My Foolish Heart

My Foolish Heart, by Susan May Warren is sassy, sweet, and poignant all at once. It is everything a good romance novel should be — and more. Issy and Caleb are the kind of characters who step out of the book and into reader’s hearts, as do several of the secondary characters. If you’re looking laugh-out-loud entertainment and a little Summer romance (or two), you’re looking for, My Foolish Heart.

The Book Blurb:

Unknown to her tiny town of Deep Haven, Isadora Presley spends her nights as Miss Foolish Heart, the star host of a syndicated talk radio show. Millions tune in to hear her advice on dating and falling in love, unaware that she’s never really done either. Issy’s ratings soar when it seems she’s falling in love on-air with a caller. A caller she doesn’t realize lives right next door.

An Excerpt:

Chapter 1/Scene 1 

For two hours a night, Monday through Saturday Isadora Presley became the girl she’d lost.

“Welcome to My Foolish Heart, where we believe your perfect love might be right next door. We want to send special greetings out to KDRT in Seattle, brand new to the Late Night Lovelorn network. BrokenheartedInBuffalo, you’re on the line. Welcome to the program.”

Outside the second-story window of her home studio, the night crackled open with a white flash of light and revealed the scrawny arms of her Japanese plum, cowering under a late summer gale. Issy checked the clock. Hopefully the storm would hold off for the rest of her show, another thirty minutes.

And the weather had better clear by tomorrow’s annual Deep Haven Fisherman’s Picnic. She couldn’t wait to sit on her front porch, watch the midnight fireworks over the harbor as the Elks launched them from the campground, and pretend that life hadn’t forgotten her.

Tomorrow, she’d watch the parade from her corner of the block—wave to her classmates on their annual float, as they made their way toward Main Street, then linger on the porch listening to the live music drift up from the park. Maybe she’d even be able to hear the cheers from the annual log-rolling competition. She could nearly taste the tangy sweetness of a fish burger, fresh walleye and homemade tartar sauce. Kathy would be pouring coffee in the Java Cup outpost. And, just a block away, the crispy, fried oil tang of donuts nearly had the power to lure her to Lucy’s place, World’s Greatest Donuts. She’d stand in the line that invariably twined out the door, around the corner and past the realty office and wait for a glazed raised.

She’d never, not once in her first twenty-five years, missed Fish Pic. Until two years ago.

She’d missed everything since then. She swallowed back the tightening in her chest.

“Thank you for taking my call, Miss Foolish Heart. I just wanted to say that I listen to your show every night and that it’s helped me wait for the perfect man.”

BrokenheartedInBuffalo had a high, sweet voice, the kind that might belong to a college co-ed, with straight blonde hair, blue eyes. But the radio could mask age, race, even gender. Truly, when Issy listened to her podcasts, sometimes she didn’t recognize her own voice, the way it softened with compassion, turning low and husky as she counseled listeners.

She could almost trick herself into believing she knew what she was doing. Trick herself into believing that she lived a different life, one beyond the four walls and garden of her home.

“I’m so glad, Brokenhearted. He’s out there. What can I do for you tonight?”

“Well, I think I found him. We met a few weeks ago in a karate class, and we’ve already had three dates—”
“Three? Brokenhearted, I know that you’re probably smitten, but three dates isn’t enough to know a man is perfect for you. A great relationship takes—”

“Time, trials, and trust. I know.”

So Brokenhearted listened regularly. Good, then maybe Issy could slow her down, help her to part the heady rush of the “love fog”—another of her coined terms. “Then you also know you don’t develop that in three dates, although Miss Foolish Heart does advise calling it quits after three if there is no visible ten potential.”

“But it feels like it. He’s everything I want.”

“How do you know that?”

“I have my top ten list, just like you said. And of course, the big three.”

“Big three essentials. Sounds like you know what you’re looking for.”

“That’s just it—he has most of them, and I’m wondering if it’s essential for him to have all of them. Isn’t . . . let’s say seven out of ten enough?”

“You tell me, Brokenhearted—would you settle for a seven romance? Or do you want a ten?”

“What if I don’t know what a ten feels like?”

What a ten feels like. Yes, Issy would like to know that too.

“Good question, Brokenhearted. I think it must be different for everyone. Stay on the line and let’s take some calls and see if anyone has a good answer. Or you can hop over to the forum at www.myfoolishheart.com—I see that Cupid27 has posted a reply. Love feels as if nothing can touch you. Nice, Cupid27. Any other callers?”

