Hi Sweet Samplers! Next Thursday is Thanksgiving here in the US. India, the heroine of my upcoming romantic comedy, Afterglow, is a kindergarten teacher who loves holidays. Her divorce , though, has changed Thanksgiving forever. Here's a bit about the holiday:
Tom called two days before Thanksgiving. “It’s going
to be strange,” he said. “not doing the whole family turkey thing. I’m going to
miss your turkey.”
I
reminded him that he was doing the whole turkey thing. Marissa was coming from
Providence. Allie and Liz were coming. I was the one who wouldn’t be doing the
whole turkey thing.
Mitch
would be working a double shift on Thanksgiving so that the other ER doctor
could spend the day with his wife and three children. “It’s just another day,”
was Mitch’s take on it. I didn’t agree with his no big deal attitude toward the
holiday. It seemed a big deal, maybe because I’d never spent a major holiday
alone before.
“I’m
sure Sasha will do just fine,” I said to Tom now. I didn’t even choke on her
name. I had Mitch, after all, who would come by after his shift ended. I had
Mitch, and Tom could have turkey and Sasha and his mother. He could even have
the company of Allie and Liz. It would all turn out for the best. I wished the
best for Tom.
Well,
okay, I didn’t really wish the best for him. Though I might like to be, I’m not
that magnanimous. It would probably be a disaster and that would serve him
right. I imagined the still frozen turkey that Sasha had forgotten to thaw, and
burnt potatoes and undercooked squash.
“We’re
having it catered,” Tom said.
“How
nice,” I said. I changed the imaginary scenario to Sasha dropping the
pre-cooked turkey on the floor and Marissa smiling tightly while sipping her
third gin and tonic and Allie introducing all of them to her girlfriend, Liz.
“Would
you,” Tom was saying as I pictured Marissa, three gin and tonics to the wind,
winding her grandmotherly pearls in her fist while a large gravy stain grew on
the plush beige carpet.
Afterglow is coming in January.
India Othmar isn’t having a great year. Her husband of thirty-one years
has left her for their son’s ex-girlfriend. Her grown children have
moved home. Her best friend Eva seems determined to set her up with
every oddball in their small Massachusetts town. And her most
significant relationship these days is with Cherry Garcia.
But India is more resilient than she thinks. And though it will take a broken arm, a lawn littered with engine parts, some creative uses for shoes, and a scandalous love affair of her own, she learns, much to her surprise, that her life hasn’t ended with her marriage.
But India is more resilient than she thinks. And though it will take a broken arm, a lawn littered with engine parts, some creative uses for shoes, and a scandalous love affair of her own, she learns, much to her surprise, that her life hasn’t ended with her marriage.
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Sounds wonderful, Ute! Well, sounds full of struggle and growth, love it!
ReplyDeletethanks JA. It's all about the struggle, isn't it?
DeleteSounds like a page turner to me!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks Stacy!
DeleteOh my you had me conjuring up all sorts of disasters and i hope she stops to think before she says 'yes' to the question.
ReplyDeletethanks Sherry. India's not in a mood to say yes to Tom. LOL
DeleteBrilliant! I can just picture the scene! Gutted about the caterers but hey! maybeTom will miss the home cooking - or choke on the wish bone...?
ReplyDeletethanks Jackie. India can only hope something terrible will befall Tom. :)
Delete