How do you cope with a life you are bored with? You make a new one, right? Be careful what you wish for because you might get a whole lot more than you bargained for….
When you’re bored with your current life, take a trip; that always changes things, right? What Analisa Meunier didn’t realize is that every decision you make in your life can change everything. A new life, a new country, a new family, a new threat to all of that…will she survive? Will they?
Baroness Lydia Von Horn has never met an American like Analisa Meunier. Hiding her own identity leads to problems in their initial relationship, but making a family, a life, and surviving with both intact is the real challenge.
From Oconomowoc, Wisconsin to Hammerbruke, Germany; from Cambria, California, to Munich, Germany, their lives and trials and tribulations take them around the world.
Genre: FICTION / Action & AdventureModerate seller
~ANALISA~
I was bored, simply bored. For years I had played at being the quintessential housewife and mother. But that wasn’t who I was; I just played at it. My sons were grown, now in colleges of their choices. My marriage had disappeared years ago, and I was running my husband’s companies, which I hated in the first place. It was time for a change. Since my husband hadn’t lived with us in, say, seven years now, I started divorce proceedings based on abandonment. I asked for everything. The lawyers said I would be lucky to get half. Wisconsin, you see, is a no-fault state. Everything is split down the middle. Since the middle was part of my contribution, I felt I should get it all. Caleb had done nothing to contribute but be there at the beginning, part of the insemination process, and—just when I was building up something for us—he took the money and ran. It wasn’t only me he abandoned, though. He abandoned two little boys that needed him, needed a male figure in their life, and needed a father. They didn’t get any of that, and I did the best I could to make it up to them. I made sure each had a trust fund so they could go to college and start out debt-free. I made sure their father (or, as I now refer to him, the “sperm donor”) couldn’t touch those sacred funds because we all knew he would, if he could.
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Portuguese
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Already translated.
Translated by Bruna Andrade
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Spanish
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Already translated.
Translated by Yanina Medina
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