Spotlight: Flawless Foundations by Lauren Helms

Born from money, Levi was destined to take over the family business. Emmy has always had a crush on her bestie’s big brother, but she hadn’t planned on shaking things up. When a kiss turns into more and a secret is being kept, can they build flawless foundations? Readers will fall in love with this best friend sibling romance from Lauren Helms. The 425 Madison series is back with season two and FLAWLESS FOUNDATIONS is now live!

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Levi

It's no secret I was born from money. And I'm destined to take over the family business, King Cosmetics when my father retires.

At least that was the plan. 

Until my father decided to impose some stupid rule about being married before I take the reigns. Everything I've worked for hangs in the balance and the future of the company is in jeopardy without a King behind the controls.  

I never considered Becca part of the plan for taking over, but when one kiss leads to so much more, I can't help but wonder if she's the answer to my problem.

Becca

There are two things I love - my beauty blog and Levi King. 

Coming from the same social circle has given me ample opportunity to crush on the next generation of King Cosmetics, but he made it clear a long time ago that I would never be anything more than "like family" to him.

Feeling the need for some serious changes in my life, I start shaking things up. 

It wasn't part of my plan to kiss Levi, but one kiss could never be enough. When that kiss turns into a relationship and I find out that Levi's been keeping a secret, I begin to question if our love affair was too good to be true.

Looks like we're about to find out if we can truly build flawless foundations for the rest of our lives. After all 425 Madison is the perfect place to fall in love.

Excerpt 

copyright @ Lauren Helms 2020

"Em, is there anything at Envirogal open? I don't know, maybe in research and development?

Or even the finance department? Maybe it's time to put my degrees to use?"

She pops out her bottom lip. "I really don't think we have any openings that would fit what you're looking for or would enjoy. But I will definitely talk to HR on Monday." I deflate a little at her response. Damn it. She was a great resource in the field I would want to work in since I clearly have to work.

"Oh, you should talk to Levi. King Cos is always hiring. They are just so much bigger than Envirogal. I'm sure he'd be able to find you a great job!" She's all excited about the prospect, she's also completely unaware of my distaste for her brother, Levi King.

Well, if she is aware, she does a great job of ignoring it. Just the thought of her tall, slender, dark-haired, brown-eyed brother makes me twitchy. Then, of course, my next thought goes to the fact that he now lives just down the hall. Which means at any time, he could just show up. Don't get me wrong, I'm happy that Emmy's relationship with her brother is stronger than ever. She deserves it since she has some of the worst parents, but I was as happy as a clam not seeing Levi on a regular basis.

I've known Levi King since I was a freckle-faced, braces-wearing preteen. We've always gotten along but were never friends. With him being two years older than us and seeing him being a nice big brother to Emmy, instead of an asshole like a lot of the other brothers in our social circle, I had it bad. My crush on him grew pretty quickly way back then. Unfortunately for me, that crush never really faded, but instead grew as the years went by. That is, until college.

It all ended one night in my Sophomore year. Emmy and I visited him at Harvard one weekend. He was a senior and surprisingly welcomed a visit from his sister. He took us out with a few of his friends to their local hang out and, well, let's just say I had a lot to drink. I decided with my liquid courage that I'd flirt a little. He flirted back, to my surprise and extreme excitement. Toward the end of the night, I thought I was actually getting somewhere. So, when I finally kissed him, I was in heaven. Until he pushed me away and told me I was drunk, and he'd never take advantage of a woman under the influence. Okay, so I can commend that. But drunk me just kept pushing until he delivered his final blow. "Becca, you're like a sister to me, nothing can ever happen between us."

Ouch. You know what's worse than being friend-zoned? Sister-zoned.

Only on Amazon + Read for FREE on Kindle Unlimited 

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About Lauren 

Lauren Helms has forever been an avid reader from the beginning. After starting a book review website, that catapulted her fully into the book world, she knew that something was missing. Lauren decided to take the plunge and write her first novel. While working for a video game strategy guide publisher, she decided to mix what she knew best--video games and romance. She decided to take the plunge and joined NaNoWrimo and a month later, she had her first draft. 

