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Tag Archives: Brenda Novak

Spotlight – Tahlulahโ€™s Back in Town

24 Thursday Aug 2023

Posted by romanticreadsandsuch in Blog Tour, Sneak Peek

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Brenda Novak, Coyote Canyon series, Talulah's Back in Town

Talulah’s Back in Town

A Coyote Canyon Novel

by Brenda Novak

Blurb:

Talulah Barclay returns to Coyote fourteen years after leaving her fiance at the alter. Sheโ€™s back to sell her deceased auntโ€™s home and head back to Seattle as quickly as possible since the memories in a small town are long and no one has forgiven her for running off. And when she finds herself falling for the best friend of her jilted ex she knows life is going to get more difficult. And when sheโ€™s injured by shattered glass after someone throws a rock through her window she knows she is not welcome in town. But she still has close friends there and they rally around her and she finds herself willing to open her heart to the town and to the man she truly loves.

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*****

Excerpt:

One

โ€œWell, if it isnโ€™t the runaway bride.โ€

Talulah Barclay glanced up to find the reason a shadow had just fallen across her plate. Sheโ€™d been hoping to ease back into the small community of Coyote Canyon, Montana, without drawing any attention. But Brant Elway, of all people, had happened to come into the cafรฉ where she was having breakfast and stopped at her booth.

โ€œOf course youโ€™d be the first to bring up my past sins,โ€ she grumbled. They hadnโ€™t seen each other for nearly fourteen years, and heโ€™d certainly changedโ€”filled out what had once been a spare frame, grown a couple of inches, even though heโ€™d been tall to begin with, and taken on a rugged, slightly weathered look from spending so much time outdoors. But she wouldโ€™ve recognized him anywhere.

The crooked smile that curved his lips suggested he was hardly repentant. โ€œIโ€™m not likely to forget that day. I was the best man, remember?โ€

She wasnโ€™t likely to forget that day, either. Only bumping into her ex, Charlie Gerhart, would be more cringeworthy.

She felt terrible about what sheโ€™d done to Charlie. She also felt terrible that sheโ€™d repeated the same mistake with two other men since. Admittedly, jilting her fiancรฉs at the altar hadnโ€™t been among her finest moments, but sheโ€™d had every intention of following throughโ€”until the panic grew so powerful it simply took over and there was no other way to cope.

It said something that, while she regretted the pain sheโ€™d caused others, especially her prospective grooms, she didnโ€™t regret walking out on those weddings. That clearly indicated sheโ€™d made the right choiceโ€”a little late, perhaps, but better not to make such a huge mistake than try to unravel it later.

She doubted Brant would ever view the situation from that perspective, however. Heโ€™d naturally feel defensive of Charlie. He and Charlie had been friends for as long as she could remember. Sheโ€™d hung out with Charlieโ€™s younger sister, Averil, since kindergarten and could remember seeing Brant over at the Gerhart house way back when she and Averil were in fifth grade, and he and Charlie were in seventh.

Dressed in a soft cotton Elway Ranch T-shirt that stretched slightly at the sleeves to accommodate his biceps, a pair of faded Wranglers and boots that were worn and dirty enough to prove they werenโ€™t just for show, he rested his hands on his narrow hips as he studied her with the cornflower-blue eyes thatโ€™d been the subject of so much slumber-party talk when she was growing up. Those eyes were even more startling now that his face was so tanned. Had he lived in Seattle, like her, sheโ€™d assume he spent time cultivating that golden glow. But she knew he hadnโ€™t put any effort into his appearance. According to Jane Tanner, another friend whoโ€™d hung out with her and Averilโ€”the three of them had been inseparableโ€”Brantโ€™s parents had retired, and he and his three younger brothers had taken over the running of their two-thousand-acre cattle ranch.

โ€œWhat brings you back to town?โ€ he asked. โ€œYouโ€™ve laid low for so long, I thought weโ€™d seen the last of you.โ€

Pretending that running into him was no more remarkable to her than running into anyone else, she lifted her orange juice to take a sip before returning the glass to the heavily varnished table. โ€œMy aunt Phoebe died.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s the old lady who lived in the farmhouse on Mill Creek Road, right? The one with the blue hair?โ€

Her great-aunt had been a diminutive woman, only five feet tall and less than a hundred pounds. But sheโ€™d had her hair done once a week like clockworkโ€”still used the blue rinse sheโ€™d grown fond of in her early twenties when platinum blond had been all the rageโ€”and dressed in her Sunday best, including nylons, whenever she came to town. So sheโ€™d stood out. โ€œThatโ€™s her.โ€

โ€œWhat happened?โ€

Talulah got the impression he was assessing the changes in her, just as she was assessing the changes in him, and wished sheโ€™d put more effort into her appearance today. She didnโ€™t want to come off the worse for wear after what sheโ€™d done. But when sheโ€™d rolled out of bed, pulled on her yoga pants and a sleeveless knit top and piled her long blond hair on top of her head before coming to the diner for breakfast, sheโ€™d assumed sheโ€™d be early enough to miss the younger crowd, which included the people sheโ€™d rather avoid.

That had proven mostly to be true; except for Brant, almost everyone else in the diner was over sixty. But he worked on a ranch, so he was probably up even before the birds thatโ€™d been chirping loudly outside her window, making it impossible for her to sleep another second. โ€œShe died of old age. Aunt Phoebe was almost a hundred.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m sorry to hear you lost her.โ€ He sounded sincere, at least. โ€œWere you close?โ€

โ€œNo, actually, we werenโ€™t,โ€ Talulah admitted. โ€œShe never liked me.โ€ Phoebe hadnโ€™t liked children in generalโ€”they were too loud, too unruly and too messy. And once Talulah had become a teenager, and her mother had allowed her to quit taking piano lessons from her great-aunt, theyโ€™d never really connected, other than seeing each other at various family functions during which Talulah and her sister, Debbie, had gone out of their way to avoid their motherโ€™s crotchety aunt.

His teeth flashed in a wider smile. โ€œMaybe she was a friend of the Gerharts.โ€

Talulah gave him a dirty look. โ€œSo were you. But unfortunately, youโ€™re standing here talking to me.โ€

He chuckled instead of being offended, which soothed some of her ire. He was willing to take what he was dishing out; she had to respect that.

โ€œIโ€™m more generous than most,โ€ he teased, pressing a hand to his muscular chest. โ€œBut if it makes you feel any better, youโ€™re not the only one who struggled to get along with your aunt.โ€

โ€œYou knew her personally?โ€ she asked in surprise.

โ€œNot well, but Iโ€™ll never forget the day someone had the audacity to honk at her because she was driving at the speed of a horse and buggy down the middle of the highway, holding up traffic for miles.โ€

โ€œWhat happened?โ€

โ€œOnce I got around her, I found she was capable of driving a lot faster. She tailgated me to the bank, where she climbed out and swung her purse at me while giving me a piece of her mind for scaring her while she was behind the wheel.โ€

Talulah had to laugh at the mental picture that created. โ€œYouโ€™re the one who honked at her?โ€

โ€œThe bank was about to close.โ€ He gave a low whistle as he rubbed the beard growth on his squarish chin. โ€œBut after that, I decided if I was ever in the same situation again, Iโ€™d skip the bank.โ€

Most people in Coyote Canyon probably had a similar story about Aunt Phoebe, maybe more than one. She mightโ€™ve been small, but she was mighty and wouldnโ€™t โ€œtake any guff,โ€ as she put it, from anyone. โ€œYeah, well, imagine being a little girl on the receiving end of that sharp tongue. Iโ€™d dread my weekly piano lesson and cry whenever my mother left me with her.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll have to let Ellen know that,โ€ he said.

Talulah didnโ€™t remember anyone by that name in Coyote Canyon. โ€œWhoโ€™s Ellen?โ€

โ€œI assume youโ€™re staying at your auntโ€™s place?โ€

She nodded. โ€œMy folks moved to Reno a couple of years after I embarrassed them at the wedding,โ€ she said glumly.

He laughed at her response. โ€œEllen lives on the property next to you. She and I used to go out now and then, when she first moved to town, and she told me the old lady would knock on her door to complain about everythingโ€”the weeds near the fence, trees that were dropping leaves on her side of the property line, the barking of the dogs.โ€

โ€œBut they both live on several acres. How could those small things bother Aunt Phoebe?โ€

โ€œExactly Ellenโ€™s point. Heaven forbid she ever decided to have a dinner party and someone parked too close to your auntโ€™s driveway.โ€

Talulah found herself more distracted by the mention of his relationship with this Ellen woman than she shouldโ€™ve been, given that it wasnโ€™t the point of the anecdote. Brant had always been so hard to attract. Most girls she knew had tried to gain his interest, including her own sister, and failed. So she couldnโ€™t help being curious about how heโ€™d come to date her new neighborโ€”and why and how their relationship had ended. โ€œSounds like Phoebe.โ€

A waitress called out to tell Brant hello, and he waved at her before returning his attention to Talulah. โ€œHow long will you be in town?โ€

She arched an eyebrow at him. โ€œAre you running recognizance for my enemies?โ€

โ€œJust curious.โ€ He winked. โ€œWord will spread fast enough without me.โ€

โ€œYou can assure everyone who cares that itโ€™ll only be for a month or so,โ€ she said. โ€œUntil I can clean out my great auntโ€™s house and put it on the market.โ€

โ€œIf you werenโ€™t close to her, how come you were unlucky enough to get that job?โ€ he asked.

โ€œMy parents are in Africa on a mission.โ€

โ€œFor the Church of the Good Shepherd?โ€

โ€œYeah.โ€

โ€œI didnโ€™t realize they sent people out on organized missions.โ€

โ€œSometimes they do, but this one is self-funded, something my dad has wanted to do ever since hearing a particularly rousing sermon.โ€ Talulah wasnโ€™t religious at allโ€”much to the chagrin of her parents. But a good portion of the town belonged to her folksโ€™ evangelical church or one of the other churches in the area.

โ€œWhat about your sister?โ€ Brant asked. โ€œShe canโ€™t help?โ€

โ€œDebbieโ€™s married and living in Billings. Sheโ€™s about to have her fourth child any day now.โ€

He feigned shock. โ€œMarried? Fear of commitment doesnโ€™t run in the family, I guess.โ€

She scowled. โ€œItโ€™s a good thing I didnโ€™t go through with it, Brant. I was only eighteenโ€”way too young.โ€

โ€œI never said I thought it was a good idea,โ€ he responded.

โ€œIf youโ€™ll remember, I made the same argument way back when.โ€

โ€œHow could I ever forget?โ€ Theyโ€™d always been adversaries. Heโ€™d hated the amount of time his best friend had devoted to her, and sheโ€™d resented that he was often trying to talk Charlie into playing pool or going hunting or something with him instead. โ€œBut letโ€™s be fair. I doubt Iโ€™m the only one with commitment issues.โ€ She glanced at his hand. โ€œI donโ€™t see a ring on your finger.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve never left anyone standing at the altar.โ€

She could tell he was joking, but heโ€™d hit a nerve. โ€œBecause you bail out before it even gets that far.โ€

He seemed to enjoy provoking her. โ€œThatโ€™s what youโ€™re supposed to do. I can teach you how, if you want me to.โ€

โ€œOh, leave me alone,โ€ she muttered with a shooing motion.

He chuckled but didnโ€™t go. โ€œHow much are you hoping to get for your auntโ€™s house?โ€

โ€œI have no idea what itโ€™s worth,โ€ she replied. โ€œI live in Washington these days, where prices are a lot different, and havenโ€™t met with a real estate agent yet.โ€

โ€œYou know Charlieโ€™s an agent, right?โ€

Slumping back against the booth, she sighed. โ€œHere we go againโ€ฆโ€

He widened those gorgeous blue eyes of his. โ€œThat wasnโ€™t a jab! I just thought you should be aware of it.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m aware of it, okay? Jane Tanner told me.โ€

โ€œYou still in touch with Jane?โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ve been friends since kindergarten,โ€ she said as if he shouldโ€™ve taken that for granted. But sheโ€™d been equally close to Charlieโ€™s sister, and they hadnโ€™t spoken since Talulah had tried to apologize for what sheโ€™d done at the wedding and Averil had told her she never wanted to see her again.

โ€œMaybe itโ€™d help patch things up if you listed your auntโ€™s house with him,โ€ Brant suggested.

โ€œYouโ€™re kidding. I canโ€™t imagine heโ€™d want to see meโ€”not even to make a buck.โ€

His eyes flicked to the compass tattoo sheโ€™d gotten on the inside of her forearm shortly after sheโ€™d left Coyote Canyon. โ€œDoes he know youโ€™re in town?โ€

She shrugged. โ€œJane mightโ€™ve told him I was coming. Why?โ€

He studied her for a long moment. โ€œI have a feeling things are about to get interesting around here. Thanks for breaking the monotony,โ€ he said, and that maddening grin reappeared as he nodded in parting and walked over to the bar, where he took a stool and ordered his breakfast.

Disgruntled, Talulah eyed his back. Heโ€™d removed his baseball capโ€”that was a bit old-fashioned, perhaps, but her parents would certainly approve of his mannersโ€”so his hair was matted in places, but he didnโ€™t seem to care. He came off more comfortable in his own skin than any man sheโ€™d ever known, which sort of bugged her. She couldnโ€™t say why. Heโ€™d always seemed to avoid the foibles that everyone else got caught up in. For a change, she wanted to see him unable to stop himself from falling in love, do something stupid because he couldnโ€™t help it or make a mistake he later regretted.

โ€œWould you like a refill?โ€

The waitress had approached with a pot of coffee.

Talulah shoved her cup away. โ€œNo, thanks. Iโ€™m finished.โ€

โ€œOkay, hon. Let me put this down, and Iโ€™ll be right back with your check.โ€

Leaving twenty-five bucks on the table, more than enough to cover the bill, Talulah got up and walked out.

The last thing she wanted was to run into someone else she knew.

Most of the town had been at that wedding.

