Yours and Mine Read online

Page 5


  Calmly Joanna opened the hall closet and retrieved their winter coats. She might appear outwardly composed, but her fingers were shaking. The prospect of seeing Tanner left her trembling, and that fact drained away what little confidence she’d managed to accumulate over the past couple of days.

  Both Tanner and Nicole came to the front door. Kristen held out her hands, and Nicole gripped them eagerly. Soon the two were jumping up and down like pogo sticks gone berserk.

  “I can tell we’re in for a fun evening,” Tanner muttered under his breath.

  He looked wonderful, Joanna admitted grudgingly. The kind of man every woman dreams about—well, almost every woman. Joanna longed to think of herself as immune to the handsome Mr. Lund. Unfortunately she wasn’t.

  Since their last meeting, she’d tried to figure out when her feelings for Tanner had changed. The roses had done it, she decided. Ordering them for Kristen and Nicole had been so thoughtful, and the girls had been ecstatic at the gesture.

  When they’d finished lip-synching their song, they’d bowed before the auditorium full of appreciative parents. Then the school principal, Mr. Holliday, had stood at their side and presented them each with a beautiful bouquet of long-stemmed pink roses. Flowers Tanner had wired because he couldn’t be there to watch their act.

  “Are you ready?” Tanner asked, holding open the door for Joanna.

  She nodded. “I think so.”

  Although it was early, a line had already begun to form outside the Pink Palace when they arrived. The minute they pulled into the parking lot, they were accosted by a loud, vibrating rock-and-roll song that might have been an old Jerry Lee Lewis number.

  “It looks like we’ll have to wait,” Joanna commented. “That lineup’s getting longer by the minute.”

  “I had my secretary make reservations,” Tanner told her. “I heard this place really grooves on a Saturday night.”

  “Grooves!” Nicole repeated, smothering her giggles behind her cupped palm. Kristen laughed with her.

  Turner leaned his head close to Joanna’s. “It’s difficult to reason with a generation that grew up without Janis and Jimi!”

  Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix were a bit before Joanna’s time, too, but she knew what he meant.

  The Pink Palace was exactly as Joanna remembered. The popular ice-cream parlor was decorated in a fifties theme, with old-fashioned circular booths and outdated jukeboxes. The waitresses wore billowing pink skirts with a French poodle design and roller-skated between tables, taking and delivering orders. Once inside, Joanna, Tanner and the girls were seated almost immediately and handed huge menus. Neither girl bothered to read through the selections, having made their choices in the car. They’d both decided on cheeseburgers and banana splits.

  By the time the waitress, chewing on a thick wad of bubble gum, skated to a stop at their table, Joanna had made her selection, too.

  “A cheeseburger and a banana split,” she said, grinning at the girls.

  “Same here,” Tanner said, “and coffee, please.”

  “I’ll have a cup, too,” Joanna added.

  The teenager wrote down their order and glided toward the kitchen.

  Joanna opened her purse and brought out a small wad of cotton wool.

  “What’s that for?” Tanner wanted to know when she pulled it apart into four fluffy balls and handed two of them to him, keeping the other pair for herself.

  She pointed to her ears. “The last time I was here, I was haunted for days by a ringing in my ears that sounded suspiciously like an old Elvis tune.”

  Tanner chuckled and leaned across the table to shout, “It does get a bit loud, doesn’t it?”

  Kristen and Nicole looked from one parent to the other then shouted together, “If it’s too loud, you’re too old!”

  Joanna raised her hand. “Guilty as charged.”

  Tanner nodded and shared a smile with Joanna. The smile did funny things to her stomach, and Joanna pressed her hands over her abdomen in a futile effort to quell her growing awareness of Tanner. A warning light flashed in her mind, spelling out danger.

  Joanna wasn’t sure what had come over her, but whatever it was, she didn’t like it.

  Their meal arrived, and for a while, at least, Joanna could direct her attention to that. The food was better than she remembered. The cheeseburgers were juicy and tender and the banana splits divine. She promised herself she’d eat cottage cheese and fruit every day at lunch for the next week to balance all the extra calories from this one meal.

