The Someday List

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The Someday List Page 1

by Stacy Adams




  “We’ve all read the happily-ever-after fairy tale, but The Someday List makes us feel what it’s like on the other side of the rainbow, when the fairy-tale marriage comes apart.”

  Virginia DeBerry and Donna Grant

  Bestselling authors

  “Stacy Hawkins Adams writes with verve, humor, and poignancy about one woman’s quest to find her own voice with courage and wit. In The Someday List you will find wisdom and truth.”

  Adriana Trigiani

  Bestselling author of the Big Stone Gap series,

  Lucia, Lucia, and Very Valentine

  “Stacy Hawkins Adams creates a heart-wrenching story with strong, lovable, and all-too-human characters. The Someday List gives us all hope that God truly is in control.”

  Jacquelin Thomas

  National bestselling author of Jezebel

  “In perhaps her best book yet, Stacy Hawkins Adams paints a vivid picture of God’s redemption in the face of our failures—past and present. Rachelle Covington has everything a woman could want. Or so she thinks until a close friend announces she’s dying, forcing Rachelle to think about what could have been . . . and who she really is. Readers will enjoy the suspenseful conclusion as Rachelle chooses between yesterday and someday. Get comfortable for this one and buy a copy for a friend.”

  Marilynn Griffith

  Author of Rhythms of Grace

  “Stacy Hawkins Adams has done it again! Her new series examines the real life issues of long lost love and marital discord through appealing and relatable characters that will leave readers thinking about their own Someday List.”

  Sherri Lewis

  Bestselling author of My Soul Cries Out

  and Dance Into Destiny

  Other books by Stacy Hawkins Adams

  Speak to My Heart

  Nothing but the Right Thing

  Watercolored Pearls

  Jubilant Soul

  Book One

  The

  Someday

  List

  A Novel

  Stacy

  Hawkins

  Adams

  a division of Baker Publishing Group

  Grand Rapids, Michigan

  © 2009 by Stacy Hawkins Adams

  Published by Revell

  a division of Baker Publishing Group

  P.O. Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287

  www.revellbooks.com

  Printed in the United States of America

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Adams, Stacy Hawkins, 1971–

  The someday list : a novel / Stacy Hawkins Adams.

  p. cm.—(Jubilant soul ; bk. 1)

  ISBN 978-0-8007-3266-0 (pbk.)

  1. Married women—Fiction. 2. Conduct of life—Fiction. 3. Family—Fiction.

  4. Texas—Fiction. I. Title.

  PS3601.D396S67 2009

  813 .6—dc22 2008039422

  Unless otherwise indicated, Scripture is taken from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION ®. NIV ®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved.

  Scripture marked NLT is taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation, copyright © 1996, 2004. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Wheaton, Illinois 60189. All rights reserved.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  To my sister, Patsy Scott,

  for serving as a modern-day Lazarus,

  and reminding those who know and love you

  that God can, and still does, work miracles.

  No, dear brothers and sisters, I have

  not achieved it, but I focus on this one

  thing: Forgetting the past and looking

  forward to what lies ahead.

  Philippians 3:13 NLT

  Table of Contents

  Prologue

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25

  26

  27

  28

  29

  30

  31

  32

  33

  34

  35

  36

  37

  38

  39

  40

  The Someday List

  1

  Acknowledgments

  Prologue

  Rachelle fumbled with the bouquet of yellow roses and locked eyes with him. Her flowers sagged from thirst.

  The simple gold band she clutched stuck to her sweaty palm. Instead of a flowing white gown, she wore the black pencil skirt and short-sleeved white silk blouse that, until today, had served as her choral ensemble uniform.

  Her groom was dressed in his standard singing attire too—white collared shirt, black tie, and black slacks. He had removed the diamond earring from his left earlobe, his goatee was freshly cut, and as far as she was concerned, he had never looked finer.

  Between the two of them, the worldly goods they possessed amounted to less than what Rev. Prescott likely paid to have his preaching robe cleaned.

  And yet, she knew this was right. The right time, the right place, and the right man, even if she had to marry him in secret. One day they would look back on this elopement with tenderness and pride, telling their children about their union in an empty church sanctuary, not far from the university they would graduate from in six months.

  He smiled at her and arched an eyebrow, questioning the delay in her response. The minister repeated himself.

  “Rachelle Marie Mitchell, do you take this man to be your lawfully wedded husband?”

  She smiled. Her beloved didn’t have to worry about her having second thoughts—not when she felt this way.

  “I do, Reverend Prescott,” she said. “I do.”

  1

  Rachelle Mitchell Covington felt both giddy and guilty.

  In twenty-four hours she would be completely alone and she couldn’t wait.

