The Sweet By and By (36 page)

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Authors: Sara Evans

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BOOK: The Sweet By and By
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The Wedding Dress

Dining with Joy

Love Starts with Elle

Sweet Caroline

Diva Nashvegas

Lost in Nashvegas

 

W
ITH
S
ARA
E
VANS

The Sweet By and By

Softly and Tenderly

Love Lifted Me

About the Authors

Multi-platinum recording artist Sara Evans has been honored with numerous accolades, among them the 2006 Academy of Country Music's Female Vocalist of the Year and the Country Music Association's Video of the Year for “Born to Fly.” Evans has been named one of
People Magazine
's “50 Most Beautiful People” and won the hearts of television viewer's as the first-ever country star to compete in ABC's
Dancing with the Stars
. Sara is a Cabinet Member of the American Red Cross.

RITA Finalist and Carol Award winner Rachel Hauck was recently chosen by Family Fiction readers as one of the top five romance authors in CBA. She has written more than 15 novels. Rachel lives in central Florida with her husband and writes from her ivory tower. Visit her website at
rachelhauck.com.
Twitter:
@RachelHauck
Facebook:
rachelhauck

An excerpt from
Softly and Tenderly

O
NE

Whisper Hollow, TN

Along the first of spring, when winter began to ease its grip on Whisper Hollow mornings, the word
barren
began echoing over the shadowy recesses of Jade's mind.

“You're quiet.” Her mother-in-law peered at her from the passenger side of Jade's truck. She looked out of place perched on the faded red, torn vinyl seat wearing a haute couture pink suit.

“Thinking.” Jade forced a smile just as the tires hit a bump in the road, jostling the passengers from side to side.

June grabbed the dashboard. “Mercy me.”

“Sorry . . .” Jade urged the truck up the hill to Orchid House, her husband's childhood home. “You feel everything in this truck. No matter how new the shocks.”

Truck shocks aside, Jade had managed to hit all the holes today. Holes in the road. Holes in her business. Holes in her heart. With a slow exhale, she propped her elbow on the door and pressed her fingers against her forehead.

Today it seemed that every woman,
every
woman, who came into Jade's downtown shop was pregnant. Nearly picked clean her retro maternity clothes. She'd been folding and hanging the remaining items when June called and asked Jade to give her a ride home.

“It's beyond me why you still drive this old bucket of bolts, Jade. Why don't you just buy a new truck?” June brushed a piece of foam from the crumbling ceiling off her skirt. “You're a Benson now. A successful business owner in Whisper Hollow and riverfront Chattanooga. Surely you can afford a vehicle better than this. Max would buy you one if you asked. I'm quite sure he—”

“Your pink suit is beautiful. Did you get it on your girls' shopping trip in Atlanta?”

June cut Jade a glance. “Paris, last spring. I figure I could risk wearing it another season.”

“Do I get dibs when it's out of season in twenty years?”

“Shug, this thing will be completely out of vogue in three months. And by the end of summer, sold at the club auction.” June ran her hand along the three-quarter sleeve, finally smiling. Ever since Jade had picked her up from the Read House Starbucks, she'd been fuming beneath a stone face.

“So Rebel got tied up with a case or something? Couldn't bring you home?” Jade asked. June had yet to say why she was stranded at Starbucks, and so steamed.

“Oh, who knows? That man. He can be so self-focused. I specifically told Rebel that Honey Andover could not drive me up to the house when we returned from Atlanta. Her granddaughter's birthday party is up in Knoxville, so she wanted to get back on the road. So . . .” June fiddled with the air-conditioning vents. “Rebel agreed to meet me at Starbucks.”

“The truck doesn't have air, June.”

“Well, why not? Mercy, Jade, buy a decent truck. What's this thing, a hundred years old?”

“Thirty-eight. So what happened with Honey? What's got you riled?”

“Nothing happened with Honey. She dropped me off at the Read House Starbucks like we planned, right by Benson Law, right by my husband's office, where he agreed to be. But Rebel's nowhere to be found.”

“You tried his cell?”

“I'm angry, not addled, Jade. I called his cell and his office. Gina didn't know where he was—and if she doesn't know, he's gone. Vanished into thin air.” June twirled her hands in front of her.

“Maybe Reb hit the golf course, taking a break from the class action suit the firm's been handling. That case has Max preoccupied and bleary-eyed.”

“Nice try, Jade, but Reb hasn't
worked
a case in years. He just
oversees
. Charms. Asks a few tough questions in court when they want to intimidate someone.” June snatched her handbag from the seat and stuffed it into her lap. “He's probably schmoozing someone in the governor's office, hoping he'll get a special appointment should one ever open up.”

“Reb has political aspirations?” Jade crested the hill and rounded the bend toward the Bensons' white brick estate.

“Jade, have you learned to tune out his ramblings already? Reb wants to run the universe from his throne on the moon.”