  While Joanna and Tanner exchanged only the occasional remark, the girls chattered happily throughout dinner. When the waitress skated away with the last of their empty plates, Tanner suggested a movie.

  “Great idea!” Nicole cried, enthusiastically seconded by Kristen.

  “What do you think, Joanna?” asked Tanner.

  She started to say that the evening had been full enough—until she found two eager young faces looking hopefully at her. She couldn’t finish her sentence; it just wasn’t in her to dash their good time.

  “Sure,” she managed instead, trying to insert a bit of excitement into her voice.

  “Teen Massacre is showing at the mall,” Nicole said, shooting a glance in her father’s direction. “Donny Rosenburg saw it and claims it scared him out of his wits, but then Donny doesn’t have many.”

  Kristen laughed and nodded, apparently well-acquainted with the witless Donny.

  Without the least bit of hesitation, Tanner shook his head. “No way, Nicole.”

  “Come on, Dad, everyone’s seen it. The only reason it got an adult rating is because of the blood and gore, and I’ve seen that lots of times.”

  “Discussion is closed.” He spoke without raising his voice, but the authority behind his words was enough to convince Joanna she’d turn up the loser if she ever crossed Tanner Lund. Still, she knew she wouldn’t hesitate if she felt he was wrong, but in this case she agreed with him completely.

  Nicole’s lower lip jutted out rebelliously, and for a minute Joanna thought the girl might try to argue her case. But she wasn’t surprised when Nicole yielded without further argument.

  Deciding which movie to see involved some real negotiating. The girls had definite ideas of what was acceptable, as did Tanner and Joanna. Like Tanner, Joanna wasn’t about to allow her daughter to see a movie with an adult rating, even if it was “only because of the blood and gore.”

  They finally compromised on a comedy that starred a popular teen idol. The girls thought that would be “all right,” but they made it clear that Teen Massacre was their first choice.

  Half an hour later they were inside the theater, and Tanner asked, “Anyone for popcorn?”

  “Me,” Kristen said.

  “Me, too, and could we both have a Coke and chocolate-covered raisins, too?” Nicole asked.

  Tanner rolled his eyes and, grinning, glanced toward Joanna. “What about you?”

  “Nothing.” She didn’t know where the girls were going to put all this food, but she knew where it would end up if she were to consume it. Her hips! She sometimes suspected that junk food didn’t even pass through her stomach, but attached itself directly to her hip bones.

  “You’re sure?”

  “Positive.”

  Tanner returned a moment later with three large boxes of popcorn and other assorted treats.

  As soon as they’d emptied Tanner’s arms of all but one box of popcorn, the girls started into the auditorium.

  “Hey, you two, wait for us,” Joanna called after them, bewildered by the way they’d hurried off without waiting for her and Tanner.

  Kristen and Nicole stopped abruptly and turned around, a look of pure horror on their young faces.

  “You’re not going to sit with us, are you, Mom?” Kristen wailed. “You just can’t!”

  “Why not?” This was news to Joanna. Sure, it had been a while since she’d gone to a movie with her daughter, but Kristen had always sat with her in the pa
st.

  “Someone might see us,” her daughter went on to explain, in tones of exaggerated patience. “No one sits with their parents any more. Not even woosies.”

  “Woosies?”

  “Sort of like nerds, only worse!” Kristen said.

  “Sitting with us is obviously a social embarrassment to be avoided at all costs,” Tanner muttered.

  “Can we go now, Mom?” Kristen pleaded. “I don’t want to miss the previews.”

  Joanna nodded, still a little stunned. She enjoyed going out to a movie now and again, usually accompanied by her daughter and often several of Kristen’s friends. Until tonight, no one had openly objected to sitting in the same row with her. However, now that Joanna thought about it, Kristen hadn’t been interested in going to the movies for the past couple of months.

  “I guess this is what happens when they hit sixth grade,” Tanner said, holding the auditorium door for Joanna.

