Today we give a warm welcome to author Lisa Worrall joining us here at Love Bytes on her tour for new release “Un-Deniable”.
Lisa brought with her a lovely guestpost ( with a unexpected guest đ ) , an excerpt and a chance to win lovely prizes !
Welcome Lisa đ

Title: Un-Deniable
Series: Left At The Crossroads #3
Author: Lisa Worrall
Cover Artist: Meredith Russell
Length: 45,000 words
Release Date: June 29, 2015
Blurb: Little Mowbury is a sleepy English village deep in the Cotswolds. The kind of village where youâre only a local if your lineage can be traced back to the dinosaurs. Where you can find everything in the single village shop from morning newspapers to dry-cleaning, and getting your shoes mended. And, of course, where everybody knows everybody elseâs business. Itâs easy to find⊠you canât miss it⊠just ask anyone and theyâll tell you⊠âItâs left at the crossroads.â
Oliver Bradford has had enough of the hustle and bustle of the A&E department in a big city hospital. Not to mention the tension caused by the break-up of his three year relationship with one of the hospitalâs top surgeons. When his sister urges him to apply for the position of GP in the quiet village of Little Mowbury, he wonders if this might be just the fresh start he needs. Unfortunately, hitting the post-mistressesâ dog with his car isnât the best introduction to his patients.
A solitary soul, Deano Wells grew up in Little Mowbury and has been having lunch at the Thatcherâs Arms on a Thursday for the last thirty-five years. First with his father, who brought him to the pub at the tender age of ten after a hard morning in the fields, and then by himself after his father passed on. He runs the farm with a practised hand and minds his business mostly, but that doesnât stop Oliver from being drawn to the big, quiet man and he knows the feeling is mutual, so why does Deano keep pushing him away?
Hello! Thank you for having me!
In Un-Deniable, #3 of the Left at the Crossroads series written by Sue Brown and myself, Oliver Bradford is the new boy in town. He makes quite an entrance to the village nestled deep in the Cotswolds, one he probably wishes heâd been able to avoid. I wonât share any spoilers, letâs just say it involves the one person in the village you really donât want to upset.
Actually, thinking about it, we could probably catch Oliver having his lunch about now in The Thatcherâs. Come on, Iâm sure he wonât mind chatting to us before he has to get back to the surgeryâŠ
Hi Oliver! Sorry to interrupt your steak, but would you mind answering a few questions about your move to Little Mowbury?
Of course not, sit down, sit down. Can I get you a drink?
No, no, you eat, weâre fine.
If you sure. What do you want to know? Iâm an open book.
Okay. After living and working in London, Little Mowbury must have been quite a shock to the system.
*laughs loudly* You could say that. In all honestly I thought places like this didnât even exist anymore, that the sense of community and rural living had all but disappeared. It certainly has in most of London. In that sense Little Mowbury has been a breath of fresh air. After the little *ahem* mishap concerning my arrival, I was welcomed with open arms by, well, almost everybody. They were fabulous and I donât miss the pace of London life one bit.
Village life can also be a bit smothering sometimes. Like you said, Little Mowbury is a very tight-knit and, some might say, intrusive community. Would you agree with that?
Doris hasnât sent you down to spy on me to give them something to talk about at the WI meeting this week has she?
No *I laugh*, but tell us more about your relationship with the famous Mrs Abernathy. I understand after that original hiccup youâve become quite close.
I love Doris. She reminds me of my Aunt Matilda, scary on the outside and soft and gooey in the middle. In fact, she and I have a weekly dinner date, which is something I didnât expect. Yes, she and the WI thrive on gossip, the entire village does, but donât they all? Itâs a price thatâs not difficult to pay when along with the twitching curtains comes the certain knowledge that help isnât far away should you need it.
I mean, I wasnât here at the time, but the way they came to Harry Boydâs rescue armed with frying pans and outrage. You canât get that in London.
You know Iâm going to askâ
Oh God, really? Is Micah hiding under the table?
Never mind Micah, I want to know. Iâve got curtains of my own, mate. What did you really think of Deano when you first saw him?
Big and Tall.
Big and Tall?
Yeah, I was in a bit of a state at the time, so thatâs all I registered until we were in Maggieâs kitchen. Thatâs when I got a proper look at him. Well, come on, youâve seen him… heâs beautiful in a rugged, pick you up and throw you over his shoulder kind of way. Heâs kind, sweet, irritating, frustrating and a bit tight with the old pennies. But totally adorable with it.
So you like him then?
I never said that.
You didnât have to. I know you have to get back to the surgery and I donât want to get you into trouble with Hilary, so just one last question. Do you think Little Mowbury could be home?
*smiles softly* It already is.
Oliver stared at the map. Why he had no idea. The next stage of his journey hadnât leapt out at him in the last twenty-five minutes so what did he think⊠the power of his frustrated gaze was going to burn the route onto his retinas if he glared at it long enough? He tossed the map onto the passenger seat of the BMW and buried his fingers in his hair, gripping tightly in his annoyance.
The irritating monotone voice on the GPS unit had suddenly sounded as though sheâd drained an entire bottle of JD, with her words slurring into one another before she faded out completely. That had been ten miles back, and heâd managed to lose himself twice since his chatty companion had left him to fend for himself. Of course, heâd tried to coax her back with promises and gentle soothing and, when that hadnât worked, had repeatedly pressed every single button he could find then whacked the screen with his fist. None of which had convinced her to start talking again. Thatâs when heâd remembered the map heâd purchased on a whim at the garage heâd stopped to fill up at earlier. The same map heâd just screwed up into a useless ball and thrown down beside him.
Where the chuff is this place? Itâs like bloody Brigadoon!
