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EXCERPT + GIVEAWAY: Waiting On You (Blue Heron #3) by Kristan Higgins

Waiting On You (Blue Heron, #3)Author: Kristan Higgins
Series: Blue Heron #3
Publication: March 25, 2014
By: Harlequin HQN
Amazon | Goodreads
4 Stars!

Does being nobody's fool mean that you're nobody's love?

Colleen O'Rourke is in love with love... just not when it comes to herself. Most nights, she can be found behind the bar at the Manningsport, New York, tavern she owns with her twin brother, doling out romantic advice to the lovelorn, mixing martinis and staying more or less happily single. See, ten years ago, Lucas Campbell, her first love, broke her heart... an experience Colleen doesn't want to have again, thanks. Since then, she's been happy with a fling here and there, some elite-level flirting and playing matchmaker to her friends.

But a family emergency has brought Lucas back to town, handsome as ever and still the only man who's ever been able to crack her defenses. Seems like maybe they've got some unfinished business waiting for themā€”but to find out, Colleen has to let her guard down, or risk losing a second chance with the only man she's ever loved.


Thank you Little Bird Publicity and Harlequin for this book. 

What I Loved: Kristan Higgins always has a way of pulling at the heart strings while simultaneously tickling the funny bone and sparking a hot flash. (Is it hot in here or is it just that black-haired Spanish pirate? *fans face*) 

Colleen and Lucas are both strong-willed, stubborn, characters with good intentions and wounded hearts. Colleen spends her time working alongside her twin brother and playing matchmaker to the people of Manningsport. She's a good friend, a good daughter and an even better big sister. But she isn't perfect. 

After Lucas left town and took her broken heart with him, Colleen did what she could to make the hurt a little bit less. She built walls and focused on the here and now instead of the happily ever after. But all her hard work comes tumbling down when Lucas walks into her bar. Colleen's head knows she should avoid him, he isn't here to stay, but try telling her heart that. 

Lucas has spent most of his life trying to do what was best for those around him. He tried to be the best son, brother, nephew and cousin he could. But even that didn't keep him from getting hurt. The only time he ever really put himself first, ever really felt alive, was when he was with Colleen. Their relationship was fast, and intense but certainly built to last, or so he thought. But words were spoken, intentions misunderstood and choices made that left them both heartbroken. 

He has no intention of staying, but the longer Lucas is in Manningsport, and the more time he spends with Colleen, the harder it becomes for either of them to deny that maybe sometimes, you really do get a second chance at your first love.

Fans of this series will be happy to see the appearance of some other beloved residents of Manningsport. *coughs* Levi *coughs*

What Left Me Wanting More: Nothing.

Final Verdict: Another great addition to the Blue Heron Series!

Favorite Quote: "I realize you don't get this close to women, but it's getting pervy. You, me, the Brussel sprouts, Team Menopause watching."

