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A Sparkle of Silver (Georgia Coast Romance Book #1)
A Sparkle of Silver (Georgia Coast Romance Book #1)
A Sparkle of Silver (Georgia Coast Romance Book #1)
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A Sparkle of Silver (Georgia Coast Romance Book #1)

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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Ninety years ago, Millie Sullivan's great-grandmother was a guest at oil tycoon Howard Dawkins' palatial estate on the shore of St. Simons Island, Georgia. Now, Millie plays a 1920s-era guest during tours of the same manor. But when her grandmother suggests that there is a lost diary containing the location of a hidden treasure on the estate, along with the true identity of Millie's great-grandfather, Millie sets out to find the truth of her heritage--and the fortune that might be hers. When security guard Ben Thornton discovers her snooping in the estate's private library, he threatens to have her fired. But her story seems almost too ludicrous to be fiction, and her offer to split the treasure is too tempting to pass up . . .

Get ready for a romantic escapade through dark halls and dusty corners that will have you holding your breath and sighing with delight as two charming characters get caught up in the adventure of uncovering the past and finding their way to an unexpected future.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 16, 2018
ISBN9781493415168
A Sparkle of Silver (Georgia Coast Romance Book #1)
Author

Liz Johnson

Liz Johnson grew up reading Christian fiction and always dreamed of being a part of the publishing industry. After graduating from Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff with a degree in public relations, she set out to fulfill her dream. In 2006 she got her wish when she accepted a publicity position at a major trade book publisher. While working as a publicist in the industry, she decided to pursue her other dream-becoming an author. While she was writing her first book, she completed the Christian Writers Guild apprentice course and wrote articles for several magazines. Liz lives in Colorado Springs, Colorado, where she enjoys theater, ice skating, volunteering in her church's bookstore and making frequent trips to Arizona to dote on her nephew and three nieces. She loves stories of true love with happy endings. The Kidnapping of Kenzie Thorn is her first novel. Keep up with Liz's adventures in writing through her Web site.

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Millie Sullivan plays a 1920s-era guest during tours of a palatial estate on the shore of St. Simons Island, Georgia, where her great-grandmother was a real guest ninety years ago. When Millie learns of a lost diary that may contain the location of a hidden treasure on the estate and reveal the identity of her great-grandfather, she sets out to find the truth of her heritage--and the fortune she desperately needs. But it won't be easy.

    When security guard Ben Thornton discovers her snooping in the estate's private library, he threatens to have her fired. Still, her story seems too ludicrous to be fiction, and her offer to split the treasure is too tempting to pass up.

    Get ready for a romantic escapade through dark halls and dusty corners that will have you holding your breath and sighing with delight.

    "A mystery, a treasure hunt, and a split-time romance--all set within a beautiful chateau.

    My Thoughts: This is a wonderful romance mystery that keeps the readers' attention from the beginning. You can't help but love Millie, who is taking care of her grandmother diagnosed with dementia. When Milie has to find another home for her grandmother, with little money to do it with, her grandmother tells her of a journal of her great grandmother's that has a treasure map. Who doesn't like a good treasure hunt? And so begins our story of intrigue and romance.

