Friday, December 6, 2013


NOW AVAILABLE!

THE MURDER CAMPAIGN

Mountain Woman Adventures #9



Chief Marshal Manchester and Marshal Kate are ordered to investigate a potential presidential candidate, Senator Chandler. They think it will be a simple investigation until murders start happening all around them. After the attorney general of the United States is assassinated and they lose one of their own, the marshals realize they are dealing with a man with secrets who will stop at nothing in his bid for president. 

Senator Chandler isn't only campaigning for president, he's running a murder campaign. Those who get in his way don't last long. And the marshals are definitely getting in his way. Marshal Kate doesn't take kindly to an attack on her men, or her country, and isn't about to back down. But this time, she may have met her match. Chandler has no fear and money to burn. 

If the marshals aren't at the top of their game they may not get out of Washington DC alive.

Monday, September 30, 2013

NOW AVAILABLE IN PAPERBACK

Mountain Woman: Fight at The Fort






Marshal Kate has received a plea for help from Alice and Jeb Spencer when the settlement named The Fort falls under attack by a group of outlaws. Can she get there in time, or will she find only bodies and ashes of the burned settlement?

She knows she has to try; Jeb and Alice are almost like her children. She and Man had taken Jeb in as an orphan after the murder of his mother. Upon arrival at The Fort, the marshals find it worse than expected, but the settlement is still standing. A vicious gunfight erupts which leads to a deadly chase after Baldy Herman’s gang of killers.

Outnumbered ten to one, Kate’s husband, Chief Marshal Man, decides to leave his desk job and go undercover to infiltrate the gang. His plan almost works, until his identity is discovered. 

Kate and her crew become his only chance to survive.


Friday, September 6, 2013


Fight at The Fort 

Mountain Woman Adventures #8



Marshal Kate has received a plea for help from Alice and Jeb Spencer when the settlement named The Fort falls under attack by a group of outlaws. A few citizens are already dead. Can she get there in time, or will she find only bodies and ashes of the burned settlement?

She knows she has to try; Jeb and Alice are almost like her children. She and Man had taken Jeb in as an orphan after the murder of his mother. Upon arrival at The Fort, the marshals find it worse than expected, but the settlement is still standing. A vicious gunfight erupts which leads to a deadly chase after Baldy Herman’s gang of killers.

Outnumbered ten to one, Kate’s husband, Chief Marshal Man, decides to leave his desk job and go undercover to infiltrate the gang. His plan almost works, until his identity is discovered. Kate and her crew become  his only chance to survive.


Paperback coming soon

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Now available in paperback


Mountain Woman: The Savage Chase





When Kate and the marshals are ordered to capture the Savage gang, she has no idea how fitting the name Savage is. These outlaws are more ruthless than any they've encountered before. Led by Grampa Savage, this gang is both smart and dangerous. And when Kate’s husband, Man, is kidnapped, the case turns personal. Determined to stop these murderous outlaws, Kate and the marshals head into Canada hot on their trail. Little do the marshals know the snow-covered Columbia Mountains will be stained with their own blood before this mission is completed.

Monday, June 3, 2013

NOW AVAILABLE!

The Savage Chase 

Mountain Woman Adventures #7



When Kate and the marshals are ordered to capture the Savage gang, she has no idea how fitting the name Savage is. These outlaws are more ruthless than any they've encountered before. Led by Grampa Savage, this gang is both smart and dangerous. And when Kate’s husband, Man, is kidnapped, the case turns personal. Determined to stop these murderous outlaws, Kate and the marshals head into Canada hot on their trail. Little do the marshals know the snow-covered Columbia Mountains will be stained with their own blood before this mission is completed.

Paperback coming soon


Wednesday, May 15, 2013


Mr. Robinson

One afternoon, when I was nine or ten years old, three of my friends and I were walking past the grocery store. The owner, Mr. Robinson, came out the front and called us to come to the store. He had a Hershey bar, the first we had ever seen. In those days, candy was hard to come by, and anything chocolate was a rare treat. He broke off one of the little squares for each of us and told us to put it on our tongues and let it melt slowly. That was the best tasting candy I had ever eaten.

Every afternoon after that, the four of us would just happen to go by Mr. Robinson’s store and stand in front, hoping he would come out with the candy. He did until the Hershey bar was gone. He told us that was all he had. He’d received only one bar and he’d shared it with us. Sometimes, one little act of kindness can make a person remember you for the rest of their life.


Monday, May 13, 2013


Credit Lake
Jayton, Texas

There is a pond in Jayton, located between downtown and the public school. Strangers hearing the locals talk about Credit Lake often ask how it got its name. Here’s what we were told.
The fifties in West Texas were, as the author, Elmer Kelton, said, “The time it never rained.” Jayton’s banker lived on the other side of the pond and walked to the bank every morning. He went by the pond again on the way home at night.
It is said the farmers named the pond. They learned that the banker looked at the pond every day and if it had water in it, they got a loan to farm that year. If the pond was dry, no credit at the bank.
Thus, to this day, the pond is called Credit Lake.


Almost every boy in Jayton learned to swim in Credit Lake, as there were no swimming pools. It was brown muddy water, but young boys don’t care.
In the winter when Credit Lake froze, that was where the kids skated. Nobody had ice skates, but if you ran and jumped on the ice, you could glide several feet, that is, if you didn’t fall.
One winter there was snow on the ground and ice on Credit Lake. One of the kids found an old hood to a Plymouth car. He tied a rope on it, the boys piled on, and he pulled it with his dad’s old car. When he got to the pond he would turn sharply and release the rope, the hood of the car loaded with boys would go spinning across the ice, usually dumping several. We considered that great fun.
Then the boy decided the ice was thick enough and drove out on it in the car. He could get up speed, turn the wheel, and do circles or slide sideways, that is, until he stopped in the middle. There was a cracking sound and the boys that were in the car jumped out, including the driver, and ran to safety. The boys who were riding on the hood of the car were close behind. They stood on the bank and watched in total dismay as the car started slowly sinking until only the top of the car could be seen.
His daddy pulled the car out of Credit Lake with a tractor as soon as the ice melted. However, the next day at school, the boy grimaced every time he sat down, but he learned a very valuable lesson, never drive on the ice of Credit Lake. In fact, it was several months before he got to drive again.
There have been improvements to Credit Lake now, making it a park area. It has been stocked with fish and at times people bring fish in and turn them loose for the kids to catch. One afternoon, I was driving by Credit Lake and saw a boy about 7 or 8 running down the street toward home. He had a huge fish clutched in his arms holding it across his chest. His Zebco rod and reel were dragging along behind and his dog was chasing the boy barking in excitement. The smile on the kid’s face was a mile wide. I expect that family had fish for supper than night.
Life is not always dull in a rural West Texas town, and it’s a great place to raise kids.