Also by New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author Sherryl Woods
BEACH LANE***
MOONLIGHT COVE***
DRIFTWOOD COTTAGE***
RETURN TO ROSE COTTAGEâ
HOME AT ROSE COTTAGEâ
A CHESAPEAKE SHORES CHRISTMAS***
HONEYSUCKLE SUMMER*
SWEET TEA AT SUNRISE*
HOME IN CAROLINA*
HARBOR LIGHTS***
FLOWERS ON MAIN***
THE INN AT EAGLE POINT***
WELCOME TO SERENITY*
SEAVIEW INN
MENDING FENCES
FEELS LIKE FAMILY*
A SLICE OF HEAVEN*
STEALING HOME*
WAKING UP IN CHARLESTON
FLIRTING WITH DISASTER
THE BACKUP PLAN
DESTINY UNLEASHED
FLAMINGO DINER
ALONG CAME TROUBLE**
ASK ANYONE**
ABOUT THAT MAN**
ANGEL MINE
AFTER TEX
*The Sweet Magnolias
**Trinity Harbor
***Chesapeake Shores
â The Rose Cottage Sisters
Look for Sherryl âWoodsâs next original novel
THE SUMMER GARDEN
available February 2012
Dear Reader,
Itâs almost become a holiday tradition for me to get to spend the Christmas season with the OâBriens. They feel like family to me, and at least this is one family whose behavior I get to control!
This yearâs story is the fulfillment of a promise Susie OâBrien made to her grandmother, that she would see that Nell had a chance to pay a visit to Ireland with the entire family. What no one expected was that it would also mean a reunion between Nell and an old flame! Add in Matthewâs off-again, on-again romance with an older womanâTraceâs sister Laila, no lessâand you can imagine the familyâs frenzy. Youâll even get a hint of the romance that could be in the wind for Susie and Matthewâs younger brother, Luke, the last of this generation of the family ⦠or is he?
I hope youâll enjoy all the twists and surprises in the story, as well as the chance to catch up with all of the OâBriens. And as always, I wish you the many blessings of this joyous season!
Sherryl
Sheâd lost the job of a lifetime because of a man!
Every time Laila Riley allowed herself to think backâhow hard sheâd worked to gain her fatherâs trust, how desperately sheâd wanted to prove herself capable of running the bank heâd established years ago in Chesapeake Shores, only to throw it all away for what had to have been the most ridiculous fling of all timesâit made her a little crazy. She was not the kind of woman who did anything because of a man. She wasnât impetuous or flighty. She was better than that, more sure of herself, more independent.
She allowed herself a sigh. Surely she must have been out of her mind to think that she and much younger playboy Matthew OâBrien could possibly have a respectable future. That had to explain her uncharacteristic behavior.
But because sheâd taken leave of her senses, here she was, back in a tiny office, doing the sort of accounting work that bored her to tears. None of the hoped-for jobs at other area banks had materialized. Her credentials were impeccable. Everyone had agreed on that. But in the current economy, no one was hiring at her level. If that changed, sheâd be the first person they called. Blah-blah-blah. Sheâd seen the encouraging words for what they wereâso many empty promises.
Within weeks of quitting her job in a huff at the family owned community bank, sheâd started berating herself for her foolishness and resenting Matthew for his role in it. If only he hadnât been so blasted irresistible, sheâd thought accusingly. So determined to win her heart. Sheâd been caught up in the romance of his pursuit.
Even as she was blaming him for all that charm and sex appeal, she was forced to admit that Matthew himself had been totally supportive in the aftermath of her impulsive decision to leave her fatherâs bank. Heâd even foundâor created, she suspectedâan accounting opening for her at his uncle Mickâs architectural firm, but she didnât want his handouts. She no longer wanted anything from him, in fact, except to be left alone.
Correction: she wanted sex, but that was out of the question. Lust, combined with loneliness and envy for all the happily married couples around her, was exactly what had gotten her in trouble in the first place.
Ending their misguided relationship within weeks of quitting her job had been her only choice. If sheâd also packed up and left Chesapeake Shores, it would have been the ultimate trifecta, a complete upending of her life.
But, no, she didnât quite have the will to cut the ties to the town she loved and her infuriating family. So she was stuck here, alone and miserable and working for half a dozen pitiful clients who barely kept her in the rocky road ice cream that lately she craved by the gallon.
âSulking, I see,â Jess OâBrien Lincoln said, braving Lailaâs dark mood by stepping into the office uninvited. She looked around, took in the drab beige walls that needed paint, the tiny window with no view and the seriously scarred desk, shook her head, then sat on a chair that had seen better days. Not even the bright posters Laila had framed could save this place, and they both knew it.