Showing posts with label #Navajo hero. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Navajo hero. Show all posts

Thursday, November 13, 2025

All of Me (Navajo Code Talker Chronicles #3) is Released!




Dear Readers--


I'm delighted to announce that All of Me, Navaho Code Talker Chronicles Book #3 is a November 2025 release from BWL Publishers.  Have you been waiting for the reunion of Kitty and Luke after their harrowing adventure in New York? Well, the wait is over! Here's Chapter 1:

Chapter 1 

 Summer, 1943 

 Riordan Railroad Station, Arizona Reunion 

 Luke Kayenta checked the delicate gardenia nestled between two rapidly warming bottles of Pepsi Cola. Was it foolish to bring the corsage, given the train’s tendency to be late in wartime? But it had called out to him. I am for her, the one you left in those other canyons, it had said. 

 He sensed Kitty Charante every day and deep in the night. He sensed her while waiting for mail deliveries. He caught the scent of her fingers, past all those fingers that had handled her letters between the city of New York and the small Dinètah trading post where they finally reached him. That scent she wore—Eau de Gardenia always intensified when they kissed. 

 His mother and sisters teased him about the corner of his sister Taswan’s window where he nurtured the small plant that had flowered in time to welcome her. It was where he kept the small stack of books, photographs, and drawings from Kitty and her family. Even his grandmother, who did not tease him as much, called it his shrine. Did their laughter signal approval of the correspondence across their cultures? 

 His nephews accepted the gifts of baseball cards and marbles from Matty and Dom, their counterparts in Kitty’s world. Maybe the children should have come here to the station to wait for her arrival with him. She was used to family all around her. Where was the train? 

He stood, leaving the gardenia on the bench, and paced, a bad habit he’d picked up from White people. A Hopi woman, who had been scowling at him since he’d shared the shade beside her, stirred. “She is coming,” the woman said, in English, their common language. 

Under his own shoes, Luke now caught the vibration she’d already felt. “You are right, Grandmother,” he said in the best Hopi he could manage. 

 She grinned, her eyes disappearing in the squint. “Come, lovesick newcomer. Help these old bones to rise.”

 He obeyed, giving her his arm, grateful she had used one of the less pejorative terms her people had for his: newcomer. The Hopi had preceded the Diné into the American Southwest by many centuries. As for the “lovesick,” that was merely a statement of fact. 

 *** 

 Kitty saw him from the window as the train slowed. Through the shimmering heat he stood in his full-dress uniform, with every button fastened, gleaming. His hat shaded his eyes. And a gardenia was somehow blooming in his hands. 

 “The war must be going badly if the Marines are letting them in,” the conductor said, behind her. 

She turned. He shrugged. “Waiting for that gaggle, likely.” He gestured to the laughing woman, who lifted a baby as her two small girls waved from the train car window. 

It was the family Kitty had invited to use her private compartment’s washroom an hour earlier, to place a Band-Aid for the older girl’s scrape. “Elbow’s the strongest part of you if anybody gets fresh,” she’d advised as she worked. 

“I know,” the girl replied with a small smile.

 “I don’t see anyone waiting for you, Mrs. Charente,” the conductor said now. “You’d best stay on. Flagstaff is a proper stop. You can telephone your party from there. Put it back, George,” he instructed the stooped porter, whose name was not George. 

 The train lurched. 

The edge of her trunk bumped the smaller girl off her feet. The mother quickly transferred the baby to Kitty, then lifted the crying girl. 

 The conductor sighed hard. “Now, Ma’am, you don’t have to help these clumsy—”

 “Stand aside,” Kitty ordered. 

 Even the crying girl went silent. The porter, a small barrel-chested man, turned, grinned wide enough for her to see his gold tooth. “No lasting harm done? Well, this way then, ladies and children,” he proclaimed brightly, hoisting the mother’s carpetbag on top of Kitty’s trunk. 

The older sister blocked her way. Her pretty embroidered blouse was like her mother’s. Unlike her mother’s braid, the girl’s black hair was whorled around each ear. “You can’t keep our tiposi, White lady,” she warned. 

 Her mother’s breath caught. 

 Kitty laughed. “Don’t worry, kiddo.” She looked down at the still-sleeping infant. How long had it been since she’d allowed herself to hold a baby? Breathe, she told herself. You can do this. 

 The scowling girl came closer, tilted her head. “You don’t smell like iodine now. You smell good.” 

