That Certain Summer

Read That Certain Summer Online

Authors: Irene Hannon

Tags: #FIC042040, #FIC027020, #Sisters—Fiction, #Homecoming—Fiction, #Mothers and daughters—Fiction, #Love stories, #Christian fiction

BOOK: That Certain Summer
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© 2013 by Irene Hannon

Published by Revell

a division of Baker Publishing Group

P.O. Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287

www.revellbooks.com

Ebook edition created 2013

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.

ISBN 978-1-4412-4291-4

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

To my dear nieces,
Catherine and Maureen Hannon—
may you always be sisters
and
friends.

And to Janice McCreary—
a treasured friend . . .
and a sister of the heart.

Prologue

— Karen —

Storms, she could handle.

This, however, was a tsunami.

As the nurse adjusted the drip on her mother's IV, Karen Butler fought back a wave of panic and shifted in her chair to stare out the window. In the distance, a solitary oak tree reached toward the sky, its bare limbs devoid of life despite the lush growth of a Missouri spring all around it. A casualty of the harsh winter.

She could relate.

“Your mother's doing very well. She's lucky it was a mild stroke. How are
you
holding up?” The nurse moved toward the door.

“Fine.”

Liar, liar.

“Well, if you'd like some coffee or a soft drink, there's a small kitchen next to the nurses' station. Help yourself.”

“Thanks.”

Giving up the futile attempt to find a comfortable position, Karen rose, stretched the kinks out of her back, and began to pace.

No matter how mild the stroke, her mother was still going to need lots of help for the foreseeable future.

And guess who was expected to provide it?

Good old reliable Karen.

A weight settled on her chest, squeezing the breath from her lungs. So far, she'd kept all her balls in the air, but how many more could she juggle? Didn't a shattered marriage, a job outside the home for the first time in more than a dozen years, and a rebellious daughter whose transition to teenager had been complicated by her parents' split provide enough challenges?

Pausing at the foot of the bed, Karen watched the steady rise and fall of the white sheet over Margaret's prone form. Her mother had looked the same for as long as she could remember. Iron gray hair, rigidly coiffed in a style twenty years out-of-date. Thin lips that turned down at the corners in a perennially disapproving expression that remained unyielding even in repose. An angular bone structure, softened neither by the extra weight she carried nor by a charitable, tolerant disposition.

In the best of times, she wasn't easy to please. While dealing with a stroke? She'd be impossible.

The knot in Karen's stomach tightened, and she crossed her arms, squeezing the flesh above her elbows. All her life, she'd tried to please Margaret. To accept family obligations without complaint. And what had it brought her? Nothing except criticism.

Yet what choice had there been after Val abdicated all family responsibilities and ran off to pursue a career in theater?

Her gaze fell on the small silver roses in her mother's pierced ears—a gift from her sister on some long-ago birthday—and the familiar resentment bubbled up inside her . . . followed, as usual, by annoyance.

Good grief, would she never grow up? She was too old for such petty nonsense. So what if Val was the golden girl with the charmed life? So what if she was Mom's favorite? She ought to get over it.

But she couldn't.

Because it still hurt.

Huffing out a breath, Karen turned her back on the bed. Enough.
She had more important things to worry about at the moment than her messy tangle of emotions—like figuring out how she was going to deal with this latest complication. It didn't help that Kristen was hobbling around on a broken leg or that the busy season at work, with its requisite longer hours, was kicking in, either.

Face it, Karen. You need help.

No!

She clenched her teeth and straightened her shoulders. Maybe she wasn't as pretty or popular or confident or talented as Val, but she'd always been organized and competent and able to cope with whatever life threw at her.

She'd get through this, like she always did.

A garbled sound came from behind her, and she turned. Her mother jabbed at the air with her good hand.

Karen crossed to the side of the bed. “What do you need, Mom?”

Margaret grabbed her arm with surprising strength and uttered more gibberish as she shook it, her face contorted with frustration.

The heart monitor began to beep.

Her own pulse tripping into double time, Karen grabbed the call button and pressed it.

