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Sage and Sweetgrass
| Diagnosed with a chronic, debilitating illness, Lanae Petersen vows to pursue life to its fullest. When she discovers mysterious love letters hidden within an antique desk, she begins a quest to discover who the young lovers were. Little does she realize that in trying to bring closure to their lives, hers will be turned upside-down. After the death of his wife, cowboy Sage Diamond wants to be left alone on his acreage in peace and anonymity. When Lanae approaches him with letters to a family member, she not only threatens to expose his family secrets, but also stirs something inside him that he neither expects, nor welcomes. Sage fights his attraction, determined not to fall for a woman whose health is so fragile. Can Sage trust God's guiding hand, or will his fear of losing another love crush his chance for a future with Lanae? |
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Author: ( LoRee Peery )
I am alive...
Somewhere out there, is someone waiting to share my life?
Â
âSomewhere out there,â Lanae Petersen sang. âThatâs the snippet I wrote when I journaled this morning.â Her sing-song statement elicited a wide grin from her sister, Geneva Carson.
âIâm thankful you found that journal writing such a help while you were sick,â Geneva commented.
The little catch phrases or quotes Lanae had latched onto after she found out hepatitis C was the cause of her sickness, were the only things that got her through some days.
And reading the Bible, of course.
Lanae glanced at the art-glass design of the sun catcher hanging in the window, a gift from Rainn Harris, Genevaâs fiancĂ©. She compared the pattern with the appliquĂ© cross Geneva was now anchoring onto the background fabric of her current wall quilt.
âI suspect your latest project isnât meant as a shop item but as a gift for Rainn.â
âYou got it.â Geneva lifted her brows to see above the rim of her glasses. âI canât get over how different you are from a couple months ago. Look at you now, pouring over those singles ads.â
âIâm alive. Praise God.â Lanae slapped the newspaper against her lap and waved her open arms toward the ceiling.
Geneva shook her head, an indulgent smile spreading across her face.
âBut for Godâs grace, I could still be caught up in that nightmare illness. I used to wonder if I would ever feel alive or die too sick to enjoy the life I have,â Lanae said. She dropped her arms and picked up the paper. Running her finger down a bolded column, she read out loud, ââMen Seeking.â I feel all crocheted out and full of the energy I didnât have while I was sick. We may have opened Frivolities, but a lot of it I donât remember. I feel like I slept through it.â
Geneva shared a look that took them back to girlhood.
Thank you, Lord, for the comfort Iâve found in words. And thank You for my sister. Lanae turned back to her newspaper reading. âThis guy wants nice legs. I have those...Mmmm, hereâs a cowboy.â
âDo any say if theyâre Christian?â Geneva asked around the needle between her lips as she measured a length of thread.
âNot yet. Hereâs an SWM, Single White Male, looking for smarts. Ohhkaaay. I might give this one an answer. Heâs a ranch owner.â Mourning what could have been, Lanae rubbed a spot of newspaper dust off the soft dark leather of her recliner. A life lived out on her own ranch. âThen again, been there, done that, with my rancher.â But he died before the culmination of their life together. Lanae contemplated the word âdream,â sighed over the memory of her deceased husband, and formed a sad smile. The Lordâs timing had no explanation.
Their shop, Frivolities, was the widowed sistersâ joint business venture. When sheâd seen the ad in their hometown paper listing a downtown building for sale in Platteville, she jumped at the chance to move back to where sheâd been born. Geneva called Lanae in response to the same ad. Certainly seemed like Godâs prompting.
âRemember, it was an ad that helped bring Frivolities into existence,â Lanae emphasized. âLook, this one says heâll treat you like a lady. Oh boy. A Western loverâbooks and movies.â
âGotta be a touch of country there.â
Lanae loved wide open spaces. She had tried to keep her husband Keithâs dream ranch alive after his death. It had slammed into her one day, the sad realization that she no longer had the resources to stick with the ranch. How she missed the expanse. ââIâm your dream come true if you love nature and horses.â This sounds good.â Lanae glanced at her sister. âHe says he likes gospel music.â
Geneva laid the colorful fabric in her lap and gave Lanae a look as sharp as the needle she used to accent the appliquĂ©d edges. âYou arenât really going to jump on this bandwagon by answering one of those ads, are you?â
âThinking about it. Itâs better than taking a chance on one of those dot-com sites, to my way of thinking.â Lanae continued to skim the column. âOh joy. This guy wants a woman to believe in him...and finally, it says he believes in Jesus. Canât buy it, though. He also lists his astrological sign.â
âThere you go. Satan believes in Jesus, too.â
Lanae sighed. Jesus held her future the same as Heâd been with her all her life.
âAnd speaking of ads...â she brushed her fingers to the side.
âFind someone interesting?â
âAcross the page here is a little something that would fit in the shop. Listen to this. âOak dressing table. Needs refinishing. Solid. Original glass pulls on fancy drawers. Make offer.ââ She raised a brow and met her sisterâs glance. âLooks like a Lincoln phone number.â
âWant to check it out in the morning? Beth will be working in the shop for Moselle. If you have a cheesecake ready tonight, youâd be free to drive down to Lincoln in the morning.â
âThink Iâll give them a call later,â Lanae said as she once again buried her nose in the paper.
