A Good Yarn Read online

Page 3


  She’d made a genuine effort to socialize, with the hope of marrying again. The closest she came was when Aurora turned fifteen, but Elise discovered that Jules, a symphony musician she’d been dating, had a wife and two daughters living in San Francisco. Devastated, she’d avoided relationships ever since. There was something to be said for a simple life.

  Looking perturbed, Elise’s daughter rounded the hallway corner. “John, I told you to leave your grandmother alone,” Aurora chastised. She reached for his arm and dragged him away from Elise’s door. “I’m sorry, Mom. I told the boys to let you sleep in this morning,” she added, casting Elise an apologetic glance.

  “It’s all right, I was awake.” Living with her daughter, a stay-at-home mom, and her family might not have been part of Elise’s retirement plans, but for the moment this arrangement suited them both. Her furniture was in storage and her life on hold, but she had a roof over her head.

  While Elise waited for the lawsuit to get settled, she paid Aurora and David rent. The amount was small at their insistence, but it was still a boon to the tight family budget. Elise also helped her daughter with the children. David, Elise’s son-in-law, was a computer specialist who set up software systems for companies across North America and was often away for a week or two at a time. Elise and Aurora, always close, were company for each other, and Elise appreciated her daughter’s encouragement and support.

  “Can you take us to the park this afternoon?” John pleaded.

  “Perhaps,” Elise said, hating to refuse him anything. “I have a few errands to run this morning and I don’t know how long they’ll take.”

  “Can I come?” John was such a dear boy, anxious to go and see and do. He’d raced into the world a full month early and had yet to stop.

  “No, sweetie, you’ve got kindergarten this morning.”

  His face fell instantly but he accepted her refusal with a good-natured shrug and quickly disappeared down the hallway to join his older brother.

  “I thought I’d go down Blossom Street and check out that yarn store,” Elise informed her daughter.

  She could tell Aurora was pleased about her renewed interest in knitting. After a recent visit to her attorney’s office, Elise had walked down the renovated street and noticed the yarn store, which she’d mentioned to Aurora.

  Elise was pleasantly surprised by the changes on Blossom Street. For years the area had been an eyesore, with its seedy-looking establishments. The renovations weren’t what she’d expected. Instead of tearing down the older buildings, the architect had refurbished what was already there and renewed a deteriorating neighborhood. The shops were appealing with awnings and flowers and sidewalk displays. The impression she’d been left with was of a warmly traditional neighborhood, a lovely little world unto itself. It was hard to believe that just a few blocks over, high-rises stretched toward the sky. Just down the hill were the huge financial enterprises, insurance complexes and other major businesses that made up downtown Seattle.

  While looking in the window of A Good Yarn, Elise had noticed a sign that advertised knitting classes. She might not be able to enjoy her retirement the way she’d hoped, but she wasn’t going to become a recluse afraid to spend a dime, either. Besides, knitting might keep her mind off her financial difficulties.

  After a cup of tea in her room, Elise dressed for the day. She’d maintained her slim figure and chose a peach-colored pantsuit that was both stylish and comfortable. Although it was early June and sunny, the weather remained cool and she would need the matching jacket once she got outside. She pinned a small pink cameo over the top closure of her white blouse. It was the nicest piece of jewelry she owned. Maverick had given it to her before they were even married and she loved it and wore it often.

  To his credit, Maverick had stayed in touch with their daughter, although not as regularly as Elise felt he should. For her own part, she wanted nothing to do with him, but she didn’t begrudge Aurora the opportunity to know her father; she never had. She considered their relationship entirely separate from her. She paused, frowning. Twice that morning she’d thought about Maverick. It wasn’t as though she ever really forgot him—how could she with her grandson so physically similar—but she rarely indulged her memories of him. She didn’t want to think about him or remember the days and nights of love.

  After running a brush through her shoulder-length brown hair, she tied it back at the nape of her neck. Untouched by gray, it was her one vanity. Her hand froze as yet another memory wrapped itself around her heart. Maverick had loved her hair down. She’d worn it in a tidy bun at the library but at the end of the day, the first thing he did was reach for the pins to loosen her thick tresses. “Rapunzel, Rapunzel,” he’d whisper and she’d smile…. Irritated, she tightened her lips and cast the thought from her mind.

  Aurora was pouring milk into bowls of cereal when Elise walked into the kitchen.

  “You look nice, Mom,” she commented.

  Compliments embarrassed Elise and she dismissed her daughter’s words with a shake of her head.

