The Promise Girls Read online




  ALSO BY MARIE BOSTWICK

  THE COBBLED COURT QUILTS SERIES

  Apart at the Seams (Cobbled Court Quilts #6)

  Ties That Bind (Cobbled Court Quilts #5)

  Threading the Needle (Cobbled Court Quilts #4)

  A Thread So Thin (Cobbled Court Quilts #3)

  A Thread of Truth (Cobbled Court Quilts #2)

  A Single Thread (Cobbled Court Quilts #1)

  TOO MUCH, TEXAS NOVELS

  Between Heaven and Texas

  From Here to Home

  NOVELS

  On Wings of the Morning

  River’s Edge

  Fields of Gold

  The Second Sister

  The Promise Girls

  NOVELLAS

  “The Yellow Rose of Christmas” in Secret Santa

  “The Presents of Angels” in Snow Angels

  “A High-Kicking Christmas” in Comfort and Joy

  The Promise Girls

  MARIE BOSTWICK

  KENSINGTON BOOKS

  www.kensingtonbooks.com

  All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.

  Table of Contents

  Also by

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  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

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  With Many Thanks to . . .

  THE PROMISE GIRLS

  DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

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

  KENSINGTON BOOKS are published by

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  119 West 40th Street

  New York, NY 10018

  Copyright © 2017 by Marie Bostwick

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.

  Kensington and the K logo Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.

  eISBN-13: 978-1-4967-0922-6

  eISBN-10: 1-4967-0922-5

  First Kensington Electronic Edition: April 2017

  ISBN: 978-1-4967-0921-9

  For my sister, Lori, the coolest mermaid I know

  Chapter 1

  1996

  Chicago, Illinois

  The studio lights are glaringly bright and white-hot.

  A disembodied voice from the loudspeaker announces, “One minute to air,” in the way Joanie imagines the autopilot of a doomed spaceship might announce, “One minute to impact.” Everyone in the studio—audience, host, and guests—goes instantly and utterly silent, waiting for what comes next.

  Three weeks into the book tour, Joanie still isn’t used to the silence of televisions studios, ponderous silence that feels like being closed in a concrete box with walls so thick no noise from the outside world can penetrate, just as no sound emanating inside can escape. Joanie can scream as loud as she wants and no one will hear her.

  Joanie, Meg, Avery, and their mother sit in upholstered side chairs, like the ones you see in the waiting rooms of doctor’s offices, motionless, waiting. Avery is so little her feet can’t touch the floor, but she doesn’t kick her legs or even fidget.

  The audience is still as well. They stare at Joanie and her little sisters in a way that makes her think about people at the zoo staring through the glass at the reptile house, waiting for the snakes to do something interesting.

  Soon they will—she will. If she doesn’t lose her nerve.

  The voice comes again, droning “Ten seconds.” Joanie feels a bead of sweat along her hairline. She lifts her hand to wipe it away, but catches sight of her mother’s eyes. She puts her hand back into her lap, feels the bead trickle down her forehead, into the crevice behind her ear, dropping onto her dress collar.

  The floor director, dressed in black, counts down the final five seconds on his fingers and points at the host, whose smile appears out of nowhere.

  “We’re back. Today we’re discussing child prodigies. We’ll be meeting children and teens whose remarkable achievements in the arts, sciences, mathematics, and business can’t help but make us reconsider our preconceived notions about the limits of human intelligence and even the nature of childhood itself. It also brings up long-debated questions about what matters most in tapping the depth of human potential. Nature? Or nurture?

  “In her newly released book, The Promise Girls, our first guest, Minerva Promise, mother of three artistic prodigies, argues that nature and nurture play equally important roles in fostering genius. Please welcome Minerva Promise and her daughters, Joanie, Meg, and Avery—the Promise Girls.”

  The audience, happy to have a role to play and eager to approve of anything put forth by their host, one of the wealthiest, most famous, and most trusted women in America, claps enthusiastically. When the applause begins to fade, the host asks her first question.

  “Minerva Promise, most expectant parents are happy just to have healthy children, but when your daughters were born, and even before they were conceived, you made it your goal to raise three highly accomplished artists—a pianist, a painter, and a writer.”

  Minerva, who has been nodding in agreement while the host speaks, smiles. “That’s right. My daughters were given expert artistic instruction as soon as they were capable of creating on their own. Joanie received her first piano lessons at two and a half. Meg began painting—with her fingers, of course—even before that. Avery is only five, so she can’t yet write sentences, but she creates and dictates remarkably complex stories. Even as babies, my girls were intentionally and intensely exposed to great music, art, and literature to tap their natural creativity.”

