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Tuesday, July 3, 2018

The Reckoning at Gossamer Pond Author Interview and Promo and Book Excerpt










About The Reckoning at Gossamer Pond:
For over a century, the town of Gossamer Grove has thrived on its
charm and Midwestern
values, but Annalise Forsythe knows painful secrets, including her
own, hover just beneath the pleasant facade. When a man is found d
ead in his run-down trailer home,
Annalise inherits the trailer, along with the pictures, vintage
obituaries, and old
revival posters covering its walls. As she sorts through the
collection, she's wholly
unprepared for the ramifications of the dark and deadly secrets she'll
uncover.

A century earlier, Gossamer Grove has been stirred into chaos by the
arrival of
controversial and charismatic twin revivalists. The chaos takes a
murderous turn
when Libby Sheffield, working at her father's newspaper, receives
an obituary for
a reputable church deacon hours before his death. As she works with
the deacon's son
to unravel the mystery behind the crime, it becomes undeniably clear
that a reckoning
has come to town—but it isn't until another obituary arrives that they
realize the true
depths of the danger they've waded into.

Two women, separated by a hundred years, must uncover the
within the
borders of their own town before it's too late and they lose their
future—or their
very souls.



Author Interview with Jaime Jo Wright
I am so thrilled to have the amazing Jaime Jo Wright with me today!

RCC: Who is your favorite author?
JJW:  Tracie Peterson, for sure.
RCC: I have heard great things about her. I really need to give her books a try.

RCC: What is your favorite book?
JJW: That's like picking my favorite pet. :) Currently, probably Lady and the Lionheart, by
Joanne Bischof
RCC: I LOVE that book!! Joanne is an amazing author!

RCC:What is your favorite Bible story?
JJW: I love the story of Rahab and Jericho.
RCC: That is a great Bible story! I sure do love that God is able to use anyone who is willing to be used.

RCC:What do you like you snack on when you write?
JJW: Usually mixed nuts.
RCC: I like mixed nuts, but to be honest I usually end up picking out my favorites, like cashews!

RCC: What do you hope your writing accomplishes?
JJW: I hope God can use it to help broken people find hope again.
RCC: I sure do hope that it accomplishes that as well.

Thank you so much Jaime Jo for your time today. I am so stinking excited for your new release!





Author Bio:
Professional coffee drinker & ECPA/Publisher's Weekly best-selling author, Jaime Jo Wright resides in the hills of Wisconsin writing spirited romantic suspense stained with the shadows of history. Coffee fuels her snarky personality. She lives in Neverland with her Cap’n Hook who stole her heart and will not give it back, their little fairy Tinkerbell, and a very mischievous Peter Pan. The foursome embark on scores of adventure that only make her fall more wildly in love with romance and intrigue. Jaime lives in dreamland, exists in reality, and invites you to join her adventures atjaimejowright.com



