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Fans of Downton Abbey will enjoy this late Victorian romance by USA Today bestselling Julianne MacLean:
Seduced at Sunset (Pembroke Palace Book 6) – Sample now for Free!

“You can always count on Julianne MacLean to deliver ravishing romance.” – NYT bestselling author Teresa Medeiros

Seduced at Sunset (Pembroke Palace Book 6)
4.3 stars – 45 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

Sometimes the matchmaker finds a love of her own…

Lady Charlotte Sinclair has long given up her dreams of happily ever after. Years ago, a tragic accident claimed the life of her beloved fiancé, but somehow she found the strength to go on—as an independent woman with a secret double life that has earned her millions. Lately, however, she has begun to yearn for something more…

While setting out to play matchmaker for her mother, Lady Charlotte meets a rugged, handsome stranger who saves her from a thief in the street, but her heroic rescuer soon turns out to be more mysterious—and dangerously captivating—than any man she has ever known. Swept away by passion into a sizzling summer affair with a man who leads a double life of his own, she vows to live only for pleasure with no promises of tomorrow. But soon she must accept that one final night of ecstasy with an irresistible lover is never going to be enough…

5-star Amazon reviews:

What a beautiful love story which left me with goosebumps at the very end.”

Wonderful characters you can’t help but love. I couldn’t put it down. MacLean is a very talented writer with a flair for the Victorian time…”

Click here to visit Julianne MacLean’s Amazon author page

And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample of Seduced at Sunset:

KND eBook of The Day: Award-winning and USA Today bestselling author Julianne MacLean continues her rave-reviewed series with THE COLOR OF JOY – Sample for FREE Now!

The Color of Joy (The Color of Heaven Series Book 8)
4.5 stars – 10 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

The Color of Joy is USA Today bestselling author Julianne MacLean’s eighth installment in her popular Color of Heaven series, which has delivered many happy sighs to thousands of readers worldwide and left them clamoring for more. Bring tissues and prepare to be up all night reading this fast-paced, emotionally charged tale about the obstacles we encounter in everyday life and the real life magic that helps us to triumph over them.

★★★★★

After rushing to the hospital for the birth of their third child, Riley and Lois James anticipate one of the most joyful days of their lives. But things take a dark turn when their newborn daughter vanishes from the hospital. Is this payback for something in Riley’s troubled past? Or is it something even more mysterious?

As the search intensifies and the police close in, strange and unbelievable clues about the whereabouts of the newborn begin to emerge, and Riley soon finds himself at the center of a surprising turn of events that will challenge everything he once believed about life, love, and the existence of miracles.

5-star Amazon reviews:

Be swept away, by author Julianne MacLean’s new novel The Color of Joy! This heartbreaking story completely overwhelmed me with strong emotions, sadness, hope and forgiveness!”

Julianne MacLean captures my heart and soul with each of her books.. Everyone in the series has been a joy to read.

Click here to visit Julianne MacLean’s Amazon author page

And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample of The Color of Joy by Julianne MacLean:

KND Freebies: Deeply moving THE COLOR OF THE SEASON by bestselling author Julianne MacLean is featured in today’s Free Kindle Nation Shorts excerpt

“…incredibly poignant and unbelievably gripping…”

Award-winning and USA Today bestselling author Julianne MacLean continues her rave-reviewed The Color of Heaven series with THE COLOR OF THE SEASON — a  fast-paced, emotionally resonant tale that will move and inspire you.

“…Ms MacLean is a wonderful storyteller. The characters in her stories seem so real, and I care what happens to them…”

Don’t miss it while it’s 40% off the regular price!

The Color of the Season (The Color of Heaven Series Book 7)

by Julianne MacLean

The Color of the Season (The Color of Heaven Series Book 7)
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Boston cop Josh Wallace is having the worst day of his life. First he’s dumped by the woman he was about to propose to. Then everything goes downhill from there when he is shot in the line of duty. While recovering in the hospital, he can’t seem to forget the woman he wanted to marry, nor can he make sense of the vivid images that flashed before his eyes when he was wounded on the job. Soon, everything he once believed about his life begins to shift when he meets Leah James, an enigmatic resident doctor who somehow holds the key to both his past and his future…
Praise for Julianne MacLean’s Color of Heaven series:

Outstanding series!!!
“These books are so well written on many levels…”

Must read series!
“…The author does a fantastic job of bringing a little of each previous book into the ones that follow but making each story feel…completely different…”

an excerpt from

The Color of the Season

by Julianne MacLean

Copyright © 2014 by Julianne MacLean and published here with her permission

Prologue

Josh Wallace

This past holiday season, I received the greatest gift imaginable—the gift of love. Or maybe it was the gift of life, or wisdom, or a combination of all those things. I’m still not entirely sure. All I know is that I am transformed.

Sometimes I look back on what happened and wonder if it was some kind of stress-induced hallucination. The doctor I told tried to convince me of that, but others were open-minded about my experience and admitted freely that they didn’t have all the answers. That what happened to me was outside their realm of experience.

What I am referring to is my unexpected encounter with the afterlife.

Who would have guessed that such remarkable things would happen to a man like me? A cop who carried a gun, never went to church, and considered any type of spiritualism to be silly new age stuff. That was for people who were weak and afraid of the real world, people who needed something else to believe in. Something to help them cope. Or so I thought.

I’ll be the first to admit I was naive in that area, and I viewed the world, and my place in it, very superficially.

“What you see is what you get,” I used to say.

Who knew there was so much more beneath, and above, the surface of absolutely everything?
Chapter One
A heavy rain was falling when I got out of bed that fateful morning, which seemed fitting, considering I was about to get dumped. I’d felt it in my gut all through the night, churning inside me like a rancid meal. I’d hardly slept a wink.

I rose from bed and stood at the paned window of my Boston flat, watching violent gusts of wind sweep raindrops across the asphalt in the street. Mist rose up from the ground, while leaves on the maple trees along the sidewalk fluttered and the branches swayed.

My body tensed and my head throbbed as I imagined Carla out there somewhere, ignoring my calls.

Because she was with him.

What were they doing right now? I wondered irritably. At this very moment?

I bowed my head and leaned forward over the white windowsill, bracing my weight on my knuckles and clenched fists, breathing deep and slow.

Hell. I needed a cup of coffee.

Turning away from the window, I moved into the kitchen to brew a pot, then poured myself a bowl of cereal, which I ate on the sofa while watching the sports channel on television.

I checked my phone again for a text from Carla. Still…nothing.

A part of me wanted to give her the benefit of the doubt, because I knew I wasn’t the most rational guy in the world when it came to cheating girlfriends. I’d been burned once before, so I had a small problem with jealousy.

But what if she’d been in a car accident on her way home yesterday and was in a coma at the hospital and couldn’t get in touch? If that was the case, I was going to feel pretty guilty.

But it wasn’t the case, and I knew it. I’d have heard something.

No, she hadn’t texted or called because she didn’t know how to tell me it was over. She felt badly about standing me up for dinner the other night and probably wasn’t ready to face me and explain herself.

I felt a muscle twitch at my jaw.

Setting my empty cereal bowl down, I rested my elbows on my knees and stared at the blue velvet ring box on the coffee table.

Thirty-five hundred bucks. That’s how much that gigantic sucker had cost, and I’d had no choice but to set up a financing plan with monthly payments because I didn’t have that kind of cash just sitting around. I probably should have chosen something smaller, but I wanted to make an impression.

Looking back on it, I suppose I thought—with my limited view of the world at the time—that the bigger and flashier the ring, the more tempting my offer would be.

I reached forward to open the box.

Yep, it was one blindingly gorgeous ring. If she could just see it and give me a chance to pop the question… Surely there was still hope. She barely knew the other guy.

In that moment, my phone vibrated with an incoming text. I quickly picked it up.

Chapter Two

A half hour later, I opened my front door to find Carla standing on my veranda, shivering in the wind and rain. Her long blond hair was pulled up in a clip at the back, and she looked as classy as ever.

It was astounding, how physically attracted I was to her. Even now.

Especially now.

“Hey,” I coolly said. “Come in.”

I lived on the second-floor apartment of a century home that had been converted into a rental property, so there wasn’t much room in the narrow entrance hall. It certainly wasn’t an ideal location to hold a conversation about the rest of our lives together, so I started up the stairs.

“Want a cup of coffee?” I asked, more than a little aware of the chill in my tone, but I couldn’t mask it. I was pissed.

“Sure,” she replied, unbuttoning her belted trench coat as she followed.

We reached the second level and I went to pour her a cup while she hung her coat and purse on a hook in the hall. By the time she joined me in the kitchen, I was stirring in the cream and sugar.

“Here.” I held out the mug.

She accepted it without meeting my gaze and glanced around the apartment. “Thank you.”

