THE BITTER AND SWEET OF CHERRY SEASON
Author: Molly Fader
Publication Date: June 6, 2020
Publisher: Graydon House Books
For fans of Robyn Carr, commercial women's
fiction about three generations of women who come together at the family
orchard to face secrets from the past and learn to believe in the power of hope
and forgiveness.
In cherry season, anything is possible...
Everything Hope knows about the Orchard House is from her late mother's stories. So when she arrives at the Northern Michigan family estate late one night with a terrible secret and her ten-year-old daughter in tow, she's not sure if she'll be welcomed or turned away with a shotgun by the aunt she has never met.
Hope's aunt, Peg, has lived in the Orchard House all her life, though the property has seen better days. She agrees to take Hope in if, in exchange, Hope helps with the cherry harvest—not exactly Hope's specialty, but she's out of options. As Hope works the orchard alongside her aunt, daughter, and a kind man she finds increasingly difficult to ignore, a new life begins to blossom. But the mistakes of the past are never far behind, and soon the women will find themselves fighting harder than ever for their family roots and for each other.
Everything Hope knows about the Orchard House is from her late mother's stories. So when she arrives at the Northern Michigan family estate late one night with a terrible secret and her ten-year-old daughter in tow, she's not sure if she'll be welcomed or turned away with a shotgun by the aunt she has never met.
Hope's aunt, Peg, has lived in the Orchard House all her life, though the property has seen better days. She agrees to take Hope in if, in exchange, Hope helps with the cherry harvest—not exactly Hope's specialty, but she's out of options. As Hope works the orchard alongside her aunt, daughter, and a kind man she finds increasingly difficult to ignore, a new life begins to blossom. But the mistakes of the past are never far behind, and soon the women will find themselves fighting harder than ever for their family roots and for each other.
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Chapter
1
HOPE
Night
up in Northern Michigan was no joke.
Hope had never seen a dark so dark.
It had heft and dimension, like she was driving right into an abyss. She
thought about waking up Tink in the back to show her, but the girl had finally
fallen asleep and she needed the rest.
And Hope needed a break.
Who knew traveling with a
completely silent, angry and traumatized ten-year-old could be so exhausting?
Hope’s phone had died when she got
off the highway about twenty minutes ago. In those last few minutes of battery
she had tried to memorize the directions:
Left
on Murray Street.
Slight
right onto County Road 72.
Your
destination is five miles on the right.
But County Road 72 wasn’t well
marked and now she feared she was lost. Well, for sure she was lost; in the
grand scheme of things she was totally off the map.
But she was clinging to the one ratty
thread of hope she had left in her hand.
And then just as that tiny bit of
thread started to slip out of her fingers, from the murk emerged a blue sign.
County
Road 72.
The road took a long arcing right
into the dark, and she unrolled her window, trying to keep herself awake.
Adrenaline and gas station coffee could only do so much against two sleepless
nights.
Her yawn was so wide it split her
lip. Again. Copper-tasting blood pooled in her mouth.
“Shit,” she breathed and pressed the last of the
napkins against her mouth. She was even out of napkins.
In the back, Tink woke up. Hope
heard the change in her breathing. The sudden gasp like she was waking up from
a nightmare.
Or into one. Hard to say.
“Hey,” Hope said, looking over her
shoulder into the shadows of the back seat. Her daughter’s pale face like a
moon slid into the space between the driver and passenger seats. “We’re almost there.” Hope sounded like they
were about to drive up to the gates of Disney World.
Tink rubbed her eyes.
“Did
you see the stars?” Hope’s voice climbed into that range she’d recently
developed. Dementedly cheerful. Stepford Mom on helium. She winced at the sound
of it. That wasn’t her. It wasn’t how she talked to Tink. And yet she couldn’t
tune her voice back to normal. “There are so many of them. I don’t think I’ve
ever seen so many stars.”
Tink
ducked her head to look out the windshield and then turned to cock her head at
an angle so she could look out the passenger windows.
They’d
gone to an exhibit about the constellations at the Science Center a year ago
and Tink still talked about it. Pointing up at Sirius like she’d discovered it
herself.
“Aren’t those the pieties?” Hope
got the name wrong on purpose, hoping for a snotty-toned correction from her
miniature astronomer. Or at least a throat-clearing scoff.