    This is a story of a lost romance and a new romance brought together by a unique situation. I believe that readers will enjoy this story as much as I did. It's not only about mystery and love, in this story we find two people trying their best to do right. Millie taking care of her grandmother and Ben trying to right his mother's wrong.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    "You know that every single one of us is more than the worst thing we've done. All of us. We bear the image of our Maker."And that quote sums up the message of this fabulous book. If you're a fan of the author's Prince Edward Island Dreams series and her Love Inspired Suspense books, you're definitely in for a treat. This book is contemporary romance with a throwback to the 1920s via a journal and a good dose of intrigue and mystery. Such a wonderful combination for this lover of contemporary, historical, and suspense romance!The setting of St. Simons Island, Georgia is gorgeous. The author's masterful writing gives color, sound, and smell to the beautiful landscape and brings forth an intricately woven plot with real, down-to-earth characters. Millie is poor and just wants enough money to be able to bring her beloved dementia-laden grandmother to a place where she can be safely taken care of. Ben is an adjunct history professor struggling to right the wrongs his mother went to prison for. Their worlds collide when they become involved in a treasure hunt instigated by Millie's grandmother's memory of her own mother's stay at the infamous Chateau. Both Millie and Ben are wary, cautious, under-the-radar kind of people who don't trust people easily. Yet their shared sense of loyalty, hard work, and compassion brings them together and welds them together as partners. As they become more entrenched in their treasure hunt, they also learn things about each other that they must wrestle with. Forgiveness for their past and realizing that their past does not define them must be learned the hard way.The book addresses the heartache involved in loving and caring for someone with dementia. It also delves deep to ask what is truly important and necessary in life - is it money? Fame? Recognition? Easy life? The flashbacks to the 1920s, right before the stock market crash, provided through Millie's great-grandmother Ruth's journals show much of what our human hearts crave but also how foolish and deceptive our hearts can be. Millie and Jeremy's present day chase through the Chateau itself and its grounds provides intrigue and suspense that keep the pages turning. Great-grandma Ruth's journals also add to the mystery surrounding the possible treasure and what may have happened to it.What a wonderful beginning of an exciting new series from Liz Johnson! I can't wait to read the second book! I was given a copy of the book from the author and Baker Publishing Group. I was under no obligation to post a positive review. All comments and opinions are solely my own.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Camilla “Millie” Sullivan is heartbroken. She’s being forced to move her beloved grandma Joy from the assisted living facility where she’s being cared for because her memory loss has worsened, necessitating more specialized care. Millie is strapped financially and can hardly afford to take care of herself. She’s out of options and feeling hopeless and dejected until her grandma mutters details about a long-held family secret that might help Millie to get the funds she needs. It involves her great grandmother, Ruth, an opulent Chateau and a diary containing a treasure map that’s hidden somewhere within the Chateau’s walls. Fortunate to get part-time employment at the Chateau, Millie sets about snooping to locate Ruth’s diary. Her efforts are thwarted when security guard, Ben Thornton, catches her and threatens to expose her. Desperate to escape dismissal, Millie recruits Ben to help her, promising to split whatever treasure she finds with him. Ben, carrying his own load and in need of money as much as Millie, agrees to help her. Together, Ben and Millie become a formidable team, uncovering more than a few secrets, and in the process, learning that love is more valuable than money. I loved this story that required me to suspend disbelief; to accept the far-fetched plot and coincidences. In this book we find treasure hunts, thefts, homicide, scandal, romance, and lots of mystery. I enjoyed the dual narrative aspect, taking us from the present and back to 1929, just before the Great Depression when Millie’s great-grandmother, Ruth, and her friend, Jane, both bank tellers, were invited to be summer guests at the Dawkins Chateau on St. Simons Island, GA, by Mr. Dawkins’s “particular friend,” Lucille Globe. (Mr. Dawkins’s wife and child were back in Chicago at their permanent residence.) The elusive diary describes Ruth’s activities in and around the Chateau during her visit. The juxtaposition of high-society socialites and the working class guests mingling at the Chateau was fun to observe—the common folks enamored with the lives of the uppercrust. Ruth was a poor farm girl from Central Georgia. Nineteen at the time, she resembled a fickle young girl who was confused about where she should direct her attention. I anxiously awaited which way Ruth’s heart would steer her. Would it be towards the lowly, solicitous gardener, George? Or the handsome, debonair, wealthy Claude? This book is categorized as Christian fiction, but it was not littered with bible verses or laced with the author’s own interpretations of scripture, which I appreciated. It was not didactic at all, but simply lacked foul language, violence and immoral activity. The narrator’s sugary, sweet southern accent took some getting used to initially, but once I acclimated myself to it I was able to relax and enjoy her performance. She did a very good job with the characters’ voices and her pace was just right. Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed this books. I liked the balance of unscrupulous characters and benevolent ones throughout the story, and how the romances within were convincingly developed. Recommended.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is a wonderful romantic story that takes us between present day and slips back to 1929. I'm not sure sure which story make me swoon more, the present or the past. Millie is a delightful character who is barely making ends meet. She has a dear grandmother she is trying keep in a facility but the bills are piling up. It is not easy to watch a loved one slowly slip away in their mind. I wanted to go take Millie's hand and tell her everything would get better.The details about the chateau that Millie works at is fascinating. I would love to explore every room there and perhaps stay in the library forever. Grandma Joy tells a story one day that surprises Millie. It is hard to tell if Grandma Joy is remembering something or just talking silly. If the story is true, there could be a big treasure waiting for Millie to find.Ben enters the picture when he finds Millie sneaking around the chateau. What can she do to convince him to let her continue her search? I loved how the story bounces back and forth between time periods with seamless energy. The author has captured the true depiction of romance with a magical story. It flows with grace and I loved the added mystery of the diary. The words spoken in there are poetic, lovely and definitely a person deeply in love. The slow simmer of Millie and Ben's attraction to each other is movie worthy. They pretend they don't care, yet their eyes tell a different story. And what of the diary which holds secrets that could change lives? The race is on to discover what or if there is a treasure when others get wind of the rumor.The story is one that slowly grabs at your emotions and takes you on a journey of discovering the inner workings of a lost love, the hope of a better future, secrets long thought to be buried and a love story that only a very gifted author can write. The kiss that I have been waiting to read about just about knocked me off my feet. It was soft, sweet, electrical between two people, and "suddenly our hearts were beating at the same tempo, racing faster than mine ever had before. " I won't say who the kiss was from, but for me I waited patiently for that moment in the story that would be worthy of "the kiss felt round the world." The book is everything you want in a story with romance, mystery and an ending that will satisfy all romantics. The author has surpassed my expectations and now has a huge fan. The ending is spectacular with intense drama and sadness that overwhelms me. The lesson in forgiveness and trust told by the characters will be one I will always remember." You have made me see a love I could not have imagined possible.”I received a copy of this book from the author. The review is my own opinion.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I always enjoy a good mystery. I love trying to figure out the puzzle as the author gives clues along the way. The author did a great job weaving this treasure-hunting mystery together. The story was fast-paced and intriguing. I definitely read this one quick. This book is not overly spiritual in it's content. God is mentioned in a few of the chapters, but isn't woven into the story as much as other authors I've read. The overall theme of perseverance through trial is clearly seen as the characters struggle with past mistakes, and life trials that are out of their control. Overall, I enjoyed the mystery part of the story, but it's not a book I would read over and over again.***I received this complimentary book from Library Thing Early Reviewers. I was not required to write a positive review. All opinions are my own.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I easily connected with this story from page one. Much of the situation between Millie and her grandmother reminded me of a situation I experienced in my own life. Millie and Ben are interesting characters and I sympathized with them both. Especially Millie, since her motivation felt more important. This is an unconventional romance, with other aspects of the story (mystery, what you hold dear in life, etc.) holding just as important of a role. It's a well-written, emotionally engaging tale. Love the title!Thank you LibraryThing, for my complimentary early reviewer copy.