Lauren Helms has forever been an avid reader from the beginning. After starting a book review website, that catapulted her fully into the book world, she knew that something was missing. Lauren decided to take the plunge and write her first novel. While working for a video game strategy guide publisher, she decided to mix what she knew best--video games and romance. She decided to take the plunge and joined NaNoWrimo and a month later, she had her first draft. 

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Spotlight: The Plan by Whitney Dineen

The Plan
Whitney Dineen
(The Creek Water Series #3)
Publication date: March 10th 2020
Genres: Adult, Comedy, Contemporary, Romance

Bead shop owner Amelia Frothingham has been keeping a secret from everyone she knows.

She pretends to be the ultimate care-free bohemian chick, but the truth is, she’s the world’s biggest control freak. Much to the delight of her Southern family, Amelia’s life appears to be smooth sailing. That is, until bad boy rockstar Huck Wiley mysteriously blows into town like a spring tornado.

Like every other woman under eighty with a pulse, Amelia’s intrigued. So when Huck starts showing up in her shop with flirtation in mind, she finds herself getting sucked into the rock god vortex. But her previous attempts at long-distance love have always ended on a sour note, so Amelia has vowed never to repeat the experience.

What Amelia doesn’t know is that Huck has a secret of his own, and he has no intention of returning to Los Angeles before he’s good and ready.

Will Huck stay in town, scattering the beads Amelia has finally gotten sorted? Or will he head back to his glamorous life and take her last chance at spontaneity and love along with him?

Find out in this deliciously funny romcom about love and life in Creek Water, Missouri!

Goodreads / Amazon

EXCERPT:

By the time three thirty rolls around, I haven’t had a customer in over an hour, so I decide to run upstairs and make a cup of tea. Just as I’m about to turn on the television while I wait for the water to boil, the bell over the shop door rings. Note to business owners, the ticket to more foot traffic is leaving the store in pursuit of tea. I might need to write a book. I could call it “If You Make Tea, They Will Come.”

I turn off the pot and run downstairs to see who my customer is. When I hit the bottom step, I have a clear view of a person standing next to my brightly painted apothecary drawer full of carnelian beads. I’m either in the throes of a major hallucination or dreams really do come true. Huck Wiley, or someone who looks enough like him to be his identical twin, is standing under one of the three beaded chandeliers hanging from the ceiling above my workstation. He’s looking at the necklace I was just working on.

He’s wearing jeans so faded and torn they look like they’re ready for the rag bin, yet I’m willing to bet he spent more on them than most people spend on ten pairs. The rock god is sporting a vintage U2 t-shirt and a black leather jacket. I can’t see what his shoes look like because there’s a display case blocking my view, but I’d put money on biker boots.

The floorboards creak as I step forward. My disbelieving eyes focus like a thirsty wanderer lost in the desert having just spotted a distant source of water. Whoever he is, he turns and looks right at me. His smile is so bright I may have gasped out loud in response. Seven more steps land me directly in front of him.

“Can I help you?” My tone is prim, reminiscent of a school librarian daring a student to try to check out a book before paying his overdue fine.

“Hey there,” he croons in that voice, the one I know so well from having spent hours listening to his music. My mouth hangs open like I’m a drooling idiot, but I can’t seem to close it. “I heard you gave beading classes and I was wondering if you have a special session for kids.”

I temporarily forget that he and I speak the same language. Did he just ask me about beading classes? I must be experiencing a particularly vivid fantasy. Rock star Huck Wiley can’t possibly be a closet beader, can he? Wait, he said “for kids” … Maybe I fell asleep when I went upstairs to make tea and this dream is making up for last night’s ball and chain fiasco. If so, it’s a good one.