Aunt Phoebeโ€™s house was going to take some work. Two stories tall, it was a Victorian farmhouse with a wide front porch, a drawing room/living room off the entry, a music room tucked to the left, a formal dining area in the middle and a tiny kitchenโ€”tiny by todayโ€™s standardsโ€”at the back, with a mudroom where the โ€œmenfolkโ€ could clean up before coming in from the fields at dinner. Probably 2,400 square feet in total, it was divided into thirteen small rooms that were packed with furniture, rugs, decorations, books, lamps and magazines. The attic held objects thatโ€™d been handed down for generations, as well as steamer trunks of old clothes, quilts and needlepointโ€”even a dressmakerโ€™s dummy thatโ€™d given Talulah a fright when she first went up to take a look because sheโ€™d thought someone was in the attic with her.

The basement held shelf upon shelf of canned goods, a deep freezer full of meat thatโ€™d most likely been butchered at a local ranch, which meant there would be certain cutsโ€”like tongue and liverโ€”Talulah would have no idea what to do with, and stacks of old newspapers and various other flotsam Phoebe had collected throughout her long life.

Even if she started right away, itโ€™d take a week or more to sort through everything, and the house wasnโ€™t the most comfortable place to work. The windows, while beautiful with their old-fashioned casings and heavy panes, werenโ€™t energy-efficient. There was hardly any insulation in the attic and no air-conditioning to combat the heat. Typically, summers in Coyote Canyon were quite mild, with temperatures ranging between fifty and ninety degrees, but they were in a heat wave. It was mid-August, the hottest part of the year to begin with, and they were setting records.

A bead of sweat rolled between Talulahโ€™s breasts as she surveyed the basement. Even the coolest part of the house felt stifling. And it was only noon. She couldnโ€™t imagine how Aunt Phoebe had managed in this heat. But her aunt could handle just about anything. Sheโ€™d had a will of iron and more grit than anyone Talulah had ever met.

โ€œHow am I going to get through all this junkโ€”and what am I going to do with it?โ€ Talulah muttered, disheartened by the sheer volume of things her great-aunt had collected over the years.

Her phone vibrated in the pocket of her yoga pants. Pulling it out, she saw that her sister was calling. โ€œHey,โ€ she answered.

โ€œHowโ€™s Coyote Canyon?โ€ Debbie asked.

โ€œI just got in last night, but from what Iโ€™ve seen so far, it hasnโ€™t changed much.โ€ The townโ€™s population had stayed at about three thousand since the end of the nineteenth century, when the railroad came to town and Coyote Canyon had its big boom.

She chuckled. โ€œIt never does. Bozeman is growing like crazy, though. I read somewhere that itโ€™s the fastest growing town in America. You should see how much itโ€™s changed.โ€

โ€œNo kidding? Whoโ€™s moving there?โ€

โ€œMostly families, I guess, but enough millennials and nature-lovers to change the whole vibe from Western to trendy.โ€

Only forty minutes away, Bozeman had been where their parents would take them to buy school clothes and other supplies. But sheโ€™d had no reason to go there since sheโ€™d left Coyote Canyon. Thanks to the stigma caused by the wedding, sheโ€™d tried to forget the whole area. โ€œDid you guys come for Rodeo Days this year?โ€ The week before the Fourth of July, Coyote Canyon held seven days of celebration that included rodeos, a 10K/5K run, a Mountain Man Rendezvous, parades, tractor pulls and bake-offs. Everything culminated in the fireworks of Independence Day.

โ€œNo. I wanted to,โ€ Debbie said, โ€œbut Scott was under too much pressure at work to take the time, and I didnโ€™t want to try to manage the kids on my own.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m sorry that Paul and I couldnโ€™t make it.โ€

โ€œHas something changed Iโ€™m not aware of? Are you two together now?โ€

Heโ€™d been trying to get with her since she met him, especially after they started the diner. But it was only recently that sheโ€™d gone on the pill and slept with him for the first time. โ€œNot really. Weโ€™ve started dating. Sort of.โ€

โ€œSort of?โ€ her sister echoed.

โ€œYou know how hard it is for me to know when I really like a guy. Anyway, howโ€™ve you been feeling? Any news on the baby?โ€ She asked because she was interested, but she was also eager to change the subject.

โ€œIโ€™m fine,โ€ Debbie said. โ€œJust tired.โ€

โ€œIt shouldnโ€™t be much longer, right?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m due in a week, and the doctor wonโ€™t let me go more than a few days over.โ€

โ€œCall me as soon as labor starts. Iโ€™ll come for the birth.โ€ Billings was only a hundred miles to the east. Part of the reason Talulah had agreed to handle her auntโ€™s funeral and belongings was because it put her in closer proximity to Debbie. She wanted to be there for the arrival of the new addition, especially since their parents couldnโ€™t be.

โ€œI will. I canโ€™t wait until this pregnancy is over.โ€ She groaned. โ€œIโ€™m getting so uncomfortable.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™ve done this three times before. Iโ€™m sure the birth will be routine.โ€

Maybe not strictly routine. Debbie had developed gestational diabetes, so there was a good chance this child would have to be delivered by Caesarean section. But they were pretending thereโ€™d be no complications. Neither of them cared to consider all the things that could go wrong.

โ€œI feel bad that youโ€™re having to take so much time away from the dessert diner,โ€ she said. โ€œMaybe I should drive over for the funeral, at least, and help while I can.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t you dare!โ€ Talulah said. โ€œI donโ€™t want you going into labor while youโ€™re here. Your husband, your doctor, everyone and everything you need are there.โ€

โ€œBut Iโ€™m just sitting around with my swollen ankles while you deal with everything in that musty house.โ€

Musty, sweltering house. But Talulah didnโ€™t want to make Debbie feel any guiltier. Besides, her sister wasnโ€™t just sitting around. She was watching her other kids. Talulah could hear them, and the TV, in the background and knew that Debbie would have to bring her young nieces and nephew if she came here. Having them underfoot would only make it harder to get anything done. โ€œThe church is stepping in to organize the funeral. You set that up yourself. So you have been involved. Besides, much to our parentsโ€™ dismay, youโ€™re the only one giving them grandkids. This is the least I can do for Mom and Dad.โ€

Debbie laughed. โ€œHave you heard from them?โ€

โ€œThey called last night to make sure I got in okay.โ€

โ€œHow long did the drive take you?โ€

โ€œTen hours.โ€

โ€œUgh!โ€

โ€œIt wasnโ€™t a big deal. I couldnโ€™t flyโ€”I knew Iโ€™d need a car while I was here.โ€ Sheโ€™d made the trip to Reno several times since her family moved from Coyote Canyon, so she was used to driving even farther. Theyโ€™d only visited Seattle once, but Talulah had been so busy with college, then culinary school, then working in various restaurants before launching Talulahโ€™s Dessert Diner with Paul, whom sheโ€™d met along the way, that she didnโ€™t mind.

โ€œIโ€™m surprised they arenโ€™t coming home for the funeral,โ€ Debbie mused.

Not to mention the birth of their latest grandchild. Talulah thought she could hear the disappointment in her sisterโ€™s voice, but Debbie would never complain, especially to a defector like Talulah. Debbie remained as committed to their parentsโ€™ faith as they did. โ€œIโ€™m not surprised,โ€ Talulah said. โ€œAfrica is so far away, and theyโ€™d only have to turn around and go right back. They want to remain focused on their mission, at least until theyโ€™re officially released.โ€

โ€œAunt Phoebe was so prickly, she and Mom were never very close, anyway,โ€ Debbie added.

That wasnโ€™t strictly true. Phoebe used to have them over for dinner every Sunday, and Carolyn brought Talulah and Debbie over for piano lessons. It was only later that they had a bit of a falling-out and quit talking. Despite that, Talulah guessed their mother felt conflicted about missing her auntโ€™s funeral. She also understood that Carolyn wasnโ€™t going to change her mind. Choosing her mission over her family was almost a matter of pride; it showcased the level of her belief. โ€œWhen we visited Aunt Phoebe, and we werenโ€™t there for piano lessons, we had to sit on chairs in the cramped dining room or living room, and sheโ€™d snap at us to quit wiggling, remember?โ€

โ€œThat was if sheโ€™d let us in the house at all,โ€ Debbie said drily. โ€œShe used to tell us to go out front and play.โ€

โ€œWith no toys.โ€

โ€œShe was the sternest person Iโ€™ve ever met.โ€

โ€œShe also never threw anything away.โ€

โ€œShe was a hoarder?โ€

โ€œKind of. She somehow managed to be fastidious and clean at the same time, so itโ€™s not the type of hoarding you imagine when you hear the word, but itโ€™s so cluttered in here I can barely move from room to room.โ€

โ€œIf itโ€™s that bad, I should come over, after all.โ€

Talulah blew a wisp of hair thatโ€™d fallen from the clip on top of her head away from her mouth. โ€œNo, Iโ€™ve got it. Really.โ€ There was no way Debbie would survive the heat, not in her condition.

โ€œBut you must be feeling some pressure to get back to Seattle,โ€ Debbie said. โ€œYou told me you have a line of people every night trying to get into the diner.โ€

โ€œWe do, but Paulโ€™s there.โ€ She couldnโ€™t have taken off for a whole month in any prior year. In the beginning, their business had required too much time, energy and focusโ€”from both of them. Sheโ€™d come up with the concept and had the name, the website, the logo, the location and the recipes figured out when Paul decided to come on board to help with the capital, credit and muscle required to get the rest of the way. Itโ€™d been touch and go for a while, but the place was running smoothly now, following a familiar routine. They had employees they could trust, and with her partner managing the day-to-day details, she wasnโ€™t too worried.

โ€œHe doesnโ€™t resent you being gone so long?โ€ Debbie asked.

โ€œHe has a family reunion in Iowa at the end of September. Then heโ€™ll be hiking in Europe for three weeks with a couple of friends. So Iโ€™ll be returning the favor soon enough.โ€

โ€œHe gets to go to Europe while you have to spend your vacation in Coyote Canyon, attending a funeral and cleaning out a house that was built in the 1800s?โ€

Talulah didnโ€™t mind the work. It was facing the past and all the people she hadnโ€™t seen or heard from in years that would be difficult. โ€œItโ€™s not a big deal,โ€ she insisted.

โ€œOkay.โ€ There was a slight pause. Then her sister said, โ€œI hate to bring up a sensitive subject, butโ€ฆwhat are you going to do when you see Charlie?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know.โ€ She certainly wasnโ€™t looking forward to it.

โ€œItโ€™d be a lot easier if he was married.โ€

Talulah agreed. If he had a wife, heโ€™d be able to believe sheโ€™d saved him for the woman he was really supposed to marry. His family and friends would then be more likely to forgive her, too. But according to Jane, he wasnโ€™t even seeing anyone, so she had no idea how heโ€™d feel toward her. โ€œI ran into Brant,โ€ she volunteered, simply because she knew her sister would be interested.

โ€œHowโ€™d he look?โ€

Too good for the emotional well-being of the women around him. But such an admission would never pass Talulahโ€™s lips. She preferred not to acknowledge his incredible good looks. โ€œHavenโ€™t you seen him fairly recently?โ€ She knew her sister came back to Coyote Canyon occasionally.

โ€œFour or five years ago.โ€

โ€œHe probably hasnโ€™t changed much since then.โ€

โ€œHe married?โ€

โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œSomehow that doesnโ€™t surprise me. I doubt heโ€™ll ever settle down. Whatโ€™d he say when he saw you?โ€

โ€œJust gave me a hard time about Charlie.โ€

โ€œWhen I was in high school, I was so disappointed I couldnโ€™t get his attention. Now Iโ€™m glad he had no interest in me. He would only have broken my heart.โ€

โ€œProbably,โ€ Talulah agreed. But, truth be told, she felt sort of bad talking about Brant that way. It was a case of โ€œthe pot calling the kettle black,โ€ as her aunt wouldโ€™ve said. Sheโ€™d broken her share of hearts, too, and possibly in worse ways, as heโ€™d intimated. But she couldnโ€™t seem to settle down. No matter how hard she tried to force the issue and be more like her sisterโ€”to do what her parents expected of herโ€”she wound up having such terrible anxiety attacks she literally had to flee. Maybe Brant had the same problem when it came to making a lifelong commitment. Maybe he was just better at accepting his limitations.

The doorbell rang as her sister finished telling her about little Casey, her three-year-old niece, whoโ€™d gotten hold of a pair of scissors and cut her bangs off at the scalp. โ€œThatโ€™s probably the woman from the church now,โ€ Talulah said. โ€œI need to go over the funeral with her. Iโ€™ll call you later, okay?โ€

Her sister said goodbye, and Talulah disconnected as she hurried up the narrow, creaking stairs. There was a woman standing on the stoop, all right. But before she pushed open the screen doorโ€”the regular door was already standing open because sheโ€™d been trying to catch even the slightest breezeโ€”Talulah could see enough to know it wasnโ€™t anyone from the church.

This woman had a cigarette in one hand and a bottle of wine in the other.

Excerpted from Talulahโ€™s Back in Town by Brenda Novak.
Copyright ยฉ 2023 by Brenda Novak, Inc.
Published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.

*****

Author Info:

New York Times bestselling author Brenda Novak has written over 60 novels. An eight-time Rita nominee, she’s won The National Reader’s Choice, The Bookseller’s Best and other awards. She runs Brenda Novak for the Cure, a charity that has raised more than $2.5 million for diabetes research (her youngest son has this disease). She considers herself lucky to be a mother of five and married to the love of her life. Visit Brenda at www.brendanovak.com.

Author Website

Facebook: @AuthorBrendaNovak

Twitter: @Brenda_Novak

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TikTok: @authorbrendanovak

*****

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Spotlight – Summer on the Island

04 Monday Apr 2022

Posted by romanticreadsandsuch in Blog Tour, Sneak Peek

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Brenda Novak, Summer on the Island

Summer on the Island : A Novelย 

by Brenda Novak

On Sale Date: April 5, 2022

9780778311850

Trade Paperback

$16.99 USD

400 pages

Blurb:

For fans of Elin Hilderbrand and Nancy Thayer, New York Times bestselling author Brenda Novak’s newest standalone novel about friendship, family and the ties that bind and challenge us follows three friends as they escape to a coastal Florida town for the summer.

