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Touching Stars
Touching Stars
Touching Stars
Ebook557 pages12 hours

Touching Stars

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A war correspondent’s return to his ex-wife and their children tests what it means to be family in this emotional saga by a USA Today–bestselling author.

Gayle Fortman has built a good life for herself and her three sons as an innkeeper in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley. She has even maintained a cordial relationship with her ex, charismatic broadcast journalist Eric Fortman, covering with the boys for his absences and broken promises. Luckily Travis Allen, her closest neighbor, has been a loving surrogate father to the boys and her own best friend.

Then, on the eve of oldest son Jared’s graduation, Eric returns, having nearly lost his life in Afghanistan. Worse, he has lost his way and his courage, and needs a place to recover. Gayle realizes this might be the last chance for her sons to establish a real bond with their father, and offers him a summer at the inn and a chance to put things right. Gayle and Eric are all too aware that their onetime love and attraction are still there. But can the pieces of their broken lives be mended, or are they better laid to rest?

Praise for Touching Stars

“Magically interpreting the emotional resonance of love and loss, betrayal and redemption through luminously drawn characters, Richards’ latest installment in her irresistible, quilt-inspired Shenandoah Album series glows with transcendent warmth, wisdom, grace, and compassion.” —Booklist

“Romance Writers of America award–winner Richards gets the emotions right and writes credible dialogue when the adults speak to children.” —Publishers Weekly
LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 17, 2012
ISBN9781460303009
Touching Stars
Author

Emilie Richards

USA TODAY bestselling author Emilie Richards has written more than seventy novels. She has appeared on national television and been quoted in Reader’s Digest, right between Oprah and Thomas Jefferson. Born in Bethesda, Maryland, and raised in St. Petersburg, Florida, Richards has been married for more than forty years to her college sweetheart. She splits her time between Florida and Western New York, where she is currently plotting her next novel.

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Rating: 3.883333416666667 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I loved this book! It was definitely hard to put down! I could really imagine being at her Inn also!!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    According to a short biographical sketch on the inside back cover of the paperback I was reading, Emilie Richards' novels feature "complex characterization and in-depth explorations of social issues, a result of her training and experience as a family counselor." This is very evident in this novel, which has good characterizations and a thoughtful, if unusual plot. In her story, Richards describes a family who has been broken by divorce for a dozen years. After the ex-husband almost loses his life, he is invited back to the family's home to rest, recuperate and get to know his sons, of whom he has seen very little over the past years. The novel focuses on their summer together, not leaving much doubt in the reader's mind as to what will happen in the end. The story is well-told and realistic I suppose, but nevertheless a sad commentary on what divorce can do to our families in this day and age. I would personally wish it had ended differently.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I really enjoyed this third book in the series. A woman who has been divorced for years allows her ex to recover from a serious injury in her home/bed & breakfast. Her sons are getting older and need to renew thier relationship with their dad. A middle-aged woman takes stock of her life and decides how she wants to spend the rest of it.

Book preview

Touching Stars - Emilie Richards

Chapter 1

Gayle Fortman knew a number of things for certain, but three were at the top of her list. One, that life could spin out of control unless she spent all her waking hours nudging it into place. Two, that even sternly administered nudges couldn’t deter fate. And three, that if fate could not be nudged, cajoled or outrun, the only other possibility was to turn and face it squarely.

But she didn’t have to smile.

Gayle wasn’t smiling now. This morning no one was nearby, so she had no reason to pretend she was anything but worried about what fate had in store for her.

Eric Fortman, the man to whom she’d been married for seven years and divorced from for twelve, was coming home. Eric, the father of three sons who, through the years, had seen him more frequently on their television screen than in person. Eric, her first and only love, who still managed to make the men who volunteered to take his place pale in comparison.

Eric, who had faced fate head-on, nearly died from the experience and was now in need of the family he had abandoned.

A lump formed in her throat at that thought, and she reached for the coffee mug she had set on a table at the terrace’s edge, grateful as the steaming liquid dissolved this one lump of many that had resided there for the past weeks.

From an ash tree at the edge of the clearing, a bird trilled a sunrise serenade, untroubled at the lack of a larger audience. Maybe the bird, an old companion, understood one of the other things of which Gayle was certain. If she jumped out of bed in the mornings and hit the ground running, she would fall flat on her face. So every day, alone on the terrace that overlooked the North Fork of the Shenandoah River, she stood with a cup of coffee in her hands and watched as dawn’s artistic fingers drizzled copper and platinum on the rippling water.

