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Best Man Next Door, Say You'll Stay, Stefanie London, Suddenly This Summer, Susan Mallery, Synithia Williams, The Time for Keeps

Suddenly This Summer
by Susan Mallery, Synithia Williams, Stefanie London
ISBN: 9781335004871
Publication Date: August 22, 2023
Publisher: Canary Street Press
Blurb:
Nothing is sweeter than the first kiss of summer…
SAY YOU’LL STAY by Susan Mallery. Shaye Harper has sworn off men for good. But when she meets army vet Lawson Easley during a pit stop on the road to a fresh start, sheโs drawn in by the quirky townโand the handsome stranger she canโt resist. Lawson knows thereโs no place better than Wishing Tree. Too bad the woman he’s certain is โthe oneโ is just passing throughโฆunless he can convince her to give him and his hometown a chance at forever.
THE TIME FOR KEEPS by Synithia Williams. Home to care for her ailing father, Michaela Spears is on a mission: reconcile with the one man she canโt forget. She broke his heart years ago, so when Khalil appears on her parentsโ doorstep in his scrubs, she knows itโs her last chance. Khalil Davenport shouldnโt have taken the job as her dadโs home nurse, but he couldn’t resist her. Their timing was never right, but now can he trust that sheโs home to stay?
BEST MAN NEXT DOOR by Stefanie London.ย For Sage Nilsen, coming back to her small Massachusetts hometown for a family wedding feels like high school all over again. Except Jamie Hackett has gone from charming boy next door to handsome best man. And sparks are suddenly flying between the popular guy and the so-called outcast. As the wedding gets closer, Sage finds herself on the edge of something unexpectedโa second chance in the town she left behindโฆwith the guy sheโs never forgotten.
*****
Excerpt:
From Best Man Next Door by Stefanie London
CHAPTER ONE
Before today, Jamie Hackett had thought heโd already faced death.
Like the time he dove off a cliff on a dare, plunging into the ocean with the speed of a bullet. Or
the time heโd come face-to-face with a territorial goose whoโd gone apeshit at him for getting too
close to her goslings. Or when his car skidded across a patch of black ice in the middle of winter
and heโd narrowly missed crash- ing into a big oak tree.
Heโd been cool as a cucumber, every single time.
But it turned out he hadnโt really faced death. Now that heโd confronted it for real, he understood
what it felt like.
Jamie glanced around the sterile white hospital hall- way, feeling weirdly disconnected from it
all. If some- one had told him he was floating in the air, watching everything happen from above,
he would have believed it. Giving himself a shake, he reached one hand to his opposite arm and
pinched himself. Hard. He winced from the pain.
Still alive.
But the quicker he was out of here the better.
His mom stood at the administration desk, her shoulders hunched. Exhaustion seeped into her posture and made her look even smaller than usual. When she turned to face him, he noticed her blouse was buttoned wrong and her curly ginger hair was sticking out in all directions like it always did when she didnโt have time to style it.
โReady to go, hon?โ She tried to smile, but her eyes were watery and the dark shadows circling underneath made her look hollowed out.
You did that to her.
He nodded.
โYour dad has gone to get the car so he can meet us out front.โ She slipped her arm into his and held him close, her fingernails biting into his skin, as if she was worried heโd float away like a discarded balloon if she didnโt hold on tight enough. โNo need to rushโweโll walk slow.โ
โYou didnโt have to wait around. I could have gotten a cab,โ he said quietly. He kept his gaze averted from the goings-on around him, not wanting to see the people being wheeled about and the elderly folk shuffling along, walking their fluid bags like strange, lifeless pets.
It freaked him out.
He was thirty-two for crying out loud. Thirty-two with his whole life ahead of him. With decades ahead of him.
โJamie Hackett, if you think I would let my child come home from hospital in a cab then I donโt even knowโฆโ Her voice broke as she shook her head, still clutching him tightly. He could hear the tears she was holding back, companions of the ones sheโd been shedding ever since sheโd arrived at the hospital yesterday. โOf course we were going to take you home.โ
There was no point arguing. Patty Hackett was an overprotective mama bear at the best of times, let alone when one of her own was hurt. Although really, aside from a few stitches in the back of his head and some chest pain that felt like a couple of boulders had been propped there, Jamie was walking away from this situation a lot better than he could have.
