Ties That Bind

Ties That Bind

Ties That Bind

Ties That Bind

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Overview

It all started in college, in the turbulent sixties, when Randolph and Jenna became lovers. Randolph knew the moment he saw Jenna Haywood that he had to make her his. But the path to love is not an easy one.

His wealthy Grandmother, Julia, disapproves of the match and unbeknownst to him, his brother's seemingly docile fiancée has a few plans of her own that she would like to set in motion. Betrayal and devastation lurks in unexpected places and tests the bond they believed was unbreakable.

As they struggle with love and passion, secrets and lies the question is: Is love enough to help them see each other through the storms that await them ahead?


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9798200932115
Publisher: Harlequin Audio
Publication date: 04/04/2023
Product dimensions: 5.20(w) x 5.70(h) x (d)

About the Author

About The Author
Brenda Jackson is a New York Times bestselling author of more than one hundred romance titles. Brenda lives in Jacksonville, Florida, and divides her time between family, writing, and traveling. Email Brenda at authorbrendajackson@gmail.com or visit her on her website at brendajackson.net.



Ron Butler is a Los Angeles based actor who works regularly as a commercial and animation voiceover artist and an audiobook narrator. A member of the Atlantic Theater Company, he has over a hundred film and television credits to his name and won an Independent Filmmaker Project Award for his work in the HBO film Everyday People.

Read an Excerpt

Ties That Bind

A Novel


By Brenda Jackson

St. Martin's Press

Copyright © 2002 Brenda Streater Jackson
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-312-30611-3



CHAPTER 1

October 1965 Howard University, Washington, DC

"For crying out loud, Jenna, the least you can do is act like you want to go," Ellie Stanhope said, glancing at her watch. "What else do you have to do tonight?"

"Study," was Jenna Haywood's reply as she turned away from the closet and walked over to the bed to put on her shoes.

"All you ever do is study."

Jenna glanced over her shoulder at Ellie. "Have you forgotten this is college and getting an education is the reason we're here?"

"Whoa, speak for yourself. That's not why I'm here. I came to Howard for a different reason altogether."

Jenna shook her head. It hadn't taken long for Ellie to explain when they first met two years ago that the reason she had come to Howard University was to find an educated man to marry who could give her the good life she wanted.

Jenna couldn't understand any black woman still thinking that way. That had been the norm for women years ago, to go off to college to find a husband. But now all across the country more and more women were demanding equal rights, although for most black women and men, civil rights were the main thing they were fighting for. But still, women were finally coming into their own, getting recognized for their accomplishments. There was even a women's liberation movement that had recently gotten started. And as far as black women were concerned, thanks to the Civil Rights Act that was passed last year, you could now enter jobs that used to be considered for "white women only".

Ellie was right. Her reasons for coming to Howard were altogether different from Jenna's. Jenna wanted to one day become an architect, a field a lot of women had not yet ventured into. Besides, she owed it to her parents, who had scraped and saved their last dime to send her to college to do her very best in school.

"Will you please hurry up, Jenna!"

Jenna turned and saw Ellie impatiently tapping her foot on the floor. "What's the rush?"

Ellie rolled her eyes heavenward. "Jenna, this is the biggest, most important fraternity party of the year. Everyone who is anyone on campus was invited."

Jenna smiled. "Then how did we get invited? We aren't anybody. At least we aren't anybody important."

"Speak for yourself, Jenna Haywood. I am somebody. I'm a woman with my eyes on Sonny Cahill."

Jenna didn't have to ask who Sonny Cahill was. He was the senior who was the son of New Jersey's first Negro mayor. And everybody on campus knew that like his father, Sonny had political aspirations. Everybody also knew that he was seeing Terri Whitelaw on a steady basis, who happened to be this year's homecoming queen. Jenna couldn't help wondering how Ellie thought she would fit into the picture. "Okay, I'm ready to go."

Ellie headed for the door. "It's about time."


The sound of Fontella Bass' hit single, "Rescue Me," was blasting when Jenna and Ellie neared the building where the party was being held. Black and gold streamers and balloons were all around the courtyard. Jenna heard that when the Alphas held their annual party, it was indeed a party. She also knew the most popular guys on campus belonged to this fraternity, which no doubt was another reason Ellie was eager to attend. Last year they hadn't received an invitation. But this year was different.

"And for pete's sake, Jenna, try not to look bored tonight. A lot of the AKAs and Deltas will be here. I know you aren't interested in joining a sorority but I am, and I don't want them to get the wrong idea about me just because we're roommates."

