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If Only in My Dreams




  The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

  First published in 2006 by Nal/Signet

  Copyright © 2006 Wendi Corsi Staub

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.

  Published in 2013 by Montlake Romance, Seattle

  www.apub.com

  ISBN-13: 9781477809808

  ISBN-10: 1477809805

  Library of Congress Control Number: 2013908295

  DEDICATION

  For my guys, Mark, Morgan, and Brody…

  And in loving memory of the three beautiful women our family has lost to breast cancer: my mother, Francella Corsi; my mother-in-law, Claire Staub; and Claire’s sister, Frances Ginsberg.

  CONTENTS

  START READING

  PROLOGUE

  CHAPTER 1

  CHAPTER 2

  CHAPTER 3

  CHAPTER 4

  CHAPTER 5

  CHAPTER 6

  CHAPTER 7

  CHAPTER 8

  CHAPTER 9

  CHAPTER 10

  CHAPTER 11

  CHAPTER 12

  CHAPTER 13

  CHAPTER 14

  CHAPTER 15

  CHAPTER 16

  CHAPTER 17

  CHAPTER 18

  CHAPTER 19

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Silently one by one, in the infinite meadows of heaven,

  Blossomed the lovely stars, the forget-me-nots of angels.

  —HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW

  PROLOGUE

  Thanksgiving 1941

  Glenhaven Park, Westchester County, New York

  That was Glenn Miller and His Orchestra with their newest hit record, ‘Chattanooga Choo Choo.’ And now, before the latest news from Europe, a word from our sponsor, Lifebuoy.”

  Lois Landry looked up from the potato she was dicing. “Go turn that off, Doris.” Her voice was sharper than the paring knife in her hand.

  “But I—”

  “Just do it, toots.” Jed shot his kid sister a warning look.

  Doris grumbled her way to the radio in the dining room, where Penny and Mary Ann were carefully setting the table with the fancy Royal Doulton wedding china.

  The prized place settings had seen perhaps two dozen Thanksgiving meals in Jed’s lifetime, with a few notable exceptions: 1929, in the wake of the stock market crash, when a turkey dinner was an extravagance the Landrys couldn’t afford; and again a decade later, when Pop lay dying in an upstairs bedroom and a holiday meal was the last thing on anyone’s mind.

  Abner Landry had lingered, comatose, far longer than anyone had expected, as though he were determined to see the trying decade through to its final month. Jed kept a silent, solo vigil at his father’s bedside that long final night, through November’s waning hours and the dawning of December.

  There were no profound last words, no dramatic requests or heartfelt promises. Not aloud, anyway. Not from Pop.

  But as he clutched his father’s lifeless hand, Jed swore that he would come home for good. He would step into his father’s shoes as head of the household and the family business.

  He had kept that vow for two oppressive years now.

  What mattered most was that Jed was back in Glenhaven Park, where he’d never expected to be, taking care of things, just like his father would have wanted.

  Yes, as Jed’s friend Arnold Wilkens often said, sometimes the longest way round is the nearest way home.

  But I’m not going to stay any longer than I have to.

  Crossing the aqua-speckled linoleum to the glass percolator on the white enamel stove top, Jed glanced at the smoky November sky beyond the glass-paned back door, then at the row of hooks on the white painted beadboard beside it.

  Funny how he almost expected to see his father’s brown wool jacket draped there even now. In the heat of July he finally convinced his mother to move it to the front hall closet. It hung there still, because Lois couldn’t bear to give it, or any of Abner’s other belongings, away.

  Nor could Jed bear to ask her if he could go through the shirts and trousers and dungarees Pop had left behind—much less help himself to them. Granted, at a lanky six three, he was a full head taller than his stout father had been. Still, shirt seams can be taken in, trouser hems let down…

  If it wouldn’t tear Mother apart.

  But it would.

  Better for Jed to keep spending whatever the household could spare on his brother Gilbert’s college textbooks, or dresses and shoes each time Penny, the oldest of his three sisters, had a growth spurt. The younger girls could make do with her hand-me-downs, just as Gilbert did with Jed’s. And Jed, well aware he couldn’t possibly spare two dollars for a new shirt—much less twenty-five for a suit—would go right on wearing his own outdated clothes.

  As he poured another steaming cup of coffee, his mother set aside the potato and the knife and turned away from the sink. He noticed anew that her once-luxurious dark hair was now liberally streaked with gray, and her mouth and eyes were firmly entrenched in wrinkles.

  Two years of widowhood had taken a harsh toll on the woman who was once the prettiest gal in New York City, according to Pop.

  Over the rim of his mug, he watched her open a white metal cabinet door and stare at the row of home-filled Mason jars and store-bought cans: peaches, green beans, Spam…

  “Did you run out of something you need?” he asked at last.

  “Hmm?” she asked absently.

  Jed realized she wasn’t even seeing the items on the shelf. No, she was thinking about old times. Her round blue eyes—Betty Boop eyes, Pop called them—always took on that dazed expression when she thought about her late husband. Bittersweet memories were more plentiful than fallen chestnuts at this time of year, with the looming holidays and anniversary of Pop’s death.

