Last night I stopped to see my editor to put the finishing touches on the manuscript for Hazel Moon! We decided to write the first chapter in the sequel, Hawthorn Moon, and add it to the end of Hazel Moon as a Sneak Peek! (See Below)
 I also picked up four proof copies of the book to take on a promo trip to Detroit to see Echo and the Bunnymen in concert, to meet the band, give them signed copies of the book, and hopefully get them interested in promoting Hazel Moon which features the band throughout the story.
 Remember the book-signing dresses we got for $10 each marked down from $400 at Nordstrom's, considering what we wanted/needed them for, and our limited budgets, that $10 price seemed like a magical gift from the Hazel Moon gods. While working with my editor, one of his other authors came in and told us a story.
 She was looking for a working laptop for her brother. Again, on a limited budget, she found one at a rummage sale and was able to talk the seller down to $10 for an older, but good laptop that gets online reliably and which was worth much much more. It just seemed like much more than a mere coincidence that two authors, sitting there talking to each other, both had important needs met for the exact same $10 price tag!!!
It would appear that Magic comes in all shapes, sizes, and colors, so keep a keen eye out for those Magical Connections that are happening in your life!
https://www.wattpad.com/myworks/37042129-hazel-moon
Hawthorn Moon
Chapter 1
Chapter 1
Seattle,  May, 1991
I've never been in love,
Don't know what it is,
I only know when someone wants me...
Jane's Addiction
"SONNY LIKES THE SARMA,"
  said a surprised Marcus as the midday spring sun haloed around his  
natural Afro in a crazy supernova sort of way.
The cap he normally wore was in his pocket...an afternoon thing when he liked his hair to have some freedom.
"Well, of course he  
does," I replied, "...we're pals, but it's more than that. We're close, 
 like twins. Sonny ate the sarma cuz he knows that if he offered me some
  of his kibble, I'd try it...get what I mean?"
My words flowed out  
midst the wafting Mediterranean aromas of spicy boreg, a layered pastry 
 often filled with cheese; eech, an Armenian bulgur salad; and 
lahmajoun,  a kind of pizza and a popular street food made with ground 
lamb,  parsley, and tomatoes.
"I haven't been to an  
authentic Armenian festival in way too long so this is a big deal for  
me, I buy some sarma and you won't even try them...they're just grape  
leaves stuffed with rice. Come on, I know you've got the chutzpah to  
choke at least one down."
"No...nope...I don't  
think so, November...I don't know what it is...I'm not feeling it and  
one thing I'm not is an ass-kissing hypocrite, but the rest of the fest 
 really kicks! Look, girl, there must be a reason there aren't any  
Armenian restaurants...think about it, so it's not happening, just  
saying."
With his last argument, 
 worthy of a Supreme Court chief justice delivering the final word on a 
 controversial case, Marcus put on his charcoal newsboy cap, the style  
that had skulls with lemon moon eyes looking back at you, and smiled as 
 he fed Sonny, sitting there drooling with anticipation,  another one of
  his meat-filled sarma. After woofing down the last one, Sonny 
proceeded  to lick clean Marcus' hands and his long, beautiful deejay 
digits.
LEERING AT HIM TOOK ME  
back to his loft, the one above St. Andrew's Grocery Store. Through my  
mind's memory eye I could clearly see the old, peeling dusty rose velvet
  wallpaper and the heavy rustic driftwood beams crisscrossing a ceiling
  with patches of plaster ready to fall to the floor. 
It was the perfect pad to sit for hours and read Rilke poetry, such as the line, Perhaps all the dragons of our lives are princesses who are only waiting to see us once beautiful and brave,
  or listen to a vinyl recording of the great Jimi Hendrix belting out  
"Hey Joe," and all while drinking Merlot and chamomile tea at the same  
time.
His sparse makeshift  
kitchen contained not much more than a plug-in hot plate and microwave, 
 but my head was swimming with images of boxes upon boxes of cheap  
macaroni and cheese. While remembering them I lost my taste for the  
Armenian delicacies I'd purchased.
WE WERE PRIVILEGED to be
  at the revival of the only Armenian picnic in the Seattle area. The  
last one took place over a decade ago.
Smiling at us were the  
ethnically charming Armenian ladies, many stout with dark hair and dark 
 complected, who'd lovingly prepared the food, using recipes handed down
  from generation to generation, going back to their homeland in the  
Middle East. 