  “Have a good day at school,” Elise told the boys as she opened the front door.

  They watched her leave, their faces glum, as if she’d abandoned them to some malicious fate. Her grandsons were her joy but she hardly knew how Aurora managed. She marveled at her daughter’s skill as a wife and mother.

  Elise sometimes feared she’d failed on both counts. She was never meant to be a wife, and her two years of married life had proved as much. Aurora was the one treasure she’d managed to salvage from that shipwreck of a marriage. Her daughter, as tall as her father at six feet, was a blessing beyond compare. In more ways than Elise cared to admit, they’d grown up together. Thankfully they’d stayed close.

  Maverick had faithfully paid his child support each month, and when the spirit moved him, he’d phoned Aurora from wherever he was currently living, which seemed to be in a different part of the country each time. Soon after their wedding, he’d given up any pretense of an ordinary job—although he’d been quite successful at insurance sales—and devoted his energy to gambling. Roots were a detriment to a professional gambler. And if settling down wasn’t conducive to a gambler’s life, a family was even less so. While Elise was in labor, her loving husband had started up a poker game in the waiting room and completely missed the birth of his only child.

  Catching the #47 bus, Elise rode it down Pill Hill toward Blossom Street, getting off three stops before the Seattle Public Library, which had recently undergone a huge renovation. Through her work at the school library, Elise had met some of Washington’s most influential librarians. They included Nancy Pearl, who’d organized the “If All Seattle Reads the Same Book” program. Cities, large and small, across the United States had followed Seattle’s lead. Elise was delighted that this idea had become so popular. It demonstrated that the library remained an important part of the community.

  Stepping off the bus, she clutched her purse close to her side. The area had once been known for its pickpockets and muggers. That didn’t seem to be the case now, but one could never be too careful.

  She walked past Fanny’s Floral and stopped to admire a display of purple carnations. She’d never seen carnations in quite that color before and was tempted to bring home a bouquet for Aurora. She probably shouldn’t waste money on flowers, but still…Well, she’d think about it.

  A snoozing tabby cat was curled up in the display window of the yarn store. Elise opened the door and a small bell rang. Apparently accustomed to the sound, the cat didn’t stir.

  “Good morning,” a pleasant-faced woman greeted her. Another, older woman stood by the counter and nodded in Elise’s direction.

  “Yes, it is,” she said, instantly warmed by the younger woman’s friendliness. This was an attractive shop, well-designed and not overcrowded with yarn. Elise liked that she could see over the top of each display case. “I’ve come to inquire about classes,” she said, distracted by the colors and textures all arou
nd her. There were projects displayed on top of the cases, cleverly arranged on wire frames. Her eye was drawn to a sweater with a dinosaur knit into the front. Both Luke and John would love that. Perhaps one day she’d make it for her grandsons.

  “We’re enrolling for a sock class this week.”

  “Socks,” Elise repeated, unsure this was a project that interested her. “I’ve knit with five needles before, but it’s been a long time.”

  “These are knitted up on two circular needles,” the woman told her. “Here, let me show you what I mean.” She led Elise toward the middle aisle, where a row of plastic feet displayed knitted socks. The patterns were intricate—far more complicated than Elise cared to tackle. It’d been years since she’d picked up knitting needles and she wasn’t eager to sabotage her efforts with a project beyond her capabilities.

  She was about to say as much when the woman explained that the designs were part of the yarn itself.

  “You mean I don’t have to do anything but knit?”

  “That’s correct. The yarn is self-patterning.” She went on to list the price of the class, the day and the cost, which included all the supplies she would need. “By the way, I’m Lydia Hoffman and that’s my sister, Margaret. She works with me.”

  “Elise Beaumont,” she said and smiled at both women. On closer inspection it became more obvious that they were related. The older one, Margaret, was large-boned but the other, Lydia, was petite with delicate features. Yet their faces were similar in shape, with pronounced cheekbones and large dark eyes. When she realized she was staring, she added, “I recently retired and thought I’d take up knitting again.”

  “That’s a wonderful idea.”

  Elise smiled at Lydia’s enthusiasm. Margaret’s attention had returned to whatever she was doing at the counter, which apparently involved catalogues and order forms.

  “A class seems like a good place to start,” Elise said.

  Lydia nodded. “I’m so glad you decided to stop by.” She continued toward the back of the shop, where a table and chairs were set up. “If you’re free on Friday afternoons, I’d like to invite you to our charity knitting sessions, too.”

  “Another class?” Elise could only afford one.

