"Will the Truth Set A Family Free?"
Reviewed by Susan Dyer
Posted June 24, 2024
Women's Fiction | Christian
THE SUMMER OF KEEPING SECRETS by Jill Lynn grabbed me right from page one and never let me go. Marin Henderson, who recently became a widow, is on her way to clean out her parent's home. It is the home where she grew up with her sister, and she is struggling. Luckily, her two adult children, Slade and Reed, are there to help her out. Marin has many deep secrets, but it seems her children do too. Marin is determined not to pry and waits for her kids to come clean to her.
While in Dillon, Colorado, Marin reconnects with her first love, Garrett, whom she dated in high school. THE SUMMER OF KEEPING SECRETS finds Garrett helping Marin prepare her family home for sale. While cleaning out one of her grandparents' drawers, Slade comes across an old newspaper clipping of a murder that happened below her grandparents' home. When Slade starts digging around to find out what happened thirty years ago, everyone's nerves are on edge! Hang on to your seat my reading friends. The secrets that come out will have you flipping the pages like crazy!
THE SUMMER OF KEEPING SECRETS is my first time reading Jill Lynn, but it won't be the last for sure. Ms. Lynn hooked me from the very beginning and never let me go until the very last page. When the secrets start coming out, the family starts to actually talk to each other, which is something that is lacking. Marin kept many things buried deep inside of her to protect her loved ones. While she is keeping things from her kids, she knows it's only a matter of time before everything comes spilling out and she is deathly afraid of what it will do to them.
Make sure you have a copy of THE SUMMER OF KEEPING SECRETS in your beach bag or on the table next to your favorite chair! You are going to love this story filled with twists and turns, but also love and hope!
I received a complimentary copy of this book from Fresh Fiction. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.
SUMMARY
"With humor and heart, Jill Lynn explores the power of family, the complicated nature of love, and the price we pay for things left unsaid. An unforgettable read from a standout voice in romance.” —Kristy Woodson Harvey, New York Times bestselling author of The Summer of Songbirds
For fans of Denise Hunter and Susan Mallery, a captivating story about a single summer that could completely break a family apart—or bring them back together. Recently widowed Marin Henderson considers time with her two adult children a gift. And she’s intent on not prying into their lives while they’re all together, cleaning out her late parents’ Colorado home. But from the start, nothing goes as planned. Her free-spirited daughter, Slade, and her strait-laced son, Reed, both arrive ahead of schedule, and no one is explaining why. Marin knows they’re hiding issues in their personal lives. But she can only push so far because she, too, is keeping secrets. Setting aside family tensions, the three of them get to work purging the house. But when Slade discovers a decades-old newspaper clipping about a body found on the rocks below the house, questions arise. Marin insists the death was ruled an accident, but Slade’s curiosity is piqued. And when a roof leak compels Marin to call on an old friend and flame for help, it’s the catalyst for a wave of revelations. Between a daughter bent on distracting herself from her own career turmoil, a son desperate to hold on to his marriage and a mother forced to confront her choices from that long-ago summer, pieces of the past and present begin to unravel. And before the summer is over, they each must decide what to hold on to and what to let go…
ExcerptChapter One
Marin Henderson looked forward to her upcoming extended stay in Dillon, Colorado, as much as she would an IRS audit, her annual pap, or consuming those disgusting chocolate-covered cherries with the sugary, syrupy liquid inside.
Except…that wasn’t completely true. She was a house—a woman—divided. One portion of her loved this town and the alpine environment that could switch from rain, snow, hail or a strange white substance that resembled Dippin’ Dots to periwinkle-blue skies and sparkling, high-altitude sunshine in a nanosecond. She loved the weather in the summer—currently a perfect seventy-one degrees. She loved the views of the Rocky Mountains, which, despite it being the first week in June, still wore leftover layers of snow on their peaks like shimmering crowns. Marin even loved the house itself that she’d grown up in—older, simple, well cared for. The kind of place people concentrated on the inhabitants and not the type of countertop or the age and color of the appliances. So many good memories filled those walls.
What Marin didn’t love was that the last season she’d stayed at her parents’ house for an extensive amount of time had been one of the worst periods in her life.
And considering that in the last four years she’d lost her mother, then her husband, then her father…that was saying a lot.
Marin had quite unwillingly become a poster child for grief.
Her Bluetooth-connected phone rang obnoxiously loud in her car, and Marin clicked to answer.
“Hey, Etts.”
“Home, home on the range, where Marin and Lovetta used to play. Where seldom would roam a stupid cell phone, and they stayed outside all day.” Lovetta’s soprano boomed into Marin’s vehicle at rock concert levels, and she notched the volume down two clicks.
“That was a good one.”