As a result of the  
Armenian Holocaust in the early 1900s the Diaspora spread all over the  
world, with a group from a certain region in Armenia settling in  
Seattle. 
One of the servers  
noticed that Marcus was turning up his nose at whatever sample she  
offered him, but she wouldn't give up. Her aged face had the same  
black-and-white photograph features I remembered from a picture that  
strangely disappeared when I was a girl. 
With her classic  
Armenian gold hoop earrings dangling, it was a face that carried the  
struggle, pain, and pride of generations—influences that threatened to  
but didn't accomplish warping the shape of her heart which was  
constantly battling with itself. Despite the past I could tell her soul 
 lived in the present  joy of a garden of golden pas-tries, flaky,  
buttery, rich, and savory.
"You...you try this  
shakalama...you will like, believe me," she said, offering a piece out  
to Marcus with the reverence of a priest holding the Holy Eucharist. "It
  is the sweet taste of Armenia!"
Putting his open hand up
  as a barrier Marcus replied, "I know...Armenians can be sweet," as he 
 paused to look affectionately in my direction, "thank you, but no,  
darling, not today."
After that happened I  
knew it was going to be a lost cause with Marcus and let him feed his  
food to Sonny, but somehow I sensed that the day was destined to unfold 
 in some significant, life-changing way that I could have never  
imagined...something...something was going to happen that would shake  
our world.
UNABLE TO SHARE SOME OF 
 my cherished ethnic culinary heritage with Marcus was taking me down,  
but before bottoming out some unusual, imported, and so-damned-honest  
sounds caught my attention. The festival parking lot came alive with  
ethnic music and this aspect of Armenian culture my Black boyfriend was 
 interested in tasting.
"Hey...dear Novi...you've been holding out on me, these guys are really kickin' it. Don't just stand there!"
"But we don't go to this church?"
That didn't matter to  
Marcus who grabbed my hand, waved Sonny on to come along, and we joined 
 the line of folk dancers holding hands and all performing in unison a  
series of repeating moves with their feet while slowly snaking around  
the dance area.
The repeating pulsing  
music became hypnotic, the crescendos exhilarating, the distinctive  
sound of the kanun gloriously evident, its strings rising above the  
other instruments, as Marcus and I broke into the human chain joining  
hands with members of the Kaprelian and the Andykian families, kicking  
when it was time to kick, swirling and laughing as we were caught up in 
 the collective joy of the experience.
Sonny found a spot right by the band and seemed to be dancing
  in his own way, panting to the beat. The music was mesmerizing, the  
extended manic sounds, the fairytale dance steps, and there I was with  
Marcus, right in the heat of the meandering moment, part of an ancient  
celebration, a ritual featuring thumping hearts the joyous pomp and  
circumstance of unbridled, free-flowing movement.
Part of that joy was  
feeling accepted. I wasn't from their church, Marcus was Black, yet  
despite our differences we had all become one collective soul joined in 
 harmony by the music and dancing. I could see Marcus dripping sweat on 
 the unusually warm and humid spring day, but you don't notice minor  
discomforts like that when you've slipped into the Twilight Zone of an  
Armenian folk dance.
Just then a cooling  
breeze waved over us making us feel like the sky was dropping cool  
petals of lily white flowers on us...hmmm...heavenly. 
Just then, while we were standing on the sidelines catching a rest, Marcus spoke up to break the spell I was under.
"You handle yourself well out there, but I thought Angela was the one who loved to dance, why isn't she here with us?"
"Believe me, she wanted to but duty called. She's working a promo. 
AT THE LOCAL MALL Angela was with her mother selling fragrances.
"This place is awesome, 
 the folks a little different than the LA crowd, but do you think teal  
nail polish will work here in Seattle to match the Eternity bottle?"
Angela Gonzales-Gondola 
 was sporting a new sassy shag-do tinted in a pretty Mediterranean  
off-center red, projecting her most seductive fall-in-love-with-me smile
  as she captivated a passing couple wearing matching brown hoodies.
"Yep, my baby poopsy,  
that should work. See, I've got on my icy-green fishnets to match the  
bottle...ooh, I like this song...hippity hoppity, right?" Rosa asked as 
 she began to bust out in some not-bad street moves, show-girling it in 
 front of their New Frontier fragrance kiosk.
"Mom...the song is,  
"Rapper's Delight," by the Sugarhill Gang, and lyrics go, I said a hip  
hop, hippie to the hippie...  There's more, Ma, but will you please at  
least get the first part right, and the name of the rapper from the band
  is Master Gee," Angela clarified.