But
no.
“Sooner
or later you’re going to talk to me,” she said. “You’re going to open that
mouth and all the words you haven’t said all day are gonna come pouring out.”
Silence.
“Do
you want to ask me questions about where we’re going?” They were, after all,
heading deep into Northern Michigan to a place she and Tink had never been, and
Hope had never told her about until today.
Tink
rubbed her eyes again.
“Or
maybe what happened…tonight?” Her gaze bounced between Tink and the road.
When you’re older, you’ll understand. When
you’re a mom, you’ll understand. She wanted to say that to her daughter,
but she herself barely understood any of what had happened the last two
days.
Still
silence.
Hope
tried a different angle. “I’m telling you, Tink. I know you and you can’t keep this
up much longer. I’ll bet you ten bucks you say something to me in
five…four…three…two…” She pulled in a breath that tasted like tears and blood.
Please,
honey. Please.
“One.” She sighed. “Fine. You win.”
Her beat-up hatchback bounced over
the uneven asphalt and Tink crawled from the backseat into the front, her elbow
digging into Hope’s shoulder, her flip-flopped foot kicking her in the thigh.
The degree of parenting it would
take to stop Tink from doing that, or to discuss the potential dangers and
legality of it, was completely beyond her. She was beyond pick your battles,
into some new kind of wild west motherhood. Pretend there were no battles.
They drove another five minutes
until finally, ahead, there was a golden halo of light over the trees along the
side of the road, and Hope slowed down. A gravel driveway snaked through the
darkness and she took it on faith that it had been five miles.
“This is it.”
Please
let this be it.
The driveway opened up and there
was a yellow-brick, two-story house.
The Orchard House. That was what
Mom called it in the few stories she’d told about growing up here. Actually,
the words she used were The Goddamn
Orchard House.
It was a grand old-fashioned place
with second-story windows like empty eyes staring down at them. White
gingerbread nestled up in the corners of the roof, and there was a big wide
porch with requisite rocking chairs.
Seriously, it was so charming, it
could have been fake.
The car rolled to a stop and Hope
put it in park. Her maniacal new voice failed her, and she just sat there.
Silent.
Suddenly the front door opened and
a dog – a big one, with big teeth – came bounding out. Cujo stopped at the top
of the steps and started barking. Behind the dog came a woman in a blue robe
carrying a shotgun.
Tink made a high panicked sound in
her voice, climbing up in her seat.
Hope’s impulse was to turn the car
around and get out of there. The problem was there was nowhere to turn around to. They had no place left to go.
“It’s okay, honey,” Hope lied. She
went as far as to put her hand over Tink’s bony knee, the knob of it fitting
her palm like a baseball. “Everything’s going to be all right.”
More desperate than brave, Hope
popped open the door. The dog’s bark, unmuffled by steel and glass, was
honest-to-god blood curdling. “Hi!” she yelled, trying to be both cheerful and
loud enough to be heard over the barking.
“Get your hands up,” the woman on
the porch shouted.
Hope shoved her hands up through
the crack between the door and the car and did a kind of jazz hands with her
fingers.
“What do you want?” the woman
asked.
“Are you Peg—”
“I can’t hear you.”
She stood up, her head reaching up
over the door. “Are you Peg?”
“Never mind, me. Who the hell are
you?” She pointed the business end of the gun toward them.
Hope quickly side-stepped away from
the car door, and Tink reached across the driver’s seat and slammed it shut.
The heavy thud of the engaged lock
was unmistakeable.
“You don’t know me—”
“No shit!”
“My name is Hope,” she said.
The gun lowered and the woman’s
face changed. From anger to something more careful. “Hope?”
“Yeah. I’m Denise’s girl. I’m…well,
you’re my aunt?”
Excerpted
from The Bitter and Sweet of Cherry Season by Molly Fader, Copyright ©
2020 by Molly Fader. Published by Graydon House Books.
About the Author
Photo Credit: Molly Fader's Website
Molly Fader is the author of The McAvoy Sisters Book of Secrets. She is also the award-winning author of more than forty romance novels under the pennames Molly O'Keefe and M. O'Keefe. She grew up outside of Chicago and now lives in Toronto. Follow her on Twitter, @mollyokwrites.
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