Praise for Kate Hoffmann fromRT Book Reviews â¦
âHoffmannâs deeply felt, emotional story is riveting.
Itâs impossible to put down.â â on The Charmer
âFully developed characters and perfect pacing make this story feel completely right.â
â on Your Bed or Mine?
âSexy and wildly romantic.â
â on Doing Ireland!
âA very hot story mixes with great characters to make every page a delight.â
â on The Mighty Quinns: Ian
âRomantic, sexy and heartwarming.â
â on Who Needs Mistletoe?
âSexy, heartwarming and romantic ⦠a story to settle down with and enjoyâand then re-read.â
â on The Mighty Quinns: Teague
THE CLOSET WAS dark and quiet. Ronan Quinn clutched the flashlight in his hand, the failing batteries providing a weak shaft of light. Closing his eyes, he tried to banish the disturbing images from his thoughts.
The dreams had started just a few months ago, right after his eighth birthday party. It had been the first party his family had attempted since his parents had disappeared the previous year.
Of course, it hadnât been the same. Birthday parties were what his mother did best. She could turn an ordinary day into the most wonderful, magical event of a personâs life. For his seventh birthday, sheâd taken him and his whole Cub Scout troop to the aquarium. Theyâd seen the most amazing thing. Thereâd been octopus cupcakes with long, licorice tentacles. And games like âPin The Finâ on the shark. There had even been a fish shaped piñata filled with gum and jawbreakers and all his favorite candy.
At the end of the day, after the party was over and he was exhausted from the excitement, heâd received his gift, a beautiful aquarium, placed on a stand right next to his bed. He remembered how heâd stayed up all night, just watching the fish swimming back and forth in the blue light.
The aquarium was empty now, all the fish dead and the water drained. It was one of those things that had been forgotten once their world had been turned upside down. There was never any time to shop for fish. No one wanted to bother keeping the aquarium clean.
This year, his grandfather and older brothers had planned a party on the family sailboat, gathering ten of Ronanâs classmates for a sail on the sound. But when theyâd gotten to the dock, Ronan had refused to get on the boat.
Fear had welled up inside of him as he stared at the dark water slapping against the hull. His stomach had begun to roil and his hands had grown ice cold. Ronan knew that if he got on the boat, the sea would swallow him up and pull him down to the very bottom where he would drown.
Dermot had stayed with him on the dock while the rest of the party left. And though his older brother tried to reassure him that everything would be fine, Ronan had seen the looks on his friendsâ faces. Heâd already been marked as being different since his parentsâ disappearance. Now, heâd be completely alone, the subject of whispers and pity.
Ronan looked down at the book clutched in his arms. The huge picture book of ocean fish had been another gift from his mother. But this one had appeared next to his breakfast one morning. It hadnât been his birthday or Christmas or any type of holiday at all. Sheâd just decided that he needed the book.
He turned the flashlight onto the pages and stared at the pretty pictures. But when he flipped the page to the chapter on sharks, Ronan slammed the book closed and hugged his knees to his chest.
There were always sharks in his nightmares. Sharks circling in the dark water. He tried not to think about what might have happened to his parents, but the nightmares brought it up again and again.
Heâd asked questions that his grandfather and brothers refused to answer. How long could they live in the water? How far could they swim? If they were in the life raft, wouldnât they drift to land? But there were never any explanations. Heâd just been told to accept the fact that his mother and father were gone.