Excerpt
CHAPTER ONEā€œDrinks are on the house!ā€
A cheer went up from the gang, not just because Colleen Oā€™Rourkeā€”the bartender and half owner of the best (and only) bar in townā€”had just offered free booze, but because Brandy Morrison and Ted Standish had just gotten engaged.
Colleen hugged the happy couple once more, then went behind the bar and accepted high fives from her regulars as she pulled beers and mixed martinis, poured wine and slid glasses down the bar. After all, Brandy and Ted were her doing. That madeā€¦hmmā€¦fourteen couples sheā€™d set on the road to matrimony? No, fifteen! Not bad. Not bad at all.
ā€œGood job, Coll,ā€ said Gerard Chartier, accepting his free Cooperā€™s Cave IPA. He sat at the end of the bar, where the fire department was having a ā€œmeeting,ā€ the agenda of which seemed to be Oā€™Rourkeā€™s list of microbrews. She wasnā€™t complaining. They were good for business.
ā€œYour sorry single state hasnā€™t gone unnoticed,ā€ she said, rubbing his bald head. ā€œNot to worry. Youā€™re next.ā€
ā€œIā€™d rather stay single.ā€
ā€œNo, you wouldnā€™t. Trust Auntie Colleen, ever wise and all-knowing.ā€
ā€œColleen!ā€ her brother Connor yelled from the kitchen. ā€œStop harassing the customers!ā€
ā€œIā€™m part of our charm!ā€ she yelled back. ā€œGang, are you feeling harassed?ā€
A satisfying chorus of no answered her. She breezed into the kitchen. ā€œHi, Rafe,ā€ she greeted the backup chef, who was making one of his famous cheesecakes. ā€œSave some of that for me, okay?ā€
ā€œOf course, my truest love,ā€ he said, not looking at her. He was gay. All the good ones were.
ā€œBrother mine,ā€ Colleen said to her twin, ā€œwhat bug is up your ass?ā€
ā€œYou just gave away three hundred dollarsā€™ worth of booze, thatā€™s what,ā€ he said.
ā€œBrandy and Ted got engaged. Beautiful ring, too.ā€
ā€œYour work, Collie?ā€ Rafe asked.
ā€œAs a matter of fact, yes. Theyā€™d been eyeing each other for weeks. I gave a gentle shove, and voila. I expect Iā€™ll be a bridesmaid. Again.ā€
Rafe smiled. ā€œAnd when will you work your superpowers on your own self, lovey?ā€
ā€œOh, never. Iā€™m too smart for all that. I like to use men for purely physicalā€”ā€
ā€œStop! No one wants to hear about your sex life,ā€ Connor said.
ā€œI do,ā€ said Rafe.
She grinned. Tormenting her brother, though they were both thirty-one, was still one of the great joys in life.
ā€œIt seems like such a waste. All that, unclaimed.ā€ Rafe gestured to her torso and face.
ā€œShe got burned when she was young,ā€ Connor told Rafe.
ā€œOh, please. Thatā€™s not why Iā€™m single. Besides, youā€™re single, too. Itā€™s all part of our dysfunctional childhood, Rafe.ā€
ā€œDonā€™t even try,ā€ he said, adding the sour cream layer to the cake. ā€œI was a gay boy born to Jehovahā€™s Witnesses and grew up in East Texas with five older brothers who all played football. It was Friday Night Lights meets The Birdcage meets Swamp People. No one can compete with me in the land of dysfunctional families.ā€
ā€œYou totally win,ā€ Colleen said. ā€œCon and I only had a cheating father andā€”
ā€œIsnā€™t tonight your night off?ā€ Connor interrupted.
ā€œYep. But I came in because I sensed, using our magical twinsy bond, that you missed me.ā€
ā€œYou sensed wrong,ā€ he muttered. ā€œGet out of my kitchen. Your posse just came through the door.ā€
ā€œHe has batlike hearing,ā€ Rafe said.
ā€œI know. Itā€™s creepy. Bye, boys! Donā€™t forget my piece of heaven, Rafe. Connor, come say hi. Everyone loves you, for some reason.ā€
She went back out into the bar and sure enough, there were the girls: Faith Holland, her oldest pal in the world (and a newlywed, and while Colleen couldnā€™t claim that one as her idea, sheā€™d nonetheless helped keep them together); Honor, Faithā€™s older sister (bone-dry martini, three olives), someone Colleen had definitely helped with sweet Tom Barlowā€”their wedding would be in early July; and Prudence, the oldest Holland sister (gin and tonic, now that it was spring), married for decades.
