Monday, July 22, 2019

Lessons from Wabbaseka @Liza0Connor


(Banner)
Lessons from Wabbaseka
By Liza O’Connor
Liza’s real memories of Wabbaseka
When I was a young girl (6-7 years old, I think) I recall my uncle worked in a dark but soothing store, that sold most anything you could ask for. Clothes, tools, snacks. It was rather like a Woolworth store.  (I think he was the bookkeeper.) At the time he and my aunt lived in an apartment on the second floor of the building.
The next time I visited them, they had moved to a one-story Victorian house with a porch and a swing. They spent the rest of their lives there until the minister wrongly convinced them to go into a nursing home.
Here’s a pic of my aunt & uncles actual house.
(House Pic here)

They went to a nursing home about six years ago, and died soon after, so the place is a bit overgrown now and it’s going to be torn down. I got this 2015 pic off the internet.

(cover)

Blurb
When Anna Baker is fired from her New York job, she accepts her aunt and uncle’s offer to come live with them in the little town of Wabbaseka, Arkansas. She discovers a house in dire need of repairs and her relatives in need of proper care. Under the misconception that being unemployed means she has no money, the local sheriff gets involved in her life, trying to determine how she can afford the building materials to fix up the house. Her cousin, Dewayne, appears and wants her evicted, and the FBI thinks she’s involved in a money-laundering scheme. While Anna doesn’t find the peace and quiet she seeks, she may find love…

Excerpt
Bad habits of the Yankee woman
Anna knelt and hugged the blonde cherub. “How’s my best friend?”
“I get to stay the whole day with you. We’re going to have so much fun! Daddy says so.”
Anna looked up at Jeremy in surprise. So far he had been less than enthusiastic with her “odd yankee ways”.
He ran a hand through his dark brown unruly hair, as his seductive brown eyes met hers. “I said she was staying the day. She added the part about fun on her own.”
Yep. No change of attitude there. She refocused on Claire. “Well, you are absolutely correct. We are going to have a whole bunch of fun today.”
“Are we going to help Daddy carpentry?”
“Nope. We’re going to do our own project.”
“What project?” Jeremy demanded, as his brow furrowed.
Anna took a great deal of pleasure from his look of worry. She picked Claire up into her arms. “You’ll have to wait until this afternoon to find out.”
Claire clapped her hands in reply.
“You aren’t taking my daughter anywhere until I know.”
God. She’d never met such a chauvinistic control freak in her life. “Don’t worry, Claire will be perfectly safe.”
***
Jeremy worried as he made his way up into the attic. God knows what that crazy woman had planned for the day. As he worked, he mentally listed all her annoying qualities, and it was an impressive list. She cursed like a man. She dressed like a man. She never fixed her hair or tried to pretty herself up. She just didn’t give a rat’s ass what people thought of her. She was rude, much too forthright, and her accent grated his nerves. However, she did pay well, and her smile—when she smiled—was genuine. There was nothing fake about her. Her desire to do things on her own was annoying as hell, yet she’d been very helpful. In fact, he missed her assistance more than he expected. She was a damned good table saw cutter.
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