Hill & McGraw Have Faith in Love

Audrey Faith Perry, a.k.a. Faith Hill, was raised in the town of Star, 25 miles outside of Jackson, Mississippi. Brought up in a devout Christian household, along with her two older brothers by adoptive parents Pat and Edna Perry. Her first singing experience came as a child in her family’s Baptist church. As a young teenager, Hill learned to play guitar, and by age 16 she had started her own country band that played at a number of local fairs and rodeos. After graduating from high school in 1986, Hill spent a year in community college before moving to Nashville, Tennessee, to pursue her love of music.

While in Nashville, she met and married a songwriter and music publishing executive named Daniel Hill. Her breakthrough came when she was spotted by a talent scout from the Warner/Reprise recording company, while singing back-up for Gary Burr in the Bluebird Café, a popular Nashville bar. Her debut album, Take Me As I Am, was released in 1993 to immediate success. The album’s first single, “Wild One,” reached No. 1 on the Billboard country music chart and stayed there for four weeks.

Hill’s rise to country stardom coincided with a good deal of upheaval in her personal life. In 1990, she had begun a search for her birth mother, whom she eventually met in 1993. Hill has declined to publicly name her birth mother in order to protect her privacy, but has remained in contact with her. Shortly after the release of her album, Hill found her marriage falling apart. She and Daniel Hill divorced in 1994.
In the spring of 1996, Hill began a joint tour, dubbed the Spontaneous Combustion tour, with country superstar Tim McGraw. At the time, McGraw had recently broken an engagement to Kristine Donahue, and Hill was engaged to Scott Hendricks, a record producer who had helmed her first two albums. Nonetheless, sparks flew, and the two began a romantic relationship behind closed doors. How could she not fall for the bad boy with the growly voice?

Tim McGraw grew up thinking he was the son of Horace Smith. When he was 11 years old, he discovered his birth certificate and saw his biological father’s surname. Turns out, that father was former baseball player Tug McGraw. Tug, unaware that he’d knocked up 18-year-old Betty Dagostino, left town. When Tim was seven months old, Betty married Horace Smith, whom she told Tim was his father. Ironically, McGraw had Tug’s baseball card taped to his bedroom wall even before he knew he was his father. Tim contacted Tug and after years of being ignored, Tug finally began to develop a relationship with his estranged son.

McGraw left college early to move to Nashville. He picked up guitar and began performing anywhere he could. It didn’t take long for him to become one of the most popular “Young Country” stars to emerge in the 1990s. After the release of his second album in 1994, McGraw quickly began to top charts and pack arenas.

While on tour with Faith Hill in Montana, he popped the question in his dressing room, which was housed in a trailer. He later reminisced about the event in an interview with People magazine: “She said, ‘I can’t believe you’re asking me to marry you in a trailer house,’ and I said, ‘Well, we’re country singers, what do you expect?’”

The happy couple married on October 6, 1996. Their daughter, Gracie, was born in 1997, and another daughter, Maggie, was born the following year. They now have three daughters. In May 2000, Hill and McGraw launched the Soul2Soul Tour, which stands as the highest grossing country music tour ever. In addition to her 5 Grammy Awards, Hill has also won 12 Academy of Country Music Awards, 4 American Music Awards, 4 People’s Choice Awards, and 3 Country Music Association Awards. McGraw’s list of awards is just as impressive, with the two combining to win a Grammy for Vocal Collaboration with the song Let’s Make Love.

In addition to her thriving career and family, Hill devotes a good deal of time to her charity organization, the Faith Hill Family Literacy Project, launched in 1996 with the cooperation of Warner Bros. and Time Warner.

“There’s a lot of people who can pick up a guitar and sing you a great song, but there’s very few people that can tell you how they feel. That’s the main purpose of acting or doing an opera or painting or anything. It’s to tell somebody how you feel and more importantly, tell them how they feel.”—Tim McGraw

Watch their adorable new video here:

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How to Avoid a Stalker While Visiting Online Dating Websites

programmer on a computer

In present times, no one is oblivious to the power of the internet. From learning cooking recipes to making new friends online, there is no aspect of our lives that has been left untouched by the internet. It is the comfort and convenience of the net that has made it so popular worldwide. It is oh-so-convenient for everyone to sit on their easy chairs with a mug of coffee and know all that is happening around the world just at the click of a tiny button. There is no aspect of our lives that has been left untouched by the power of the internet. This includes our married and dating life as well.

As of late, online dating has become a rage. With sites like Tinder and Match, it has become very easy for people to register online to try finding the person of their dreams. The anonymity these sites provide makes them all the more comfortable for an individual to find their prince or princess charming. However, there are always two sides to a coin.

While dating sites can be fun, they also prove to be a breeding ground for stalkers and psychotic criminals, who register online, mainly looking for their next vulnerable victim. Many times innocent victims unknowingly succumb to the charm of the stalkers, hence suffering a lot in the process. Such doings can prove to be very dangerous and even fatal at the time. Here we have a few tips for you to avoid a stalker while visiting an online dating website:

  • Block anyone suspicious: The moment you get an inkling that a person is going an extra mile to charm you or is trying to become your friend by force, block him or her immediately. Also, make sure to report the profile for the safety of others as well.
  • Don’t accept request randomly: Whenever you get a friend request, don’t accept it immediately. Make so to visit the person’s profile first. After that, run a search on him or her on Google to verify whether the images used are real or fake. Only after a thorough search should you accept a request, else avoid.
  • Keep the chats restricted to the website only: Make sure to keep your chats restricted to the website only. Never share your phone number or talk to mobile apps for your own safety.
  • Meet in a public place: When you decide to meet the person in real, make sure to meet him or her in a crowded public place. Never meet the person in an isolated location.
  • Take a friend along: Make sure to take a friend along on your first date if you choose to date online. Never meet a person whom you don’t know all alone for the first time.
  • Do not share your address or other personal details: Make sure not to share your address or other personal details with a person. You may repent later. Also, make sure to never share your intimate pictures with anyone online, which he or she may use to trouble you later.

scared female teenager with computer laptop suffering cyberbullying harassment

It is better to be safe than sorry! All the best!

 

A Salute to Mother-Daughter Writing Teams

Teacher teaching student in classroom

Mother’s Day is coming, and it always has a bittersweet quality for me because my mother died right after Mother’s Day 16 years ago. My mother was not a writer, but she was well-read and critically observant, and I’m sure she could give me valuable advice on my writing if she were still here. So I am naturally envious of the successful mother-daughter writing duos out there.

clarkFor example, in the mystery fiction arena, there are the equally well-known Mary Higgins Clark and her daughter Carol Higgins Clark, authors of books together and separately. Their first collaboration was Deck the Halls, described by Publishers Weekly as a “amiably lighthearted Christmas ornament of a book,” in which Regan Reilly, the dynamic young sleuth from Carol Higgins Clark’s novels, accidentally meets Alvirah Meehan, Mary Higgins Clark’s amateur detective, and they team up to solve a Reilly family-linked kidnapping. Another mystery writing duo operates under the pseudonym P. J. Tracy for mother-daughter team Patricia (P. J.) and Traci Lambrecht. Their debut Monkeewrench, which won a Barry Award as Best First Mystery Novel, is a tale of serial killings inspired by the new computer game of software company Monkeewrench, whose eccentric partners have a secret past that may link to the crimes.

skyIn the Young Adult space, New York Times bestselling author Suzanne Brockmann teamed up with her daughter Melanie Brockmann to write the paranormal Night Sky series about Skylar Reid, a teenage girl who discovers that she is a Greater-Than, meaning she has scary super-powers. Bestseller Jodi Picoult also collaborated with her daughter, Samantha van Leer, to produce Young Adult fare, starting with Between the Lines, a fairy tale-styled teen romance. Sometimes the mothers and daughters who share writing talent work best as mutual inspirations rather than as co-authors, as seen with the late award-winning writer Carolyn See and her best-seller daughter Lisa See (who also has mystery chops via her Red Princess series). Carolyn and Lisa did share the pen name Monica Highland, too. For more about mothers and daughters in publishing, see http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jocelyn-kelley/moms-write_b_1510114.html

ABOUT  KATHERINE SHARMA

Katherine Sharma’s family roots are in Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas. But after her early childhood in Texas, she has moved around the country and lived in seven other states, from Virginia to Hawaii. She currently resides in California with her husband and three children. She has also traveled extensively in Europe, Africa and Asia, and makes regular visits to family in India. After receiving her bachelor’s degree. in economics and her master’s degree in journalism from the University of Michigan, Katherine worked as a newspaper and magazine writer and editor for more than 15 years. She then shifted into management and marketing roles for firms in industries ranging from outdoor recreation to insurance to direct marketing. Although Katherine still works as a marketing consultant, she is now focused on creative writing.

Stranded With 5 Sex-Starved Guys!

 

dv2044010“Damn you, Melanie!” I cursed and hit the steering wheel for good measure.

I trusted my friend and she draws a crazy map, one that led me right in the middle of—nowhere! And to make things worse, there were big rain clouds hovering over my little car, a car that wasn’t anything near to being a four-by-four, which was what I needed right now.

This getaway weekend with the girls had been something I’d been dreading. Melanie always came up with these great ideas that turned into disasters. Wasn’t it enough to just book a couple of hotel rooms in the city and get together with the four of us old friends? Why did we have to go on this wilderness adventure, especially since the last time I’d done anything like that was when I went camping with my folks when I was seven.

I pulled over to the side of the road and tried to make sense of Melanie’s map again. I’d been looking for the sign that said the town of Maxin was thirty miles away. I’d been driving for hours now, and I was getting farther away from any kind of civilization. I had to admit it: I was lost.

