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8

On the 4th Day of Christmas…The Gift

Posted by Robin Delany on Dec 16, 2011 in Christmas, Holidays, Life

The Gift

By Robin Delany

The Smith Bedroom, Dec 24, 12:05 a.m.

      Hattie lay on her side in front of Dylan, who draped a hand over her waist from behind. She kept her eyes trained on her bedside table and wiped at her watering eyes.  
      "I know we wanted to be pregnant by this Christmas, but it'll be okay, Hattie. We have each other, and that's all that matters." Dylan rubbed her hair, and his soft voice made another sob break from her throat.  
      "I know." She wiped again as fresh hot tears spilled over. "I should be happy for what we have."
      After a year and a half of treatments and three failed rounds of in vitro fertilization that had depleted their savings, they'd spent the last five months trying to face reality. She was barren. Barren. What kind of a-hole came up with that ugly term? Like her insides were a desert, or something. She ran a finger along the ruffled pillowcase that she'd so often imagined a tiny form laying on, suckling at her breast, its little fingers wrapped around her big one. 
      Dylan kissed her cheek. "We may not have a baby, but we have a lot." 
      She stared at the ceiling, not wanting to see the ruffle, but really, it didn't matter. Everything brought her loss into focus these days. Was it considered a loss when you never had something in the first place? 
      "For the past five months, I've been trying to count my blessings. I really have." She held a hand up so he could see her fingers as she counted them off. "I've got a loving husband, a supportive family, and the career in journalism I’d always dreamed of. I know I've got a lot. More than so many others, in fact. I just can't make my heart accept what my head tells it." It didn't matter that she'd wanted a child far longer than her career. Or that she'd owned about fifty dolls as a girl and taken meticulous care of each one. She'd even made little outfits for her egg in Home Economics class. 
      "I know, sweetheart." He rubbed a knuckle down her cheek. "Try to sleep. Life is always a little harder when you're coming down with a cold. You'll feel more optimistic in a few days when it's passed and you have more energy."  
      "I think it's probably a mild case of food poisoning," Hattie moaned.   
      "That's the last time we buy sushi from a gas station." 
      She swiped at the last of her tears. "You can say that again." 
      "That's the last time we buy sushi from a gas station."  
      She giggled, and elbowed him playfully. "Go to sleep."

      The Smith Bathroom, Dec 24, 6:05 a.m. 
       "I could loan you some money to try again," Mama said. 
      "After all these years of trying, I don't think there's anything left to do." Hattie sat on the edge of the tub, one hand holding her cell, the other covering her eyes. Her whole body ached and she'd had strange vivid dreams that agitated what little sleep she'd gotten. What the heck was her brain trying to tell her by having a giant octopus chase her across a parking lot? Ridiculous. Yet she'd woken in a sheen of sweat. 
      "You can try it again. Did you ask the doc—?" 
      "I don't know. Look, I'm not feeling well. I have to go."  
      "What's wrong, honey?" Mama's voice pitched higher, the way it did when she was concerned. "Are you sick?" 
        Her stomach roiled. "I think I have food poisoning. I'm nauseous and tired, like Dad was that time he ate the mystery container in the fridge when you weren't home to make dinner." 
      "Ugh. I still can't believe he did that."  
      Hattie smiled, practically hearing the eye roll in Mama's tone. Her stomach heaved. 
      "I'll see you when your flight gets in." Hattie pressed a hand against her mouth.  
      "But Hattie—"  
      She dropped the phone and voided her stomach for the second time that morning. And it was only six. This was going to be a long Christmas Eve.

