April 26th, 2024
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Secret Identity, Small Town Romance
Available 4.15.24


Excerpt of Sea Glass Summer by Miranda Liasson

Purchase


Seashell Harbor # 2
Forever
July 2022
On Sale: June 28, 2022
Featuring: Alex; Kit
368 pages
ISBN: 1538736276
EAN: 9781538736272
Kindle: B09HQMVP8W
Paperback / e-Book
Add to Wish List

Women's Fiction Family Life, Romance Contemporary

Also by Miranda Liasson:

Sea Glass Summer, August 2024
Mass Market Paperback
The Sweetheart Crush, November 2023
e-Book / audiobook
The Summer of Second Chances, July 2023
Trade Size / e-Book
The Sweetheart Fix, December 2022
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Sea Glass Summer, July 2022
Paperback / e-Book
Coming Home to Seashell Harbor, May 2022
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
The Sweetheart Deal, February 2022
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book / audiobook
Coming Home to Seashell Harbor, May 2021
Paperback / e-Book / audiobook
All I Want for Christmas Is You, November 2019
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
The Way You Love Me, February 2019
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Then There Was You, June 2018
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Can't Miss Christmas, November 2017
e-Book
The Baby Project, September 2017
Paperback / e-Book
Can't Fight This Feeling, March 2017
e-Book
Can't Stop Loving You, December 2016
Paperback / e-Book
Mirror Lake - Three Book Series, September 2016
Audio / e-Book
A Man of Honor, July 2016
Paperback / e-Book
This Loving Feeling, July 2016
Paperback / e-Book
This Love of Mine, October 2015
Paperback / e-Book
Heart and Sole, July 2015
Paperback / e-Book
This Thing Called Love, May 2015
Paperback / e-Book

Excerpt of Sea Glass Summer by Miranda Liasson

Kit was just texting back when she heard pounding. Harsh, metal-biting-rock kind of pounding. The distinct, sharp chink of a heavy implement repeatedly splitting stone, echoing through the early morning quiet. She rose from the peeling old chair and carefully walked down the crooked back porch steps, along the side of the house and around the tangled, overgrown shrubbery and low-hanging tree branches. All of which gave her plentiful cover as she cautiously rounded the front, hovering her finger over the final 1 in 911, just in case. What she saw made her gasp. 

A shirtless man was taking a sledgehammer to the already-crumbling steps. And the sight stopped her dead in her tracks. 

It wasn’t the awful steps that drew her attention or the enormous sledgehammer glinting in the morning light as he ripped out the old mortar and cracked sandstones that were scattered all about. 

A flush of heat rose all through her as she noted the fine smooth lines of tensing muscle, the elegant movements, his lean but strong build. Whoever this man was, he moved with a confident fluidity, with a grace akin to a dancer, and it was mesmerizing. 

Lift the hammer, swing down hard—chink went the stone. Another lift and repeat. 

No wonder his shirt was off. He was probably burning a thousand calories a minute. Bet his friends didn’t have to drag him out of bed to force him to jog three miles on a chilly morning. 

Also, he was way too hot to be cold. 

She laughed at the silly joke. It wasn’t like her to be giddy. Well, the old Kit would’ve been, for sure. A sense of relief rushed through her that maybe her old self really was in there somewhere. 

Also…her ovaries were still clearly functioning. 

Suddenly, the man straightened up. She watched as he ran the back of his hand along his forehead. Then he turned, his expression foreboding, brows drawn down over dark eyes.  

Busted. 

A shock reverberated clear through her as recognition hit. His pitch-black hair was wavy and longish now, grown out from the high-and-tight military cut when she’d seen him last. And his skin wasn’t tan—that illusion came from his natural Latino coloring. She forced herself to look directly at him. But the intensity of his dark gaze wasn’t any less calming. 

Alex de la Cruz. Here, working on Carson’s house. Despite the fact that she’d told him thanks but no thanks. A quick scan showed a shiny black pickup sitting in the driveway. She hadn’t seen it since they’d jogged along the coastline and approached from the backyard. 

He took in her leggings, Carson’s old sweatshirt, and her multicolored knit cap with dual pom-poms, a gift from Ollie last Christmas. She saw the moment recognition widened his eyes—and he looked about as pleased as she was. 

“Hello, Katherine,” he said, his voice deep and as calm as if they met passing on the street. It sounded mocking because no one had called her Katherine since she’d gotten detention in high school for passing notes in Lit class. 

Come to think of it, he’d been the one she’d gotten in trouble with for that. They’d also been chem lab partners, and they’d joked around and had fun. In the days before he’d developed a branch up his butt. 

He might as well have called her Mrs. Blakemore for all the formality brimming in the deep baritone of his voice. 

He’d always been a little odd. When Carson was around, Alex rarely even glanced at her, giving the air of barely being able to tolerate her. She’d written it off as him being one of those men who simply didn’t “see” women—as equals, anyway. Still, she’d put up with him because Carson had loved him. 

Anger welled up. Because besides ignoring the fact that she’d told him not to come, he was doing things to Carson’s house uninvited. Actually, worse than that. In defiance. 

“Hello, Alex,” she managed as she struggled to choke down her fury. “What are you doing here?” 

 

Excerpt from Sea Glass Summer by Miranda Liasson
All rights reserved by publisher and author

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