I really did like getting together with my old college friends. But for once I wish someone would outvote Melanie and pick a more normal place for our semi-annual get-togethers. I mean, the last one had been whale-watching. I’ve got nothing against whales and I enjoy nature, but I spent every day of that trip throwing up over the edge of the boat. If there were any whales out there, I didn’t see any—and I’m sure they didn’t want to see me.

Still, the others seemed to love those trips, so I didn’t want to rain on their parade.

Speaking of rain, the skies were just now opening up. A misty, dull day was now a rainy day, and quickly becoming a torrent. I could hardly see a few feet ahead of me on the road. What now? Where was that knight on a white charger when you needed him?

Hah! My life had been totally knight-free for a year. I’d been hoping to confide in my friends and get some serious dating tips.

The thunder cracked overhead, making me jump. I hoped that wasn’t a message from above telling me how futile my search was, for both this retreat in the woods and my imaginary lover.

I crumpled the map, threw it into the backseat, and tried my cell phone, but the mountains interfered with the reception. I was on my own.

I could try to crawl ahead and maybe reach a town—if there were any nearby. The girls would be waiting for me in that wilderness retreat, a collection of cabins along a lake where people booked time away from the world. I hoped they wouldn’t worry about me, because it looked like the best I could do was to find a place off the road and sleep in the car for the night. It was getting dark.

I inched the car along until I came to a rickety wooden bridge over a fast-moving stream. It seemed to be rising faster as I watched. I parked the car and waited, though for what, I don’t know.

The tap on my window was so unexpected that I nearly jumped out of my skin. I hadn’t seen another vehicle for about an hour.

“Lady, you can’t stay here,” the man said.

He was soaked. He looked to be in his early forties and had the kind of face that always seemed to be an inch away from a big smile. I decided to trust him.

“I think I’m lost. Do you know where the Little Corners Retreat is?”

He scratched his head. “I think so. You’re way off, though. You’d have to turn back and go another hour or so.”

“I’m not going anywhere now.” I wasn’t a very good driver, and my vision wasn’t the greatest at night. “I think I’ll stay right here until the morning.”

“I don’t know about that, lady. We’re in for a ton of rain. If this bridge gives out . . .”

“Then what am I supposed to do?” I asked testily.

“Why not follow me up to our camp?”

“Your—camp?” I repeated, not really understanding.

He hesitated for a moment, then got back in his truck. I guess I was supposed to follow him.

To where? What camp? Was I better off just spending the night at the side of the road? He said “our” camp. Maybe his family’s?

He drove slowly so I could follow. His truck crossed the ancient bridge and I felt it rumble as I followed. The water had risen to an alarming height in just the time it took for us to talk.

Suddenly I could feel the whole bridge shaking. I closed my eyes and gunned the accelerator. Just as the tires hit the muddy road on the other side, I could hear something falling, crashing. Up ahead, my rescuer had stopped his truck. I stopped, too. He got out.

“You’ve got to be the luckiest woman on the face of the earth,” he said when I’d rolled down my window.

“What do you mean—oh, my God!”

ThinkstockPhotos-465067420 I looked behind me. The old bridge was gone. I got out of the car and stared at the empty space I’d just driven over. There was nothing now but the remains of old timbers falling into the rushing water. Two seconds later and I would have been dead.

I started to shake. The man held me and hugged me tightly for a full minute.

“Are you going to be all right?” he asked finally.

“I think so. What’s your name?”

“Hansen.”

“I’m Jill.”

“Well, now you don’t have any choice but to go to our camp, Jill. We could sure use the company. Hey, why don’t you just leave your car here, and I’ll drive you the rest of the way? It’s kind of rough for a little car like this.”

Hansen waited while I took my small suitcase out of the trunk, which he put in the back of his truck. Strangely, I didn’t feel afraid of him. Maybe it was the way he’d comforted me after seeing the bridge collapse.

Hansen really seemed like a nice guy. He was a little too old for me, maybe in his early forties. We didn’t say much as he drove, but then he began to talk. I hardly listened. What can you say to a stranger who’d almost lost her life? I wondered if I would have tried to cross the bridge on my own. What if, what if? All I knew was that I was alive and feeling very grateful. So maybe I was stranded with this stranger. What did that matter?

Slowly I began to concentrate on what he was saying. He was mentioning quite a few men, but so far I hadn’t heard him mention even one woman.

“What kind of a camp is this, Hansen?” I asked.

“It’s kind of like a construction camp.”

“And there are . . . how many men there?”

“There’s the five of us right now. Sometimes there’s seven, but two of the lucky ones are on rotation. That means they’re home right now. Unfortunately, one of them is the cook, so we have to make do with our not-so-great cooking skills. Damn! I hope they can put up a temporary bridge. It’s been six solid months since the rest of us have been home.”

Things were slowly starting to make sense to me. I was headed for some kind of a construction camp where five men hadn’t been home in six months. Besides that, it looked like I was stranded here with them. To any of my female friends, that might have been a dream come true—but not to me. I was hungry, tired, and I’d just had the scare of my life.

Hansen was a charmer. He had a sweet, shy way about him that made me forget he was too old for me. I began to warm up to him and to accept the situation. After all, none of this was his fault. He couldn’t have predicted the bridge washing out just as I was driving on it.

I took a deep breath. It was a good thing that I was with Hansen and not trying to follow in my car. The rain was pouring down now and I couldn’t see a thing. This man must have had a sixth sense about where he was going, especially because the road had turned into a mud trail.

“How much farther?” I asked finally.

“We’re almost there. I sure hope someone put some supper together. I’m starving.”

I was surprised to find that I was, too. The last thing I’d eaten was a greasy breakfast at a diner along the highway, and that had been hours ago.

“Here we are. Home sweet home,” he said with a smile.

I looked around. All I could make out through the sheets of rain was a collection of white construction trailers.

“I’ll take you to the dining room,” he said. “That’s where we hang out. Not much to do up here after work, especially when it rains.”

Hansen got out and took my suitcase from the back. I followed him slowly. I’d gotten used to him during the drive, but I felt a little intimated about meeting four other strangers.

“Come on. They won’t bite,” he said with a twinkle in his eye. “Unless you ask them to.”

It took me a few moments to figure that one out. Then I remembered what he’d said about none of them being home for six months. I couldn’t imagine that any girlfriends had made it up there in the middle of nowhere, so that meant . . .

I’m walking into a camp where five men haven’t seen a woman in six months. Oh, my friends are going to love this one!

But then I walked into the “dining room,” which was just a big trailer, and came face-to-face with the others. Two guys were sitting at the big table, playing cards. A solitary man was reading in a corner, while still another was doing some kind of paperwork. When they saw me, they all stood up, as if on cue. I must have looked like a drowned rat.

I’d always been shy. Once I finished college and started my career, I was able to do all right with people. However, social situations still made me nervous. Determined, I approached the first two men and stuck out my hand.

“Hello. I’m Jill Robinson. I guess I’ll be staying for a little while, since I’m stranded.”

“Stranded?” the two asked in unison. Then they looked at Hansen.

“The bridge washed out. Jill just barely got across. We left her car near there and came up in the truck.”

“The bridge is gone? Oh, that’s great, just great!” The man who’d been doing the paperwork came over to us.

I sensed immediately that he was the boss. He looked me up and down as though I was a fly that had just crossed his path. He turned back at Hansen.

“I was just talking to the police in Stanley. The whole town is flooded. Who knows when it’ll stop, too. They have their hands full, evacuating people. We’ll be pretty low on their list of priorities right now, since we’re not in danger and are self-sufficient with food and water. So, Miss—Robinson, is it? You might be staying with us for longer than you think.”

From the sound of his voice, that was the last thing he wanted.

“I forgot the introductions,” Hansen said. “Jill, this is Chad Morgan, our supervisor. Mark, Alex, and Pete. Now you know everyone.”

I heard the other names, but my gaze was still locked with Chad’s. It was as though he blamed me for getting stranded there and disrupting his plans.

“I’ll try to stay out of everyone’s way,” I said.

“Oh, I’ll make sure of that,” Chad huffed.

I had the urge to kick him in the shins. Hansen gave a theatrical little cough and tried to hide a smile behind his hand, but I didn’t find his boss amusing at all. I thought he was extremely rude and thoughtless. Hadn’t he heard Hansen say that I’d almost been swept away by that flood back there?

“All right, then. Let’s get you settled in,” Chad said, picking up my luggage and walking out the door. I had to trot to keep up with him.

“Come back in a little while for supper, Jill,” Hansen called out. “We’ll be waiting for you.”

At least the others in the camp seemed happy to have a woman in their company! I followed Chad out into the soggy yard. We walked until we got to the smallest trailer, situated slightly away from the others. He pushed open the door and didn’t wait for me to follow.

It was a typical man’s environment. The hallway was littered with rope and equipment that I didn’t recognize.

“I really don’t want to be a problem,” I told him.

“Beautiful women are always a problem. Damn! Why did this have to happen right now?”

“The flood . . . or me coming here?” I was a little stunned by his comment about beautiful women. He couldn’t be talking about me, surely?

“I don’t think you want me to answer that, Miss Robinson. Here’s where you’ll be staying. The bathroom’s just down the hall. Nothing fancy.”

Chad left the trailer and I spent a few minutes getting washed up. But I was really hungry, so I made my way back to the dining room trailer.

The others were just about to sit down to eat. I looked around and was relieved to see that Chad wasn’t there.

We were having a great time, me and the four men. They had fried steaks and made garlic bread for supper. I was telling them about my college friends and some of the crazy reunion trips we’d gone on, just as Chad came back. He gave me an icy stare and walked on past us to the desk in the corner, ignoring all of us.

