The Christmas Town, by Elyse
Douglas, is a new time travel, mystery, romance novel that was released on
October 5, 2013.
While traveling home for Christmas, Jackie and Megan, two young women in their 20s, encounter a huge snowstorm. After crossing a covered bridge, they suddenly find themselves stuck in the past in a small picturesque Vermont town in 1943. While struggling to return to their time, they fall in love with two handsome soldiers. As Christmas approaches, Megan and Jackie are torn between their new lovers and their desire to return to their time. At the last moment, they must make the difficult decision and, because it is Christmas, a miracle happens.
While traveling home for Christmas, Jackie and Megan, two young women in their 20s, encounter a huge snowstorm. After crossing a covered bridge, they suddenly find themselves stuck in the past in a small picturesque Vermont town in 1943. While struggling to return to their time, they fall in love with two handsome soldiers. As Christmas approaches, Megan and Jackie are torn between their new lovers and their desire to return to their time. At the last moment, they must make the difficult decision and, because it is Christmas, a miracle happens.
The Christmas Town is a thrilling
adventurous novel interspersed with humor and romance. It's a great read any
time of the year, but it's an especially cozy read during the winter months
around Christmas.
The
Christmas Town is available in both paperback ($8.79) and
kindle ($4.99) on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/The-Christmas-Town-ebook/dp/B00FTPG6S6/ref=la_B0080S51TE_1_5?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1382118312&sr=1-5
Elyse Douglas is the pen name for the husband and wife writing team of
Elyse Parmentier and Douglas Pennington. Elyse began writing poems and short
stories at an early age, and graduated from Columbia University with a Master’s
Degree in English Literature. Douglas grew up in a family of musicians,
astrologers and avid readers. Some of Elyse Douglas’ novels include: “The
Astrologer’s Daughter,” “Wanting Rita,” “The Christmas Diary” and “The
Christmas Town.” They currently reside in New York City.
Excerpt:
They
crept along, eye-weary, back-weary and bone-weary. They’d been driving for over an hour and they had not seen
another car, road sign, house or town.
“Okay, I’m freakin’ out,” Megan said. “I mean, if we don’t see some sign of
life in the next few minutes, I am going to freak out!”
“Let’s try to stay calm.”
“I wonder if this is instant karma,” Jackie said, her
shoulders stooped, eyes darting about nervously.
“What do you mean?”
“I mean, how we got this car. I know you lied to that man back there. I know it. Your
mother doesn’t need medication, and now we are being punished.”
“Don’t blame me,” Megan said. “If it hadn’t been for me, we wouldn’t have gotten the car
in the first place.”
“And I wouldn’t be out in the middle of freakin’ nowhere!”
“Look, don’t start something you can’t finish,” Megan
said.
“I just can’t believe you lied to him.”
“Stop it! Okay? Maybe I feel bad about it.”
Jackie was sweating. “I doubt it, and that was a nasty thing to do. I mean that was just wrong. He was so nice to you and you just lied
to him. And, it’s Christmas.”
“I said, stop it!” Megan said.
“I thought there was something funny about the way you
acted when he shook your hand,” Jackie said.
“Jackie, that’s enough. Just let it go!
While we’re arguing we could be passing a house or motel. I don’t see anything but this blinding
snow.”
The wind howled like a wild animal, and snow blew across
the road, piling into drifts against the base of trees.
“How far have we gone so far?” Megan asked.
“I don’t know.
Maybe 40 or 50 miles.”
Megan blew out an audible sigh. “I feel like I’m in a snow globe and some crazy kid just
keeps shaking it.”
“Dramatic,” Jackie said.
“Scared,” Megan shot back.
Megan thought she saw a sign ahead, caked in snow and
leaning precariously to the right, as if a burst of wind would blow it down.
“Jackie, stop!
Look. I think there’s a
sign over there. See it?”
Jackie slowed, saw the sign and stopped. “God, I hope it
tells us where we are.”
Megan struggled into her coat and gloves and pulled on
her hat. She shoved the door open,
braced against the wind, and got out.
Snow lashed at her face and she turned away, protecting her face with
her hand. She trudged through
nearly a foot of snow until she reached the sign, illuminated by the car
beams. With her right hand, she
brushed snow from the sign, little by little, until she was able to read HOLLY
and then GROVE 1 MILE. A little black
arrow pointed right. Megan looked
right, shading her eyes, and peered into the distance. She saw something. She saw the shadow of a covered bridge,
looming out in the blur of snow.
That must be it. The town
was across the bridge. Energized,
she whirled, stomped back to the car and got in.
She was breathing rapidly. “It’s wild out there,” she said, shivering. “There’s a bridge just ahead. Holly Grove is about a mile away.”
“Sounds quaint,” Jackie said. “I hope they have a motel and an all-night restaurant.”
Jackie drove toward the bridge, the narrow road to the
bridge looking dark and foreboding.
“Wait a minute, Jackie.”
Jackie paused before making the turn. “What’s the matter?” she asked.
“I don’t know.
I just hate to leave the main road.”
