Celebrating TGIF with Finding Hope cover reveal

Orange Cover Reveal-1

Is everyone ready for TGIF?  I sure am. This has been a busy week on Rebekah Lyn Books, busy in a good way. We are finishing up the week with the cover reveal of my friend Melanie Snitker. Like most of my author friends, Melanie is a member of Clean Indie Reads, a book blog site dedicated to giving readers a go to site for  “flinch free”  reads. So no worries if you teen or grandmother pick up this book~Onisha

Love’s Compass: Book Two
Finding Hope
by Melanie D. Snitker

Finding hope

Melanie D. Snitker, author of Calming the Storm and Finding Peace, is excited to reveal the cover of her newest novel. Finding Hope is an inspirational romance and the second title in her Love’s Compass series. Look for it on Kindle and in paperback July 2015.

About the Book:
Cancer

That one word has rocked Lexi Chandler’s life to the core. Her focus has always been to help others. She loves being a nurse and enjoys spending time with her family. Things had been going according to plan. Now she’s struggling to pick up the pieces and make sense of the changes in her life.

Lance Davenport has cared for Lexi since they were kids. He’s turned burying his feelings into an art. Now, watching Lexi battle with cancer has made him realize just how much he’s missed. He doesn’t know what their future holds, but he’s determined to not waste another minute.
The people closest to Lexi pull together as she tries to navigate her way down a path none of them ever dreamed she’d have to follow.

About the Author:
Melanie D. Snitker has enjoyed writing fiction for as long as she can remember. She started out writing episodes of cartoon shows that she wanted to see as a child and her love of writing grew from there.
She and her husband live in Texas with their two children, who keep their lives full of adventure, and two dogs, who add a dash of mischief to the family dynamics.
In her spare time, Melanie enjoys photography, reading, crochet, baking, archery, camping and hanging out with family and friends.

Follow Melanie for more about Finding Hope, including
character interviews, book excerpts, and more.
Website | Facebook | Twitter | Pinterest

Go West~Chapter 11

Blue Tea Pot

Go West

by DiVoran Lites

Chapter Eleven

Ellie

Something woke Ellie at four the next morning, but she felt refreshed and eager to see what the day might bring. Pulling her print dress from the closet where she had hung it the night before she picked up her work shoes and tiptoed down the stairs. Each time a wooden stair creaked, she stopped to listen to the sleeping house. She was sitting in a kitchen chair bending over and tying the laces on her shoes when Aldon walked in carrying a bouquet that looked small in his long-fingered hands.

“Whoa,” he said pausing dramatically as if her presence in the kitchen had startled him. “You’re up early.” He stepped into the small room off the kitchen and came back with a blue teapot into which he ran water for the flowers.

“I don’t know what woke me. Those are pretty,” she said watching him settle the flowers into the water and put the pot on the table in front of her.

“A few wildflowers that grew out by the barn. Weeds, I guess, but yeah, they’re kinda pretty.” His hand hovered over the flowers in the teapot vase.

“Do you pick them often?” she asked.

“Nah, haven’t done it since I was a kid. It felt like a good day for it, that’s all.” He glanced away.

“They are fine wildflowers,” she said wanting him to know that she, at least, appreciated them. If you’ll show me where everything is, I’ll make coffee.” She looked up at him and from that angle; he appeared to be seven feet tall.

“Well, let’s get it going.” He opened the stove lid and poked at the banked coals then added kindling from the box on the floor. The embers flickered into flame, and the scent of wood-smoke perfumed the air reminding Ellie of trips to the Poconos with the Campfire Girls.

“Where do you keep the coffee?” Ellie asked, grabbing the tin pot off the stove-shelf and filling it from the faucet.

Aldon pulled a package from the cupboard and showed her the label. “How about Arbuckle’s Arioso? Everybody around here likes it, except Signora Solano. She sticks with Italian coffee.”

“Yes, we drink it in Chicago, too. Would you like for me to make an omelet?” Ellie looked into the lower cupboards and brought out a frying pan.

“Sounds good. I haven’t had a real omelet since France.”

“I learned how to make them from the chef in our restaurant at the department store. They were all the rage for brunch. The secret is to cook the eggs as slowly as possible,” Ellie said. “Do you have any cheese?”

“Good German cheese – made by my uncle. It’s in the pantry under a cloth.” Aldon went to get the cheese and Ellie followed him sightseeing. She noted that the room held staple foodstuffs, extra dishes, and large pots and pans.

“How is it you know so much about the kitchen?” she asked.