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Book Excerpt
Chapter 9
Libby
A low fog settled over the grassy lawn by Gossamer Pond, with the moon a half slit in the sky. Within
a few days it would be a moonless sky, like the pall the funeral earlier that day had left over the town.
The evening breeze sent a chill through Libby as she paused. The outline of a large tented structure
rose alongside the pond, its frame imposing and new. Dusk outlined the rectangular tent, its canvas a
dark gray with the front doors pulled wide and fastened back to invite souls inside. Ropes stretched
from the corners and midpoints of the structure to wrap around metal posts hammered into the ground.
It was almost like a circus tent, only this wasn’t the Big Top, and the entertainment was a different kind
of show. It was spiritual.
Residents of Gossamer Grove lined up their various forms of transportation in the field just west
of the tent. Motorcars, wagons, carriages, and some lone horses. Men, women, and children alike
all gravitated toward the tent’s entrance. Libby knew they were a mixture of curiosity, faith, and
trepidation. Tent revivals had been sweeping the nation the last few years and had finally made
their way to Gossamer Grove in the form of Jedidiah and Jacobus Corbin. Since the mid-nineteenth
century, people such as D. L. Moody and Billy Sunday had been shaking up people’s eternal
security. Some, like Moody, seemed well received, with church revival spreading rampantly.
Others, like Sunday, were stirring controversy with unscripted tirades from a mouth straight from
the baseball field instead of the seminary.
Mitch had told her one paper he’d read said Sunday was so “raw” that they refused to print his
words. He used language unfit for feminine dispositions, and even some men were so stricken by
his preaching, they were taken from the tent on stretchers, having swooned like a female whose
corset was tied too tight.
Libby narrowed her eyes, attempting to catch a glimpse of the Reverends Corbin through the bright
lantern-lit inside of the meeting place. Supposedly, the twin brothers had traveled with Sunday for
a while and now had struck out to evangelize on their own. Hopefully, tonight’s female attendees
had loosened their corsets—assuming the Corbin brothers had picked up on Sunday’s bad habits.
The smell of kerosene from the lamps was pungent as she neared the meeting place. Libby searched
for Mitch, but there were so many in attendance, she couldn’t find him. The message he’d left with
Paul to have her join him at the tent revival meeting left her scrambling to help finish proofs on the
articles going to press that night. She gave Paul a timid reminder to be prepared for Mitch to come
busting through the doors at midnight with a special report on the revival. Paul’s sneer told Libby
all she needed to know about how he felt about that.
Libby caught a glimpse of Old Man Whistler, the town drunk. She was taken aback that he would
even be here, and yet it stood to reason, she supposed. The Corbin brothers were a curiosity.
Whistler brushed alongside her, his shaking elbow knocking into her arm as his knuckles gripped
the bulbous end of his cane.
“Come to get yerself saved?” he cackled, and Libby tried to hide her repulsion toward the old man
and his musty breath.
“I already am, thank you.” She moved a step away.
Old Man Whistler chuckled. “I’ve a feeling we all will be after tonight. Unless we want to hang
along with Deacon Greenwood. Even the good can’t hide their sin forever, you know.”
The elderly man gave her a sideways glance before leaving her side. Libby swallowed hard. Hide
their sin? She watched him wobble toward the tent’s doorway. Old Man Whistler probably should
not be underestimated. He was a wanderer, and wanderers saw things—knew things. His remark
struck close to the obituary’s heart. The insinuation of hidden sins. But, Deacon Greenwood’s slate
was so clean, even Mitch had never been able to find a speck of dust on it.
Libby startled as a grating shriek erupted from inside the tent. Gracious, there was an organ! The
music began to play, and the shivering tones and airy puffs from the pump organ blasted from the
door. Row upon row of attendees lined two sides of the tent with an aisle down the middle covered
in sawdust. Libby should have come earlier to find Mitch. There was no way she would now. She
stretched up on her tiptoes, but the sea of bowler hats, feathers, bonnets, and bare heads made
identifying anyone nearly impossible. The sun had almost completely gone down, and even now,
little children were being shushed as ushers made their way up the aisle indicating they were not to
disturb with whining and crying.
Libby moved to the other side of the tent, hoping she could edge her way inside and find an
unobtrusive spot to stand along the canvas wall. It was hot inside the tent, stuffy with the smells
of perfume, sweat, and fresh sawdust. She fumbled with the neckline of her blouse, tempted to
remove the cameo brooch and unbutton the lace at her throat.
The organ music whined to a halt.
Silence.
Someone coughed. A child whimpered and was quickly shushed.
Libby strained to see the front. A modest stage, a pulpit, and . . .
“Sin!” The deep voice branded the atmosphere with authority. “It will deceive you. It will drag
you to the depths of hell with the claws of demons leading the way.”
Libby froze. The vivid picture the Corbin brother drew had the entire meeting place holding their
collective breath. Trepidation spread uninvited through the shelter.
Jedidiah Corbin was a man of medium height, with lamb-chop whiskers along his cheeks and
wavy brown hair parted down the middle. He couldn’t be much older the Libby. His early thirties
perhaps. The flyer advertising tonight’s event identified this twin as the eldest. His brother,
Jacobus, was very obviously missing from attendance.
He stalked across the platform. “The darkness that festers in our souls is like a poison that, but for
the grace of God, cannot be squeezed from our hearts.”
Libby scanned the crowd around her, twisting the material of her dress in her hands. Running was
implausible, but preferable to being here. There was no comfort—no conviction—in the words.
Merely impending doom and destruction. Jedidiah Corbin might as well have combined his
message with Edgar Allan Poe’s poetry, and the congregation would have barely been able to tell
the difference.
She jumped as Corbin’s foot stomped on the platform.
“But the grace of God is real!” Corbin’s gravelly voice rose with intensity, and he flung his arm
forward as if throwing a baseball. “It is the damnable misrepresentation of theology that allows us