A fawn suddenly leaped onto the road from the cluster of trees tucked into the curve of the bend. Jade hammered the clutch and brake.

“Sake's alive.” June smacked the dashboard with her Gucci bag.

Stiff-arming the steering wheel and mashing the brake, Jade winced as the truck drifted into a blinding patch of sun. Anticipation drilled a hole between her ribs.

When there was no impact, breath exploded from her lungs. Just beyond her windshield, a black-eyed doe and her two spotted fawns crossed the road into the woods on the other side.

“My heart is thumping in my throat.” June spanked the dash grit from the smooth leather of her handbag. “Can you imagine if you'd not seen?”

“I wouldn't have been able to sleep for a week.” Jade watched the doe as she led her young to the other side, her head high, her steps neat and sure. Jade pressed the clutch and shifted into first with a final glance at the creature.

In the grass, just beyond the trees, the doe turned and fixed her polished gaze on Jade.
Yes, I know .
. . A motor roared, and the doe dashed into the tress the moment a car whizzed around the bend.

“Farrel Lawrence,” June said. “She's got a lead foot.”

Run, girl. Run
. Jade eased off the clutch, and the truck chugged up the last few feet of the hill, the heart of the doe and the sensation of beauty resonating within her.

The Bensons' foyer was cold. Jade shivered as she followed June inside, carrying a few of the bags and boxes her mother-in-law had collected from three days of shopping in Atlanta with Honey.

“Constance?” June clicked on the table lamp. The soft yellow light caught the gloss and glimmer of the polished mahogany. The wood grain matched the banister of the sweeping, curved staircase that spilled from the second floor into the Italian marble foyer. “You here, Constance?”

Jade dropped the packages at the base of staircase, rubbing the bend of her arm. “What did you buy? Bricks?” She peered into the Neiman Marcus bag. “Christian Louboutins? Don't you have, like, four pairs already?” Jade sat on the bottom step and lifted the lid off the shoe box, inhaling at the sight of dark red patent leather heels. “Wow.”

“And now I have five pair.” June scouted the formal living room for signs of life. “I bought them for the club's Christmas ball. Reb? Constance?”

Barely emerging from winter's gray, and June was already planning for Christmas. Jade could learn something here . . . What, she wasn't sure, but the moment sure felt teachable.

“How much?” Jade dug around for the receipt.

“Didn't your mama teach you it's impolite to ask how much? Get your nose out of my bags.” June gazed into the family room on the other side of the foyer. “Well, the place looks tidy.”

“Six hundred dollars?” Jade dropped the shoe back into the box and let the receipt go, fluttering into the bag. “You can buy a lot of food for the poor with that kind of money.”

“For Pete's sake, Jade, don't preach to me. Reb and I give plenty to the poor.” June turned for the kitchen, her low heels beating a rhythm against the marble. “Why don't you call Max and have supper here? Run quick to pick up your mama too. Mercy, I pay Constance for a full day's work and I want a full day. Whether I'm here or not. Constance!”

“Max is working late.” Jade sauntered into the kitchen. “Mama's still recovering from the last round of chemo. Why don't we try for another time?”

“Well, if you're sure, fine . . . another time.” June stood in the middle of the arching, stainless steel kitchen looking disconcerted.

Jade leaned against the ivory and green island. The kitchen was like a structural hug, cozy with June's Southern hospitality and dabbled with yellow and gray Smoky Mountain sunshine dripping through the skylight.

“How about we get Reb to fire up his grill this weekend?”

“He'd love that . . . We can thaw the kobe steaks.” June opened the fridge and then closed it without looking inside. “I am sorry Beryl's not feeling well. Tell that mama of yours I'll be over tomorrow for a game of hearts.”

“She'd like that. June?” Jade peered into her pinched eyes. “Are you okay?”

“Of course I'm okay. I've just been shopping for three days. Now, how about some hot tea? The house is freezing.” June walked over to the basement door. “Constance?” June shoved the door closed. “That girl . . . I'm docking her pay a whole day.”

“Why don't you hear her out first?” Jade slipped onto one of the island chairs and watched June fill a kettle with water and drop it onto the stove with a clank.

It was nearing five. Jade would have to leave after this cup of tea to get Mama's dinner. The latest round of chemo had zapped her energy more than the previous treatments. She slept most of the day, eating only when Jade urged her. Leukemia was a cruel taskmaster.

June set two mugs in front of Jade. “So what's new with you in the three days I've been gone? Have you and Max made any decisions?”

June never hesitated to dig around in Jade's life, prying open internal windows. Didn't Honey empty June of all her idle words? Didn't the woman just want to relax in a hot bath, order a Mario's pizza, and curl up with Rebel and a good TMC movie?

“A decision? In three days? I've hardly seen him.” Her sorrow over the plethora of pregnant shoppers at the Blue Two this afternoon surfaced, gasping for air.

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