Besides the gifts, antiques, and frivolities the shop sold, they had an espresso machine and Lanaeâs baked goods. Customers came in and experiencedâŠno, savored, their offerings. It was a God-thing, how the idea for the crazy itemsâMoselleâs handcrafts, Genevaâs quilts and specialty coffees, and Lanaeâs crochet and cheesecakesâhad come to them at the same time when theyâd each seen the building advertised. With the long state of Nebraska between them, each sister had recognized the opportunity to use her skills for profit.
She considered the Frivolities women. At the moment, her niece Moselleâthe third party in the Frivolities ventureâwas on her honeymoon, or sheâd be working on a craft designed from old items right along with them. Mondays, when the shop was closed, werenât always for leisure. It was their practice to meet as part of their business plan and to work on their contributions to keep Frivolities stocked with goodies.
âThey must bold these ads with large print so oldies like me can read âem.â
âYeah, right. You think weâre old in our fifties? Arenât you the one who told me weâre only as old as we think we are?â
The sisters shared a look that covered a myriad of unspoken thoughts.
âYou could find yourself a man. After all, I found my Rainn. That way your guy could do the reading when your eyes go.â Genevaâs teasing held a dreamy quality.
âIf my eyes go, Iâll blame it on all that crocheting I did instead of sleeping when I was sick.â Lanae flipped the page to see how many more columns the ads covered. None. The singles were confined to one page.
She studied her sister. Geneva looked so pretty in love. She could almost pass for her daughter, Moselle.
âI agree. You got yourself one in a million with your Rainn, my dear Geneva. Like the Elvis quote I read the other day that says weâre meant to do something worth remembering. Youâve sure done that with that sweet man of yours.â Lanae drummed her fingers on the paper in her lap. âI believe I am ready to seek my own man, to do my own something-worth-remembering.â
âWait a minute, here.â Geneva set her elbow against her hip bone, needle pointed in the air, and gave Lanae a get-real look. âYou were married to a Vietnam vet. You held onto the ranch over twenty years after Keith died. Iâd call that doing something worth remembering.â
âGuess youâre right. Not to mention creating Frivolities with you. Now that Iâm feeling alive again, it might be nice to seriously search for a man of my own. To warm my winter nights, you know...someone to share it all with.â
âHave to admit, those strong arms of Rainnâs help me feel tucked in safe and warm every night.â
âThat sounds interesting. You mean he moved in when I moved out of your house?â Lanae snorted.
âNot funny. Rainn and I say good night even if itâs by phone. And if heâs at the scene of a fire, I have Mia to attend to. So Iâm not alone.â
âThat girl. Remember how she spelled out her name and pronounced it âM-E-ah,â so weâd all get it right?â They shared reminiscent smiles.
Miaâs mother, Rainnâs sister, was a single mom who died of drug-related, mysterious circumstances in Fort Worth, Texas. Rainnâs parents wanted no part of caring for a child with special needs; so Rainn became custodial caregiver of his six-year-old niece, a special child with autism.
Lanae shook her head and shot another smile at Geneva. She was still trying to wrap her mind around the vast changes in their family over the last few months.
First, her niece, Moselle, had reunited with her high school love, Eric, and married him seventy-two hours ago, the day after Thanksgiving.
Second, Geneva had blossomed every day because of the attention Rainn Harris, Ericâs firefighter buddy, paid her. Heâd rescued her from a tree, where sheâd climbed after a stray cat. The family still made jokes about it, how sheâd fallen into his arms when he rescued her.
Third, Lanae had overcome hep C. âYou and I got used to sleeping single in a double bed, Sis. Now Iâm going to try with all my might to see if thatâs really Godâs plan for the rest of my life.â
âYou may very well have a point. He spared you from a terminal illness.â The smile accompanying Genevaâs words brought the blessing home. âBut donât get too carried away with your own plan instead of waiting on the Lord.â
Lanae shot up a silent prayer of thankfulness for her healthy liver and went back to reading the ads out loud. âHereâs one. âIntegrity and full of heart.â Meaning, no heart disease, Iâll wager.â She emitted a throaty, scoffing sound. âOooh, this one sounds like me. âCountry boy at heart, but caught in town.ââ
âIf that doesnât sound like you, Iâll eat my needle,â Geneva mumbled around that sharp object.
âDonât laugh, or you just might,â Lanae said. Then she laughed loud enough for both of them.
This particular Monday morningâs working session and business meeting had fizzled. Wedding and holiday still filled the atmosphere, so Geneva and Lanae had made short business of their shop-talk duties. They now attended to the creative side of their joint venture, working on individual quilted fabric and crochet items.
Well, Lanae had attempted to work. Sheâd eventually set aside her crochet hook and picked up the newspaper.
The women closest to Lanae, sister and niece, faced the future with their respective firefighters. The men had their softer sides. Eric sold insurance and built birdhouses for fun. Rainn was a stained glass artist and would soon start teaching at community college.
