Enjoy!
ISBN-13:
9781488085826
Publisher: Harlequin
Release Date: 5-28-2019
Length:
384 pp
Start Up In The City #1
Buy It: Amazon/B&N/Kobo/IndieBound/Audible
ADD TO: GOODREADS
Overview:
Co-parenting with her best friend. What could go wrong?The next three decades of Abby Herbert’s life are as carefully planned out as the last three were. Best career ever? Check. Great friends, one of whom she lives with in a stunning Tribeca apartment? Check. Perfect man to share her dream family? Surely just a matter of time. But then she gets devastating news from her doctor—if she wants to get pregnant, she needs to get started on that by…well, yesterday. On the bright side, she has the perfectperson in mind to be the father.
Tech entrepreneur Marcus Ross has been harboring decidedly not-friends feelings toward Abby. He doesn’t want to lose her and, knowing his feelings are one-sided, he’s been trying to move on. When he learns about the curveball Abby’s just been hit with, he promises to be there for her however she wants him to be, even if the idea of fatherhood is a little complicated for him right now. But it isn’t long until boundaries start to blur, and a deal struck between friends starts to turn into something perilously close to feelings that could change everything…
Read an excerpt:
CHAPTER ONE
Marcus
“SO, I WANTED to talk to you about something
tonight...”
There’s a strange
edge to my best friend and roommate’s voice tonight, but I’ve just walked in
the door after a thirteen-hour day at the office and I’m so hungry I can barely
think straight. As curious as I am about whatever’s going on with Abby, I need
to get organized before we talk.
It’s Monday night.
That means we eat dinner early because Abby meets her gaming friends online at
8:00 p.m., and it also means that it’s my turn to cook. Tonight, I’ll be
“cooking” Thai, courtesy of Seamless.
“Just let me quickly
get this order in, then I’ll be all ears, I promise. Do you want the chicken
laksa? Or do you feel like seafood tonight?” I double-check the detail, because
while I know her orders by heart, the chicken versus seafood in her curry-soup
debate has been going on for a while and still seems far from settled.
“Chicken, please. And
listen, I’ve thought about this a lot, and I have my reasons—this isn’t a
whim.”
“Sure...spring
rolls?”
“Most
definitely. Actually, can you get me a double serving?”
“Of course.”
“No, wait...”
“Let’s get a
double and if you don’t finish them, I will.”
“Okay.”
I finish the
order, then set the iPad back down onto the coffee table and turn to face Abby.
We’re sitting on the couch in our usual places, our postures mirrored. I’m on
the right, next to the armrest where the remote controls live, because
according to Abby I’m a control freak and I need to drive the TV. Abby is on
the left, because it’s closest to her bedroom and thus her bathroom, and she
seems to pee every five minutes.
“Now, what
were you saying?” I prompt her gently. Abby’s gaze is distant as she
absentmindedly runs the pad of her finger around the rim of the half-full
wineglass she’s nursing. Before she can speak, the iPad makes an odd sound—a
notification I don’t immediately recognize. Abby raises her eyebrows and points
to the device.
“Check it,”
she says pointedly. “It might be a problem with the dinner order and I cannot deal
with Hangry Marcus tonight.”
I flash her an
apologetic smile and reach for the iPad, but the notification isn’t some
obscure Seamless error—the only thing on the screen is a Facebook message. When
I recognize the icon, I al
most put the iPad right back down...but then the
words on the screen actually register in my brain.
Warwick Chester wants to connect with
you.
I turn the iPad to Abby, who squints at the screen,
then gasps. For a long minute, we just stare at each other in disbelief. Then I
set the iPad firmly on the coffee table, screen down.
“No,” I say. My voice is rough, so I clear my
throat, then try again. “Just...no.” I draw in a sharp breath, then huff it out
heavily. “Yeah. Let’s just forget that even happened. Now, what did you want to
talk about?”
“Are you kidding me?” Abby squeaks. “No, we are not talking
about my thing right now. Are you going to open the message and see what he has
to say for himself?”
“No,” I say, but my gaze keeps drifting back to the
iPad. “Fuck. I don’t know. Do you think I should?”
“Yes!”
I move to reach for the iPad again, but hesitate at
the last minute. Whatever this message says, it’s too little, too late. Maybe I
should just block him.
“Hey,” Abby says softly. “Let me?”
I nod.
Warwick Chester is my biological father. He was an
excellent parent, right up until a few weeks after my seventh birthday, when he
left for work and never came home.
