Playing the Hand You're Dealt
Page 36
Harry walks into the living room and greets everyone, introducing himself to people who don’t know how much gratitude they really owe him.
“You need me to help with anything?” Bill asks, coming around the corner from my bedroom.
Bill Harris is my friend. We met two and a half years ago when I moved to this neighborhood. He’s a retired accountant and die-hard Redskins fan. He lost his wife ten years ago and hadn’t dated much since. One day he saw me working in my front yard and told me that a lady as pretty as me shouldn’t be down on my knees, digging in the dirt. I laughed and told him that where I was from, that’s all we used to do. Turns out he’s from the South, too. We hit it off over coffee and my sweet potato pie, and he’s been sitting his feet under my table ever since.
I smile and look up at him. “As a matter of fact, I know how you can help me.” I wink, motioning for him to come over and give me the kind of sugar that don’t go in no cake!
I never thought I’d find love fifty years after I lost it, but I have. God surely is good because I have a wonderful man, children who love me, and grandchildren to spoil. I didn’t come by my family the traditional way that most folks do, but they’re mine just as surely as if I’d breathed life into each one of them. In the end, things always work out like they’re supposed to. I’ve learned that you just have to play the hand you’re dealt.
Don’t miss Trice Hickman’s latest,
Breaking All My Rules
On sale in March 2013 from Dafina Books
Chapter 1
“Nooooo!” Erica screamed over and over, gasping for breath, drowning in fear. She was falling. Falling fast. Her slender arms and thick legs flailed through the air as if on a runaway roller coaster. Her mouth gaped open and her eyes bulged wide when she realized what was next to come.
Erica knew it would only be a matter of seconds before she hit the hard, rugged earth below. Death was near. She could feel it, hear it calling her name, and smell it invading her nostrils.The bitter taste of it filled her mouth as she screamed.Then suddenly, her panic and fear vanished into the whisper thin air around her.
She couldn’t explain her newfound sense of calm, or what had caused the shift, so she did the only thing that was left to do at such a terrifying moment—she obeyed it.
She stopped struggling.
She relaxed her tired limbs and welcomed the uncomfortable peace spreading through every inch of her now flaccid body—the kind of peace that only death could bring. This is it, Erica thought as she swallowed hard. She closed her eyes, anticipated the rough gravel and dirt that lay mere inches away, and readied herself for the fatal impact.
Bonk! Beep! Bonk! Beep! Bonk!
Erica shot straight up in her bed and fumbled as she reached over to silence the alarm clock blaring loudly near her head. Her chest heaved up and down with rapid speed as her lungs fought for air. She took two deep breaths, closed her eyes tightly, and began to slowly count backward from ten until her body no longer trembled with fear.
She breathed in and out as her heart searched for its natural rhythm. After several minutes she was finally able to inhale and exhale at a normal pace. “Thank you, God,” she whispered, covering her parched mouth with her trembling hand. The exercise had worked again, just as it had so many other nights and mornings in the past.
Erica slumped her tense shoulders and shook her head, falling back onto her pillow. Waking up like this made her wish she could end her day before it began.
It was Friday morning, and despite the fact that the weatherman had forecasted a bright, beautiful day to start what promised to be a picturesque weekend ahead, Erica felt as if dark clouds were hovering directly above her head, ready to drench her at any moment.
“Aggghhhh” she moaned.
Erica was normally an upbeat, optimistic go-getter who always looked on the cheery side of things, no matter how bleak. But lately her state of mind had been steering counter to her character, and she couldn’t seem to shake the funk it brought in its wake.
She knew she should adopt a better outlook and operate from a more hopeful place. After all, she’d learned long ago that negative thoughts only led to negative outcomes. But no matter how hard she tried to conjure up her usual glass-is-half-full, rainbow-laden optimism, she couldn’t run from her haunting dreams or the seeming bad luck that was bearing down on her.
This was the second nightmare she’d had this month, and she could feel the heavy weight of her past pressing into her here and now.
Erica turned over again and shifted her body against her dampened, Egyptian cotton sheets as she adjusted her purple gown, which now clung to her skin. She wiped her brow, thinking about how her frightful dreams were always accompanied by unsparing panic and horrid night sweats.
Whenever she felt stressed, unsure, anxious, or confused, the nightmares would return. Some nights she was chased through winding, narrow streets that never seemed to end. At other times she was hiding from faceless assailants whose footsteps nipped at her heels. And in her darkest, most alarming dreams, she was completely helpless and without a way to protect herself. Those were the dreams she feared most, like the one she’d just had—falling powerlessly from the sky without a safety net to catch her.
But no matter the particulars of her dreams, the results were always the same; she was fighting for her life, awaking just in the nick of time to save herself from a fatal ending. It had been that way for the last twenty-five years, and it had all started the night of her tenth birthday.
After a whirlwind day of fun, laughter, and gifts that had been capped off with chocolate cake and vanilla ice cream to celebrate her first double-digit birthday, Erica and her family had settled in for the evening. A peaceful quiet rested over their large brick house as her mother finished cleaning the kitchen and her father read in his study. Erica and Nelson, her twelve-year-old brother, were walking upstairs to their bedrooms when they heard frightening sounds that froze their feet into place.
From nowhere, a thunderous crash of glass, followed by the terrifying sound of gunshots, sliced through the still night. What happened next raced by so fast that neither young Erica nor Nelson had time to react as they stood motionless, watching the violent scene unfold before their helpless eyes.
In the span of the few seconds that it had taken her mother to dial 911, Erica’s father was shot twice after racing from his study to defend his family. But despite his wounds, he’d managed to break the would-be thief’s arm, bust his nose and lip, and leave him a bloody mess before the man hastily limped away through the broken glass of their patio door to a getaway car that had been parked down the street.
The intruder, a drug-hazed career criminal, was apprehended that very night.Thankfully, Erica’s father survived the brutal attack. It took months for the wounds to his right shoulder and upper abdomen to heal, but the emotional scars lingered with the family long after. It was especially hard for Erica, a sensitive child who wore her emotions on her sleeve.
The violent home invasion had traumatized her on a day that had been otherwise filled with nothing but goodness.
Erica learned many things on that fateful night. She learned how strong and fearless her father was. How calm and level-headed her mother was. How resilient and determined her brother was. And how painfully fragile she was. But, most of all, she learned that no matter how wonderful your day started out, everything could change after the sun went down.
DAFINA BOOKS are published by
Kensington Publishing Corp.
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New York, NY 10018
Copyright © 2010 by Trice Hickman
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.
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First Dafina trade paperback printing: December 2012
ISBN: 978-0-7582-7935-4
Trice Hickman, Playing the Hand You're Dealt