“I’ll fix him a plate,” Hansen said quietly as the others began to talk again. “Otherwise he won’t eat.”

It seemed that the men respected Chad, though my brief experience with him was less than favorable. Still, I was the interloper there. I’m sure I must have put his schedule off by being there, whatever it was they did in that camp in the middle of the wilderness.

After supper everyone except Alex and myself left the dining trailer. I was helping him wash the dishes when he commented that I must be special to be staying in the “Hilton”, which is what they called Chad’s little trailer.

“Yes, it’s really nice of you all to make me feel at home. I feel guilty, though, staying there all by myself, when I know the rest of you have to share.”

“Oh, you aren’t by yourself. Didn’t Chad tell you? That’s his trailer you’re staying in.”

I almost dropped the plate in my hands. Chad’s trailer? Now, why on earth would he have put me up in his own trailer, when it was obvious he could barely stand the sight of me?

Maybe he doesn’t trust me. Maybe he thinks I came here to sleep with all of his men.

I had to smile at that one. Later, when I was back in my bedroom in the trailer, I wondered what Chad would do if he arrived there and found me gone. Would he check all the men’s quarters to make sure I hadn’t slipped into someone’s bed? But he didn’t come back until early the next morning.

When I went to the dining trailer for breakfast, Pete and Alex were just leaving for the construction site and Mark was finishing his plate of eggs and bacon. Hansen was the temporary cook.

“Is there anything I can do for you today?” I asked. “I mean, I’ve got nothing to do except read a book I brought with me. How about if I make lunch?”

“Sure—thanks for the offer,” Hansen said. “If you can make any sense of where Cook puts things. He’s even got recipe books, but I don’t think he’s ever used them. We just make good, plain food up here.”

“I’ll do my best,” I promised, happy to be able to earn my keep. “Any word about the flood?”

“Not much. The water’s still rising slightly. Fortunately, it hasn’t affected the work we do here too much, but it means you’ll be stuck here a few more days.”

“No hardship on us,” Mark piped up, bringing his plate to the sink. “We’d keep you here forever if we could, Jill.”

Mark was a charmer. He was about my age, maybe a little younger. I smiled at him.

“Miss Robinson, if you’re quite finished with your breakfast, I’d like a word with you.”

The imperative voice behind me nearly made me jump out of my skin. I whirled around and came face-to-face with Boss Man Chad. Why did I feel like a schoolgirl who’d been caught kissing a boy?

“Of course. Whenever you’re ready.” I smiled at Hansen, who was finishing with the dishes and followed Chad outside.

He watched as Mark climbed into the truck that would take the men to their construction site. Chad waited in silence as the men shouted funny farewells to me. I laughed and waved back.

“It wouldn’t be too good for you to get too friendly with any of the men, Miss Robinson.”

“Oh, for goodness’ sakes—call me Jill!” I said impatiently.

“Don’t change the subject. I’ve got a great team here. We work well together and we get things done. I’ve been in places where women and men were hired to work together in isolated places. In my experience, it just doesn’t work.”

“You seem to have a short memory. I’m not here by choice. The first chance I get, I’m leaving.”

“That will be fine with me,” he said stiffly.

I stomped off, back toward the dining trailer. Hansen was still there. He had told me that he was scheduled to travel to a different part of the site that day, so he couldn’t go with the others. I was glad he still hadn’t left. I needed someone to complain to.

“What’s wrong?” he asked.

“It’s Chad. That man is so rude! Or is he just the world’s biggest male chauvinist?”

Hansen laughed. “He’s kind of bitter since his divorce. It shows, huh?”

“He has no manners whatsoever. I mean, the rest of you guys have treated me with respect and kindness. But not him.”

“I wouldn’t be too hard on him. Chad’s a great guy, a good boss. It’s just that we’ve had some problems on this site.”

“Problems? What problems?”

He looked uncomfortable as he packed his equipment bags. He didn’t speak for a few moments, and when he did I could tell he was choosing his words carefully.

“Last week we had some environmental activists snooping around. It took awhile to convince them to leave.”

“Hansen, isn’t it time you left for the north quarter?”

That voice! It was Chad again, sneaking up on us. How much had he heard?

Hansen left quickly, after flashing me an apologetic smile. I think he sensed that I’d be the brunt of Chad’s anger.

“What is it that you do here?” I asked Chad when Hansen had left. “Why the big mystery?”

He towered over me. I hadn’t realized just how tall he was—or how big those muscles in his arms were—until now. Was he trying to intimidate me?

“Are you really who you say you are, Jill Robinson?”

“What do you mean?”

“I mean, are you just someone who got lost on her way to a rendezvous with her old college girlfriends?”

So he had been listening to my conversation with the guys.

“Of course I am! Remember, I asked you to try to contact them for me if you could, to let them know I was all right?”

“So you did.” He seemed deep in thought. Then, suddenly, he grabbed my hand and pulled me outside.

“Where are we going?” I asked.

“You wanted to know what it is we do here. I’m going to show you.”

We got into a pickup truck that must have been his own, since there wasn’t a company logo on the door like the other ones.

“I—I promised to make lunch for the guys,” I told him as we took off.

“I’ll get you back long before that.”

ThinkstockPhotos-486936183We drove for about twenty minutes. Up ahead I could see the other men working, walking up and down the side of a steep hill. They stopped and waved at us for a moment. Chad and I waved back.

“But they’re—they’re wearing masks,” I said. “Chad, what’s going on?”

“I don’t want to take you too close. You don’t have the proper breathing equipment or suit. Besides, it’s too dangerous for an outsider.”

“What are you talking about?”

“My company is here to do an environmental cleanup, Jill.”

“So that’s the reason for all the secrecy,” I said.

“Yes. We’ve been hired to clean up the mess of an old refinery that used to be here. Then, later, it was the site of a chemical processing plant.”

“Out here? Way out in the middle of nowhere?”

“Where better to have one?” he said, laughing cynically. “Up until the seventies, companies got away with this sort of thing all the time.”

“But this must be so dangerous—to work here, I mean.”

“Yes, it is. That’s why we get paid so well to do it. It’s necessary work. Would you rather this poison was just left in the ground?”

“But the men. Is this going to damage their health?”

“You care about them, don’t you? We take all the proper precautions. I don’t spare any money when it comes to the safety of my workers.” He sounded hurt by my implication.

“I didn’t mean it that way. I mean, you’re just as much at risk as anyone.” I put my hand on his arm. “And to think that people think of this as pristine wilderness. . . . ”

“It will be that again. You’ll see. That’s my job,” he said. “I’m trusting you with this, Jill. My company needs this contract, and part of it is making sure that this information doesn’t leak to the press. I sure hope you’re not some big-city reporter in disguise.”

I laughed outright at that one. “Who? Me? I barely passed English in school.”

He smiled then. We drove back in companionable silence. I was changing my opinion of Mr. Chad Morgan. He cared about his workers, and he was starting to trust me. In turn, I felt myself softening a little toward him.

“Happy cooking,” he said as he dropped me off back at the dining trailer. I waved as he drove on out of sight, back toward the site of that chemical dump.

I was kind of disappointed when he didn’t show up for lunch. The others did, though, and they tore into my pathetic attempts at baking. I’d made biscuits with sausages and even baked a cake for dessert.

“Step aside, men. I’m going to marry this woman!” Mark said when he saw the spread on the table. He lifted me off my feet.

The others joined in, joking that they were going to keep me there forever if I was going to cook like that. I felt happy to be with them. They didn’t leave one crumb on their plates. After dinner, Pete and Alex volunteered to do the dishes.

Still, the place felt empty without Chad. Hansen had told me he hadn’t been eating properly. The stress of the environmental activists showing up, I guess.

Later in the afternoon, when I was planning supper, Chad came in. He looked exhausted.

“Sit down,” I urged him. “Have something to eat. There’s still some left over from lunch.”

I was hoping that he wasn’t regretting showing me the cleanup site. I wanted to tell him that he really could trust me.

“This is great. Where did you learn to cook like this?” he asked, surprised.

“I’m not just a pretty face,” I joked. “Who do you think does the cooking at my place? The maid?”

I sat down and had a cup of coffee while he dug into the food.

“I’m trying to think of what to make for supper,” I said.

“Listen, Jill, you don’t have to do this. You’re a guest here. We should be catering to you, instead of the other way around. Don’t spoil these guys.”

“I like spoiling them.”

A frown came over his face. We sat in silence for a few moments. “Chad, why did you put me up in your trailer?” I asked then. “The cook’s room is just off the kitchen here. I could have slept there.”

“So I could keep an eye on you,” he said quietly.

So he did think I couldn’t be trusted around the men!

“Well, that’s hardly flattering,” I said. “Did you think I was going to come on to them all?”

“I did it for your own safety. Jill, these men haven’t had leave for a long time. They haven’t been around a woman in six months.”

“Well, neither have you.”

“I’m different.”

ThinkstockPhotos-82355280 I remembered Hansen telling me about Chad’s divorce. It must have been painful. What divorce wasn’t? I wanted to console him, but I didn’t even know him. I tried to remember what it was we’d been talking about.

“You’re staying in my trailer, and that’s final, Jill,” Chad said.

I stared at the door after he left. I would’ve given a hundred dollars right then to know what was on his mind.

I made supper that night, but again Chad wasn’t around. I put a plate of food in the fridge with a note for him. Now I was starting to feel like Hansen, looking after him.

I didn’t allow myself to fall asleep that night until I heard Chad come in. Was it my imagination, or did his footsteps linger for a moment by my door? In any case, I fell asleep right after that.

