Dream Come True Read online




  Dream Come True

  Book 1

  Dreaming of Love Series

  By: Vanessa Miller

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Dream Come True

  Vanessa | Miller

  ~Prologue

  ~Chapter One

  ~Chapter Two

  ~Chapter Three

  ~Chapter Four

  ~Chapter Five

  ~Chapter Six

  ~Chapter Seven

  ~Chapter Eight

  ~Chapter Nine

  ~Chapter Ten

  ~Chapter Eleven

  ~Chapter Twelve

  ~Chapter Thirteen

  ~Chapter Fourteen

  ~Chapter Fifteen

  ~Chapter Sixteen

  ~Chapter Seventeen

  ~Chapter Eighteen

  ~Chapter Nineteen

  ~Chapter Twenty

  ~Chapter Twenty-One

  ~Chapter Twenty-Two

  ~Chapter Twenty-Three

  ~Chapter Twenty-Four

  ~Chapter Twenty-Five

  ~Chapter Twenty-Six

  ~Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Once Upon A Dream | Book 2 in the Dreaming of Love Series | releases on June 15, 2021

  Book Discussion Questions

  ~Fear Not Scriptures | Dear Reader, these have been some scary times lately, but when you are afraid, I pray that you find comfort in the Word of God. He will never leave you, nor forsake you.

  Excerpt of | Once Upon A Dream | Book 2 | Dreaming of Love Series

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  About the Author

  Dream Come True

  Vanessa

  Miller

  Book 1

  Dreaming of Love Series

  Publisher’s Note:

  This short story is a work of fiction. References to real events, organizations, or places are used in a fictional context. Any resemblances to actual persons, living or dead are entirely coincidental.

  Vanessa Miller

  www.vanessamiller.com

  Printed in the United States of America

  © 2021 by Vanessa Miller

  Reprint of: Heaven Sent

  Praise Unlimited Enterprises

  Charlotte, NC

  No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical—including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system—without permission in writing from the publisher.

  Other Books by Vanessa Miller

  Something Good (rel. March 2022)

  Dream Come True

  Once Upon A Dream

  Forever

  Family Business I

  Family Business II

  Family Business III

  Family Business IV

  Family Business V

  Family Business VI

  Our Love

  For Your Love

  Got To Be Love

  Rain in the Promised Land

  Sunshine And Rain

  After the Rain

  How Sweet The Sound

  Heirs of Rebellion

  Feels Like Heaven

  The Best of All

  Better for Us

  Her Good Thing

  Long Time Coming

  A Promise of Forever Love

  A Love for Tomorrow

  Yesterday’s Promise

  Forgotten

  Forgiven

  Forsaken

  Rain for Christmas (Novella)

  Through the Storm

  Rain Storm

  Latter Rain

  Abundant Rain

  Former Rain

  Anthologies (Editor)

  Keeping the Faith

  Have A Little Faith

  This Far by Faith

  Novella

  Love Isn’t Enough

  A Mighty Love

  The Blessed One (Blessed and Highly Favored series)

  The Wild One (Blessed and Highly Favored Series)

  The Preacher’s Choice (Blessed and Highly Favored Series)

  The Politician’s Wife (Blessed and Highly Favored Series)

  The Playboy’s Redemption (Blessed and Highly Favored Series)

  Tears Fall at Night (Praise Him Anyhow Series)

  Joy Comes in the Morning (Praise Him Anyhow Series)

  A Forever Kind of Love (Praise Him Anyhow Series)

  Ramsey’s Praise (Praise Him Anyhow Series)

  Escape to Love (Praise Him Anyhow Series)

  Praise For Christmas (Praise Him Anyhow Series)

  His Love Walk (Praise Him Anyhow Series)

  Could This Be Love (Praise Him Anyhow Series)

  Song of Praise (Praise Him Anyhow Series)

  ~Prologue

  Leah Davison’s younger sister Tamara was moving to Atlanta to work for a local news station. By the line of cars in front of her parent’s four thousand square feet, brick exterior home and the gospel music loudly playing, she could tell that the party had started without her.

  Getting out of her car, she stood there for a moment, nervous about ringing the doorbell at the very same home she grew up in. Her parents bought the place when she was in fifth grade, and Leah loved everything about it. From the beautifully landscaped yard to the 5” hardwood floors, granite and stainless steel in the kitchen. The screened in back patio that was the perfect place to hang out on summer nights.

  She hadn’t been allowed in this home in over a month, but today she was here for Tamara, so she wasn’t concerned if her presence made the rest of the family uncomfortable. Taking a deep breath, Leah rang the doorbell. She actually had to ring the doorbell in a house she grew up in. Leah still couldn’t believe that her mother stripped her of the keys to the house. But she wasn’t here to dwell on that today.

  “I’m coming.” Leah heard her mother say before the door swung open. Dang! She was hoping that her father would answer the door, but he was probably still taking it easy after suffering the heart attack that her family blamed her for.

  “Hi Mom, I came for the party.” Leah put her hands in the air and gyrated like she was ready to get in the house and dance to the music.

