HOLIDAY TREAT: A Christmas on Bellevue Lane EXCERPT!

A Christmas on Bellevue Lane EXCERPT for my Fans and Friends! Grab your copy for only .99 Cents!

See CHAPTER ONE Below… Then stay tuned right here on the Blog for CHAPTER TWO next week–where we get our first glimpse of how Marsha and Joe Dixon met and fell in love ;o) .

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cobl-final (1)

Christmas on Bellevue Lane
November 2, 2015
Pre-order on Amazon

Chapter One

“Grandpa,” Marsha Dixon’s granddaughter squealed, “you’re home!”
Camille barreled across the Dixon living room toward her grandfather, her arms filled with an overflowing box of Christmas ornaments.
Dru Hampton, one of Marsha and Joe’s grown foster children, snatched the cardboard carton out of her niece’s hands, seconds before Camille launched herself into Joe’s outstretched arms.
“And you look like a walking Christmas in July ad.” Joe’s chuckle disguised the way he winced. Almost.
Despite the tightness and chronic pain Marsha knew her husband had felt since his bypass surgery, Joe lifted Camille into one of his trademark hugs. Marsha smiled at the beautiful sight. It was a precious moment. She and Joe were so very blessed.
But it was also before noon. Her husband hadn’t been due home until that afternoon, after he finished his work day. And he looked even more exhausted than he had when he’d left that morning.
Her heart caught a little as their eyes met.
Joe winked as if to say everything was going to be okay.
“Are you checking up on us, Dad?” Dru asked.
She handed Marsha the ornaments and held out her hands for Camille. She took the seven-year-old into her arms to spare Joe—even though Dru’s adorable baby bump was growing by the day, now that she was well into her second trimester.
“Brad’s heading over soon to put the tree up,” she said. “I didn’t think we’d see you before you showed up with dinner. The family’s counting on you to be our pizza delivery device.”
Joe waved away the undercurrent of worry in his daughter’s voice.
“I’ll call Little Vincent’s later,” he said. “They’ll deliver our pies. And everyone at the office understood me not wanting to miss a minute of Camille’s first Dixon Family Christmas in July. It wouldn’t be July 1st, if I wasn’t wrestling our artificial tree out of the storage room and making sure the kids have something to hang things on later.”
He kissed Camille’s forehead and ambled away, heading toward the kitchen and the storage room beyond.
He was noticeably limping when he passed Marsha. She set the box Drew had given her beside a stack of similar ones and snagged Joe’s hand. When he slowed to a halt beside her, she leaned in so only he would hear, knowing she shouldn’t ask.
But she couldn’t stop herself.
“Why don’t you let Brad take care of the tree?” she asked.
She’d turned away from the others. She’d lowered her voice. She was tempting a replay of her and Joe’s quiet argument after breakfast.
“You’re tired and sore,” she rushed to add when she felt him tense, “and Dru said Brad was happy to help.”  Their soon-to-be son-in-law had cleared his work schedule. “Save your energy for when the kids get home from their days. The rest of us can get things started. Maybe you could take a—”
“Nap?” Joe jerked away from her. “Like an old man?”
He glanced over his shoulder at their audience. Dru and Camille were hanging on every quiet word.
“If you’d had your way this morning,” Joe said to Marsha, “I’d have taken a nap before I even got out of bed. I’m not going to collapse, Bird. I’m just assembling a stupid Christmas tree!”
He looked instantly embarrassed, apologetic, at the way he’d raised his voice.
Shaking his head, he glanced at the girls again, and then walked away from the family room and the conversation with Marsha he kept refusing to finish. His footsteps ate a path through the kitchen. He was still limping, every footstep visibly costing him.
“Are we still having Christmas in July?” Camille switched from watching her grandfather’s retreat, to waiting for Marsha’s answer.
“Kid,” Dru answered, while Marsha stared down at the cardboard cartons full of Christmas cheer and regained her composure. “Nothing’s gonna stop us from rocking your first Dixon holiday. This place with be packed in a few hours with family ready to get their party on.”
