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On Sale Very Soon!

AWARENESS
An Anthology of Hope
by

Jane Carver~Nancy O’Berry
Vickie Gray
~Phyllis Johnson
Mae Powers
~Denise Jeffries

This collection of works compiled by caring authors, editors, and staff of www.midnightshowcase.com is dedicated to those that have survived, those that have not, those that continue to fight, as well as the family and friends, and the wonderfully compassionate people who continue to support this cause, breast cancer (and other types of cancer too).

                        Profits from this digest will be donated to:
                                           Susan G. Komen for the Cure

 

 

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_________________________

 

AWARENESS
An Anthology of Hope
 

The Merest Thought – Jane Carver
What happens when a well-woman exam discovers more than Tracy imagined?
What new path could her life turn to if that lump is malignant?

After The Storm – Nancy O’Berry
Cancer and rejection nearly broke Lauren Phelps. Doctors could fix her body,
however, could she find the courage to love Cole McGuire.

Second Chances – Vickie Gray
After a decade apart, Josh is still in love with breast cancer survivor Tess;
will she give him a second chance to win her love?

Letter To My Dad – Phyllis Johnson 
A poem dedicated to the memory of a man of integrity and a real role model
to emulate. Fighting the good fight, he never complained.

Awareness For Him – Mae Powers
Breast Cancer is something everyone should be aware of, even men; for it
can kill those sweet heroes we spend a lifetime with. 

Crown and Glory – Denise Jeffries
There are three things Charlice Darrett wants: life, hair, and to be left alone.
Tyree Crawford wants only one thing – Charlice.  Who will win?

 

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Excerpts

The Merest Thought

By Jane Carver

 

 

Life is often defined by those events that take a person down a different path. A marriage, the birth of a child, buying a new home or car are all moments of great joy. Leaving friends behind when moving, the death of a friend or family member evokes great sadness. Surviving hurricanes, tornados, wrecks and abuse…these are personally traumatic. But what about the trauma that strikes the minute someone says, "This may be cancer,"?

* * * *

“I have to leave school a little early Wednesday. Can you get a sub for me?”

“Problems?”

“No, just my yearly well-woman checkup.”

“Played during summer vacation and forgot to get it done, huh?”

“Yep.”

After twenty years of working together, how well the school secretary knew Tracy.

* * * *

Nothing could be colder than sitting on an exam table in a tiny clinic room, bare feet dangling off the end, white sheet wrapped around Tracy’s naked body in an attempt to stay warm while air conditioning sent shivers down her back. Ms. Comal, the physician’s assistant, breezed into the room. How many years have we done this exact procedure? Tracy wondered. They re-established the fact that she exercised, could stand to lose a few pounds, still didn’t smoke and enjoyed a glass of wine on occasion. The PA helped her lie back on the table, feet on the metal extension. Eventually, they were propped up in stirrups.

Tracy’s mind intentionally wandered to her last period class at school, still in session for another fifteen minutes. Eighth graders can be such a challenge when the regular teacher is not in the room. Hope the sub survived.

Ms. Comal took a Pap smear and palpated Tracy’s abdomen and uterus. Finally, the PA uncovered her breasts and began the circular exam with fingers sensitive to any abnormality. Tracy’s wandering mind came back to reality when she realized Ms. Comal still manipulated her right breast.

“I can feel a lump.”

Her words sent Tracy into a mental meltdown. The word "cancer" came to mind with the power of a sledgehammer. Cancer had taken her dad and aunt.

“Did you notice this?” The PA spoke with a far away look in her gaze as if she were in the midst of the troubled skin.

Tracy swallowed hard and attempted to speak, but her mouth dried out with fear. “To be honest, no. I sort of forgot to do my exam.” She wanted to hit her head against the wall; the most important thing a woman could do to save her own life and she "sort of forgot" to do it.

“Let’s get a mammogram and set up an appointment with Dr. Kit.”

Faster than Tracy could believe but slower than she wanted, the test and appointment were set.

www.romances-by-janie.com

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After The Storm

By Nancy O’Berry 

 

Chapter One

Little by little, the gauze fell away to reveal a breast complete with areola and nipple. Her immediate reaction was to run her hands over the fullness and touch the flesh that appeared pink and rosy. Her breath rushed from her lungs as she traced the swell. It had no feeling. Her hands touch the skin, but she didn’t feel the uniqueness of her left bosom in comparison to her right.

“It should look the same,” a voice from the door whispered.

