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Window on the Bay

Debbie Macomber




  Dear Friends,

  The best ideas for my books come straight from life. My daughter Jody prompted this story about surviving an empty nest. It all started when Jody’s youngest headed off to college, and she lamented that she wasn’t sure what she was going to do with herself. For years her time had been spent wrapped around her children and their interests, mainly sports. James was a star basketball player, and she drove hither and yon supporting him and his team. Her life was suddenly an empty slate. Now what?

  Years earlier Wayne and I faced that same question. I remember when our youngest headed off to college and the changes that took place in our lives. Suddenly, Wayne and I found ourselves parenting our dog, Peterkins. I volunteered to mentor a high-school girl who yearned to be a writer, and Wayne took up woodworking. New adventures awaited us at each turn.

  Change. Isn’t that what happens in life?

  With the thought of an empty nest, my creative imagination went to work, and you are now holding the result in your hand. I hope you enjoy Jenna and Maureen’s story as they navigate through this new world and the discoveries they make about themselves and their futures.

  You, my readers, are my inspiration, and hearing from you is what has guided my career from the start. Every email, website guestbook remark, and handwritten letter is personally read by me. You can learn more on my website at debbiemacomber.com, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and every other social media available. Or you can write me at P.O. Box 1458, Port Orchard, WA 98366. I look forward to hearing from you.

  Warmest regards,

  Window on the Bay is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2019 by Debbie Macomber

  All rights reserved.

  Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

  BALLANTINE and the HOUSE colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

  LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

  Names: Macomber, Debbie, author.

  Title: Window on the bay: a novel / Debbie Macomber.

  Description: New York: Ballantine Books, [2019]

  Identifiers: LCCN 2019007652 | ISBN 9780399181337 (hardcover) | ISBN 9780399181344 (ebook)

  Subjects: | GSAFD: Love stories. | Christian fiction.

  Classification: LCC PS3563.A2364 W56 2019 | DDC 813/.54—dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/​2019007652

  Ebook ISBN 9780399181344

  randomhousebooks.com

  Book design by Dana Leigh Blanchette, adapted for ebook

  Cover design: Belina Huey

  Cover illustration: Alan Ayers

  v5.4

  ep

  Contents

  Cover

  Author's Note

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Prologue: Jenna

  Chapter 1: Jenna

  Chapter 2: Jenna

  Chapter 3: Maureen

  Chapter 4: Jenna

  Chapter 5: Maureen

  Chapter 6: Jenna

  Chapter 7: Jenna

  Chapter 8: Maureen

  Chapter 9: Jenna

  Chapter 10: Allie

  Chapter 11: Jenna

  Chapter 12: Jenna

  Chapter 13: Maureen

  Chapter 14: Jenna

  Chapter 15: Jenna

  Chapter 16: Maureen

  Chapter 17: Allie

  Chapter 18: Maureen

  Chapter 19: Jenna

  Chapter 20: Jenna

  Chapter 21: Maureen

  Chapter 22: Jenna

  Chapter 23: Jenna

  Chapter 24: Maureen

  Chapter 25: Jenna

  Chapter 26: Allie

  Chapter 27: Maureen

  Chapter 28: Jenna

  Chapter 29: Maureen

  Chapter 30: Jenna

  Chapter 31: Jenna

  Chapter 32: Jenna

  Chapter 33: Maureen

  Chapter 34: Jenna

  Chapter 35: Maureen

  Chapter 36: Jenna

  Chapter 37: Jenna

  Epilogue: Jenna

  Dedication

  Ballantine Books from Debbie Macomber

  About the Author

  PROLOGUE

  Jenna

  Where It All Began

  “We need to talk,” Maureen said, as we walked across the quad at the University of Washington’s main campus. The cherry trees were in full bloom, and the fragrance filled the air.

  Maureen and I had met in college as freshmen while taking French classes. We started out as study partners and soon became fast friends. By the end of our sophomore year, we’d made it a goal to travel to Paris after graduation.

  Paris. We were dying to see Paris. I’d fallen in love with the city as a young teen after watching Casablanca for the first time. When Humphrey Bogart looked deep into the eyes of Ingrid Bergman and said, “We’ll always have Paris,” I was captivated.

  The City of Love had beckoned me. It was the very reason I’d taken six years of French classes—four in high school and now two in college. I couldn’t wait to see Paris. I wanted to walk in the moonlight along the Seine, tour the Louvre, and see the view of the city from the Eiffel Tower.

  We’d spent countless hours together planning for the trip over the last two years, and we’d each worked part-time jobs to pay for it. We’d sacrificed our weekends and saved every penny. Finally, here we were in our senior year, and our dream was going to come true.

