“So what do you want?” He nibbled at her throat.

“I never want a single wrinkle or gray hair, though those will come.” She laughed at herself. “As for the final look, I don’t know. I liked Mira.”

“I like you,” he said, “just the way you are. I think I said that before. But I’m okay with thirty-three. Don’t want people thinking I’m cheating on my wife.”

Charley laughed and pulled away from him. “Are you sure? Because this is your last chance, too. Once midnight passes, there’s no turning back. Not just on my looks. You try and jilt me, James and Cael will hunt you down, dispose of your body and call it an accident.”

Wyatt didn’t even flinch. “I love you, Charley Randall. I have since the first day I met you.”

Charley smiled against his lips. “I love you, Wyatt Moreland. And I’ve loved you longer.” She tapped him on the nose.

Wyatt kissed her again. “And if you decide I’m not worth keeping around?” He smiled against her.

“You’ve always been worth that. I tried to push you away three times before, but I never forgot you or stopped loving you. The type of love changed each time as you grew and matured, but it never died. I wanted you to have everything in life and didn’t think I could be a part of it. I fought it every step of the way. Of course, you wouldn’t remember all that, just my time as Mira.”

“No?” Wyatt cocked one eyebrow. “What about the lullaby?”

Charley’s surprise came in the form of a smile and a quick shake of her head. “How-”

“I hear it in my dreams. Took me a while to figure out what it was, but you hummed it at the hospital.”

Charley laid her head on his chest and sighed. “So, sometime, early summer, we make it official and formal? Lily thinks she can plan the whole thing right down to the last detail and bake the cake, dress the tables, design the flowers-all of it.” Charley rolled her eyes at the thought, but tornado Lily would do it justice.

“I think I can handle that.” Wyatt rubbed his nose against hers.

Charley laughed, a deep, happy, love-infused sound that reflected her true desires. “It’s a deal, then. Happy Birthday, Wyatt.”

“Happy Birthday, Charley.”

Acknowledgements

Oh, to get to ‘The End.’ It took a beginning, somewhere a few decades ago, to a teacher-Mom and a Dad who instilled in me a love of reading. So, first and foremost, I must thank my parents. Without you, I wouldn’t be here. After them comes my hubby; this is what the blood, sweat and tears are for. To my kids, who believe Mom is actually attached to her laptop… this is why. To my sister, who had the very, very, very first draft of Little White Lies in her hands… trust me, this one is way better, but thank you for even remotely attempting to read that one. To Claire Gillian, aka AuburnAssassin. Wow. Um. What to say? How many times can I change up a story in the first draft, while you’re reading, and you still actually want to read it? I bow to your patience and would like to know if you can bottle some of that and share it with me. To J.A. Belfield, yes, James will have his story and his growl and they’ll all be for you, baby. E-hugs from ‘across the pond’; I can’t thank you enough. To Angie Carlsen, my first ever non-family member, non-writer reader… thank you for your encouragement and the praise that every new writer wants to hear (oh, and the note to spice it up a bit. Hopefully, you noticed that I did). To Kris Fullbrook, who read the version you all see here and used such glowing words that my heart soared, to the folks on Scribophile.com who bore the brunt of my first chapter woes, threw preemptive strikes on my poor use of semicolons, and both praised and ripped my writing to shreds, I will be forever grateful. And finally, to my editor, Julia Helo Gonzales and everyone involved with J. Taylor Publishing… you rock.

Aimee Laine

Aimee is a romantic at heart and a southern transplant with a bit of the accent (but not a whole bunch). She’s married to her high school sweetheart, and with him, she’s produced three native North Carolinians, two of whom share the same DNA.