But not for long. In my dreams, I was back in my car again, crossing that bridge—only this time I didn’t make it to the other side. I felt the car falling into the raging current. I could feel the ice-cold water around my neck. I woke up in a cold sweat.

The light came on in the hallway, and I could see the figure of a man at my door. I almost screamed. Then I remembered where I was, and why.

“Are you all right, Jill? I heard you cry out.”

“A—a nightmare. I’ll be all right.”

Chad hesitated, then came into the room. He knelt down beside the bed. “What was it about?”

“The washout. Only in my dream, I wasn’t so lucky.”

Call it delayed shock or whatever, but I began to shake and couldn’t stop. I felt cold and frightened.

“Do you want me to turn on the light?” he asked.

“No, no, don’t do that. Just—just . . . I’ll be fine in a minute.”

“You’re shaking like a leaf. Something tells me that Hansen didn’t tell us exactly how close a call that was for you on that bridge.”

“I didn’t want anyone to make a big deal about it.”

“But it was a big deal. You almost drowned.”

Then he wrapped me in an embrace. I was shocked. Chad had seemed so distant and in control of his emotions. And now—this. I didn’t know how to react.

So I just relaxed against him. In a few moments he got up and left the room.

But the hug was just what I’d needed. I turned over and slept like a baby for the rest of the night. I’m sure there was even a little smile on my face.

The next morning I noticed something strange about the men. Instead of their gentle flirting and joking, they seemed to be giving me a wide berth. Talk was about the weather and other neutral subjects. I wondered if I’d said or done something to offend them.

“What’s the matter? You guys don’t like the way I make your eggs?” I teased.

They didn’t respond; they only gave each other funny looks.

Chad came in just as they were getting ready to leave. Once the other four had left for the cleanup site, I plunked a plate of eggs and hash browns down in front of him.

“What’s going on with the guys? They treated me like Typhoid Mary just now.”

He didn’t say anything at first. I poured coffee for both of us and sat down.

“Jill, you remember I told you that it wouldn’t be in your best interest to get too friendly with the men, considering the circumstances?”

“Yes.” It was like the intimacy of the night before had never happened.

“Well, for your own protection, I’ve told them to keep their distance. You’re a guest here. It wouldn’t do to give them any ideas, especially since we don’t know how long you’ll be staying with us.”

“I get the feeling that you’re not telling me everything,” I said.

“You’re right. They weren’t convinced that you felt that way. Like I said, they haven’t been around a woman for a long time. A couple of them wanted to get to know you better—a lot better.”

My face must have turned red but my voice was calm. “So? Maybe that’s all right with me.”

“Well, that’s not all right by me, Jill, and if you were thinking, you’d agree. I have a camp to run here. I can’t have my men thinking about you day and night, maybe making some stupid mistake out there on that dangerous site . . .”

“Chad, what is it you’re trying so hard not to tell me?”

“I told them the only thing I could think of to keep them away from you: I told them that we were sleeping together.”

My fist came up to hit him. That shocked me because I’d never hit anyone in my life. I stopped just in time, but he could see what I’d been about to do. I rushed to my feet, ready for verbal battle.

“Why would you tell them something like that? They’re not raving dogs, for crying out loud. No one’s even made a pass at me.”

“What’s the matter, Jill? Are you disappointed that no one’s tried anything yet?”

I did hit him then. It was a feeble attempt to hurt him. It didn’t happen like a scene in the movies, either. Instead of a nice slap, I hit his jaw with my fist and nearly broke my fingers. Chad stepped back in shock. Then, to my surprise, he started laughing.

“Hey, not bad! Where’d you learn to punch like that?” He moved his jaw to check for damage.

I was still furious. I crossed my arms over my chest and glared at him.

“All right, maybe I deserved that,” he said with a big grin on his face.

Maybe? You damned well did deserve it!”

He stood there laughing at me and nursing his jaw. “Anyway, Jill, the damage is done. They think we’re an item. It’s perfect. No one will approach you now—and I’ll have peace in my little camp.”

The man sounded so pleased with himself that I wanted to smack him again. I would have, too, if my hand didn’t hurt so much.

As I watched him strut out of the trailer, I had a childish urge to throw something at his back. How could one male be so smug?

It burned me, and not just because I was enjoying the harmless flirting with the other men. It bothered me that Chad would take it upon himself to tell them that we were sleeping together. I wondered what they’d been thinking about me. Of course, it only added to Chad’s reputation, but it did nothing for my own. I was starting to get a little interested in Mark, the funny one of the group, and maybe Alex, the quiet one. But Chad Morgan had just put a damper on any romantic plans I might have had.

Not that I’d ever sleep with any of them under these circumstances. But it was an ideal situation to meet men. I didn’t have any competition, after all.

But Chad had gone and told them, basically, that I was his “property”. I couldn’t face the men for the rest of the day. I made up meals for them and left them in the fridge. I spent the rest of the day taking a walk and later reading my book. How was I ever going to talk to them again?

“All right, Jill. What’s the problem?” Chad asked later that evening. “Are you sick? Why haven’t you shown up for lunch or supper?”

“You know why, Mr. Boss Man. Every man in this camp thinks I’m you’re . . .”

“Would that be so bad, Jill?”

I put my book down and put up a hand to ward him off, but it was too late. Chad kissed me then. Of all the men in camp who might have kissed me, why did it have to be him? We didn’t like each other. Or did we? By the way he was concentrating on the kiss, his lips moving slowly—way too slow for me—over mine, you’d think we’d been lovers forever. And I liked the way he kissed, so slow and so delicious. This was the kiss of a lifetime.

“What do you think of me now, Jill?”

“I think that maybe we should be sleeping together.”

How had that come out so wrong? He laughed.

“I think that . . . maybe we should,” he said, mimicking me.

ThinkstockPhotos-156208173 It was a night that I wouldn’t forget for a long time. Chad was an incredible lover. He had stamina and incredible patience, and neither one of us got any sleep at all. Much later, as the first rays of dawn crept into my room, I wondered who came up with the term “sleeping together.” They just didn’t get the point at all.

Chad opened his eyes and groaned. “I’ve got to get to the site early this morning,” he said. He got out of my bed and started putting his clothes on.

“Without breakfast?”

He turned back to look at me, a wicked smile on his face. “I don’t think you’re thinking about food right now, are you, Jill?”

Hardly. Not when I could see that perfectly shaped male butt disappearing into his work clothes. I could hardly breathe.

Still, our relationship—if you could call it that—was too new, too fragile for much joking. I felt my face grow warm, but I didn’t say anything.

“I really do have to go. But I’ll remember you like this, waiting for me in your bed, every moment that I’m out there. And when I come back . . .”

“Just get your work done fast,” I said, surprising myself.

Chad laughed, that deep sound that turned me on.

It was hard to concentrate that day. Chad had said he wouldn’t be back for lunch. I was a bundle of nerves all day. The guys noticed it at lunch.

“Are you all right, Jill?” Hansen asked.

“I’m fine,” I said, after dropping about the tenth item that day.

“You seem a little tense.”

“No, really, I’m fine.” Then I remembered that the whole group thought I was sleeping with Chad. Well, now it was true.

I didn’t know what I was going to do about it. I mean, one night of incredible sex still wasn’t the basis of a relationship, in my opinion. It was too soon. Chad and I had gone from being at each other’s throats to being in bed together in just one day.

When the phone rang, Hansen went to check on it. He was talking to someone, but I couldn’t make out what he was saying. Then he turned to all of us and gave a whoop of joy.

“The flooding has stopped! We should have some contact with the outside world in a day or less!”

The men cheered. It had been a long time coming for them. As soon as they could drive out, they’d be able to take a much-needed break.

“Oh, and Jill. The sheriff has someone in town who wants to talk to you,” Hansen told me.

It was Melanie. My friends had been anxiously waiting at the retreat. Chad had gotten through with the message that I was safe, but they were still beside themselves worrying about me.

If this had all happened even yesterday, I would have been thrilled to get out of this camp and away from Chad. But today I wasn’t so sure. I’d be leaving and who knew if we’d ever see each other again?

It was after supper when I went back to the trailer to read my book. Chad hadn’t shown up all day. Hansen said not to worry, that he’d spotted him just north of the cleanup site doing some work. He explained that Chad often got so caught up in his work that he forgot about eating.

Suddenly, my door burst open. Chad walked in, looking angry enough to hit something.

“Chad! What’s wrong?”

“You tell me, Jill. Yes, go ahead and tell me what you’ve been up to while all of us were up at the site.”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about, Chad.”

“I think you do!”

“I don’t have any idea what you’re talking about,” I said.

“Don’t you? Then how did the media get their hands on the confidential information and reports that I keep in my room here? Now it’s all over the news that we’re doing a secret cleanup here. They have details that came from my own reports to the company. And you had access to those reports! Damn, you probably even used my own fax machine to send them!”

I could only sit there and stare at him. What was he talking about?

“And last night. Was that part of your whole package to deceive me, Jill? Sleep with the guy, really gain his trust? Or did you just do that out of guilt?”

In the movies, that would have been the ideal moment for the heroine to slap the hero. I went for his face, but he just caught my flailing arms and pulled them to my sides.

“And to think,” he said, his voice full of self-disgust, “I was starting to really feel something for a woman for the first time in years.”

He let me go and started to leave. Then he stopped at the doorway. “Get your things together, Jill. The rescue crew should be here in a few hours. I never want to see you again.”

I was left staring, trying to piece together what had just happened, and wondering how I was going to fix this newest hole in my heart.

