Showing posts with label Atlas Beach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Atlas Beach. Show all posts

2023-10-31

Romance Writers Weekly ~ Halloween Flash Fiction ~ #LoveChatWrite



 This week, on the Romance Writers Weekly blog hop, we're asked to contribute a piece of "Halloween Themed flash fiction--500 words or less using - pumpkin spice, ghost, and costume."

Annnnd...I might have messed up. I saw the list of words to use and said, yes! I've got the perfect idea! And then, when I was mostly done, I realized that it was supposed to be Halloween-themed. 

Does it count that I didn't have time to start over because I had to attend a Halloween party? No?  Well, it is what it is. I've written plenty of Christmas stories that have skimped on the actual Christmas part...maybe this is just the same. It's a Halloween adjacent kind of thing. It's giving Halloween vibes. I'm calling it, Coffeehouse Blues.

A good coffeehouse is a wonderful thing.  And I ain’t been in one of those in a while. Ever since my usual hangout—Cup O Joe’s—closed down. They say it’s just for remodeling.  But that seems sus to me. I mean, why’s it taking so long?  What could they possibly be doing to the place that would justify my having to make my own coffee for the last few months…or weeks? Yeah okay, probably just weeks. But it feels like months. Because coffee at home is just not the same.

 

A coffeehouse is not just about the coffee. It’s the community, the vibe. It’s that feeling you get when you push through the door and the barista catches your eye and smiles and says, “The usual?”

 

My cousin, who gets all the tea from the Chamber of Commerce, assures me I’ll be happy when Joe’s reopens. That it’ll be ‘worth the wait’ and ‘better’ but I’ve got doubts. It’s practically Halloween! The TSMs (that’s Typical Suburban Mom’s, in case you’re cheugy or weren’t sure) have already togged their babies out in the most basic of costumes (low maintenance stuff, without a lot of chewable pieces) ghosts and pumpkins and baby bats. Which means I’ve missed half of Pumpkin Spice Latte season! 

 

There is such a thing as diminishing returns, I tell my cousin. And ‘better’ is a relative term. 

 

He laughs when I say it and tells me to stay in school. Right, because the idea of me, with my coupla semesters at community college, tryna tell him about matters of economics is ridiculous. But that’s not what I’m saying at all!

 

If I miss out on too much, if I have to wait too long, then how much better will better really be? I’m living in a post coffee apocalypse dystopia here. A postcoffalypse? Dude, I don’t know: something.

 

Anyway, I’m feeling kind of down as my ramble takes me past the graveyard…I mean the coffee-shop-that-was. And then I stop in my tracks. I smell coffee. Real coffee. Good coffee. I glance up and see that the paper that’s been covering Joe's windows has been removed. And…it's not Joe's anymore. In its place is Whole Latte Love. And the sign says Open! 

 

Feeling hopeful, I push through the door. I glance quickly around, and freeze once again. Because it is better. It’s a coffeeshop-slash-wine-bar-slash-bookstore now. And I’m just so happy I want to cry. 

 

But then my gaze tracks back to the counter and I want to cry for real because the barista’s a ghost. No, not that kind. He’s bussin—a total snacc, and yummy af. But he’s a ghost from my past and, in that moment, all I  can think is, "Of all the coffeeshops in all the towns in all the world, he walks into mine."


Now, hop on over to Jill Haymaker's page to read her flash fiction (probably more on point than mine). And don't forget to check out her book, Christmas in the Montana Pines.






It time to get in the Christmas spirit. Hallmark Christmas movies have begun, and now’s your chance to get new Christmas novels as well. Christmas in the Montana Pines brings you to the mountains of western Montana for this seasoned romance that proves it is never to late to fall in love, especially at Christmas.









FREE Today Only!

Going Back to Find You

A Children of Night Halloween Story


Because even a vampire deserves a second chance. 


When Jason Cook boarded the train to San Francisco, he didn't plan on coming back. He never expected to see Nebraska or Lizbeth Petersen ever again. But when an unexpected turn of events threatens the woman he'd been forced to leave behind, he has no choice but to go back and try to make things right. 

Warning: This is not a drill. Vampires are invading your favorite, small Nebraska town this Halloween. Does this mean Type-O flavored Booze will soon be the new rage in Sapphire Falls? Hopefully, it won't come to that. But you never can tell... 

***This story was originally released as part of the Sapphire Falls Kindle World. It takes place between books six and seven in the Children of Night series.***



 https://www.books2read.com/GoingBack

2021-02-12

Do You Want to Play a Game? Again?

 










Next week I'm doing a soft relaunch of my novella Truth or Dare, the first book in my previously published trilogy Games We Play. Book two releases March 3 and book 3 on March 17--all three are available for preorder now. It's the first time I've done a pre-order and I'm a little nervous about it. I'm starting off very slowly with this because I don't want to mess up, and I'm still not sure of the best way to go about promoting a release when the book's not new. 