She muted Brokenhearted and clicked on another caller. “TruLuv, you’re on the air. What does a ten feel like?”

A gravelly, low voice, the two-pack-a-day kind: “It’s knowing you have someone to hold on to.”

“Great response, TruLuv. Here’s hoping you have someone to hold on to.” She muted TruLuv. “Go ahead, WindyCity.”

“It’s knowing you’re loved . . . anyway.”

Loved, anyway. Oh, she wanted to believe that was possible. “Love that, WindyCity. Anyone else?”

The forum had come to life, replies piling up. On the phone lines, PrideAndPassion723 appeared. “Pride” called at least once a month, often with a new dilemma, and kept the forum boards lit up with conversations. Issy should probably give the girl a 1-800 number.

She clicked back to Brokenhearted. “Do any of those replies feel like what you feel?”

“Maybe. I don’t know.”

“Miss Foolish Heart suggests you hold out for the ten, Brokenhearted. The perfect one is out there, maybe right next door.”

She went to a commercial break, an advertisement for a chocolate bouquet delivery, and pulled off her headphones, massaging her ears.

Outside, the rain hummed against the house, a steady battering with the occasional ping upon the sill, although now and again it roared, the wind rousing in anger. Hopefully she’d remembered to close the front windows before she went on the air. Lightning strobed again, and this time silver leaves stripped from the tree, splattered on the window. Oh, her bleeding heart just might be laying flat on the ground, after all the work she’d done to nurture it to life.

The commercial ended.

“I see we have PrideAndPassion on the line, hopefully with an update to her latest romance. Thanks for coming back, Pride. How are you tonight?”

She’d expected tears, or at the very least a mournful cry of how Pride had stalked her boyfriend into some restaurant, found him sharing a low-lit moment with some bimbo. Pride’s escapades had become the backbone of the show, ratings spiking every time she called in.

“I’m engaged!”

Issy nearly didn’t recognize her, not with the lift in her voice, the squeal at the end.

“Kyle popped the question! I did it, Miss Foolish Heart—I held out for true love, and last night he showed up on my doorstep with a ring!”

“Oh, that’s . . . great, Pride.” Issy battled the shock from her voice. No, not just shock. Even . . . okay, envy.

Once upon a time, she’d dreamed of a finding the perfect man, dreamed of standing on the sidewalk at the Fisherman’s Picnic with Lucy, hoping they might be asked to dance under the milky starlight of the August sky. But who had the courage to dance with the football coach’s daughter? And as for Lucy, she simply couldn’t put her courage together to say yes. Sweet, shy Lucy, she’d used up her courage on one boy.

It only took Lucy’s broken heart their senior year to cement the truth: a girl had to have standards. She had to wait for the perfect love.

Issy had come up with the list then, refined it in college. A good solid top ten list, and most important, the top three must-have attributes in a man besides his Christian faith—compassionate, responsible, and self-sacrificing—the super evaluator that told her if she should say yes to a first date.

If any came around. Because she certainly couldn’t go out looking for dates, could she?

“Oh, Pride, are you sure?” Silence on the other end. She hadn’t exactly meant it to come out with that edge, almost disapproving. “I . . . just mean, is he a ten?”

“I’m tired of waiting for a ten, Miss Foolish Heart. I’m twenty-six years old and I want to get married. I don’t want to be an old maid.”

Twenty-six. Issy remembered twenty-six, a whole year ago. She’d celebrated her birthday with a jelly-filled bismark that Lucy brought over, and they’d sung Abba at the top of their lungs.

And, as a finale, Issy ventured out to her front steps. Waved to Cindy Myers next door, who happened to be out getting her mail.

Yes, a red-letter day, for sure.

“You’re so young, Pride. Twenty-six isn’t old.”
“It feels old when everyone around you is getting married. I’m ready, and he asked, so I said yes.”

Issy drew in a breath. “That’s wonderful. We’re all happy for you, right, forum?”

The forum, however, lit up with a vivid conversation about settling for anything less than a ten. See? Not a foolish heart among them.

“Good, because . . . I want you to come to the wedding, Miss Foolish Heart. It’s because of you that I found Kyle, and I want you to be there to celebrate with us.”

