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You can read more of our story in My Ideal Partner: How I Met, Married, and Cared for the Man I Loved Despite Debilitating Odds. Thanks to Girlie on the Edge for inspiring the above with her six-sentence story prompt for this week. If you’d like to participate in her blog hop, click here.
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By the way, for those of you who use the National Library Service for the Blind and Print Disabled, The Red Dress is available for download from their site here. No matter how you read it, please be sure to review it wherever you can. That goes for all my books. Thank you for stopping by. Stay safe, happy, and healthy.
New! The Red Dress
Copyright July 2019 by DLD Books

When Eve went to her high school senior prom, she wore a red dress that her mother had made for her. That night, after dancing with the boy of her dreams, she caught him in the act with her best friend. Months later, Eve, a freshman in college, is bullied into giving the dress to her roommate. After her mother finds out, their relationship is never the same again.
Twenty-five years later, Eve, a bestselling author, is happily married with three children. Although her mother suffers from dementia, she still remembers, and Eve still harbors the guilt for giving the dress away. When she receives a Facebook friend request from her old college roommate and an invitation to her twenty-five-year high school class reunion, then meets her former best friend by chance, she must confront the past in order to face the future.
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she must confront the past in order to face the future….great ending. good six
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Actually, the bit about confronting the past to face the future is part of the synopsis of my latest book, the red dress, not part of my six Dash sentence story. Thank you for reading and commenting.
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Heartwarming! Made me feel good.
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I’m glad to hear it. Thank you for reading and commenting.
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What a blessing you had each other.
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Absolutely! Thank you for reading and commenting.
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Service to each other. What greater love? Though yours was undoubtedly the more physically demanding “service”, it sounds as if your husband returned his, as best he could in ways available to him.
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You’ve hit the nail on the head. Thank you for reading and commenting.
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I imagine that despite everything you had to do, they were the closest and happiest six years of your lives together.
My six!
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You’re right. I believe they were the best six years of our lives, despite the hardships. Thank you for reading and commenting.
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I love that you were still able to appreciate each other, Abbie.
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Thank you. I appreciate your comment.
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This is so touching, Abbie.
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Thank you. I appreciate your comment.
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I am glad to hear those years of service were a blessing for both of you.
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Yes, they were quite fulfilling, despite the bad times. Thank you for reading and commenting.
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Everyone, when we’re young, hears the ‘we only use 10 percent of our brain…imagine the potential’ meme.
Your story not only follows that path (substituting Will for brain) but follows through on the ‘teaser’ of ‘imagine the potential’ caring that each person possesses.
Thoughtful Six
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What an interesting perspective. Thank you for reading and commenting.
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