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I’ve always been interested in the history of old homes or estates, wondering what would be told if walls could talk. In A Sparkle of Silver, journal entries from Millie’s great-grandmother do the talking. Millie learns about her families past by reading the journal entries and the mysteries that line the pages. While her grandmother is struggling with dementia, she still has glimpses of the past and offers Millie tidbits of information that fill in gaps from the journal. Millie begins searching for answers to questions that are unveiled of her ancestors by taking a job at the Dawkins’ Estate mentioned in the diary. Ben Thornton works at the estate as a security guard and through a twist of events begins helping Millie with her search for answers. He is hiding secrets of his own past that have landed his mother in prison. Even though he was only a child when his mother deceived others, he is haunted by her mistakes and is on a mission to bring restoration. Together, Millie and Ben, set out on a treasure hunt of sorts to find answers to many mysteries. What they uncover is painful and shocking, bringing a sudden halt to their blooming relationship. But with the wise words of Millie’s forgetful grandmother and Ben’s boss at his second job, they wade through the deep waters to find peace. A Sparkle of Silver is a fun, engaging and wisdom filled novel. It’s an easy and enjoyable read with a few twists and turns along the way!*Thank you to NetGalley & Revell for my e-copy in exchange for my honest review. All opinions are my own.*
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Millie is trying to find a treasure and save her grandma. Along the way, she falls in love.A romance with religious messages is not normally my type of book, but I enjoyed it. It slowed down for me towards the end, but it ended well.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This will go down as one of my favorite romance books of all time. I did not want to put this down. I loved Millie and Ben. I found the Chateau fascinating. It would have been so cool to be invited to stay at this place during the twenties. I hope that the rest of the books in this series will be just as good. I also enjoyed the bit of mystery that surrounded the Chateau during the twenties. I received a copy of this book from the author for a fair and honest opinion that I gave of my own free will.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I enjoyed this book and the author giving us a glimpse into the mind of a person affected with Alzheimer’s and the main character loving and trying to take care of her grandmother. She also is given a deadline to come up with money she doesn’t have to move her grandmother.I loved that the other main character is carrying guilt for something his mother did while he was a child, and then we see how these overlaps.Now while both are working at a wealthy 1920’s estate, only at the present time, we see how the present and past collide, but will these two, with a mission, first fall for each other, and achieve what others have failed at in the past, find the treasure.I found myself walking in their shoes and loving the setting, and enjoying the read!I received this book through Revell Publishing and was not required to give a positive review.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A Sparkle of Silver is the first book in Liz Johnson's Georgia Coast Romance Series. What a way to start a new series. This novel was so good, it has romance, family, adventure, suspense and history. There's something for everyone. There was such a loving relationship between Millie Sullivan and her Grandma Joy. This story had me at the heartstrings from the very start. The author does a great job of showing us what families deal with having a loved one with Alzheimer's. Millie wants to do what is best for grandma, but her funds have run out. She faces grandma being evicted from the facility she is in. Grandma Joy's story was difficult for me, having just recently placed both my father and mother into a facility. You always wish you could continue to take care of them, but sometimes there comes a time when the best and safest thing for them, is not your first choice.I found it interesting that Grandma Joy, all this time has been hiding a secret. When she tries to reveal it, Millie is not sure she can trust what grandma is telling her. Millie sets out to find a lost diary, a hidden treasure and her true heritage. Ben Thornton unexpectedly becomes her partner in crime. This was a page-turner mystery laced with romance. The love story is one of my favorites this year. I believe it worked so well because both Millie and Ben were not looking for a relationship. Both are trying to solve their own personal problems, they don't have time for romance in their life.Millie has gone to Grandma Joy with her biggest problem, Ben. There are some wonderful quotes from grandma, one of my favorites, “You know that every single one of us is more than the worst thing we've done. All of us. We bear the image of our Marker. Even Ben.”......“And we're surely more than the worst thing someone in our family has done.”I found this to be an exciting mystery, yet sweet historical Christian love story.I was given a copy of this book by Revell Publishers through NetGalleys.The opinions in this review are my own.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    With many improbable and surprising plot twists, A SPARKLE OF SILVER offers readers the chance to trace an unusual and convoluted mystery set in the old Chateau Dawkins on Georgia's Atlantic coast.Millie cares for her Grandma Joy whose early descent into Alzheimer's causes Millie to deal with conflicting information about a needed connection to the rich Devereaux family. Grandma Joy is being evicted from Assisted Living and Millie, her only support,has no money to move her into a Memory Care facility. Millie clutches at the possibility that her Great-Grandma Ruth's diary may give clues to the Devereaux connection.She takes an acting job at the Chateau where she meets security guard Ben as she is illegally searching the Chateau library for the hidden diary...or two.Millie and Ben conceal many secrets of love and money as they agree to work together to find the diaries and a possible hidden treasure. Wild attraction ensues in this first volume of the new GEORGIA COAST ROMANCE series!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I really enjoyed the setting of the book as well as the story. I liked seeing how the two characters came together to work for what they were searching for.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I highly anticipated this story since it was set on the Georgia coast (I'm a North Carolina coastal native). It was, though, not a book I was highly fond of. The setting is coastal Georgia and a lavish pre-1929's home where the rich and famous retreated and partied. The story spans four generations focusing on the contemporary couple, Ben and Millie, and the great-grandmother of Millie, Ruth. Ruth's journal is found and she has written lengthy pages of detail of her exploits in the mansion where she is a guest, though certainly not a wealthy one.Supposedly there is a treasure to be revealed in Ruth's journal and Ben and Millie are searching for it. What they find is each other.A special treat is Millie's grandmother who has dementia and resides in an assisted living facility. She is losing her place (Millie has 90 days to find another place for her) because she "needs more care than they can provide." The ending is a bit of a surprise and that is the best part of the book. Early in the story (and seemingly for too long) the two characters, Ben and Millie, liked and disliked each other as well as had frequent times of distrust of each other. The story just didn't capture my attention but I did find it a somewhat pleasant read. I received an advanced reader copy via the LibraryThing Early Reviewers Program. A review was not required but is appreciated.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I have never read Liz Johnson before, but I was interested in the plot line of A Sparkle of Silver. I enjoyed it very much. Buried treasure always sounds enticing. A Sparkle of Silver begins with Millie, a young woman doing everything in her power to provide for her beloved grandmother. But Grandma Joy has dementia and needs around-the-clock care, which is expensive. In her lucid moments, Grandma Joy talks about her own mother and a buried treasure on a large estate. Millie is desperate to get her hands on the treasure and claim a finders fee to help ease her financial burden. Along the way, she is caught trespassing by Ben Thornton and promises him half of anything she gets in exchange for his silence. Ben has his own money troubles that could be set right by helping Millie find a treasure. This unlikely duo team up to find a treasure that may not exist, before other treasure hunters find it first. Maybe they will find love along the way.A Sparkle of Silver is an easy read with good characters and a well thought out plot. The author kept me guessing until the end of the story. My only complaint is that I felt some of the dialog at the beginning of the book is a bit hard to follow; kind of disjointed. Perhaps the author cut some things out and it didn't flow right. Otherwise, great book!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    3.5-4.0 stars: I'm hard pressed to categorize this novel. It is about finding true love, but it's not a traditional romance. It's also about finding out what is important in life--and it's not always wealth. I guess I just didn't buy the premise behind the treasure hunt.I admire that both the male protagonist (Ben) and female protagonist (Millie, short for Camilla) are working hard to make ends meet. Both hold multiple jobs. I feel a bit more for Millie in that her reasons are to take care of the grandmother who raised her. Ben has good reasons too--but I think he is taking upon himself something that he doesn't have to and putting the pressure on himself. The court did not order him to make restitution for his mother's deeds--that is something he chose to do. It's noble and shows his character.While Millie struggles with how she will pay for care for her grandmother, the grandmother lets slip that her mother knew of a treasure. Envisioning a way to give her grandmother the care she feels she deserves, Millie sets out to find the diary that contains the map to the treasure. Along the way, she has to involve Ben so that she can continue her search. Note: I received a copy of this book through the LibraryThing Early Reviewers Program in exchange for an honest review.