Blurb:
Needing a change of pace, elementary school teacher Kelly Seda accepts the school exchange position and flies from Ottawa to London. Exchanging jobs and houses for a year, he and six-year-old daughter Wendy have a less than a day to adjust before starting work.
Single mum Staci Kirk has carved out a life for herself and her young son Tommy. Fiercely independent and self-reliant, sheās found a good place where she can settle in but sheās all too aware that happily ever after applies only to other peopleāor in the romance books she writes.
The arrival of Tommyās new teacher, also her next door neighbour, threatens to upset her carefully balanced apple cart but Staci knows itās only a matter of time before Kelly packs his bags and flies back to Canada. No sense in starting anything she canāt finish.
However, life is never that simple. When the worst happens, there is only one person she can rely on to help.
Extract:
Staci sat on the couch beside Kelly as Tommy and Wendy coloured happily at the table. The picnic lunch sheād prepared after the service had gone down a treatādespite the rain which had poured down in torrents since theyād left the church. Sheād turned the table into a palace with a couple of blankets, made crowns out of sheets of cardboard, and the four of them had eaten inside it, with the kids pretending to be a prince and princess.
Kelly sipped his coffee. āThat indoor picnic was a stroke of genius.ā
She smiled. āWe do that a lot in the winter. As long as Tommy eats, I donāt care where. Within reason, that is. The bedroom is a no no. Itās not easy being both parents.ā She paused. āIām a single parent.ā
āIām with you on that score. Hair, for example. I canāt braid to save my life and as for getting her part straightāforget it. Hence her really short hair.ā
Staci laughed. āWhereas Tommy wants his hair cut like my dadās. Nothing on the top and very little around the sides.ā
Kelly roared with laughter. āDid you tell him that happens naturally when he gets older?ā
āI tried, but he doesnāt want to wait. I placated him by promising a multi-coloured Mohican during the Christmas holidays.ā
āHow are you planning to do that? Just in case Wendy wants one at some point.ā
āHe did it for world book day back in March. He went in full Native American dress. He wanted to go as Pocahontas.ā
Kelly tried to hide a grin but failed. āIsnāt Pocahontas a girl?ā
āUh-huh. Tommyās argument was if the pantomime dame is a bloke why canāt he go as Pocahontas? But in the end I convinced him to go as Hiawatha instead. Funny enough, he preferred being the leader of a nation to a princess living in a foreign land.ā
Kelly sipped his coffee. āI can totally understand that one. I think I would as well. Thanks again for bailing me out this morning with the dress.ā
āItās the least I can do. If I can get it off of her Iāll sew it tonight and let you have it back tomorrow. Will you hire a car whilst youāre here?ā
He pursed his lips. āI honestly havenāt thought that far ahead. Both work and the school are within walking distance. The subway will get me most placesāonce I find the nearest station.ā
āHalf a mile up the road, but you need the mainline train to get to the nearest underground station. Weāre too far out of the city for our own station. Buses work as well. Which school is Wendy going to?ā
āCannon Street Primary.ā
āThe same one as Tommy. It has a really good reputation and the scores are good. December is a bit of a late start for the year though.ā
āCouldnāt be helped. Work transferred me here later than anticipated.ā
āTheyāll be gearing up for Christmas with nativities and parties and carol concerts. Bit like all the houses. The American way of decorating seems to be creeping over more and more each year. Tommy wants the tree and outside lights up now. I told him he has to wait another week or so.ā
āGoing back a bit.ā Kelly finished his coffee and set the cup on a coaster. āWhatās a pantomime?ā
Staci paused. How on earth did she explain something so quintessentially British in a way heād understand? āItās a theatre play only put on at Christmasāwith lots of songs and slapstick humour. Where the hero is played by a girl, and the dame is played by a bloke. There is usually a cow involved somewhere no matter what the story. Itās normally a fairy tale. So, Dick Whittington or Cinderella or Peter Pan. This year itās Jack and the Beanstalk. I took Tommy last year, and he loved it. Are you here for Christmas?ā
He nodded. āIām not planning on going home until July. Iām hoping my parents will come over at some point, but Mom hates to travel. Despite having a passport, sheās never been outside Canada.ā
Staci failed to contain her surprise. āNot even to step over the border at Niagara Falls? I did that one year, just so I could say Iād been to Canada.ā
āNot even that.ā Kelly shook his head. āThe farthest sheās ever been is Toronto to visit my brother. Maybe a car would be a good idea. I wouldnāt mind seeing some of the country while Iām over here.ā He glanced at the rain pounding on the windows. āAssuming it stops raining. Does it ever stop raining here?ā
There is a book trailer HERE with music commissioned and written especially.
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Comments
Good luck and God's blessings
PamT