Marlo Madsen has just been through a global pandemic that turned her lifeโ€”and the lives of almost everyone she knowsโ€”upside down. Her beloved father has died from COVID. Helping her mother, who has MS, handle his estate means returning to the small coastal Florida town where she was raised.

Having just left her job as a divorce attorneyโ€”which paid well but showed her too much of the worst in peopleโ€”sheโ€™s invited two friends to join her for a seaside summer. The two friends are also facing huge life changes after the worsening California wildfires took everything from them, and need to decompress and recuperate. And travel has long been forbidden, so they are beyond appreciative for the ability to escape.

Unfortunately, a restful summer doesnโ€™t seem to be in the cards, especially when Marlo learns about a special provision in her fatherโ€™s will that reveals he has a love child with Rosemarie, the housekeeper whoโ€™s worked for the family for years. Rosemarieโ€™s son was around while Marlo was growing up, but she never suspected a thing. Nobody did. And once the news is revealed, the fallout will cause waves big enough to topple two families and a whole community.

Brenda Novak Store: https://brendanovakstore.com/collections/home-shop-all/products/soti

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Indie Bound: https://www.indiebound.org/book/9780778311850ย 

Walmart: https://www.walmart.com/ip/Summer-on-the-Island-Paperback-9780778311850/821066975

*****

Excerpt:

CHAPTER ONE

Teach Island looked exactly the same as Marlow Madsen remembered it. Since the entire world had been disrupted by the pandemic, the comfort and familiarity of this place nearly brought tears to her eyes. Part of that was how strongly she associated it with her father. John โ€œTillerโ€ Madsen, whoโ€™d gotten his nickname because of his love for sailing, had died a month ago. But the island had long been his escape from the rat race of Washington, DC, where heโ€™d served as a United States senator for thirty years.

โ€œI canโ€™t believe Iโ€™m back. Finally,โ€ Marlow said as she rolled down the passenger window to let in some fresh air.

Part of the archipelago of forty-five hundred islands off the coast of Florida, Teach was only seven square miles. Marlow loved its homey, small-town atmosphere. She also loved its white sand beaches and its motley collection of bars, restaurants, bait-and-tackle stores and gift shops, most of which, at least in the older section where they were now, had kitschy decor. Because the island was named after Edward Teach, or Blackbeard, one of the most famous pirates to operate in this part of the world in the early eighteenth century, there was pirate stuff all over. A black skull-and-crossbones flag hung on a pole in front of the most popular bar, which was made to look like a colonial-era tavern and was named Queen Anneโ€™s Revenge after Blackbeardโ€™s ship.

In addition to the Blackbeard memorabilia, there was the regular sea-themed stuffโ€”large anchors or shipโ€™s wheels stuck in the ground here and there, fishing nets draped from the eaves of stores and cafรฉs, and lobsters, crabs and other ocean creatures painted on wooden or corrugated metal sides. Her parents had a house in Georgia, a true Southern mansion, as well as their condo in Virginia for when her father had to be in Washington. But this was where theyโ€™d always spent the summers.

Now that Tiller was gone, her mother was talking about selling the other residences and moving here permanently. Marlow hated the sense of loss that inspired the forever change, but since Seaclusionโ€”her fatherโ€™s name for the beach houseโ€”had always been her favorite of their homes, she was also relieved that her mother planned to keep it. This was the property she hoped to inherit one day; she couldnโ€™t imagine it ever being out of the family. And after what so many people had experienced with the fires in California, where sheโ€™d been living since she graduated college, and all the hurricanes in recent years that had plagued Florida, she had reason to be grateful the house was still standing.

โ€œSounds like youโ€™ve missed the place.โ€ Reese Cantwell, whoโ€™d been sent to pick up her and her two friends, had grown even taller since Marlow had seen him last. His hands and feet no longer looked disproportionate to the rest of his body. She remembered that his older brother, Walker, had also reminded her of a pup who hadnโ€™t quite grown into his large paws and wondered what Walker was doing these days.

โ€œItโ€™s a welcome sight for all three of us,โ€ Aida Trahan piped up from the back. โ€œThree months by the sea should change everything.โ€

Claire Fernandez was also in the back seat, both of them buried beneath the luggage that wouldnโ€™t fit in the trunk. Theyโ€™d met at LAX and flown into Miami together. โ€œHereโ€™s hoping,โ€ she said. โ€œEven if it doesnโ€™t, Iโ€™m looking forward to putting my toes in the water and my butt in the sand.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™ll get plenty of opportunities for that here,โ€ Reese said.

Claire needed the peace and tranquility and a chance to heal. Sheโ€™d lost her home in the fires thatโ€™d ravaged Malibu last August. To say nothing of the other dramas thatโ€™d plagued her this past year.

Marlow looked over at their driver. Apparently, since her fatherโ€™s death, Reese had been helping out around the estate, in addition to teaching tennis at the club. His mother, Rosemary, had been their housekeeper since well before he was bornโ€”since before Marlow was even born. Marlow was grateful for the many years of service and loyalty Rosemary had given the family, especially now that Tiller had died. It was wonderful to have someone she trusted watch out for her mother. Eileen had multiple sclerosis, which sometimes made it difficult for her to get around.

โ€œLooks as casual as I was hoping it would be.โ€ Claire also lowered her window as Reese brought them to the far side of the island and closer to the house. Situated on the water, Seaclusion had its own private beach, as well as a three-bedroom guesthouse and a smaller apartment over the garage where Rosemary had lived before moving into the main house after Tiller died so she could be available if Eileen needed anything during the night.

โ€œThere are some upscale shops and restaurants where weโ€™re going, if youโ€™re in the mood for spending money,โ€ Marlow told them.

โ€œWhen have I not been in the mood to shop?โ€ Aida joked.

โ€œYou donโ€™t have access to Duttonโ€™s money anymore,โ€ Claire pointed out. โ€œYou need to be careful.โ€

Claire had lost almost everything. She had reason to be cautious. Aida wasnโ€™t in the best situation, either, and yet she shrugged off the concern. โ€œIโ€™ll be okay. I didnโ€™t walk away empty-handed, thanks to my amazing divorce attorney.โ€

Marlow always felt uncomfortable when Dutton came up, and sometimes couldnโ€™t believe it wasnโ€™t more uncomfortable for them. The way Claire and Aida had met was remarkable, to say the least. It was even more remarkable that theyโ€™d managed to become friends. But Marlow twisted around and smiled as though she didnโ€™t feel the sudden tension so she could acknowledge Aidaโ€™s compliment. Although Marlow was only thirty-four, sheโ€™d been a practicing attorney for ten years. Sheโ€™d jumped ahead two grades when she was seven, which had enabled her to finish high school early and start college at sixteen. A knack for difficult negotiations had led her to a law degree and from there sheโ€™d gone into family law, something that had worked out well for her. Her practice had grown so fast sheโ€™d considered hiring another attorney to help with the caseload.

She probably wouldโ€™ve done that, if not for the pandemic, which had shut down every aspect of her life except work, making her realize that becoming one of the best divorce attorneys in Los Angeles wasnโ€™t everything it was cracked up to be. No matter how much money she made, she didnโ€™t enjoy dealing with people who were so deeply upset, and the richer, more famous the client, the more acrimonious the divorce. She hoped sheโ€™d never have to wade through another one. If a marriage worked, it could be wonderful. Her parents had proved that. But after what sheโ€™d witnessed with other people since passing the bar, she was beginning to believe Tiller and Eileen were the exception.

โ€œAll I did was make Dutton play fair,โ€ Marlow said. โ€œBut at least you have some money you can use to get by while you decide what to do from here.โ€

โ€œI liked being a trophy wife,โ€ Aida grumbled. โ€œIโ€™m not sure Iโ€™m cut out for anything else.โ€

Like so many in LA, sheโ€™d been an aspiring actress at one time, but her career had never taken off. After sheโ€™d married Dutton, sheโ€™d spent more time at the tennis club, where she and Marlow had met, than trying out for any auditions.

โ€œDonโ€™t say that,โ€ Marlow told her. โ€œYou can do a lot more than look pretty.โ€

Claire remained conspicuously quiet. Sheโ€™d been subdued since they left, so subdued that Marlow was beginning to wonder if something was wrong.

โ€œWeโ€™ll see.โ€ Aida shrugged off the compliment as readily as she had the warning. โ€œBut before I have to make the really hard decisions, I deserve a break. So whereโ€™s the expensive part of the island again?โ€

Reese chuckled. โ€œWeโ€™re almost there.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ll be able to play tennis, too,โ€ Marlow told her. โ€œThe clubโ€™s only a mile from the house. And Reese is our resident pro.โ€

โ€œNo way! You play tennis?โ€ Aidaโ€™s voice revealed her enthusiasm.

โ€œEvery day,โ€ he replied.

โ€œCan he beat you?โ€ Aida asked Marlow.

โ€œHe was just a kid the last time we played, and he could take me about half the time even then. I doubt heโ€™ll have any problem now.โ€

โ€œI can see why you talked us out of renting a car,โ€ Claire said, finally entering the conversation. โ€œConsidering the size of this placeโ€ฆโ€

โ€œLike I told you before,โ€ Marlow said, โ€œmost people walk or ride a bike.โ€

โ€œYou only need a car if youโ€™re going off island,โ€ Reese chimed in. He was driving them in Eileenโ€™s Tesla.

Marlow was anxious to ask how her mother was doing but decided to hold off. If she questioned him while her friends were in the car, sheโ€™d probably get the standard โ€œFine.โ€ But she wasnโ€™t looking for a perfunctory answer. She wanted the truth. What heโ€™d seen and heard recently. He was the one whoโ€™d been here. Marlow hadnโ€™t been able to visit, not even when her father died. Thanks to the pandemic, they hadnโ€™t been able to give him the funeral he deserved, either.

Reese glanced into the rearview mirror. โ€œAre the three of you staying all summer?โ€

Marlow suspected he was hoping Aida, in particular, would be on the island for a while. Although Aida was thirty-six, fourteen years older than he was, she was a delicate blonde with big blue eyes. The way she dressed and accessorized, she turned heads, especially male heads, wherever she went.

โ€œWe are,โ€ Aida said, and the subtle hint of flirtation in her voice told Marlow that sheโ€™d picked up on Reeseโ€™s interest.

โ€œWe have some big decisions to make in the coming months,โ€ Marlow said, hoping to give Reese a hint that this wasnโ€™t the opportunity he might think it was. Aida was on the rebound. She needed to put her life back together, not risk her heart on a summer fling.

โ€œWhat kind of decisions?โ€ he asked, naturally curious.

Claire answered for her. โ€œLike what weโ€™re going to do from here on. Weโ€™re all starting over.โ€

Reeseโ€™s eyebrows shot up as he looked at Marlow. โ€œMeaningโ€ฆwhat? You wonโ€™t be returning to LA?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not sure,โ€ she said. โ€œI sold my condo and closed my practice before I left, just in case.โ€

His jaw dropped. โ€œReally? But your mom said youโ€™re one of the most highly sought-after attorneys in Los Angeles.โ€

No doubt her mother talked about her all the time. Sheโ€™d heard a few things about Reeseโ€™s family, too, including the fact that he hadnโ€™t finished school because heโ€™d let partying come between him and a degree. But Marlow didnโ€™t know Reese that well. Sheโ€™d spent more time with his much older brother, Walker, when they were growing up. โ€œItโ€™s not that it wasnโ€™t working out. It was. Iโ€™m justโ€ฆdone with divorce.โ€

He turned down the rap music heโ€™d had playing since they got in. โ€œHave you told your mother?โ€

โ€œNot yet. I was afraid sheโ€™d try to talk me out of it. I know itโ€™s sort of crazy to walk away from what I had going. Not many lawyers would do that. But after being quarantined for so long, working with people who almost always behaved their worst, Iโ€™m finished suffering through other peopleโ€™s emotional turmoil.โ€

โ€œCanโ€™t say as I blame you,โ€ Aida agreed. โ€œI feel so bad about how Dutton treated you.โ€

Aidaโ€™s ex hadnโ€™t just called Marlow names. Heโ€™d gotten her cell phone number from Aida, claiming he wanted to negotiate directly, and then proceeded to threaten her on more than one occasion. โ€œWe can all be glad Duttonโ€™s out of our lives.โ€

โ€œAmen,โ€ Aida said, but again Claire said nothing.

They reached the gap in the shrubbery that signaled the beginning of her parentsโ€™ drive, and Reese turned into Seaclusion.

โ€œLook at this!โ€ Aida exclaimed. โ€œItโ€™s a whole compound.โ€

Reese parked in the detached four-car garage. โ€œWelcome home,โ€ he said with a grin.

Marlow had her carry-on with her, but when she went to the trunk to get the rest of her luggage, Reese insisted heโ€™d bring it in.

She thanked him, put her bag down and, eager to see her mother, hurried to the house.

Rosemary was waiting on the stoop, where her mother would normally be. โ€œItโ€™s good to see you, Marlow.โ€

โ€œThanks, Rosemary. Itโ€™s good to see you, too. Is Mom okay?โ€

At fifty-five, Rosemary was five years younger than Eileen and tall and thin, like her two sons. Theyโ€™d gotten their good looks from herโ€”didnโ€™t resemble their father at all, who wasnโ€™t around anymore. Marlow could recall him showing up at the Atlanta house drunk and bellowing for Rosemary to โ€œget her ass home.โ€ It wasnโ€™t any surprise to Marlow that the relationship hadnโ€™t lasted. Heโ€™d abandoned the family when Reese was four or five.

โ€œSheโ€™s fine. A little tired.โ€ Although Rosemary smiled, she seemed anxious and uptight herself. Was it because of Eileen? Was she worse off than Marlow had been told?

โ€œIs it anything to be concerned about?โ€ Marlow pressed.

