clothes. Bits and pieces splattered against the wall and dropped to the floor.
They had all drawn back from the table in a single, unified motion just as she had cut into the center, and they were untouched. Only she had been hit.
Buck clutched his stomach. Their laughter grew louder. Even Sophie had joined in.
"Did you see her face?"
"We fooled you," Chantal cried. "It was Gordon's idea. Gordon, you're so smart!"
Honey's chest heaved and she stumbled backward, staring at them. They were gathered around her ruined feast like a pack of jackals who had gorged on a banquet of malice. Their spitefulness choked her. She would leave them, pack her suitcase and never see them again.

Could you put yourself in Honey's place? Could you picture the scene perfectly? Did you feel the hurt she felt? I did.

That's what I'm talking about. So today, I'm going to go through some of my writings and see if I can pick out some "over-told" scenes. Ugh.

Have a great weekend!






Thursday, May 3, 2007

Thursday Thirteen #3

Technically, this isn't about me. It's about my hubby. I found it interesting enough to blog about it anyway. And he gave me the thumbs-up, so without further ado here are...
Thirteen Women I'm Very Surprised to Learn My Husband Does NOT Find Attractive

1…. Jennifer Lopez. **Guh? I would have stepped over my own mother to look like she did the night she sang on American Idol. Is he nuts or what?

2... Pamela Lee (Anderson). **Ok. He said she was too fake looking, and I would have to agree. But still.

3... Nicole Kidman. **Huh? He especially thinks her curly hair is unattractive. What??
She's tall and gorgeous! A little pale, but nothing a little time in the sun wouldn't cure.

4... Paris Hilton. **No. Take out the rich-spoiled-little-girl personality part and you still have a pretty woman. But he disagreed with me.

5... Lisa Kudrow. ** What? Okay, maybe she wasn't the prettiest "friend" on Friends, but I still think she had her moments. According to my hubby, there were no moments.

6... Gwenyth Paltrow. **I'm sorry. This one I just cannot believe, but he assured me he does not find her attractive. I don't get him at all.

7... Snow White. **Apparently for my hubby, cartoon drawings are not out of the realm of unattractiveness. Snow White--or rather "Hag White" as he calls her--would be the last Disney Princess on his so-called date list.

8... Sarah Jessica Parker. **Hmmm... maybe I'm not that surprised about that one.

9... Alyssa Milano. **I could be wrong, but it might have been the super short haircut that did him in.

10... Tori Spelling. **He was on the fence about her, but a recent picture--with an extra 100 pounds or so--sent her straight on this list.

11... Salma Hayek. **I'm beginning to see my hubby has an aversion to Spanish women--which is lucky for me and my Polish/Lithuania heritage.

12... Uma Thurman. ** Actually, he didn't give me a real reason for putting Uma here. Just an average "Eh" feeling towards her.

13...Angelina Jolie. **Shocked? I was. That's why I left her for last. Unattractive?? Let's see...the hair, the eyes, those LIPS, the body... what could be MORE attractive? But again, the hubby disagreed and thinks Brad was a fool for leaving poor Jen.

Well, that's it. I don't know if I should be happy or worried.

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

BLOGS that make me go "Hmmm"

IN THE NEWS: According to the OC Gazette, "A toll collector who fired a paintball gun at a car in Cape May County must be reinstated, according to the Supreme Court ruling this week. Jason Glassey fired paintballs at a car as he drove home in 2003. According to court papers, the toll collector thought the car was moving too slowly. In ruling for reinstatement, the arbitrator said that Glassey's actions had no connection to his job. But a later investigation by turnpike officials found that Glassey had allegedly distributed parkway pamphlets with expletives drawn on them and former -Gov. McGreevey's picture altered with handlebar mustaches and black glasses."
(Don't blame me. My hubby found this article hilarious and made me put it in my blog)


Well, I'm honored. Truly. Why you ask?

Because author Lainey Bancroft has named me as one of her 5 Top Blogs That Make Her Think.

Wow. I had no idea. I had kind of hoped I'd be someday named a blog that made someone chuckle--or at least crack a half smile. But I'll take an intellectual award. And there's my little gold award down there to prove it.


So many people to thank for this award. Oh wait. That's not true. I only have to thank Lainey. Thank you!


