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Hold Her Again
Hold Her Again
Hold Her Again
Ebook141 pages2 hours

Hold Her Again

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A country-music star returns home to win back the woman he loves in this charming holiday novella from New York Times bestselling author Shannon Stacey

Ava Wright isn’t happy to see her high school sweetheart rolling into their hometown a few weeks before Christmas. He’s only come back to bury his estranged father, but there’s no way she’ll be able to avoid him. No one can: he’s become a country-music superstar since going solo and leaving Ava behind.

Jace Morrow grew up believing “money can’t buy happiness” was something people said to make themselves feel better. But now he knows it’s the truth: no matter how many number-one hits he has, he’ll never recapture the magic of singing with Ava. Missing her—loving her—and living with making the wrong choice in life were what made him who he is.

When Jace is roped into being part of the town’s annual Christmas party, he only cares about earning Ava’s forgiveness. And though Ava’s heart has never healed, she loved Jace too much and for too long to shut him out when he’s hurting. As they fall in love all over again, they’re both faced with choices for their future…and this time Jace intends to make the right one.

This book is approximately 30,000 words

One-click with confidence. This title is part of the Carina Press Romance Promise: all the romance you’re looking for with an HEA/HFN. It’s a promise!
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 23, 2017
ISBN9781488079191
Author

Shannon Stacey

New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Shannon Stacey lives with her husband and two sons in New England, where her two favorite activities are writing stories of happily ever after and off-roading with her friends and family. You can contact Shannon through her website, www.shannonstacey.com, as well as sign up for her newsletter.

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    Book preview

    Hold Her Again - Shannon Stacey

    Chapter One

    Ava Wright didn’t need to hear the excited chatter around her to know who was driving the custom jacked-up, blacked-out Dodge pickup rolling slowly past the café’s windows.

    Jace Morrow was back in town.

    And if she was on Santa’s list of good girls, that truck would just keep on rolling, right into a tree.

    The exclamations quieted to speculative whispers and tsk sounds as the diners served each other some juicy gossip. Namely that Jace was back to bury the father he hadn’t seen for six years, and reminders that he’d broken the heart of the woman who served their biscuits and gravy and refilled their coffee mugs.

    Ava had known Jace coming back was a possibility as soon as word reached the café that Brian Morrow had passed away, but the only way she’d gotten any sleep for the last week was to lie to herself. She’d made herself believe he wouldn’t bother coming back himself—that he’d send his people to take care of the details and put the old house up for sale.

    But there was no mistaking that truck. He’d been leaning against it in a photograph that had been on the cover of a magazine last year. She’d done her best to avoid reading the article, but nobody in town would shut up about it and there had been a copy next to the dryer at the salon.

    It was a typical magazine profile of a country music superstar. Big house. Fancy studio. A folksy photo of him in jeans and bare feet, his acoustic guitar on his lap as he wrote his next big hit. And the obligatory photo of him on stage with rows of adoring women screaming and reaching for him.

    Yeah, it was good to be Jace Morrow.

    Holy shit, it’s true.

    The voice belonged to Whitney Cassidy, which meant word had already spread to the café’s kitchen. Ava had lived in Cottonwood Creek her entire life, except for those six months in St. Louis she’d wasted chasing dreams with Jace, and the efficiency of the gossip grapevine still managed to surprise her sometimes.

    Are you burning food right now? Ava asked, since Whitney was the only cook and there were order slips clipped to the carousel in the kitchen.

    Probably. But, holy shit, Ava. What are you going to do?

    There wasn’t much she could do. I guess I’m going to take up cooking the food in addition to taking the orders and serving it, since you’re not doing it.

    Could you see him?

    Best friend or not, Ava did not want to talk about Jace in front of her customers. No. And unless it’s a picture of his face on the back of a milk carton, I have no interest in seeing him.

    Honey, in this town, the only way you’re not going to see him is if you put a bag over your head.

    Speaking of heads, a lot of them were turned her way now that the truck was out of sight. She had no doubt the customers were looking for a reaction from her, but she had no intention of giving them one.

    She pushed through the swinging door to the kitchen, Whitney on her heels. Only when it had closed behind them did she press her hands to her face. Her cheeks felt hot, and with every passing moment of awareness that yes, Jace was back in town, it felt as if her heart raced a little more.

    Maybe I was wrong and you won’t have to see him, Whitney said, though they both knew it was a lie.

    I have to go to the funeral, she said. And we’re the only restaurant in town. He couldn’t cook for shit when he left and I doubt having tons of money gave him the ambition to learn.

    Take some sick days. It’s rude to go to a funeral sick because there are so many old people there. And maybe he doesn’t know you’re back. You could have stayed in St. Louis. After pausing for a few seconds, Whitney frowned. Or not. There are probably people camped in his dad’s front yard already, wanting to get his autograph and catch him up on all the gossip he’s missed. Pretending you’re sick could work, though.

