
Young Adult Romance
Date Published: 02-14-2023
Publisher: Fire & Ice YA (Melange)
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The Secrets of Constellations was selected by Barnes and Noble as a Top Indie Book for February and March, and on Amazon, it hit #1 Best Seller and #1 New Release in Teen & YA Adoption.Ā
Ā Itās been sixteen years since Norae Whelanās adoption. Sheās conquered her past by baking her way through her challenges. All thatās left is culinary school, until a unique stranger offers her an opportunity to learn the truth of her birth and with it, the trial of facing down what she thought she left behind.Ā
Her birth motherās hometown is a place where memories hide beneath the floorboards of an eclectic house. Inheriting a house and all its mysteries is one thing. The instant attraction to Orion Reise is another. Thereās only one problem. Orionās blind, and the reason behind it lurks through the downtown streets, dying to take him away.Ā
With the end of summer fast approaching, Norae must make some big decisions. Sheāll have to decide if falling in love with Orion is worth the price of letting go of her past and embracing a potentially, disastrous future.Ā
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EXCERPT
One
Last night, I stabbed the Jabberwocky while eating a piece of cake, and it felt good! Tasted good, too! āNext time, nightmares, bring me your captain. Iāll use his hook to hang my tomato vines!ā I pointed a paring knife at my disheveled reflection in the oven door. The Disney symphony in the background built to a crescendo, and I laughed like the perfect childhood villain.
āNorae?ā
Admittedly, I screamed, but it was totally called for. Not only had Mom scared the crap out of me, but I also dropped the knife. I never danced like a monkey so fast. Embarrassing? Completely, but my toes were still attached. Mom stood in the doorway with her hands on her stomach, her cheeks pink, her lips thinned as she held herself together.
āI hate when you sneak up on me,ā I told her. I picked up the knife and set it down on the counter next to a pile of sliced strawberries. Reluctantly, I turned off the stereo. Chernabog and his mountain could wait.
āBattling with your dreams again?ā Mom guessed. Her layered skirt brushed the marble floor as she swayed toward the oven. āWhat was it this time? Dogs, donuts, or Duff?ā
I rolled my eyes. āI havenāt had dreams about Goldman in months,ā I defended. āFor your information, I was dreaming about Alice in Wonderland.ā
āIf youāre dreaming about monsters, Iām afraid your mind is trying to tell you something.ā Mom clicked her tongue as she shook her finger in my face. āWorried about something?ā
āMaybe Iām worried about ruining my cake because my mother likes to interpret dreams over breakfast.ā
The strawberry cake filled the kitchen with a pleasant smell of home. It shouldāve been warm in the kitchen, but Iād opened the backyardās double doors to let in the chill of the morning. Later, it would get sticky. Connecticut summers came with oppressive humidity, but the chilly morning was a welcomed guest.
āThe cake smells amazing!ā Mom clapped her hands together with enthusiasm. āAre you making strawberry buttercream to go with it?ā
Her praise sent warm chills down my spine. āOf course!ā She disappeared behind the fridge door. āOrange juice is on the top shelf. Fruit tarts are on the bottom.ā A peace sign appeared over the edge of the door. āAnd I boiled a few eggs for you. You heard the doctor.ā Momās head popped up. Tight, brown curls flew around her narrow face like a forest of vines. āDonāt shoot the messenger,ā I added.
āI canāt. Whoās going to cook around here?ā
Mom took her breakfast assortment to the kitchen table, careful of her skirt and its natural tendency of getting stuck under the chair legs. I glanced at the clock, watching the second-hand inch closer and closer to the hour. Three…two… one… Out came the tarot cards with an expert shuffle and the jingle of bracelets. I examined the deck with an eye of disbelief. Yesterday, they claimed Ms. Golishna would kiss a frog, join the army, and move to a city full of luxurious couches. The eighty-three-year-old woman was about to move into an apartment for assisted care.
