Evergreen
by Emily
Mims
GENRE: Contemporary
romance
BLURB:
Thirty-year-old
musician Leilani Mahuiki is in Tennessee to find Joe Barstow, the birth father
whose bone marrow might save her daughter’s life. She finds Bradley, too, Joe’s
adopted son. Against all odds, she and Bradley make wonderful music together,
she on the ukulele, he on the banjo. And Bradley is everything else she’s ever
wanted in a man.
Bradley wants her,
too. But is that enough? He needs a family of his own. Having grown up an
outsider, he’s always dreamt of something simple and old-fashioned. No
entanglements. No complications. Just mom, dad, and the kids. Not something
Leilani can ever offer. She already has the very complications and
entanglements that he so desperately wants to avoid, and that are not going
away any time soon. And yet, as he and Leilani pull out all the stops to save
her daughter’s life, he knows Leilani is the only woman for him. The most
beautiful music in the world can sometimes happen when disharmony resolves—and
a lonely Tennessee winter can become a tropical paradise.
Excerpt:
He eased open the bedroom door and
tiptoed down the hall to the landing, where he could see down the stairs into
the living room. What in the world? Leilani carried a garbage sack across the
room to her small dining room table. Bradley watched as she eased open the sack
and started slowly withdrawing colored cups and spoons. It was the garbage from
the club tonight, the cups and spoons they’d all used to eat the pudding and
drink the Bay Breeze. His eyes narrowed as she zeroed in on the red and blue
cups and the red spoon. He’d watched enough crime scene television shows to know
what she was doing. She wanted somebody’s DNA sample. But whose? And why?
Only one way he knew to find out.
Bradley tiptoed down the stairs and
stood with his arms folded as Leilani carefully put the cups and spoon into a
gallon-sized plastic sack and zipped it shut. Intent on her task, she didn’t
notice him until she’d loaded the rest of the garbage back into the sack and
turned around with the sack in her arms. She stared at him in shock and the bag
slipped out of her arms, spilling dirty cups and spoons all over the floor.
“Shit, Bradley, you startled me.” Her eyes widened and she looked like a deer
caught in the headlights.
Bradley did not try to hide his
suspicion. “Care to explain what the hell you’re doing?”
She shrugged, looking resigned. “I
may as well, you’re all going to find out anyway. Help me get this mess cleaned
up first. I don’t want the sticky pudding soaking into the carpet.”
“To hell with the carpet,” Bradley
said harshly. “Tell me what’s going on.”
“To hell with your attitude. The mess
first, then the explanation.” Leilani held two dishtowels under the tap and
threw one at him, hitting him in the middle of his chest. “Help me clean up and
I’ll tell you all about it.”
He gave her a go-to-hell look but
started picking up the dirty cups and spoons. He sneaked a glance in her
direction. Her face was expressionless, but her trembling hands gave her away.
She was in the grip of powerful emotion, so powerful that she was hanging on by
a thread. Whatever was going on was important to her.
They got the mess cleaned up.
Leilani took the soiled dishtowel from him and motioned to the sofa. “This may
take a few minutes.”
Bradley sat down across from her.
“Okay, spill. Whose DNA are you after and why?”
“Joe’s. I have reason to believe
that Joe Barstow is my father.”
Bradley felt a river of ice gush
down his back. “What the hell do you mean, you think Joe Barstow’s your father?
You’re from Hawaii. Joe’s never been to Hawaii.”
“No, but Debbie Pickens has been to
Tennessee. Mom used to sing on the bluegrass circuit.
She was a damned fine dulcimer
player.”
“Which is why you know bluegrass
music and play the dulcimer so well. She taught you.”