  “Not exactly. There’s no cost. A number of my regulars come here to knit for different charitable projects and organizations. You’d be most welcome, Elise.” She talked about Warm Up America, the Linus Project and ChemoCaps for people undergoing chemotherapy.

  “Do you supply the yarn?” Elise asked, conscious once again of her limited budget.

  “As a matter of fact, I do,” Lydia said. “Or at least some of it. Patrons have donated leftover yarn for the Warm Up America blankets, and anyone who purchases yarn for one of the other projects can buy it at a discount.”

  “Perhaps I’ll do that.” Elise’s schedule was nearly empty and she was looking for ways to fill it. So far, she’d joined a readers’ group that met once a month at a branch of the Seattle Public Library, and had volunteered to fold church newsletters. A strong supporter of the local blood bank, she’d also volunteered to handle the desk every Monday morning until noon.

  “Would you like to sign up for the sock class?” Lydia pressed. “I’m sure you’d enjoy it.”

  Again Elise’s spirits lifted at the other woman’s friendliness. “Yes, I think I would.” She opened her purse and removed her checkbook. “How many will be in the class?” she asked as she signed the check.

  “I’d like to limit it to six.”

  “Has there been a lot of interest?”

  “Not yet, but I only put the ad in the window Tuesday morning. You’re the first person to join.”

  “The first,” Elise repeated, and for reasons she could only guess at, being first gave her a sense of pleasure.

  She decided to buy those flowers for Aurora, after all.

  CHAPTER 3

  BETHANNE HAMLIN

  It wasn’t supposed to be like this, Bethanne Hamlin lamented as she pulled into the driveway of her Capitol Hill home. The house, built in the 1930s before it was deemed unsafe and unfeasible to use brick on top of an earthquake fault, had been her dream home. She’d fallen in love with it the moment she saw it. The short steep driveway ended at the basement garage. Concrete steps led to a small porch, and the front door was rounded, like the door to a fairy-tale cottage, she’d always thought. A gable jutted out from the second-floor master bedroom. The window seat there overlooked the entire neighborhood. Bethanne had often sat in that window and read or daydreamed. It was in this beautiful home that she’d once lived her perfect life. Her fairy-tale life…

  She turned off the engine and sat in her five-year-old Plymouth, searching for the resolve and the strength to enter her house with a smile on her face. Taking a deep breath, she slid out of the car, reaching into the backseat for her groceries.

  “I’m home,” she called out as she opened the front door, doing her best to sound cheerful.

  She felt relief when silence greeted her.

  “Andrew? Annie?” She placed the grocery bag on the kitchen countertop, filled the teakettle and set it on the burner. Before the divorce she’d never been much of a tea drinker, but in the last year she’d become practically addicted, drinking two or three pots a day.

  “I’m home,” she announced a second time. Again, no response.

  After a few minutes, the kettle began to whistle, and she poured the steaming water over Earl Grey tea bags in the ceramic pot that had once belonged to her grandmother. Then she carried it to the breakfast table.

  Sitting in the small alcove, she tried to make sense of her life. Tried to make sense of everything that had happened to her and her children over the past two years. Nothing felt right anymore. It was as if the seasons no longer followed each other in proper succession. Or as if the moon had suddenly replaced the sun…She still had trouble understanding what had happened—and why.

  It’d all started sixteen months earlier on the morning of Valentine’s Day. The kids were awake and banging around inside their bedrooms, getting ready for school. A little earlier, when she could hear Andrew and Annie squabbling over the bathroom, she’d thrown on her housecoat and started down to the kitchen to make breakfast. Then, as she reached the door, she’d noticed her husband sitting up in bed, knees bent, face in his hands. Bethanne’s first thought was that Grant had the flu. Any other morning, he was already up and dressed for work. He loved his job as a broker for a successful real estate company. He earned enough so that Bethanne could stay home with the children; from the time Andrew was born, and Annie thirteen months later, she’d felt the children should be her career. Grant had supported her decision. He liked having her home, accessible to him and the children, and appreciated the elegant business dinners she frequently prepared for him and his colleagues.

  “Grant?” she’d asked, completely unsuspecting of what was to follow.

  He’d looked up and Bethanne had read such pain in his eyes that she sat down on the bed and placed her hand on his shoulder. “What is it?” she’d asked gently.

  Grant couldn’t seem to speak. He opened his mouth as if to begin, but no words came.

  “Mom!” Annie shouted from the bottom of the stairs. “I need you.”