āSo, big day today, birthday girl,ā Mom beamed around a mouthful of the tart. āLetās see what the cards say. Iām feeling energized. Theyāre speaking to me.ā
I hated the thought of unseen supernatural beings foretelling my future. Something about the whole knowing things before they happened put a massive damper on embracing what comes after high school. It was a neat parlor trick and an excellent way for Mom to earn a living, but I was skeptical. After years of living in a haunted house with a psychic mom, I still hadnāt seen more than a candle flame flicker. Those mysterious bumps in the night? Dad tripping over his shoes on the way to the bathroom. Doors opening on their own? Drafty hallways. I mean, it wasnāt like I wanted to live in a remake of Paranormal Activity, but at least their haunting seemed legit.
Maybe it wasnāt the magic so much as the thought of the annual birthday reading. My birthday was not something I really liked, only because the origin of my birth was a looming shadow I couldnāt escape. Every year, it snuck up on me, demanding I celebrate its presence. How could I celebrate something I didnāt understand? Okay, I realized it in the broadest sense. Everyone had a birth date, and I knew mine. I just didnāt know the who, why, and where. Being adopted was a buzzkill.
The memorable clap of boots echoed off the back porch. āHappy Birthday, Rae!ā Cambria Dunston rushed through the open back doors, splattering mud all over the blue tiles.
āCambria!ā Mom shouted. āYour boots!ā
āSorry, Mrs. Whelan!ā Her southern drawl made me smile. āWhatās cooking, Chickadee?ā She kicked off her cowboy boots and rushed over to look through the ovenās window. āSmells fantastic.ā Cambria kissed my cheek.
āWhatās baking is strawberry shortcake. What are you doing here so early?ā
She stole a strawberry. āYour mom invited me.ā Cambria danced around the island and joined Mom at the table. āCanāt miss the annual reading. Hoping Iāll get another one. What do you think, Mrs. W? Help a girl out?ā
I went to work on slicing more strawberries while Mom shuffled the cards two more times.
āWhat do you need?ā she asked. āWe got together for a reading last month.ā
āYeah, yeah, but I need to know how Mr. Man shows up.ā Cambria gripped the edge of the table and leaned forward. Her long hair tumbled onto the tablecloth and tangled with the tassels. āWhere would be helpful. Around the corner is so vague. Do you know how many corners are on this block alone? Thirteen if you donāt count the broken wall next to Mr. Ballerdās place.ā
I coughed to hide my snort of laughter. Cambria, a diehard believer in the paranormal, took all of Momās advice to heart. She once took a taxi to Brooklyn to buy a lotto ticket because Mom said sheād win big. She won ten dollars and had to use it to tip the driver.
āYou told her she was going to meet a man? How clichĆ©.ā
Cambria interrupted Mom. āPulled him straight from the deck! I canāt wait. Moving back to Texas is going to open up new adventures.ā
āWhy donāt you come to the shop tomorrow, Cambria? Iāll give you a reading at a discount.ā My best friendās face fell into a pout. Cambria liked immediate action. She experienced severe, nonvisual allergic reactions to the word no.
āNorae, are you going to let your mom do her thing?ā
Mom spread the cards out in a half-circle, waving me over.
I wiped my hands on my apron as I headed over to the table.
I hovered my hand across the deck and pretended to feel the mystical energy floating off the cards. I wiggled my fingers foolishly. No energy, just empty air, but Mom promised it was the soulās job. I picked the last five cards at the end of the curve because, letās face it, less mess.
Mom gathered up the rest of the deck as I slid into a seat next to Cambria. āAlright, Norae,ā Mom whispered, shaking her hands in the air to dispel something we couldnāt see. āLetās find out what your year will bring.ā She laid out the five cards in a cross, clapped her hands twice, and the lights went out.
Cambria gasped. āI told you! She has powers!ā
āOr Clap-On bulbs she installed a few days ago.ā
Mom stuck out her tongue and then tapped the top card with her green fingernailāThe Fool. āThere will be a situation. Different. Enticing.ā Her dramatics made me smile. āItāll be exciting, but donāt get naĆÆve. A fire burns when the water retreats.ā She waved her hand over the cards, faltering over the Devil. A sign of danger.