 “Thanks. How’s the elbow?” 

 “Better.” She pointed her chin out the train’s last window. “Is he your man?” 

 “Sure is. Isn’t he handsome?” 

 The girl frowned. “He is Diné. But my grandmother pets his arm. Look, Ingu! Grandmother pets a Diné!” 

 “Hush,” her mother admonished, her middle child now settled at her hip. 

“My daughter is very young, Miss.” 

 “I have five years,” the girl protested. “My sister has three, but she can jump rope almost as good as I can.” She nodded toward the bundle in Kitty’s arms. “He cannot even sit up yet. But he likes to laugh.” 

 “Well. You’re all swell kids. Even him.” 

 A smile broke through the woman’s wary expression. “You honor my family.” 

 As the train door opened, the heat hit Kitty with a force that rocked her stance. She was still getting used to the altitude change from New York’s sea level. This was a new challenge. But the baby nestled in her arms balanced her. Careful. Baby’s wiseacre sister was onto Kitty’s deep longing. The piney smell of his head only intensified it. 

 Luke Kayenta reached out for her. 

She remembered his hands and their gentle strength. He eased her down the train’s steps, traded the baby for his gardenia with a shy smile. 

He carried the baby back to his mother. The Pullman porter left her trunk on the platform and carried the young mother’s bag to the waiting flatbed wagon. 

Luke followed, assisting the family’s grandmother. Happy squeals rose from the women. And did she even hear the baby’s merry chortle? So much for stoic, cigar-store wooden Indians she’d been told to expect. 

Luke and the porter returned. “That was so kind of you, William,” Kitty said, loud enough for the conductor to hear that she knew the man’s actual name. “Thank you.” 

 The porter touched the brim of his cap. “Not at all, Miss Kitty. It’s my job, Ma’am.”

 “Wait.” She looked up into Luke’s eyes. “Hey, partner. Got some change?” 

 Luke plunged his hand into his Marine dress pants pocket, then opened his palm. In the middle of the copper pennies gleamed a silver dollar. 

 William Marshall, Pullman porter, whose son graduated college first in his class, took a step back. “Oh, no. You already gave me an envelope for services rendered,” he objected. 

 “This is to thank you for helping with the bags of my friends,” Kitty insisted, nodding towards the women. She took up the coin from Luke’s palm. Why had she let her sister talk her into painting her nails? She flipped his silver dollar behind her while she still had sense of where William Marshall stood. 

She heard it land in his palm. “Why, thank you, Missus. And Corporal, sir. You have yourselves a good visit, now!” 

 Even in her spectator pumps, Kitty had to look up to finally make solid contact with Luke Kayenta’s fathomless eyes. The sight almost robbed her breath. “So,” she managed, “How about a kiss?” 

 Luke smiled. She remembered how rare his smiles were. “I have many kisses for you, Kitty.” 

 “You think you could plant the first?” 

 The small drama had drawn the attention of every remaining passenger on the train. She would have been mortified if he’d hesitated. But he did not. He swooped on her mouth as if it were his ultimate destination over the months they’d been apart. Kitty didn’t remember anything but the taste of Luke Kayenta after that, except for the vague sense of her skirts flying in the train’s wake. As Luke gasped for air, he buried his nose in her hair and her neck. He spoke a little. Not in English, but in that deep, nasal, drawling language of the people he was born into.  As she felt her breasts rise, react against that buttoned-up uniform, the evidence of his own desire tantalized her thighs. 

 When they finally finished the kiss, both the train and the wagon were gone. Only a beat-up green truck remained at the station. 

 Luke’s smile slid lopsided and his brow furrowed. “The silver dollar. It was for gas.” 

 “Oh. Well, we can walk.” 

 “But Kitty. I wrote to you, explained, remember? That we have many miles to go yet?” 

 She grinned. “Relax, Captain.” 

 “I am not a captain in the Marines, Kitty.” 

 “But you are still a member of the Office of Strategic Services? And that’s your rank there?” 

 “Well, yes. That seems a hard unit of government to be released from.” 

 “Then, in private, you’re still my captain, who well earned his rank. There have to be some rewards for your service! So, my captain, if you’ve got ration coupons, I can pay for gas.” 

 “You did not forget what I wrote in the letter, then, about distances here. You are teasing me. The women do that all the time. They say I am too serious.” 

