NEW
from NYT Bestselling Author Nicole
Williams
New
Adult/Adult Romance
Releasing
January 20, 2015
Cover
designed by Okay Creations
I grew up with three
brothers. They weren’t tied to me by blood, but our connection went beyond
genetics or bearing the same last name. Our connection was forged the summer I
turned thirteen, the summer my mom ended her life and left me in the custody of
John Armstrong, a man I’d never met. Packing all I owned in a couple of boxes,
I left the familiarity of the big city and headed west to Red Mountain Ranch,
set in a lonely valley outside of Jackson Hole.
Nothing was as it
seemed at Red Mountain—it didn’t take long for me to figure that out. John was
kind to me but distant, as if he was afraid to let anyone get too close. His
three teenage sons had their own devices for keeping love as far away as they
could. The eldest distracted himself with cheap relationships that had a
shelf-life of one night. The middle son threw himself into the rigor of running
a ranch, and the third wielded cruelty and mind-games in his quest to keep
people from getting close.
Time has gone by, and
I’ve spent those years trying to forget the brother I’d fallen for—the biggest
mistake of my life.
Finally, I’ve moved
on. Finally, I’m back. But what I didn’t realize was that running away from the
wrong brother meant I’d also run away from the right one. The one who’d been
there for me all along, waiting in his brother’s shadow for the day I either
would or could move on.
But a decade is a long
time to wait. Has the brother I should have chosen all of those years ago moved
on too? Am I about to discover that my biggest mistake wasn’t falling in love
with the wrong brother, but failing to return the love of the right one sooner?
Does unrequited love
have an expiration date?
I’m about to find out.
Author’s Note: This book
is a "sweet" romance that isn't overly sexy. Fans of LOST
& FOUND will be interested in THREE BROTHERS.
EXCERPT
I stood there, sucking
in deep breaths until I felt something that resembled calm. And that was when I
noticed a faint red glow coming from one end of the porch. That I hadn’t
smelled the familiar scent that came with it was an indication of just how not
myself I’d been when I fled out that door.
“You might want to keep running. Things are only going to get worse in there.
There’s no happy ending waiting for anyone on the other side of that door.”
His voice blew past the walls I’d been so sure had been
impenetrable and threaded through me as it always used to. Instead of feeling
like the twenty-five-year-old woman I was, I became that impressionable girl
who had worshipped the ground beneath a boy who had no right to be worshipped.
I closed my eyes and bolstered my strength. “You were always the one who was
better at running, Conn. That’s more your style than mine.” Instead of down the
stairs or back inside, I went toward him. I wanted him to see that he didn’t
have power over me any longer. At least, I wanted him to see the façade of him
not holding power over me.
“Yet how long were you frozen on that first step when you arrived? I kind of
lost count at five minutes.”
His voice was just as smoky and smooth as I remembered it, and
age had deepened it a key or two. The porch lights were out. With just the
light coming from the buildings and barns dotted around and the orangey glow of
his cigarette, I could barely make out Conn’s face. Not that I needed light to
remember it. I’d memorized the perfections and imperfections of it years ago,
and despite my efforts to forget, it had revisited my dreams too frequently.
Where Chase had been big, blond, and beefy, Conn was the opposite. He was
taller than me but only by a couple of inches, and his hair was the same dark
chestnut John’s had been before the silver took over. Conn’s body could have
been described as lanky and lean, and his dark long-sleeved shirts and pants
gave off just the right degree of sinister meets tortured. That, matched with
his brooding expression, had alerted me from the beginning that he was the kind
of boy I should keep my distance from. The kind who had let so much darkness
into his life that it suffocated all of the light
“You were here the whole time? Camped out in your chair, smoking your
cigarettes, watching me, and you didn’t say anything?” I stopped when I was
still a good ten feet back from him. Distance was a good thing when it came to
Conn, both mental and physical. “I should probably be surprised, but I’m not.”
Conn’s jagged smile crept into place. “So? Are you keeping your fingers crossed
for a repeat of your sixteenth birthday?”
I didn’t have to see the image flash through his eyes to know exactly what he
was talking about. “Nothing happened.” I crossed my arms and stood taller, trying
to convince myself at the same time.
“And is that why you disappeared for seven years?” The cigarette dangled from
Conn’s lips. The bottle in his hand was already a third empty, and even though
I could barely see them, his eyes were both calling me closer and shoving me
away. Everything about him flashed danger. Everything screamed stay away.
I’d never read the signs when it came to Conn. This time, I’d promised myself I
would. I’d promised myself that I wouldn’t come back here if I wasn’t sure I
could keep him at an emotional and physical distance.
“I came back because John, aka your father, is dying. I came to say good-bye.”
I leaned into the railing along the porch, keeping a safe distance without
making it seem as though I was concerned about how close or how far I was from
Conn. “Unlike you, I’m not trying to discover what gives out first: my lungs or
my liver.”
“I’m hoping they go at the same time.” Conn plucked the cigarette from his lips
long enough to take a pull from the bottle.
Unlike his father, who was adamant that scotch was the only
thing to drink when a person needed one, Conn chose tequila. It wasn’t a simple
matter of a difference in taste. No, whatever John liked, Conn preferred the
opposite. What was sad though was that in Conn’s effort to defy John at every
turn, he was only proving just how significant a role his father played in his
life. He was just as in tune with his dad as if he’d been mimicking him at
every turn.
“Why aren’t you at dinner?” I asked, reminding myself to keep our conversation
short. Conn was a master at wordplay and could lure even the greatest of cynics
to his side.
“Because I don’t want to go.” He held out the bottle. When I shook my head, he
let the bottle hang between us for a few moments before taking another long
drink. At this rate, Conn would be shit-faced before that cigarette burned out.
“That seems to be your go-to answer to every question.”
“That’s because that’s my go-to feeling for most everything, family most of
all.” Conn looked off into the distance where Red Mountain rested. Unlike the
rest of us, who dodged looking at it or venturing up it, Conn seemed to view it
as a refuge.
“Still haven’t gotten over your daddy issues?” I closed my eyes, instantly
regretting my words.
I was just about to apologize when Conn leaned forward in his
chair. All I could see were the whites of his eyes, but that was all I needed
to see to know he was staring straight at me. When I’d been younger and under the
impression that Conn could do no wrong, I’d measured my life in the moments
when Conn had looked at me and me alone. There were only two ways he looked at
me: straight through or straight on. Now I would have preferred he look
straight through me because his eyes pulled things out of the place I’d buried
deep inside myself.
“I don’t know. Have you gotten over your Conn issues?”
About the Author
I’m
the New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author of the CRASH series
(HarperTeen, S&S UK), LOST & FOUND series, UP IN FLAMES (S&S UK),
The EDEN TRILOGY, and a handful of others. I write stories about everyday kinds
of people who find themselves in extraordinary kinds of situations. I tell love
stories with happy endings because I believe in making the world a better
place, and that’s one tiny way I can make it so. I’m one of those people who
still believe in true love and soul mates, and would rather keep my head in the
clouds any day over having my feet firmly on the ground.
No comments:
Post a Comment