An ominous silence ensued. The tension was thick as mud.

“Should we go and sit down?” she suggested.

I nodded and gestured toward the sofa in the living room, where we’d spent many evenings wrapped in each other’s arms, watching late night movies.

She chose the leather chair by the window, however, which I considered a bad sign.

I sank onto the sofa and watched her sip her coffee. Still she hadn’t looked me in the eye. Then, at last, she set the cup down on the table. Naturally, after she called, I’d moved the ring box and placed it in a drawer in my bedroom. At least for now.

“I’m sorry about the other night,” Carla said at last. “I hope you were able to cancel the reservations without any trouble.”

I shrugged a shoulder. “It’s not like they bill you for it.”

She nodded and looked down at the floor. “No, of course not.”

Another awkward silence rolled through the room, then she cupped her forehead with her hand and shook her head. “God, I’m really sorry, Josh. You’re angry with me and you have every right to be. I know things have been…strained between us lately.”

“Have they?” I asked, needing her to elaborate, because honestly, I’d thought everything was fine. Well, mostly fine. Maybe there was a part of me that knew she didn’t belong to me completely, and that’s why I’d bought the ring.

Carla let out a sigh. “Yes. I think maybe, we moved a little too fast, right from the beginning. We’d both been through some rough times with relationships that didn’t end well, and that’s why we wanted so badly for this to work.”

“I thought it was working,” I replied. “And I’m still not convinced it isn’t. We’ve been together almost a year, Carla, and we’re good together. You know that. We have great chemistry and we both want the same things—to get married someday and raise a family. Everything was fine until…”

I stopped myself, because I needed to hear her say it.

“Until I flew to Canada to be with Seth in the hospital,” she replied.

The muscles in my shoulders clenched.

A few months ago, Carla had received a phone call about her late husband, Seth, who had died in a plane crash the year before. But apparently they’d found him alive—or so they thought. In the end, it turned out that the man floating on an iceberg in the middle of the North Atlantic wasn’t Carla’s husband after all, but some other passenger on the plane who had claimed Seth’s belongings.

The man’s name was Aaron Cameron—and I wanted to wring his scrawny neck.

Carla sat forward. “I don’t know how to explain it, but something happened to me when I was in Newfoundland, and I’m as confused by it as you must be. All I know is that I need to figure this out, and in order to do that, I have to be with Aaron.”

My gut squeezed with nausea. I shut my eyes, clenched both hands into fists. “You barely know him. You spent a couple of days with him in the hospital, and now you think he’s the great love of your life.”

“I’m sorry,” she continued in a gentle tone. “I wish you knew how hard this has been for me. I hate doing this, but I don’t want to lead you on, or heaven forbid, cheat on you while I figure out what I want.”

My eyes flew open. “Figure it out? So you’re not even sure?”

She sat back and stared at me. “Like you said, I barely know him, but there’s something between us that…” She paused. “I don’t know how to explain it, Josh, but it just feels right. It’s as if we were meant to find each other and I need to explore that.”

Meant to find each other? Seriously?

Reeling with frustration, I rose to my feet and went into the kitchen to pace around for a minute or two. After I cooled the anger in my blood, I returned to the living room and stood on the carpet, facing her.

“We have a good thing here,” I said, “but you want to throw it all away for a guy you’ve only spent a few days with? I thought you were the rational type with both feet on the ground, but maybe I don’t know you as well as I thought I did. Maybe the so-called ‘magic of the universe’ is doing me a favor here, because I sure as hell wouldn’t walk away from what we have to go on some ridiculous quest for my soul mate. You know I don’t believe in that crap, and I sure as hell hope you don’t expect me to wait around for you while you go and do that.”

She stared at me with something that resembled pity. It only served to piss me off even more.

“I’m sorry you feel that way,” she said, “but you’re right, I suppose. The universe is doing you a favor, because this isn’t meant to be. If it was, everything would be clear. All the pieces would have fallen into place.”

“It was clear,” I reminded her. “At least, it was for me. And you don’t really believe that, do you? That the universe will take care of everything? We have to take control of our lives, Carla, and make things happen the way we want them to happen.”

“I’m not saying we shouldn’t take control,” she argued. “I’m just saying that sometimes you have to follow your gut.”

“And your gut is telling you that you should run off with a guy you barely know,” I reiterated. “That sounds really intelligent.” I tapped my forefinger on my temple. “Good to see you’re using the old noggin for these major life decisions.”

“I’m sorry, Josh. I never meant to hurt you.”

Well, you did.

My stomach lurched.

“You can show yourself out,” I eventually said.

All the color drained from her face. Then she stood up.

I stepped out of the way to let her pass. Slowly, she collected her coat and purse from the hook on the wall while I stood watching with a tight jaw that made my entire skull throb.

Don’t go, I wanted to say. Please stay. You’re making a mistake. We can work this out. I have a ring for you in the other room. Would that change your mind if I offered it to you now?

But I didn’t say any of that, because I had my pride to consider.

Instead I stood in anger, glaring at her while my head pounded with tension.

“I’m very sorry,” she said again. “I hope one of these days you’ll be able to forgive me.”

“Don’t bet on it,” I replied, and felt an instantaneous regret for lashing out at her that way—at this woman I loved. Still loved.

But this was the second time I’d been cheated on, and I was bitter.

I was terribly, terribly bitter.

Chapter Three
A few years back, I fell in love with a beautiful woman named Brooke, who I intended to marry. We met in an upscale restaurant downtown not long after I entered the police force. She was fresh out of college, working an entry-level position with a large marketing firm.

I still remember what she wore that night—a skinny black pencil skirt, glossy white blouse, red, patent leather heels. Her black hair was sleek and shiny and hung to a sharp point at her waist. She had an ivory complexion and her smile electrified the whole room. The physical attraction between us was off the charts and we immediately entered into a relationship that lasted well over a year.

All I’d wanted was to be with her forever and maybe that was my problem. I lost sight of everything else in my life. When things eventually settled into a slower pace between us, I wasn’t prepared for the possibility that she might get bored.

Which she did.

That became obvious when I invited Kevin, an old college buddy of mine to come and stay with me for the weekend. Brooke soon decided he was far more exciting than I was.

I’ve since come to realize that she’d always been attracted to men she didn’t know very well. I suppose I was in that category when we first met in the restaurant. But when the excitement faded, so did her level of interest.

I walked in on Brooke and Kevin in my apartment, in bed together—which was a double betrayal because Kevin had been one of my best friends since freshman year. I took it pretty hard when he did that to me.

Last I’d heard, he and Brooke dated for about six months, then went their separate ways. I haven’t spoken to either of them since, and it was a long time before I felt ready to date again, let alone to enter into another serious relationship. For a while there, I thought I would never be ready.

Until I met Carla.

*   *   *

I was scheduled to work the graveyard shift on the day Carla dumped me, which at least spared me the agony of going to bed alone, tossing and turning, and over-analyzing what went wrong between us.

I’d done enough of that over the past few days when she stopped answering my calls.

But really… What had I done wrong? I was a good guy with a decent job with the Boston Police Department. Sure, I was only an officer in the traffic division, but I was young, educated and ambitious, and I had my eye on the next level. I was confident that eventually I’d slide over to the routine patrol division, learn the ropes there, and sooner or later get promoted to lieutenant. Or I could apply for advanced training for the SWAT unit anytime.

As far as my personal life was concerned, I was as loyal and family-oriented as any man could be. I loved my mom and treated her like a queen. I enjoyed cooking and didn’t mind doing dishes and laundry. I’d always loved kids––I certainly had plenty of experience with my nieces and nephews. I adored Carla’s teenage daughter Kaleigh and had tried my best to get to know her.

When all was said and done, I had been more than ready to walk down the aisle and become a husband and stepdad. I’d thought Carla wanted that too. I believe she did want it.

At least until she flew up to Canada to meet Robinson Crusoe.

Chapter Four

As soon as I got into the squad car shortly after midnight and started up the engine, my partner Scott set his coffee in the cup holder and cocked his head.

“So what happened between you and Carla?” he asked. “Did she ever get back to you?”

I shifted into reverse, backed up, and drove out of the station parking lot toward the turnpike.

“Yeah,” I replied. “She came over this morning and finally said what needed to be said, so at least now I know.”

“All, hell,” Scott said. “How are you holding up?”

I tugged down on the brim of my hat. “Let’s just say I’ve had better days.”

“What about the ring?” Scott asked. “Did you have a chance to give it to her, or at least tell her about it?”

I scoffed. “Are you kidding? After she stood me up and spent the weekend with another guy, I didn’t think it was an opportune time.”

