![]() ![]() ![]() Her ultimate goal is unwavering: Finish her degree, get a high-paying job, and use the money to find her missing siblings. Now working as an operator for a Boston answering service, noble Hope takes “care” of her clients (like the elderly lady in need of a hip replacement and the young man pining for a music scholarship) while she studies computer science. According to these rich and influential paragons of the community, their minister father and his wife not only stole from the church, they were killed in a car crash while in an attempt to get away. Seven years before the start of the story, adopted Hope Prescott, her two younger sisters, and her younger brother were cruelly separated by the evil types in her small Texas town. And though the heroine is a shade t-o-o-o pure and perfect in every way, I’m happy to say that Christina Dodd has concocted a nifty modern-day variation on the theme for her first single title contemporary. I’m not exactly proud of this, but I’m a sucker for a Cinderella story. ![]()
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