Leilani smiled faintly. “We are the
only two dulcimer players in Hawaii. Anyway, she got pregnant with me somewhere
in Tennessee at a bluegrass festival. I figured out about when I was conceived
and found an old festival flyer in her keepsake box. She’d circled her picture
and the picture of The Barstows on that flyer. I don’t know, obviously, but I
think she and Joe hooked up that weekend. Here, let me show you.” She ran
upstairs and came back a moment later with an old flyer. “Take a look.”
Bradley took the flyer from her with
fingers that trembled, and stared down at the circled pictures of a pretty
young woman and The Barstows as they appeared thirty-one years ago. A much
younger Joe, the only original member of the band still performing, smiled up
at him out of the picture. “So based on just a date and a flyer, you think
Joe’s your father? What else do you have that makes you think that?”
Leilani lifted her hands and pulled
the hair up off her face, exposing the wide forehead and sharp widow’s peak
that so defined both Joe’s and his brother’s faces. And the cheekbones and the
blue eyes. Bradley’s breath caught in his throat. How could he have missed it?
How could any of them have missed it? No wonder she’d looked so familiar the
first time he’d laid eyes on her. Underneath all the hair she wore down around
her face, she looked like Joe. Even more strikingly, she looked like Jake.
She looked like her dead brother.
She looked like her father.
Interview
with Emily Mims
1. What inspired you to write Evergreen?
It’s
part of the Smoky Blue series and is about a ukulele player from Hawaii. Not only does it fit in with the rest of the
series about young musicians, I play the ukulele myself.
2. Can you tell us a little bit about
the next books in the Smoky Blue series?
Indigo,
Timberlynn Barstow’s story, will be out soon.
I have four more plotted to follow Indigo.
3. Can you tell us a little bit about
the characters in Evergreen?
Leilani
Mahuiki comes to Tennessee in search of her birth father, for a bone marrow
transplant that will save her daughter’s life.
Bradley Barstow desperately wants a traditional family of his own-mom,
dad, and the kids. Leilani is the last
woman who can give him that.
4. You know I think we all have a
favorite author. Who is your favorite author and why?
If
I have to name just one…Nora Roberts.
Because she’s good!
5. If you could time-travel would you
travel to the future or the past? Where would you like to go and why would you
like to visit this particular time period?
I
would love to see the world a couple hundred years in the future. I want to see where technology has taken us
by then.
6. Do you have any little fuzzy friends?
Like a dog or a cat? Or any pets?
I have three small dogs, an elderly poodle and a younger chiweenie and
chihuahua.
Thanks for taking time out of your busy
schedule to visit with us today.
AUTHOR BIO:
Author
of thirty romance novels, Emily Mims combined her writing career with a career
in public education until leaving the classroom to write full time. The mother of two sons and grandmother of
six, she and her husband Charles live in central Texas but frequently visit
grandchildren in eastern Tennessee and Georgia.
She plays the piano, organ, dulcimer, and ukulele and belongs to two performing
bands. She says, “I love to write
romances because I believe in them.
Romance happened to me and it can happen to any woman-if she’ll just let
it.”
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Giveaway:
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13 comments:
Thanks for hosting!
Congrats on the tour and thanks for the chance to win :)
Oh sounds so good! I cannot wait to read and see what all happens with everyone...and her and Bradley!
Thank you for the opportunity to win!
Thank you all for having me today! Readers, do you have any questions about either me or the series?
Best, Emily
I enjoyed the interview.
Great post - I enjoyed reading it. Thanks for sharing :)
What is your favorite book? Thanks for the giveaway. I hope that I win. Bernie W BWallace1980(at)hotmail(d0t)com
A fun interview. A "chiweenie" is a new one on me.
Thanks for the excerpt, interview and giveaway.
Have a great day and thank you for giving all of us the opportunity to win.
Not such a nice day here in Michigan today. Hope it's sunny where you are. Thanks for all you do bringing us such terrific giveaways to enter.
Happy Friday! I hope that you have a wonderful Memorial Day weekend and that this has been an enjoyable and successful book tour! Best of luck to you with all of your future endeavors!
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