“Megan, across that bridge is a town. We have passed absolutely nothing on
this ‘so-called’ main road.
Please, let’s just get across the bridge and spend the night in Holly
Grove.”
Megan nodded, still reluctant.
Jackie made the turn. But at the threshold of the bridge, Megan called out again.
“Stop!”
Jackie hit the brakes again, irritated. “Megan, what?”
Megan stared at the bridge. It wasn’t a large bridge, probably no more than 90 feet
across a rocky stream, but something gnawed away at her, some ineffable feeling
of danger that she couldn’t put her finger on.
“Megan?” Jackie said, seeing a far-away look in Megan’s
eyes. “What are we waiting for?”
“Okay, okay...It’s just that...”
“What?”
“Forget it.”
Jackie nudged the car forward and it rattled across the
bridge. The two girls held their
breath in the cave-like interior, darkness swallowing them, the wind screaming
through the cracks all around them.
When they finally exited on the other side, they released
trapped air from their lungs.
“Wow, that gave me the creeps,” Megan said.
Jackie looked about uneasily. “What a freaky night this is.”
They passed through a gray and white shroud of blowing
snow. Suddenly, as if a curtain
were being drawn from both sides of a stage, a gust of wind passed over the car
and blew the snow away.
Jackie stopped the car. The girls looked at each other, then blinked around in
astonished wonder.
“What happened?” Megan asked.
Jackie was speechless.
There was snow on the ground, but only two or three
inches. There was no sound of
wind, no blowing snow, just a few gentle flurries. The whispering sound of the windshield wipers was loud in
the sudden silence and Jackie switched them off. They sat there, staring. Jackie rolled down the window and felt a cool, intoxicating
breeze on her face. She looked up
into the sky and saw a few stars and a ghostly near-full moon swimming over the
top of a distant shadowy mountain.
Megan opened the door and stepped out, without hat or
gloves. She turned in a circle,
smelling fresh pine, hearing the splashing stream they’d just crossed. It was quiet, a deep satisfying quiet
that relaxed her. She took an easy
breath and smiled.
“Jackie... it’s beautiful,” she said, as she held out her
hand to catch a few random snowflakes.
Jackie stepped out.
It was still cold, but not a punishing cold. There was a softness in the air. Megan looked at Jackie, her brows raised in query. She shrugged. Jackie shrugged.
It was as though they were suddenly watching the world at a slower movie
projector speed.
Megan turned.
“Yes! What is it?”
Through the smoky cloud of fog, two glowing headlights
slowly approached.
“It’s a car!
Megan, it’s a car. Let’s
wave it down. Hurry!”
Framed in the headlights, the girls walked to the front
of the car, and waved, using both arms.
The car began to slow to a stop.
Megan gave Jackie the thumb’s up. Jackie stayed back, but Megan moved
toward the stopped car as the driver’s window rolled half way down. Megan drew up along side and looked in
to see an elderly man, with wary, watery eyes peering up at her.
White vapor puffed from her mouth as she spoke. “Hi there. Thank God you came by.
We’re lost and we haven’t seen anything or anybody for miles.”
The man didn’t blink. He just stared.
He stared at Megan. He
stared at Jackie. He stared at
their car.
Megan noticed his car. It was old—a very old black car—dusted with snow. She noticed the running board and heavy
fenders. It looked like something
out of the Bonnie and Clyde movie her
father repeatedly watched.
Megan was actually looking at a 1934 Ford Tudor Sedan,
two-door body.
“Can you help us?” Megan asked.
“Well, what do you want me to do?” he barked.
“We were trying to get to Portland and we must have
missed the turn-off somewhere back.”
“I’ll say you did.
You’re a good 30 miles away from it. You’re going in the wrong direction.”
“We haven’t seen a motel or anything. Is there somewhere we can spend the
night?”
He kept looking at her strangely, then he stared at
Jackie again, and then at their car.
“What is that?”
Megan followed his eyes. “What? Our car?”
“Yeah. What
is that?”
“It’s our car.”
He shook his head.
“Dang, I ain’t never seen a car like that before. What is it?”
“It’s a Ford.
A Ford Fusion Hybrid.”
“A what!?” he asked, pinching up his face and cupping his
ear with his hand. “What did you
say it was?”
“It’s a Ford.
Can you please tell me where the nearest town or motel is?”
He couldn’t pull his eyes from the car. “Ain’t never seen anything like that.”
“Sir, please!
We are very tired and very hungry.”
He looked at her again and jerked a thumb behind
him. “Holly Grove is about a mile
up the road.”
He rolled up his window, threw the car in gear and
plodded off. Jackie waved. As he passed the Ford Fusion, his eyes
bulged wildly, face blank with shock.
He pressed down on the accelerator, hurrying off into the night.
Megan strolled back to Jackie.
“What did he say?” Jackie asked.
“Well, I guess he’s never seen a hybrid before.”
They got back into the car and continued on into the uncertain
night, straining every muscle to see the town. Moments later, they came to some railroad tracks,
bumped across them and saw a white sign with black letters that read
WELCOME TO HOLLY GROVE VERMONT
POP 5,400
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