All I remember from the first weeks after he
disappeared was feeling impatient. I was so sure that he loved us too much to
leave us forever, so I knew it was only a matter of time
before he came back.
It’s been twenty-five years, and the message Abby
is reading right now is his first-ever attempt to contact me. Warwick did show
up at my grandfather Don’s funeral last month, but he sat at the back and left
as soon as the service ended. He didn’t even acknowledge me or my twin brother,
Luca. I wouldn’t have seen him at all if I hadn’t joined Mom onstage to support
her as she read the eulogy.
It was a confusing day even before I noticed
Warwick. My grandpa Don loved his family fiercely, but he had a mean streak,
especially with me and Luca. Mom was devastated to lose her father, but my
feelings on his passing were more complicated. I didn’t have the brain space to
try to figure out how to feel about Warwick’s presence that day, so I chose to
simply ignore it.
“It’s a group message to you and to Luca.”
I guess that makes sense, as much as any of this
makes sense. “Do you remember when he first left?” I ask her quietly.
“I was,
what...five years old? I do remember sitting in the tree house
with you and Luca while you tried to figure out where he’d gone.”
“You cried
with us,” I say softly. Abby offers a sad smile.
“I remember
wishing that I knew where he was. I thought I could go just get him for you
guys.”
Abby, Luca and
I grew up in Syracuse in upstate New York. My mom and stepdad, Jack, still live
in the house I was raised in. On the other side of the small park next door,
Abby’s parents still live in the house she was raised in.
Abby’s two years younger than me and Luca, but for as long as I can remember,
she and I have been best friends.
It’s fitting
that she’s helping me navigate this, because she’s been there for all the other
key moments in my life, too.
“Should I read
this to you?” she asks.
“Does he want
a kidney?”
“What? No! Why
would you even think that?”
“Seems odd
that he’s suddenly messaging us on Facebook like a long-lost camp buddy,” I
mutter. “He wants something, right?”
Abby extends
the iPad toward me, and I take it with a sigh.
Dear Marcus and Luca,
Maybe it’s unfair of me to drop into your lives again like this,
but Don’s passing last month has left me in a difficult position. Now that he’s
gone, I’m going to lose track of you altogether if I don’t speak up and take
the chance that one or both of you might be willing to try to rebuild some kind
of a relationship with me.
I have no excuses for my absence—only a depth
of regret and sadness that is impossible to convey in this message. Will you
consider a call with me?
Warwick
I exhale, then
set the iPad on the table again. Abby throws her arms around my waist and rests
her cheek against my chest with a sigh.
Abby smells
like strawberries. I think it’s her shampoo, and I really like it. In fact, I
like it enough that I’m momentarily distracted by it. We are firmly just
friends, although for a brief moment earlier this year, I hoped we might become
something more. That’s passed now and the only throwback to that phase of my
life is that sometimes I notice cute details about her...like the fact that she
smells heavenly all the time.
“I’m sorry,”
she whispers. “I can’t even imagine how you’re feeling right now.”
“I’m fine,
Abs,” I tell her with a quietly confident laugh. Of course I’m
fine. I’m thirty-two years old, for God’s sake. I have a great apartment and
amazing friends and I’m the co-owner of a software startup that’s growing so
fast my life feels like some delicious dream.
Abby isn’t
fooled for a second. She sits up to stare at me, and the piercing look in her
big brown eyes forces me to interrogate my own reaction.
The pain of it
finally hits—and for a second, I don’t feel like a successful
thirty-two-year-old man at all. Instead, I feel an awful lot like the
seven-year-old kid who kept sneaking out of bed to sleep on the rug in the
foyer because he needed to keep an eye on the front door in case his dad came
home.
“Don’t even
bother pretending this isn’t a huge fucking deal,” Abby says flatly. “We’ve
been friends for way too long for that macho bullshit. You know what? You need
a drink.”
I laugh weakly
and rub my chest, trying to push away the awful, uncomfortable emotions
bouncing around in there. All at once, I’m confused and resentful and upset
and...hopeful. I need to squash that last one real quick.
“Yeah. I guess
I do.”
Abby fetches
two glasses of Scotch from the liquor cabinet, and passes me one as she returns
to the sofa. We knock our glasses together, down the drink and share a matching
grimace at the burn. She sets her empty glass onto the coffee table in front of
us...and for maybe the first time since she moved in with me two years ago, she
actually uses the coasters.
I know that
gesture is just for me, and I laugh softly. Abby smiles reluctantly, too, then
murmurs, “That message makes it sound like Warwick has been in contact with Don
for all of these years, keeping tabs on you guys. Do you think that’s true?”
