She’s a teacher who has led her students to the finals of an international French competition to be help in Paris. The night before the trip, the Principal tries to cancel the trip before he, in turn, loses his job to her high school boyfriend, Sean Collins.
Sean Collins has survived cancer, a divorce , and Gigi having aborted their child back in high school. He assumed he’d hate her, if they ever crossed paths again. But he discovers she’s exactly what he wants.
When Gigi and Sean are stuck together for a week in Paris, Gigi feels she has lost all her control. How can she survive her attraction to Sean? The man’s sexier now than he was back in the day, and once upon a time, he’d had her heart. She finds herself falling for him, even knowing forever is impossible.
Excerpt:
Payback time. Standing in his mother’s kitchen, Sean Collins
smiled as he hung up the phone.
He hovered at the phone for a
moment, then charged along the carpeted hallway to his bedroom. In a flash, he
changed from his T-shirt and jeans into his black pin stripe
king-of-the-business-world suit complete with black tie and shiny black shoes.
Finished dressing, Sean jittered
at the door and listened to his son talking nonstop to his mother upstairs. His
skin tingled and he closed his eyes. At least moving to his parents’ country
estate where he had grown up on Cape Cod had been good for everyone.
Breakfast could wait. He grabbed
the keys on the counter downstairs, and he called upstairs, “I’m leaving. I
won’t be gone long.”
Last year, the school principal
had fired him with bogus charges. Sean had sworn on every holy book that he’d
been fired because his doctors had discovered cancer in a routine physical
exam.
The sickness sucked. But he’d
survived. And now he used his vast wealth to get what he wanted. No teacher
should be treated so callously. He had taken the job at the time to prove to
himself he had more choices than being the chief financial officer of his
father’s corporation.
He set his jaw and walked outside
to his car, where the smell of freshly cut grass hit his senses.
The moment he stepped outside and
headed toward the garage, Sean stared at the vast forested area on the property
for a moment and pressed his lips together. Trees made sense. Women never had.
His luck with women had been bad from the start. His first girlfriend, Gigi
Dumont, had left him for parts unknown, and then later his wife, now his ex,
Jennifer, had also left. She’d played with a whole set of loose scruples. But
Jennifer hadn’t hurt him, not like Gigi had. Sean rolled his shoulders. Why did
everything in his life always seem to go back to Gigi leaving?
He fished out his keys from his
pocket. And now Gigi had moved back into the house next door.
Sean opened the garage door. A
quick click of a button and the gate lifted.
Last night he hadn’t slept. Today
his shoulders were straight. This moment had nothing to do with women and
everything to do with justice. His fingers traced the shiny finish of his
brother Gerard’s Aston Martin. Without blinking, he opted to borrow the car.
He’d be early and outshine everyone else. Gerard had offered to loan it to him
specifically for today. Sean licked his lips and turned the key, igniting the
engine, and took off.
A daydream flashed in his eyes.
Principal Murray’s jaw dropped to the ground in shock the second Sean stepped
inside the office with the papers.
Sean clutched the wheel. He
intended to twist the knife even further. People like Mr. Murray gave
businessmen around the world the reputation of cold, heartless automatons,
especially when he claimed the firing had been over “job performance.” Every
one of Sean’s students had passed the state assessments.
Now, Sean ran the finances for
his parents, his father’s company, and his brothers. The support of his family
to get him through cancer treatments had been phenomenal, but what if he hadn’t
had that support? What if he’d had no money to pay for treatments? He’d be dead
because the principal had fired him due to the insurance increases. Well, now
Sean had a better solution.
He sped down the country road for
the half-hour trip. During his horrible marriage to Jennifer, he’d worked as a
teacher, and his students had achieved both academic and social successes.
Jennifer had been the nightmare that drove Sean away from Collins Industries,
Collins Enterprises, Collins Investments, and Collins Mutual, to list a few of
his father’s multiple companies. Post divorce and cancer, Sean had made the
decision to offer employees packages in cases of sickness. Anyone who worked
for him would now receive a payoff equal to the job performance done over the
years as part of a settlement. Money paid hospital bills.
