Spending the night in jail isnβt exactly how I planned to spend Christmas, but Iβve had worse holidaysβ¦
Now that Iβm out, itβs time to accept my real punishment. Coaching ten-year-old terrors on the ice, in my non-existent free time. My Coach thinks itβd be good for me. Remind me where I came from. He should know Iβve tried every day of my life for the last ten years to forget.
The youth hockey league is a hell I didnβt plan on and the worst penalty possibleβ¦
Until the day a sweet, single mom cracks a joke about her kid, and then all bets are off.
Iβm the best defenseman in professional hockey, but I didnβt see her comingβ¦ now what in the hell do I do? Iβm not equipped for a relationship. Iβm definitely not ready to have a kid depending on me, but I canβt deny she makes me feel thingsβ want things I never imagined I could have.
I should save us both the trouble and stay far away from her. But rules were made to be broken, and I was never good at following them anyway.
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You feel sorry for Holly when you first meet her – her ex is a total *insert favorite bad word here*, he cheated on her with her best friend and then moved in with the woman right next door! But once Dom sets his sights on her … π Holly is a good mom, a caring person, and quickly finds herself drawn to the broody hockey star. And is surprised to find that attraction reciprocated.
This is my first Las Vegas Vipers book so I don’t know what impression previous stories gave readers about Dom but based on Rule Breaker I loved him. He’s troubled but loves his sister and will do whatever he can to help her. He’s made himself a loner because he wants to keep his family & his history quiet. Forced to coach a little kids hockey team, he finds himself drawn to Holly and her son. Before he knows it he’s getting involved and letting other people into his own life. The way that has him growing closer to his teammates turns out to be just as pivotal for him as the relationship that develops with Holly.
Lynn’s latest is funny, angsty, sexy, and entertaining. She gives us characters we can root for, plenty of steam, a boatload of feels, and a HEA that just tugs at the heart. A bit of a warning – there are some sensitive topics discussed, but I don’t feel like she treated them lightly (although I’m no expert in any of them).
*Part of a series but can be read as a standalone.*
*****
Author Info:
Stacey Lynn likes her coffee with a dash of sugar, her heroes with a side of bossy, and her wine a deep shade of red.
The author of over thirty romance novels, many of which have been best-selling titles on Amazon, AppleBooks, and Barnes & Noble, she loves being able to turn her vivid imagination into a career that brings entertainment and joy to her readers. Focused on sports romance and emotional, small-town romance, she also loves stretching herself in different genres.
Born in Texas and raised in the Midwest, she now makes her home in North Carolina and loves all things Southern. Together with her ultimate tall, dark, and handsome hero, she has four children. Her life is a chaotic mess that fights with her Type-A, list-making, neurotically organized preferences and she wouldn’t have it any other way.
Fitness influencer Crystal Chen is so focused on herself and the gym that no man can get in her way: except for firefighter and new gym patron Scott, literally, when he steals her squat rack. Soon the competition β and their undeniable chemistry β heats up as they fight for gym domination. But after their escalating jabs, the last place Crystal expects to see Scott is at their grandparentsβ engagement party. As Crystal discovers the softness under his muscular exterior, she feels a deep bond forming β butΒ whenΒ internet trolls come after a viral picture of them, Crystal and Scott will have to ground their budding relationship in what they know is real.
βLeaβs steamy debut romance features well-developed, likable characters with slow-build chemistryβ¦VERDICT Hand this one to fans of Helen Hoang and Talia Hibbert.βΒ βLibrary JournalΒ Β
βFresh, fun, and extremely sexy.β―Set on Youβ―is a romance of unexpected depth.ββHelen Hoang,β―USA Todayβ―bestselling author ofβ―The Heart PrincipleΒ Β
“Just the right dose of delicious steam. Amy Lea has crafted an ode to all of us who struggle with self-acceptance while remaining determined to love ourselves.”βAli Hazelwood,β―New York Timesβ―bestsellingβ―author ofβ―The Love HypothesisΒ
βSet on Youβ―is energetic, steamy, bubbly, and so, so fun. But more than that, it’s also a hugely important book that celebrates body positivity in the most joyous way possible.ββJesse Q.Β Sutanto, author ofβ―Dial A for AuntiesΒ
*****
Author Info:
Amy LeaΒ is a Canadian bureaucrat by day and contemporary romance author by night (and weekends). She writes laugh-out-loudΒ romantic comediesΒ featuring strong heroines, witty banter, mid-2000s pop culture references, and happily ever afters. Β When Amy is not writing, she can be found fangirling over other romance books on Instagram (@amyleabooks), eating potato chips with reckless abandon, and snuggling with her husband and goldendoodle.Β Learn more atΒ https://www.amyleabooks.com.
How do you start over when the biggest mistake of your life has more than one million views?
Forget diamonds; the internet is forever. Social media consultant Isla Thompson learned that lesson the hard way when she went viral for all the wrong reasons. A month later, Isla is still having nightmares about the moment she ruined a young starletβs career and made herself the most unemployable influencer in Manhattan. But she doesnβt have the luxury of hiding away until sheβs no longer βInstagram Poison.β Not when her fourteen-year-old sister, Dani, needs Isla to keep a roof over their heads. So she takes the first job she can get: caring for Camilla, a glossy-maned, foul-tempered hellhound.
After a week of ferrying Camilla from playdates to pet psychics, Isla starts to suspect that the dachshundβs bark is worse than her biteβjust like her owner, Theo Garrison. Isla has spent her career working to make people likeable and hereβs Theoβhappy to hide behind his reputation as a brutish recluse. But Theo isnβt a bruteβheβs sweet and funny, and Isla shouldΒ notΒ see him as anything but the man who signs her pay cheques. Because loving Theo would mean retreating to his world of secluded luxury, and Isla needs to show Dani that no matter the risk, dreams are always worth chasing.
Isla trudged along the hallway toward her apartment, high heels swinging from her finger. Usually she wouldnβt dare go barefoot on public carpetβespecially not in a building of questionable standards, like this one. But after walking six blocks to get home in the pretty, stiletto-heeled death traps, her feet had officially given up the ghost.
Besides, foot hygiene was the least of her problems. With another rejected job applicationβthis one coming through before sheβd even made it home from the interviewβshe had bigger things to worry about.
Isla unlocked her front door and stepped inside, her lips quirking at the familiar sight. Her little sister, Dani, was standing next to the wall, one hand resting on a makeshift barre crafted from a shower curtain rod and some wall brackets theyβd found at the dollar store. She was dressed in a plain black leotard and a pair of pink ballet tights with a hole in the knee. Her battered pointe shoes were frayed around the toes, though the ribbons were glossy and new, stitched on with the utmost care.
Classical music blared from the stereo and Isla hit the pause button. βWhat have I said about disturbing the neighbors?β
βThatβs not what I said.β She shot her sister a look, trying to ignore how her leotard was digging into her shoulders. It was clearly a size too small because the damn girl was growing like a weed. At fourteen, sheβd already surpassed Isla in height.