“Hang on, Mom. I'll get the nurse.”

Two minutes later, as the woman calmed her mother down and retrieved a bedpan, Karen backed away.

She couldn't do this alone.

Everyone had their limit, and she'd just hit hers.

Gritting her teeth, she pulled her cell out of her purse. Like it or not, Val needed to come home.

Not
being the operative word—for both of them.

— Val —

Hand on the door of her condo, Val Montgomery hesitated as the phone began to ring. Her teenage cast was going to freak if she
was late for the dress rehearsal, and spending the first hour trying to calm a gym full of hyper adolescents held zero appeal.

Hitching her purse higher on her shoulder, she dug through her oversize tote bag for her keys. Let the caller leave a message.

“Val, it's Karen.” Her sister's voice echoed through the condo as the answering machine kicked in, and her hand froze. “I need to talk to you as soon as possible. Please call me on my cell when you get this message. I have a new phone, and I jotted the number down somewhere. Give me a sec . . .”

In the silence that followed, a tingle of apprehension zipped through her.

If Karen was calling, there must be a serious problem.

Hand still on the knob, she chewed on her lower lip. A crisis wasn't in her plans for tonight . . . but if she left without talking to her sister, she'd be distracted all evening—and adrenaline-pumped teens required her full attention.

With a resigned sigh, she walked over to the phone and lifted it out of its cradle. “Karen? I was walking out the door. What's up?”

“Thank goodness I caught you! I'm at the hospital. Mom had a stroke.”

Stroke.

As the word ricocheted through her mind, Val tried to process that bombshell.

It didn't compute.

Their mother had a lot of problems, but despite her myriad complaints, she'd always been healthy as a horse.

Combing her fingers through her hair, she stared out the window at the gray clouds gathering on the horizon. “How bad is it?”

“Mild, according to the doctors. They're still doing tests, but it's clear she's going to need some help for a while.”

And I expect you to pitch in.

Though the words were unspoken, the message came through loud and clear.

Clamping her lips together, Val tightened her grip on the phone. Not going to happen. The very notion of spending an extended period with her manipulative, self-centered mother turned her stomach. How Karen had managed to live in such close proximity to her all these years without going crazy was beyond comprehension.

As the silence lengthened and she struggled to fabricate an excuse that would absolve her of the implied obligation, Karen spoke again.

“Look, I'm sorry to dump this on you.” A thread of desperation wove through her sister's words. “I'd deal with it on my own if I could, but Kristen broke her leg a couple of days ago in gymnastics, and things are hectic at work. I can't manage two patients without some help. With your school year ending soon, I thought maybe you could come down for a few weeks, just to get us over the hump.”

A few weeks!?

As she tried to wrap her mind around that nauseating notion, the second part of Karen's comment suddenly registered.

“Why didn't you tell me about Kristen?”

“I didn't see any reason to bother you. It's not like you're close enough to help out.”

Val let the inferred criticism pass. “Is she okay?”

“Not to hear her talk. She missed the final gymnastics meet, the pool's off-limits, and she's out of commission for her typical summer activities. In her mind, the world is ending. But according to the doctor, she'll be fine.”

Val's lips quirked. “Being a teenager is tough.”

“Trust me, I'm reminded of that every day.”

“Me too. As a matter of fact, I've got a bunch of high school thespians waiting for me, and if I don't show up pronto, the drama won't all be on the stage. Can I get back to you later tonight to talk about this?”

A slight hesitation, followed by a terse reply, told her Karen recognized the request for the stall tactic it was. “Yeah. I'll probably
still be at the hospital. Let me give you the numbers for Mom's room and my cell phone.”

As Val jotted them down, she checked her watch. “I'll call you in a couple of hours.”

“Fine.”

The line went dead—and based on her sister's resigned tone, it was clear Karen expected her to bail.

But as she shoved the phone numbers into her tote, guilt niggled at her conscience. When had Karen ever asked for help—with anything? Never, as far as she could remember. Meaning her sister must be at the end of her rope. And it wasn't as if her own plans for the summer were all that pressing, other than two modeling commitments she could commute to fulfill. Plus, she knew how to handle their mother—a skill Karen had never mastered.

