Authors: Kendra Leigh Castle
PRAISE FOR KENDRA LEIGH CASTLE AND THE HARVEST COVE SERIES
“A delightful story filled with endearing characters and laugh-out-loud humor.”
âKatie Lane,
USA Today
bestselling author of
The Last Cowboy in Texas
“Kendra Leigh Castle delivers a fresh and honest story guaranteed to make you smile, laugh out loud, and even shed a few tears.”
âCandis Terry, bestselling author of
Home Sweet Home
“[A] breezy, fun, slightly steamy novel. . . . Castle's Harvest Cove promises to be worth repeated visits.”
â
Publishers Weekly
“Ms. Castle has given us a cast of characters who are all intriguing in their own right.”
âSmexy Books
“[A] charming series.”
â
RT Book Reviews
“An entertaining, light, and sexy contemporary romance . . . [for] fans of Jill Shalvis and Kristan Higgins.”
âHarlequin Junkie
“Sweet and sexy character-driven romance!”
âFresh Fiction
“A fun, humorous read, with a great couple, cute animals, and a serious subject in the background.”
âThe Reading Cafe
“A beautifully written small-town romance . . . a job well done.”
âUnder the Covers
“An amazing start to a very cute new contemporary series. . . . From page one I was hooked on this small New England town and I couldn't stop reading.”
âLove to Read for Fun
“An author I'd want to read again and again . . . A good, well-written feel-good romance.”
âDebbie's Book Bag
Also by Kendra Leigh Castle
The Harvest Cove Series
For the Longest Time
Every Little Kiss
One of These Nights
SIGNET ECLIPSE
Published by New American Library,
an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC
375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014
This book is an original publication of New American Library.
Copyright © Kendra Leigh Castle, 2016
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.
ISBN 978-1-101-99015-5
PUBLISHER'S NOTE
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Version_1
For Brian, Maddie, Connor, and Jack The sweetest things in my life
Acknowledgments
This book would never have become what it is without the tireless efforts of my editor, Kerry Donovan, whose belief in and enthusiasm for Harvest Cove have inspired me to do the best work of my career with this series. Her skill, support, and patience have made me a better writer, and for that I'm forever grateful. Thanks as always to my agent, Kevan Lyon, for finding the Harvest Cove series such a good home. I'm also indebted to my brilliant friend Alicia for both “getting it” and for providing me with the laughs and positivity I needed in the home stretch, and of course to my family, who continue to love me when I'm on deadline and unfit for polite company. Brian, Maddie, Connor, Jack, Mom, Dad, and Gramma, I say it every time, and it's always true: I couldn't do this without
you.
“Y
ou have frosting on your nose.”
Larkin O'Neill rubbed her forearm across her face without looking up. The fluffy clouds she was piping onto the top of the three-layer cake had to be
just so
, and a little food on her face was the least of her concerns. “Better?”
“Well . . . it's at least more evenly distributed,” her friend Emma responded.
Larkin grinned and squeezed the piping bag, finishing the second cloud. “Cool. I like symmetry.” There had been a time, not long ago, when Larkin would have found being observed by the perfectly put together half of the Henry sisters a little unnerving, and she didn't fluster easily. Now, though, Emma was a good friend, which made her a welcome distraction. Larkin loved to talk while she baked. Or decorated. Or . . . well, mostly she just loved to talk, provided the company was good.
One of her favorite things about Petite Treats, her little bakery on Harvest Cove's square, was the ready availability of good company. Her pink, white, and turquoise havenâcomplete with scattered unicorns and long glass cases full of sugary wonderâhad become one of the Cove's best spots for friendly conversation. She wouldn't have it any other way.
Larkin stepped back, planted her hands on her hips, and studied her creation. “Well?” Emma asked, tilting her head as she gave the cake a thorough once-over.
“Is it done? I haven't seen you make one like this before.”
Larkin glanced at her and smiled. Even in the cold, miserable depths of February, Emma Henry managed to look as fresh and bright as a spring daisy. Her dark brown hair was pulled up into a bun, and she wore a dressâwhich in this weather demonstrated a level of commitment to fashion that Larkin knew she would never be able to musterâof white wool, with a thin black belt and black tights and a pair of cute little snow boots that Larkin suspected would be neither little nor cute if she bought them in her own size. The entire effect was charming. It also, in her opinion, required entirely too much work to pull off.
I'm doomed to wear ripped jeans forever. Oh well. I'd rather be comfortable and smell like a cookie.
“Almost done. Can't forget the most important part.” Larkin returned to the table, opened a small plastic package, and set about bending a sweet-and-sour rainbow to arch between the whipped cream clouds. When it was done, she made a fist. “Yessss. Rainbow cake achieved! I do good work.”
Emma laughed. “It
is
adorable.”
