Guest
Blog with Author Sarah Ballance
Good
morning my lovelies! I switched things up today with a guest blog. When I
requested an appearance from this author on the blog, I gave her the reins and
allowed her to talk about any subject she wished. I love allowing authors
freedom because you always get some pretty interesting topics sent back. And
this one is interesting. *nods* Who knew pigs could be inspirational?
Ha! I
gotcha with that one didn’t I? Now the curiosity is killing you! So read on and
enjoy some time spent with author: (disclaimer: I in no way take responsibility
for accidentally misspelling Ms. Balance’s name as Word continually keeps
changing her name to Balance. ARGH! However, I will endeavor to switch them all
back!)
**SARAH BALLANCE**
Here is a
little about Ms. Ballance:
Sarah and her husband
of almost fifteen what he calls "long, long" years live on the
mid-Atlantic coast with their six young children, all of whom are perfectly
adorable when they're asleep. She often
jokes that she writes to be around people who will listen to her, but her
characters aren't much better than her kids.
Fortunately, her husband is quite supportive, having generously offered
to help her research "the good parts" . . . and she's never had to ask twice.
**GUEST BLOG**
**Inspiration: Going To
The Hogs??**
Sarah Ballance: Inspiration … Going to the Hogs?
The attached photo is of my 23-month-old daughter,
Lillian, meeting one of our piglets for the first time.
Sometimes inspiration
comes from the strangest places . . . like piglets. Yep, I said piglets.
I've had a recent streak
of blah. Not feeling like my work was where it needed to be, not keeping up
with the house or the kids (forget keeping up—I was just run OVER, wicked-witch
style), just generally not feeling accomplished. I could provide details all
day long, but I think almost everyone has their own version of this story with
which to relate. So suffice to say, I was there.
Then, a couple of days
ago our sow had piglets. Wee little things, about the length and diameter of my
forearm, and smaller than their mama's foot. There were 11 of them, some all
pink, a couple sporting brown eye patches, and one spotted like a Dalmatian. I
don't know if you've ever had the opportunity to see brand new piglets, but
it's kind of hard not to smile when they wobble to their little piggy feet for
the first time. Their little snouts are as cute as a button, and those little curly
tails wag while they nurse. In a word, ADORABLE.
In another word, inspiration.
Uh, say what? Inspiration
in pigs? Okay, not so much in the muck and afterbirth, but in LIFE. In the
renewal and the tenacity of a creature so tiny, minutes old, determined to get
to mama's good stuff. In the realization that the world is so much bigger than
the next scene—in my case, usually one refusing to hit the page with any degree
whatsoever of EASE. Of realizing—as I so often escape the rigors of daily life
within the pixels of my computer screen—that life is *so* much more than my
work-in-progress, or that story I'm plotting (which, more often than not, I'm
convinced is actually plotting against me).
That writing is bringing
life to the page, not finding one there. That in the end, the beauty is in the
little things.
Especially when they
smell like bacon.
Note: Piglets don't actually smell like bacon. Not
even when they're under the heat lamp.
Okay, I’m a believer. I can totally see how pigs .. errr …
piglets rather, could be inspirational. One of those affirmations that life is
so much more than just what we get caught up in. *nods* So how about some info
on Ms. Ballance’s book? Hmmm???? Yep. I though so! Here you go!
**TIDE OF LIES**
A devastating secret. A
shocking betrayal. A deadly obsession.
Haunted by three
unsolved murders, Detective Holden Whitlow is stunned when his cold case takes
a heated turn. Julia Cohen, his ex-lover, is back in town, and in the face of a
brutal attack she's ready to run. No matter how tightly she holds her secrets,
for Holden, turning away from the woman he's spent a decade trying to forget
isn't any more an option than walking away from his job . . .even when it
threatens to cost Julia her life.
Julia is still reeling
from a past she can't bear to face. When she becomes the target of a killer,
fate throws her back into Holden's arms, but she's yet to recover from a truth
that has stripped her of everything—and everyone—she loves. Will she tell him
the secret that will destroy him, or will her lie destroy them both?
Buy
Links: Noble
Romance / Amazon / Barnes & Noble
**EXCERPT**
(ADULT
CONTENT)
Another one.
Holden Whitlow could have
done without that grim utterance from his sergeant re-entering his life. He
exhaled, wishing the hot, summer sun would dissolve some of the unease weighing
him down. But the scorching rays cutting through the windshield only left him
hot and sticky, prompting his sunglasses to slide down his nose and his shirt
to plaster against his back. The discomfort, however, didn't best the miserable
prospect of walking onto a crime scene and confronting the fourth murder victim
of his short career.
Two years ago, a stalker
turned murderer and took three local women as victims. The cases remained
unsolved. Holden had been sopping wet behind the ears at the time, but his
inexperience landed him a top-notch partner in Greg Martin, the lead detective
who since retired. Although the whole Barrier Shoals PD had, at some point,
worked the stalker case—Martin even checking in from his living room—guilt led
Holden to carry the weight of the unsolved murders solo. It dug deep under his
skin, and whether or not his cold case had just been set ablaze, the heat was
on.