I pulled the Devil card on my fifteenth birthday. I broke my arm playing field hockey three weeks later and ended up losing all my chances at getting a full-ride scholarship. Dad still cries about it, but I think heās sharing sympathy pains with his wallet.
Mom pointed to the second line. āWheel, Magician, Devil. Good and bad here.ā Her sympathetic look caused Cambriaās look of nervousness.
āCome on, Mom. Itās just a bunch of cards.ā
Her finger was instantly in my face. āDonāt disrespect the cards. They say youāll meet someone who will change your world.ā She put her manicured finger on the Devil, covering its face. āBut trouble is coming. You need to be ready. Do you understand me?ā Our eyes met across the table. Iād never seen Mom so serious. What lay beyond the painted faces on the cards?
Cambria picked up the last card. āAt least thereās love,ā my best friend shouted.
Mom took the card with a sigh. āYes, there is this.ā She handed it to me. āDestiny says itās time. Your man will be the last thing you expect and the person youāll need the most.ā
āTime for what? Kissing naked outdoors?ā It was very sensual for cat people in loincloths.
Mom snatched the card back. āYouāre such a child. Are you sure youāre eighteen?ā
āDid you think Iād wake up this morning ready for meetings, suits, and popping out three kids?ā
I wasnāt one of those girls who grew up planning how to find a husband. I didnāt buy wedding magazines, I didnāt watch Say Yes to the Dress, and I didnāt have a wedding dress Pinterest board. A date here, a boyfriend there, but nothing long term because long term meant getting serious with a stranger. It meant giving up on my dream.
Cambria and I performed the whole cap and gown thing a week ago. My diploma cover sat on my nightstand because they never give an actual diploma at graduation. Societyās way of telling teenagers theyāre still irresponsible even though they can get a full-time job and join the military. I applied to the colleges Dad recommended. I had three crumpled denials in the trash and, most likely, four on their way. Universities wanted people with Olympic medals who walked on their hands, not high school grads who had no idea what major to declare and preferred pounding dough over pounding keys on a keyboard.
If Dad let me apply to the schools I wanted, Iād probably be juggling acceptance letters. He thought business degrees meant solid futures when, in reality, the idea of sitting in three-hour lectures on effective negotiation strategies sounded like the door to Boresville. My idea of exciting learning included applying new techniques to getting egg whites to the perfect fluffy consistency before baking. So, while I followed Dadās instructions like a good daughter, I secretly applied to my dream school: The Culinary Institute of America in New York.
I had a vague feeling Mom forgot something. āHey, what time were you supposed to be at work?ā
āTen, same as usual.ā We all glanced at the clock. It was 9:53. Mom jumped out of her seat, knocking over her chair. āWeāll finish this later!ā She grabbed her bag and coat off the counter. āHappy birthday, Baby. Bye, Cambria!ā
āBye, Mrs. W.ā Cambria wiggled her fingers as Mom rushed out the back door. āYou know, some days, she makes it obvious.ā
I got up to pull the finished cake out of the oven. āOur differences? Yeah.ā I bit my bottom lip and stared down at the browning cake I set on the counter, wondering if Iād ever inherited anything from my adoptive parents.
I pretended I didnāt see the gift behind Cambriaās back as we took the spiral staircase to my bedroom. I asked about her tarot reading instead. She mentioned something about a gathering, a mysterious lover, tree bark, and a goat. I lost my concentration when she started talking about farm animals.
Cambria laughed at something as I shouldered my door open. It was like listening to violins on the Venice canals in springtime, or at least thatās what I thought she sounded like when she laughed. Iād never traveled farther than Providence. She was the epitome of a Prom Queen and had the crown to prove it. Her shiny raven hair, permanently curled, complimented her high cheekbones and full lips. Fashion was her middle name. Today, Cambria paired her boots with a miniskirt and an off-the-shoulder blue paisley top. Her oversized belt buckle glittered with blue stones. Iād miss her flare. Texas was so far away.