Jenna lifted a brow. "And just what idea is that?"

"That I'm a fuddy-duddy bookworm. I have plenty of time to buckle down and hit the books during senior year. Right now I want to enjoy college life and make sure my future is set. Hopefully I'll have good news for my parents when I go home for Christmas."

Jenna knew from what Ellie had told her that her parents were the driving forces behind her finding a husband at college. According to Ellie, her parents had met that way at Howard years ago. Her father was a pharmacist and her mother was a schoolteacher. Ellie had also explained that although she didn't think her parents were in love or anything like that, the most important thing was that they were well suited for each other, which made things even better. Jenna couldn't understand why anyone would think that way, or why anyone would want their daughter to follow in their footsteps and enter a relationship so clinical and loveless.

Jenna thought about her own parents. Neither had gone to college but her father was proud of his job as a meat cutter and her mother enjoyed working as a cook in the school's cafeteria. And as far as love was concerned, John and Jackie Haywood had plenty of it for each other as well as for their four children.

By the time Jenna and Ellie reached the building where the party was being held, a number of people were coming in and out, and others were hanging around outside talking and having what seemed to be a good time. There was no doubt in Jenna's mind that Ellie would enjoy herself tonight. But Jenna doubted that she would. Her mind would be preoccupied with thoughts of the test she would have in her history class on Monday. Because of this party, she would have to spend most of Sunday studying.

As they entered the building Jenna hoped that Ellie wasn't planning to stay too late. If so then she wouldn't have any choice but to leave her here, although she didn't really want to do that. But Ellie was determined to be a part of the in-crowd, no matter what it took. She and Ellie were two different people with two different sets of goals and ambitions. Jenna had accepted that and was fine with it. But she knew Ellie had a long way to go to accept her way of thinking and to understand that there were more important things in life besides husband-hunting.


"Hey, how about if we ditch this party and go to my dorm and make out?"

Jenna smiled at Johnny Lane as he came to stand beside her just as her favorite song, "Rainbow 65" by Gene Chandler, began playing. Johnny, six foot four, muscular, with good dark looks, was one of the first persons she had met upon arriving at Howard and was a known flirt around campus. "Sorry, Johnny, I have a headache," she said grinning. "I'm surprised to see you here though. I thought you didn't do the fraternity thing."

He shrugged. "Normally I don't but a man has to eat sometimes and the food here is always good." He glanced around the room then smirked at her. "I see Princess Ellie was able to talk you into coming."

Jenna shook her head. Johnny and Ellie didn't get along. In fact they disliked each other intensely. Ellie claimed he lacked any kind of breeding and polish. On the other hand, Johnny thought Ellie was a snob. "I didn't mind."

"Yeah, right," he said grinning, knowing better. "How you put up with her beats me. She's operating under the misconception that she's popular on campus when in fact very few people actually like her."

Jenna shrugged. Feeling loyalty to her roommate she said, "Ellie's okay. She just tries too hard at times."

Johnny snorted. "In trying to get people to like her she somehow manages to get them not to like her."

Jenna took a sip of her punch. She knew that in the beginning Johnny had had a thing for Ellie. When she all but made him feel he wasn't worthy of her affections, whatever feelings he'd felt for her had turned into animosity. Jenna hated that because she considered both Johnny and Ellie her friends and often found herself right smack in the middle of their fray. More than once, Ellie had tried making her choose sides but she had refused to do so. As far as she was concerned, whatever Johnny and Ellie felt for each other didn't involve her.

"So, is Leigh still spending most of her time over at Noah's place?"

Jenna nodded. Leigh was her other roommate who didn't get along with Ellie either. Instead of tolerating the situation like Jenna, Leigh spent most of her time with her boyfriend, Noah Wainwright, who lived off campus. He was three years older than Leigh and a law student.

"Can't say I blame Leigh too much," Johnny was now saying. "You have to be the most tolerant person on earth, Jenna."

Jenna smiled. "I don't let Ellie get under my skin." Changing the subject to one that was Johnny's favorite topic lately, namely civil rights, she asked, "I heard there may be another march on Washington next year."

Johnny shook his head. "Don't count on it. President Johnson is definitely not John F. Kennedy. Right now he's too worried about what's happening in Vietnam to give a damn about a bunch of black folks. But what this country has to realize is that young men like me have no reason to go to some god-forsaken country I know nothing about and shoot up a bunch of people I personally don't have anything against, when I'm being treated like a second-class citizen in my own country."

