“Sabrina wants to create a new team of trainers to work with new and old teams as they move between missions, a way to acclimatize and upgrade knowledge, procedures...the type of things she would do with us directly whenever we came back to headquarters.” He reached for her hands and held on tight.
“We could still do what we discussed, open up our own clinic for low-income families. The training could be done on weekends, or we’d take a week from the clinic to come here. This also leaves you time to be with Diane for as long as she needs you.”
Her eyes lit up at the idea. “You’ve been thinking about all of this, haven’t you?”
A slow smile spread across his face, and that dimple she loved appeared. “How could I not? I’ve had months of lonely nights to plan what our life would be like here. I wanted to talk to you about this before I met with Sabrina, but . . . still, I meant what I said to you last night, Charlie. I’m here and I’m not going away.”
“What if Diane never heals? What if she . . .” She couldn’t say it. She couldn’t give up hope that one day her sister’s mind would heal.
“Then we will be in Seattle, by her side, for as long as she needs us. She’s our family.”
The way he said our told her everything she needed to know.
“And children?” She broached the one subject she truly was afraid of.
His gaze softened. “If and when we decide it’s time to add children to our lives, then we’ll adopt. I’m sure we know an orphanage or two with children we could love.” He winked before leaning forward and kissing her.
The day-to-day things they could figure out as they came up—where they would live, what they would do . . . just as long as they were together.
That was what mattered.
Being together.
<<<<>>>>
Dear Reader;
Thank you for reading The Memory Journal, a companion to The Memory Child.
I fell in love with Charlie while writing The Memory Child and was so happy to have an opportunity to write her story. I realize that not all of Diane’s story has been told here, so if you haven’t read The Memory Child and want to know more about Diane and Brian and their own love story, now is the time!
Would you like to know when my next book is available?
Sign up for my newsletter where you’ll be the first to know, or keep an eye on my website at www.steenaholmes.com, follow me on twitter at @steeholmes or like my Facebook page at http://facebook.com/steenaholmes.author.
Turn the page for a complete book listing and check to see if there’s some you haven’t read yet.
In the mean time, I hope you enjoy a sweet life full of chocolate, happiness and peace.
(turn the page for a look at The Memory Child)
Steena
Other Books by Steena Holmes
The Memory Child
Stillwater Bay Series:
Before the Storm – a novella
Stillwater Rising – a novel
Finding Emma Series:
Finding Emma
Dear Jack: a Finding Emma novella
Emma’s Secret
Dottie’s Memories: a Finding Emma novella
Megan’s Hope
Decadent Events Series:
Sweet Memories
Sweet Dreams
Return to Sender – a novella set in the Invitation to Eden series
Sweet Collection Boxed Set
Halfway Series:
Halfway to Nowhere
Halfway in Between
Single Romance Titles:
Chocolate Reality
In Love with a Cowboy
Turn the page for a look into The Memory Child
Interested in The Memory Child? Here is a brief sample for you.
This was a perfect moment. In the silence, with the hint of dawn peeking through the curtains, where promises of a better day were offered.
I stared down at the twinkling blue eyes of my sweet darling baby and knew hope for the first time in a long, long time. Grace was everything I didn’t deserve and everything I longed for. Just one look at her bow-shaped lips, wispy blond hair, and sweeping eyelashes and I knew, from the moment I first saw her, that I could never go back to the way I used to be.
“I’m so sorry I have to leave you,” I whispered, not wanting to wake her. We had a rough night and at least one of us deserved some rest.
I drew my newborn daughter close and breathed in the smell of fresh baby powder. To think I never wanted this experience, to never feel the slight weight of my child in my arms, to never see the twinkle in her eyes as she stared up at me and recognized me for who I was. Her mother. The thought that I never wanted to be a mother…how selfish could I have been? Everything I’d ever worried about became insignificant the moment I held her.
Grace’s lashes fluttered for a few moments before resting on her cheeks. I could have stood there for hours and held her while she slept, but instead, I gently placed her down in the bassinet and stepped away, careful to keep my steps light.
What was I thinking? To leave her after only one month? I wasn’t ready. She wasn’t ready. My heart splintered into tiny cracks with each step I took.
What kind of a mother was I? I was abandoning my child for my career. I thought I could do it, that it wouldn’t be difficult for me, that like many others, I could find a way to juggle motherhood with my profession.
What if I’d made a mistake?
“Are we ready?”
My breath caught as Nina’s voice carried up the stairs. I gently closed Grace’s bedroom door. Nina, our nanny/housekeeper/sometimes jailer, stood at the bottom. She held my travel mug in one hand and brown leather messenger bag in the other.
Was I ready? Not really. This was the hardest thing I’d ever had to do in my life.
Nina’s face softened as she smiled. I liked to call her the grey dragon on my bad days. On my good days, she was my best friend. I’m not sure what I would have done without her.