When midsummer’s humidity, fueled by dewdrops and river mist, sucked the breath from her lungs, or when treacherous sheets of ice glazed the fieldstones she and Eric had so carefully laid, she stood here. Dawn was the time when she gathered her thoughts, murmured her prayers, dreamed her dreams. She wasn’t rich or self-indulgent, but she gave herself these precious minutes of solitude before she headed into the kitchen of Daughter of the Stars, the bed-and-breakfast inn she owned and operated, to begin her day in earnest.

Except that this morning, with so much to sort out and prepare for, it seemed she wasn’t alone after all.

Surprised, Gayle stepped forward and squinted into the pearly light. The inn sat high on a slope, protected from waters that rose and fell according to the whims of the river gods. But when the Shenandoah raged, the low water bridges that skated back and forth over the snaking length of it were quickly submerged. Gardens planted in the alluvial soil washed downstream, and river became a verb. Everyone within miles of the North Fork understood what it meant to be rivered in.

The river was behaving this morning, but the same could not be said about a certain family member. Gayle slammed her coffee mug on the table, then she started down the terrace steps at a brisk trot. The only thing that kept her from yelling her youngest son’s name was the knowledge that a shout this close to the house would wake her older ones.

Dillon, she muttered under her breath. Dillon…Arthur…Fortman.

The boy in the boat didn’t hear her, nor had she intended for him to. He was oblivious to everything. What could he hear inside the shabby rowboat tethered to the willow that grew at the river’s edge, except the singing of the current, the slapping of gentle waves against the sides of the boat?

As Gayle watched, Dillon flipped a fishing rod over his shoulder, then brought it forward, flicking his wrist to cast his line farther into the river. Despite her annoyance, she winced as the rod jerked and stuttered, and the line flopped just in front of him. She had seen her son practice this maneuver over and over, yet his movements were as awkward as if he had never held a rod. Dillon had neither the coordination nor confidence to make his cast a thing of beauty. And his thirteen-year-old body, which every day seemed to explode in new and frightening directions, was as daunting an obstacle as any she’d ever seen.

Now that she was almost to the water, the rowboat no longer looked like one of the toys her son had sailed across mud puddles as a toddler. Afraid she would startle him, she raised her voice just enough that he could hear her words.

Dillon Fortman, what are you doing out here alone?

He turned, and the boat wobbled alarmingly. In the early morning light his face looked pudgy and unformed, his eyes heavy-lidded.

"What are you doing here?"

She had too many sons to go on the defensive. Sometimes she thought it was a shame Dillon never had the chance to trap her the way his brothers had.

She reached the bank and slapped her hands on her hips for emphasis. We have rules. One of them is that you don’t go near the river alone.

But I didn’t make that rule. You made it. I didn’t get to say a thing about it.

That’s right. She picked her way across uneven ground to the tree where the boat was tied. Wedging her index finger between loops of what was—to give Dillon credit—an expertly tied knot, she began to loosen it so she could pull him to shore.

I’m fishing!

"No, you were fishing. Now you’re coming in."

You ruin everything!

She ignored him, resorting again to years of experience. She managed to untie the knot, although by the time she was able to pull the boat to shore, yesterday’s manicure—one of her few indulgences—was a casualty.

We’ll go over the rules while you’re my captive audience, she said as pleasantly as she could muster. You don’t come down here alone. You don’t go out in the boat alone. And you don’t disobey me, then try to make this my fault.

"Well, it is your fault, because it’s a stupid rule!"

The boat was close enough to the riverbank now that he could jump out and did. She moved to the edge and handed him the rope, then stepped back so he could finish pulling the boat ashore.

We can always discuss a rule, she said as he went through the motions, then retied the boat once it was out of the water. But we don’t discuss a rule when you’re in the middle of breaking it.

Like you have time to talk to me or anybody else!

She waited. She was a busy woman—busier than most, it was true—but all her sons knew she would drop anything if they needed her. Dillon was no exception. When he didn’t, couldn’t, come up with anything else to add, she took pity on him.

Is this about your dad coming for the summer?

Dillon was as tall as she was. At five foot five, she’d had little hope of remaining taller than her boys. Their father was a strapping six foot one, broad shouldered and raw boned. Eighteen-year-old Jared, their oldest son, was nearly as tall as Eric. At sixteen, Noah was not yet six feet, although he still looked down at Gayle from a superior height. Dillon was already taller than either of his brothers had been at the same age. Gayle hoped he would grow to be the tallest. He needed some way in which he towered over the others.

For the moment Dillon was just tall enough to gaze straight into her eyes. She saw that his were mud-brown with anger. His forehead was crinkled, and he was breathing loudly through his nose, like a bull about to charge.

