Page 64 of Soaring


  Henry liked adventure. Me, that was a different story. But I was always at Henry’s side.

  Always.

  Except now.

  And last, and maybe most important, he could be very sweet and he was this way often.

  “I want you calling every day,” he demanded. “Check in. Let me know you’re okay.”

  “You’re too busy for me to call you every day,” I told him something I should know, since, even though Tisimo magazine had given him a young man named Daniel to take my place temporarily, I still knew his schedule like the back of my hand.

  “How about you let me decide what I’m too busy for, sweetheart. But I would hope you know by now, one of those things is not and never will be you.”

  Oh my.

  Yes.

  So very sweet.

  “Henry—” I started on a whisper.

  “Now, do something good. Like go out, buy a great bottle of wine, and drink it watching some ridiculous TV show you would normally hate so you can tell me all the reasons you hate it. Do not sit around, drinking your tea and doing something worthy. Like emailing Daniel to make certain he’s on his game or trying to read War and Peace for the seven millionth time.”

  “I’m going to finish that book someday,” I vowed on a mutter.

  “Let’s not make today that day,” he replied and I smiled.

  “All right. Reality TV and a good bottle of wine it is,” I murmured.

  “Good girl,” he murmured back and I could hear the smile in his voice. “Tomorrow, I want to know all the ways the housewives of wherever get on your nerves.”

  I smiled again before I asked, “Would you like me to take notes?”

  “Seeing as they’ll probably get on your nerves in so many ways even you’ll forget a lot of them, yeah.”

  “Then consider it done.”

  “Right.” I could still hear the smile in his voice. “Now go. Wine. TV. And while you’re at it, buy something good to eat. And I don’t mean an excellent wedge of brie. I mean something like a bucket of chicken.”

  I made a face that he hopefully could not hear in my voice when I lied, “Consider that done too.”

  “Liar,” he muttered and I smiled again.

  Then I said, “I should let you go.”

  “For now, sweetheart. I’ll talk to you tomorrow.”

  “Tomorrow, Henry.”

  “Be bad,” he said quietly.

  “I’ll try,” I replied and both of us knew that was a lie too.

  There was another pause before he whispered, “Chin up, Josephine. Always.”

  “It’s up, Henry. Always.”

  “Okay, sweetheart. Talk to you tomorrow.”

  “’Bye, Henry.”

  “Later, honey.”

  I disconnected and threw my phone on the cushion in front of me.

  Then I looked out to the sea.

  There was no buttery yellow in the sky, the peachy pink was fading and the lavender was taking over.

  It was stunning and it made me wish that Henry was, indeed, here with me. He’d take a fabulous picture of it.

  I was in the light room at Lavender House, the house Gran inherited from her mom and dad when they died which was thankfully after she’d divorced her husband.

  The house that had this room, five stories up a spiral staircase. A circular room that was curved windows all around so you could see everything. The sea. The outcroppings of rock and beaches along Magdalene Cove. The centuries old, tiny town of Magdalene. And the landscape beyond.

  This room with the window seats all around. The big desk in the middle where I knew Gran always wrote her letters to me. Where she sometimes took and made her phone calls to me. Where she paid bills. Where she wrote out recipes. Where she opened my letters to her and she probably read them right here too.

  The room that had the half-circle couch she found and bought because it was, “just too perfect to pass up, buttercup.”

  And it was. That couch was perfect. It had taken seven men, a pulley and who knew how much money to get it up there through a window. But Gran had seen it done.

  She loved it up here.

  I loved it up here.

  And I sat in this very spot years ago after I became well enough to move around a bit after she saved me from my father. I also sat in this very spot after I called her and told her I had to get away, I just had to get away, and she flew me here.

  Here. Home.

  Here was where I put my father behind me.

  Here was where I put my world behind me.

  Here was where I got the call from a girlfriend who had moved to New York to do something in the fashion world (anything, she didn’t care, and she succeeded and was then working as a minion for flash-in-the-pan diva designer who thought he was everything who had recently been fired from his job designing clothes for discount department stores).

  A girlfriend who told me Henry Gagnon was looking for an assistant and she knew I loved clothes, I was an admirer of his photos and she could talk to someone who could talk to someone who could maybe get me a meeting with him.

  And here was where I took the next call when I learned she got me a meeting with him.

  Here was where my life ended…twice, even as it started again…twice.

  It still smelled like Gran here even though it had been years since she could get up to this room.

  She was everywhere in Lavender House.

  But mostly she was here.

  And now she was gone.

  And on that thought, it happened.

  I knew it would happen. I was just glad it didn’t happen at her graveside, in front of people.

  It happened there, the safest place I could be, the safest place I ever had, with Gran all around me.

  The first time in over two decades when I let emotion overwhelm me and I wept loud, abhorrent tears that wracked my body and caused deep, abiding pain to every inch of me rather than releasing any.

  I didn’t go out and buy a bottle of wine.

  I certainly didn’t get a bucket of chicken (not that I was going to anyway).

  And I didn’t watch the real housewives of anywhere on TV.

  I fell asleep on that window seat with tears still wet on my face and with Gran all around me.

  The safest place I could be.

  The Will is available in ebook and print now.

  ####

  About the Author

  Kristen Ashley grew up in Brownsburg, Indiana but has lived in Denver, Colorado and the West Country of England. Thus she has been blessed to have friends and family around the globe. Her posse is loopy (to say the least) but loopy is good when you want to write.

  Kristen was raised in a house with a large and multi-generational family. They lived on a very small farm in a small town in the heartland and existed amongst the strains of Glenn Miller, The Everly Brothers, REO Speedwagon and Whitesnake (and the wardrobes that matched).

  Needless to say, growing up in a house full of music, clothes and love was a good way to grow up.

  And as she keeps growing up, it keeps getting better.

  *****

  Discover other titles by Kristen Ashley:

  Rock Chick Series:

  Rock Chick

  Rock Chick Rescue

  Rock Chick Redemption

  Rock Chick Renegade

  Rock Chick Revenge

  Rock Chick Reckoning

  Rock Chick Regret

  Rock Chick Revolution

  The ‘Burg Series:

  For You

  At Peace

  Golden Trail

  Games of the Heart

  The Promise

  The Chaos Series:

  Own the Wind

  Fire Inside

  The Colorado Mountain Series:

  The Gamble

  Sweet Dreams

  Lady Luck

  Breathe

  Jagged

  Kaleidoscope

  Dream Man Series:

  Mystery Man
r />
  Wild Man

  Law Man

  Motorcycle Man

  The Fantasyland Series:

  Wildest Dreams

  The Golden Dynasty

  Fantastical

  Broken Dove

  The Magdalene Series:

  The Will

  Soaring

  The Three Series:

  Until the Sun Falls from the Sky

  With Everything I Am

  Wild and Free

  The Unfinished Hero Series:

  Knight

  Creed

  Raid

  Deacon

  Other Titles by Kristen Ashley:

  Fairytale Come Alive

  Heaven and Hell

  Lacybourne Manor

  Lucky Stars

  Mathilda, SuperWitch

  Penmort Castle

  Play It Safe

  Sommersgate House

  Three Wishes

  Connect with Kristen Online:

  Official Website: www.kristenashley.net

  Kristen’s Facebook Page: www.facebook.com/kristenashleybooks

  Follow Kristen on Twitter: KristenAshley68

  Need support for your Kit Crack Addiction?

  Join the Kristen Ashley Addict’s Support Group on Goodreads

  Cover Design by PixelMischiefDesign.com

 


 

  Kristen Ashley, Soaring

 


 

 
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