Margins
A Vacancy at the Inn book cover
A Vacancy at the Inn
2015
First Published
4.23
Average Rating
163
Number of Pages

Part of Series

A VACANCY AT THE INN Riverton Road Romantic Suspense Book 3 A Christmas Novella Luke & Bethany’s Story by Alice Orr On a cold December day Bethany Miller and her son Michael arrive in Riverton. Bethany grew up on Riverton Road Hill in remote upstate New York in a home filled with family drama. She moved away from her small town roots to escape that drama. Now she’s back because of complications in her present life as a single mom with a young son. She hopes the Miller family will be a Christmas blessing for Michael. She’s less hopeful about what this homecoming at the holidays will be for her. The last thing Bethany needs is more complication. That means the last person she wants to see is Luke Kalli staring down at her from the roof of Miller’s Inn. They shared a glorious romantic connection before she fled from here. The power of that encounter came at a tumultuous moment in her life as yet another reason to leave the emotional peril that Riverton seems to be for her and never return – until today. She has no idea this place will put her son in peril too. A Vacancy at the Inn is the third book and the first Novella of the Riverton Road Romantic Suspense Series featuring the Kalli family and now the Miller family as well in stories of Romance and Danger. A Vacancy at the Inn is available in eBook and paperback editions.

Avg Rating
4.23
Number of Ratings
31
5 STARS
42%
4 STARS
45%
3 STARS
6%
2 STARS
6%
1 STARS
0%
goodreads

Author

Alice Orr
Alice Orr
Author · 7 books

My Name is Alice & This is My Story. Growing up as an only child until I was nine had a lot to do with making me a storyteller. I wasn’t really alone because I had my imagination and spent loads of time there. I also had Grandma and she did two amazing things for me. She told me stories of her own and she listened to mine. I’d sit at the table in her warm kitchen and kick my toes under my chair because my feet didn’t yet touch the floor. I'd talk while Grandma listened with a twinkle in her eye behind her rimless glasses. Because of Grandma I love to tell stories. In the eighth grade I had a teacher named Mrs. Mahon. I was a restless, troublesome student. Then she assigned a writing project and I wrote several pages without a restless moment in any of them. When Mrs. Mahon handed back the graded papers she dropped mine on my desk & said “You know how to write, girl.” I figured that must be true. Mrs. Mahon wouldn’t have complimented bad-student me unless she meant it. At last I had something I loved to do that I was good at doing. Still it was decades before I talked about my dream to anybody but myself. My husband Jonathan asked me a question that changed my life. “If you could do anything at all what would it be?” I couldn’t answer right away. I was afraid that if I spoke the words out loud they'd shatter in the air and my dream would shatter with them. Finally I said “If I could do anything at all I’d be a writer.” Those words did not shatter and everything I’ve done since has been about pursuing them.

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