Say it, Scarlett.âWe messed it up before. And it wasnât fun. The contrast between theâbetween what we had in bed, and the restââ
He answered slowly, âWe were different people, then. In a different situation.â
âDifferent enough, compared with the people we are now?â
âThat weekend â¦â He leaned closer, looked down at their joined hands, rubbed the pad of his thumb over her knuckles in slow strokes.
âYes, can we talk about that weekend?â she said.
âWe need to.â
How? She sensed it wasnât going to be easy. The noise level in the beer garden was rising. Hard to tell if the other conversations going on would be a protection or would force them to talk uncomfortably loud.
She stretched forward, almost knocking down her beer, so that their heads were close. Listening distance. Debating distance. Kissing distance, almost.
Almost, but not quite.
Dear Reader,
Several times a year, I drive a particular Australian road which takes me past a massive sprawl of old cars, many of which have been there for more than fifty years. They are now valuable for their rare spare parts, and have become a local tourist attraction. You can see this place and read about it for yourself if you search the internet for âFlynnâs Wreckers Cooma.â When I started writing Scarlett and Danielâs story, I had no idea that a car yard similar to this oneâsmaller, thoughâwas going to be important in the story, but it soon emerged as a significant part of Danielâs past. With Scarlettâs help, he will need to work through his history and deal with the legacy of those cars before they have a hope of building a future together.
This is one of the things I love about writing. Something that starts off as a small detail can take on a major and meaningful role, and you have to wonder if my subconscious knew better than I did, and had been storing up my impressions of Flynnâs wrecking yard all these years.
Scarlett and Daniel had a sizzling encounter several years before this story starts, but it was a classic case of meeting at the wrong time. Now that theyâve found each other again, they soon discover that the same things that broke them apart before could shatter everything a second time. I hope you enjoy their journey.
Lilian Darcy
LILAN DARCY has written nearly eighty books. Happily married, with four active children and a very patient cat, she enjoys keeping busy and could probably fill several more lifetimes with the things she likes to doâincluding cooking, gardening, quilting, drawing and traveling. She currently lives in Australia but travels to the United States as often as possible to visit family. Lilian loves to hear from readers. You can write to her at PO Box 532, Jamison PO, Macquarie ACT 2614, Australia, or e-mail her at [email protected].
It began with a familiar headache, which grew steadily worse as Scarlett drove north to Vermont. She pulled over, swallowed painkillers and kept driving, but ten miles from her brotherâs house, before the painkillers could kick in, her vision began to blur as if her eyes were windowpanes and there was water running down the glass.
She almost stopped driving at that point, but by the time sheâd found a place to pull over, the water seemed to have stopped running and she could see clearly again. Things didnât feel quite right. On top of the pain, her brain felt foggy and disconnected. But she was less than ten minutes from Andyâs, so it seemed best to keep on going. After all, sheâd had these spells before.
The symptoms had been milder those other times, though. Self-diagnosis followed by several tests to rule out more serious options had settled on migraine. The spells always passed before they cost her any significant time at work.
And before they forced her to question the way she was living her life.
Today, the real trouble hit two miles from her destination, and this time there was no warning. The whole world just keeled over like a ship run aground, except she knew the problem wasnât with the world, it was inside her head. Even though she was wearing chunky sunglasses with dark lenses, the daylight felt so bright that it blinded her, and her senses were scrambled and out of her control.
No question about waiting for a safe place to pull over now.
The safe place had to be right here, because another five seconds at the wheel and she would crash. She couldnât see, could barely move ⦠She just managed to brake hard, bring the car to a halt and kill the engine, a couple of hundred yards from the Radford town boundary, and she could only hope she was on the shoulder not the road.
Then she rolled the window down and sat.
Fought the dizziness and pain.
Waited, with her hands gripping the top of the steering wheel and her forehead pressed hard against it, for the moment when she would feel well enough to leave the car, or find the phone that lay in her purse.
But the moment didnât happen. If she tried to open her eyes, all she saw was painful, blinding brightness. If she moved an inch, the world tilted and rolled. She groped for her purse, but it was out of reach on the floor of the passenger seat where it must have slid when sheâd braked so suddenly.