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  To all the men and women in the United States armed forces—past, present, and future. And to those who love and support them.

  Truly I tell you, if you have faith as small as a mustard seed, you can say to this mountain, “Move from here to there,” and it will move. Nothing will be impossible for you.

  Matthew 17:20 (NIV)

  chapter one

  Spring Cleaning

  Day 429

  AS SOON AS the alarm goes off, Amber forces herself to say it.

  “This is the day the Lord has made. I will rejoice and be glad in it.”

  Today, Amber actually believes it. She’s so close to the end.

  She shakes off the night and her covers. Her bare feet touch the cool, glossy oak floor. The floor she and Darren sanded, stained, and polished together when they bought this old Victorian eight years ago in Clarksville, Darren’s hometown.

  Amber flies around their king-size bed to the en suite bath with the claw-foot tub she found at a vintage store the summer after they bought the place. She loves this tub. She loves soaking in this tub. She loves looking at this tub. She hates cleaning it. And boy, does it need a scrubbing.

  Amber grabs her robe from the hook that hangs next to Darren’s. His robe hasn’t moved in 429 days. Neither have his toiletries on the top two shelves of the medicine cabinet. Even his shampoo bottle is still propped up on the rim of the shower stall, just as it was the morning he left for Afghanistan.

  Amber enters Bree’s darkened room and sits on the edge of her daughter’s bed. She lightly touches her eight-year-old’s shoulder. Bree’s eyes flutter open as she rolls onto her back. Most of her long, brown, wavy hair still covers her face, and Amber brushes it aside to look at her gorgeous brown eyes. A gift from her father. Nothing like Amber’s fair skin, blond hair, and blue eyes.

  Amber sings, “This is the day . . .” She waits for Bree to echo the response.

  “No, Mom. I’m tired.” Bree pulls the covers over her head.

  “This is the day . . . Come on,” Amber teases.

  Bree’s head shakes from under the quilt. “It’s Saturday.”

  “That the Lord has made.” Amber echoes that part on her own: “That the Lord has made.”

  Amber pulls the covers off Bree’s face.

  “I wanna sleep in.”

  “You can’t hide. Time to get up.” Amber tickles Bree’s sides. Bree squirms under the quilt.

  “Keep singing,” says a muffled voice.

  “This is the day that the Lord has made. Let us rejoice and be glad in it.”

  Bree peeks out from under the covers and joins in on the last line. “This is the day that the Lord has made.” Bree stretches her arms above her head, reaching her fingers to touch a photograph she knows is taped to her headboard. Her father in his military uniform.

  “Is today the day?”

  “No. But not too much longer.”

  “How long?”

  “Ten days.”

  “That’s a lot.”

  “It’s less than two weeks, Bree. We have so much to do before then.”

  “Like what?”

  Amber thinks about the roof that needs repair, and the yard that needs raking, and the fence that could use a coat of white paint, and the house that needs a good spring cleaning. How did she let so much go over the year?

  “We’re gonna clean the house and rake the yard today,” says Amber, who knows she’s biting off more than they can chew. “And afterward we’ll go downtown and get ice cream.”

  Bree hugs her pink camouflage butterfly pillow, a gift from her dad from the post exchange on base. “I have an idea. Let’s make pancakes and watch cartoons instead.”

  Amber opens the blinds, sending the sun streaming into Bree’s room against the powder-puff-pink walls, filling the room with warmth. Outside she notices the daffodils and tulips have bloomed overnight. She cracks the window open and warm spring air flows in, smelling like moist soil and fresh grass. The yellow ribbon she and Bree placed around their big oak tree that stands in the yard at the end of their house flutters in the breeze. It’s looking faded. She should replace it before Darren gets home. Glancing across the lawn, she notices for the first time all winter that it’s no longer brown and crumpled. Instead, a light-green hue has cropped up overnight. In a couple of weeks the grass will be long enough to mow.

  And Darren will be home.

  Amber starts to sing lightly, “This is the day that the Lord has made.”