βOh, thatβs right.β Dani grinned. βYou said that about schoolwork. But, to be fair, ballet is even more important than schoolwork, soβ¦β
βWorking on it.β Dani continued warming up, her pointe shoes knocking against the floorboards. βHow was your day?β
Ugh. You mean, how were the three dozen rejection letters and this last interview, which was clearly only for curiosityβs sake because the recruiter straight up laughed the second I left the interview room?
βIt wasβ¦fine,β she said, without much commitment.
In reality, it was anything but fine. What had her old boss called her? Oh, thatβs right: Instagram poison.
Isla pulled a bottle of wine out of the fridge and poured her-self a glass. Sheβd been rationing it, since the only stuff that was left after this was a box wine of unknown origin. βAmanda lost her contract with that makeup company and her movie is flopping. She sent me an angry email today.β
βWhatever happened to all publicity is good publicity?β
βItβs a myth. Turns out some things are career killers.β Isla took a gulp of the wine. βAnd now Iβm that woman who filmed a Disney princess vomiting all over herself.β
After the live video had been splashed across the internet and featured on network television, Isla had swiftly been fired from her job as a senior social media consultant with the Gate-way Agency. All her freelance clients had dropped her like a hot potato, too. Now, anyone who searched Islaβs name got page after page of the same thing: vomit girl and the person who was too dumb to stop recording.
Hence the growing pile of rejected job applications.
βI take it the interview didnβt go well?β
Isla cringed at the concern in her sisterβs voice. Most fourteen-year-olds were worrying about frivolous things, like which shade of lip gloss was the most on trend or how to craft the perfect TikTok dance routine. Hell, she would argue thatβs the stuff they should be worrying about. Not whether they were going to have a roof over their heads.
βNo, it didnβt,β Isla admitted. βBut honestly, Iβm not sure I would have wanted to work there anyway.β
It was a total lie.
Isla was ready to take anything at this point. It was humiliating to be begging for jobs she could have done ten years ago with her eyes closed, only to be rejected because the recruiters had found someone βwith more experience.β Umm, what? In other words, sheβd been officially blacklisted from the social media industry.
βHow come?β Dani walked over to the kitchen, her arms swinging gracefully by her sides. Her dark hair was in a neat bun on top of her head, tied with a piece of leftover ribbon from her pointe shoes. βWere they not very nice?β
βNot really.β
Dani came up to Isla and put an arm around her, stooping so she could lean her head against her big sisterβs shoulder. Some days it felt like it was them against the world. Given they didnβt actually know where their mother was these daysβand they hadnβt seen either one of their dads in God only knew how longβthey really did have to stick together.
Isla remembered the day it all happenedβthe eve of her twentieth birthday. Their mother had announced she was eloping overseas with a boyfriend sheβd known less than a month, and they hadnβt seen her since. Apparently motherhood was a temporary commitment, in her eyes. That left Isla responsible for the well-being of another human, and more terrified of the future than sheβd ever been.
Six years later, Isla had built a life for them both. Sheβd fostered and financed her half sisterβs dreams, built up her own dream career and done it all while hiding how often the numbers werenβt in their favor. But the older Dani got, the more keenly she observed what was going on.
βMaybe you can ask the ballet school for our money back,β Dani suggested quietly.
Her spot had been secured for the summer intensive ballet camp months ago, before Islaβs job situation had fallen apart.
βI know it was really expensive,β she added.
Isla felt tears prick the backs of her eyes, but she refused to let her sister see even a sliver of her emotion. It was her job to be a pillar. To be the strong one. To be the positive mother figure neither of them ever had.
βDani, I would sell my right kidney if it meant you could go to ballet camp.β
βIβm pretty sure thatβs illegal.β
Isla snorted and wrapped her sister into a big hug. Like al-ways, she smelled of oversweet vanilla perfume and mango-scented shampoo. She would do anything for this kid. Anything to make sure Dani grew up knowing that dreams were worth chasing, and that family came first no matter what.
βAnd how do you know so much about black market organ sales?β Isla raised a brow and Dani laughed.
βCSI.β
βAh, of course.β She laughed. But when Dani pulled back, Isla noticed her sisterβs characteristically carefree attitude was hidden under the worry swimming in her blue eyes. Isla hated seeing that. βWhy donβt we go to Central Park, huh? Weβll take your phone and I can get a few shots of you for your Instagram account.β
βReally?β Daniβs eyes lit up.
βSure. Just let me get changed.β
βI promise not to make you take a hundred photos this time.β Dani grinned and did a little pirouette in the kitchen. βNot even half that!β
βDonβt make promises you canβt keep,β Isla shot over her shoulder as she headed into her bedroom. βTrust me, I know where you get those perfectionistic tendencies.β
The second Isla closed her bedroom door behind her, she slumped against it and deflated like a balloon the day after a birthday party. Outside, the city roared with life. Sirens and horns, music blaring from the open window of another apartment, the shrieking laughter of people enjoying the early evening. She gazed out of the window, her eyes catching on the usual things that faced their cozy (read: cramped) place. There was a glimmer of light as the sun reflected off glass panes, and the zigzag of a fire escape from the building opposite them. The same three apartments always had their blinds wide openβeither inviting voyeurism or not caring enough to prevent it.
Sometimes she wondered about their lives. Had they been stuck and struggling at some point like her? Had they lost faith in themselves and the world?
After she got fired, Isla had assumed it would all blow over if she kept a low profile and didnβt make matters worse. But then Amandaβs movie tanked and all her sponsorships fell through, and people stopped taking Islaβs calls. Even when sheβd tried to laugh the whole thing off as a βMiley Cyrus exerciseβ her contacts had frozen harder than an Upper East Siderβs Botoxed face.
New York could be like thatβwhen you were successful it felt as though the sun was made of gold. And when you fell from grace, you hit the concrete so hard you shattered every bone in your body.
How much longer was she going to be able to keep faking that everything would be fine? Rent was due next week and the final payment for Daniβs elite ballet camp had come out of her account a few days ago. Islaβs eyes had watered at the amount. But Dani had worked so hard, practicing every day and pushing herself to the limit to beat out the rich kids with their prestigious coaches and private lessons and their lifetimes of opportunity.
How could Isla pull the rug out from under Dani like that? What kind of lesson would that be teaching her?
βYouβll figure this out,β she said to herself. βSomeone will hire you.β
After all, she had to make it work. Because letting her sister down was not an option.
While it’s entirely predictable, London’s newest is charming and cute. In the beginning Theo is gruff and standoffish, very Beast to Isla’s Beauty but as we get to know him we see the lonely man underneath and the reasons he’s kept himself separated. Time spent around Isla’s bright and understanding spirit has him coming out of his shell more and more. But it leaves him vulnerable and that’s not something Theo likes to be.