โ€œNo. She was so excited to see you that she couldnโ€™t sleep last night. Thatโ€™s all. Sheโ€™s in her room resting if you want to go in.โ€

Anxious to reassure herself that nothing more serious was going on, Marlow introduced Aida and Claire to Rosemary, and while Rosemary led them to the guesthouse, where Reese was taking the luggage, Marlow went inside. โ€œMom?โ€ she called as she moved through the living room.

โ€œIn here!โ€ her mother called back.

Marlowโ€™s stomach knotted as she reached the master bedroom and swung the door open wider. It was a beautiful day outside, not a cloud in the sky, yet the shades were drawn, making it dark and cool.

As soon as she reached the bed, she bent to kiss her motherโ€™s paper-thin cheek. โ€œIโ€™m so glad to see you again.โ€

Eileenโ€™s hands clutched her wrists. โ€œLet me look at you. Itโ€™s been too long.โ€

โ€œWho couldโ€™ve guessed a pandemic would come between us? That wasnโ€™t something I even considered when I went so far from home.โ€

Once her eyes adjusted to the light, Marlow could see that the room hadnโ€™t changed. Her fatherโ€™s watch glimmered on the dresser, his slippers waited under the side chair and his clothes hung neatly in the closet as though he might walk through the door at any moment. Her mother hadnโ€™t done anything with his personal property. That meant Marlow would have to deal with it, but she was actually grateful Eileen had waited. Touching his belongings was their only remaining connection to him, their only chance to say goodbye, and now they could do that together.

โ€œAre you hungry?โ€ her mother asked. โ€œRosemary made tea for you and your friends.โ€

Marlow sat on the edge of the bed. Eileen had thick dark hair and bottle green eyesโ€”both of which Marlow had inheritedโ€”and looked good despite being so ill. But she was pale today and had lost significant weight. โ€œThat sounds wonderful,โ€ Marlow said.

โ€œI thought your friends might enjoy it. And I know how much you like clotted cream. When we were in London with your father several years ago, that was all you wanted to eat.โ€

The twinkle in Eileenโ€™s eyes made Marlow feel slightly encouraged, until her mother winced as she adjusted her position. Eileen had to be feeling terrible, or sheโ€™d be up and around and asking to meet Aida and Claire.

โ€œAre you having another attack?โ€ Marlow asked. Her motherโ€™s disease came in waves, or what they called โ€œattacks.โ€ Sometimes she grew worse for no clear reasonโ€”she didnโ€™t do or eat anything differentโ€”and then she improved just as mysteriously. Although the steady decrease in her functionality attested to the fact that each attack took a little more from herโ€ฆ

โ€œI must be. But donโ€™t worry about me. Itโ€™sโ€ฆmore of the same. How was your flight?โ€

The lump that swelled in Marlowโ€™s throat made it difficult to swallow. Sheโ€™d already lost her beloved father. Was she going to lose her mother this year, too? The probability of Eileenโ€™s dying had hung over their heads ever since she was diagnosed twenty-six years ago, so itโ€™d come as a total shock that Tiller had died first. Heโ€™d never been sick a day in his lifeโ€”until he got shingles. Then heโ€™d spent five weeks in bed and simply didnโ€™t wake up one morning. According to the autopsy, a blood clot had formed and traveled to his lungs.

โ€œThe flight was crowded and miserable,โ€ she answered. โ€œBut arenโ€™t all flights that way?โ€

โ€œYou shouldโ€™ve come first class.โ€

Marlow thought about her decision to sell her place and close her practice but decided not to mention it until later. Eileenโ€™s father had been a steel baron; sheโ€™d married into money, as well. Sheโ€™d never known what it was like to struggle. Marlow hadnโ€™t, either, but she was out in the world and much more cognizant of the difficulties faced by those who didnโ€™t have quite as much. โ€œI didnโ€™t want to ask Aida and Claire to spend the extra money. You know what happened to Claire.โ€

โ€œYes. The poor thing. Iโ€™m so glad she had insurance to cover the rebuild. The fires in California have been awful. Iโ€™ve seen them on the news.โ€ Eileen lifted her head to look toward the door. โ€œWhere are your friends?โ€

โ€œRosemaryโ€™s helping them get settled in the guesthouse.โ€

โ€œI canโ€™t wait to meet them.โ€

โ€œTheyโ€™re grateful to you for letting them come home with me. But with the way youโ€™re feeling, maybe I shouldโ€™ve come aloneโ€”โ€

โ€œNo, no,โ€ she broke in. โ€œThey both needed a place to recoup, as you said. And having them here wonโ€™t hurt me. New friends might help fill the terrible void Iโ€™ve felt since Tillerโ€ฆโ€ Her voice cracked.

Marlow squeezed her hand, wondering if it was the emotional toll of losing Tiller thatโ€™d gotten the best of Eileen, rather than MS. โ€œI miss him, too,โ€ she whispered.

Her mother brought Marlowโ€™s hand to her cheek. โ€œItโ€™ll be good to have you here for practical reasons, too. I think thereโ€™s something that has to be done with the estate.โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™s that?โ€ Marlow asked in surprise.

โ€œI donโ€™t know. Samuel Lefebvreโ€™s been calling me, trying to get me to come meet with him, but I told him youโ€™re the one to talk to. I canโ€™t face it.โ€

Sam was her fatherโ€™s attorney and had been since Marlow could remember. Heโ€™d written her a character reference when she applied to Stanford, since heโ€™d graduated from there himself, which was how sheโ€™d landed on the opposite coast. โ€œI can handle it. It shouldnโ€™t be hard. Most, if not all, of Dadโ€™s estate will pass directly to you. Maybe he left me a few trinkets.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m sure he did. But Sam acts as though thereโ€™s business at hand, so he must need something.โ€

โ€œYou know Sam. Heโ€™s fastidious, always in a hurry to wrap things up. It wonโ€™t be a problem.โ€

A ghost of her motherโ€™s former smile curved her lips. โ€œYouโ€™re so capable. Youโ€™ve always been capableโ€”just like your father.โ€

Marlow heard Rosemary come into the house with Aida and Claire. โ€œShould I wait to introduce my friends to you until after we eat?โ€

โ€œMaybe that would be best,โ€ Eileen said. โ€œItโ€™ll give me the chance to rest a bit longer.โ€

โ€œOf course. Thereโ€™s no rush.โ€

โ€œI canโ€™t wait to spend more time with you. Itโ€™s comforting to know we have the whole summer.โ€

โ€œIt is.โ€ Marlow hugged her mother, breathing in the welcome scent of her perfume before going out to join Aida and Claire in the dining room, where Rosemary had put a tea caddy filled with small sandwiches, crackers with herb spread, homemade scones and chocolate-covered strawberries. The clotted cream was in small dishes at the side of each plate.

โ€œLooks delicious. I donโ€™t think anyone in the UK could do it better.โ€

โ€œThen I did it right,โ€ Rosemary joked.

When Marlow sat down, she halfway expected Reese to join them, since she knew he was on the property, but he didnโ€™t come in. As generously as her family had treated Rosemary and her boys, thereโ€™d always been a distinction between the family and the help. Marlow supposed that, in many situations like this, it was inevitable: there was a natural hierarchy when it came to employment.

โ€œReese has gotten so tall,โ€ she remarked to Rosemary, helping herself to a cucumber-and-cream-cheese sandwich.

โ€œHeโ€™s a handsome man,โ€ Aida said.

Marlow shot her friend a warning look but didnโ€™t dare say anything in front of Reeseโ€™s mother, who seemed to take the compliment at face value. โ€œHeโ€™s six-four, as tall as his brother now,โ€ she said proudly.

โ€œWhatโ€™s Walker been doing these days?โ€ Marlow asked.

Rosemary used a towel to hold the hot teapot with both hands. โ€œHeโ€™s living here on the island now.โ€

Marlow paused, her sandwich halfway to her mouth. โ€œHe left Atlanta to come here permanently? When?โ€

โ€œAs soon as he heard about COVID. Poor guyโ€™s always felt he needs to be there for me and Reese,โ€ she said with an affectionate chuckle. โ€œI guess itโ€™s no wonder since, growing up, he had to be the man of the house.โ€

Eileen hadnโ€™t mentioned that Walker had moved to Teach, but at thirty-six, he probably didnโ€™t come to the house much. โ€œWhat part of the island does he live on?โ€ Marlow asked. โ€œHeโ€™s not staying above the garage, is he?โ€

โ€œNo, Reese is there now. Walker bought the cottage down by the cove. Itโ€™s not very big, but the setting is magnificent. Iโ€™ve never seen prettier sunsets than the ones I see from his front porch.โ€

Marlow liked the cove, too. The beach there was small and completely cut off from the other beaches, so it was often overlooked by tourists, which made it feel almost as private as the beach her family owned. โ€œWhat does he do for a living?โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s the chief of police.โ€

Marlow sat taller. โ€œThe chief of police?โ€

Rosemary shrugged off her surprise. โ€œIt sounds loftier than it is. There are only two other officers on the force.โ€

โ€œButโ€ฆhowโ€™d that happen? Last I heard, he was a street cop in Atlanta.โ€ She remembered someone telling her that a friend had talked him into going into the academy. That had been a while agoโ€”probably a decadeโ€”but Walkerโ€™s ascent still seemed quick.

โ€œThis is your oldest son?โ€ Claire interrupted.

โ€œIt is,โ€ Rosemary replied before answering Marlow. โ€œHe didnโ€™t want to be separated from me or his brother during the pandemic, so he kept checking for jobs on the islandโ€”and he found one.โ€

โ€œThe chief of police quit or was fired or something?โ€ Claire asked.

โ€œNo, Walker got on as a regular officer first,โ€ Rosemary clarified. โ€œBut when the chief retired, he took over.โ€

โ€œDo you have a daughter-in-law, too?โ€ Aida asked. โ€œOr any grandbabies?โ€

โ€œNot yet,โ€ Rosemary replied. โ€œI bug Walker about finding a wife all the time, but he just laughs it off and tells me you canโ€™t hurry love.โ€

โ€œMaybe Reese will be the one to give you grandbabies,โ€ Aida said.

โ€œHeโ€™s got some growing up to do first,โ€ Rosemary said and headed into the kitchen.

Marlow and Claire both gave Aida a pointed stare.

โ€œWhat?โ€ she said, lifting her well-manicured hands as though sheโ€™d done nothing wrong. โ€œHeโ€™s twenty-two. Itโ€™s not as though heโ€™s underage.โ€

Rosemary reappeared before they could say anything further. โ€œWalkerโ€™s here,โ€ she announced. โ€œI needed a few things for the soup Iโ€™m making for dinner tonight, and he said heโ€™d grab them for me.โ€

A knock sounded on the door. After Rosemary opened it, Marlow could hear Walker say, โ€œHere you go. Youโ€™ll find some of those dark chocolateโ€“covered almonds you like in the bag, too.โ€

Marlow could see a slice of Rosemary as she accepted the sack he handed her. โ€œThank you.โ€

โ€œNo problem. Iโ€™ll see you later.โ€

โ€œWalker?โ€ his mother said, calling him back. โ€œMarlowโ€™s home if youโ€™d like to come in and say hello.โ€

There was a slight pause, which indicated he wasnโ€™t thrilled with the idea. Marlow could understand why. They hadnโ€™t exactly been close, at least not during their teenage years. But he eventually said, โ€œFine. But just for a minute. I have to get back to work.โ€

Excerpted from Summer on the Island by Brenda Novak,
Copyright ยฉ 2022 by Brenda Novak, Inc.
Published by MIRA Books.

*****

Author Info:

Brenda Novak, a New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author, has penned over sixty novels. She is a five-time nominee for the RITA Award and has won the National Reader’s Choice, the Bookseller’s Best, the Bookbuyer’s Best, and many other awards. She also runs Brenda Novak for the Cure, a charity to raise money for diabetes research (her youngest son has this disease). To date, sheโ€™s raised $2.5 million. For more about Brenda, please visit www.brendanovak.com.

TWITTER: @Brenda_Novak

FB: @BrendaNovakAuthor

Insta: @authorbrendanovak 

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*****

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Spotlight – Keep Me Warm at Christmas

24 Wednesday Nov 2021

Posted by romanticreadsandsuch in Blog Tour, Sneak Peek

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Brenda Novak, Keep Me Warm at Christmas, Silver Springs series

Keep Me Warm at Christmas

Silver Springs #9

by Brenda Novak

ISBN: 9780778311256

Publication Date: September 28, 2021

Publisher: MIRA Books

Blurb:

Maybe this Christmas can thaw his frozen heartโ€”and heal hers.

Hollywood starlet Tia Beckett knows one moment can change your life. Her career had been on the fast track before a near-fatal accident left her with a debilitating facial scar. Certain her A-lister dreams are over, she agrees to house-sit at her producerโ€™s secluded estate in Silver Springs. Itโ€™s the escape from the limelight Tiaโ€™s been craving, until she discovers sheโ€™s not the only houseguest for the holidays. And her handsome new roomie is impossible to ignore.

BookShop.org

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Books-A-MillionPowellโ€™s

*****

Excerpt:

Chapter One

Thursday, December 11

Tia Beckett ran a finger along the jagged scar on her cheek as she gazed into the mirror above the contemporary console on the living room wall. Sheโ€™d taken down almost every mirror in her own house as soon as she came home from the hospitalโ€” broken them all and tossed them out. But she couldnโ€™t do the same here. This wasnโ€™t her home, and there seemed to be mirrors everywhere, each one projecting the same tragic image. 

She leaned closer. It mustโ€™ve been the windshield that nearly destroyed her face. 

She dropped her hand. After a month, her cheek was still tender, but she continued to examine her reflection. The woman in the mirror was a complete stranger. If she turned her head to the left, she could find herself again. The shiny black hair that framed an oval face. The smooth and creamy olive-colored skin. The bottle-green eyes with long, thick eyelashes. The full lips, which were her own, not a product of Botox injections. All the beauty thatโ€™d helped her land the leading role in Hollywoodโ€™s latest blockbuster was still there.