The vision in front of me releases an easy laugh, a real laugh. Huck Wiley is probably used to odd reactions from strange women, and let me say, I’m doing my darndest to behave strangely. “Would you tell me when those classes are?” he persists.

Forcing myself to behave as normally as possible, I robotically tell him, “I have one on Wednesday and Thursday right after school, so four o’clock. They last for an hour and the price of the class includes the materials for one bracelet. It usually takes four classes to complete a project.” I don’t mean to brag, but my acting skills have gone untapped until now and I managed to get that whole sentence out without tripping over my tongue.

He nods. “Would you be available for a private lesson during the morning sometime?”

I shrug awkwardly like I’m having some kind of seizure. “For now, or during the summer?” What kid isn’t at school during school hours now?

“My daughter will be doing online school and I’d like for her to have a break during the day. You know, other kids get recess and lunch, I’d like for Maggie to get out and about.”

My jaw drops wide open. My earlier attempts at appearing normal have failed me. I’m back to feeling like I’m in a science fiction television show and I’ve just leaped out of my body. It’s like I’m watching me have this conversation with the biggest rock star of our time from the ceiling. The part of me that’s escaped its confines wants to shout down to the rest of me, “Close your mouth, girl!” But I can’t, so I don’t.

Instead, I say, “I’m sorry, but are you Huck Wiley?”

“I am.”

“Why are you here?” I demand. “Don’t you live in Los Angeles or something?”

“Or something,” he answers evasively. Before he can say anything else, I reach across the counter and touch the man’s face. His slightly stubbly beard scratches at my fingertips and then I swear I don’t know what comes over me, but I pinch him.

He jumps back and releases a short bark of surprise, assuring me he’s not some figment I’ve conjured. “I’m so sorry,” I say, quickly regaining my senses. “I thought maybe I was dreaming you up or something.”

“I think you’re supposed to pinch yourself when you think you’re dreaming,” he says, looking at me like I might be an escaped mental patient.

Author Bio:

Whitney loves to laugh, play with her kids, bake, and eat french fries -- not always in that order.

Whitney is a multi-award-winning author of romcoms, non-fiction humor, and middle reader fiction. Basically, she writes whatever the voices in her head tell her to.

She lives in the beautiful Pacific Northwest with her husband, Jimmy, where they raise children, chickens, and organic vegetables.

Gold Medal winner at the International Readers' Favorite Awards, 2017.

Silver medal winner at the International Readers' Favorite Awards, 2015, 2016.

Finalist RONE Awards, 2016.

Finalist at the IRFA 2016, 2017.

Finalist at the Book Excellence Awards, 2017

Finalist Top Shelf Indie Book Awards, 2017

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Spotlight: I Hate You Fuller James by Kelly Anne Blount

I hate you, Fuller James.

I hate your floppy hair and your lopsided grin and those laughing blue eyes that always seem to be laughing at me.

I hate that you’re the most popular guy in school and I’m still the girl who sneezed and spit out her retainer on someone at a middle school dance. It’s just such a cliché.

I hate that I’m being forced to tutor you in English and keep it a secret from everyone. Because otherwise it might put our basketball team’s chances at winning State in jeopardy, and even though I hate you, I love basketball.

I hate that it seems like you’re keeping a secret from me…and that the more time we spend together, the less I feel like I’m on solid ground. Because I’m starting to realize there’s so much more to you than meets the eye. Underneath it all, you’re real.

But what I hate most is that I really don’t hate you at all.

Excerpt

“How was school today, honey?” Mom passed me a large bowl of pasta. 

“Good.” I scooped several heaping servings onto my plate, burying the blue flower design in the center. 

My little brother giggled from across the table, his light brown eyes flashing with interest. He took after our mom in the looks department, and I took after my dad. 

Clearing his throat, Dad caught Mom’s gaze. “Hudson, can you do us a favor and grab the pitcher of lemonade from the refrigerator?” 

He scrunched up his nose and grinned. “You’re in so much trouble.” 