Isla is struggling to find work to be able to support her sister and a chance encounter with Theo in the park gives her the help she needs. While working on winning the trust of his temperamental dachshund, Isla also gets a glimpse into the heart of Camilla’s equally troubled owner. And the more she sees, the more she likes.
As good as the romance is, the secondary relationships are important as well. There’s something wholesome about Isla’s relationship with her sister. The way she shows her support and patience, the sacrifices she’s made for her, and the way Dani is willing to help her sister in return. And I really hope we get to see more of Isla’s friend, Scout, as her support is very important to the Thompsons and I’m curious about her story. Theo doesn’t have very many people in his life, by choice, but you can see the caring that’s there for those that have known him the longest. And the stories of his grandmother show just how awesome she was.
There’s so much about this book that I liked. It’s fun, steamy, & emotional and even though I could see their problems coming a mile away, the path to them and then to a HEA made for a very enjoyable read.
*****
Author Info:
Stefanie London is a USA Today Bestselling author of contemporary romance. Her books have been called “genuinely entertaining and memorable” by Booklist, and her writing praised as “elegant, descriptive and delectable” by RT Magazine. Originally from Australia, she now lives in Toronto with her very own hero and is doing her best to travel the world. She frequently indulges her passions for lipstick, good coffee, books and anything zombie related.
Threatened by the unexpected, a devoted rancher refuses to compromise her ambition or her legacy.
Chloe McIntyre is determined to become the co-CEO of her grandfatherβs Montana ranch, but her father isn’t ready to become partnersβyet.
Jaded memories of her parents’ shotgun wedding gone wrong cloud her attraction for best friend Matt Cooper when she discovers she’s pregnantβwith his baby. Chloe believes raising a child isnβt in her genes, and she doesnβt expect a marriage proposal. She keeps her condition a secret to hold her position on the ranch and continue what she does best: wrangling strays and working alongside hired hands.
After her father announces his first choice for co-CEO, a wild ride jeopardizes the pregnancy, and Chloe questions life choices. Will the cowgirl grit she has inherited from her grandmother be enough to rein in her disappointment, or will she walk away from everything that could flourish into love?
βLinda Bradleyβs magical manipulation of words creates a symphony in the readerβs mind, building lasting impressions to savor. If you love young women with grit and determination, then this is the story for you.β β Roni Hall, author of Montana Wild and Third Man on the Left
I wasnβt sure which stirred the queasy flutter in my belly, the fact I could be pregnant or the fact Iβd have to own the responsibility. Matt and I werenβt ready for an addition. Weβd been friends since college. We never talked about marriage, and I liked it that way.
My toe-tapping didnβt speed up the process. I wiped my sweaty palms on my jeans. The stopwatch on my phone ticked like the stride of a sloth. I wrapped the pregnancy test in tissue, tucked it beneath the washcloths in the vanity drawer, peeked into the hallway, then decided to go downstairs to the kitchen. I stuck my head in the refrigerator. The blast of air cooled my brow. My stomach rolled over.
My relationship with Matt wouldnβt ever be the same.
I grabbed a bottle of water, shut the door, and twisted the top off. The plastic container crackled. With an eye on the clock, I drummed my fingertips on the counter. The granite was cold, unforgiving.
I peered out the picture window. Maggie and Dad were nowhere in sight. The midday sun lit the majestic Montana landscape. Dad had brought me here to live on his parentsβ 617 Ranch when I was eightβ6/17, my grandparentsβ wedding date.
βI miss you, Grandpa,β I whispered to his spirit and pictured him, the way he looked when I came here eighteen years ago. I wiped away brimming tears, turned on a heel, hurried back to the bathroom, and locked the world out.
I never knew my grandma, Ida May, and I wished I had. Iβd seen her in old photographs and always wondered what part of me was like her. If any. And did she watch over me with my granddad?
My hands shook as I read the results on the white plastic stick. My vision blurred. There was no mistake about the outcome. I leaned against the counter and glanced in the mirror. I didnβt feel twenty-six and pregnant.
The knock at the door jarred me. I took a deep breath, wrapped the evidence in toilet paper, then buried it beneath the existing trash.
βChloe, are you in there?β
I turned on the water, washed my hands, and took a seat on the toilet to search the far crevices of my mind for an answer. Every problem had a solution. All I had to do was find it. Maggie called my name, again. My heart raced.
βJust a second.β I pounded my fists into my thighs. The hangnail on my pointer finger caught in the fray of my blue jeans, and I bit my lip.
βChloe? I could use your help.β She paused. βChloe,β Maggieβs voice was muffled through the heavy door. βAre you okay?β
βYes.β I dried my damp cheeks, stood, shook out my legs, and inspected myself in the mirror. My wavy, dishwater blond hair framed my flushed cheeks. The silver necklace I wore flickered in the light.
βIβm coming.β I steadied my hand and reached for the doorknob.
Maggie stood in the hallway, leaning against the railing. Her lips pinched when our gazes met. I hoped I could hide my secret behind a smile. βWhatβs going on?β
She stepped closer, the corners of her eyes her lined with concern. She was beautiful as ever, perhaps even more beautiful than when I first met her. Her slender fingers pushed strands of hair from my face.
Maggie tucked her long, strawberry blond hair behind her ears. I didnβt think sheβd ever go gray. I desperately wanted to ask her how it felt to carry a child.
βWhatβs wrong, Chloe?β
My shoulders fell forward. What was I going to do with a baby? Maggie stroked my hair.
βChloe, whatβs wrong?β
I had no words. Maggie held my hands in hers. The flecks of gold in her green irises shimmered like an Irish field as the light streamed through the window at the end of the hallway.
βItβs nothing.β
βYouβre obviously upset. Youβre shaking.β
βMatt and I had an argument.β I lowered my gaze at this lie.
βAbout what?β
Maggie examined me through narrow slits. Hopefully, she wouldnβt go all Maggie on me. Thatβs what Dad called it when she sensed something was off. As amusing as I thought it was when she turned the tides on him, I didnβt want to be in the undertow should she suspect a fissure in my world. She had the nose of a hound when it came to pretense. I suspected she acquired this inherent sense before retiring from her elementary teaching career.
βI should talk to Matt first,β I answered.
I swallowed away the knot at the back of my throat and leaned against the wall. My shoulders fell forward. I tucked my fingers in my pockets and hooked my thumbs through the belt loops of my faded jeans.
My flat stomach wouldnβt be so flat much longer.
βI canβt imagine anything being so bad. You and Matt get along so well.β
I leaned back; my shoulder blades skimmed the wall. βYeah, Iβm sure we can work it out.β How do you work out a baby?
βI could use your help in the barn. Butch and Sundance have gotten into the burrs. I tried combing their tails, but they arenβt having it. Thought maybe you could win them over with your charm and sugar.β
I scuffed my boot lightly against the floor. βButch and Sundance always find the burrs.β So did I.