  “Why do we have to clean the house? It’s just gonna get dirty again.”

  Amber laughs. Bree’s spunk and sense of humor make the long days without Darren more tolerable. What would she do without her daughter?

  “No more arguments. Up and at ’em, kiddo.” Amber goes to Bree’s closet and selects two outfits. “Which one?” Amber holds up a hot-pink shirt in her left hand and a yellow-sailor-striped one in her right.

  Bree slides out of bed, slipping her feet into her oversize pink elephant slippers. She points to the one on Amber’s left.

  “You always pick the pink one.”

  “It’s Dad’s favorite.”

  “Can’t argue with that. Let’s get it on.” Amber hangs the sailor shirt back on the bar. Bree treads over to her mother, elephants slapping the wooden floor with each step. Amber lifts her pjs over her head and slides the shirt on in their place. “Brush hair and teeth, and meet me downstairs for breakfast.”

  She sends Bree to the bathroom and heads back to the master, entering as she hears her phone. She dashes over to find she’s missed a call from Darren, hits redial, and prays she can get a connection. Pacing back and forth, Amber wills the call to go through.

  “Come on. Come on. Pick up. Let’s see, it’s nine o’clock here, which means dinnertime there. Come on, Darren. You were just there.” After the fourth ring, Darren’s line goes to voice mail.

  Amber doesn’t bother leaving a message. It’s happened this way a million times before. By now she should be used to the missed calls and cutoff conversations. But she isn’t. It’s been more than a week since she’s heard his voice.

  She shrugs off her momentary letdown. In ten days they’ll be able to talk and talk and talk. No interruptions.

  chapter two

  Choir Rehearsal

  THE NEXT MORNING, Amber enters the sanctuary of her church to find her choir members have already arrived and are standing in groups of two and three in the choir loft. Bree darts ahead of her.

  “Take a seat next to Mrs. Capers. And don’t bug her,” Amber instructs Bree, who’s already halfway down the aisle. She shuffles up to the piano, where Mrs. Capers slides over and pats the piano bench for Bree to sit.

  “Good morning, Miss Bree. Can you help me turn pages?” says Mrs. Capers.

  “I was hoping I could play the tambourine this morning,” Bree says, with an eye to her mother.

  “You can do both. We only need the tambourine for the first song,” says Amber. Bree grabs the tambourine from the percussion box next to the piano.

  The pastor’s wife, Karena Williams, spots Amber and whisks her way across the loft. Karena’s petite stature belies her large personality. With a broad smile, she wraps her arms around Amber. “Go
od morning, hon. Listen, I don’t mean to hit you with this right off the bat, but we’re missing the Petersons.”

  “What happened to them?”

  “Their daughter went into labor last night. They’re at the hospital.”

  “That’s great news.”

  “Not for the choir. We’re already short on sopranos.”

  “Then the sopranos will have to take it up a few decibels.” Amber checks her watch. “Especially if Bridgette doesn’t show. Where is that girl?”

  “Haven’t heard from her. But she better get here.”

  “I want details on her date with Isaac last night.”

  “Hey, that reminds me. We need to plan a girls’ night out before Darren gets home. I have a feeling we won’t be seeing you for a while once he sets his feet back on American soil.”

  Amber grins sheepishly. She has definitely indulged in fantasies about their reunion.

  “You have me for the next nine days. How ’bout this coming Wednesday?”

  “Painting? Shooting? Or binging Netflix?”

  “My budget’s a little snug right now. Can we do Netflix? My house? You bring your amazing chocolate mousse, and we’ll see if Bridgette can make her baked ziti.”

  “Ladies, ladies, ladies!” a singsongy voice from the back of the church calls out.

  Amber turns to see her best friend, Bridgette, coming down the aisle in her nude heels and camel-colored pencil skirt. She’s wearing a salmon silk blouse and a delicate gold chain with an infinity charm that Amber’s never seen before. She wishes she had even half the energy Bridgette has on a bad day.

  “I had the best date ever last night!”

