BLURB:
After a disastrous marriage,
Matchmaker Maggie vowed never to marry again. She will never give
another man the power of life and death over her body and soul.
Unfortunately, that doesn't keep her lonely heart from fantasizing about
her newest client, Caleb Black. She made the mistake of starting a
flirtatious correspondence with the clever devil, believing they would
never meet. But when his new bride abandons her mid-way to Colorado to
elope with another man, Maggie is forced to face the devastatingly
handsome Caleb and explain. Now she'll have to stay long enough to
make things right and find him a new wife. But Maggie better
hang on to her vow with both hands, because Caleb has other plans for the
fiery matchmaker...and a very seductive kiss.
EXCERPT:
“What do you mean, you quit? Mr. Sinclair, you just can’t quit.” Margaret “Maggie” Selby put her pen down on
the desk. She would not raise her
voice. She would not lose control.
“I’m sorry, Mrs. Selby, but I got no
choice. There’s an opening at the
sanitarium in Albany and my Mary, she needs to go right now. The doctors there might be able to help
her. We leave on the morning train.”
Maggie took a deep breath and nodded. She understood. She really did, but it didn’t change the fact
that she was now in a difficult situation.
“Of course, you must go. I know
how poor Mary’s health is and any help that can be obtained for her, must be.”
“I wish I could give you some notice, but we
just received the letter in yesterday’s post.”
“It’s fine, Mr. Sinclair. I’ll manage.”
He handed her an envelope. “Here are the train tickets.”
“Yes, well, I’ve wanted to see the frontier
I’ve been sending my these girls to. I’m
simply going to see it sooner than I anticipated.”
“I’m truly sorry, Mrs. Selby.”
Maggie got up, came around the desk and held
her hand out to him. “You just take care
of Mary. That’s your job now.”
He shook her hand, nodded. Mr. Sinclair put on his hat and wiped his
brow with his kerchief before venturing back out into the already hot and sunny
morning.
She went to her desk, grabbed Caleb Black’s
file, put the closed sign on the door and then went upstairs to her apartment
to pack. Her bride, Jenny Talbot would
be by in an hour or so to pick up her tickets.
Maggie would tell her then that she’d be accompanying her, not Mr.
Sinclair. It was just as well. Jenny was nervous as a kitten and Maggie
worried about the union, but both Mr. Black and Jenny had been adamant that it
take place. If truth be told, Maggie
herself was a better match for Mr. Black than Jenny. But she was here to find matches for others,
not for herself.
Jenny’s reasoning she understood. Jenny was the oldest of the seven Talbot
children. At twenty-two years old, felt
she was a burden on her parents even though she worked and helped out with the
bills. She hated her job and wanted to
get married. Her chances were growing
slim. Most men of marriageable age were
either already married, old or widowers with hellions for children.
Jenny was a tall, slim girl with pale blue
eyes and dark blond hair. Her lips were
full, her nose long and straight. Just a
plain young woman from a struggling family who wanted a better life. One that the wild frontier might be able to
offer.
Mr. Black’s reasoning was less clear. He was successful and wanted children. Maggie had presented him with several other
possible candidates, some more attractive, some younger, some older, all of
whom he’d rejected. The reasons he gave
were weak. Brown hair. Too short.
Too fat. Too thin. Too young.
Too old. There seemed to be a
reason for rejecting every one she sent him.
Finally, he’d settled on Jenny with the
proviso that Maggie herself accompanied the girl. She’d agreed, but stated only that Jenny
would be accompanied. With her full
intention having been to send Mr. Sinclair in her place. Maggie’s time was much more well spent here
in New York. Finding clients, assigning
candidates that is where her mind, body and commitment lay. Yes, running her business is where she belonged
more than on a trip to the wild West.
She didn’t feel bad about her decision.
Really she didn’t, she told herself over and over. But she was lying. If she were honest, deep down she was afraid
to meet Mr. Black. Afraid her image of
him would be wrong, but even more afraid it would be right and he really was
the man he depicted in his letters.
She shouldn’t have allowed it, the private
correspondence, but it had been innocent enough. In the beginning. A simple flirtation with someone she’d never
meet. But now, the thought of actually
meeting him terrified and thrilled her at the same time. Now she had to
go. Maggie released a rather breathless
sigh. She blinked repeatedly against the
harsh sunlight. So Mr. Black was getting
what he’d asked for after all. Much to
her dismay.
Buy Link:
Amazon - http://amzn.com/B00DSSVG72
Cynthia Woolf was born in Denver, Colorado and raised in the
mountains west of Golden. She spent her early years running wild around the
mountain side with her friends.
Their closest neighbor was one quarter of a mile away, so her little brother
was her playmate and her best friend. That fierce friendship lasted until his
death in 2006.
Cynthia was and is an avid reader. Her mother was a librarian and brought new
books home each week. This is where young Cynthia first got the storytelling
bug. She wrote her first story at the age of ten. A romance about a little boy
she liked at the time.
She worked her way through college and went to work full time straight after
graduation and there was little time to write. Then in 1990 she and two friends
started a round robin writing a story about pirates. She found that she missed
the writing and kept on with other stories. In 1992 she joined Colorado Romance
Writers and Romance Writers of America. Unfortunately, the loss of her job
demanded she not renew her memberships and her writing stagnated for many
years.
In 2001, she saw an ad in the paper for a writers conference being put on by
CRW and decided she'd attend. One of her favorite authors, Catherine Coulter,
was the keynote speaker. Cynthia was lucky enough to have a seat at Ms.
Coulter's table at the luncheon and after talking with her, decided she needed
to get back to her writing. She rejoined both CRW and RWA that day and hasn't
looked back.
Cynthia credits her wonderfully supportive husband Jim and the great friends
she's made at CRW for saving her sanity and allowing her to explore her
creativity.
OTHER TITLES AVAILABLE:
- CENTAURI DAWN
- CENTAURI TWILIGHT
- CENTAURI MIDNIGHT
- TAME A WILD HEART
- TAME A WILD WIND
- TAME A WILD BRIDE
- THE SWORDS OF GREGARA – JENALA
- THE SWORDS OF GREGARA – RIZA
- THE SWORDS OF GREGARA - HONORA
- CAPITAL BRIDE
- HEIRESS BRIDE
- FIERY BRIDE
Thanks for having me.
ReplyDeleteCindy, I'm glad you're here. 12 books is a great feat! Celebrate. I'm incredibly proud of you.
ReplyDeletexo
LA
Cindy, I'm still trying to figure out how you find time to do so much promo and turn out great books. You need to do a blog post on your time management skills!
ReplyDeleteIt's easy, ignore your husband, the housework, laundry and everything else except writing and promotion. LOL Seriously, I have insomnia so I work a lot at night when no one else is up and I get loads done that way.
ReplyDeleteThe excerpt sure makes me want more. It's only the beginning of what sounds like a great read! I'm alone with no distractions other than a son who pops in now and then, and my fur baby, and I can't find time to do the things you do. You go girl!
ReplyDeleteCindy, It sounds like a fun story with an interesting setting. I'm looking forward to it.
ReplyDelete