Copyright © 2007, Sabra Brown Steinsiek
Published by Whiskey Creek Press LLC

Reviews For ANNIE'S SONG by Sabra Brown Steinsiek

"Much of Ms. Steinsiek’s story is very predictable, but charming all the same.
A group of friends who all grew up together gives built-in dynamics to the story. There is a fun cast of quirky characters in Annie’s Song, and the play between Kit and Rosina, the Morgan’s cook, makes for especially delightful reading." Reviewed by MyShelf.com


Rating: 4.5 Enchantments! “This was a remarkable story of love, life, romances and choices. I thought the author did a fabulous job weaving the different relationships throughout her story. I was thrilled when Kit and Annie finally got together. It’s a bit long, but the overall content was very good. This was a nice read.” - Desiree de Cleves Enchanting Reviews


Sample Chapter For ANNIE'S SONG by Sabra Brown Steinsiek

Annie Morgan stepped back to get the full effect and caught her breath at the vision before her. “Oh, Dante, you’re beyond beautiful,” she said to her best friend, who would be getting married in a few minutes. “Avery is going to be speechless.”

“Really?” Dante whispered as she looked at herself in the mirror. “Is that really me? Is this really happening?”

Annie stepped beside her, and they were framed in the mirror as if time had saved a photograph of the moment. Blonde, blue-eyed Dante Harrington was a vision in traditional white, a tiara and veil crowning her upswept hair. Annie wore a shade of blue meant to show off her stunning red hair and turquoise eyes. Best friends since childhood and roommates for the last four years, they both knew this was the end of an era.

“It’s happening, Dante. Avery is a wonderful guy.”

A soft smile lifted Dante’s lips. “Yeah, he is. I am so lucky.”

They could hear the others in the adjoining room, and Annie said, “One more thing.” She picked up a small box from the table and took out a heart-shaped charm that read “Best Friends Forever.” Picking up one of the ribbons on Dante’s bouquet, she tied the charm firmly in place. “Just to remind you that I’ll always be here for you,” she said as she kissed Dante on the cheek. “Don’t you dare cry! You’ll mess up your makeup!”

Just then, Dante’s mother came in, closely followed by Avery’s mother. The bridesmaids, Erin Scott and Olivia Maxwell, were behind them.

“It’s time, darling,” her mother said as she gave the veil an imperceptible adjustment. “You are so beautiful.”

There was a flurry of activity as bouquets were picked up and last-minute adjustments made to hair and dresses. Then the mothers were gone, and the wedding planner stood ready to start the procession as soon as the mothers had been seated.

* * * *

Christopher “Kit” Maxwell sat beside his parents in the second row as they waited for the wedding to start. He usually didn’t “do” weddings, but Dante was his favorite cousin and his sister, Olivia, was one of the bridesmaids. His mother had made it pretty clear that his attendance was mandatory. His body was present, but his mind was on his meeting with his graduate advisor yesterday morning.

“Mr. Maxwell, may I see you for a moment?”

Class had just finished, and Kit was stuffing papers into his backpack.

“Sure, Professor Nesbitt.”

“I was reading your assignment last night. It’s really not up to your normal excellent standards. I found several misspellings, but, more troublesome, there were instances where you used the wrong word, and places where it seemed whole paragraphs were missing. Is there something interfering with your writing?”

“Three somethings, sir. I live in a house with three other guys, and they’re the partying type. It’s noisy, and I’m always being interrupted. When I was working on that piece, one of the jerks set the kitchen on fire. It was distracting to say the least.”

“Can you move somewhere else?”

“I wish I could, but my job doesn’t pay enough for a good place. With what I can afford, I’d be stuck with the same kind of situation. I figure it’s better to stick with the evil I know.”

“It’s affecting your writing, Kit. You have a real talent. It deserves your full attention.” He handed Kit the assignment he’d been talking about and said, “Take this home and do it again, then I’ll grade it. And keep in mind, you won’t get a second chance when you present your novel.”

Not that he needed reminding. He knew he needed to move. His internship at The Times was unpaid. His graduate teaching assistant position and a part-time job in the library barely stretched to cover his living expenses. Right now, splitting the rent was all he could afford.