Marsha nodded, shoving aside her shock at how much more frequently her husband’s uncharacteristic outbursts were coming.
She carried Camille’s ornament box to the love seat that was positioned cattycornered to the fireplace. Later, the family’s artificial spruce would be assembled there—the way it had been for thirty years now.
“But why Christmas in July?” Camille asked.
Marsha smiled indulgently as she sat.
Their family’s quirky July tradition came with quite a story attached. One that could take the rest of the morning and half the afternoon to tell.
“Because December is too long to wait,” she offered simply, “for a little magic to happen.”
“Even more magic”—Camille plopped down on the love seat’s plump cushions. She pulled the cardboard box into her lap and began looking through the colorful ornaments within—“than my mommy and daddy finally making me a Dixon?”
Marsha’s heart filled. Her granddaughter had only been with them for such a short time. But she’d already brought so much sunshine into their family.
Dru moved the other boxes of ornaments and twinkly tree lights to the fireplace.
Marsha hugged Camille. “You’ve always been a Dixon, sweetheart.”
Just like all the foster kids in her and Joe’s sprawling family would always be Dixons, wherever they came from and wherever they went after they left or aged out of their group home.
“Even when I didn’t know who any of you were?” Camille asked.
“Especially then.” Marsha thought of her son and his new bride’s whirlwind, second-chance romance.
Oliver and Selena had reconnected only a few months ago.
It hadn’t been an easy reunion—seeing each other again for the first time in seven years, after Oliver had made his way back to Chandlerville when he’d heard about Joe’s heart attack. But love had prevailed—and now the forever connection Camille’s parents’ had always felt for each other had deepened even more.
Oliver and his new bride had married two days ago at the county courthouse, with a handful of friends and family beside them as witnesses. Then they’d taken off to enjoy a quick, three-day honeymoon to the mountains.
“Your mommy and daddy,” Marsha assured her granddaughter, “were just waiting for the perfect time to bring you home to us.”
“You mean so I could be here for Christmas this summer? And at Grandpa’s Father of the Year party last month?”
“Exactly.”
Marsha straightened one of her Camille’s perpetually off-center pigtails and pecked a kiss onto her granddaughter’s button nose.
“And now that school’s out,” she said, “Grandpa and I have the whole summer to make up for lost time. Your parents better watch out. When they get home, they’ll have to wrestle your grandpa and me to get you back.”
Camille grinned at the thought of the grownups in her newly settled life fighting over her.
“But we live just two streets over now,” she reminded Marsha. “And I’m still at Grammy Belinda’s next door all the time, ‘cause she babysits me for Mommy and Daddy, too.”
“But if you were over there now, who would help Dru and me pick which ornaments should go on the tree first?”
Sorting through the Dixon family’s overflowing boxes holiday decor had been Marsha’s master plan for keeping Camille occupied until Christmas in July officially began—when the rest of the family returned home in the afternoon.
“Grandpa would,” Camille insisted. “Cause he loves Christmas in July, too, right?”
A crash and a curse from the direction of storage room distracted Marsha from answering.
“Of course he does,” Dru assured her niece.
Except Joe had actually mumbled something at breakfast that morning about canceling this year’s party—a tradition his love for Marsha and their family had dreamed up years ago.
He’d apologized almost as soon as he’d said it.
He’d just been tired and hurting, he’d assured Marsha. He was fine. Everything was fine. They were fine. And they’d have a blast tonight with the kids.
But he was home from work early again, something that had been happening a couple days a week since he’d started back after his bypass surgery. And there was another crash and a fresh curse sounding from the storage room. This one clear enough to widen Camille’s beautiful green eyes until they were as round as an owl’s.
She glanced at Marsha. “Is Grandpa mad?”
“No, sweetie.” Marsha wished anger was all that was ailing her husband.