ā€œHowā€™s tricks, Holland girls? Honor, you want your usual? Pru, a G&T? And what about you, Faithie? I have some strawberries Iā€™ve been saving for youā€¦a little vodka, a little mint, splash of lemonā€¦want to try one?ā€
ā€œJust water for me,ā€ Faith said.
ā€œOh, lordy, are you pregnant?ā€ Colleen blurted. Faith and Levi had gotten married in January, and from the way he looked at her, those two got it on like weasels. And you know what they say about weasels.
ā€œI didnā€™t say that.ā€ But she blushed, and Honor smiled.
ā€œWell, I hope you are,ā€ said Pru. ā€œNothing like the blessing of kids, even though I thought I would kill Abby the other day. She asked if she could get her tongue pierced. I said sure, Iā€™d get a hammer and a nail and we could do it right now if she was that dumb, and the conversation devolved from there.ā€
ā€œHi, girls,ā€ Connor said dutifully, having emerged from the kitchen.
ā€œCon, bring Pru and Honor their regulars, and a big glass of ice water for Faith here.ā€
ā€œI thought you wanted me to say hi, not to wait on you,ā€ he said. ā€œFaith, are you pregnant?ā€
ā€œNo! Maybe. Just shush,ā€ Faith said. ā€œIā€™m thirsty, thatā€™s all.ā€
ā€œConnor Cooper would be a great name,ā€ he suggested.
ā€œI think it sounds pretentious,ā€ Colleen said. ā€œColleen Cooper, or Colin for a boyā€¦now weā€™re talking. Con, how about those drinks? And some nachos?ā€
Her brother gave her a dark look but left obediently, and Colleen settled back in her seat. ā€œGuess what you missed? Brandy Morrison and Ted Standish just got engaged! He got down on one knee and everything, and she was crying, and it was beautiful, ladies! Beautiful!ā€
Hannah, Colleenā€™s cousin, brought over their food and drinks, and Prudence launched into a story of her latest adventure in keeping things fresh in the old conjugal bed. Very entertaining. Coll scanned the bar as Pru talked, making sure all was running smoothly.
It occurred to her that spending her night off at work was maybe not a hundred percent healthy. Granted, options were limited in Manningsport, New York, a town of just over seven hundred. She could be home, reading and cuddling with Rufus, her enormous Irish wolfhound mutt, who would love nothing more than to stare into her eyes in adoration for several hours. One couldnā€™t rule out the ego boost that provided.
Or, Colleen thought, she could be out on a date. Rafe had a point.
Itā€™s just that every guy she met seemed to be lacking something. She hadnā€™t felt the tingle in a long, long time.
As the proprietor of the only year-round, alcohol-serving establishment in town, Colleen saw a lot of relationships blossom or end in a fiery crash. When things went right, it was generally because the woman had cleverly manipulated the guy into good dating behavior. Heā€™d call when he said he would. Put some thought into dates. Heā€™d ask questions about her life because she didnā€™t vomit up all her personal history in the first ten minutes.
Far more common, however, was the fiery crash model, when Colleen mixed a sympathy cosmo or poured an extra ounce of Pinot Grigio into a glass for a woman who had no idea what went wrong. Colleen could tell her, of course, and sometimes didā€¦Maybe you shouldnā€™t have talked about your ex for two hours, or Is telling him you were just cleared for fertility treatments a good idea on the first date?
Happily, the now-engaged Brandy had asked Colleen for advice from the start. Should I go out with him again tomorrow? Is it okay to sleep with him yet? How about if I text him right now?
The answers: No, no and no.
ā€œColleen,ā€ said the bride-to-be now, ā€œI just wanted to thank you again for everything.ā€ She bent down and gave Coll a hug. ā€œBridesmaid?ā€
ā€œOf course!ā€ Colleen said. ā€œYou twoā€¦mazel tov! Iā€™m so happy for you!ā€
ā€œThanks, Coll,ā€ Ted said. ā€œYouā€™re the best.ā€
ā€œMy fifteenth couple,ā€ she said to the Holland sisters as the happy couple left for some monkey sex, one presumed.
ā€œYou have a gift,ā€ Faith said, taking a slab of nachos onto her plate.