So now I will pass along this generous award and name 5 Top Blogs that Make ME Think: (I would name Lainey right back since her blog makes me think, too, but I figured she already won this award, so let's spread the wealth, so to speak)

Here are mine:

1) Real Writers Don't Vacuum. This writer has not been posting long but trust me, her blog is always THOUGHTFUL. Plus, she's a heck of a nice woman and a fantastic writer.

2) No Rules. Just Write. Author Brenda Coulter raises such thoughtful and interesting comments on writing in her blog that I feel ten times smarter after reading just ONE of her posts.

3) Chelle Sandell. This writer always (when she's not busy moving, that is) has interesting takes on writing, movies and chit-chat in general. She also raises interesting questions that I love to discuss in her comment section.

4) Just My Type. Author, Eileen Cook makes me think about things from what's my favorite Easter candy, to what irrational fears I have, to what drives me crazy in an elevator. Always something fun to think about over there. Check it out.

5) The Two R's--Reading and Writing. Yeah, I know Lainey mentioned this one in HER blog, but I read this blog, too! Author Elle Fredrix raises thoughtful questions about writing and books in general. I love to frequent it and see what we're going to discuss today. Every once in a while she throws some funny stuff at us, too. Not too shabby for a woman who doesn't like sushi.

Should you choose to participate, please make sure you pass this list of rules to the blogs you are tagging. The participation rules are simple:


1. If, and only if, you get tagged, write a post with links to 5 blogs that make you think,

2. Link to this post so that people can easily find the exact origin of the meme,

3. Optional: Proudly display the 'Thinking Blogger Award' with a link to the post that you wrote

Does your brain hurt now?

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

The Heir by Paul Robertson

MENTAL STATUS: "Fried". Trying to get too much done in one day. I love going away, but it's the coming back that is so unappealing. AKA loads of laundry (it was just a 2 days trip!), e-mails to respond to, Mother's Day reservations I forgot to take care of and two birthday parties my daughter was invited to that I forgot were this week.


Anyhew... it's the first of the month and that means a short take from the debut book by Paul Robertson: The Heir.

Enjoy.



Chapter One

I couldn't take my eyes off the casket. It was expensive, and it glowed, resting among the candles and the heaps of flowers. It so perfectly expressed the man inside.

The dignitaries droned, and I didn't hear them. We knew it all. We knew what he had done with his life. If a man knows his purpose, then everyone else will know it, too.

They'd been told what to say and to keep it short, and they obeyed. They'd all gotten where they were by doing what they were told.

It was tribute by catalog listing: achievements, philanthropy, and Senate career. The real man was never mentioned—the companies he inherited, the rivals he crushed, the cold blood behind the politics—but everyone knew. Was anyone else listening? It's easy to eulogize a man who knew why he lived his life.

I just stared at that gleaming box and wondered why I was living mine.

We sang a hymn, and that brought me back—words obscure enough to drive any clear thoughts from a man's brain. A voice behind me sang off-key.

I watched the man's wife instead. Her name was Angela, and she was sitting between my brother, Eric, and me. I might have given her a hug, but she had always objected to my familiarity. It was nothing personal; she objected to anyone. Her brother and sister were not at the service.

She was his second wife. The other one died young of cancer, which had been worth a lot of sympathy in his first election. If he had grieved for her, I wouldn't know.

I looked back. The off-key voice behind me was another senator, a man I'd never liked. He had no speaking part. It was probably a snub.

For a moment it seemed a pity the whole thing was going by so fast. The church was flawless, and the funeral was such a good use for it. Now I even knew the true purpose of candles: to reflect off that casket. They were going to look tacky anywhere else. And there I was staring at it again.

Candles knew their purpose, but I didn't have a clue about mine.

The governor said his few words about what he had felt when he heard about the accident—the shock and sadness, the great man cut down in his prime, what a loss to the state. He shook his head at the whole sad mystery of life and death and checked his watch.

"Jason?"

I pushed past Katie and got up to the pulpit. Now the box was right in front of me, shining like a waxed floor. I needed something else to look at.

The back wall of the place had a row of statues in it, saints or angels, and one had his hand up waving at me. I never had written anything to say.

