Copyright © 2006 by Tracey Bateman
All rights reserved.
WARNER BOOKS
Hachette Book Group
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Visit our Web site at www.HachetteBookGroup.com.
Warner Faith® and the Warner Faith logo are trademarks of Time Inc. Used under license.
First eBook Edition: June 2006
ISBN: 978-0-446-55897-6
Contents
Copyright Page
Praise for Claire Knows Best
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Reading Group Guide
If You Enjoyed Claire Knows Best...
About the Author
Praise for Claire Knows Best
“Through Claire, Tracey Bateman leads us in and out of the corners of real life where children misbehave (and triumph), trees fall in unfortunate places, and a romantic kiss can still be a doozy of a good one. What I love about the Claire Everett series is that through it all, Claire knows best, even when she doesn’t—which is so relatable.”
— Charlene Ann Baumbich, author of the Dearest Dorothy series www.welcometopartonville.com
“I love Claire Everett! With poignancy and humor, Claire confronts life, romance, and mothering with an authenticity and nerve that grabs my heart. I just wanted to climb inside the book and hang out with her. A delightful read that charmed me and made me believe that, indeed, Claire Knows Best!”
— Susan May Warren, award-winning author of Everything’s Coming Up Josey
“Whether you’re eighteen or eighty, you will find something to love about Claire! She is everygirl, and I loved sharing in her life and can’t wait to see her again. Tracey Bateman is a wonderful, snappy voice in women’s fiction.”
—Kristin Billerbeck, author of What a Girl Wants and She’s All That
To Susie Warren. Sometimes a girl needs a best friend to laugh with. Thank you for loving life with me. Sometimes I think we were twins separated at birth.
Acknowledgments
First of all to Troy King, owner and operator of America Tree in Grand Lake, Colorado: Thank you Troy for your expert information on how to remove a tree from a house. On a day when I was frantic for something fresh, God spoke through you and gave me exactly what I needed to get over my block. From the bottom of my heart, thank you.
Debra Ulrick: Thanks for being a voice of praise when I need to hear nice things. And thanks to your husband, Rick, for putting up with contracting questions.
Leslie Peterson for great editing.
Cara Highsmith: I would have been lost without you during the edits of this book. Thanks for being an ear and a voice of encouragement as well as offering good insights that made the book much better than I could have done alone.
My great agent, Steve Laube: Thanks for believing in me.
My mother-in-law, Vivian: You’re always there for your grandkids and for me. You raise the bar for mothers-in-law everywhere.
My mom, Frances: As always, you read for me, you watch kids, you provide much needed prayer and pep talks.
Angie and Eldon Shivers: Thank you for feeding my kids, driving them places, and convincing me that I’m doing you the favor by letting you do it. God breathes His goodness through you two. I’ve never known anyone with such a spirit of generosity. I’m blessed to call you friends.
Rachel, Chris, Susie, Susan, and Anne: For helping in so many different ways. Just for being my friends.
Kris B: Thanks for long, honest e-mail conversations. You’re a treasure.
Jesus, You make this all possible. I live for You.
1
I have a bad habit of laughing at the wrong times. Like last Tuesday during prayer meeting. Eddie Cain, a sweet, elderly man who has attended my church for twenty years, stood up and asked for prayer. Nothing humorous about that. But for ten whole minutes—and for the record, ten minutes can be agonizingly long—he shared every detail of his medical malady and then excused himself and headed for the men’s room.
Let me just say that incontinence is a serious issue facing many seniors, and I know it’s not funny. Only, the way Eddie said, “Preacher, I need y’all to pray for me. I’m having trouble holding m’water these days,” just sort of gouged my funny bone. I pressed my lips together and bowed my head like I was getting ready to pray. But the truth was that laughter bubbled just below the surface. I knew if I looked anyone in the eye, I’d lose it.
The heavy silence that followed this man’s request and subsequent exit didn’t help matters. I kept waiting for someone to say something to ease the tension. Pastor, maybe? Our leader, the shepherd of the flock. But the pin-dropping silence lingered… lingered… Then, as I sat there replaying poor Eddie’s words in my mind, the inevitable happened: I felt a dreaded giggle coming on. I pushed it down not once, but twice. Oh, all right, at least ten times. Fervently, I prayed that Pastor would just end the service already before I made a complete fool of myself. But alas, that was not to be.
Still, to my credit, I was totally winning the battle for control. I really was. That is, until my fourteen-year-old son snickered next to me. Oh, my goodness! Spit-flying guffaws burst forth from my innermost being. First I tried to cover them with a cough. That never works. Next I pretended I’d been moved by the Spirit. You know what I mean. Just above a whisper I resorted to the word that remains the same in every language: “Hallelujah.” Hey, I’m not proud of it. But in the heat of the moment, I caved in to Christianese.
I don’t think anyone was fooled by either diversionary tactic, anyway. Imagine a high-pitched, way-too-forced “Hallelujah” and you can guess why no one bought it. Oh well.
I didn’t wait around after the final “Amen.” Instead, I bee-lined for the door and got the heck out of Dodge before anyone could give me that way-to-blow-the-whole-service glare.