  No worries about temporary empty-nest syndrome—she was happy to let her parents deal with two preadolescent know-it-alls for half of the summer. And no need to feign an interest in her husband’s wants, work, or even his world.

  For the first time in their eleven-year marriage, she and Gabe would be away from each other for more than a week. When he informed her that he had agreed to speak at a medical conference the week before he left for a medical mission trip, she knew he expected her to complain. Rachelle had frowned for his benefit, but also bit her lip to keep from cheering.

  Though it was already steamy outside this morning, the temperature inside Houston’s Intercontinental Airport left her longing for her cashmere coat. Rachelle shivered and smiled when Tate and Taryn, looking like they had stepped off the pages of a Children’s Wear Digest catalog, turned to wave one last time before passing through the security gate and approaching a waiting airline employee.

  The young woman in the crisp navy and
white uniform would escort them to their direct flight to Philadelphia.

  The fifth and third graders had been trying to whine their way out of their annual summer visit with Rachelle’s parents for two days, because they would miss their friends, feared boredom, and believed Gram would have way too many rules. Rachelle had reminded them again this morning that, despite those perceived hardships, they had no problem enjoying the regular outings, video games, and other treats they enjoyed during their stay.

  When Tate and Taryn disappeared around a bend that led to Terminal A, Gabe turned toward Rachelle and motioned with his head that he was ready to go. He and Rachelle walked briskly toward the parking deck without touching or talking.

  Gabe walked a stride or two ahead of her, as if he were on a mission. He tempered his gait as they neared his SUV, and he unlocked the doors with his key chain device.

  “I’m not going into the office this morning since I’ll be flying out early tomorrow,” he said without looking toward Rachelle. “Let’s grab breakfast at Olivette.”

  Rachelle scrambled for an excuse, but none presented itself. She hadn’t mentioned that she soon would be leaving too, for a weekend trip to the West Coast. It didn’t matter that he didn’t know. He wasn’t going to be home anyway.

  “That’s fine,” she finally said about breakfast, although he had already steered his Mercedes in the direction of the hotel restaurant.

  They rode in silence during the half-hour drive and didn’t speak until the waitress asked for their order.

  Rachelle sighed and responded by rote. “He’ll have smoked salmon and a bagel with a side of fresh fruit.”

  Gabe nodded and looked up at the waitress. “She got it right.”

  “Salmon and bagel with a side of fruit,” the waitress repeated, lodging the order in her memory.

  Rachelle leveled her eyes at Gabe. “Order for me.”

  He peered at her over the rim of his glasses. “How would I know what to order for you?”

  Rachelle didn’t feel like playing along with his public politeness today. She sat back and folded her arms.

  “Try.”

  The waitress shifted from one foot to the other and turned her gaze to a nearby bank of potted plants.

  Gabe’s nostrils flared and he clenched his teeth. “Just order something already.”

  “If you can’t do it, I guess I’m not hungry,” Rachelle said.

  Gabe opened the leather-encased menu and glared at the offerings. Seconds later, he pushed it into the waitress’s face. Startled, she grabbed it before it landed on the Oriental rug beneath the table.

  “Bring her an omelet with ham, mushrooms, and cheddar cheese.”

  The waitress nodded and left quickly, her reddish-brown ponytail swaying with each step. Rachelle knew the young lady had to be wondering how a couple could fight over a breakfast order. If she had asked, Rachelle would have assured her this skirmish was overdue.

  Since she had received Jillian’s unsettling invitation three weeks ago, Rachelle’s tolerance for just about everything had plummeted. With the kids away for the next month, she didn’t have to contain herself. Gabe should be thankful he was leaving for a business trip tomorrow.

  He laid his linen napkin across his lap and stared at her.

  Rachelle challenged him with her eyes. She wanted him to care enough to question her, to probe why she was being defiant.

  But just as she knew what to order for his meal, she knew he wouldn’t take the bait. He was his usual, detached self—enveloped in skin that was a smooth, savory brown and as self-absorbed as a two-year-old whose favorite words were “no” and “mine.”

  In that moment, something welled up inside of her. She looked past Gabe’s glasses, past the perfect white teeth, past the pool of nothingness in his eyes. She wanted to see into his soul. She wanted to know that he had an “I would die for you” kind of love inside of him. For her. Even if they had been together for what seemed like forever. Even if she didn’t know how she really felt about him. If one of them could summon the emotion, maybe that would make all the difference.

  He was leaving tomorrow for New York and would return home for one day before traveling to Uganda. In twenty-four hours, she’d have the entire house to herself. But right now, she realized, she needed to leave to save herself.

  Right now, what mattered more than being a good wife was being good to herself. Hearing from Jillian for the first time in a long time was nudging her to stop procrastinating.

  Rachelle took a sip of her coffee and rose from her seat. “Stay and enjoy your breakfast. Call a taxi when you’re done. I may or may not be at home by then.”

