The Monday Blog

It’s Preview Friday!

Sneak Peek

It’s Preview Friday where you can get a sneak peek of an upcoming release.  This week, read Chapter 1 of HIDING IN PLAIN SIGHT (A Billy Jo McCabe Mystery, Book 2).

Hiding in Plain Sight

Hiding in Plain Sight

A long-buried secret that was never meant to be uncovered could suddenly put a target on both Detective Mark Friessen and Billy Jo McCabe.

More info →

****

Chapter 1

When Billy Jo thought of Carly Thornton, never in a million years had she pictured a white picket fence.

She parked on the street, looking out at the house, a cute two-story craftsman with teal trim and a front porch with two comfy lounge chairs, a welcoming invitation to come sit and visit. She took a second to check whether she had the right address.

This had to be a joke.

She couldn’t pry her hands from where they were wrapped around her black steering wheel, the car still idling. She took in the houses on both sides of the street, the kind of homes that implied family, community, respectability, where people likely spent Saturdays barbecuing with neighbors.

This had to be the wrong Carly Thornton. But then, the trail had gone cold here after so much digging. The curiosity Billy Jo hadn’t been able to shake suddenly turned into anger, which had her turning off the car, yanking on the door handle, and stepping out, unable to pull her eyes from the respectable neighborhood around her.

This was a mistake. Perhaps she had been wrong about the name. After all, Carly Thornton must have been a common name, like Jane Smith. She hesitated as soon as the thought hit her, though. After all her digging, following this cold trail, she knew that the last known location of her mother—scratch that, of the woman who’d given birth to her, was here. And how many people named Carly Jane Thornton, with the same birthdate, with a mother whose maiden name was Holloway, could be living on the island?

The records had huge gaps in time and a ton of inaccuracies, as if Carly didn’t want to be found, but then, with a father like Chase McCabe, who could literally find a needle in a haystack, Billy Jo had learned from the best.

She gave her door a shove closed and left it parked on the narrow street, hearing the sounds of the morning, sprinklers running and a dog barking. She put one foot in front of the other and started walking up to the driveway. The grass was carefully manicured and green even though most of the island was facing a water shortage, and the perennials and bushes appeared well cared for.

She fisted her hands, feeling the curiosity that had driven her building in the pit of her stomach again. Wearing sandals and faded green capris, she looped her baggy purse over her shoulder and took in the car in the driveway, a silver BMW, only a few years old. Everything about the house appeared pristine, neat and tidy, nothing like what she’d expected from an addict.

The inside door was closed, and the screen door was white. Her heartbeat kicked up as she tapped on it, and it rattled. She heard footsteps, feeling her rage building, a frown pulling at her lips. Her heart thumped once, long and loud, as the door opened, and she stared into blue eyes, dark hair, and a smile she hadn’t expected.

“Hello. Can I help you?”

It was her voice, soft. She didn’t appear that old, and she wasn’t much taller than Billy Jo, about five foot two. She pushed open the screen, and Billy Jo glimpsed inside the house behind her, seeing gleaming hardwood and nice furnishings, hearing voices and footsteps from what she thought was the kitchen.

“I’m looking for Carly Thornton. My name is Billy Jo McCabe. I hope this doesn’t sound totally strange, but the searches I’ve done show that this house is where she lives.”

The woman’s smile suddenly faltered, and she didn’t know what to make of her expression.

“Are you Carly?” Billy Jo finally asked.

“You have the wrong house,” the woman said. “I’ve never heard of Carly Thornton. Who are you, anyway—a bill collector, a solicitor? The sign clearly says we don’t accept any here.” She pointed to a sign by the door, No soliciting.

So she didn’t like strange people showing up. Billy Jo knew well when someone was uncomfortable, though. She could tell from the tension in her expression.

“Carly, who’s at the door?” a man called out.

Billy Jo heard his footsteps before he appeared behind the woman. About her dad’s age, he had dark hair and hazel eyes, and he smiled, holding a mug of coffee. His hand rested on the woman’s shoulder.

“Oh, just someone who’s lost and looking for directions, is all,” the woman said. “Can you see that the girls finish breakfast and get ready for school? We’re running late already.”

Billy Jo stood in silence, watching. The man was tall, solidly built, wearing blue jeans, a golf shirt, and a wedding ring. He looked over to her and back to the woman, and the two exchanged the kind of look a husband and wife shared. “Don’t be long, then,” he said. “You said you had to leave earlier for the school meeting, and don’t forget we have the Davidson fundraiser tonight.”

Then he stepped away from the door, and the woman angled her head to him and gave him a smile. As he walked away, though, and she dragged her gaze back to Billy Jo, her face was filled with the kind of unfriendliness she hadn’t seen in a long time.

“So you are Carly?” Billy Jo said, the heaviness inside her now building into a sick feeling.

“Look, I don’t know who you are or what you want, but I asked nicely,” the woman said. “Please go away. I already told you that you have the wrong house.” She actually stepped out and pulled the inside door closed quietly behind her, holding the screen so it wouldn’t slap closed.

Secrets and lies. She knew when someone was holding out on her. Billy Jo had to step back, really taking in this woman, who was of the same height and build as her. Her hair reached her shoulders, and she was dressed casually, much like Billy Jo. The panic and something else in her expression said she didn’t want Billy Jo asking about Carly Thornton.