Issy gave a slight chuckle over the air. High and short, it was a ripple of sound that resembled fear. Perfect. “I . . . well, thank you for the kind offer, Pride, but—”

“You don’t understand. This is going to be a huge wedding. I know we’re not supposed to reveal our names on the air, but I am so grateful for your help that you need to know—my father is Gerard O’Grady.”

“The governor of California?” Former actor-turned billionaire-turned politician?

“Yes.” A giggle followed her voice. “We’re already planning the wedding—it’ll be at our estate in Napa Valley. I want you there, in the front row, with my parents. You’ve just helped me so much.”

“Oh, uh, Pride—”

“Lauren. I’m Lauren O’Grady.”

“Okay, Lauren. I’m so sorry, but I can’t come.”

“Why not?”

Why not? Because every time Issy ventured a block from her house, the world closed in and cut off her breathing? Because she couldn’t erase from her brain the smell of her mother’s burning flesh, her screams, the feel of hot blood on her hands? Because every time she even thought about getting into a car, she saw dots, broke out in a sweat?

Most of all, because she was still years away from breaking free of the panic attacks that held her hostage.

“Our station’s policy is—”

“I’m sure my father could get your station to agree. Please, please don’t say no. Just think about it. I’ll send you an invitation.”

And then she clicked off.

Seconds of dead air passed before Issy found the right voice. “Remember to visit the forum at www.myfoolishheart.com. This is Miss Foolish Heart saying, your perfect love might be right next door.” She disconnected just as Karen Carpenter’s “Close to You” signaled the close of her show.

Yeah, sure. Once upon a time, she’d actually believed her tagline.

Once upon a time, she’d actually believed in Happily Ever After.

The next show came on—The Bean, a late-night sports show out of Chicago that scooped up the scores from the games around the nation. She had no control over what shows surrounded hers and was just glad that she had the right to control some of the ad content.

Stopping by the bathroom, she closed the window, grabbed a towel, and threw it on the subway tile floor, stepping on it with her bare foot. She paused by her parents’ bedroom—it hadn’t seen fresh air for two years, but she still opened the door, let her eyes graze the four-poster double bed, the Queen Anne bureau and dresser, the window that overlooked the garden.
For once, she left the door cracked, then descended the stairs. Front door locked, yes, the parlor windows shut.

Light sparked again across the night, brachials of white that spliced the blackness. It flickered long enough to illuminate the tiny library across the street and the recycle bin on its side, rolling as the wind kicked it down the sidewalk. A half block away, and down the hill towards town, the hanging stoplight suspended above the highway swayed. The storm had turned the intersection into a four-way stop, the red light blinking, bloody upon the porcelain pavement.

She pulled a knitted afghan off the sofa, wrapped it around herself, letting the fraying edges drag down the wooden floor to the kitchen. Here, she flicked on the light. It bathed the kitchen—the spray of white hydrangeas in a milk glass vase on the round white-and-black table, the black marble countertops, the black-and-white checked floor. Part retro, part contemporary—her mother’s eclectic taste.

Thunder shook the house again, lifting the fine hairs on the back of her neck. How she hated storms.

She snaked a hand out from the blanket, turned on the burner under the teapot. She’d left the last donut from her daily Lucy delivery upstairs in her office. Her gaze flicked to the index card pasted to the cupboard.“If God is for us, who can ever be against us?”

Indeed. But what if God wasn’t exactly for you? Still, she wasn’t going to ignore help where she might get it.
Another gust of wind and something tumbled across her back porch—oh no, not her geraniums. Then, banging on her back door. The glass shuddered.

Why her mother had elected to change out the perfectly good solid oak doors for one solid pane of glass never made sense to her.

The teapot whistled. She turned the flame off, reached for a mug—

A howl, and no, that wasn’t the wind. It sounded . . . wounded. Even afraid.

She swallowed her heart back into her chest. She knew that kind of howl. Especially on a night like this.
Tucking her hand back into her blanket, Issy moved to the door, then locked it. She turned off the kitchen light and peered out into the darkness.

No glowing eyes peering back at her, no snaggle-toothed monster groping at her window. She flipped on the outside light. It bathed the cedar porch, the cushions of her faded teak furniture blowing in the wind, held only by their flimsy ties. Her potted geraniums lay toppled, black earth muddy and smeared across the porch, and at the bottom of the steps, the storm had flattened her bleeding heart bush.