She could go.

But as she toyed with the idea of returning to the Missouri river town of her childhood, a wave of panic swept over her.

Tightening her fingers on her keys, she closed her eyes and fought back a surge of painful memories—the same ones that had been cropping up more and more often during the past few months, battling their way out of the dark prison where she'd banished them, clamoring for release. So far, she'd managed to corral them. But they were growing more unruly and insistent, and her control over them was slipping.

One of these days, she was going to lose the battle to contain them.

Then what?

She swallowed. It was time to face the hard truth she'd been dodging for months.

The only way to free herself from the mistakes that haunted her was to confront them and deal with them once and for all.

And maybe she'd just been handed an opportunity to do that.

Her hand began to throb, and she loosened her grip on the keys, eying the angry red imprint they'd left on her fingers. If she'd
continued to hold on to them, the ridges would have become deeper, numbness would have set in, and function would have become more and more limited. Letting go was the only way to restore normalcy.

To her fingers.

And perhaps to her life.

Val closed her eyes.

It was time to go home to Washington.

— Scott —

“Come on, guys, pick up the pace. I'm ready to crash.”

Scott Walker shot Mark a weary grin and transferred his saxophone case to his other hand as they exited the jazz club. “Maybe you're getting too old for this life.”

“Maybe we all are.” Joe led the way to their van. “What city are we in again?”

“Philadelphia.” Their publicist hit the remote for the locks. “After the honky-tonk dives you guys played for ten years, you should be grateful Prestige booked you in some class places to promote your debut album.”

“We are.” Scott opened the door of the van and climbed in. “But we've been doing one-night gigs for six weeks. It takes a toll.” He stifled a yawn. “We'll be fine after some z's.”

He hoped.

But the constant travel and disrupted sleep and incessant demands of the recording company for more radio and TV interviews, more social media visibility, more PR appearances and glad-handing were wearing. They hadn't pursued careers in music to schmooze.

Funny how their big break had given them less time to do what they loved best.

Silence fell as they all settled in and their publicist took the wheel. Joe and Mark fell asleep within minutes. Lulled by the motion of the van, Scott began to drift too—until a rough jolt jarred him awake.

As he struggled to jump-start his brain, he heard a sudden squeal
of brakes. His shoulder slammed against the side of the van. Headlights that seemed mere inches away blinded him. A screeching cacophony of ripping metal ricocheted in his ears, and he raised his hand to shield his face.

There were screams.

Shouts.

Pain that was sharp and intense and suffocating.

Confusion.

But in the moments before blackness engulfed him, Scott knew one thing with absolute clarity.

Their promotional tour was over.

And even if he survived, his life would never be the same.

— David —

“Why are we moving, Daddy?”

David Phelps set aside the stack of plates he was packing and looked down at his daughter. How many times had he answered that question over the past few weeks? Dozens, for sure. But five-year-olds didn't retain information long—especially information that didn't make sense to them. And no matter how he explained it, Victoria couldn't understand why they were leaving the condo that had been her home since she was born.

“Because I have a new job in a different place called Washington, Missouri, and because I want us to live in a house with a yard for you to play in.” David dropped down to balance on the balls of his feet beside her, brushing a stray strand of silky blonde hair off her forehead.

She frowned, planted her hands on her hips, and tilted her head. The stance, so reminiscent of Natalie, clogged his throat.

“I can play in the park at the corner. It has swings and a slide.”

“But it's not your very own yard. And you'll have a much bigger room too. We can paint it pink.”

“I like purple better.”

“Then purple it is.”

All at once her shoulders drooped and she hung her head. “I still don't want to move. I like St. Louis.”

So did he. But prayer had led him to this decision. To the acceptance that certain dreams had died and that it was time to let go of the past.

But how to explain that to a five-year-old? All Victoria knew was that her world was about to be turned upside down. Again.

He pulled her into his arms and gave her a hug. “St. Louis is nice, honey, but I think we'll like Washington too, once we get there.”

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