In my June article (HERE), I revisited an anthology Prairie
Rose Publications put out in the summer of 2014 (Lassoing a Mail-Order Bride).
For my July article, I’m revisiting another PRP anthology that
saw its one-year publishing anniversary on July 4, 2020—
– a collection of six western historical novellas that are hotter than a two dollar pistol and 4th of July fireworks – |
The stories and their authors are:
- Fake Marriage with a Dash of Desire by Karen Michelle Nutt
- The Lady Piano Player by J. Arlene Culiner
- Duty by Angela Raines
- Diamond Jack’s Angel by Elizabeth Clements
- A Summer to Remember by Julie Lence
- Give My Love to Rose by Kaye Spencer
A little more about my story—
Music often inspires my stories. In the case of Give My Love
to Rose, Johnny Cash’s song of the same name gave me the basic idea for the
plot. Rose in his song became my main character. The man who came across
the dying man in my story is a deputy U.S. Marshal.
Here’s the song.
And here’s an excerpt.
Clint Callahan stopped a few feet from the covered front porch. “Is this the Griffin place? Lon Griffin’s?”
“Yes. It is.” The younger of the two women came forward, her
gaze dragging from the back of the mule to look at him. “I’m Rose Griffin. This
is my mother-in-law, Bess.”
Clint’s mental image of Rose crashed. Rose was hardly more
than a girl, and Lon was…Well, he was old enough to be her father, maybe even
grandfather. This put a different slant on the situation, and he wasn’t
altogether comfortable with it.
Rose’s chin lifted with the set of her shoulders. “Was he
dead when you found him?”
This was the hardest part, explaining. A woman’s reaction
revealed much about her character. He’d seen it all from throwing themselves on
the body in fits of wailing grief to outright joy the no-good scoundrel was
dead.
“No. I found him at dusk not far from the railroad tracks.”
Clint dismounted. “He’d fallen out of the saddle and lacked the strength to get
up. When I knelt beside him, I could tell he didn’t have much time left. I
asked his name and where he was going. He said he had to get home to Rose. I
told him I’d take him home, but he was in too much pain to move. I offered to
fetch you. He said no. He didn’t want to—”
“—to die alone,” Rose murmured.
Clint nodded. “Yes, ma’am. There was a buffalo wallow off
from the tracks where the night wind wouldn’t hit us straight on, so I got him
laid out on his bedroll. I put up a makeshift lean-to over him and built a fire
close by. I boiled a piece of jerky and helped him sip on the broth. He dozed
off and on all night. Sometimes he muttered nonsense in his sleep, other times
he was wide awake and making sense. He must have told me his life’s story.”
Available on Amazon.com
Until next time,
Kaye Spencer
Stay in contact with Kaye—
Congratulations on your antholoversary! What great company to appear in.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great word, antholoversary. :-)
DeleteThat anthology was SUCH a good one! I thoroughly enjoyed it, and I always love your "story behind the story" posts like this one!
ReplyDeleteI love that word, too, Christine--I'm adding it to my vocabulary!
Cheryl,
DeleteThanks for stopping in. I enjoyed every story in this anthology. It is great to rub writing elbows with these authors.
You never cease to amaze me with how a song allows you to create such great stories. Love this one. Doris
ReplyDeleteThank you, Doris. I know music is important in your creative life, too. Birds of a feather... ;-)
Delete