The #1 New York Times bestselling author of life-changing fiction brings her signature “emotional, heart-tugging” (Woman’s World) prose to this wise and worldly novel of forgiveness and hope in the City of Lights.
In Indiana, Ashley Baxter Blake and her husband are about to take an anniversary trip to Paris, but she is hesitant. More than two decades ago, she made her most grievous mistake in that same city. She has never forgiven herself for what happened there, and she still harbors secrets that she’s afraid will come to light. Just before the trip, Ashley gets a call from her niece. Jessie explains that her French boyfriend’s mother remembers working at a bakery with an American named Ashley. “Could that be you?”
When Alice and Ashley meet, a flood of memories comes for both women, taking Ashley back to a reckless affair and an unexpected pregnancy and Alice to the night she nearly ended it all. Can this reunion bring healing and closure? Maybe it is finally time for Ashley to forgive herself...and Paris.
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The incessant pounding rattled the living room window and shook the walls in the small Parisian flat where Marie Michel was trying to sleep. She folded the pillow over her head and squeezed her eyes shut. She was a terrible mother. How could she have raised a daughter who ran with drug dealers? An addict who had stolen from Marie⦠from her own mother.
āChange the locks,ā the police officer had told her last time it happened. āYouāre not helping by giving her a way to keep using.ā
More pounding.
Marieās heartbeat skipped and jumped and raced inside her chest. It was after midnight. What was her daughter thinking? Why wouldnāt she get help? Marie threw the pillow on the floor and swung herself out of bed.
As she did, the pounding stopped. Marie held her breath. Ten seconds.⦠Fifteen. Still nothing. Silence. Marie exhaled. Alice mustāve moved on, scurried off through the dark of night to find the place where she sleptāunder some bridge or in a shelter in the most dank and undesirable part of Paris. Wherever the drugs were easy.
Marie lay back down and stared at the ceiling. Baby girl, Iām sorry⦠I never wanted it to come to this. A chill ran down her arms and she pulled the blanket over her thin body. She hadnāt paid her gas bill again and this was the coldest night in May.
Life was eroding like the beach at high tide.
If her own mother were still alive, Marie knew what the woman would say. Pray, Marie. Pray. God has all the wisdom in the world. Talk to Him⦠ask Him. He loves you, Marie.
But what would it matter, praying to God now? Alice had been gone long before tonight. Marieās precious baby girl was eighteen and a child of the streets, running with derelicts and drug dealers. Marie wasnāt even sure when sheād lost Alice. Three years ago, maybe. Sometime between shifts, when Marie was out working two jobs to keep food on the table. They wouldāve been better off starving.
Then she might still have Alice.
Marie leaned over and clicked on the lamp by her bedside. A yellow haze filled the cramped room. Marie let her eyes adjust. She stood and pushed herself to the dresser by the window. Every step stirred the ache in her bones, the ache that always came with twelve hours of cleaning hospital floors.
Donāt look at it, she told herself. You need to sleep. Morning comes quickly.
But her hands had a mind of their own.
They pulled open the second drawer and there, sitting atop a heap of worn T-shirts, was the photo album. The one Marie had put together for Aliceās sixteenth birthday. An attempt to win her back and pull her from the seedy world sheād fallen into.
The effort failed, but the photo book remained. Proof that their time together hadnāt been all bad. Marie picked it up and ran her thumb over the cheap cloth cover. At the center was a photo of Marie and Alice, cheek to cheek. In the picture, her precious girl was maybe ten or eleven. Before the streets had gotten her.
Marie stared at the image. āWhat happened to you, baby girl? Why arenāt you here? Down the hall?ā Her voice fell. āYour mama still loves you, Alice.ā A rush of tears came and Marie shut her eyes again. āIāll always love you, Alice.ā
Sleep wasnāt going to come anyway. Marie took the album to the edge of her bed and settled in.
The first few pages were full of baby Alice, as if sheād come into the world like any other child. Alice on her blanket and in her crib, crying in her first bath and laughing at her favorite toy bunny. And Marie, a much younger version of herself holding baby Alice and walking her along the streets of Paris in the pram Aliceās grandmother had given her.