“Hudson,” Mom said in a firm voice. “Lemonade, now.” 

Getting off his chair, his little feet hit the floor. “I know. I know. I’ll take my time.” 

As soon as he disappeared around the corner, Mom and Dad turned toward me. 

“Fuller, how could you be doing so poorly in AP Literature class? You’ve never failed a class before!” Mom’s eyes were wide and her brow furrowed. 

Of course Principal Davis would let them know... It 

couldn’t have been a complete surprise to them. They’d been on me when my grade dropped from a B to a C and again when it went from C to a D, but I’d promised to bring it up. A promise, it turns out, that I couldn’t keep. 

“I—I—” Unable to come up with an excuse, I let my head fall. The homemade bunny salt-and-pepper shakers in the middle of the wooden table didn’t offer any brilliant answers, so I remained quiet. 

“I don’t want to hear excuses. This is your only AP class.” My dad frowned. “Principal Davis told us that Coach’s niece will be tutoring you until you’ve raised your grade back up.” 

“Yes, sir.” I struggled to get the words out. Not only were my parents upset with me, but I’d made a terrible bet that could end up hurting someone who didn’t deserve it. 

“We want a daily report. Details of what you covered in class, what you did in your tutoring session, and a rundown of your homework.” Dad crossed his arms. He looked at me like Coach had before I left practice. 

Shoulders drooping, I replied. “Yes, sir.”“You need to set a better example for your little brother.” Mom’s words stung. She was right.“Yes, ma’am.”Hudson walked back into the room with a glass pitcher 

balanced in between his small hands. “Are you done being disappointed in Fuller?” He pressed his lips together, trying to suppress a grin. 

“Your brother is going to do much better in school,” Mom said, shooting me a look that could stop a freight train in its tracks. “Isn’t that right, Fuller?” 

“Yes, ma’am.” 

Buy on Amazon | Barnes and Noble

About the Author

USA Today Bestselling author and Wattpad Star Kelly Anne Blount has more than seventy-three-thousand followers on social media. Her Wattpad stories have been read more than twenty-million times. She’s contributed to Tap, Wattpad’s new app for chat-style stories, where her work has been “tapped” more than fifty-million times. She is a writer and reviewer for SpoilerTV, which has allowed her to develop an incredible network of film and TV stars.

Two of her Wattpad works, including Captured (seventeen-million reads), have been optioned for film by Komixx Entertainment, and she is regularly invited to present seminars about social media at author events.

Stop by any of Kelly’s social-media platforms (@KellyAnneBlount) and stay tuned to this website for announcements and information about upcoming releases and events

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Spotlight: A Season to Love by Rebecca Heflin

Kristen McKay and Tyler Kincaide have a past—one that has left her with a bone-deep animosity for him. And a secret. After seventeen years away, Tyler has returned to his hometown of Northridge, complicating Kristen’s life and dredging up conflicting emotions she’d rather not confront: the shame of that night so many years ago, coupled with the confounding and unwelcome physical attraction she has for him; the desire to keep her secret and the guilt over doing just that. For his part, Tyler tries to renew his once-casual friendship with Kristen, but is greeted with open hostility for his efforts. He can’t understand why she feels about him the way he feels about Brussels sprouts and kale—intense loathing. What did he do that was so unforgivable? And what can he do to make her view him with less distaste than she would gum on the bottom of her shoe? When they’re roped into working on a project together for the town’s Economic Development Council, there is no denying their chemistry. The heat between them grows into something more than sexual attraction, leaving Kristen no other alternative. She must confess her secret, even though she knows it will tear them apart. In an ironic twist, she finds she must seek forgiveness from the very man she swore never to forgive.

Buy on Amazon | Barnes and Noble

About the Author

Rebecca Heflin is a bestselling, award-winning author who has dreamed of writing romantic fiction since she was fifteen and her older sister sneaked a copy of Kathleen Woodiwiss' Shanna to her and told her to read it. Rebecca writes women's fiction and contemporary romance. When not passionately pursuing her dream, Rebecca is busy with her day-job at a large state university.