Jenna raised a brow upon hearing the anger in Johnny's voice. "Are you saying you won't go into the armed services if you're drafted?"

"Hey, don't look so surprised. I heard Muhammad Ali is thinking the same way. He went all the way to Italy and won that gold medal, and came back here and couldn't go into a five-and-dime store and sit at the counter because he's black."

Jenna took another sip of her punch. Muhammad Ali, the famous boxer, who had been known as Cassius Clay until last year when he changed his name, had started speaking out against the injustices against blacks. "I hear the Muslims have held several meetings on campus."

"Yeah, and I've attended a few and found them pretty interesting. Maybe you could go to one of the meetings with me," he said, knowing full well that she wouldn't do such a thing. Jenna was a good Southern Baptist girl who wouldn't be caught associating with any group believed to be of a radical nature, and with such a different viewpoint than her own religion. Not to put her on the spot, he decided to change the subject and discuss a recent rumor he had heard. "Did you hear there may have been a conspiracy with Malcolm X's death?"

Jenna lifted a brow. She wasn't surprised. There were some people like her parents who also believed there had been a conspiracy behind President Kennedy's death, too. Malcolm X, the onetime spokesman for the Nation of Islam and leader of the Organization for Afro-American Unity, had gotten slain earlier that year. "No, I hadn't heard that."

After a few minutes of filling her in on the latest rumor, Johnny said, "Well, since you won't leave this party to go somewhere and make out with me, I guess I'll move on. I'm sure there's some woman here tonight who'll be interested."

Jenna chuckled. "Yeah, I'm sure there is." She watched as Johnny left her side and crossed the room to a group of ladies standing nearby. She checked her watch. It was close to twelve o'clock already, the midnight hour. She searched the crowd for Ellie. She had only seen her twice since they had arrived. She spotted her standing across the room talking to Tyrone Wells, one of the star players on the football team. Jenna knew that now would not be a good time to approach Ellie to let her know she was ready to leave.

Deciding to take a step outside to get a bit of fresh air, Jenna made her way through the crowd and for the door. Once outside she took a deep cleansing breath, thinking she much preferred being outside than inside.

She happened to glance across the yard where a group of guys stood talking, and blinked when she noticed that one of them was staring at her. And for the life of her she couldn't help but stare back. From the floodlights shining off Drew Hall she could see his features clearly — he was such a dreamboat! He had medium-brown skin and black curly hair. She would guess his height to be at least six foot four and his shoulders were broad. From the Howard Bisons jersey he was wearing, she wondered if he was a member of the football team. He had, she thought, the most handsome face she had ever seen and that thought suddenly played havoc on her nerves. This was the first time she had seen any guy on campus who had even slightly interested her.

Suddenly, she realized he had left the group of guys he'd been standing with and was coming straight toward her. Jenna felt some sort of an electric current passing between them that was irresistible, undeniable. She experienced a sense of panic and for a quick moment was about to turn and go back inside. But something about the way he was looking at her stopped her, and she somehow knew that even though there was this raw energy flowing between them, she had nothing to fear from him. So she remained where she was, watching him approach. Her gaze locked firmly with his while the sound of Wilson Pickett's "In the Midnight Hour," drifted through the air. When he finally reached her, he smiled, took her hand in his and said in what she thought was the deepest male voice she'd ever heard, "Will you go back inside and dance with me?"


Jenna thought his hand felt warm as he led her back inside where they joined other couples dancing. As they moved their bodies in formation to do the swing, it occurred to her that not once had she thought of turning him down when he'd approached her.

For the longest time he didn't speak. Neither did she. They merely stared into each other's eyes as if they thought dancing together, in this place, at this time made perfect sense. Although they would probably be the first to admit that this intense attraction didn't. She had never felt anything like this in her entire life, not even for Jeremy Fields and they had dated all through their last two years of high school. They had broken up after graduation when he had decided that he wanted to escape the prejudices in the South by moving to California.

"Who are you?" she finally asked, thinking she should at least know the name of the person who had miraculously warped her senses.

"Randolph Devin Fuller. And who are you?"

"Jenna. Jenna Marie Haywood."

A smile lifted the corners of his mouth. "Hi, Jenna Marie Haywood."

Jenna could help returning his smile. "Hi, Randolph Devin Fuller."

"You're a junior?" he asked with interest.

"Yes. What about you?"

