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Dreams for Stones

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by Ann Warner




  Dreams for Stones

  by

  Ann Warner

  Silky Stone Press

  Dreams for Stones

  Copyright © 2007 Ann Warner

  Previously Published by Samhain Publishing

  Cover design by

  Ann Warner

  Smashwords Edition

  This e-book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This e-book may not be re-sold, but if you would like to share this book with a friend, this e-book is enabled for sharing. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  Without limiting the rights under the copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the above author of this book.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, brands, media, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of various products referenced in this work of fiction, which have been used without permission. The publication/use of these trademarks is not authorized, associated with, or sponsored by the trademark owners.

  Table of Contents

  Dedication

  Book Description

  Chapter One - Chapter Two - Chapter Three - Chapter Four - Chapter Five - Chapter Six - Chapter Seven - Chapter Eight - Chapter Nine - Chapter Ten - Chapter Eleven - Chapter Twelve - Chapter Thirteen - Chapter Fourteen - Chapter Fifteen - Chapter Sixteen - Chapter Seventeen - Chapter Eighteen - Chapter Nineteen - Chapter Twenty - Chapter Twenty-One - Chapter Twenty-Two - Chapter Twenty-Three - Chapter Twenty-Four - Chapter Twenty-Five - Chapter Twenty-Six - Chapter Twenty-Seven - Chapter Twenty-Eight - Chapter Twenty-Nine - Chapter Thirty - Chapter Thirty-One - Chapter Thirty Two - Chapter Thirty-Three - Chapter Thirty-Four - Chapter Thirty-Five - Chapter Thirty-Six - Chapter Thirty-Seven - Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Epilogue

  Excerpt of Persistence of Dreams

  A Note to Readers

  About the Author

  Acknowledgments

  Reading Group Guide

  Other Titles by Ann Warner

  Dedication

  To my husband who loves me for ordinary reasons in an extraordinary way.

  And to Joe and Emma, muses and friends, who showed me how to face difficulties with grace.

  Book Description

  Indie Next Generation Book Award Finalist

  A man holding fast to grief and a woman who lets go of love too easily. It will take all the magic of old diaries and a children's story to heal these two. Caught in grief and guilt over his wife's death, English professor Alan Francini is determined never to feel that much pain again. He avoids new relationships and keeps even his best friend at arms' length. His major solace is his family's ranch south of Denver. Children's book editor Kathy Jamison has learned through a lifetime of separations and a broken engagement that letting go is easier than hanging on. Then she meets Alan, and for once, begins to believe a lasting relationship is possible. But Alan panics and pushes her away into the arms of his best friend. Now the emotions of three people are at stake as they struggle to find a way to transform their broken dreams into a foundation for a more hopeful future.

  Chapter One

  Alan Francini smoothed a saddle pad onto Sonoro’s back, and the horse danced sideways before settling and blowing softly. For a moment, Alan rested his forehead against the animal’s neck, then he reached for the saddle and, with one smooth motion, swung it into position. He tightened the cinch, led Sonoro outside, mounted, and heading toward the foothills, gave Sonoro his head.

  Their swift passage through the brisk air chilled Alan’s face, pulling tears from his eyes. He ignored the wet on his cheeks, focusing instead on the dull staccato rhythm of hooves on frozen ground, the click of iron shoe against cold stone, and the huff of Sonoro’s breathing, visible in the icy air.

  When they reached the alpine meadow with its tiny topaz lake, he left the stallion to graze and walked to the edge of the water.

  The day he and Meg discovered it, the lake had been blue and mirror still, reflecting mountains, trees, and sky in all their perfection, like a second reality.

  Now that day was the only Meg memory he was able to look at directly, without flinching. The only day in all their days together that hadn’t shifted and splintered into sharp-edged, unrelenting pain.

  A cloud slid across the sun. The lake darkened, its opaque surface shivering with each gust of wind. Early April. An uncertain time of year. As uncertain as the possibility of joy.

  He picked up a stone, tossed it into the gray lake and stood waiting until the widening ripples from the splash touched the shore at his feet.

  Then he remounted and rode back the way he had come.

  ~ ~ ~

  Alan was halfway through chores Easter morning when his sister showed up. Elaine swung on the door of the stall he was cleaning, chewing a stem of alfalfa, looking more like a young girl than a woman of thirty-three.

  He reached over and pulled the hay from her mouth. “Bad habit, Laine.”

  She wrinkled her nose and yanked a fresh stem free. “So, how go the Denver State tenure wars?”

  “Dossier’s due in the fall.” He went back to forking used straw into the wheelbarrow.

  “You have a take on how it’ll go?”

  “New department head might be the sticking point.”

  “So? Send her roses and a box of very expensive chocolates.”

  He pulled in a deep breath of air scented not with roses and chocolate but with hay and horse and turned to tell Elaine he couldn’t think of a worse thing to do.

  She grinned. “Gotcha. Why’s she the sticking point?”

