One morning Charley woke up to find it was the day before yesterday. And that is just the start of a mystery. 8yrs+.
... her coming back doesn't mean you've ceased to matter. She's my mother. You're my father. I shouldn't have to choose between you.” There was a pause. For the second time, Charley wondered whether her father had disconnected the line.
Features an audio read-along! On Charley’s first night, Henry carries his new puppy in his old baby blanket all the way to his house. He shows Charley every room, saying, "This is home, Charley.
Dennis O’Keefe is a gifted story-teller creating vivid original characters clashing with each other as they set forth on a dangerous path.” Golda David, Writer/Producer “It will have you on the edge of your chair.” Alan Caruba, ...
The second time Charley was slightly more prepared, but just as curt. Morgan had been in the kitchen getting some coffee for us when Charley walked in. I'd heard the conversation, a little too polite for Charley to really be genuine.
Charles Gill. you'll have a better chance of being alone with him than later this evening.” “Yes, I would like to go now; ... After trying the handle a second time, Charley pounded on the door, waited and then pounded again.
By that time, Charley had left town for the western frontier but was arrested in late May 1878 and transported back to Carlisle in midJune. When the train pulled into town in front of the old county jail, two hundred men, ...
But when Micah returned empty-handed a second time, Charley went to look herself. She looked on the dresser and in the closet and behind the door. She flung clothes and shoved aside the stack of farm catalogs. She lifted the mattress.
It was unlikely he would or could succeed against the Rakshasa a second time. How could Charley twice fool a creature who had likely lived for hundreds of years and performed crossovers hundreds of times? A creature who had a second ...
And he’ll stop at nothing to rescue his sister—even if she doesn’t want to be saved. “Rarely has an author painted the great American West in strokes so bold, vivid, and true.”—Ralph Compton