  But the frown on Alma Davison’s face caused her hands to flap back down.

  Alma stretched her hand out like a stop sign. “Not today, Leah.”

  Leah rolled her eyes and jerked her head as if to say, here-we-go-again-with-this-mess. “Mom, you already fired me from my job, but you can’t fire me from this family.”

  “I love you, Leah, but you have some growing up to do. And I need space and time before I can bring you back into the fold.”

  Leah pointed inside the house. “But everybody else is already here. Adam, Solomon, and Larissa get say their goodbyes to Tamara. I just want to spend time with my sister before she leaves for Atlanta.”

  But her mother shook her head. “You are not allowed in this house and you know why.”

  The door closed in Leah’s face as tears sprang to her eyes. Yes, she could admit it, what she’d done to her family had been awful, but couldn’t her mother just forgive already? Why did they have to treat her as if she was no longer a part of the family?

  As Leah got back in her car and drove off, she declared, “I don’t need them. They never wanted me to be a part of this family anyway. I’ll succeed in life without the Davison clan.” She popped her fingers. “Period.”

  ~Chapter One

  Five months later... October - 2016

  “Fashionable,” “chic,” and “stylish” were words normally associated with Leah Davison’s sister, Tamara. But ever since Leah had signed on as an event planner with Events & Things she had upped her own game. Leah knew she would never be as beautiful as Tamara or her cousin Lariss
a. But if the attention she’d been receiving from men lately was any indication, she looked pretty good. To top it off, her boss had recently commended her on the wonderful job she was doing and hinted at a coming promotion.

  Six months ago, Leah had been the public relations manager for her father’s church. She had loved that job, and the loss of it—admittedly her own fault—had landed her in the awkward position in which she now found herself.

  Her latest event was a party at a nightclub where the liquor was flowing freely, and Ned Turner—a former client who was too handsome for his own good, and for the good of unsuspecting women—had the audacity to strut into the club and crash the private party. Leah was tempted to ask security to show him the door, but she didn’t want to draw attention to the uninvited guest—who, she was almost certain, had been stalking her. His presence could cost her that promotion, because her boss had already informed her about the no-dating-the-clients policy. So, she just kept doing her job and prayed that he would go away.

  Leah smiled as she handed her business card to a potential client. The guy was the CFO for one of the local banks, just like tonight’s guest of honor, and he didn’t look like the kind of man who spent his time worrying about how much things cost. Her favorite kind of client.

  Then she noticed Ned inching his way toward her.

  Leah excused herself, then ducked into the kitchen. She pressed her back against the wall and peeked out, making sure that Ned wasn’t on her heels. Her pretext was checking on the meal preparations, so she stepped up to the chef. “How’s everything going, Chef Darnel?”

  “Everything is superb, Leah,” he replied. “Now, what are you doing in here? You know I don’t like lookie-loos in my kitchen.”

  Like most chefs she contracted with, Darnel was extremely temperamental. That trait always got on her last nerve. But his hors d’oeuvres never failed to impress her clients, many of whom requested specific recipes for various dishes he had prepared. So, Leah lived with his moods. “I was just checking to see if you needed help with anything.”

  “What do you mean? You don’t have enough to do, that you need to scrounge for work in the kitchen?” He shooed her away. “Go see to your guests up front, and let me attend to my kitchen.”

  Leah wanted to object. After all, she was the one who had hired him, and figured that gave her the right to hide out in “his” kitchen. But Chef Darnel was not only known for his exquisite hors d’oeuvres; he had walked off numerous jobs screaming bloody murder for the smallest of infractions. And his contract allowed him to keep two-thirds of the contracted price, whether he acted like a fool or not. Leah decided not to mess with him. “All right,” she conceded. “I’ll just go on back out there and check on my client.”

  With her head lowered, trying to avoid eye contact with Ned Turner, Leah returned to the party. All the while wondering how in the world she would manage to escape being noticed by her ex. If she didn’t see him for the rest of the night, that would be fine with her.

  All her pondering came to an end as she crashed right into him. “I—I’m so sorry,” she stammered, looking up to find him staring down at her.

  “No need to apologize,” he said with a smile. “I was looking for you.”

  “You were? Uh, why?”

  Leah could have kicked herself. Ned was one of the first clients she’d worked with at Events & Things. After she’d pulled off a successful event, Ned had called and asked her out. Leah had been flattered that such a handsome, accomplished man wanted to date her. He was the founder and president of a successful financial planning firm. She’d gone out with him a few times, only to discover that he had a serious personality defect. He didn’t understand the word no, and had tried her one time too many.

  “You haven’t returned any of my calls in over a month,” he said, “so I’m trying to figure out what’s wrong with you.”

  In Ned’s world, nothing was ever wrong with him; it was always someone else, hence the personality defect. She got a bad feeling when she was close to Ned. It was like God was sending her signals, telling her to run. Leah glanced around the room, hoping to catch the eye of one of the security guards, but the closest one was on the other side of the club.

  Ned grabbed her arm. “Come sit with me. We need to talk.”

  She pulled free from his grasp. “There’s nothing to talk about, Ned. I’m at work, and I would like for you to leave me alone.”