βYes, they doββMaggie smiledββbut they make up for their horseplay with hard work and loyalty.β
βNice one,β I said, following her downstairs and into the main part of the house filled with rustic furnishings, love, and everything Montana. Pretty soon it would be filled with the pitter-patter of little feet.
βIβm sure whatever it is, it isnβt as bad as you think. Itβs easy to make a mountain out of a molehill.β Maggie stopped at the bottom of the stairs and turned to face me. βWhen you want to talk, Iβm here.β
βThank you,β I said.
βDo you feel like helping me?β She picked up Dadβs corduroy barn jacket from the floor and hung it on the antler hall tree.
βYeah, I canβt let Butch and Sundance stay gnarled and knotted like your mommaβs knitting yarn.β
βSpeaking of my mom, Iβd love to see her, up close and in person. I sure miss her.β Maggie straightened the plaid throw on the back of the leather sofa. βYour dadβs in the pasture rounding up cattle with the guys. Butch and Sundance have also been rolling in the mud. I canβt wait βtil someone fills in the hole theyβve made. Youβd swear they were a couple of wallowing hogs.β
She stopped short in front of me, and I bumped into her. βSorry,β I said.
βNo need to be sorry. Iβm used to it. Youβve been on my heels since the day I met you. Remember the time we bumped heads and I needed stitches?β
βHow could I forget?β
Maggie pushed the hair away from her left temple. βThe scar is completely gone, but the memory lives on, dear girl.β
There was a message in her words. She wasnβt one to hold a grudge. She was making a point.
βI figured if I brought it up again, it would take your mind off whatever is troubling you. Michigan seems like a lifetime ago.β
βSure does,β I said. βSome days Iβd give anything to be a little girl again.β
Maggieβs gait across the dark planked floors was slow and easy. Over the years, she had absorbed our Gallatin Valley tempo of living and tamed her Midwestern suburban ways, but she hadnβt forgotten her roots. When she wasnβt riding or doing chores, she photographed ranching life in Montana with hopes of publishing her images in a coffee table book.
I turned off the kitchen lights and put on my cowboy hat. Maggie reached for me and squeezed my hands. Her soft touch melted my insides.
βI miss those days, too. I think I got the better end of the deal though,β she said.
βWhyβs that?β
βBecause I inherited you after the diapers, colic, and ear infections. I mightβve missed the baby and toddler years, but you were still young enough to cuddle with when I married your dad.β
βActually, I think I got the better end of the deal. Youβve made life easier. Having you made up for my momβs absence.β I hugged her. βMomβs Hollywood modeling career has taken a toll on both of us. Me and her. Maybe someday she and I can make up for lost time, mend some of the rifts. Sheβs always busy though.β I opened the mudroom door. Samson, our scrappy bulldog, waited for us outside. He was seven but had the heart of a pup. βCome on, boy, letβs get to the barn and see whatβs going on. If it werenβt for me, this place would go under.β Samson woofed and lollygagged down the path beside me. βI swear this dog is Bones reincarnated,β I said to Maggie. βHe has the same swagger and muddy brown eyes.β
βHey, what do you want for dinner tonight? I picked up some thick cowboy steaks at the butcherβs today. Howβs that sound?β
She tripped on a rock and grabbed my arm to balance herself.
βMaybe.β I shrugged.
βGeez, you must really be down in the dumps. Steak is your favorite.β
βSteak sounds delicious. Wish Grandpa were here to cook. I wish he were here to do lots of things.β What I wanted most was to curl up in his lap and bury my head in his shoulder. At the end of the day, whether Iβd screwed up or not, I was his girl. And with him gone, I didnβt quite fit in anymore. Somehow, Grandpa always made me feel like one of the guys. Dad, Grandpa, and I had been the three amigos. The banter came easily, and our intentions flowed freely in his presence. βI canβt believe itβs been almost two years,β I said.
βSeems like yesterday, most days.β Maggie blew a kiss toward his memorial marker up on the ridge, then whistled for Samson to get out of her garden. βHis method of harvesting beets and carrots makes for a slim crop. Heβs got to stop digging holes.β
Samson wasnβt the only one digging holes. I looked toward the ridge where weβd scattered Grandpaβs ashes. The shimmy down my spine forced my shoulders back, and I lifted my chin to the breeze. In my mind, my grandmother appeared to be nudging Grandpa out of the way. βYou know what, Maggie? Iβll cook.β
βYou sure? Your last attempt resulted in a near four-alarm fire.β
βIβm positiveβand thanks for the reminder. I put the last fire out, and Iβll extinguish the ones to come.β I tucked my fingers in my back pockets. A baby might fill Grandpaβs void, but the sole way to make sure his legacy lived on was to take todayβs bull by the horns and wrestle it to the ground. Iβd dreamed of running the ranch, not raising a child. I was being given a chance to follow in my grandmother Ida Mayβs footsteps, which meant it was time to quit bellyaching about what I couldnβt change and do something about the things I could. The McIntyre ranch had an heir on the way, and I was speaking for both of us now.
*****
Author Info:
Lindaβs inspiration comes from her favorite authors and life itself. Her character-driven stories integrate humor found in everyday situations, family drama, and forever love. Her distinct voice creates memorable journeys and emotion.
Lindaβs been a finalist in the Booksellers Best Contest and Romance Reviews Readersβ Choice Awards. Linda lives in Michigan with her artist husband, sons, and rescue dog. Linda loves art, animals, and stories with hope and heart.
“Maggie’s WayΒ is a heart-warming tale of love and loss, fear and friendship. With charming characters and a moving plot, Linda Bradley’s debut gently reminds us that it’s never too late for second chances.” βLori Nelson Spielman, International Best Seller, Author ofΒ The Love ListΒ andΒ Sweet Forgiveness
βLinda Bradleyβs fresh voice will keep readers riveted from beginning to end. Bradley delivers a heart-warming story full of disarming honesty and beautiful dramaβ¦This one stands out!β βJane PorterΒ New York TimesΒ andΒ USA TodayΒ best selling author
Taking a work call for my best friend in my undies? Check.
Filling in for her after an emergency and getting mistaken for her? Check.
Royally messing it all up until the hot duke-in-waiting I hate but canβt keep my hands off steps in to save me? Uh, checkβ¦
Yes, yes, that all sounds wonderful, doesnβt it? Until you consider I now have to plan and execute an 80th birthday party for the Dowager Duchess of Devon, and I canβt organize my hairbrushes. The current duchess is the ultimate type A personality, determined to micromanage the entire thing.
Iβm a typeβ¦ XYZ . . . LMNOP . . . Maybe not even that.
When all my attempts go to hell in half a handbasketβI canβt even mess up properlyβthe only hope I have to pull this thing off is duke-in-waiting Hugo Edwards.