But there were other moments the pages didnāt show. Her motherās warning in the beginning, when Marie came home pregnant after her first year of college.
āYouāll keep the baby, of course.ā Māman had pulled her into a hug. āI will help you.ā Then she had stepped back and looked deep into Marieās eyes. āBut mark my words, Marie. Being a single mother will be the hardest job youāve ever had. I should know.ā
Marieās father had left when she was six. That was the year her mother refused to go along with her fatherās affairs. āItās a Parisian thing,ā Marie could still hear him saying. āFrench men need more than one woman.ā
Finally, her mother had sent him on his way. āYou can have all the women you want,ā she had told him. āJust not this one.ā
Whenever Marie had asked about her father, her mama would stand a little straighter and her eyes would cool. āWe donāt need him, Marie. We have each other⦠thatās enough.ā
And it was. For Marieās mother.
But no one ever asked Marie if having only a mother was enough for her. She remembered her first day of third grade and her classmates talking about their fathers. My papa works in sanitation. Mine works at the hospital.⦠My papa is taking me to Normandy.⦠My papa is taking me to the Seine.
She could hear their voices, feel herself shrinking toward the back of the classroom. āWhat about you, Marie?ā her best friend had asked. āWhat does your daddy do?ā
āHeās a soldier.ā The answer was out before Marie could stop herself. And thatās what she told herself every day after that. Right up until high school, when her mother told her it wasnāt nice to lie.
āYour father wasnāt a good man.ā Her mama had put her hand on Marieās shoulder. āStop calling him a soldier.ā
And so, Marie was left with the truth. Her daddy had done just one thing in his role as a fatherāhe had gotten her mother pregnant. After that he had disappeared.
Even now Marie missed the imaginary soldier father she had created. But as she worked her way through high school, and as she met friends like her with single mothers, Marie promised herself one thingāshe wouldnāt repeat her motherās mistakes. Not ever. When she fell in love it would be for life and the children she bore would know what it meant to have a father.
Marie stared at a photo of her younger self holding baby Alice. That was the main thing missing from the photographs: Aliceās father.
Tears stung her eyes. Years had passed since sheād cried about her own story, the way sheād repeated her motherās mistakes and become a single mom to Alice.
The next page of the book showed her and Alice at a Paris playground, side by side grinning from the swings. Despite her watery eyes, a slight smile tugged at Marieās lips. Before Alice started using heroin, Marie had felt proud of the work sheād done as a single mom. She didnāt believe in God back then, not really. But often she felt like she had some sort of invisible help. Maybe because of the things her own mother would constantly tell her.
āYouāre never alone, Marie. Alice isnāt alone, either. Your Heavenly Father is only a whisper away,ā she would say. āWho could ask for more than that?ā
Her mother had felt that way right up until her death last year from cancer. Peace had filled her face even as she took her last breath, off to meet the One who had carried her all her life. But Marie had none of that assurance.
She turned the next page and the next. More pictures of her and Alice, making a life for themselves. I didnāt see it coming, baby girl. How could I have seen it coming?
The change in Alice happened midway through her first year of secondary school. Thatās when students were allowed to have cell phones in school. Overnight it seemed Alice was different. She ran with a wilder crowd and lied about where sheād been. Months later Marie was rummaging through Aliceās room, looking for signs of trouble, when she found tiny bits of balloons and other plastic pieces, along with miniature fragments of tinfoil and short sections of string.
Her heart in her throat, Marie moved to her bedroom telephone. A quick call to a drug counseling office and she had the truth. Alice was doing heroin. The man who spoke with her said addiction could happen the first time a person tried the drug. Before long, heroin was all a person knew, and buying and using became a full-time obsession.
Cold chills had run down Marieās arms. She confronted Alice that day and after a spate of lies, her daughter left in the dark of night and didnāt come home for a week. When she did, her clothes hung on her shrinking body and her eyes were sullen, framed by dark circles. Alice tried to run past Marie toward her bedroom down the hall. But Marie grabbed her daughterās arm. āWhere are you going?ā Stay calm, she had told herself. Alice wonāt talk to you if youāre hysterical.