Things happened pretty fast after that. The rescuers got through with their temporary bridge. The men in our camp were so excited about leaving for home. Melanie and my other friends were there, ready to whisk me off to the retreat that I’d missed.

And there were reporters, too. They were full of questions for anyone who would talk to them. I had one last look at Chad as he tried to avoid them.

“Come on, Jill, let’s get out of here!” Melanie said.

I looked back over my shoulder, but I didn’t see him again. So this was how it would end. I didn’t really have to hold back the tears. Melanie and the others would just think that I was happy to see them and be out of there.

My old life seemed pretty dull after that. I went home and found my apartment just as I’d left it, except for a layer of dust. I tried to get back into my job and my previous social life.

But at night I would dream about the time I’d spent with Chad. How could one perfect night end so badly? We never even had a chance, the two of us.

I tried not to think of the things he’d accused me of. Now and then I watched the news reports on television focusing on the company that Chad’s company had worked for. They had to admit the near-environmental disaster. No one ever said anything about Chad or the work the men had been doing up there to fix things before it got so out of hand.

And he blamed me for all of that. I don’t know who betrayed him to the press, and at this point I didn’t really want to know. All I knew was that it wasn’t me.

Trust. Wasn’t that what a relationship had to be built on? So he never knew me well enough to trust me. I should forget all about getting lost and ending up in a camp full of men. But somehow, I couldn’t.

Chad’s face would come to mind in the strangest of places—when I was driving to work, even when I was walking in the rain. Anything and everything seemed to remind me of him.

Then, one night. I was watching the news and something caught my eye.

“This just in. Charles Vemen, the former cook at the Jace Company’s environmental cleanup camp, has just been named as the media leak of confidential details about the site . . .”

I recognized the name of the company that Chad’s company worked for. Jace. Yes, that was it. And the cook had been accused of leaking the information. So that meant—

That meant that by now, Chad would know that I wasn’t the one who’d betrayed his trust. It felt good, but not much. He’d jumped to a lot of conclusions.

At least now he had to know the truth. I had slept with him because I’d wanted to, for no other reason. I wasn’t the kind of person to betray those men, especially since they’d been so kind to me. I hoped that Chad Morgan was burning up with guilt right then.

But he probably wasn’t. He was likely on some other isolated site by now, thinking about how nice it was not to have to deal with women again.

I had him figured out, finally. He’d been divorced for a couple of years, from what Hansen had said. Since then he’d taken on these jobs that kept him away from women—until I came along and messed up his plans.

Well, now he could go back into hibernation. But it was a damned shame, really. He was the best lover I’d ever had.

One day I was just leaving my apartment to pick up a latte before work. I only got a few steps onto the sidewalk when a big man stepped in my path.

“How did you—why are you here?” I asked, stumbling over my words in my shock.

Chad just stood there a few moments, looking deep into my eyes until I could feel the heat build up under my light jacket. Lord, the man could melt me with just a stare.

“Chad, whatever you want—it’s over. It never really started, can’t you see that? You don’t trust me. I don’t think you can trust any woman. It just wouldn’t wor—”

He stopped my words with his lips. Right there, in the middle of Main Street. And that kiss felt like coming home after a long, long time. It felt like heaven.

“Don’t do this to me, Chad,” I whispered when he finally broke away.

“Don’t do this to you? Jill, do you know how much sleep I’ve gotten in the past two months since you’ve been out of my life? I need to hold you again. I’m tormented with the thought that you’re still having those nightmares . . . and if there’s someone holding you until they go away.”

I looked up into his eyes. He was jealous.

“How do you really know it wasn’t me who ratted on your operation to the media? Maybe the cook was wrongly accused,” I told him.

“No way. He confessed. He was paid by a tabloid. Then the rest of the media caught on to the story. He had plenty of time to go through my documents when we were all out on the site. As soon as he went on leave he called that newspaper. Don’t try to get my mind off you, Jill, because it just won’t work.”

“Chad, I—”

“I’m sorry, Jill. I’m so sorry that I accused you of those things. Now please forgive me so we can get on with more pleasant things.”

“I love to see a man beg,” I said, laughing. “All right. You’re forgiven. Now I have to go to work.”

“No way, lady,” he said, taking my arm and steering me back towards my apartment. “I didn’t spend all this time and effort tracking you down for nothing. First, we’re going to start with some serious sex. Next, you and I are going to talk about the future. Not necessarily in that order.”

“Sounds like a plan.” I practically dragged him up the steps to my place, my heart fully mended and ready to take on the world.

How Does Stress Devastate Your Sex Life

Silent days is not anything pleasant

Each and every individual has a strong desire for sex and not getting the proper experience in it may turn out to be annoying. Although different people have varied levels of sex drives or libido, it is certain that all of them have definite sexual passions in his or her different ways.

In the biological point of view, sex is a very common factor in humans, and it should not be neglected or, particularly, suppressed. Sex brings in a range of physiological reactions, mostly biochemical and psychological, making a person internally happy and content. Sex drive arises in a person because of several hormonal actions inside the body and is conducted or charged through the libido. So, it is natural concluding the reason to the urge of sex as a completely natural phenomenon required for the sustenance of the overall health of a person, both physically and mentally. However, like various other issues we face in our day-to-day life, our sexual life also gets to face one of the nasty enemies of it because of modern lifestyle. This enemy is known as stress, and the ‘stress factor’ can do a considerable harm in one’s sexual life leaving the person and his or her partner unhappy at the end of a ‘hopeful night’. Let us see what stressful sex can do to our personal lives.

portrait of a woman sitting on the floor with a man reading behindRelationship Issues

Well, the impact on our metabolism is a serious matter delivered to us by stress. According to biology, stress diverts and negatively influences your metabolism level to such an extent that your physique changes. Your physique plays a significant role in your sex life, and a change in it will affect your performance. Your self-esteem in bed will get lower, and a low self-esteem paves the way for weaker sex. This impacts relationship in a considerable way. No one wants that to happen.

Do Not Court Cortisol

Cortisol is the stress hormone of the body, and you need it in a very less quantity. A rise in its level will bring in significant weariness and hormonal changes affecting your sexual traits severely. As a matter of fact, Cortisol suppresses the sex hormones. This results in a lower libido than usual. Stress heightens the production of Cortisol in the human body. Removing stress permanently from your body through your inner sexual powers can become a good choice.

Stress Is Responsible for Harming Our Health Secondarily

Stress is one of those monsters that lead a person to various destructive activities, which again provides a negative impact in sex life. Stress contributes to a person’s psychology and gets it inclined to excessive drinking providing a good amount of alcohol in your blood stream. The excessive alcohol in your blood creates problems for your heart and when you are having heart issues, be sure to have sexual issues.

Hormonal Troubles

It can be hoped that you have learnt about the endocrine systems from your biology classes in your school years. The master glands controlling the other endocrine gland is known as the Pituitary gland harnessing the powers of the other endocrine glands as well as ovaries in women. Stress affects this little pea sized gland and, as an outcome, the overall endocrine system functions improperly. Women can even have disorders in menstruation if they are overstressed. Do not worry, though! Trying a session in the tantric massage service can give you some real benefits. Tantric massage services use your sexual energy to redesign and amplify your sexual energy internally.

That is a lot of sexual stress and its management. Well, whatever the cause is, just keep in mind that a problem is a problem and keeping it a problem will not give you any benefit unless you solve it. The rest is up to you.

He Who Shall Not Be Named

Man Body In Summer. Male Relaxing In Pool On Vacation

Dating is dead and hookup culture is ruining modern romance – declares every article on the internet right now. I, for one, can’t speak to what dating was like before a drunken hookup constituted a relationship building block. But I do think every experience is different. It’s true, I’ve called someone my boyfriend before we’ve ever gone on a proper date, and have gone to a stranger’s home before meeting him outside of the digital realm. But I have also been on many a dinner date, and detailed a drink meet up, down to the arrival time, three days prior to said event. So to this romance is dead talk, I would respond that maybe it’s not dead, it is just different. 

What I can speak to, however, with more certainty, is the ancient practice of nicknaming a romantic prospect. My friends don’t know that I ever dated a James. If you asked them who John is they may assume you’re referring to my landlord. And to be honest, I myself barely remember having drinks with a Dan. They do remember: British Boy, DJ Selfie, and Dandruff. There was the Italian, a whole host of “current tinder flings”, and the only time I refer to Tommy by his first name is with a put-on Bostonian accent. 

And this renaming practice, I have it on good authority, is not a unique quirk of mine. “I saw skateboarder today”, a text message from my friend read, which popped up in tandem with one from my cousin, where she referred to a certain “DJ Selfie”. I understood exactly whom each one was referring to in mere moments. After all, for my friend to call him Matt would be much too intimate, considering their fling consisted of one fun night, several chance run-ins, and a few unanswered text messages. 

Much akin to Carrie’s “Mr. Big”, or Miranda’s “marathon man”, nicknames are essential in the early stages of courtship, especially if you suspect feelings may soon emerge. Perhaps, this refusal to call someone by their name is the first move in a fun game I call, “I can’t get rejected if I never try”. Or maybe it would be better characterized as the tipping point between potential and possible, imaginary and realistic. The first few weeks, sometimes months, with a new romantic prospect often live in a realm limited to the cover of nightfall and exclude any outside connections. If my friends are to meet him, then I have to answer to what became of our budding affair, usually in a tear-filled conversation over wine and cigarettes. And if they know his name, the sting of hearing it uttered over a spicy margarita can be just too much to bear when you’re still reeling from an unanswered text message.

I understand that some people may disagree with this practice, claiming that taking away someone’s name is the ultimate in disrespectful acts. But in today’s dating world, where prospects literally lie at your fingertips, you can’t go out there unarmed. A crush can develop unintentionally after just a few hours of conversation, but a name? A name is earned. 

