

With Tucker by her side, she starts feeling more like herself than she has in years-until Tucker’s owner actually calls back. After weeks of unanswered calls to the number on his tag, Sloan decides the dog is now hers.


Unsure what to do, Sloan takes him home to find his owner. A dog runs out in front of her car, barks at her, and then jumps straight through her sunroof. But, on her way to visit her fiancé’s grave, something strange happens. Struggling with her emotions, Sloan seems to have given up all things important in her life, including her painting. It’s been two years since Sloan Monroe lost her fiancé, but she knows grief doesn’t have a time limit. I’d finally found the me I’d lost before.” Abby Jimenez, “The Happy Ever After Playlist” (325) SYNOPSIS But it was the choice that was the accomplishment. Most of the time it was a fabricated, forced version that cracked around the edges if examined closely enough. “My ‘happiness’ wasn’t always the real thing.