But when she turned her head to the rightโ€ฆ 

Her stomach soured as she studied the raised, pink flesh that slanted in a zigzag fashion from the edge of her eye almost to her mouth. The doctor had had to piece that side of her face back together like a quilt. Heโ€™d said there was a possibility that cosmetic surgery could improve the scars later, but that wasnโ€™t an option right now. After what sheโ€™d been through already, she couldnโ€™t even contemplate another surgery. Itโ€™d be too late to save her career by then, anyway. 

Who was this poor, unfortunate creature? Her agent, her fellow cast members for Expect the Worst, the romantic comedy in which she costarred with box-office hit Christian Allen, and the friends sheโ€™d made since moving to LA said she was lucky to have survived the accident. And maybe that was true. But it was difficult to feel lucky when sheโ€™d lost all hope of maintaining her career just as it was beginning to skyrocket. 

A knock at the front door startled her. Who could that be? She didnโ€™t want to see anyone, not even her friendsโ€”and especially not the press. Theyโ€™d been hounding her since the accident, trying to snap a picture of her damaged face and demanding an answer as to whether she would quit acting. That was part of the reason sheโ€™d readily accepted when Maxi Cohen, the producer of her one and only film, offered to let her stay at his massive estate in Silver Springs, ninety minutes northwest of LA. He and his family would be in Israel for the holidays, so he needed someone to house-sit. That was what heโ€™d said. What sheโ€™d heard was that she could hide out for a month and be completely alone. And she wouldnโ€™t even have to pay for the privilege. She just had to care for the houseplants, feed and play with Kiki, the parrot, occasionally drive each of the six vehicles parked in the airplane-hangar-sized garage and make sure nothing went wrong. 

She also turned on the lights in the main house at nightโ€”Maxi didnโ€™t yet have them set up on a timer, like those in his yardโ€”so that it looked occupied since she was staying in the guesthouse, which was smaller and more comfortable. But that was probably unnecessary. There wasnโ€™t a lot of crime in Silver Springs. Known for its boutique hotels, recreational opportunities and local, organic produce, it was sort of like Santa Barbara, only forty minutes away and closer to the coast, in that there were plenty of movie moguls and the like who had second homes here. 

Still, he couldnโ€™t have left Kiki without a caretaker. And safe was always better than sorry. He also owned an extensive art collection that could never be replaced, so she figured he was wise to have someone watch over it, just in case

Whoever was at the door rapped again, more insistently. Maxi had given the housekeeper and other staff a paid holiday. Even the gardeners were off, since the yard didnโ€™t grow much during the cold, rainy season. The entire estate was essentially in mothballs until Maxi returned. And no one Tia knew could say exactly where she was. So why was someone at her door? How had whoever it was gotten onto the property? The front gate required a code. 

โ€œHello? Anyone home?โ€ A manโ€™s strident voice came through the panel. โ€œMaxi said youโ€™d be in the guesthouse.โ€ 

Damn. Those words suggested whoever it was had a right to be here, or at least permission. She was going to have to answer the door. 

โ€œComing,โ€ she called. โ€œJustโ€ฆgive me a minute.โ€ She hurried into the bedroom, where her suitcase lay open on the floor. Sheโ€™d arrived in Silver Springs two days ago but hadnโ€™t bothered to unpack. There hadnโ€™t seemed to be much point. There didnโ€™t seem to be much point in doing anything anymore. She hadnโ€™t bothered to shower or dress this morning, either, and she was wearing the same sweat bottoms, T-shirt and socks sheโ€™d had on yesterday.

Yanking off her clothes, she pulled on a robe so that thereโ€™d be no expectation of hospitality as she scurried back through the living room. Still reluctant to speak to anyone, she peered through the peephole. 

A tall, slender manโ€”six-two, maybe tallerโ€”stood on the stoop. His dark hair had outgrown its last haircut and stuck out beneath a red beanie, he had a marked five-oโ€™clock shadow, suggesting he hadnโ€™t shaved for a couple of days, and a cleft chin almost as pronounced as that of Henry Cavill. He was a total stranger to her, but he had to be one of Maxiโ€™s friends or associates, and she should treat him as such.

Bracing herselfโ€”human interaction was something she now avoided whenever possibleโ€”she took a deep breath. Please, God, donโ€™t let him recognize me or have anything to do with the media. 

The blinds were already pulled, so she turned off the lights and cracked the door barely wide enough to be able to peek out with her good side. โ€œWhat can I do for you?โ€ 

His scowl darkened as his gaze swept over what he could see of her. He mustโ€™ve realized she was wearing a robe, because he said, โ€œI hate to drag you out of bed atโ€”โ€ he checked his watch โ€œโ€”two in the afternoon. But could you let me into the main house before I freeze myโ€”โ€ catching himself, he cleared his throat and finished with โ€œโ€”before I freeze out here?โ€ 

Assuming he was a worker of some sortโ€”she couldnโ€™t imagine why heโ€™d be here, bothering her, otherwiseโ€”she couldnโ€™t help retorting, โ€œSure. As long as you tell me why I should care whether you freeze or not.โ€ 

The widening of his eyes gave her the distinct impression that he wasnโ€™t used to having someone snap back at him. Soโ€ฆ maybe he wasnโ€™t a worker. 

โ€œBecause Maxi has offered to let me stay in his home, and he indicated youโ€™d let me in,โ€ he responded with exaggerated patience. โ€œHe didnโ€™t text you?โ€ 

โ€œNo, I havenโ€™t heard from him.โ€ And surely, what this man said couldnโ€™t be right. Maxi had told her that sheโ€™d have the run of the place. Sheโ€™d thought sheโ€™d be able to stay here without fear of bumping into anyone. Sheโ€™d been counting on it. 

โ€œHe was just getting on a plane,โ€ he explained. โ€œMaybe he had to turn off his phone.โ€ 

โ€œOkay. If you want to give me your number, Iโ€™ll text you as soon as I hear from him.โ€ He cocked his head. 

โ€œYouโ€™llโ€ฆwhat?โ€ 

โ€œIโ€™m afraid youโ€™ll have to come back later.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t want to come back,โ€ he said. โ€œI just drove six hours, all the way from the Bay Area, after working through the night. Iโ€™m exhausted, and Iโ€™d like to get some sleep. Can you help me out here?โ€ 

His impatience irritated her. But since the accident, sheโ€™d been so filled with rage she was almost relieved he was willing to give her a target. โ€œNo, Iโ€™m afraid I canโ€™t.โ€ 

He stiffened. โ€œExcuse me?โ€ 

โ€œI canโ€™t let some stranger into the house, not unless Maxi specifically asks me to.โ€ Even if this guy was telling the truth, forcing him to leave would not only bring her great pleasure, it would give her a chance to feed Maxiโ€™s parrot before hiding the key under the mat. Then there would be no need for further interaction. He wouldnโ€™t see her, and she wouldnโ€™t have to watch the shock, recognition and pity cross his face. 

Pity was by far the worst, but none of it was fun. 

โ€œIf I have the code to the gate, I mustโ€™ve gotten it from somewhere, right?โ€ he argued. โ€œIsnโ€™t it logical to assume that Maxi is the one who gave it to me?โ€ 

โ€œThatโ€™s a possibility, but there are other possibilities.โ€ 

โ€œLikeโ€ฆโ€ 

โ€œMaybe you hopped the fence or got it from one of the staff?โ€ His chest lifted in an obvious effort to gather what little patience he had left. โ€œI assure you, if I was a thief, I would not present myself at your door.โ€

โ€œI can appreciate why. But Iโ€™m responsible for what goes on here right now, which means I canโ€™t take any chances.โ€ 

โ€œYou wonโ€™t be taking any chances!โ€ he argued in exasperation. โ€œIf anything goes missing or gets damaged, Iโ€™ll replace it.โ€ 

What was there to guarantee that? โ€œThe art Maxi owns canโ€™t be replaced,โ€ she said and thought she had him. Maxi had told her so himself. But this stranger said the only thing that could trump her statement. โ€œExcept by me, since Iโ€™m the one who created most of it in the first place,โ€ he said drily. 

โ€œYouโ€™re an artist?โ€ she asked but only to buy a second or two while she came to grips with a few other things that had just become apparent. If he was one of the artists Maxi collected, he wasnโ€™t some obscure talent. Yetโ€ฆhe couldnโ€™t be more than thirty. And he certainly didnโ€™t look too important shivering in a stretched-out T-shirt, on which the word Perspective was inverted, and jeans that had holes down the front. 

โ€œI am,โ€ he replied. โ€œAnd you areโ€ฆthe house sitter, I presume?โ€ 

She heard his disparaging tone. He wondered who the hell she was to tell him what to do. He thought he mattered more than she did. But that came as no surprise: sheโ€™d already pegged him as arrogant. She was more concerned about the fact that Maxi mightโ€™ve referred to her as a menial laborer. Is that the way her former producer thought of her now? It was only a few months ago that sheโ€™d been the most promising actress in Hollywood. Certainly sheโ€™d attained more fame than this snooty artistโ€”when it came to having her name recognized by the general public, anyway. 

But what did it matter how high sheโ€™d climbed? Sheโ€™d fallen back to earth so hard she felt as though sheโ€™d broken every bone in her body, even though the damage to her face was the only lingering injury sheโ€™d sustained in the accident. โ€œIโ€™m house-sitting, yes. But, like you, Iโ€™m a friend of Maxiโ€™s,โ€ she said vaguely.

Fortunately, he didnโ€™t seem interested enough to press her for more detailed information. She was glad of that. 

โ€œFine. Look, friend.โ€ He produced his phone. โ€œI have proof. This is the text exchange I had with Maxi just before his plane took off. As you can see, he says he has someoneโ€”youโ€”staying in the guesthouse, but the main house is available, and Iโ€™m welcome to it. If youโ€™ll notice the time, youโ€™ll see that these texts took place just this morning.โ€ 

Her heart sank as she read what he showed her: I have someone in the guesthouse. Just get the key from her. 

โ€œHow long are you planning on being here?โ€ she asked. 

โ€œDoes it matter?โ€ he replied.

It did matter. But this was Maxiโ€™s estate, and they were both his guests, so she had an obligation to treat him as well as he was accustomed to being treated. โ€œJust a minute,โ€ she said and muttered a curse after she closed the door. There goes all my privacy.

Excerpted from Keep Me Warm at Christmas by Brenda Novak,
Copyright ยฉ 2021 by Brenda Novak, Inc.
Published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.

*****

Author Info:

New York Times bestselling author Brenda Novak has written over 60 novels. An eight-time Rita nominee, she’s won The National Reader’s Choice, The Bookseller’s Best and other awards. She runs Brenda Novak for the Cure, a charity that has raised more than $2.5 million for diabetes research (her youngest son has this disease). She considers herself lucky to be a mother of five and married to the love of her life.

Author Website

Twitter: @Brenda_Novak

Instagram: @authorbrendanovak

Goodreads

*****

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Spotlight – The Bookstore on the Beach

31 Wednesday Mar 2021

Posted by romanticreadsandsuch in Blog Tour, Sneak Peek

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Brenda Novak, The Bookstore on the Beach

For fans of Elin Hilderbrand and Mary Kay Andrews, comes New York Times bestselling author Brenda Novak’s newest standalone work of women’s fiction, a big, sweeping novel about family and the ties that bind and challenge us. In this novel, three generations of women from the same family share a house and work together at a bookstore in Colonial Beach over the course of a summer.

*****

The Bookstore on the Beach

by Brenda Novak

On Sale Date: April 6, 2021

9780778361053

Trade Paperback; $16.99 USD

448 pages

Blurb:

How do you start a new chapter when you havenโ€™t closed the book on the last one?

Eighteen months ago, Autumn Divacโ€™s husband went missing. Her desperate search has yielded no answersโ€”she still has no idea where he went or why. After being happily married for twenty years, she canโ€™t imagine moving forward without him, but for the sake of their two teenage children, she has to try.

Autumn takes her kids home for the summer to the charming beachside town where she was raised. She seeks comfort by working alongside her mother and aunt at their quaint bookshop, only to learn that her daughter is facing a life change neither of them saw coming and her mother has been hiding a terrible secret for years. And when she runs into Quinn Vanderbiltโ€”the boy who stole her heart in high schoolโ€”old feelings start to bubble up again. Is she free to love him, or should she hold out hope for her husbandโ€™s return? She can only trust her heartโ€ฆand hope it wonโ€™t lead her astray.

Bookshop.org: https://bookshop.org/books/the-bookstore-on-the-beach/9780778361053

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Indigo: https://www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/the-bookstore-on-the-beach/9780778361053-item.html

Book Depository: http://www.bookdepository.com/book/9780778361053

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Target: https://www.target.com/p/the-bookstore-on-the-beach-by-brenda-novak-paperback/-/A-80028510ย 

*****

Excerpt:

CHAPTER 1

Tuesday, June 8

Today her daughter was returning for the summer. Mary Langford gazed eagerly out at the street in front of her small bookstore, looking for a glimpse of Autumnโ€™s car and, when she saw nothing except a large family going into the ice cream parlor at the end of the block, checked her watch. Three-thirty. Autumn had called at lunchtime to say that she and the kids were making good time. They probably wouldnโ€™t be much longer.

โ€œYouโ€™ve been quiet today,โ€ Laurie commented from where she sat behind the counter, straightening the pens, tape, stapler and bookmarks.

Mary turned from the large front window sheโ€™d recently decorated with posters of the hottest new releases. โ€œI worry when sheโ€™s on the road for so long.โ€

โ€œSheโ€™ll make it, and itโ€™ll be great to see her and the kids. They havenโ€™t been back since Christmas, have they?โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ She picked up the feather duster and began cleaning shelvesโ€”a never-ending job at Beach Front Books, which she and Laurie owned as 50/50 partners. Autumn lived in Tampa, Florida, far enough away that it wasnโ€™t easy to get together when Taylor and Caden were in school. โ€œAnd I doubt theyโ€™ll come back for the holidays this year.โ€ Fortunately, they were more consistent about returning for the summerโ€”except for last summer, of course, which was understandable. Mary hoped sheโ€™d be able to count on that continuing, but with the kids getting older, nothing was certain. Taylor had only one more year of high school before heading off to college. Caden had two. Mary feared this might be the last time, for a while, theyโ€™d all be together in Sable Beach.

