: Shelley Shepard Gray
: Sycamore Circle
: Blackstone Publishing
: 9781799923718
: 9.59
: 1
: CHF 8.40
:
: Erzählende Literatur
: English
: 100
: Wasserzeichen
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: ePUB

New York Times bestselling author Shelley Shepard Gray returns with the second novel in her 'tantalizing' (Publishers Weekly) Rumors in Ross County series. In Ross County, love can stay the course, but first you have to know who to trust.

There's a lot going on in Joy Howard's life. She's got an ex-husband who starts acting like he doesn't want to be an ex anymore, a sixteen-year-old daughter in need of a guiding hand and a lot of rides to dance practice, more orders for paintings than she has time to paint, and a roster of tutoring clients who sometimes need far more than she can give.

What she doesn't have is time for a new relationship.

Samuel 'Bo' Beauman is a lot of things. He's a counselor for transitioning ex-cons, a good friend to many, a construction worker, a brother and son, and even a part-time model for a high-end sportswear catalog. He's also a man searching for redemption.

One thing he isn't is a man in need of a girlfriend.

But none of that seems to matter when Bo hears Joy's kind voice in a crowded coffee shop. He instantly knows she's someone he wants to know better. The two of them hit it off-much to the dismay of practically everyone they know-but Bo doesn't care what other people think. He feels at peace whenever he's with Joy, and he won't let her go without a fight.

When Joy starts getting mysterious texts and phone calls from unknown numbers, she tries to ignore it. But instead of going away, the messages escalate and Joy realizes she can't handle it alone. But she is juggling a jealous ex-husband, a handful of students with little to lose, and a brand-new boyfriend who spent several years behind bars. Who can she trust?



Shelley Shepard Gray is aNew York Times andUSA Today bestselling author, a finalist for the American Christian Fiction Writers prestigious Carol Award, and a two-time HOLT Medallion winner. She lives in southern Ohio, where she writes full-time, bakes too much, and can often be found walking her dachshunds on her town's bike trail.

CHAPTER 1

They’d been standing in line for five minutes and likely had another ten minutes to go before they could get out of there. Considering he hadn’t wanted to go to Sacred Grounds in the first place, Bo was irritated. After a three-year stint in Madisonville, he didn’t like to spend his time standing in line for much.

Waiting this long for a cup of overpriced coffee just seemed wrong.

“I can’t believe you come here all the time, Mason,” he muttered.

Mason shrugged. “This coffee is worth the wait. You’re going to love it. I promise.”

“Doubt it.”

As usual, his longtime buddy paid him no mind. “Whatever. Look at your phone or something and chill.”

Mason went back to doing exactly that, but Bo was in no hurry to pull his phone out of his back pocket. If he did, he knew he’d see another four emails and twice as many texts from the guys who reported to him. He liked his job, but sometimes he needed a break.

Instead, he listened to the woman at the head of the line order some kind of complicated latte with almond milk and gritted his teeth. Why did everybody try to make simple things so difficult? Coffee was coffee. There was no need to add whatever kind of “milk” came out of an almond to it.

Mason sure had fancy tastes in his beverage choices, considering he’d come out of prison not too long ago.

At last, the almond milk gal had her drink and scone. They stepped forward in the line. Bo started to smile—until he heard the teenage girl at the front of the line announce she was ordering four drinks to go.

“Lord have mercy,” he murmured. He meant it too. He absolutely was going to need some divine help in order to not pull Mason out of Sacred Grounds and drive to the nearest convenience store. There, he could get sixteen ounces of Maxwell House for two bucks, and even pick up a Slim Jim or two.

Mason looked up from his phone. “I’m telling you, it’s worth it. Settle down.” Lowering his voice, he added, “and try, for once, to look a little less like you’re itching to wring somebody’s neck. You’re gonna make everyone around us nervous.”

Realizing Mason probably had a point, Bo pulled his attitude down a notch. He wasn’t a small man, and his sleeve of tattoos didn’t always generate warm and cozy feelings either.

He knew that too. Shoot, it seemed like he spent half his life telling the men he was in charge of—fresh-out-of-prison guys in need of a hand—to remember that the regular population was real different than the one they’d been accustomed to in Madisonville.

It was obviously time to concentrate on something else. He looked around hoping to find something to capture his attention.

The coffee shop was a converted church in the middle of the square in their tiny downtown. Whoever had done the remodeling had kept the basic structure but had removed anything that might have religious connotations. He never would tell Mason this, but he remembered when the owners had bought the old place. They’d donated the sixty-year-old stained glass to a local church and replaced it with stained glass featuring a sun, a cup of coffee, and the shop’s name.

Mason was obviously not the only fan of the café either. There were eight tables and six of them were filled. At least a dozen people stood in line, and three people worked behind the counter.

When they moved forward again, he heard the prettiest voice he ever heard. It was smooth, melodic, and kind. So kind.

Something inside of him stilled.

“Good job, Anthony,” the woman said in a gentle way. It wasn’t condescending or the slightest bit flirtatious. It was just plainnice. Nice in a way that clean laundry or breathing fresh air in the early morning was.

Her perfect, oh-so-nice