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This novel, set on St. Simon’s island in Georgia, alternates between the 1920s and contemporary times. In the earlier story, Ruth, a young woman looking for love and adventure, finds herself a guest at the lavish summer estate of a stock market millionaire. She is torn between the glamorous life that a wealthy young man might offer, and the earnest affection of a gardener on the estate. In the contemporary story, Ruth’s great-granddaughter, Millie, desperately needs funds to care for her aging grandmother and returns to the estate as a worker, hoping to find a treasure that Ruth had vaguely told her daughter about, or to find out if she is tied by blood to the wealthy Devereaux family, in hopes they would then aid her grandmother. She is assisted by history teacher and estate security guard, Ben, who has secrets of his own.There is a lot going for this novel. The premise is interesting, and the 1920s is a period that hasn’t been overused in romance novels. The heroes, George (1920s) and Ben are down to earth and appealing. The story could, however, have used more research. We are told that we are among the wild rich flapper set in the 1920s, but there is little description to make the period come alive. There is a murder and mystery thrown in to that timeline, but it is given little thought or attention, other than to provide a dramatic scene when the killer is revealed. Ruth is far more concerned with her love life than with a killer on the loose.In the contemporary story, while it is entirely plausible that someone could be financially strapped trying to care for a relative in a care home, the way it is depicted is just not well researched. A home’s director is not just going to tell you that you need a different set up, toss a few brochures at you, and tell you to be out in 90 days. And the entire burden of care is not on the family. There would be social workers and Medicaid and all sorts of other complications involved. All that is glossed over for the melodrama of “Grandma Joy is going to be tossed out on the streets”, instead of the more thoughtful and realistic “I need to provide for a better place for Grandma Joy than what the state would provide."These flaws though, merely prevent a good story from becoming a great one. It’s still a quick and enjoyable read, with a heartwarming, if somewhat implausible ending. I was given a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I was chosen to write an honest review through LibraryThing Early Reviewers.Millie Sullivan is trying to make ends meet, but things aren't easy. She is trying to keep a roof over her head and a roof over her grandmother's head. Millie was raised by her Grandma Joy when her parents dropped her off and never came back. Now Grandma Joy has been diagnosed with dementia and she is getting worse. The home that she is living at gave Millie notice that Grandma Joy needs to go to a home that can better care for her and they need her room within a 90 day period. As Millie tries to figure out what to do she thinks back to a story Grandma Joy had always talked about, one that takes Millie back in time to the life of her Great Grandmother Ruth. As Millie works her now 2 jobs trying to get ahead and find Grandma Joy a new home she researches a story that, if true, may be the answer to all of their prayers and a connection to a high profile past.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This was a dual time line novel about a lost treasure in a palatial estate on St. Simon's Island in Georgia. Ruth's story took place in the 1920s when she stayed at this estate with friends and fell in love. The modern day story is about Millie, Ruth's great granddaughter. Millie has a tough life - she is working three jobs and living in a small apartment over a garage. She had to give up her plans because someone swindled all of her grandmother's savings. Millie grew up with her grandparents and is now the sole provider for her grandmother who is in a home where she can get daily help due to her Alzheimers. When Millie hears that Ruth may have hidden a treasure at the estate, she decides to try to find it so that she can move her grandmother to a better home. As she is sneaking around the estate, she meets Ben, a security guard who also works three jobs. They decide to split whatever money they find as they work together to find the treasure. Their search gets them into all sorts of trouble but also leads to increasing feelings for each other. Will they both be able to let go of the past and plan a future together?This was a quick summer read about taking care of family at the expense of your own happiness. I enjoyed reading it and look forward tot he next book in the series.Thanks to librarything for a copy of this book to read and review. All opinions are my own.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This book was just a little to sweet for me. I found Millie to be to rather juvenile.Millie was raised by her grandparents and now her grandmother is living in an assisted care facility. Her dementia is getting worse so Millie needs to find her another place to live. Millie is already working three jobs. Her grandmother, during a lucid moment, tells Millie that a treasure is to be found at Chateau Dawkins one of the places Millie works as an actor recreating life during the late 1920's. Grandma Joy tells Millie that her mother (grandma Joy's mother) was an invited guest at the Chateau for one summer. That Millie's great-grandma Ruth left behind a journal from her stay at the Chateau and Millie needs to find it to discover the secret/ treasure.While Millie is searching the Chateau she is caught by a security guard. Not wanting to lose her job Millie tells Ben a half truth as to what she is doing and that if they find the treasure she will share it with him. Ben has secrets of his own and could use the money as well. So they agree to work together and the story begins....told in past with Ruth's voice through her journal pages and present day with Ben and Millie. Family secrets in Millie's family and Ben's secrets of his life. Sparks fly between Millie and Ben so we have a little romance as well as the treasure hunt and family secrets and life at the Chateau during Ruth's stay. Oh and theft and murder as well.This book is a Christian read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I easily connected with this story from page one. Much of the situation between Millie and her grandmother reminded me of a situation I experienced in my own life. Millie and Ben are interesting characters and I sympathized with them both. Especially Millie, since her motivation felt more important. This is an unconventional romance, with other aspects of the story (mystery, what you hold dear in life, etc.) holding just as important of a role. It's a well-written, emotionally engaging tale. Love the title!Thank you LibraryThing, for my complimentary early reviewer copy.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A Sparkle of Silver by Liz Johnson is the first book in her Georgia Coast Romance series. In the 1920’s Millie’s great grandmother was a guest at the Chatateau owned by oil-tycoon Howard Dawkins and located on the shore of St. Simon Island, Georgia. Now, ninety years later Millie is part of a re-creation of that era for the historical society. When her grandmother mentions a hidden treasure and a missing journal, Millie begins her own search. I really enjoyed the journal entries that gave us a historical view of the hotel and a glimpse of Millie’s great grandmother, Ruth. It was like we had two different stories in one. I thought the story started a little slow but the ending more than made up for it. I stayed up way too late to finish this book. I kept turning the pages to find out what happened next. I received this book from the publisher in exchange for my honest review.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I think this book could best be described as a romantic mystery. Wanting to find out who was the father of Ruth's baby and if there was any treasure to be found were the parts of the story I was most interested in. Others might find the romantic elements of the story to be the strength of the book.Millie is already struggling to make ends meet and now is forced to find her grandmother a new nursing home to live in. Grandma Joy is suffering from dementia and needs full time care but Millie doesn't know how she will be able to come up with the money. That is until Grandma Joy mentions a diary written by her mother, Ruth, when she was a guest at the estate of an oil tycoon back in the 1920s. The diary supposedly mentions the location of a hidden treasure on the grounds. So Millie takes a second job as a tour employee at the estate where she meets Ben, a security guard. When he catches Millie snooping around in the library looking for the lost diary, they agree to split the treasure if they are ever able to find it. But what are the chances there actually is something to be found?Is this the most interesting book you will ever read? No, but it is certainly not a horrible way to pass your time. The only real issue I had was it felt the author relied too much on Grandma Joy to provide answers to move the plot along. Given how her dementia issues were described at the beginning of the book, it just didn't feel realistic. I'll admit though it is a sensitive issue with me given my own grandmother having dementia. I won a free copy of this book in a giveaway by BookishFirst and the publisher. I was under no obligation to post a review and all views expressed are my honest opinion.

