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Sharon Sala - Sweet Baby

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Sweet Baby: summary, description and annotation

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Sharon Sala, the author of over 17 popular contemporary novels, brings readers the story of a woman who must come face-to-face with her past in order to put her fears behind her. Abandoned as a child by her mother, she is desperate to love, but afraid to trust--and terrified of what she does not remember. .

Sharon Sala: author's other books


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But you promised! You promised you would love me! You cant break your word!

Her panic was his undoing. Brett had known Victoria Lancaster for four yearshad lived with her for the past three of those yearsand had never, not once, seen her lose control like this.

Panicked by what he had unintentionally caused, he pulled her into his arms, rocking her against his chest as he soothed her terror with a gentle hand.

Im sorry, baby. Im sorry. Dont cry. Please dont cry. I never said I didnt love you. Youre my world. Youre my life.

She clutched at his arms, staring blindly into his face. At that moment he had the strangest feeling she was looking not at him, but somewhere deep into her own mind.

Ms. Sala draws you in from the very beginning. She delivers main characters who will touch your heart and quirky secondary characters who will intrigue you.

Romantic Times on Snowfall

Also by SHARON SALA

DARK WATER

SNOWFALL

BUTTERFLY

REMEMBER ME

REUNION

And look for Sharon Salas
newest romantic suspense

OUT OF THE DARK

Available now from MIRA Books

MIRA Books is also proud to publish
Sharon Sala under the pseudonym
DINAH M C CALL

Watch for the newest Dinah McCall title

MIMOSA GROVE

SHARON SALA

Sweet Baby

Picture 1

I wrote this book for all the children who needed a Sweet Baby, but didnt have one.

I will say a prayer each night for the children who cry and no one hears. I will say a prayer each night for the children who wake up hungry and go to bed the same way. I will say a prayer each night for the children who are missing, and for those who are lost. I will say a prayer each night for the children who suffer alone because they have no one who cares. I will say a prayer each night for the children no one loves. I will say a prayer for the children. I will say a prayer each night, because when no one else is listening,

God still hears.

Contents

Prologue

Rural Arkansas, 1973

A rooster tail of dust billowed behind the bright yellow school bus as it rumbled down the Arkansas back roads, returning the children of Calico Rock to their homes.

It was dry for September. The narrow, two-lane road on which the bus was traveling was bordered on both sides with an abundance of dust-covered greens. Old trees, tall and angular, struggled for space among new growth in the constant act of taking root. On the ground beneath, bushes and scrub brush flourished, hanging on to their place in the mountains with fierce persistence.

The sky was pale, a blue so light it almost seemed white, and the sun beaming down on the roof of the bus sweltered the children inside like so many beans in a can. Sweat ran out of their hair and down their faces as they chattered away. They didnt care that it was hot, because it was Friday, and they were going home.

But though the noise level inside the bus was high, there was the occasional child, like six-year-old Victoria Lancaster, who sat alone in her seat, quietly contemplating the days events and longing for the first sight of home.

Last night had been a first for young Tory in more ways than one. She and seven other little girls had spent the night at Mary Ellen Wiggins slumber party. For Tory, it was the first time in her life that shed slept somewhere other than beneath her mothers roofand without her dolly, Sweet Baby. And she hadnt cried. Not even once.

As the bus began to brake, she looked up. The Broyles brothers were getting off. That meant she would be next. Her mouth pursed as she thought back to last night. She couldnt wait to tell her mommy about Mary Ellens party. Roasting wieners and marshmallows and then telling ghost stories after the house was dark had been scarybut so much fun. Mommy would be so proud of her for not asking to go home.

The bus hit a bump, and Tory clutched at the brown paper sack in her lap. It held yesterdays dirty school clothes, as well as her nightgown. There was a ketchup stain on her dress and marshmallow on the front of her gown, but she wasnt too worried. Mommy never yelled at her for things like that. In fact, Mommy hardly ever yelled at all, and when she did, she was usually yelling at Ollie.

She sighed, remembering a time in their life when Ollie hadnt lived with them and wishing it could be that way again. Ollie was always teasing her about being a mommas baby. When she got home, she would show him. Shed spent the whole night away from home. Babies couldnt do that!

Right in the middle of planning what she would say to Ollie, a voice suddenly shrieked in her ear. Torys got a boyfriend. Torys got a boyfriend.

Tory turned in her seat and stuck out her tongue, glaring angrily at the boy behind her. It was that stupid old Arthur Beckham. After less than six weeks of first grade, shed already figured out that the older boys got, the dumber they became.

When he laughed in her face, she spun back in her seat, red-faced and a little bit shocked by her own temerity. When she got to be a fourth-grader, she wouldnt pick on little kids like Arthur did, of that she was certain.

Once more the bus began to slow. Tory glanced out the window as the brakes locked, then squeaked. When she saw the familiar rooftop of her home, she grabbed hold of the seat in front of her for balance, then stood. Arthur Beckham made a face at her as she passed down the aisle, but she was too anxious to get home to give him another thought. As she stepped off the bus, an errant wind lifted the hem of her dress, but she didnt care. The moment her feet hit the dirt, she began to run.

An orange-and-black butterfly fluttered just ahead of her, riding the wind current with delicate ease, and it almost seemed as if they were racing. The fantasy caught in her mind, and she shifted into an all-out stride. The afternoon sun caught and then held in the tangles of her long, blond hair. Had anyone been around to notice, they might have imagined theyd seen a halo above her head. But it was the end of the day, and had one been inclined to consider her an angel, she would have been a grubby one at best.

There was a skinned spot on her knee, a smudge from lunch on the front of her dress, and her shoes and anklets wore a light coating of dust as her little legs churned, making short work of the distance to the house. The brown paper bag she held clutched in one fist was torn at the top and about to give way, but it didnt matter now. She was almost there.

Just as Torys feet hit the front steps, the butterfly darted off to the left. She laughed aloud, calling out to her mother as she grabbed the screen door and yanked.

Mommy! Mommy! Im home! You should have seen me! I was racing a butterfly and

She froze as the echo of her own voice moved from room to empty room, drifting like a bad memory that wouldnt go away. A draft of hot air came from somewhere before her, shifting the hem of her dress and pushing the fabric against her bare legs. Tory took a step farther, then another, and another, unaware when the brown paper bag shed been holding fell from her fingers and onto the floor.

Everything was gone, from the faded blue curtains on the windows to the furniture that had been sitting on the floors. Her heart skipped a beat. Even though her eyes were seeing the truth, her heart would not accept it.

Mommy?

She cocked her head, listening for the familiar sound of her mothers voice, but all she heard was the faint grinding of gears as the school bus climbed the hill on the road beyond.

She called out again, her voice trembling. Mommy? Mommy? Im home.

The silence beyond the sound of her voice was insidious, amplifying the call of a bird in the tree outside the kitchen window. Somewhere within the house she heard a cricket chirp, and her heart leaped. Mommy hated crickets in the house. Any minute she would come racing into the room to get rid of it. She turned toward the doorway, her big blue eyes tear-filled and horror-stricken. But nothing moved, and no one came.

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