At the very least, she should cover her mother’s prized pilgrim roses.

Issy dumped the afghan in the chair, rolled up her pant legs, grabbed a windbreaker hanging in the closet near the door and pulled the hood over her head.

Unbolting the door, she eased out into the rain. The air had a cool, slick breath, and it raised gooseflesh on her arms. The deluge had stirred to life the Scotch of her white pine, a grizzled sentry in the far corner, its shaggy arms gesturing danger.

But who would hurt her here, in her backyard? Not only that, but her father had built the titanic of all fences, with sturdy pine boards that bordered her in, kept the world out, with the exception of Lucy, who used it as a shortcut on her way to town.

It wasn’t like Issy actually locked the gate. Okay, sometimes. Okay, always. But Lucy had a key to the gate as well as the house, so it didn’t really matter.

Splashing down the stairs, she dashed across the wet flagstone, past her dripping variegated hosta, the yellow verbena, the hydrangea bush, too many of the buds stripped. The rugosa, too, lay in waste.

She wouldn’t look. Not until tomorrow. Sometimes it worked better that way, to focus on what she could save. On what she still had.

Reaching the shed, she dialed the combination and opened it. She grabbed the plastic neatly folded on the rack by the door, scooped up two bricks, and dashed back to the porch. Rain couldn’t quite smatter the roses here, under the overhang. Still, just in case . . . she weighted one end of the plastic with the bricks on the porch, then unfolded it over the flowers.

Grabbing stones from the edging of her bed, she secured the tarp, then ran back to the shed for another pair of weights.

The howl tore through the rain again, reverberating through her.

She froze, her heart in her mouth.

Something moved. Over by the end of the porch.

The sky chose then to crack open and pour out its rage in a growl that lifted her feet from the earth.

And not only hers.

Whatever it was—she only got a glimpse—it came straight at her, like she might be prey. She screamed, dropped the bricks, and sprinted for the porch. Her foot slipped on the slick wood and she fell, hard. Her chin cracked against the wood, and then the animal pounced.
“No! Get away!” But it didn’t maul her, didn’t even stop. Just scrambled toward the door.

The pane of glass waterfalled upon the floor as the beast careened into her kitchen. Issy froze as the animal—huge and hairy—skidded across the linoleum.

It came to a stop, then lay there, whining.

A dog. A huge dog, with a face only a mother could love, eyes filled with terror, wet and muddy from its jowls down.

“Nice doggy . . . nice . . .”

Lighting must have illuminated her, and the animal simply panicked. It turned and shot off through her house. Toenails scratching her polished wood floors.

“Come back!”

In the front parlor, a crash—not the spider plant!

The dog emerged back out into the hall and shot up the stairs.

“No! C’mere boy!” Issy’s bare feet stopped her at the threshold. The glass glistened like ice on the floor. Perfect. “Don’t break . . . anything!”

She ran off the porch, around the path of the garden, opened the gate, and ran through the slippery grass to the front of the house.

Thumper the rabbit still hid the key and now she retrieved it and inserted it into the door.

The squeal of rubber against wet pavement came from her memory—or perhaps she only hoped it did. Then a crash, the splintering of metal, the shattering of glass.

She turned. No.

Under the bloody glow of the blinking stoplight, a sedan had t-boned a Caravan. Already, gas burned the air.

Her hand went to her face, to the raised memory on her forehead, and she shook her head, as if to clear away the images.

She should call 9-1-1. But she could only back into her house.

She shut the door and palmed her hands against it, the cool wood comforting. Just . . . breathe. Just . . .
Her breath tumbled over her, and she felt the whimper before it bubbled out.

God, please . . . What was her verse? If God is for us . . . No . . . no, the one Rachelle had given her. We have not been given a spirit of fear, but of power—

She heard shouts and closed her eyes to them, pressed her hand to her chest, heat pouring through her.

Just breathe.

Issy slid to the floor.

You’re safe. Don’t panic. Just breathe.

Susan May Warren:
Susan May Warren is an award-winning, best-selling author of over twenty-five novels, many of which have won the Inspirational Readers Choice Award, the ACFW Book of the Year award, the Rita Award, and have been Christy finalists. After serving as a missionary for eight years in Russia, Susan returned home to a small town on Minnesota’s beautiful Lake Superior shore where she, her four children, and her husband are active in their local church.