  Karena nudges Amber with a smile.

  “I was expecting at least a text last night,” says Amber with a little wink. “You must’ve gotten in late.”

  “Isaac took me to that new restaurant that overlooks the lake, and he ordered this amazing seafood platter with oysters, mussels, and escargot.”

  “You know that’s snail, don’t you?” Karena says. “Did you tell that boy you don’t eat food from the ocean?”

  “Turns out, I do.” Bridgette glows. “And he got me this.” Bridgette runs her fingers over the gold necklace. “Isn’t it precious?”

  “Precocious, maybe,” says Karena.

  “This was your second date, right?” Amber is wary.

  “He spent over two hundred dollars. I got a glance at the check.”

  “That’s tacky, girl.” Karena clicks her tongue.

  “What’s he got planned for your third date? Skydiving and caviar?” says Amber.

  “Hey, I’m just saying that it pays to give people a second chance,” Bridgette says.

  “Sometimes. And some people,” Karena says. “He’s trying to buy your affections. You see that, don’t you?”

  “Can’t a girl enjoy a little spoiling?”

  Amber smiles. Bridgette is on that dangerous precipice: turning thirty and getting desperate to be married. “Bridge, we wanna do a girls’ night on Wednesday.”

  “This coming Wednesday? Um, can’t. Isaac wants me to go with him to some company dinner.”

  Amber and Karena wag their heads. “Meet his coworkers? Already?” asks Amber.

  “Things are moving super fast. You see that, right?” Karena says.

  “It’s just dinner.”

  Amber and Karena exchange a look. It’s time.

  “May I remind you that after Ethan, you begged us to monitor your dating accelerator pedal. Here’s your warning. Step off the gas,” says Karena.

  Bridgette thinks about it for a second. “But he’s so cute.”

  “Bridge,” warns Amber.

  “Okay, okay. I’ll ask Isaac for a rain check. So what’s the plan for GNO?”

  “My house. Netflix binge.”

  “Perfect. I’ll bring my ziti.”

  “Don’t make it so spicy this time,” says Karena.

  “The spice makes it mine.” Bridgette turns to Amber. “Hey, girl. Ten days. Are you excited?”

  “Nine days. And yes.”

  “You’re almost there. Home stretch.”

  “I know, I know. I want things to be just perfect, but the house is a mess.”

  “Your house doesn’t matter. All he’s gonna care about is holding you and Bree in his arms,” says Karena.

  “I know, you’re right.” Amber checks the time again. “We’d better get started. I want to make sure we get warmed up and cleared out before the parishioners arrive.”

  Amber’s learned that it’s not uncommon for people to show up half an hour before service starts just to make sure they can get a front-row seat to hear Pastor Williams.

  Karena and Bridgette take their seats as alto and soprano. “Hey, everyone. Good morning. Let’s get in place and warm up with ‘Jesus Paid It All.’ This will be our opening song this morning. Sopranos, you’re gonna have to really use your voices today, because Mrs. Peterson’s about to become a grandma.”

  She gets oohs and aahs from the choir. Amber checks for Bree. She’s right where she asked her to stay, chatting it up with Mrs. Capers.

  “Bree, lemme hear you on that tambourine.” Bree gives it a long, hard shimmy. The choir laughs.

  “Okay. You got it. Put it down. Watch for my cue.” Amber is grateful for such a good kid. She and Darren want to have more. Maybe it’ll happen once he gets back home. After years of unsuccessful trying before he left for Afghanistan, Amber stopped wrestling with why and surrendered to trusting God’s perfect plan. Besides, Bree is blessing enough.

  Amber takes her place as choir director at the podium. She finds her baton and taps out the beat to a modern arrangement of “Jesus Paid It All” that she wrote with Mrs. Capers.

  Mrs. Capers comes in with the opening bars. After the eighth measure, Amber prompts the singers to come in. The sopranos need a little coaxing to up their volume. Bridgette, still giddy from her date, channels that energy to her vocal cords and carries the melody.

