Pulling the shoulder strap of the seat belt over her head, she leaned over the steering wheel, looking for the dotted lines in the road, catching a glimpse here and there. They wouldn't be able to see her car with time enough to stop. At times it was impossible to see the road through the windshield, but stopping meant certain disaster because of the people on the highway behind her. Rain fell so hard in places that traffic slowed to five miles an hour and Denise held the wheel with white knuckles, her face a mask of concentration. Now that she was firmly in its midst, there was little she could do. People who could took cover inside, but people on the highway, like Denise Holton, had no place to go. All at once, radio stations crackled with emergency warnings, documenting the storm's ferocity. The system had blown in from the northwest and was crossing the state at nearly forty miles an hour. One minute it was cloudy and dark, but not unusually so in the next, lightning, gale-force winds, and blinding rain exploded from the early summer sky. Thousands of trees were felled, flash floods swept over banks of three major rivers, and lives changed forever with one fell swoop of Mother Nature. Telephone lines lay strewn across roads, transformers blazed without anyone to stop them. In all, nine documented tornadoes would touch down that evening in the eastern part of the state, destroying nearly thirty homes in the process. Others simply shook their heads and said that they knew something like that would happen sooner or later. Because it occurred in 1999, some of the most superstitious citizens considered it an omen, the first step toward the end of time. It would later be called one of the most violent storms in North Carolina history. Lynn Harris at New Line Cinema Mark Johnson, producer.
You both changed my life for the better and I'll never forget it.Īnd finally, a wineglass raised in toast to the rest of those people who help me every step of the way: Jennifer Romanello, Emi Battaglia, Edna Farley, and the rest of the publicity department at Warner Flag, who designed all my fabulous book covers Scott Schwimer, my entertainment attorney Howie Sanders and Richard Green at United Talent Agency, two of the best at what they do Denise DiNovi, the fabulous producer of Message in a Bottle (the main character in this novel is named for her, by the way) Courtenay Valenti and Lorenzo Di Bonaventura at Warner Bros. Many thanks to Larry Kirshbaum, the number one guy at Warner Books, who also happens to be a really nice guy, and Maureen Egen, who is not only a gem, but a brilliant gem. I hope we work together for a long, long time. My editor, Jamie Raab, of Warner Books, has also been great to work with-again! What can I say? I'm lucky to have your guidance-don't ever believe that I take it for granted. I can never say it enough: Thank you so much for everything-you're the best! My agent, Theresa Park, of Sanford Greenburger Associates, has been with me every step of the way, and it's been my good fortune to have worked with her. My three sons (Miles, Ryan, and Landon) also deserve my thanks, simply because they help me keep everything in perspective. What a wild eleven years we've shared, huh?
This book is dedicated with love to Pat and Billy Mills.Īgain, I'd like to thank my wife, Cathy, who had to be more patient with me than usual while writing this novel. Warner Books, Inc., Hachette Book Group, 237 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017, Visit our Web site at The "Warner Books" name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc. Copyright (c) 2000 by Nicholas Sparks Enterprises, Inc.