It doesn’t matter. He cut his hand through the air, narrowly missing her shoulder.

Well, it does. I’d like to know what you’re doing out here. She sighed and her voice dropped appreciably. How was the fishing?

Do you see any fish?

Sadly, she didn’t. A worm waster, huh?

The forehead crinkles deepened. Just because I said something cute when I was three doesn’t mean I have to hear about it the rest of my life.

Personally ‘worm waster’ makes me smile, and these days I need all the smiles I can get. She took a risk, a calculated one, and put her arm around his shoulder for a quick squeeze. He did not pull away.

Your dad likes fresh river bass, she said.

Yeah.

There was nothing else to say. As she had suspected, her son had sneaked out in the darkness, before the fish were even fully awake, hoping he could go back to the house with a string of freshly caught bass or sunfish. He had braved a river he feared, a sport that bored him, the state’s warnings about PCB and mercury contamination in fish caught in these waters, and, finally, his mother’s wrath. All in search of Eric Fortman’s elusive love.

Your dad likes fresh bass, but he’d be sorry to lose you over pursuit of them, she said as they started back toward the house.

I can swim.

Dillon could swim. A little. She had made certain that despite his debilitating fear of the water, he learned to keep himself afloat. But her youngest son was a long way from being a swimmer. When the water was rough he was given to panic, to hyperventilation and cramps and erratic splashing. If he fell into the river when no one was watching, if he thought he was being carried away by the current despite his efforts, it was possible he might panic and drown.

Dillon did not need a reminder. He knew.

Your dad also likes chocolate-chip muffins, she said when they were halfway to the house. And the state of Virginia doesn’t dictate how many we can safely eat in a month. Want to help me make some?

It’s not the same thing.

True. Muffins taste better for breakfast.

I just wanted to show him I can fish!

Maybe the two of you can fish together when your dad’s feeling a little stronger.

Do you think he’ll want to?

The question was a good one. None of them knew exactly what Eric would feel like doing this summer. Her ex-husband’s life had been turned upside down. His health had suffered. In their brief phone calls he had tried to be the take-charge Eric she’d known and loved so long ago. But he had sounded like an actor playing that part, a bit player who had only managed to memorize the lines.

I know he’ll want to spend time with you. She smiled the lie into truth—or at least the nearest neutral zone. She did not know if Eric wanted to spend time with Dillon. Dillon was a stranger to him, the son he knew the least. The son he hadn’t wanted.

The son who needed him the most.

I don’t know why he can’t stay in the carriage house with us, Dillon said.

Because no matter how I juggled sons or space, I couldn’t find room for him.

He could have slept in my room, with me and Noah.

Your dad needs a room all his own, and the Lone Star room in the inn is one of the nicest. He’ll just be yards away. You know you can see him any time you like.

But we’ll have to be quiet because of the guests.

Your dad will be welcome in our house, Dillon, any time he wants to come over. You know that. Don’t make trouble where there is none, okay?

He pouted. As always, she was struck by how much this son resembled his father. Same dark gold hair, same deep brown eyes, even the same slightly off-kilter nose. Jared was the most like Eric in personality, but when Dillon had finished growing, he was going to be a nearly exact physical replica. The irony wasn’t lost on her.

They were almost to the terrace before he spoke again. It’s going to be, like, weird for you, isn’t it?

A little. She stopped and put her hand on his shoulder, pleased he could see beyond his own turmoil. At thirteen, Dillon wasn’t particularly talented at understanding how other people felt. It’s going to be a little weird for everybody. Your dad included. But you kids don’t have to worry about your dad or me. We’re grown-ups, and we’ve stayed friends. You just take care of yourself.

Everything’s changing.

Not everything.

Dillon fidgeted, shifting his weight. His hands were balled into fists. Dad’s coming. Jared’s graduating from high school.

Life just keeps moving, and we either move with it or watch it pass right by.

So? Do we have to like it?

She wished, as she did at least a dozen times a day, that she could make this child’s life easier. No. We just have to accept reality.

I’m going back to bed.

Good luck on that. We may not have guests this week, but I bet your brothers will be up shortly.

As if to prove it, the door opened and Jared, in athletic shorts and a T-shirt, stepped out, followed by Noah in navy-blue sweats. Normally getting her sons out of bed when they didn’t have school or work to do was like prying dinosaur bones from a tar pit. But this was no ordinary day.

She hadn’t had time to mentally prepare for everything to come. For a moment she felt like hopping in the rowboat and floating downstream as far as she could go. But panic was a luxury she couldn’t afford.

Chocolate-chip muffins, she said, willing her voice to be steady. How about scrambled eggs and apple sausage to go with them?