She wished she could do more to help him than insulating the kids, young and old, from how hard it had become for their father and grandfather to do the things he absolutely loved doing for their family.
Even Christmas in July.
“I think grandpa’s just a little tired,” she explained. “And you saw how much we have in storage. Once he drags our tree in here, everything will be right as rain.”
Dru’s unconvinced stare over Camille’s head confirmed what Marsha had suspected for the last week or so.
Her older children were no longer buying their parents’ assurances. Dru clearly knew that Joe was anything but fine today.
“Grandpa loves Christmas more than all the rest of us put together.” Dru smiled for Camille’s benefit, raising an eyebrow at Marsha.
Camille’s silence begged Marsha to convince her.
“We’ll have a tree up for decorating in no time,” Marsha assured you.
“You’ll see,” Dru added. “There’s a party going on here tonight, and you’re this year’s guest of honor.”
“Yay!” Camille kicked her feet, her excitement returning.
She dipped her hands into the Marsha and Joe’s oldest box of Christmas things.
“Does every kid in the family really have their own ornaments?” she asked. “How long have you been doing Christmas in July?”
“Since forever.” Dru smoothed back the dark curls that passed for Camille’s bangs. “And you’ll have your own ornaments now, too. It’s part of the tradition.”
“What’s this one, Grammy?” Camille picked up a large crush of aging tissue paper. She peeled back the brittle, glitter-flecked layers, slowly revealing the treasure within. “It’s so pretty . . . ”
Marsha smiled at her granddaughter’s awed expression, tearing up a little at the memories.
I want to give you beautiful things like this every day of our lives, Joe had said when he’d given it to her.
“What is it?” Camille held up the fragile creation.
“It’s a hummingbird.” Marsha brushed her fingers over tin ornament’s gilded surface.
Its colors had had faded over the years. But it was just as beautiful as the first day she’d held it.
“Grandpa Joe gave it to me in college.”
“College?”
“That’s where they met,” Dru said. “Actually, your grandpa ran over your Grammy Marsha, her first week on the University of Georgia campus.”
Dru rubbed Marsha’s shoulder, comforting, reassuring, supporting.
Then they both tensed as another frustrated growl erupted on the other side of the house.
“College is where we fell in love,” Marsha said, falling into that place in-between, where the best memories could take you.
Where before and now and forever suddenly felt as if they were all the same. All the good and the bad. The dreams and the disappointments. The setbacks and the triumphs. Everything you’d been and were and ever would become, could bind themselves together sometimes when you were remembering, showing you the story of your life.
She and Joe were maybe facing the toughest setback of their marriage. What if he couldn’t recover from his heart problems the way they needed him to?
Could their love see them and their foster family through even that, the same as it had every other challenge they’d faced?
“Mom?” Dru’s voice pulled Marsha back from her thoughts. “I think it’s time Camille heard your and Dad’s story.”
Marsha smiled at her older daughter, thanking Dru for the welcomed distraction.
Marsha and Joe shared their foster family’s history with each child placed in their home. It was their history, too—something to belong to and trust in and take with them for the rest of their lives. And that same story belonged to Camille now, too.
Marsha couldn’t think of anything she’d enjoy better than indulging in a few minutes of looking back.
“Your grandpa gave me this ornament on the night he proposed to me,” she said. “I’d never seen anything so magical.”
“You met at Christmas?” Camille asked.
Marsha shook her head, realizing she’d have to start at the beginning.
She felt the story tumbling out as she cuddled her granddaughter close and Dru settled in next to them.
“Not exactly, sweetheart  . . . ”
“Grandpa,” Marsha Dixon’s granddaughter squealed, “you’re home!”
Camille barreled across the Dixon living room toward her grandfather, her arms filled with an overflowing box of Christmas ornaments.
Dru Hampton, one of Marsha and Joe’s grown foster children, snatched the cardboard carton out of her niece’s hands, seconds before Camille launched herself into Joe’s outstretched arms.
“And you look like a walking Christmas in July ad.” Joe’s chuckle disguised the way he winced. Almost.