      The Smith Living Room, Dec 24, 12:05 p.m. 
       Hattie cuddled with Dylan on the couch, picking at the bland turkey sandwich he'd made her.  
      "Now she thinks I'm dying of the plague."  
      Dylan laughed. "When you stubbed your toe, your Mama thought it was the plague." 
      "She's a little overprotective." Hattie tried to keep her mouth straight and failed. "She means well, but she's a diagnoser. During my childhood, I had ADD, PCOS, and any other syndrome with an acronym. By the time she gets here, she'll have my symptoms all figured into an official diagnosis and the pharmacy on standby with penicillin." 
      "I bet she will." Dylan's smile widened to show more of his teeth, and he tugged a strand of her hair. "So, what do you think I gave you for Christmas? What's your guess this year?" 
      She set the sandwich on the plate at her feet and leaned into him again, resting a hand on his stomach. "I'll bet it's a bowling ball. You've been wanting one all year. I bet you got one for me so you can use it when I say I don’t want it." 
      He lifted an eyebrow. "And I bet you got the ultimate box set of Sex in the City for me." 
      "Wasn't that what you wanted?" she asked with wide eyes. "I swore it was on your list." 
      He smiled down at her and tweaked the tip of her nose. "You're the best thing in my life. You know that?" 
      "Of course I am." Hattie laughed, stretching to kiss him. "I love you, too."

      The Smith Dining Room, Dec 24, 6:05 p.m. 
       Thud.  
      Hattie rubbed a hand over her face. Thud, thud. 
      She pushed away from the table and went to the door, pausing a moment before opening it to see Mama and Papa walking toward the house. Her stomach was rebelling again, but this time, it seemed, the rebels had pipe bombs and machine guns. Or at least pitch forks.  
      After hugs and kisses, hauling in bags and gifts, and an hour of work related small talk, Mama stood. "I've discovered the problem." 
      Hattie sneaked a sly glance to Dylan. "Oh?" 
      "Yes, and I've got just the thing for you here in my bag." Mama walked to where her purse sat on the kitchen counter and opened it. It must be an herbal remedy, if she had it in her purse. St. Johns Wort? Noni juice, perhaps?  
      Mama drew a long box with a light blue cover and a picture of a pregnancy test. Hattie's mouth fell open and a stone dropped into her stomach. 
      "That's cruel, Mama. I'm sick, and I'm tired, and now you shove this in my face?" She thrust a hand toward the disgustingly cheerful blue cover. 
      Dylan came to stand next to Hattie and put his hand on her shoulder. Papa looked away as if unaware of the conversation, as he had during every fight she and Mama had since her childhood. Hattie frowned. How diplomatic.  
      "That's right, sweetheart. You're sick. You're tired. When I called at eight o'clock, you said the smell of the pot roast was bothering you, and when I called again at two-thirty, you yelled at Dylan to take out the trash before it made you—what did you call it?—ah, yes, before it made you hork. You're pregnant, dear. Now take the test." 
      Hattie couldn't even let herself wish it in the smallest part of heart. It had been too long, there had been too many 'no's to have a 'yes' with no help. To have a yes at all. She clenched her jaw to keep her chin from trembling. "Mother, do you know what the doctor told me on our last visit?"  
      Dylan stiffened at her side, and Mama shook her head.   
      "That's because I couldn't bear to tell you. He said we'd be better off looking into a surrogate, since my body wasn't inclined to accept implantation." She stormed to the cabinet and pulled out the brochure he'd given them, and threw it on the table. It skittered off the edge and landed on the carpet at Mama's feet. 
      Mama bent to pick it up, studying the cover image of a couple standing on either side of a pregnant woman with their hands on her belly and insipid smiles on their faces. 
      "I can't give you grandkids. It's not going to happen. Face it." Hot, angry tears rolled down her cheeks. 
      "All right, now you listen to me, Hattie Jane Smith. You will walk into that bathroom and take this test. If it says negative, I won't say another word." She shook the box and the test clacked around inside it. "But until then, I'm going to harp on this like the cruel mother I am." 
      "Fine!" Hattie scowled and snatched the box from her hands. "But after this, you'll never mention children to me again. Understand?"  
      Mama nodded, her chin lifting an inch. Hattie huffed and turned. From the edge of Hattie's vision, a smile lifted Mama's lips. The woman may have given birth to Hattie, but she would be the death of her one of these days.