“Nancy, taught us boys to cook. She could run cattle, so she figured we needed to know about women’s work in case no girls wanted to marry us when we grew up.” Aldon grinned.

“Nancy is your mother, right? Why do you call her Nancy?” Ellie saw a bowl of eggs in the pantry and took them into the kitchen to break into a bowl.

“We started calling her that to tease her and it stuck.” He opened a drawer and pulled out a wooden spoon. “Will this work?” he asked.

He poured the coffee and set out cream and sugar while Ellie cooked the omelet and divided it onto two plates. “I’m finding out I have several bosses, and it’s confusing,” she said sitting down and admiring the view of the valley through the many-paned windows. He sat beside her, and she assumed it was so he could see the valley below, too.

“Your number one boss would be Signor Solano,”Aldon instructed, but he said I could take you on the cattle drive if you have no objection. Next, it would be Molly unless Signora wants you with her. Sounds like you’ll be busy, but it will be all right. I’m here most of the time, so if you need help, let me know.” He put a forkful of eggs in his mouth, chewed, and closed his eyes in ecstasy. “Mmm. You’ll give Molly a run for her money.”

“Don’t say that. I don’t want to offend her in any way.” Ellie put her hand on his wrist, but removed it immediately when she felt a spark flare in her innermost parts.

“What do you think about the cattle drive?” he said, seemingly unaware of the effect touching him had on her.

“May I think about it?” Ellie took a deep breath to calm herself. She hadn’t felt so alive in a long time.

“It’s a small herd,” he said, “The ranch families are all related to each other. We take a bunch of cattle into the range so they can graze through the summer. That allows the grass to grow, and then in the wintertime we use it for hay.”

“Would I be riding a horse, though?” Her enthusiasm stalled like a bicycle going up a steep hill.

“Yep. Ribbons can make one more push. She knows the way. By the end of the first day, you’ll feel as if you’ve been in a rocking chair.”

“Ah, yes?” She was skeptical. “What will I do to earn my pay?”

“We need a new cook,” Aldon said. “I’ve been to town looking for one, but there’s no one around who can or will do it.”

“Who did it last year?”

“Believe it or not, it was Kate’s husband, Albert Fisher.” Aldon’s eyebrows came together in a frown. “We called him Cookie – that’s what we call camp cooks.”

“Doesn’t he want to go?” she asked. From the agonized expression on Aldon’s face, she wasn’t sure she wanted to hear the answer.

“He was the first person to try out the new electric chair down at the state penitentiary.” Aldon’s voice wavered, and she could tell he felt sad, but he went on. “He was a good cook, and a decent man. I’m sorry he got into trouble.”

“What did he do?” she asked.

“Well…he killed a man. I’ll tell you about it sometime.” Aldon got up for the coffee pot and sat back down again. “For now, do you want the job?”

“I don’t have a lot of experience with cooking,” she admitted. “My mother stayed at home and looked after the house and all that, and I spent most of my spare time with my grandparents at the store.”

“You strike me as someone who could learn to do anything,” he said. “If you did make a mistake or two, I doubt if the cousins would shoot you, they’re partial to good-looking girls.” He winked and bobbed his head. She wondered whether he was aware that he was flirting.

“Shoot me! What do you mean?” Ellie sipped at the coffee left in the bottom of her mug, but she immediately started coughing and he began to pat her back. Once she caught her breath, she went on, “Why would anyone shoot a cook?”

“The men expect things to be just right, even though they’re only getting coffee, beans, bacon, and biscuits. My grandpa liked to tell a story about a cook that made coffee as weak as Chinese tea and biscuits as hard as bullets. One of the fellows was in a bad mood, because he got kicked by a horse. He whipped out his sidearm and shot the cook dead. It has been a warning to cooks ever since. Don’t worry, though, they wouldn’t do that to you, even if you burned the beans.”

Ellie assumed burning the beans was the worst thing a camp cook could do.

“So, do you want to ride along?” He seemed eager for her answer.

“You promise they won’t shoot me?” She looked up at him with a half-smile to let him know she now understood that he was joking.

“I promise.” He nodded. “Kenny’s going too. You know that tall drink-a-water that belongs to the Fitzgeralds. He’s a good boy and a hard worker, and he’ll look after you.”

“I’ll need someone to look after me for sure,” she said.

“We’ll castrate and brand tomorrow, and then you and Molly can start getting the food ready. She’s lived around here all her life, and she and Nancy went on many a drive. But she figures now it’s her job to keep the home fires burning.”