  “And yet,” the host comments, her brow furrowing, “some have said there is nothing natural in your methods. You didn’t just encourage your daughters, but engineered them with the specific intention to raise prodigies in three separate areas of the arts. Is that true?”

  Minerva frowns, but in a way that will not make her appear any less attractive on camera.

  “I think ‘engineered’ makes it all sound a lot more Mary Shelley than was actually the case. I’m no Dr. Frankenstein.” She flashes a maternal smile to prove it. The audience chuckles. “However, I did take advantage of technological advances to conceive and bear children with a higher likelihood of achievement in the arts.

  “As a single woman with infertility issues that made conception by natural
means or even by artificial insemination impossible, I feared I would never have children. But when Louise Brown was born—”

  “The first test tube baby,” the host clarifies, “born in England in 1978.”

  “Yes,” Minerva says. “She was the first baby born via in vitro fertilization, in which the egg is fertilized in a laboratory and then implanted into the mother’s womb. Soon afterward, I went to Europe to undergo the procedure, choosing donor sperm from an anonymous classical pianist for my first child, Joanie, and a gifted painter for my second girl, Meg.” She smiles affectionately at her daughters, who smile back. “By the time Avery was born, in vitro was widely available in the U.S., so I . . .”

  Joanie stops listening. The press packet prepared by their publicist and sent ahead of each interview has suggested questions written out in advance. The host has written her own questions, but Joanie knows more or less what will come next—the pseudo-serious discussion of pseudoscientific theories, the host’s gentle chiding about the social and moral implications of designer babies . . . It was pretty much the same every time.

  Only a few questions will be directed toward Joanie or her sisters and those will be softballs—easy inquiries about the artists they admire most, what their average day is like, if they have time to play and have friends like “normal” kids, possibly a cheeky question about whether or not Joanie has a boyfriend—questions formulated to make them seem like other children, which they are not.

  Other children don’t get paraded out to perform like monkeys at the circus, stared at like snakes in the Reptile House, like freaks in a sideshow. Even now, as the grown-ups talk about the children as if they aren’t there or can’t hear, the audience keeps sneaking furtive glances at them. The boy in the front row, the geeky math whiz who tried to talk to her in the green room, is staring at them outright, at her, and has been the whole time.

  Like the others, he probably wants to know what the big deal is about them, about her. Are they as genius as Momma claims? Joanie doubts it. Meg is different perhaps, the only true genius in the room. But they all work very hard, Momma too.

  The Promise Girls—the children and the book—are Momma’s life’s work, the only means she had of making a living, for all of them. Having just turned seventeen, Joanie is old enough to understand about money and the need of it. That’s why she agreed to go along with this, to be the one whose job it is to prove that Momma is telling the truth and has successfully and intentionally raised prodigious artists.

  Avery is too little to be anything but adorable, though she absolutely is and enjoys the attention. But being adorable doesn’t prove the success of the experiment, does it? Meg can’t produce a painting on demand in an eight-minute television segment. Even if she could, she’s too timid. She hates being stared at, being judged by strangers. Just sitting here is agony for her.

  It is for Joanie, too, but she can bear it better. She must because she’s the oldest. It’s her job to protect the little ones, and so she agreed to this. For three weeks. It was supposed to be over by now. The publicist said that three weeks after a book is released, the public will lose interest. Unless you are on this show.

  Apparently, it is a very big deal. Joanie wouldn’t have known unless someone told her—they don’t own a television. But because the host read Momma’s book and decided to do a show built around them at the last minute, now everyone wants them. Paula, the publicist, is booking them three months out. Three months.

  Joanie hadn’t agreed to that. None of them had.

  Avery is turning into a brat, starting to act out because she thinks the others are getting more attention. Momma has threatened to spank her even though Avery knows her mother would never lay a hand on Avery, on any of them. Momma has a sinus infection. Joanie has a cold. All of them are exhausted. When it began they were excited because the hotels have swimming pools. Now they are too tired to use them.

  Meg is suffering the most. She woke up crying this morning, has headaches every day, all day. She’s anxious all the time, too nervous to eat.

  Meg is suffering. Can’t they see that? Someone has to put a stop to it.

  The first segment is over. A stagehand comes to escort Joanie, but she knows what she is supposed to do. She gets up from her chair and goes to the piano on the far side of the stage. She will play her usual piece, Liebestraum No. 3, by Liszt. When she is done, she will go back to the chairs with the others. The host will ask the softball questions while pictures of Meg’s paintings flash onto the big screen at the back of the stage.

  Then it will be over. Except it won’t be. Not unless someone puts a stop to it.