He wasn't a math guy, but
oh-for-four rang in his ears like nails on a chalkboard.
This murderer wouldn't
get away.
Spying the convenience
store marking the crime scene, Holden steered his Crown Vic into the lot and
parked on the far edge, intending to close the last sixty feet on foot. There
was no reason to hurry or risk driving over evidence. The girl was dead.
Holden's partner had beat
him there, a faux pas the older detective would never let Holden live down.
Detective John "Bear" Barrett surveyed the surroundings, fingers
splayed on his hips, one hand in the vicinity of his badge and the other in close
quarters with a Glock.
"You're late,"
he said, not bothering to look up as Holden neared.
Holden snorted. "I
thought you were on vacation."
"Was. I came back
for the show."
"I'm sure our vic
appreciates your dedication to the cause," Holden said, not feeling the
edge of his own humor. He cast a cursory glance around the defunct Quik-Stop.
Dented gas pumps stretched in a forlorn line, islands in a sea of broken glass.
Thin lines of grass snaked over the lot, marking cracks in the pavement. Holden
smelled the stench of abandonment, felt the pulse of death. "Where's the
body?"
"Hospital."
Holden consulted his
phone for the time. A quarter hour had passed since the call. A couple of techs
had their noses to the pavement, plucking at the scattered, nearly microscopic
debris of the abandoned lot with tweezers, but the coroner, David Frankel, was
nowhere in sight. Short of disavowing protocol and shoving the body in his
trunk, there was no way he could clear a scene in fifteen minutes. "The
morgue? Already?"
Bear knelt, balancing on
the balls of his feet, and cocked his head, studying the ground. Shifting his
sunglasses away from his eyes, he raised an arm and motioned over a young woman
from forensics.
"Make sure you catch
this trail," he said, pointing first to his feet, then in a line toward
the building. Without waiting for her response, he righted himself and returned
the shades to his nose. "I said hospital, Whitlow. Not morgue. Considering
the victim is still breathing—but barely—I don't think she'd take kindly to a
tour of the basement."
"She's alive?"
Bear paced the twenty
feet to the painted brick corner of the store. A metal door on the side hung
slightly ajar, the word "JON" displayed with crooked, stuck-on
letters. He nudged open the door wider with his foot. Seconds later, his head
jerked to the side as if the stench had reached out and slapped him.
Laughing, Holden edged
closer. "I could have told you not to breathe, Detective."
He pulled a penlight from
his pocket and directed it inside the stall, pressing his mouth in a thin line
to suppress his gag reflex. Questionable patches in various shades of brown
smeared the floors, and the toilet held what appeared to be a solid mass of
waste he didn't care to investigate. His quick sweep of the room came to an
abrupt end at the sink, where dark crimson marred the already stained
porcelain.
"You thinking what
I'm thinking?" Holden asked, glancing to Bear, who had joined him in the
doorway.
"Looks like blood to
me." Bear shook his head. "I'd sure hate to be the guy sopping up DNA
out of that shit hole."
Holden scratched the back
of his neck, surveying the handful of officers and forensic techs scattered
over the scene. "I can't imagine why anyone would want to go in there,
criminal or otherwise."
That particular restroom
had never been golden. When he was at the tender, scheming age of fourteen, he
and his buddy, Bridger Jansen, used to buy cigarettes from an elderly—and half
blind—cashier and hide in the bathroom to smoke. Fully functioning, it hadn't
smelled much better than it did now.
Bear covered his nose and
mouth with his forearm.
"Well, someone
wanted in, and recently," he said, his voice muffled. "See a rookie
due for a hazing?"
With a rueful glance
through the open doorway, Holden shook his head. "That's why I don't work
forensics."
"Yeah," Bear
said, walking away from the building. "Someone else does the grunt work,
and we get the glory. Cushy job, huh?"
Glory. Not much of that
in three unsolved murders. Holden joined Bear by the curb where he stood—his
foot propped on the concrete—and shook off a squirrely sense of déjà vu. No.
This one was different. "She's alive, you say?"
"Catch up, Whitlow.
Unconscious when they found her, but breathing. Who told you she was
dead?"
Holden mentally wheeled
back through the phone call from his sergeant. He hadn't specifically said the
woman was dead, but the implication had been there. Another one.
"The victim, where
was she?" Only a few rushed footprints disturbed the grime and . . . stuff
on the bathroom floor. The victim couldn't have been there in a state of
failing consciousness, which begged three questions: Where had the blood come
from? Whose blood was in the bathroom . . . and how did it get there?
Pointing to a cluster of
uniforms, Bear said, "Victim was balled up over there on the pavement. Kid
in the jeans called it in. Said he thought he saw her breathing but was afraid
to get too close. Didn't want the breeze blowing his DNA on her or
something."
Holden followed Bear's
gesture, pegging the kid at the other end of it for about fifteen. He was tall
and scrawny, with the height of a man but none of the bulk. Head down and sans
his shoes, he toed the end of a skateboard, causing it to clack against the
pavement. Long, blond bangs obscured his face. "Did he see anything?"