Rebecca is a member of Romance Writers of America (RWA), Florida Romance Writers, and Florida Writers Association. She and her mountain-climbing husband live at sea level in sunny Florida.

Connect:

Website: http://www.rebeccaheflin.com

Twitter: https://twitter.com/RebeccaHeflin

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RebeccaHeflinBooks/

Promo Link: https://bookbuzz.net/blog/contemporary-romance-a-season-to-love/

Cover Reveal: Can't Fight This Feeling by Claire Hastings

Releasing May 4th, 2020

From debut author, Claire Hastings, comes a fresh, fun, and unputdownable romance where having a crush on your best friend isn't the biggest secret at the Indigo Royal! 

For as long as Kyle Egan can remember, he has wanted only one thing: to run his own boat charter company. Not that he has much to complain about, as the lead charter boat captain at the Indigo Royal Resort in St. Thomas USVI. He gets to spend his days out on the water, never has to wear a tie, and works alongside his best friend, Drea Miller, who happens to be the only other thing he wants.

Drea Miller has been crushing on her best friend Kyle since the moment she saw him five years ago. Unfortunately, she is fully aware that he doesn’t see her as more than a friend— oh, and the niece of his bosses. Working for the family-owned resort with her three annoyingly overprotective uncles has always been what she wanted, but lately she’s started to wonder what else life might hold. If she can't have the guy she wants, maybe it’s time that she makes another dream a reality.

When an encounter with a guest brings out the truth, Kyle and Drea are left trying to navigate their feelings, but can their new love survive a revelation they never saw coming?

Pre-Order: 

Amazon US: https://amzn.to/39CghnB

Amazon UK: https://amzn.to/331WGus 

Amazon CA: https://amzn.to/2VZpUJ2 

Amazon AU: https://amzn.to/336cdJu 

Add to Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/51982979-can-t-fight-this-feeling

About Claire

Claire Hastings is a walking, talking awkward moment. She loves Diet Coke, gummi bears, the beach, and books (obvs). When not reading she can usually be found hanging with friends at a soccer match or grabbing food (although she probably still has a book in her purse). She and her husband Drew live in Atlanta with their fur-child Denali.

Sign Up for Claire’s Newsletter for Release Announcement: https://mailchi.mp/38bcc614213e/clairehnl 

Follow Claire:

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/clairehastings_author/ 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/clairehastingsauthor/ 

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Claire-Hastings/e/B0859H3Z2M 

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/20093302.Claire_Hastings

Spotlight: The Road to Delano by John DeSimone

A high school senior, Jack Duncan dreams of playing college baseball and leaving the political turmoil of the agricultural town Delano behind. Ever since his father, a grape grower, died ten years earlier, he’s suspected that his mother has been hiding the truth from him about the suspicious circumstances surrounding the death. With his family’s property on the verge of a tax sale, Jack drives an old combine into town to sell it. On the road, an old friend of his father shows up with evidence that Jack’s father was murdered. Armed with this new information, Jack embarks on a mission to discover the entire truth, not just about his father but the corruption endemic in the Central Valley. When Jack’s girlfriend warns him not to do anything to jeopardize their post-graduation plans and refuses to help him, Jack turns to his best friend, Adrian, the son of a boycotting fieldworker who works closely with Cesar Chavez. The boys’ dangerous plan to rescue the Duncan family farm leaves Adrian in a catastrophic situation, and Jack must step up to the plate and rescue his family and his friend before he can make his escape from Delano. The Road to Delano is the path Jack and Adrian must take to find their strength, their duty, their destiny.

Excerpt

Chapter 6

Ash Wednesday

M

onday at lunch, Jack and Ella settled on the grassy school quad. The morning haze, a gray dullness, hung over them. Ella in a long skirt and T-shirt printed with her favorite saying played her guitar. Jack ate slowly, as Ella gently strummed a Joan Baez song.