Scott picked up his coffee and sipped it. “Sorry to hear that. You guys seemed good together. You sure as hell looked good, like some Hollywood power couple or something.” He paused and glanced out the window while the vehicle tires hissed through puddles on the wet pavement. “But listen—maybe if you tell her about the ring, it might change her mind and make her realize what she’s walking away from. You know how girls are about diamonds. The sparkles make them all weepy. My wife practically fainted in my arms when I proposed to her.”

“I don’t think so,” I said, shaking my head. “She seems pretty into the other guy—like she thinks they’re soul mates or something, which I really don’t get, and I just can’t forgive. We’ve been together for a year. How could she just flick a switch and do an about-face like that?” I waved a hand over the steering wheel. “I really need to let this go. I’m starting to sound like a broken record—a pathetic, heartbroken sap. Somebody, please, just shoot me now.”

Scott chuckled. “Hey, I understand. She delivered a blow. Seemed like it came out of nowhere, too.” He patted my shoulder. “You’ll get through it, buddy. We just need to find you a new girl. A really hot girl.”

I nodded because that was the “guy” thing to do, even though I had no interest in hot new girls. All I wanted was Carla.

“Do you see that?” Scott asked, pointing at the silver minivan in front of us, weaving back and forth over the center line.

Scott called in the license plate number to the dispatcher while I activated the siren and flashing blues.

Chapter Five

“I’ll get this,” Scott said, raising the hood of his slicker and opening the car door at the shoulder of the road. “But you could order the rain to stop, if you get a minute.”

“Sure thing.” I leaned forward slightly to squint up at the dark, overcast sky while water sluiced down over the windshield.

While I kept the wipers moving at full speed and let the car idle to prevent the windows from fogging up, Scott got out and approached the vehicle.

Attentively, I watched him tap a knuckle on the window of the van and begin to converse with the driver. I noted another passenger in front—a woman leaning across the console to speak to Scott, though it was difficult to make her out through the blinking rear tail lights and heavy rain.

Scott eventually moved a few feet back and gestured for the driver to step out of the vehicle.

Must be a DUI, I thought. Not surprising, given how the van was weaving about.

Just as I reached to unfasten my seatbelt, however, I heard a gunshot. I looked up to see Scott stumbling backwards onto the road.

Shit!

Within seconds, I had radioed for backup and was out of the squad car, going for my gun.

Freeze! Drop your weapon!” I shouted, darting a quick glance at Scott. He was conscious and clutching his shoulder.

By now the perp had scrambled back into the minivan. The passenger door opened and the woman fell onto the road, screaming hysterically. “Help me!”

“Stay down!” I shouted at her.

Just as I reached the driver’s side door, the tires skidded over the wet pavement, spitting up loose gravel. The van fishtailed out of there.

The next thing I knew, I was aiming my .38 and considering firing off a couple of rounds at the left rear tire, but I didn’t have to. The driver hit the brakes for some reason and the minivan did a 180 on the slick pavement. It skidded into the guard rail about a hundred yards away.

“You okay?” I asked Scott, who was rising unsteadily to his feet. I reached out to give him a hand.

“Yeah. The little bastard got me in the arm. I think it just grazed me.”

“Get the woman,” I said, hearing the sound of the minivan engine sputter. The suspect was attempting to make another escape. “Backup is on the way.”

Sirens wailed in the distance. The front door of the van swung open. The suspect hopped out and sprinted down the off-ramp.

“I’m going after him,” I said to Scott, and broke into a run.

Chapter Six

I barely registered Scott’s voice calling after me, telling me to wait for backup. I probably should have listened to him, but I couldn’t let the suspect get away. Not after he’d shot my partner at close range.

Running at a fast clip down the off ramp, I radioed in my location and followed the perp into an auto body repair shop parking lot.

I was breathing heavily by then, aware of the sound of my rapid footfalls across the pavement, splashing through puddles.

The suspect disappeared around the back of the building. I followed briskly, pausing at the corner to check my weapon and peer out to make sure he wasn’t positioned there, waiting for me.

He had gained some distance and was scrambling up and over a chain-link fence. I immediately resumed my pursuit and climbed the fence to propel myself over.

Inside the repair shop, a dog barked viciously. An outdoor light flicked on, illuminating the rear lot. I was almost over the fence when a door opened and a large German shepherd was released from within. He came bounding toward me, barking and growling.

I dropped to the ground on the other side of the fence.

“Police officer in pursuit of a suspect!” I shouted at the man who followed his dog across the lot.

“He’s heading that way!” the man helpfully replied, pointing, but I didn’t stop to acknowledge his assistance because the suspect was escaping toward a residential area across the street.

Stop! Police!” I shouted.

To my surprise, just as the shooter reached a low hedge in front of a small bungalow…instead of jumping over it, he halted on the spot and whirled around.

I trained my gun on him. “Drop your weapon!”

He raised both arms out to the side.

“I said drop your weapon!”

I blinked a few times to clear my vision in the blur of the rain. Then…

Crack!

A searing pain shot through my stomach, just below the bottom of my vest. Then another crack! I felt my thigh explode.

Somehow I managed to fire off a few rounds before sinking to the ground. The suspect did the same.

In that instant, two squad cars came skidding around the corner, sirens wailing and lights flashing.

Slowly, wearily, finding it difficult to breathe, I lay down on my back in the middle of the street and removed my hat as I stared up at the gray night sky. A cold, hard rain washed over my face. I began to shiver.

Vaguely, I was aware of the other two units pulling to a halt nearby. I turned my head to watch two officers in raincoats approach the suspect, who was face down in the ditch in front of the hedge.

Then rapid footsteps, growing closer…

“Josh, are you okay?”

I looked up at Gary, a rookie who had offered me a stick of gum in the break room before I’d headed out that night. I nodded my head, but felt woozy. “I think I’m hit.”

“Yeah,” he replied, glancing uneasily at my abdomen. “Help’s on the way. Hang in there, buddy. You’re going to be fine.”

Feeling chilled to the bone, I shook my head. “I don’t think so.”

By now Gary was applying pressure to my stomach, which hurt like hell. He shouted over his shoulder, “Need some help over here!”

I clenched my jaw against the burning agony in my guts and leg, and heard more sirens.

“Will they be here soon?” I asked with a sickening mixture of panic and dread.

“Yeah,” Gary replied. “Any second now. Just hang on.”

“It’s cold,” I whispered. “I should have worn the raincoat.”

More footsteps. I felt no pain, only relief but was drifting off. It was hard to focus.

Another cop knelt down beside me.

I labored to focus on his face.

“MacIntosh,” I said. “Can you call Carla for me? Tell her I’m sorry about this morning. Tell her I love her. I didn’t mean what I said. I should have walked her to the door.”

“You can tell her yourself,” MacIntosh replied.

His patronizing response roused a wave of anger in me.

“No.” I grabbed his wrist and spoke through clenched teeth. “I need you to promise me… Promise me you’ll tell her, or I swear I’ll knock your head off.”

“All right, all right,” he replied. “I’ll tell her.”

That was the last thing I remembered from that day.

What happened next was strange and incredible. From that moment on, my life became divided into two halves—everything that happened before the shooting, and everything that happened after.

… Continued…

Download the entire book now to continue reading on Kindle!

The Color of the Season
(The Color of Heaven, Book 7)
by Julianne MacLean
Special Kindle Price: $2.99!
(reduced from $4.99 for a limited time only)

BEST PRICE EVER on another fast-paced, emotionally gripping tale in the Color of Heaven series…
The Color of Love by USA TODAY bestselling author Julianne MacLean

“Julianne MacLean knows what her audience likes…compelling characters and a soul-baring journey of love.” – Reader to Reader

The Color of Love (The Color of Heaven Series Book 6)
4.8 stars – 36 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

USA Today bestselling author Julianne MacLean continues her Color of Heaven series with another fast-paced, emotionally gripping tale that will move and inspire you.

Carla Matthews is a single mother struggling to make ends meet and give her daughter Kaleigh a decent upbringing. When Kaleigh’s absent father Seth—a famous alpine climber who never wanted to be tied down—begs for a second chance at fatherhood, Carla is hesitant because she doesn’t want to pin her hopes on a man who is always seeking another mountain to scale. A man who was never willing to stay put in one place and raise a family. But when Seth’s plane goes missing after a crash landing in the harsh Canadian wilderness, Carla must wait for news… Is he dead or alive? Will the wreckage ever be found?

One year later, after having given up all hope, Carla receives a phone call that shocks her to her core. A man has been found, half-dead, floating on an iceberg in the North Atlantic, uttering her name. Is this Seth? And is it possible that he will come home to her and Kaleigh at last, and be the man she always dreamed he would be?\

5-Star Amazon Reviews

“… I really enjoyed this historical romance novel filled with tenderness and hope!”