At the same moment, they looked into each other’s eyes realizing he had said the name of a song from the war. He started humming in a pure baritone. He asked her to join him moving his head back slightly. Their voices blended as if they’d been singing together all their lives.

“Keep the homes fires burning,

Though your hearts are yearning,

Though your lads are far away

They dream of home.”

As they finished the song, she glanced up to see that someone was on the other side of the swinging door listening.

 

Go West~Chapter 10

Aldon in Loft

 

Go West

by DiVoran Lites

 Chapter Ten

Aldon

 

After putting the ranch to bed, Aldon arrived at his loft sanctuary and stretched on the cot in a state of annoyance. Sunday was the one day in the week when he let up on the ranch work. Half the afternoon, though, he had sat at the table listening to what was called conversation. The other half had passed showing Enrico the ranch. The man wanted to know how to run it and the worth of it. You’d have thought Signor’s grandson planned to inherit it.

Too bad we couldn’t have started Ellie’s riding lessons today, he thought. And then, oh, well, no use crying over spilt milk. As Ma says, “it has enough water in it already.”

He picked up the Bible from his bedside table and opened it to the Psalms. Lately, he had come to believe that the Master spoke to him whenever he read David’s words.

Soon he laid down the Bible, checked the level of kerosene in the lamp, and propped his back against the wall. Holding a lined tablet propped against his drawn up knees he started writing to his surviving brother.

Dear Bill,

It’s Sunday and the chores are done. I’m sleeping in the loft these days because the house is filling up with people. I sleep fine until the new cockerel starts in. Mother named him Chanticleer the Twenty-Fifth. He practices crowing anytime of the night or day. Howling Coyotes set him off and at three-thirty in the morning, he has to notify us that the train is arriving in the valley. He must think the headlight is the sun. I recollect when your voice was changing. We never knew if it would come out deep or squeaky. Sorry we gave you a bad time, brother. Paul’s and my voices changed too, we should have been more understanding.

How are you doing in Hollywoodland? We would like to see you. Don’t see much of Ma, either.

Pastor Rudd has been encouraging us to read the Bible. I think it’s helping me get over the war some. I lost many friends, but it was better for us fliers than for the men in the trenches, by far.

I’m beginning to believe that praying is going to help us know what to do about the possibility of losing the ranch. I sure would hate to see that happen after our dad and granddad kept it going so long, with us in mind. Right now, I can’t see how we’d get along without Signor Solano’s lease money, but sometimes he talks about going back to Italy. If he does that before we get a plan, we’re sunk.

The Appaloosa is fine, thanks for asking. I named him Chief. He’s got all the colors, white, russet, black, and some sorrel. He’s a beauty of a mustang. There’s a few more up there I’m interested in, too. They are wild and they belong to anybody who can catch them. The winters are hard on them and we can give them a good home or maybe sell some. Come on home and help me bring them in

Remember I told you about the young woman who was coming to work here? I picked her up at the train station about suppertime yesterday. Her name is Miss Elizabeth Morgan. I’m thinking on asking her to take Cookie’s place on the cattle drive. After all, she came west to have some adventures.

Write and tell me about your stunt job and the horses in your remuda. I’m glad you got away for a while. You don’t have any broken bones yet, do you? I’m sure you’re their best rider. I’d put you up against anyone when it comes to horses. Tell us when you star in a moving picture show and we’ll go to town and see it.

Say, Bill, have you come across any of those flappers yet? The reason I ask is that I’m trying to figure out if Miss Morgan might be one. Mother always told us to stay away from women who bob their hair and wear lipstick and Miss Morgan does both. She’s independent, too like you hear about women being these days.

Miss Morgan says she’s a mechanician. I call it mechanic. She wants to work on the automobiles. It makes her mad that I don’t take her serious. I heard about those ambulance drivers and the women in America who did all kinds of driving during the war. That was fine, but I’ve never yet met a woman who could clean spark plugs, change oil, or patch tires, nor one who’d want to.

I’m going to teach her to shoot and fish. Do you think she ought to use the Sharpe’s or the Remington? No question which fishing rod she’ll use, yours, of course, if it’s okay?

Oops. The barn cat leaped up to see what I was doing and to rub her cheek on the end of my pencil. She can’t stay long, as she has four kittens to feed, so I stopped to pet her for a bit. Her purr is so loud it sounds like a tractor starting up.

We brought a colored woman and her granddaughter home from town. She was Cookie Fisher’s wife. You remember how he called our cattle drive his vacation. I don’t feel like writing about what happened to him, now, but I’ll tell you later.

 

Write soon.

Best Regards, from

Your brother, Aldon