Despite the tightness and chronic pain Marsha knew her husband had felt since his bypass surgery, Joe lifted Camille into one of his trademark hugs. Marsha smiled at the beautiful sight. It was a precious moment. She and Joe were so very blessed.
But it was also before noon. Her husband hadn’t been due home until that afternoon, after he finished his work day. And he looked even more exhausted than he had when he’d left that morning.
Her heart caught a little as their eyes met.
Joe winked as if to say everything was going to be okay.
“Are you checking up on us, Dad?” Dru asked.
She handed Marsha the ornaments and held out her hands for Camille. She took the seven-year-old into her arms to spare Joe—even though Dru’s adorable baby bump was growing by the day, now that she was well into her second trimester.
“Brad’s heading over soon to put the tree up,” she said. “I didn’t think we’d see you before you showed up with dinner. The family’s counting on you to be our pizza delivery device.”
Joe waved away the undercurrent of worry in his daughter’s voice.
“I’ll call Little Vincent’s later,” he said. “They’ll deliver our pies. And everyone at the office understood me not wanting to miss a minute of Camille’s first Dixon Family Christmas in July. It wouldn’t be July 1st, if I wasn’t wrestling our artificial tree out of the storage room and making sure the kids have something to hang things on later.”
He kissed Camille’s forehead and ambled away, heading toward the kitchen and the storage room beyond.
He was noticeably limping when he passed Marsha. She set the box Drew had given her beside a stack of similar ones and snagged Joe’s hand. When he slowed to a halt beside her, she leaned in so only he would hear, knowing she shouldn’t ask.
But she couldn’t stop herself.
“Why don’t you let Brad take care of the tree?” she asked.
She’d turned away from the others. She’d lowered her voice. She was tempting a replay of her and Joe’s quiet argument after breakfast.
“You’re tired and sore,” she rushed to add when she felt him tense, “and Dru said Brad was happy to help.”  Their soon-to-be son-in-law had cleared his work schedule. “Save your energy for when the kids get home from their days. The rest of us can get things started. Maybe you could take a—”
“Nap?” Joe jerked away from her. “Like an old man?”
He glanced over his shoulder at their audience. Dru and Camille were hanging on every quiet word.
“If you’d had your way this morning,” Joe said to Marsha, “I’d have taken a nap before I even got out of bed. I’m not going to collapse, Bird. I’m just assembling a stupid Christmas tree!”
He looked instantly embarrassed, apologetic, at the way he’d raised his voice.
Shaking his head, he glanced at the girls again, and then walked away from the family room and the conversation with Marsha he kept refusing to finish. His footsteps ate a path through the kitchen. He was still limping, every footstep visibly costing him.
“Are we still having Christmas in July?” Camille switched from watching her grandfather’s retreat, to waiting for Marsha’s answer.
“Kid,” Dru answered, while Marsha stared down at the cardboard cartons full of Christmas cheer and regained her composure. “Nothing’s gonna stop us from rocking your first Dixon holiday. This place with be packed in a few hours with family ready to get their party on.”
Marsha nodded, shoving aside her shock at how much more frequently her husband’s uncharacteristic outbursts were coming.
She carried Camille’s ornament box to the love seat that was positioned cattycornered to the fireplace. Later, the family’s artificial spruce would be assembled there—the way it had been for thirty years now.
“But why Christmas in July?” Camille asked.
Marsha smiled indulgently as she sat.
Their family’s quirky July tradition came with quite a story attached. One that could take the rest of the morning and half the afternoon to tell.
“Because December is too long to wait,” she offered simply, “for a little magic to happen.”
“Even more magic”—Camille plopped down on the love seat’s plump cushions. She pulled the cardboard box into her lap and began looking through the colorful ornaments within—“than my mommy and daddy finally making me a Dixon?”
Marsha’s heart filled. Her granddaughter had only been with them for such a short time. But she’d already brought so much sunshine into their family.
