Author: Valentine Wheeler
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: February 10, 2020
Heat Level: 2 - Fade to Black Sex
Pairing: Female/Female
Length: 63300
Genre: Contemporary, LGBT, bisexual, asexual, bakery, restaurant, chef, small-town politics, older MCs, interracial, family drama
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Synopsis
When Marianne Windmere’s bakery customers begin complaining that her parking lot is always full, she assumes it must be customers for the new restaurant next door. She’s never met her neighbor, and with the parking lot situation, she has no interest in doing so. But when a snowstorm knocks out the power and traps both women in the building overnight, sparks fly—until the next morning, when the buried argument comes to a head.Can they find a way to reclaim the magic of that night? And as decades-old secrets about the history of the town and Marianne’s family come to light, can they work together to save both their businesses?
Excerpt
No Parking
Valentine Wheeler © 2020
All Rights Reserved
The travel mug banged against the
counter. Marianne jumped. “Jesus, Kevin! I didn’t hear you come in.”
“It’s full again.” Kevin crossed his
arms and glared. “The parking lot back there.” He made a show of glancing
around the nearly empty bakery, eyes pausing on Zeke in the corner, mug in his
hands and laptop open as usual, big red headphones covering his ears. He
crossed his arms. “Why do you pay that kid if all he does is ignore you? And
the customers?”
“You’re in a mood this morning.”
Marianne pushed herself off the stool and grabbed his aluminum coffee mug. Her
ex-husband was still an attractive man fifteen years after their divorce, and
she couldn’t work up the energy to be annoyed at him for it anymore. “If you
want to go next door and complain about the cars, go ahead.” She filled his mug
with hazelnut coffee, added an espresso shot, capped it, and handed it back.
“It’s not like our customers are beating down the doors for spots right now.”
“I did go next door,” Kevin grumbled,
taking the cup. “It wasn’t productive.” Now it was him avoiding her gaze.
The parking lot issue wasn’t a new
one—it had been a problem for a few months—and on a busy day Marianne would be
filled with a low-level simmering rage as customer after customer complained
about it. Still, she wasn’t going to tell Kevin that. Their relationship had
improved in the years since their divorce but not quite that much.
“Not productive?” she pressed.
He sipped his coffee to cover the slight
flush in his pale cheeks and didn’t answer.
“She threw you out, didn’t she?”
Marianne’s estimation of her neighbor and nemesis rose a notch. “You tried to
yell at her, and she didn’t take it.”
“I was very polite!”
“Hm.” Marianne put her hands on her hips
and considered the man she’d spent nearly twenty-five years married to. He
could be charming when he wanted to be—the whole silver fox, sparkling blue
eyes and white teeth politician thing—though he never tried it with her
anymore. Many women had found him suave and attractive during their marriage
and probably still did. But when he wanted something from someone with no
interest in what he was peddling? Politeness wasn’t his style. Generally, once
charm had failed, he whined worse than any of their three kids had as toddlers.
She’d learned that plenty during their marriage, and again during the divorce.
“I’m sure you were.”
“I can talk to Bruce and Andrea,” said
Kevin. “Just because I’m retired—”
“No need to get the city council
involved, Kevin. I’ll handle my own property, thanks.” She glanced at the clock
on the wall, its tarnished brass pendulum swinging below the cracked glass.
“Aren’t you going to be late for your train?” He was still showing up at
transit meetings in the city every other week since he had been appointed to
the regional transit board as community representative now that he wasn’t an
elected official. Kevin had a habit of holding onto things too tightly and
refusing to let them go.
Kevin glanced down at his watch and
swore. “Yeah. Shit.” He took another long gulp of coffee and leaned over the
counter to kiss Marianne’s cheek. “Thanks. Who knew retirement could be so
busy?” He turned to hurry out the door and then stopped and glanced back over
his shoulder. “You be good, all right? Don’t work too hard.”
Marianne rolled her eyes and shooed him
out with a towel.
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