Blurb:
Studious Lavinia Vega is tired of proving to Zeke Abberley that she has no ulterior motives. When Zeke brings her a damaged painting to restore and authenticate, she is eager to help but not get involved. When she uncovers a hidden map behind the painting that leads to valuable buried coins, the game plan changes. Or so Zeke thinks.
Studious Lavinia Vega is tired of proving to Zeke Abberley that she has no ulterior motives. When Zeke brings her a damaged painting to restore and authenticate, she is eager to help but not get involved. When she uncovers a hidden map behind the painting that leads to valuable buried coins, the game plan changes. Or so Zeke thinks.
EXCERPT ONE
Zeke Abberley stared at the damaged 1859
painting with a scowl on his face. Why
me? He had bid on the Illinois estate sale as a whole specifically because
of this piece and now it had arrived damaged, with a crunched frame and
punctured canvas. He had been assured the painting was in perfect condition. He
bit his lip, continuing to stare at the entrancing image of the unrecognizable
couple from the Middle Ages embraced in a kiss with shadowy forms lurking in
the background. Although one of Francesco Hayez’s best known works, this was
not the most famous rendition of the pose or lighting—but still the mastery of
Hayez. From Zeke’s research, it seemed this particular rendition had never been
seen on the market.
That is, if it is an
original Hayez. Zeke tapped his index finger on his lips. It still
needed to be authenticated by an expert. The family selling the contents of
their attic had no desire or time to search for appraisals and had posted the
estate sale as a whole. Imagine finding a
Hayez.
Although it appeared there were other prized
antiques in the collection, Zeke hadn’t understood why he had wanted to
purchase an out-of-state collection, especially with their antique shop
overflowing as it is and sales down due to the economy. Something had possessed
him, though, and this painting had something to do with it.
Aunt Adele walked into the room and set a box
of pastries on the conference room table. “You’re looking down in the mouth.
What’s happened?”
“Can you believe it? Can you just believe it?”
he said, shaking his fist at the painting.
Life was definitely not going smoothly for
Zeke. He and his younger brother, Zach, had that confrontation with Pop which
had ended up with Pop walking out on them and the business. Then Zach and Holly had married and left on a
very long honeymoon. And he couldn’t forget Aunt Adele suddenly marrying Kipp
Waterbury at their annual street BearBQ where they barbequed a bear. Aunt Adele
hadn’t been around to help with the business, either. His disastrous
relationship with Lavinia Vega, the break-ins on the street, and now the
damaged painting did not bode well for Zeke either. He sighed. Yeah, most of
them were happy events for those involved, but he had taken the blunt of
everyone’s absence and had been working double duty for weeks on end. Sure
everyone was back and the long winter blues were over, but all the lovebirds
kept wandering off.
Trying to manage Abberley Antiques, Zach’s
thrift shop, and Kipp’s clock shop had run him ragged. No wonder he was a
basket case and his and Lavinia’s relationship had ended. It would have never
worked out anyway, not with the way her father felt about his family and not
with how reclusive Lavinia kept herself. After all their secret dates, she
still hadn’t opened up to him. She was a closed book, albeit a beautiful,
gorgeous closed book.
The memory of her attractive, vanilla blonde
bob, soft, full lips, delicate curves, and hint of lilac perfume sent his
senses tottering and his libido hopping. However, no one, and he meant no one,
would ever penetrate that armored fortress guarding her frozen heart. Futile. Utterly futile.
“Did you hear me?” Aunt Adele asked.
“Oh, sorry. What did you say?” He laid the
painting down on the table and pinched his chin.
“Do you think the shipping company damaged
it?”
“Most likely. I viewed the painting on Skype
and didn’t see the damage. Of course, it could have been masked. Just my luck.”
“It’s The
Kiss by Francesco Hayez, isn’t it?” Aunt Adele said, moving to the small
fridge for a quart of milk to go with the pastries.
“Yes, well, no. This is one of the five
renditions Hayez did with different lighting, but not the most known. I don’t
think this one has surfaced before. That is, if it really is a Hayez.”
“So I guess you know what you have to do.”
“What’s that?” He wrapped the painting back in
brown paper and bubble wrap.
“Take it to Lavinia.”
He fumbled the painting as he tried to slide
it into the box. It landed on the floor, and he accidentally kicked the
painting across the carpet as he reached to pick it up. “Are you joking?”
“I can’t even mention her name without you
turning into a spaz.” She smiled and shook her head. “Holly’s right. You have
that—what did she call it?—pistanthrophobia.”
EXCERPT TWO
Lavinia Vega spread out a sheet of bubble wrap
and placed the early 1900s painting of the Great Salt Lake, by Alfred
Lambourne, carefully within its confines. She expertly wrapped it for shipping,
hoping to get it mailed before noon.
