Synopsis
When your past vanishes, what happens to your future? Candice and Jason Woodruff had everything going for them: a strong marriage, the family they’d dreamed of, and successful businesses. When they made their wedding vows, they promised to love each other through infinity and beyond…but Candice doesn’t remember making that vow. Candice doesn’t remember the last eighteen years. After a medical emergency, Candice awakens to find herself a married mother of four. She’s surrounded by a loving family of strangers, but Candice struggles to claim an identity while learning to be a wife and mother. Candice is no longer the same woman Jason fell in love with all those years ago. Can they learn to love each other in this new reality? Through Infinity is one woman’s journey as she rediscovers the love of her husband and children. But will that new found love be strong enough to carry them through infinity and beyond…
Through Infinity Goodreads links
Through Infinity Buy links
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ITUNES: https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/id945230401
Kobo: http://store.kobobooks.com/en-US/ebook/through-infinity
Through Infinity Book trailer
through infinity book trailer from Libby Austin on Vimeo.
through infinity book trailer
EXCERPT
Coming home when Rissa was already
a few months old made me want to prove I could take care of her. Fortunately,
for the most part, she was a pretty easy baby. I was feeling pretty confident.
This fatherhood thing wasn’t as hard as everybody made it out to be. Oh
little did I know.
A few nights after I got home from
deployment, we went out to dinner with our moms before they flew home. We’d
been at the restaurant close to an hour when Rissa started to get fussy. She didn’t want a bottle or a pacifier. None
of the positions I tried were working. You reached for her, but I said, “Just
wait, I gotta learn.” A minute or two later she quieted down. I’d found what
worked, bouncing on my knee, or so I thought. Feeling a bit smug, I told you,
“See, I got this.” You gave a small nod and smiled like you knew something I
didn’t know. If I’d been a smart man, I would have heeded the warning from the
experienced parent.
It wasn’t long before you glanced
down and grinned like the cat who ate the canary. My chair was angled away from
the table so I had room for Rissa on my lap. As you nodded your head toward me
and smirked, you asked, “Did you have an accident?’
I followed your gaze and looked
down at my lap to find a big wet spot seeping out from under Rissa. “She peed
on me!”
“Ugh, babe, I don’t think that’s
pee.”
“Oh, nasty!” I tried to hand Rissa
to you, but you were having none of it.
You shook your head, held your
hands up, and said, “Remember—you got this. So get to getting.”
Desperate, I looked to our moms
for help, but I instantly knew they were on Team Mom and I was on my own. By
this point, Rissa had started crying at full volume. After about five minutes
of watching me struggle to get her out of the poop infested clothes and diaper,
you took pity on me, or Rissa at least, and started changing
her. After bending her in half, which I didn’t know was possible, you had a
fresh diaper on her before I blinked. To this day, I don’t know how you changed
diapers that quickly. Although, I’m pretty sure most of the liquid poop was on
my lap, so there wasn’t much for you to have to clean.
The front of my pants were covered
in baby shit. I used every napkin we had at the table, then asked the waiter
for more and another glass of water. By the time I was done scrubbing my pants, I looked
like I’d pissed myself. The three of you thought it was hilarious that I had to
walk out of the restaurant holding the diaper bag in front of me. Y’all had
quite the time yucking it up at my expense.
I learned a valuable lesson; it’s
okay to ask for help as a parent, and nobody has all of the answers when it
comes to kids. But I’ll admit to some satisfaction when Xavier crapped all over
you when he was a couple of weeks old. While I got it in my lap, he got you
from head to waist. I also learned he who laughs last, laughs
loudest.
I couldn’t believe that nobody
helped him. My mom was a sucker for a crying baby, and his mom was a
sweetheart. I couldn’t picture either of them letting Jason struggle or Rissa
cry while she was covered in poop. This story needed to be verified.
The phone rang a couple of times
before Marlene picked up. “Hello.”
“Hey, Marlene.”
“Hey, sweetie. What are y’all up
to?”
“I just finished opening one of
the memories.”
“Oh, really, are you enjoying
them?”
“Yeah, they’re great. This one was
one of Jason’s. He told the story about Rissa pooping on him in a restaurant—”
“Oh, good grief,” she laughed,
“he’s never gonna let that go—”
“It really happened? And he
changed her at the table?”
“Oh the naiveté of the new
parent.” Okay, no faulting her logic there, but seriously, why would you change
a baby’s diaper where you were eating? Ewww “The restaurant was this little
hole in the wall Mexican place. I have no idea how it wasn’t shut down by the
health department. We would have probably needed a tetanus shot if we’d gone to
the bathroom there. The spot on his pants wasn’t even that bad. If he’d of just
waited until we got back to the house to clean his pants nobody would have even
noticed.
“You’d would’ve thought he was the
first parent to ever get crapped on by a baby. When we got to the car to go
home, he pulled off his shorts & put them in a plastic bag from the trunk.
Then he took a forty-five minute shower we got to y’all’s townhouse. Who would
have thought that a grown man would be bested by one poopy diaper?”