Banished Love
by
Ramona Flightner
BLURB:
Free-Spirited…
Clarissa Sullivan dreams for more from life than sipping
tepid tea in stifling parlors in Victorian Boston. She defies her family’s
wishes, continuing to teach poor immigrant children in Boston’s West End,
finding a much-needed purpose to her life.
Radical…
As a suffragette, Clarissa is considered a firebrand radical
no man would desire. For why should women want the vote when men have sheltered
women from the distasteful aspects of politics and law?
Determined…
When love blossoms between Clarissa and Gabriel McLeod, a
struggling cabinetmaker, her family objects. Clarissa’s love and determination
will be tested as she faces class prejudices, manipulative family members and
social convention in order to live the life she desires with the man she loves.
Will she succeed? Or will she yield to expectations?
BANISHED LOVE follows Clarissa Sullivan on her journey of
self-discovery as she learns what she cannot live without.
“If you don’t mind me saying so, Mr. McLeod, you seem quite
domesticated,” Savannah said in a haughty tone.
Gabriel laughed. “Like a favorite pet, Miss Russell?” He
glanced toward her with humor. “I always think domestication ruins the better
part of the beast.”
“But you wouldn’t want a wild dog in your house,” Savannah
protested. “And horses must be tamed.”
Gabriel nodded. “I would hate to think you compared me to a
horse or a dog, miss. I hope I have better manners than that?” he asked,
raising his eyebrows mockingly toward Savannah. “Though, I agree, horses are
most useful for our purpose when tamed, but I wonder if they truly enjoy
working for us?” He looked toward me, although he did not push me into the
conversation.
He let out a long theatrical sigh. “Domesticated cats, dogs.
Domesticated women. Wonderful creatures. Wouldn’t you agree, Miss Sullivan?” He
looked toward me wickedly. I had bolted so hard in the rocker at his words I
had nearly flown onto the floor. I watched him with wide eyes, wondering why he
pushed Savannah so.
Savannah replied, “Now you are offensive, sir.” She vibrated
with anger.
“Isn’t that what all young women long to be?” Gabriel asked
Savannah, setting down the filled mugs with a clunk. “Domesticated. Demure.
Tamed to the needs and ways of their husbands?”
“You know perfectly well you are describing the ideal wife,”
Savannah spat out.
“Am I?” he asked, sounding unconvinced. “What do you think,
Miss Sullivan?” he turned to me. “Is that what you long to be, a domesticated
woman?”
“No!” I blurted out before I could stop myself.
“Rissa!” Savannah scolded me, eyes flashing. She had begun
to breathe heavily, and I feared she would faint with her tightly laced corset.
I blushed but met Gabriel’s eyes. “No,” I said. “I have no
desire to match that description. Slightly less clumsy, perhaps,” I muttered.
“Yes, I agree,” Gabriel said, causing me to worry he agreed
with my assessment about my clumsiness. “Domestication is akin to docility
which is an unattractive trait in a woman.” He smiled knowingly at me, and I felt
a flash of pleasure.
“Do you speak in earnestness, sir, or are you in jest?”
Savannah demanded. When Gabriel merely turned to look at her, she continued.
“Men want docile, demure women,” she expounded, as though teaching a
rudimentary fact to Gabriel.
“Well, pardon me, ma’am, for not learning my lessons well,”
he replied, nodding his head deferentially.
I watched Savannah’s face become flushed red with anger and
was worried she would erupt. She generally kept her temper under control, but,
when it blew, it was a frightening thing to behold.
“I’d actually like to meet a young woman who can think for
herself and doesn’t want only what her father or husband wants.” His quiet
statement made my pulse quicken.
Savannah scoffed, “That path leads only to misery.”
“Or tremendous contentment,” Gabriel countered.
Savannah stood, knocking into the table with such force she
caused tea to spill out of the mugs. “I will not sit here any longer and listen
to your insolent beliefs,” she declared. “Rissa?” She turned toward me
expectantly, then headed toward the door.
I looked at Gabriel with remorse, wanting to have spent
longer time in his company. “I enjoyed our conversation. Maybe we could
continue it one day at the school?” I watched him, hopeful he would agree.
He smiled, releasing a sigh of relief. “I would enjoy that
very much, Miss Clarissa.”
I had forgotten how his voice could feel like a caress. I
closed my eyes for a moment, having missed hearing his gentle baritone. No
matter how much I had enjoyed his letters, I had missed him.
Ramona Flightner is a native of Missoula, Montana. After
graduating from Tufts University with a B.A. in Spanish, she earned a Masters
degree in Spanish Literature from the University of Montana. Her Master’s
thesis, Chilean Testimonial Literature: the collective suffering of a people,
highlighted her continued interest in the stories of those who were at risk of
being forgotten or silenced.
She studied nursing at the University of Pennsylvania and
graduated with a Master’s in Nursing as a Family Nurse Practitioner. She has
worked for ten years as a family nurse practitioner providing care to the poor
and under insured at two community health centers, first in Wilmington,
Delaware and now in Boston, Massachusetts.
An avid reader, she began writing three years ago. She enjoys
the demands of research and relishes the small discoveries that give historical
detail to her books.
Ramona is an avid flyfisher and hiker who enjoys nothing
better than spending a day on a remote Montana river, far from a city. She
enjoys research, travel, storytelling, learning about new cultures and
discovering new ways of looking at the world. Though she resides in Boston,
Massachusetts, Ramona remains a Montanan at heart.
Her dreams are to see
the plains of East Africa, marvel at the wonder of Petra in Jordan, soak in the
seas of the South Pacific, and to continue to spend as much time as possible
with her family.
Banished Love is her first novel and is the first in the
forthcoming Banished Saga.
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Will Savannah pop up in a futrue book? I love her character :)
ReplyDeleteilookfamous at yahoo dot com
Hi Elise- Never fear- Savannah is in book two, and she has a much larger role in book three. I'm so glad you like her!
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ReplyDeleteI really loved this excerpt. This sounds so good.
ReplyDeleteI like the excerpt
ReplyDeleteSuch a wonderful excerpt thank you.
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