Summer at the Cape is the fourth original hardcover from New York Times, USA TODAY, and Publisher's Weekly bestselling author RaeAnne Thayne. With the emotional pull of Debbie Macomber, Barbara Delinsky, and Susan Wiggs, RaeAnne tells the story of the Porter sisters, Cami and Violet, who come together to mourn the death of Violet's twin, Lily. Over the course of the summer, the sisters must make peace with each other and also individually with their free-spirited, outspoken, activist mother who left their father two decades earlier.
As the older sister to identical twins Violet and Lily, Cami Porter had always been the odd sister out. The breach became even stronger when her parents split up—while the twins stayed in Cape Sanctuary with their free-spirited activist mother, Rosemary, fourteen-year-old Cami moved to L.A. with her by-the-book attorney father, Ted. Nearly twenty years later, when Cami gets the tragic news that Lily has drowned saving a child, Cami returns to her childhood home—her mother and Violet need her.
Lily had spent her entire life looking for something to be passionate about, and in leasing a property from neighbor Franklin Rafferty and setting up Coastal Pines Glamping, she was about to see her dream realized. Following her death, the sadness and grief Rosemary, Violet and Cami feel is compounded by Jon Rafferty, son of the neighbor whose land Lily had leased. Jon, who hadn't seen his father in years, is stunned to learn that his father is in the early stages of Alzheimer's Disease, and he worries that the Porter women took advantage of him. But Jon can see that the Porter family is in mourning, and agrees they can keep the land through the summer, and then they'll need to shut the glamping site down.
Then there's Violet—the child Lily saved, Ariana Mendoza, is the daughter of Violet's former high school sweetheart, Alex Mendoza. She could never forgive him way back when for cheating on her, but she is so grateful that his adorable little girl is okay. Alex still has feelings for Violet, but he is overcome with grief and gratitude at the same time for the loss of Lily, who died saving his child.
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2
VIOLET
WILD, FRENZIED BARKING RANG OUT WHEN Violet Porter let
herself into the back door of her mother’s comfortable kitchen at Moongate
Farm.
Rosemary was nowhere in sight. Instead, a cranky-faced
schnauzer–toy poodle mix planted himself in front of the door, telling her in
no uncertain terms that she was an intruder who wasn’t welcome here.
“Hi, Baxter,” she said, mouth stretched thin in what she
knew was an insincere smile. “How are you, buddy?”
Lily’s dog only growled at her, baring his teeth with his
hack-les raised as if he wanted to rip her throat out.
The dog hated her. Violet wasn’t exactly sure why.
She might have thought he would look more fondly toward
her, considering she was the identical twin to his late owner. But maybe that
was the problem. Maybe the fact that she looked so much like Lily but clearly wasn’t
her sister confused the dog and made him view her as a threat.
He had never really warmed to her, even when he lived in
her condo with Lily. Since Lily’s death, he had become down-right hostile.
“Stop that. What’s gotten into you? I could hear you
clear back in my bedroom.”
Her mother’s voice trailed out from down the hall,
becoming louder as she approached the kitchen, still fastening an earring.
She stopped dead when she spotted Violet.
“Oh! Violet! You scared me! What are you doing here?”
“You invited me. Remember? You’ve known for months I was
coming to help you out during my summer break.”
“You were coming tomorrow. Not today!”
Okay. That wasn’t exactly the warm welcome she might have
expected, Violet thought wryly. Instead, her mother was staring at her with an
expression that seemed a curious mix of chagrin and dismay.
She shrugged as Baxter continued to growl. Wasn’t anybody
happy to see her?
“I finished cleaning out my classroom and calculating
final grades this morning. Since all my things were already packed and loaded
into my car, I couldn’t see any reason to wait until the morning to drive up.
Is there a problem?”
Rosemary, usually so even-tempered, looked at her, then
at the giant wrought iron clock on the wall of the Moongate Farm kitchen with a
hint of panic in her eyes.
“No. It’s only…this is, er, a bit of a complication. I’m
expecting dinner guests any moment.”
“That must be why it smells so good in here.”
It smelled like roasting vegetables mixed with garlic and
cheese. Violet’s stomach rumbled loud enough she was certain her mother had to
hear, but Rosemary didn’t seem to notice, looking at the clock again.
Why was she so nervous? Who was coming? If she didn’t
know better, Violet might have suspected her mother was expecting a date.
Not impossible, she supposed. Her mother was still a
beautiful woman, with high cheekbones, a wide smile and the deep blue eyes she
had handed down to Violet and her identical twin.
Rosemary didn’t date much, though she’d had a few
relationships since her divorce from Violet’s father.
As far as Violet knew, she had broken up with the most
re-cent man she had dated more than a year earlier and Rosemary hadn’t
mentioned anyone else.
Then again, just as Violet didn’t tell her mother
everything that went on in her life in Sacramento, Rosemary likely had secrets
of her own here in Cape Sanctuary.
“No problem,” she said, trying for a cheerful tone. “You
don’t have to worry about feeding me. If I get hungry later, I’ll make a
sandwich or something. I’ll get out of your way.”
“You’re not in the way,” Rosemary protested. “It’s just,
well…” She didn’t have time to finish before a knock sounded at the back door.
Baxter, annoying little beast, gave one sharp bark, sniffed at the door, then
plopped down expectantly.
