BookGiveaway:
April is generously offering 1 paperback signed copy of either MACY or JASMINE to 1 randomly chosen commenter. The winner will be announced here on Friday, July 24th between 5-6 PM EST. To be entered in the Giveaway, please leave your contact information within your comment.
Here's an excerpt from MACY to enjoy:
From MACY by April McGowan
One
They say
there is a time and a place for everything. I could tell by the way Arthur held
his fork, this was neither. It swiveled in his hand, looking more like a
stabbing device than an eating implement. The pieces of salad fell from the
tines onto the booth’s laminate tabletop, splattering it with red Catalina
French salad dressing. As if listening in, the restaurant seemed to go peculiarly
quiet.
He leaned
toward me. Steel gray eyes stared me down. “You’re what?”
“We’re going
to have a baby.” I whispered, certain everyone had turned their attention on
us. Then the busboy dropped a tray of dirty dishes, and a half-eaten portion of
chicken-fried steak hit the big trucker at the bar, and gravy coated the wall.
They no longer cared about two strangers in the back, their lives at a sudden
impasse.
I curled a
strand of red hair around my finger, gripping it tight. My husband’s gaze bore
down on me, and everything around us went still. It reminded me of the time we
stayed over in California during one of their earthquakes. The breeze stopped
and the birds quieted like someone’d tossed a blanket over the whole place.
Then it came on us, shaking me to my core, tossing me from my comfortable seat.
I gripped the
table. Arthur shook his head at me, and disgust curled his lips into a false
smile. “I’m a long-haul trucker. We live in our sleeper cab. We don’t have a
house.” He listed things in a cold, detached way that told me his stress level
had reached an all-time high. I also noticed he left the biggest issue off his
list. He never wanted children. Until the moment I took the pregnancy test,
neither had I.
“Would you
like some herb tea?” My hand shook as I lifted the silver teapot toward him.
His eyes
refocused on me. “Tea?”
I motioned to
the basket of mixed teabags the waitress had left for us. “To calm you down.”
I waited for
him to yell. Maybe take a swing at me. But he didn’t. Instead, Arthur did
something that surprised me. He got up, tossed money on the table, and walked
out. Stunned, I didn’t move. He must have needed time to think. After all, I’d
had a week to process the idea. He’d come back in a while, and we’d figure out
what to do. Arthur could be a hard man, no one knew that better than me. The
baby would change all that.
A picture of
a house nestled in the trees, a garden out back, and maybe a dog to keep us
company while Arthur was out on the road, formed in my mind. I touched my stomach,
daydreaming, until a familiar rumble startled me back to the present. I peered
out the window, tipping to the side to see the parking lot, and saw diesel
smoke bellow out of the chrome stacks.
He was
warming up the truck. I took fast bites of my lunch, not wanting to make him
wait for me any longer, but my stomach rebelled. I’d get a to-go box and take
it with me. And the tea—that’d be just the thing to settle my stomach on the
road. I almost got the waitress’s attention when I heard the engine shift from
idling to engaged. My hand froze mid-air and I watched as if in slow motion.
Our big rig pulled out of the parking lot and past the window where I sat. The
brown cab, splotched with dirt and oil from thousands of miles on the road,
moved across the front parking lot of the restaurant, pulled out, drove to the
light, then turned the corner out of sight. My heart raced, but my legs went
numb.
He’d left.
He’d be back, he had to come back. I read the maps for him. He probably went to
get supplies to let me finish lunch. We were overdue on an oil change—hadn’t he
noticed the shop up the road? I nibbled my food, glancing out the window
between bites, sure he’d come pulling in any minute. Any minute.
A full hour
later, I still sat in the booth. The waitress refilled my hot water pot. “You
okay, honey?"
I started to
say what we all say when a stranger asks such a question. I started to tell her
I was fine. Instead, when I opened my mouth, a sob came out.
“He’s gone,”
I managed to get out and then swallowed hard, realizing a new point of panic.
“I don’t even know where I am.” The smell of fried potatoes and eggs wafted off
the waitress and traipsed over to my nose. My stomach churned.
“I’m sure
he’ll be back.”
I glanced at
her hopeful blue eyes. Her name tag said Donna.