The dreamy, handsome, makes-my-heart-pitter-patter, arrogant tosspot Hugo Edwards.
He and his brother are the only people who know who I really am. The success of their grandmotherβs party relies on us getting along long enough to make it happenβand me and Hugo keeping our hands off one another behind closed doors.
None of which is easy to achieve.
When my best friend shows up to take over from me, the fact that Iβve fallen for Hugo is the least of my worriesβ¦
He turned to me. βI donβt see a car outside. Did you drive here?β
I paused. βNo. I cycled.β
βYou cycled?β
Evelyn snorted, getting up. βPeople do use things other than cars to get around, you know. Back in my day, cars were for the rich.β
Hugo slid her a look. βYou were the rich. You are the rich.β
βGood point. Never mind, then.β She winked at me, adding a cheeky grin to it, and walked towards the door. βI trust youβll be taking Camilla back to her cottage.β
βOh, itβs fine,β I said, right as Hugo said, βI wonβt be passing there.β
Evelyn stopped dead in front of him and craned her neck to look up at him. βIt wasnβt a request, Hugo.β
He rolled his shoulders. βUnderstood.β
βThatβs what I thought.β She tapped his leg with her stick, and he stepped aside to let her pass.
It was abundantly clear who ran the roost around here.
Hugo sighed the second sheβd disappeared. βAre you ready?β
βYou donβt have to take me,β I said, picking up the rucksack and slinging it over my shoulders. βItβs really not far by bike.β
βI donβt want to take you, but the idea of Grandma finding out I didnβt is something I like a whole lot less, so letβs go.β
βI have Noraβs bike with me. I canβt just leave it here.β
βIβll throw it in the back. Come on.β He motioned for me to follow him again, and I begrudgingly did so.
I could not think of anything I wanted less than to spend time in an enclosed space with Hugo. Or any space, really. Weβd not exactly hit it off at the pub, and that was clearly a theme we were going for given that weβd sniped at one another every time weβd spoken.
So sitting in a car?
No, thank you.
βIβll ride the bike back,β I said when he opened the front door.
βJust let me take you. Iβm trying to be nice,β he huffed.
βYouβre only being nice because she told you to be. Youβre not doing it out of the goodness of your heart. Thereβs a difference.β I stepped outside.
He followed me, pulling the door closed behind him. βEither way, think of it as an olive branch.β
βIβm not a fan of olives.β
βOf course youβre not.β
I gave him a withering look, then sighed. βHow are you going to get the bike back? Do you have a bike rack on your car?β
βI have a pick-up truck.β
I blinked at him. βWhat is this? Little Texas?β
Hugo scratched his cheek. βLook at where I live.β
Pointedly, I turned around and stared at the huge manor house. βDownton Abbey?β
He licked his lips and looked up.
I swear.
If he did that counting thing he did with his Grandmaβ¦
βDonβt start counting,β I warned him.
His gaze snapped down. βYou caught that?β
βYou have the discretion of a pick-up truck parked outside Downton Abbey.β
βMaybe I should count to ten instead of three with you,β he muttered, walking over to where Iβd left Noraβs bike. βIt might make me be able to be nice to you for real.β
βIβm not a child.β
βYouβre acting like one.β
βSo are you.β
βFair point,β he agreed, wheeling the bike over. βCome on. Iβll toss this in the back and take you there.β
All right. Fine. I clearly wasnβt winning this argument, and even if he was only doing it because Evelyn had made him, Iβd accept the olive branch.
At the end of the day, he knew I wasnβt Camilla.
I was loathe to admit it, but I needed his help.
It meant Iβd have to try to get along with him.
βThank you,β I said, watching as he carefully put the bike in the bed of a muddy black pick-up truck. βSo why do you have this miniature lorry?β
He chuckled. βExmoor.β
βYouβre going to have to elaborate.β
He opened the passenger side car door for me. βIβll explain on the way.β
βThank you.β I put both my bags in the footwell looked at the truck.
I was five-foot-three.
These wheels were almost bigger than I was.
How on Earth was I supposed to get in there? I supposed I was going to have to haul myself up and hope for the best.
I braced my hands on the seat and the door, took a deep breath, and yanked myself up. My hand gave way on the soft fabric of the seat, and my foot slipped on the metal step. My life flashed behind my eyes, and I was about to scream when Hugo grabbed me from behind.
He wrapped one arm around my waist and held me against his body. My heart pounded uncontrollably, and I didnβt know if it was from the fear of my near fall or because I was nestled tightly against him.
He had a very firm body.
It wasnβt the worst thing Iβd ever been pressed up again, for what itβs worth.
βNeed a leg up?β His lips were far too close to my ear, and his words were said on an exhale that skittered warmly against my cheek.
Yep.
Yeah.
Yes.
The heart pounding was definitely from his closeness.
This was an unwelcome development.
*****
Author Info:
Emma Hart is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of over forty novels and has been translated into several different languages.
She is a mother, wife, lover of wine, Pink Goddess, and valiant rescuer of wild baby hedgehogs. She lives in North Wales with her family, three cats, one very large dog, and an undetermined number of chickens and ducks.
She’s known for her hilarious, sarcastic romantic comedies with wildly inappropriate grandparents, and has been dubbed “The RomCom Queen” by her readers.
I used to believe in what we do at Mayberry Matchmakers, but now? Love is just another four-letter word.
Too bad my grandmother hasnβt gotten the memo. When tech billionaire Rory Byrne approaches us, wanting to develop the matchmaking app my sister and I dreamed up (and Nana shot down), she jumps at the chance. My grandmother is nothing if not opportunistic.
Of course, thereβs a catch. Sheβll only do it if Rory lets us matchmake him the old-fashioned way.
Heβs going to say no.
Please God, let him say no.
The last thing I want to do is matchmake an entitled rich jerk…especially one who looks like sin and talks a good game.
Rory
Iβve screwed up in love a few times, but I never screw up in business. Mayberry Matchmakers has the idea for something amazing, and I have the money and the experience to make it come to life.
I should deny Nana Mayberryβs condition. If I let them matchmake me, itβll be all over the news, and making headlines has never interested meβ¦especially not after the personal betrayal that nearly broke me. But Iβm having trouble caring about what I should do, because Bryn Mayberry is smart, snarky, and not the slightest bit impressed with me.
Actually, this may be Mayberry Matchmakersβ easiest job yet.
βPeople are always watching you, arenβt they?β I ask.
Rory takes a step toward me, and I think again about all those watching eyes. Everyone in town will be watching us now, and theyβll sense . . .
Well, theyβll sense that weβre obviously in lust with each other.
βAre you watching me, Bryn?β he says softly.
Well, throw a bucket of water on me and call me the Wicked Witch of the West.
βSometimes itβs hard to look away,β I admit, my mouth forming the words before I have time to give it a talking-to.