Susan’s larger than life characters and layered plots have won her acclaim with readers and reviewers alike. A seasoned women’s events and retreats speaker, she’s a popular writing teacher at conferences around the nation and the author of the beginning writer’s workbook: From the Inside-Out: discover, create and publish the novel in you!. She is also the founder ofwww.MyBookTherapy.com, a story-crafting service that helps authors discover their voice.

Susan makes her home in northern Minnesota, where she is busy cheering on her two sons in football, and her daughter in local theater productions (and desperately missing her college-age son!)

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from LitFuse Publicity. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

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Filed under Book Review, Christian, contemporary fiction, Fiction, Giveaway, LitFuse, Romance

Blogging Through the Gospels

SOAP

  • Scripture
  • Observation
  • Application
  • Prayer

For a further description, click on graphic and visit Mom’s Tool Box.

Sunday, April 10th, 2011

Blogging Through the Gospels: Matthew 8

Scripture:

Observation:

Application:

Prayer:

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Blessed: Living a Grateful Life

Reservoirs need refilling. Whether they hold water, tea or blessings, most of us don’t have limitless resources to pour out upon others, yet we women often behave as though we do. We hold down jobs, manage our homes, and volunteer in our communities to help ease the burden and stress of others, often without taking the necessary time to replenish ourselves. Sometimes all we need to be rejuvenated is the knowledge that we’re not alone and a chance to enjoy the successes of others.

In her Book Blessed: Living a Grateful Life, Ellen Michaud opens our eyes to the everyday blessings around us and invites us to sit and partake to our heart’s content.  Each story provides a mini spirit-healing vacation.  This book blessed and enriched me during the last gray dismal days of this extra long Pacific Northwest winter.  I provided sunshine in written form.   I highly recommend it if you need to focus a little sunshine ion your soul.

About the Book:
Sometimes we just need to stop for a moment and absorb the quiet moments in the world around us–to take a deep breath and appreciate the things in life that make us thankful and bring us joy. In this heartfelt collection of her online columns from Diane, the flagship magazine of the Curves women’s fitness center organization, author Ellen Michaud reminds us of the everyday blessings that surround us, but we all tend to overlook.

Entries include:

  • Summer in a Jar: On a 200-acre farm known for its Jersey cows and prizewinning cheese, two women harvest a cornucopia of produce that looks like it came from the Garden of Eden. Although the visit was intended to pick up ingredients for “one of the finest salsas in the near world,” the end result is a view of a fertile valley, the rich smell of vegetables freshly tugged from the earth that speaks to the soul, and the natural rhythm of friendly conversation.
  • The Teapot: During a snowy winter storm, the author pulls her great-grandmother’s worn silver teapot down from a shelf. As she polishes the teapot’s tarnished surface, she contemplates its long journey over an ocean and through the generations. As she discovers engraved hallmarks that lead to a deeper understanding of its 200-year history, her appreciation for the women who traveled with it grows.
  • Welcome Home: As an Airbus 321 begins its descent toward the coastal lights of Los Angeles International Airport, the pilot makes an overhead announcement that stills the restless and rustling passengers. What follows are moments of contemplation about the sacrifices of soldiers and, how regardless of one’s politics, there is still a shared sense of love and respect for those who fight for our freedom.
  • The Courage to Change: After a lifetime of self-built barriers, the author’s 88-year-old aunt overcomes discouraging memories and years of grief to prove that it’s never too late to open yourself to new experiences, take risks, and start over.
Ellen & Meggie -- photo by Peter Chin

Ellen & Meggie photo by Peter Chin

About the Author:
Ellen Michaud is an award-winning author and editor who lives high in the mountains of Vermont. Her work focuses on women’s stories, and has appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, Ladies Home Journal, Health Magazine, Better Homes and Gardens, Parents Magazine, Men’s Health, Readers’ Digest Magazine, and Prevention Magazine, where she was the editor-at-large for six years. Today she not only writes for these and other media, she is also an online columnist at MyCurves.com.