ā€œAnd yet just last night, there was some poor woman in here, begging the guy she was with not to dump her, and I took her aside and said, ā€˜Honey, if you have to beg, do you really want this loser?ā€™ But of course, she kept crying and begging, and it was agony, I tell you.ā€ She finished her drink, one of the strawberry thingies Faith had passed on. ā€œMaybe I should teach a class. Pru, when Abby starts dating, you send her to me.ā€
ā€œWill do. And thanks, because God knows, sheā€™s not listening to me these days.ā€
ā€œExcuse me,ā€ came a voice, and all three of them looked up.
ā€œHey, Paulie,ā€ Colleen said. ā€œHow are you? Have a seat!ā€
Paulina ā€œPaulieā€ Petrosinsky pulled up a chair, swung it backward and straddled it. Sheā€™d been Faith and Colleenā€™s classmateā€”not quite a friend back in the day, but really nice. She came into Oā€™Rourkeā€™s once in a while, usually after a workout at the gym, where her weightlifting skills were the stuff of legend.
ā€œUmā€¦I overheard you say something about, uh, teaching people? Women?ā€ she asked.
ā€œSlut University,ā€ Pru said, and Faith and Honor snorted.
ā€œVery funny,ā€ Colleen said. ā€œMy reputation is greatly exaggerated.ā€
ā€œAnd whose fault is that?ā€ Faith asked. ā€œYou should stop spreading rumors about yourself.ā€
Colleen smiled. Had she in fact written something flattering about herself on the menā€™s room wall just last week? She had. ā€œIgnore my so-called friends,ā€ she said. ā€œWhatā€™s up?ā€
ā€œUmā€¦can you really help a, um, a person? With, uhā€¦you know. Love and men and stuff?ā€ Paulieā€™s face turned deep red, then purple.
ā€œAre you all right?ā€ Honor asked, frowning a little.
ā€œOh, that. My face. Itā€™s called idiopathic craniofacial erythema. Iā€¦I blush. A lot.ā€
ā€œWish I could hang around,ā€ Prudence said. ā€œWe farm people have to get up early. Good luck with your man, Paulie! See you, girls!ā€
ā€œSo are you interested in someone in particular?ā€ Colleen asked, scootching over into Pruā€™s vacated chair to make more room at the table.
Paulie swallowed. ā€œYeah,ā€ she whispered, glancing around.
ā€œWho?ā€ Faith asked.
ā€œUmā€¦Iā€™d rather not say.ā€
Colleen nodded. ā€œWhat do you like about him?ā€
ā€œHeā€™sā€¦heā€™s just so nice. I mean, really kind, right? And heā€™s cheerful and good and smart, I think, too. I mean, heā€¦well. Heā€™s great.ā€
Colleen smiled. ā€œAnd do you feel sick when you see him, and then hot, and then nauseous?ā€
ā€œExactly,ā€ Paulie said, her face purpling again.
ā€œDo you imagine conversations with him, holding hands and moonlit walks and all that other mushy stuff?ā€
ā€œIā€”yes. I do.ā€ Paulie took a shaky breath.
ā€œDoes he make your danger zone tingly? Does your skin get hot, do your knees wobble, does your tongue feel swollenā€”ā€
Faith stood up. ā€œI miss Levi,ā€ she announced. She gave Colleen a kiss on the cheek and squeezed her sisterā€™s shoulder. ā€œGood luck, Paulie! Take Colleen with a grain of salt.ā€
ā€œIā€™m going, too,ā€ Honor said. ā€œBye, matchmaker. Do no harm, mind you. See you, Paulina.ā€
ā€œSo who is this guy?ā€ Colleen asked when they were gone.
Paulie shot a nervous glance back to the bar. Aha! A hint. ā€œYou know what?ā€ Paulie said. ā€œNever mind. Heā€™sā€¦heā€™s out of my league.ā€
ā€œNo, heā€™s not!ā€ Colleen cried. ā€œPaulie, youā€™re so nice! You are! Anyone would be lucky to have you.ā€ Besides, Colleen always felt a little guilty where Paulie was concerned.
ā€œThanks,ā€ she muttered.
ā€œItā€™s true,ā€ Colleen said firmly. Granted, Paulie hadnā€™t been blessed with great beauty. And her dad was a little oddā€”Ronnie Petrosinsky, owner of four small restaurants called Chicken King that served fried chicken thirty-eight different ways, all of them very, very bad for you. He was locally famous for his commercials, where he pranced around dressed as a rooster wearing a crown. Poor Paulie was also featured in a fluffy yellow chick suit, wearing a crownā€”the Chicken Princess. Try getting out from under that title, especially in high school.
ā€œListen, Paulie. No one is out of your league. Go ahead, tell me.ā€