Considering I have a nine part series I'm also hoping to release this year, I guess I'd better learn quick!

I spent most of this past week reformatting all three of the books and something unexpected happened. I fell  back in love with my characters. So, let me introduce you to a few of them--or reintroduce you, if you're one of the folks who missed them the first time around. 

The Wild Geese Inn, which is where all the stories are set, is a smallish resort hotel that has seen better days. Located in the fictional town of Atlas Beach. And, seriously, WTF is wrong with my fellow New Jerseyans that no one ever thought to give that name to an actual town? Atlas Beach that was once a very popular Destination of Choice for Jersey Shore-goers but now, much like the hotel itself, it's fallen out of favor. And that was before Hurricane Sandy showed up to beat the everliving crap out of it. The the town is rebuilding. The hotel? Ah, that's where our story begins.

"Wild Geese" is a term that was first coined in the 16th century. It initially referred to a particular brigade of soldiers who left Ireland to fight in France. Over the next few centuries the meaning changed--as frequently happens! At first it was applied to any Irish soldier who left to fight abroad, and gradually it began to be used to reference any Irish emigrant.

The Inn was founded by an unnamed ancestor of our protagonists. All we know is that he, or she, came from Ireland, settled in Atlas Beach and opened a hotel. It's possible the pub came first, and the hotel came later (in fact that's very, very possible--and would explain a lot!) but now it's just one big, sprawling, Victorian-era, conglomeration of accomodations. There's the hotel itself--a grand old building that's big on charm and romance, but totally lacking in modern amenities. And, it's haunted. There's a restaurant, the aforementioned pub, the only part of the package that works year 'round and which, seemingly, has a boggart attached to it. Boggarts are Scottish, and how it came to live in an Irish pub is anyone's guess. There are also beach cottages that are located on the adjacent blocks, and which--by and large--are only habitable during the summer months. 

The property has been in the same family since it first opened, but since it has always been handed down along the matrilineal line, the names keep changing. When the story opens, matriarch Moira Walsh Gallagher has just passed away, leaving the hotel to her three adult grandchildren, Brenda Donovan, Luke Kelly, and Gwyn Carmichael. 

Great-grandfather Walsh (Moira's father) is the closest thing the family has to a patriarch, and given that his wife kicked him to the curb, we can assume that he wasn't a very good one. He's the man responsible for the family curse, but since no one believes in the curse anyway, they don't hold it against him. Much.

Gwyn Carmichael is the youngest of the cousins, although given that there's only a five month age difference between Brenda (the oldest) and  and Gwyn (the youngest) with Luke more or less in the middle, that doesn't mean much. Out of the three cousins, she's probably the one who's spent the most time at the hotel--she and her mom even lived there for awhile when she was a kid. So it's not surprising that she's also the most emotionally invested. Currently, Gwyn's in charge of the hotel and restaurant. She's the only one of the cousins on speaking terms with the hotel ghosts.

Berke Weidman was Gwyn's college boyfriend--the good guy who still managed to break her heart when he left her for his bad boy best friend Cam Steiner. Gwyn hasn't seen either of the men since the super hot, totally disastrous Valentine's Day weekend the three of them spent in one of the hotel's cottages. 

Now, it's Valentine's Day once more and they DID NOT just show up at her door again! Gwyn's ready to peace out on whatever the guys are planning, but it seems the ghosts have other ideas.


Luke Kelly is the middle child of the three cousins. Well, technically, of course, they're all only children, but... Luke's birthday falls midway between the two girls', and "between the two girls" is where he spent most of his childhood (no! NOT like that!) breaking up their squabbles and attempting to keep the peace, etc. 

Luke's domain is the pub, and his two bĂȘte noires are the boggart who messes with the bar, and Kristy DiLuca, who messes with his head, and his heart, and always has. Luke's a sadist, and even if Kristy hadn't friend-zoned him back when they were kids, he'd still be reluctant to introduce her to all his kinks. 

Kristy has loved, lusted, and longed for her good friend for as far back as she can remember. But Luke grew up with two gorgeous cousins, and Kristy could never believe he could ever really be interested in plain old her. Little does he know, but she'd love for him to do all the kinky stuff he's dreamed of doing. Luckily for the two of them, the boggart's got their  back...or does he? Pinning all your hopes on a mischief-making spirit is probably not the best idea! 


Brenda Donovan is the most responsible of the cousins, or at least she thinks she is. But, then again, she also thinks she knows best because she's the oldest. Needless to say, the other two don't take that all too seriously. Still, they happily put her in charge of the business side of things, because that's what she trained in, having gone to school to study hotel management while the others got more hands-on experience. 

