Bibliophile Chloe
One Last Chance
This story is epic!
One Last Chance
COMPLETE SERIES BUNDLE
Chapter 1: Daisy
Finn: Are you all set for your flight?
My heart rate simultaneously ticks up and slows down, warmth spreading through my chest, as I read Finn’s message.
Why?
My euphoria is short-lived as my mind kicks into overdrive, stomping on my poor little heart and her moment of victory.
Why, after the way Finn and I left things over Christmas, is he messaging me?
The sting of his rejection burns through me once more as I recall his sincere expression and apology. I’m sorry things can’t be different.
He’d said the words regretfully enough but that didn’t stop the humiliation from blazing through me. And now, a text message.
Did he change his mind about us? Does he think things could develop now? It’s not like I need a ring on my finger or a label of any kind; I don’t understand why we can’t explore what’s between us. Or, is Finn just being friendly since we’re going to be working together in three days?
“You all packed?”
Startled by the voice, I drop my phone next to me on the bed and duck my head, so my brother Jax won’t catch me acting flustered over a text message from a guy.
But Finn isn’t just any guy.
He’s more than that. He’s the guy who heightens my awareness, causing goosebumps to prickle the back of my neck and excitement to bounce in my bloodstream, just by entering a room. The one who kissed me sweetly under the mistletoe at Christmas. The guy who helped me hang the Christmas wreath my mother lovingly made so many years ago, and shared in my silence as I mourned her loss like I do every holiday.
And he turned you down.
I remind myself of this important detail sternly just as Jax’s head pops around the doorway. “Dais, you good?”
Glancing up, I throw my arm out to encompass my packed belongings. “All set.”
“I can’t believe you’re moving abroad,” Jax comments, walking into my room and sitting on the edge of my bed. “You ready for this?” He offers a half-smile, his green eyes watching me closely.
My laugh is nervous, as I tuck my hair behind my ear, my eyes roaming over my bare bedroom walls and the two neatly packed suitcases standing next to each other in the center of my room. “As ready as I’ll ever be,” I admit. “I just wish I knew more people.”
“Yeah, I know. But at least you’re in good hands with Sierra’s family. And you have Finn.” My brother raises his eyebrows, blatantly fishing for information on what’s brewing between Finlay and me. It’s no secret that things between us intensified when he visited Sierra, my best friend and his cousin, over Christmas.
And then they flatlined.
“We’re just friends.” I flick my wrist dismissively, hoping my voice conveys more confidence than I feel in that statement. I don’t know what we are.
Jax smirks, his eyes dancing with amusement. He doesn’t believe me for one second, but he doesn’t call me out on it. At least, not outright. “I’m going to give you some advice, Daisy girl.”
I roll my eyes, “Here we go.”
“Hey, come on now, you’re heading out and won’t receive this honesty from anyone else for a bit. Humor me.”
“Have at it.”
“Us guys, we’re different than you women.”
“Truly mind-shattering.” I deadpan.
My brother snorts, shaking his head. “It takes us longer to come around to things. We don’t react on our emotions. It’s a process and it takes time.”
I quirk an eyebrow at him. “I clearly remember you pursuing the hell out of Evie.”
“Yeah, after seven years of radio silence. Look, all I’m saying is, I wouldn’t count Finn out. I saw the way he was around you at Christmas. The way you two were always checking each other out, spending time together. He’s not as unattached and unavailable as you may think. He’s just better at hiding it.”
I wince, “Am I that obvious?”
Jax tilts his head sympathetically. “Buying him a Christmas stocking for our mantle was a thoughtful gesture.”
I blush at the reminder, leaving out the part where Finn gifted me a Louis Vuitton Neverfull purse for Christmas.
“But things are different now, Dais. You’re moving to Edinburgh for an opportunity, a career. You’ll have other things on your plate to keep you busy.”
“You mean distracted.”
Jax shrugs. “I mean, just do you, Dais. Make sure you’re not giving all the power to Finn in whatever dance y’all are doing. You have a say too.”
I pick at the nail polish on my thumb. “You’re right. I’m going to Scotland for the job and if things happen with me and Finn,” I shrug, “it’s a bonus. But I’m not going to wait around for him or try to force something that isn’t there.”
“Good. I’d hate for you to miss out on the experience because of a guy.”
I shake my head, “You’ll be happy to know I made a New Year’s Resolution.”
“Oh, this oughta be good.”
“Stuff it. This is my Year of No Fear. New Year, new Daisy Kane.”
Jax laughs. “I like the ring to that. What does the Year of No Fear mean, exactly?”
I grin, brushing my hair away from my face. “I’m going all in. These past six months, with the job hunt and all the rejections, kind of sucked. But I’m moving now, starting my career, and having an adventure. I’m going to embrace it all, claim my future, and not let fear of failure hold me back. My Year of No Fear.”
“Just don’t come home with a Scottish accent.” Jax jokes, before his expression turns thoughtful. “I’m proud of you, Dais. You nervous at all?”
“A little. I just don’t know what to expect. I mean, obviously everyone speaks English and it’s not like there’s going to be a language barrier or anything but, I’m sure there will be cultural differences.”
“It’s normal. There will be. The homesickness will be the worst at the beginning, but make yourself go out, force yourself to be social even when you don’t feel like it, and it will get easier. Once you make friends and get comfortable in your surroundings, everything will fall into place.”
“Is that what you did? In the Army?” I pick at my fresh manicure again, averting my gaze as nostalgia sweeps through me. In a handful of hours, this, me and my brothers, living in our childhood home, being around all the time, will be over. The thought wraps around me unexpectedly and I draw in a sharp breath as I chip my new nail polish. Sitting on my hands, I look back up at Jax.