“The Color of Love is filled with adventure so real you can smell the air and feel the cold. The interaction and relationships of the primary characters are well written and you care about them as though they were your own friends…”

“… Julianne MacLean has done a masterful job of telling a multi-tiered love story.”

About The Author

USA Today bestselling author Julianne MacLean came to the romance genre after completing a degree in English literature from the University of King’s College in Nova Scotia. She fell in love with some of the classic romances — Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights, Pride and Prejudice — and after a brief stint as a federal government auditor, decided to try her hand at becoming a modern-day romance writer.

Julianne is a three-time Rita Finalist and winner of numerous awards, including the Romantic Times Magazine Reviewers Choice Award, the Colorado Romance Writers Award of Excellence, and the Greater Detroit Romance Writers Booksellers’ Best Award. She has sold over 1.2 million books in North America alone.

She is a devoted wife and mother, and loves to travel. She has lived in New Zealand and Ottawa, and is now settled happily in Nova Scotia, while working on her latest historical romance.

For more about Julianne MacLean and her work, please visit her website.

*  *  *

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KND Freebies: Bestselling heartwarming novel THE COLOR OF A DREAM is featured in today’s Free Kindle Nation Shorts excerpt

***KINDLE STORE BESTSELLER***
Literature & Fiction/Family Life…
and 48 straight rave reviews!

From award-winning and USA Today bestselling author Julianne MacLean comes this emotionally charged tale of a young woman who has fought hard to survive a heart transplant, but soon finds that her new heart is engaged in another battle altogether…

“…Ms MacLean is a wonderful storyteller. The characters in her stories seem so real, and I care what happens to them…”

Don’t miss The Color of a Dream while it’s 80% off the regular price!

The Color of a Dream (The Color of Heaven Series Book 4)

by Julianne MacLean
The Color of a Dream (The Color of Heaven Series Book 4)
(reduced from $4.99 for limited time only)
4.9 stars – 48 reviews!
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Nadia Carmichael has had a lifelong run of bad luck. It begins on the day she is born, when she is separated from her identical twin sister and put up for adoption. Twenty-seven years later, not long after she is finally reunited with her twin and is expecting her first child, Nadia falls victim to a mysterious virus and requires a heart transplant.

Now recovering from the surgery with a new heart, Nadia is haunted by a recurring dream that sets her on a path to discover the identity of her donor. Her efforts are thwarted, however, when the father of her baby returns to sue for custody of their child. It’s not until Nadia learns of his estranged brother Jesse that she begins to explore the true nature of her dreams, and discover what her new heart truly needs and desires…

5-star praise for The Color of a Dream:

Outstanding Series!!!
“These books are so well written on many levels…I can’t wait for the next book to come out!!!”

must read series!
“…The author does a fantastic job of bringing a little of each previous book into the ones that follow but making each story feel like a completely different book. Believable characters and story lines…”

an excerpt from

The Color Of A Dream

by Julianne MacLean

 

Copyright © 2014 by Julianne MacLean and published here with her permission

Prologue

Jesse Vincent Fraser

 

Sometimes it’s difficult to believe that coincidences are simply that: coincidences.

How could it be that easy when the most unlikely events occur and we find ourselves connecting with others in ways that can only be described as magical?

Until recently, I didn’t believe in that sort of thing—that fate, destiny, or magic played any part in the outcome of a man’s life. I always believed that what happened to me later, when I became a husband and father, resulted from the decisions and choices I made along the way, with a little luck—good or bad—tossed into the pot for good measure.

Things are different for me now. How can I not believe in something more, when what happened to me still feels like a dream?

It’s not difficult to pinpoint the exact moment when my world began to shift and all the puzzle pieces began to slide into place. It was a month before Christmas almost twenty years ago. A heavy, wet snow had just begun to fall.

I was fourteen years old, and it was the day I began to hate my older brother.

 

Chapter One

 

Some people said we lived in the middle of nowhere because the road wasn’t paved and ours was the only house for many miles.

I didn’t think it was nowhere. I liked where we lived on the distant outskirts of a quaint little town where our father was the only dentist.

I suppose it was a bit remote. Once you drove past our house, which stood at the top of a grassy hill with pine trees behind it, you reached a bend in the road and were suddenly surrounded by thick forest on either side. It was extremely dark at night.

That didn’t stop people from speeding, however, because it was the only alternate route between our town and the next and there were plenty of country folk who preferred to avoid the interstate. Partly because our road provided a more direct route into town, but mainly because it was where the bootleggers lived. If you wanted liquor after hours—or if you were underage—a fifteen-mile drive down a deserted gravel road was only a minor inconvenience.

More than a few times, we were awakened in the night by drunks who drove into the ditch where the road took a sharp turn not far from our home. We always left our outdoor lights on all night, so we were the first house they staggered to. Luckily, the ones who came to our door were always polite and happy drunks. There hadn’t been any fatalities and my father never refused to let them use the phone to call a tow truck.

The event that changed my relationship with my brother, however, occurred in the bright cold light of day during the month of November, and we weren’t coming from the bootlegger’s shack. We were on our way home from a high school football game where we’d just slaughtered the rival team—thanks to my brother Rick, who was captain and star quarterback.

Earlier in the day, Rick had been coerced by our mother to let me tag along to the game. Now he was dropping me off at home so that he and his buddies could go celebrate.

 

* * *

As we turned left onto the gravel road, the tires skidded and dust rose up in a thick cloud behind us. Rick was doing the driving and I was sandwiched into the back seat between two keyed up linebackers.

“Did you see the look on the other coach’s face when you scored that first touchdown?” one of them said. “We were only five minutes into the game. I think that’s when he knew it was going to get ugly.”

“Ugly for them, but not for us,” Greg said from the front seat. He high-fived Rick, who lay on the horn five or six times.

The car fishtailed on the loose gravel as he picked up speed, eager to get rid of me no doubt.

“Hey,” Greg said, turning to speak over his shoulder to Jeff, the linebacker to my right. “What are you going to do if Penny’s there?”

I may have been only fourteen years old, but I’d heard all the gossip surrounding the senior players on the team. They were like celebrities in our town and if the school could have published a tabloid, these guys would have been on the front cover every week.

“She better not be there,” Jeff replied, referring to the house party they were going to as soon as they dropped me off. “She knows we’re done.”

“She won’t take no for an answer, that one,” Rick said.

“He speaks from experience,” Greg added, facing forward again.

Everyone knew the story. Penny dated my brother for three months the year before, but when she got too lovey-dovey he broke it off with her. She wouldn’t stop calling him though. Then she had a minor mental breakdown and lost a lot of weight before her parents finally admitted her to the hospital. She was out of school for a month.

This year, she’d set her sights on Jeff and they’d had a brief fling a few weeks ago. Now he was avoiding her and everyone said he had a thing for some girl in the eleventh grade who just broke up with her longtime boyfriend. I heard he went off to college in September, joined a fraternity and decided he didn’t want to be tied down anymore. She was heartbroken and Jeff wanted to step in and lift her spirits.

We all knew what that meant.

I felt sorry for her. I also felt sorry for Penny, who kept getting her heart stomped on and would probably end up in the hospital again. From where I stood at the sidelines, it seemed obvious that she should steer clear of the football team and maybe join the science club instead, but girls just didn’t seem to go for guys like me who were good at math. They liked big muscles and stardom. Even if it was only small town stardom.

We drove past the Johnson’s hayfield and I wondered what the cows thought of the dust cloud we were creating as we sped up the gravel road.

When at last our large white house came into view at the top of the hill, Rick didn’t slow down and I wondered how he was going to make the turn onto our tree-lined driveway.

That was the moment I spotted Francis—our eleven-year-old golden lab—charging down the hill to greet us.

Chapter Two

 

I grabbed hold of the seat in front of me and pulled myself out of my sandwiched position between Jeff and Rob.

“Slow down,” I said to Rick. “Francis got loose.”

What was he doing out of the house? I wondered. Our parents weren’t home. They’d left early that morning to visit my grandmother. Rick was the last one to leave the house and before that I was sure I’d seen Francis asleep on his bed in the family room as I walked out.

“I’m not slowing down,” Rick said. “We’re already late for the party, thanks to you.”

It all seemed to happen in slow motion after that…as I watched Francis gallop down the hill, his ears flopping. The sound of our tires speeding over the packed dirt and gravel was thunderous in my ears.

“I think you better slow down!” I shouted, hitting Rick on the shoulder.

“Shut up,” he said. “He’s not stupid. He’ll stop when he gets closer.”

My heart rose up in my throat as our two paths converged. I prayed that Rick was right about Francis knowing enough to stop when he reached the road.

Then whack!—the horrendous sound of the vehicle colliding with my dog.

Only then did Rick slam on the brakes. “Shit!”