Glaring at Rosa were  
several pairs of eyes from their competitors trying their best to push  
their lines of perfumes, but Angela and Rosa seemed to attract all the  
fragrance-buying customers that day, and most days, frustrating the  
other sellers to no end.
"That's right, the name 
 of the fragrance is Master D," Angela replied, answering the final  
question before closing the deal for the couple who'd been presented  
with a series of small samples sprayed on business cards, sniffing a jar
  of strong coffee beans to clear the nose of the previous scent before 
 trying the next.
"Yeah, that's the one. I
  like the subtle but strong earth tones...yep, wrap it up and you've  
been a big help describing all the differences between the samples," the
  guy from the couple said.
Yes, Angela was good at 
 what she did, she knew her fragrances, but the real dance taking place 
 between her and her customers was about raw, sexual chemistry and 
Angela  had it going on in that department. She made the sale to a 
couple, but  it was the guy who first made the move in Angela's 
direction, to the  consternation of his date as the sales soiree 
unfolded.
"Game on, Mom...score two more for me...ooooh, Angela is good, now isn't she!"
They got paid just for  
being there at the mall and talking up their Calvin Klein line of  
fragrances. They earned the posh gig of being paid to go on the road  
merely promoting the company's fragrances because they were the most  
successful sales team by far in their district. Beyond that, they had  
fun competing to see who would end up closing the most customers when  
the mesmerized person, male or female didn't seem to make a difference, 
 opened their wallet to buy something they were pitching.
Angela's bold boast  
triggered Rosa's competitive instincts and she didn't have to take a  
backseat to anyone. Rosa had been a dancer all her life, her prime cut  
shapely legs and rounded calves constantly turning heads. Her dancer's  
feet were always wrapped in sexy open strap sandals, shoes, and boots,  
not so much for the open-toe look but because they sweat so much. Adding
  to her visual impact is a three-inch stunning skunk streak down the  
center of her long luxurious hair.   
"Watch this, half-pint," challenged Rosa, eyeing up a fifty-something handsome UPS guy in his brown uniform.
Her pitch usually got  
the job done. It always began with a huge, broad, welcoming smile  
boasting lots of teeth to go along with pumping up her shoulders a  
couple of times like she would do serving a pan of homemade lasagna. But
  that was just the opening seductive salvo. The UPS driver was about to
  slip into her web.
"Tell me something about your honey. Do you think she'd like a sensual scent or something fun and spirited on you?"
Before he had a chance to answer, Rosa would press the assault after noticing he had a wedding ring on.
"I see you're married. What is your wife's name?"
"Kelly," UPS Guy answered while raising his ring finger to show Rosa.
"Try this, new from  
Calvin Klein, Eternity for men, but really this fragrance was made for  
women, for wives, like your Kelly, because it symbolizes how you felt  
when you fell in love with her...and your eternal love for each other," 
 Rosa tactfully insisted after setting the romantic stage as she  
proceeded to spray a sample on him.
This was the risky  
reverse seduction phase of the sell. When the right fragrance mixed the 
 man's natural scent and the potent pheromones released could be  
intoxicating, sending Rosa and Angela into a swirl of erotic intensity. 
 The girls would often have to wait a minute for the butterflies to  
settle before they could continue the pitch.
That's what happened  
with the UPS driver as he noticed Rosa swoon after inhaling his enhanced
  manly scent. The poor guy was outgunned, though, and smiled a look of 
 surrender as Rosa proceeded to close him, all while Angela, who knew  
exactly what was happening, smirked wistfully in Rosa's direction before
  engaging in her new habit, swirling her wedding ring round and round  
when she was in the midst of any intense emotion.
Although Angela and Rosa
  spiced up their promo days with a little good-natured competition, it 
 was obvious to anyone who knew them or saw them together that they 
loved  each other. Score: Angela 2, Rosa 1, but the ladies called it a 
draw.
"Alright girl...who's rockin' Seattle now?
After a high five they  
began busting out Salt-N-Pepa moves right in the middle of the mall  
while singing the lyrics to, "Ooh Baby Baby," both of them positioning  
their hands up to their mouths as if they were holding microphones.
BACK AT THE ARMENIAN  
Festival, there was a lull in the action as the band was on a break, so 
 Marcus pulled out his harmonica and was serenading November with the  
song, "Dixie," his style soft and slow...right from the heart.
