April 20th, 2024
Home | Log in!

On Top Shelf
EXPLOSIVE TRAILEXPLOSIVE TRAIL
Fresh Pick
THE WILD SIDE
THE WILD SIDE

New Books This Week

Fresh Fiction Box

Video Book Club

April Showers Giveaways


April's Affections and Intrigues: Love and Mystery Bloom

Slideshow image


Since your web browser does not support JavaScript, here is a non-JavaScript version of the image slideshow:

slideshow image
Investigating a conspiracy really wasn't on Nikki's very long to-do list.


slideshow image
Escape to the Scottish Highlands in this enemies to lovers romance!


slideshow image
It�s not the heat�it�s the pixie dust.


slideshow image
They have a perfect partnership�
But an attempt on her life changes everything.


slideshow image
Jealousy, Love, and Murder: The Ancient Games Turn Deadly


slideshow image
Secret Identity, Small Town Romance
Available 4.15.24


Another Life

Another Life, April 2007
by Ann Roth

Kensington Zebra
Featuring: Mary Beth Mason
320 pages
ISBN: 0821780344
EAN: 9780821780343
Mass Market Paperback
Add to Wish List


Purchase



"Emotionally charged drama of two wives dealing with the death of their bigamist husband."

Fresh Fiction Review

Another Life
Ann Roth

Reviewed by Jory Reedy
Posted March 15, 2007

Fiction Women's Fiction | Romance Contemporary

Mary Beth Mason lives a good life. She and Stephen have been married for 20 years. She gave up her career to make a comfortable home for him and their teenage daughter, Aurora. But one phone call changes it all. Stephen is in a hospital in Seattle and not expected to make it through the night. But why is he there and not in Singapore?

When she arrives at the hospital, Mary Beth meets Caroline, who's also waiting for news concerning her husband. They begin to share information about their spouses and discover they are a lot alike. But when the doctor delivers the shocking news that Stephen Mason has died, the unexpected response is that both women claim to be his widow. You guessed it; Stephen Mason was a bigamist, and he left two very confused women with a big mess to clean up.

Mary Beth confides in one of Stephen's law partners about his bigamy and soon discovers who her true friends are. Aurora blames her mother for Stephen's need to set up another household. She rebels and starts hanging out with new friends she meets at the mall. Mary Beth finds out the house they shared is mortgaged to the hilt and there's a problem with the life insurance. It seems Stephen, the selfish bigamist, left his family with nothing. Mary Beth sees their only chance for financial survival is to sue Caroline.

But things are not great for Caroline either. Unlike Mary Beth, she does have a career. But in order to remain in the home she shared with Stephen and their daughter, Jax, she needs to take in a tenant. However, having a renter has its challenges. She meets weekly with her attorney, Martin Cheswick, to strategize about suing Mary Beth.

When Caroline and Mary Beth start calling each other, a weird sort of camaraderie begins to form. After all, they do have a lot in common. Could they possibly become friends? But remember, they're suing each other, and that could put a damper on any friendship.

ANOTHER LIFE by Ann Roth is a story like no other I have read. I was hooked on the first page and couldn't put it down until the final sentence. This is a drama, romance and a mystery all rolled into one. I can't wait to read more of Ms. Roth's books.

Learn more about Another Life

SUMMARY

Sometimes Losing Everything…
Learning of her husband Stephen’s fatal heart attack is the worst thing Mary Beth Mason can imagine--until she learns about the other family he left behind. Another wife, another daughter, another home hundreds of miles away in Seattle. For twenty years, Mary Beth’s life centered around pleasing and loving Stephen, socializing with his lawyer friends, taking part in the exclusive San Francisco clubs and guilds he prized, and raising their daughter Aurora while he was away on “business.” Having promised to take care of her forever, he left her instead with mountains of debt and a house mortgaged to the hilt.