Written By Rachel Ellison

(From Never Liked It Anyway, the number one destination for all things break-ups and bounce-back! It’s the place to buy, sell and tell all things ex! Sell your breakup baggage, tell your story and join the community of rock stars bouncing back better than ever! )

In Two Weeks I’ll Be Married…And I’m In Love With Another Man!

the lonely bride

I’m head over heels in love with John Michael Courtney.

My wedding date is set for two weeks from next Sunday. That’s exactly three hundred ninety-eight hours and thirty-two minutes from right now. I know because I’m counting.

I’ve taken care of nearly all the details. I have one gown fitting left and my appointment is for twelve-thirty tomorrow afternoon. I’m off from twelve to one for lunch anyway.

My friends gave me two bridal showers. The first was a kitchen shower and the second a linen shower. Thanks to them, I’m pretty well stocked when it comes to the basic necessities. Besides which, more and more wedding presents keep pouring in every day.

I bought my bridesmaids their gifts last Thursday. I’m lucky because all four bridesmaids own charm bracelets. I got each girl a darling little gold heart engraved with our initials to add to her collection.

We ordered most of our furniture three months ago, and the last piece is supposed to be delivered to our apartment this coming Wed­nesday. I’ve already asked for two hours off from work on Wednesday afternoon. That way, I can be at the apartment when the delivery truck comes.

We’ve made honeymoon reservations at a really nice hotel about sixty miles outside the city. My future in-laws even gave us a beautiful set of matching luggage as an early wedding gift. So we’re all set as far as our honeymoon goes.

Like I said, everything is nearly ready for the wedding.

There’s just one problem: I’m head over heels in love with John Michael Courtney, but in exactly three hundred ninety-eight hours and thirty-two minutes I’m going to marry Richard Stephen Willis!

I suppose I should explain how I man­aged to get myself into this mess. I’ll try, but I’m not really sure I can explain. I’m not sure I understand it myself.

I’ve known Richard Stephen Willis for over three years. We started dating during my senior year in high school. Richie is a year older than me, so he was already out of school and working by the time I met him.

Richie and I went together for more than a year before we got engaged. I remember how relieved Mom was about that.

“I used to worry that you might jump into marriage without really getting to know the man first,” Mom admitted.

“I’ve always been pretty sensible, so why would I do a dumb thing like that?” I demanded.

Mom shrugged her shoulders. “You can never be sure. Sensible or not, people do strange things when they think they’re in love. Some girls meet a man and pow—the chemistry is right! They don’t wait long enough to see if it’s just a physical attraction. They rush right into marriage. Later on, they find out that two people need more than sex to keep them to­gether.”

My mother believed in long courtships, but then Mom is old-fashioned. I had known for quite a while that I loved Richie. I was sure he loved me, too. When he finally made up his mind and asked me to marry him, I didn’t hesitate to say yes.

“I hope you’re not angry because I didn’t get you an engagement ring, Stacey,” he said. “I thought about sur­prising you, but I decided I would rather have you pick out the one that you really like,” Richie explained. He kissed me ten­derly. “I’ll meet you downtown after work tomorrow and we can choose.”

I hesitated for a moment. I’m basically a very practical down-to-earth type per­son. Besides, I had shopped enough with my engaged and married girlfriends to know the score. “I’m not sure I want a ring, Richie.”

Richie looked surprised. “Why not?”

“We’re going to need millions of things when we get married. And prices are un­believable. Wouldn’t it be smarter to skip the ring and put the money into good furniture or something useful like that?”

“I-I suppose you’re right,” Richie ad­mitted gloomily.

“Don’t look so down in the dumps, Richie! I think it’s great that we know each other well enough to bring our prob­lems out in the open and talk about them—even big problems like engage­ment rings and money,” I added.

I finally managed to convince Richie I didn’t need a diamond ring. A couple of days later, though, he gave me a beautiful wristwatch. “I love you so much, Stacey. I wanted to give you something,” he told me.

I guess Richie and I were lucky because right from the start, our engagement was smooth sailing all the way. My parents and my friends all liked Richie. Even more important (at least from my point of view), Richie’s folks seemed genuinely happy to accept me into their family.

Richie and I decided on a June wed­ding. That didn’t leave us much time, so we immediately started looking for an apartment and furniture. We were like two excited, happy kids, loving and plan­ning and sharing and buying.

Heaven must have been watching over us because our luck continued to hold. I’ve heard about people who had to search for months and months to find the right apartment, but we found a darling little place on our third day of looking. The present tenants, the Thorpes, were a few years older then Richie and me. Mrs. Thorpe was seven months pregnant.

“I’m sure we’ll be out of here before the end of next month,” Mrs. Thorpe told us. She patted her bulging stomach. “I really want to get into our own house before the baby comes.”

“Also our lease happens to run out at the end of next month!” Mr. Thorpe added.

Mrs. Thorpe laughed as though her husband had said something funny, but I caught the worried little frown between her eyes.

“Oh, I’m sure our new house will be done by the end of the month!” Mr. Thorpe went on to say, “The builder said it’s almost ready for occupancy right now.”

Richie must have seen Mrs. Thorpe’s troubled glance, too. “Don’t worry, we won’t put you out on the street!” he joked.

“Weddings don’t get canceled. If you let us stay here past the end of the month, where would you live?” Mr. Thorpe laughed, but his voice was half-kidding, half-serious.

“We’ll move in with my mom and dad. They have plenty of space,” Richie answered without hesitation. Then he winked at me. “Just temporarily, of course!”

“I’m positive it won’t come to that!” Mrs. Thorpe cried. But she sounded very relieved, and her smile was suddenly young and carefree.

Richie and I turned to go. “You’ll make a lovely bride and groom!” Mrs. Thorpe said. She squeezed Richie’s arm, gratefully, before we walked out of the apartment.

“Good luck!” Mr. Thorpe called after us. He sounded like he genuinely meant it. Even the present tenants of our new apartment liked Richie Willis!

“The apartment doesn’t feel real,” I complained to Richie, as we rode the elevator down to the lobby.

“Hey, here we are, alone in an elevator with six floors to go, and all you can do is talk!” Richie said. He grabbed me up into his arms and covered my face with kisses. We kissed all the way down, until we felt the heavy thud as the ancient elevator bumped to a stop on the ground floor.

Outside the elevator in the small lobby, I caught my breath from Richie’s last pas­sionate kiss. Then, I remembered the Thorpes’ apartment, and all my bewilder­ment came rushing back. I’ve always been the kind of person who has both feet planted firmly in reality, so the unreal quality of the little apartment upstairs was making me come unglued at the seams.

“Do you think, maybe, the apartment doesn’t seem real to me because there are other people still living there?” I asked Richie.

“Your problem is you’re worried that the Thorpes won’t be out by the end of next month,” Richie said. “Relax, Stacey! Everything will work out. Mr. Thorpe said their house is nearly ready right now.”

“I’m not worried about getting into the apartment, Richie! I just can’t picture us living there—you know, you and me! It’s not real. If I close my eyes, I see the Thorpes in that apartment, but not us.”

We were out on the sidewalk now. “Take it easy, Stacey. I’m sure the Thorpes’ new house will be ready on time,” Richie repeated.

I bit back the tears of anger and frus­tration. This was the first time I could ever remember that Richie hadn’t under­stood me. Or maybe he didn’t want to understand me.

We caught a bus on the next corner. “Hey, this is super!” Richie exclaimed. “The bus route runs straight downtown. It will be a breeze to get to work from our new apartment.”

I tried as hard as I could, but I just could not imagine me, Stacy Gebhard, (I’d be Stacey Willis then), heading out to work from the Thorpes’ tiny sixth-floor apartment. The lost, bewildered feeling stayed inside me, until the bus left the un­familiar neighborhood and turned down Union Avenue.

After Richie and I got off the bus, we stopped at a pizza place for lunch. Then we browsed through several of the bigger downtown department stores, looking at bedroom sets and living room couches and kitchen furniture.

“There’s so much to choose from, it’s hard to come to any decision,” Richie complained.

“I like an ordinary, old-fashioned kind of bedroom set,” I said. I pointed to a very simple, dark brown walnut bed and matching dresser. “See, like the one over there by the far wall.”

Richie’s eyes lit up. He squeezed my hand. “Hey, that’s my favorite, too! I never thought you’d go for anything so plain and simple, Stacey.”

“A lot of couples have trouble picking out their furniture. They can’t agree on what they want. We’re lucky our tastes are so alike,”I said.

“We’re lucky we have each other!” Richie grinned. He pulled me into his arms and kissed me, right there in the middle of the furniture department.

I struggled to free myself. “Not here, Richie! Everyone can see!”

“Who cares? I love you, Stacey!”

“I love you, too,” I whispered.

We spent the rest of the afternoon de­bating between a black and white chrome kitchen set and a green and yellow kitchen set. “I guess we both like modern when it comes to kitchen furniture!” Richie com­mented.

Everything was all right, until the following afternoon when I went for my second gown fitting. I was standing there in front of the store’s full-length mirror, staring at myself and all of a sudden I got this scary, queasy feeling.

When I looked in a mirror, I expected to see me. But the stranger in the floor-length white bridal gown didn’t bear the faintest resemblance to me! I knew I was Stacey Gebhard, but who was that woman in the mirror?

I could hardly wait for the fitter to fin­ish with her endless pins and tucks. I started to sway a little.

“It’s a bit warm in here. Take it easy, Miss Gebhard. I’m nearly done,” the fitter said, through a mouthful of pins.

