The Symphony of Remembrance
Lady Heartswell
Margaret Walsh never expected to fall in love again at fifty-eight, especially not in the sterile hallways of a nursing home where she visits her Alzheimer's-stricken mother every single day. Three years after losing her husband Thomas, she's built walls around her heart as carefully as she's built her quiet routine of work, visits, and avoiding the piano that once brought her joy.
But then she hears the music.
James Harrington plays Debussy in the sunroom every afternoon for his wife Caroline, who hasn't recognized him in months. When Margaret finally works up the courage to listen, she discovers that grief has a way of recognizing itself in others—and that sometimes the most unexpected connections happen in the most unlikely places.
What starts as shared conversations over terrible coffee becomes something deeper, something that terrifies them both. Because loving someone new doesn't erase the love you had before, and when you've already buried one soulmate, opening your heart again feels like the cruelest kind of hope.
When tragedy strikes both their families, Margaret and James are forced to confront an impossible sometimes the greatest act of love is letting yourself love again, even when you know exactly how much it can hurt to lose someone.
But what happens when the person you're falling for is still married to someone else—even if she's already gone?
A heartbreaking story about second chances, the complexity of love, and the courage it takes to believe that your story isn't over just because one chapter has ended.

