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Authors: Jenny B. Jones

Tags: #YA, #Christian Fiction, #foster care, #Texas, #Theater, #Drama, #Friendship

Can't Let You Go

Can’t Let You Go

Jenny B. Jones

Also Available in a Katie Parker Production Series

In Between

On the Loose

The Big Picture

Can’t Let You Go

An old love whose kisses make her weak, but whose secrets threaten to destroy all she holds dear . . .

Fresh out of college, Katie Parker had it all—a charming romance, a role in a famous stage production, and an idyllic life in London.
Until
she found her boyfriend cheating and got herself fired from the play. Leaving everything behind, Katie hops a plane home, only to run into her first love, Charlie Benson. As the couple returns to In Between, Katie questions everything she ever thought she wanted—including a renewed romance with her high school flame.

While she attempts to rebuild her life, Katie’s plan to manage the family’s theater meets a devastating obstacle, dragging her into a legal battle that will rock her small town. And the boy who once broke her heart seems to have the power to do it again. As Charlie’s secrets unravel, Katie must make a choice. Can she overcome her past and trust Charlie with her heart again?

© Copyright 2014 Jenny Jones

Kindle Edition

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

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

Cover Design: Kelli Standish

For information contact:

[email protected]

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Dedicated to Dana Tanner

Rock star of positivity, inspiration to all, beautiful inside and out, day-maker, light-giver, anointed one, overcomer, friend

Table of Contents

Title Page

Katie Parker Production Series

About the Book

Copyright Page

Dedication

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

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter Twenty-Six

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Chapter Twenty-Nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-One

Acknowledgements

About the Author

Chapter One

“W
hat do you
mean my bags aren’t here?”

I leaned over the counter at the O’Hare airport, fresh out of patience and smiles. The TSA employee’s fingers clickity-clacked on his keyboard, his generous brows knit together like an escaped wooly worm.

“I’m sorry, Miss Parker. Something apparently went very wrong, and your luggage seems to be on a flight to Reykjavik.”

“This is unacceptable. Who goes to Iceland?”

“Apparently your bags do. Look ma’am, I’m just the gate agent. You’ll have to talk to the folks in baggage.”

“I already did that.” I wanted to slap my hand on the counter and yell until Mr. Brows made this all okay, and I knew it wasn’t his job. But I just couldn’t handle one more catastrophe. My bottom lip quivered, and I heard the pitiful words tumble from my lips. “My whole life is in those bags.”

“Surely not everything,” said a voice behind me.

That voice.

One I hadn’t heard in years, except in my dreams of home and heartache.

I turned around, pushing my tired, limp hair from my flushed cheek. Suddenly all the exhaustion of a ten hour flight evaporated, the weeks without sleep, the homesickness. All that I’d left behind in London.

“Charlie Benson.” His name came out of my mouth like a sacred whisper as he stood there smiling.

I immediately burst into tears.

“Hey.” Strong arms wrapped around me, and I was taken right back. My head pressed to Charlie’s chest, I inhaled his achingly familiar scent, and I was no longer this broken, exhausted twenty-three year old, who’d just spent a year studying abroad, the pieces of my heart the only luggage that followed. I was sixteen, back in my hometown of In Between, dancing with one sweet Charlie Benson on my back porch underneath the Texas stars.

“How are you here?” I dashed at the tears and took a much-needed step back. I let my eyes roam over the boy before me. Could I even call him a boy? He stood tall and broad shouldered, as if now carrying not just muscle, but some of the world’s responsibilities. With his dark dress pants, white button down, and navy tie, Charlie looked all man. And a professional one at that. “Are you headed home?”

“Yes. Got out of a meeting only minutes ago.” Charlie now lived and worked in the Windy City. “So my big brother and your best friend getting married. Crazy, huh?”

“Crazy that Frances and Joey got together, or that they’re pulling this quickie wedding business?”

His smile told me he didn’t share in my concern over Frances Vega and Joey Benson going from first date to wedding date in less than ninety days.

“I mean, three months?” I held up an appropriate number of fingers as a stunning visual aid. “Who does that? What’s their rush?” Frances swore to me she wasn’t pregnant, brainwashed, or trying to avoid testifying on Joey’s behalf, but this was not like my neurotic, nerdy, logic-ruled best friend.

“I guess they just know it’s right,” Charlie said, as we both began to walk toward our gate. “I’ve never seen my brother so happy.”

“It’s called lust.”

“Is it?” Charlie laughed. “That’s just sad, Katie. When did you get so cynical?” He didn’t bother to let me answer. “So trouble with your last flight?”

“It’s been the longest day. A flight cancellation, a lot of waiting and stress-eating, then the new plane got delayed, and for my finale, a little scrap with customs. It’s so good to be finally headed home.” To my mom and dad, my crazy grandmother, to people who loved me. My gosh, I’d missed them.

