Acclaim forNew York Timesbestselling author Susan Wiggs
â⦠Truly uplifting â¦â
âNow magazine
âThis is a beautiful bookâ
âBookbag on Just Breathe
â⦠Unpredictable and refreshing, this is irresistibly good.â
âCloser Hot Pick Book on Just Breathe
âA human and multi-layered story exploring duty to both country and familyâ
âNora Roberts on The Ocean Between Us
âSusan Wiggs paints the details of human relationships with the finesse of a master.â
âJodi Picoult, author of Nineteen Minutes
âThe perfect beach readâ
âDebbie Macomber on Summer by the Sea
Also bySusan Wiggs
The Lakeshore Chronicles SUMMER AT WILLOW LAKE THE WINTER LODGE DOCKSIDE SNOWFALL AT WILLOW LAKE FIRESIDE LAKESHORE CHRISTMAS
The Tudor Rose Trilogy AT THE KINGâS COMMAND THE MAIDENâS HAND AT THE QUEENâS SUMMONS
Contemporary HOME BEFORE DARK THE OCEAN BETWEEN US SUMMER BY THE SEA TABLE FOR FIVE LAKESIDE COTTAGE JUST BREATHE
All available in eBook
This book is for my friend Lois, with love.
Thanks to my own personal brain trustâ
Anjali Banerjee, Carol Cassella, Sheila Roberts, Suzanne Selfors, Elsa Watson, Kate Breslin, Lois Faye Dyer, Rose Marie Harris, Patty Jough-Haan, Susan Plunkett and Krysteen Seelenâ wonderful writers and even better friends.
Thanks to Mr David Boyle, president and co-owner
of the New Haven County Cutters, for information regarding Independent Baseball and the Can-Am League.
Thanks also to Margaret OâNeill Marbury and
Adam Wilson of MIRA Books, Meg Ruley and Annelise Robey of the Jane Rotrosen Agency, for invaluable advice and input. Thanks to my publisher and readers for supporting the Lakeshore Chronicles and for coming back to Avalon again and again.
With every word I write, Iâm grateful to my familyâ
the reason for everything.
âA lake is the landscapeâs most beautiful and expressive
feature. It is earthâs eye; looking into which the beholder measures the depth of his own nature.â
âHenry David Thoreau
Walden, âThe Pondsâ
LaGuardia Airport
Concourse C
Gate 21
The dark glasses didnât hide a thing, not really. When people saw someone in dark glasses on a cloudy day in the middle of winter, they assumed the wearer was hiding the fact that sheâd been drinking, crying or fighting.
Or all of the above.
Under any number of circumstances, Kimberly van Dorn enjoyed being the center of attention. Last night, when sheâd donned her couture gown with its scandalous slit up the side, turning heads had been the whole idea. Sheâd had no idea the evening would implode the way it had. How could she?
Now, at the end of a soul-flattening red-eye flight, she kept her shades on as the plane touched down and taxied to the Jetway. Coach. She never flew coach. Last night, however, first class had been sold out, personal comfort had taken a backseat to expediency, and sheâd found herself in seat 29-E in the middle of the middle section of the plane, wedged between strangers. Sometimes the need to get away was more powerful than the need for legroom. Although her stiff legs this morning might argue that point.
Who the hell had designed coach class, anyway? She was convinced she had the imprint of her seatmateâs ear on her shoulder. After his fourth beer, he kept falling asleep, his head lolling onto her. What was worse than a man with a lolling head?
A man with a lolling head and beer breath, she thought grimly, trying to shake off the torturous transcontinental night. But the memories lingered like the ache in her legsâthe lolling guy with a snoring problem, and, on her other side, an impossibly chatty older gentleman, who talked for hours about his insomnia. And his bursitis. And his lousy son-in-law, his fondness for fried sweet potatoes and his dislike of the Jude Law movie Kim was pretending to watch in hopes of getting him to shut up.
No wonder she never flew coach. Yet the nightmare flight was not the worst thing that had happened to her lately. Far from it.
She stood in the aisle, waiting for the twenty-eight rows ahead of her to deplane. The process seemed endless as people rummaged in the overhead bins, gathering their things while talking on mobile phones.
She took out her phone, thumb hovering over the power button. She really ought to call her mother, let her know she was coming home. Not now, though, she thought, putting the phone away. She was too exhausted to make any sense. Besides, for all she knew, the thing had one of those tracking features, and she didnât feel like being tracked.
Now that sheâd arrived, she wasnât in such a big hurry. In fact, she was utterly unprepared to face a dreary midwinter morning in New York. Ignoring the stares of other passengers, she tried to act as though traveling in an evening gown was a routine occurrence for her, and hoped people would just assume she was a victim of lost luggage.
If only it could be that simple.
Shuffling along the narrow aisle of the coach section, she definitely