Larkin admired the tall, cylindrical cake. The design was simpleâthree layers, with pale yellow buttercream frosting setting off the sugar confetti scattered about the bottom third of the cake, and a cheerful rainbow at the top. Once it got to where it was going, the cake would sit on a short pastel pink pedestal with scalloped edges, a nod to the gender of Brynn's soon-to-be niece. And, of course, there would be more sugar confetti. There was always room for more sugar confetti.
“I love it,” she said with a nod. “I've only done this cake a couple of times before, but it's so cute for a baby shower. I'm just glad Brynn agreed with me.”
“Brynn has good taste,” Emma said. “And she really wants to make this a nice shower for her sister. I still think she's crazy for having it at her house, butâ”
“Oh, it'll be fine,” Larkin said, waving her hand. “Her house is super cute, and there are only, what, ten people going? Little party, little house, little cake, big pile of presents . . . sounds awesome to me. I just have to get this over there before she starts to worry.” She popped the top onto her cake carrier, gathered the few items she'd need to finish up at Brynn's, and pulled her apron over her head. “Want to come with? We can probably talk her into a mimosa in the kitchen before we have to clear out.”
Brynn Parker was Emma's assistant at her event planning company, Occasions by Emma, and Larkin had worked with the bubbly redhead often enough that they'd been friendly long before they'd gotten around to actually hanging out. She and her employer were two peas in a pod in a lot of ways, Larkin thought with a smileâbright, beautiful, driven, and weirdly addicted to uncomfortable shoes. Though as she'd
discovered these past few months, Emma was substantially better at karaoke than her counterpart.
“Can't. Wish I could,” Emma replied. “I've got the setup for an evening wedding to deal with, and Seth is making us a late dinner and renting movies.”
“He's cooking? Seth doesn't cook.” Emma's fiancé had some fine qualitiesâand he was a sexy thing to bootâbut Larkin had never seen the man do anything in the kitchen that required more than the use of the microwave.
Emma frowned lightly, looking perturbed. “He bought a cookbook. And groceries. And then when I tried to look in the bags, he
physically removed
me from the kitchen.”
Larkin smiled. “Aw. He wants to make food for you.”
“He swears he knows how. I just hope he doesn't make fire for me instead. I don't think we can handle another man who burns water in this family.”
“Poor Jake.” Larkin laughed. Emma's sister was married to Jake Smith, the local vet. Nice guy. Legendarily bad cooking skills. He did keep trying, but the jury was out on whether or not that was a good thing. “So that's why you came to see me today,” she said, arching an eyebrow. “You got kicked out.”
“That's not the
only
reason,” Emma said. “I also heard you had cookies. Big chocolatey chocolate chip cookies.” She grinned. “And I had to get a couple of things from the apartment.”
“Oh, I see how it is. I'm being used for witty repartee and baked goods. Mostly baked goods.” Larkin heaved an exaggerated sigh. “I assume you saw the cookies on your way in.”
“I may or may not have bought a bag of them for myself, which may or may not be sitting behind the counter with Aimee as we speak.”
“Hmm.” Larkin brushed her hands absently down her shirt. “The weeks I have chocolatey chocolate chip cookies are the weeks I wonder why I ever bother to make any other flavors. This is a town of chocoholics.”
“This is a
world
of chocoholics. Don't act like you're immune. I've seen you get into the batter while you're working.”
Larkin snorted. “I'm powered by cake batter and cookie dough. I deny nothing. So have you decided what you're going to do with the apartment yet? I can ask around if you're looking for a renter.”
“I might be.” Emma huffed a stray lock of hair out of her face. “I don't want to sell it. That's definite. It's right above the shop, and I'm attached.”
“You also want to keep some control over who's banging around up there. I would, too,” Larkin said.
Emma had moved in with Seth just before Christmas, leaving her cozy apartment mostly furnished but generally unoccupied. It was so convenient to work that Larkin might have been tempted, but the kitchen was way too small. Even though she did most of her baking right here in the shop, she still liked to have space for it at home. Her own little house might not be a palace, but it had enough room for her to spread out the way she liked.
It was more than she'd had for a lot of years. And that was more than enough.
“I feel funny thinking of anyone else up there,” Emma admitted. “But I'm going to have to get used to it.” She offered Larkin a small self-deprecating smile. “We all know how good I am at change.”
“You've got all kinds of change going on. You're great with change. This is just a really big one.” Larkin walked around the corner of the stainless steel table and wrapped her arms around Emma, propping her chin on the shorter woman's head. “Do you need a song?”
“Oh God.” Emma's voice was muffled. “No.”
“I think you need a song.”
“Please. Please no.” But the “no” ended in a desperate giggle, so Larkin began to rock Emma back and forth. She heard a groan.
“Don' worry,” she crooned, “'bout a thing. You know why, Emma?”
“Umâ”
Larkin sang the answer, that everything would be all right, increasing her volume to make up for the fact that she wasn't exactly on key.
“Larkin, Bob Marley is rolling in his grave right now,” Emma mumbled into Larkin's arm.
Larkin kept singing at the top of her lungs, all the while pretending to tune out her friend's protests.