“How was living in London?”

Don’t think about it. Don’t think about it.
“Very nice.”

“My mom keeps me updated on In Between. She said you were in some great plays on the West End.” At my nod he smiled. “She says you’re kind of a big deal.”

Glad someone thought so. “Just lucked into some good roles, I guess.”


Flight 247 for Houston will now begin boarding our first class passengers
. . .”

Rain pelted the wall of windows at the gate, and I wondered if the crew had noticed.

“Are you on this flight?” Charlie asked.

“Yes, you?”

“Yep. I’m going home until the wedding. A little working vacation.” He reached out, ran his hand down my arm, his head tilted just so. “Are you sure you’re okay?”

“What, me? This?” I gestured to my mess of a face. “Jet lag, you know? And then the airline losing my stuff.” I gave a laugh so genuine, the Academy should’ve FexExed me an Oscar. “I’m sorry. I’m a little homesick, and when I saw you—” I shook my head and smiled. “I guess you were just a sight for sore eyes. So how are your folks?” I knew exactly how they were, but it was time to divert the focus from my crazy.

“Mom stays busy with my little sister. And Dad. . .” Charlie adjusted the strap of his laptop bag. “He’s ambitious as ever. Yours?”

“James and Millie are actually scheduled to leave on a mission trip to Haiti a few days after I arrive.” My foster parents had adopted me when I was seventeen, and I couldn’t have asked for a better mom and dad. I had taken their last name, officially becoming Katie Parker Scott, but Katie Parker was my stage name. And the only thing Charlie had ever called me.

It had been over five months since I’d seen my parents when they’d visited me at Christmas, and I was dying for a Scott family reunion.

The garbled voice came across the speakers again.

“Time for me to board,” Charlie said. “Where are you sitting?” He held out a hand for my ticket, and I fumbled in my bag to find it.

“It’s here somewhere.” I dug through the outer-pocket, coming up with a nail file, half a Snickers, two pieces of gum, and ten wads of semi-used Kleenex.

“Hey.” He stepped nearer. “You’re shaking.”

I waved it off. “Fatigue.”

He took my worn leather messenger bag, searched the middle compartment, and pulled out my ticket. “You’re still afraid of flying, aren’t you?”

The things people remembered. One senior class trip to Miami Beach in which I tried to storm the cockpit demanding two forms of identification from the pilots, and everyone labels you a full-blown nut job.

Please. I had grown up since then.

“Final boarding call . . .”

“It’s been incredible seeing you today.” Charlie pulled me in for a hug, and I just breathed him in. The warm, the familiar, the safe. “We have more catching up to do.” His voice was a caress near my ear. “Are you going to be okay?”

“Definitely. I haven’t had a flying meltdown in such a long time.”

It had been at least three hours.

Clutching a water bottle and my wrinkled ticket, I followed Charlie as we boarded the sparsely populated plane. He stopped off in row seven, while I schlepped to the very back of the cabin. Next to the bathroom. How these odiferous seats didn’t come with a discount was beyond me.

I squeezed my bag in the bin above me, then settled into the window seat, hoping the two empty seats on my right remained that way. Buckling in, I checked my phone one last time. I quickly responded to a text from my mom, two from my dad, and five from my grandma that consisted of nothing more than her fish-lipped selfies with the message, “My face misses yours!”

And then there were those voicemails I’d immediately deleted.

Fifteen minutes later, we taxied down the runway. I sat in my blissfully empty row, pushed my breath in and out, and prayed to the Lord Jesus to spare me one more day. I wasn’t afraid of what came after death. I was just a little terrified of the actual dying process. Especially if it involved crashing, flames, and wasted drink carts.

I was just promising the Holy Father my favorite mascara and first born when a shoulder bumped mine, as someone threw himself into the seat beside me. I continued to whisper my beggar’s prayer when a hand covered my clenched fingers.

I looked up.

Charlie smiled. He brushed my damp hair from my face like he’d done it a million times before. He pulled my hand from my lap and just held it in his.

“I’m not afraid to fly,” I said.

“Of course not.” He gave my fingers a squeeze. “It’s the fatigue.”

Thunder cracked outside. “Do you think it’s safe to be in the air?”

“I do.”

“But I read this report that when it storms, your statistical chances of—”

“It’s perfectly safe.”

“But sometimes lightning can strike the plane—”

“Nearly impossible.”

“And then there’s the possibility of—”

“Katie?”

My heart beat wildly, and my bones ached with exhaustion. “Yes?”

His gray eyes held mine. “I won’t let anything happen to us.”

“Promise?”

With a smile as safe as church and sweet as sun tea, he slowly nodded. “Always.”

Chapter Two

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