  Jed repeated his question as, in the dining room, the radio abruptly went silent.

  “Mother told me to do it, so there!” Doris retorted loudly over her older sisters’ prompt protest. Jed pictured her scrunching up her freckled face, twisting her pink-ribboned red pigtails, sticking out her tongue.

  “Aw, go chase yerself,” Mary Ann shot back.

  “I’m telling on you.”

  “For what?”

  As the girls’ voices became more shrill, Jed watched his mother slam the cabinet door and reach for her pack of Pall Malls on the counter.

  “For being rude,” Doris bellowed in the dining room.

  “Go ahead and tell. I’ll tell, too.”

  Lois thrust a cigarette between her cranberry-red-lipsticked mouth, then bent over the stove to light it from the gas burner.

  “Do you want me to go in there and straighten things out?” Jed was compelled to offer, though doling out discipline to his siblings was his least favorite household role. The girls resented him; Gilbert defied him outright.

  “No, you just sit right down and drink your coffee.” Mother took a deep drag of the Pall Mall as her daughters continued to bicker. “And when you’re done with your coffee, you can go next door and borrow Sarah Wenick’s kitchen chairs before she leaves for her sister’s house. She’s loaning them to us for the day.”

  Both extra leaves were already in the dining room table to accommodate the assorted family members who would share the feast with Jed and his mother, siblings, and maternal grandparents, all of whom lived under this roof. Cousin Amy and her new husband were drivin
g down from Saratoga Springs, and Uncle Elmer, Aunt Marge, and their four children were taking the train up from Brooklyn.

  Everyone would do their best to make it a festive day despite their lingering grief, the looming shadow of the war in Europe, and the peacetime draft that had already claimed several of Jed’s old high school pals.

  So far he had been spared—a good thing, considering how much he was needed here at home.

  But he had yet to reconcile his long-held dreams and ambitions with reality.

  From the time he was deemed academically gifted as a child, Jed knew he was destined for great things. His parents and teachers told him so; he was encouraged to study hard and strive to be the best. He graduated as valedictorian of his high school class, and nobody was surprised when he won a full Ivy League scholarship.

  It wasn’t just giving up the potential for an important career in Boston that still stung now, two years after being forced to drop out of Harvard Law just six months shy of graduation.

  It was losing Carol.

  He probably shouldn’t have assumed she would accept his impromptu marriage proposal.

  But he’d brazenly had it all figured out: their summer wedding at the First Congregational Church, a honeymoon in the Catskills, the cozy newlywed nest they would create over his mother’s detached garage, since Grandma and Granddad had taken over his old bedroom when he left for Harvard.

  “You want me to marry you and live in a garage like… like a nobody?” Carol had asked in disbelief.

  “Not in a garage. Above a garage.”

  He was still down on one knee at that point. But it didn’t take him long to get up. Get up, and start walking.

  Here he was, two years later, living alone over the garage of his mother’s house on Chestnut Street in Glenhaven Park.

  Officially a nobody.

  Last he heard, Carol married some Harvard Law School grad and was living in a Back Bay townhouse. A somebody, as she always wanted to be.

  Jed supposed he had plenty of things to be thankful for this Thanksgiving. Not marrying a self-centered social climber probably should have been one of them.

  Yet he couldn’t help but think he was wasting his life as a small-town bachelor, running his late father’s five-and-dime, feeling like a glorified soda jerk. At one point or another he had dated most of the available gals in town and fallen in love with none of them, although several reportedly had their sights set on him.

  Just yesterday, Betty Godfrey had cozied up to him over a chocolate malted and reminded him of the movie Caught in the Draft, which he had taken her to see after the Independence Day parade. “Remember how Bob Hope tried to avoid the service by getting married? Just think, Jed, if you were married, you wouldn’t have to worry.”

  “I’m not worried,” he told her, mopping up the countertop with a dishrag. “If I get called up, I’ll serve.”

  “Where would that leave your mother?”

  “My brother’s graduating from Penn State next spring,” Jed informed her. “He’s planning to come back to Glenhaven Park. When he does, he’ll take care of Mother and the girls and run the store.”

  What Jed didn’t admit was that he was counting the days until Gilbert’s return… and that he was planning to enlist the day his brother got back, anyway.

  Just two years ago, FDR had staunchly promised that America wouldn’t fight unless attacked. Yet between the new draft, the Lend-Lease Act, and the Atlantic Charter, it was increasingly obvious that the president expected the country to be dragged into the war. And Jed would have to fight, like his father had back in 1917.

  No question about it. Just as it had been his responsibility to step up as man of the house when Pop died, it would be Jed’s duty to protect his country from the tyranny spreading like a malignancy overseas.

  Mingling with his patriotism was an unabashed desire to see the world beyond the Eastern Seaboard. Yet, much to his shame, he also harbored secret doubts that he could ever harm another human being, under any circumstances.

  His father always liked to tell the story of Jed’s first childhood fishing expedition in the Catskills. Pop threw in his own line, landed a hefty trout—then fended off a surprise attack from his pint-sized firstborn, who tore the wriggling catch from the hook and hurled it back into the stream, shouting at Abner to pick on someone his own size.