Is The Only Way To Find Yourself…
But amidst the piles of unpaid bills, Mary Beth discovers some unexpected gifts—a fierce determination to begin again, a strength she never knew she possessed, and a most unlikely ally. Out of the ashes of a lie, she starts to create the life—and the family—she’s always wanted. A life built on trust, honesty, and perhaps even love…

Excerpt

Mary Beth Mason was running late because she couldn’t find her keys. Where had she left them? Standing in the middle of the kitchen where she’d spent the past hour preparing a chicken-broccoli casserole for dinner, she tried to recall.

She remembered the cell phone ringing as she’d pulled into the garage after the garden club meeting—Susan Andrews wanted to discuss the upcoming ballet guild fundraiser. Absorbed by the conversation Mary Beth had wandered inside and tossed the keys . . . somewhere. She drew a blank.

Nerves thrumming, she chewed the pad of her thumb, which wasn’t as satisfying as biting her nails but protected her bi-weekly manicure. Good thing Stephen wasn’t here, because he considered any kind of finger or nail chewing “coarse.”

What was it he said last week when she couldn’t find her sunglasses? “Forty years old and senile already.”

It was a joke but also a jibe. Stephen, who was nearly sixty and neurotically organized, never misplaced anything and didn’t understand people who did. Especially his wife.

The minute-hand on the art deco kitchen clock stuttered forward, and she was later still. As breathless as if she was in the middle of a tennis lesson, she rapidly searched the kitchen, the den, the dining and living rooms, and even the powder room reserved for guests. No luck. The keys weren’t in any of the bedrooms or bathrooms upstairs, either, or in her purse, sweater, or coat pockets.

“Oh, dear,” she muttered, back in the kitchen. Maybe she was getting senile.

It was her day to drive carpool. Aurora didn’t like to be kept waiting after swim-team practice, which ended exactly fifteen minutes from now. Mary Beth pictured her daughter’s pretty young face tightened into the same scowl Stephen used to convey disapproval. Father and daughter also shared the same intolerance for those who weren’t as organized and punctual as they were.

But then lately, Aurora found fault with Mary Beth no matter what she did. At fourteen the world revolved around her, and she expected her mother to bow to her needs no matter what. Teenagers!

Worse, Aurora would whine about this to Stephen tomorrow night when he called from Singapore. Then the chiding would begin.

“There are only three of us in this family, Mary Beth. How hard can it be to run the household smoothly and efficiently?” she mimicked, lowering her voice in imitation of Stephen’s. “Surely even you can do that.”

“I’d like to see you juggle Women’s Club and PTA meetings, the garden club, symphony, art guild, and opera fundraisers, and sit through every one of Aurora’s swim meets and clarinet recitals,” she muttered under her breath.

Not loud enough for anyone to hear, because Mary Beth preferred to avoid conflict. Of course, at the moment there was nobody around to hear.

Stephen never drove Aurora anyplace, and he rarely attended her activities. He was too busy making money and traveling to Asia to work with clients. He paid the bills and handled the investments. Mary Beth’s job was to run the house and care for their daughter, and that meant picking her up on time.

The phone rang—not the cell but the land line. She ignored it. Friends and family would know to try the cell. Anybody else could leave a voicemail message. After five rings, the machine picked up.

There was one last place to check for the keys. By the time she reached the foyer, the phone was ringing again. Her gaze homed in on the marble-top console inside the entry. Though she couldn’t recall using the front door or the adjoining coat closet today, her keys lay there, a tangle of silver and gold.

Wouldn’t you know they’d be in the last place she looked. At least she had them now. They jingled as she snatched them up.

The phone went silent. Almost immediately it rang again. Odd. She checked her watch, then rushed into the kitchen and picked up.

“Hello?”

“Is this Mrs. Mary Beth Mason?” asked a sober female voice.

Too clipped and businesslike for a salesperson.

“Yes, it is,” she replied, tapping her toe impatiently on the floor. Hurry up, hurry up.

“This is Barbara Collins for Dr. Suzanne Frank at Harborview Hospital in Seattle. Please hold.”