“Did you just hit your dog?” Jeff asked as the car skidded sideways to a halt and we were all tossed forward in our seats.

“Lemme out!” I cried as I scrambled over Jeff’s lap.

Rick was quicker to open his door and leap out to see what had happened.

My whole body burned with terror at the sight of Francis, more than ten yards back, lying still at the edge of the road.
Chapter Three

 

I ran to Francis as fast as my legs would carry me and dropped to my knees. I laid my hands on his belly, rubbed them over the contours of his ribs and shoulder blades.

“Francis!” I cried, but he didn’t move.

Rick shoved me aside. “Move Jesse! Let me check him!”

I was practically hyperventilating as I stood up, only vaguely aware of the other three guys coming to take a look.

“Is he okay?” I asked, while Rick pressed his ear to Francis’s chest to listen for a heartbeat. Then he put his fingers to Francis’s nose. “Shit!” he shouted. “He’s dead.”

“What? No! He can’t be!” I dropped to my knees again and laid my head on Francis’s side. There were no signs of life. I stared at his belly, willing it to rise and fall. I needed to see him breathing, to know it wasn’t true.

“Maybe we should take him to the vet!” I pleaded, unable to accept what I knew to be true. “Maybe they can save him!”

“It’s too late,” Rick said. “He’s gone.”

The words, spoken so straightforwardly, made my eyes fill up with tears while blood rushed to my head. My temples began to throb.

“Why didn’t you slow down?” I demanded to know. “He was running straight for us.”

“I didn’t think he’d hit us,” Rick explained.

“What a stupid dog,” Greg said.

“He’s not stupid!” I sobbed. Then I stood up and slammed my open palms into Greg’s chest to shove him away. He was built like a tank, however, and barely took a step back.

“Settle down,” Rick said, hitting me in the shoulder and shoving me.

“This is all your fault!” I cried. “And what was he doing outside? Didn’t you shut the door when you left?”

He stared at me for a long moment, then shoved me again. “This isn’t my fault. It’s your fault, jerk, because we wouldn’t even be here if Mom didn’t force me to drag you along. We wouldn’t be late for the party. We’d be there right now, and Francis wouldn’t be…”

Thank God he stopped himself, because I don’t know what I would have done if he’d finished that sentence. Actually said the word.

Still, to this day, I fantasize about tackling Rick in that moment and punching him in the head.

But my anger was tempered by grief. I felt as if I were dissolving into a thousand pieces. I swung around and sank to my knees again, gathered my beloved dog—we’d had him since I was three years old—into my arms and wept uncontrollably.

“Jesus,” Jeff said. “What are we gonna do? We can’t just leave him here.”

“No,” Rick agreed. “We’ll have to take him up to the house.”

I felt his hand on my shoulder and this time he spoke more gently.

“Come on Jesse. We have to get him off the road. Help me lift him. We’ll put him in the car.”

I glanced back at my father’s blue sedan. “How?” I asked, wiping at my tears with the back of my hand.

“We’ll put him in the trunk.”

“The trunk?” I replied. “No. He can’t be in there alone.”

“It’s the only way,” Rick replied. “We’ll cover him with the blanket. Now get up and help me. Guys? You gotta help too. He’s gonna be heavy.”

Each breath I took was a hellish, shuddering ordeal as I slid my hands under Francis’s torso and raised him up. He was limp and it took four of us to carry him to the car. In hindsight, we should have backed the car up closer, but we were all pretty shaken. Well, at least I was shaken, and I can only assume Rick was as well, though he certainly didn’t show it. Maybe it was because his friends were there. He seemed more irritated than anything else.

Awkwardly we placed Francis in the trunk and Rick covered him with the green plaid blanket my father always kept on hand in case we got stranded in a snow storm.

“Stop crying,” Rick said as he shut the trunk. “It’s over now and we can’t do anything to change it.”

I felt the other guys staring at me as if I was a wimp, but I didn’t care. I opened the car door and got into the front seat, forcing the other three to pile into the back together. I’m sure they weren’t happy about it, but they had the sense not to object.

Before Rick got in, he went around to the front of the car to check for damage.

“How’s it looking?” Jeff asked when Rick got in.

“The fender’s dented.”

“At least it’s just the fender,” Greg replied. “You won’t even need to tell the insurance company. You can just hammer that out.”

Rick started up the engine. This time, he drove slowly as he turned up our driveway and began the long journey up the hill.

I could barely think. I felt like I was floating in cold water, bobbing up and down while waves splashed in my face. I had to suck in great gulps of air whenever I could.

At last we reached the house and everyone got out of the car. I have no memory of the next few minutes. All I recall is sinking down onto the cool grass in our front yard next to Francis while Rick stood over us.

“We have to go,” he said. “When Dad gets home, make sure you tell him it was an accident and that Francis came out of nowhere.”

“But he didn’t,” I replied.

“Jesus, he was running like a bat out of hell.”

He was just excited to see us, I thought, as I ran my hand over Francis’s smooth coat.

“You better tell him it was an accident,” Rick warned me as he returned to the car, “because you were there, too, and this wouldn’t have happened if you weren’t.”

“I told you to slow down,” I insisted.

“No, you didn’t.”

“Yes, I did.”

“It’s your word against mine,” Rick said, pausing before he got into the car, “and I have witnesses. On top of that, I’m pretty sure you were the last one to leave the house, remember? Mom’s always telling you to shut the back door.”

It wasn’t true. I hadn’t left the door open. I was waiting in the car when Rick came out with his gear slung over his shoulder, running late as usual.

I couldn’t wait to tell my father the whole story when he got home. And I was going to tell the truth, whether Rick liked it or not.
Chapter Four

 

I’d always suspected that Rick was my father’s favorite. He was his firstborn child after all, my father’s namesake—though my father went by Richard.

When you compared Rick and me, I realized it must have been difficult for my mother to pretend I was as special as him because he excelled at everything he did. He was good looking and popular, he played a number of sports equally well, and he possessed a fierce charisma that seemed to put most people in some sort of hypnotic state. Every other person in a room seemed to disappear when Rick walked into it. All eyes turned to him and everyone was mesmerized. He knew all the right things to say, especially to grownups, and everyone who met him was suitably impressed.

‘You sure hit a home run with that boy, Richard,’ friends of my father would say when they came over to the house—or ‘He’s going to be a heartbreaker,’ women said to my mother at the supermarket.

I suppose I was invisible in the glare of such perfection, but to be honest, I didn’t mind because I was a bit of an introvert, which was why I didn’t go seeking a spotlight by trying out for sports teams or running for student council. I was quite content to sit quietly in the corner of a room while Rick carried on conversations or told stories that made everyone laugh.

Naturally he was voted most likely to succeed during his senior year of high school—which turned out to be a good prediction because he ended up working in LA as a sports agent, earning millions from celebrity clients.

But that came much later. I shouldn’t be skipping ahead when you probably want to know what happened when my parents came home and found me huddled in the front yard with Francis in my arms.

Chapter Five

 

It was dark by the time they drove up the tree-lined drive. I should have at least gone into the house to get a warmer jacket at some point, because it was late November in Connecticut and near the freezing point on that particular day after the sun went down. But I didn’t want to leave Francis, so I sat there shivering in my light windbreaker until the car headlights nearly blinded me.

My mother was first to get out of the car. “Oh my God, what happened?” She strode toward me and crouched down, laid her hand on Francis’s shoulder.

“Rick hit him with the car,” I explained as my father approached. He’d left the headlights on.

My rage had been boiling up inside me for nearly two hours and I’m not sure what I sounded like. I think I might have achieved more if I’d remained calm and rational, but I was fourteen years old and didn’t possess Rick’s clever way with people.

“He murdered him!” I shouted.

“Who murdered who?” my father asked with growing concern.

“Rick killed Francis. He drove right into him, even when I told him not to.”

“That can’t be true,” Mom said, looking up at my father who glared down at me with derision. “Rick loves Francis. He would never do something like that. Certainly not intentionally.”

“You’re not making any sense, Jesse,” my father said in his deep, booming voice. “You’re upset, which is understandable, but accidents happen.”

He knelt down and stroked Francis’s head. “Poor boy. How long ago did it happen?”

“A couple of hours,” I replied.

“And you’ve been out here with him all this time?” my mother asked, laying a sympathetic hand on my cheek.

I nodded, grateful for her gentle warmth in light of my father’s severity.

She looked down at Francis and rubbed his side. I could see her eyes tearing up.

“Did he suffer at all?” she asked.

“I don’t think so,” I replied. “It happened really fast. As soon as we got out of the car, Rick said he was dead.”

My father’s eyes lifted and he regarded me from beneath those bushy dark brows. “How did he get loose? Did you leave the door open again?”

“No! I swear I didn’t! It was Rick! It had to have been.”