    She might not have to pretend, Ava thought, since her stomach was tied up in such tight knots, it almost hurt. Whitney kept talking as she turned her attention back to the food she was cooking, but Ava wasn’t paying attention.

    This was really happening.

    Jace had come to take care of his father’s funeral in person, and there wouldn’t be any hiding from it. Or pretending she was sick, since she had too much pride to try that. Coming down with something right after her old flame drove into town was so transparent even an idiot would see through that.

    Ava? She’d been staring off at nothing, but she forced her attention back to her friend, who was holding two plates. Do you want me to take these out?

    No. She’d needed a minute—or days she didn’t have—to let Jace’s return sink in, but there would be no gossip about Ava coming undone and having to hide in the kitchen while Whitney did her job for her. Knowing this town, the story would be embellished and include a full-on emotional breakdown and broken dishes by bedtime. I’ll do it.

    You know your mom will probably be here any minute.

    They went to Springfield to do some Christmas shopping and have dinner, so they’re probably not back yet. Not that a phone call or a quick Facebook check wouldn’t clue her mom in, but she probably wouldn’t have time to descend on Ava at work, thank God.

    Take a breath, Whitney said, still holding the plates. I know you don’t want everybody talking about you guys, but it’s going to happen. Just keep your chin up and ignore it. He’ll crawl back under his fancy rock soon enough.

    Ava looked at her best friend, trying to center herself. They’d been balancing each other out for years—the tall brunette and the short blonde—but she wasn’t sure Whitney was going to be able to talk her through this one.

    I should be over it by now, she said in a small voice.

    "Honey, even I’m not over it and I wasn’t in love with him. You two were perfect together, not only as a couple, but when you guys sang. And he threw you away the first time some shiny bitch dangled a recording contract in front of him."

    Ava flinched. They never pulled any punches with each other, but when it came to Jace, the sore spot was too tender for a direct hit. But she knew what Whitney was trying to do. If she was focused more on the anger than the hurt, she might be able to avoid being the target of everybody’s sympathetic clucking.

    I hate him, Ava said, nodding her head.

    "We hate him. Whitney handed over the plates. He had his chance and he blew it, so you go out there—head high, back straight, tits out—and show everybody what he missed out on."

    Ava actually laughed, which went a long way toward driving back the panic. Make sure you save me a serving of the baked mac and cheese before it sells out, she told Whitney. I know I said I was going to cut back on carbs—

    Again.

    But I’ll be in the mood for comfort food, she finished.

    In one fluid move that came from years of doing it, Ava turned and kicked the swinging door open with the bottom of her foot. Then she turned as she went through it, so she was facing forward without the plates hitting the door.

    As she walked past a table of four on her way to deliver to another, she saw them bent over a phone and from it came a painfully familiar tune.

    I remember the taste of her lips, the sound of her voice,

    And I know I made the wrong choice.

    I just want to hold her again.

    Ava almost stumbled, but she forced herself to keep walking. Her mind had frozen up on her, but she went through the motions of serving the plates and asking the right questions out of sheer habit.

    They’d scrambled to stop the song when she’d walked into the dining room, but the damage was already done.

    She thought of it as The Song, always capitalized in her mind. It was the song that had launched Jace into stardom and gotten so much radio playtime, Ava hadn’t even been able to grocery shop in peace. There had been no escaping it, or the heartache that settled in deep every time she’d heard it.

    Yeah, Jace Morrow had made a choice. And Ava had spent the last five and a half years living with it.

    * * *

    Cottonwood Creek, Missouri was the last place Jace Morrow expected to be, three weeks before Christmas.

    Even after six years away, the roads were as familiar to him as a pair of faded and worn jeans, and he slowed as he started down the hill toward the four-way stop that constituted downtown. He kept his eyes forward as he drove, not allowing himself to look to the right at the café where Ava had waited tables since they were fifteen years old.

    Ava.

    He should probably feel some shame that when the phone call came about his old man’s heart giving out on him, close on the heels of regret that they’d never been as close as they should have, was the thought he’d have an excuse to see Ava Wright again.

    Maybe seeing her again—talking to her, if he was lucky—would erase the vivid memory of the last time he’d seen her. He’d made the mistake of looking over his shoulder as he walked out the door of their shitty apartment in St. Louis and saw the shock and anger give way to tears as her face crumpled.

    I’ll never get another chance like this, Ava. I’ve gotta go.

    He went. And he felt like he’d been looking over his shoulder at what he’d lost every damn day since.

    Jace had looked her up once, on Facebook, during a moment of weakness. And he’d found her, or at least a photo of her. It had been taken on her parents’ front porch and she was laughing at whoever took the picture. Seeing her like that had hurt like hell because it wasn’t him she was laughing with, and he’d stared at the photograph for at least

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