  “She came to observe my class. Unannounced.” He continued to work, his muscles loosening and warming, sweat dampening his shirt, as he recalled Hilstrom’s visit. He’d done the math. The woman was at least fifty, but fighting it with short skirts and too much makeup.

  That day she’d sat in the back of the room, a perfectly groomed, lavender-garbed apparition, while he struggled to get a reaction to a piece of experimental fiction out of students more likely to have lavender hair than lavender garments. Eventually he succeeded and, caught up in the discussion, he forgot Hilstrom until the students filed out.

  She had paused in the doorway, tapping her reading glasses against her teeth. “That was certainly an interesting approach, Alan.” Her tone made it unclear whether she considered it a good interesting or a bad interesting.

  Elaine wiggled her fingers at him. “About that visit?”

  He didn’t want to rehash it, bad enough to have lived through it once, but maybe he could come up with a story to amuse her. It would be nice to keep her hanging around a bit longer.

  “We were reading The Taming of the Shrew. I invited her to read Katherine’s part.”

  “Tell me you’re joking.”

  “Trust me, Hilary Hilstrom is no joke.” And wasn’t that the truth. He kept his face turned away, as he continued to work.

  “Did she do it?”

  “She did.”

  “And?”

  He leaned on the pitchfork and thought about where to take the story as the horses chomped steadily through their morning hay and oats.

  And then he had it. “Hilstrom was so dramatic, the football player reading Petruccio forgot he was acting and kissed her.” Alan smiled at the vision of Hilstrom, those silly looking glasses on her nose where th
ey belonged for once, and a block-shaped lineman with no neck, leaning in, eyes closed, lips puckered.

  “If that really happened, your goose is cooked.”

  “Yep. Unless he was an excellent kisser.” He tossed the last of the used straw into the wheelbarrow. “She did appear bemused.”

  Elaine laughed. “By the muse or the guy?”

  Alan shrugged, pleased with the success of his tale. As he passed her, Elaine turned and followed him.

  “You made that up, right?”

  He dumped the contents of the barrow, straightened and met her gaze with a solemn look. “Nope. Cooked goose. That’s me. Easter dinner.”

  He saw she half believed him, although as a clinical psychologist, she usually recognized bullfeathers immediately. But then, it had been a very long time since he last joked with her.

  Her grin fading, she stepped closer and touched his arm. “Alan, there’s something I need to tell you.”

  “Knew it was too good to be true you actually came to help me muck out,” he said, hoping to lighten her up.

  “We’re making the announcement at dinner, but. . . ” She bit her lip, her fingers worrying the fabric of his shirt. “I didn’t want to spring it on you in front of everybody. But, well, we’re going to have a baby.”

  He sucked in a quick breath and let it out slow, trying not to let the emotions set loose by her words take hold. “Hey, that’s great news, Laine.” He pulled her into his arms. “Bet Ted is thrilled, and the folks will be over the moon.”

  “It’s just. Times like this.” Her voice caught, and she pressed her head against his shoulder. “Meg. . . she ought to be here. You know.”

  “Yeah.” He spoke softly, because suddenly he found it impossible to get all the air he needed.

  “Sometimes I can’t stand that she isn’t.” The fierce words were interlaced with tears. “I miss her so much.”

  Yeah. He did too. And always would.

  Elaine scrubbed her eyes. “Sorry. I didn’t know I was going to do that.” She stumbled out of his arms and went over to the nearest stall. The occupant stuck its head over the door, whickering a greeting, and Elaine stroked the shaggy neck, lifting and untangling the mane with her fingers.

  The sun slanted across his sister’s hair, burnishing its honey color with gold and, for an instant, it was as if Meg stood there, and he could almost hear her voice saying, “Alan, look at this. Her mane’s all tangled, and after I just combed it. Bet she got into those brambles going after berries again, the greedy gut.”

  The twist of pain was so powerful, he doubled over. When he straightened, he was relieved to find Elaine hadn’t noticed his lapse. He shook his head to clear it, then hooked a bale of fresh straw and hauled it over to the clean stall. When he looked up, he found Elaine watching him, a worried look on her face.

  He spoke as gently as possible. “It’s okay, Laine. I think your having a baby is wonderful.”

  He led the occupant back into the clean stall and took his time unclipping the lead, stroking the soft muzzle, running his hands down each leg, picking up and checking each hoof. By the time he finished, Elaine had gone back to the house.

  He breathed a sigh of relief, glad to be alone again in the quiet of the barn with creatures that couldn’t speak.

  Chapter Two

  Kathy Jamison stood at the entrance to the botanical gardens, her gaze focused on the man walking toward her. She had the urge to pinch herself to make sure she wasn’t dreaming. Instead, she rubbed her thumb against the diamond ring Greg had placed on her finger a month ago and knew she was most definitely awake. And reality was better than any dream.

  Greg reached her and bent his head to kiss her before he took her hands in his and swung her into an impromptu waltz, singing, “California, here I come.”

  Kathy’s smile slid away, and her whole body stiffened with alarm. “California?”