โ€œYou could go visit them,โ€ Laurie pointed out.

Autumn had invited her many times. Remembering the arguments her refusal had sparked over the years caused Maryโ€™s stomach to churn. She wanted to go to Tampa, wanted to make it so that her daughter wouldnโ€™t have to doย allย the traveling. Autumn had been going through so much lately. But the thought of venturing into unfamiliar territory filled Mary with dread. Other than to go to Richmond occasionally, which was the closest big city, she hadnโ€™t left the sleepy Virginia Beach town she called home in thirty-five years. โ€œYes, but you know me. This is the only place I feel safe.โ€

Laurie rocked back on the tall stool. โ€œWell, if the fear hasnโ€™t gone away by now, I guess itโ€™s not going to.โ€

โ€œNo. I donโ€™t talk about it anymore, but the past is as real to me now as itโ€™s ever been.โ€

Although the store had been busy earlier, what with the influx of tourists for the season, foot traffic had slowed. When that happened, they often talked more than they worked. Beach Front Books wasnโ€™t Laurieโ€™s sole source of income. Her husband, Christopher Conklin, was a talented artist. He painted all kinds of seascapes, and while he wasnโ€™t in any prestigious galleries, he sold his paintings in a section they reserved for him in the store as well as online.

But Mary, whoโ€™d never been married, had no other support. Beach Front Books didnโ€™t make a large profit, but no one loved the escape that books provided more than she did, and the store garnered enough business that she could eke out a living. That was all that mattered to her.

โ€œAutumn gets so mad that I wonโ€™t go out and see the world. Visit. Travel. That sort of thing,โ€ she murmured, wishing she didnโ€™t have the scars and limitations that had, at times, put such a strain on their relationship. โ€œShe keeps saying Iโ€™m too young to live like an old lady.โ€

โ€œShe has a point.โ€

Mary sighed. โ€œIโ€™m not young anymore.โ€

โ€œWhat are you talking about? Youโ€™re nine years younger than me. Fifty-four is not old.โ€

That was true, but sheโ€™d had to grow up far sooner than most people. โ€œI feel ancient.โ€

โ€œNext year, you should go to Tampa, if they ask you.โ€

She shook her head. โ€œI canโ€™t.โ€

โ€œMaybe youโ€™ll prove that you can.โ€

Mary couldnโ€™t help bristling. She didnโ€™t like it when Laurie pushed her. โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œAutumn doesnโ€™t understand, Mary. Thatโ€™s what causes almost every fight you have with her.โ€

โ€œI know. And I feel bad about that. But thereโ€™s nothing I can do.โ€

Laurie lowered her voice. โ€œYou could tell her the truthโ€ฆโ€

โ€œAbsolutely not,โ€ Mary snapped. โ€œWhy would I ever do that?โ€

โ€œThere are reasons. And you know it. Weโ€™ve talked about this before,โ€ Laurie said, remaining calm, as always. That was one of the many things Mary liked about herโ€”she was steady and patient, and that steadiness somehow helped Mary cope when old feelings and memories began to resurface.

In this instance, Laurie might also be right. Mary could feel the past rising up from its deep slumber. Maybe itย wasย time to tell Autumn.

But there were just as many reasonsย notย toโ€”compelling reasons. And the thought of revealing the past, seeing it all through her daughterโ€™s eyes, made Mary feel ill. โ€œI canโ€™t broach that subject right now, not with what sheโ€™s been dealing with the past year and a half. Besides, itโ€™s been so long itโ€™s almost as if it happened to someone else,โ€ she said, mentally shoving those dark years into the deepest recesses of her mind. โ€œI want to stay as far away from that subject as possible.โ€

Laurie didnโ€™t call her out on the contradiction her statement created. And Mary was glad. She couldnโ€™t have explained how it could be real and frightening and always present and yet she could feel oddly removed from it at the same time.

โ€œExcept that itย didnโ€™tย happen to someone else,โ€ Laurie responded sadly. โ€œIt happened to you.โ€

~

The scent of the ocean, more than anything else, told Autumn she was home. She lowered her window as soon as she rolled into town and breathed deeply, letting the salt air fill her lungs.

โ€œWhat are you doing?โ€ Taylor held her long brown hair in one hand to keep it from whipping across her face as she looked over from the passenger seat.

Autumn smiled, which was something she knew her children hadnโ€™t seen her do enough of lately. โ€œJust getting a little air.โ€

โ€œYou hate it when I roll downย myย window,โ€ Caden grumbled from the backseat.

โ€œIโ€™m hoping I wonโ€™t be so irritable anymore.โ€ For the past eighteen months, Autumn had been mired in the nightmare that had overtaken her life. She almost hadnโ€™t come to Sable Beach because of it. But when her children had each pleaded with her, separately, to ask if they could spend the summer with โ€œMimiโ€ like they used to, she knew they needed some normalcy in their livesโ€”needed to retain at least one of their parents. Her grief and preoccupation with her husbandโ€™s disappearance had probably made them feel as though sheโ€™d gone missing, tooโ€”at least the mother theyโ€™d known before. She hoped by returning to the place that held so many wonderful memories for them all, theyโ€™d be able to heal and reconnect.

It wasnโ€™t as if she could do anything more for Nick, anyway. That was the ugly reality. Sheโ€™d exhausted every viable lead and still had no idea where he was. If he was dead, she had to figure out a way to go on without him for the sake of their children.

The second she spotted the bookstore, the nostalgia that welled upโ€”along with memories of a simpler, easier timeโ€”nearly brought her to tears. When she was a little girl, sheโ€™d spent so many hours following her mother through the narrow aisles of that quaint shop, which looked like something from the crooked, narrow streets of Victorian London, dusting bookshelves or reading in the nook her mother had created for her.

Sheโ€™d spent just as much time at Beach Front Books when she was a teenager, only then she was stocking shelves, ordering inventory, working the registerโ€”and, again, reading, but this time sitting on the stool behind the counter while waiting for her next customer.

God, it was good to be back. As hard as she could be on her mother for her unreasonable fears and idiosyncrasies, she couldnโ€™t wait to see her. Until this moment, she hadnโ€™t realized just how much she missed her mother. So what if Mary was almost agoraphobic with her unwillingness to leave her little bungalow a block away from the sea? She was always there, waiting to welcome Autumn home. Maybe Autumn had never had a father, or the little brother or sister sheโ€™d secretly longed for, but she was lucky enough to have the enduring love of a good mother.

โ€œThere it is.โ€ She pointed to the bookstore as she slowed to look for a place to park.

โ€œWeโ€™re not going to the beach house?โ€ Caden asked, looking up from whatever heโ€™d been doing on his phone.

โ€œNot right now. First, weโ€™re stopping to see Mimi and Aunt Laurie. Then weโ€™ll take our stuff over to the house.โ€

A glance in the rearview mirror showed her his scowl. โ€œI hope it wonโ€™t be too late to go to the beach,โ€ he said.

โ€œIโ€™m sure we can manage to get there before dark,โ€ she responded as she wedged her white Volvo SUV between a red convertible and a gray sedan and grabbed her purse.

Taylor spoke, causing her to pause with her hand on the door latch. โ€œYou already seem different.โ€

โ€œIn what way?โ€ Autumn asked.

โ€œLess uptight. Not so sad.โ€

โ€œComing here makes me happy,โ€ she admitted.

โ€œThen why were we going to skip it again?โ€ Caden asked.

Autumn twisted around to look at him. โ€œYou know why.โ€

A pained expression claimed her daughterโ€™s face. โ€œDoes this mean youโ€™re letting go?โ€

โ€œOf Dad? Of course sheโ€™s letting go,โ€ Caden answered, the hard edge to his voice suggesting he considered the question to be a stupid one. โ€œDadโ€™s dead.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t say that!โ€ Taylor snapped. โ€œWe donโ€™t know itโ€™s true. He could be coming back.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s been eighteen months, Tay,โ€ Caden responded. โ€œHe wouldโ€™ve come back by now if he could.โ€

โ€œStop it, both of you.โ€ Autumn didnโ€™t want them getting into an argument right before they saw her mother. They were at each otherโ€™s throats so often lately; it drove her crazy to constantly have to play referee. But she could hardly blame them. Theyโ€™d lost their father, and they didnโ€™t know how or why. And she had no explanation. โ€œLifeโ€™s been hard enough lately,โ€ she added. โ€œLetโ€™s not make it any harder.โ€

โ€œThenย youย tell her,โ€ Caden said. โ€œDadโ€™s dead, and we have to move on. Right? Isnโ€™t that the truth? Go ahead and say itโ€”youย areย letting go.โ€

Was she? Is that what this trip signified? If not, how much longer should she hold on? And would holding on be best for them? She couldnโ€™t imagine her kids would want to spend another eighteen months swallowed up by grief and consumed with seeking answers they may never find. Taylor was seventeen, going to be a senior and starting to investigate colleges. Caden was only a year behind her. Surely, they would prefer to look forward and not back.

Regardless, Autumn wasnโ€™t sure sheย couldย continue to search, not like she had. She was exhaustedโ€”mentally and physically. Sheโ€™d put everything she had into the past year and a half, and it hadnโ€™t made a damn bit of difference. That was the most disheartening part of it.

โ€œIโ€™m continuing to hold out hope,โ€ she said, even though everyone sheโ€™d talked to, including the FBI, insisted her husband must be dead. It was difficult to see the idyllic, two-parent upbringing she was trying to give her kidsโ€”something sheโ€™d never had herselfโ€”fall apart that quickly and easily, and the heartbreak, loneliness and frustration of looking for Nick, with no results, created such a downward spiral for her. She knew it had been just as painful for her children. That was why maybe sheย shouldย let goโ€”to provide the best quality of life for them as possible.

โ€œWhat does thatย mean? Are you going to keep looking for him?โ€ Caden pressed. โ€œIs that how youโ€™re going to spend the summer?โ€

He could tell something had changed, that coming here signified a difference, and he wanted to reach the bottom line. But Autumn wasnโ€™t ready to admit that sheโ€™d failed. Not with as many times as sheโ€™d tried to comfort them by promising sheโ€™d have answers eventually.

She opened her mouth to try to explain what she was thinking in the gentlest possible way when she spotted her mother. Mary had come out of the store and was waving at them.

โ€œThereโ€™s your grandmother,โ€ she said.

Thankfully, her children let the conversation lapse and got out of the car.

โ€œHi, Mimi.โ€ With his long strides, Caden reached Mary first. Although he wasnโ€™t yet fully grown, he was already six-one. And Taylor was five foot ten. They were both tall, like their father.

Mary gave each of the kids a big hug and exclaimed about how grown-up they both were and how excited she was to see them before turning to Autumn.

โ€œYouโ€™ve lost weight,โ€ she murmured gently, a hint of worry belying her smile before they embraced.

โ€œIโ€™m okay, Mom.โ€ Autumn could smell a hint of the bookstore on Maryโ€™s clothes and realized that was another scent sheโ€™d never forget. It represented her childhood and all the great stories sheโ€™d read growing up. Sheโ€™d once hoped to read every book in the store. She hadnโ€™t quite made it, thanks to new releases and fluctuating inventory, but sheโ€™d read more books than most people. She still considered books to be a big part of her life. โ€œItโ€™s good to be home.โ€

โ€œLaurieโ€™s dying to see you. Letโ€™s go in and say hello,โ€ Mary said and held the door.

As soon as the bell sounded, Laurie hurried out from behind the register. โ€œThere you are! Itโ€™s a good thing you came when you did. I was afraid it would drive your mother crazy waiting for you. Sheโ€™s been so anxious for you to arrive. We both have.โ€

Taylor allowed her aunt to give her an exuberant squeeze. โ€œIโ€™m glad we got to come this year. Whereโ€™s Uncle Chris?โ€

โ€œProbably on the beach somewhere, painting. You know how he is once the weather warms upโ€”just like a child, eager to get outdoors.โ€

They took a few minutes to visit the small section of the store dedicated to Christopherโ€™s work so they could admire his latest paintings. Autumn was especially enamored with one heโ€™d done of the bookstore that portrayed a child out front, hanging on to her mother with one hand and carrying a stack of books with the other. That child couldโ€™ve been her once upon a time. She almost wondered if his memory of her had inspired it, which was why she decided, if that painting didnโ€™t sell before she left, sheโ€™d buy it herself and take it back to Tampa.

Fortunately, she had the money. As a corporate attorney, Nick had always done well financially. After the first few years of their marriage, which he spent finishing school, theyโ€™d rarely had to scrimp. But it was what heโ€™d inherited when his father passed away thatโ€™d really set them up. After Sergeyโ€™s death, Autumn had quit working as a loan officer for a local bank and, for the past ten years, had focused on her family, her home, gardening and cooking. Her financial situation was also one of the reasons she rejected the idea that Nick mightโ€™ve left her for another woman, a possibility that had been suggested to her many, many times. Why would he leave his children, too, and walk away without a cent? Sure, theyโ€™d had their struggles, especially in recent years, when his work seemed to take more and more of his time and attention, but neither of them had ever mentioned separating.

โ€œThis is amazing,โ€ she exclaimed as she continued to study the little girl in the painting. โ€œI love Chrisโ€™s work.โ€

โ€œThe last original he donated to charity went for six thousand dollars,โ€ Laurie announced proudly.

โ€œWho bought it?โ€ Autumn asked. If whoever it was lived in Sable Beach, chances were good sheโ€™d know him or her.

โ€œMike Vanderbilt, over at The Daily Catch. He was drunk when he got into a bidding war for it, and now itโ€™s hanging in his restaurant. I think heโ€™s glad to have it, but I imagine he also sees it as a reminder not to raise his paddle when heโ€™s been drinking.โ€

They all laughed to think of the barrel-chested and good-natured Mike letting alcohol bring out his competitive nature.