It’s just us, remember? Dillon said.

She raised her hand to welcome Jared and Noah. ‘Just us’ is plenty good enough for a special breakfast.

As they walked to join the others, she thought that this would be the last time for a long time that they would eat breakfast as a family. Tomorrow Eric would eat it with them. Not quite family, at least not her family. Not any longer.

Two parents, no longer married. Three sons shared. And a history of trying so hard to make things work out. First the marriage, then the divorce, and now the recovery.

I’m glad Dad’s coming, Dillon said.

I know you are. She patted his shoulder. But she didn’t lie and say that she was glad, as well.

Ariel Kensington was a star on the rise, but she wasn’t a traditional beauty. Her blue eyes were just a hair too widely spaced, and her chin had a pronounced point that worked better on Reese Witherspoon. Off camera, Ariel’s head almost seemed out of proportion to her body, as if on some heavenly assembly line the angels had run out of the proper model and found a substitute one size larger. The head was covered with black curls that refused to acknowledge that straight hair was the style of the day. Somehow all these flaws gave her a more powerful presence on camera. And the size of the head fit the size of the smile, which lit up any room she entered. Eric had met Ariel two years before, at a dinner at Washington’s National Press Club, and a week later they had become lovers.

Now she was his chauffeur. She was taking him to the inn where his sons waited and his ex-wife was probably wondering what she was getting into.

You could still come to L.A. and stay with me. Ariel switched lanes on I-81 heading south to Toms Brook. My place is a postage stamp, but we could manage.

Eric realized he had been staring at Ariel’s profile. Maybe he was trying to memorize it in case he was ever falling through space again. In those moments and the many beyond, he had tried and failed to conjure up an adequate picture of her in his head.

He turned away. We’ve been over this. This is better.

She didn’t argue. Both of them knew their relationship hadn’t progressed enough for 24/7 intimacy. Neither had asked for any kind of commitment, nor, he imagined, had Ariel thought about the next step any more than he had. He had tried marriage, found wedded bliss was one of the few things he did badly, and decided not to fail again. Ariel was married to the next step on the career ladder.

Do you know every sentence you utter has an edge to it? She glanced at him. That’s new.

You thought maybe I hadn’t changed?

I just wonder if you know how angry you sound all the time. How will your boys react?

I’m not angry at them. I’m not angry at you.

Eric, on the list of things you’re angry about, what’s at the top?

Is this an interview?

"Maybe that’s one of the things you’re angry about. That everybody wants to know how you feel. Everybody wants—or at least wanted—an interview when you came back."

You must have considered psychology before you chose journalism.

"Oh, I did, sweetie. Dr. Kensington had a real ring to it. Problem was, I wanted to know what made people tick, but I didn’t want to take the time to make them tick faster or slower. I wanted to move on to the next story."

One of the things Eric liked most about Ariel was her honesty. It served her well on the job, too. She was gathering a reputation as a straight shooter. People often requested her when they were forced to talk to the press. She was as honest as a television journalist could be.

He decided to be just as honest. I’m angry that this is all such a huge waste of resources.

Fill me in.

I’ve got energy, intellect, insight into world problems. I know how to use people to help me get to the bottom of things. He paused. Or at least I used to.

And now you’ve been sidelined.

That was it, of course. Sidelined. Benched. Hog-tied. Eric Fortman, charismatic, powerful, dashing television journalist. So weak, so beaten, that right now he couldn’t face reporting Little League baseball scores.

Tell me about your family, Ariel said after the silence had stretched thin.

You’ve never asked for a lot of details.

I’ve never been ten miles away and counting.

What do you want to know?

Basics again, for starters.

Jared’s eighteen, smart enough to get a scholarship to MIT in the fall. A top athlete, charming—

Like his daddy.

Not like me. He’s quieter. Jared is just who he is. He never tries to prove himself.

Watch yourself, you’re giving away insecurities. She smiled and lit up her rental car with the brilliance of it.

He looked away and gazed out the window. Some fool in a black Cadillac Escalade was trying to pass on the right and getting nowhere fast. Nobody used a gas pedal like Ariel.

Noah’s more of an enigma, he said, after watching fields and trees and the occasional cow whiz by his window. The Escalade had dropped behind, as had several eighteen-wheelers. He’s…let’s see…sixteen. Funny. The class clown. Very personable, the kid who picks up strays and helps his mother with the dishes. He likes art, and he’s won some competitions. I’ve never quite figured him out.

Do they look like you?

Jared a little. He paused. And I guess Dillon will.

Dillon’s the youngest?

Yeah. He stopped and did a silent count. Almost fourteen, I guess. The rebel.