  “Yep. Can you believe it? The fellowship came through. San Francisco. Only the best toxicology residency in the country. My pick of positions when I finish.”

  Kathy stepped away, trying for perspective, dread replacing joy. “But. . . but, I thought. . . that is, we agreed. You’d accept the residency here if it was offered. So we wouldn’t need to move.”

  People eddied around them as they faced each other in the center of the path.

  “Well, yeah, but that was only if San Francisco didn’t come through.” Greg recaptured her hand. “You knew I went for the interview.”

  Because he didn’t want to upset the head of Emergency Medicine at St. Joseph’s who’d recommended him, but it wasn’t supposed to mean anything. “You said you didn’t have a chance.”

  “You know how it goes. Want something too much, it practically guarantees you won’t get it.”

  Like her wanting to stay in Denver?

  But if he wanted San Francisco so badly, why hadn’t he shared that with her? Instead he’d joked about what a disaster the interview had been, how he forgot to pack dress shoes and worried about it until an inept waiter made shoes a moot point by dumping coffee on him at breakfast.

  They’d laughed about it, and somehow she’d failed to notice how much it mattered to him. But he had to know staying in Denver mattered to her.

  He pulled on her hand. “Come on. We’re blocking traffic.”

  She went along with him, her thoughts still churning, numb to the sight of daffodils and budding trees as he led the way to the Japanese garden where he’d proposed to her. When they reached the bench in the corner, he sat and pulled her down beside him wrapping his arm around her. She leaned away.

  “What is it?” He cocked his head, giving her what she thought of as his doctor look. “You aren’t coming down with something are you?”

  “I may be.” Her throat tightened and her nose itched.

  “A cold?”

  She shook her head. “About San Francisco. Have you accepted?”

  “Of course.”

  Of course? Could the man she loved be so oblivious? “Don’t you think we need to talk about it?”

  “What’s to talk about?” He looked puzzled.

  That we agreed. You’d try to stay in Denver. “The University of Colorado, maybe. Did you hear from them yet?” It was a struggle but she’d managed to keep her tone calm.

  “They called last week.”

  “And?”

  He shrugged. “They offered me the spot.”

  For an instant his image wavered as if she were seeing it in a funhouse mirror. They offered you the spot. They offered you the spot! “You didn’t tell me.”

  “I was waiting to see if San Francisco came through. Look, Kit, if you wrote a novel, and you got an offer from Random House and another from Podunk Press, which would you choose?”

  If she said anything more right now she’d likely regret it. Instead, she switched her focus to a middle-aged couple walking through the garden. The man leaned toward the woman and said something that made her laugh. Kathy watched the two until she thought she could speak without raising her voice. “The University of Colorado isn’t exactly Podunk U.”

  “True, but San Francisco, Kit. It’s the opportunity of a lifetime.”

  Did Greg’s rich baritone carry a hint of irritation? But what right did he have to be irritated? Her life was the one being uprooted, and he needed to show some sensitivity to that fact.

  “It’s only two years, babe. No biggie. Besides, it’s not like you’ve lived in Denver your whole life or anything.” He gave her his most ingratiating smile, and an overwhelming urge to slap him had her clutching her hands together.

  “You’ll love San Francisco.”

  Wrong. Denver was her home now. She’d chosen it, let herself get attached. Promised herself she wasn’t moving again. And two years was more than nothing. It was as long as she’d lived any one place when she was growing up.

  Moving. With a father in the Air Force, she knew all about it, and she’d had enough. Enough of leaving behind all that had become
familiar and dear. Enough of starting over with new friends, new neighbors, new schools. New dentists, new doctors, new jobs. Enough of packing and unpacking. Enough wrong turns, enough ending up in wrong places.

  Just enough.

  She tried to speak, but her throat felt like it was full of sand. She swallowed. “So, tell me. Is this how you plan to handle decisions affecting the two of us once we’re married?” Her voice began to spiral, like a car going out of control on an icy curve. “You decide, then you tell me what you’ve decided.” She clamped her lips shut, moving her fingers in a silent count.

  “Of course not. But it’s my career, so that makes this my decision.”

  “So. Does that mean since I’m the one who gets pregnant, it’s my choice whether we have children?”

  “That’s ridiculous. Kids would affect both our lives.”

  “And your decision to go to San Francisco doesn’t affect my life?”

  Greg cleared his throat, lifted his eyes to hers and spoke with apparent sincerity. “I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have accepted without discussing it with you.”

  Darn right, he shouldn’t have. She took three more breaths, staring at him, waiting for him to look away. He didn’t.

  “I’m really, really sorry,” he said.

  He did look sincere. And regretful. She continued to glare at him.

  Finally he lowered his gaze. “I just didn’t think. Being engaged—it’s so new. I didn’t realize. I didn’t mean to hurt you.”

  “I accept your apology.” Her voice was stiff and jerky, but she made no effort to smooth it.

  He reached for her hand, and she let him have it.

  “You are so beautiful.”

  He almost got away with it—distracting her from her anger, not to mention from the fact they hadn’t resolved anything.

 

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