A lot better than what would have been if his best friend hadnโt saved him.
When they made it outside, Jamie sucked in as much air as his lungs would allow, and even though doing so burned, he had to clear the hospital smells from his nostrils. It was warm and sunny out, with a clear blue sky and not a cloud to be seen. The perfect early summer day.
Perfect like it had been the previous evening when heโd decided to get a good sweaty workout in. Perfect like when heโd jogged across the gym floor, warm sunshine streaming in through the windows and the high-quality shock-absorbent flooring cushioning his feet. Perfect like when his fists had sailed at the heavy punching bag, the repetitive pounding motion better than any form of therapy heโd found to date.
Perfectโฆuntil heโd almost died.
Jamie shook the dark thoughts from his head as his father pulled the family SUV up in front of the hospitalโs pick-up area. His mom rushed forward to open the passenger side door for him.
โI can open the door myself, okay?โ he said. He hated seeing her worry like this. Hated knowing that he caused it. โYou donโt need to wait on me.โ
โJust get in the car, James,โ she sighed and shot him a look that told him there was no point arguing. It was easier to do what he was told. And if she was calling him by his full name, it meant she was a hair away from clipping his ear.
So he climbed into the car without another word.
โSon.โ His father looked over to him with a crinkled brow. โLet your mother fuss. She needs it.โ
Jamie nodded. โYouโre right.โ
His father turned to face the road as the back door opened and Patty climbed in, scrambling to hoist her small frame up into the giant SUV like she always did. The ride home was filled with rapid-fire questions from the back seat.
Why didnโt you tell us you were stressed out?
Should you be talking to a professional about your problems?
Is it happening again?
The last one made a weird acidic taste burn in the back of his throat. No matter how many years he put between himself and The Great Breakdown of his early twenties, he was frequently reminded that nobody would ever forget it happened.
Because when you were a world-class athlete, your failures didnโt only become gossipโthey became lore.
โThe doctor said you need to keep your stress levels down and take a break from work,โ his mother relayed. โThis could happen again. She said that panic attacks can be triggered by working too much and not getting enough rest, andโโ
โI know, Mom. I was there.โ
โWe care about you, Jamie.โ His fatherโs voice was gruff. โThis isnโt about blame or trying to make you feel bad. You know that, right?โ
Despite everything that had happened in the past, his parents had never once made him feel like he was to blame for what had happenedโฆeven if he himself had felt like a giant failure.
โYeah,โ he said. โI know.โ
โAnd the doctor said we need to keep an eye on you for the next twenty-four hours to make sure there are no complications,โ Patty continued. The car rolled smoothly along the highway, other vehicles passing them at a rapid pace thanks to his dadโs carefulโread: slowโdriving. โI got your sister to set up the spare bedroom at our place. And donโt bother protesting about going home by yourself because I wonโt have it.โ
Jamie glanced at his father, who simply shrugged as if to say, sheโs the boss. Too right. Nobody was under any illusions about who was head of their household, that was for damn sure.
โWouldnโt dream of it, Mom. But what aboutโโ
โFlash is staying at Clayโs house,โ she said without letting him finish. โHe said we could leave him there until you were ready to go home.โ
Whenever Jamie wasnโt feeling himself, the first thing he wanted to do was to hang out with his dog. They really were manโs best friend. No doubt Jamieโs business partner, Clay Harris, would spoil him rotten with treats and belly scratches, so it wasnโt like heโd be sad having a sleepover.
Jamie watched the scenery roll along outside the window. Soon they were approaching Reflection Bay, the town where heโd spent most of his lifeโa town that wasnโt even big enough for its own hospital.
Heโd driven along this road so many times heโd lost count, watching the silvery blue of the ocean flicker between patches of green and rugged cliff faces, the tourist-favorite red-and-white lighthouse rising up in the distance. It was the same as it had always been and yetโฆit felt different now.
