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The Lost Daughter Of Pigeon Hollow

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2018
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The Lost Daughter Of Pigeon Hollow
Inglath Cooper

Willa Addison doesn't believe in fairy talesShe's too busy running her mother's diner and raising her wild teenage sister. She doesn't like to dwell on the dreams she once had, dreams she put on hold. Then Owen Miller walks into her diner and changes her life.She doesn't know what to think when Owen hands her a letter from her father–a father she thought was dead–requesting they meet. As if that wasn't enough, her sister has become more than she can handle. It's time for Willa to figure out what's happened to her life. And maybe, with Owen around, she can finally believe in happily ever after….

“A Bland County woman, twenty-three-year-old single mother Teresa Potter, was the winner of last night’s five million dollar lottery—”

“Can you believe that?” Judy asked, pointing to the TV hanging from the ceiling. “I mean, she just buys a ticket in the Mini-Mart, and presto, her life is changed overnight.”

Willa began filling a row of glasses with iced tea. “Only happens in fairy tales.”

Judy reached for a towel and began wiping down the counter. “Does that mean something good can’t happen to a person once in a while?”

“No. But I’m not going to stand around waiting for it.”

The door opened and Judy’s eyes widened. “Don’t look now, but the winning lottery ticket just walked in.”

Dear Reader,

One of the things that draws me to books is the notion that within the covers of each one exists a group of characters who, like real-life people, have made mistakes, chosen unwisely and maybe found themselves headed in a direction they hadn’t anticipated.

In our own lives, mistakes are easy enough, but second chances are sometimes elusive. We don’t always get another opportunity to make a better choice. But as readers, we can step into someone else’s world, see what happens when they get another shot.

In The Lost Daughter of Pigeon Hollow, each of my characters has a problem that needs fixing, a turning point where they must choose to stay as they are or let go of the rope and take a chance. Easier said than done! I hope you’ll enjoy watching Owen and Willa give it their best.

I love to hear from readers. Please write to me at P.O. Box 973, Rocky Mount, VA 24151. You can e-mail me at inglathc@aol.com. Or visit my Websiteinglathcooper.com.

All best,

Inglath Cooper

The Lost Daughter of Pigeon Hollow

Inglath Cooper

www.millsandboon.co.uk (http://www.millsandboon.co.uk)

For my grandmothers, Vickie Perdue Holland and Mary Mullins Johnson, ladies of character and integrity.

I love you more than you can know.

CONTENTS

CHAPTER ONE

CHAPTER TWO

CHAPTER THREE

CHAPTER FOUR

CHAPTER FIVE

CHAPTER SIX

CHAPTER SEVEN

CHAPTER EIGHT

CHAPTER NINE

CHAPTER TEN

CHAPTER ELEVEN

CHAPTER TWELVE

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

CHAPTER NINETEEN

EPILOGUE

CHAPTER ONE

PIGEON HOLLOW, KENTUCKY, was the kind of place that could never quite get past its name. No one knew exactly where the name originated. Folks said it had been somebody’s idea of a joke. Others said the original settlers in the valley had discovered a flock of albino pigeons that came to symbolize the peace the settlers had hoped to find in their new home.

Nonetheless, the current-day residents of Pigeon Hollow were aware of the initial impression the name conjured. A town full of hicks whose definition of higher education did not broaden past Sugar McWray’s Beauty School or the local community college’s night course for mechanics.

The town council had proposed changing it a number of times. But the council had never gotten past the talking stage, the consensus being that a town ought to be able to transcend its name.

Mostly, it did.

They had an unemployment factor of less than three percent; a fair number of their high-school graduates went on to college. In addition, the town boasted impressively high rates of volunteerism and a food bank that stored frozen and canned goods for families in need.

To outsiders, the town was one of those places that existed simply because it was on the road to somewhere else. For Pigeon Hollow, somewhere else was Lexington, and the international horse industry that had become as rooted there as the blue-grass pastures on which equine royalty grazed.

There were those in town who complained about that. Willa Addison wasn’t one of them. Except for a few years away at college, she had lived in Pigeon Hollow all her life, and taken over her mama’s business when she was twenty-one. A good number of those people driving through to Lexington stopped for a meal at the Top Shelf Diner.

And each of those customers increased the probability that she would be able to pay the monthly stack of bills now looming at one corner of her kitchen counter.
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