My parents exchanged a look and I knew they didn’t believe me.

“Well,” my mother said gently, “whatever happened, we can’t change it now and we can’t bring Francis back. This was a terrible accident, Jesse, but you mustn’t punish yourself. It’s no one’s fault.”

Why did everyone seem to think it was me? That I was the one who had something to answer for?

“Yes, it is someone’s fault,” I argued. “It’s Rick’s, because he was driving.”

“Now, see here,” my father scolded. “I won’t hear talk like that. If Francis got out of the house, it could have happened to any of us. It was an accident and if I hear you say otherwise to your brother, you’ll have to answer to me. He must feel guilty enough as it is. Do you understand?”

“But it was his fault,” I pleaded. “He was driving too fast and I told him to slow down but he wouldn’t.”

My father’s eyes darkened. “Did you not hear what I just said to you?”

I’d been raised to respect and obey my father—and to fear him. We all did, even Mom. So I nodded to indicate that yes, I’d heard what he said.

That didn’t mean I had to believe he was right.
Chapter Six

 

Rick didn’t come home that night. He slept at Greg’s so it was left to me to help Dad bury Francis at the edge of the yard under the big oak tree. My mother suggested the spot because it was visible from the top floor windows of the house, and I agreed it was the right place.

It was ten o’clock by the time we finished. I was so exhausted afterwards, I went straight to bed, but I hardly slept a wink all night. What happened that day had been a terrible ordeal and I couldn’t stop replaying all the vivid images in my mind: Francis bounding down the hill to greet us; the sound of our car striking him; then finally the eerie sight of my father shoveling dirt on top of him while I held the flashlight.

I imagined we must have hit Francis in the head with the car, which was why he died so quickly. At least, if that was the case, he probably felt no pain.

That thought provided me with some comfort, though I couldn’t overcome the white-hot rage I felt every time I remembered how Rick stood over me in the yard blaming me for what happened.

That perhaps was the real reason I couldn’t sleep. My body was on fire with adrenaline, and I wanted to hit something.
Chapter Seven

 

I woke late the next morning, having finally drifted off into a deep slumber sometime before dawn. Sleepily, I rose from bed, used the washroom, and padded downstairs to the kitchen in my pajamas.

“Mom?”

My voice never echoed back to me in the kitchen before and the implications of that fact caused a lump to form in my throat.

“Mom? Dad? Is anyone here?”

When no answer came, I went to the front hall and looked out the window. Both cars were parked in the driveway, which meant Rick had come home.

“Rick?” I climbed the stairs to check his room, but it was empty and the bed was made.

Suddenly it occurred to me where everyone must be and a feeling of panic swept over me. I hurried to the window in Rick’s room, which looked out over the back field and apple orchard, and sure enough, there they were, my mother, father and Rick, all standing over Francis’s grave.

I had no idea what was going on out there, but I felt very left out. Without bothering to get dressed, I hurried downstairs, pulled on a pair of rain boots and a jacket, and ran out the back door.

* * *

It was not one of my finer moments. I will admit that. When I reached my family, I shouted at all of them accusingly.

“What are you doing out here? Why didn’t you wake me?”

My mother turned and looked at me with concern. “You seemed so tired last night, Jesse. I thought you could use some extra sleep.”

“If this is Francis’s funeral,” I said, “I should be here.”

“It’s not his funeral,” my father informed me, impatiently. “Rick just got home and he wanted to see where we buried Francis.”

“He was my dog, too,” Rick said with a frown, as if I was being selfish.

Maybe I was, but I was only fourteen and I was grief-stricken and angry.

“Come here,” Rick said, holding out his hand to wave me closer.

I slowly approached.

“I was thinking,” Rick said, “that we should get some sort of monument. Maybe a small headstone. I have enough in my savings account to pay for it.”

“That would be a fine gesture, Rick,” my father said, “but please let me cover the cost.”

Rick laid a hand on my shoulder. “What do you think we should have engraved on it?” he asked. “His name of course, but maybe we should come up with some sort of epitaph.”

I thought about it for a moment. “What about: Here lies Francis, beloved dog and best friend?”

My voice shook and I didn’t think I could speak again without breaking down.

“That sounds perfect,” Rick said. He looked down at me meaningfully. “I’m really sorry, Jesse. I don’t think I’ll ever be able to forgive myself.”

He closed his eyes and pinched the bridge of his nose, as if he, too, could not speak about it anymore.

My father squeezed his shoulder and patted him on the back.
Chapter Eight
Five years later

 

“Hey, Bentley. Where’s your leash?”

Bentley’s head lifted, his ears perked up and he jumped off the sofa in the family room. I rose from my chair at the kitchen table and headed for the laundry room. With tail wagging, Bentley followed me in.

Dad waited only a month after we lost Francis before coming home one afternoon with a brand new puppy—an adorable black lab I fell in love with at first sight.

From that moment on, Bentley and I were best pals. He formed a closer bond with me than anyone else because both my parents worked and I was the first one home every afternoon to take him for a walk. I made sure his food and water bowls were always full in the mornings, and he slept on the floor in my room on a large green pillow. I loved him dearly.

After attaching the leash to Bentley’s collar, I led him out the front door. While I stood there locking the door behind me, I heard a car speed by on the road at the bottom of the hill. A few years earlier, a crew had come in and paved the road all the way to the next town, so we now had a steadier stream of traffic moving at a faster clip in front of our house. In addition to that, a number of new homes had gone up since the paving project was announced. We were no longer the only house between the main road and the bootlegger’s shack—which as far as I knew was still there.

There had been other changes to our lives as well. Rick graduated from high school with honors and received a scholarship to UCLA. He was still there, living out west, working on an MBA.

As for me, I was still living at home, working at the airport as an operations assistant until I figured out what to do with my life. My father wanted me to enroll in a science program and go to dental or medical school. I certainly had the grades for either of those options, but I just wasn’t that keen on following in my father’s footsteps. We were different, he and I, and I wanted to choose my own path. Maybe it would have something to do with aviation. I’d always had an interest in that. I just wasn’t sure yet.

That’s when I met Angela. She, too, had decided to take a year off after high school and she was working as a waitress in one of the airport restaurants. Just like seeing Bentley for the first time, it was love at first sight when she approached me in the staff parking lot, needing help because she’d locked herself out of her car. I called AAA for her and waited for them to arrive, but when she finally got into her car, the engine wouldn’t start. So after arranging to have her vehicle towed to a repair shop, I gave her a lift home.

Three weeks later, we were seeing each other every day and I was head over heels in love. I hadn’t had much experience with girls and I never imagined it could be like that, but everything about Angela suited me. She was a bit of a math geek, like me, and she hadn’t had much experience in the dating scene either. I couldn’t understand why, because I thought she was the most beautiful creature to ever walk the earth. Her hair was jet black, cut in a shoulder-length bob with bangs, and she had giant brown eyes and a soft, smooth ivory complexion. She was very petite at five-foot-three and went to yoga class three times a week. Every time I saw her, I felt like I’d been run over by a truck. She was fun and sweet and incredibly kindhearted. Bentley loved her, too.

Before long I started thinking about moving out of my parents’ house and getting a place of my own. My parents didn’t approve, of course, because they still wanted me to go to university and make something of myself.

When I brought it up at the dinner table one night, my father’s bushy eyebrows pulled together and two large vertical creases formed between them. He set down his fork and knife and leaned back in his chair.

“How will you ever go to a good school if you’re tied down to some waitress here in town, struggling to pay your rent every month?” he asked.

“Maybe I don’t want to go to a good school,” I defiantly replied. “Maybe I just want to keep working at the airport.” My mother fidgeted uncomfortably and her eyes pleaded for me to walk away from this one.

He scoffed at me, as if I were a fool. “Believe me, when the shine wears off of this exciting new relationship and you’re stuck in a dead end job, arguing with that girl about how you’re going to pay the phone bill, you’ll feel differently, and you’ll wish you had listened to me.”

“Maybe so,” I replied, “but it’s my life and I’m not a kid anymore. I’m nineteen and you have to let me make my own decisions.”

He and Mom exchanged a look, as if they were carrying on a mental conversation I wasn’t privileged to be a part of.

Then Mom leaned across the table and clasped my hand. “Jesse, it’s not that we don’t like Angela. She’s probably a very nice girl. But you’ve had so little experience in that area. How can I say this…?” She paused, then continued. “It’s important to try on some different styles and sizes before you make a commitment you can’t get yourself out of.”

She was so much gentler than my father. Nevertheless, I frowned at her. “It’s not like we’re moving in together.” Though the idea wasn’t far from my mind. Angela and I had only been seeing each other for a month, but I figured—and hoped—moving in would be the next step. For now, I just wanted a place where I could have my privacy to be with her.