His eyes sparkle, as if I just confirmed something heβs wondered about, desperately. βDo you ask so many questions of all of your clients?β
βYes,β I fib. While he might be averse to white lies, Iβm not. But before that sparkle can dim all the way, I admit, βBut I donβt usually offer any information in return.β
His smile burrows under my skin. Then he glances up, taking in our observers, and says, βLet me walk you to your car.β
βItβs in the back of the parking lot,β I say.
He nods. βLead the way.β
He walks beside me, a little too close, and even though itβs a warm night, I can feel his heat leaping toward me, like flames to paper.
Once weβre away from the front of the brewery, his hand slips to the small of my back and lingers there, and if thereβs ever been anything so sexy, I donβt know what it is. Weβre about to pass a copse of trees on the side of the lot when he glances around, grabs my hand, and pulls me into it. Weβre in near darkness, evergreens dancing around us, and weβre standing close enough that I can feel his breath feathering my face.
His eyes are so warm they nearly immolate me.
βI donβt mean to tell you how to do your job,β he says, βbut I think you succeeded before you started. I want to be set up with you.β
βMicromanaging me already, are you?β I ask, a little breathless.
βYes.β He reaches up to touch my jaw, tracing the shape of it. βIβd like to kiss you.β
I should tell him no. Setting aside the whole four dates thing, weβre going to be working together. Giving into this . . . madness . . . is the last thing we should be doing, but Iβve been so lonely, and heβs more of a man than Iβve encountered in . . .
Forever.
Heβs the kind of man I didnβt think existed in real life, to be honest.
Still, I find myself leaning into him. βThen quit talking and do it already.β
*****
Review:
The newest collab between these two bestselling authors is full of disastrous dates, steamy moments, and two people who shouldn’t finding themselves falling in love.
Rory is pretty much perfect – he’s generous with his money and power, he’s kind and understanding, and he’s commanding in the bedroom. Which makes him pretty darn irresistible to Bryn.
Bryn is struggling with her self-worth. Her last relationship ended badly and left her with a lot of doubts, about herself and her job as a matchmaker. Quickly realizing her early assumptions about Rory and his motives, she finds herself with another issue – resisting her latest client.
Angela Denise brings readers a humorous rom com with a near-perfect hero and a heroine who needs to learn to trust herself again. A delightful combination of comedy, heat, and emotion, with enjoyable characters and a satisfying HEA, Matchmaking a Billionaire gives readers a reason to want to return to Highland Hills again and again.
*****
Author Info:
ANGELA DENISE is the pen name for the writing duo Angela Casella and Denise Grover Swank.
ANGELA CASELLA loves writing romcoms, particularly with the lovely Denise Grover Swank. She lives in Asheville, NC with her husband, daughter, and two geriatric dogs. Her hobbies include herding her daughter toward less dangerous activities, stress baking, and marathon watching TV shows.
DENISE GROVER SWANK is a New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and USA Today bestselling author and has sold over three million books. She indie published her first book, a romance mystery, Twenty-Eight and a Half Wishes, in 2011. She has since published over fifty novels, multiple novellas and short stories as an indie and with five publishers. She is published in seven languages. She is a single mother to six children and four dogs and hasnβt lost her sanity. Or so she leads you to believe.
New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Denise Grover Swank was born in Kansas City, Missouri and lived in the area until she was nineteen. Then she became a nomadic gypsy, living in five cities, four states and ten ho uses over the course of ten years before she moved back to her roots. She speaks English and smattering of Spanish and Chinese which she learned through an intensive Nick Jr. immersion period. Her hobbies include witty Facebook comments (in own her mind) and dancing in her kitchen with her children. (Quite badly if you believe her offspring.) Hidden talents include the gift of justification and the ability to drink massive amounts of caffeine and still fall asleep within two minutes. Her lack of the sense of smell allows her to perform many unspeakable tasks. She has six children and hasnβt lost her sanity. Or so she leads you to believe.
ANGELA CASELLA loves writing romcoms, particularly with the lovely Denise Grover Swank. They write together as Angela Denise. Angela also writes the Fairy Godmother Agency series. She lives in Asheville, NC with her husband, daughter, and two geriatric dogs. Her hobbies include herding her daughter toward less dangerous activities, stress baking, and marathon watching TV shows.Β
Melissa Foster is celebrating the release of her new contemporary romance, Maybe We Won’t. Check it out and be sure to grab your copy today!Β
Maybe We Won’t
Silver Harbor #3
by Melissa Foster
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Blurb:
A sexy and soul-stirring novel about love, family, and rediscovering what matters most by Melissa Foster, the New York Times bestselling author of Maybe We Will.
Jagger has overcome his own personal trials to place stock in lifeβs pleasures: family, friends, peaceβ¦and if he has his way, one positively beautiful, absolutely uptight attorney. Jagger knows heβs the perfect person to help Deirdra deal with her hurtful past and find her way back to being happy.
A chance encounter leads to deep conversation, and night after liberating night, Deirdra lets down her guard. But neither has plans to stay on Silver Island. Free-spirited Jagger has wanderlust, and Deirdra has a career to return to. Theyβre on different paths, and plans for a future together donβt stand a chance. But when has anything gone according to plan?
The Silver Harbor series is published by Montlake Romance and will be available in paperback and audio formats at all book retailers, and exclusively in digital format for Kindle and Kindle apps. Download a free Kindle reading app here: http://bit.ly/FreeKindle_App1
Heβd sprung that little nugget on her three days ago, after which Deirdra had announced her two-month hiatus, effective immediately. Everyone had been shocked, including Deirdra. Sheβd never taken time off and had made herself available in the evenings and on weekends since sheβd first started with the company. Sheβd had to. It was a dog-eat-dog industry, and with six other attorneys on boardβfour of whom were menβsheβd wanted to stand out. Yes, she was well aware that she was putting the company sheβd given her all to in a pickle, especially since the new general counsel couldnβt start for another two months. But that was the point. Let them suffer without her impeccable mind handling everything under the sun. She was confident in her game plan and certain Malcolm would quickly see the error of his ways.
The truth was, sheβd thought he wouldnβt let her walk out the door after her announcement. But her stern sixty-year-old boss had simply wished her a relaxing time and said she needed it. Sheβd already received dozens of calls and emails from colleagues who were shocked that sheβd taken so much time off, but she struggled with disappointment over the ones that hadnβt come from her boss.
She still couldnβt believe Malcolm had said she freaking needed the break. As if sheβd ever produced subpar work? That was a laugh. Heβd had nothing but accolades for her jobs well done, and last yearβs promotion had been proof of that.
Her frustration simmered to the boiling point. Ugh. She needed to stop overthinking the situation. Fat chance of that happening for a self-professed control freak. Deirdra not overthinking would be as weird as her younger sister, Abby, not seeing the bright side of things or their older half sister, Cait, trusting everyone at face value. Deirdra had a better chance of trying to transform into a bird and fly away.
If only . . .
