Mrs nashs ashes, p.1

Mrs. Nash's Ashes, page 1

 

Mrs. Nash's Ashes
Select Voice:
Brian (uk)
Emma (uk)  
Amy (uk)
Eric (us)
Ivy (us)
Joey (us)
Salli (us)  
Justin (us)
Jennifer (us)  
Kimberly (us)  
Kendra (us)
Russell (au)
Nicole (au)



Larger Font   Reset Font Size   Smaller Font  
Mrs. Nash's Ashes


  Praise for Mrs. Nash’s Ashes

  “Brilliantly constructed and full of unforgettable characters, Mrs. Nash’s Ashes is an unequivocal delight. Fans of Emily Henry and Sarah Hogle, you’ve found your newest obsession.”

  —Ava Wilder, author of How to Fake It in Hollywood

  “At turns both zany and heart-wrenching . . . this is a treasure of a story that lived and breathed inside my heart.”

  —Anita Kelly, author of Something Wild & Wonderful

  “Sarah Adler nails the ultimate rom-com alchemy with her sparkling debut, Mrs. Nash’s Ashes. Full of zippy banter, gorgeous prose, and tender-hearted characters who give the novel a deep, emotional core, it’s a complete delight.”

  —Carley Fortune, New York Times bestselling author of Every Summer After

  “This unforgettable road trip runs on laugh-out-loud humor, deeply felt romance, a profound sense of the unexpected, and classic rock radio—we loved every mile.”

  —Emily Wibberley & Austin Siegemund-Broka, authors of The Roughest Draft

  “Mrs. Nash’s Ashes is a delightfully fun and utterly romantic debut. Adler has it all—fresh characters, fabulous writing, and enormous heart.”

  —Sarah Grunder Ruiz, author of Luck and Last Resorts

  “With an unforgettable voice, Adler crafts a tale full of humor and heart, proving that love sometimes finds us when we least expect it.”

  —Ashley Herring Blake, USA Today bestselling author of Astrid Parker Doesn’t Fail

  “Instantly addictive! . . . Pure rom-com gold. Witty, fun, and yet also deeply affecting, this remarkably strong debut from Sarah Adler is sure to win hearts.”

  —India Holton, bestselling author of The League of Gentlewomen Witches

  “Witty, beautifully written, and laced with sexual tension and suspense . . . I expected that I’d be enjoying one romance but ended up falling in love with two. Extraordinary storytelling.”

  —Sarah Hogle, author of Just Like Magic

  “A delightful debut from Sarah Adler! This is a road-trip romance at its best, with all the forced proximity, unexpected intimacies, and questionable music playlists that come with it . . . a journey I didn’t want to end.”

  —Jen DeLuca, USA Today bestselling author of Well Matched

  “Adler perfectly mixes humor, heart, and steam to create a flawless rom-com. If you’re in the mood for a true rom-com, you cannot go wrong with this book!”

  —Falon Ballard, author of Lease on Love and Just My Type

  “Playful, sexy, and unexpected in the very best way, Sarah Adler is a dazzling new voice in romantic comedy.”

  —Jen Devon, author of Bend Toward the Sun

  “I laughed. I sobbed. I loved it! Soft, sweet, and utterly enchanting, Mrs. Nash’s Ashes by Sarah Adler is a delightfully funny and poignant romance that sticks with you like a warm and gooey cinnamon roll.”

  —Ashley Poston, New York Times bestselling author of The Dead Romantics

  BERKLEY ROMANCE

  Published by Berkley

  An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

  penguinrandomhouse.com

  Copyright © 2023 by Sarah Adler

  Readers Guide copyright © 2023 by Sarah Adler

  Penguin Random House supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin Random House to continue to publish books for every reader.

  BERKLEY and the BERKLEY and B colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Adler, Sarah, 1991– author.

  Title: Mrs. Nash’s ashes / Sarah Adler.