โ€œHis wife must be doing well, then,โ€ Autumn said. โ€œSheโ€™s still in remission?โ€

Laurie shot Mary a surprised glance, and it was Mary who answered. โ€œIโ€™m afraid not. She was when he bought that painting, but they received word just a couple of months ago that Bethโ€™s breast cancer has come back.โ€

โ€œOh no,โ€ Autumn cried. Everyone knew the owners of The Daily Catch. They did a lot for the community. And it was her favorite restaurant. When she was home, she ate there all the time. โ€œWhatโ€™s her prognosis?โ€

โ€œNot good. Thatโ€™s why Quinn has moved home from that little town in upstate New York. He helps his father with the restaurant these days. Iโ€™m sure heโ€™s also here to spend time with his mother beforeโ€ฆwell, before he has to say goodbye to her for good.โ€

โ€œQuinnโ€™s home?โ€ Autumn said. She wasnโ€™t expecting that; the mention of his name knocked her a little off-kilter. When he was a senior and she was a junior, sheโ€™d given him her virginity in the elaborate tree house that was in his backyard, even though he hadnโ€™t been nearly as interested in being with her as she was him. And then heโ€™d broken her heart by getting back together with his girlfriend, the same woman he married five years later. โ€œSo his wife and kids are here now, too?โ€

โ€œNo, he doesnโ€™t have any kids,โ€ Laurie said, chiming in again. โ€œAnd he and Sarahโ€”what was her maiden name?โ€

โ€œVizii,โ€ Autumn supplied.

โ€œYes. Vizii. They divorced almost two years ago. You didnโ€™t know?โ€

โ€œHow would I?โ€ Sheโ€™d seen nothing about it on social media, but then, Quinn had never been on social media, and sheโ€™d never been able to find Sarah, eitherโ€”not that sheโ€™d checked recently because she hadnโ€™t. โ€œI havenโ€™t seen him since he was working as a lifeguard at the beach after his first year of college and he had to swim out and save me from drowning.โ€ She didnโ€™t add that sheโ€™d faked the whole episode just to get his attention. She was mortified about that now and cringed at how obvious it mustโ€™ve been to him.

โ€œIโ€™m surprised the gossip didnโ€™t reach you all the way down in Tampa,โ€ Laurie said. โ€œFor a while, it was about the only thing anyone around here could talk about.โ€

But who would tell her? Her mother wasnโ€™t much for gossip, which was ironic, considering sheโ€™d lived in Sable Beach for so long. The town where Autumn had been raised took talking about their friends and neighbors to a whole new level.

โ€œWhy would his divorce be such big news?โ€ she asked. Besides being one of the most popular boys in school, Quinn had been handsome, athletic and at the top of his classโ€”undoubtedly one of Sable Beachโ€™s finest. But still. Divorce was so commonplace it was hardly remarkable anymore. And Quinn was thirty-nine. Heโ€™d been gone from this placeโ€”except for when he visited his folksโ€”for twenty-one years. How could what was going on in his life be such a hot topic?

Laurie tilted her head toward Taylor and Caden in such a way that Autumn understood she was hesitant to speak in front of them. โ€œThere were someโ€ฆextenuating circumstances. Have your mother tell you about it later.โ€

โ€œIย want to hear,โ€ Caden protested.

โ€œWhy? We donโ€™t even know him.โ€ Taylor jumped in before Autumn could respond, then Caden snapped at her to shut up and they started arguing again.

โ€œDonโ€™t make Mimi regret inviting us.โ€ Autumn rolled her eyes to show how weary she was of this behavior.

โ€œShould we go over and get you settled in?โ€ Mary asked. โ€œLaurie offered to close the store tonight, so Iโ€™m free to start dinner while you unpack.โ€

โ€œSure,โ€ Autumn said. Once Caden and Taylor got to the beach, maybe theyโ€™d mellow out and fall into the same companionable rhythm they usually achieved when they came to Sable Beach.

Her motherโ€™s house seemed the same, except that its shingle siding was now white instead of green. It had needed a fresh coat of paint, and the white looked clean and crisp. But as much as she loved the update, Autumn was relieved to find that nothing else had changed. Visiting Mary was like going back in time. Not many people could do that twenty years after theyโ€™d left home.

Because it was such a small cottage, Caden had to sleep on the couch, Taylor took Autumnโ€™s old room next to Maryโ€™s, and the three of them shared the only bathroom, which was off the hallway. Autumn slept above the detached garage, where she had her own bed and bath, thanks to Nick. Because heโ€™d typically had to work when she brought the kids, heโ€™d never spent more than a few days at a time in Sable Beach. That had caused more than a few arguments over the years, so sheโ€™d readily agreed when heโ€™d insisted they have their own space for when he did come. Sheโ€™d thought it might mean heโ€™d accompany them more often, or stay a little longer when he did. It made no difference in the end, but he was the one whoโ€™d hired an architect to create the plans to finish off the top of the garage, even though it had been Autumn whoโ€™d picked out the finishes and colors.

A wave of melancholy washed over her as she left the kids with her mother to get settled in at the main house, let herself into the garage and climbed the narrow stairs at the back to the apartment, where sheโ€™d be living for the next few months, by herself. As often as sheโ€™d been here over the years, it felt strange to know that Nick would not be visiting. At times, she was still so lost without him.

โ€œWhere are you?โ€ she whispered as she walked around, touching the things heโ€™d touched. Sheโ€™d come for Christmas without him, but she and Taylor had shared her old room in the house. They could do that for a week or so but not for three monthsโ€”not without wanting to turn around and head straight home.

She stopped in front of the dresser, where her mother had put a picture of her family. Sheโ€™d known her husband was getting involved in something secretive, that a friend who was with the FBI had recruited him for his knowledge of Ukraine. Because his parents had emigrated from there, heโ€™d known the language, was familiar with the customs and still had a few relatives in the country. That made him useful in what had become a very troubled region.

Although he couldnโ€™t tell her exactly what he was doing for the government, she guessed he was working in counterterrorism, probably trying to infiltrate various radical groups. Sheโ€™d read that the FBI sometimes used civilians who were particularly adept with computers, or had some specific knowledge or ability, to assist them.

Maybe heโ€™d become a full-fledged spy, and whoever was on the other side had discovered his activities. The FBI claimed they hadnโ€™t sent him to Ukraine to begin with, but sheโ€™d discovered that heโ€™d flown into Kyiv before disappearing and had no idea why heโ€™d go there if not at their request. If he wanted to reacquaint himself with his uncle and cousins, he wouldโ€™ve told her. Besides, the family he had there claimed they hadnโ€™t heard from him. Sheโ€™d traveled halfway across the world to speak to them face-to-faceโ€”not that the long, tiring trip had accomplished anything.

She lifted her suitcase onto the bed and was unpacking her clothes when her mother came up. โ€œThe kids would like to go to the beach before we have dinner, but I told them Iโ€™d rather they not go alone.โ€

โ€œMom, theyโ€™re sixteen and seventeen,โ€ she said. โ€œKids that age go to the beach by themselves all the time.โ€

โ€œStill. I donโ€™t mind walking down with them.โ€

That was her motherโ€™s polite way of saying she was afraid they wouldnโ€™t be safe and felt the need to watch over them. Mary had always been overprotective. But Autumn managed not to say anything. What would it hurt for their Mimi to walk down to the water with them? There was no need to transfer the suffocation sheโ€™d felt to her children, especially because theyโ€™d had to put up with so much less of it. โ€œOkay.โ€

โ€œWould you like us to wait for you?โ€

โ€œNo, Iโ€™ll find you in a few minutes.โ€

With a nod, her mother turned to leave but paused before descending the stairs. โ€œIt canโ€™t be easy for you to stay out here, knowing that Nick wonโ€™t be coming. Would you rather we make other arrangements, like we did at Christmas? Have you stay in the house with us?โ€

Unless Nick suddenly showed up, sheโ€™d have to brave it at some point, wouldnโ€™t she? It might as well be now. โ€œNo. Thereโ€™s not enough room. Taylor and I both need our space.โ€

โ€œIf youโ€™re sure.โ€

โ€œMom?โ€

She looked up. โ€œYes?โ€

โ€œBefore you go, tell me what Laurie was referring to at the bookshop.โ€

โ€œAboutโ€ฆโ€

โ€œQuinn and Sarah,โ€ she said.

โ€œOh. No one really knows exactly what happened,โ€ her mother said.

โ€œThere mustโ€™ve been a story circulating.โ€ And she was eager to focus on something besides her own troubles for a change. She could see Nickโ€™s rain boots in the corner of the room and knew there would probably come a timeโ€”in the not-too-distant futureโ€”when she would have to make the difficult decision about what to do with them.

She couldnโ€™t even imagine that. But she had a whole houseful of his belongings in Tampa, and if he didnโ€™t come back, sheโ€™d have to decide what to do with all of it. Should she box it up and put it in storage? Stubbornly continue to wait? And if so, for how long?

Her mother seemed as reluctant as ever to repeat gossip, but she mustโ€™ve understood that whatโ€™d happened to Quinn might create a good distraction, because she finally relented. โ€œSarah claims he was having an affair, which caused her to fly into a jealous rage and stab him.โ€

This was not what Autumn had expected. โ€œDid you sayย stabย him?โ€

Her mother frowned. โ€œIโ€™m afraid so.โ€

โ€œButโ€ฆhe must be okay. Laurie said he was here, helping his father run the restaurant.โ€

โ€œShe didnโ€™t hit anything vital, thank goodness. But I heard he spent a few days in the hospital, so his wounds werenโ€™t superficial, either.โ€

Autumn whistled as she imagined how bad their marriage mustโ€™ve been for something like that to happen. โ€œI thought theyโ€™d be happy together. They dated for so long before they got married. Itโ€™s not as if they didnโ€™t know each other well.โ€ She sank onto the bed next to her suitcase. โ€œDid he admit to cheating?โ€

โ€œNot that I know of.โ€

โ€œBut you think he didโ€”cheat, I mean.โ€

โ€œI wouldnโ€™t be surprised.ย Somethingย had to have made her react so violently.โ€

Mary never gave the benefit of the doubt to a man. Autumn had noticed this before and assumed her father was to blame. Although Mary refused to talk about the pastโ€”went rigid as soon as Autumn mentioned her fatherโ€”there were times, more of them as she got older, when she found herself wondering who he was and what he was like. Before Nick went missing, sheโ€™d told her mother that she was tempted to try to look him up, and Mary had been so appalledโ€”that Autumn would have any interest in him when he was such a โ€œbad personโ€โ€”that sheโ€™d dropped the idea.

It was something she thought she might like to revisit, though. Times had changed. Nowadays, a simple DNA test could possibly tell her a great deal. And there were moments when she felt she should be allowed to fill in those blanks.

But she hated to proceed without her motherโ€™s blessing. She owed Mary a degree of loyalty for being the parent whoโ€™d stuck with her.

Finished unpacking, she put her empty suitcase in the closet while trying to ignore Nickโ€™s snorkel gear, which was also in there, changed into her bathing suit and cover-up, slipped on her flip-flops and grabbed her beach bag. She was on her way down the stairs when she heard her phone buzz with an incoming call.

Assuming it would be her mother or one of her children, wondering what was taking her so long, she dug it out of her bag so that she could answer. But according to Caller ID, the person attempting to reach her wasnโ€™t a member of the family. It was Lyaksandro Olynyk, the Ukrainian private investigator sheโ€™d hired to look for Nick.

It was seven hours later in that part of the world. Why would he be calling her in the middle of the night?

Excerpted from The Bookstore on the Beach by Brenda Novak, Copyright ยฉ 2021 by Brenda Novak, Inc. Published by MIRA Books.

*****

Author Info:

Brenda Novak, a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author, has penned over sixty novels. She is a five-time nominee for the RITA Award and has won the National Reader’s Choice, the Bookseller’s Best, the Bookbuyer’s Best, and many other awards. She also runs Brenda Novak for the Cure, a charity to raise money for diabetes research (her youngest son has this disease). To date, sheโ€™s raised $2.5 million. For more about Brenda, please visit http://www.brendanovak.com.

TWITTER: @Brenda_Novak

FB: @BrendaNovakAuthor

Insta: @authorbrendanovakย 

Goodreads

*****

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Book Review – Right Where We Belong

06 Tuesday Feb 2018

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Book Review, Brenda Novak, Right Where We Belong, Silver Springs series

Right Where We Belong

Silver Springs #4

by Brenda Novak

New York Times bestselling author Brenda Novak returns to Silver Springs with a moving story about rebuilding your life when you’ve got nothing left to lose

Savanna Gray needs a do-over. Her “perfect” life unraveled when, to her absolute shock, her husband was arrested for attacking three women. With her divorce settled, she takes her two children home to Silver Springs to seek refuge between the walls of the farmhouse where she was born. It needs a little TLC, but she’s eager to take control of something.

Gavin Turner understands the struggle of starting over. Abandoned at a gas station when he was five, it wasn’t until he landed at New Horizons Boys Ranch as a teen that he finally found some peace. He steps up when Savanna needs help fixing thingsโ€”even when those things go beyond the farmhouse.

Despite an escalating attraction to Gavin, Savanna resolves to keep her distance. She trusted her ex, who had a similarly tragic background, and is unwilling to repeat her past mistakes. But it’s hard to resist a man whose heart is as capable as his hands.

Savannahโ€™s life is horrible in the aftermath of her husbandโ€™s arrest.ย  She doesnโ€™t feel like she can even leave her house because of the way sheโ€™s viewed by her neighbors โ€“ even though she didnโ€™t even know that her husband was doing horrible things sheโ€™s been painted by his actions anyway.ย  So she decides to move โ€ฆ but she canโ€™t leave her life completely behind.ย  She has to deal with contact from both her husband and his mother trying to get her to help him.ย  And the cops are convinced that she can help them.ย  Itโ€™s stressful and intense and gets even more so when new information comes to light.ย  Throw in an undeniable attraction to her neighbor and thereโ€™s a lot on her plate.