Paulina sighed gustily and drained her Genesee (first order of business: get her to drink something more feminine). ā€œItā€™s Bryce Campbell.ā€
Oh. Okay, so that might be tough.
Bryce was gorgeous. Jake Gyllenhaal DEFCON 4ā€“gorgeous. He got his share of tail, as Colleen knew all too well. Bryce was a regular. Not the sharpest tool in the shed, but sweet. He had a certain charm, and women threw themselves at him all the time.
Lots of women.
ā€œThatā€™s fine,ā€ Colleen said, realizing she hadnā€™t spoken for a moment. ā€œNot a problem.ā€
Paulie gave her a despairing look.
ā€œIā€™m serious. We can work with this. So, tell me more about you and Bryce.ā€
Paulieā€™s expression grew dreamy, the severe blush fading. ā€œHe volunteers at the animal shelter, you know?ā€ Colleen nodded; Bryce had in fact helped her choose Rufus the Doofus. ā€œAnd the animals, they all love him. I go in a lot. I, umā€¦Iā€™ve adopted two dogs and four cats in the past year.ā€
Colleen smiled. ā€œThatā€™s a lot. But go on.ā€
ā€œAnd the other day, I was getting gas, and so was he, and I didnā€™t even plan that! He just smiled at me and said, ā€˜Hey, Paulie, howā€™s it going?ā€™ā€ She sighed at the memory of the magical words. ā€œIt was amazing. I mean, that smile, right?ā€
Yes. Bryce had a beautiful smile. That was true.
ā€œHeā€™s never in a bad mood,ā€ Paulie went on. ā€œNever has a bad thing to say about anyone. Not that I talk to him. Not much, anyway. But sometimes we lift weights at the same time, andā€¦well, I try to talk to him. But my mind goes blank, and I never think of anything good to say. But last week? I had to walk past him, and I said ā€˜Excuse me,ā€™ and he said, and I quote, ā€˜No problem.ā€™ Colleen, he smelled so good.ā€
The woman had it bad.
ā€œAnd when we were in high school, he never made fun of me.ā€
Colleenā€™s heart gave a squeeze. Paulie had a solid, athletic build and held the school record for the number of pushups, beating even Jeremy Lyon, football god, a record that stood to this day. Her fatherā€™s business didnā€™t help her social status; heā€™d started out as a chicken farmer, and Paulie hadnā€™t grown up as comfortably as most of the kids in town, though not as poor as others. And then, when the Chicken King became so successful, well, that was different, too, and it was hard to be different at that age.
Though she was now the chief operating officer for the Chicken King franchises, Colleen had never seen Paulie out of gym clothes, and she always seemed on the fringe of things, as nice and smart as she was.
With a pang, Colleen realized Paulie reminded her of Savannah, her nine-year-old half sister.
ā€œYou know what? Letā€™s forget about it, okay? Iā€™m sorry,ā€ Paulie said now.
ā€œAbsolutely not,ā€ Colleen said. ā€œHeā€™d be lucky to have you. Iā€™m serious. Youā€™re great, you have so many nice qualitiesā€¦itā€™s not gonna be that hard, Paulie. What have your other relationships been like?ā€
ā€œUmā€¦Iā€¦Iā€™ve never had another relationship.ā€
ā€œThatā€™s fine. So, no experience with men?ā€
ā€œIā€™m a virgin,ā€ she said.
ā€œNo worries. Nothing wrong with saving yourself for true love.ā€ Colleen herself had, after all. Not that hers was an exemplary story.
ā€œItā€™s more like no oneā€™s ever asked me.ā€
Oh! Poor lamb! ā€œNot a problem.ā€
ā€œHeā€™d probably rather go out with you,ā€ Paulie said.
ā€œOh, please,ā€ Colleen said with a flinch. ā€œBryce? No. Weā€™re notā€¦heā€™s a sweetheart, but not my type. But you guysā€¦youā€™d be great together.ā€
Paulieā€™s face lit up? ā€œReally? You think so? Honest? Iā€™ll do whatever you say. You think I have a shot?ā€
ā€œAbsolutely.ā€
Connor was back. ā€œDad called. Wants you to babysit. Apparently, Gail needs a break.ā€
Ah. Gail Chianese Oā€™Rourke, their stepmother, four years their senior, not so lovingly known as Gail-the-Tail-Chianese-Rhymes-with-Easy-Hyphen-Oā€™Rourke.
ā€œA break from what?ā€ Colleen asked. ā€œFrom spa appointments? From shopping? A break from having breaks?ā€
ā€œI donā€™t know. Ask him to call you on your cell next time. Hey, Paulie, anything else for you?ā€