  “What—”

  Before he could protest, Rachelle raised her hand to stop him. Her voice trembled when she addressed him in a whisper. “Gabe, I’m tired of playing like the happy couple. Our life is strangling me. I want a real marriage and this isn’t it . . . And by the way, I’ve always hated cheddar cheese.”

  She grabbed her purse from the back of her chair and strode toward the door, heart pounding as if it would burst through her sleeveless tangerine top.

  Had she really done that? Did she just walk away from her well-to-do, handsome husband and leave him stranded in a restaurant?

  What would her parents say? Their friends? For the first time that she could recall, those questions wouldn’t determine her actions.

  Rachelle slowed her pace when she reached the restaurant’s entrance and nodded farewell to the hostess. She strode through the lobby of the Houstonian Hotel and thanked the bellhop who held open the door for her. While the valet retrieved Gabe’s Mercedes truck, she stood at his booth, tapping her foot and looking over her shoulder.

  In the minutes since she had left the table, Gabe hadn’t pursued her. Despite the fact that she had fueled this drama, she was hurt. She breathed in the humid summer air and exhaled slowly, trying to keep her composure. For once, she wished she were sweaty enough to mask the moisture on her face. The last thing she wanted to admit was that once again, she had allowed him to make her cry.

  2

  Rachelle sat in the middle of her four-poster bed an hour later, staring into space. She clutched a cordless phone to her ear and listened to her younger sister’s nasal drawl.

  “Girl, no you didn’t do that to that man,” Alanna said. “How could you, when you know he’s leaving for his medical conference tomorrow and then going to Africa?”

  Rachelle shrugged as if her sister could see her through the phone. Alanna lived four hours away, in Dallas, but they talked at least three times a week, sometimes more if one of them had a pressing issue.

  “I didn’t plan it, Lanna,” she said. “It just happened. I couldn’t help myself. I don’t think I’m really leaving him; I just want him to know how unhappy I am. I want him to put some effort into this marriage, other than just paying the bills.”

  “But, Rachelle,” Alanna said dryly, “by tomorrow morning you would have had your space, without causing all of this drama. And believe me, paying the bills is nothing to sneeze at. What gives?”

  Rachelle remained silent for what felt like an eternity while Alanna waited. She didn’t want to go into details about the turmoil Jillian’s news had thrown her into, and other than that, she had no explanation.

  “When I find out, I’ll let you know,” Rachelle said. “I’m going to go pack for him and for myself. I don’t think I told you—I’m going to California for the weekend. Jillian lives there now, remember?”

  Alanna sniffed. “You haven’t seen Jillian in years. Why fly across the country now? Don’t get there and start wallowing in your memories of what coulda shoulda been. Hopefully when you come back, Gabe won’t have changed the locks.”

  Rachelle ignored her sister’s cynicism. Alanna didn’t know that Jillian needed her. Plus, she had always questioned how Rachelle had landed such a good man while she—despite her “fabulosity”—still found herself catching frogs.

  “Girl, you don’t
know how good you have it,” Alanna would often tell Rachelle after relaying the details of another breakup with a boyfriend she hadn’t known was married, on medication, or afraid of commitment.

  Before the conversation went down that path this afternoon, Rachelle ended the call and began packing for a brief stay in San Diego. Her flight didn’t leave for another two days but this would give her something to do, other than watching the clock to see what time Gabe made it home. Usually she was too busy with Tate and Taryn to notice, but with them gone, she needed to keep herself occupied.

  She intended to visit California for less than forty-eight hours, but that still meant a large suitcase, because she could never decide what to wear. Rachelle tucked her digital camera and a scrapbook of childhood photos of herself and Jillian between her favorite knee-length cocktail dress and a floor-length emerald green one. She added a pair of jeans and shorts and a few casual tops, in case there was some downtime with Jillian, or, more likely, the other guests. When her bag was ready, Rachelle sat it in the back of her closet.

  She padded across the plush plum carpet and walked into Gabe’s closet. She surveyed his collection of bags and retrieved a small suitcase from a low-level shelf.

  Packing for him came as easily as ordering his meals. It took minutes to fill the designer luggage with several white shirts, ties, slacks, and the suit he needed for his medical conference. She pulled out a large hard-shell suitcase for the mission trip to Uganda.

  “Might as well get all of it out of the way,” she muttered.

  Rachelle walked over and sat on Gabe’s side of the bed. She rummaged through his nightstand for the list of recommended travel items the medical mission leader had given to the “freshmen” on the team—him, another doctor in his practice, and a surgical nurse, all of whom were first-time participants.

  Three pairs of khakis—check. Five long-sleeved shirts and a few T-shirts—check. Socks, underwear—check. Sneakers—check. Insect repellent . . . the list went on and on.

 

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