Everything felt different.
Forty-eight hours after returning home from the hospital, Jamie was โdischargedโ from the Hackett Family Hospital. But not without needing to pass a rigorous interrogation from his mother. If someone had overheard the conversation, they might mistake Patty Hackett for an actual doctor rather than the elementary school art teacher she was.
But now that Jamie could taste the sweet air of freedom, he was happier than ever to be alive. Especially since he had been reunited with his canine best friend.
โIsnโt it glorious? The sun is shining. The birds are singing.โ Jamie glanced down at his dog, Flash, who ambled with the kind of gait that could only be described as โwalking under duress.โ โOh, come on, bud. Itโs not that bad.โ
The chunky fawn-and-white bulldog looked up at him with imploring eyes as if to say, please make it stop. Flash, named in the most ironic fashion, hated working out as much as Jamie loved it. In fact, it was somewhat of a local joke that the two fittest guys in town had adopted the laziest dog ever as the mascot for their gym.
But Jamie loved Flash with everything he had. The dog might not be able to move faster than a drunk snail, but he had a heart of gold. Flash was always happy to see Jamie, never judged him for working too long or for stressing out too much about his business, and loved nothing more than just hanging out. No expectations, no bullshit.
That was love.
The pair ambled along the street. His business, Reflection Fitness, sat right at the end of the main strip, on a corner. It never failed to make pride surge through Jamieโs veins to see what he and Clay had built together. Their goal had been to create a gym that catered to all the people in their small town, leaving no one to feel like they didnโt belong. Reflection Fitness had clients who were training for big goals like marathons and fitness competitions, as well as clients like Jamieโs grandpaโwho was combating osteoarthritis with regular, low-intensity workoutsโand Jamieโs favorite personal training clientโa bubbly woman in her forties whoโd decided to try weight lifting after years of thinking cardio was the only option for women. They had a trainer on staff who specialized in pre- and post-natal fitness and another who ran classes for seniors aimed at improving joint mobility. They had built the gym to be accessible for clients with mobility needs. It was important to both Jamie and Clay that everyone who came to the gym felt welcomed and catered to.
โLetโs get you inside where thereโs some air-conditioning, huh?โ Jamie looked down at Flash, who was taking each plodding step with great effort. To be fair to the dog, it was unseasonably hot for so early in the summer. โWeโre almost there.โ
Jamie turned the corner to access the gym from the back door, which led directly into the office he and Clay shared. He tried not to take Flash through the front if he could help it, in case anyone working out had asthma or allergies. But when Jamie got to the door and tried to turn the handle, he found it locked.
โWeird,โ he muttered.
The back was usually open if Clay was working, which he should be, given the hour. But perhaps heโd stepped out.
Jamie tried unlocking it. Onlyโฆthe key wouldnโt fit.
โWhat the heck?โ He tried again. No dice.
He stared at the key, wondering if the knock heโd taken to the back of his head had done more damage than heโd realized. But no, it was definitely the right key.
Befuddled, Jamie walked Flash around to the front of the gym, where a sleek set of glass doors opened to a small reception area. The space was light and welcoming, with a big potted plant and a white couch in one corner. An old black-and-white photo hung on the wall, showing Clay and Jamie in their high school days, arms around each otherโa tennis racket in Jamieโs hand and a basketball in Clayโs.
โJamie!โ The receptionist, Sara, brightened when she saw him. She wore a blue Reflection Fitness uniform polo shirt and her long, dark brown hair hung over her shoulder in twin braids. โHow are you feeling?โ
โNever better,โ he replied breezily. โAnd thank you for sending those flowers to Momโs place. That wasnโt necessary.โ
โEveryone was thinking about you.โ Her brow wrinkled. โWe were all so worried when Clay told us what happened!โ
Ugh, Clay. The guy had a big mouth.
โI told him to keep it quiet,โ Jamie muttered. โIn any case, I appreciate the gesture. Mom commandeered the flowers right away for her living room.โ
Sara laughed. โThatโs why I picked tulips. I had a feeling she would end up with them.โ
Mama Hackett was a favorite among the staff since she often made oatmeal cookies, energy balls and other healthy treats for everyone who worked at Reflection Fitness.
