Chloe loved walking the dog. They’d probably end up at the park
 
 for a few hours. Peppy would have to wait patiently while Chloe tried out
 
 every single swing or slide like she’d never been there before. Taylor knew
 
 she’d have to resort to some form of bribery to get her daughter off the
 
 equipment and back home for supper, but she already planned on using a
 
 bath. Chloe also loved baths, especially if they had a lot of bubbles in them.
 
 Taylor rinsed out the cloth, then used her wet hands to smooth back
 
 the wild strands of hair that had escaped her messy bun. She thought about
 
 the farm. She thought about Chloe. Taylor really did want to make it to the
 
 end of June, but it was only mid-September. After all her recent failures,
 
 she was losing hope. How much opportunity was really here for them?
 
 Would she ever find someone to share her life? Maybe it wasn’t impossible
 
 if she wasn’t in Austin. Maybe she could go back home and just— just—
 
 suck it up and be who they wanted her to be, at least on the outside.
 
 Stop. You’re going to make it work. You’re going to get a job.
 
 Someone will call. The bad luck streak has to end sometime.
 
 Taylor knew she already had friends here. Chloe’s school was great.
 
 So maybe her first jobs hadn’t worked out, but that didn’t mean she should
 
 just give up, pack it up, and resign herself to a life of being someone she
 
 wasn’t because that was what everyone else wanted. That was a horrible
 
 way to live. Even if she loved the farm more than anywhere else, she didn’t
 
 love lying to herself.
 
 Some of her determination came back, and Taylor promised herself
 
 that she wasn’t going to give up. Not on finding work. Not on finding
 
 someone. Not on turning her idea that she’d pitched— and flopped— into a
 
 reality. Not on getting a job. As long as she could make it work in Austin,
 
 she’d stay, even though it was hard. Financially though, if she didn’t get a
 
 job soon, she knew she was in real trouble.
 
 Chapter 7
 
 Christina