She and her sisters were quite the trio, and theyβd had a whirlwind few months. She and Abby had only discovered Cait existed in the spring, when theyβd come back to the island to go over their motherβs will with one of their motherβs best friends, Shelley Steele. While Abby had embraced and trusted Cait unconditionally from the moment sheβd met her, Deirdra had been cautious, given that their family house, restaurant, and meager inheritances were on the line. It had taken Cait some time to open up and trust them as well. But theyβd gotten through those trials and tribulations and had become close. Cait was a wonderful addition to their family, and like Abby, sheβd found solace and love on Silver Island.
Deirdra would not be following suit.
Beyond seeing her sisters happy, Deirdra had no interest in their family restaurant, the Bistro, or in the island on which sheβd spent too many years trying to hold together the pieces of her alcoholic motherβs disheveled life, helping to run the Bistro and keep a roof over their heads. Deirdra had fled immediately after high school to attend Boyer University in Upstate New York with her bestie, Sutton Steele, and had finally started living her own life. But self-preservation had consequences, and Abby had been stuck caring for their mother in Deirdraβs absence. That sucked, but what choice had Deirdra had at the time? Stay on the rinky-dink island running a restaurant she resented and putting her drunk mother to bed while her dreams went to pot? Besides, Abby had encouraged her to go, and Deirdra had clung to that support like a lifeboat in her sea of guilt as sheβd set out to prove herself to Abby and maybe even to stick it to her mother and show that she couldnβt hold her back.
Deirdra stared at the ceiling, discomfort simmering inside her. Sheβd thought her resentment toward the island and all that it represented might ease now that her mother was gone, but painful reminders lingered like ghosts in the wind, and the house and her bedroom were filled with them. Abby and Aiden had done a great job of sprucing it up. It was absolutely gorgeous. To anyone else it would seem warm and inviting, but there wasnβt enough paint on the planet to obliterate Deirdraβs painful memories. How many nights had she snuck out the window just to sit on the hill and look out at the water to keep from drowning in her motherβs wake?
Maybe she shouldnβt have come back, but she couldnβt do that to Cait. The start of her impromptu hiatus had lined up with the day Cait and all their friends were fixing up her new tattoo shop. Deirdra wasnβt big on manual labor, but she loved her sisters, and sheβd needed to get out of Boston. She was glad sheβd come, even if being on the island was uncomfortable. Sheβd gotten to witness Caitβs boyfriend, Deirdraβs childhood friend Brant Remington, get down on one knee in front of all their friends and propose. Deirdra couldnβt be happier for them, but come hell or high water, she was getting off this island tomorrow and going on a well-deserved vacation, the destination of which was yet to be determined.
Deirdra tried to focus on the distant sounds of Silver Harbor sneaking in through the open window instead of the cacophony of laughter, low conversations, and prolonged silences, followed by loud lustful sounds coming from downstairs. If only she were back in Boston. She preferred her noisy neighborβs stereo blasting classic rock and oldies at all hours over this. At least that she could dance to.
Needless to say, she was a little jealous of her sistersβ love lives. Not that sheβd had time for a man, or anything else besides work, these last few years. More noises floated upstairs. She closed her eyes, willing them not to have sex in the living room or, worse, in the kitchen. She had to eat at that table. Oh God, thatβs probably what Aiden is doing. She squeezed her eyes shut. Deletedeletedelete!
What was she thinking, staying in her old bedroom? She should have stayed in the apartment over the garage. Why hadnβt she thought of that from the get-go?
A loud thud rattled the walls, followed by more laughter.
Deirdra flew out of bed. She was not going to listen to a play-by-play of Abby and Aiden having sex. She put on her silk kimono and headed downstairs, praying she wouldnβt catch them in a compromising position. She stopped on the bottom step, eyeing the trail of clothing that led past the steps and down the hall to their bedroom. Thank God. Hurrying into the kitchen, she snagged the key to the apartment off the hook by the side door and quietly slipped outside. She crossed her arms against the brisk September air as she climbed the steps to the apartment above the garage.
A streak of moonlight lit a path down the hallway to the bedroom. She took off her kimono and slipped under the warm covers, closing her eyes as she sank into the mattress. Something moved beside her, and her eyes flew open just as that something licked her face. She screamed and jumped out of the bed, flailing for the light switch. A bark rang out, and a cold nose hit her crotch. She swatted at it as she flicked on the lights, illuminating an amused Josiah βJaggerβ Jones pushing languidly from the bed as his dalmatian, Dolly, nosed Deirdraβs privates. The twentysomething hippie worked at the Bistro as a part-time musician and part-time chef.
βWhat are you doing here?β She twisted away from Dolly, her eyes catching on Jaggerβs naked body. Holy mother of hotness. Broad shoulders and a few wordy tattoos on his ribs vied for her attention, but her eyes locked on the dusting of dark chest hair trailing down lickable abs, and her thoughts skidded to a halt at the impressive cock dangling between his legs. She couldnβt look away. Her loneliest parts clenched with desire, while her boggled mind tried to make sense of the perfect manscaping, which didnβt fit the image she held of the hemp-clothing- and sandal-wearing, too-damn-laid-back guy for whom she had no patience. Not that sheβd ever imagined him naked. Well, not too often anyway. He may not be her typeβgive her a man in a suit any dayβbut she couldnβt deny that Jagger was hot, and he had a great voice, the kind that fantasies were made of. His hair wasnβt bad, either: dark, thick, and wavy. The kind of hair sheβd love to hold on to while his face was between her legs.
Dolly licked her, snapping her back to the moment.
Holy crap. She was losing it. She was thirty years old, and he couldnβt be more than twenty-four or -five. She needed to get off the island and scratch that particular itch with a man who was more her speed . . . age . . . Holy cow, his body . . .
Dolly licked her again, jerking her mind back into submission.
βDolly!β She turned away, glowering at Jagger, who was watching her with a big-ass grin.
βLike what you see?β he said far too casually. He lazily raked a hand through his hair, his leather and beaded bracelets slipping down his wrist.
As Jagger helps Deirdra face her past and the two become closer, she starts to uncover a part of herself she’s buried deep. But can she let go of her trauma enough to really embrace the person she could be? Even though the story pretty much goes exactly as you’d expect it to, Maybe We Won’t is still a thoroughly enjoyable read. Foster can always be counted on to bring readers stories of heat mixed with humor and a more than generous amount of emotion and her latest shows exactly how well she does it.
*****
Author Info:
Melissa Foster is a New York Times & USA Today bestselling and award-winning author. She writes sexy and heartwarming contemporary romance, new adult romance and women’s fiction with emotionally compelling characters that stay with you long after you turn the last page. Readers adore Melissa’s fun, flirty, and sinfully sexy, award-winning big family romance collection, LOVE IN BLOOM featuring the Snow Sisters, Bradens, Remingtons, Ryders, Seaside Summer, Harborside Nights, and the Wild Boys After Dark. Melissa’s emotional journeys are lovingly erotic and always family oriented.