      The Smith Bedroom, Dec 25, 12:05 a.m. 
       Hattie lay on her side in front of Dylan, who draped a hand over her waist from behind. She kept her eyes trained on her bedside table and wiped her watering eyes. 
      She sniffed and lifted the diamond bracelet he'd given her at the stroke of twelve. "We have to give this and your stereo to Mama for Christmas, you know. The insulated socks don't seem like enough anymore."  
      He kissed her cheeks. "Yeah, and we may have to get her a new car too." 
      She used a fingertip to wipe a tear from the ruffled pillow. "Don't go giving it all away. We've got more than just us to think of now." 
      "That's right. We did it, sweetheart," he whispered, his breath tickling her ear as his palm rubbed her lower abdomen. "We got our baby for Christmas."

I hope you enjoyed my little contemporary Christmas story, and I'd like to invite you to visit with me a bit more. I'm taking part in a blog hop all week (Dec 16th-23rd) Please join me on my blog for a chance to win a signed copy of Jillian Stone's An Affair With Mr. Kennedy, and a chance at the grand prize, a Nook Color.

 
 

Robin Delany

I have a fab hubby, 2 sweet babies, & I love 2 write romance, research, travel, read, & letterbox. I'm NOT trying 2 take over the world. Really...

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2

I know that author!

Posted by Silke on Sep 9, 2010 in Life, Writing

Yep, we all get a buzz from knowing someone who is "famous".
I know my share of famous faces, but I have this curious affliction of knowing they are human beings, and not falling at their feet in complete awe.
It also means that you might know an author – and you don't know it.
But did you ever consider what it's like to be the "famous" author yourself?
How would you deal with it? Would you be prepared for it? Have you ever considered what it would be like to have your privacy threatened?
Imagine going shopping and everyone sticks a book under your nose to sign. Bliss, right?
Maybe at first. The novelty wears off fast, when you can't step out of the door in your jimjams and your hair in curlers to get the paper. I've known plenty of famous faces, worked with them, to have seen this first hand. I also know how tired they were of it, and how much strain it put on them.
This was in the days before the internet, imagine how much more information about someone is out there now.
So are you prepared?

Most authors choose pen names. Some because they don't like their name, some because they want to keep their writing life separate from their private life. There are many reasons for choosing a pen name. Some quite obvious  – who in their right mind would want to find some weirdo camped out on their doorstep, after all? Some not so obvious.
If you write erotic romance, you don't particularly want the parents of the second graders you teach put your name into a web search and come up with adult oriented books. I doubt they'd understand.
Another reason can be job hunting. I'm not kidding. Employers do research on potential employees, and I've heard a few people say they were questioned about their commitment when the new boss found out they have 2 books published, or are working to find publication. For some reason this myth of rich authors persists. (Thanks, J.K. Rowling and Stephen King.)
Of course we would all love to write for a living, but for most of us that's just not going to happen. Unfortunately non-authors don't understand this. They believe if you have a book out, you are automatically rich.
Not.
One thing you need to be aware of while you promote your book: Don't give too much about yourself away. Don't tell people where you live, don't show them pictures of your kids or family. Don't post details about them on your blogs or facebook.
People who really know you, already know about them. Your fans don't need to know.
It may seem innocuous right now, but what if you do hit the big time? Those details will still be around, cached on some server, for people to find — and abuse.
Be careful.
Being vague is okay, but specific details could come back and bite you where it really hurts.

I don't use a pen name. I probably should, but then… I have a unique name anyway. Truly unique, as in, I'm the only one I know of who has this first name / last name combination – in the world. (And I've gone through some 30 pages of links on Google, never found a single one other than me.)
But at the same time, I'm quite careful what I put out there. Yeah, you'll find links to posts from me, you'll find interviews I've given over 10 years ago, articles I wrote, blog posts I made. Personal information? Depends. I've made it a point not to list my phone number anywhere, or give people I don't know very well my real email address. (I have at least 2 dozen email addresses.)
It's not that hard to find an author's real name. Just open the book and it's usually right there. But at least a search might not reveal the two are linked. It's the reason I didn't bother with a pen name. Quite frankly, if you searched for my real name, you'd only get stuff about me. So what's the point in using a pen name?
For me, none. I don't teach kids, I don't work in a sensitive job, my boss knows I write, and any weirdo wanting to camp out on my doorstep will be challenged by my rather vigilant neighbors and get thrown out of the private estate where I live.
For others, this consideration is a valid one. So give it some thought and weigh up the pros and cons, if you choose to write under your real name. It may seem trivial when you start out, but God forbid you're the next King, Rowling, Meyer, Cartland or Sheldon.
Most of these were big names before the internet was ever available to the public. It's different now. Every bit of dirt gets pulled out and a flame war you had with someone five years ago (and have long forgotten) might be unearthed and used somewhere.
It may not be scandalous, but it could turn out as an embarrassment you'd rather not have everyone know about.
People will judge you from what they can find out about you.