Book preview

A Sparkle of Silver (Georgia Coast Romance Book #1) - Liz Johnson

Books by Liz Johnson

PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND DREAMS

The Red Door Inn

Where Two Hearts Meet

On Love’s Gentle Shore

GEORGIA COAST ROMANCE

A Sparkle of Silver

© 2018 by Liz Johnson

Published by Revell

a division of Baker Publishing Group

PO Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287

www.revellbooks.com

Ebook edition created 2018

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.

ISBN 978-1-4934-1516-8

Scripture quotations are from the Holy Bible, New International Version®. NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

Published in association with Books & Such Literary Management, 52 Mission Circle, Suite 122, PMB 170, Santa Rosa, CA 95409-5370, www.booksandsuch.com.

For Aunt Chris,
who invited me to fall in love with books when I was a child and to visit her on St. Simons Island when I was an adult. You are a brilliant cheerleader and an incredible woman. I’m so thankful you’re my aunt.
The greedy stir up conflictbut those who trust in the LORD will prosper.

Proverbs 28:25

Contents

Cover

Books by Liz Johnson

Title Page

Copyright Page

Dedication

Epigraph

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

Epilogue

Sneak Peek at the Next Georgia Coast Romance

Acknowledgments

About the Author

Back Ads

Back Cover

one

There were some things Millie Sullivan would rather forget. The long gravel lane up to this home. The drab interior walls that melted into sticky carpet and stained tile floors. The fact that she could afford nothing better for the woman she loved most.

But every time she stepped into her Grandma Joy’s room, Millie tried to be thankful her grandmother could remember anything at all.

Who are you? Grandma Joy squinted from across the small studio apartment, her hooded eyes suspicious and the wrinkles at the corners of her mouth growing deeper. I don’t know you. What are you doing here? What do you want?

Her breath caught in the back of her throat, and Millie tried to recall what she’d done last time. What had the doctor said? Speak in low tones, calming words.

It’s all right. She held out her hands, palms up, an invitation. Taking two slow steps, she dipped her chin and lowered her voice another half an octave. You’re safe. You’re in your home.

I know that. What do you take me for? Grandma Joy looked like she had half a mind to hop out of her overstuffed rocker at such an offense. I want to know who you are and what you’re doing here.

Fair question.

Try to use familiar words and phrases.

I’m Mil—Camilla.

Grandma Joy’s eyes narrowed further, nearly disappearing beneath loose skin. Camilla? Her tone held a hint of recognition.

Millie’s chin hitched, a smile already spreading into place. Yes, Camilla. I’m Robert’s daughter.

Robert? Any sign of clarity vanished, and her too-pink lips smacked together. Never heard of him.

Wrapping her arms across her stomach, Millie nodded. Okay. But it wasn’t, not even a little bit. Nearly everything she knew about her dad, she’d learned from his mother. And today Grandma Joy couldn’t even remember him.

Her stomach heaved like a boat on stormy waves. What if last time was the last time Grandma Joy remembered her? What if last time was the last time she heard Grandma Joy’s laugh? What if last time was the last time Grandma Joy kissed her forehead and promised that all was well?

The back of her eyes burned, and Millie pressed her hands over her face. Holding every muscle as tight as she could, she forced a smile in place and held it there for three seconds before meeting her grandma’s gaze again.

Yes, a smile. That’s what she needed. Even if she didn’t feel it, Grandma Joy would see it. And even if she didn’t recognize Millie’s smile specifically, well . . . everyone appreciated a smile. Right?

The smile in question trembled behind the cover of her hands, and Millie sucked in a quick breath between pinched lips.