No more clumsy moves on her part…or Zeke’s.
They had stopped secretly dating two or three months ago—Oh, who was she
kidding?—exactly seventy-one days ago, and her life had certainly gotten calmer
and less physically painful. At least as calm as her life ever got. She heaved
a sigh and taped the bubble wrap.
Father hadn’t figured out she had been dating
Zeke for that would have been disastrous. Instead, he thought she had been
cursed by some voodoo spell Holly Waterbury had brought with her from Idaho
when she had come here to take care of her injured uncle Kipp, who was
Hungarian, spoke in fragmented sentences, and hoarded all kinds of things. As
ludicrous as that sounded, Lavinia would rather Father thought her cursed than
him knowing she had been dating Zeke.
The Abberleys had been a taboo subject for as
long as she could remember. It had all started with Father’s friendship with
Zeke’s dad, Zymon. Father had gotten to be a close friend of the family and had
fallen in love with Zeke’s aunt Adele some fifteen to twenty years ago. She, in
turn, had fallen in love with Kipp Waterbury, but everything went south when
Zeke’s mother was killed in a plane crash.
Lavinia pulled a packing box from the shelf
and began folding it.
Last year, when Adele announced at a block
meeting that Father was jealous of Kipp and had had it in for him for years, he
had retreated into one of his dark moods. Little could be said to him still.
Unfortunately, he had always tried to live in a world of perfection. Everyone
must think the Vegas are perfect—no mistakes, no deficiencies, no flaws, no
failings.
She tried to relax her clenched jaw. Somewhere
out there, there had to be a road marked with happiness for her. She didn’t
know what, where, or with whom, but somehow she would find the harmonious
lifestyle of which she had always dreamed.
Finished with packaging the painting and
addressing it, she looked up to see Daniela Estrada checking out the unique
Utah spring flower paintings displayed in the large front window. Even
unconventional Daniela had managed to find love and happiness with Duston
Cooper and her own canine grooming business on the street.
Why did relationships happen so much easier
for everyone else?
“Haven’t you finished that yet?” Father asked
as he came in through the back.
“Yes, actually. Is Donny around to take it to
the post office?”
“His name is Donatello. I did not name him
Donny. And frankly, I can’t stand that people on the block call him Picasso.”
“Fine,” she said with an inward groan.
“I sent your brother on a delivery. He’ll be
back soon.”
Vivete sauntered sleepily into the gallery
from the back, stretched her back, and curled up next to Lavinia’s feet.
Father grumbled. “What have I told you about
your poodle in the gallery?”
“The customers don’t seem to mind Vivete.
Almost everyone has a dog in their shop on Merchant Street. That’s one of the
things that contribute to our uniqueness compared to the cold, sterile, commercialized
shops in the mall.” She reached down and patted Vivete’s fluffy, white head of
hair.
Father muttered under his breath again,
unwrapped a piece of gum, and popped it into his mouth.
He had hated the day she had brought home the
small, but clearly identifiable, white Standard Poodle she had adopted. She
still couldn’t believe she had found a purebred at the shelter, but she
preferred to rescue a dog than to pay thousands to someone who was clearly only
out for the profit. Besides, Vivete didn’t shed, handled the customers
good-naturedly, brought smiles to their faces, and provided wonderful company.
Lavinia gave Vivete’s ears a scratch. So she could get a little rambunctious at
times, mostly at home. She had a habit of playing with her food and tearing up
paper and plastic and scattering the pieces. Oh, and mouthing people’s hands
like they were chew toys. Lavinia declared again she would work on Vivete’s
social skills.
“Keep her in the back.” Father reached down
and grabbed Vivete’s collar and tugged.
Despite being pulled to her feet, Vivete dug
in her paws and stayed by Lavinia’s side, letting out a low growl. She had
never liked Father, but then he wasn’t exactly a dog person, and not the best
people person either.
Buy Links for Fortune for Fools
Sweet Cravings: http://bit.ly/1nW5RhZ
Amazon: http://amzn.to/1m3Fozp
Bio:
Cindy A. Christiansen writes sweet romance with
humor, suspense...and dogs! She's the mother of two awesome boys who just
happen to be autistic. Dogs have helped her through multiple health issues
so she honors them in her books and donates both time and money to help them.
She lives with her wonderful family and delightful dogs in West Jordan, UT. Fly
into a good book!
Contact Links:
Website: http://www.dragonflyromance.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/DragonflyRomance
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AuthorDragonfly
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CindyDragonfly
Google+: http://bit.ly/14TuIh6
Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/cindydragonfly/
Email: cindy@dragonflyromance.com
No comments:
Post a Comment