Dru moved the other boxes of ornaments and twinkly tree lights to the fireplace.
Marsha hugged Camille. “You’ve always been a Dixon, sweetheart.”
Just like all the foster kids in her and Joe’s sprawling family would always be Dixons, wherever they came from and wherever they went after they left or aged out of their group home.
“Even when I didn’t know who any of you were?” Camille asked.
“Especially then.” Marsha thought of her son and his new bride’s whirlwind, second-chance romance.
Oliver and Selena had reconnected only a few months ago.
It hadn’t been an easy reunion—seeing each other again for the first time in seven years, after Oliver had made his way back to Chandlerville when he’d heard about Joe’s heart attack. But love had prevailed—and now the forever connection Camille’s parents’ had always felt for each other had deepened even more.
Oliver and his new bride had married two days ago at the county courthouse, with a handful of friends and family beside them as witnesses. Then they’d taken off to enjoy a quick, three-day honeymoon to the mountains.
“Your mommy and daddy,” Marsha assured her granddaughter, “were just waiting for the perfect time to bring you home to us.”
“You mean so I could be here for Christmas this summer? And at Grandpa’s Father of the Year party last month?”
“Exactly.”
Marsha straightened one of her Camille’s perpetually off-center pigtails and pecked a kiss onto her granddaughter’s button nose.
“And now that school’s out,” she said, “Grandpa and I have the whole summer to make up for lost time. Your parents better watch out. When they get home, they’ll have to wrestle your grandpa and me to get you back.”
Camille grinned at the thought of the grownups in her newly settled life fighting over her.
“But we live just two streets over now,” she reminded Marsha. “And I’m still at Grammy Belinda’s next door all the time, ‘cause she babysits me for Mommy and Daddy, too.”
“But if you were over there now, who would help Dru and me pick which ornaments should go on the tree first?”
Sorting through the Dixon family’s overflowing boxes holiday decor had been Marsha’s master plan for keeping Camille occupied until Christmas in July officially began—when the rest of the family returned home in the afternoon.
“Grandpa would,” Camille insisted. “Cause he loves Christmas in July, too, right?”
A crash and a curse from the direction of storage room distracted Marsha from answering.
“Of course he does,” Dru assured her niece.
Except Joe had actually mumbled something at breakfast that morning about canceling this year’s party—a tradition his love for Marsha and their family had dreamed up years ago.
He’d apologized almost as soon as he’d said it.
He’d just been tired and hurting, he’d assured Marsha. He was fine. Everything was fine. They were fine. And they’d have a blast tonight with the kids.
But he was home from work early again, something that had been happening a couple days a week since he’d started back after his bypass surgery. And there was another crash and a fresh curse sounding from the storage room. This one clear enough to widen Camille’s beautiful green eyes until they were as round as an owl’s.
She glanced at Marsha. “Is Grandpa mad?”
“No, sweetie.” Marsha wished anger was all that was ailing her husband.
She wished she could do more to help him than insulating the kids, young and old, from how hard it had become for their father and grandfather to do the things he absolutely loved doing for their family.
Even Christmas in July.
“I think grandpa’s just a little tired,” she explained. “And you saw how much we have in storage. Once he drags our tree in here, everything will be right as rain.”
Dru’s unconvinced stare over Camille’s head confirmed what Marsha had suspected for the last week or so.
Her older children were no longer buying their parents’ assurances. Dru clearly knew that Joe was anything but fine today.
“Grandpa loves Christmas more than all the rest of us put together.” Dru smiled for Camille’s benefit, raising an eyebrow at Marsha.
Camille’s silence begged Marsha to convince her.
“We’ll have a tree up for decorating in no time,” Marsha assured her.
“You’ll see,” Dru added. “There’s a party going on here tonight, and you’re this year’s guest of honor.”