Like her cousins, Brenda has always dreamed of someday returning to Atlas Beach and running the Wild Geese Inn. But, now that someday is here, she's not sure the three of them are ready for it. The hotel's losing money and unless Brenda can come up with a solid plan, the three of them are going to lose their entire inheritance.  That's where Max comes in...or so she thinks.

Max Murphy is a bit of a dark horse. He's working undercover at the Inn. Brenda thinks he's helping her negotiate a profitable sale of the property. Brenda's cousins think he's warming Brenda's bed. There's more going on than any of the cousins realize--but is it destiny taking a hand, or the family curse kicking in? Only time will tell...

Click HERE to read the prologue!


Gwyn has her hands full these days trying to help save the family business -- a quirky hotel on the Jersey Shore. She has no time for romance. But when the two men with whom she once spent a drunken menage weekend show up with a sexy proposition, how can she resist? Berke and Cam might have broken her heart once, but Gwyn is older now and wiser. She's not looking for forever. She just wants a good time. And, after all, it is Valentine's Day. 

 For Berke and Cam, the weekend isn't just about fun, or adding some spice to their marriage; it's about winning back the woman who got away, and convincing her to give a committed three-way relationship a shot. They each have skills that could help make the hotel a success -- and they're not above bartering to get what they want. but first they have to get past the walls Gwyn's built to keep them out. But while Cam's biggest concern is making sure Gwyn doesn't break Berke's heart a second time, Berke is worried about what Cam will think if he learns about Berke's part in screwing things up the last time around.

Buy Links (more Coming Soon)


2018-09-05

The Beach...in winter?

I know, I know. Sounds like I'm rushing through the seasons a little, doesn't it? I mean, September only just started, and I'm posting about winter already? Let me explain.

I just posted the first episode of Truth Or Dare (Games We Play, Season One) on Radish. So, of course, that's on my mind. And, what you might not know, is that one of the "seed ideas" for the series was a piece of flash fiction I wrote--quite a few years ago, now--titled The Beach in Winter. And that story had, as its starting point, two rather memorable events from my own teen years that, yes, occurred at the beach. In winter. 'Cause sometimes, as Freud might have said a cigar is, in fact, just a cigar. 

So, even though it's barely fall here--and, on the California coast that means basically it's still summer, my thoughts are somewhere else. Or somewhen else, I guess I should say.

Having grown up in New Jersey, I naturally spent a lot of time going down the shore, as we say. I even lived there, for awhile (in Brick, if you want to be specific). And I still have friends and family who live there now. So, even though the Wild Geese Inn, where most of the action in the series takes place, had its genesis in a very real hotel, on a very different shore, when it came time to create my quaint, little beach town...well, I already had one of those in California, didn't I? So, I thought, why not go back and revisit my roots?

If I had to break it down, I'd say that Atlas Beach is about equal parts Lavallette and Cape May, with hints of Seaside, Point Pleasant and Asbury Park tossed in for good measure. I was actually shocked, when I went looking for a name, to discover that there wasn't already a Jersey Shore town called Atlas Beach. What. The. Fuck. So, yeah, I had to rectify that, for sure!

So far, we haven't seen very much of the town itself. Most of the action in the first three books (which are in the process of being re-released, and will be available exclusively on Radish, at this point) centers around my haunted hotel, The Wild Geese Inn.  But I do have plans for more stories in the future. Kristy's brothers definitely need stories. They also need to be taken down a notch, IMO. I figure they each deserve a Jersey Girl (or maybe a Jersey Boy, I haven't quite decided yet) of their own to put them in their places. The DiLuca boys also have a family business that they're running, DiLuca's Bakery. I expect that will feature at least a little bit in their stories. 

Anyway, I'm sure there are plenty of other characters--and locations--waiting for me to discover them in Atlas Beach, along with more ghosts, and perhaps a Jersey Devil...or even a mermaid.

Really, who knows, at this point? Anything is possible.

You can find the first couple of episodes HERE,  and episode three releases tomorrow. Meanwhile, here's a sneak peek...


