Jo Huddleston is a multi-published author of
books, articles, and short stories. Novels in her West Virginia Mountains
series, her Caney Creek series, and her standalone novel, Tidewater Summer, are
sweet Southern historical romances. Jo is
a member of ACFW and the Literary Hall of Fame at Lincoln Memorial University
(TN). Learn more at www.johuddleston.com where you can read
first chapters of her novels and novellas and also sign up for her mailing
list.
Welcome to my blog, Jo. This story is a
novelette. Please tell us about your book, With
Good Intentions.
A sweet
romance spiced with deception, set in 1959. Jean Stewart and her mama stand firm to protect their family business
from a big-city developer’s takeover. Oscar Wainworth sends his son William to
convince the ladies to sell their property. William has an instant attraction
to Jean, believes he shouldn’t be the one to discuss the sale with the
Stewarts, and gives them a fake name. If they know he’s a Wainworth, he’s
likely to find himself out on the sidewalk.
One lie leads to another until William may have dug a hole too deep to escape. By stealth he learns that Jean can’t associate with anyone who is dishonest. To win Jean’s love, William must convince her that his lies flowed from good intentions.
One lie leads to another until William may have dug a hole too deep to escape. By stealth he learns that Jean can’t associate with anyone who is dishonest. To win Jean’s love, William must convince her that his lies flowed from good intentions.
Where can your books be purchased and where can
someone read sample chapters?
Book’s Purchase
Link: http://amzn.to/2lTR7LF
Website with sample chapters: http://www.johuddleston.com
Here is a sample of Jo's writing skills below. Read an excerpt from With Good Intentions.
Chapter 1
October 1959—Birmingham, Alabama
William
Wainworth shifted in his chair, stretched
his long legs beneath the massive conference table, and braced for the
impending reprimand from the CEO. This regular Monday morning meeting of Wainworth Development sales staff had gone on
longer than he’d expected.
He
would loosen his necktie but doing so
would violate the expectations Wainworth’s
CEO held for his male employees: wear a coat and tie when representing
Wainworth Development. His daddy being the CEO of Wainworth Development, William had that rule ingrained in him from an early age.
Among
other stellar traits, his daddy dressed immaculately, and he expected his workforce to follow his example. His
appearance had favorably impressed many clients who sat with him in his
Birmingham office. Every weekday, he never ventured outside his home without
the requisite coat and necktie. William had never seen him wear wrinkled pants
or curled-up shirt collars.
Now,
Oscar Wainworth stood tall, slender, and good-looking between the head of the
table and an easel, his index finger tapping on a sketch positioned there.
William moved his attention from his daddy to the sketch, a street-level
drawing of storefronts along a sidewalk in Conroy, Alabama.
Wainworth
Development sought to purchase that entire block of businesses, demolish the
buildings, and replace them with an apartment complex having a bookstore on the
first floor. Sitting across the street from a growing college, the location
proved ideal for Wainworth’s purpose.
The
building plans had received the city’s approval. Wainworth representatives had
successfully gained signatures on real estate contracts to acquire all the
properties except one. The smallest business on the block refused to sell,
despite repeated overtures from Wainworth Development.
Oscar
Wainworth faced the dozen or so men seated around the table in chairs
upholstered in rich, brown leather. He put his palms on the gleaming tabletop
and leaned forward. “Gentlemen, this one small store is the monkey wrench in
this whole deal. We’ve bought up all the properties on the block, yet here’s
this little hole-in-the-wall ice cream shop smack-dab
in the middle that you’ve not convinced to sell. Why is that? Why this one
store?”
Mumbled
reasons and comments circulated around the massive table. William and Oscar had
heard them all before. Oscar Wainworth stood straight, his six-foot-four height
menacing, and met the eyes of each salesman. “Yes, the owners are females, and
you’ve all probably tried to be gentlemanly in your contacts with them. That’s
commendable and appropriate.
“But,
men, you need to work with these ladies just as you would any other client.
Wainworth Development is a business, and
you must conduct yourselves accordingly—doesn’t matter if you’re dealing with a
man or a woman. However, it’s time to get tough with these women. Understood?”
The
men bobbed their heads in sync as if they followed the directions of an
orchestra conductor, and his daddy continued. “Do I have to go down there and
show you how it’s done? Must I close this deal myself? I assure you I will not
be happy if I do.”
His
gaze settled on his son. “William, I want you to go down to Conroy and convince
the owners to sell. This has become a special case, and if you’ve learned
anything from me in your thirty-two years, you’ll be successful. You drive on
down there and stay as long as it takes to get the job done.”
“Yes,
sir, I will.”
“Get
going. Now.” He waved a hand toward the closed door to spur William into
motion. “Ask Gloria for the files on this property and be on your way. Check
back with me when you get there.”