“I don’t know why you’re pretending you’re not her,” Billy Jo said. “By your reaction, only a fool would miss that you’re hiding something. Let me tell you that finding you wasn’t easy. The trail was hidden and cold, and someone went to a lot of trouble to make it that way. I didn’t have a clue what I was going to say to you, but here it is. I was born twenty-five years ago in a small Nevada town, on June 15th, to a meth addict. I spent my first few months being weaned off the drug. As a baby, I was difficult to care for, and I was in and out of the ER, being bounced around from foster home to foster home. I think, by your face, your expression, your reaction to me, that you’re my mother. I’ve been looking for you for a really long time. But what I can’t understand is this picture-perfect life you have now, or how you just abandoned me to the hell I lived through for fifteen years until I was finally adopted by my parents…”

“Look,” the woman said. “This Carly Thornton you say you’re looking for is not me. She doesn’t exist. I’m sorry for what you’ve been through, and it sounds horrible, but that’s not on me. I would appreciate you not coming back here again. Please leave. I wish you the best of luck finding this woman, but she’s not me. Now, if you don’t mind, I need to get back to my family and get my girls ready for school.” She was still holding the door, and the expression on her face was guarded.

“I don’t know what you’re hiding or why you want to pretend this isn’t you, but I think I deserve some answers,” Billy Jo said. “I have a right. No, I demand—”

“You have no right to anything,” the woman said, cutting her off quite sharply. She took a step toward her, letting the screen door close and forcing Billy Jo back closer to the steps. Her voice was low and quiet. “I’m going to ask you just one more time: Please leave, please. I have a good life here, a husband, children. You said you were adopted, you have a mother and father? Good, because they’re your family. It sounds to me as if you’re looking to dig up a problem that should stay buried. Don’t bring this to my doorstep, trying to search for answers down memory lane. It’s not going to happen.” She reached for the screen door and pulled it open, then for the knob of the closed inside door.

“Wait, please,” Billy Jo said. She could feel this slipping away, this opportunity to look the woman she hated in the eye, but this was nothing like what she’d expected. “I know you’re her. I just want some answers, please.”

“Carly Thornton no longer exists. I’m sorry for whatever happened to you, but by the looks of it, you appear to be doing fine. As you said, you have a family who adopted you. That was a long time ago. Please go away—and don’t come back. Please.” There was nothing friendly in her tone, and the way she looked at Billy Jo with such anger, hate, and fear tore open that giant wound inside her that had never really healed.

Billy Jo put her hands on the screen door before the woman could close it, but the woman still moved to open the inside door. “Look, I just want some questions answered. I’ll come back another time so we can talk, but I think I deserve that much.”

All the woman did was step back inside and shake her head, then said in a low voice, “Please go, please, and don’t come back. You’re entitled to nothing.”

Then the door closed in her face.

Billy Jo looked over to the living room window as she turned to take a step down. Two girls, maybe eight and ten, had parted the blinds and were looking out before the woman pulled them away.

She stepped down the two steps from the porch, taking in this perfection, the perfect life this woman now had. So that was Carly Thornton, who was nothing like the meth-addicted woman who’d abandoned her.

Instead of resolving anything, the meeting had left rage bubbling up inside her. Carly had dumped her and had been responsible for her childhood of hell, and now she got a free pass to have a great life?

As she walked back to her car, looking once more at the perfect house, the perfect yard, and the image of a perfect family, she felt like garbage, unwanted. She knew there was no way this woman was getting a pass.

No, she’d keep coming back, and she’d figure out a way to get the answers she wanted, the answers she deserved. There was no way she was going to let herself be a dirty little secret Carly was trying to forget. Billy Jo was going to make damned sure her birth mother told her everything.


Take the poll and let me know which O’Connells title you enjoyed most!  Click here to submit your vote.


Calling All Reviewers

If you’ve read the titles in The O’Connells boxed sets and would kindly leave a review of the collection at your favorite eRetailer, I’d be extremely grateful.  Links are provided below for your convenience.  Thank you so much for your consideration and support!

THE O’CONNELLS, BOOKS 1-3
THE O’CONNELLS, BOOKS 4-6
THE O’CONNELLS, BOOKS 7-9
THE O’CONNELLS, BOOKS 10-12


Free Audio Codes

Get a FREE US or UK Audible code for these titles.

First come, first served (please take only if you intend to listen
as the number of promo codes are limited). 
Reviews are greatly appreciated. 
Thank you and enjoy!


Read More
The Saved Series
The Monday Blog

Wednesday Book & Box Bargain

Don’t miss this bargain book and boxed set deal!

99Cents

For a limited time, THE HOLIDAY BRIDE (The Wilde Brothers, Book 9) is on sale at the great rate of 99cents at your favorite eRetailer!

All Trinity Cooper Wilde wanted was a quiet Christmas alone with her baby…

“This is a delightful romance loaded with charm, a sassy new mother, a strapping alpha, and a love just waiting to happen.” Catlou, Kindle Customer


$2.99 Box

Kidnapped and pregnant, Abby finds salvation in the arms of naval captain Eric. Can he keep her safe as danger rages around them? Follow their heart-pounding journey in this complete collection featuring full-length novels Saved, Vanished and Captured

“I loved the characters, the emotional upheaval, the twists and turns, the ups and downs. The issues, the struggles, and finding the right path for each of these characters kept me turning the pages.” ★★★★★ Jackie F., Amazon Reviewer

Find the SAVED BOXED SET here.


