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The Sleeping Beauty Bride
The Sleeping Beauty Bride
The Sleeping Beauty Bride
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The Sleeping Beauty Bride

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Noelia Russo's plate is full: she works at Wedding Bliss by day, writes romance by night, and now she's agreed to volunteer at the hospital too. However, this favor for a friend pays off when Noelia bumps into Dr. Nate Westbury, a widower who could warm her lonely heart.

But Nate can't think about a relationship while his daughter, Lydia, remains in an unexplained coma after a car accident. He blames the girl's fiancé, a young mechanic whom Noelia believes is innocent in the tragedy. She's determined to help the young couple find their happily ever.

Then strange events begin to occur, and it's up to Nate and Noelia to unravel the otherworldly messages. As the real danger closes in on the Westburys, can Nate learn to trust Noelia's instincts—and her love—to save them all?
LanguageUnknown
Release dateMar 23, 2022
ISBN9781509239955
The Sleeping Beauty Bride
Author

Glenys O'Connell

Glenys O'Connell writes romantic suspense and comedy. Her interest in criminal psychology began when covering the crime beat as a journalist for a large daily newspaper . She holds a degree in psychology and is qualified as a counselor. As well as romance, she also writes non-fiction on mental health issues, children's books, and is an award-winning playwright. After years of travelling and working abroad, mainly in the UK & Ireland, she now makes her home in rural Ontario, Canada, with her husband, four grown-up children, and three spoiled cats. You can read more about her at her blog, https://romancecanbemurder.blogspot.com/ or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/glenys.oconnell

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    The Sleeping Beauty Bride - Glenys O'Connell

    Noelia hurried around a corner in the corridor and ran smack dab into a visitor coming the other way. Tall, with silver streaks in his dark hair, carrying a bouquet of yellow flowers, he was the kind of guy lots of women would love to run into. He didn’t look too pleased, however, especially as he had dropped his book and files to help Noelia regain her balance.

    Embarrassed, Noelia hoped the man couldn’t see beyond the flush on her cheeks to the sizzling reaction she’d felt as he held her. Oh my goodness! To cover her reaction, she knelt to pick up the book and file folders, coming face to face with him as he, too, tried to retrieve his possessions. Thoroughly flustered now, she stuttered, I am so sorry—I guess I wasn’t looking where I was going.

    Hospitals can be places that cause distraction, he replied calmly, tucking the errant book and papers back under his arm and moving past her. She wondered what his face would be like if the serious expression was gone and he smiled…

    It’s all this romance and marriage that’s going around, Noelia told herself firmly. You’re a fifty-year-old widow, much too old and staid to be swept off your feet by a guy you bump into! Even if he was handsome and polite.

    The Sleeping Beauty Bride

    by

    Glenys O’Connell

    The Wedding Bliss Series, Book 2

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

    The Sleeping Beauty Bride

    COPYRIGHT © 2022 by Glenys O’Connell

    All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or The Wild Rose Press, Inc. except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

    Contact Information: info@thewildrosepress.com

    Cover Art by Jennifer Greeff

    The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

    PO Box 708

    Adams Basin, NY 14410-0708

    Visit us at www.thewildrosepress.com

    Publishing History

    First Edition, 2022

    Trade Paperback ISBN 978-1-5092-3994-8

    Digital ISBN 978-1-5092-3995-5

    The Wedding Bliss Series, Book 2

    Published in the United States of America

    Dedication

    To Adrian, my own romantic hero, without whom the words would have no meaning.

    CHAPTER ONE

    The fact that Noelia Russo didn’t strangle Sasha Atwell Montgomery right then and there had more to do with her own sense of propriety and restraint than with her assistant’s lack of a sense of self-preservation.

    Call it justifiable homicide, she thought. Not a judge in the land would convict her after hearing testimony from the clients whose self-image the young woman had very likely destroyed with a few badly chosen words of fashion advice.

