Dear Reader,
Like most young girls, I loved horses. I recall once attempting to convince my parents that a small stable would fit perfectly in our suburban backyard. Nixing that idea, they opened our home to a number of rescued dogs and cats, and I didnât revisit horses until this book project came along.
The research was fascinating. I learned about horse racing, yes, but also about the bold and complex men, women and animals at the heart of the sport. Bold and complex describes the story line of THOROUGHBRED LEGACY, as a matter of fact, and getting to know the other authors was a pleasure. I hope you enjoy Biding Her Time and that it whets your appetite for the books to follow!
Wendy Warren
WENDY WARREN
lives with her husband and daughter in the beautiful Pacific Northwest. Their house was previously owned by a woman named Cinderella, who bequeathed them a garden full of flowers they try desperately (and occasionally successfully) not to kill, and a pink General Electric oven, circa 1958, that makes the kitchen look like an I Love Lucy rerun.
A two-time recipient of the Romance Writers of Americaâs RITA>® Award, Wendy loves to read and write the kind of books that remind her of the old movies she grew up watching with her momâstories about decent people looking for the love that can make an ordinary life heroic. When not writing, she likes to take long walks, hide out in bookstores with her friends and sneak tofu into her husbandâs dinner. If youâd like a tofu recipeâand who wouldnât?âvisit her Web site, www.wendywarren-author.com.
With deep gratitude to the editors,
past and present, who have taught me to write and paid me to do it.
From the early years: Wendy Corsi Staub,
Anne Canadeo and Lynda Curnyn.
Susan Litman, my current editor,
is savvy, talented, smart as a whip and sends e-mails that knock me off my chair with laughter.
Stacy Boyd and Marsha Zinberg invited me on-board
the Thoroughbred Legacy project and have guided it surely and with terrific grace.
I am very appreciative!
âPut your hands in your pockets, boys, and dig deep. Iâm about to lighten your loads.â
Bending over a pool table that had seen more money change hands than Chase Manhattan Bank, Audrey Griffin stretched one toned, well-muscled arm along the green felt. Loose auburn waves spilled over her shoulder as she cocked her opposite elbow back and lined up a seemingly impossible shot.
âThirteen in the corner,â she called, then sank the ball so fast, a few of the men around the table cussed a blue streak guarandamnteed to set their mamas to praying.
Laying her cue stick atop the well-used table, Audrey brushed her hands, shrugged and let an obnoxious grin spread over her face. âAnyone for darts?â
Colby Dale told her what would have to happen to hell before he played anything with her ever again, but he tossed her a ten spot before walking away. Two of the others coughed up handfuls of dollar bills, and Jed Clooney gave her two bucks in change plus an IOU, just to be irritating.
âAw, câmon.â Audrey gathered her winnings, patting the cash into a neat pile. âIâve been beating yâall since Red Bullet won the Preakness. You gotta be used to it by now.â
âYouâve been gloating about it that long, too,â Jed reminded her as he gathered up cue sticks, âand weâre not used to that yet.â But he tweaked Audreyâs nose as he passed by to show there were no hard feelings. âNice game, junior. The old man would be proud.â
Audrey felt tears well up.
Shit.
Blinking the emotion away, she pushed her smile higher. No way would she lose it now. Not when sheâd been sucking it up successfully all day.
âBeer! Iâm buying.â Leading the procession to the bar, she ordered ten Michelob drafts from Herman, the proprietor of Hot to Trot, added shots for those who wanted them and raised her jigger of bourbon immediately when it came. âLive for today, for tomorrow we may die,â she toasted, trying to remember if there was more to the quote, then deciding it was fine just as it stood.
The boys must have agreed with her, because every shot glass bottomed up along with hers. The glasses returned to the bar with a clunk, warm hands reached for icy beers, and talk turned to a couple of local yearlings that had graduated from the Keeneland spring sale in April.
As the conversation heated up along the mahogany and tufted-leather bar, Audrey relinquished her stool and stepped away from the others. The guys would be content to nurse their beers and talk horses the rest of the night, but she didnât have the focus right now to discuss business. Nor did she have the desire to chase her whiskey with beer. It felt better tonight, or at least more appropriate, to let the eighty-proof Kentucky bourbon have its way with herâburning the back of her throat, threading her veins with a thin coil of heat that made her feel uncomfortably weak. Patting the base of her throat, where the alcohol stung, she decided that bourbon and life had a lot in common: fun in the moment, but you had to be prepared for consequences.