So before you rush into posting about the family picnic, naming every child, aunt, uncle, cousin and spouse, or about a nasty fight you had in the shopping mall over some broccoli – ask yourself "What if I become famous?"

Silke

Silke writes paranormal romance, and knows a thing or two about things going bump in the night. Although it is usually her, creeping to the kitchen at O' Dawn Thirty to score another cup of coffee. She grew up in Germany, but her home of choice is in the UK, where she lives with her partner on the outskirts of London. Her first book Smitten is now available from Decadent Publishing.

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4

What makes a book a keeper?

Posted by Silke on May 7, 2009 in Writing

We all have them.
The Keepers.
The books we will read again and again, the ones we guard with our lives, will never lend out and the ones we want to take to the grave with us.
But how to define a keeper?
What makes a book a keeper?
Is it the story? The characters? The writing style?
Sometimes one of them, sometimes all of them.
Personally, I fall in love with heroes. I’m sure most of us do. Sometimes I love the spunky heroine. Sometimes the storyline is one that grabs me and doesn’t let go.
It’s personal taste.
I have unlikely keepers, too.
Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistlestop Cafe, by Fannie Flagg, is one of my keepers.
So is my collection of poems by Edgar Allan Poe.
Pest Control, by Bill Fitzhugh, is one of those unlikely keepers. I absolutely adore that book, because it makes me laugh out loud.
Good Omens, by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman, is one I can read over and over.
However, my romance keepers… change.
They change, because I evolve, just like the genre evolves.
I used to gobble up anything by Johanna Lindsay, Kathleen E. Woodiwiss and Jude Deveraux. I swore they were all keepers.
My entire collection is boxed up and in the loft. I haven’t read one in years.
Actually, that’s not true.
I tried to read one. I got as far as a quarter of the book and put it down, wondering how I could ever have deemed it a keeper. The writing seemed stale. The storyline unbelievable and contrived. The heroine… let’s not go there. The hero was an overbearing rapist.
We change. Our tastes change.
Unfortunately, most of our keepers don’t stand the test of time and can’t cope with the change. (Some do, though.)
I remember Shanna (Kathleen E. Woodiwiss) with absolute fondness, because it was the first romance I read. I’ve never read the English version. (I read it in German.)
I have other Woodiwiss books in English, and I even peeked into one recently. I put it away, because… well… the writing was just… horrible. The language, the style… God. I just couldn’t bear it.
Don’t get me wrong. I still love those books. I have fond memories of the characters and the story. I just don’t want to read it again, because it would taint that memory.

I doubt I’m the only one who feels this way.
So what are the keepers you can’t bear to read again, but won’t let go of anyway?
Do you keep them out, or do you box them up?
Do you try to read them again?
Do you get put off, because the style that seemed so great when you first read it, is just not what you would read now?
I know I do.
And I keep the books anyway, would never part with them.
To me, they are like old friends you haven’t seen in a long time. But now you can see all their irritating habits, and prefer to know them from a distance. Smile

Silke

Silke writes paranormal romance, and knows a thing or two about things going bump in the night. Although it is usually her, creeping to the kitchen at O' Dawn Thirty to score another cup of coffee. She grew up in Germany, but her home of choice is in the UK, where she lives with her partner on the outskirts of London. Her first book Smitten is now available from Decadent Publishing.

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