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Historical Romances with Passion, History and Soul

Cynthia Owens 45, Female
Montreal, Canada

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About Me:
I grew up loving books and history and all things Irish.

I believe I was destined to be interested in history. One of my distant ancestors, Thomas Aubert, reportedly sailed up the St. Lawrence River to discover Canada some 26 years before Jacques Cartier’s 1534 voyage. Another relative was a 17th Century “King’s Girl,” one of a group of young unmarried girls sent to New France as brides for the settlers there.

My passion for reading made me long to write books like the ones I enjoyed, and I tried creating sequels to my favorite Nancy Drew mysteries. Later, fancying myself a female version of Andrew Lloyd Weber, I drafted a musical set in Paris in WWII.

A former journalist and lifelong Celtophile, I enjoyed a previous career as a reporter/editor for a small chain of community newspapers before returning to my first love, romantic fiction. My stories usually include an Irish setting, hero or heroine, and sometimes all three. My first novel, In Sunshine or in Shadow, is set in post-Famine Ireland.

I am a member of the Romance Writers of America, Hearts Through History Romance Writers, Celtic Hearts Romance Writers, and the Canadian Romance Authors network. I live in Montreal with my own Celtic hero and my two school-aged children.

http://cynthiaowensromancewriting.blogspot.com


Join my mailing list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CynthiaOwens
Website:
http://pages.videotron.com/cowens/index.html
Published Novels
In Sunshine or in Shadow (Highland Press 2006) is a story of love lost, betrayal, revenge, redemption, and the healing power of love. Rory and Siobhan are a pair of lost souls.

Siobhan lost her mother and sisters to the Famine, and her husband and young brother were unjustly executed by their landlord. Rory was robbed of his childhood by a cruel, abusive father. He's looking for a place where can find peace for himself and his daughter.

Can Rory learn to trust again? And can Siobhan forgive him for the sins of his father -- the very landlord who killed her husband and her beloved brother?
Favourite Books
Too many to name, but Shattered Rainbows and One Perfect Rose by Mary Jo Putney rank right up there. Also, anything published by Highland Press, as well as anything by Teresa Medeiros.

In Sunshine or in Shadow

Excerpt From In Sunshine or in Shadow
Highland Press, 2006
ISBN: 978-0-9746249-5-2

Prologue

Ballycashel, Ireland, 1850

Her worst enemy was her last hope.

Siobhán Desmond stood before the heavy wooden door, shivering as the cold, wet autumn wind knifed through her threadbare cloak.

Squaring her shoulders, she raised her hand and lifted the dragon-headed brass knocker.

You’ve no choice, she reminded herself. You must do this. You must.

The door creaked open, the mournful sound loud as a banshee’s wail.

Yes?”

Biting her lip to still its trembling, Siobhán gazed up at the tall, broad man with the craggy face and wintry blue eyes. A chill raced down her spine as she forced herself not to flinch from that cold, superior gaze.

Lord Percival Glenleigh.

The one man she hated above all others.

“Are you one of my tenants?”

He didn’t know her. She, her mother and father and their parents before them, had all been his tenants, yet not a spark of recognition flared in his icy gaze.

“Aye, Your Honor. Me name’s Siobhán Desmond, sir.”

“Desmond? I don’t recall the name. But no matter. One cannot keep track of all one’s tenants. Well, get on with it then, Shi…vaun. What is it you want?”

Siobhán swallowed against the surge of hatred boiling in her throat. Remember Ashleen. She would do anything, even beg scraps from this repulsive man, if it meant her daughter would survive.

“I-I’m after lookin’ for work, sir,” she murmured, her head lowered, her voice barely audible. “’Tis desperate I am. The money’s run out, and ‘tis all I can do to keep body and soul together. I’ve knowledge of cooking and cleaning, and I make lovely lace. Please, sir, I’ll do anything...”

Oh, God, how she hated the note of pleading that crept into her voice. Oh, Michael—Ashleen...

Forgive me...


“Come in, then. What did you say your name is? Shi…vaun?”