“No fucking
way.” I shake my head without hesitation. “Don would have mentioned that
at some point over the last twenty-five years. It’s not like
he shied away from talking about Warwick.” Sure, pretty much everything Don had
to say about Warwick was an insult, but he still mentioned him
enough that I know it would have come up in conversation if the two men were
still in touch.
“What are you
going to do?”
“I don’t know.
Does he deserve a reply? There’d be some kind of poetic justice in me just
ignoring him, the way he ignored us for all of these years. Right?”
With anyone
else I’d be embarrassed at my bitter tone, but Abby won’t judge me. That’s not
how this friendship works.
“Maybe you just have to do whatever feels right
here. If ignoring him feels right, then go right ahead.”
“There’s no chance I’m going to fucking call him.”
I sigh. I run a hand through my hair, then rub the back of my neck. “I do need
to call Luca, though.”
A fleeting shadow crosses Abby’s face.
“Well...maybe you need time to process this on your
own before you talk it through with Luca.” Abby gnaws her bottom lip, and
there’s a crease in the space between her brows—a sure sign she’s worrying
about something.
My gaze drops to her hands on her lap—she’s tapping
her fingers against her thigh. I reach for her hand and squeeze it. “Hey. This
is annoying, but I’ll be fine.”
She nods, but she’s still unsettled. I’m touched by
the depth of her concern, even if I am a little confused by it.
Hmm. Something else is going on here.
“What was it you wanted to talk to me about
tonight?”
She shakes her head. “It’s nothing. Anyway,
we’re not talking about it tonight. Not now.”
I know Abby better than I know myself, so I’m very familiar
with that stubborn tone. I’m concerned enough that I want to push her some
more, and maybe I will...once I’ve had a little more time to get my head
straight after that message from Warwick.
I pick the
iPad up again, load the message and stare at it. I click on Warwick’s profile
picture, and his face fills my screen. He’s standing on his own at the front of
a bluestone building, his head cocked to the side. He’s wearing jeans and a
knit jumper. He’s smiling, but the smile doesn’t quite reach his eyes.
It’s eerie
staring at a photo of Warwick Chester because it’s like getting a glimpse of
the future. Warwick would be in his sixties now, and Luca and I are identical
twins who share most of Warwick’s facial structure and that same dark, curly
hair. Warwick’s hair is still thick, but sprinkled with silver. Luca wears his
hair long now and keeps it perennially pulled back into a man-bun, but Warwick
and I have a similar hairstyle—we both leave our curls longer on top, but the
back and sides are a little shorter.
I click on his
Facebook profile, hoping to find more photos, but he’s locked the profile
down...and I’m sure as hell not ready to send him a friend request.
Several
minutes pass where we don’t speak. The silence is gentle—Abby and I know how to
be quiet together. There’s freedom in the easy, familiar rhythms of my life
with her. This isn’t the first tough moment we’ve navigated together, and it
won’t be the last.
“I really do
need to talk to Luca,” I say eventually.
Abby nods, but
that odd look passes over her face again. Her fidgeting returns in an instant.
And both times
this happened I was talking about my brother.
“Did you have
a fight with him?” I ask.
“Me and Luca
are always fighting.” She laughs weakly. Well, that’s certainly true. Abby and
Luca are great friends, too, but they bicker like siblings sometimes—the kind
of messy bickering most people grow out of by adolescence. Their “arguments”
are always good-natured and innocent, though. What’s confusing is that there’s
nothing innocent about the guilty shadow on Abby’s face.
“You’re
clearly anxious whenever I say his name, Abs,” I say softly.
“You’re
hungry, and upset, and imagining things,” she says lightly, but she’s an
infamously bad liar. Something is definitely going on. I know Abby and Luca
aren’t romantically involved—Luca is happily married, and Abby literally could
not be less his type. Luca’s husband, Austin, is a chef and
restaurateur and, undoubtedly, the love of my brother’s life.
I reach for my
phone, and Abby squeaks, “What are you doing?”
Curiouser and
curiouser.
“I’m going to
call Luca.”
I’m bluffing
because Abby tells me everything, and I’m momentarily certain that she’s about
to blurt out the truth of what’s really going on. Instead, she gnaws her lip
while I pick up my phone to place the call, and picks at imaginary fluff on her
hoodie to avoid
looking back
toward me. Luca’s phone rings and rings, but eventually goes to voice mail.
Typical—he never answers his damned phone.
“It’s me. Have
you seen your Facebook messages? Take a look, then call me back when you can.”