ā€œUh, Iā€™m good, thanks,ā€ she said, shifting to take a ten from her pocket.
ā€œOn the house,ā€ Connor and Colleen said in unison.
ā€œThanks.ā€ She stood, tripped a little over the chair; Con grabbed her arm and Paulie flushed again. ā€œWell. Thanks, Coll. You rock.ā€ With that, she headed out into the beautiful spring night.
ā€œIā€™m fixing her up,ā€ Colleen said.
ā€œOh, God,ā€ Connor muttered.
ā€œWhat? You have something against true love?ā€
ā€œDo you have to ask?ā€
The bar was emptying; the sidewalks, few that there were, tended to roll up early in Manningsport. Connor sat down with her. The only folks left were on the volunteer fire department, who felt that Oā€™Rourkeā€™s was their home away from home.
ā€œCon, you think Mom and Dad screwed us up forever? I mean, neither one of us has a significant other.ā€
Connor shrugged. He hated talking about their parents.
ā€œYou should go out with someone. Jessica Dunn, maybe. Or Julianne from the library. Or I could fix you up.ā€
ā€œIā€™d rather hang myself, but thanks.ā€
ā€œIf you do, can I have your car?ā€ She gave him a look. ā€œWhat arenā€™t you telling me?ā€
He grimaced, but hey, the twin telepathy was alive and well. ā€œDonā€™t have kittens, okay? But actually, Iā€™m seeing someone.ā€
ā€œWhat? Since when? Who?ā€
ā€œNo kittens, Colleen.ā€
ā€œWell, youā€™re my twin, my family, my coworker! We share a house!ā€
ā€œAnother life mistake.ā€
ā€œConnor,ā€ she said more calmly, ā€œhow are you seeing someone and I donā€™t know about it? Who is she? How long has this been going on? Why didnā€™t you tell me?ā€
ā€œBecause of this. I didnā€™t want you to go crazy and give me advice or start naming babies.ā€
ā€œWhen have I ever done that?ā€
ā€œAn hour ago. You told Faith to name her baby after you.ā€
ā€œWell, so did you.ā€
Her brother crossed his arms. ā€œItā€™s not serious. Not yet.ā€
ā€œI canā€™t believe you kept this from me. God, those three minutes you have on me ruined you. I shouldā€™ve been born first, and I wouldā€™ve been, if you hadnā€™t shoved me out of the way.ā€
ā€œOkay, weā€™re done here. You wanna kick out the fire department, or shall I?ā€
ā€œGet out, people!ā€ Colleen yelled, and the various and sundry members of Manningsportā€™s bravest started reaching for their wallets.
Hello. Bryce Campbell was there, too. He mustā€™ve come in when she was with the girls. He was watching the fire department with an almost wistful look on his face. Boys. They never got over the thrill of their first shiny red truck.
Well, no time like the present.
ā€œHey, Bryce,ā€ she said, ambling over.
ā€œHi, Colleen.ā€ He looked at her and smiled, and yes, Paulie had a point. Bryce was cute. That wasnā€™t news, but still.
ā€œHowā€™s your dad?ā€ Smiling Joe Campbell was one of Colleenā€™s favorite patrons, though he hadnā€™t been in much in the past year.
ā€œHeā€™s great!ā€ Bryce flashed another look at the MVFD, who were now filing out the door, laughing.
ā€œYou should join the fire department,ā€ she said.
ā€œYeah. I doubt my mom would approve of that. I might get hurt.ā€
ā€œYou probably wouldnā€™t, though. Their safety record is stellar, even if they are a bunch of goofballs.ā€ She took his empty glass and wiped the counter in front of him. ā€œSo, Bryce, you seeing anyone these days?ā€
He raised a friendly eyebrow. ā€œYou asking?ā€
ā€œNo.ā€
ā€œRight.ā€ He gave a mock grimace. ā€œNope, no one special. I wouldnā€™t mind having a girlfriend, though.ā€
This was going to be easier than she thought. ā€œReally? Whatā€™s your type?ā€
ā€œAside from you?ā€ He winked.
ā€œNone of that, now. Answer the question.ā€
ā€œI donā€™t know. Pretty. Kind ofā€¦pretty and nice and hot, you know? Like Faith Holland, except maybe taller and skinnier, and donā€™t tell Levi I said that, okay?ā€
ā€œBryce Campbell. Looks arenā€™t everything, you know.ā€ And if he had a problem with Faithā€”who was built like a 1940s pinup girlā€”she was going to have to tread carefully with Paulie. ā€œHow about personality?ā€
ā€œReally outgoing. Like me, kind of. You know anyone?ā€