“Does it ever get easier?” I reached for the coffee, took a sip, then grimaced. “Come on Nina, not today of all days. Didn’t you get any of French vanilla creamer I asked you to pick up?”
There was a look on Nina’s face that I wasn’t too sure about. Pity, maybe?
I didn’t care. In the past three months since Nina first came to help while I was on bed rest, she’d been trying to get me to eliminate sugar from my diet.
“It’ll get easier. I promise.” Nina reached out and touched the sleeve on my jacket. “I need you to trust me. We talked about this, remember? One step at a time. Just like changing your diet to lessen the effects of your medication.”
I took a deep breath and straightened my jacket before smoothing out the one black pencil skirt I could still fit into.
“I’m not sure this is a step I can take today.” I knew I should, that was normal for most mothers to head back to work so soon after giving birth, but I’m not most mothers. I’m Diane Wright, CEO of HK Solutions, a cutting-edge firm that creates software for the blind. I needed to snap out of it but my feet were rooted to the floor as if cemented there. I listened for a sound, any sound, to come out of Grace’s room. All it would take was a small sigh, the beginning of a cry, and I would cancel everything and stay home.
“Just come with me into the kitchen. Grace will be fine.” Nina walked ahead of me and I followed obediently.
“Do you need my monitor, or do you have yours?” As insane as it sounded, I had a deathly fear that something was going to happen to Grace if I wasn’t there. She could cough and ended up choking, or smother in her blanket, or even…
“Everything’s going to be okay.” Nine gave me a motherly smile.
“I’m sorry, I know I’m being…” What as the word I was trying to find? Overprotective? Distrusting? Smothering?
“Perfectly normal. You have a busy day today, full of appointments and a new schedule to get used to. Let’s concentrate on that, shall we? Everything else will be fine.” Nina h
eld open the fridge door and pulled out the creamer. “Here, maybe a gradual withdrawal will be easier for you to handle.”
“I told you so,” I muttered beneath my breath.
“Don’t be like that. We’ve had this talk. You were the one who asked me to hold you accountable.” Nina glared at me. I glared back.
“We also talked about how I wasn’t willing to give up my coffees.”
“You don’t seem to be willing to give up much when push comes to shove,” Nina mumbled.
I only shrugged.
Losing the baby weight wasn’t as easy as I thought it would have been, and while I was desperate to make it into my pre-baby clothing before Brian came home from opening the London office, I also had to be realistic. I loved food. I always have. It was one of Brian’s and my passions. But I worked hard to make sure it didn’t show on my body, too.
Brian had left the country just before I went into labor and wasn’t scheduled to return for another week or so. I know it must have killed him not to be there, but everything had happened so fast that by the time his flight arrived in London, she’d already been born. I e-mailed him videos and photos of Grace daily but made sure not to include any full-length images of myself. Not until the pudge around my waistline was gone.
“Are you ready for today?” Nina smoothed her sweater over her pants.
Since I’ve known Nina, I’ve always been home. She came on board as my nurse when I went on bed rest two months before Grace was due. I had some complications, and since Brian had to travel to London at the same time, we hired a nurse to stay with me. Mainly for Brian’s peace of mind. Nina worked out so well that we asked her to stay on board as nanny until I felt capable enough to do it on my own. Plus we were all to travel to London and stay with Brian for a bit, since I had some time off.
Except that part of the plan hadn’t worked out yet.
“Am I ready for today? Not really. I have a feeling Walter won’t accept my conditions and it’ll be a struggle. Knowing him, he’ll devise a strategy to have me come in every day.”
Nina’s lips quirked. “Really? I thought for sure he was the one telling you to stay home.”
“He’s just saying that. I can tell he needs me there.” My relationship with Walter was a special one. Not only was he my boss, but he was like a father to me. There wasn’t anything I wouldn’t do for him. Anything.
“Or maybe you’re just using that as an excuse? Remember, I’m here if you need me.” Nina laid her hand on my arm and smiled. She really was pretty. She’d been a nurse for years, and it amazed me that she would stay by my side when she could go back to her previous job in a hospital.
“Thank you. I’m not exactly sure when I’ll be back.” I checked my watch and sighed. I needed to go. “I’ll try to be home as early as possible. Brian might call and I don’t want to miss him again. I love reading his cards and letters, but they just aren’t the same. I need to hear his voice.”
“If anyone calls, I’ll be sure to take a detailed message.” Nina stood there, calm and composed, while inside I felt like I was being torn into two. I almost hated her in that moment. She was able to stay home with my daughter while I had to go to a job I wasn’t even sure I wanted anymore.
Funny how having a child changed things so drastically. Once upon a time, I used to know what my focus was, where I wanted to be in life. Having children was never part of the plan. But the moment I held Grace, all that disappeared. I’d been unprepared for the changes having a baby meant, and still it didn’t seem real. Grace was only a few months old and already I was heading back into work? Where were my priorities? Why couldn’t I just stay home and take care of my daughter? It was like I was being split into two different personalities.
