A secret fear from her childhood that she buried deep within is now exposed—old wounds threaten to overwhelm her when everything she knew fell apart. Does Natasha have the faith to forgive?
After the dramatic end of her marriage, Natasha Walker tries to move on with her life and overcome her fear of the past. She still loves Matthew, but has given up all hope of ever being with him again, as he has found someone new, and she has to cope with the pain of that revelation. Her life now is a battle, an emotional turmoil spun from a secret no one knew, ripped to the surface by a tragic and devastating night. But she is angry and bitter, and if Matthew can’t see the truth, then she wouldn’t be the one to tell him.
Matthew Bradford has strong ideals as to what a wife and a mother to his children should be. Natasha no longer fits that bill, and he no longer wants her in his life. She cheated on him, and he has no interest in having anything to do with her again. She betrayed him, and as a Christian woman, she should have been faithful. He has moved on, and it is time for him to find that perfect wife. Only problem is, he still loves his wife. Now his ex-wife, nonetheless, he sees her as that. No matter how much he wants her out of his life, he is drawn to her, still possessive of her, and as far as he is concerned, no other man has the right to have what belongs to him. This is compounded by the fact that God continues to fill his mind and heart with dreams of Natasha. No matter how much Matthew wants to remove her from his life, he finds this is impossible. God will not let him. In the night hours, when he cannot defend against it, he is faced with a choice. A choice that ultimately goes against everything he stands for as a man, and one which he does not feel he has the faith to believe in and make. He knows the truth—doesn’t he?