ā€œHmm. No one leaps to mind.ā€ Actually, four women leaped to mind, but Bryce was a typical manā€”he didnā€™t know what he needed; he just knew what he liked. ā€œBut Iā€™ll think about it, okay?ā€
ā€œThanks, Coll! Youā€™re the best!ā€
ā€œItā€™s true. Now get out, weā€™re closing.ā€
Half an hour later, Colleen walked to the yellow-and-red Victorian she shared with her brother. A duplex, so it wasnā€™t quite as dysfunctional as it sounded. Connor had left a little earlier, and the first floor lights were out. Colleenā€™s apartment was on the second floorā€”a staircase in the back led to a small deck and her door.
She wondered if this mystery woman of his had visited the house yet.
ā€œItā€™s all good,ā€ she murmured to herself as she opened her door. ā€œAfter all, we have somebody to love, too. Right, Rufus?ā€
One hundred and sixty pounds of scruffy gray canine agreed. She allowed him to maul her, scratched his rough gray fur, gazed meaningfully into his eyes, and then extricated herself. ā€œWho wants a cookie? Is it us? I want an Oreo, and you, my beautiful countryman, can have a Milk-Bone.ā€
Some bozo had bought Rufus as a puppy, then, shocker, learned that the breed tended to get a wee bit large. But the idiotā€™s loss was her gain, because, as Bryce Campbell had suspected, Rufus and Colleen were kindred spirits.
She called Rushing Creek and talked to Joanie, the night nurse in her grandfatherā€™s wing, and ascertained that Gramp was having a good night. Then, with a sigh, she got the snacks, made Rufus balance his cookie on his nose before allowing him to inhale it, then flopped down on the couch with the box of Oreos. Because really, no one had just one Oreo.
Love was in the air. It was all around her, as a matter of factā€”Faith and Levi maybe percolating a baby; Honor and Tom getting married; Brandy and Ted now engaged. Paulie and Bryce (complicated on several levelsā€¦but maybe a chance for Colleen to do something good).
Connor and someone.
That one gave her the biggest pang. Granted, thereā€™d been many times over the years when Colleen wouldā€™ve cheerfully sold Connor to the gypsies (and had, in fact, put him up for adoption when they were twelve and he announced the fact of her period in the cafeteria). When their parents went through their ugly, horrible, terrible divorce, she and Connor had become closer than ever. They often called or texted each other simultaneously. Saw each other every day.
It was strange, thinking of her twin married, a dad. She certainly wanted him happy, of course she did. It was just that she always pictured it in the happy, sunny future, in which she would have a great spouse and adorable tots.
But that picture always held a dreamlike quality, the image overexposed, as if the sun shone too brightly, and her husbandā€™s face was blurred.
Once, sheā€™d known exactly who the face belonged to, and it hadnā€™t been blurry at all.




Fun Fact: The inspiration for Lucas was this guy...


 About Kristan Higgins
New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author and two-time winner of the Romance Writers of America RITAĀ® Award, Kristan lives with her family in a small Connecticut town that boasts a wonderful library, a great agricultural fair, a really good ice-cream stand and not much else. She is the mother of two lovely kids and the wife of a brave firefighter who is also (perhaps more important) a fantastic cook.

Previously a copywriter, Kristan began writing fiction when her children graced her life with simultaneous afternoon naps. Writing, she found, was infinitely more satisfying than folding laundry, and so began her first novel. Kristan holds a B.A. in English from the College of the Holy Cross, which means she can identify dangling participles, quote many great novels and play a mean game of Scrabble.

Kristan is an award-winning baker, devoted fan of the New York Yankees and an avid reader. She and her crew spend as much time as possible at the family home on Cape Cod, where they shiver in the Atlantic, ride bikes, swat horseflies and donā€™t catch any fish.




 

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