Dear Trish, someday I want to marry you...
Craig Cadman has proposed to Trish Lowery at least a dozen times. Of course, he started when he was nine and kept at it until her parents moved away when they were both teens. Clearly, she didnât take him seriously. Because now, after ten years, sheâs back...and engaged to someone else. He has to remember that. Just do the job, help her renovate her gramâs Victorian house and keep a professional distance. But Craig canât forget those old feelings. Is working together just stirring up nostalgia...or is this something more?
âDonât you go up there again.â
Trish turned so they faced each other only inches apart. âListen. This is my house, and I plan to check out any and all repairs. How else can I know everything is done correctly?â
Craig held up his iPhone. âPictures.â They were close enough that he felt her warm breath against his face, caught the scent of perfume. That was something new. She never wore perfume back when they were kids. âI guarantee my work.â He paused, diminishing the space between them so they were nearly nose to nose. âDonât go up on the roof unless someoneâs here. Namely me. You understand?â
âAll right, already.â She stepped onto the ground. âWhen did you get so bossy?â
Trishâs cheeks were bright pink in the cold. Why hadnât he kissed her when heâd had the chance? Every part of his being had wanted to. Still did. But...
They werenât kids anymore. She was spoken for, committed to someone else. So was he. There would never be any Trish and Craig together.
Dear Reader,
Itâs a sad time for Trish when she returns to Riverbend, New Jersey, after a ten-year absence. She just lost a grandmother who was so special, and now sheâs back to collect the house her grandmother left her. She loved this place while growing up, as well as all her childhood friends. And of course Craig, the friend whoâd wanted to marry her from the time he was nine.
I raised my family in northern New Jersey in a town similar to Riverbend and spent countless hours completing projects on our hundred-year-old farmhouse. Many of the windows had been painted shut decades before we bought it. Although our home wasnât as spacious or as attractive as Trishâs inheritance, it did provide me with numerous projects, some of which I could include in her story. I became skilled at plastering, painting and repairing, and I can appreciate why someone wouldnât want an old house.
I love hearing from readers and can be reached through my website, marionekholm.com, or heartwarmingauthors.blogspot.com.
Marion
MARION EKHOLM was writing stories and reading them to her friends back in fifth grade, in Plainville, Connecticut. She always wanted to be either a writer or an artist. Neither one seemed like a possibility in her day, when most women became either teachers or secretaries. But she had determination on her side and a mother willing to help with her dreams. She earned her BFA at Rhode Island School of Design and became a lace designer in New York City, met her husband and moved to New Jersey. Years later, she took stock of her life. She had a career, two children, a beautiful home and opportunities to travel extensivelyâbut sheâd never written anything other than letters. She began writing for real and eventually became an editor of a newspaper and sold numerous short stories and magazine articles. Thanks to Harlequin Heartwarming, sheâs now a novelist. Her third novel, Forget Me Not, follows Just Like Em and An Act of Love. Sheâs found signing her books and talking to people whoâve read them an absolute delight.
This book is dedicated to Shelley Mosley, my critique partner, mentor and friend. Her encouragement over the years has been a driving force in my career. Thank you.
Acknowledgments
My thanks to the many people who helped me gather all the information for this book.
To my friend Fran Deming, who interviewed volunteer firemen at the Company No. 1 Fire Department in Mahwah, New Jersey. Although both of our husbands had belonged to that organization, I couldnât remember all of the details. She managed to get answers to all my questions. Even so, my book is fiction, and a few artistic liberties may have been taken.
To my nephew Matt Suess, a fabulous photographer who told me what kind of camera Craig would use.
To Glenda Chagolla for her technical knowledge. Iâve enjoyed working with her at Glendale Community College, where she teaches CAD (computer-aided design) programs.
I learned about scissor lifts and knuckle booms from my son, David, a skilled electrician and handyman who answered any questions relating to DIY work.
Additional thanks go to Harlequinâs Dana Grimaldi, my personal editor, who provided directions for the story.