Every family needs one. Sounds like the other two had all the good stuff sewed up. Does he drive your ex crazy?

Gayle? Are you kidding? Dillon’s her baby. She’d cut up his meat and spoon-feed it to him if he let her. But even as he said this, Eric knew it wasn’t true. That was the vision he wanted to hold of his ex-wife, but it didn’t begin to give her the credit she deserved.

How do you get along with them?

A simple question. A trick question. Most of the time I’m not around.

And when you are?

We get along fine.

Even you and the rebel?

I haven’t spent as much time with Dillon.

Oh.

He heard a world of questions in that syllable. He had no answers, but he did have excuses. He listed them. He was too young to do a lot of the things I wanted to do with the other two. And when I do spend time with the three of them, Dillon spends most of it fighting with his brothers. It’s not very pleasant for anybody.

Consequently he gets left behind, she said.

Consequently, yes.

"Jockeying for position, I’m sure. I’d wonder who I was if Jared and Noah were my brothers."

Why are you so interested?

She sent him another of those smiles. I’m interested in you, Eric. You don’t have that figured out?

Something eased a little inside him. And only when it did was he willing to admit how tense he had been. It’s not easy going home to them.

Home?

Their home. And let’s face it, it was mine for a while.

A long time ago, right?

A lifetime.

And the ex-wife? What about her?

Gayle’s great. We get along, or at least we get along as well as two people who used to sleep together ever can. We don’t fight. She doesn’t ask for anything I don’t want to give.

She sounds like a paragon. Are you sure you’re not still in love with her?

That would be a twelve-year mistake, wouldn’t it? Something of a record.

Ariel slowed so that she could move into the right lane. He saw the sign for the Toms Brook exit just ahead of them. In a moment she had taken it, slowing dramatically as she did.

He gave directions, and she listened, then followed them. They were smack in the middle of rural Virginia now, magnolias bursting into bloom, grass growing tall along the roadside, daisies climbing from drainage ditches. Mountains dominated the horizon. Manageable mountains. Nothing like Afghanistan’s High Hindu Kush, or the Kafar Jar Ghar mountain range in Zabul province, where he had tried and failed disastrously to chase down Taliban leaders.

There’s a part of me, Eric said, that wishes I were coming back here as a beloved husband and father, a conquering hero to be fussed over, honored and adored. That’s pathetic, isn’t it?

Pretty natural, I’d say.

Gayle and I have a model divorce, but this is going to test things. I’ll be on their turf. At their mercy. He managed a weak smile.

Sweetie, relax. You’ve already been to Iraq and Afghanistan, and this ain’t neither.

That’s true. Nobody in Toms Brook wants to kill me. Nobody’s going to hold a sword over my head just to entertain his friends.

"You’re safe, Eric. Those people are far away. These people want to help you recover."

He closed his eyes for a moment, wondering which vision he would see when he did. The stifling mud-and-stone house north of Dai Chopan? Or the peaceful old inn by the river that he and Gayle had lovingly restored, one room at a time.

I would go nuts here. Ariel made a turn onto Route 11. The country gives me the creeps. Who do these people talk to?

They know each other better than you know the man in the condo next to yours. They invent reasons to get together. It’s a good life.

She snorted. So good you couldn’t wait to get away.

That good, he admitted. I was licking wounds when Gayle and I bought the inn. She had an inheritance. I thought I’d had it with the news biz. Turns out I was wrong.

Wounds?

He wanted to tell her. Maybe because, after everything else, his past was almost humorously tame.

I was forced to give up a story I was working on to a colleague. I told her there were some problems, that I was still researching and checking facts. But she rushed it into production, and when some of the information proved to be bogus, she blamed it on me. My name was still attached, and she was higher up the chain. They moved me to a nothing job at a nothing station, and I quit.

She was silent for a while, apparently absorbing everything he’d said. Then she glanced at him. You were having an affair with her, weren’t you?

How’d you figure that out?

Because why else would you put up with that kind of treatment? You knew if you squawked, the affair would come to light and your wife would find out.

I’m not particularly proud of it. Gayle and I were separated at the time, and I probably told myself I deserved better. It was just one of those things that happened. Too many drinks after work trying to unwind. The affair didn’t mean anything. Too many late nights in the same places. She was married, too. I thought that made me invulnerable.

Fooled you, didn’t she?

Made a fool of me, more likely.

Did your wife find out anyway?

After we began talking divorce, somebody told her.

Final nail in the coffin?