āTo my room.ā Alice glared at her. āLeave me alone.ā
āNo.ā Marieās grip tightened. āWe need to talk.ā
āThereās nothing to talk about.ā Alice jerked her arm free and thatās when Marie saw the marks. Needle tracks up and down the inside of her daughterās left arm. Alice mustāve realized what her mother had seen because she ran to her room and slammed the door.
Marie didnāt give up. She followed Alice and tried to open the door, but Alice mustāve been sitting against it because it barely budged. āMove, Alice! Let me in!ā
āNo. I said leave me alone!ā Aliceās voice was muffled.
āI know about the heroin.ā Marieās voice had grown louder. āI want to help you.ā
āItās my life.ā Alice started crying. āI donāt want help.ā
And so it went for five minutes until Marie had no choice but to wait it out. She returned to the kitchen and an hour passed. When it was long after dark, Marie tried again. This time when she pushed her way into her daughterās room there was no resistance. Alice was passed out on her bed, still in her dirty clothes, her stringy hair strewn across her beautiful face.
Marie wasnāt sure if she should wake her daughter up and finish the discussion. For several minutes she stood there and watched her sleep. Just staring at her precious Alice. Baby girl, how did this happen? Why would you do heroin? She barely noticed the tears falling onto her face. Didnāt I give you what you needed? Wasnāt this life enough for you? In that moment a thought had occurred to Marie. Something else her mother had always told her. Without God, life would only be a series of meaningless efforts and irredeemable failures. You need Him, Marie. Alice needs Him. This life is empty otherwise.
Marie had always figuredāthen and nowāthat if God were real, she wouldāve had a father. Alice would have one, too. She and Alice wouldnāt struggle to pay the bills and keep food on the table, the way her mother had also struggled. Every day of their lives.
If He loved them, where was He when Alice took her first hit of heroin?
Marie ran her finger over the next photo. Alice grinning from the second row at her middle school graduation. She was so beautiful, so full of light and love. Friends surrounded her in the photograph, the way they always had back then. Marie held the book a little higher so she could look deep into her daughterās eyes. The eyes of a child with all of life ahead of her. I have no answers, Alice. Marie sighed and lowered the book again. None. Why would you throw your life away?
That night in her daughterās room, despite Marieās best efforts to stay quiet and motionless, Alice opened her eyes. Not like when she was a little girl. Sleepy and slow with a smile that gradually lit up the room. Back then she would hold out both arms and call for her. āMaman⦠hold me.ā
No, that child was gone forever. Instead, that terrible night Aliceās eyes had flown open. Unnaturally wide and panicked. She breathed fast and hard. āGo away!ā Her words were a shrill scream. āGo! Now!ā
Marie had felt her anger rise. Forget being calm. If this were a fight for Aliceās life, Marie was going to start swinging. āYou will not talk to me like that, young lady. Do you hear me?ā
And Alice was on her feet. Her breaths came in jagged gasps and she raked her trembling fingers through her hair. Then she faced Marie and screamed again. āGet away from me!ā
āAlice, youāre not yourself.ā Marie was no longer crying. She was too terrified for tears. āYou donāt want this⦠this life.ā
āYou donāt know what I want.ā She tried to push past, but Marie stood her ground, blocking the doorway. Aliceās face grew red. āMove! You donāt own me!ā
āIf I have to get locks for your bedroom door, Iāll do it,ā Marie had shouted. āI will not let you leave this house for a life on the streets. That isnāt who you are, Alice. Get back in bed.ā
A switch had seemed to flip in Aliceās heart at that, and suddenly the fight left her. Slowly, like the sick child she was, she returned to her mattress and slipped beneath her blanket. She buried her head in her pillow and turned her back to Marie. Just one word came from her before she fell asleep again.
āGo.ā
That was the last word Marie heard from Alice for a month. In the morning when Marie went back to her daughterās room, the girl was gone. So were her bedsheets and pillow and most of her clothes.
And life had been like that ever since. For two years. Marie had no idea who Alice had been living with or what she was doing to survive. She didnāt want to think about it.
Then a few months ago, Alice began stopping by the flat, acting like she was interested in changing, like she wanted a relationship with Marie again. But each time she left, Marie found money and v...