The lines around her smile and age spots on her hands showed her to be in her
mid-fifties. “They all come back.”
“I didn’t
think he’d leave.” I shivered even as others around me shed their jackets.
Maybe I was going into shock.
“Come with
me, sweetie.” She pulled me up from the booth and led me down the hall, past
the kitchen entry—where I held my breath—to a door painted white with a
seventies confetti sparkle. After pulling out a key, she unlocked it, revealing
a long shadowy staircase.
“We’ve got a
small apartment up there. Just a studio.” She paused, her voice softening.
“It’s unoccupied. Go lay down a bit. Life always looks better after a nap.”
At the very
suggestion of a nap, my body went on autopilot. I trudged up the stairwell and
she closed and locked the door behind me. For a moment, I considered if I’d
been voluntarily kidnapped. As I topped the stairs, I found a cozy room with a
kitchenette. In the corner sat a daybed, all made up, as if waiting for me. I
headed toward it, past the love seat and small coffee table, my eyes focused on
the pillow. Everything was clean, dust free, hair free. I lay down and turned
my face into the bedding. As the aroma of baby powder dryer sheets met my nose,
I gave in and cried myself to sleep.
The smell of
coffee woke me. I cracked my eyes and took in my surroundings. It hit me again
that I’d been abandoned, and I buried deeper under the comforter. A bright
light came in through the window sheers as the sun rose. I heard rustling in
the kitchenette and saw Donna’s back.
“What time is
it?” My croaky voice surprised me. I must have cried harder than I thought.
Donna turned
and gave me a soft smile. Her eyes held regret. “Sorry, didn’t mean to wake
you. It’s just a bit after five.”
“Five? In the
morning?” I sat up too fast and the room spun.
Donna rushed
over and kept me from toppling off the bed. “I peeked in on you after closing
last night, and you were sleeping hard. You looked like you needed the rest.”
I’d been
there all night. We’d been married for seven years and not once had I spent the
night away from Arthur. He’d never even let me go home for a visit.
“I’ve got
coffee in the kitchen.”
Autopilot
kicked on, because otherwise I’d be sobbing. “Thanks.” I looked around and saw
a door. “Is that the bathroom?”
“Sure is. You
go clean up—fresh towels inside. Feel free to take your time. You come on down
for breakfast when you feel up to it.” She patted my back and headed out of the
room. Her heels clicked on the stairs as she tromped down. “I’m locking you in,
but you can flip it from the inside. It’s just to keep wanderers out.”
“Thanks,” I
called. Bracing myself against the bed, I got up and waited for the room to
still again. Low blood sugar ran in my family. I remembered hearing my mama complaining
about it when she was pregnant with my sisters and brother. That must be what
was wrong with me. Heading into the bathroom, I found not only fresh towels,
but a bottle of shampoo, soap, packaged toothbrush, and toothpaste. A shiny
clean hairbrush sat on the mirror shelf. And a fresh package of underwear,
amazingly just about my size, lay on the back of the toilet. Tears pooled in my
eyes.
Glancing into
the mirror over the tiny sink, I caught sight of matted red hair and mascara
stains running down my cheeks. I hoped I hadn’t ruined Donna’s pillowcase. In
the shower, I ran my soapy fingers over the tiny hump I imagined on my stomach.
Realistically, the baby couldn’t be showing yet—but something felt different.
Firmer. As I stepped from the shower, emotionally lighter, nausea washed
through me. Before I knew it, I was over the toilet, vomiting bile.
My mother
survived this four times, and toward the end of each one, resentment began to
show. As it was only my third time throwing up, I didn’t feel bitter yet. Maybe
that would come later?
Fully clothed
and cleaned, I felt more human. My toast had gone cold. A real breakfast
sounded good. I headed downstairs, thinking about how I could pay back Donna
for her kindness—and for the breakfast I would eat. My hand protectively
covered my stomach. I needed to figure out what to do next, but I couldn’t get
my brain to engage. I didn’t have any cash on me. I needed to find my bank.
Regret passed over me. I’d worked hard to save my secret money for emergencies.
Being
abandoned qualified.