I think it just made the divorce a little more inevitable. When we bought the inn she thought it was a forever deal. I guess I saw it as an investment while I figured out what to do next. Then I was offered a job reporting from Bosnia. Almost out of the blue. A chance to be in the middle of the action instead of the middle of sawdust and breakfast-menu rehearsals and diapers.

I can understand why you went.

So could Gayle. And I could understand why she didn’t want to go. Her father was in the foreign service. Gayle moved a lot. For some people it becomes a way of life. For Gayle it became a desire for roots.

You two never thought about this before you married?

We thought we’d find a balance.

Yin and yang, huh? I’ve never seen it work.

He wondered about that as they zipped past frame and brick houses set back from the road and through the small town center of Toms Brook, which was more of an address than a destination. No stoplight slowed their progress.

Maybe his marriage to Gayle could have worked if he had been someone else, someone better. Eric rarely beat himself up. He spent less time considering past actions than he spent trimming nose hairs. But in those troublesome bursts of navel-gazing, he had come to the realization that he rarely put anyone else’s needs ahead of his own. Three days when he had believed each breath might be his last had firmed up that conclusion.

And of course in the weeks since he’d been held hostage, he’d had more than a little time to consider everything about his life.

Ariel slowed and turned off the larger road to a narrow lane. Okay, where do we go from here?

He directed her, but they were silent otherwise. Ariel was assertive and pragmatic. Three days ago she had flown to D.C. to meet his plane after his long flight from Germany and taken him to the hospital for the mandatory inpatient physical performed by a doctor the network had chosen. She had helped him fill out stacks of paperwork, fended off friends both in and out of the media, and finally, last night, checked him into a suite at the Mayflower under her brother’s name, then waited with him until the sleeping pill the doctor had prescribed kicked in. Early this morning she’d picked him up for the trip to the valley. No one could have done it with less fuss and more finesse.

What had she gotten out of this?

When the scenery was suddenly unfamiliar, he realized how much time had passed since he’d last been here. There were several new houses on the road leading to the inn. And the road itself, which had not been completely paved, was pristine blacktop all the way.

There’s the first sign, he said, pointing. Daughter of the Stars, A Bed and Breakfast Inn.

Classy.

The place may be in the middle of nowhere, but it’s a class act.

She slowed even more and took the required turn. You’ll keep in touch?

I plan to.

I can be here in a day if you need me, Eric.

He kept his voice light. I wouldn’t ask you to rescue me twice in one lifetime.

We all need occasional rescue. The people we choose to ask? That says a lot about us.

Then it says I have good taste.

She stopped at the end of the driveway that led up to the front door. He gazed at the familiar structure. The inn sprawled in several directions, a barn-red building with white trim and black shutters. Window boxes filled with ivy, purple petunias and white geraniums graced the upstairs windows, while pots on the porch sprouted with flowers he had no names for. To one side of the house a new rose garden added gaudier splashes of color. As he opened his door, their fragrance seemed to lift him out of the car, hypnotic, sensual and welcoming.

He heard a shout from inside, and the screen door banged. Though he had grown, clearly the boy who emerged was Dillon. No one else moved with the same hyperkinetic lack of grace. His son’s gold hair shone in the summer sunlight. His smile was both radiant and hesitant.

My God, Eric, he’s your clone, Ariel said softly from the driver’s seat.

He heard her words, then Dillon’s shout.

Dad’s here. Dad’s really here!

In that moment Eric understood the duality of his son’s smile. He was filled with the radiance of homecoming, of being loved this much, of having a place in this lonely aching world that he could, at least temporarily, call home.

But in the same moment he wanted to get back into the car and beg Ariel to take him anywhere. Any place where nobody needed him.

The screen door opened again, and Gayle stepped out, followed by their two older sons, who held back. They stood behind their mother as if to say they had chosen sides, and Eric had better understand it. That they would be right there to protect her and watch over her this summer.

Gayle stepped forward first. She put her hand on Dillon’s shoulder, whispered something in his ear, then stepped down off the porch and started toward Eric. When she was only a few feet away she extended her hands and grasped his. Then she leaned forward and kissed his cheek.

Welcome home, Eric, she said. We are all very glad to see this day.

Chapter 2

"I’m glad you’re here, Dad. Jared gave his father a quick bear hug. I’m glad you’re, you know…back."

Eric knew exactly what his son meant. The word he hadn’t been able to say was alive.

Noah danced around the word, too, but got closer. Yeah, we’re glad you made it.

Jared reached out an arm for his middle son, and he saw Noah hesitate. Then Noah leaned closer and let his father hug him. But only for a moment.

Hey, he probably needs to sit down or something. Dillon danced from foot to foot at the edge of the group. He’d been the first to offer his arms to his father, but watching the other boys greet Eric seemed to frustrate him.