Bride having her dress laced upThey had asked me to stand on a small, carpeted platform, so the fitter could measure for the gown’s hem. I felt as though I was going to keel over at any second. I reached out and clutched at the back of a nearby chair to steady myself.

“Just relax, Miss Gebhard. Don’t worry, you’ll be a beautiful bride. All brides are beautiful,” the fitter assured me.

She was wrong, I wasn’t worried about being beautiful. I was worried about losing my mind! I wanted to say I didn’t even recognize that stranger staring back at me from the mirror.

The fitter removed the pins from her mouth. “You’ll probably need one or two more fittings, dear.”

The next week, Richie and I put the down payment on our furniture.

“I can’t believe all that furniture is going to be ours,” I gasped. “I mean, I’ve never owned a kitchen table or a living room couch. Older people own furniture. You know, people like my mom and dad.”

“We’re paying enough for the stuff! It’ll be ours, all right!” Richie assured me, as he grimly signed the order form.

“It just doesn’t seem real,” I pro­tested.

Actually, nothing seemed real to me, during those last two hectic months be­fore the wedding. Most of the time, I felt like I was walking around in a thick fog. My world was changing so fast, I could hardly keep up. I was still Stacey Geb­hard, age twenty, living with my parents. But people insisted on treating Richie and me as if we were a grown-up, married couple, and I was having a lot of trouble adjusting to the new image.

We had signed the lease for our apart­ment and we had put a big down payment on three rooms of furniture. Then one night, an insurance man called to see if Richie had enough life insurance to take care of me in case he suddenly died!

The insurance man was the last straw. “I don’t believe it! This can’t be hap­pening to me—to us!” I wailed.

The only thing in my life that stayed the same was my job at Excel Insulation. I’d liked my job before I decided to marry Richie, but I had never loved it, if you know what I mean.

Now, though, my feelings toward Ex­cel started to change. My job became a haven. It was the only place I could es­cape from the bewildering kaleidoscope of my new life.

I reveled in the familiar office routine. Day after day I still typed out the same letters for my boss, Mr. Berst. I filed the same old bills and sent out identical new bills. I answered the telephone and the customers always had the same questions and the same problems that they’d had last week or last month.

Also, the men and women in my office continued to treat me pretty much the way they always had. The Excel staff knew I was getting married, but after the initial round of congratulations and a little bit of teasing, life settled back to normal. I didn’t have an engagement ring to remind people, so after a few weeks everyone sort of forgot about my wed­ding. That was just great with me. At Ex­cel Insulation, I was still me, Stacey Geb­hard, with two feet planted firmly in of­fice routine and sane, sensible reality.

The more my life at home changed, the more I appreciated coming to work where nothing ever changed.

No, that’s not true, one thing did change during those last hectic months before my wedding. Mr. Berst hired a new salesman to replace Lenny Marshall. Lenny had been with Excel for fifteen years and when he left to open his own business, everyone at the office felt sad, though, of course, we all wished Lenny the best of luck.

The new guy who took over Lenny’s job was named John Michael Courtney. I knew his full name was John Michael Courtney because I actually went to the trouble of checking out his records in Excel’s personnel file.

Johnny was very cute, and I shocked myself by noticing how cute he was.

You ought to be ashamed of yourself! I scolded myself. You’re going to marry Richie in less than two months. You’re not supposed to notice whether or not men are cute anymore!

But I did notice, and Johnny was cute. Very cute. Too cute. Call it chemistry, call it infatuation, call it love, call it any­thing you want-all I knew was I’d never felt so attracted to any guy in my whole, entire life. And that, unfortunately, included Richard Stephen Willis, the man I was going to marry.

I’m sure no one at the office had ever bothered to fill Johnny in on the details of my upcoming marriage. Johnny hadn’t been around when I’d made my big announcement four months earlier. And since I didn’t have an engagement ring, the subject just never came up.

Johnny certainly didn’t act like he knew about Richie. Not that Johnny spent his days hanging over my desk and flirting with me. It was nothing like that. Johnny respected office decorum just as much as everyone else at Excel Insulation. I suppose if Johnny had acted fresh, someone would have noticed and remem­bered to tell him I was engaged to Richie.

Instead, Johnny just flashed me those super-special smiles whenever he passed by my desk. (At least I thought his smiles were super special.) And sometimes, if it was before nine and we were still on our own time, he would stop and talk to me.

Sexy business guy

It was weird, but any time Johnny paid any extra attention to me, my heart would start to pound and these absolutely crazy tingles would race though my entire body.

I’d never felt this way with a guy be­fore — not even with Richie. All my life, I had been so down-to-earth and practical. It was hard to believe a man like Johnny could sweep me off my feet with just a few smiles and some light-hearted chit­chat.

But that’s exactly what was happening.

I felt myself falling head oven heels in love with Johnny. I struggled against my feelings, but I couldn’t help myself. Any time Johnny was near, I absolutely went crazy.

One morning around eleven-thirty, Johnny stopped by my desk. My heart started beating like a steel drum. I could feel goosebumps popping out all over my arms.

“Will you have lunch with me today, Stacey?” Johnny asked.

“Okay!” I blurted out, before I could think-of a good excuse to say no.

“Terrific! I’ll see you at twelve!” Johnny hurried off to Mr. Berst’s office before I had a chance to tell him I had changed my mind.

Having lunch with Johnny isn’t dis­honest or cheating, I comforted myself. mean, I have to eat anyway. It’s broad daylight outside, what could possibly happen? And besides, what’s to prevent a woman-even an engaged woman-from having male friends?

But I wasn’t fooling myself. I didn’t think of John Courtney as just an ordinary male friend. My feelings for Johnny ran a lot deeper than simple friendship.

And then Johnny asked me out for a Fri­day night. Right then and there I should have told him I was engaged. I should have, but I didn’t.

Instead, I told Richie I couldn’t see him that night because I had a bad headache. And I told Mom I was working overtime for Mr. Berst. And I told myself it was better for me to find out before I got married, not after.

I lied my way through three dates with Johnny. And each time I felt guiltier and more rotten than the time before.

The third time was the worst because it was so easy. This time, Richie was the one who canceled out our regular date be­cause he had to work overtime. Knowing Richie, I was sure his excuse was legiti­mate, not dishonest like mine. Part of me felt awful about seeing Johnny that night, but in spite of my guilty conscience, I managed to have a marvelous time.

I discovered that I loved going out with Johnny. Like I said before, I’m such a practical, down-to-earth type of person—well, Johnny was the exact opposite. He always acted so carefree and full of fun, I forgot all about my problems and trou­bles. I forgot all about apartments, and insurance, and furniture.

Richie didn’t have to work overtime the next night, so of course, he came over to my house for our usual date.

“I missed you so much last night,” Richie murmured, holding me close. “I can’t wait till we’re married, Stacey.”

By now I felt I had to tell Richie it was off between us, but he wasn’t making it any easier for me. Richie pulled me over to the couch and we sat down. He put his arms around me and nuzzled my ear.

“After we’re married, Stacey, I’ll be able to see you any time—even on the nights when I have to work late.”

I pulled away.

Richie still didn’t sense that things weren’t right between us. “Do you want to hear some good news?” Richie said, rushing on before I could find the right words to say what I had to say. “I got a phone call at work today from Mr. Thorpe. Their new house is ready! They’re moving out of the apartment over the weekend, so you can relax. We won’t have any problem. We’ll even be able to get in before the wedding to have our furniture delivered and to do a little painting and fixing up.”

I didn’t say anything, but Richie went on talking as if he hadn’t noticed my silence. “I’ve been thinking, Stacey. Do you remember that time we took the bus downtown and you kept complaining that the apartment gave you a very uncomfortable feeling?”

I finally found my voice. “Everything about our wedding gives me an uncom­fortable feeling,” I muttered.

Richie withdrew his arms from around me. We sat in silence for several moments, before he said, “I got the same sort of feeling today after Thorpe phoned me. I finally figured out what’s bothering us.”

I was hardly listening to Richie anymore. I was debating the best way to break the bad news to him. I decided straight out was the best way—the wedding is off!

“Don’t you want to hear what I think is bothering us?” Richie demanded. He was obviously irritated by my lack of attention.

“Okay, what do you think is bothering us?” I shrugged. I asked the question only because I felt I owed it to Richie to be polite, not because I wanted to know the answer. In another minute, I was going to hurt him bad enough.

“You said the apartment doesn’t seem real. I disagree with you, Stacey. I think the problem is that our apartment is too real! When Mr. Thorpe phoned me at work, I realized I actually dreaded going back there next week to paint and put up the curtains.”

My disinterest suddenly vanished. I sat up straighter, and looked into Richie’s eyes. I knew I felt this way, but not that Richie did, too! Maybe Johnny Courtney was a blessing in disguise. Maybe neither Richie nor I was making the right choice, getting married. At least not right now. Maybe Richie also had decided we should put off the wedding for a while!

Richie was still talking. “I know I’m going to have to force myself to walk into our apartment next week. I mean, it’s so real. I can reach out and touch the walls. It gives me this eerie feeling. That apart­ment is solid proof of the big step we’re taking, Stacey!”

Richie pulled me back into his arms. “The idea of getting married scares me! Don’t get me wrong, Stacey. I love you, but I’m still scared. I’ve already heard enough bad jokes about how the groom is supposed to be nervous.” Richie’s eyes had a pleading look. “Can you under­stand what I’m trying to tell you, Stacey?”

A great weight suddenly lifted from my heart. “You’re right, Richie! It is the last minute jitters!” I cried.

“Hey, you sound like you really do understand!” Richie exclaimed. He leaned forward and kissed me.