"I'm a senior. Funny we never ran into each other before on campus."

Moments later when Wilson Pickett's song ended and a slow number by Solomon Burke immediately began playing, Randolph gently pulled Jenna to him, holding her close, but not too close as to be considered indecent or disrespectful. But it was close enough to breathe in the tantalizing scent of her perfume.

With mixed emotions bombarding him resulting from holding her in his arms, Randolph tried to calm himself down. "So, tell me about yourself," he said, swallowing hard.

"What do you want to know?"

"Everything."

She smiled. "That would take more than this dance, Randolph."

He barely suppressed the chuckle rising in his throat as he kept his gaze leveled at her face. He thought she had a beautiful smile. The last thing he had expected when he showed up here tonight was to run into a woman he would find himself irresistibly attracted to. "Then tell me the important stuff like what brought you to Howard."

Jenna nodded before she began speaking. "I'm in the school of architecture. What brought me here is my parents' lifelong dream that I get educated at a prestigious college. They worked real hard to send me. It's my dream to return to Knoxville and open a business there."

"Knoxville? Is that where you're from?"

"Yes. I'm the oldest of four kids and the only girl. Now what information would you like to share?"

He smiled. "I'm majoring in business with plans to go on to law school here. The Fullers have deep roots in Richmond, Virginia, where my father was born. My paternal grandparents still live there. My mother's parents are in Glendale Shores, South Carolina."

She nodded. She had heard all about Glendale Shores, which some people claimed was the most beautiful of the sea islands off the South Carolina coast. "Do you ever go to Glendale Shores to visit?"

"Not as much as I'd like. When I was a kid growing up, I spent most of my summers there."

"Do you have any sisters or brothers?"

"Yes," he replied, smiling fondly, thinking of the brother he was very close to. "I have a brother named Ross. He's a law student. I heard my parents wanted a third child but once they saw what a holy terror I was, they decided two was enough." He then studied her features, thinking how young she looked. "How old are you?"

She smiled. "I'm eighteen. I graduated from high school at sixteen. Since my mother worked in the school system, I was able to start school a year ahead of schedule."

"Is your mother a teacher?"

"No, she's a cook in the school cafeteria. And how old are you, Randolph?"

"I'm twenty. I'll be twenty-one in April."

"April? What day in April?"

"The fourth."

Jenna blinked. "My birthday is April fourth, too," she said, grinning from cheek to cheek. "Isn't that a coincidence?"

"Yes, it is," Randolph said warmly, thinking she was simply beautiful, although she hadn't done anything to accentuate that beauty. But in his opinion, she didn't have to. She wore her hair up in a knot that showed just what a graceful neckline she had. She had applied minimum makeup and was dressed conservatively in a skirt and blouse. But there was something about her that had grabbed his attention the moment she had walked outside.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Ties That Bind by Brenda Jackson. Copyright © 2002 Brenda Streater Jackson. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin's Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Title Page,
Acknowledgments,
Book One - 1965-1968,
Book Two - 1980-1981,
Book Three - The Present,
Epilogue,
Also by Brenda Jackson,

Reading Group Guide

It all started in college, in the turbulent sixties, when Randolph and Jenna became lovers. Randolph knew the moment he saw Jenna Haywood that he had to make her his. But the path to love is not an easy one. His wealthy Grandmother Julia disapproves of the match and unbeknownst to him, his brother's seemingly docile fiancee has a few plans of her own that she would like to set in motion. Betrayal and devastation lurks in unexpected places and tests the bond they believed was unbreakable. As they struggle with love and passion, secrets and lies the question is: Is love enough to help them see each other through the storms that await them ahead?

1. Who was your favorite character in the book? Who was your least favorite? Why?

2. Do you think Ross should have seen through Angela's duplicity?

3. Do you think the love Jenna and Randolph shared was special? Why?

4. Did Julia Fuller have the right to interfere in her grandsons' lives?

5. Did you see Ross as weak because he was more tolerant of his grandmother's interferences than Randolph?

6. Do you think Jenna did the right thing by breaking off her engagement with Randolph when Angela got pregnant?

7. Should Randolph and Noah have stopped looking for Ross' daughter years ago? Why or why not?

8. Do you think the historical detail was critical to the story? Why or why not?

9. Should Randolph have told Trey the truth years ago instead of letting him think the worst about him and Jenna?

10. Did Trey handle the situation properly in dealing with his mother once he discovered all the things she had done? Why or why not?

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