"A lump out of the
corner of his eye. He was cruising down the sidewalk when he noticed her. He
came over to investigate. When he realized the object was human, he freaked and
dialed 9-1-1 from his cell phone. Or that's his story, anyway."
Holden's jaw clenched. He
didn't like getting his information secondhand. Bear had a good eight years of
police experience over him, though, and his work was meticulous. Whatever
information he had would be good. "You don't believe him?"
"It's the scene of
the crime, Whitlow. I don't believe anyone yet."
Holden set his jaw.
"Do you have a reason—?"
Bear grinned, and then
leaned closer. "Between you and me, he's about to piss himself. Did I
mention the kid was bleeding? Nice little gash on his hand. I bet my badge that
blood in the bathroom is his."
"Yeah," Holden
grumbled. "Empty wager. You just like toying with me."
"I'm a high stakes
man." Bear grinned and cocked his head toward the restroom. "What do
you want to believe he stepped in something?"
That would certainly
explain why the boy was standing there in his socks. Nothing to ruin an
afternoon like having your shoes hijacked as evidence. Holden tried to imagine
how that excuse would have flown with his own mother, fast deciding it wouldn't.
He hoped the kid was as innocent as he looked. Holden turned to Bear.
"Hey, how did you get here so fast? You're making me look bad."
"Eh. My wife dragged
me to the gallery around the corner for some watercolor exhibit. I drew the
line at an hour-long session on interpretation, so she cut me loose to grab
some coffee. I was right across the street when the call came." He held up
a paper cup in mock salute.
Holden hadn't even
noticed Bear's car was absent. Some detective. "I don't guess you saw
anything?"
"Nope, not a thing.
Everything was quiet until the sirens started blaring. I got here about the
time the ambulance did. Cramer was the first uniform on the scene, but not by
much. I watched him pull in. It's pretty quiet around here—especially for a Saturday
afternoon."
That it was, especially
for tourist season. A quaint resort town alongside the Atlantic
Ocean, Barrier Shoals usually hosted tourists from May through
September, and this morning shouldn't have been an exception. But other than a
small crowd drawn by the police presence, the lonely corner now felt . . .
dead.
Holden winced at the
thought.
Bear crossed his arms and
fixed his sunglass-covered stare on Holden. "You've still got your head in
your ass over those murders a few years back."
"No . . .
yeah." Holden blew a sharp breath and planted his hands on his head.
"Hell, Barrett, I don't know. It's hard sitting on a case you never
solved. The guilt doesn’t go away just because you close the file."
"Wouldn't know about
that. My closure rate is pristine."
Holden rolled his eyes,
dropping his hands to his hips. "If you're so smart, work the cold case.
You find the guy."
"In due time,
partner. We've got a hot one, so how about we stick to the living victims for
now?" Bear's cell phone chirped. He consulted the screen, and then held up
a finger signaling he needed a minute. Lifting the device to his ear, he said,
"Barrett."
Turning to allow Bear a
modicum of privacy, Holden rolled his shoulders and cocked his head, popping
his neck. He was off his game, unable to shake the discord that arrived on the
heels of the initial call. Another one. Clearly, Holden wasn't the only one
haunted by the past. His sergeant's tone had carried the same wariness now
lumped in Holden's chest. The question was, why?
What was it about this
call that had set off eerie alarm bells in both their minds? The vic wasn't
dead. Nothing about this scene seemed remotely connected to the others—and yet
. . . Barrier Shoals was a small town. Most of the crime he handled was the
minor break-ins and purse snatchings that seemed to plague the tourist season.
A murder. An assault. These were rare. Rare enough to raise the sergeant's
hackles. And after all the dead ends he'd been finding lately, Holden was on
edge, as well.
Behind him, Bear cleared
his throat. "You want to go talk to the vic? I can handle things
here."
Holden turned, looking at
Bear in surprise. "Me? It's not like you to give up a bedside encounter
with a woman."
Bear dropped his cell
phone in his pocket and shrugged, his self-proclaimed lady-killing grin in a
lazy sprawl across his face. "You have a point there, but I'm not into
sloppy seconds."
The dig worked. Holden
froze. "What's that supposed to mean?"
"You got me,
Whitlow, but our vic is awake. Seems the lovely Julia Cohen is asking for you
by name."
So what
do you think? Leave a comment and let me know. And if you like what you read,
use the buy links above and get a copy of your own! Thanks for spending some
time with me today and learning more about author Sara Balance.
Until next time …
HAPPY READING!!!
LOL! I have to admit, I've misspelled my own name before thanks to autocorrect. *grins* Thank you so very much for having me. This was a fun visit, and I can't get tired of that picture. ;c)
ReplyDeleteMs. Ballance ~
DeleteYou are more than welcome! I enjoyed the post very much and that photo is too cute for words! And auto-correct? Let's just say that sometimes ... *frowns* not so helpful.
Thanks so much for spending some time with us today!
~K