High school wasn’t the right time or
place for their relationship to grow, but now, fifteen years later, a chance
encounter changes both of their lives forever.
No one in the charming river town of New Hope,
Pennsylvania, needs to know that Vince Amato plans on flipping The Hideaway Inn
to the highest bidder and returning to his luxury lifestyle in New York City.
He needs to make his last remaining investment turn a profit…even if that means
temporarily relocating to the quirky small town where he endured growing up.
He’s spent years reinventing himself and won’t let his past dictate his future.
But on his way to New Hope, Vince gets stuck
in the middle of nowhere and his past might be the only thing that can get him
to his future. Specifically Tack O’Leary, the gorgeous, easygoing farm boy who
broke his heart and who picks Vince up in his dilapidated truck.
Tack comes to the rescue not only with a ride
but also by signing on to be the chef at The Hideaway for the summer. As Vince
and Tack open their hearts to each other again, Vince learns that being true to
himself doesn’t mean shutting down a second chance with Tack—it means starting
over and letting love in.
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That summer Vinny
would come by and see me almost every day, usually with a new book. I loved
hearing him talk. He described the spiritual journey of Siddhartha, the
complicated plot of King Lear and even read some of James Baldwin’s poems to me
that were so riveting I almost hammered my finger to a post. At school I was
in a class called “Reading Foundations” and even I was smart enough to know it
was for kids who were barely passing. I never felt dumb around Vinny. He
treated me like I was just as smart as he was and after hanging out with him
for a few weeks, I started to believe it.
Being alone with Vinny was easy. We were so different but also
had so much in common. My mom died when I was a kid and he never knew his
father. I never talked to anyone about not really having many memories of her
and wanting more. He only had a single picture of his dad and never wanted to
know more. We fit like opposite pieces of a puzzle that click when joined.
Being alone together at the edge of the farm felt like freedom. But when the
fence was done and school started, the world shifted back to where it was and
whatever we had evaporated.
A small-town high
school is a network of territories with strict borders. Vinny didn’t belong
anywhere and it made his life miserable but it made me admire him more because
he didn’t need to. He did what he wanted, how he wanted to do it.
My life felt like an
endless list of obligations. I followed some script then and I don’t even know
why or where it came from. I had to place at the meets, have the hottest
girlfriend, drink like an animal at parties on the weekends. These things were
expected of me or I expected them of myself. At the time I couldn’t tell the
difference. I couldn’t imagine a life being anything other than the one that
was already attached to me, but meeting Vinny put a crack in that heavy iron chain.
Once school started, Evie came back from her summer job down the
shore, football practice began and chores on the farm took over my life. At
least, that’s what I told myself. I couldn’t find a way to make Vinny part of
my life beyond that summer without making my entire world explode. I ignored
him at school, pretty much, even though alone in bed at night I couldn’t stop
thinking about him. I kept those worlds separate because they seemed to be in
completely different orbits. It was a shitty thing to do. I know it now and I
even knew it then.
I left The Hideaway mad as hell at Vinny—or rather Vince—for
the way he treated me in the kitchen, but the truth is I deserve everything he
said to me and more. How could I ever get him to understand the choices I made
back then and why I made them? How could I explain to him how hard I have
worked to undo everything I did back then? Then I remember how I already
started on the wrong foot. He asked about Evie and I went all mysterious and
vague. I should have told him we got divorced. I should have told him that we
still co-parent a wonderful, funny six-year-old. I should definitely have told
him that I finally came out as bi. But picking him up on the side of the road
was such a confusing surprise that my brain wasn’t functioning at full
capacity.
Copyright © 2020 by Iron Bridge Creative
About Philip William Stover
Philip William Stover splits his time between Bucks County, Pennsylvania,
and New York City. He has an MFA in writing and is a clinical professor at New
York University where he is the former chair of the writing curriculum. As a
freelance journalist, his essays and reviews have appeared in Newsday, The
Forward, The Tony Awards, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The
Houston Chronicle, The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, and other
national publications.
Philip grew up
tearing the covers off the romance novels he devoured so he wouldn’t get teased
at school. Now he enjoys traveling the world with his husband of over twenty
years and sitting in front of the woodstove with their half-Bassett,
half-Sharpei rescue pup and he would never consider defacing any of the books
he loves.
He is thrilled to
be returning to romance and loves to write cozy, warm-hearted stories served by
hairy forearms with a side of fries. He can be found on social media as Philip
William Stover.
Connect with Philip William Stover
Carina
Adores is home to highly romantic contemporary love stories featuring beloved
romance tropes, where LGBTQ+ characters find their happily-ever-afters.
A new Carina Adores title is available each month:
- The Girl Next Door by Chelsea M. Cameron (available May 26, 2020)
- Just Like That by Cole McCade (available June 30, 2020)
- Hairpin Curves by Elia Winters (available July 28, 2020
- Better Than People by Roan Parrish (available August 25, 2020)
- Full Moon in Leo by Brooklyn Ray (available September 29, 2020)
- If You Can’t Stand the Heat by KD Fisher (available October 27, 2020)
- Just Like Us by Cole McCade (available November 24, 2020)
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