Plus, grab FREE audio codes!

Get a FREE US or UK Audible code for these Saved titles.

First come, first served (please take only if you intend to listen
as the number of promo codes are limited). 
Reviews are greatly appreciated. 
Thank you and enjoy!


Did you miss my latest releases?

Be sure to check out these newest titles including Book 1 in the brand new Billy Jo McCabe mystery series, plus additions to The O’Connells romantic suspense series.  Now available everywhere.

NOTHING AS IT SEEMS (A Billy Jo McCabe Mystery, Book 1)
THE O’CONNELL FAMILY CHRISTMAS (The O’Connells, Book 14)
THE STALKER (The O’Connells, Book 13)


Read More
The Monday Blog
The Monday Blog

Remember the last holiday you had with your family?

Remember the last holiday you had with your family, before the pandemic, when things were different? With all the chaos going on and the current restrictions in place everywhere, that last vacation is just a memory. One of the last ones we went on together was four years ago, on a cruise to Hawaii for the holidays. It was one I had planned for, saved for. Those of you who have a special needs child understand a cruise is ideal: Cruises have programs and lots of activities, and because your kids are on the ship, there’s no place else for them to go. Everyone gets a vacation. With COVID, no one really would consider going on a cruise right now, but for us, it was filled with a lot of great memories.

At the same time, if you ask my kids, traveling with me is an experience! Their word, not mine. On this particular trip, after the cruise docked in California, we spent the night in a hotel because our flight home didn’t leave until very early the next morning. When I woke at four a.m., ready to get to the airport for our flight, I opened my eyes to a really bad headache. Any of you who’ve woken up with one of those headaches that borders on a migraine will understand how painful that is. I’m not prone to them. In fact, it had been many years since I’d had one. I figured the hotel had been very, very stuffy, and sleeping in a closed room with no fresh air, no ventilation, is not ideal. I climbed from bed, and we packed up our bags, with plans to grab breakfast at the airport.

We grabbed the hotel shuttle, and the entire time my head was aching. I don’t carry Advil, Tylenol, or Aspirin, because I never need it. I just don’t take drugs. A headache is unusual for me, like one every two or three years. Unfortunately, nothing was open at that time of the morning, so I knew I would have to grab something at the airport. We arrived really early, with plenty of time. As we stood in the long line to check in, we were told to use the kiosk to get our tickets printed. It worked, for the most part, until it came to my daughter’s passport and entering her information. My kids helped, because the headache meant every question at the kiosk left me staring in confusion, but the machine rejected my daughter’s passport with a computer-generated response like Go see a ticket agent.

So we had to get back in line—a really long line. But we had two hours, so no problem, right? We finally made it to the ticket counter and explained the kiosk’s rejection of my daughter’s passport as we were trying to get our boarding passes. The lady typed in some stuff and explained that she wasn’t sure what the issue was other than that the airlines didn’t like her passport. Whatever it was, it was no big deal, just a glitch in their system. She printed off the tickets and checked our large suitcases, which I had to pay an additional fee for. We swung our carry-on bags over our shoulders and set off for security. Now, at this time, I was counting the minutes to get through to the other side so my kids could eat and I could buy a painkiller. I needed something to put me out of my misery.

We were in line at security for a while with tons of holiday travelers, but when we finally made it to the first security point, where you show your passports and boarding passes, the security lady said that the papers we had weren’t boarding passes. She handed everything back to me and flicked open the rope to send us back out. When I was like, “Huh, wait, what?” she told us to go back to the ticket counter to sort it out, then come back with the correct boarding passes to the shortcut point where she was standing so we wouldn’t have to go to the very back of the long line. That was great, because my head was still giving me grief and I really wanted to just buy whatever brand of painkiller was available in the gift shop.

I mused in sarcasm that maybe the airlines really hadn’t liked my daughter’s passport, after all. We went back to the front where the airline check-in was, and I saw a ridiculously long line. Although we’d had lots of time before, we had not so much now, so we stood off to the side where the lady’s counter was and tried to catch someone’s eye. It took about ten minutes because no one wanted to look our way, but finally the same lady finished with the person she was checking in, and I took a step in before the other people could go up and have their turn and said, “Excuse me.” I held up the tickets. “The tickets were rejected at security.”

Now we had her full attention. She waved us over, thankfully, and took in the tickets. Someone joined her, maybe a supervisor, because she had to have heard. Not sure what the issue was, but she walked her through something, printed off new tickets, and assured us they were correct now and sent us on our way. Still hauling my carry-on bag, I was feeling miserable, but my kids were awesome as usual, picking up the slack. We got to that shortcut point and had to wait a bit, maybe another few minutes, before the same security lady saw us, unhooked the rope, and let us in line.