Siobhán nodded as Glenleigh ushered her into the drawing room. It felt blessedly warm inside, the fire blazing cheerily, the thick carpets soothing her bare, blistered feet. She longed to throw herself onto one of those deep-cushioned brocade sofas and sleep. It would be soft, she knew. And she could pull one of those heavy throws over her shoulders and be warm again...

If Glenleigh would hire her, she could bring these things home...

“So it’s work you’re seeking, is it?”

“Y-yes, sir. I’ll do anything, Your Honor. I can cook and clean and do mending. Just give me a chance...”

He was staring at her, she realized, gooseflesh springing onto her arms and crawling up the back of her neck like a thousand poisonous spiders. A small smile played around his thick lips as his gaze traveled from her face to the pitifully undernourished body barely concealed beneath her worn woolen cloak.

Tis the very green of yer eyes, darlin’, Michael had once told her, his own blue eyes sparkling with love. But sure, those eyes put Erin’s green fields to shame, so they do. She forced her mind from past to present as she heard Glenleigh’s arrogant voice. “Are you clean, madam?”

“I…clean?” For a moment, Siobhán could not understand his words, then all her Irish pride rose up in her. “Aye, ‘tis clean I am, Yer Honor. We’ve not much more than a sliver of soap at home...” Her words trailed off as the real meaning of his words hit her.

This evil old man actually thought—wanted…

With his words, all the pain and anguish she and her family had suffered washed over her as if it were yesterday. The hunger, the little ones dying. The executions.

And now this man actually thought she would sell herself? To him? And for what? A moldy crust of bread? A bag of meal? A banquet served at the enemy’s table?

No! her mind screamed. She wouldn’t—couldn’t lower herself to that. No matter what, she would find some other way to keep them all alive.

Wildly, she shook her head, her long curls bouncing about her shoulders. Yet even as she did, he reached for her, his soft, white gentleman’s hands tugging at her cloak.

“Here, now, don’t be shy, my dear. If you cooperate, I’m sure I can find some food for you—the servants can’t possibly eat all they prepare. If you’ll just come in for a moment—”

“Take your filthy English hands off me!” Was that voice really hers? Furiously, she struggled to free herself. “I’ll not be yer whore, Your Honor. I’d not be sellin’ meself so cheaply, not if you promised me a banquet in Heaven itself.”

“Why, you little Irish bitch!” His fingers biting into her shoulders, he lowered his mouth to hers. Hatred surged in her heart as she twisted in his grasp, frantic to free herself. He rammed his tongue into her mouth and she shuddered with revulsion. A low moan tore from her throat.

Then, just as suddenly as his assault had begun, Lord Percival Glenleigh’s hands went slack and a harsh sound gushed from his lips. His eyes bulging, he clutched wildly at his chest. When he opened his mouth to speak, only a strangled gurgle emerged.

Siobhán watched impassively as the mountainous man fell to his knees on the lush Aubusson carpet. She stared in silence at the hand he held out in supplication.

“Please—water,” he croaked. “There—on the table—water, damn you!”

Impassively, Siobhán looked from Glenleigh to the sparkling array of decanters and glasses set on an elegant cherry wood table. They were crystal from Waterford, she knew, the best that money could buy.

Money that could have bought food to feed her starving people.

It would be easy, she thought. So easy to fill one of them, to hand it to His Honor... Memories flooded over her—her mother and sisters looking to her for food that wasn’t there,
two beloved bodies swinging from the Hanging Tree, her baby sister dying in her arms.

What had Glenleigh ever done for her?

As the Master of Ballycashel House fell prostrate on the floor, his struggles stilled, a high, wordless cry rose to Siobhán’s lips. It was a cry of rage, a cry of anguish, a mourning cry wrung from the very depths of her tormented soul.

She spun on her bare heels and ran into the dark, salt-sprayed night.