  Amber then points to Bree, who uses her whole body to shake the tambourine. Amber motions for her to tamp it down, and sends her a wink of approval when she obeys.

  As they move into the second verse, Amber gestures for the rest of the choir to lower their voices to a hum as Karena and Bridgette soar into a duet. Their perfectly pitched melody is sure to have the right effect on the crowd.

  Amber scans the choir, getting ready to cue them to come in on the chorus. With just three measures to go, Amber returns her gaze to Karena and Bridgette. Karena’s expression has taken a turn for the worse, causing Amber concern. When Karena’s voice drops off as the choir enters with the chorus, Bridgette glances over to see what’s wrong. Her voice thins out, and Amber lowers her hands. The rest of the choir tapers off, looking to Amber for instruction.

  “Karena, are you okay?” says Amber. Karena’s answer is in her gaze. Bridgette is also transfixed on something at the rear of the church. Amber turns to look.

  It registers slowly. Two people are coming down the center aisle. Two men. Tall men. Two soldiers in full dress uniform. Solemn. Marching in perfect step.

  Amber feels their expressionless eyes focus on her. She watches as they pace toward the choir loft. In her mind it’s slow motion, and she barely notices that Karena and Bridgette have moved to her side, flanking her like bodyguards.

  “What is this? What are they doing here?” Amber says, her voice shaky. Bridgette doesn’t answer. Karena puts a hand around Amber’s arm. It does little to steady Amber’s quaking insides.

  “Just take a deep breath,” Karena whispers. “Don’t jump to any conclusions. Let’s just see what they want.”

  Movement at the rear door causes Amber to notice Pastor Williams enter. His eyes are lowered to the ground, but he glances up at his wife. Amber sees the pastor and Karena exchange a disturbing look. Her gut hollows, as if she’s been socked hard under the rib cage without warning.

  The soldiers move to the front of the church, arriving respectfu
lly to face her. Amber finds it hard to look at them. They wait for her to compose herself. Waiting for eye contact. Everything in the church falls silent.

  “Mrs. Amber Hill?” It’s all fuzzy in Amber’s ears. She struggles to focus on them, her eyes shifting back and forth between their faces.

  “I’m Sergeant Miller, and this is Private Kasich. We are here on behalf of the United States Army, and we regret to inform you that your husband, Sergeant Darren Hill . . .” At his name, she retreats, sobbing in heavy gasps. Her chest starts to compress as she stumbles back. Her legs give way, and she collapses.

  Amber feels four hands grip her arms and back as she falls to the floor.

  “Amber? Amber?” The multiple voices calling to her fade away. As she passes out, Amber’s brain picks out only one thing: the sound of a tambourine hitting the floor.

  chapter three

  Sunday Brunch

  Two Years Later

  IT’S NOW 11:38 A.M., and Patti Hill sits in her silver Cadillac just outside the country club where she and her five girlfriends have a standing reservation for Sunday brunch. The six of them have stuck together since high school, weathering five decades of everything life has dished out. Patti tries to compose herself as she scrolls through the pictures of Darren on her phone.

  A lump forms in her throat as she clicks to the phone function to call Kim. She’s going to cancel. She hits the voice mail button by mistake, and her eyes go immediately to the last voice mail on the list. It was left exactly two years ago tomorrow. When the call came through it showed up as an unrecognizable number, and because Patti had been at lunch with a friend, she had ignored it and let it go to voice mail. But the annoying caller rang twice more before Patti stepped outside to answer. It was Karena Williams, the pastor’s wife from Amber’s church. She was sorry to be the one to tell Patti that her son had been killed and her daughter-in-law was in the hospital.

  Patti had rushed to Clarksville Memorial, where Amber was in the emergency room recovering from shock. Bree was there at her side, white as a ghost in the one-size-too-big yellow-striped sailor shirt Patti had bought for her. She spent the day with Amber and Bree until Amber was released that evening. She offered to take Bree overnight, but Amber became hysterical at the idea.