Dare Lanae follow through with her planned man hunt?
Lord willing.
She had been content with her life. She hadnât faced the loneliness, or missed having a man around, until she witnessed what love did for the two women she loved.
She missed the poignancy of love, how much brighter and happier life could be when shared with the right person. But she was a different person now, living in a different time and place. Maybe God had a new plan for her. But if this was it, she would be happy as long as she followed Godâs will.
Lanae glanced out the sliding glass door and followed the trail of a dancing cottonwood leaf as it drifted to the ground. âBut you know, sis, I really do miss it at times. The ranch. Those open miles where the sun causes a gal to crinkle and wrinkle. The meadowlarks and bugs and wind in my hair.â
âWhat hair?â
âVery funny.â
The memory of hair loss sobered Lanae. Her Hep C meds hadnât caused her to lose hers like some cancer treatments did, but her hair sure had thinned. Sheâd decided to keep her hair short.
Joy and peace now flushed her soul.
She ran her fingertips over the leather chair that offered comfort every time the deep cushions welcomed her. Family and friends had taken up a collection for the recliner, and a grand gift it was. Sheâd been so overwhelmed with their outpouring of love.
But was the love of God, family, and friends enough for fulfilling relationships? Or was she meant to find a special someone to spend the rest of her days with?
Lanaeâs gaze traced the blocks in the quilt Geneva had made, which now graced the wall. Arranged in varied blocks of crosses, surrounding one huge cross in front of a blazing gold light, the teal and mauve colors never failed to warm her heart. The thick quilt had warded off the chill on her legs, originally serving the purpose of lap blanket.
Should she be looking for someone? Or should she leave it to God to bring that special someone to her?
Or, should she, like the biblical Paul, be content with what she had?
Lanae played with the strap of the denim bag Moselle had designed. The tote was created from a pair of old jeans. Lanae tucked away her balls of yarn and current crochet project into the bag.
âI would imagine Moselle and Eric are having a great time about now.â Geneva spoke on a wistful sigh as though wishing she was on her own honeymoon.
The sisters exchanged understanding smiles. Lanaeâs turned into laughter then higher pitched giggles as Genevaâs color rose to a deep blush.
Lanae set her tote on a nearby shelf and straightened her journal and daily devotional on the cabinet top. She folded the newspaper in her lap and took in her immediate surroundings.
Eric, her new nephew by marriage, had built the cabinet next to her recliner. Handcrafted in golden oak, the cabinet itself consisted of two shelves and a routed edged top.
The stained-glass sun catcher caught her eye again and she said a prayer of thankfulness for Rainn, her soon-to-be brother-in-law. Sections of amber and pink glass in the shape of a rose formed the backdrop for the amber cross.
Humbled anew at their gifts of love, she realized yet again how blessed she was to have so many loved ones in her life.
Yet, no special man filled the role of lover.
Lanae slapped her knee with the folded paper and smoothed out the dents. âOnward and upward.â
She opened the pages and renewed her perusal of the ads. ââAre you the one for me? Can we be friends first?ââ
âA young guy wants an older woman?â Geneva quipped.
âIn your dreams,â they chorused, caught the otherâs eye, and giggled.
âYour dream came true,â Lanae sassed.
âLucky me.â
âNo such thing as luck,â they joined voices again; same slight nuance in tone, same inflection, same identical timing.
The sisters shared familial comfort and continued with their individual tasks.
Â
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Rating:
Just imagine, nothing to lose, living life to its fullest while clinging to God's love. Isn't this what we're all supposed to do? This is what Lanae
vows to do. And in freeing herself to live, she frees herself to love - and to teach others to love as fully as she does.rnrnI loved the mystery
surrounding the antique desk and the way it tied in with Sage's family, the happenstance of it all - just the way God works in all our lives. I loved
the fact that Lanae stepped out and took the chance on looking for love in such an impulsive way. And I especially loved the way she was willing to
accept God's will for her life in everything from her disease to how she would spend the remainder of her life.rnrnGod bless you, Miss Peery for
sharing this wonderful journey of finding love while clinging to the greatest love of all.
Rating:
I absolutely loved this one. It kept me riveted to my kindle from the get go. The third in the Frivolities series, LoRee Peery has woven an amazing
tale of love the second time around. rnrnLanae is determined to live life to the full and has thrown herself into the shop she owns with her sister
and niece, yet she yearns for the love theyâve found, the kind she used to know with her husband before his death. Answer an ad in the paper and
buying a vanity unit from cowboy Sage offers her that. Or does it?rnrnSage is still mourning his wife, several years after her death. Living in the
past to protect his family from the sordid truth, he doesnât want Lanaeâs interference in raking over the coals of the skeletons in the
closet.rnWoven into this is the love story of the letters. Lives torn apart by a series of actions beyond anyoneâs control.rnrnWith itâs amazing
characters, setting so real I could see it unfold in my head like a movie, this one has definitely gone back into my TBR pile. A heart-warming story
of love, loss and hope you donât want to miss.
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