a
humorous, heartwarming story of
new beginnings, do-overs, and self-discovery…
new beginnings, do-overs, and self-discovery…
SWEET SOUTHERN HEARTS
Willow Hill Series #3
Susan Schild
Releasing Jan 10th, 2017
Lyrical Press
Susan
Schild welcomes you back to the offbeat Southern town of Willow Hill, North
Carolina, for a humorous, heartwarming story of new beginnings, do-overs, and
self-discovery…
When it comes to marriage, third time’s the charm for Linny Taylor. She’s thrilled to be on her honeymoon with Jack Avery, Willow Hill’s handsome veterinarian. But just like the hair-raising white water rafting trip Jack persuades her to take, newlywed life has plenty of dips and bumps.
Jack’s twelve-year-old son is resisting all Linny’s efforts to be the perfect stepmother, while her own mother, Dottie, begs her to tag along on the first week of a free-wheeling RV adventure. Who knew women “of a certain age” could drum up so much trouble? No sooner is Linny sighing with relief at being back home than she’s helping her frazzled sister with a new baby…and dealing with an unexpected legacy from her late ex. Life is fuller—and richer—than she ever imagined, but if there’s one thing Linny’s learned by now, it’s that there’s always room for another sweet surprise…
“This charming and well observed novel about finding the courage to love after loss will make you smile as well as cry more than a few happy tears. Be prepared for a story of true tenderness, humor, and sometimes nail biting tension. Sweet Southern Hearts delivers all this and more.” --Holly Chamberlin, author of Summer with my Sisters
When it comes to marriage, third time’s the charm for Linny Taylor. She’s thrilled to be on her honeymoon with Jack Avery, Willow Hill’s handsome veterinarian. But just like the hair-raising white water rafting trip Jack persuades her to take, newlywed life has plenty of dips and bumps.
Jack’s twelve-year-old son is resisting all Linny’s efforts to be the perfect stepmother, while her own mother, Dottie, begs her to tag along on the first week of a free-wheeling RV adventure. Who knew women “of a certain age” could drum up so much trouble? No sooner is Linny sighing with relief at being back home than she’s helping her frazzled sister with a new baby…and dealing with an unexpected legacy from her late ex. Life is fuller—and richer—than she ever imagined, but if there’s one thing Linny’s learned by now, it’s that there’s always room for another sweet surprise…
“This charming and well observed novel about finding the courage to love after loss will make you smile as well as cry more than a few happy tears. Be prepared for a story of true tenderness, humor, and sometimes nail biting tension. Sweet Southern Hearts delivers all this and more.” --Holly Chamberlin, author of Summer with my Sisters
Jack stepped inside and gave her a
wry grin. “I just texted Vera and told her the fighting was upsetting Neal and
that we were coming home early to take him for a few days. I didn’t ask her, I
told her. That should set off a firestorm.” He grimaced and held up his phone.
“The furious calls should start in four, three, two, one…”
Linny stood with a hand on her hip,
sent him a crooked smile, and waited. The phone rang, its tone sounding more
shrill and urgent than it usually did.
Jack rolled his eyes, turned it off,
and slipped it in his pocket.
Despite knowing that going home was
the best thing to do, as they wound down the mountain in the truck, Linny
fantasized about what it would be like to deal less with Vera, if just for a
little while. Maybe she and Chaz would get a sudden burning desire to live off
the grid for a year to fix their marriage. They'd move to a cabin with no
plumbing in Talkeetna, Alaska. Normal-looking couples did it all the time on
all those Alaska shows Jack and Neal watched. Vera and Chaz could re-bond while
chopping firewood and fixing their broken snowmobile, which they urgently
needed to go into town to get much-needed supplies because a blizzard was fast
approaching. For one long moment Linny imagined how serene life would be with
Vera in Talkeetna. She and Jack could walk together through a field of
wildflowers, each holding one of Neal’s hands—something the boy would never
allow them to do. Bluebirds and hummingbirds would fly around them.
Flushing guiltily, she glanced at
Jack as though he could read her mind, but he was flipping down the sun visor.
Linny blew out a sigh. Glumly, she stared out the window. She didn’t really
wish for that Alaskan adventure for Vera. Neal really needed his mother and
he’d grown to love his stepfather, Chaz, too.
Linny and Jack were quiet for much
of the long drive home from the mountains to Willow Hill. Even her Technicolor
daydream of Vera battling icy winds as she trudged to the outhouse in fifty
below weather didn't cheer her up. Linny was just too disappointed to make
conversation. Jack looked pensive, the muscles in his jaw working.
Her phone rang and she glanced at
the screen. It was Ruby, one of her mother, Dottie’s, two best friends. Had
something happened to Mama? Her stomach tightened as she pictured her mother
lying on the floor like that woman on the TV commercial who lived alone and
didn’t have the emergency clicker necklace.
But Ruby sounded cheery. “Hi,
sweetheart. Hope you’re just walking on air now that you’re freshly married.