  Jed never did grow to enjoy fishing the way his father and brother did. Or, God forbid, hunting.

  Not that he was a sissy. No, he lettered in three sports in high school, including football. But physical confrontation on the gridiron was one thing. Going hand to hand anywhere else was quite another. Unlike his volatile kid brother, he avoided school-yard skirmishes, though when forced, he rolled up his sleeves to rescue Gilbert from the clutches of neighborhood tormentors like Waldie Smith.

  Maybe if Jed thought of the Nazis as overgrown bullies, he’d be capable of violence after all. Particularly in self-defense. But he didn’t like to think about that. And he didn’t have to… not yet. Not for another six months.

  Though nobody in the family knew of his intent to join, he was certain they wouldn’t be surprised. His restlessness was no secret.

  Here in the steamy, fragrant kitchen on this Thanksgiving Day, watching his mother set her cigarette aside to open the oven door to check the roasting turkey, he felt a twinge of guilt for even thinking about leaving someday.

  Mother needed him. They all needed him. He had been the head of the family for two years now. Two years next week.

  But I need a life of my own, he told himself. I need to get back out there. Just for a few years.

  I’ll put in my time, I’ll have some adventures, I’ll meet a swell woman, and I’ll bring her back here to settle down.

  Leafy, friendly Glenhaven Park was the perfect place for a fellow to raise a family. For Jed, it was home… and it probably always would be.

  What he couldn’t know, as he sipped his hot coffee in the comforting warmth of home on this Thanksgiving Day, was that Someday was going to come much sooner than he expected… and that his coveted ticket out of town would be only one-way.

  CHAPTER 1

  The Present

  New York City

  Malignant.

  It’s the last word Clara McCallum really comprehends, though it’s far from the last one Dr. Svensen utters.

  Sitting in the patient’s chair, clutching the wooden arms with the tenacity of a white-knuckled flier, Clara is vaguely aware of other phrases. Phrases that are equally familiar, equally repugnant, hovering in the air like noxious fumes.

  MRI and bone scan.

  Lumpectomy.

  Chemotherapy and radiation.

  None of this is registering. None of it seems to matter.

  In the wake of malignant, what could possibly matter?

  As Dr. Svensen goes on talking in her soothing voice, Clara sits staring at the robust, foil-wrapped potted white poinsettia on her desk, regretting…

  Well, everything.

  Everything she hadn’t had a chance to do and now, perhaps, never will: getting married, raising children, winning an Oscar or a Golden Globe or even just a Daytime Emmy, for God’s sake. Is a Daytime Emmy too much to ask?

  What about the rest? What about celebrating her thirtieth birthday, living somewhere other than New York City, having a baby?

  This can’t be happening.

  “… surgeon,” Dr. Svensen says. “… hospital…”

  It is.

  It is happening, and Clara regrets not just things she hasn’t done, but things she has.

  Smoking cigarettes back in her Broadway days, to rev up her metabolism and keep herself audition-svelte. Ingesting all those artificial sweeteners, every day, all her adult life, right up to the ubiquitous Diet Coke she drank in the cab on the way uptown just now. Never getting enough sleep, always under so much stress…

  And then there’s Jason.

  I probably shouldn’t have broken the engagement after all. We ca
me so close… so damned close.…

  Why did I throw away a five-year relationship on a whim, thinking something better was going to come along?

  Something better never did… and now it never will.

  “Clara… here.” Dr. Svensen passes a box of Kleenex across her desk.

  Only then does Clara realize she’s crying. She accepts the box, plucks a white tissue and wipes away the tears, only to have them instantly replenished like the biological counterpart of a Hollywood rainmaking machine.

  “This can’t be happening to me. I have too much to do. I have a movie to make.”

  It sounds so incredibly lame, even to her own ears. But Dr. Svensen’s sympathetic expression provides validation, so she goes on, brokenly. “Everything is finally falling into place with my career. I can’t be sick. I can’t die.”

  “Clara, come on. Try to breathe. Deep breaths.” The doctor reaches for her hand, the one that isn’t holding a soggy tissue.

  Clara knows the gesture is meant to provide comfort, but it only seems to seal the raw deal. Dr. Svensen, her gynecologist since high school, is not ordinarily a touchy-feely, emotional person. Clara’s prognosis must be pretty bleak if they’re holding hands.

  The doctor’s fingers are as cool as her typical bedside manner; her grasp feels like a farewell handshake.

  Clara wrenches her hand away and rakes it through her long brown hair, a longtime habit of hers.

  “Clara—”

  “I’m going to die.” She looks into the physician’s eyes, noticing that they’re gray. Light gray… like a granite tombstone. “Right? I’m going to die.”

  She waits for the doctor to dispute the statement with reassurance. Or even just to put a philosophical spin on it with a bullshit line like We’re all going to die someday.

  Neither of those things happens.

  Dr. Svensen squeezes Clara’s hand again. “You’re fortunate that we caught it early. And to be living here in Manhattan, with access to a number of fine treatment facilities.”

  Does she have to sound so professional, so… formal? Why can’t she just agree that this sucks? Why can’t she at least talk about miracle cures or something?