Remember. She just had to remember. This woman—the one in the faded purple rocking chair—wasn’t the one who had raised Millie. She wasn’t the one who had taken in her only grandchild and provided for her every need. At best she was a facsimile.

But the only thing Millie could do about it was paste a smile on her face and try to help her remember. And pray that Grandma Joy would come back to her.

Please, God. Let me have her a little longer.

Miss Sullivan?

Millie jumped, a shiver racing down her spine. She knew that voice, and it never brought good news. But she was paid up. She was. Her last check hadn’t bounced, and Golden Isles had cashed it immediately.

Turning toward the woman at the open door, Millie bestowed the smile she’d been saving for her grandma on Virginia Baker.

The woman’s sleek bob wobbled in greeting, but she didn’t bother returning the grin. May I have a word?

A word, sure. It was imagining the second, third, fourth, and fifth that sent her stomach into a nosedive. Still, Millie turned her back on Grandma Joy and walked toward the door.

Virginia held out her hand in a silent invitation for Millie to step into the hallway. Millie tried to take a steadying breath. The rumble in her stomach was far too much like that time she’d been called into the principal’s office for falling asleep in class during high school. She hung her head the same way she had all those years ago as she stepped past Virginia from the warm tones of Grandma Joy’s room into the garish lights of the hallway.

Miss Sullivan, there’s just no easy way to say this.

Suddenly it was hard to breathe. She pressed a hand to her throat and tried to gasp a thread of air, but it didn’t help. Neither did Virginia’s unforgiving monologue.

She’s getting worse. When Millie opened her mouth to offer an argument, Virginia shook her head. I’m not telling you anything that you don’t already know.

Millie risked a glance toward Grandma Joy, who had closed her eyes and let her mouth drop open. The even creaking of her chair had ceased, and she looked at peace. No longer disturbed by the arrival of a woman she couldn’t recognize.

With a sigh Millie nodded. She knew. And no matter how much she wanted to deny it, there had been no evidence to indicate otherwise.

Grandma Joy wasn’t going to get better. Her memories weren’t going to come back—at least not for longer than a few minutes. But they were in there, and every so often one surfaced, only to nosedive back into oblivion before Millie could use it to pull her grandma closer.

Your grandmother needs better care. More personalized. She needs someone to look after her one-on-one. All day. And night.

I know, but—

Virginia held up her hand. I know money is a concern.

That was the understatement of the century. Money wasn’t just a concern. It was the only one. It was all that was holding Millie back from giving Grandma Joy the finest room in the best memory-care facility.

But she couldn’t make money where there was none. As far as she knew, it was still illegal to print her own. Besides, she’d need a printer for that, and she highly doubted the library would let her use theirs. Not that she would do such a thing even if she could, of course.

There is government help available.

I know. I’ve applied for all of it. But they’ve turned her down. Her diagnosis isn’t severe enough or something.

Virginia rubbed her chin, a frown tugging at the corners of her lips. Then you have to appeal. Get a lawyer and take it to court.

Millie held back a snort, but only just. That required money too—a lot of it. And time, which was hard to come by when she was working two jobs just to make ends meet. And even then she’d been late with her own rent again last month.

Maybe Virginia read her face, because she moved on to another option with a hopeful lilt in her tone. Well then, what about her Social Security?

What about it? It doesn’t even cover half of your fine establishment’s fee every month. As if on cue, the fluorescent light above them flickered, and Virginia’s shoulders drooped.

I’m sorry, Millie said, forcing her sarcasm to stay in check. It wasn’t Virginia’s fault. None of it. And she couldn’t afford to alienate the home’s administrator. I’ve tried everything I can think of, but we’re out of options. Golden Isles is our only choice.

Chewing on her lower lip, Virginia shook her head. We have a list of people who belong here waiting to get in. I’ll give you ninety days. And then you’re going to need to find her other arrangements.

Three months? You can’t be serious. Millie’s voice rose with each word, her heart skipping every other beat until the chair in her grandma’s apartment resumed squeaking. She couldn’t look across the room and could barely breathe. What am I supposed to do?

Well, that was a silly question. And Virginia seemed to have only a silly answer.

Some people find in-home care to be a better choice.

Millie’s chin fell against her chest, and she wrapped her arms around her middle as a chill swept down her spine. She’d tried caring for Grandma Joy at home, but the first time she’d been called home from her job at the diner to find her grandma wandering down the road in little more than a threadbare robe, she’d known that they needed help.

That’s where Golden Isles Assisted Living had come in. They were desperately understaffed and in a building older than any of their residents, but bless their hearts, they tried. That was all Millie asked for. A safe place with people who genuinely cared for Grandma Joy.

But now they were kicking her out. And leaving Millie in a pickle too big to swallow.

Please. She hated the way the word came out—desperate, strangled. Taking a deep breath, she tried again. There has to be another option. I could . . . I could pay you more. I could pay for an extra night nurse.

Yeah, right. She didn’t have that kind of money, and she didn’t have a clue how to get it. Maybe she could get an extra shift at the diner. That would get her approximately one percent of the way there. The truth was, there weren’t enough shifts at the Hermit Crab Café to cover that kind of offer. Not that Virginia Baker was inclined to accept it anyway.

This isn’t a negotiation, Miss Sullivan. She has to move. Virginia dropped her voice on the last sentence, a small consolation to the complete rejection in her words. I’ll begin preparing her paperwork. Let me know if you need some recommendations. I have some literature in my office. She didn’t wait for Millie to respond before patting her shoulder and walking away, head high.

Millie slumped against the wall and stared hard at the gray laces of her tennis shoes. She was pretty sure they’d only had one previous owner, the best pair she’d ever found at the thrift store. She pressed her toe into the carpet, wishing there was some sort of pedal she could push that would reveal a solution, but it wasn’t that easy.

It never was.

You’re just like your dad.

Her chin snapped up, and she peeked into the room. Grandma Joy’s eyes were still closed, but there was a tension in her features that suggested she was awake and—dare Millie even hope?—lucid.

He never knew what to say to bad news either.

My dad?