“You are totally losing customers right now.” Emma was laughing again, allowing herself to be rocked from side to side.
As she sang, Larkin stumbled sideways, and the two of them yelped as she crashed them, as gently as possible, into the counter. A stack of measuring cups tipped over, clattering to the floor. Larkin got one look at Emma's mussed hair and amused yet disgruntled expression before throwing back her head and laughing. It was only a second or two before Emma joined her.
They were noisy enough that the male voice was less of a shock than it might have been.
“Why don't I ever get invited to these things?”
Larkin took a split second to brace herself before she turned her head. Even then, it was hard not to make some sort of stupid yummy noise at the sight of the man standing before them. It didn't seem to matter how many times she was exposed to himâand that was plenty, since being underfoot was one of his special talentsâShane only seemed to get better-looking. He loomed in the doorway, his big athletic frame seeming just a little too large for his surroundings. His stance was relaxed, thumbs hooked in the pockets of his jeans, a classic, stylish wool coat open over a plain T-shirt. Melting snow puddled around his boots. Larkin forced herself to meet his gaze, pretending she hadn't taken yet another mental snapshot of his square jaw, the dusting of freckles across the bridge of his nose, the short crop of dark red hair that spiked up, just a little, and probably on purpose.
Somewhere in the recesses of her mind, there was a gallery dedicated entirely to Shane Sullivan, God of Inappropriate Hotness and General Bad Idea, and that was where she filed away the snapshot, to be savored later when no one could ask her why she was staring off into space and smiling like an idiot.
His deep-set eyes were crinkled at the corners as he grinned at her, and Larkin offered what she hoped was a cheeky smile back. Even though she was surrounded by baked goods, there was nothing in the shop she would rather take a bite out of than Shane. That was a problem.
He
was a problem. And because Shane liked being a problem more than just about anything, he would continue to plague her until the day she cracked, threw herself at him, and demanded he take her right there among the pastries.
Not that she had any fantasies about that sort of
thing. Or an entire collection of them with only slight variations. No, sir, she did not.
“You don't get invited because you do such a good job inviting yourself,” Larkin said, releasing Emma from her clutches and laughing as her friend tried to smooth down her hair. “I didn't realize I was having a party back here. Did somebody kick you out of your house, too?”
“Not recently.” He eyed Emma. “Trouble in paradise?”
“No. I was kicked out with love, and the promise of a gourmet meal later.” Emma straightened her dress and turned her attention back to Larkin. “I'll call you tomorrow and tell you if the house burned down. Thanks for the, ah . . . whatever that was.”
“They were good vibes, and you're welcome. Don't eat all the cookies at once.”
“No promises,” Emma replied with a laugh, though the smile that replaced it seemed slightly stiff when she turned away. “Bye, Shane.” He moved aside to let Emma pass, then sauntered a little farther into the kitchen before glancing behind him, through the doorway to the front of the shop.
Shane exhaled loudly. “She still doesn't like me,” he said.
“Emma? Sure she does.” Actually, Larkin thought it was more “ambivalence” than actual “like,” but it was still an improvement. Besides, Emma wasn't exactly alone in being less than warm and fuzzy on the subject of Shane. His mouth tended to be as big as he was, and he had a reputation among the female population of Harvest Cove (and the surrounding towns) for being . . . well, kind of a jerk. Kind of a
complete
jerk.
And yet here I am, drooling. Of course.
Larkin sighed. Some things never changed.
“Got any spare cupcakes?” he asked, as though he knew what she was thinking about. “If you're testing out anything new, my taste buds are available.”
She gave him a look, and hated herself just a little when she turned to pick up a small cupcake box from the counter. It was Saturday. He always came in on Saturday. And when she'd been baking this morning, she'd done a test batch of a new recipe and put a few aside for him. His knowing smile when he realized what she'd done turned her insides to mush instantly.
“I love you,” he said, and her lower belly tied itself into little knots even though it was a phrase he threw around all the time, rarely with any sincerity. She really ought to be immune to it by now.
“You love my mad baking skills,” Larkin said, walking over to him and poking him in the stomach. Hard as a rock. Naturally. “Here, jerk. Cookies-and-cream brownies. I'm probably putting them on the menu next week, unless they make you projectile vomit.” She smiled. “Or maybe they're
supposed
to make you projectile vomit. You'll have to taste one to see.”
“Gladly.”
He took the box from her with a casual brush of his fingers against hers that made her skin tingle. Standing this close, Shane tilted his head to talk to her while she looked up at him. He was probably used to it, she thoughtâat six foot five, the man was taller than almost everyoneâbut it was still a novel experience for her. She was five foot ten, a giant among her female friends and eye level with plenty of men. The way he almost enveloped her when there were only a few inches
between them felt incredibly intimate. He was so warm that she could feel the heat radiating off him. That alone would have beckoned her closer, but he also smelled good, wearing some kind of dark vanilla musk that made him seem like a sexier extension of her work.