  “Is something wrong?” I asked, holding my thick nursing textbook close to my chest. While commuting to and from my clinicals this semester, I’d spent a lot of time daydreaming about what early summer would be like in Paris. I’d envisioned myself walking along the river, viewing artists busily painting on their canvases, while the sweet notes of a love song drifted through the air from a distant accordion.

  “I can’t go to Paris,” Maureen blurted out.

  “What?” Her words took my breath away. I was sure I’d heard her wrong.

  “I won’t be able to go to Paris the way we planned.”

  Dumbfounded, I stopped walking and stared at her. Our airline tickets had been purchased, our hotel reservations were made, our itinerary was in writing and on our phones—every last detail had been finalized.

  Maureen lowered her eyes. “I’m pregnant. Peter and I have decided to get married as soon as we graduate.”

  I knew she’d been seeing a lot of Peter Zelinski but had no idea their relationship was this serious. Maureen had taken on the role of tutoring students as a means of earning extra money for our Paris trip. Peter had been one of her calculus students.

  I was dating, too. Kyle Boltz was a first-year medical student, and I was beginning to hope we would have a future together. Kyle had a lot of schooling ahead of him, and I would soon be graduating with a nursing degree. We’d met at a party and we had clicked.

  “Say something,” Maureen pleaded.

  That was the problem. I didn’t know what to say. I hadn’t fully processed that everything—all our plans, our prep work, the
anticipation—had changed in an instant. And my best friend was pregnant. This changed everything.

  “You should still go,” Maureen added.

  “Not without you.” I refused to entertain the thought. It wouldn’t be the same without my best friend.

  “I’ve ruined everything,” Maureen said, biting her lower lip.

  Giving her a big hug, I did my best to comfort her. “You didn’t ruin anything. A baby is far more important than a trip to Paris. We’ll get there one day.”

  Maureen’s mouth wobbled with the effort to smile.

  “And I get to be in your wedding.”

  “Maid of honor,” Maureen said. “I wouldn’t have anyone else.”

  “Deal.”

  Yes, I was disappointed, but we had our whole lives ahead of us. Paris would have to wait.

  CHAPTER 1

  Jenna

  I’d waited for this for a long time.

  I sat in the small nook with the padded seat in my upstairs bedroom, gazing out the window. The view of Elliott Bay stretched before me. I loved this spot, my contemplation area. I leaned my back against the wall, my knees drawn up as I gazed out over the panorama. The gray skies had threatened rain earlier in the day. Despite popular opinion, Seattle wasn’t drenched in drizzle all twelve months of the year. No matter what the weather, my window on the bay never failed to soothe me. In contrast, this afternoon the sky was blue and bright in late September, and the waters of Puget Sound as green as an emerald lawn. The waterfront area of Seattle was filled with tourists, the streets busy with those either departing or returning from Alaskan cruises.

  My mind was spinning with the changes about to take place in my life. The day before, I’d helped Allie settle into her dorm room at my alma mater, the University of Washington. My daughter was about to spread her wings at college, just as I’d done all those years ago. Although I’d been looking forward to this day, I worried. Allie was nothing like her older brother, Paul. My son had been the man of the house and was more mature than his years, especially after his father left us. Allie could be overly emotional at times, and I had to admit I’d spoiled her, though not to the point that she was self-centered and irrational. I’d wanted her to commute from home the first couple years of college, but she insisted that she wanted to live in the dorms. Eventually I’d given in, remembering that my parents had given me that experience to let me soar on my own.

  This move was big for Allie and equally big for me.

  My nest was now empty.

  The silent house had never felt louder. It was as if I could hear the hollowness surrounding me. While I had been looking forward to this time, I wasn’t completely sure what I wanted to do with myself. I’d spent the last sixteen years as a single mom, dedicating my life, my resources, and my everything to my two children, all the while juggling a full-time career. It hadn’t been easy being both mother and father, but I was smarter and wiser, especially in the area of men. I could fix a leaky pipe, clean gutters, and assemble a chest of drawers with instructions written in a foreign language. I was woman—and I could pound my chest as hard as any man.

  And now, after years of attending sporting events—soccer, baseball, and basketball games, as well as swimming meets—I finally had time for myself. I thought of all the music lessons, the Girl Scout Cookie drives I’d organized, and how I’d been class mother for both Paul and Allie in their grade-school years. The last year Paul was in junior high, I’d been president of the PTA. My kids’ teeth were straight, and they both were grounded and obtained above-average grades.

  As I looked out my window, I remembered that sense of elation mingled with worries and doubts which nearly overwhelmed me when I dropped Allie off at the college campus. I watched a green-and-white Washington state ferry sail toward Bainbridge Island.

  I refused to let my concerns take away this special moment. I let the calming view settle my nerves and I turned my focus onto what this new season of life meant for me.