She didn’t know if it was modesty or fear someone would see her like this, but Lauren pulled the paper gown up over her shoulder, feeling the burn of heat in her cheeks.

“I-I couldn’t wait,” she mumbled, trying to scramble to retrieve the bandages that a few moments before had covered the rebuilding of her left side.

A hand touched her shoulder. Instead of restricting her movement, it offered sympathy as only another woman could. “It’s okay, Lauren. You are not the first woman to feel the need to know.”

Only when tissues were shoved into her empty hands did she realize she was crying.

“Please, look if you want. I want to check the progress of our surgery.”

Lauren dabbed her eyes, noting that the mascara she had so carefully applied now coated the tissue.

“Hold out your arms, please,” the physician directed.

Raising her arms, Lauren listened to the rustle of paper as the doctor slid the drape around to the side so she could see her handiwork. In the mirror across from the examining table, she watched with detached emotion as Dr. Barbara Felton lifted her right breast to measure the weight against the reconstructed one on the left. Goose pimples rose on her right side. The doctor’s hands were cold.

“You should be well pleased. The surgery seems to be quite a success.”

“Yes, I am,” she mumbled with a twinge of hesitancy. “Pleased, that is.”

“I hear a ‘but’,” the good doctor stepped back.

Lauren readjusted the paper covering her body, lending her some measure of modesty in spite of all she’d lost due to her illness. Her uncertainty was brief, yet it seemed to acknowledge the doctor’s astute insight into what she was feeling.

“But?” Dr. Felton asked again, this time allowing her eyebrow to arch toward the spike bangs of her stylish short bob.

“But,” Lauren mumbled, “It’s hard to feel. I mean it seems like it’s just a pound of flesh there.”

“Yes, that’s true,” said the doctor, as she pulled up a chair. “But, to anyone else, they would never know just how tough this year has been on you.” Reaching out, she touched Lauren’s hand. “You had cancer. You’ve been through a mastectomy and three rounds of chemotherapy. You are a survivor.”

http://www.nancyoberry.net/

 

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LETTER TO MY DAD
By
Phyllis Johnson 


This poem is dedicated to the memory of my dad. He was a true Christian, a man of integrity and a real role model to emulate. Fighting the good fight, he never complained. He got his strength from the Lord. His spirit lives on and he will always be my hero. I am proud to share this poem about him in Awareness, a book that champions strength in our loved ones.

There comes a time when I need to put my thoughts into words…

 A time when talking isn’t enough,

A time for letting you know how much you mean to me.

The quiet way you’ve always been encouraging,

Giving us nuggets of wisdom,

Not talking a lot, but when you did we all knew

to lean forward and listen.

It was the nuggets that I think about when I am

trying to make decisions in my life.

 (For more of this wonderful and lovely poem, read the book)

http://home.earthlink.net/~ajax21/wordsatplay/id6.html

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Second Chances

By Vickie Gray 

 

Chapter One

 

Tess McBride didn’t expect to see the man who broke her heart standing in her classroom. But there he was, looking like he could have stepped right off the cover of a romance novel.

Somehow, Josh looked even better than she remembered. The black uniform showed his broad shoulders and muscular arms to perfection, and the years had brought a maturity to his face that suited him. But why the hell was he here?

His dark chocolate eyes widened as he saw her. He opened his mouth to speak, but before he could utter a sound, Judy Larkin, the assistant principal, bustled past him.

“Ms. McBride, I’m sorry I forgot to email you about this,” she said with a quick smile, her hands absently brushing a few strands of tastefully colored red hair from her plump face. “Officer Richards will be visiting all the fourth grade classes today to talk about saying ‘no’ to drugs. If this isn’t a good time, he can come back and visit your class after lunch.”

Tess shook her head, praying that Judy wouldn’t notice her reaction to the police officer’s unexpected visit.

“No, it’s fine,” she managed. Warmth flooded her cheeks as his eyes swept over her face. “The students certainly won’t mind if we put their math lesson off until this afternoon.”

“Officer Richards, Ms. McBride will introduce you to her class. I think you’ll enjoy working with her students.”

He nodded, a hint of a smile playing on his full mouth. Tess swallowed hard, struggling to keep her knees from knocking as the memory of his kiss threatened to derail her composure.

“I believe Ms. McBride and I have already met,” Josh said smoothly, his expression a model of professional detachment.

