The cedar-lined closet smelled of dry-cleaning fluid, old lavender sachets, and quiet defeat. It was past eleven on a Friday night. Outside the bedroom window, a soft Boston rain slicked the cobblestone streets, reflecting the amber glow of the streetlamps. Inside, thirty-nine-year-old Maya sat cross-legged on the cold hardwood floor, surrounded by a mountain of clothes. It was the bi-annual closet purge, a ritual Maya had come to dread. To her left was the "Keep" pile, mostly comprised of stretchy black leggings and oversized sweaters—the camouflage she had adopted since her second pregnancy. To her right was the box destined for the charity shop. But directly in front of her sat the most painful pile of all: The "Someday" clothes. Maya picked up the top item, a pair of rigid, designer straight-leg jeans she had worn at twenty-seven. The denim felt heavy and unforgiving in her hands, the brass button cold against her thumb. For three years, these jeans had hung a...
Delivering fictional dreams that feel more real than reality. A dedicated collection of romantic tales, bittersweet memories, and stories of female empowerment, written for the heart that dares to dream.