Violet thought she heard a man’s deep voice say something
on the other side of the door and then a child’s laughter in response.
Something about that voice rang a chord. She frowned,
suddenly unsettled. “Mom. Who are you expecting?”
“Just some…some friends from town,” Rosemary said
vaguely. She heard the man’s voice again and her disquiet turned into
full-fledged dismay.
No. Rosemary wouldn’t have. Would she?
“Mom. Who’s here?” Her voice sounded shrill and she was
quite sure Rosemary could pick up on it.
“I didn’t know you were coming tonight,” her mom said
defensively. “You told me you were coming tomorrow, so I…I invited Alexandro
and his daughter for dinner. He’s been such a help to me with Wild Hearts. I
could never have set up all those tents or moved in the furniture without him.
I’ve been meaning to have him and his daughter over for dinner but the time got
away from me, until here we are. I’m sorry. You weren’t supposed to be here until
tomorrow and I didn’t think it would be a problem.”
The news hit her like a hatchet to the chest. Alex was
here, on the other side of the door. Alex, who had once been her best friend,
the man she thought would be her forever.
Alex, who had betrayed her.
She had seen him exactly twice since they broke up a
decade ago.
One previous encounter had been a few years after he
married Claudia Crane, when she had bumped into him at the grocery store while
home from college for a brief visit.
The second time had been four months earlier at Lily’s
memorial service.
That was two times too many, really. Three encounters was
asking far too much of her.
She wanted to jump back into her car and head back to
Sacramento.
No. This was silly. She had known she would see him this
summer. How could she avoid it? Cape Sanctuary was a small town. Not only that,
but his house and boat charter business were both just down the road from
Moongate Farm.
The concept had seemed fine in the abstract. Like algebra
and the periodic table.
It had been nearly a decade, after all. She was a
completely different person from that besotted girl she had once been.
He meant nothing to her anymore. She should be able to
blithely chat with him about what he had been up to the past decade.
Yeah. Not happening.
Maybe she could turn around, climb back into her car and
go hang out at The Sea Shanty until he was gone.
No. That was just kicking the can down the road. She had
to face him eventually. Why not now?
She could come up with a dozen reasons, but none of them
seemed compelling enough for her to flee without at least saying hello.
“I’m sorry,” Rosemary said again, her hand on the
doorknob. “It’s fine, Mom. Don’t worry about it. Don’t leave them standing
outside. I’ll just say hello and then head over to the bunk-house to settle in.
You won’t even know I’m here. It will be fine.”
She didn’t believe that for a minute, but she forced
herself to put on a pleasant smile as her mother opened the door.
And there he was.
As gorgeous as ever, with those thick dark eyelashes,
strong features, full mouth that could kiss like no one else she had ever met…
Her toes curled at the unwelcome memories and she forced
her attention away from Alex to the young girl standing beside him. She had
dark hair that swung to her shoulders, bright brown eyes and dimples like her
father.
Right now she was staring at Violet like she had just
grown a second head.
“Miss Lily?” she whispered, big brown eyes wide and mouth
ajar.
Of course. Ariana thought Violet was her sister. It was a
natural mistake, as they were identical twins, though as an adult, Vi had
mostly seen the differences between them.
She approached the girl with the same patient, reassuring
mile she used in her classroom when one of her students was upset about something.
“Hi there,” she said calmly, doing her best to ignore
Alex’s intense gaze for now. “You must be Ariana. I’m Violet. Lily was my twin
sister.”
“You look just like her,” the girl said breathlessly. Her
gaze narrowed. “Except I think maybe your hair is a little shorter than hers
was. And she had a tattoo of flowers on her wrist and you don’t.”
When they were in college, Lily had insisted on getting a
tiny bouquet of flowers, intertwined lilies and violets and camellias to
represent the three Porter sisters.
She had begged Violet and Cami to both get one, too.
Cami, older by two years and always far more mature than either Vi or Lily, had
politely explained that she didn’t want any tattoos because of the serious
nature of the law career she was pursuing. Violet had promised she would but
then kept putting it off.
She still could go get a tattoo. After Lily’s death, she
had thought more seriously about it, but the loss of her sister was always with
her. She didn’t need a mark on her skin to remind her Lily wasn’t here.
She forced a smile for the girl. “Right. No tattoo.
That’s one sure way of telling us apart.”
Plus, she was alive and Lily wasn’t. But she wasn’t cruel
enough to say that out loud, especially not to this child.
Lily had drowned after rescuing Ariana and a visiting
friend when a rogue wave from an offshore winter storm dragged the girls out to
sea. Lily had somehow managed to get both girls back to safety, but the Pacific
had been relentless that day, and before Lily could climb out herself, another
wave had pulled her under.
Violet certainly couldn’t blame this child for a cruel
act of nature.
Or for her parentage.
Excerpted from
Summer at the Cape by RaeAnne Thayne. Copyright © 2022 by RaeAnne Thayne.
Published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.
About the Author
New York Times bestselling
author RaeAnne Thayne finds inspiration in the beautiful norhtern Utah
mountains where she lives with her family. Her stories have been
described as "poignant and sweet" with "beautiful honest
storytelling that goes straight to the heart." She loves to hear
from readers and can be reached through her website at www.raeannethayne.com.
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