Gavin has complications of his own (which I wonโ€™t get into because itโ€™s kind of a spoiler) but it is made even more difficult by the growing attraction to his neighbor.ย  He does what he can to help support her as she deals with her own troubles, not just with her family but with the falling down farmhouse sheโ€™s inherited.ย  Time spent together might not make things easier but it definitely shows both of them that their feelings arenโ€™t going to go away.

I saw in another review where someone mentioned that it seemed like the main romance suffered a bit with the complications of other relationships for the two main characters and I kinda have to agree.ย  While the story is very well written (I wouldnโ€™t expect less from Novak) and the suspense element with Savannaโ€™s husband is definitely gripping, there wasnโ€™t as much time spent with the two main characters together as I expected.ย  ย There is a HEA (as youโ€™d expect), detailed characters, and a page-turner of a story โ€ฆ I just have a little trouble categorizing it as a true romance (it’s more of a woman’s fiction piece) so keep that in mind when you make your reading choices ๐Ÿ™‚

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Book Review – Until You Loved Me

28 Tuesday Nov 2017

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Book Review, Brenda Novak, Silver Springs series, Until You Loved Me

Until You Loved Me

Silver Springs series

by Brenda Novak

New York Times bestselling author Brenda Novak returns to Silver Springs

Sometimes starting over means finding everything you’ve been missingโ€ฆ

After catching her fiancรฉ cheatingโ€”with another manโ€”usually straitlaced, workaholic scientist Ellie Fisher liberates her wild side just long enough to indulge in a passionate one-night stand with a tall, dark stranger she meets at a trendy Miami bar. Embarrassed by her recklessness, she ducks out the following morning without learning the guy’s full name, something that shouldn’t have been a problemโ€ฆuntil a pregnancy test turns positive.

Being a professional football player, Hudson King has always been cautious around women. But this one had been differentโ€”so disinterested in his celebrity, so convincingly into him. When Ellie tracks him down, claiming she’s carrying his baby, he’s stunned. And more than a little betrayed.

But after growing up as an orphan, he’ll do anything to stay involved in his child’s life, so he urges Ellie to move to Silver Springs, where they can co-parent. Hudson has a lot of love to give, certainly enough for his child, and when their initial spark reignites, perhaps for Ellie, tooโ€ฆ

In an interesting twist for a romance, a good portion of the early part of the story has the two on their own.ย  But in a weird way it kinda works because as a reader we get a better understanding of our lead characters.ย  For the romance though it kinda was bad because that meant that the two leads didnโ€™t get to know each other during that time.ย  Itโ€™s realistic for how the story flows but does make the love story part a little harder to get to.ย  Being as skilled as she is, though, Novak does make it work.ย  Once they start spending time together, Ellie and Hudson somehow manage to get past their insecurities and learn to be brave enough to go after what they want.ย  It just takes a while โ€ฆ but what else do you expect in a romance ๐Ÿ™‚

I really enjoyed Ellie โ€“ sheโ€™s super smart but her confidence has taken a bit of a hit because of her cheating, no-good ex.ย  A night with Hudson definitely goes a long way in getting her mojo back … until she finds herself pregnant and no way to contact the father.ย  Iโ€™m sure finding out that heโ€™s a famous NFL player wasnโ€™t easy but she handles it well (and I have to say sheโ€™s a lot more forgiving and understanding than I would have been.)

Hudsonโ€™s past definitely makes finding out he has a baby on the way a shock.ย  Heโ€™s always done what he could to limit the chance of an accidental pregnancy because no baby of his would ever feel unwanted.ย  So he does everything he can to make sure that he will be there now โ€ฆ after he pulls a few bonehead moves, of course!ย  While there may have been a few moments when I wanted to smack him, I always understood where he was coming from and the idea of what heโ€™s gone through, and is currently experiencing, after being abandoned as a baby is heartbreaking.

Full of all the feels, realism, and interesting characters that youโ€™d expect from a Novak book, Until You Loved Me is another great addition to the Silver Springs series.

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Book Review – No One But You

21 Friday Jul 2017

Posted by romanticreadsandsuch in Book Review

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Book Review, Brenda Novak, No One But You, Silver Springs series

No One but You

A Silver Springs Novel

by Brenda Novak

New York Times bestselling author Brenda Novak welcomes you to Silver Springs, a picturesque small town in Southern California where even the hardest hearts can learn to love againโ€ฆ

Struggling to make ends meet after a messy divorce, Sadie Harris is at the end of her tether. Her waitressing gig isn’t enough to pay the bills let alone secure primary custody of her son, Jayden, a battle she refuses to lose. Desperate, she accepts a position assisting Dawson Reedโ€”the same Dawson Reed who recently stood trial for the murder of his adoptive parents. Joining him at his isolated farm seems risky, but Sadie is out of options.

Dawson has given small town Silver Springs plenty of reasons to be wary, but he’s innocent of the charges against him. He wants to leave his painful past behind and fix up the family farm so he can finally bring his dependent sister home where she belongs.

As Sadie and Dawson’s professional relationship grows into something undeniably personal, Sadie realizes there’s more to Dawson than the bad boy everyone else seesโ€”he has a good heart, one that might even be worth fighting for.

(While this technically picks up after Finding Our Forever, it really is more of a stand alone story.ย  Dawsonโ€™s story was vaguely brought up in the first book and a few of the characters make another appearance, but No One But You really is self-contained.)

I really enjoyed the bit of mystery and danger that Novak brings into play here.ย  Sheโ€™s also a writer of suspense books so you get that darker feel but it is an underplay to the emotions which are so very important.

Sadieโ€™s got problems with her ex and is trying very hard to find a way to support herself and her son โ€ฆ even if it means working for a man accused of killing his adoptive parents.ย  But once she meets Dawson she starts to think that things may not be as everyone believes.ย  His big heart and strength of character calls to her.

Dawson knows he;s innocent and now that heโ€™s been acquitted by the court he just wants to make a home so he can get his sister back.ย  He needs help and that help turns out to be Sadie.ย  She may look like life has gotten the best of her but sheโ€™s got so much heart and determination that he has to admire her for it.

As these two begin to get to know each other, they slowly become friends and each otherโ€™s champions.ย  But with her wily ex and the townsfolk who arenโ€™t so quick to forget what he supposedly did, it wonโ€™t be easy.ย  As their feelings grow into something more they take on more and more for each other, working to find a way to have a future together.

While there were parts in No One But You that had me holding my breath to find out what happened next, it is the layers of emotion and the people that Novak skillfully develops that keep me coming back for more of her stories.

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Book Review – Finding Our Forever

05 Wednesday Apr 2017

Posted by romanticreadsandsuch in Blog Tour, Book Review, Contest

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Book Review, Brenda Novak, Finding Our Forever, Silver Springs series

I’m always so giddy when I see a new book by Brenda Novak … ย ๐Ÿ™‚

*****

Finding Our Forever

Silver Springs, Book 1

by Brenda Novak

Blurb:

New York Times bestselling author Brenda Novak welcomes readers to the town of Silver Springs, where surprises wait around every corner!

The search for her birth mother brought Cora Kelly to the New Horizons Boys Ranch. Getting a job there was easy enough, but confiding in Aiyana, the ranchโ€™s owner, that sheโ€™s really her daughter? Coraโ€™s not sure she can do that, not unless sheโ€™s confident the news will be welcomed. And once she gets to know Elijah Turnerโ€”Aiyanaโ€™s adopted son and ranch managerโ€”that decision becomes even more difficult.

Although Elijah canโ€™t deny his deep attraction to Cora, heโ€™s always struggled with trust. Anyone with his past would, and thereโ€™s something about the ranchโ€™s newest employee that isnโ€™t exactly as it seems. But if the feelings she awakes in his guarded heart are any indication, she might be just what heโ€™s long been waiting for.

Goodreads |ย Amazon | Books-A-Million | Barnes & Noble

*****

Review:

Not having been adopted (or even been close to anyone that I knew was adopted) it is hard to imagine what kind of questions Cora has about herself. ย To finally be able to put that restlessness behind her is a temptation she can’t pass up. ย Eli comes from kinda the opposite point – he knows where he came from, it just isn’t a happy place. ย Their pasts have left both of them with some baggage that they have to figure out how to handle. ย Baggage that is only complicated when they start to fall for each other, thanks to their ties to Aiyana.

This is not the first of Novak’s books I’ve read … and it DEFINITELY won’t be the last! ย I love how she somehow makes Finding Our Foreverย real and pretty drama-free, but still engrossing. ย There is so much growth and discovery for both Cora and Elijah and yet when everything comes to a head they don’t let things overwhelm them. ย It would have been so easy for Novak to have them weighted down with hurt feelings and damaged pride, but instead they handle things with grace and sensitivity. ย There are so many possible options for where to go with future books and, as a fan of damaged heroes, I’m looking forward to all the possibilities!

*****

Author Info:

New York Times and USA Today Bestselling Author Brenda Novakย has penned over 45 novels. A two-time Rita nominee, sheโ€™sย won The National Readerโ€™s Choice, The Booksellerโ€™s Best, The Bookbuyerโ€™s Bestย and many other awards. Sheย runs an annual online auction for diabetes research every May at http://www.brendanovak.com. To date, sheโ€™s raised over $2 million. Brenda considers herself lucky to be a mother of five and married to the love of her life.

Connect with Brenda –ย Website | Facebook | Twitter

*****

Giveaway:

http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/82ae250c58/

*****

Click on the banner below to check out the rest of the tour

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Book Review – Discovering You

01 Wednesday Jun 2016

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Book Review, Brenda Novak, Discovering You, Whiskey Creek series

cover84031-mediumDiscovering You

A Whiskey Creek Novel

by Brenda Novak

Can she ever trust another “bad boy”?

India Sommers once had the perfect familyโ€”until an ex-boyfriend broke in and shot her husband. Not only did that cost her the man she loved, a respected heart surgeon and the father of her child, but she also feels responsible. Charlie died because of the people she hung out with before she had the strength to change her life.

Just after moving to Whiskey Creek with her little girl, Cassia, to start over, she’s learned that her ex-boyfriend’s trial ended in a hung jury. He’s getting out of jail; he could try to find her again. And that’s not all that scares her. She’s extremely attracted to her next-door neighbor, but Rod Amos is the handsome “bad boy” type that’s given her so much trouble in the past. If she got involved with him, her in-laws would sue for custody of Cassia.

India has to keep her distance from Rodโ€”but the more she gets to know him, the more difficult that becomes.

Iโ€™m going to state up front that I love this series.ย  Unfortunately I donโ€™t remember enough about the remaining (single) Amos brothers to have a preconceived impression of Rod.ย  But here heโ€™s just about perfect – maybe a little too perfect ๐Ÿ™‚ย  We know that the Amos family hasnโ€™t had the easiest time but theyโ€™ve stuck together and created a good life for themselves.ย  Theyโ€™re a little rough but they are truly good men.ย  Rodโ€™s honest, hard-working and not willing to settle for anything less than honest with India.

I donโ€™t know that anyone can really imagine what India has gone through, and is still going thru, but it definitely complicates things for her.ย  And meeting someone as sexy and good as Rod seems to be only adds to that.ย  She knows that she shouldnโ€™t get involved but heโ€™s awfully hard to resist.

Iย doย think that the whole thing happens a little fast.ย  Not only the time from their meeting to them getting together but how long it has been since Indiaโ€™s husband died.ย  I know itโ€™s the only way it works with the timeline of her troubles with her ex, but it just seems a little soon.ย  I know their somewhat concerned with that as well butt over all as an issue I think it is a minor one.

The rest of the story โ€“ from the deepening of their relationship to the troubles with her ex โ€“ is addictive and so well written that I had trouble putting it down.ย  We also get a little look at the next story in the series and I have to say Iโ€™m a little concerned where it is going but I trust Novak to handle it with care, just like all of the others ๐Ÿ™‚

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Book Review – A Winter Wedding

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

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A Winter Wedding, Book Review, Brenda Novak, Whiskey Creek series

cover71271-mediumA Winter Wedding

Whiskey Creek series

by Brenda Novak

One Christmas can change your lifeโ€ฆ

Kyle Houseman believes he’ll never find anyone he could love as much as Olivia Arnold, who’s now married to his stepbrother. Not only did he lose her, he’s been through one divorce and has no desire to go through another. He’s determined to be extra careful about the next woman he gets involved withโ€”which is why he fights his attraction to the beautiful stranger who rents his farmhouse for the Christmas holiday.

Lourdes Bennett is a country music artist. She’s only planning to stay in Whiskey Creek long enough to write the songs for her next albumโ€”the album that’s going to put her back on top. Her dreams don’t include settling in a town even smaller than the one she escaped. But as she comes to know Kyle, she begins to wonder if she’d be making a terrible mistake to leave him behindโ€ฆ

I have been looking for Kyle to finally get his happy ending.ย  When we met him in When We Touchย I didnโ€™t like him much, although I guess weย werenโ€™t really supposed to.ย  At that point, heโ€™d slept with that heroineโ€™s sister and gotten her pregnant, which ruined not only his relationship with the heroine but cemented a big rift between the sisters.ย  So he wasnโ€™t exactly the good guy in that story ๐Ÿ™‚ ย But as we got to know this group of friends over the next few books, we also got a better understanding of Kyle and how much that mistake impacted his life.ย  Now it is finally his chance for a HEA.

I love how fluid this story is โ€“ nothing about it is big or dramatic or that surprising.ย  He meets Lourdes and the two spend time together, realize they are attracted to one another but that their lives donโ€™t exactly mesh.ย  We get to know them as they get to know each other and weโ€™re right there with them as they fall in love.ย  Itโ€™s sweet and true to life (as much as it can be with a country music star ๐Ÿ™‚ ).ย  We do get some trouble with Kyleโ€™s ex, which spices things up but also helps to wrap up that relationship and leave him clear for a future with someone else.

Kyle and Lourdes just have to figure out if theirโ€™s is that future and if so how to make it work for both of them.

 

(Buy on Amazon)

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