She let the last chord vibrate in the air. “You look far away today, Jack.”

“Just thinking.”

“Worried about the big game?” She strummed a C chord.

“Not really. I’m ready for those guys.” As crucial as the Arvin game was to his chances for a scholarship, his head spun with Herm, the sheriff, and lost combine. He needed to set all that aside.

But how?

“You’re worried about losing that combine, aren’t you?”

He shrugged and glanced off into the haze. Herm’s beat-up face filled him with too many questions, ones he would rather not ask.

“What do you think happened to it?”

Jack did his best to suppress a frown. He spent the next twenty minutes explaining how Sheriff Grant found Herm Gordon face down in the mud and how their combine had gone missing. Short of stealing someone else’s machine and selling it to pay the taxes, he didn’t have too many ideas about what he could do to save his mom’s place.

“Jack, you have to protest. Write to the newspaper. Make noise until the sheriff finds your combine. Someone knew you needed that money to save your property.”

Ella’s sense of urgency hovered over her, an impending sense of doom that required her to stand up and shout to drive it away. She had been this way since he first met her, always ready to protest. Vietnam had taken up most of her attention. But it was their trip to Berkeley a couple of years ago that had set her on fire, and had almost got Jack arrested in front of Sproul Hall.

Two years ago, their sophomore debate team had joined the junior and senior team on a field trip to UC Berkeley to observe a statewide competition. They left Delano before dawn and talked for the entire four-hour bus ride. That was something he had never done with any girl. They sat across from each other, an aisle between them. Her darting green eyes held his interest. Life shot out of them, beautiful and intelligent in the same instant.

They debated the war in Vietnam, who killed JFK, the likelihood of a gunman on the grassy knoll, the Selma march, the Freedom Riders, Malcolm X, the Black Panthers—she had an opinion on everything. Mostly, she made sense. The girl’s intensity at times unsettled him, but it mostly intrigued him.

During the debate competition in a Berkeley auditorium, shortly after the lunch break, Ella leaned into him in the dark. “Meet me outside on the steps in a few minutes.”

Without waiting for an answer, she rose and disappeared. Jack stewed in his seat, trying to figure out what she was up to. He wouldn’t miss much if he left. Besides, her sense of adventure piqued him. A few minutes later, he found her outside the glass doors on the steps. In the breeze, her brown hair, straight and long, riffled across her mischievous smile.

“There’s an FSM rally on the other side of the campus. Go with me. We’ll be back in plenty of time.” “A what?” he asked.

“You know, the Free Speech Movement. Please, go with me,” she pleaded with her green eyes. “Mario Savio is going to speak.”

From the way she threw out his name, he was someone Jack should know. He had never heard of the Free Speech Movement, or Savio, whoever he was. Jack glanced back to the doors.

“They’ll be in there for hours.” She took his hand. He marveled at her warm grasp. He liked it.

They made their way through a maze of buildings. She must have had this all planned out. She led him directly to a large plaza packed with students milling about. Some sat, most stood talking and smoking, and clouds of strange smelling smoke wafted over the crowd. A line of cops stood on the fringes of the crowd. They fidgeted with their batons.

The two of them were so far back, they could hardly make out what the speaker was saying. Ella pushed her way toward the front, and Jack held on. Had she done this before? She stopped when they were about twenty feet from the speaker, who read a list of students who were being expelled. People were booing.

A new speaker came to the microphone, a tall wiry-haired student in a white shirt and sheepskin-lined jacket. Electricity seemed to shoot right out of his hair. The crowd around Jack murmured, likely wondering what this guy was going to say. Ella squeezed his hand tighter. He didn’t dare let go of her, afraid they’d get separated in the jostling crowd.

The crowd hushed when the man with the electric hair started to speak. He had a machine-gun delivery. His message burst from him with so much energy the entire crowd leaned in for more. His lips moved like waves, every word coated with fire.

