He picked up on the first ring
âHello?â Even in that one word, a west Texas drawl, the quality of Justinâs voice echoed. It was the same resonant public speaking voice that had made Brandonâs grandfather stand out in the halls of Congress.
She swallowed, then started again. âMay I speak to Brandon Smith, please?â
âThis is Brandon.â
Markie closed her eyes. She was talking to her very own son again. Just like the first time, it was scary, but also strangely intoxicating. It took all her will to suppress tears as her mind flashed back to the pages of her journal where she had made those promises to him so long ago. Would she keep them now? Or would she injure her child? Would she hold him back?
Or let him go?
Dear Reader,
People often ask me where I get my story ideas. THE BABY DIARIES were first âconceivedâ when I was reminiscing with a friend about the birth of my middle daughter, who was born when my husband was a candidate in a statewide political race. It occurred to me then that babies seldom arrive when it is convenient.
THE BABY DIARIES are three stories of three sisters, each having a baby under most inconvenient circumstances, each falling in love under equally inconvenient circumstances.
For these stories I returned to my beloved Texas Hill Country. My brother and sister-in-law, her mother, Jean, and Jeanâs longtime friend Helen were perfect traveling companions as we hit the trail in the minivan and explored the colorful towns and rural areas that eventually melded into the setting I have named Five Points.
One final note: authors are also often asked if their work is autobiographical. Yes and no. While my own impressions and experiences are always unconsciously woven into any story, this town and these characters are pure fiction. For example, unlike the conniving Marynell McBride, my own mother was honest to a fault and would never, ever have touched someone elseâs diary!
As always, my best to you,
Darlene Graham
P.S. I love to hear from you! Drop me a line at
P.O. Box 720224, Norman, OK 73070 or visit www.darlenegraham.com. While youâre there, take a peek at the next book in THE BABY DIARIES series, Lone Star Rising.
This first book in my new Texas series is dedicated to
Rick and Jody, my precious brother and dear sister-in-law. Despite six-shooters, snakes and donkeys that bite, I will go back to the Hill Country with you two anytime!
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
If you are reading this diary without my permission, stop right now. I mean it. I want you to put this diary down. Immediately. For your information, this means you, Mother.
Iâm warning you, if you keep going youâll find out things you donât want to know.
Okay, I know youâre still reading, you snoopy old thing, so you asked for it. Donât blame me if you have a horse heart attack.
I am pregnant.
There.
And Justin Kilgore is the father. How do you like that? Me and Justin. Weâre in love. And donât you dare try to interfere with that. Donât you dare go and ruin the one beautiful thingâ
âWHAT ARE YOU reading there, Sissy?â
Markie McBride jumped at the sound of her middle sisterâs words, even though Robbie always spoke with the soothing lilt of a low violin. Not even the antics of her three little boys could make Robbie McBride Tellchick raise her voice.
âNothing.â Markie closed the cover and tried to stuff the book back down in the dusty old cardboard box where sheâd found it moments ago. It had been a physical shock to look down and see, wedged in between her yellowed first communion dress and her high school letter jacket, next to a flank of musty yearbooks, the faded mauve cover that was her Baby Diary, as she had come to call it many years ago. Eighteen years ago, to be exact. Her son would be eighteen by now. Correction. Her son was eighteen nowâa bright, exceptional, eighteen-year-old young man. Only a few days ago, she had talked to him herself, in a phone conversation that had haunted her ever since.
As her hand struggled in the tangle of dry-cleaner bags encasing the cloth items in the box, she realized, not for the first time, that her mother was a totally conflicted human being.
Hot and cold. Love and hate. That was Marynell McBride. Mostly cold and mostly hate, Markie decided sadly, as her mind absorbed this latest in a long line of betrayals. Where was the photograph? Markie couldnât risk looking for it now.
The box had been tightly packed and the diary refused to fit back into its appointed slot. Markie pushed harder. So weird. So, so weird that sheâd stumbled on the thing now, when sheâd been compelled to return to Five Points to attend her brother-in-lawâs funeral. Now, at the very time that her son, Justinâs son, was actually preparing to come here, as well. It was almost like some kind ofâ¦eerie convergence. Like fate or something.