  Description: First edition. | New York: Berkley Romance, 2023.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2022037538 (print) | LCCN 2022037539 (ebook) | ISBN 9780593547793 (trade paperback) | ISBN 9780593547809 (ebook)

  Subjects: LCGFT: Romance fiction. | Novels.

  Classification: LCC PS3601.D5748 M77 2023 (print) | LCC PS3601.D5748 (ebook) | DDC 813/.6—dc23/eng/20220816

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2022037538

  LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2022037539

  Cover design and illustration by Vikki Chu

  Book design by George Towne, adapted for ebook by Jessica Arnold

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

  pid_prh_6.0_143550374_c0_r0

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Key West, Florida, November 1944

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Key West, Florida, December 1944

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Key West, Florida, December 1944

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Key West, Florida, New Year's 1944/1945

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Key West, Florida, March 1945

  Chapter 14

  Key West, Florida, July 1945

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chicago, Illinois, September 1950

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chicago, Illinois, August 1952

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Washington, District of Columbia, October 1953

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Washington, District of Columbia, January 2021

  Acknowledgments

  Reader’s Guide

  Behind the Book

  Discussion Questions

  Books You’ll Find Sarah Reading in the Passenger Seat (Even Though She’ll Definitely Get Carsick)

  About the Author

  _143550374_

  To Houston—

  You were right; this was the one.

  Content Note

  While this is a book with a happy ending and hopefully lots of laughs along the way, it also includes instances of, discussions about, and references to ableist language; death, including parental death (in the past, off-page); grief; historical homophobia; the objectification of girls and women; and toxic relationships. If any of these are potentially sensitive for you, please read with care.

  1

  • • • • •

  Rose McIntyre Nash died peacefully in her sleep at age ninety-eight, and now I carry part of her with me wherever I go. I do not mean that figuratively. She’s inside a small wooden box tucked away in my backpack as we speak. Not all of her, of course. Geoffrey Nash wasn’t about to hand over his entire grandmother to the weird girl who lived in her spare bedroom. But Geoffrey was kind enough to give me three tablespoons of her ashes (again, not figurative; he portioned her out with a measuring spoon from the kitchen). Probably not the request he was expecting when he asked if I’d like something to remember her by, but he didn’t seem to mind too much. I think he was mostly relieved I didn’t want her highly collectible radioactive Fiestaware.

  Geez, this is making me sound like a total wackadoo. I’m not, though, I promise. I know that’s exactly what a wackadoo would say, but I’m really just a relatively normal person who happens to be traveling to Key West with a small amount of human remains.

  I’m going about this all wrong; let me start at the beginning.

  Mrs. Nash had been living in Apartment 1B for almost seventy years when my boyfriend and I moved into Apartment 1A. Thanks to rent control, she was paying like five dollars a month for her two-bedroom between Dupont and Logan Circles. And we became fast friends, because I am a damn delight and so was she. So when Geoffrey and the rest of the extended family began fretting over her living alone around the same time things with Josh imploded, I moved in with Mrs. Nash. It was the perfect situation: Geoffrey let me live there for practically nothing in exchange for cleaning, cooking, running errands, accompanying Mrs. Nash to her medical appointments, and generally attending to his grandmother’s needs. But mostly what Mrs. Nash needed was friendship, which I was more than happy to provide since that’s mostly what I needed too.

  Well, one day about three months ago, we were in the living room, me sprawled on the Persian rug with some book on the War of 1812 I was reading for work and Mrs. Nash sitting with her eyes closed in her favorite threadbare chair, the sunlight covering her plump little body like a blanket. She appeared to be napping, but suddenly her cornflower-blue eyes fluttered open and she sat up straighter.

  Millie, she said with a sense of urgency in her voice that sent a jolt of panic up my spine. I was relieved—albeit momentarily confused—whe

n she continued, I would like to tell you about the love of my life. We met during the war. Her name was Elsie.