  Torn between her husband’s needs and those of her children, Bethanne vacillated, then squeezed Grant’s arm. “I’ll be right back.” Actually it took ten minutes, and both kids had left the house by the time she returned.

  Grant’s position was unchanged when she walked into the bedroom, his expression just as bleak.

  “Tell me,” she’d whispered urgently, her mind whirling as she wondered what could possibly be wrong. Grant had been to see the doctor for a physical the week before; everything seemed fine, but there’d been the routine tests. Perhaps Dr. Lyman had found something and Grant was only now able to tell her. She sat down next to him again, the mattress dipping slightly under her weight.

  “It’s Valentine’s Day,” Grant
had announced in a voice so hoarse that he didn’t sound like himself.

  She’d kissed his cheek and felt him stiffen. “Grant, please—tell me what’s wrong.”

  He’d started to weep then, huge sobs that shook his whole body. In the twenty years of their marriage, she could only recall a handful of times that her husband had revealed such deep emotion. “I don’t want to hurt you,” he cried.

  “Just tell me!”

  He gripped her shoulders, his fingers digging painfully into her flesh. “You’re a good woman, Bethanne, but…” He faltered. “But I don’t love you anymore.”

  At first she could only assume this was a hoax and she giggled. “What do you mean, you don’t love me anymore? Grant, we’ve been married for twenty years. Of course you love me.”

  He closed his eyes as if he couldn’t bear to look at her. “No, I don’t. I’m sorry, so sorry, but I’ve tried. God knows I’ve tried. I can’t carry on with this…this charade any longer.”

  Bethanne was dumbstruck, staring at Grant. This was the man she’d loved and slept with all these years and suddenly, in the blink of an eye, he’d become a stranger.

  “What happened?” she asked uncertainly.

  “Please,” he begged, “don’t make me say it.”

  “Say what?” At that moment she was more perplexed than angry. Rather than take his words personally, Bethanne immediately went into her problem-solving mode. Whatever was wrong could be fixed, the same way you’d have a broken faucet or a faulty outlet repaired. You just called a plumber or an electrician. Whatever was wrong simply needed the appropriate attention and then everything would go back to working as it always had.

 