My Robert. Grandma Joy readjusted her folded hands over her middle and sighed. He was so smart, but sometimes he couldn’t find the words. He said he always wanted to go to college. Then he up and met your mama, and he couldn’t tear his eyes away from her.

Millie took a tentative step into the room, careful to avoid the groans in the old floor, careful not to spook her grandma out of this bout of memory.

He made mistakes, but he loved me. Just like I know you do.

Millie pressed her lips together and tried to form a picture in her mind of the man she’d last seen when she was four. But the memories were too faded. Maybe that was what it felt like for Grandma Joy, looking for the past that remained elusive.

Yep. You’re so much like your father.

She wanted to ask if that was a compliment. Even though the memories were thin, her perception of her father was anything but. Everything she knew about him was tainted with a thick layer of cynicism based on his selfishness.

But before she could ask, Grandma Joy kept going. You are your father’s daughter. But I’m not.

Millie’s eyebrows rose, and she met Grandma Joy’s gaze. You’re not what? Not your father’s daughter? That couldn’t be. Grandma Joy’s dad, Henry, was a good man. There had been pictures of him all over the farmhouse where Millie had grown up.

Grandma Joy’s lips twitched, a sparkle in her eyes promising a good secret.

You’re joking, right? Millie couldn’t hold it back.

My mother, Ruth, was a guest at the Chateau. Before she married Henry.

Chateau Dawkins?

Grandma Joy chuckled. Is there another one?

A picture of the grand estate on the coast, built by Howard Dawkins, flashed across her mind. Three stories of gleaming white glory reached by curving white staircases and rich archways, surrounded by lush lawns and waving palms. They said at night the lights could be seen half a mile across the ocean, glowing like a beacon, brighter than the island’s famous lighthouse. The Chateau adorned postcards in every St. Simons Island gift shop, and the library carried a whole shelf of books about the mansion and its short-lived golden era.

I just . . . Millie shook her head, trying to find her words. You never said.

Oh, Mama mentioned it a time or two. I think she fell in love there.

Her stomach lurched as Grandma Joy’s ramblings suddenly began to make sense. Ruth—Great-Grandma Ruth—had stayed at the wealthiest estate in Georgia during the late 1920s and fell in love there. And Grandma Joy wasn’t her father’s daughter, which meant . . .

Millie gasped and dropped to her grandma’s bed, perching on the edge.

Grandma Joy was the illegitimate child of one of the wealthy guests. Oil and newspapers, real estate and coal—Dawkins had been connected to millionaires of every ilk.

And even an illegitimate heir deserved something from the estate of her father. Right?

Who was it? Millie clapped a hand over her mouth. I’m sorry, she whispered between her fingers. That was crass. I just meant . . . do you know who your father is?

That twinkle in Grandma Joy’s eyes returned, mischief personified. She would never say. She didn’t put his name on my birth certificate. After all, she was married to Henry before I was born. She said it was between her and her diary. And she hid that away at the estate. After all, she didn’t want the treasure map in it to get into the wrong hands.

Ben Thornton scribbled another name on the list. Judith Tulley. That made twenty-three. Twenty-three people identified. Twenty-three lines in his notebook. Each one a ruined life.

You hear me, Ben?

He glared at the phone on his desk, faceup and glowing. The thick Southern drawl on the other end echoed in his empty classroom but still managed to make his skin shiver.

Judith Tulley from Augusta. Ninety-one.

I heard you, Owen. Why wasn’t she in the case?

Owen shuffled some papers on the other end. I don’t know. Maybe they couldn’t find her. Maybe she didn’t . . . Well, you know. She’s old. Maybe she just didn’t want to bother.

With justice?

Owen sighed, and Ben could picture the young lawyer running a hand through his too-long hair. With the hassle, Owen said. It’s not easy. It takes time. A lot of it. Y’all know that.

Yes, Ben knew that litigation had a tendency to drag on. And maybe Judith didn’t want to spend what was left of her time on earth trying to see a woman pay for her crimes.

But Ben was young. And he would see that her crimes were paid for and her victims compensated.

Ben, there’s something else. Owen’s voice took a decidedly deep turn.

Ben leaned an elbow against the desktop, pushed an essay he’d been grading out of his way, and rested his forehead against his open palm. What is it?

She’s filed for bankruptcy.

His groan was entirely involuntary, and he doubled all the way over, face against his desk. She’s going to get away with it. There was no question involved, just a dull certainty that throbbed at the base of his skull.

If she has no assets, she can’t repay the claimants.

That sounded about right. Maybe it had been her plan all along. If she lived lavishly off other people’s money, she’d never have to repay all that she’d stolen. And without another mark, she had no source of income.

I guess that’s all we can do. Owen sounded defeated. Even after he’d won the trial and put a swindler behind bars.

But jail time wasn’t restitution. It wouldn’t give those people back their savings. It wouldn’t make their lives any easier. And if she was claiming bankruptcy, then there was no one to pay them back, no one to make things right.

No one but him.

Have a good day, Owen said before hanging up the phone.

Standing, Ben took a deep breath of the stale classroom air. He strolled through the rows of empty desks, stooping to pick up a crumpled piece of paper.

He wasn’t exactly responsible for cleaning up the classroom. It was only his for three classes a week, after all. Still, the sparse furniture made it easy to tell if the room had been picked up or not. He wasn’t about to leave a mess for the tenured professor who would teach the next course here.

Bending over, he snagged a pen that a student had dropped before tossing it into the cup on his desk for anyone who showed up to class without a writing utensil. If only it were as easy to clean up after the mess his mom had made.

And he would have to. It wasn’t even a question.

As he slid back into his desk chair and straightened the pile of essays that had been turned in, he gave another hard look at the list in his notebook. There were a lot of names there and few dollars in his checking account. He needed another job. Maybe two.

two

A scuffle down the hallway made her gasp, and Millie flung herself against the bookcase behind the door. Holding her breath, she pressed her eye to the crack above a hinge, searching the corridor beyond for the source of the commotion and praying that the pounding of her heart was only audible to her own ears.