  Anyway, that’s the ultra-abbreviated version of how I wound up here, sitting cross-legged on the floor at National Airport, waiting to board a plane to Miami with a bit of Mrs. Nash in my backpack. There’s a lot more to the story, of course, but right now I’m a bit too distracted to tell it properly—a man across the gate’s waiting area keeps glancing my way when he thinks I’m not looking. Like he thinks he might know me from somewhere and is trying to figure it out. That’s nothing new; people still recognize me sometimes, even though I haven’t been on TV since I was fourteen. It’s not a big deal when they do since I’m about as extroverted as they come.

  Usually the way this situation plays out is they approach me, saying something like, “Hey, aren’t you that girl from that show?” Then I respond, “If you mean the actually kinda problematic kids’ show from the early aughts about the time-traveling redhead and her poorly rendered CGI lizard companion, then yes. That’s me. Millicent Watts-Cohen, also known as Penelope Stuart on Penelope to the Past.” Then they say, a little sheepishly, “Right. Yeah, that show was awesome, and you were great in it.” Except I know they are lying because the show was terrible. The history it taught was inaccurate at best and flat-out offensive at worst, the special effects sucked, and I was never talented at acting so much as at having a cute face and a good memory. Sometimes they’ll mention a Penelope episode they claim was their favorite, but it’s usually a conflation of two or more, or even a different show altogether. I never bother correcting them, just smile and nod. And I’ll usually agree to a selfie when they say, “Oh my god, my friend/sibling/partner/parakeet will never believe this!” because it keeps them from taking an unflattering stealthy pic of me eating a corn dog a few minutes later, and also staves off the biannual tabloid rumors that I’ve died from huffing glue.

  It’s possible this guy is a fan; he looks about my age, give or take, and thirtyish is the right demographic. Except something about the way he’s looking at me feels familiar. Like maybe he recognizes me from real life.

  I think I might recognize him too. But I can’t seem to place him. Did we go to school together? Not grad—my master’s program was small and absurdly insular—but maybe undergrad. I’m running through a mental catalog of various classrooms I’ve been in over the years, hoping he’ll snap into the memory of one of them, when a man’s voice interrupts my mental riffling.

  “Hey, are you . . . ?”

  I turn to find an almost perversely muscular dude in a tank top, which feels like a real choice on a cloudy day that didn’t even break sixty-five degrees in the DC area. His shaggy, sun-bleached hair sticks out from the edges of a flat-brimmed Nationals cap with its iridescent sticker still in place. His biceps are the size and color of whole honey-baked hams. He’s wearing sunglasses—indoors. This person is what I imagine would result if a beach bum and a lax bro had a thirtysomething baby.

  My meeting-a-fan smile automatically plasters itself to my face as I stand. “Penelope Stuart on Penelope to the Past,” I say. “That’s me. Millicent Watts-Cohen.”

  “Whoa, yeah, I thought it was you. That’s so rad. I can’t wait to tell my boy, Todd. He won’t believe it.” He pulls out his phone and holds it up. “Can I get a selfie?”

  “Yeah, sure,” I say.

  We lean in toward each other, and he angles the phone downward to get us both in the frame. His proximity assaults my nose with the scent of beer and an excessive amount of musky body spray. Even after he snaps a few shots and tucks his phone back into his shorts pocket, his grin remains. “Todd and I watched every episode of Penelope to the Past like a million times back in the day.”

  “That’s great. Always nice to hear that people enjoyed the show,” I say.

  “Ha, no, the show itself was kind of garbage—no offense.”

  My smile droops in response to this surprising development. Not that I’m offended (I mean, I wholeheartedly agree with him), but these lines aren’t part of the usual script for this interaction.

  “You were like the hottest girl our age we’d ever seen. Especially that episode when your family was on vacation in Mexico. You know, the one where you went back to Aztec times? You were in this little yellow bikini, and your, you know . . .” Don’t do it, I think. Don’t do it. But he raises his hands to his chest and palms invisible breasts, then mimes them bouncing while he slo-mo runs in place. “. . . when you had to escape from the human sacrifice.” He laughs and nudges me with an elbow. “Ha, yeah. You know what I mean. You know.”