I grabbed his cap while 
 he was playing and put it on laughing, "This is mine for the rest of 
the  day since I've got to go to some poser lame photo shoot you got me 
 into...rockin' out with Marcus Duprees!"
I pulled it over my way 
 wavy long hair that on this  day was coppery brown shaped with three  
thin braids...this day that would unfold to be a one to remember.
"Hey, that's exactly why
  they wanted you—November Rainer Savitchian can ROCK OUT. These guys  
trust me to steer just the right talent to them. The gig is at the Den  
Zen End bowling alley and the guy's name is Guter...he's way cool. I  
mean, him and I go way back, he digs your incense, and he wants someone 
 real, earthy, and different for the video...and...he's paying you some 
 good cash. Gutter Man is a character. He drinks like a fish and owns 
the  Singing Telegram Modeling Agency...some guy...know what I mean."
"Are you kidding  
me...what is all that supposed to mean? I just know I'm not going to  
like some guy who sings and drinks. I do like his name,  
though...different, for sure, and I'm wondering what his last name could
  possibly be. You're right about the incense though, he is a loyal  
Tomorrow's Rainbow customer. I mail him a lot of it every month. But,  
how come you don't know the name of the band the video is for? Angela,  
my very best gal pal, is in town. She's staying at the OK Motel where  
we're going to party to-night if you want to join us."
With that I jumped on  
the back of Marcus' shiny blue Buell roadster, Sonny leaped into the  
Robin side-car, and I instinctively began stroking both his and Sonny's 
 hair...just something I like to do...just saying. Then, Marcus shot an 
 arrow right through my wounded heart with words that slapped my misty  
Seattle love world silly.
"I'm dropping you off at
  the Weeping Wounded Heart gas station...you know the one...with that  
huge weeping willow out front. Gutter will pick you up there. There's a 
 nice concrete bench outside. Why don't I pick up your Italian friends 
at  the mall, it's been awhile since I've been there, I'll pick up some 
 pizza, and after you're done shooting the video we'll get the party  
started at their motel! So tell me more about this Angela. Does she  
really have five kids with three different guys?"
"No...that's four, all  
boys, Gunner, Garlito, and the twins, Giovanni and Giancarlo," I  
answered, while petting Sonny in the sidecar, trying not to think, to  
stay in the moment, that place where I was always safe, wondering what  
I'd said to Marcus...oh how damning and ordinary conversation can be.
I WAS ESCORTED OFF his  
bike onto a corner that faced the Fresh Fish Market. After inhaling the 
 pungent smell of rotting salmon and cod coming from their dumpster, 
more  than ever I felt like the last thing I could possibly want was to 
be in  another typical music video exploiting women as sex objects and 
be  handled by some drunk guy named Gutter.
Peering down at my  
favorite blue calico cotton summer dress, wearing my black combat boots,
  with my dad's brown cardigan on, I just couldn't imagine why anyone  
would want to photograph me. I pulled skull cap down and watched as my  
Marcus rode off with Sonny to do what I did want to do—party with my  
friends.
The crunchy white gas  
station gravel was stained with the remains of various petroleum  
products as I literally ran to the only thing that seemed to make any  
sense—the large weeping willow, covered with fresh Popsicle-green new  
growth leaves and gleaming with endless possibilities.
I paused, then turned to
  hug the trunk, my mind racing back to that fateful Eve of the Hazel  
Moon so many years ago, tears flowing knowing how much that night  
changed me. Looking down I could see pairs of nightcrawlers lined up  
next to each other carrying out their mating ritual. Looking up to the  
chirps of song sparrows, I saw a male and female prancing as a prelude  
to procreating, and following the sound of scampering to the right I  
noticed a female red squirrel being pursued by two chunky suitors hot on her trail.
Standing next to the  
great willow I felt myself at the epicenter of a natural world teeming  
with the hanky-panky life force of renewal and where was I—November  
Rainer Savitchian, abandoned at the Willow Wounded Heart Gas Station.  
Then, I began tingling all over.
An early May breezed  
picked up. It carried an intoxicating familiar fragrance—lily of the  
valley, spiced with the warmer notes of Patchouli. Looking up I saw a  
swirl of white hawthorn flowers. Slowly emerging from the cloud of  
petals, breathtakingly beautiful, singing with a songbird's voice, yet  
always projecting her sassy devil-may-care personality, there she was.
"Luna!"    

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