  I’d raised my children, made sacrifices for them, stayed focused on their needs, but now I could look to the future and make plans of my own. Unlike their father, I’d taken my responsibility as a parent seriously. Kyle had proved to be a sorry disappointment as a husband, but especially as a father.

  I had an entire list of what I hoped to accomplish in the next few years. For a long time, I’d wanted to find a creative way to express myself. Zumba class, painting. I’d been toying with the idea of creating a Bullet Journal, too. The possibilities were endless. And trips. I longed to travel, to see the world, study new cultures, taste the local cuisines. With France, especially Paris, on the top of the page, of course. Between my work schedule at the hospital and all the kids’ activities, I’d never found time to fit any of these things into my life.

  But I could now.

  Paris. The more I thought about it, the more I longed to make that trip a possibility. Maureen and I had put off that dream for far too long. Like me, Maureen was divorced now, too. We’d been single moms together all these years, and formed our own support group. Both of our marriages had gone down in flames, and Paris was shoved into the black hole called “someday.” Well, “someday” was now, finally within reach.

  I dropped my legs from my perch and reached for the phone, calling Maureen to invite her over for a movie and some girl time together. She was quick to agree, eager to hear how Allie’s move-in at college had gone.

  Before she arrived I had the popcorn popping, and for the fun of it, I’d downloaded Casablanca, hoping to remind her of our long-ago dream.

  The doorbell rang, and I set aside the remote to answer the door.

  Maureen came into the house waving a grocery bag. “You’ll like what’s inside!” She was a petite brunette with deep brown eyes that revealed her subtle wit and intelligence. Her hair was the same shade as her eyes. She wore it shoulder-length, and I envied how thick it was.

  Over the years I’d come to appreciate Maureen all the more. We talked often and supported each other through everything that life had thrown our way. She’d been the first person I’d called after Kyle left, and when Allie broke her arm. I couldn’t have asked for a better best friend.

  She pulled out a container from the bag, revealing my favorite flavor of ice cream: salted caramel, my weakness.

  “A perfect addition to a perfect day.” I took it from her and headed into the kitchen to place it in the freezer.

  Maureen trailed behind me. “How was your hot date?”

  My hand paused on the freezer door as I thought back over my dinner with the insurance adjuster. It had been washed from my mind, an evening I was eager to forget. “A disappointment.”

  “Yellow light?”

  Maureen and I had devised our own grading system when it came to men and dating. A green light meant there was real potential. A yellow light meant we were waiting to learn more and would proceed with caution. A red light was a flat no, no questions asked, not happening. No way. No how.

  “Red light?”

  I gave a sad nod.

  “After one date?”

  I expelled a lengthy sigh, letting it whistle through my teeth. What was it with men? “He thought dinner at a cheap Mexican restaurant gave him a free license to spend the night.”

  “Give me a break,” Maureen said, shaking her head.

  I’d dated off and on since my divorce. My children had always been my priority. Still, there were times when I needed adult male companionship for my own mental health, yet in all the years since Kyle and I had split, I hadn’t met a man I felt deserved a green light. Several had looked promising in the beginning, but as we got to know each other better, something always seemed to be fundamentally lacking. I was beginning to think the “lacking” might be me—that I’d set my standards too high.

  My marriage to Kyle hadn’t helped matters. I’d come out of it with t
rust issues and with the fear of making yet another mistake. Now, with both kids in college, I’d hoped to seriously look at my relationships with men.

  “How frustrating,” Maureen said. Seeing the bowls of popcorn on the kitchen counter, she reached for them and led the way into the family room.

  I loved my Colonial-style house that was set on a hill overlooking Elliott Bay. Other than my children, it was the best thing I’d gotten out of my marriage. The family room off the kitchen was where we all gathered to watch television, or to sit by the fireplace on a cold, rainy Seattle day on the comfortable, oversized, well-loved leather furniture. One year for Christmas, my dad had a gas line installed to the fireplace, so I didn’t need to fuss with building a fire with wood any longer. All winter long, I had that fire going. It added a touch of warmth to those chilly nights while Paul and Allie sank into the big chairs to do their homework.

  I had Casablanca primed and ready to play.

  Popcorn for dinner and ice cream for dessert. Now, that was freedom.

  I reached for the remote. Maureen had her shoes off and her ankles crossed on the ottoman as she munched on the popcorn. “You picked the movie?”

  “Yup, and you’re going to love it.” I hit the remote, and immediately the music leading up to Casablanca began to play.

  Maureen’s smile widened. “Is this what I think it is?”

  I couldn’t keep from smiling. “Yup, and that should tell you what I’m thinking.”

  “Paris,” Maureen cried. “You want to start planning for our trip to Paris.” Her eyes shone with enthusiasm.