If she was caught, her grand plan—her only plan—would be ruined. It had taken her three weeks to cook up the scheme, land a job at the Chateau, and begin searching for her great-grandmother’s diary. And as long as she was here, there was hope. At least an inkling that she could find a treasure that would save Grandma Joy.

Whether the treasure was marked on the map in the journal with a big red X or Ruth’s words revealed the identity of Grandma Joy’s father, the Chateau was her only hope. She couldn’t afford to be found out of place on her third night at work, or she’d certainly be fired.

Peeking into the hallway, she could only see the pale yellow lines of the wallpaper through the opening.

Until a small child pressed his chubby face into the crack. What are you doing in there?

Her pulse galloped as she blinked at the little intruder. She tried to find her breath and her words. Shh. Adjusting her dress to lower herself to his level, she pressed her finger to her lips. I’m playing a game. We have to be silent.

Can I play? He clearly didn’t understand the definition of silent, his voice bouncing down the generous corridor and probably down the spiral stone staircase at the end of it.

Your mom and dad will miss you. You should go find them.

He wiped the back of his hand across his mouth, and in the flickering light from the antique sconces, she could make out a trickle of green from the corner of his lips to his chin. Apparently he’d indulged in some mint ice cream at the gift shop by the front gate. And now his sticky fingers were pressed against a wooden door older than his great-great-grandparents.

No. I don’t want to. This house is boring.

Boring? For a five-year-old, maybe. For all of the other tourists who paid the entrance fee, Chateau Dawkins was an entry to the past. A window into what had once been. And it held more than enough secrets to keep her interested. But arguing the point wasn’t going to get her little visitor to leave her alone. And letting him stay would only alert others to her location.

She patted her hips as though the sleek silk gown would magically grow pockets and a stash of candy in them. But she had nothing to distract him. Nothing she could even use to bribe him.

And all the motion did was remind her how strange the dress felt, even on her third shift. Her simple cotton wardrobe didn’t include anything half as luxurious as the knee-length evening gown with its feather embellishments at the shoulder. It was a few decades out of style, but exactly what her Great-Grandma Ruth might have worn when she visited this estate.

But if she wasn’t careful, Millie might never find out anything more about Ruth.

Her gaze darted around the room on this side of the door. Cloth-covered books in faded blues and greens and burgundies lined every inch of the deep cherry shelves. Like china in a cabinet, many of them were hemmed in by locked doors, the windows replaced with chicken wire so trapped humidity wouldn’t ruin the precious tomes. A turn-of-the-century sofa took up the majority of the center of the room. The matching gray wingback chair in front of the empty fireplace looked perfect for curling up with one of the thousands of stories on these shelves. On any other night, in any other situation, she might have done just that. But none of this would distract her young visitor.

The red velvet rope across the doorway hadn’t stopped her from entering. And it wasn’t likely to keep out someone who could so easily go under the barrier.

The little guy made a move to duck under it, his eyes bright with mischief, and she lunged around the door, blocking his entry before slinking into the shadows on the opposite side.

You have to go back to your family. Please.

Perfect. Now she was begging a five-year-old. She might not have had a lot of experience with kids, but even she knew that showing her desperation was bound to end poorly.

But I don’t want to. I want to play the game.

The game? Right. The one where they were silent.

Except it would be anything but when the kid’s parents noticed he was missing. Every flickering light in the house would be turned on, every employee—from security all the way to reenactors like her—would be sent out to find him.

Maybe she could convince him to go back with a different tactic. Where did you last see your parents?

He waved a finger past the room that had once served as Howard Dawkins’s study and toward the stairwell at the end of the hall. Over there.

What did the room look like?

His eyebrows, so fair that they nearly disappeared into his pale skin, rose halfway up his forehead. There was a big table.

The dining room? Oh dear. That was on the far side of the house. How had he wandered so far?

He shook his head. It was for playing a game.

She let out a quick breath and offered a soft smile. The billiard room?

He shrugged. Maybe.

Well, as far as confirmations went, maybe was pretty weak. But it would have to suffice. The game room was at the foot of the stairs, and she couldn’t think of another room in the house with a big table.

Glancing behind her once more at the rows of unsearched books, she sighed. They would have to wait for another night.

She unlatched the velvet rope from its gold post, slipped past him, and held out her hand. Let’s go for a walk.

Is this part of the game?

Um, yes.

With a nod and a skip, he led the way down the corridor, the sound of his little feet echoing off the arched ceilings. At the top of the stairs, he turned back to her. What do we do next?

Sure, he’d ask her about the rules of a game she’d only made up to distract him.

Well . . .

Jamie! Jamie, where are you? Come here now.

Saved by the call of a frantic mom. Millie heaved a sigh of relief, and Jamie must have recognized a tone that meant business. Grabbing onto the relatively recently installed handrail, he disappeared down the spiral staircase. Within moments his mother’s audible relief reached the upper hallway.

I was so worried about you. Where did you go?

I was playing a game with the lady.

What lady?

There was a long pause, and Millie’s heart jumped to her throat. This was it. The moment they rushed up the stairs and she was discovered at the very last place she should be—in the room she most needed to search.

That lady with all the books.

Don’t be silly. There’s no one up there. Now, come along.

But there is, Mama. There’s a woman in red.

Jamie’s mother must have dragged him back to join the rest of the tour group, his voice disappearing but remaining adamant.

Millie smoothed down the front of her red evening gown, and even through her white gloves the silk was cool beneath her suddenly trembling fingers. Too close. This was all too close.

And it might all be for nothing.

There was no telling how much of Grandma Joy’s story had been true. Probably less than was false. Still, she had seemed so certain. There had been something about the fragile old woman’s eyes that gleamed with excitement and hope. It’s in the room with the books. Find it. It’s in there.

Find it, Millie muttered to herself as she slipped across the hallway and let herself back into the library. No problem. Find a book in a library. It was like finding a particular piece of hay in a haystack. Every single binding could be the journal she hunted for.

But after two tries, she wasn’t sure any of them really were.

Running a finger down the blue spine

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