Cal Hart knows how to keep a ranch alive, raise his daughter, and survive another day without the wife he loved and would have kept. Danielle Avery knows how to run a school, protect her daughter, and honor the soldier-husband whose absence still sits in every quiet room. Neither is looking for a replacement. Neither has room for romantic nonsense. Life is already full of work, grief, homework, weather, bills, and children who notice too much.
But Sadie Hart and Maya Avery become best friends with the fierce certainty only children can carry. They see what their parents refuse to name: two lonely, responsible adults who understand loss, duty, faith, and the cost of loving someone well. Their first attempts to "help" are messy, funny, and quickly corrected. Hope is allowed. Managing adults is not. When a school agriculture event brings Danielle's fourth-grade class to Cal's ranch, fences, weather, prayer, and carefully marked boundaries force everyone to face harder questions.
Can a place still belong to the dead if the living laugh there? Can happiness after loss exist without betrayal? Can two widowed parents make room for love without rushing their daughters, replacing their spouses, or letting gossip cheapen something sacred?Persuaded is a grounded, faith-threaded story about grief, parenting, friendship, and a careful second beginning. Love does not erase the past.
It does not cure loss. It simply leaves room for coffee on purpose, honest prayers, responsible slow steps, and the brave decision to keep living.
Cal Hart knows how to keep a ranch alive, raise his daughter, and survive another day without the wife he loved and would have kept. Danielle Avery knows how to run a school, protect her daughter, and honor the soldier-husband whose absence still sits in every quiet room. Neither is looking for a replacement. Neither has room for romantic nonsense. Life is already full of work, grief, homework, weather, bills, and children who notice too much.
But Sadie Hart and Maya Avery become best friends with the fierce certainty only children can carry. They see what their parents refuse to name: two lonely, responsible adults who understand loss, duty, faith, and the cost of loving someone well. Their first attempts to "help" are messy, funny, and quickly corrected. Hope is allowed. Managing adults is not. When a school agriculture event brings Danielle's fourth-grade class to Cal's ranch, fences, weather, prayer, and carefully marked boundaries force everyone to face harder questions.
Can a place still belong to the dead if the living laugh there? Can happiness after loss exist without betrayal? Can two widowed parents make room for love without rushing their daughters, replacing their spouses, or letting gossip cheapen something sacred?Persuaded is a grounded, faith-threaded story about grief, parenting, friendship, and a careful second beginning. Love does not erase the past.
It does not cure loss. It simply leaves room for coffee on purpose, honest prayers, responsible slow steps, and the brave decision to keep living.