Seattle? Aside from a family vacation years ago, Mary Beth didn’t know the city or anyone living there. This call made no sense, but while she waited on hold she ran through the possibilities. Couldn’t be family, because Stephen and Aurora were her only living relatives. Stephen had a frail brother twelve years older, but he lived in England. There were business associates all over the world, but all their friends lived here in San Francisco.

The line clicked. “This is Dr. Frank,” said a soft female voice. “I’m afraid I have bad news. Your husband has suffered a massive coronary.”

The words didn’t penetrate. Mary Beth frowned. “There must be some mistake. Who did you say you are?”

“Dr. Suzanne Frank at Harborview Hospital,” the woman repeated. “You are the Mary Beth Mason married to Stephen Edward Mason III?”

“I am, but—”

“Your husband is in the ICU under my care, Mrs. Mason.”

The keys slipped from Mary Beth’s fingers, clattering onto the tile. “But that can’t be.” She sank onto a bleached- wood kitchen chair. “Stephen is a partner at the law firm of Jones, Westin and Hawkins. He specializes in international law. That’s why he’s in Singapore.” Though no one could see her, she shook her head. “He’s definitely not in Seattle.”

The doctor cleared her throat. “Look, I don’t know anything about your husband’s travel itinerary.

All I know is, if you want to see him alive you’d better get up here right away. I don’t think he’s going to make it through the night.”

Mary Beth slumped in the hospital-beige lounge chair outside the Harborview Hospital Cardiac ICU. It was nearly one in the morning, eight hours since she’d received the call that had brought her here. She’d arrived at the hospital only twenty minutes ago, but it felt like days.

Stephen had suffered a second coronary, the nurse at the ICU desk had informed her, and the doctors were working to save him. So here she sat, numb and waiting. Yet nagging questions hummed through her brain like irritating gnats.

For starters, what was Stephen doing in Seattle when he was supposed to be in Singapore? Why hadn’t he told her where he was?

Mary Beth hugged her Prada handbag close. It was cold and hard when she needed warmth, a comforting touch, or at least a sympathetic smile. But at this late hour she was the lone visitor.

If only she’d brought Aurora. Her distraught daughter had begged to come along, but Mary Beth hadn’t wanted her to see her daddy this sick. So she’d called Ellie Saunders, her oldest and dearest friend, and asked her to stay with Aurora. Stephen didn’t approve of the never-married Ellie, whose father once had served time for passing bad checks and who worked as a paralegal at a non-profit law firm specializing in immigration. But the woman was like a sister to Mary Beth and a godsend of a friend, and she lived in nearby Oakland. She’d packed a bag and come at once, offering to stay with Aurora until Mary Beth brought Stephen home.

The elevator pinged and a weary-looking but beautiful woman stepped from the cage, balancing a large cup of Starbucks coffee and a jumbo Godiva chocolate bar. She wore strappy heels that had to hurt her feet, and shimmery off-black stockings. Her legs were long and shapely, and she walked like a woman used to high heels, an art Mary Beth had never mastered.

Blowing a strand of thick, blond hair from her face, she took a seat across from the white coffee table in the same waiting area. Her hair was shoulder- length, wavy and glamorous, and the color looked natural. She set down her things and shrugged out of her black dress coat, which looked to be cashmere.

The coffee smelled good. Mary Beth tucked her limp, brown, chin-length hair, which she dyed to hide the gray, behind her ears. She and the blonde exchanged weary, sad smiles.

The woman was a good ten years younger than she. Judging by the slinky black cocktail dress clinging to her body, she was slimmer and shapelier than Mary Beth had ever been. She put on weight just thinking about candy, but this woman probably ate all the chocolate she wanted and never gained a pound.

Mary Beth envied her. She also felt frumpy and fat. She tugged her gray cardigan over her ample hips and wished she’d changed out of her old gray wool trousers, striped blouse, and loafers before rushing to catch the plane.


What do you think about this review?

Comments

No comments posted.

Registered users may leave comments.
Log in or register now!

 

 

 

© 2003-2024 off-the-edge.net  all rights reserved Privacy Policy