The
restaurant murmured with early morning customers, sipping coffee from their
mugs in zombie-like trances. I could almost see the light of life begin to
sparkle in their eyes. The aroma of ham and eggs and all things breakfast-like
cozied around me.
“There you
are.” Donna gave me a bright smile and motioned me to a booth. “What sounds
good this morning, sweetie?”
“An omelet,
some hash browns, side of fruit?”
“Coming right
up.” Donna turned to go.
I caught her
arm and motioned her to come closer so I could whisper my shame. “Donna, I
don’t have any money right now.”
“It’s on me.”
She winked.
Again, I was
taken aback. It’d been a long time since I’d met anyone who didn’t want
something for, well, everything. Worries rushed through my head. All of my
things, though few, were with Arthur. I had no clothes. I had no job. I had no
means of getting a job. Reading road maps for the past seven years, and raising
my siblings before that, didn’t qualify me for much of anything. While my schoolmates
were finishing high school and working at the Fresh Freeze, I directed my
husband across the country. My meager savings wouldn’t last long at all.
Donna put the
plate before me. “What’s your name, honey?”
This woman
fed and housed me, and I’d never even introduced myself to her. I blushed.
“Macy Stone.”
“So, Macy,
what are your plans?” Donna tucked her order pad into her apron pocket and sat
down across from me.
Panic
threatened to pop the lid covering my emotions. I had never been on my own. I
thought marrying Arthur would take care of my future and give me the freedom
I’d dreamed of. Bit of a mistake there. “I need a job.”
“Just so
happens, I’m down a waitress. You ever waitressed before?”
I shook my
head.
“I can train
you, but you need to assure me you’re in for the duration. I don’t want you
skipping off to the next place as soon as I get you broke in.”
I almost
laughed. I’d never skipped anywhere. And I had no place to go. “What if Arthur
comes back?” My question was a hollow one.
“If he comes back,
then you can go with him. If you want to.”
My eyes
locked on hers. If I wanted to?
Have you ever
looked at a lion in a zoo habitat too small for it? You’d expect it to pace
back and forth, yell and carry on to be let out. But it just sits there with
all the hope squeezed out of it. The idea that there could be something else
doesn’t enter its mind anymore. It was just waiting. Waiting for the next rain,
for the next meal, for the next time little kids made growling noises at it.
Submission
and (the writer's) Life by April McGowan
When I
started writing I was having some health struggles, but I was managing. Years
later my illness has taken a turn and demands more control over my life than
I'd liked to admit. I've powered through, I've looked past, I've plunged on—but
it wasn't until I looked up that I found peace.
Our
lives can change when we least expect it—illness, tragedy, or loss is never
planned. In those times, it's tempting to grasp for more and more control, but it's
a futile attempt. When you are fighting a chronic illness, it's even more
futile because the energy you could use more effectively elsewhere is spent on
holding fast to something you really should let go of.
My
condition comes with severe and surprise fatigue. I never know how much I'm
going to accomplish in a day. At first, this frustrated me to no end—and it's
still a shock when I'm going along minding my own business and then suddenly I
can't go anywhere except to bed. But as I give more and more of my day over to
the Lord, I find it's easier to accept those moments. Notice I didn't say like those moments, I'm not sure if that
will ever happen, although it's something I hope for.
In the
past two years, there’s been a huge shift in my focus. I get up and pray for
what the Lord might enable me to do rather than what I want to do. This brings great peace when I can't do all I plan to
(which is daily!), because I can rest in God's plans instead of my own. This
submission brings great freedom.
Some
days that includes writing a few hundred words, or several thousand, or none. Sometimes
that means staying still all day or missing out on an event I’d been very
excited to attend. More often than not, though, the Lord enables me to go and
do things I never thought possible. I’m so grateful because I know it’s by His
strength and His power I’m moving at all. I’m carried in the very palm of His mighty
hand—what a blessed place to be.
I've
come to see, though, that I should have been living my life like this all along—ill
or not. That's where He wants all of us. Rather than going our own way, we
should pray in submission for what He might have for us every day, every
moment. It' s our best hope so we don't miss anything He has in store for us
and this, in turn, brings a greater intimacy with our Lord.