I’m okay, Eric assured them. He held out his arm to Ariel. Ariel, come meet everybody.

Ariel wore tight black capris and sandals with three-inch heels that showcased lethally red toenails. Her navel was adorned with a ruby that winked every time she lifted an arm. Eric saw Jared and Noah give her an admiring glance.

What a good-looking crew, she said as she joined them. She held out her hand to Gayle before Eric could make the introduction. Ariel Kensington.

Gayle’s smile seemed genuine. I recognize you from the series you did on natural disasters a couple of years ago on the Discovery Channel. I’m so glad you could drive Eric here, Miss Kensington.

Ariel.

And I’m Gayle.

Eric watched as Gayle introduced the boys. About fifty percent of marriages in the United States ended in divorce, but to his knowledge, no one had written a rulebook for moments like this. Luckily the two women didn’t seem to need one. An awkward moment had been waved away by mature adults.

He hadn’t seen Gayle for a year, and then only in passing. He thought she looked much the same. Her chin-length hair was the pale gold of Jared’s, fine, straight and expertly layered to fall around her face. Her gray eyes were steady and serious, but her smile, although not the star caliber of Ariel’s, was genuine and warm. Years ago he had fallen in love with the smile, then the woman. The smile conveyed everything about her. Integrity. Wisdom. And just a hint of the wilder woman inside. He had been captivated, and, like any good journalist, he had known she was a story worth uncovering.

Now she was telling Ariel about the inn. Would you like a tour? she asked after a truncated history. You can’t rush off. You must need a break from driving.

Just a short one. I have to catch a plane out of Dulles late this afternoon, and you know airports these days. I always give myself plenty of time.

Then a glass of tea and a quick look, and we’ll have you back on the road.

Perfect, Ariel said.

You can’t just leave Dad standing here. Dillon moved to his father’s side, as if to prop him up. He’s sick. Look how skinny he is!

The words had fallen into a conversational void, and Dillon’s decibel level was always high.

Gayle flashed an apology to Eric with a glance he remembered well. Then she put her hand on Dillon’s shoulder.

Your father may need to rest, but that’s his call, don’t you think? I promise we aren’t going to let him topple over in the driveway.

I’m not sick. Eric’s words were sharper than he had intended, but they did the job. Silence fell. He glanced at Ariel, who shrugged, and he remembered what she had said in the car about the anger in his voice.

I’m not sick, he said in a gentler tone. I just lost weight on this assignment. I’m planning to gain it all back.

Well, you don’t look like you used to, Dillon said with a pout. You look older and—

Noah dragged his brother away from Eric. Let’s go see if everything’s ready in Dad’s room.

But I already—

No, you didn’t, Noah said.

Noah was the only brown-haired son, a throwback to Eric’s father or Gayle’s, but his nose was hers, as was the shape of his face. He was muscular and strong, and Dillon yelped as Noah dragged him away. Noah was everybody’s friend, but underneath the carefree grin, the terms were always his.

Gayle looked unhappy, but she didn’t try to stop the boys. "That’s one thing about Dillon. You can always count on him to tell the truth with unnecessary force. You are thin, Eric, but you’ve come to the right place. Feeding people is our specialty. And your sons make a mean waffle. No one else’s compare."

He was grateful to her and not surprised. This was Gayle at her best. Facing the truth, making it feel lighter than it was, finishing on a positive note.

Now you’re making me sorry I’m not staying overnight, Ariel said.

Gayle turned to start up the steps. I’ll give you a chocolate-chip muffin as a consolation prize.

If I stayed around here, I wouldn’t fit behind the news desk.

Gayle laughed, and this, too, seemed genuine. Ariel, if you stayed around here, you’d find there’s no news to report.

The two women climbed the steps together. Eric and Jared were left below as the screen door closed.

Eric looked at his son, who was gazing into the distance. Along with her pale blond hair, Jared had inherited Gayle’s straight nose and gray eyes. His forehead was broader, and his chin strong and square. There was nothing childishly soft about Jared now. Eric’s oldest son was a man, and he felt a pang as he realized it. Jared had been six when Gayle and Eric divorced, the only child old enough to realize that things would somehow be different from that point on.

Eric knew this son the best and loved him the best. Other parents might not admit to favoring one child, but Eric only had one son he really understood and felt close to.

You’re really all right? Jared asked.

No, but there’s nothing wrong that food, rest and a few pills won’t cure. It’s good of your mother to let me stay until the tenants move out of my condo in Atlanta. It can’t be easy for her, having a full-time boarder for the summer.