His thoughts were interrupted by a murmur in the church as the ushers seated first Avery’s mother, then his Aunt Mary. The music rose as Avery and his groomsmen took their places, watching as the bridesmaids came up the aisle to join them. His little sister Olivia was first down the aisle. She was absolutely beautiful, he thought with surprise. When did she get to be such a lovely young woman? Erin Scott, Olivia’s best friend since kindergarten, was next. He realized that, seemingly overnight, she’d grown up as well, a beauty in her own right. Little Annie Morgan, not so little now and a well-respected presence on Broadway, followed Erin. When the string quartet began to play the traditional wedding march, everyone turned as Dante, looking like a young Grace Kelly, floated down the aisle on her father’s arm.

He had a perfect view of Erin Scott’s profile during the ceremony, and he was struck again by the change in the leggy girl who had been ever-present at their home. Dante and Annie had joined the group in high school, when all four of them joined the same dance class. From his lofty three-year superiority, he’d just considered all of them annoying friends of Olivia’s, filling the house with girl stuff and giggles. Now he was forced to acknowledge that they’d grown up while he wasn’t looking.

* * * *

Taylor and Laura Morgan smiled as Annie walked down the aisle. Tall like her father, with her mother’s red hair, she was a striking young woman. She’d been on her own for five years now, steadily carving out a niche in the New York theater world under her stage name of Morgan Collins. Her first starring role had been the year she’d graduated from high school, and they had made the difficult decision to allow her to pursue her dream while they returned to Laura’s childhood home in Albuquerque to begin new careers.

They’d seen Dante regularly, since she roomed with Annie while she pursued her own dancing ambitions on Broadway. There had been only occasional meetings with Olivia and Erin, although the girls had been a steady fixture in their home while they were growing up. Dante had lived on another floor in their building, and the two girls had bonded the first day they met. Most weekends the girls had slept over at one or the other of their homes. After Erin and Olivia joined their circle, the sleepovers expanded so that each family had all four girls one Saturday night a month.

Laura smiled with pride at the poised young women they had become, while Taylor struggled with the same questions going through Kit Maxwell’s mind. Where had the time gone?

* * * *

The new Mr. and Mrs. Avery Huff turned to face the crowd, who broke into applause as the musicians played the recessional. Annie joined the best man and followed the bride and groom as the others followed them. They escaped into the pastor’s office, where they would stay until the guests headed for the reception. The photographer had been given twenty minutes to take formal portraits before they would all pile into limousines to join the guests.

* * * *

The dancing had been going on for more than an hour, and Annie had not left the floor for one minute. Her shoes had long since joined her bouquet at the table, and she was flushed from laughing when she called a time out and sank into the nearest chair.

“You look like you could use this.” A hand appeared in front of her face with a glass of ice water. Taking it gratefully, she looked up into the face of a man who was vaguely familiar—he had gorgeous blue eyes that she knew she should remember, but the shaggy, dark hair looked wrong.

“Thanks! I absolutely need this...and probably more.” She gave in and asked, “I know we’ve met, but....”

“Annie,” he said with a grin, “I’m wounded. How could you forget me?”

The grin was unmistakable. “Kit! I didn’t recognize you in the fancy suit. What happened to the sweats?”

“Mom wouldn’t let me wear them to the wedding. And I’d washed them, too!”

“How have you been, Kit? You should be finishing your master’s soon if I remember right.”

The grin vanished and he nodded, “Next year, if I stay sane that long.”

“Problems?”

“Nothing big. I just need to look for a new place to live so I can write in peace and get my thesis finished. Hard to do on a part-time salary.”

Before he could say more, Erin sat down next to them. “Any more of that water,
Annie?” she asked as she picked up a napkin to fan her face.

“I’ll go find a pitcher and some glasses,” Kit volunteered. “Be right back.”

“Wow,” Erin said as she watched him walk away. “Kit cleans up good.”

“He does indeed,” Annie said. And they both giggled as they enjoyed the view.

“Annie! Come on!” Jake Phillips, the best man, held out his hand. “We haven’t had a dance yet.”

“Jake, I can’t,” she protested even as she let herself be pulled from the chair. Soon they were lost in the crowd of dancers. She caught glimpses of Erin and Kit laughing at the table but never found time to connect with him again.

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