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from Ruby Mansuri of FSB Associates. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

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A Cowboy’s Touch

A Cowboy’s Touch, by Denise Hunter (from Thomas Nelson and Woman of Faith Fiction) is an excellent read. The characters are distinct individuals with compelling life stories that just happen to come together between a rock and a hard place in beautiful Moose Creek, Montana. Abigail Jones is a reporter on a forced leave of absence for her health. She’s been banished from her position as a staff writer for Viewpoint Magazine which is run by her mother. Wade Ryan is a quiet rancher with a motherless daughter in need of nanny. Abby and Wade come together in what seems like the perfect solution, Abby can laze around the ranch making crafts and baking cookies with Ryan’s daughter, Maddie, for the summer, and Ryan can concentrate on round up and branding cattle without worrying that Maddie will be trampled underfoot. Unfortunately Abby has a hard time taking things easy and to complicate things further, she learns her mother’s magazine is going to fold if they don’t get a blockbuster story and raise their circulation numbers immediately, and then she discovers her new, hunky employer is J.W. Ryan, a rodeo cowboy who disappeared at the peak of his career after being named the prime suspect in the suspicious death of his wife. If she tells Wade’s story she can save her mother’s magazine? And what will happen to the tender love growing between her and Wade?

Read an Excerpt:

Abigail Jones knew the truth. She frowned at the blinking curser on her monitor and tapped her fingers on the keyboard-what next?

Beyond the screen’s glow, darkness washed the cubicles. Her computer hummed, and outside the office windows a screech of tires broke the relative stillness ofthe Chicago night.

She shuffled her note cards. The story had been long in coming, but it was finished now, all except the telling. She knew where she wanted to take it next.

Her fingers stirred into motion, dancing across the keys. This was her favorite part, exposingtruth to the world. Well, okay, not the world exactly, not with Viewpoint’s paltry circulation. But now, during the writing, it felt like the world.

Four paragraphs later, the office had shrunk away, and all that existed were the words on the monitor and her memory playing in full color on the screen of her mind.

Something dropped onto her desk with a sudden thud. Abigail’s hand flew to her heart, and her chair darted from her desk. She looked up at her boss’s frowning face, then shared a frown of her own. “You scared me.”

“And you’re scaring me. It’s after midnight, Abigail—what are you doing here?” Marilyn Jones’s hand settled on her hip.

The blast of adrenaline settled into Abigail’s bloodstream, though her heart was still in overdrive. “Being an ambitious staffer?”

“You mean an obsessive workaholic.”

“Something wrong with that?”

“What’s wrong is my twenty-eight-year-old daughter is working all hours on a Saturday night instead of dating an eligible bachelor like all the other single women her age.” Her mom tossed her head, but her short brown hair hardly budged. “You could’ve at least gone out with your sister and me. We had a good time.”

“I’m down to the wire.”

“You’ve been here every night for two weeks.” Her mother rolled up a chair and sank into it. “Your father always thought you’d be a schoolteacher, did I ever tell you that?”

“About a million times.” Abigail settled into the chair, rubbed the ache in her temple. Her heart was still recovering, but she wanted to return to her column. She was just getting to the good part.

“You had a doctor’s appointment yesterday,” Mom said. Abigail sighed hard.

“Whatever happened to doctor-patient confidentiality?”

“Goes out the window when the doctor is your sister. Come on, Abigail, this is your health. Reagan prescribed rest—R-E-S-T—and yet here you are.”

“A couple more days and the story will be put to bed.”

“And then there’ll be another story.”

“That’s what I do, Mother.”

“You’ve had a headache for weeks, and the fact that you made an appointment with your sister is proof you’re not feeling well.”

Abigail pulled her hand from her temple. “I’m fine.”

“That’s what your father said the week before he collapsed.”

Compassion and frustration warred inside Abigail. “He was sixty-two.” And his pork habit hadn’t helped matters. Thin didn’t necessarily mean healthy. She skimmed her own long legs, encased in her favorite jeans . . . exhibit A.

“I’ve been thinking you should go visit your great-aunt.” Abigail already had a story in the works, but maybe her mom had a lead on something else. “New York sounds interesting. What’s the assignment?”

“Rest and relaxation. And I’m not talking about your Aunt Eloise—as if you’d get any rest there—I’m talking about your Aunt Lucy.”

Abigail’s spirits dropped to the basement. “Aunt Lucy lives in Montana.” Where cattle outnumbered people. She felt for the familiar ring on her right hand and began twisting.

“She seems a bit . . . confused lately.”

Abigail recalled the birthday gifts her great-aunt had sent over the years, and her lips twitched. “Aunt Lucy has always been confused.”