And then, of course, I was too embarrassed to come back. I begged off Wednesday-night Bible study, then faked the flu on Sunday. To make matters worse, my best friend, Linda, phoned Sunday afternoon to tell me they’d cancelled Tuesday-night prayer meetings for an indefinite period of time. Pastor Devine claimed it was because of low attendance, and I can’t help but feel responsible.
Believe me, I know poor Eddie Cain’s plight was so not funny in the first place. But like I said, the stupidest, unfunniest things make me laugh.
Moral of the story? It is quite possible that laughter is not necessarily the best medicine. Because I just feel sick about the whole thing. Although, in my defense, let me just say that with four pregnancies under my belt, it’s not like I haven’t experienced the same problem. I mean, you try sneezing with nine pounds sitting on top of your bladder. And heaven forbid anyone should make me laugh at the wrong moment during the last trimester.
Not to make this all about me or anything, but I do empathize on some level with the poor man.
Fresh from the memory of such a mortifying experience, you’d think I’d be on my guard for a while. Instead, I made another huge mistake merely a week later when my editor, Tanya, called me from home to break some potentially life-altering news.
I’m thinking, really, after five years of working with Tanya, who edits my books with the t
ouch of Midas, why I was the last to know about her obsession with Star Wars? She had to have a baby (of which I had no clue until a week before her maternity leave) in order for me to know this.
If she’d have mentioned it in the first place or even hinted that she enjoys the Lucas-film mega-movie empire, I’d have been prepared for her boldly going where no parent has gone before. Oh, wait. That’s Star Trek, not Star Wars. Well, either way, if I had known she had a penchant for sci-fi, I would have been prepared for her announcing the child’s name.
Anakin Skywalker Gordon.
So, there I was, laughing like a lunatic at her little joke. Only to find out, um… she wasn’t joking. To make matters worse, Anakin is a girl. Although from the photo Tanya proudly e-mailed to me, Anakin Skywalker Gordan looks more like, well… Yoda. But I suppose it’s not fair to judge. No one else in the world can have babies as beautiful as mine. Besides it could have been worse as far as names go. Flash, for instance, would have been worse, considering her last name. So, that little “Anakin” fiasco happened yesterday when Tanya called to tell me she had decided not to return to work. Apparently, she doesn’t have the heart to leave little Ani (on second thought, I guess Ani works for a little girl). She wants to be a full-time mommy. Admirable, but leaves me in a bit of a lurch.
And after I mocked her choice of a name, even though she knows I thought she was kidding, she’s in no mood to go to bat for me with her replacement. Who is a man. Who hates romance novels. Which I write.
This guy will not be swayed by my ever-growing fan base. Because from what I’ve heard, his vision for the publishing company is about as far away from romance as a person can get. Literary something or other, I imagine. The stuff college seniors deconstruct in English 401, taught by frustrated English instructors who wanted to be authors but who didn’t have the guts to live on Ramen noodles and reuse paper towels so they could afford to write the great American novel. Hmm. Maybe they are the smart ones.
Even my agent, who used to think I was the cat’s meow, isn’t optimistic about my future with this publisher. Methinks my publisher is about to cut me loose. So much for all the hype about loyalty. Guess that’s a one-way street and I’m heading the wrong way.
Did I forget to mention I’m a writer? Claire Everett, writer and single mother juggling four kids ranging in age from eight to sixteen, three of whom are boys. My ex-husband and his new younger (and I promise I’m not bitter about it anymore) wife, Darcy, are expecting their first baby this summer (she may have morning sickness, but I’m the one who’s truly nauseated by the whole thing).
My kids are excited about the pregnancy and have already started talking about spending more time at their dad’s. I’m a little jealous. I admit it. I just have to get a grip and realize that they will naturally want to be around their new baby brother or sister.
Anyway, back to the situation at hand. My agent’s hesitation is making me nervous.
“So, where does this leave me?” I ask, hating the tremor in my voice. I mean, honestly, I know God has my life in His hands. I know my writing career was totally His idea and that He’s surrounded me with His favor every step of the way. There’s no need for me to worry. But why’d I have to go and laugh at Anakin’s name? Why? Why? Why?
I finished my last contracted manuscript a month and a half ago. I’ve been expecting a new series contract soon. Waiting, as a matter of fact, for my editor to get back from maternity leave so she can approve the new manuscript and turn her attention to pushing the review committee to approve a new contract for me. But no, Miss I-want-to-be-a-mommy turned over her job to a woman-hater. And suddenly my job security is gone.
“Look, Claire,” my agent, Stu Lindale, says in a smooth voice that, to be honest, I could listen to all day. He’d make a killing reading audio books if he ever wanted to give up agenting. “You still have a name in the industry. I’m sure the other publishing houses would love to get their hands on you now that your contract has expired.”
I know he’s trying to mollify me, but quite frankly that bites. “What if I don’t want to go looking somewhere else?”
“You’ve been wanting a change,” Stu reminds me. “Now’s your chance.”