We proceeded to security, and I took off my shoes, coat, and purse, unpacked my laptop, put my bag in the bin… You know the routine. Everything, including the bags, went through their scanner. I was like, Hallelujah! We’re almost to the other side. Breakfast now meant grabbing an apple or something quick, because not a lot of time was left. My kids were ahead of me, getting their shoes back on, grabbing their coats, and packing up my laptop. Then one of the security guys called out, “Whose bag is this?”

Of course, I looked to find it was my carry-on. Yes, everyone was looking my way as I lifted my hand and said, “Oh, that’s mine.”

As I walked closer, the security guy opened my bag and pulled out two bottles, saying, “There’s wine in here.”

Okay. Now, early that morning, as I’d scrambled to pack with a headache, I had pulled out the two bottles of wine that had come from the cruise ship as a gift the night before we disembarked. I had packed a big suitcase full of clothes that would be checked, and I had put the two bottles, wrapped in a sweater, in my carry-on because my pounding head had mixed up the airline rules. Yes, wine goes in the carry-on, I had thought. Really!

My response to him was, “You mean it doesn’t go in the carry-on? Okay, I screwed up.”

He told me they saw that all the time at Christmas, and despite the fact that he was being really nice about it, I fought the urge to quip, You see all us holiday travelers suddenly going braindead? I’m not kidding when I say they were very good about it, though. The security guy said I had two options, either leave the wine behind or check my carry-on.

Now my daughter was like, “Mom, just leave the wine…”

Really, it’s not that I’m a big drinker. During the holidays or a few times a year, I enjoy a really good glass of wine, but to me, the wine was a gift, and I was taking it home. As my kids will tell you, I’m always an adventure to travel with because they never know what to expect. So I said to the security guy, “Do I have time to check it?”

By this time, there were three security guys there. One of them asked which flight we were on, and I told them, and another said, “Oh, you have plenty of time. Just go and check it.”

Meanwhile, my horrified, embarrassed kids were told to go on through, and one of the security guys assured me that my kids, all teenagers, were perfectly fine to go through alone without me. After one of the security guys shoved the two bottles of wine back in my carry-on, which was basically an overnight bag, all three walked me back out a different way to the front check-in area, flanking me. As they left me at the point just outside the security zone, my head was still pounding and giving me tremendous grief, and I realized then that I didn’t have my purse, which held my wallet and credit card to pay for the bag. Everything had gone with my kids except for my ticket and passport.

I saw the lineup, not very long, and got in it. The lady who’d done our earlier tickets looked up and spotted me, and the horror in her expression was priceless, as I think back now. She waved me frantically forward and said, “Your plane is leaving!” I was still standing there with my overnight bag and no purse. I explained to her what I had done, that I had totally screwed up with the wines and my purse was through security, so I couldn’t pay for the extra bag now.

She grabbed my bag from me and said, “Don’t worry about paying. I’ll take it and check it. You run.”

So, yes, I took off, hurrying back to the shortcut point again—but this time no one was there, and amid my pounding headache, I was starting to panic a little bit, dancing one foot to the other, going on my toes. There was no way I could go to the back of the security line and make the flight. As I was trying to get someone, anyone, to see me, a new security guy walked over. I explained my dilemma, and he unhooked the rope and let me in, and I quickly took off my shoes. Thankfully, I hadn’t worn a belt, because that would’ve taken precious seconds! I made it through the scanners unscathed, with nothing going off, no alarm bells, and I put my shoes back on.

The moment I stepped out of security with my passport and boarding pass, ready to head toward the departure gates, I heard my name announced over the loudspeaker: “Eckhart, party of four, we’re closing the doors in two and a half minutes.”

Now, of course, our gate was at the far end, so I started running. Meanwhile, my son was texting me:

Where are you?

The plane is leaving!

They won’t let us on without you!

What are you doing???

However, my daughter had my purse, in which my cell phone was stuffed, so the dingding of the texts coming in made her realize they had no way of reaching me. My kids were standing there in horror at the gate with one airline employee, no one else, because everyone else had boarded. My autistic son wore an expression of disbelief, gesturing that this was too much.

I was out of breath, and my head was killing me, but I made it.

“There she is!” my son said to the airline employee.

The employee waved us on, and the door to the airplane closed behind us, because everyone on the plane had been waiting for me. We got to our seats—which, by the way, were way in the back—with no breakfast and no painkillers. The plane took off for Seattle, where we would have to change planes, and I took those few hours to close my eyes and attempt some sleep for my aching head. When we landed in Seattle, we had only enough time to get across the airport to our next flight, which we did, thankfully free of any more excitement. Even better, there was a gift shop there and a few food vendors close to our gate. We bought smoothies, and I bought some extra-strength Advil and popped two before we boarded the plane for the short flight home.

By the time we approached our airport, where my truck was parked, I was sinking fast. The Advil had done nothing, and my head felt like it was going to explode. As we disembarked, my son saw I was dragging myself, counting the seconds until we could get out of the airport, so he grabbed a luggage cart and waited for the bags at the carousel. At this point, I was no use, but I knew I would still have to pay duty on the wine. My son loaded up the bags and waited for my carry-on, which came down last in a big plastic bag. As he lifted it, I could hear the broken glass and the slosh of wine that had seeped from the broken bottles, all because the security guys hadn’t repacked them with the clothes around them so they wouldn’t break. The smell of red wine didn’t go well with my bordering-on-migraine headache, and it was all I could smell as we walked through customs.

I handed the customs agent the forms where I had declared everything, which is what you’re supposed to do, but as I gestured to the wine-soaked overnight bag, now in plastic, I asked whether I still had to pay duty on the shattered wine.

He did chuckle a bit before shaking his head. “No, you don’t,” he said.

Great.

So we made it out of the airport and walked to the long-term parking, where my sons loaded up the bags. And as we all sat in the truck, waiting for it to warm up in the frigid, icy, snowy winter that had descended on our part of the Pacific Northwest, my daughter said, “I told you to leave the wine.”


The Next Book in The Billy Jo McCabe Series is now available for pre-order!

Hiding in Plain Sight

Hiding in Plain Sight

A long-buried secret that was never meant to be uncovered could suddenly put a target on both Detective Mark Friessen and Billy Jo McCabe.

More info →
Read More
The Monday Blog

Grab this bestselling box for $2.99!

$2.99 Boxed Set Sale

USA Today Best-Selling Book THE McCABE BROTHERS: THE COMPLETE COLLECTION is now on sale for $2.99!  Join the five McCabe siblings on their journeys to the dark and dangerous side of love in this intense, exhilarating collection of romantic thrillers.

“Outrageously gripping reading…I have read this series twice and gleaned a great appreciation for this author’s writing ability for entertaining her readers. Never a dull moment and never leaving you unsatisfied.” ★★★★★ Leah’s Insights, Kindle Customer

The McCabe Brothers: The Complete Collection
Buy now!

More free US & UK audio codes for The McCabe Brothers series!

Get a FREE US or UK audio code for these McCabe Brothers titles!  
If you didn’t get a chance to download and listen to any of these McCabe Brothers titles, I have for you more FREE audio codes for the UK Audible store and a few left for the US Audible store. These are first come, first served. Click the yellow button below for details. Please take only if you intend to listen as the number of promo codes are limited. 

While a review is not necessary, it is always much appreciated.  Thank you and enjoy!


Recently Released

Don’t miss my newest series featuring Billy-Jo McCabe!  Book 1, NOTHING AS IT SEEMS, is now available everywhere.

“This is a new series by Lorhainne Eckhart. It combines two families that we know and love to read about, the McCabe family and the Friessen family. Like many of Lorhainne’s other stories, this one grabs on to the reader and takes us for a ride full of excitement. I was drawn in from the first chapter and could not put it down!”
★★★★★ Kindle Customer


Read More
The Monday Blog
The Monday Blog

Don’t miss the first Monday Blog of 2021!

This winter, it seems as if everything is happening at once. Nothing is more apparent than the feeling of having been in a really long winter, with all the craziness of 2020. I’ve lost count of the number of people who’ve told me they couldn’t wait to say goodbye to 2020 and are looking forward to 2021, hoping it will be better. We’ve seen a spotlight shone on racial injustices and equality imbalances, and COVID has literally forced everyone to pivot and cease everything we may have taken for granted about our lives before. Depending on where you are in the world, your family may even be separated.

At the same time, consider this: Your immediate family household has been forced to spend more time together than ever. I know me and my kids have always been close, but with COVID and all the restrictions that have come into play, we basically shut ourselves off from the outside world. We do more now just with each other than we ever did. Despite all the craziness of 2020, we still need to see all the good things of the past year. Even in good times, when things in life are going well, we are naturally conditioned to look for the bad, awful things. We adopt a negative outlook, saying we’re not good enough, that things are just horrible, that the world is going to hell. All we see are the power plays, how others have more than we do, how we’re being taken advantage of, or our rights are being violated, or people are just not following the rules.

We can find a lot of bad things in our lives and in the world around us if we really try. I’ve heard from so many around me that there’s been nothing good about this past year. But we still need to remember the good things—and I can tell you that for me and my kids, a lot of good things happened in the past year.

For one, being an author, I decided to shut off the TV news completely, because all it did was build on my fear and panic and anxiety. In isolation, I no longer had the same demands on me and my time that I once had. Writing is a solo occupation, and you have to love that alone time, which I really do.

For my autistic son, things are different, but we took time every day to do some fun stuff as a family, from badminton to volleyball. My daughter took over conducting some Special Olympics activities for my son, creating a mini obstacle course outside. We talked, we laughed, and we played games when I wasn’t writing and working. We even had dinner together every night, something we had never done before, because dinner was had in passing, between running out the door for every activity or sport or whatever we were involved in. We had been too busy with our crazy outside demands.

For me, I cannot look back on 2020 without seeing good things. I feel like we got to step off that fast rollercoaster of go-go-go craziness and have time for us as a family. But then, I learned long ago in the business of being an author that I had to be able to pivot. In selling books, what worked two months ago doesn’t work today. The industry changes that fast, which is one of the reasons many authors have never been able to quit their day jobs.

COVID is no different. You have to look at what you can do and pivot with this challenging time. Look at what is working for you and your business and your job. Maybe this is the time for a career change, or maybe you can figure out a way to work from home, or you can start your search for that dream job, which you’ve always put off.

As we enter 2021, in many places in the country and in the world, not much has changed. But look at what’s making you happy. When your thoughts start taking you down that road where everything is bad, take a minute and look at what’s working—because now is the time to find the best in the situation, in your home, in your job, in your family, and in you



Newly Released

Book 1 in The Billy-Jo McCabe Mystery Series is now available everywhere!  