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Another Excerpt From In Sunshine or in Shadow

Damn and blast this bloody Irish rain! Rory O’Brien, now known as David Burke, squinted through the rain and fog, trying vainly to see the black ribbon of road unfurling before him. Not only was it nearly impossible to see his hand in front of his face, but the cursed dampness seeped through his skin to slash talons of agony through his leg. Shaking icy droplets from his hair, he wondered for the hundredth time if this whole undertaking was insane. Why in God’s name had he chosen to com… Continue

Posted on July 19th, 2008 at 4:13am — 2 Comments (Add)

Another Excerpt from In Sunshine or in Shadow

Chapter One Winter “Ballycashel’s been sold!” It was Paddy Devlin, one of the few young men left in the village, who brought the news. The small group gathered in Siobhán’s kitchen looked up as one, hope and dread mingling on every one of their faces. Siobhán froze in the act of tending the fire and turned, her heart seeming to hang suspended in her chest. “And how would you be knowin’ this, young Paddy?” demanded Eileen O’Farrell, who’d once been her mother’s dearest friend. “Who would b… Continue

Posted on July 12th, 2008 at 12:05am — No Comments (Add)

Author Cookies

I’m guest blogging at Author Cookies all this week. Check out my recipe for molasses cookies here

Posted on July 5th, 2008 at 12:30am — No Comments (Add)

Introducing Grannie Meg - the Rock of Ballycashel

Her busy hands are never still. Whether she’s kneading a loaf of bread, sweeping out the bits of twigs and leaves that blow in through the half-door, or keeping an eye on her young granddaughter, Margaret Kilpatrick, better known in Ballycashel as Grannie Meg, always seems to be busy. She is something of a fixture in Ballycashel, one of the senior members of the small but valiant group of survivors of the Hunger — and of Lord Percival Glenleigh’s domination over her village. She, and a few of h… Continue

Posted on July 4th, 2008 at 7:30am — 2 Comments (Add)

Meet Tom Flynn of Ballycashel

Sitting at the spotless wooden table in the tiny, thatched-roof cottage, Tom Flynn glances around him, a smile of satisfaction on his face. He’s obviously a happy man, content with his lot in life, secure in the knowledge that come what may, he, and the other people of Ballycashel, can survive anything. “’Twas a hard time, the Hunger,” he admits with a deep sigh. “So many of our friends and neighbors died, or left for American on the coffins ships. Some simply took to the road and were never he… Continue

Posted on June 27th, 2008 at 10:04pm — No Comments (Add)

Comment Wall (67 comments)

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At 6:38am on July 2nd, 2008, kimbercrowe said…
Hi Cynthia,
Thanks so much for the friend request. I really appreciate it.
I hope you have a wonderful week.
At 8:38am on May 20th, 2008, Brian L Porter said…
Hope to see you there Cynthia.

Best regards

Brian
At 3:35am on May 20th, 2008, Brian L Porter said…
thanks Cynthia,

Great to hear from you. I see you are in Canada. The publisher of my novel 'A Studyin Red - The Secret Journal of Jack the Ripper' is from Ontario, and I'm honoured to have been admitted to the membership of another Ning site you may be interested in, The Canadian Authors Network. Why not check us out at http://canadianauthors.ning.com/

Best regards

Brian
At 1:55am on May 20th, 2008, Brian L Porter said…
Thanks for adding me to your friends Cynthia. This look s to be a great site!

Best regards

Brian

At 5:02am on May 3rd, 2008, Renee Knowles said…
HI Cynthia. Thanks for the friend request. Love your In Sunshine or in Shadow excerpt!

Renee
At 12:16pm on May 1st, 2008, Julianne Douglas said…
Thank you for the warm welcome!

Do you read French? There is a wonderful novel entitled Marie Carduner, fille du roy by Nicole Mace about the "King's Girls" in Canada. It's one of my favorites! Have you read it? I don't know if it's been translated.
At 11:35pm on April 19th, 2008, Gwyn Ramsey said…
I loved reading about your stories and your family history. Great job. Come visit my blog at www.gwynramsey.blogspot.com.
At 8:22am on March 14th, 2008, Kathy Otten said…
Hi Cynthia,
Glad to have you as one of my friends. I think it's great you have so much history in your family.
Kathy
At 1:04am on March 11th, 2008, Linda Alexander said…
Cynthia: Thx for the ad. Sounds like you have a lot of stories in your background to help your writer's imagination run wild! As a historical researcher myself, I firmly believe that we often cannot make up the stories our ancestors have already lived . . . but we CAN write about them!

Blessings -- Linda
At 12:43pm on March 9th, 2008, amy said…
Thanks for the add.
 
 

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