“Someone needs to check on her. Her latest letter was full of comments about some girls who live with her, when I know perfectly well she lives alone. I think it may be time for assisted living or a retirement community.”

Abigail’s eyes flashed to the screen. A series of nonsensical letters showed where she’d stopped in alarm at her mother’s appearance. She hit the delete button. “Let’s invite her to Chicago for a few weeks.”

“She needs to be observed in her own surroundings. Besides, that woman hasn’t set foot on a plane since Uncle Murray passed, and I sure wouldn’t trust her to travel across the country alone. You know what happened when she came out for your father’s funeral.”

“Dad always said she had a bad sense of direction.”

“Nevertheless, I don’t have time to hunt her down in Canada again. Now, come on, Abigail, it makes perfect sense for you to go. You need a break, and Aunt Lucy was your father’s favorite relative. It’s our job to look after her now, and if she’s incapable of making coherent decisions, we need to help her.”

Abigail’s conscience tweaked her. She had a soft spot for Aunt Lucy, and her mom knew it. Still, that identity theft story called her name, and she had a reliable source who might or might not be willing to talk in a couple weeks.

“Reagan should do it. I’ll need the full month for my column, and we can’t afford to scrap it. Distribution is down enough as it is. Just last month you were concerned—”

Her mother stood abruptly, the chair reeling backward into the aisle. She walked as far as the next cubicle, then turned. “Hypertension is nothing to mess with, Abigail. You’re so . . . rest- less. You need a break—a chance to find some peace in your life.” She cleared her throat, then her face took on that I’ve-made-up- my-mind look. “Whether you go to your aunt’s or not, I’m insisting you take a leave of absence.”

There was no point arguing once her mother took that tone. She could always do research online—and she wouldn’t mind visiting a part of the country she’d never seen. “Fine. I’ll finish this story, then go out to Montana for a week or so.”

“Finish the story, yes. But your leave of absence will last three months.”

“Three months!”

“It may take that long to make a decision about Aunt Lucy.”

“What about my apartment?”

“Reagan will look after it. You’re hardly there anyway. You need a break, and Moose Creek is the perfect place.”

Moose Creek. “I’ll say. Sounds like nothing more than a traffic signal with a gas pump on the corner.”

“Don’t be silly. Moose Creek has no traffic signal. Abigail, you have become wholly obsessed with—”

“So I’m a hard worker . . .” She lifted her shoulders.

Her mom’s lips compressed into a hard line. “Wholly obsessed with your job. Look, you know I admire hard work, but it feels like you’re always chasing something and never quite catching it. I want you to find some contentment, for your health if nothing else. There’s more to life than investigative reporting.”

“I’m the Truthseeker, Mom. That’s who I am.” Her fist found home over her heart.

Her mother shouldered her purse, then zipped her light sweater, her movements irritatingly slow. She tugged down the ribbed hem and smoothed the material of her pants. “Three months, Abigail. Not a day less.”

About the Author:
Denise Hunter lives in Indiana with her husband Kevin and their three sons. In 1996, Denise began her first book, a Christian romance novel, writing while her children napped. Two years later it was published, and she’s been writing ever since. Her books often contain a strong romantic element, and her husband Kevin says he provides all her romantic material, but Denise insists a good imagination helps too!

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from Thomas Nelson. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

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Blogging Through the Gospels: Matthew 10

SOAP

  • Scripture
  • Observation
  • Application
  • Prayer

For a further description, click on graphic and visit Mom’s Tool Box.

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

Blogging Through the Gospels: Matthew 10

Scripture:

Matthew 10:39
Whoever finds their life will lose it, and whoever loses their life for my sake will find it.

Observation:

Only by freely giving our lives to God do we gain a life worth living.

Application:

I miss those days when I walked in tandem with Jesus. I miss our prayer communion and I miss the peace that resided in my soul as a result of that closeness. Since I have taken back control of my own choices my peace and joy have fled.

Prayer:

Lord, help me to lean wholly on you. Take me, Lord, as you did before and make me wholly yours. Help me drop the reins of my life and put them once again in your hands. Mold me and make me more like Jesus. Amen

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Blogging Through the Gospels: Matthew 9

SOAP

  • Scripture
  • Observation
  • Application
  • Prayer

For a further description, click on graphic and visit Mom’s Tool Box.

