It's uncanny the way I always want to move to whatever small town Sharon Sala creates, and it's certainly true of Jubilee, Kentucky, the setting of this 5-star novel about the redeeming power of love--and what a fabulous, kind, sweet, charming, and heartwarming read it was.
The novel starts off with a bank robbery gone bad, a terrifying shooting, injury and a death, and Linette Elgin was there, waiting outside the vice-president's office when three masked and armed men burst into the bank, terrify the occupants and one of the bank robbers shoots and kills the vice-president of the bank who had dropped to the floor as ordered, and was lying right next to Linette. Police officer, Wiley Pope, unaware of the events inside, enters the bank, quickly realizes what's happening, shoots the lookout, as well as the other two robbers and in return is shot in the chest. Linette, a nurse at the local hospital, rushes to help him and although he's in pain, she's relieved to see that he was wearing a Kevlar vest. The weight of the body armor was making it hard for him to breathe, so she helps him remove it. By then, the sick, wounded, and injured were taken to the hospital, including Wiley, with cracked ribs, but he was certainly the hero of that day. But for a small town, there's yet another murder and an attempted murder to come--solving it forms the secondary plot of this novel.
Wiley, still in the hospital, was thrilled to see Linette come to his rescue. They'd gone on one date that ended badly when a couple a catty women showed up, flirted with him, and made a couple of snide remarks, and Wiley had been trying to think of a way to convince Linette to date him again--the bank robbery gave him that chance. By the time they had their second date, the two knew they'd found that special someone. And that's when we meet the little star of this story, 7-year-old, Ava.
Then, one day a woman, Corina, shows up at the police station, where Wiley and his brother, Aaron, both work, claiming that Aaron is the father of her obviously starved, bruised, and abused daughter, Ava. Aaron has never seen this woman before in his life. But Wiley knows who she is, and the DNA test proves that little Ava isn't Aaron's daughter, she's the daughter of their cheating father, Clyde, making Ava their half-sister. It's clear that Corina is the worst sort of abusive mother, and she has no problem leaving her child behind. It's Wiley who steps up and agrees to take custody of and raise his little sister--but her mother has dumped her on a lot of other people all of her short life, and Ava is fearful, having no reason to trust anyone, having been left behind before, and she's taken to heart and believes what her mother has told her--that she's an unwanted mistake. Watching Wiley step up and gladly take on raising her in a kind, loving home, with loving family, a room of her own, with more than the few ragged garments she owned, made this novel one of the most sweet, heartbreaking and heartwarming novels I've read. Ava's reactions to even having so much as a bed and a pillow, let alone her own room, and the many things Wiley bought for her and her reaction to all of it had me in tears.
The big question is: how will Linette feel about helping to raise Wiley's little sister? And what about the many members of his own family little Ava has yet to meet? Ms. Sala has thought of everything you could possibly want in this family-forward novel--from Ava's first dolly, her first trip to a restaurant, meeting her grandmother for the first time, her first shopping trip, and more. There is just so much love and affection poured out to this sweet little girl from all of the many members of the large Pope family, it made you wish that every such mistreated and abused child in the world could have a Wiley Pope of their own.
There's still the matter of the other murder and attempted murder to solve, bad guys to bring to justice, Linette's reaction to Ava, the custody issue, Corina's fate, and more in this utterly charming novel. Thank you, Sharon Sala, for giving us this wonderful gift of a novel. I cannot recommend it highly enough.
I voluntarily read an advance reader copy of this novel. The opinions stated are my own.