Eventually, the Whittakers, parents and son, help Maribeth to cope with her pregnancy and her family's rejection, while she helps them accept the death of their beloved Annie. Meanwhile, Tommy's parents have drifted far apart, but the fear that their son may soon be a father temporarily reunites them. The two lonely adolescents slowly fall in love Tommy offers to marry Maribeth, but she refuses, claiming that they are too young to be parents she plans to give the child up for adoption. Teenager Tommy begins frequenting a diner where he meets 16-year-old waitress Maribeth Robertson, who's pregnant and has been thrown out of her home. But when five-year-old Annie dies of meningitis the day after Christmas, their lives fall apart. It's 1952, and the Whittakers are the perfect happy family. Steel deviates sharply from her usual romance formula in this tender if sometimes sappy story about bad things happening to good people.
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