Hope, like the phoenix, rises from the ashes. “Does this mean we’re going to start shopping the new series proposal?” I started it during my recovery from surgery. Carpal tunnel. Had it last year and was forced into a sabbatical. Best thing that ever happened to my family relationships. Maybe not so good for my career, though.
Stu is hemming and hawing about now, and I feel the phoenix crumbling once more into the thick dust that is my life. Stu never hems and haws. He’s precise, concise, and, by the way, never charges me for mailing supplies. I like his no-nonsense approach to my career. So why, all of a sudden, is he hedging?
I just come right out and ask. “So, what’s the problem, Stu? You don’t like the plot idea?”
“Oh, it’s a good idea. The series could easily go on for eight or nine books.”
Now that would be job security. I’m not picking up on his reasoning here. Guess I’m going to have to push a little.
“Improbable, unsympathetic characters?”
“No. The characters are likeable.” He pauses. “Well, the agent comes across a little Magoo, but…”
Smirk. Let him wonder if I patterned my heroine’s agent after him. I didn’t, but let him wonder. Life imitating art imitating life. That’s the beauty of writing. Everyone thinks you’re writing about them. Very empowering.
Anyway. “So the plot’s good, the characters are good. Then what’s the problem, Stu? My writing?”
“No, I’d say it’s some of your strongest writing so far.”
You got that right, buddy.
“Good grief, then. What?”
One of those well-all-right-if-you’re-going-to-pin-me-down huffs that Stu’s famous for blows through the receiver, and I swear I can almost feel the breeze. “Your readers don’t want this Everywoman stuff from you, Claire. They want romance. It’s what you’re known for, like Nora Roberts and Danielle Steel.”
Yeah, minus the furs, cars, and diamonds.
Besides, what does he mean “Everywoman stuff”? Okay, my heroine is sort of real. Okay, so maybe she’s a lot real—as in a lot of me went into that character. But that should be a good thing. I’m an interesting person, especially since I started getting out of the house more. And no one can argue with the fact that I have quite the quippy sense of humor. But most of all, I am so ready to move on and write another type of book. And I thought my agent was on my side. Creep.
“You just said, not two minutes ago, that maybe I could make a change.”
“We were talking about changing publishers. Not genres.”
“Well, what if this new guy who hates romance is a blessing in disguise? Maybe this is my chance to really give something else a shot.”
His silence is excruciatingly loud. My heart starts beating inside my ears.
“Stu? Come on. What do we have to lose at this point? If it doesn’t work out, we’ll just fall back on romance.”
“That’s a little risky. Can you afford to go without a new contract for much longer?”
Stu knows me well enough by now to know that I am not one of those idealistic authors who write for the euphoria of creating. I have mouths to feed and that takes the green stuff, baby. I huff and stomp the ground like a bratty kid. “Not really.”
“Well, then.” His tone is sort of high falutin’ and smug and ticks me off just a little, but I’ve learned to schmooze in this business, so I refrain from calling him a big jerk.
Apparently oblivious to my restraint, he says what I figured he was going to say. “How about getting a romance proposal out there? And when you get picked up by another publisher, we can mention the other series.”
He poses the words in question form, but we both know he’s not asking. I give one last-ditch effort to salvage my pride. “You work for me, you know. Not the other wa
y around.”
“I know, Boss,” he patronizes. “So, how about that new romance proposal?”
“I’m going to have to think about it,” I say, aware that I’m pouting and that he’s acting like the boss (which, in all honesty, he is). “I hate this business.”
“No, you don’t,” Stu chuckles. “You’re addicted.”
“Well, I hate writing romance.”
“Romance readers got you where you are today.”
Now Stu’s scolding me? What am I, ten?
“I really hate when you’re right.” Really, really.
“You mean all the time?”
“Funny.” Not! He may be right but he’s not right. Know what I mean?
“Get that proposal to me soon,” he says, and we hang up.
Instead of obeying his directive, I stubbornly grab my running shoes and head for the door. Irritation rumbles through me. How come he just assumes my decision will be to go ahead and write the romance? I mean, true, the heart-pounding and heavy-breathing stuff was my first attempt at writing and got me published. Why? Because I was in desperate need of income after Rick walked out on our eleven-year marriage. I figured if I was ever going to do anything but work three waitress jobs, I might as well give it a shot. I chose romance because that’s what I read to escape my crappy, lonely life. (That was back before I realized a woman doesn’t need romance to be happy.) And guess what? Turns out a lot of people think I write it well. And my wonderful, faithful readers have continued to buy my books, thereby keeping me two steps ahead of the unemployment line and government cheese.
But after providing entertainment for one and a half million romance readers, I feel like I’ve earned the right to do what I want. I mean, why can’t I just be true to my convictions for once and write the story on my heart?
Sigh. The almighty dollar. That’s why. And a mortgage, and electricity, and, oh yeah, food.
Especially pizza.
Just before I reach the door, my sixteen-year-old daughter pops down the stairs holding her cell phone to her ear. “Hang on, Paddy,” she says into the receiver to her on-again-off-again heartthrob. “Where you going, Mom?”
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