  Smirking at her with those cold, dark eyes, he said, “I’m not leaving until you talk to me.”

  Leah felt trapped. “Okay, Ned. If you want to talk, then we’ll talk. But give me a minute. I need to check with my client to see if he needs anything.” She walked back toward the front of the room, where the party was in full gear. Her client was celebrating like there was no tomorrow. And if the drinks and well-wishes that had been floating around the club were any indication, his friends weren’t leaving this party anytime soon.

  Tapping her client on the shoulder, Leah put on a happy face. “Things seem to be going well.”

  “Oh, Leah, there you are. My buddy Ned was looking for you a moment ago.”

  “I saw him,” she said, then got right back to business. “I just wanted to see if you needed anything else.”

  He glanced around. “Nope. Everything’s going smoothly. You weren’t kidding when you said you knew how to throw a good party.”

  “It’s my specialty.” She looked over her shoulder at Ned, still standing awaiting her return. Then she glanced at her watch. “Look, if you don’t need anything else, why don’t I get out of here? I’ll send in the cleanup crew in about an hour, and they’ll clear everything out.”

  He nodded. “That’ll work. Send the invoice to my office. Throw in some business cards, too. I have plenty of contacts I can hook you up with.”

  “Thanks. I really appreciate that.” Leah backed away from her client, keeping an eye on Ned. She stood by the bar for a moment, pretending to be checking in with the bartender. The moment Ned took his eyes off her, Leah raced to the side door and ran out of the nightclub like it was about to be raided.

  Unfortunately, she’d parked at the far end of the parking lot. By the time she made it to her car and grasped the door handle, Ned had caught up to her. “Get away from me!” she yelled at him, trying to open the door.

  But he grabbed her by the shoulders and spun her around to face him. “All I wanted to do was talk to you, Leah.”

  “Leave me alone, Ned,” she warned him. “I promise you, I will call the police if you don’t stop bothering me.”

  “Oh, so now I’m bothering you? Funny, I wasn’t bothering you when you were taking my money and eating for free.”

  “I didn’t take your money. You paid my company, and I planned your event. But if I’d known then that you were a stalker, I never would have agreed to work with you.” She’d never had these kinds of problems when she worked at the church.

  “All you did was take my money,” Ned snarled, his eyes taking on a crazed look. “You never wanted a relationship with me.”

  “Move out of my way, Ned.” She reached into her purse as she backed up trying to create a bit a space.

  “I’m not going anywhere. You are going to talk to me.” He reached for her.

  Leah pulled her mace out of her purse and sprayed him like he was a roach and she held a can of Raid. He buckled over, grabbing his eyes. She jumped in her car, locked the door before she sped off.

  Never in all the years she worked at her father’s church had she ever had to mace anyone. She missed her family, wished things were different. She wished that Bon Jovi song, Who Says You Can’t Go Home was written for her, because she desperately wanted to go home and be with her family.

  ~Chapter Two

  Cory Parker woke in a cold sweat. He clapped his hands twice to turn on the lights. Where was it? He normally kept his cell phone on his nightstand. Throwing the covers off, he jumped out of his king size bed and stepped on his phone.

  “
Please tell me I didn’t break it.” Picking it up, and seeing no cracks, he wanted to breathe a sigh of relief but he couldn’t. Not until he checked his text messages. It was four in the morning, but the job of an investment banker was never done. If he missed an important call, no matter the time of night or day, it could cost him, his career, his bonus and the promotion that was going to get him to the fifth floor at C & T Capitol.

  Cory’s promotion wouldn’t come with the corner office reserved for the managing director. But he would get a nice office with a window. Not some manufactured cubicle style office where the walls didn’t go all the way to the ceiling and the neighboring senior investment bankers could hear his conversations and possibly steal his deals.

  No call or text had come through since he left the office at ten o’clock that night. He put his cell phone on the nightstand and rolled over to try to get a few more hours of sleep. The life of an investment banker was stressful. But he loved the hustle and bustle of the job. Loved that he was making over a million dollars a year, and loved that when this next IPO cleared he would receive ten to twenty million dollars as a bonus, depending on how well the Initial Public Offering goes. The time when a private company first offers shares of their company could either go well, everybody gets paid, or it could be a big dud.

  Life was good, except for the stress... except for the fact that his family complained they hardly ever saw him anymore. And he’d missed so much church, the pastor had sent a search and rescue team to find him. Cory had assured them that he hadn’t lost his love for God. Didn’t he display that by faithfully paying his tithes each month?

  After getting a couple hours of sleep, Cory stretched and yawned, then got out of bed. Rubbing the sleep from his eyes, Cory made his way to his home gym. He paid for a gym membership but didn’t have time to go. So, one of the bedrooms in his three-bedroom penthouse apartment had been turned into an exercise room.

  On his way to the gym, he passed by the den, which had been designed for relaxation. He didn’t do much of that these days. An 18x24 size portrait of Erlene caught his attention this morning. She had been a beauty with that golden brown skin tone, high cheek bones, and one of those short cuts that Halle Berry used to wear.