  She walked down the center aisle and paused by an empty row near the back, checking with Tanner before she entered. Neither of them sat down, though, until they’d located the girls. Kristen and Nicole were three rows from the front and had slid down so far that their eyes were level with the seats ahead of them.

  “Ah, the joys of fatherhood,” Tanner commented, after they’d taken their places. “Not to mention motherhood.”

  Joanna still felt a little taken aback by what had happened. She thought she had a close relationship with Kristen, and yet her daughter had never said a word about not wanting to be anywhere near her in a movie theatre. She knew this might sound like a trivial concern to some, but she couldn’t help worrying that the solid foundation she’d spent a decade reinforcing had started to crumble.

  “Joanna?”

  She turned to Tanner and tried to smile, but the attempt was unconvincing.

  “What’s wrong?”

  Joanna fluttered her hand weakly, unable to find her voice. “Nothing.” That came out sounding as though she might burst into tears any second.

  “Is it Kristen?”

  She nodded wildly.

  “Because she didn’t want to sit with us?”

  Her hair bounced against her shoulders as she nodded again.

  “The girls wanting to be by themselves bothers you?”

  “No…yes. I don’t know what I’m feeling. She’s growing up, Tanner, and I guess it just hit me right between the eyes.”

  “It happened to me last week,” Tanner said thoughtfully. “I found Nicole wearing a pair of tights. Hell, I didn’t even know they made them for girls her age.”

  “They do, believe it or not,” Joanna informed him. “Kristen did the same thing.”

  He shook his head as though he couldn’t quite grasp the concept. “But they’re only eleven.”

  “Going on sixteen.”

  “Has Kristen tried pasting on those fake fingernails yet?” Tanner shuddered in exaggerated disgust.

  Joanna covered her mouth with one hand to hold back an attack of giggles. “Those press-on things turned up every place imaginable for weeks afterward.”

  Tanner turned sideways in his seat. “What about makeup?” he asked urgently.

  “I caught her trying to sneak out of the house one morning last month. She was wearing the brightest eye shadow I’ve ever seen in my life. Tanner, I swear if she’d been standing on a shore, she could have guided lost ships into port.”

  He smiled, then dropped his gaze, looking uncomfortable. “So you do let her wear makeup?”

  “I’m holding off as long as I can,” Joanna admitted. “At the very least, she’ll have to wait until seventh grade. That was when my mother let me. I don’t think it’s so unreasonable to expect Kristen to wait until junior high.”

  Tanner relaxed against the back of his seat and nodded a couple of times. “I’m glad to hear that. Nicole’s been after me to ‘wake up and smell the coffee,’ as she puts it, for the past six months. Hell, I didn’t know who to ask about these things. It really isn’t something I’m comfortable discussing with my secretary.”

  “What about her mother?”

  His eyes hardened. “She only sees Nicole when it’s convenient, and it hasn’t been for the past three years.”

  “I…I didn’t mean to pry.”

  “You weren’t. Carmen and I didn’t exactly part on the best of terms. She’s got a new life now and apparently doesn’t want any reminders of the past—not that I totally blame her. We made each other miserable. Frankly, Joanna, my feelings about getting married again are the same as yours. One failed marriage was enough for me.”

  The theatre lights dimmed then, and the sound track started. Tanner leaned back and crossed his long legs, balancing one ankle on the opposite knee.

  Joanna settled back, too, grateful that the movie they’d selected was a comedy. Her emotions were riding too close to the surface this evening. She could see herself bursting into tears at the slightest hint of sadness—for that matter, joy. Bambi traipsing through the woods would have done her in just then.

  Joanna was so caught up in her thoughts that when Tanner and the others around her let out a boisterous laugh, she’d completely missed whatever had been so hilarious.

  Without thinking, she reached over and grabbed a handful of Tanner’s popcorn. She discovered that the crunchiness and the buttery, salty flavor suited her mood. Tanner held the box on the arm between them to make sharing easier.

  The next time Joanna sent her fingers digging, they encountered Tanner’s. “Sorry,” she murmured, pulling her hand free.

  “No problem,” he answered, tilting the box her way.