to sin and wait until we lay on our deathbeds, gasping for our last breaths, to lay penitent before the
Lord. That a whore can continue in her sin with a backward confession to cover the last evening’s
errancy. That a drunkard may swallow his liquor along with a prayer. That a thief can pocket coins
from the offering plate while admitting other sins to his priest. This hypocrisy is from the pit of the
lake of fire and must cease before we hang ourselves from the rafters of a house built on lies!”
An audible gasp arose from the crowd. Whether from the language of curses and vulgar frankness
mixed with grace or the reference to hanging, Libby wasn’t sure. Murmurs and heads turned
toward each other. Libby’s throat closed with the claustrophobic reality that Reverend Jedidiah
Corbin danced on the circumstances of Deacon Greenwood’s death.
“May we not die a sinful wretch unforgiven!”
No more. Please, no more.
Libby shoved through the people toward the tent opening. Her breaths came in short, suffocating
gasps. The black sky outside, with only the tiny shaft of moon to light the banks of the pond, held
little escape from this sense of being squeezed. She hurried to the pond’s bank, staring into
glowing waters.
“Libby.”
She shrieked. Spinning around, her arms wrapped across her chest, she squinted in the darkness at
the form that had come up behind her. She glanced toward the pond, a deep gray reflection rippling
in the water. Being trapped between the water and the shadowy form was intimidating.
The man tipped his head, and as he did, his face turned into the shaft of moonlight.
“It’s you.” Libby’s breath released in a whoosh. She stepped toward him, away from the bank.
“Who did you think it was?” Elijah frowned. “I was almost certain you intended to launch yourself
into the pond.”
“The thought did cross my mind, but of course that would be nonsensical, and it wouldn’t help a
soul.” Libby abruptly ended her nervous chatter. Her skin had broken out into little bumps.
“I noticed you escaped the revival.” Elijah looked back toward the tent. “I had to as well.”
Libby nodded. “It was quite . . . well, I wasn’t finding myself drawn to salvation. Maybe if I’d
stayed I would have. I mean, it’s not that I’m not saved as it is, but if I weren’t—if I didn’t believe
in God—I mean, the crucifixion and resurrection of Christ—then I would be going to hell, I
suppose.” She stumbled to a halt. Elijah was not standing before her to inquire about the state
of her eternal soul.
“Why are you here?” She sought for an avenue of escape from her scattered thoughts.
Elijah took a step closer to the pond, and he watched its dark outline for a moment. “My father was
to give the closing prayer.” His quiet voice, so matter-of-fact, explained why a grieving son would
attend a revival meeting on the day of his father’s funeral. Not that it would have been enough of a
reason to give Libby the compulsion to attend, but Elijah was, after all, a Greenwood. They stood
on principle, not feelings.
“Elijah—”
“Don’t, Libby.” His voice dropped an octave, thick with memories and truths long buried between
them. Elijah turned to her. His dark eyes were troubled, his newsboy cap tugged down over his hair.
“I need to clean up after my father’s affairs. To take over the mill and get it in order. I cannot—”
He seemed to struggle to find words. “I cannot pick at an open wound with suggestions of foul play
over my father’s own cowardice toward life.”
“That’s unfair,” Libby dared reprimand him. Elijah gave her a sharp look. “One never knows why
a person determines to end his life before God chooses. Perhaps there was heartbreak, a sense of
lost direction, or maybe—maybe—burdens weighted him down. You mustn’t speak with such
judgment toward your father.”
She floundered. But it hadn’t been suicide, had it? She knew it. So, if he were honest with himself,
did Elijah.
Elijah’s jaw worked back and forth in the darkness. She could see the sharp outline of his chin, the
cleft there, and the sad lack of joy at the corners of his eyes. Libby tried again, mustering the
courage to confront the man she far preferred to stay in the shadow of.
“The obituary—”
“No.” Elijah held up his hand.
“But, you cannot discount it!” Libby insisted. “Why would you want to discount it? If it means
your father’s life was taken against his will—if someone determined to remove him from this
world for feelings of ill will or perhaps a personal vendetta?”
“Oh, the questions! Don’t forget, Libby, what of the note? In the straw? Did my father have secrets?
What man doesn’t, I ask? Must he die for them? Or take his own life for them?”
Elijah’s voice rose, and he stifled his outburst by running his palm across his mouth and looking
beyond Libby toward something unseen. Finally, he met her eyes, the moonlight reflecting in his
pupils. “I’m not in a place where I can—where I can contemplate it.”
How very selfish! Libby swallowed back her ire and tried to temper her voice. The words came in a
nervous stutter. “W-why ever not? You’re willing to risk another life if they were to strike again by
pretending your father’s death was not by another’s hand?”
Elijah tugged his hat down and sniffed. An awful silence was covered by the sound of the
impassioned speech of Corbin in the distance and frogs peeping their night song at the pond’s edge.
Then the organ started playing, its shaky tones wafting eerily over the night sky with the
confessional tune of “What a Friend We Have in Jesus.”
She wished Elijah would say something—anything. But he pushed his hands in his trouser pockets
instead. Libby couldn’t read his face in the darkness of the night. His shoulders were tense, but
finally he drew a deep breath in through his nose and let it out through his mouth. His words were
grave, his tone deep, telling, and all too knowing.
“When, dear Libby, have you ever been concerned how others’ lives may be affected by another’s
choice?”
It was an unfair question. Hurtful. But burdened with truth all at the same time. Elijah leaned
forward, his breath against her face, and his mouth inches from her nose.
“This is what we do. We continue on. We forget what has happened and look toward the future.”
“This is . . . is, well, it’s murder. That’s what it is! To pretend it’s nothing is cowardice!” Libby
knew she should not have said the words the moment they filtered from her lips.
Elijah’s eyebrows shot upward. His hand lifted, and he brushed the back of her cheek with his
knuckles. “And we both know that you and I are the worst sort of cowards.”
His whispered words hung between them, bringing the horrid truth into the moment and damning
their souls in the echoes of the tent revival.


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