“Thank you!” Her younger sister by two years broke into song lyrics—made up or otherwise— whenever possible. The habit had started when she participated in musicals in high school and continued long past. “Are we there yet?”
“Almost.” Marin turned onto the inclined road that led to their parents’ home and the place they’d lived out an idyllic childhood, until that fateful summer—at least for her—squelched those carefree years into a soupy, tasteless pulp.
Ever since the month-long span she’d spent here in her twenties, Dillon created an uneasiness in Marin that crawled along her spine and wrapped talons around her windpipe.
Those weeks had changed and warped things, and the lid never fit the bowl right again after that. This town wasn’t as innocent for her as an adult as it had been as a child.
And this visit made her tense in a way previous ones hadn’t, because Marin was once again staying for a substantial length of time.
Over the years when she and Ralph had visited her parents, they’d laid low. Baking with Mom. Fishing the Snake River Inlet with Dad. And once her parents’ health had begun to decline, her trips had become focused on their care and the subsequent logistics.
When Marin was in Dillon she treaded carefully, as if someone she knew—or someone who recognized her—might be lurking around every corner. She constantly feared that a nosy pot-stirrer would bring up the past and pummel her with questions she didn’t have answers to.
“How was the drive?”
“Uneventful, thankfully.”
“I’m glad. You could use some uneventful in your life.”
“Right?” Her arthritic fingers gripped the wheel with tension that would wreak havoc on her later. The familiar street stretched before her, curving, etching into the side of the hill until it brought her to the row of houses perched atop the rocky ledge that lined the cobalt Snake River Inlet and the indigo Dillon Reservoir. Though rock was too quaint a word to represent the boulders jutting from and forming the land. Most of the houses on the street were semi-mansions—contemporary boxes or remodels that gave the illusion of rustic with all the conveniences of modern.
The home Marin and Lovetta’s parents had occupied during their fifty-eight-year marriage— and that Dad had then lived in until his passing six months ago—was by far the smallest on High Meadow Drive.
Three bedrooms. Two bathrooms. One oversize, overflowing, storage-slash-laundry room that the family affectionately referred to as The Armpit.
For someone else, the value of the home would be based on the location. For Marin, her sister, Lovetta, and for Marin’s children, the value of the home was in the people who’d occupied it.
Marin and Lovetta had discussed their desire that the future purchaser of the house improve on the bones and structure rather than demolishing it to build something newer and supposedly better, but they didn’t plan to demand anything of the sort. They had to find a way to be unemotional about selling their childhood home, because the modest amount of money left in their parents’ estate had dwindled swiftly over the last year.
Dad’s request to live out the end of his life at home after his stroke had incurred major medical expenses. That, coupled with the cost of living in Summit County, had quickly drained any reserves he’d had.
Marin and Lovetta had no regrets over conceding to his wishes. They’d just wanted their father to be as happy as possible without their mother, and the house had been family to him. 3
But the lack of funds created additional stress.
Because of Ralph’s life insurance policy, Marin could technically float the carrying costs until the house sold and then replenish what she’d spent before splitting the profits with Lovetta. But her sister had been adamant that everything remain even between them—especially since she wasn’t able to be here to assist with the purge. If money was needed, she’d demanded that they both pool their savings to cover costs.
Marin wasn’t sure Lovetta understood how much pressure that added, because the last thing she planned to do was accept money from her chronically ill sister.
Which meant they’d just have to clean out and sell the house quickly.
“I don’t want to be melodramatic, but are you going to survive this, Mar? I know there’s a slew of memories in Dillon that you’d prefer to avoid.”
A vast understatement.
Marin had turned erasing the events of that summer into an art form. Like a page torn out of a history book, there was no point in discussing or rehashing something that didn’t exist.
“Of course.” Marin was quick to assure her sister. Less quick to believe herself. “I’ll be fine. It’s going to go great, especially with the kids’ help. We’re just going to put our heads down and focus on the work.” Marin was oversimplifying things. In truth, if she and her adult children survived their time together in the home that held some of her best and worst memories, didn’t get on each other’s nerves and managed to ready the place to sell, that would be quite the achievement.
Now look who was being melodramatic.
Marin reached the driveway and detached two-car garage, which was located on the west side of the house. She parked in front of the wooden double door, knowing full well there would be no space for her to park in the garage—not with her dad’s things still filling it.
“Just pulled in.”
“It hurts that I’m not there to say goodbye.”
“I know. I promise I’ll send you lots of pictures and save whatever you want to keep.” After she was diagnosed with MS ten years ago, Lovetta had switched from traveling with friends to hoarding her paid time off in case of a medical appointment or a flare-up. She worked as a Discharge Planner at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, and she was careful not to do anything to jeopardize her career and the fabulous benefits it provided.
