Turning thirty? Time for artist Joanna Spinelli to put her life plan into action! Will true love be on her to-do list? USA TODAY bestselling author Patricia Kay opens a new chapter of The Hunt for Cinderella!
Joanna Spinelli was determined to make her design dreams finally happen. Getting a show at Marcus Barlowâs art gallery was key. Sure, the straitlaced businessman might be just a little too sedate for her taste. But just one look and she could feel herself melt like chocolateâ¦.
She was like a fresh breeze to his all-work, no-play life. And though Marcus appreciated her carefree lifestyle, he knew Joanna would have to change to fit into his world. Yet by asking her to become someone she was not, would Marcus lose the things he cherished in her the most? Or would he finally learn to loosen his tieâand open his heart?
He didnât like that feeling.
What was it about Joanna that so strongly affected him?
Just looking at herâthe way her hair had gotten blown by the wind and was even messier than usual, the way her dark eyes met his for one naked moment before moving on, and the way it seemed to take an effort for her to smile as naturally as she had Friday night before heâd kissed herâall reminded him more forcefully than words or any lectures he might have given himself that he might already have crossed into territory heâd never been in before.
That maybe it was too late to go back.
The Hunt for Cinderella: Seeking Prince Charming
Dear Reader,
Writing a new book is always an adventure. So is life. Both are like going on a long road trip; you never really know whatâs coming. You might plan your route, what youâll see and do, but invariably something happens to thwart your plans, and you have to adapt and change accordingly.
This first book of the third Hunt for Cinderella series was planned more than three years ago, with the expectation that it would be published in late 2011. But in July 2010, just after Iâd first begun writing it, my husband was diagnosed with a terminal illness, and everything else I was doing had to be put aside so that I could spend all my time with him.
My husband passed away in January of 2012 and it took almost a year for me to feel as if I could write again. Iâm so glad that Holiday by Design and the two books that will follow in the series are finally going to be in readersâ hands. It was fun for me to write about Joanna and Marcus and to revisit characters from the previous Hunt for Cinderella books. I hope you enjoy the story and would love to hear from you. You can find me at www.patriciakay.com.
With warmest wishes to all,
Patricia Kay
Formerly writing as Trisha Alexander, PATRICIA KAY is a USA TODAY bestselling author of more than forty-eight novels of contemporary romance and womenâs fiction. She lives in Houston, Texas. To learn more about her, visit her website at www.patriciakay.com.
This book is dedicated to my first writing teacher,
the wonderful Bunny Paine-Clemes, whoâs always known how to inspire and draw the best from her students, and to my longtime âPAL â from West Houston RWA, Pat OâDea Rosen, who has become a dear friend, an always-helpful critique partner and a second Mama to my cats.
Chapter One
âHappy birthday, dear Joanna...happy birthday to youuu.â
As the Spinelli family raised their glasses in a birthday toast, Joanna smiled at the gathered clan and hoped it didnât show that her heart wasnât in it.
Thirty years old.
Today she was thirty years old, and on this milestone birthday, instead of being well on her way to a successful career in fashion design, married to the man of her dreams andâat the very leastâpregnant with her first child, she was still struggling for recognition in her chosen field, still employed as a part-time assistant to her former loverâwho had dumped her less than two weeks ago!âand she was so far from being pregnant with any child she might as well forget about ever becoming a mom.
My life needs a major overhaul. Oh, who am I kidding? My life needs a miracle.
And tonight, adding insult to insult, she didnât even have a date. But her state of woe wasnât her familyâs fault, was it? So she had been doing her best to look cheerful and happy to be here with them tonight. And heaven knew, theyâd tried to make her feel good. Her mom had knitted Joanna a gorgeous, dark red, oversize cashmere shawlâperfect for chilly Seattle fall weatherâand her dad, always generous toward his one and only daughter, had given her a hundred-dollar gift card, while her four brothers had pitched in to buy her an iPad, which was incredibly sweet of them.
In fact, she still couldnât believe theyâd done it. She could hardly wait to buy some design software sheâd been eyeing. Now sheâd be able to work no matter where she was without having to lug her heavier laptop.