“Yay!” Camille kicked her feet, her excitement returning.
She dipped her hands into the Marsha and Joe’s oldest box of Christmas things.
“Does every kid in the family really have their own ornaments?” she asked. “How long have you been doing Christmas in July?”
“Since forever.” Dru smoothed back the dark curls that passed for Camille’s bangs. “And you’ll have your own ornaments now, too. It’s part of the tradition.”
“What’s this one, Grammy?” Camille picked up a large crush of aging tissue paper. She peeled back the brittle, glitter-flecked layers, slowly revealing the treasure within. “It’s so pretty . . . ”
Marsha smiled at her granddaughter’s awed expression, tearing up a little at the memories.
I want to give you beautiful things like this every day of our lives, Joe had said when he’d given it to her.
“What is it?” Camille held up the fragile creation.
“It’s a hummingbird.” Marsha brushed her fingers over tin ornament’s gilded surface.
Its colors had had faded over the years. But it was just as beautiful as the first day she’d held it.  “Grandpa Joe gave it to me in college.”
“College?”
“That’s where they met,” Dru said. “Actually, your grandpa ran over your Grammy Marsha, her first week on the University of Georgia campus.”
Dru rubbed Marsha’s shoulder, comforting, reassuring, supporting.
Then they both tensed as another frustrated growl erupted on the other side of the house.
“College is where we fell in love,” Marsha said, falling into that place in-between, where the best memories could take you.
Where before and now and forever suddenly felt as if they were all the same. All the good and the bad. The dreams and the disappointments. The setbacks and the triumphs. Everything you’d been and were and ever would become, could bind themselves together sometimes when you were remembering, showing you the story of your life.
She and Joe were maybe facing the toughest setback of their marriage. What if he couldn’t recover from his heart problems the way they needed him to?
Could their love see them and their foster family through even that, the same as it had every other challenge they’d faced?
“Mom?” Dru’s voice pulled Marsha back from her thoughts. “I think it’s time Camille heard your and Dad’s story.”
Marsha smiled at her older daughter, thanking Dru for the welcomed distraction.
Marsha and Joe shared their foster family’s history with each child placed in their home. It was their history, too—something to belong to and trust in and take with them for the rest of their lives. And that same story belonged to Camille now, too.
Marsha couldn’t think of anything she’d enjoy better than indulging in a few minutes of looking back.
“Your grandpa gave me this ornament on the night he proposed to me,” she said. “I’d never seen anything so magical.”
“You met at Christmas?” Camille asked.
Marsha shook her head, realizing she’d have to start at the beginning.
She felt the story tumbling out as she cuddled her granddaughter close and Dru settled in next to them. “Not exactly, sweetheart  . . . ”
***

cobl-final (1)

Christmas on Bellevue Lane
November 2, 2015
Pre-order on Amazon

Can Christmas in July be saved at the Dixon house?

With holiday carols, glittering ornaments and lots of cheer, Marsha and Joe Dixon welcome their new granddaughter to one of their favorite traditions. Marsha’s excited to share memories of her and Joe’s heartwarming love story, to help Camille feel even more a part of the sprawling foster family her grandparents have nurtured for decades.

But Joe’s struggle to recover from his recent heart attack and bypass surgery threatens their fun, and more than just Christmas in July is at stake. If he doesn’t regain his strength and ability to provide financially and emotionally for his family, the Dixon group home might have to close.
With loved ones rallying around and their treasured holiday tradition working its magic, Marsha’s convinced she can talk Joe into embracing the physical therapy he needs.

Will her and the Dixon clan’s Christmas-in-July wish come true?

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2 Responses to “HOLIDAY TREAT: A Christmas on Bellevue Lane EXCERPT!”

  1. denise says:

    wonderful excerpt!

  2. Patricia B. says:

    Thank you for the excerpt. It hit a bit close to home. I look forward to reading the book.

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