 She touched the slight stubble at his chin. “Luke. I’m so glad to see you. And this gardenia. Thank you. It’s beautiful.” 

 “Saiah naaghai bikieh hozho, Yanaha,” he said quietly, formally. Kitty recognized the phrase from his letters. “Walk in beauty,” was the poor English translation of the complex philosophy of life balance he explained in his letters. And he used the name he’d given her, Yanaha: She Meets the Enemy. His voice, even deeper than she remembered, made the name soar. Those exotic Valentino eyes were exactly as she remembered. Where had he found a gardenia? Its scent drifted past the strand of pearls against her throat. She pressed her finger to his bottom lip. He drew it into his mouth. The sudden sensuousness of it robbed her breath. His arms closed around her again. She reveled in his familiar scent of corn and sage mixing with the oiled metal of his hidden firearm. There, encircled, she felt safe from the world and all its cruelties—from the petty aggressions of the railroad conductor toward the kind porter and the young Indian mother to the war itself. 

 “We need to go,” Luke murmured into her hair. “The sun will not wait for us to finish.”

 “Finish what?” she teased him, now that she knew his other women did. But he had no snappy comeback. He did not even grin or call her a brazen hussy. 

 “Drinking each other in,” he answered her question. 



Monday, October 13, 2025

Plaid Blanket Cover Story

      


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I'm excited to announce that I have a new book coming out next month! It's the third of my Navajo Code Talker series that began with I'll Be Seeing You and continued with Watch Over Me. Keeping up with the title theme of songs that were popular in the 1940's, Book #3 is a song that my mom once told me was her and my dad's favorite: All of Me.

All of Me is set in the summer of 1943, just after the first class of Navajo Code Talkers has been sent overseas to the Pacific. Our hero Luke Kayenta is still stateside in Arizona, training and recruiting more possible candidates for this important work that helped the United States win the war.

It's now New Yorker Kitty Charente's turn to be a fish out of water as she comes to join Luke and meet his family.  But Nazi agent Helmut Adler has arrived too, to try to throw the Code Talker program into chaos.

The threesome....


Book 1: Spain 1942




Book 2: New York City 1942




Book 3: Arizona 1943

Do you like the cover of All of Me? It's another wonderful design of our Art Director, Michelle Lee. There's a story that goes with that blanket that Luke and Kitty are snug under, concerning a long-ago real life Scottish trader named Big Jock....


Big Jock McCluskey



Big Jock McCluskey

The story Luke's grandmother Anaba Bowman tells is about the Hudson’s Bay Scottish trader lost in a storm. It's based on the life of Big Jock McCluskey, who traded machine loom blankets and shirts woven in the colors of Rob Roy tartan of the Clan MacGregor. McCluskey family stories claim that the Native Americans loved the red-black cloth and called it Buffalo Plaid. It became a quintessential symbol of the American West. I had fun thinking of Big Jock losing his way in a Northern Arizona winter and finding the Navajo, who had been weaving their own wool for centuries! Luke’s long-ago grandmother politely traded one of her textiles for his, and so it became a family heirloom. It appears in All of Me’s story as well as its wonderful cover.


Next month I'll include a sneak peek at my new novel. Thank you for being readers of the series!







Saturday, September 13, 2025

History in the Footnotes

 

                                                                            

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I love finding history in the footnotes of my research. Did you know that Native Americans have used a now disgraced symbol in their art? For the first peoples of the American southwest, the symbol is the whirlwind or whirling log. But with the rise of the Nazi party in Germany its benevolence turned deadly. 

It is, of course, the swastika.




    Realizing the growing threat to the world, four nations--the Hopi, Navajo, Apache and Papago decided to have a ceremony to renounce its use. In 1940, representatives signed a proclamation which read:


Because the above ornament which has been a symbol of friendship among our forefathers for many centuries has been desecrated recently by another nation of peoples,

Therefore, it is resolved that henceforth from this date and forevermore our tribes renounce the use of the emblem commonly known as the swastika or flyfot on our blankets, baskets, art objects, sandpainting, and clothing.


 Here is a photo of the event:




Did I use this in book 3 of my Navajo Code Talker Chronicles, All of Me? Of course I found a way to work it in!


Since then, some artists and craftspeople have reclaimed their ancient benevolent symbol, which exists in many cultures throughout the world. Others think it should stay buried, because of the trauma it engendered by the Nazis.


What do you think? 


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