āHow about a lunch date with yours truly? One last hurrah before I leave?ā She finally got to something meaningful. āI got a gift here with your name on it,ā she added, and shook the small box in front of her.
āDidnāt I tell you not to get me anything?ā I asked. āYou know I donāt do the whole birthday thing.ā
I stopped in front of my wall by the large window, covered from floor to ceiling in pictures. Cambria threw herself across my bed, muttering something about ungrateful friendships, and tossed my gift on the nightstand. Okay, not breakable. Brownie points. I grabbed a tack from my end table, picked up the newly printed picture of Cambria and me in front of her truck, and tacked it in the last free corner.
āFinished.ā
āLooks legit,ā Cambria stated as if she cared. Her second allergy? Pictures. She let her head hang off the side of the bed. āSo, now that youāre eighteen, donāt you think itās time to find your roots?ā She held up her hands in defense when I shot her a glare. āYou know, find the donors.ā
I sat down at my vanity and stared at my reflection. Iād woken up this morning and immediately went to work on my cake. My blonde hair was a wavy mess. Strands stuck up in every direction, causing my round jaw to look extra full. I took a minute to consider if chopping it off was brave or stupid. Long hair defined me, and yet, a little voice told me it was time to take a different approach. I tried to cut it on my own and ended up at a salon to fix the butchered mess. It ended up shorter than I wanted, stopping just above my shoulders.
It wouldnāt be so bad if I liked my face, but over the years, Iād grown accustomed to disliking the little things. I didnāt know what my birth parents looked like, I wasnāt sure I cared too much anymore, but they gave me a plain face compared to my best friend. My nose was straight, like eighty percent of Connecticutās female population. My brow was small, which made my eyebrows, even though I shaped them, sit heavy over my eyes. People told me I had a Julia Robertsā smile, which would be nice if my lips had some substance to them, but they were thin and lacked that slight dip in my top lip. If I was Juliaās secret love child, her claiming skills were a bit rusty. I had a better chance with Angelina Jolie.
āIām not interested,ā I told Cambria. I grabbed my hairbrush. āIām not sure Iāll get anything out of it.ā
Her fake gasp rattled my nerves. āYouāre the worst liar on the planet.ā
āWeāve talked about this before. I donāt need to know. Iāve moved on from that lonely-orphan stage.ā
āAnd yet, you always lie.ā Cambria flipped herself onto her stomach. āIāve known you long enough to know when you lie. Your left eyebrow wiggles.ā
āIt does not!ā
Cambria pointed at my forehead. āItās wiggling. Didnāt your dad tell you to ask if you ever wanted to know?ā I nodded. āSo, donāt you think youāve waited long enough? Sixteen years,ā she paused, adding up the years since my adoption date, āis a long time.ā
Cambria didnāt understand the emotional tide that swept over me when she brought up my past. Iād spent sixteen years exactly, because my adoption day was also my second birthday, coming to terms with my lack of a real family. Okay, getting over it was too soft. I probably had a touch of Avoidant Personality Disorder. Avoiding the topic kept me going. If I didnāt think about it, it didnāt have the power to bother me.
I used to think about it a lot, especially in my middle school years. I didnāt come from trauma, but I grieved a lot, to the point where my adoptive parents, Rick and Mary, stuck me in therapy. The preteen years were the worst. I kept waiting for my birth parents to show up and announce it was all a mistake. Ta-da! Just kidding! Youāre the princess of Genovia! Iād flip out on Mom and Dad for no reason except the pizza delivery guy wasnāt related to me. I tried to master the world Iād forcibly received and played the withdrawn, aggression, and self-doubt cards like a Royal Flush.
It took a long time to accept I couldnāt change a thing and many hours of baking with my grandma to help me come out of my depression. Cambriaās arrival helped, too, because she didnāt look at me like some orphan left on the side of the road. I wasnāt. I came to my parents through a private agency, but I started to believe in magical tree portals after watching Once Upon a Time. Too bad the real world was…real.