My father still hadn’t picked up his fork. “Your mother’s right,” he said in that deep, reverberating voice that made everyone quiver. “You should be dating lots of girls before you settle for just one.”

“Like Rick does?” I tersely asked. I set my fork down and leaned back in my chair. “He dates all kinds of girls and manages to have a whale of a time. Do you want me to be more like him and break lots of hearts?”

“That’s not fair,” Mom said. “Rick has always worked very hard at school and sports. He’s incredibly busy and doesn’t have time for a serious relationship, that’s all.”

“And look where he is now,” my father added. “In the MBA program at Anderson Business School. He’ll have his pick of high-paying jobs the minute he steps off that campus.”

I took a deep breath and let it out because I knew this conversation was pointless. My parents wanted me to be a great “success” like Rick, but when it came right down to it, my definition of success differed from theirs. I didn’t need to make a million dollars. I didn’t want to have a series of superficial relationships with girls I had nothing in common with. I’d already found the girl who was right for me and I just wanted to be with her. It didn’t mean I was going to give up any thought of doing something more with my life. I just wanted her at my side, no matter what I chose to do.

“It’s my decision to make,” I said, pulling my napkin from my lap and tossing it onto the table. “Excuse me, Mom. I’m finished now.”

My father stared up at me with displeasure as I carried my plate to the kitchen. “Fine,” he said, “but don’t expect any help from me when you can’t pay your rent.”

“I’ll remember that.” On my way upstairs, I picked up the newspaper from the front hall so I could check out the classifieds.
Chapter Nine

 

A week later, I signed the lease on my first apartment, which came cheap because it was a mile from the airport and the roar of the planes flying overhead turned off most prospective renters. It was convenient for me, however, because I could reach work in ten minutes by bicycle, and Angela could come and stay over anytime she liked.

My dad was true to his word. He didn’t help me with anything. He didn’t let me take any of the furniture from my room—not a single item—so I had to purchase a bed and a table at yard sales. My mother couldn’t stand with me on this, but I remember the lump in my throat when she quietly slipped fifty dollars into my hand on the day I moved out.

It was Angela who helped me shop for plates and kitchen utensils, bedding and a small television set, all of which we found at second hand stores. Her parents gave me a sofa they wanted to get rid of anyway.

Ironically, the one thing my father let me take from the house was the only thing I really wanted.

He let me have Bentley.

* * *

I didn’t call my parents or speak to them for over two months. I wasn’t trying to punish them. I just had no interest in being lectured about why I was making the worst mistake of my life. So I waited it out and thought maybe, eventually, they would accept my decision and let me choose my own path.

The way I saw it, even if I was making a mistake, it was my mistake to make, and I was ready and willing to learn from it—and all the others I would likely make in the coming years.

Wasn’t that part of life? To follow your heart? Explore the unknown and engage in a little trial and error?

Angela, for the most part, agreed with me, though she worried about me losing touch with my family. She certainly didn’t want to feel responsible for that, so when a third month passed and there was still no communication, she suggested I pick up the phone.

“Call when you know your father won’t be there,” she suggested one evening while we were out walking Bentley. “How much you want to bet your mom will be thrilled to hear your voice and she won’t even tell him you called if you don’t want her to.”

I considered that. “If she wants to hear my voice, she could call me any time,” I said. “I’m in the book.”

“No, you’re not. You won’t be in the book until the next one comes out.”

“When will that be?” I asked.

“I have no idea,” she replied with a chuckle.

Bentley paused briefly to lift a leg and pee on a telephone pole, then continued on.

“I’m sure Mom knows the number for directory assistance,” I mentioned.

Playfully, Angela shoved me into the chain-link fence that ran along the sidewalk. “You’re impossible,” she said.

I bounced off the fence and returned to her side. “Yep, and that’s why you love me.”

“Is it?” she replied with mischief in her eyes. “I thought it was for another reason entirely.”

I smiled and wrapped my arm around her. We walked on, our steps in perfect unison while a giant Boeing 767 passed over our heads—taking off for some exotic location, no doubt.

The thought of what unexplored territories were over my own horizon filled me with hope and excitement. I felt like one those jetliners, finally lifting off the runway. Everything in my world seemed new and full of promise.

It’s a shame that feeling didn’t last longer. Two weeks later I was forced to come down from the clouds when my mother called with some news.

Suddenly, I was back on the ground, living among the pressures of my old world.
Chapter Ten

 

The sound of her voice on the phone caught me off guard because I’d just stepped out of the shower. I was dripping wet and wrapped in a towel. Angela was asleep in my bed, tangled in the sheets, wearing my flannel pajama bottoms and an oversized T-shirt.

As I carried the phone out of the bedroom, I had to drag the long cord over Bentley on his giant green pillow. He lifted his head and tilted it to the side as he watched me.

“Mom, it’s nice to hear from you,” I said.

It was a polite response, but it was also the truth. The sound of my mother’s voice in my ear reduced me to my ten-year-old self, to a time when she was my whole world. Yet that seemed like a lifetime ago.

For some unknown reason, I felt a sudden rush of panic. Had there been some horrible family tragedy? Did someone die? Was that why she was calling so early in the morning?

To this day, I don’t know why I thought that, but it woke me up to something. I regretted not picking up the phone sooner as Angela had so often encouraged me to do.

“I’m so glad I caught you,” Mom said cheerfully. I let out a breath of relief knowing no one had died. She simply missed me. I could hear it in her voice.

“How are you getting along?” she asked. “Are you eating enough vegetables?”

I laughed. “Yes, Mom. I’m eating well.”

“And how’s Bentley? The house is so quiet here with both of you gone.”

“I imagine it is,” I replied. “Bentley’s doing great. I come home for lunch every day, so he’s never alone for too long.”

I waited for her to ask about Angela, but there was a long noteworthy silence.

“How’s Dad?” I asked.

“Oh, you know, busy as usual. His receptionist is retiring next month, so he’s looking for someone.”

“Ah.”

There was another pause.

“You should come over for dinner sometime,” Mom said. “Bring your girlfriend.”

“Angela,” I mentioned.

“Yes, Angela…” Another pause. “Is she still working at the airport pub?”

My mother was doing her best to sound friendly and accepting, but I could hear her disapproval and disappointment not far beneath her cheerful façade. No doubt she and Dad would have preferred me to date a law student. Or even a flight attendant, for that matter. At least flight attendants wore heels and blazers.

“Yeah,” I replied. “She’s making great tips.”

Bentley appeared at my feet and panted up at me. I reached down to rub behind his ears.

“That’s wonderful,” Mom said.

A plane flew overhead; there was some static on the line, and I wondered if my mother was still on the other end.

“Rick’s coming home for a few weeks over Christmas,” she said, breaking the silence at last. “Will you be coming home, too?”

It seemed an odd question, and I combed my fingers through my wet hair. “You mean like…to sleep?”

To wake up Christmas morning and open Santa’s gifts as a family?

“Your room is still here,” she said. “You can come home any time you like.”

I nodded. “That’s nice to know, Mom. Thanks.”

Maybe I was being too presumptuous, assuming that my parents expected me to fail—even wanted me to—so that they could say ‘I told you so’ and wrestle me back onto the right track.

Was it possible they had changed their minds and were ready to accept the choices I was making?

That would be nice—if they could simply pick me up and dust me off if I stumbled, instead of insisting that I not stumble in the first place.

“I don’t have a lot of time right now, Mom,” I said. “I have to get to work, and Bentley needs to go outside. Maybe we can talk later. When is Rick coming home?”

“He’s flying in on the fifth,” she replied. “Maybe you’ll be the one to haul his suitcase off the plane. That’s what you do at your job, isn’t it?”

I closed my eyes and tipped my head back against the wall. “Yeah, Mom. That’s what I do.”

I said good-bye and hung up. When I finally made it to work and began loading baggage onto a Bombardier CRJ-200, I glanced up at the pilots in the flight deck windows and imagined for the thousandth time what it would feel like to fly such an incredible machine.

Perhaps a career in aviation was in my future, but I was nevertheless determined not to let my parents pressure me into any career before I was ready. Even if it was a career of my own choosing.
Chapter Eleven

 

Though I didn’t speak to my father at all over the next few weeks, I did hear from Mom who called to tell me Rick’s flight number and what time it would arrive on the fifth. She asked if I would meet him at the gate because she and Dad would be at work. She also asked if I wanted to come for turkey dinner on Christmas Day.

“Bring Angela, of course,” she added.

Encouraged by the fact that she had remembered Angela’s name this time, I accepted her invitation.

I wasn’t scheduled to work on the day Rick’s flight came in, so I was able to meet him at the gate. After we found each other in the terminal, I asked him about school and LA. He then asked about my job and the new apartment.