Oliver opened the door, climbed out of the car and shielded his eyes against the sun with his hand. He couldnât deny it was beautiful countryside, or that it was indeed in the middle of nowhere. That combination had been the main reasons heâd found the job opening so attractive. Oliver leaned against the car, crossed his arms and filled his lungs with fresh country air. He could hear Beckyâs voice now as sheâd burst into his flat, waving the Haymarket magazine at him.
He would be the first to admit that seeing Andrew at the hospital every day had begun to suck all the enthusiasm for his job right out of him, and being an intern in the casualty department wasnât something you could afford to do unfocused. It hadnât taken long for him to decide he needed a complete change. A change of employment, of pace, of bloody everything.
Becky, his sister, had been very supportive when sheâd found out about Andrewâs string of affairs. Although the support had only come after sheâd told him sheâd always thought Andrew was a wanker anyway. He had pointed out that it would have been quite helpful if sheâd given her opinion when heâd started dating Andrew. Not waited until heâd had his heart plucked from his chest and stomped on by said wanker.
âWell, I thought Iâd grow to like him, didnât I.â Her response had been less than apologetic.
âAnd did you?â heâd asked.
Becky had simply topped up his glass of Jacobâs Creek and replied, âGood God no. Manâs a tosser.â
Five unbelievably long months later, sheâd shoved the Haymarket under his nose and jabbed an excited finger at the advertisement sheâd circled in fuchsia lipstick. âItâs perfect! Exactly what you need. New job, new house, new people. Fire up the laptop and letâs send your C.V.â
Oliver gazed around him, the only sounds the gentle thrum of the BMWâs engine and birdsong from the trees shrouding the country lane. Becky had been deciding the route his life should take from the moment they were out of nappiesâhaving a twin was not always a blessing, especially when they knew you better than you knew yourself. The C.V. had been emailed and before heâd had time to breathe heâd had two phone interviews and a Skype call with the retiring GP. Now he was staring at miles of British countryside wondering if Becky had been wrong this time.
His main priority at the moment, however, was trying to figure out how to get to where he was going. There was, of course, the possibility he could be stranded in the arse-end of fuck-alone-knows-where forever. His frantic family would end up sticking posters of him around London and heâd eventually be found wandering around a farmerâs field wearing a cabbage leaf hat, up to his neck in sheep shit.
âLost, are ya?â
âJesus!â Oliver exclaimed. He spun round to find a weathered face staring at him over the hedge. âYou scared the crap out of me.â
âLost, are ya?â the elderly farmer repeated.
Oliver couldnât see any mode of transportation, so where had the old man come from? All he had was a walking stick and a border collie. Maybe he flew in on the stick, or rode in on the dog. Oliverâs inner voice wasnât exactly being helpful, so he ignored it and pasted what he hoped was a winning smile on his face. âYes, sir, I am. My GPS gave out on me about ten miles ago.â
The old man gave a disapproving grunt. âCanât be doing with those new fangled electro gadgets. They never work round âere. Sunâs best way to get ya where youâre goinâ.â
Oliver glanced up at the steadily beaming yellow ball in the sky and frowned. Unless the sun had directions to Little Mowbury etched into it, the bloody thing still looked the same to him. The man was obviously delusional. But then sniffing sheep shit had to have an effect on a person after fifty years or so. âWould you know how to get to Little Mowbury, sir?â
ââAppen I do.â
âThatâs great,â Oliver said on a sigh of relief, and smiled widely as he waited for the man to continue⊠and waited⊠and waited. What the hell? Is he giving me directions telepathically? Osmosis maybe? âUm⊠could you tell me?â
ââBout eight miles up road,â the farmer replied, scratching idly at the bald pate visible under the rim of his flat cap. âJust keep goinâ straight âtil you get to crossroad anâ turn left. Stay on road for âbout four mile, but donât go past Thatcherâs Arms.â
âThatcherâs Arms?â Oliver echoed.
âUh-huh, pass Thatcherâs Arms anâ youâve left village.â
Oliver stared, open-mouthed, at the man. Was this actually happening or had there been bad prawns in that sandwich heâd bought in the same garage as the map? It was like conversing with Peter Butterworth in Carry on Camping. Were Sid James and Barbara Windsor going to pop out from behind a bush with Kenneth Williams? He inwardly cursed the Saturday afternoons his dad made him watch old British comedies, and shook his head in the vain hope it would dispel the bad sandwich dream he was trapped in. Nope, Farmer Barleymow still stared him down from the other side of the hedge.
âOkay, thank you,â Oliver slid back into the driverâs seat and closed the door. He fastened his seatbelt and nodded at the old man. âSo thatâs follow this road to the crossroads, do a left and just keep driving until I hit Little Mowbury?â
The ancient farmer looked at him as though he was madâor stupidâor both. âYou ainât from round âereabouts, are ya? Like I said, itâs left at tâcrossroads.â
âRight, thanks, left at tâcrossroads,â Oliver waved a hand out the open window and put his foot on the gas. ââAppen I might make it after all,â he mumbled in a poor imitation of the manâs accent as he headed, hopefully, towards Little Mowbury.

I live in Southend-on-Sea, a small seaside town just outside London on the South East coast of Essex, England that boasts the longest pier in the world; where I am ordered around by two precocious children and a dog who thinks she’s the boss of me. I’ve been writing seriously for three years now and love giving voice to the characters warring to be heard in my head, and am currently petitioning for more hours in the day, because I never seem to have enough of them.
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lisa.worrallauthor
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Blog: http://lworrall.blogspot.in/
June 29:
Elisa – My reviews and Ramblings
June 30:
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July 13:
Molly Lolly: Reader, Reviewer, Lover of Words
July 14:




