Stumble Stones
Page 1
Table of Contents
Excerpt
Praise for Marilyn Baron and…
Stumble Stones A Novel
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
PART TWO
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
PART THREE
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Epilogue
A word about the author…
Thank you for purchasing this publication of The Wild Rose Press, Inc.
Life was better in Business Class, especially when your cheating ex-husband was paying for it. Hallelujah couldn’t wait until Lloyd got the bill—for the airline ticket, the set of top-of-the-line TUMI luggage, the fashionable, Italian-worthy wardrobe, a two-week stay at a first-class hotel in Florence, an expensive day of pampering at the hotel spa, dinner in the city’s finest restaurant, and front row seats to the Il Volo concert. It’s not like Lloyd Evans couldn’t afford it. It would hardly make a dent in the bastard’s bank account.
Her short-term plan was to spend as much of Lloyd’s money as she could before his skanky secretary/fiancée Olivia Brewster got her greedy little hands on it. Polly would be proud of me.
But she wasn’t Polly. Polly lived life on the wild side, and she had a vindictive streak. Hallie Evans was practical. She believed in playing it safe and paying her own way. But she deserved this final fling. She had scraped together the last of her savings, and she would use those funds when Lloyd’s credit card was tapped out. Then she would go back to the single life and the single paycheck and try not to dwell on how much her ex had hurt and humiliated her. But right now, Polly was in the pilot’s seat. And, from now on, Hallie was determined to live life on the edge, just like Polly.
Settling into her roomy Magnifica seat, she signaled the Alitalia flight attendant for another amaretto sour before the plane took off. Getting properly sloshed mid-air was a strategic and recent addendum to the plan. Oh, and part of her plan was to swear off men.
Praise for Marilyn Baron and…
STUMBLE STONES
“Modern characters find themselves thrown into a mystery that spans generations, and to discover the answers, they have to look to the past. Marilyn Baron perfectly blends that laugh-out-loud humor of a new romance with the heartbreaking story of a family torn apart by the Holocaust. Touching and beautifully written with marvelous attention to setting and history.”
~Jennifer Moore, Author of Change of Heart
“Marilyn Baron brings a unique style to her quirky and fast-paced stories that keeps readers turning pages.”
~New York Times Bestseller Dianna Love
UNDER THE MOON GATE
“A surefire blockbuster… a treasure trove of mystery and intrigue. It sparkles with romance.” ~Andrew Kirby
“Historical romance at its best.” ~TripFiction
“A great job of bringing Bermuda during the WWII era to life.” ~PJ Ausdenmore, The Romance Dish
“An enjoyable read from start to finish…family, friends, enemies, intrigue and suspense.”
~Romance Junkies (4 Blue Ribbons)
LANDLOCKED
“LANDLOCKED is a well-researched, well-written story… A solid and fun book. Well worth the read!”
~Veronica, Coffee Time Romance & More (4 Cups)
“Baron offers a bit of everything…. There’s humor, infidelity, murder, mayhem, and a neatly drawn conclusion.”
~RT Book Reviews (4.5 Stars)
Stumble Stones
A Novel
by
Marilyn Baron
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.
Stumble Stones
A Novel
COPYRIGHT © 2016 by Marilyn Baron
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or The Wild Rose Press, Inc., except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
Contact Information: info@thewildrosepress.com
Cover Art by Debbie Taylor
The Wild Rose Press, Inc.
PO Box 708
Adams Basin, NY 14410-0708
Visit us at www.thewildrosepress.com
Publishing History
First Crimson Rose Edition, 2016
Print ISBN 978-1-5092-0911-8
Digital ISBN 978-1-5092-0912-5
Published in the United States of America
Dedication
This book is dedicated to my husband, Steve,
who prefers to read spy thrillers set in World War II,
in hopes that he’ll read this one.
Also to my two daughters, Marissa and Amanda,
who are my biggest cheerleaders,
and my new son-in-law, Adam Kallin.
Acknowledgments
Thanks to my friend Karl Goetzke for his e-mail about the stumble stones placed in front of his house in Stuttgart, Germany, which sparked the idea for this book. Stumble Stones is a real project. German artist Gunter Demnig has placed five thousand of these brass plaques—known as Stolpersteine or “stumble stones,” cobblestone-sized Holocaust memorial stones—in Berlin and some fifty thousand of them in eighteen countries in Europe.
And a special thanks to my friend, New York Times Bestseller Dianna Love, my first reader and brainstormer extraordinaire, for her advice and support.
PART 1
AS THE PLANET SPINS
Chapter One
Hallelujah
AS THE PLANET SPINS SCRIPT EXTRACT
BY HALLELUJAH WEISS
SCENE 1. THE KITCHEN AT THE WINTHROP ESTATE.
[PARKER AND POLLY IN KITCHEN. PARKER TOSSES HIS SUIT JACKET OVER A KITCHEN CHAIR, NOTICES POLLY, AND FROWNS.]
PARKER: [BLINKING] I’m beat, Polly. Can we talk tomorrow?
POLLY: [RAISES HER EYEBROWS] Hard night at the office?
PARKER: You have no idea.
POLLY: [SWEETLY] Oh, I think I do. Was your secretary there with you?
PARKER: I told you she would be. I asked her to work overtime.
POLLY: [CRYPTICALLY] What else did you ask her to do?
PARKER: [TURNS TOWARD POLLY] What are you implying?
POLLY: I’m not implying anything. As a matter of fact, I went to the office this evening to bring you your briefcase. You left it on the kitchen table.
PARKER: [FIDGETS WITH HIS TIE AS THE MUSIC INTENSIFIES; COUGHS TO CLEAR HIS THROAT] You were at the office tonight?
POLLY: Imagine my surprise when I found the lights off and no one was there. I called your cell, but there was no answer. I left you a number of messages.
PARKER: Well, after we finished our project, we decided to get a bite to eat.
POLLY: Hmm. How long have I known you, Parker?
PARKER: A long time.
POLLY: Long enough to know when you’re lying to me. Just tell me where you really were.
PARKER: You won’t believe me anyway.
POLLY: This isn’t the first time you’ve cheated on me.
PARKER: Polly, my secretary doesn’t mean a thing to me. You’re the love of my life. How many times have I married you?
POLLY: Too many to count.
PARKER: It’s three, and I’d marry you all over again.
POLLY: It’s too late for us, Parker.
PARKER: Let’s take a trip. How would you like to go to Italy? Tuscany is beautiful this time of year.
POLLY: If I want to go to Italy, I’ll go myself.
PARKER: You’re so predictable.
POLLY: Not anymore. [GRABS PARKER BY THE LAPELS AND PLANTS A LONG, WET KISS ON HIS LIPS]
PARKER: What was that for?
POLLY: [ABRUPTLY] That, my dear husband, is called a kiss-off. Her smell is all over you. Go wash it off and pack your things. I want you gone before I wake up—and, oh, by the way, I want a divorce.
****
Life was better in Business Class, especially when your cheating ex-husband was paying for it. Hallelujah couldn’t wait until Lloyd got the bill—for the airline ticket, the set of top-of-the-line TUMI luggage, the fashionable, Italian-worthy wardrobe, a two-week stay at a first-class hotel in Florence, an expensive day of pampering at the hotel spa, dinner in the city’s finest restaurant, and front row seats to the Il Volo concert. It’s not like Lloyd Evans couldn’t afford it. It would hardly make a dent in the bastard’s bank account.
Her short-term plan was to spend as much of Lloyd’s money as she could before his skanky secretary/fiancée Olivia Brewster got her greedy little hands on it. Polly would be proud of me.
But she wasn’t Polly. Polly lived life on the wild side, and she had a vindictive streak. Hallie Evans was practical. She believed in playing it safe and paying her own way. But she deserved this final fling. She had scraped together the last of her savings, and she would use those funds when Lloyd’s credit card was tapped out. Then she would go back to the single life and the single paycheck and try not to dwell on how much her ex had hurt and humiliated her. But right now, Polly was in the pilot’s seat. And, from now on, Hallie was determined to live life on the edge, just like Polly.
Settling into her roomy Magnifica seat, she signaled the Alitalia flight attendant for another amaretto sour before the plane took off. Getting properly sloshed mid-air was a strategic and recent addendum to the plan. Oh, and part of her plan was to swear off men.
Now that she was free and clear of Mr. Wrong, her long-term plan was to reinvent herself and revert back to her maiden name—Hallelujah Weiss. Lloyd was so cavalier he couldn’t be bothered to use her birth name; he had insisted on shortening her given name, Hallelujah, which she thought was distinctive, to Hallie. Like she wasn’t worth the effort. So naturally, while Parker was conducting his affair with his secretary, he had stopped calling his wife Pollyanna and shortened it to Polly.
Hallelujah was expecting a nice settlement from her ex, but who knows what terms the lawyers would finally hammer out. She was convinced he’d hidden his assets, so her lawyer had hired an accountant to get to the bottom of that particular barrel, but she didn’t expect to get a fraction of what was coming to her. Already Lloyd had gotten custody of their condo, and she had nowhere to live at the moment.
She’d always fantasized about living in Italy. She could write soap opera scripts from anywhere in the world. Have laptop—will travel. She’d taken two weeks off from her job as a writer for As the Planet Spins to get herself together, so she was free and clear to go wherever she wanted. When would she ever get a chance like this again? Her life was a blank slate—perfect for making a clean break. She didn’t relish living on the same continent as Lloyd and Livia. Cutler’s Ridge, California, was a small community, and she couldn’t face running into the newly happy couple every time she went to the grocery store to binge on gelato to drown her sorrows.
When she told her best friend about her decision, RaeLynn had asked, “Isn’t Italy a little drastic?”
“Desperate times…you get the picture.”
And speaking of pictures, when she and RaeLynn were clearing her things out of the condo before Lloyd and Livia returned from Paris, she accidentally helped herself to the Monet painting. Maybe running off with the Monet was a little over the top, but Lloyd had run off with Olivia, hadn’t he? Was taking the Monet legal? Probably not. Was cheating on her with his secretary legal? Who knew? Who cared? It certainly was immoral. Morality aside, the Monet was rightfully hers. Lloyd had purchased the small oil painting on canvas for her in a gallery near their hotel on their honeymoon. He wouldn’t know a masterpiece if it bit him in the butt. He didn’t appreciate fine art, and he didn’t appreciate her.