"Why am I here?" The little saint seemed friendly, so I figured I'd just talk to him. "I wish I knew." Maybe it was a her, not a him. They all wear robes.

"I think he could have told me. He knew why he was here, what he was doing. He never doubted anything he did." Somehow, I was staring at the casket again. I found my friend on the wall. "Maybe he is now."

They were all watching me, but I watched the back of the church. "The one thing I ever really knew for sure in my life was that he was there. I only saw him a few times a year and I won't miss him for that. It's more like a mountain is gone—one you'd see off in the distance."

Katie wanted me to be impressive for the assembled personages. She knew they'd be measuring and calculating, putting me in their equations. After three years of marriage, she also knew me enough to know I didn't care. I did hope she wasn't embarrassed. Her mother was sitting behind her and she'd be embarrassed enough for all of us.

I wouldn't inherit anything anyway. It was all going to his foundation. Eric and I would just get our monthly checks, as we always had.

The saint's stone hand was palm up, as if it had been holding something that had just flown away. "Anyway, he's gone and we're still here, so we'll get by without him." I finally got myself to look at the people. What a well-dressed crowd. "And everything he knew about life is gone with him, so I'll get by without that, too."

I didn't have anything else to say. I smiled at Angela, and then I nodded at Eric on her other side.

I waited at the end of the pew as Eric got out, and he patted me on the back. Katie gave me a tight smile as I sat. She was annoyed, but not mad.

Eric was tall, dark, and clueless behind the heavy wood pulpit. We look alike, especially with him wearing one of my suits. For all the money he has, he'd never figured out how to buy clothes. It was loose on him, and maybe that was why he looked so young. Or maybe it was because he was so young. There were no questions about life beneath that spiky black hair.

But he kept his eyes on the audience the whole time and told them what a loving father the man had been. He did a good job. I appreciated him because he did the right thing, what I should have done, and maybe he thought what he said was true.

Then the priest said whatever he had to, and it was over. When I got out into the light of day, I was so glad it had lasted no longer than it did.

* * *
The rest of the festivities went about the same. In the limo, Katie chattered and Angela sighed about how nice the service had been. Eric was watching boats in the bay.

I watched them, too. I prefer water to land because land is unmoving; the water is never still and has nothing fixed. Long Island Sound, Nantucket Sound, Block Island Sound—we were surrounded by silent waters named for the lands that confined them.

Eric turned to me. "What did you mean, you wouldn't miss him?"

"That's not what I said."

"And what were you looking at?"

"Nothing."

He turned back to the boats and I did, too. I would rather have been out there. Anyone whose ancestors lived on these coasts would feel the same pull.

Across from me, Katie was glaring, so maybe she was mad after all. She had her hair down straight, over her shoulders. Her simple, dark blue dress with the string of pearls was as perfect as the church. She had me done up just right, too, with the black suit she'd picked out a year ago for weddings and funerals. She had a tailor come every six months to keep all the suits fitted. That's why it hung so loose around Eric's shoulders.

Change the subject. "He really was a great man," I said to Angela.

She smiled, and it was genuine. The funeral had penetrated the pink plastic armor. She wasn't even fifty. Her husband had been fifteen years older, but she'd still expected a lot more years with him. They'd been married for nineteen.

Katie smiled at me, and I was out of trouble. I pushed my luck.

"What do you think he would have been most proud of?"

"Most proud?" Angela always spoke so quietly, like a kitten. I'd wondered if it was an act, but it was no asset to a political wife, being so fluffy. She wasn't striking or brilliant. Why did he marry her? He must have actually loved something about her. I wouldn't even recognize her without the platinum hair and bubblegum lipstick. "He did so much. He didn't enjoy Washington, but he accomplished so much there. He was happier here at home. And he was proud of his foundation. I think that's what he was most proud of."

Not of his sons. Not of his oldest son, anyway. "I hope it will keep going," I said.

"Mr. Kern will run it. He's always done such a good job there. And now he'll have charge of all of Melvin's companies."

Melvin. The name of the deceased hovered in the air for a moment like cigarette smoke, and Nathan Kern's name was the smell of stale beer that went with it so well. I was not a patron of that saloon. I'd get my little allowance, and the big wad would go to the foundation. Melvin had made it very clear that Eric and I should have no expectations beyond simply living in the style to which we had become accustomed.