-->
Out of the corner of her eye, Gwyn caught a flicker of motion on the stairs. She ignored it, as she usually did, and went on with her work. A moment later, a current of air seemed to rise from nowhere. Outside the wind howled. A shadow passed across the wall. Cold air swirled around her for an instant and then was gone. That was a little more worrisome. In general, the ghosts only produced drafts when they were on the verge of manifesting something unusual.
Gwyn sighed and shook her head. Perfect. Because “unusual” was just what they didn’t need this weekend. Grams had always insisted the ghosts only hung around because they wanted to help the family. Gwyn had yet to be convinced.
Brenda could argue all she liked, but everyone knew the Wild Geese Inn was haunted. It was a big reason they found it hard to keep people on staff. There were doors that opened or closed by themselves, lights that flickered or burned out too fast, voices whispering in the hallways when no one was in sight. The staff had already presented her with a list of the rooms they refused to clean—a fact she’d been careful to keep hidden from her cousin. It wasn’t like those rooms needed to be dealt with very often anyway, unfortunately. When they did, Gwyn took care of them herself. As a teenager, she’d worked as a maid here every summer. It was like riding a bike.
A couple of minutes later, the hotel’s big double outer doors slammed open, banging against the walls of the enclosed entryway. Gwyn glanced up, annoyed. What in the hell were the haunts up to now?
She was surprised—and to be honest, more than a little relieved—to see actual, corporeal people in the glassed-in entryway. Two men, one wearing a long black overcoat and dress pants, the other in a navy peacoat and jeans, were struggling against the wind to re-close the front doors. She perked up at the thought of customers. Ghosts were fine, in their place, but they didn’t pay the bills.
Having finally triumphed over the doors, the two men paused to stomp the snow from their boots. Gwyn watched them appreciatively. She couldn’t see their faces clearly through the fogged glass of the entryway windows, but they were both tall—one more so than the other—and athletic-looking, well worth ogling. Then they turned toward each other, tenderly brushing stray snowflakes from each other’s shoulders and out of their hair, and her heart melted. Her hand strayed to her throat, and she absently fingered the gold and garnet triquetra pendant she always wore. The camaraderie between the two men, their ease with one other, was obvious from clear across the room. It touched her in ways she didn’t quite understand.
It had been years since she’d seen two men this comfortable with each other, so at home. She didn’t even remember when the last time was. Then the taller and fairer of the two men said something his dark-haired companion found funny. He threw back his head in a laugh, and suddenly Gwyn recalled exactly when she’d last witnessed something like this.
“Yeah, Weidman, stop complaining. At least you have your hot girlfriend to keep you warm. Speaking of which, I’mma think I have to borrow her. You up for sharing?”
“No way,” she whispered, horrified, as the blood drained from her face so quickly she nearly passed out on the spot. “No fucking way. It can’t be.”
Gwyn had never been one to hesitate in the face of disaster. She jumped from her seat and grabbed the handle of the reception room door without waiting to learn whether her suspicions about the men’s identities were correct. Someone else could deal with this shit. Brenda, for example. Gwyn was almost positive her cousin was here somewhere tonight. She’d track her down and let her check them in. Or send them away? Oh yes. That would be even better. Although that option might take some explaining.
The door had other ideas about her leaving. It refused to open. No matter which way Gwyn turned the handle, the door didn’t budge. This is not happening, she thought as she started to panic. Behind her, two sets of footsteps crossed the lobby and stopped. She pushed at the door. Still nothing. Damn it!
“Miss?” A familiar voice spoke up behind her. “Miss, can you help us? Excuse me, miss?”
“Someone will be with you in a moment,” Gwyn said, attempting to make her voice as impersonal as possible as she continued to pull uselessly at the door.
A moment’s dead silence met her response. And then, “Gwyn? Is that you?”
Well, fuck.
Gwyn took a deep breath. You can do this, she told herself firmly. Her “useless” Theatre Arts degree and the years she’d spent in amateur productions had to be good for something.
“What can I help you gentlemen with?” she asked as she turned around. Two familiar faces stared at her—as though she were the ghost.
Berke looked stricken. Cam’s mouth had dropped open. Gwyn smiled blandly back at them. Please say nothing. Please say you just got lost and need directions out of town. Please, please, do the decent thing and leave.
“Gwyn, it’s us,” Berke said.
No shit? Her gaze tracked blankly across their faces. “Is there something I can do for you?”
“Gwyn…” Berke said again in a heartrending tone that made her want to break character and kick him. Preferably down a flight of stairs.
“We, uh, have a reservation,” said Cam, who’d finally succeeded in getting his jaw back under control. Ooh. Give the boy a star.
“Oh yes? Well, let’s see now…” Gwyn glided back to the desk and slid gracefully onto the stool. She’d never in her life been more grateful to her Aunt Norah for having insisted all three of the cousins attend deportment classes as children. She opened the reservation calendar and stared sightlessly at her screen. “What name am I looking for?”
“It’s, uh, under Steiner?” Cam said.
Yes, of course it was. Gwyn blinked furiously in an attempt not to frown. They’d been booked into the Captain’s Room for three nights. Whoever took this reservation was so fired. And yes, that was unfair and ridiculous and probably not even legal. She didn’t care. What the fuck was she supposed to do for the next few days—hide? No. Screw that. This was her home. They didn’t get to come here and act surprised to see her. Stupid bastards.
“I’ll need to see identification and a valid credit card.”