Then RaeLynn admitted she’d never really liked Lloyd but hadn’t said anything because she didn’t want to ruin Hallelujah’s happiness.
“Lloyd already took care of that.”
When RaeLynn was rooting around in Lloyd’s side of the closet, she unearthed a cardboard box. “Hey, this looks promising. What’s in here?”
“Oh, just a box of Lloyd’s deflated balls.”
“What?”
“Some of his old tennis balls.”
Hallelujah decided to dump Lloyd’s balls and store the Monet in the box before removing it from the premises.
She’d left behind the ugly palm tree lamp Lloyd hated, pulling the plug on the lamp and her former life while she wrapped the brown cord around the monstrosity’s neck, pretending the neck belonged to her former husband.
The lamp was tacky and kitschy. She was sophisticated, open to new possibilities. Like Pollyanna Winthrop, or Polly, the soap opera character she wrote for the long-running sudser As the Planet Spins.
Speaking of Pollyanna, the absurdly perky flight attendant was back with another sweet-smelling, mind-numbing cocktail. She couldn’t wait until this flight got off the ground. Flying was not one of her favorite things.
“Grazie,” said Hallelujah, slurring her Rs. She stored her Italian language book in the seat pocket in front of her, downed her second cocktail, and watched the flight attendant scurry off to fluff another passenger’s pillow before filling her drink order. This was a record for her, and it didn’t include the countless drinks she’d already put away on the transatlantic flight from California to Berlin. Only one leg of the trip to go and she’d be in Italy—her happy place.
She made a decent living as a soap opera writer, but every time she told someone what she did, they would snicker as if it weren’t a respectable profession. She had studied creative writing in college and wanted to become a serious writer, perhaps write a novel. But she needed a high-concept idea. She hoped she would find one on this trip to Italy. Now that she was on her own, she didn’t think it was wise to quit her day job.
A tall, lanky, well-dressed man in a neat goatee took the seat next to her. A tall, lanky, attractive man. Hallelujah studied the hottie surreptitiously, her gaze traversing his face. Moving past the thick black glasses framing enigmatic, steel-gray eyes, she was stopped in her tracks by the facial hair. Normally she wasn’t attracted to men with beards, but life after divorce was anything but normal. This man had possibilities, if he’d shave his beard. Was it too early into their relationship to suggest it? Probably. What would Polly do? She knew what Polly would do. Polly would have this man eating out of her hands before the plane reached cruising altitude.
He’d only been in his seat five minutes, and they hadn’t even been properly introduced. Hallelujah felt a little high—would soon feel at least 35,000 feet high—and far away from the constraints of California, which made her feel naughty, and that felt great. Her plan to swear off men now seemed seriously shortsighted.
He turned to face her. His goatee was starting to slip. Either that or she’d had too much to drink.
“Hi, I’m Lucca. Thought I’d introduce myself, sin
ce we’re going to be seatmates for the next hour and fifty-eight minutes, until we land in Rome.”
It probably couldn’t hurt to talk to him. She shook his hand. “I’m Hallelujah Weiss.”
He smiled, and when he did, he took his dimples for a test flight. “Hallelujah as in ‘Hallelujah, brother’?”
“No, Hallelujah, as in that’s the name my parents gave me when I was born.” She was a rabbi’s daughter. She might as well own it. Even though her father trivialized her profession and said writing for soap operas “promulgated the propaganda of seduction.” Her parents claimed they never watched the show, but Hallelujah happened to know that, although she’d never admit it, her mother was a closet fan of the soap.
“No nicknames? Hal? Louie?”
“No, just plain Hallelujah.”
The man studied her appreciatively. “From where I sit, there’s nothing plain about you.”
“Well, then you’d better change seats or get new glasses. Not everyone in the world thinks so.”
“Hallelujah is quite a mouthful for such a tiny girl,” he noted.
She loved that he thought she was tiny. She always felt ungainly next to Lloyd’s petite secretary/lover. Even seated, Lucca was so tall anyone would look small in comparison.
Lucca also had a very sexy Italian accent to go with his very sexy body (as she imagined it, sans beard). Hallelujah focused on the man’s mouth. It would be entirely kissable if that damn goatee weren’t covering it. The beard would have to go if he had any intention of kissing her, Hallelujah speculated.
“What brings you to Rome?” Hallelujah asked, wanting to be sociable.
“A broken heart.”
Hallelujah sat up in her seat. “Someone dumped you, too?”
The hottie looked down at his newspaper. “I’d rather not discuss it. It’s personal.”
“You can talk to me. I’m a good listener. And I’ll bet my story could top yours.”
With a look of resignation, Lucca turned to her. “It’s a classic. Sigrid and I…Sigrid was my fiancée, and we were ready to walk down the aisle. She was pregnant, and I was having the house remodeled to please her and accommodate the baby.”