“This is the launch of a new series, a mysterious, gritty crossover between the McCabes and the Friessens…A few surprising twists and turns, suspense and some unsolved mysteries that hint at more interesting things to come, make this book a promising start in the series.” ★★★★★ Honest_bookworm, Amazon Reviewer

Nothing As It Seems

Nothing As It Seems

When an at-risk girl disappears from an island wilderness camp, social worker Billy  Jo must team up with a detective who’s her polar opposite to bring her safely home. But one missing girl is just the beginning…

More info →

And The O’Connells Family Christmas

The O’Connells Family Christmas

The O’Connells Family Christmas

As Christmas approaches, the O’Connell family’s loyalty is tested once again.

More info →
Read More
The Monday Blog
The Monday Blog

How many Christmases have you had in the dark?

Monday of this past week, the countdown to Christmas ushered in a surprise storm. It started in the wee hours of the morning with rain and wind—you know, the kind of heavy winds that cause driving rain, knock down trees, and take out power? I was woken by a godawful howling from my cat, who’d somehow found himself outside at about four in the morning and was clinging to the screen door, soaking wet. The wind was howling, too, and as I let him in, dripping, I realized one of the kids must have let him out earlier that night. Of course, I didn’t stay up afterward, simply went back to bed. But the temperature dropped, and I woke up at dawn to find that the rainstorm had turned into a snowstorm.

Now, this wasn’t just a few snowflakes. This was a full-fledged heavy winter snowstorm, so much so that the roads weren’t driveable, because it was that wet, icy west coast snow. My daughter had to work, but she soon found out that would mean pulling on her boots and hiking through the snow to the ferry by foot. It was only an hour’s walk, but she reported that apparently, as she was walking, most of the cars that had attempted the drive were already on their sides in the ditch.

By the time she got to the ferry, purchased her ticket, and thought to check her cell phone, she found that her boss had tried calling her. They had a tree down across their road and weren’t getting out, and not only was there too much snow, but the power was out there too, so they weren’t opening. She took it in stride and chalked it up to her daily exercise, but I don’t think I would have looked at it with the same optimism! She made the hike back, which took closer to an hour and a half with the heavy, icy snow, and when she arrived home, snow covered, she was just in time for all the power to go out.

Where we live, no power means you’d better have other heat sources, other ways to cook, and water stocked up. As we faced the reality of having no power, I really hoped we wouldn’t see a repeat of Christmas 2018, when a huge windstorm had hit us, taking trees down everywhere and knocking out power across the island. For us, it took seven days for it to be restored, and for many other places around us, it was closer to New Year’s. Now, let me tell you, that Christmas was one I’ll never forget—from having to haul buckets of water from our holding tank to heat on the woodstove, to our neighbor, who was entirely solar powered, taking pity on us and dragging an extension cord up to our house so I could work on my laptop and plug in our fridge and freezer so we wouldn’t lose all our food. Now that’s a good neighbor!

The moment I remember most during that windstorm was watching trees come down, fearing that our neighbors’ trees, which were sideways, swaying in the storm, would snap and come down on our roof. When it finally stopped at the end of the day, my daughter was stranded at school, the roads not passable, and the entire island was without power. If you’ve heard people say that the roads after a storm resemble a war zone, you’ll have some idea.

I had to lift the neighbors’ fence, which was completely down and blocking my road. Branches were everywhere, and I had to drive over one, though, luckily, I had a 4 x 4. The roads that led to town had trees down across them, and power poles and lines were down, too. Everyone who had a chainsaw was out there, clearing the road, which was covered in branches and debris. I drove at a crawl in a single line of traffic while neighbors cleared with their chainsaws so we could pass through just to get our kids in town. We followed one of the Shaw trucks, which was clearing lines from the road. But not everyone could get their kids, because some roads just couldn’t be cleared, so many had to bunk with friends. Christmas on the island was spent in the community.

This year, our power was restored late that first night, with a huge sigh of relief. It was a reminder that a storm is great as long as the power stays on! Christmas 2018, though it was spent with no power, was spent with our neighbors, and we made it a great day. Unfortunately, this year, with all the shutdowns, that wouldn’t have been an option. Thankfully, the power was restored.

As I’ve said to my kids, we will get back to spending Christmas with family and friends again. But you know what? At least we had power, and we were warm.


Don’t miss my newest release The O’Connell Family Christmas

The O’Connells Family Christmas

The O’Connells Family Christmas

As Christmas approaches, the O’Connell family’s loyalty is tested once again.

More info →
Read More
The Monday Blog
The Monday Blog

The Monday Blog

What’s something everyone does but few do willingly? Say those two simple words: “I’m sorry.”

We all screw up and make mistakes—you know, throwing out thoughtless remarks, making cruel assumptions about someone because of race, gender, or social status, or lying about something when you know damn well you did it. Worse is when we do those things to someone we love. As parents, we know our kids look up to us, yet as adults, we’re so far from perfect, and we all make mistakes.