    Drawing in a deep breath and sending up a little prayer for patience, she said, How many times do I have to repeat that ‘the customer is always right’ is good business practice? And good business practice means happy customers, customers who spend their hard-earned cash with us. That, in turn, means that we get paid for taking good care of them. Think of it as a circle with a smile at one side and a paycheck on the other.

    Looking truculent, Sasha mumbled, But Noelia, I was doing her a favor not letting her buy that outfit. I have a great sense of style—people often comment about that. She paused to cast a critical eye over Noelia’s comfortable pants-and-sweater ensemble. Seeing the other woman’s dark look, she hurried on. I mean, that mother-of-the-bride dress she wanted, in that awful pinky-gray-beige color, would have made her look like a plucked turkey.

    Noelia rolled her eyes in exasperation. Really, Sasha, maybe you were right. But you didn’t have to actually tell her in those exact words. Keeping her voice quiet and projecting as much calm as her waning patience would allow, she added, That little repartee led to a very promising client leaving the store. That will cause ripples, and other potential clients from the Bingham wedding will now choose to buy their outfits somewhere else, rather than deal with your lack of tact. And that would cause a nasty gap in the bottom line of Wedding Bliss. Noelia didn’t own the shop—Kelly Andrews did—but as Kelly’s assistant and friend, Noelia took the success of Wedding Bliss seriously. She felt she owed it to Kelly to do her very best work.

    Sasha managed an injured sniff. I never wanted to be a wedding planner in the first place. Kelly and Brett bullied me into it.

    You’re not a wedding planner. You’re a temporary assistant until Kelly and Brett get back from their honeymoon. A honeymoon they’d delayed because they were so caught up in work. Is it really too much to ask, after all she has done for your family, that you should repay her by helping out in her business? Preferably without bringing the business into bankruptcy by your treatment of our clients, she added to herself. Kelly must have been crazy to ever imagine her spoiled, airheaded sister-in-law could possibly be an asset to the business she had worked so hard to build.

    I didn’t think when Brett said it would be good for me to have a job and be useful that he meant waiting on a lot of women with awful fashion taste. I mean, what’s useful about that if I can’t give them the benefit of my obviously more sophisticated savoir-faire? Sasha glanced in the big mirror on the store’s back wall, smoothing down the pretty hunter green miniskirt she wore with a very fashionable floral-patterned top with lace inserts.

    Noelia bit back the mean reply that hovered on her lips. Instead, she said calmly, Our job is to help customers find clothes that truly suit them, whether that is a bridal gown or dresses for the bridesmaids, matron of honor, mother of the bride, or a wedding guest. Everyone loves a wedding, and everyone wants to look their best.

    That’s what I was doing! Tears pooled in Sasha’s eyes. My conscience wouldn’t let me allow that woman to go out in public in that dress! It was shockingly ugly, and the other guests would have laughed at her.

    Your conscience? The one that let you sell off your aunt’s things, including her wedding gown, while she was lying ill in the hospital? The gown that turned out to be cursed and set off all kinds of trouble around here?

    Sasha sniffed again, despite the guilty pink that bloomed over her cheekbones. Yes, but it did have a happy ending. Aunt Mary found the man she had loved and lost, Kelly and Brett found each other, and a restless spirit found peace at last. And all that started because I sent that wedding dress that she could never possibly want to wear again because she was jilted in it, to the auction house to sell it for a few hundred measly dollars…

    Noelia counted to one hundred. Slowly. What you did with Mary Atwell’s gown was wrong, just as what you said to that last customer was wrong. You could have found a kinder way of diverting her, getting her to try on an outfit that would truly suit her, one that she would love, and then she would forget all about that ugly beige concoction. The way you handled it was tactless and cruel.

    Sasha sniffed again and wriggled her feet in her designer shoes with the impossibly high, slender heels. My feet hurt. I’ve been on them all day—I don’t know how you and Kelly do it.