    A Walk Along the Beach Read onlineA Walk Along the BeachA Christmas Message Read onlineA Christmas MessageFirst Comes Love Read onlineFirst Comes LoveThe Marriage Risk Read onlineThe Marriage RiskWhat Makes a Family Read onlineWhat Makes a FamilyA Country Christmas Read onlineA Country ChristmasWindow on the Bay Read onlineWindow on the BayMorning Comes Softly Read onlineMorning Comes SoftlyThe Twenty-First Wish Read onlineThe Twenty-First WishAngels at Christmas Read onlineAngels at ChristmasMy Funny Valentine (Debbie Macomber Classics) Read onlineMy Funny Valentine (Debbie Macomber Classics)Almost Paradise Read onlineAlmost ParadiseSummer on Blossom Street Read onlineSummer on Blossom StreetCountry Brides Read onlineCountry BridesSusannah's Garden Read onlineSusannah's GardenHome for the Holidays Read onlineHome for the HolidaysTogether for Christmas Read onlineTogether for ChristmasCedar Cove 01 - 16 Lighthouse Road Read onlineCedar Cove 01 - 16 Lighthouse RoadBe My Valentine Read onlineBe My ValentineNavy Families Read onlineNavy FamiliesThe Apartment Read onlineThe ApartmentChristmas Wishes Read onlineChristmas WishesDebbie Macomber's Cedar Cove Series Read onlineDebbie Macomber's Cedar Cove Series8 Sandpiper Way Read online8 Sandpiper WayBlossom Street Brides Read onlineBlossom Street BridesChristmas Letters Read onlineChristmas LettersDashing Through the Snow Read onlineDashing Through the SnowFairy Tale Weddings Read onlineFairy Tale WeddingsBetween Friends Read onlineBetween FriendsThere's Something About Christmas Read onlineThere's Something About ChristmasMontana Read onlineMontanaA Gift to Last Read onlineA Gift to LastLost and Found in Cedar Cove (Short Story) Read onlineLost and Found in Cedar Cove (Short Story)Farmer Takes a Wife Read onlineFarmer Takes a WifeThursdays At Eight Read onlineThursdays At EightYours and Mine Read onlineYours and MineStand-In Wife Read onlineStand-In WifeDebbie Macomber's Cedar Cove Series, Volume 2 Read onlineDebbie Macomber's Cedar Cove Series, Volume 2311 Pelican Court Read online311 Pelican CourtA Girl's Guide to Moving On Read onlineA Girl's Guide to Moving OnA Turn in the Road Read onlineA Turn in the RoadOne Night Read onlineOne NightThe Manning Grooms Read onlineThe Manning GroomsLooking for a Hero Read onlineLooking for a HeroThis Matter of Marriage Read onlineThis Matter of MarriageAlaskan Holiday Read onlineAlaskan HolidaySame Time, Next Year Read onlineSame Time, Next YearAlways Dakota Read onlineAlways DakotaDenim and Diamonds Read onlineDenim and DiamondsBride Wanted Read onlineBride WantedCall Me Mrs. Miracle Read onlineCall Me Mrs. MiracleStarlight Read onlineStarlightWhen First They Met Read onlineWhen First They MetNavy Husband Read onlineNavy HusbandStarry Night Read onlineStarry NightTwelve Days of Christmas Read onlineTwelve Days of ChristmasCottage by the Sea Read onlineCottage by the SeaReflections of Yesterday Read onlineReflections of YesterdayReady for Marriage Read onlineReady for MarriageThe Wyoming Kid Read onlineThe Wyoming KidRock-A-Bye Baby Read onlineRock-A-Bye BabyStarting Now Read onlineStarting NowWhite Lace and Promises Read onlineWhite Lace and PromisesThe Perfect Christmas Read onlineThe Perfect Christmas50 Harbor Street Read online50 Harbor StreetAngels at the Table Read onlineAngels at the TableAny Dream Will Do Read onlineAny Dream Will DoMr. Miracle Read onlineMr. MiracleTwenty Wishes Read onlineTwenty WishesMail-Order Bride Read onlineMail-Order BrideDebbie Macomber's Cedar Cove Series, Volume 3 Read onlineDebbie Macomber's Cedar Cove Series, Volume 3Midnight Sons Volume 1 Read onlineMidnight Sons Volume 1Country Bride Read onlineCountry BrideThe Trouble with Caasi Read onlineThe Trouble with CaasiA Mother's Wish Read onlineA Mother's WishRight Next Door Read onlineRight Next DoorReturn to Promise Read onlineReturn to PromiseHeart of Texas Vol. 3 Read onlineHeart of Texas Vol. 3Friends--And Then Some Read onlineFriends--And Then SomeWyoming Brides Read onlineWyoming BridesReady for Romance Read onlineReady for RomanceA Season of Angels Read onlineA Season of AngelsLove by Degree Read onlineLove by DegreeBaby Blessed Read onlineBaby BlessedAngels Everywhere Read onlineAngels Everywhere204 Rosewood Lane Read online204 Rosewood LaneDakota Home Read onlineDakota HomeHasty Wedding Read onlineHasty Wedding1105 Yakima Street Read online1105 Yakima StreetThe Manning Sisters Read onlineThe Manning SistersMrs. Miracle Read onlineMrs. MiracleThe Shop on Blossom Street Read onlineThe Shop on Blossom StreetShirley, Goodness and Mercy Read onlineShirley, Goodness and MercyFalling for Her (Short Story) (Kindle Single) Read onlineFalling for Her (Short Story) (Kindle Single)Angels at the Table: A