  The commercial break ends. The cameras roll again. The host introduces her and Joanie begins to play.

  How many times has she played the Liebestraum? The “Dream of Love”? Hundreds, certainly. Thousands, maybe. Yet she never tires of it. Maestro Boehm has taught her to see mystery in every note, to understand that every time she plays, no matter how familiar the notes, chords, and arpeggios become, the music can reveal something new to her, and in her, if she will release herself to it.

  But today is not one of those days. She is not playing very well. Not badly, but not well. She has learned that television audiences don’t know the difference; it’s not like playing at a competition. But surely even they will notice the mistake she has planned, timing it to occur during the change from arpeggios to chords, where someone might easily trip up. If she goes through with it, makes this mistake on purpose, they’ll see that she’s not a prodigy at all, just a lazy, mediocre girl, a failed experiment, and they’ll send her home. They’ll send all of them home.

  Will Maestro Boehm forgive her? Will Momma?

  But someone has to put a stop to it; Momma should have already. When Paula started talking about booking three months out, Momma should have said, “I’m sorry, we’re done. It’s enough.” But she didn’t and now Joanie doesn’t know if she’ll be able to forgive her, ever, for forcing her to do this, for leaving her no choice.

  Here they come, two bars away now, the chords.

  Joanie’s eyes shift to the far side of the stage, ignoring the suspicion she sees in her mother’s eyes. Joanie looks at the keyboard and makes her fingers stumble, or seem to stumble. She frowns, pretending to be perturbed, flustered. Then she pretends to recover herself and plays the end of the piece perfectly.

  The final notes fade away. Joanie lifts her hands from the keyboard and stands up as the audience applauds. Her cheeks feel hot. She knows she doesn’t deserve their adulation and doesn’t understand why they don’t realize this, but she curtsies because that’s the procedure, that’s what you do after a performance. Momma always says, “It’s one thing to make a mistake, another to let people see it.”

  The host crosses the stage to meet her. The audience claps even louder when she folds Joanie into a congratulatory embrace before leading her back to the chairs.

  Momma stands up as if to greet her. Her lips are pressed into a thin line and her eyes are two cold gray mirrors. She draws back her arm and slaps her daughter across the face with such power that the sound is like the crack of wood against leather when a batter swings away and hits one into the bleachers.

  The audience gasps as if they are one person and then, just for a breath, falls into shocked silence. They can’t quite believe what they have just seen, can’t believe that the mother of these brilliant children who has been making the rounds of all the talk shows, including this one, hosted by the empress of them all, has just slapped her daughter while the cameras rolled.

  But Joanie is not surprised. She expected . . . well, not this. But something like it. She knew Momma would be angry.

  Joanie totters a step, feeling off-balance. She removes her hand from her cheek, exposing the angry red imprint of her mother’s hand. The crowd gasps again. They see the evidence of Minerva’s wrath.

  And then . . . pandemonium. It all happens so fast.

  The host grabs Joanie, pulls her close,
calls for security. Within seconds, two security guards grab hold of Minerva, clasping her arms, limp at the elbow. Two black-clad producers appear from the wings, swooping down on Meg and Avery. Avery is sobbing, crying for her mother and Joanie at the same time. Meg is crying, too, but no sound comes out of her mouth even though her eyes are streaming with tears and her face is contorted. There are cries and boos. People calling their mother names—terrible, terrible names. Others are calling for 911, for the police.

  The floor director shouts, “Cut!” The red lights on the cameras go dark. The security guards are dragging Minerva off into the wings. Another of the black-clad strangers grabs hold of Joanie’s arms and pulls her in another direction, away from her mother, away from her sisters, too, separating them like four points of a compass, to the end of the map of the world, the end of their world.

  Joanie is crying now, too, louder than anyone, sobbing, “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean it! Let me play it again, please! I’ll do it right this time, I promise. Please! Let me play it again!”

  It does no good. She can scream as loud as she wants. No one hears.

  Chapter 2

  2017

  Seattle, Washington

  March is the season of waiting in Seattle.

  Rain drizzles down day after day in a dithering trickle, too hard for a sprinkle, too light for a deluge. The temperature, too, is indecisive. It’s hard to know what to wear—coat, jacket, sweater, or shirtsleeves—so people tend to dress in layers, trying to prepare for anything, irritated that they need to. The skies are neutrally gray, refusing to make an endorsement or prediction. Everyone lives in suspense, waiting for the unveiling that, this year, could well pass them by, waiting for spring. Or something like it. Anything different would do, anything to break the monotony, and the tension, of waiting.