    Noelia recognized the cry for pity and the subject diversion and sighed. Sasha was a spoiled young woman who’d had everything she ever wanted, had never finished college or held down a job, and had gathered two divorces without learning anything about her own behavior. It wasn’t something Noelia felt she had the time or energy at the moment to counsel the girl on. Why don’t you take off for home now, Sasha? We’re almost at closing time. Maybe you could wear some more comfortable shoes tomorrow? Remember that working in a store means you are on your feet much of the day.

    Sasha didn’t need to be told twice. She hugged Noelia impulsively, all grievances apparently forgotten, grabbed her expensive leather jacket and designer leather handbag, and caused the silver bells above the store entrance to jingle and dance madly as she all but flew through the door.

    Noelia sighed again. Was she being overly impatient with the girl? Brett Atwood, Kelly’s new husband, was right that his sister needed to learn something about the real world and that working would be good for her. After all, Brett had shared a similarly privileged life as his sister, but what had made the two of them so different? He had spent most of his adult life working hard for non-profit organizations in the poorest parts of the world while Sasha seemed to be the original airheaded bimbo. Who knows the ways of Mother Nature?

    With Sasha gone, Noelia just had to tidy up and turn the sign on the front door to closed. But as she went to get her coat her cell phone rang.

    Ellie Mae? Goodness, I didn’t expect to hear from you! Noelia said.

    Oh, Noelia, we’re having the most wonderful time! The cruise was heavenly, and now we’re at the hotel in Barbados…it’s like a second honeymoon, only better!

    Noelia sighed. It seemed like everyone in the world was enjoying romance, except her.

    I’m glad it’s all working out.

    Well, I just wanted to check that you were coping with my volunteer hours at the Marina Grove General Hospital? I know it’s a lot to ask of you—you’re the best friend in the whole world!

    I’m glad you think so, dear—and if I don’t leave now, I’ll be late for this evening’s stint. I’m getting introduced to working the third floor tonight.

    Ellie Mae issued a gusty sigh. That’s the floor for the chronically ill, long-term patients—it can be heartbreaking.

    Noelia rolled her eyes. Just what she needed in her present mood. I’m sure I’ll survive, she told her friend. Don’t worry and enjoy your trip. Take lots of photos!

    Noelia grabbed her coat and rushed out to her car. She hoped Ellie Mae was wrong and that volunteering on the third floor would not be so depressing. She was anxious to get home and step into her own secret life of Mimi L’Amour, the glamorous best-selling author of sexy hot romances.

    ****

    Despite her tiredness and aching feet after a full day at the store, Noelia was pleased to find she actually liked being a candy stripe volunteer at the hospital. Not that she wanted to carry on after her friend Ellie Mae returned from her exotic cruise, but it was opening up a whole new world to her, a world in which she felt of use to people who needed and appreciated her.

    She liked and admired the nurses and doctors that she met and the other volunteers, too. In fact, she was making new friends, particularly with Eva Wilkinson, the nurse she was currently doing rounds with.

    This is one of our heartbreakers, Eva told Noelia as she paused before opening the door. We call her Sleeping Beauty. She’s been in a coma ever since a car accident three months ago.

    Oh, the poor lamb! Noelia fought to keep the tears that crowded in her eyes from falling as she peeked in through the door of the private room. That name suits her—she’s lovely.

    The room they entered was so quiet it seemed almost cut off from the real world, aside from the low, diligent mutterings of the monitors attached to the body of the pale young woman who lay in the hospital bed. In the dim light that stole through the half-closed blinds, Sleeping Beauty looked fragile and pale, her deep sleep giving the impression of a dreaming fairy tale princess.

    Maybe it was the air of loneliness that pervaded the room or seeing such a young woman trapped in a death-like coma, but something made Noelia shiver as if a cold breeze had suddenly sprung up.

    Looks like a goose walked over your grave. That’s what my mom always said when someone shivered like that for no reason, Eva said cheerfully.

    Noelia shivered again. The picture of the goose on her grave was depressing, and she wondered how Eva could take it so lightly. I think there was a bit of a draft, she said, suppressing another shiver.