Are you
powering through life with your own agenda, longing for a peace that eludes? Or
are you sitting alone feeling useless because of an illness or circumstances
beyond your control? I’d offer up neither are a right place to be. Start your
day out by not starting, but by
sitting still, praying for what He might have for you today. You will be
surprised at where He takes you.
Proverbs
3:5-6 Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own
understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your
paths.
Psalm
37:3-5 Trust in the Lord, and do good; dwell in the land and befriend
faithfulness. Delight yourself in the Lord, and he will give you the desires of
your heart. Commit your way to the Lord; trust in him, and he will act.
April's Ah-hahs To Tweet:
Inspirational fiction author @AprilKMcGowan: What happens when you don’t
accomplish your goals? (Tweet This)
Everyone’s Story: Author @AprilMcGowan on #writing and #ChronicIllness
(Tweet This)
Like #ChristianFiction #Women’sFiciton? Check out @AprilMcGowan’s
#BookGiveaway (Tweet This)
Author's Bio:
April McGowan loves to read and write healing fiction. She and her husband, two children, and her mews, Spookers, live in the beautiful Pacific Northwest. April is a member of Oregon Christian Writers and American Christian Fiction Writers. When she’s not writing, homeschooling her two children, or playing board games, you might find her at her drum kit, imagining she’s on a world tour. Hey, it could happen. April’s next novel, To Hold the Light, is with her agent, David Van Diest, and she’s in progress of writing her first non-fiction title, Things Your Chronically Ill Friend Wishes You Knew.
April McGowan loves to read and write healing fiction. She and her husband, two children, and her mews, Spookers, live in the beautiful Pacific Northwest. April is a member of Oregon Christian Writers and American Christian Fiction Writers. When she’s not writing, homeschooling her two children, or playing board games, you might find her at her drum kit, imagining she’s on a world tour. Hey, it could happen. April’s next novel, To Hold the Light, is with her agent, David Van Diest, and she’s in progress of writing her first non-fiction title, Things Your Chronically Ill Friend Wishes You Knew.
Hi April,
ReplyDeleteSo fun to get acquainted with Macy! And thanks for your encouraging article…take care ad keep up the good work. gkittleson@myomnitel.com
Gail, thanks for visiting! MACY is a must read--I love April's voice in this story.
DeleteEnjoy your weekend.
Thanks for stopping by, Gail!
DeleteA lovely post thank you & I enjoyed the read through.
ReplyDeletemarypres(AT)gmail(DOT)com
It's always a pleasure to see you, Mary!
DeleteNice to meet you, Mary!
DeleteI enjoyed the excerpt of MACY.. I think I've read about this book somewhere else & thought it sounded so good! Thanks for the giveaway :)
ReplyDeletedkstevensne AToutlookD oTCoM
Waving fondly, Deanna! I think you'd enjoy MACY. I have yet to read JASMINE (which April also offers the choice of in her Giveaway) but really want to add it to my TBR pile of delicious reads.
DeleteSo glad you enjoyed reading the excerpt, Deanna. Thanks for commenting!
DeleteCommit your way to the Lord; trust in him, and he will act.
ReplyDeleteThank you for this encouraging article. When things are hard it's so easy to look around and think there's no use, but God will see us through because His plans never fail. If He gives us a job to do He will enable us. Glad I saw this post today. :)
Donna, welcome to Everyone's Story. I'm glad you enjoyed April's uplifting words. But know what? You gave me a boost in spirit just now too. Thanks!
DeleteHope to see you again.
PS, Donna: if you're interested in April's Giveaway, please include your email address in a comment or use the "Contact Me" form on the right-hand sidebar.
DeleteSo grateful His plans for us are above ours, Donna! I often aim too low, when I should just aim for Him and what He wants from me. Jesus reminds us His time is easy and His burden light. Many blessings!
DeleteAwesome opening to your book, April,
ReplyDeleteAnd such wise words from you. Just exactly what I needed to hear today.
Bonnie, welcome to Everyone's Story! So glad you could visit. I'm glad April's words lifted your spirits today.
DeleteHope to see you again.
Thanks, sweet Bonnie! I'm glad it touched you. HUGS.
DeleteThis was so encouraging! Thanks April for sharing. I loved the reminder to pray for what God enables me to do this day, this hour, instead of doing what I want to do or what I feel I ought to do. That removes a load of guilt!