āI need to bring Dad some lunch,ā I said, trying to change the subject. Cambriaās glare implied the issue was staying. āFine. Iāll think about it. Youāre lucky I love you.ā
āI know. Your eyebrow didnāt wiggle.ā
Grandpa Byron owned Whelanās Ware before Dad took over fifteen years ago. Iād come after school when I was little and eat ice cream while Grandpa Byron whittled rocking horses for the local church. A family moved into the upstairs apartment when I was eight. Theyāre okay for a trio of antisocial people. Their son, Dillon, started working for Dad last year to make extra cash to buy a car. Heās still working. The car he bought isnāt.
āHey, Norae.ā Dillon nodded. I nodded back, watching him sweep the never-ending dust. We werenāt close, never were. Ours was a comfortable relationship.
I headed to the counter. Momās petite frame disappeared behind the thick column next to her. Body size, our only commonality, but I could reach the Doritos in the kitchenās high cabinets. Momās excessive amount of jewelry was part of her made-up dress code. She called it twinkling like a star. I preferred looking like a walking jewelry store.
As I passed the walls and shelves, cluttered with hundreds of shiny tools, I pictured Grandpa Byron standing on a ladder, counting merchandise. Antiques decorated the wall at the back of the shop. A warm feeling spread through my chest, making my cheeks tingle. Those tools were not for sale and never would be. Iād make sure of it.
Mom scrunched up her nose as she looked around the shop. āWhereās Cambria?ā
I pointed over my shoulder, indicating the truck seen through the large window. āSheās afraid Dillon will try to talk to her again.ā Dillonās reflection in the mounted security mirror confirmed my best friendās fears. He swept toward the windows until he saw Cambria in the truck. Then he just swept air.
āYou need to fix the shelf, Rick.ā Mom leaned against the counter, drawing circles in the spot Dad wasnāt wiping. āMina almost died.ā
āWhatever you want, Mary,ā Dad responded. Rick Whelan tried to play pacifist unless it involved hockey. Or football.
Dad still carried his quarterback build, but the years aged him, his cheeks trading pimples for wrinkles. He blamed the menopausal witch and pubescent teenager who loved him for his grey hair, but we all knew Grandpa Byron caught the greys in his thirties. Cheerleaders used to flank Dad. Mom was the marching bandās “ute player. One day during football practice, Dad overthrew the ball. Love at first concussion.
āWhatās wrong with the shelves?ā I asked as I hooked an arm around Momās waist. I imagined hundreds of witchcraft books raining down on Mina.
Candles, wands, crystal balls, essential oils, and jewelry from all over the world stuffed Books and Brooms. No Hogwarts letter? No problem! Just call Mom to curse a bully. Which never, ever, ever happened. It didnāt stop a daughter from asking a billion times though. Mom opened up shop ten years ago to help pay the bills. Now, she was Connecticutās leading good witch and psychic. Growing up in the Whelan household was a treat. If I was terrible, and Iāll never admit to it, I had to choose between grounding or a hex. And bringing a boy home for the first time? Once they saw the setup in Momās study, they never came back.
āThe Native remedies almost crushed Mina,ā Mom exclaimed as she pointed toward the front window. Books and Brooms was across the street, which was how Mom managed to pester Dad on her self-assigned coffee breaks. āI canāt have customers getting crushed by herbal remedies. Can you imagine? You come in looking for a Cree Nettle recipe to help your pregnancy, and you leave with a concussion! Baby will come out backwards!ā
āHoney, I said Iād fix it, but I canāt leave the shop right now.ā Dad threw the rag under the counter. āWeāre busy this morning.ā
Mom and I both looked around. No one was in the shop except for Dillon, who was swatting at the fly buzzing around his head. He whacked himself in the face and swayed, trying to get the fly off his nose. āYeah, really busy,ā I said slowly. āI can see your feet bleeding from all the running around.ā
The sigh Dad released was admitted defeat. āI guess I can take my lunch early.ā I dropped the frozen meal on the counter. His lips flattened. āThanks, Rae.ā
I winked. āNo problem.ā
The grandfather clock chimed. Grandma Susan used to clean it every Saturday morning. She was a small thing, heavy from years of work and five kids, and had the voice of an angel when she sang her lullabies. My love of baking came from her. A day didnāt go by without something in the oven, fresh cookies on the table, or homemade sherbet in the freezer. After Grandpa died, her heart couldnāt take the loneliness. Two months after his death, Grandma followed him, making my seventeenth birthday a day I wouldnāt forget.