Shirley, Goodness, and Mercy Christmas Story Read onlineAngels at the Table: A Shirley, Goodness, and Mercy Christmas StoryThat Wintry Feeling (Debbie Macomber Classics) Read onlineThat Wintry Feeling (Debbie Macomber Classics)Heart of Texas Vol. 2 Read onlineHeart of Texas Vol. 2Orchard Valley Grooms Read onlineOrchard Valley GroomsBuffalo Valley Read onlineBuffalo ValleyAll Things Considered Read onlineAll Things ConsideredMidnight Sons Volume 3 Read onlineMidnight Sons Volume 344 Cranberry Point Read online44 Cranberry PointSome Kind of Wonderful Read onlineSome Kind of WonderfulLove Letters: A Rose Harbor Novel Read onlineLove Letters: A Rose Harbor NovelMarriage of Inconvenience Read onlineMarriage of InconvenienceTouched By Angels Read onlineTouched By AngelsHeart of Texas Series Volume 1: Lonesome CowboyTexas Two-StepCaroline's Child Read onlineHeart of Texas Series Volume 1: Lonesome CowboyTexas Two-StepCaroline's ChildThe Man You'll Marry Read onlineThe Man You'll MarryJingle All the Way Read onlineJingle All the WayMarried in Seattle Read onlineMarried in SeattleA Cedar Cove Christmas Read onlineA Cedar Cove ChristmasMerry and Bright Read onlineMerry and BrightIf Not for You Read onlineIf Not for YouStarry Night: A Christmas Novel Read onlineStarry Night: A Christmas NovelOn a Snowy Night: The Christmas BasketThe Snow Bride Read onlineOn a Snowy Night: The Christmas BasketThe Snow BrideSweet Tomorrows Read onlineSweet TomorrowsThree Brides, No Groom Read onlineThree Brides, No GroomBrides and Grooms Box Set: Marriage WantedBride WantedGroom Wanted Read onlineBrides and Grooms Box Set: Marriage WantedBride WantedGroom WantedA Good Yarn Read onlineA Good YarnThe Inn at Rose Harbor Read onlineThe Inn at Rose HarborThe Knitting Diaries Read onlineThe Knitting DiariesChanging Habits Read onlineChanging HabitsHeart of Texas Volume One Read onlineHeart of Texas Volume OneHearts Divided Read onlineHearts DividedTrading Christmas Read onlineTrading ChristmasBorrowed Dreams (Debbie Macomber Classics) Read onlineBorrowed Dreams (Debbie Macomber Classics)Back on Blossom Street Read onlineBack on Blossom StreetHeartsong Read onlineHeartsongAlaska Home Read onlineAlaska Home16 Lighthouse Road Read online16 Lighthouse RoadFamily Affair Read onlineFamily AffairMidnight Sons Volume 2 Read onlineMidnight Sons Volume 2Debbie Macomber's Navy Box Set Read onlineDebbie Macomber's Navy Box SetThe First Man You Meet Read onlineThe First Man You MeetCindy and the Prince Read onlineCindy and the PrinceJust Married Read onlineJust MarriedThe Bachelor Prince Read onlineThe Bachelor PrinceDebbie Macomber's Navy Box Set: Navy WifeNavy BluesNavy BratNavy WomanNavy BabyNavy Husband Read onlineDebbie Macomber's Navy Box Set: Navy WifeNavy BluesNavy BratNavy WomanNavy BabyNavy HusbandDebbie Macomber's Cedar Cove Cookbook Read onlineDebbie Macomber's Cedar Cove CookbookSomeday Soon Read onlineSomeday SoonChristmas in Cedar Cove Read onlineChristmas in Cedar CoveSooner or Later Read onlineSooner or LaterSilver Linings Read onlineSilver Linings1022 Evergreen Place Read online1022 Evergreen PlaceBorn in a Small Town Read onlineBorn in a Small TownOnce Upon a Time: Discovering Our Forever After Story Read onlineOnce Upon a Time: Discovering Our Forever After StoryDebbie Macomber's Table: Sharing the Joy of Cooking With Family and Friends Read onlineDebbie Macomber's Table: Sharing the Joy of Cooking With Family and FriendsHannah's List Read onlineHannah's List92 Pacific Boulevard Read online92 Pacific BoulevardGlad Tidings: There's Something About ChristmasHere Comes Trouble Read onlineGlad Tidings: There's Something About ChristmasHere Comes TroubleThe Manning Brides Read onlineThe Manning BridesPromise, Texas Read onlinePromise, TexasThe Rain Sparrow Read onlineThe Rain SparrowAn Engagement in Seattle Read onlineAn Engagement in Seattle1225 Christmas Tree Lane Read online1225 Christmas Tree LaneLast One Home Read onlineLast One HomeRose Harbor in Bloom Read onlineRose Harbor in BloomWhen Christmas Comes Read onlineWhen Christmas ComesPromise Me Forever (Debbie Macomber Classics) Read onlinePromise Me Forever (Debbie Macomber Classics)I'll Be Home for Christmas Read onlineI'll Be Home for ChristmasGlad Tidings Read onlineGlad Tidings6 Rainier Drive Read online6 Rainier DriveOrchard Valley Brides Read onlineOrchard Valley BridesTogether for Christmas: 5-B Poppy LaneWhen We TouchWelcome to Icicle FallsStarstruck Read onlineTogether for Christmas: 5-B Poppy LaneWhen We TouchWelcome to Icicle FallsStarstruckThat Holiday Feeling: Silver BellsThe Perfect HolidayUnder the Christmas Tree Read onlineThat Holiday Feeling: Silver BellsThe Perfect HolidayUnder the Christmas TreeThe Sooner the Better Read onlineThe Sooner the Better