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Characters :
The heroine/adventurous film production assistant
Maggie Lawrence, film production assistant to Magnus Broad, travels the world for different film productions. First she visits the town Little Belton with the production team for the film 'Time and Again' and falls in love with the resident Tom Atkins. As Maggie has to leave to join another production, they agree to meet six months later in the place they first kissed. Due to work she doesn’t return to the town until years later, feeling that she has betrayed her one true love. When she finds out about Jackie Marcus and Eric Kreel’s underhand activities and their intention to force through major changes in the picturesque town, Maggie, together with Magnus and Tom, concocts a plan to put an end to their intrigue. The group succeeds in revealing Jackie’s dodgy dealings. Despite their long separation and initial doubts, Maggie and Tom get married in the end.
The hero/courageous handyman
Tom Atkins, a handyman from Little Belton, initially protests against the film production in his home town but after meeting Maggie changes his mind about the project and falls in love with her. When Maggie leaves after 'Time and Again', Tom travels the world as an assistant to an egocentric celebrity, missing the agreed appointment with Maggie, but regretting his decision. When Maggie returns to Little Belton, he helps her to accomplish her plan to stop Jackie Marcus from turning the picturesque town into a commercial centre.
The eccentric film producer
Magnus Broad, successful film director and Maggie’s former boss and friend, is eccentric, loud, and confident of his work. His employees fear him but also love working with him. He retires to Little Belton and, as an opponent to major changes in his new home town, supports Maggie and Tom in their plan to save the place by making use of his connections and experience in production.
The harassed personal assistant
Lisa Jones, personal assistant to Magnus Broad, is harassed but very efficient and organised. She understands red tape and supports Maggie and the others with their project.
The corrupt councillor
Jackie Marcus, crooked councillor of Little Belton is devious and career-driven. She is all show and no substance and betrays the population by pretending she wants to prevent major changes in town, while actually cooperating with Eric Kreel in forging out a plan to bring commerce and money to the town. She ends up in jail.
The mercenary property developer
Eric Kreel, property developer, is greedy, disliked by everyone and focused on luxury. He plans to move to London after his business deal with Jackie Marcus is completed. He finds out about the hoax Maggie and Tom organise and - driven by revenge - not only reveals the fraud but also tries to separate the lovers. He ends up in jail.
The archaeology professor
Leonard Keating is Professor of Medieval Archaeology and Middle English languages at the University of Bath. He finds actual archaeological remains on Eric Kreel’s ground and thus helps free Magnus, Tom and all the other detained people involved in the hoax. Only a small role.
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Extract
Maggie stopped. She had been wandering aimlessly with no route planned or destination in mind and yet, perhaps through coincidence or that old nonsense fate, or perhaps because her feet had a mind of their own, she now found herself in a very familiar spot. The little cowshed looked exactly as it had back when she had first seen it. This was the place where she and
Tom had planned to meet, that meeting which in the end neither of them had attended. How different might her life – their lives – have been? If only she could turn the clock back.
She realised now she had been unconsciously avoiding this place since her arrival. It had been the one place she had most wanted to visit, the one she felt the most drawn to, and yet she knew what feelings it would bring up in her. Of regret, of guilt, of a life that could have been hers if only things had been different. Those feelings were there to be sure, the instant she laid eyes on the unassuming shed that meant so much in her personal history. But they remained only for the instant. They were replaced by a warm glow she hadn’t anticipated. This was, in a way, the single place on earth in which she had been happiest, and how could she look on it with anything but fond memories? Things hadn’t worked out as they were supposed to and nothing could change that, but equally nothing could change what had happened here. To be happy, if only for a brief while, is still worth something. Better to have loved and lost.
That had been the message of
Magnus’s film, she now recalled, Time and Again. Better to love and lose again and again, better to suffer that separation over and over than to have never known the love of your life. And who in that situation would make a different choice? To part was always a wrench, but to love made it worthwhile. And there was always a chance this time it might work out. And what was life without taking the occasional chance?
“You too?”
Maggie started around and saw
Tom approaching, hands in his pockets against the chill.
“I didn’t mean to end up here,” said
Maggie. “I just did.”
“This is the first time I’ve been back up here,” said
Tom.
Perhaps that should have surprised
Maggie, since he had been living in the village for much of the intervening time, but she thought she probably would have done the same. He had thought he had let her down by not showing up, just as she had thought she had hurt him. Nobody wanted to be reminded of something like that. In fact they had just hurt themselves.
“Me neither.”
“Well, you’ve been busy faking a major archaeological discovery,” smiled
Tom.
An icy wind blew and
Maggie shivered as she smiled back.
“Do you want to go inside?” asked
Tom.
“I guess we should now we’re here.”
Neither of them seemed very enthusiastic about the idea but in they went.
“I walked in on
Magnus and
Lisa talking,” said
Tom, as they seated themselves on a convenient hay bale and took in their surroundings. “I don’t think the ‘getting an appeal’ side of the plan is going that well.”
“We got carried away with the fun bit,” said
Maggie.
“What part of this has been fun?”
Maggie just looked at him and
Tom smiled.
“Alright, yeah. Most of it has been fun.”
The unfinished thought that hung in the air between them was that even the stuff that hadn’t been fun (endless article writing for example) had been fun because of whom they were with.
“What happens if we don’t get the appeal do you think?” asked
Maggie, more to keep the conversation on safe ground than out of curiosity.
“I guess the land is sold and we get a supermarket or some blocks of flats.”
“I meant what happens to us?”
“Us?” Was that hope she could hear in his voice as he uttered that single syllable.
“On the matter of defrauding the press.”
“Oh that.”
Tom shrugged. “Not sure that anyone will care.”
“What if we’re successful?”
“Then people might care,” admitted
Tom. “And we might end up doing some jail time.”
Maggie shook her head. “We really didn’t think this through.”
“It all seemed like fun.”
“Still, we’d have saved the village.”
“There is that.”
“You don’t sound too happy about it,” ventured
Maggie.
“I don’t think it’s going to happen,” said
Tom. “Red tape and big business always win.”
“And I thought you hadn’t changed,” said
Maggie.
Tom had never been a pessimist protestor, he had always believed in his own ability to change the world for the better. It was strange to hear such a downbeat prognosis from him.
“I learnt things don’t always go the way they’re supposed to.”
Maggie thought about this. Of course she had learnt the same thing and she had learnt it in the same way, and perhaps a week ago she would have said the same as
Tom. But now…
“You know what?”
Maggie spoke. “Just because your life doesn’t go the way you imagined it would doesn’t mean it goes badly. It can be equally good. Just different.”
Tom smiled. “I like that.”
“Do you think it’s true?”
“I do.”
Their eyes met and suddenly it was as if the intervening years had never happened. Their eyes had met then too, smiling
brown eyes looking into unflinching
green ones. The time fell away and they were two young people caught in a cowshed during a rainstorm, who had argued until they were hoarse, and then been unable to resist the powerful attraction that crackled between them.
They kissed. And again the years fell away. It didn’t matter how much had changed, in that moment nothing had changed, not where it mattered. The way they felt about each other was as powerful and as irresistible now as it had been back then.
Frequency of appearance
We have summarised all personalisation options for this book here. We also listed the Frequency of appearance for the respective details. You do not need to fill in all options – you can also use the defaults.
The heroine/adventurous film production assistant
The heroine's first name is
515 x
The heroine's last name is
13 x
The heroine's hair colour is
1 x
The heroine's eye colour is
5 x
The heroine's favourite film is
2 x
The heroine's favourite band is
2 x
The heroine's favourite song from that band is
1 x
The hero/courageous handyman
The hero's first name is
431 x
The hero's last name is
15 x
The hero's hair colour is
3 x
The hero's eye colour is
5 x
The hero's favourite film is
4 x
The hero's favourite song is
1 x
The eccentric film producer
The film producer's first name is
246 x
The film producer's last name is
62 x
The harassed personal assistant
The assistant's first name is
67 x
The assistant's last name is
2 x
The corrupt councillor
The councillor's first name is
74 x
the councillor's last name is
57 x
The mercenary property developer
The property developer's first name is
170 x
The property developer's last name is
61 x
The archaeology professor
The professor's first name is
1 x
The professor's last name is
12 x