“You should show it to me now,” he said, “before I go to Mom and Dad’s. I can’t believe my baby brother’s all grown up.”

He teasingly messed my hair as we stepped onto the escalator. I elbowed him in the ribs.

“Fine,” I said, “but you’ll have to take a cab unless you want to hop on the back of my bike with your suitcase. Or you could walk. It’s only a mile or two.”

“You ride a bike to work?” Rick asked, his head drawing back slightly.

“Yeah. Saves on gas. And car payments.”

I walked with him to where the taxis were lined up outside, gave my address to one of the drivers, then told Rick that I’d meet him at my place in a few minutes. I fetched my bike, hopped on and managed to peddle fast enough to beat him to my front door.

* * *

“It’s a great spot,” Rick said after I gave him a two-minute tour of my apartment, “if you don’t mind airplanes landing in your front yard. Geez, how do you sleep through that?”

“I hardly notice,” I told him. “And Bentley doesn’t seem to mind it.”

Rick glanced around skeptically. “I don’t know. I don’t think I could take it.” He flopped onto his back on my sofa and crossed his legs at the ankles. “It’s great to be here, though. We should go do something.”

“Like what?” This was a new development: my brother wanting to spend time with me in a public place. I couldn’t remember a single instance when he didn’t resent being forced by Mom and Dad to let me tag along with him somewhere.

“I don’t know,” he said. “I’m starving. They didn’t serve anything on the plane except for pretzels. We should get some lunch.”

“Sure,” I replied, “but if you want to go downtown we’ll have to take the bus.”

“No problem,” he said, rising to his feet. “Let’s go.”

* * *

Rick and I enjoyed a late lunch with a few beers at a downtown pub, and before I realized what I was saying, I was telling him about my plans to look into flight school.

“Makes sense,” he said, raising his beer to his lips and taking a sip. “You were always into rockets and planes when you were a kid. What do Mom and Dad think?”

I glanced at the waitress loading up her tray at the bar. “I haven’t mentioned it to them.”

“Why not?”

“Because we don’t talk much,” I replied, “and even if we did, I don’t think I could stomach giving Dad that much satisfaction. He might think I was doing it just to make him happy.”

Rick laughed. “Well, that wouldn’t do, because we all know how much you enjoy being a total disappointment.”

I shook my head at him, choosing not to argue because we both knew it was true, to some extent. Nevertheless, I didn’t appreciate that he felt compelled to point it out.

“I’m only joking.” Rick signaled to the waitress to bring him another beer.

I finished the last of my salad, wiped my mouth with the napkin and laid it on the table. “Wonder what they’ll think of Angela when they meet her.”

“They haven’t met her yet?” Rick asked with surprise.

“No, but Mom invited us for dinner Christmas Day, so you’ll get to witness all the subtle digs and backhanded compliments.”

“Maybe they’ll surprise you,” Rick said.

“Maybe so,” I replied, “but I’m not holding my breath. And listen, don’t mention flight school to them. I still haven’t made up my mind and I don’t want Dad to get out his conductor’s wand and start directing the show. If I go, I’ll pay for it myself, and I’ll go when I’m good and ready.”

“Sure.”

The waitress brought Rick’s third beer and I asked him what he was planning to give to Mom and Dad for Christmas—I had no idea what to get them and I wanted to change the subject.

He said he had a couple of hardcovers in mind. Then he asked me what I was planning to give Angela.

Looking back on it, I should have told him it was none of his business. And I never should have taken her to dinner Christmas Day.

Chapter Twelve

 

I often wondered, growing up, what it was about my brother that was so seductive to women. He was good looking—that was a given—but it didn’t explain why they all seemed to melt into a puddle of sticky goo when he engaged them in a conversation about something as simple as the weather.

I suppose he was born with some sort of rare, penetrating charisma that few of us are blessed with. It’s why he later went on to make millions in his profession. He could convince anyone—men and women alike—to say yes to anything. ‘Another two million per year for that rookie outfielder? Sure, Mr. Fraser. We’d love to pay that.’

When Rick and I returned to my apartment after lunch, I was surprised to find Angela sitting on the sofa with Bentley, watching television. As soon as we walked through the door, she hit the mute button on the remote and stood up.

“Hey,” I said, shrugging out of my jacket. “What are you doing here?”

“I’m on my lunch break,” she replied. “I have to go back in half an hour.”

I gestured toward Rick who walked in behind me. “This is my brother, Rick. Rick, this is Angela.”

“Hi.” She waved at him. “It’s great to finally meet you.”

“You, too.” He moved forward to shake her hand, then he took a seat on the upholstered chair across from the TV. “So you guys met at work?”

“Yeah.” Angela sat down again and told the story of how she locked her keys in her car and I came to her rescue like a knight in shining armor.

Rick then asked what high school she went to. When she told him which one, he asked if she knew so-and-so, because Rick knew everyone. They chatted for a while about their mutual acquaintances.

I went to use the washroom and when I returned, they were talking about Angela’s yoga classes, and Rick was interested in trying a class for himself.

As soon as I stepped into view she checked her watch and stood up. “Geez, I’m going to be late. Wish I could stay but I have to go.”

She hurried toward me and gave me a quick kiss on the cheek. “I’ll see you guys later. Bye, Bentley.”

With that, she was out the door.

“Cute girl,” Rick said, slouching low in his chair. “How long have you been dating her?”

“A few months,” I replied.

He nodded with approval as he pulled off his sneakers and settled in to watch some television. “Nice work. I’m sure you have nothing to worry about. Mom and Dad will think she’s great.”

“I’m not worried,” I informed him.

Because it didn’t matter to me what they thought. It only mattered how Angela and I felt about each other.

It’s unfortunate that I didn’t know, at the time, that there would be other far worse things to worry about, and none of them would involve my parents. Maybe if I had known, I might have been able to prevent the worst of them from happening.

Or maybe not. I’ve come to learn that certain things in life are beyond our control.

Others are beyond comprehension.

… Continued…

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The Color of a Dream
(The Color of Heaven, Book 4)
by Julianne MacLean
4.9 stars – 48 reviews!
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Find out why readers everywhere are clamoring for the next installment of this thrilling, inspiring series.

ER nurse Audrey Fitzgerald believed she was married to the perfect man – a heroic firefighter who saved lives, even beyond his own death. But a year after losing him she meets a mysterious woman who has some unexplained connection to her husband….

Soon Audrey discovers that in the weeks leading up to her husband’s death, he was keeping secrets, and she wonders if she ever really knew him at all. Compelled to dig into his past and explore memories that define the essence of their relationship, Audrey embarks upon a journey of discovery that will lead her down a new path to the future – a future she never dared to imagine.

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About The Author

USA Today Bestselling author, Julianne MacLean came to the romance genre after completing a degree in English literature from the University of King’s College in Nova Scotia. She fell in love with some of the classic romances – Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights, Pride and Prejudice – and after a brief stint as a federal government auditor, decided to try her hand at becoming a modern day romance writer.

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She is a devoted wife and mother, and loves to travel. She has lived in New Zealand and Ottawa, and is now settled happily in Nova Scotia, while working on her latest historical romance.

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While recovering from a heart transplant, Nadia Carmichael is haunted by a recurring dream that sets her on a path to discover the identity of her donor.  Her efforts are thwarted, however, when the father of her baby returns to wreak havoc on her life . It’s not until Nadia learns of his estranged brother Jesse that she begins to explore the true nature of her dreams, and discover what her new heart truly desires..

Be sure to read the other books in this series:

THE COLOR OF HEAVEN

THE COLOR OF DESTINY

THE COLOR OF HOPE

THE COLOR OF A DREAM

Coming Soon: THE COLOR OF A MEMORY

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“What a beautiful storyteller Julianne MacLean is! I started this book this morning and couldn’t stop reading until the end. The way she creates such lovable and real characters who grip your attention just amazes me. I love how so many stories are intertwined and I cannot wait for book #5 in this series! Well done, Ms. MacLean, and thank you.” – 5 Star Amazon Review

About The Author

USA Today Bestselling author, Julianne MacLean (who also writes under the pseudonym E.V. Mitchell), came to the romance genre after completing a degree in English literature from the University of King’s College in Nova Scotia. She fell in love with some of the classic romances – Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights, Pride and Prejudice – and after a brief stint as a federal government auditor, decided to try her hand at becoming a modern day romance writer.

She is a three time Rita Finalist and winner of numerous awards, including the Romantic Times Magazine Reviewers Choice Award, the Colorado Romance Writers Award of Excellence, and the Greater Detroit Romance Writers Booksellers’ Best Award.

She is a devoted wife and mother, and loves to travel. She has lived in New Zealand and Ottawa, and is now settled happily in Nova Scotia, while working on her latest historical romance.

And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample of The Color of a Dream by Julianne MacLean: