“Angels,” he breathed. “Angels everywhere.”
Including the one in his arms.
*****
EARTH ANGELS is the first in my series of wacky stories about everyday angels.
Next will be ALMOST AN ANGEL, about klutzy, endearing Sameh Smith, a visitor from the future. P.I. Adam Hawkins can’t figure her out. He tries to be cynical, but with Sameh around, cynicism just doesn’t work. Can a man rooted firmly in the present and a woman not quite from this planet or this time make romance work?
I’d love to hear what you think of my stories. Writers write for their readers, and it’s always thrilling to hear your opinions—good, bad or indifferent!
Get in touch with me at:
[email protected]
http://www.bobbyhutchinson.com
https://www.facebook.com/BobbyHutchinsonBooks?ref=ts&fref=ts
Bobby Hutchinson's Bio
Bobby Hutchinson was born in a small town in interior British Columbia in 1940. Her father was an underground coal miner, her mother a housewife, and both were storytellers. Learning to read was the most significant event in her early life.
She married young and had three sons. Her middle son was deaf, and he taught her patience. She divorced and worked at various odd jobs, directing traffic around construction sites, day caring challenged children, selling fabric by the pound at a remnant store.
She mortgaged her house and bought the store, took her sewing machine to work, and began to sew a dress a day. The dresses sold. The fabric didn’t, so she hired four seamstresses and turned the store into a handmade clothing boutique.
After twelve successful years, she sold the business and decided to run a marathon. Training was a huge bore, so she made up a story as she ran, about Pheiddipedes, the first marathoner. She copied it down and sent it to the Chatelaine short story contest, won first prize, finished the Vancouver marathon, and became a writer. It was a hell of a lot easier than running.
She married again and divorced again, writing all the while, mostly romances, (which she obviously needs to learn a lot about,) and now has more than fifty-five published books.
She decided she needed something to do in the morning in her spare time, so she opened her first B&B, Blue Collar, in Vancouver, B.C. After five successful years, she moved home to the small coal mining town of Sparwood, where she now operates the reincarnated version of the Blue Collar.
She's currently working on three or four or eight more books. She has six enchanting grandchildren. She lives alone, apart from guests, meditates, bikes, reads incessantly, and writes.
She likes a quote by Dolly Parton: “Decide who you are, and then do it on purpose.”
Earth Angels Page 9