โIs Clay in?โ Jamie asked. โI tried the back door, but I think somethingโs wrong with my key.โ
โUhโฆโ Saraโs expression turned strange, and she reached for the phone on the desk. โLet me call him through.โ
โItโs okay, Iโll head in.โ Jamie had his swipe pass on hand, like always, and he tapped it against the electronic reader which activated the gate into the gym.
The screen flashed red and made an angry beep sound.
First his key didnโt fit the lock and now his pass wasnโt working. What theโ
โJamie.โ
He looked up and saw Clay striding through the gym toward the foyer, a no-nonsense look on his face. At six foot five with shoulders that could bridge two cities, Clay had the perfect build for the sport heโd loved as a childโbasketball. He had dark brown skin, warm eyes and close-cropped curly black hair. Usually, Clay would be flashing his signature charming smileโa smile that had won over just about every cheerleader the guy had ever encountered in his high school and college days. A smile that, now, was conspicuously absent.
โYou locked me out.โ Jamie shook his head in disbelief. โYou changed the locks on the office without telling me?โ
โOutside, now.โ Clay pointed to the front doors as he strode through the gate. โWeโre not doing this in front of the clients.โ
Sara dropped her head and pretended to bury herself in work, ignoring Jamieโs gaze pleading for support.
He let out an irritated huff. โFine.โ
The two men walked back outside and Jamie felt a pang of guilt as Flash made a noise of protest about returning to the hot summer day. The trio rounded the corner away from the front of the gym so they could have it out.
โThis is for your own good, Jamie.โ Clay held up his hands, signaling he didnโt want a fight. Despite being strong enough to beat most men in anything physical, Clay was a gentle giant with a big heart.
He was also, however, stubborn as an ox.
โWeโre partners, Clay. You canโt lock me out of my own damn business.โ Jamie gestured with his free hand toward the building next to them. โThatโsโฆthatโs got to be illegal.โ
Clay folded his arms across his chest. โI had a feeling you wouldnโt take this seriously. The doctor said you need to rest and your mom told me to keep an eye on you, because sheโs worried, too.โ
Typical Patty. Jamie made a sound of disbelief. โI rested.โ
โFor two days.โ Clay shook his head. โThatโs not enough.โ
โMan, it was nothing. Youโre overreacting.โ
โI am not overreacting. Do you have any idea what itโs like to walk up on your best friend lying unconscious on the floor? I thought youโd had a heart attack or something. I thought you were dead.โ
He felt terrible for putting Clay through that, but he was already feeling vulnerable about this whole thing. He couldnโt let his friend see how much it had shaken him.
โSo dramatic.โ Jamie rolled his eyes.
โSee, thisโโ Clay circled a finger at his face just like his mom used to when they were naughty kids โโis why I know youโre not listening to what the doctor said. You came right here to go back to doinโ exactly what you were doinโ before.โ
โBuilding our business?โ he replied, biting back his frustration.
โRunning yourself into the ground. Wake up, Jamie.โ Clay shook his head. โYou might not be so lucky next time.โ
โItโs my call to determine whether Iโm ready to come back, not yours.โ
โIt sure is, because I wonโt give you a new key until Iโm sure youโre actually taking this thing seriously.โ
Jamieโs mouth popped open. โYou canโt do that!โ
โSure I can. Itโs my name on the lease, remember?โ
Oh yeah. That. Heโd been meaning to get that bit of paperwork updated for almost three years now, but it was one of those things that kept falling off his to-do list in favor of more impactful items. Besides, heโd always thought Clay would never do him dirty, so it didnโt seem like a big deal.