    It’s just an old English superstition, hon, Eva said, chagrined at Noelia’s sudden pallor.

    I think I’m just tired. And there’s something…so sad about this poor girl. She’d almost said, something about this room. But that would have sounded odd.

    Our pretty little Lydia? There’s a story to this, and I’ll… Suddenly, Eva’s pager went off. Gotta go. Can you find your way back to the nurses’ station? I’m sure they’ll find something else for you to do! With a quick smile and a gentle touch on the shoulder, Eva was gone.

    Noelia took one last look around the room and uttered a prayer for the young woman on the bed. Then she left quickly.

    ****

    The middle-aged woman sat beside the hospital bed, tears welling up in her eyes as she took in the muttering and beeping machinery and the still, silent form of the young woman who lay there.

    She came here every day to talk to her, to hold her hand, hardly knowing whether her words were heard, or her touch felt. But she had to do something. How could she carry on with her own path when this child was lost in the no-woman’s-land of a coma?

    There must be something more she could do, some way to elicit some sign from the sleeping girl that she would return to those who loved her before everyone gave up on her.

    Voices sounded outside in the corridor, and the woman stirred from her thoughts. She knew she was hardly even noticed by the staff here and, if they thought of her at all, it would only be with pity for the tragedy in her life. With a last sweet kiss on that pale face, the woman slipped from the room.

    ****

    Preoccupied by the story of the lovely young Sleeping Beauty, Noelia hurried around a corner in the corridor and ran smack dab into a visitor coming the other way. Tall, with silver streaks in his dark hair, carrying a bouquet of yellow flowers, he was the kind of guy lots of women would love to run into. He didn’t look too pleased, however, especially as he had dropped his book and files to help Noelia regain her balance.

    Embarrassed, Noelia hoped the man couldn’t see beyond the flush on her cheeks to the sizzling reaction she’d felt as he held her. Oh my goodness! To cover her reaction, she knelt to pick up the book and file folders, coming face to face with him as he, too, tried to retrieve his possessions. Thoroughly flustered now, she stuttered, I am so sorry—I guess I wasn’t looking where I was going.

    Hospitals can be places that cause distraction, he replied calmly, tucking the errant book and papers back under his arm and moving past her. She wondered what his face would be like if the serious expression was gone and he smiled…

    It’s all this romance and marriage that’s going around, Noelia told herself firmly. You’re a fifty-year-old widow, much too old and staid to be swept off your feet by a guy you bump into! Even if he was handsome and polite and wearing a classy gray suit that brought out the startlingly deep blue of his eyes.

    But be honest, Noelia, a guy who brings in a hefty book on Welsh history to read to a hospital patient is hardly likely to be a soul mate for a woman who writes sizzling hot romances.

    ****

    Dr. Nate Westbury, chief of psychology at Marina Grove Hospital, sat beside his daughter’s bed, the files on his lap unopened, the fat History of Wales by Peter Davies lying forgotten on the seat beside him. He regarded Lydia with sad eyes as he watched her sleeping figure.

    Honey, I would give everything I have to have you back again, well and happy. And this time I wouldn’t let anyone make you miserable or hurt you. Least of all that no-good boy who called himself her fiancé. Daniel is out of your life for good, and you’ll find someone worth your love.

    There was no response from Lydia—Sleeping Beauty, the hospital staff called her—but without warning a draft knocked all the files off his lap and scattered them onto the bed and on the floor. Then, to his disbelieving eyes, the same air movement lifted the heavy history tome from the seat and threw it on the floor.

    The weight of the book made him shake his head. That must have been an optical illusion. Obviously, I didn’t put the book properly on the seat, he muttered to himself. He gathered the papers together again, being careful to put them in the right file folders and checking again to make sure nothing had been filed wrongly after he’d bumped into that woman in the hallway. He wondered briefly if he’d ever meet her again. Pretty unlikely, he thought, surprising himself by the pang of disappointment he

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