Elisabeth Grace Foley

Historical Fiction Author

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Land of Hills and Valleys: more snippets

February 7, 2019 by Elisabeth Grace Foley 14 Comments

News: I finished the first rough draft of Land of Hills and Valleys this week.

Also: it’s a mess. But I’ll fix it.

Seriously, though, after having had such a hard time with writing this winter, I’m still trying to wrap my head around the notion that I actually finished a manuscript. And the good news is, I’ve been having ideas as I go along for things that need to be changed and jotting down notes to that effect—so hopefully I shouldn’t get too stuck anywhere in the second draft.

Since the second half of the manuscript is equal parts (A) spoilers and (B) a mess…as I think I mentioned earlier…I couldn’t find too many shareable snippets; but here’s the few that I came up with:

The room quieted a little, and I heard the subdued rustle of everyone leaning forward to look past their neighbor or stretching to see over the heads in front of them. I felt the suffocating sense of shame for him, felt the desire to melt into the floor as strongly as if all the eyes had been focused on me instead.

*

Robert Herrington had patted my hand and told me not to distress myself overmuch; Carol had practically squeezed the blood from my fingers and told me not to be an idiot; if I adopted a point of view somewhere about the middle I ought to be all right.

*

The full realization of the fact seemed to go through me for the first time like a cold breath of wind, and my lips felt numb for a second. “Or did you know that already? Did they report to you?”

An eyebrow went up at that, but still his reaction wasn’t one of either alarm or violence. He only came a little closer to me and peered straight into my eyes for a minute as if to be sure I wasn’t suffering from shock or fever or something else unbalancing.

*

Tony was still muttering under his breath, things I wouldn’t repeat but had to agree with.

*

Here under the canopy of trees it was almost dark, but we were sheltered from the rain, with only an occasional splat of water from a branch hitting the windshield. Tim guided the truck around a climbing hairpin bend, the noisy engine sounding like it was laboring at the elevation, and then pressed his foot on the accelerator up the length of a straight slope. At the top of the incline he turned off from the last vestiges of the petering-out track, threading a gap between two tree trunks. The truck tires clawed at the long wet grass and we skidded a little, and I sat up straight on the edge of my seat as if that would help keep our balance.

as they say, to be continued…

Filed Under: Land of Hills and Valleys, Snippets of Story

Snippets: Land of Hills and Valleys

August 27, 2018 by Elisabeth Grace Foley 11 Comments

The concept of Land of Hills and Valleys, a murder mystery set in 1930s Wyoming, goes back to 2009, when I won that year’s NaNoWriMo with 50,000 words of an incomplete version under a different title. That original version was so juvenile that it’s embarrassing to even look at my early notes now, but I always did feel there was a germ of something good in the mystery plot. Over the ensuing years I re-outlined it several times, added some twists to the plot and even changed the culprit more than once, but never got it any further off the ground than that. Something was just lacking.

Then, last summer, I had a moment of inspiration—to try writing it in the first person. I totally scrapped the early drafts and started from scratch again, and found that the new narration not only worked, it gave the story the spark of life it had been missing. Now it’s a bit like a Mary Stewart romantic-suspense novel meets the setting and mood of Mary O’Hara’s My Friend Flicka.

I’ve reached the halfway point of my rough draft, which seemed like a good time to share a few snippets. Here’s a sampling, all from the first half of the book:

We turned into a stretch of woods, on ground rising to the north—first a fairylike grove of wind-rustled aspens, and then higher up as the rocks broke more and more from the moss-carpeted soil, dark, close-ranked, rich-scented pines, their gnarled roots crawling over and winding between the blocks of granite. I held unashamedly to the saddle horn as our horses climbed, and ducked the prickly evergreen branches that swept across the narrow trail we followed.

*

I said nothing, but pressed my lips in a straight line and fixed my eyes on the third button of his frayed denim coat. I’d said I wasn’t a little girl, but I felt like an obstinate child whose only weapon is silence.

Sutherland’s harsh laugh grated on my very skin. “Have it your way, Lena. I’ll be seeing you.”

*

My door had a lock that could be turned from inside, but it was stiff and creaky and I wasn’t even sure I could make it turn all the way. Even if I could, it would make more noise than anything in the house. I stood there in my nightgown with my ear close to the crack of the door, cold toes curled on the bare floor.

*

We trailed at a leisurely pace past shorn hayfields, swaying goldenrod with mottled leaves shedding a mellow spicy scent in the sunshine, and occasional wind-whipped cottonwoods beginning to scatter their leaves. There was next to no traffic on the dirt roads—only twice did we meet an automobile churning through the dust, which honked and slowed as the boys parted the cattle and then nosed its way slowly through the herd. I waved to the drivers as they picked up speed again on the other side, and the plodding Herefords closed over the road again like a slow-moving Red Sea.

*

She must have seen I looked shocked, for she added more temperately, “Don’t think I’m excusing murder, because I’m not, by any means. Nor saying the truth ought to be buried. All I want to say is, there’s no need for you to waste your pity on him.”

*

The world turned upside-down and hit me hard, and I lay gasping for breath, flat on my back in the ditch with the cheery blue and white of sky and floating clouds high above me. I stared at the clouds and fought for breath, with a kind of incredulity.

*

There was a shoebox on the floor almost out of sight beneath the hem of the dress, and it it were a little embroidered purse with a broken clasp, a wide tortoiseshell comb such as girls used to put up their back hair in my mother’s day, and a couple of ribbons. It was almost more than I could bear. Why hadn’t he written? Why hadn’t he set things right between them, or at least tried?

 

Well, what do you think? Would you want to hear more of this story?

Filed Under: Land of Hills and Valleys, Snippets of Story

August Snippets

August 26, 2016 by Elisabeth Grace Foley Leave a Comment

Somewhere amidst the natural disarrangement of schedules that comes with a week of family vacation, and the added complication of nursing an injured dog, I did manage to complete my main goal for August: editing the first draft of The Mountain of the Wolf. (And now I can stop referring to it as “the first draft of” and be glad of it, for with that title there are entirely too many “ofs” in the sentence.) It is a great and happy relief to have it finished and on its way to beta-readers.

The Mountain of the Wolf will be coming to an e-reader near you in late 2016—as a matter of fact, I have some rather exciting plans afoot concerning this story’s publication. I shall say no more just yet, but watch this space for an announcement sometime in the next couple of months! In the meantime, to celebrate the wind-up of this draft, here are a few snippets:

Somehow he and his noisy voice and presence were out of the house, and Rosa Jean hastily closed the door behind him. She wanted to think. She felt she had been given the key to a riddle, if only she could pick it out of everything else jumbled in Charlie’s speech. She went in and sat on the edge of her bed, one hand on either side of her, and stared at the opposite wall.

He was hardly in the saddle when a wolf’s howl rose loud from somewhere close by and both horses jumped. Quincy steadied Pheasant with the reins and spoke to them in low tones, meaningless words, while his mind was occupied with a pithy and fervent prayer that the wolves would mind their own business tonight.

Rosa Jean heard the thunder of hooves and dropped her rolling pin to run for the door, only to falter to a stop halfway. It was queer the way that sound still made her heart give a little jump of excitement and then just as quickly the thud of sickening remembrance.

Again he saw it—her expression shut up like a door being closed; her mouth set straight and her eyes offering no clue to her thoughts. It must hurt, he thought involuntarily, to do that…he did not know where the unsettling thought sprang from.

The white head swung slowly toward him, and the old man’s blank eyes stared. Quincy nodded to him. “Your name’s Sullivan, isn’t it?”

The old man bent over and began doing something vaguely with a rope and bucket at his feet—he half glanced sideways at Quincy without looking up at his face. “I ain’t got any whisky,” he mumbled. “I tol’ you I ain’t got any.”

 

image: Robbers’ Roost, Utah // Wikimedia

Filed Under: Snippets of Story, The Mountain of the Wolf, Westerns

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