ReplyDeleteKaren, you made it on over! So happy you visited!
DeleteAs April says, really, it's all about trusting in Him… a lesson I need to actively participate and remember each and every day in this otherwise scary world.
Hope to see you again!
It certainly lightens the load of self-imposed expectations....which can totally derail us from the goals God has in mind for us, and be very self-defeating! Many blessings!
DeleteProverbs 3:5-6 are probably some of the first scripture I memorized. And like you it makes me sad that I wait until a problem comes up to depend wholly on the Lord. But as I get older, I'm depending more. Wonderful post and Macy sounds like something I want to read.
ReplyDeleteThanks for visiting this evening, Pat. Thanks for all your visits!
DeletePatricia, that peace that passes all understanding is worth the submission every time! Thanks for stopping by! Many blessings.
DeleteApril thank you for this! You are an amazing author. I'll never forget Jasmine! ~Blessings, Sandi
ReplyDeleteSandi, I am so pleased to see you here! I love when we can all encourage one another and through the years, you've been an encouragement to me! God bless.
DeleteSandi! The admiration is mutual! Hugs! Thanks for posting!
DeleteThanks so much for this post, April. It's perfectly timed for me - just as relevant for someone living with a person with a chronic illness <3
ReplyDeleteOh, Autumn, may He especially bless you and those you love. Thanks for visiting, and for the Tweet.
DeleteI'm so glad, Autumn. Many you feel His presence mightily as you go through your day. We can face anything if we know we're not alone! Prayers and blessings!
DeleteThank you for sharing your heart, April, and to Elaine for
ReplyDeletehosting her. This has encouraged me to worry more about
what God has for me to do and enables me to do rather
than worry about my agenda. This was a pertinent reminder!
Kathy, thanks much for your visit. I so agree with you! April has also helped to put things into a good perspective.
DeleteKathleen, it's helped me tremendously to remember that! That surrender has brought me great peace...as long as I remember!! When I find myself frustrated, then I know I'm off track!
DeleteWhat a situation Macy finds herself in... I look forward to reading more of her story!
ReplyDeletepattymh2000(at)yahoo(dot)com
Thanks for visiting today, Patty. MACY was a wonderful read!
DeleteThanks very much, Patty! I hope you enjoy reading through her journey! Thanks for commenting☺
DeleteIllness is sure a pain in the butt, sometimes literally lol, can go about one's life at your hut, then boom it hits. Sure is the pits. But have to keep on keeping on indeed at every feed.
ReplyDeleteHey, Pat! So glad you swung around down under for a visit with April and me. You're so right about pressing forward.
DeleteHappy to see you again!
Truth! It's not easy to persevere, The Bible verse that connects most personally with me is James 1:2 Count it all Joy. It reminds me that all these trials are for a purpose and can mold and shape me for better if I let them. Not easy to remember in all circumstances, though!
DeleteDealing with this issue for an extended period of time made me sensitive to it. Now I need April's insights to be able to articulate the experience and reach out to others. SandraAllenLovelace@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteNice to see you again, Sandra, though sorry to learn that you've been dealing with health issues. I think each one of us, whether we're the ones who endure a chronic illness or love another who suffers, can gain a good and perhaps heavenly-sent, perspective from April. God bless.
DeleteI'm sorry you've been struggling. It's never easy. I'm so grateful that God never wastes a thing in our lives if we give it over to Him.I pray He can use your story to touch someone else. Hugs.
DeleteDue to an approaching thunderstorm, I'm racing to get my next feature launched, however I'm so sorry this week with my lovely guest, April McGowan is ending. April, I hope you'll come back! You're already in the high Top Ten of my all-time biggest viewer hit features. Yay for you! A blessing for me and my viewers! Thank you.
ReplyDeleteApril, thanks too for your wonderful BookGiveaway. And the winner of April's Giveaway is…
Karen W. Congratulations, Karen. Both April and I will contact you directly in emails.
Blessings to all.
Thanks so much for having me as a guest. I loved getting to know you and reading all the comments and chatting with your readers! You have blessed me greatly!
DeleteThanks for the smile, April.
Delete