She insisted. We’ve been worried enough.

There’s really nothing to worry about now. But you can keep an eye on me for a while if it makes you feel better.

It must have been hell.

One man to another. Eric heard it, and realized Jared’s words and the way he said them were completely genuine. Unaccountably, he was nostalgic for the little boy who was no more.

Eric cleared his throat. It’s over. I’m glad.

Me too.

Eric put his hand on Jared’s arm. How about a little support for the old man? Stairs aren’t my friends yet.

You got it.

I hadn’t expected to need this kind of help until I was ninety.

We’ll pretend it’s preparation.

Eric laughed, rested his hand on his son’s and started the climb.

The inn’s Lone Star room was one of Gayle’s favorites, because it had a small porch with a view of the mountains and river. Each of the eight bedrooms was named after a different star quilt and decorated in harmony with the colors of the quilt displayed there. The Lone Star room was dominated by an Amish-made Lone Star wall hanging in southwestern sunset colors.

To highlight the quilt, she had painted the walls of the room a pale gold with a caramel glaze, hung burnt-red curtains, and accented with turquoise and deep purple pillows. The furniture was dark and heavy; the bed with its sand-colored duvet sat high off the floor. The effect was pleasing and more masculine than some of the other rooms. The fact that Eric had been born in the Lone Star state gave the decision to house him here the necessary note of humor.

They were going to need all the laughter they could muster.

Gayle opened drapes and turned on lights to make the room even more welcoming. Ariel was back on the road, and Noah was keeping Dillon temporarily at bay. She and Jared were attempting to make Eric feel at home.

You travel so light, she told him, as Jared deposited his father’s two small suitcases beside the closet. You’ll have room to spare in the dressers.

Eric looked alarmingly pale. Pale, thin and, yes, as Dillon had blurted out, older. But he was still Eric. He carried himself like a prince; he hadn’t quite forgotten how to smile. He had a strong, classic bone structure that was too prominent now, but still pleasing. Eric would be handsome at eighty.

I’m sorry, Dad, but I have to go out, Jared said. And I figured you’d need some time just to rest. I’ll be back later.

We’ll have plenty of time to catch up. Eric made as if to get a suitcase and unpack, but Gayle stopped him.

I can do that. Let me, okay? No fussing. Once you’ve had a few days to rest up, I’m going to put you to work.

I don’t need anything right now except some pills in the outside flap of that one. He gestured to the largest suitcase. I’ll take care of the rest of it a little at a time.

She didn’t argue. She unzipped the flap and took out half a dozen containers, and set them on the table beside his bed, where the boys had put bottled water and three glasses on a tray. We can get your prescriptions transferred to a local pharmacy.

I picked up a bug in— He stopped. Nothing much to worry about. I just need to be on a couple of things for a while, including some vitamins.

I’m heading out now. Jared made a fist and gently punched his father’s arm. See you later.

Eric smiled wanly. You bet. Thanks for the help. He watched Jared disappear through the door before he turned.

When did he turn into a man?

She hesitated, then shrugged. I guess when his father was taken hostage and nearly killed by terrorists.

"They called themselves freedom fighters."

Only it wasn’t your freedom they were fighting for, was it?

Funny, Jared’s turned into a man, while I feel like a helpless kid. Eric perched on the edge of the bed, his feet just skimming the ground. We traded places.

I can’t even imagine what you’ve been through.

I can’t imagine I’m here talking about it. He looked up at her. But let’s not.

She answered by moving to the dresser and lifting a handmade basket filled with everything from cans of nuts to muffins. What else do you need? The boys made a basket of goodies for you to snack on.

I’ll devour everything eventually, I’m sure.

We aren’t having guests this week. With Jared’s graduation and party tomorrow, and your arrival, it seemed easiest. So you’ll have peace and quiet to rest.

I can imagine what losing a week of income is going to do to your budget.

She let that pass, since she couldn’t disagree. The bathroom is stocked with more toiletries than you can use in a lifetime. We change towels daily and sheets twice a week, unless you need them changed more often. No television in the rooms, but lots of books. And there’s a flat screen in the guest parlor whenever you want to watch it.

It’s better than fine, Gayle. It’s a gift I don’t deserve, and I know it.

It’s a gift I’m happy to give the father of my sons. I want you to be here. They need to have you in reach for a while.

He looked more tired by the moment, but he stopped her before she could leave. Where was Jared off to?

Graduation practice. She hesitated. And I imagine he has to pick up Brandy so she can watch. They’re inseparable.

Brandy’s the girlfriend, right?

She is. The first serious girlfriend. They’ve been together all year.

"Why do I think you don’t

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