  Joanna munched steadily. Before she knew it, the popcorn was gone and her fingers were laced with Tanner’s, her hand firmly clasped in his.

  The minute he reached for her hand, Joanna lost track of what was happening on the screen. Holding hands seemed such an innocent gesture, something teenagers did. He certainly didn’t mean anything by it, Joanna told herself. It was just that her emotions were so confused lately, and she wasn’t even sure why.

  She liked Tanner, Joanna realised anew, liked him very much. And she thoroughly enjoyed Nicole. For the first time since her divorce, she could imagine getting involved with another man, and the thought frightened her. All right, it terrified her. This man belonged to a different world. Besides, she wasn’t ready. Good grief, six years should have given her ample time to heal, but she’d been too afraid to lift the bandage.

  When the movie was over, Tanner drove them home. The girls were tired, but managed to carry on a lively backseat conversation. The front seat was a different story. Neither Tanner nor Joanna had much to say.

  “Would you like to come in for coffee?” Joanna asked when Tanner pulled into her driveway, although she was silently wishing he’d decline. Her nerves continued to clamor from the hand holding, and she wanted some time alone to organise her thoughts.

  “Can we, Dad? Please?” Nicole begged. “Kristen and I want to watch the Saturday Night videos together.”

  “You’re sure?” Tanner looked at Joanna, his brow creased with concern.

  She couldn’t answer. She wasn’t sure of anything just then. “Of course,” she forced herself to say. “It’ll only take a minute or two to brew a pot.”

  “All right, then,” Tanner said, and the girls let out whoops of delight.

  Occasionally Joanna wondered if their daughters would ever get tired of one another’s company. Probably, although they hadn’t shown any signs of it yet. As far as she knew, the two girls had never had a serious disagreement.

  Kristen and Nicole disappeared as soon as they got into the house. Within seconds, the television could be heard blaring rock music, which had recently become a familiar sound in the small one-storey house.

  Tanner followed Joanna into the kitchen and stood leaning against the counter while she filled the automatic coffee maker with water. Her movements were jerky and abrupt. She felt awkward, ungraceful—as though this was the first time
she’d ever been alone with a man. And that was a ridiculous way to feel, especially since the girls were practically within sight.

  “I enjoyed tonight,” Tanner commented, as she removed two cups from the cupboard.

  “I did, too.” She tossed him a lazy smile over her shoulder. But Tanner’s eyes held hers, and it was as if she was seeing him for the first time. She half turned toward him, suddenly aware of how tall and lean he was, how thick and soft his dark hair. With an effort, Joanna looked from those mesmerising blue eyes and returned to the task of making coffee, although her fingers didn’t seem willing to cooperate.

  She stood waiting for the dark liquid to filter its way into the glass pot. Never had it seemed to take so long.

  “Joanna.”

  Judging by the loudness of his voice, Tanner was standing directly behind her. A beat of silence followed before she turned around to face him.

  Tanner’s hands grasped her shoulders. “It’s been a long time since I’ve sat in a movie and held a girl’s hand.”

  She lowered her eyes and nodded. “Me, too.”

  “I felt like a kid again.”

  She’d been thinking much the same thing herself.

  “I want to kiss you, Joanna.”

  She didn’t need an analyst to inform her that kissing Tanner was something best avoided. She was about to tell him so when his hands gripped her waist and pulled her away from the support of the kitchen counter. A little taken aback, Joanna threw up her hands, as if to ward him off. But the minute they came into contact with the muscled hardness of his chest, they lost their purpose.

  The moment Tanner’s warm mouth claimed her lips, she felt an excitement that was almost shocking in its intensity. Her hands clutched the collar of his shirt as she eagerly gave herself up to the forgotten sensations. It had been so long since a man had kissed her like this.

  The kiss was over much too soon. Far sooner than Joanna would have liked. The fire of his mouth had ignited a response in her she’d believed long dead. She was amazed at how readily it had sprung back to life. When Tanner dropped his arms and released her, Joanna felt suddenly weak, barely able to remain upright.

  Her hand found her chest and she heaved a giant breath. “I…don’t think that was a good idea.”

 

    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