Sean’s stomach clenched as he
gazed at the sign for the Barnstable Charter High School parking lot. Sean
parked Gerard’s fancy lawyer wheels that screamed “out to impress” right next
to the about-to-be-sacked principal’s BMW sedan. The Aston Martin made the
perfect goodbye gesture. Murray had been outclassed.
Sean leaned forward in his seat,
refusing to feel guilty. He waited for the school bell to ring and watched
students bounding outside.
Unlike most people, his family
had money, and normally he wouldn’t like flaunting wealth. His Jeep Wrangler
suited him just fine, but today he needed to look like the elite businessman he
was. He stepped out a minute later, and in a fast walk, he strode down the
halls. Sean winked the second he saw the school guard’s shocked face.
“You had cancer?” asked the older
African American lady who coached the wrestling team.
“Yes, I did. I’m better now,”
Sean said, smiling.
He inclined his head and passed
the security desk then Sean turned right toward the principal’s office.
In his briefcase he carried the
school board’s ruling and the proof of sale of the school to Collins
Enterprises. Barnstable was a private school that followed school board law.
The sale to his company had been finalized, but Sean had insisted on telling
Murray in person. The minutes of the meeting would be posted at one that day.
Victory waited for him, and justice tasted better than homemade chocolate chip
cookies.
In the office, the overqualified
secretary, Mattie, dropped her pencil on the floor. Sean made eye contact with
her and the older woman smiled back. Then he picked up the pencil in stride,
and handed it back to her. She opened her mouth to speak, and he shook his
head, placing his finger over his lips to silently request her silence.
She smiled her response and
swiveled her chair back to her computer.
He had seen Mattie in action and
understood the older woman had known how to treat people more than anyone else
in the office.
Outside the principal’s door,
Sean straightened his tie into perfect alignment. His heart rate sped up and
his entire body became alert then he heard her voice.
Gigi,
or should he say, Giovanna Dumont. Her quiet, sweet voice unmanned him, making
his palms sweat. Why would she be here? And how could she still steal his
breath away?
Review:
I love the direction the author took with this story, in that Sean has purchased the private school where his first love and ex-girlfriend Gigi is employed. Now since she broke his heart years ago, he could have fired her and this would turned into an angsty, drama-filled novel; instead Sean (who did have the fleeting thought of firing Gig), has realized that he's not quite as hate-filled towards her as he thought he would be.
Gigi didn't have the best childhood growing up, except for her childhood friendship that over the years blossomed into romance with Sean (I mean her mom wasn't a pleasant person. At. All). Even after their romance fell apart and Gigi left town, they still love each other, even if Gigi feels that she doesn't deserves Sean's love.
But the week they spent in Paris while chaperoning some of Gigi's students in Paris for a competition does indeed show that they do still love each other, in spite of what happened in the past. I liked that Sean was indeed mature enough to not follow his gut instinct and fire Gigi at the beginning of the story; he's already endured too much grief and suffering, and I like how he is learning to embrace his new lease on life.
I love the direction the author took with this story, in that Sean has purchased the private school where his first love and ex-girlfriend Gigi is employed. Now since she broke his heart years ago, he could have fired her and this would turned into an angsty, drama-filled novel; instead Sean (who did have the fleeting thought of firing Gig), has realized that he's not quite as hate-filled towards her as he thought he would be.
Gigi didn't have the best childhood growing up, except for her childhood friendship that over the years blossomed into romance with Sean (I mean her mom wasn't a pleasant person. At. All). Even after their romance fell apart and Gigi left town, they still love each other, even if Gigi feels that she doesn't deserves Sean's love.
But the week they spent in Paris while chaperoning some of Gigi's students in Paris for a competition does indeed show that they do still love each other, in spite of what happened in the past. I liked that Sean was indeed mature enough to not follow his gut instinct and fire Gigi at the beginning of the story; he's already endured too much grief and suffering, and I like how he is learning to embrace his new lease on life.
Rating
Book provided in exchange for an honest review.
No comments:
Post a Comment