William
pushed his chair away from the conference table and rose. “Yes, sir.” His daddy
was a workaholic, especially since his wife, William’s mama, had died five
years ago. Oscar Wainworth put in a sixty-hour work week, never leaving a job
undone. He expected similar dedication in his staff.
Finally
outside the conference room and waiting at Gloria’s desk for her to collect the
files, William exhaled. He didn’t mind that his daddy booted him out of the
meeting—anything beat sitting in a stuffy roomful of cigar smoke.
Gloria
returned and handed him several file folders. “Here are the files you need.
Good luck. I hope your trip goes better than those of the other men Mr.
Wainworth has sent down there.”
“Thanks.
Where did the other guys stay? You got the name of a hotel?”
“Yes,
they stayed at the Conroy Hotel. I’ll telephone to reserve you a room. How long
will you be staying?”
“Maybe
for the remainder of the week.”
~
Same Day—Conroy, Alabama
William
carried his luggage up to a second-floor hotel room, then returned downstairs
to grab a late lunch in the hotel’s dining room. When he crossed the lobby, the
antiquated wooden floors groaned beneath his every step. Inside the dining
room, booths lined one wall and tables covered with white linen tablecloths
dotted the floor space.
He
asked the hostess for a booth, and she seated him at a high-back wooden booth
near the entrance. After a light lunch of steaming vegetable soup and a ham
sandwich, he found a pay phone in the lobby and stepped into the booth to call Birmingham.
“Good
afternoon. Wainworth Development.”
“Gloria,
ring my daddy’s office, please.”
Shortly,
he heard his daddy’s voice. “That you, William? How does the lay of the land
look down there?”
“Just
letting you know I’m here. Haven’t seen the owners yet, but plan to go there
now.”
“Fine,
fine. How about you call me every morning about ten o’clock to bring me
up-to-date with what you’re doing? We’ve got to get this deal finalized.”
“Yes,
sir, I’ll do that.”
William
stepped out of the telephone booth to walk outside the red brick hotel. He
stood on the sidewalk, hands shoved into his pants pockets. Without haste, he
scanned what he could see of the town—to his left, a bank stood on the corner, and to his right, a drugstore anchored
that corner, its front facing away from him.
Not
many folks moving around, and from the casual dress of those passing by him,
then had to be college students. He glanced at his polished shoes and creased
dress pants—shades of Oscar Wainworth. He’d stand out like a palm tree at the
North Pole among these young people. Might as well put a sign on his back
saying, Here I am from the big city. I
want to buy your property.
He
returned to his hotel room, tugging off his necktie as he opened his luggage. Later,
again on the sidewalk, dressed in blue jeans with his long-sleeved dress shirt
now open at the neck, his black leather bomber jacket, and loafers, William
breathed in the fresh air. A satisfying change from the pollution that filled
the air over Birmingham.
Turning
to his right, he sauntered west until he reached the corner and stopped. He
faced the street in front of the drugstore and read the signpost: College Street. Some committee must have
worked many hours to come up with that original name—the street sliced through
downtown Conroy, Alabama, between the college and the town. The next block to
his left held the businesses Wainworth Development had bought. Except for the
ice cream shop. Might as well head on down there.
He
crossed the street when the traffic light changed. Again on the sidewalk, he
passed the stores that would soon disappear once Wainworth had acquired all the
properties.
Before
he reached his destination, the clock tower atop a lofty red brick building across College Street tolled
the hour. Three o’clock. A spattering of foot traffic moved across the
manicured lawns of nearby campus buildings. Probably class-changing time.
A
short distance farther, William stood outside the building whose purchase
depended on him. The sign above the door read: Stewart’s Ice Cream Shop.
Inside,
William verified that his daddy had been correct when he referred to the
business as a hole-in-the-wall place.
With about only 400 square feet, the twelve-foot wide, deep room measured about thirty-five feet from the entrance
to a closed swinging door in the back. Along the right wall, chairs occupied
the length of the room, stopping at a pay phone attached to the wall and a
display case that faced the entrance.
The
tile floor shone, and on his left stood three ice cream cases, each about eight
feet long. Their fronts were white and spotless, and no fingerprints smudged
the glass through which sat numerous opened tubs of ice cream. The sweet,
pleasant scent of ice cream filled the room and drew William to follow the
customers already in the shop.
He
fell in line with a few college students awaiting their turn to be served. The
kids weren’t impatient, but rather they calmly shuffled toward the cash
register. He’d skipped dessert in anticipation of his visit to the ice cream
shop, and the various flavors listed on the wall tempted him.
An
attractive woman probably in her late forties with dark hair and a pleasant
face worked efficiently behind the counter. Another female stood behind the
tall display case near the rear of the room. He could only see the back of her
head and didn’t have a clue to what she did. Soon William stood first in the
line.
“May
I help you?” the woman asked.
