
Part of Series
July 19, 1983 The Kinards, the Richardses and the Webbers—Seattle's Kennedys. Their "compound" — elegant Forrester Square. . .until the fateful night that tore these families apart. Twenty years later. . . Their children were reunited. Repressed memories and family secrets were about to be revealed. And one person was about to make sure they were never remembered. . . When Meg Bassett and Brody Taylor divorced, their fraternal twins were only infants. Brody was about to move to Ireland, and joint custody would have only created upheaval in their children's lives. So Meg and Brody each took a twin. . .and they became single parents. It was a big mistake.Five years later Meg moved to Seattle, unaware that Brody had just moved there, too—and that both twins were enrolled at Forrester Day Care! How to tell the kids their new best friend was their sibling? And how to tell each other they were still in love?
Author

Dear Readers, The love stories in my family have always been fodder for romance novels. My maternal grandmother and grandfather simultaneously ran a business together and raised four daughters, long before it was an accepted thing to do. Grandpa O’Dell ran the gas station and the barber shop; Grandma O’Dell managed the grocery and cooked for customers. They were true partners and madly in love and parted, tragically, way too soon when he succumbed to cancer when he was in his early fifties. Grandma grieved deeply but eventually picked herself up, started a new career as a cafeteria chef, and eventually found deep romantic love and happiness again, in the form of a second marriage. Read more here...