āHey, so, Cambria and I are grabbing brunch and seeing a movie. Iāll be home before four, okay?ā
āYouāre doing something on your birthday?ā Dad asked, his voice layered with surprise. The door to the shop chimed, and he welcomed the customer. āWhere are you guys going?ā he asked when the customer waved him off.
āThe Court.ā I leaned forward on the counter. āEndgame just came out.ā
Mom cupped my cheeks until my lips puckered. āYou and your weakness for men with accents. I know youāre going because of, whatās his name, Cumberbutton?ā
āCumberbatch,ā I said between my pressed lips, though it came out sounding like an insult.
Mom leaned forward and kissed the tip of my nose. āMy baby girl is growing up, Rick. Remember when she was waddling around in diapers?ā I stretched my lips when she let go.
āWasnāt that yesterday?ā Dad joked, pinching my arm. I rubbed the spot. āI owe you seventeen more of those.ā
I back peddled, uninterested in turning black and blue. āIāll see you guys later!ā
The Court was a brand-new development, with multiple stores and restaurants tucked back into the woods of Cromwell. Benches dotted the walkway, imported fruit trees and bushes brought in some needed shade, and gas lampposts lined the one-way lane cutting through the center.
At the top of the lot was a movie theatre, one of the new ones with the reclining seats, a buzzer, and a waiter. The outside resembled The Pantages Theatre in Los Angeles, with its neon lights and Broadway-style marquee. When it first opened, I told Cambria they needed to import five tons of smog and some panhandlers. Then, theyād have the perfect replica of a California landmark. A billboard above the marquee rained gold lights, but sometimes, it played trailers when a new movie debuted. I preferred the black-and-white Coke commercials from the 1960s.
We settled in our seats ten minutes before the trailers, munching on stale popcorn and sipping from gigantic sodas. The seats at the very top, right under the projector, needed our names engraved on them, kind of like how bibliophiles deserved reserved parking spots at Barnes and Noble. Sometimes, we pretended we had guests with us, just so we could use the extra seats to store our purses, but tonight, Cambria chose to give them up to a female Thor and a toddler version of Groot.
āNorae Whelan,ā Cambria stage-whispered, using her soda as a microphone, ānow that youāre a real woman, what are you going to do next?ā
I set my popcorn at my feet. As an animated storyteller, my hands tended to flick and fling. āIāve been thinking about it a lot. You know how Dad said I needed to get a real degree? Those havenāt been working out.ā
Cambriaās chin fell as she threw me a look that read Duh! Whatās your point? She even repeated the implied line.
āWhat if I go to Dad, you know, soon, and offer up an ultimatum. If one of his colleges accepts me, Iāll attend. But if, I donāt know, a culinary school accepts me, I get to go there.ā My friend looked unconvinced. āI applied to CIA in New York,ā I explained, ābut I didnāt tell Dad. Iām afraid heāll freak out.ā I fell back into my seat and stared up at the dancing popcorn on the screen when Cambriaās face fell in disbelief. āI want to dream bigger, fill my life with something new, something worthwhile. I donāt want to be stuck behind a desk all day. I want to be adventurous. ā I took a deep breath. āI want to open a bakery,ā I admitted because, in front of Cambria, I was courageous. With my parents? Glorified wimp!