I snuggled closer into Richie’s arms. I saw everything much clearer now. John Michael Courtney is a nice guy, a very nice guy! But I don’t really love him. I do love Richard Stephen Willis.

It was like Richie said, getting married is such a big step. I was just scared out of my head. I mean, marrying Richie is probably the most important decision I’ll ever make. No wonder I was having a hard time trying to stay cool, calm, and collected.

I guess I met Johnny when I was most vulnerable. Johnny began working at Ex­cel Insulation just when I was starting to come really unglued over the big step I was taking. I used Johnny as a convenient excuse to escape from my decision to get married.

Richie was still holding me close. I could feel his heart beating against mine. “You know what, Stacey? I love you!” he whispered.

“I love you, too!” I cried.

And at that wonderful moment, I knew I did love Richie. I loved Richard Stephen Willis with a love that was strong and real and true. And I loved only Richard Stephen Willis, and nobody else.Young couple moving in into new apartment

5 Reasons We Need A Breakup Leave of Absence

Work romance between two business people holding a heart

There is a reason you feel so awful after a breakup: breakups are another form of loss. And even if the person didn’t die, it sure can feel like it. There will be a giant, gaping hole in your life that will make you feel like something is missing. And this hole doesn’t fill up over night! The healing process from a breakup, just like after you physically lose a person, can take quite some time. So it’s really quite unfair that you’re expected to be at work the following day, chipper as ever and ready to meet all those deadlines. Sure, you could take one of your sick days, but that won’t change the fact that your coworkers will think of you as weak for taking a sick day over a breakup.  Breakups should be given their own separate leave of absence in the workplace and acknowledged as the grueling grieving process that they are. Here are 5 reasons why!

1. Quality is sacrificed

You just don’t feel like doing sh*t. But you have to, so you do your work anyway, but it’s just not up to par. Even if you’re trying your best. It’s probably your worst best ever. You may as well have not done it at all.

Stressed business woman

2. Productivity suffers

When you’re not trying your worst best, you’re doing nothing instead. This is the point after a breakup when you master the art of looking like you’re doing really-busy-and-important-stuff without actually doing it. It’s another skill for the set, but not necessarily something to be proud of. Long, vacant stares into the distance become your new signature “thing”. Or, alternatively, your thoughts won’t stop racing, so to quiet them, you binge-watch cute sea lion videos all day. They truly are the puppies of the sea.

Group therapy in session sitting in a circle in a bright room

3. Annoying coworkers

You’re already a little more irritable than usual at work, and your usually annoying coworkers seem more obnoxious than ever. They’ll probably deploy the usual post-breakup comfort cliches, like “there are plenty of fish in the sea” or “have you ever thought about dating *insert other coworker’s name here*?” They might even go as far as to ask you to get a drink with them later, to pull you out of the slump. Too soon! Sometimes you just want to stay at home and eat microwaveable ziti and listen to Ina Garten’s soothing voice.

4. Appropriate work attire? No thanks!

Wear a bra? No sweatpants allowed? No one has ever uttered more tragic words to you in your life. All you really want to do is cocoon in your bed for a few hours in your comfiest clothes, and you should be allowed to!

Desperate employee stressed man resting head on laptop

5. Heartless bosses

Your boss probably doesn’t care about your love life. Never has, never will, so your sudden heartbreak won’t change anything. You’re still expected to show up, look good, be happy, and get work done. But this is an unrealistic expectation! We’re human beings, not emotionless robots (at least, not yet) so there’s literally no way you can “have that thing on their desk” by Friday when you don’t even have your sh*t together yet! Hey, nobody’s asking for months off to wallow in self-pity, but a day or two off for mental and emotional wellness could be just the thing to help you bounce-back to your badass self and start slaying at the workplace again!

Written By Brianna Porter

(From Never Liked It Anyway, the number one destination for all things break-ups and bounce-back! It’s the place to buy, sell and tell all things ex! Sell your breakup baggage, tell your story and join the community of rock stars bouncing back better than ever! )

4 Buddhist Mantras To Help You Breeze Through A Breakup

Woman doing yoga on the lake - beautiful lights

Moving on after a breakup is easier said than done, especially when being bitter and petty about it is just so much more satisfying. It’s called being human. And it’s alright to feel this way for a certain amount of time, but as soon as you cross over into key-his-car-a-la-Carrie-Underwood territory, you’ve gone too far. This is where Buddhist teachings come in; Buddhists believe that the best way to deal with anger is through mindfulness practice. Now, this can mean a variety of things, and everyone’s mindfulness practice can be different, but one way to practice being mindful is through meditation and chanting mantras.

So how do you do it?

Here are 4 Buddhist mantras you can try out while meditating that’ll help you conquer your inner breakup-zilla and breeze through your breakup to a better you. Everyone deserves an equal opportunity at happiness and peace, and these 4 mantras might help you get there.

1. Green Tara Mantra

Om Tare Tuttare Ture Soha

Young black woman doing yoga at home in the lotus position

The Tara mantra is used to push through physical, emotional, and mental blockages, and even blockages in relationships. This mantra requires a resignation to let go of a particular outcome you may be hanging on to, as this often promotes unhappiness and frustration when you don’t get your way. When chanting this mantra, think about letting go, and all of your negative energy will come back to you as positive energy.

Use It When: you’re gripping too tightly to the things you just need to let go of

2. Amitabha Mantra

Om Ami Dewa Hrih

Young woman doing yoga by the lake, childs pose

This mantra is for overcoming any obstacles or hindrances to your personal growth and success (bad breakups included). Chanting this mantra can enhance your compassionate and loving nature, which may be lacking after a recent breakup.

Use It When: you can feel yourself thinking thoughts full of revenge, destruction and vengeance

3. Manjushri Mantra

Om A Ra Pa Ca Na Dhih

Afro American couple doing yoga

This mantra is said to enhance wisdom and improve one’s communication (both verbal and written) skills. Both of these things are very important not only in a relationship, but after the end of one, when you may feel like doing or saying something impulsive. Just don’t. Chant this instead.

Use It When: You feel impulses to shout your feelings and destroy things with spiteful words.

4. Avalokitesvara Mantra

Om Mani Padme Hum

Young woman in paschimottanasana pose, home interior background,

Buddhists believe that repeating this mantra will invite the blessings of Chenrezig, the embodiment of compassion. It’s no secret that after a breakup, you may be deficient in the compassion department. Any resentment or ill-will towards your ex can make you begin to resent others, too. Invite all the blessings of compassion you can because even if you are a bit of a breakup-zilla, you deserve it.

Use It When: You’re stuck in a negative spiral, replaying old events and recalling old conversations

Happy Birthday to March-Born Mystery Writers!

Couple of Valentine Cupcakes with heart topping on top.

Because I was born in this month, I am naturally curious about other writers with March birthdays. If you look at the whole literary realm, from children’s book great Theodor Geisel (Dr. Seuss) to the Roman poet Ovid, the list is overwhelming. So I narrowed it down to just March-born mystery/crime fiction writers. And they’re a varied lot!

 

juryStart with the late Mickey Spillane (Frank Morrison Spillane, born March 9, 1918). I’m actually not a fan of his PI Mike Hammer, who debuted in 1947′s I, the Jury, but Spillane is a pioneer of “hard-boiled” crime fiction and won the 1995 Edgar Allan Poe Grand Master Award, so you may want to meet Hammer just to indulge in old-fashioned, tough-guy nostalgia.

 

 

 

 

spiderMore modern mayhem comes courtesy of James Patterson (born March 22, 1947). Patterson is probably best-known for the African-American psychologist and police detective protagonist of his Alex Cross series (including Along Came a Spider and Kiss the Girls), but he has penned standalone thrillers and other series, such as the Women’s Murder Club.

 

 

 

catMeanwhile, there’s Nevada Barr (born March 1, 1952), author of the Anna Pigeon mystery series with a park ranger detective (so naturally set in national parks). Her debut novel, Track of the Cat, won the 1994 Anthony Award and Agatha Award for Best First Novel.

 

 

 

 

 

coldStaying with the wilderness theme, another March writer is Dana Stabenow (born March 27, 1952). Her Kate Shugak mystery series is set in Stabenow’s native Alaska and has a unique protagonist: an Aleut living on a 160-acre homestead in a national park, with a half-wolf, half-husky roommate called Mutt. The first Kate Shugak mystery, 1992′s A Cold Day for Murder, won the Edgar Award for Best Paperback Original.

 

 

 

dryBut probably my favorite of all the March-born mystery writers is Peter Robinson (born March 17, 1950) and his Inspector Alan Banks novels set in Yorkshire. The 1999 Anthony Award and Barry Award for Best Novel went to the tenth entry in the series, In a Dry Season. When a drought drains the local reservoir to reveal the ruins of a lost village and the unidentified bones of a murdered young woman, Banks must hunt down a sadistic killer who has escaped detection for half a century.

 

 

For all authors born in March, check out this list: https://www.bookish.com/articles/happy-birthday-authors-a-look-at-writers-born-in-march/ 

ABOUT  KATHERINE SHARMA

Katherine Sharma’s family roots are in Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas. But after her early childhood in Texas, she has moved around the country and lived in seven other states, from Virginia to Hawaii. She currently resides in California with her husband and three children. She has also traveled extensively in Europe, Africa and Asia, and makes regular visits to family in India. After receiving her bachelor’s degree. in economics and her master’s degree in journalism from the University of Michigan, Katherine worked as a newspaper and magazine writer and editor for more than 15 years. She then shifted into management and marketing roles for firms in industries ranging from outdoor recreation to insurance to direct marketing. Although Katherine still works as a marketing consultant, she is now focused on creative writing.