We were born to be idle rich, Eric and I, and we'd never risen above it. I wondered what our new allowance would be. Katie was feeling constrained by our thirty thousand a month.
Ahead of us, the hearse turned onto the gravel road into the cemetery. We parked beside it. As we waited for the other cars to park, I walked to the open grave. What a view he'd have, of the cliffs and the waves breaking. I was about fifty feet from the edge of the grass, and it was twenty feet straight down from there into the violent water. In a thousand years the whole place would be gone, worn down by the surf. Usually he planned better than that, but while it lasted, it would definitely be a view to die for.

There were six pallbearers. Nathan Kern and the governor took the middle on each side, for show. The casket was heavy, though, and it needed at least four strong men out of the six. So Eric and I were in front, and two gardeners from the estate were in back. We walked the short distance slowly. The sun was bright, between clouds; the better to dramatize the moment. The mourners added darker colors to the brilliant blue and greens, and the brown of the earth piled by the grave.

Five minutes after we set the box down, we were done with the words and the gardeners were lowering it into the ground. I took the shovel they handed me and dropped some ceremonial dirt down on top of the box, and then a couple more good heavy loads just for the exercise. I was just kicking into gear, and I would have filled the whole pit, but then I had to stop. I felt lightheaded and my vision blurred and my breath stuck in my throat, and that was when I knew he was gone. I dropped the shovel and walked over to the cliff, and I didn't know if the pounding I heard was the waves or my own blood filling my ears.

Then Katie was beside me. "Jason? Are you all right, dear?"

I nodded. Wherever we all end up going, he was there now—where he knew the answers to all my questions and where I couldn't ask them of him. I looked around again at the strength and ferocity of that place with its hard stone and unrelenting breakers. It was everything hard, without mercy or forgiveness. I hoped he'd enjoy it.

"Come on, let's go back." Katie sounded nervous. She knew me well enough to want me away from the cliff.

"Don't worry." The moment was over. I took her hand and we strolled back to the others.

* * *
We stood for the right number of minutes in the rolling clouds and sun, nodding to the mourners, saying the proper words. The cloud shadows were chill, a reminder that the New England summer would soon have its own abrupt end.

"I'm getting cold, dear."

I hadn't noticed Francine next to us. The last I'd seen her, she'd been talking to the senator.
"You should go home, Mother," Katie said. "I'll call tonight." We watched her skitter across the grass, like a little crab.

"I'm getting cold, too," I said.

"No, you aren't."

"Let's go home anyway."

My own car was waiting for us. I was about to open the door for Katie when Melvin's lawyer waddled over to us.

Fred Spellman was a nice man. He must have been very smart to have been Privy Counsellor, but I'd never seen him in action. To us, he had always been Uncle Fred, and I had better childhood memories of him than of Melvin.

He gave me a paternal pat on the back and kissed Katie's hand, and I might have thought he'd been crying. But he took a deep breath and pulled himself together.

"Well, well." Then he paused and took another breath and tried again. "Well. We have some things to discuss, Jason, my boy. I need to have you and Eric come see me."

"Right. The reading of the will."

Melvin's secretary, Pamela, was next to us. She really had been crying, and she still was. She hugged Katie, patted my shoulder, and walked on, all without words. I watched her.

"It won't take long," Fred was saying. "Would tomorrow morning be too soon? Or do you need time to ... adjust? I don't want to hurry you, but there are some things that will need attention, sooner rather than later."

"That's fine. The body's still warm, but at least it's underground." I looked away from Pamela to my watch. "We could do it right now, sitting on his grave. That would be poetic. I'll call Eric."

"He's not serious," Katie said. "What time tomorrow?"

Maybe I had gone too far with him. He stared at me in a way I hadn't seen. "Nine o'clock?" he suggested. "Eric is available."

"What about Angela?" I said. "The grieving widow, you know. The scene wouldn't be complete."
"She will have her own meeting."

"Whatever." I opened the door and Katie slipped in. "May I bring my wife?"

"That will be at your discretion." He smiled, the old teddy bear smile. "I think you should. It helps to face these things together."