  Oh god.

  It’s not that I was unaware until this moment that my awkward fourteen-year-old body starred in a lot of my fellow teenagers’ early sexual fantasies. It’s that most people keep this shit on the internet, where they can say gross things anonymously and without inflicting it directly upon my person. That’s one of the main reasons I don’t do social media. I learned a long time ago that I can’t stop the world from objectifying me, but I can choose to shield my brain from absorbing the worst of it. Luckily (and perhaps surprisingly) this is the first time in years someone has been so candid when meeting me. But as much as I want to call out this dickhead for what he’s said, my mouth is paralyzed in this sort of horrified gape, which he’s unfortunately taking as encouragement to continue voicing his disgusting train of thought.

  “Wow. I had so many dreams about you in that yellow bikini back then, you can’t even imagine.” He lets out another laugh. My whole face grows hot with this terrible combination of embarrassment and fury. “You look good, still, by the way.” He lifts his sunglasses, and his eyes travel over the front of my body like a dog show judge might check out the standard poodle before taking a closer look at its teeth. “Really good.”

  A warm hand cups my shoulder, and I flinch before I realize the touch is coming from somewhere behind me. From someone who has yet to comment on either the past or present state of my tits and is therefore very welcome to enter this conversation.

  “There you are,” a voice says as the hand leaves my shoulder and slides down my arm, spreading a strangely reassuring heat over my skin. “I know you said you put the hotel info in my bag, but I can’t find it and I need the phone number. Can you come look?”

  I glance over at my rescuer as he hands me my little leather backpack and grabs the handle of my rolling suitcase. He’s the guy from before, the one I remembered but couldn’t place. Except now that he’s closer, I can see his features clearly: dark chocolate–colored hair, mussed in a fashionable way where you can’t tell if it’s deliberate or if he really did just roll out of bed; light olive skin; full lips surrounded by the kind of stubble that manages to be ever-present yet has zero aspirations of becoming an actual beard. And I’d never forget those eyes in a million years—one blue-gray, one cognac brown, staring from behind round, tortoiseshell glasses. I’ve definitely had those mismatched eyes focused on me before.

  “Yeah, sure.” I hug my backpack—and Mrs. Nash—to my chest and mutter a quick, “Nice to meet you,” to the fan, even though it wasn’t nice to meet him at all.

  “Sorry to interrupt, man,” my new companion calls out as he guides me away. Then he adds in a hurry as if he just can’t help himself, “But also, hey, learn some fucking appropriate boundaries maybe.”

  The memory comes together like a time-lapse video of a jigsaw puzzle. The crisp, late-September air on my face, chilling my tears as they tumbled down my cheeks. The whooshing sound of city traffic that replaced the restaurant’s hubbub as I stepped outside into the night. A man’s voice—this man’s voice—reaching out of the dark, asking, Hey, you okay?

  Hollis Hollenbeck. From my ex’s MFA cohort. One of those fancy literary friends Josh talked about and constantly compared himself to but rarely let me interact with beyond hasty introductions and quick hellos at parties. Hollis was there that horrible night eight months ago, leaning against the brick wall beside the restaurant’s entrance, the light from the old-timey lantern suspended above him highlighting the different colors of his eyes.

  Now, Hollis leads me to the row of chairs in front of the floor-to-ceiling windows as a plane zooms down the runway in the distance. His blue duffel bag waits in front of the seat he vacated to save me. I consider joking about how he must have missed the last twenty years of PSAs about not leaving your bags unattended in an airport, but instead I say, “Thank you. That was getting . . . gross.” I am grateful, of course, for his intervention. But I also can’t ignore the tiny twinge of shame deep in my stomach, as if part of me feels like what that guy said is somehow my fault, that I should have shut it down or prevented it or been able to walk away without Hollis’s assistance.

 

Add Fast Bookmark
Load Fast Bookmark
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Scroll Up
Turn Navi On
Scroll
Turn Navi On
183