“Yes, we have,” Tess agreed in a bland voice. She folded her arms across her chest and glanced toward her students. “The students are ready whenever Officer Richardson would like to begin his presentation.”  

“Terrific,” Mrs. Larkin chirped. “Officer Richardson will be going to Mr. Davidson’s classroom when he finishes here. Perhaps you can show him the way to the room.”

Tess nodded. Dear Lord, don’t let them notice the slight quivering in her hands.

“I’d appreciate that,” he replied. A light danced in his deep brown eyes. “I knew your face was familiar.”

Familiar? Tess wanted to slap him. There was a time when he knew every inch of her. Surely, he hadn’t forgotten the summer when she’d fallen in love with him. How could he speak to her so casually after all that had passed between them?

Email:   VickieGrayRomance@gmail.com

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Awareness For Him

By  Mae Powers
 

“Strip, Mrs. Langly. Put your boob up on the metal platform.” I heard it every year, perhaps not always in those exact words, but it never got any easier to deal with, this breast examination where discomfort was a mild thing to put up with in order to save your life.

So I would put it up there and let the technician adjust the device. My breast lay on a cold metal shelf where they mash first one then the other breast. If I didn’t have a lump before, I’d definitely have one afterward. It felt like an invasion of self, both physically and emotionally.

What was a woman to do? And how did men who got breast cancer, or thought they had it, cope with this type of exam? Did they take tweezers and stretch out the guy’s nipples? Some men have big boobies sure, but nipply-only people must have a hell of a time going through having a mammogram on theirs. If it weren’t necessary, the process should be outlawed.

Only the Marquis de Sade would have enjoyed this process. I was glad I never dated that type. Ben understood though; well, he did at one time. It was for him that I’d gotten this exam in the first place. Something I’ve done yearly, even before his death. It is rare, but men die from breast cancer, too.

With Ben, it started out as a simple tiny pin-sized lump near his left breast, but it pained him now and then. He thought it a sign of heart failure, but he’d always been healthy. He exercised and ate right as much as possible. When the doctors examined him, we couldn’t believe the results.

I’d read that it was a rare thing for a man to get breast cancer, but it happened. Reportedly, about one percent or so of men, close to 2000 yearly, of those that get examined though. Over 20 percent of those will die from cancer compared to about the forty-something percent of women out of the nearly 200,000 who are examined and detected each year. The numbers, according to all the polls and figures I’ve read, were higher for women, but the scare is still there, as is the chance of death, even for men.

Email Mae at: maepowers@yahoo.com

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Crown and Glory

By Denise Jeffries

 

Chapter One

 “So, how does it feel?”

Charlice Darrett glanced up from the paperwork she’d just completed and stared into the eyes of her best friend Patricia. How did it feel? Coming back to work after being out on medical leave? Having cancer? Almost losing her life? How did what feel?

Charlice hunched a shoulder and said, “I’m fine.” Patricia didn’t speak, just stared at her. “Seriously, I’m fine,” she repeated.

“Okay then.” Patricia drew Charlice into a tight hug, only to release her a second later. “Don’t overdo it.”

“I won’t.”

And she wouldn’t. There was nothing that could make her overdo it. She didn’t have the energy, even if she wanted to. Her strength was coming back slowly but surely, and each day was better than the last, but there were still spurts when all she could do was climb into bed and pull the blanket over her head.

Charlice shoved the papers aside, stood and walked out to the nursing unit. She turned into the bathroom and stood in front of the mirror for a minute, staring at herself. Nothing was the same. She’d lost forty pounds. The expensive wig reminded her of the chemo treatments that had stolen her hair.

She chuckled when the conversation with her doctor came to mind.

Ninety-nine percent of the people lose their hair.” Her oncologist said nonchalantly. He smiled as if what he’d just told her was nothing.

“Not me.” She ran her hand over her head and stifled the laugh bubbling up from her gut, remembering standing in the shower and looking down at her feet only to see every bit of hair swimming in the water pooling there. The shower over, her head was as bald as the bottom of her feet. Not me. Charlice turned to look at her profile in the mirror, again wondering if people knew.

* * * *

A lot had changed in the eight months she’d missed. A lot of the old faces were gone, and a lot of new ones graced the halls. She paused at the corner, sucked in a breath and blew it out.

All righty then. Here I go. She hated the pity she saw in people’s eyes, and even worse, the pity she heard in their voices when they spoke to her. She didn’t need pity. What she needed was life. Any life.

 

www.denisejeffries.com

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