“Yes,
ma’am. I’d like a cone—two scoops, please.”
“What
flavor?”
“Vanilla
and chocolate. Would you please put the vanilla on the cone first and then the
chocolate?”
The
woman dipped his ice cream onto a cone while William read the flavors painted
on a wooden board hanging above a counter behind her. “You certainly offer a
lot of flavors here.”
“And
yet you choose our trusty standbys—vanilla and chocolate.”
“Yes,
ma’am. Always been my favorites.”
William
paid for his treat and took a seat in the last chair against the wall. From
there he had an unlimited view of the
business except for the area behind the display case to his right. His
attention fell to the contents of the case. Behind the glass sat numerous
delicious-looking desserts—artfully decorated cakes and pies waiting to be
personalized with someone’s name, a tray of individually-wrapped ice cream
sandwiches, and two log rolls made of chocolate cake and vanilla ice cream.
Everyone
had been served, and either left with
their ice cream or taken seats along the wall to eat their treats. The woman
who had served him sauntered toward where William sat. She stopped at the empty
counter space across from him, reached underneath it, and brought out a large
piece of flat cardboard decorated with balloons of red, blue, green, and yellow
and the name of the ice cream shop.
While
the woman worked with the cardboard, she spoke to the girl behind the display
case near him. “Did any Wainworth people contact you before I came to work?”
William
angled his body toward the entrance, pretending lack of interest in what the
woman had said. He watched the traffic outside the front window but kept his attention on the
conversation before him.
The
girl behind the display case joined the woman assembling the cardboard into a
cake box. “No, ma’am. No one has come by or called, which is unusual for a
Monday. For weeks now they’ve been persistent, showing up here almost every
day.” The girl had on a white basic bib apron, as the older woman did, over her
skirt and blouse and wore blue Keds on
her feet.
“Maybe
you’ve finally convinced them you mean it when you say we don’t want to sell.”
“Mama,
I hope so, but I doubt that.” The two could be sisters, as attractive as they
were, rather than mother and daughter. Probably the owners. The girl reached
beneath the counter and pulled out another sheet of cardboard to give the older
woman. “I’ve talked with some of the other business owners, and it appears we’re the only holdouts on the block.
“If
that’s the case, rather than give up, Wainworth Development will increase their
pressure on us to sell. I cringe every time someone dressed in a suit and
necktie come through the door. All the Wainworth people think they can make us
sell—they’re so arrogant and expect us to roll over and play dead when they
wave money in front of us.”
Good
thing William had changed clothes before visiting their shop.
“Their
money would be nice, Jean. We could
pay off the mortgage here and have some left over. I could get used to not
working outside the home again.”
“Mama,
please don’t go soft on this. We’re not going to sell! Daddy started this business, and we’ll do everything we can to
keep it going.”
Jean’s
mama put the assembled boxes underneath the counter and started toward the cash
register to help new customers. The girl returned to whatever kept her busy
behind the dessert case.
William
left his chair and stepped nearer the display case, continuing to enjoy his ice
cream cone. Bending at the waist and peering inside at the cakes, William
didn’t notice the girl behind the case had approached him. A female voice drew
his attention. “May I help you with something from the dessert case?”
He
straightened and turned toward the voice. When their eyes met, hers were the
color of the deepest part of the Gulf of Mexico waters and turned him into a
bumbling adolescent. “Ah, well, no, thank you. Just, uh, looking. Did you make
all these pretty cakes?”
She
smiled, apparently enjoying his discomfort. “Yes, I did. See something you like
in there?”
Not
in the dessert case, he didn’t. But he wouldn’t mind getting to know the
dark-haired woman standing next to him. “No, thanks. Guess I’ll just finish
this cone I’ve started.”
“I
recognize our regulars, the college kids, but I don’t believe you’ve been in
here before. You new in town?”
“Yeah,
you could say that. I’m, er, I’m doing some work on the college campus.”
“Oh?
What’s that?”
“Uh,
helping one of the professors with some research.”
“Then
welcome to our town. I’m Jean Stewart.”
“Thanks.
I’m Will….” Beyond her shoulder, he saw the wooden
board where they listed their ice cream flavors. “…Will Woods.”
Thank you for telling us about your new book, Jo. Here are more links for Jo Huddleston's books.
Amazon author page: http://amzn.to/2cfSroU
Facebook author page: http://bit.ly/2aqFEeT
Facebook personal page: http://on.fb.me/1Ubic69
Goodreads: http://bit.ly/1QAPtFv
Inspirational blog: http://bit.ly/2gttKVr
BookBub Profile: http://bit.ly/2liB0G3
2 comments:
Jo's book sounds good and grabbed me from the beginning.
Nice interview, interesting story plot.
Diane, thanks for your kind words about With Good Intentions. Thanks for leaving your comment.
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