โItโs our business, no matter what the lease says.โ
โJamie, Iโm doing this because youโre my best friend. I want you to take care of yourself.โ Clay looked genuinely concerned. โCoach always used to say a heart that pumps too fast is no better than one that doesnโt pump at all. Rest is as important as work.โ
Jamie let out a groan. โSitting at a desk isnโt exactly strenuous. I just need to answer some emailsโโ
โAnd then youโll just need to look at some spreadsheets and make some calls and then some new client will come to you with a sob story and youโll squeeze them in even though you said you werenโt going to take on any more PT clients yourself.โ Clay shook his head. โI know your tricks, man. Donโt try to play me.โ
โBut what about the clients I haveโโ
โI split them up between the other trainers. Itโs already done.โ
โYou called everyone already?โ Jamie scrubbed a hand over his face. โI told you I didnโt want anyone to know.โ
โI said you were helping me plan stuff for the wedding. Best man shit.โ Clay grinned and Jamie found his anger withering away. It really was hard to hate the guy when he smiled. โYouโre loyal like that.โ
He let out a strangled noise of frustration. โIโll call the locksmith myself.โ
โThen heโs gonna have to get through me.โ
Jamie considered his options. Anyone who didnโt know Clay might be too intimidated to try changing the locks against his wishes and anyone who did know him would be too charmed to want to try. Fact was, his best friend had him over a barrel.
โWhat am I supposed to do with myself, huh?โ Jamie hated the panic in his voice. Who on earth felt panicked at the prospect of time off?
โI donโt know. Play ping-pong with your dad, go up to the Cape, sleep in. Youโre a big boyโyouโll figure it out.โ
Clayโs hand came down hard on Jamieโs shoulder, earning him a soft grunt. There was no reasoning with the guy, that much was clear.
Maybe Clay and his mom were right and this was serious. Jamie could have died. When heโd woken up in the ambulance, everything had flashed before his eyesโhis whole life. His family. Work. His failed professional tennis career. His business. Long hours at his computer after longer days on the gym floor. Chasing the next thing, expanding the business, more clients, more money. Never satisfied. Always restless.
Was that all his life was about?
Heโd always been hyper competitive, driven, and ambitious. But what if he had died the other day? What would he have left behind?
Jamie realized then that Clay was looking at him, as if waiting for him to speak. โNo sweat. You want me to chill for a bit, fine. I can do that. Youโll see this isnโt a big deal.โ
But even as he brushed off the severity of the incident, he knew the earth had shifted beneath his feet. What heโd thought was solid ground was now loose earth and uneven terrain. He needed to find his footing again. He needed to get himself straight. Most of all, he needed to prove to everyone that this was just a one-off. That he could handle pressureโunlike when he was younger.
Because he couldnโt ever go back to being Jamie Canโt-Hackett ever again.
Excerpted from Suddenly This Summer by Susan Mallery, Synithia Williams, Stefanie London.
The Best Man Next Door by Stefanie London
Copyright ยฉ 2023 by Stefanie Little.
Published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.
*****
Author Info:
SUSAN MALLERY:ย Susan Mallery is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of novels about the relationships that define women’s livesโfamily, friendship, romance. Library Journal says, โMallery is the master of blending emotionally believable characters in realistic situations,” and readers seem to agreeโ40 million copies of her books have sold worldwide. Her warm, humorous stories make the world a happier place to live. Susan grew up in California and now lives in Seattle with her husband. She’s passionate about animal welfare, especially that of the ragdoll cat and adorable poodle who think of her as mom. Visit Susan online at www.susanmallery.com.
SYNITHIA WILLIAMS:ย Synithia Williams has loved romance novels since reading her first one at the age of 13. It was only natural that she would one day write her own romance. When she isnโt writing, Synithia works on water quality issues in the Midlands of South Carolina while taking care of her supportive husband and two sons. You can learn more about Synithia by visiting her website, www.synithiawilliams.com.
STEFANIE LONDON:ย Stefanie London is a USA TODAY bestselling author of contemporary romances and romantic comedies. Her books have been called โgenuinely entertaining and memorableโ by Booklist and have won multiple industry awards, including the HOLT Medallion and OKRWA National Readersโ Choice Award. Originally from Australia, Stefanie lives in Toronto with her very own hero and is doing her best to travel the world. She frequently indulges in her passions for good coffee, lipstick, romance novels and anything zombie related.ย Visit Stefanie online at Stefanie-London.com.
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