I shrugged. "It's really not a big deal, Fred. Not to me. We'll just putter along like always. Nathan Kern will have the headaches."

That look again. I couldn't read it, and it was not from the kindly family friend I'd always known. But then we both turned to watch Eric vroom vroom out of the cemetery on his Yamaha. Nice touch, or it would have been if the thought had occurred to him. I would have done the motorcycle-at-the-funeral thing to make some kind of statement. He did it because he was oblivious.

Or maybe the bike was the most presentable thing he had. None of his five cars was very solemn. The leather jacket was going to mangle the borrowed suit.

"Tomorrow morning, nine o'clock."

"I'll be there, Fred."

I got in the car, but not fast enough. Nathan Kern floated elegantly up to the window.

"Jason! I don't know what to say." Not that that had ever stopped him from saying it. "It just doesn't seem possible." If Fred was the king's chamberlain, Nathan was the archbishop.
"Apparently it was," I said. I was the court jester.

"We will need to talk. I know the foundation will be as important for you as for your father."
Selfless nobility, thy name is Nathan Kern.

"I don't plan to have much part in it."

He was surprised at that, and he shouldn't have been. He knew me better. "But it was always Melvin's foremost concern." His elegant fingers were trembling. I thought the diamonds would fall out of his cuff links.

"He left his estate to it. I feel sorry for you, Mr. Kern. You have some big responsibilities now." I was getting tired of the day or I might have been a little nicer. I could feel Katie preparing the lecture. "Give me a week, and I'll be glad to come see you." By then I might even build up some curiosity about him and his world. There had to be something beneath the sanctimony.

"Yes, yes, of course," he said.

I took that as a good-bye and closed my window.

* * *
We finally got out onto the road. "You could have acted like an adult," Katie said.

"That's not my way."

We'd come up behind a truck, and there was no place to pass. The coast road went on a few more miles like this, two winding lanes. "Everyone there was looking to you to take your father's place."

"I'd rather die."

"Jason."

I punched the accelerator and passed blind on a curve. The road ahead was clear so I kept the speed up. Katie held on to her shoulder belt.

"You don't have to kill me, too."

I slowed down. "All right, I won't. But the only reason I'm not taking this car off a cliff is because I don't want to die the same way Melvin did."

"Thank you." She would have bitten through the guardrail, her jaw was clenched so tight. I needed to make a gesture.

There was a gas station after a few minutes, and I stopped beside some landscaping and pulled up two flowers.

"Here."

She relented. "I accept your apology." We got back out on the road and she held them, treating them with far more respect than they deserved. "Why did I marry you, anyway?"

"For my money," I said.

"Then I made a big mistake." She said it with a smile, though, for which I was very grateful. "I don't know if your money is worth putting up with you. If you worked with those people—Nathan Kern and all the rest of them—you could be rich."

"I am rich."

"Not as rich as you could be." The edges of the smile hardened a little. "He'd put you on the board of the foundation, and you could get control of everything your father had." She looked out the window. "It should have been yours anyway."

"Look, all I did was get born into this family," I said. "It wasn't my choice. As long as they send my check each month, nobody gets hurt. If they want anything else I'll inflict damage." I waited until she looked back at me. The two daisies in her hand were a little damaged. "You like your flowers?"

"Yes."

The road was bending through hills, away from the ocean. I stopped again, just off the edge, where the guardrail actually was bitten through. Out of the car, I stood and looked down the hillside at the scraped dirt and torn bushes and the broken tree at the bottom. They'd cleaned away the wreckage, every piece of it.

Katie got out with me.


"Why am I here?" I said. "What is the point?"
She pulled a knot of wildflowers from the ground, much nicer than the daisies, and handed it to me.

"Here."

"You don't need to apologize for anything," I said.

"I just want to give you some flowers."

I stood for a moment. Then I tossed them down the steep hill and the wind caught them and they landed just where his car had. I'd seen it there, with yellow police tape and spotlights, and the trucks pulling it up the embankment.

"He's gone, Jason," she said. "It might really be different now."

Excerpted from:The Heir by Paul Robertson

Copyright © 2007; ISBN-13 9780764203244
Published by Bethany House Publishers
Used by permission. Unauthorized duplication prohibited.