Cambria squeezed my hand. āI hope you get what you want. Just donāt forget to give me the family discount. I canāt even bake cookies.ā Her head fell back against the seat. āIām going to miss you, Chickadee.ā Texas A&M accepted Cambria to its biomedical program. She planned to live with her grandparents in Bryan while she attended. āBut youāll come to see me? Youāll find the time, right?ā
I wrapped my arm around hers and leaned my head on her shoulder. āDefinitely.ā
āYouāll get your adventure…unless those cards are telling the truth then youāre going to get into trouble.ā She leaned the side of her head on top of mine. The silence dragged on for a bit when she suddenly barked, āGet that boyfriend your mom saw.ā I pinched her hip. āOw! Iām serious! Youāll have to conquer him without me as your wing-woman.ā
āYou were never my wing-woman.ā Because to have a wing-woman, you needed to hit on guys, and my flirt skills lacked experience. My last boyfriend asked me out.
Correction!
Only boyfriend.
āYour momās potion collection scares them off, not you!
Youāre adorable.ā She kissed the side of my head. āI need to find my man. You need to find your man. And then, you need to bring your man to visit so I can be unimpressed and hook you up with a cowboy.ā
āSounds like a hassle.ā
āA city slick and a cowboy are two different breeds, Chickadee. Youāll need one right in the middle.ā Cambria moved her hands around like she was painting a picture. āSomeone nice, but not too nice. Needs some attitude. He needs to be a gentleman but with a streak of bad boy. Hot, definitely hot. Someone who will kiss you under a thunderstorm, hold your hand indoors, push you up against the wall, and tell you youāre his.ā She shivered. āNow thatās what Iām talking about.ā
āYeah, he sounds pretty spectacular,ā which meant that guy was already married. āWhen you see him, send him my way.ā
Cambria held tight to my arm as the lights started to dim. āHe exists,ā she whispered. āJust wait.ā
I got home at six. I brought ice cream to use as my apology card. Munching on Cookies Nā Cream while decorating my perfect cake was the only thing I liked to do on my birthday. Except when I ran into the kitchen, the table wasnāt set. The atrocious balloons Dad bought every year, the enormous numbers, were missing. My birthday card was unsigned, out of its envelope, and leaning against the toaster. I glanced at my watch in surprise because, even though I disliked the day, I appreciated my parentās efforts. So, what was with the lack of festivities?
āNorae?ā Mom called out. āWeāre in the living room.ā
āIām sorry! I know Iām late! We can still order pizza, right?ā I came around the corner and smiled brightly. āI can call Tonyās and…ā
The creepy, old guy from Poltergeist sat on my couch with a toothy grin. Okay, so not the Devilās henchman, but a gangly replica. Anyone with shocking white hair and a yellow smile would fit the bill, especially if they were rocking a bowler hat. My parents didnāt look soullessāscore one for living in reality.
Dad stood up and waved a hand toward our guest. āRae, this is Miles Hidifork.ā
āGood evening, Miss Whelan,ā the man greeted, taking tiny breaths between each word like his lungs couldnāt handle the talking. āItās a pleasure to meet you.ā
āHello.ā I walked over and offered my hand. His grip was solid.
āMr. Hidifork is here about Bobbie Jo Thatchor,ā Mom said as she moved to stand next to Dad.
I frowned. āWho?ā
Mr. Hidifork pressed his hat against his chest. āI was her lawyer, Miss Whelan. Bobbie Jo was your birth mother.ā
Ā About the Author

S. H. Clark is a romance author in the following sub-genres: young adult,
contemporary, horror, and fantasy.
Clark lives in Southern California with her two cats and her beloved coffee
maker. When she’s not writing, which is rare, she’s an elementary school
teacher on one of California’s Native reservations. She holds multiple
secondary degrees, including an MFA in Creative Writing, has a bookshelf
overflowing with paranormal romances, and loves to write to the sound of a
thunderstorm.
It’s been said Clark has attempted to conjure Cadbury Cream Eggs with her
Harry Potter wand.
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