I ask you to consider if this university is a firm…we’re the raw materials.

And we don’t mean to be made into any product…to be bought by anyone.

We’re human beings!

The crowd applauded, and Ella loosed her hand to clap and shout.

There’s a time the operation of the machine becomes so odious… you can’t take part.

You’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears…upon the levers… and you’ve got to make it stop.…Unless you’re free, the machine won’t be prevented from working.

The crowd broke into more applause. Kids were yelling their agreement. Jack wasn’t clear what machine the guy was talking about, or what freedom he didn’t have, and what gears needed to be stopped. Then the speaker introduced Joan Baez, and the crowd went crazy with chatter and clapping.

She started singing a Bob Dylan song, and a hush fell over everyone.

How many times can a man turn his head And pretend that he doesn’t see?

The answer, my friend, is blowin’ in the wind… Ella hopped up and down on the balls of her feet.

Baez started up another song, “We shall overcome…,” and everyone joined in, the crowd swayed with the words. Something great, something powerful was about to break open here. He took Ella’s hand, and she gave him a complicit smile. She held him tight as if she feared she would float away in the euphoria of the moment.

When the song ended, she pulsed forward. Jack dared not let her go as they slipped between applauding students who hovered around the famous singer. Ella ascended right up to the great Joan Baez, her long black hair draped over her shoulders, her guitar slung over her neck.

Ella tried to talk calmly, but she only stammered.

“Did you want an autograph, honey?”

Ella had a confused look as if the question she wanted to ask had slipped away.

“Do you go to school here?”

Ella shook her head. “Delano High School.”

“Look,” Baez pointed over Ella’s shoulder. “You guys got to get out of here. There’s going to be trouble.”

At the far end of the crowd, cops were forcing students to move. Cop cars with lights flashing swarmed into the quad forcing students toward them. Panicked voices, screams, and shouting rose in the quad. Police vans rolled into the quad, lights flashing, the short squawks of their sirens stirred up the crowd.

The man with wiry hair grabbed the microphone beside Baez. “Everyone sit down. Resist them. Don’t let them take you. You have a right to be here.”

Baez fished in her purse and pulled out a black pen. “Here, let me sign something, then you two split.” She hovered her pen looking for something to write on while Ella stood motionless. Finally, the singer reached up and scrawled her name in big looping letters on Ella’s forehead.

“Go!” Baez pointed off to her left.

Jack led Ella down the side of the steps, away from the surging crowd. Students were shouting as the cops swung batons, pushing and shoving them into the center. Jack ran along the front edge of the students sitting cross-legged on the ground. Several cops ran toward them from their right. Jack, with Ella in tow, sprinted away from them across the open plaza, heading for the shelter of a building.

“Hey, you two, stop!” Heavy footsteps gained on them.

Jack clutched her hand, nearly dragging her. He desperately wanted to reach their seats in the auditorium. They ran full out down the side of a building, between another two into a smaller plaza. They dodged students, dashed around a fountain, and then behind another building.

“That way,” Ella said, pointing over his shoulder to a long hall. The footsteps were still behind them. They made their way down the side of the long hall, into a parking lot where they ducked between two cars, then down a lane.

“There! There!” Ella said. Jack saw the auditorium in front of them. If they could just make the doors.

“You two stop now!” Jack ran with everything left in him through the lot, across a small plaza, up the steps, and into the lobby. They blasted through the double doors into the darkened auditorium.

“Oh, no!” Jack said, stunned. It was empty.

“The buses are right outside. Over there!” Ella said, pointing to a side door down by the stage. They hustled down the aisle, both breathing hard, and turned to the door. Just as he reached for the crash bar, a shaft of light flooded in from behind them. Jack held up. A silhouette stood in the open auditorium door.

“As soon as I open this, he’ll see us,” Jack whispered to Ella, who was crushed up against him.

“We can make the bus.” Her breath was hot on his ear.

The door closed, plunging them into darkness. A beam of light flashed and began sweeping the seats, steadily moving toward them.