I’ve done it. There was an incident not long ago where my daughter had to remind me to say I was sorry to my son. And she was right! When I look back on it, being caught up in a moment of craziness with the pandemic, hearing about recent lockdowns and the uncertainty they caused, I overreacted because of Christmas presents. Christmas presents? But it wasn’t about the presents; it was about a moment where I was feeling too much, with the pandemic, the lockdowns, and the school that’s currently causing my daughter some grief—so much so that I wanted to scream, “Stop!”

You know when you’re stuck in that moment of fear, and you snap, but you wish you could take the words back? Well, I’m big enough to admit when I screw up, saying or doing something I shouldn’t. I apologized to my twenty-year-old son, but as he stared at me in confusion, I realized he didn’t have a clue what I was apologizing for, as he hadn’t heard what I’d said. Right, the young male stopped listening after the first word!

But there are bigger things, too. I can think of so many. What hurts the worst is being judged or accused or categorized because of who you are, because of something you didn’t do. For us, this has happened too many times, but the incident I recall now happened at the beginning of December, when our septic backed up in the house. Now, if any of you have experienced that nightmare, you’ll understand what I’m talking about—because it brings “shit” to an entirely unpleasant and too real level.

The plumbing company was called, and accusations started immediately from the plumbers. Because I have teenagers, I was advised they probably shoved things down the toilet and plugged up the system, because that’s what teenagers do. Everyone knows that a septic is different than a city sewer system. In a city sewer system, you dump anything and everything down, but for a septic tank, the term “septic safe” means just that. However, the thing is that my kids are well aware of how to properly use a septic system. I was adamant, but hey, the professionals refused to believe me. So I stood there and swallowed the comments they directed at me, at my kids.

After some digging, it was discovered that only one part of the septic tank had a cover, and the other one, the main one, which has to be emptied, had been ignored for over five years. It was packed full—and no, it wasn’t plugged with things that shouldn’t have been put down there. When we moved here a year and a half ago, I specifically asked if the tank had been emptied, and I was assured it had been taken care of by the local septic guy. It turned out the local septic guy, who charges half price and cuts corners, had emptied the part that didn’t need to be emptied and didn’t bother with the main tank.

I was speechless when an apology never came after all the hurtful remarks. My kids weren’t impressed and were rather annoyed about having been accused of jamming up the system just because they were teenagers. After all, aren’t all teenagers considered thoughtless and careless? Regardless, a call was put in to a registered company, one that was actually licensed and insured, employing skilled workers who understand what they’re doing and don’t cut corners. The tank was completely emptied, and a new cover was put on. But even after all that, with their accusations to my kids, to me, I never heard anyone say, “I’m sorry.”

As I said to my kids, I wonder how many lawsuits could be prevented if people would just say those simple words, “I’m sorry.” Sometimes, all anyone ever wants is for someone to admit that he or she was wrong.


Don’t miss Amazon #1 category bestseller THE HOMETOWN HERO (The O’Connells, Book 7), on sale for a limited time for just 99cents!

The Hometown Hero

The Hometown Hero

In this shocking O’Connell family novel, a brother’s secret is exposed, opening up old wounds and creating a scandal that could rock the community.

More info →

Tomorrow is Release day for The O’Connell Family Christmas!

The O’Connells Family Christmas

The O’Connells Family Christmas

As Christmas approaches, the O’Connell family’s loyalty is tested once again.

More info →
Read More
The Monday Blog
The Monday Blog

The Monday Blog – Family Loyalty

Can you imagine being part of a family that always has your back, no matter what? Regardless of what you do, how you feel, what you think, or even amid fights and disagreements, you know your siblings will step up no matter what happens, no matter what time. Isn’t that what having brothers and sisters is about?

So what happens when you’re a young adult male? I’ve raised two, and let me tell you, there are moments during those post-teen years where you wonder when your son suddenly went braindead. He’s walking and talking with a head full of steam, saying the first thing that comes to his mind, though you know very well that years down the road, he’ll wish he could take back some of the really stupid things that came barreling out of his mouth, unchecked.

Come to think of it, it’s not just young men, really. It’s all of us. Remember some of the things you said and did at that youthful age? How many are cringing now, wishing we could all have a do-over? But, you know, if you look back on all those youthful mistakes and the wisdom you have now, didn’t those years make you a better person?

Look at the challenges we’re facing right now. In these difficult times of COVID, with business challenges, personal challenges, and the political environment, everything seems to be converging and piling up, and for some, it has become too much to handle. Even little problems may seem big and explosive. But what if you didn’t let it overwhelm you? Instead, look at these challenges as an opportunity to change something that wasn’t really working to begin with. When something is built on a shaky foundation, taking a band-aid approach often results in the structure falling apart completely when disaster strikes. Right now, so many problems are creeping out, but now is the time to fix that problem spot and actually make it better.

They say this kind of wisdom comes with experience and age, but that’s not always true. Anyone can be in a good place, a happy place, when things are going your way—when the weather is perfect, the environment is perfect, and the economy’s rolling. Everything is perfect in your mind, in your world, when you’re not under the kinds of restrictions many are under now. But what happens when things aren’t going your way? If you can keep your head in the game and stay in a happy, positive state even then, when bad things happen, like these challenging times for some, what happens is that bad things roll off you, and it becomes easy for you to find solutions to a problem.