Abby is
visibly relieved when I hang up, which only makes me more determined to know
what’s going on.
“Spill your
guts, woman. What’s he done this time?”
The intercom
sounds and I sigh at the relief that crosses Abby’s face.
“Don’t think
I’m dropping this,” I warn her. When we settle back on the couch, food in hand,
I look at her expectantly. Abby squirms.
“There is
something I need to talk to you about,” she admits reluctantly. “But I really
can’t talk about it tonight.”
“Don’t let
that shit with Warwick put you off. I was in shock for a minute there, but I’m
good now. Let’s talk.”
“I know you’re
okay, but you’ve had a really full-on night, and I’d rather we just wait and
discuss it tomorrow. Can we please just watch some TV and relax for a while?”
My eyebrows
rise. “Aren’t you going into your cave tonight?”
Abby makes her
living creating digital content about video games, and via a series of screen
dividers, she’s converted part of her bedroom into an office that doubles as a
studio for her videos
aka “the cave.” Her schedule is set in stone, and
Monday night she always retreats for a marathon session of
gaming-for-fun. She’ll periodically, reluctantly, vary her routine on other
days, but she nevermisses Monday night’s leisure gaming.
“Not tonight,” she says quietly.
“Abby, seriously. What the fuck is going on? I’m
going to worry until you tell me now.”
“It’s nothing to worry about, I promise. I just
feel like hanging out with you tonight.” She gives me a hopeful look. “TV?” I
sigh and reach for the remote, then navigate to the media center to load the
sci-fi series we’ve been watching. “No, not sci-fi,” she says. “Let’s watch the
news for a while.”
I nearly choke on a spoonful of my curry. I feel
like I’m in a real-life Twilight Zone tonight.
“The news?”
“Sure. Isn’t that what you like to watch when I’m
not around?”
“Exactly. ‘When you’re not around.’ You’re clearly
‘around’ right now.” She shrugs and reaches for a spring roll, and I narrow my
gaze at her. “Abby, I do not need your pity news watching.”
“It’s not ‘pity news watching,’ if that’s even a
thing. I just thought it might be your turn to choose.”
“If we’re supposed to be taking turns, I think mine
is several years overdue,” I say, still not convinced.
Abby’s laughter
fades just a little. Her eyebrows knit. “I’m not that bad.”
“You’re
that good.” I’m laughing again, and I click the button to load the
sci-fi show, anyway. “You’ve trained me so well.”
“Maybe you’ve
actually started to like sci-fi?” she suggests, and I grimace.
“Or maybe it’s
Stockholm Syndrome. In any case, let’s just see if these mutants can escape the
starship tonight.”
“They aren’t
mutants, they’re aliens,” she says, then she settles right into the couch with
a sigh of pleasure as the show begins, but she can’t quite help but correct the
rest of it even as the theme song starts. “And it’s not a starship, it’s a time
machine. Have we even been watching the same show?”
I chuckle to
myself and settle in to watch the awful show Abby inexplicably loves. My
workload is insane right now. It’s a testimony to just how much I adore my best
friend that I sit through this shit several nights a week, just because she
likes it.
A few minutes
into the episode, Luca texts.
I saw the message.
Really need to talk to you, anyway. Drinks tomorrow night?
“Is that Luca?” Abby asks. Her voice is so high I’m
sure dogs six blocks away just howled. I raise my eyebrows at her and she
flushes.
“Yes, it’s Luca,” I say. “We’re going to catch up
tomorrow night.”
Abby swallows. I look back to my phone with a
frown.
Marcus: What the hell is going on with
you and Abby? She’s acting really weird tonight.
Luca: It will only
make sense if I explain it over beer. Possibly many, many beers. I’ll talk to
you tomorrow night—usual place, usual time.
I set the phone down, just as Abby slides hers from
the pocket of her jeans and starts furiously tapping the screen. The intense
concentration on her face morphs into a scowl before she throws the phone onto
the carpet near her bedroom door in frustration.
“Yikes.” I raise my eyebrows at her.
“I want it on record that I did not want
to talk to you about this tonight,” she says fiercely.
I reach for the remote and pause her show. “Huh.
You know, I could almost have guessed that myself.”
“It’s not fair to dump this on you tonight after
the Warwick thing,” Abby exclaims.
“Dump what on—”
“Luca is making me tell you and I
want you to know that before I even...you know—” she exhales in frustration “—tell you.”
“Okay,” I say, softening my tone. “This is all
Luca’s fault, got it. Now what is ‘this’?”