Jack pushed the bar, and they burst into the sunlight. A line of yellow buses, motors idling, were strung along the curb. Halfway down, Jack found the Delano High bus and pushed Ella up, then he jumped up the step. The two stood in the small aisle by the driver. Every eye on the bus stared them down. Every eye wanted to know where they had been. Heat seeped into his cheeks. He calmed his breathing.

“It’s about time you two showed up,” Mr. Thompson said. The only two seats left on the bus were in the front row next to him. Jack took the window, and Ella sat between them.

“Sorry, Mr. Thompson,” Ella said, demurely. “I was in the bathroom. I got lost, and Jack showed me where the buses were.”

He sighed and shook his head. “You can roll now, Howie,” Thompson said to the bus driver.

The bus door soughed close, and the driver revved the motor. Jack closed his eyes, letting all the tension out of his body. He wanted to laugh, but he dared not.

Just then someone banged on the door. It opened, and a cop stepped up into the bus.

“I’m looking for two demonstrators who ducked in here.”

“All of our students are accounted for, officer,” Mr. Thompson said. “We have to get on the road.”

“These two.” He pointed at Jack and Ella with his Billy club.

“They look familiar.”

“They’re with us,” Thompson said.

The officer squinted and inched closer, staring at Ella. “What’s that on your forehead?”

Mr. Thompson leaned over to have a look.

Before Ella could answer, Jack asked, “Are you aware of what day

it is, sir?”

“What?” The cop had an angry look.

“It’s Ash Wednesday.”

“Yeah, so?”

“We were at the church this morning.” Jack pointed vaguely behind him. “And that’s how they anoint now.” A few months before, Jack had seen a TV special on the changes in the Catholic Church.

“They don’t do ashes like that.”

“Everything changed with Vatican II.” Jack had been learning about the power of rhetorical questions in debate. Now would be a good time to test one out. “Are you at peace with your religion, officer? Is that why you’re singling her out?”

The officer looked as if he was gagging, trying to get an answer out of his mouth.

“Officer,” Mr. Thompson urged. “We have to get on the road.”

He backed out of the bus, the door closed, the motor revved, and with the grinding of old gears the bus haltingly rolled forward, gained speed, and headed home.

Darkness had fallen. Jack let his mind wander as he stared out the window at the passing cars trying to understand what had happened between them today. Holding Ella’s hand was like being captured by a tornado. He had to admit he didn’t want to let her go.

She rested quietly beside him. Mr. Thompson snored. They were still an hour away from Delano when Ella squeezed Jack’s hand. She leaned close and kissed him on the cheek. She put her mouth to his ear.

“I’m a Presbyterian. But for one moment I was a Catholic. I will never forget that.”

Her words made him smile. He wasn’t Catholic, but that didn’t matter. He wouldn’t forget today either. When her parents heard about her meeting Joan Baez and hearing Savio speak, they never allowed her near Berkeley again.

After they arrived back at campus, Mr. Thompson took him aside. He said he’d let this episode slide, but only if he showed the same initiative and creativity in debate for the rest of his high school career. He felt himself in a squeeze. Ella was a top debater. This was her territory.

He’d be in her whirlwind. Then there were the ramifications of getting caught leaving the debate. He had far less to fear from a cute girl.

“Sure,” he told Thompson. They shook, and no one talked about it again, except for Ella just about every time they kissed.

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About the AuthorJohn DeSimone is a novelist, memoirist, and editor. He’s co-authored bestselling memoirs, The Broken Circle: A memoir of escaping Afghanistan, and others. He taught writing as an adjunct professor at Biola University, and has worked as a freelance editor and writer for nearly twenty years. His novel, The Road to Delano, is a coming of age novel set during the Delano grape strike led by Cesar Chavez. BookSirens said, “It’s more than a little Steinbeck, in a good way….” He lives in Claremont, Ca, and can be found on the web at www.johndesimone.com   

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