Monday, April 11th, 2011

Blogging Through the Gospels: Matthew 9

Scripture:

Matthew 9:9
Passing along, Jesus saw a man at his work collecting taxes. His name was Matthew. Jesus said, “Come along with me.” Matthew stood up and followed him.

Observation:

Matthew didn’t ask where they were going. He followed without hesitation.

Application:

I need to better trust the Lord when he leads me. I need to question less and trust more.

Prayer:

Heavenly Father, help me to be more like Matthew and follow your commands immediately and willingly. Remind me when I balk that no path I choose can possibly be safer than the path of your will. I am yours. In the name of your son, my Savior, Jesus, I ask you to take me and shape me into the person you would have me be. Amen.

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Blogging Through the Gospels: Matthew 8

SOAP

  • Scripture
  • Observation
  • Application
  • Prayer

For a further description, click on graphic and visit Mom’s Tool Box.

Saturday, April 10th, 2011

Blogging Through the Gospels: Matthew 8

Scripture:

Matthew 8:3
Jesus reached out his hand and touched the man. “I am willing,” he said. “Be clean!” Immediately he was cleansed of his leprosy.

Observation:

If I am to be like Jesus, I shouldn’t turn away from others when their health and/or hygiene disgust me.

Application:

I need to worry less about my own comfort and more about the needs of those God sends me to serve.

Prayer:

Heavenly Father, forgive me my unwillingness to lend a helping hand or a ride to those around me who are less clean. Touch my heart with compassion for them and guide me to reach out like Jesus. I ask this in the name of Jesus. Amen.

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Blogging Through the Gospels: Matthew 7

SOAP

  • Scripture
  • Observation
  • Application
  • Prayer

For a further description, click on graphic and visit Mom’s Tool Box.

Saturday, April 9th, 2011

Blogging Through the Gospels: Matthew 7

Scripture:

Matthew 7:16
You will know them by their fruits. Grapes are not gathered from thorn bushes nor figs from thistles, are they? (NASB)

Observation:

Observation, indeed — or, as the song says, “We will know they are Christians by their love.” I am constantly distressed by the people who stand up and shout that they are Christians, and then spew hatred and malice. Those are not fruits of The Spirit.

Application:

Look for the love in people’s actions. It is what people do that reveals their true character. Words are better deceivers than actions.

Prayer:

Father, help me always to look at the actions of my leaders as well as listening to their words. Keep me tuned to your truths and do not let me be swayed by false teachers. In the name of Jesus, I pray. Amen.

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Blogging Through the Gospels: Matthew 6

SOAP

  • Scripture
  • Observation
  • Application
  • Prayer

For a further description, click on graphic and visit Mom’s Tool Box.

Friday, April 8th, 2011

Blogging Through the Gospels: Matthew 6

Scripture:

Matthew 6:22
The eye is the lamp of the body. If your eyes are *healthy, your whole body will be full of light.

*The Greek for healthy here implies generous.

Observation:

My mind immediately went to:
Matthew 5:29 If your right eye causes you to sin, pluck it out …
AND
Philippians 4:8 … whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things.

Application:

The things I choose to take in through my eyes (reading, television, websites, etc.) can enhance or inhibit my spiritual growth and my witness.

Prayer:

Heavenly Father, thank you for reminding me to be more mindful of what I take in through my eyes. I will take better care to not look for or dwell on those things that do not concern me and do not lift me up. Time to turn the television off again and take better care of what I read while in the grocery store check out line. Holy Spirit tap me on the shoulder when my eyes stray to unwholesome pursuits. In the name of Jesus I pray. Amen.

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Blogging Through the Gospels: Matthew 5

SOAP

  • Scripture
  • Observation
  • Application
  • Prayer

For a further description, click on graphic and visit Mom’s Tool Box.

Thursday, April 7th, 2011

Blogging Through the Gospels: Matthew 4

Scripture:

Matthew 5:48
Be perfect, therefore, as your Heavenly Father is perfect.

Observation:

Whoa! Tall order! He’s kidding, right?

Application:

Okay, not kidding, but Jesus does realize we can’t achieve perfection. That’s what his coming to earth was all about, but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try.

Prayer:

Father, Jesus began the Beatitudes with “Blessed are the poor in spirit …” and you know that that is often me. Help me to better follow through on what I believe, even when it is inconvenient. Help me set aside my “I shoulds” and turn them into “I wills.” I ask for this blessing in the name of Jesus. Amen.

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