Melissa also writes sweet and clean romance under the pen name Addison Cole.
Melissa has painted and donated several murals to The Hospital for Sick Children in Washington, DC. Her interests include her family, reading, writing, painting, friends, helping others see the positive side of life, and visiting Cape Cod.
Melissa is available to chat with book clubs and welcomes comments and emails from her readers. Visit Melissa on social media or her personal website.
Never miss a brand new release, special promotions or inside gossip again by simply signing up to receive your newsletter from Melissa.
The clock strikes midnight with Lydia Drakeβs sparkling new Regency series that blendsΒ Pride and PrejudiceΒ andΒ CinderellaΒ into one romantic romp.
Pre-orders available now! The book will be out in December.
*****
Author Info:
Lydia Drake is a reader of all things romance and a drinker of all the tea. A New Jersey resident, her favorite activities include taking the train to New York City, scouring used bookstores, spending time with her family and wrangling her hyperactive cockapoo puppy.Β Cinderella and the DukeΒ is her debut novel.
Deacon James lives his life at two speeds, a hundred miles an hour and stop. Heβs spent the last decade travelling the world, winning races, partying with the most beautiful men and women, and living life on his terms, a life which was pretty close to perfectβ¦ with just one caveatβ¦ heβs never quite been able to get over the boy he left behind. His best friend Jesse has always made him yearn for something heβs too afraid to face and cutting him out of his life seemed like the only answer.
But things are never that simple. When Deacon wakes from an accident in Italy with Jesse asleep in the hospital chair beside him, he discovers Jesseβs been keeping secrets of his own.
At a crossroads in their life, theyβre faced with a choice, build something deeper and stronger from the ashes, or let words unsaid and secrets tear them apart forever.
From author Wendy Saunders writing as Vawn Cassidy comes this second chance, friends to lovers, hurt/comfort with a HEA.
I surface through the syrupy depths of consciousness, and this time itβs a little easier. My body still screams in agony, and I feel like Iβve been hit by a truck. My head is pounding, and my throat feels like itβs filled with razor blades, but as I open my eyes, they donβt feel so heavy and itβs easier to focus.
I tilt my head slowly and glance at the chair wondering if I really had seen Jesse or if it had been some kind of feverish dream.
It wasnβt, unless Iβm still hallucinating because heβs curled up in a comfortable looking leather chair next to me, idly leafing through a magazine. Iβm sure heβs wearing a different colour shirt than before, and I take a moment to study him.
His short blonde hair is in need of a trim, sticking up slightly as if heβs run his fingers through it in agitation. Thereβs a light scruff along his jaw, which means he probably hasnβt shaved in a few days, and there are smudges under his eyes, like heβs barely slept.
βJesseβ¦β My voice is barely more than a croak, causing Jesseβs head to snap up in my direction.
βDeak.β He leans forward with a gasp of relief. βYouβre awake. You opened your eyes for a few moments yesterday, but then you were out cold again.β
Yesterday? I stare at him in confusion. βWhereβ¦β I try to speak, but my voice sounds like a rusty nail, and my mouth is so dry I donβt even have any spit when I attempt to swallow.
βHere.β Jesse carefully lifts a small plastic cup and guides a straw to my lips. βSip slowly. They had to put a tube down your throat to help you breath for a while, so you probably have a sore throat.β
Understatement.
I sip gratefully. The water is lukewarm and has a faintly clinical taste to it, but against my painful throat it feels like the best thing Iβve ever tasted. I release the straw, feeling a bead of water drip from my lower lip. I watch as Jesse reaches out unconsciously and runs his thumb along my lip. My heart kicks up a notch, and once again the stupid machine next to me starts beeping faster.
Realising what heβs done, he drops his hand and swallows, staring at the machine. βIβll go get someone.β He frowns.
βJesse,β I whisper hoarsely, lifting my hand clumsily to grasp his. βWhere am I?β
βYouβre in a hospital in Rome,β he replies quietly, his warm hazel eyes searching my face for any flicker of recognition, but so far, Iβm drawing a blank.
βRome?β I frown, and I have a vague recollection of a party. βWhat happened?β
βYou were in a car accident.β
I close my eyes against the sudden flash of lights, the sound of grinding metal, glass shattering.
*****
Review:
Jesse feels like he’s taking care of everyone and everything. He doesn’t mind, he loves them all, but he’s starting to struggle under the pressure he’s putting on himself. While he misses his best friend desperately, having him back may be more than he can take. Deacon is having a bit of a life crisis. He’s struggling with finding enjoyment and purpose in his current life, to the point that he’s cut off the most important person to him. An accident brings them back together, providing the opportunity to connect and maybe develop their relationship into something deeper.
Cassidy delivers a very emotional romance with moments of humor and a bit of heat but also filled with a lot of angst, brooding, and misunderstanding. Not everyone is into that kind but I think those that do will really enjoy themselves. The characters, both main and secondary, are enjoyable and the HEA ending is an enjoyable conclusion to a heartwarming (and occasionally heartbreaking) story. I’m super excited to see what is in store for the rest of them π
*****
Author Info:
Vawn Cassidy is the mild mannered MM obsessed alter ego/ pen name of contemporary fantasy & romantic suspense author Wendy Saunders. She’s a Brit and lives in the UK with her husband and kids.
To celebrate the release of Definitely Deacon, Vawn is giving away 2 e-sets of the Belong to Me Series so far (2 eBooks: Suddenly Beck & Definately Deacon)!
Enter the Rafflecopter giveaway for your chance to win!
My mom always said you don’t get a second shot at making a first impression. I’ve remembered that my entire career. Especially since I’m one of the few black men who play professional hockey.
I’m calculated and respectful in the way I speak to my coaches, the owners, and the media. I’ve never taken a risk… until her.
I could blame it on the fact that for once I pushed away the pressure of my career for the ocean waves, the sand, and good times with my new teammates. But those are excuses because the minute I saw her at the airport, something lit up inside me and the best week of my life was spent with her in my bed.
After our week in paradise, we said goodbye, exchanged phone numbers and both assumed that unless one of us was flying through the other’s city on the opposite side of the country, our vacation fling was over.
Then one night after practice I see her. She’s here. In my city. Telling me she moved here for a job. If that’s not fate tell me what is.
I’ve never wanted a second shot more than I do this time, but she’s determined to leave what we were on the island we left behind.
Download today on Kobo, Google Play, Barnes & Noble, Apple Books, Amazon!
Piper Rayne is a USA Today Bestselling Author duo who write “heartwarming humor with a side of sizzle” about families, whether that be blood or found. They both have e-readers full of one-clickable books, they’re married to husbands who drive them to drink, and they’re both chauffeurs to their kids. Most of all, they love hot heroes and quirky heroines who make them laugh, and they hope you do, too!