The doorbell rang and in that moment, I was tempted to rush back upstairs, sit in the rocker, and be content to watch my daughter all day long.
The sound of heels tapping on the hardwood floors stopped me though. The soft cadence of voices when Nina answered the door filtered through the hallway.
“Mandy, come on in. She’s almost ready to go.”
“Amanda?” Seeing her was a jolt. She was a reminder that I had commitments to keep; responsibilities that didn’t stop just because I gave birth to the most precious thing in my life. Brian says that I am the master of masks. If so, then it was time to don a mask I wasn’t sure I wanted to wear anymore. I pushed back my shoulders, took a deep breath, and began the process of compartmentalizing my life. It was the only way I’d be able to get through today. I placed my briefcase down on the entranceway table and faced my assistant. Her coming to my home, while I was on my way to work, didn’t make sense.
A tentative smile grew on Amanda’s lips and stayed there while I just stared. She looked…different. Older maybe?
“Did you cut your hair? And lose weight?”
She didn’t say anything.
“Why are you here?” Never, in the three years that we’d worked together, had Amanda come to my home uninvited.
I’d hired timid little Amanda Bell to be my new assistant when I first received the promotion to vice president at HK Solutions a few years ago. The idea of molding an assistant to suit my needs rather than retraining one seemed appealing. Amanda had been straight out of college but had the highest grades in the class. Her work ethic proved it, even though, at the time, her wardrobe did not.
It took almost a year for Amanda to realize she needed to dress the part before she could command the attention and respect from others in the office. Gone was the little girl who wore loafers and cardigans into work each day. In her place rose a woman of stature, in pencil skirts, blouses, and heels. For her birthday last year, I’d even gifted her with a pearl necklace and earrings, proud of the woman she’d become.
But that still didn’t excuse her adding chaperone to her list of duties.
The glance between Nina and Amanda didn’t go unnoticed.
“Mandy wanted to help make your first day back as stress-free as possible,” Nina answered.
Really? “Did Walter send you to be my chauffeur?”
Amanda shrugged, and in that moment, I realized I was missing a bigger picture.
“I do not need to be babysat.” I fished my keys out of my purse, grabbed my bag, and walked past both women with my head held high.
“Considering you’re going to be late now to work”—I stopped just as I reached the door—“you might as well pick up some coffee for us both since we’ll be spending the morning together, and be sure to buy enough muffins for everyone in the office.”
My hand trembled as I gripped the doorknob and pulled it open. I couldn’t help myself from glancing over my shoulder and up the stairs. All I needed was a small cry, a whimper, anything to prove that being a mother was more important than being a businesswoman.
Grace was sleeping. She was safe and loved and would be fine. So why did I feel like such a failure for leaving her?
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Just In Time
Text copyright 2015
Rosalind James
All Rights Reserved
What happens in Vegas…
Will Tawera doesn’t do commitment, except on the rugby field. Moving to Las Vegas to become a kicker for the NFL would be a big change from New Zealand rugby, but then, he’s ready for a change. And when he’s asked to do a little modeling on the side? Thousands of dollars to hold a beautiful blonde while looking dark, dangerous, tattooed, and Maori? He could do that.
Faith Goodwin doesn’t do dark, dangerous men. Especially not when they make her laugh, take her miniature golfing with four-year-olds, and are far too sexy and sweet for comfort. But when Will finds himself in hot water back in New Zealand, who’s he going to call? And who would be able to resist answering?
Author’s Note
The Blues and the All Blacks are actual rugby teams. However,
this is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Dream Date
It all started with Mrs. Johnson’s toilet.
Faith Goodwin wielded the blue plastic plunger with everything she had. She was late, and every plunge was making her later. The accordion pleats compressed with a whoosh, then released with a sucking sound that…never mind.
“Three”—whoosh—“hundred”—suck—“dollars,” she chanted in her mind. The amount of rent she paid in exchange for managing the six-unit apartment building. It was a good deal, even though she was wearing rubber boots and rubber gloves, and this wasn’t the first time she’d unclogged Mrs. Johnson’s toilet. Or any toilet.
“It’s the colitis.” The quavering voice came from a nice, clean, dry spot behind her. “I have to use extra paper. And you know, dear, these toilets could stand to be replaced.”
Faith closed her eyes and counted to ten. “You need to start flushing more in…in between, Mrs. Johnson. This makes twice this month.”
“Maybe a plumber…” the old lady suggested.
“He’d charge me a hundred dollars to do the exact same thing,” Faith said, doing her level best to detach from her surroundings. “So, please. Flush.”
She plunged a few more times, then gave the lever a push, crossed her fingers in the yellow gloves, and held her breath. The toilet thought about it for a minute, and then reluctantly decided to resume normal service, the water gurgling its way down the bowl. Yay.
Sweet Talk Boxed Set (Ten NEW Contemporary Romances by Bestselling Authors to Benefit Diabetes Research plus BONUS Novel) Page 65