You tell that handsome hunk of a husband of yours that I said hey.” Ruby had
been a looker in her heyday and still had a flirty streak.
Linny breathed out. This wasn’t a
meet-me-at-the-emergency-room call. She called to
Jack, “Ruby says hey, you handsome hunk of a husband.”
Jack shook his head, but his mouth
crooked up.
“We’re at your mama’s house and you
need to talk to her,” Ruby said. “For weeks now we girls have been planning to
go to the RV show at the Civic Center to make a final decision about what kind
of camper or RV we want to rent for our trip. We’re fixing to get in the car to
go and now she’s making all kinds of excuses for staying home. This is the last
day of the show,” Ruby said, sounding exasperated.
Since coming to terms with learning
that her late husband had had a longtime mistress, her mother had shaken off
her dour, church lady demeanor and blossomed. She’d given up the yard sale
habit that bordered on hoarding, taken a two-week Caribbean cruise with her
girlfriends, and was now seeing a charming older man named Mack whom she’d met
on the ship. Oh, and Dottie—a card-carrying Baptist and member of the Sisters
of Dorcas ladies’ prayer circle—had won $250,000 on the nickel slots on the
ship. So, emboldened with her first big vacation, Mama and her two friends had
cooked up this RV adventure they called their “trip to see the US of A.” It was
all the three of them had talked about for months.
“Let me talk to her,” a woman’s voice said
insistently. Linny heard a fumbling as the phone changed hands. “Dessie here,”
said her mother’s other best friend, in her usual brisk tone. “This is the
second time she’s backed out of the RV show. Yesterday she said her feet were
hurting her and today she’s claiming her sugar’s high.”
Linny paused a beat,
baffled. “She doesn’t have bad feet or sugar problems.”
“We know,” Dessie said
drily.
“Can you put her on the
phone?” Linny asked, rubbing the spot on her temple that had begun to throb.
What was going on?
More fumbling sounds, and the phone
clattered as it dropped to the floor. Dessie picked back up. “Your mama doesn’t
feel like talking right now. She and Curtis are going in to take a little lie
down.”
Linny wondered again how her mother
could get any sleep at all sharing her bed with Curtis, her 170-pound Great
Dane. But maybe Dottie really wasn’t well. “Dessie, does she seem sick? Should
you run her by the urgent care?”
Dessie said, “We ate lunch at
Captain Finn’s Seafood and she had the First Mate’s Special with an extra order
of shrimp and lemon chess pie for dessert.”
She chuckled. “So her appetite’s fine and her color is good, too. You
ask me, I think she’s just got a case of nerves.”
“Nerves about what?” Linny asked,
coming up empty when she tried to think of any stressors in her mother’s
peaceful life and remembered all the unexpected happiness that had been
showered upon her over the last year.
Dessie’s voice was back at a normal
decibel level and extra bright. “Well, we’re real glad you had a good visit to
the mountains and we can’t wait to hear all about it.”
Her mother must have come back
within earshot. Scanning the highway for signs, she saw they were almost to
Greensboro. “Dessie, you and Ruby go on to the RV show yourselves and do
reconnaissance for your trip. Jack and I are coming back early from the
mountains and we’ll be home in two hours. Tell Mama I’ll stop by to see her
this evening.”
“I will, honey, and you two drive
safe.” Dessie ended the call.
“What’s wrong with your mama?” Jack
asked, his eyes lit with concern.
“Not sure. The girls don’t think
it’s anything serious, but I’ll run by and check on her. Dessie said it could
be nerves.” She turned her hands palms up. “About what I don’t know, but I’ll
find out.”
Susan
Schild writes
wholesome and sunny Southern fiction. She likes stories about charming men,
missing money, adventuresome women, sweet dogs, and happily ever afters at any
age.
Susan is a wife and a stepmother. She enjoys rummaging through thrift store for treasures like four dollar cashmere sweaters and amateur watercolor paintings. She likes taking walks with her Lab mix, Tucker, and his buddies. She and her family live in North Carolina.
Susan has used her professional background as a psychotherapist and a management consultant to add authenticity to her characters.
Susan is a wife and a stepmother. She enjoys rummaging through thrift store for treasures like four dollar cashmere sweaters and amateur watercolor paintings. She likes taking walks with her Lab mix, Tucker, and his buddies. She and her family live in North Carolina.
Susan has used her professional background as a psychotherapist and a management consultant to add authenticity to her characters.
SWEET
SOUTHERN HEARTS, the final book in the Willow Hill series, will be released in
January of 2017. Readers can look forward to more adventures, new beaus,
sinister ministers, lovebirds over fifty, a road trip for Mama and her pals,
and maybe even an “I Do”...or two.
You can follow Susan on Facebook, Twitter and on her website or subscribe to her quarterly
newsletter for inside
scoop, sneak peeks and giveaways.
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Thank you for featuring SWEET SOUTHERN HEARTS!
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