“Keep me updated when you can.”
“I will.”
Lovetta sniffled. “I’m so sorry I’m not there to—”
“No apologies, remember?”
“Fine!” The snort-laugh Lovetta had always despised but never been able to change filled the car, and she blew her nose. “No one is sorry, then. Even though I am.”
Marin’s head shook, mouth curving. “Talk soon.”
Engine off, Marin exited the vehicle like a person who’d just fallen down a flight of stairs— gingerly, painfully, her RA reacting to the lack of movement in her twelve-hour drive from Scottsdale.
Purse and house key in hand, Marin walked the stone path to the front door. Evergreens grew impossibly out of rocks where no dirt was visible, their refreshing scent reminding her of crisp summer nights.
A lump—or more specifically a body—sprawled along the wooden planks of the small front porch. Panic caused the tendons cradling Marin’s throat to constrict and then release as recognition of the unexpected figure registered. It was only Slade, though why her daughter was conked out on Gran and Grandad’s porch, Marin couldn’t begin to understand. Slade had been planning to arrive around the same time as her brother at the end of the week.
A quiet snore sounded as Marin moved up the steps.
Her daughter’s pale, skinny legs poured out of jean shorts and ended in white boots with thick black soles, and her current hair color was a shade of blond that was almost silvery white.
Marin had recently stopped dying her hair chestnut and embraced the gray that had been overtaking her scalp for the last decade. Her daughter, it seemed, was in a hurry to age. Except on Slade, the almost silver-blond color was somehow young and stylish.
Marin bent enough that she could shift Slade’s hair from her cheek and yet not so far that her knees would give out or get stuck.
“Hi, Love.” Slade was named after Lovetta, but even though she adored her aunt, the summer before sixth grade, she’d announced that she was going to go by her middle name, Slade—which also happened to be her favorite grandparents’ last name.
Marin agreed that Slade fit her better than Lovetta. Still, she didn’t regret that the two women she loved most in the world shared that connection—even though Slade often considered Marin’s love to be overbearing and intrusive.
She was working on it! Marin could admit her faults.
Icy blue eyes, which were somehow jaded and vulnerable all at once, opened. Blinked. “Hi, Mom.”
“What are you doing here, Love?” Marin stood. “I thought you weren’t arriving until Saturday. Same day as Reed.”
Slade scrambled up from the porch floor. They hugged. Marin wouldn’t classify it as stilted, more…halfway present. Just like Slade herself. Her daughter was always bouncing from one scenario to the next, never focused, horrendous at keeping a job let alone managing a career.
“My job ended early.”
“Ended? I hope you didn’t quit for this. I was very clear that no one was to jeopardize their livelihood in order to help with Gran and Grandad’s house.”
“I didn’t jeopardize anything to be here,” Slade assured her, her expression the mixture of hurt and defiance that she’d worn for most of her teenage years.
Marin had coached herself on the drive today, regarding the upcoming time with her two children. I will not say anything to upset anyone. I’ll keep my mouth shut when it comes to the lives of my adult children, both of whom insisted on helping me with this massive project like the wonderful children they are.
And yet Marin had started out, somehow, on the wrong foot. But then, she hadn’t expected to find Slade at the house. She’d anticipated having the next four days to get organized, shore up old wounds and fears, tuck them away.
Why are you really here, Love? What’s going on?
Marin was confident that voicing the question out loud would be a mistake. Slade would take offense at Marin’s concern—which she would consider nosiness. Things would digress. Quickly.
Surprisingly, Slade’s cheeks creased with amusement, and she squeezed Marin’s arms gently, like a mom admonishing a toddler. “It should be a good thing I’m here early to help, Mom. Roll with it. No need to dissect it.”
Right. No dissecting. Reed would never show up without communicating his arrival, but Marin wasn’t sure why she was surprised that Slade had. Reed had taken a week off work and planned to be at the house nine days—leave he’d requested ahead of time. But then, that was Reed. Marin’s eldest and only son had always been the exact opposite of his sister. Poised. Planned. Purposeful. Full of career goals. Driven. Strategic. She could go on and on.
“So, what happened with your job?” Despite that this probe was also likely off-limits, Marin couldn’t set aside that she was a mother who was deeply concerned about her daughter. Was Slade okay? Had something happened? Should she be home interviewing for new jobs instead of here assisting Marin?
“Nothing, really. Let’s just focus on the house, okay?”
“Okay,” Marin replied, hoping the sometimes painfully deep love she felt for Slade would transfer through the one-word response.
If anyone could understand not wanting to talk about a subject, it was Marin.
At least they’d unearthed something the two of them could agree on.
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