THE
CORNER OF FOREVER AND ALWAYS
Author:
Lia Riley
Series:
Everland, Georgia #2
On
Sale: September 26, 2017
Publisher:
Forever
Mass
Market: $7.99 USD
eBook:
$5.99 USD
Fairy
tales aren't ever what they seem . . .
Tuesday Knight's dream of Broadway stardom has flopped, leaving her unemployed and brokenhearted. Ready to quit kissing frogs and make her own happily-ever-after, she takes a job as a princess in Everland, Georgia's historical amusement park.
Mayor Beau Marino lives an unenchanted existence-all work, no play-which is fine by him. After his marriage ended in disaster, the last thing he wants in his life is more drama. But Everland's new free spirit has a talent for getting under his starched collar.
When the town's beloved but bankrupt park might be shut down, Tuesday and Beau face a choice. Can they join forces, save the day-and each other? Or will their fierce battle of wills destroy any chance of a fairy-tale ending?
In the tradition of New York Times bestselling authors Kristan Higgins, Jill Shalvis, and Marina Adair, comes the second book in Lia Riley's Everland, Georgia series about two city sisters finding love in a small town.
Tuesday Knight's dream of Broadway stardom has flopped, leaving her unemployed and brokenhearted. Ready to quit kissing frogs and make her own happily-ever-after, she takes a job as a princess in Everland, Georgia's historical amusement park.
Mayor Beau Marino lives an unenchanted existence-all work, no play-which is fine by him. After his marriage ended in disaster, the last thing he wants in his life is more drama. But Everland's new free spirit has a talent for getting under his starched collar.
When the town's beloved but bankrupt park might be shut down, Tuesday and Beau face a choice. Can they join forces, save the day-and each other? Or will their fierce battle of wills destroy any chance of a fairy-tale ending?
In the tradition of New York Times bestselling authors Kristan Higgins, Jill Shalvis, and Marina Adair, comes the second book in Lia Riley's Everland, Georgia series about two city sisters finding love in a small town.
“I’m nervous.” The tightness in his tone
backed up the muscles bunching near the hinge in his jaw. And the simple,
honest admission did something to her that no amount of flirtatious
back-and-forth ever would.
“So am I.” She began buttering the dish. “Who
taught you how to cook?”
He stirred the chocolate in the double
boiler, hands clenching the spoon. “Mama used to say that a man needed to know
three things: how to fix a dessert, iron his own shirt and sew a button. That
some day future women would thank her.”
“Smart lady.” Tuesday laughed, grateful for a
moment to recalibrate, to slow her racing heart. “I suck at ironing by the
way.”
Beau gave her a resolute stare. “I make my own
starch.”
“Stop.” She nearly dropped the dishtowel. “No,
you don’t.”
“One tablespoon of cornstarch in two cups of
water.”
Her gaze fixed on the rare smile tugging the
corner of his mouth. The revelation was oddly endearing. “I’m not sure whether
to be impressed or terrified.”
“Your mama didn’t teach you these things?”
Tuesday thought. “We grew up in small town
Maine.”
“Sounds cold.”
“So, so cold. So much snow. So much cold.
Beautiful though.”
“I’d like to check it out, in summer.”
“Yeah, good idea. My dad ran a maple sugarbush
farm, made homemade maple syrup. Mom was his opposite. He loved being outdoors.
She liked being inside. I guess they were opposites, must have attracted at some point but over
time they repelled each other. Pushed one another further and further away. She
left when I was in high school. Moved down to New Hampshire where she was from
and met a banker. They live in the suburbs. She has a housekeeper now.”
“She abandoned your family?”
“I. . .you know, I don’t know. My sister
thinks so. I was the baby. My mom used to love to style my hair. She could do
so many intricate braids. We didn’t have much money but she’d shop at thrift
stores and garage sales and find me cute dresses. Sometimes I’d find her sad
and I’d try to cheer her up. I’d ask her to brush my hair and she would, even though sometimes I could hear her
sniffling and I knew if I turned around I’d see her crying.”
Tears sprang to her eyes and she ground her
fists into them. “Wow. Hello! Where'd these come from.” God, way to keep things
light. Her inconvenient emotions would probably sink the night.
“I’m sorry that happened.”
“Me too.” She took a breath. Then another.
“Can
we return to the regularly scheduled programming? Chocolate is always the
cure.”
Beau looked like he might press forward but
changed his mind at the last moment. “My mama taught me how to separate yolks
from whites. Can I show you?”
“I won’t pretend that I have skills. Instruct
away.”
“Okay, pick an egg, any egg.”
She selected a brown one and he stepped behind
her, her back heating against his chest. His arms slid over hers. “Now
what you do is give it a tap to open the shell. No! Not so big, just a little
one.” His hand engulfed hers, guiding the movement. “Good. That’s real good.
Now let the yolk settle in one side. That’s it. Now you start to transfer the
egg back and forth and back and forth, let the white run out like that until
voila! All you have left is the yolk.”
Tuesday gawked at the golden yolk in the
shell. “Martha Stewart eat your heart out.”
He checked the chocolate and milk, it had
melted down into a decadent pool.
“Can we eat that as is? I’m sure the souffle
is amazing and all but hey, a bowl of melted warm chocolate is going to do me
fine.”
His laugh was just as decadently rich.
“Haven’t you ever heard that good things come to those who wait?”
“Sure, by people waiting,” she quipped. “They
need something to tell themselves.”
That really got him going, his deep laugh rich
as sun-warmed molasses. “Let me make you a deal.”
“I’m not agreeing until I hear the terms.”
“Smart woman. When you have this dessert, you
are going to say it’s better than the best sex you’ve ever had.”
She set her hands on her hips. “You have a low
opinion of my sex life.”
“Nah.” He winked. “Just a very high opinion on
my soufflé.”
She arched a brow. “You’re on.”
Standing behind her he continued to help guide
her effortlessly through measurements and pouring, mixing and stirring. He
didn’t grind on her or get perverted, not that she’d have minded. Chocolate was
meant to be an aphrodisiac and she’d never experienced anything so sexily
mundane as chatting over nothings in the kitchen with a man who didn’t try to
cop a feel. He appreciated and and even savored her for who she was and what
she offered which right now was fully dressed fairly polite company.
In fifteen minutes he opened the oven and slid
the soufflé in.
“And
now?”
“We wait,” he answered. “Until it’s puffed on
top and jiggly in the center.”
“You have a way of making cooking sexy.”
“Do I? I guess that helps even the field.”
“How so?”
“You make breathing look sexy.” His gaze
lingered on hers for a few beats before he turned and began to wash the dishes.
She
stared at the back of his head, his broad shoulders, his narrow hips, blinking
in surprise. He seemed wholly unaware that he’d broken her heart and put it
back together, refashioned into something new, stronger and brighter.
THE EVERLAND,
GEORGIA SERIES
IT HAPPENED ON LOVE
STREET, #1
THE CORNER OF FOREVER
AND ALWAYS, #2
FOLLOW
FOREVER ONLINE
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