“You don’t.” She laughed. “Not for sure. But don’t worry. It’s not like there’s only one right thread. If you find your thread is taking you somewhere you don’t want to go, you can always grab hold of another. You’ll have many threads, many choices in your life. Some will be better than others. But all of them, every single one, has at least the potential for good. You’ll see,” she said and reached her hand to run her finger tenderly along my cheek, a touch I remembered from other dreams and other days.
“The main thing is not to be afraid.”
“I’m not. Not anymore.”
“Good for you. You’re going to be fine. I always knew you would be. Just keep reaching out and grabbing hold. The thread may look thin, but it’s stronger than you think. You’ll see. You’re stronger than you think too.”
She smiled again and held out her hand. I looked up at her, handed her the empty glass, and saw the name printed on her name tag: Susan.
She grabbed hold of the cart handle. “It’s time for you to wake up now, Liza. But I’ll see you again,” she said as she walked down the aisle, pushing the cart ahead of her.
Garrett stirred next to me, yawned.
I yawned, too, opening my eyes and blinking a few times before turning first to the left, toward the empty aisle of the darkened plane, filled with sleeping travelers, then down to my lap, where the unstitched patches of my quilt block still sat, and then to the right.
Looking out the tiny oval window, I saw the velvet-black night studded with pinprick stars in a sky that began in the mind of God and ended at the edge of dawn, to a thin silver thread of morning arcing across the horizon, stretching as far as I could see and farther still, a shining path that could lead me anywhere.
Anywhere I choose.
A READING GROUP GUIDE
A THREAD SO THIN
Marie Bostwick
ABOUT THIS GUIDE
The following questions are intended to
enhance your group’s reading of
A THREAD SO THIN.
For more information about
A Thread So Thin
or Marie Bostwick, visit www.mariebostwick.com or follow her on Twitter, @marie bostwick.
Dear Reading Friend,
It has been such a joy for me to serve as your guide on this, our third visit, to New Bern. Three books in to the Cobbled Court series of novels (and already working on book four, which I believe you’ll see in the late spring or early summer of 2011), I can honestly say that I find this little village and these characters as compelling as ever. I hope you feel the same.
When I sat down to begin working on
A Single Thread,
the first Cobbled Court novel, I had not considered it to be the first in a series. But by the time I finished writing it, I very much wanted to return to New Bern, so I asked readers to write and let me know if they felt as I did.
You did write, by the thousands, and I am so grateful.
Your enthusiasm for these characters and their stories, and your openness as you shared how these books have made you laugh, cry, think, and even make important changes and decisions in your own lives, convinced me that it was important to return to New Bern. I have done so with pleasure.
Every e-mail and letter I receive from readers is a huge encouragement. I do read every note, and every note receives a response—not always as quickly as I’d like, and it does take me much longer to respond to letters than e-mails, but I do my best to keep up. (If you don’t hear back from me, please double-check to make sure you’ve included a correct return mailing address or e-mail.)
If you’d like to write to me, you can do so at the address given on page 340, or you can drop by my website, www.mariebostwick.com, and send me a note via the contact form. While you’re there, you can also read excerpts from all six of my other novels and check out the Recipe of the Month, my Latest Crush, my blog, or my upcoming appearance schedule.
Also, if you register as one of my Reading Friends (click on the Become a Reading Friend box on the left of the home page to begin), you’ll have access to special content; be registered in my monthly Readers’ Contest; receive personal invitations to my appearances in your area; and have the opportunity to connect with other readers in the online forum, as well as download free goodies such as the Broken Hearts Mending quilt pattern from
A Single Thread
and printable recipe cards for the dishes that were featured in
Snow Angels
.
AND, as a special thanks to my registered Reading Friends who are also quilters, I’m delighted to offer a new quilt pattern from
A Thread So Thin
! Famed quilting teacher and designer Deb Tucker, of Studio 180 Design, has created a beautiful table-runner pattern based on Liza’s Star-Crossed Love quilt that I think you’ll love. Reading Friends can download the table-runner pattern free for their personal use, but
please remember:
This gift is available only via computer and only to registered Reading Friends.
Thank you again for visiting New Bern. I hope you enjoyed this trip as much as I did. Until we meet again…
Blessings,
Marie Bostwick
PO Box 488
Thomaston, CT 06787
www.mariebostwick.com
KENSINGTON BOOKS are published by
Kensington Publishing Corp.
119 West 40th Street
New York, NY 10018
Copyright © 2010 by Marie Bostwick Skinner
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.
Kensington and the K logo Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.
ISBN: 978-0-7582-6016-1