Abby squeezes her eyes shut very tight and draws in
a deep breath. When she finally speaks, her words tumble out so close to one
another it sounds like she’s saying one ridiculously long word.
“I’ve-decided-to-have-a-baby-on-my-own-and-today-I-asked-Luca-if-he-would-be-my-sperm-donor.
I know this might seem sudden, but I want you to trust me when I say that this
is what I need to do. And that’s final.”
When she opens her eyes again, a moment or two has
passed, but I’m still staring at her, slack-jawed at her announcement. I think
I’d have been less surprised if she told me she was moving to Antarctica or
that she’d decided to shave her head.
Abby as a mom? Yes. I can very easily imagine that.
I know that on the bookshelf in her “cave,” she already has a binder full of
information about parenting, complete with preferred schools for a hypothetical
child, and a list of possible baby names. She’s made no secret of the fact that
she desperately wants kids.
Abby as a single
mom? Sure. She’s tough, caring and capable.
But Abby choosing to
be a single mom, at thirty years old? Nothing about that makes sense. Abby has
that damned binder on her bookshelf precisely because she is the kind of person
who plans her life carefully and she’s been thinking about her
sickeningly stereotyped nuclear family forever. It’s not just potential
children she’s put an immense amount of thought into—it’s also her potential
future husband, and the life she wants to build with him.
“But...” Even
when my voice decides it’s ready to work again, my brain is still catching up.
It doesn’t matter, because Abby silences me with a fierce wave of her hand.
“And it’s not
something we’re going to discuss tonight because you’ve had a
tough day, it’s late and I’m feeling very emotional about it
and I’m not even close to being ready to explain to you why this is
happening. We’ll talk about it in a few days when Luca has decided if he’s
going to do it. Okay? And don’t you even think about trying to talk him out of
it.”
“I’ve never
been able to talk Luca in to or out of
anything, not that I’d do that to you, anyway,” I say slowly. “I just don’t
understand. You’ve always known exactly the life you want for
yourself. What happened to the gamer husband you were going to find? What about
the house in the suburbs where you’re going to settle down? What about the
rescue dog named Charlie? How does...” I’m strug
gling to even say the words. “How does Luca’s baby
fit into that picture?”
“It won’t be Luca’s baby,” Abby snaps
at me, and leaps to her feet. “This will be my baby. Luca will
be the baby’s annoying uncle, which is exactly what you will be, too. No one
will know any different but me and Luca and...Austin and...” She groans in
frustration. “Now you. End of story.”
I’ll respect her decision if she goes ahead with
this. I’ll support her all the way. How could I not? Abby is smart enough to
know what she wants, and strong enough to handle all the challenges of
parenthood, even on her own.
It’s just that the more her announcement sinks in,
the less I understand it. Abby is the least impulsive person I know—if she’s
seriously considering this, there’s got to be something more to the story. My
suspicion is confirmed by the glint of tears in her eyes. She blinks rapidly, but
it’s quickly apparent that she’s not going to be able to control her emotions.
Her face crumples even as she turns away from me.
“I’m sorry to dump this on you tonight,” she
chokes. “It’s not fair that you have to deal with Warwick and now this...”
“Abs,” I say, bewildered. “You aren’t dumping
anything on me. Please sit back down and talk to me, help me understand—”
“I can’t talk
to you about this yet,” she whispers. “Please just respect my decision and I’ll
explain when I... I’ll talk to you about it when I’m ready.”
“But...”
I rise, too,
ready to pull her into my arms, but she shakes her head and jogs quickly to her
bedroom. Before I can even take a step, her bedroom door slams shut.
The sound
echoes through the apartment—an undeniable full stop on one of the most
bewildering nights of my entire life.
Kelly Rimmer is the worldwide and USA TODAY bestselling author of five novels, including Me Without You and The Secret Daughter. She lives in rural Australia with her husband, two children and fantastically naughty dogs Sully and Basil. Her novels have been translated into more than twenty languages.
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That sounds really good.
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ReplyDeleteits a good sounding read for sure Kim
DeleteOoh! This sounds good! I like the friends to lovers trope, and that he has been harboring an (what he thinks is,) an requited crush. Unexpected love is the best! Thanks for sharing Debbie :)
ReplyDeleteLindy@ A Bookish Escape
that and second chances are my faves Lindy :)
Deletemy pleasure
ReplyDeleteI want that yellow dress :)
ReplyDeleteit is cute :)
DeleteThis sounds like a cute little read for a day at the lake
ReplyDeleteHi Dana thanks for stopping by and yes it does :)
Deleteit really does
ReplyDelete