The O’Connells are a fictional Montana family, and the loyalty of the siblings having each other’s backs is a running theme in the series. Brady Baker, the youngest sibling, shares a father with his four older brothers and two sisters. When he learned that his entire life and the persona his father created were a lie, how well did he handle it? It rocked his world to learn that he had siblings, another family, and he had lived a lie his entire life, believing his father to be someone he wasn’t. It took him some time to really believe he had a family now, a family who had his back.

On his nineteenth birthday, he receives the loyalty lowdown from his older brothers. They remember being in that nineteen to twenty-two age group—during which, as I mentioned, young men say the first things that come to their minds. His brothers’ gift to him was wisdom, telling him to think before he speaks and dial back his emotion, the wave of hot-headedness, so that years later, he won’t have to live with regrets. They tell him what it means to be an O’Connell, to be a good brother, and that family always has each other’s backs. When they get in a jam, in trouble, or even arrested, they can call each other anytime, anywhere, and they’ll be there.

Is it perfect? Not at all. Brady quickly learns that his grown siblings come with their own colored pasts, and it’s a wonder the O’Connells are functioning, somewhat normal members of society today. Marcus, who is now the sheriff, led a life of youthful crime alongside Ryan, and Luke used to disappear for days on end. Meanwhile, Owen, the eldest brother, carried everyone’s secrets. At the same time, they teach Brady that the key to success in anything is failure. Really! If you made a mistake yesterday, you won’t make that same mistake today. Having that family loyalty, the O’Connells know that when they mess up, their siblings won’t toss it in their face, put them down, criticize them, or use it against them down the road. That’s the kind of support everyone wants and should have, so when challenges crop up, you know you’ve got a sounding board and the support you need to fix things.

The truth is that we’re in tough times—if you allow them to be. While many are truly prospering, many are struggling. I’ve said this to my kids time and again: Raise your standards! We should never feel as if we’re on the ground with someone’s boot on our neck, holding us down, yet many of us are feeling this way right now. Sometimes, we need to check in with family, who have our back and can give us a different, positive perspective we need to make a different choice, to take the kind of action that can make something better in our lives. Even now, that can mean the difference between feeling completely overwhelmed and finding another way to fix a problem so that the challenges you may be facing become just a bump in the road.

This goes for anything out there: If the foundation is strong, your problems will just roll off.

The O'Connells

The O’Connells of Livingston, Montana, are not your typical family. Follow them on their journey to the dark and dangerous side of love in a series of romantic thrillers you won’t want to miss.


More FREE Audiobook Codes from Audible


Read More
Don't Catch Me
The Monday Blog

It’s Free-Book-for-a-Review Friday & Free Audio Codes!

Free-Book-for-a-Review Friday

Get your FREE eBook copy of DON’T CATCH ME (The McCabe Brothers, Book 2) in exchange for an honest online review! To receive your review copy, simply click here.  Please note that there are a limited number of eBook downloads available, so please only download if you are sincerely interested in reading and reviewing.  Your honest review is much appreciated at your favorite eRetailer(s) by December 25th.  Thank you for your support, and I hope you enjoy this title!

Plus, grab FREE audio codes!

Get a FREE US or UK audio code for these McCabe titles.  
First come, first served (please take only if you intend to listen as the number of promo codes are limited).  While a review is not necessary, it is always much appreciated.  Thank you and enjoy!


Recent Releases

Have you read my latest releases?  Check out the newest books in The O’Connells romantic suspense series featuring Alison, Brady, Cassie and the entire O’Connell clan.  Available at all eRetailers.

THE STALKER (Book 13)
AND THEN SHE WAS GONE (Book 12)
THE RETURN OF THE O’CONNELLS (Book 11)


Audiobooks

Click here to see my titles currently available in audiobook!

And did you know… if you already own one of my eBooks on Kindle, you can pick up the audiobook at a reduced price with Whispersync?  Whispersync allows you to both read and listen, and you can even switch back and forth between reading on Kindle and listening on Audible without losing your place.


Read More
The Monday Blog

Don’t miss this $2.99 Friessens box plus more FREE audio codes

$2.99 Boxed Set Sale

Follow a new generation of Friessens in this special three-book collection about family, commitment, hope and making a relationship work.  THE FRIESSENS BOOKS 9-11 boxed set includes In the Moment, In the Family and In the Silence.  Now on sale at all eRetailers.

“Loved it from beginning to end, all 3 books…just wanted to keep reading, all night!” ★★★★★ Texasgeni, Kindle Customer 

The Friessens Books 9 – 11
Buy now!

Plus, grab FREE audio codes!

Get a FREE US or UK audio code for these Friessens titles.  
First come, first served (please take only if you intend to listen as the number of promo codes are limited).  While a review is not necessary, it is always much appreciated.  Thank you and enjoy!


Recently Released

“A gripping read.  This book had me at the end of my seat and I truly could not put it down…Another story exceptionally well told…” ★★★★★ Caroline L., Amazon UK Vine Voice


Audiobooks

Click here to see my titles currently available in audiobook!

And did you know… if you already own one of my eBooks on Kindle, you can pick up the audiobook at a reduced price with Whispersync?  Whispersync allows you to both read and listen, and you can even switch back and forth between reading on Kindle and listening on Audible without losing your place.


Read More