My brother tilts his head in my direction sympathetically, his features settling into a serious expression once more. “It was a bit more forced in the Army then it will be for you. I was constantly surrounded by people, naturally pulled into a group, that it was easier to make social connections. But yeah, the social aspect made everything easier. Once I started relating to guys like me, forming friendships, getting into my routine, being away from home wasn’t as hard. It’s an adjustment but you’ll handle it.”
“Hope so.” I offer a small smile. “I’ll keep your advice in mind. Are you taking me to the airport?”
“We all are,” Carter clarifies, striding into my bedroom. “You didn’t think we’d let you move across the world without a send-off party, did you?”
“Scotland is hardly across the world.” I grin at my second eldest brother, the one who pretty much raised me.
“It’s far enough,” Denver’s gravelly voice adds. He walks over to my suitcases and tests the weight of each, pulling on the handles. “You’re cutting it close, but I don’t think you’ll have excess baggage fees.”
“The silver lining,” I joke.
“Do you have your passport?” Carter asks me for the ninth time this morning.
“Got it. I think I’m all good. I have everything I absolutely need. Passport, wallet, phone, laptop.”
“You’ll call when you land?”
I shake my phone at him. “I will do that since Anderson PR made my phone plan international.”
Den smirks, Jax chuckles, but Carter’s expression remains the same.
“I’ll be back next month,” I remind him. “Gotta make sure this one doesn’t mess up his wedding vows.” I jerk a thumb toward Denver, turning to face him. “Especially since you’re marrying my best friend and I won’t ever forgive you if you don’t make her my sister.”
Denver snorts, “Taking those Maid of Honor duties seriously.”
“Of course.”
Finally, Carter grins and reaches out to pull me into a hug. With his head pressed against mine, he murmurs into my ear, “I’m gonna miss you, Dais. It feels different this time.”
I sigh into my brother’s shoulder. I knew saying good-bye to him would be the hardest. “I know.”
“When you went to ASU,” he pulls back and looks at me, his seafoam green eyes flickering with an emotion I can’t place, “I knew you’d be back. But this time, I’m not so sure.”
“But we’ll still keep the house, right?” I ask, a wave of panic unfurling in my chest.
In a handful of hours, I’ll be embarking on a new adventure, starting my life in Scotland. But my childhood home has always been my one constant. After my mom passed and with my dad out of the picture, it was the one place my brothers and I maintained as a family unit. What if my brothers sell our house while I’m in Scotland, and things don’t work out and I end up homeless? What if I’m not here to say good-bye? To adjust to the idea that it’s even gone?
“We’re keeping the house,” Denver reassures me. “At least, for now.”
Relief causes my limbs to relax that we’re keeping the house. Financially, it doesn’t make any sense. In the past year, all three of my brothers have found women who make them better men and have moved forward with their lives and out of my childhood home. Even though the house is going to sit empty, I’m still grateful that we’re figuring it out. For now.
Carter grins down at me. “Don’t worry about the house. You’re going to do great in Edinburgh, Dais. This company is lucky to have you.”
I scoff at his words, feeling the blush as it works across my cheeks. “We’ll see about that.”
“And Finn is lucky to be working with you.” Denver throws out, his eyes boring into mine as he searches for a sign to understand what’s going on with Finn.
Rolling my eyes, I glance at my watch, ignoring his obvious attempt to get me to spill information. “We better get going.”
“Not even going to bite?” Jax jokes, a rumble of laughter working its way up from his chest.
“Finn and I are friends.” I repeat, not bothering to glance at any of my brothers as I sense them all sharing a look over my head.
“We’re ready to head out when you are.” Carter finally says.
“Let’s go.” I stuff my cell phone with the unanswered message from Finn into the beautiful Louis Vuitton Neverfull bag he bought me, my heart skipping a beat at the thoughtful gift, and follow my brothers’ downstairs.
Denver carries my suitcases out to Carter’s SUV, as I turn in the foyer of my home, taking in the surroundings and spending a long moment memorizing everything in case it’s all different the next time I’m here.
The worn wooden floors and lumpy cushions on the couches. The swinging door to the kitchen and the rickety stairs. It isn’t much to behold but it’s home. My home. The home my brothers fought to maintain my entire childhood, so I wouldn’t face the instability of the foster system.
I let out a long sigh, my fingertips trailing along the chipping paint on the wall.
Good-byes are always difficult, bittersweet. But this good-bye, it is different. Carter was right; this time, I don’t know if I’ll ever move back here on a permanent basis. I know it’s okay to explore the world and collect new experiences, but it doesn’t mean it doesn’t hurt to move on.
Still, this is my Year of No Fear.
“See you later, home.” I say, biting my lower lip as emotion clogs my throat.
Then I stiffen my spine, square my shoulders, and close the front door firmly behind me. Exhaling the morning air, I settle into the backseat of Carter’s SUV, and watch out the window as we head toward the Savannah airport and my hometown fades away.
* * *
When the plane’s wheels touch down in Edinburgh, my stomach is a mess of nerves, anxiety, and an expanding bubble of excitement. I’m here. I’m really doing this.
Turning on my phone, I grin at the barrage of messages appearing on my screen, my anxiety melting and a genuine smile crossing my face. My stopover in New York was so short I didn’t have time to check in with my family, as I literally raced from one plane to the next.
Jax: Let us know when you land.
Carter: We miss you already.
Denver: Call Sierra’s mom. She keeps asking me if you like pot roast or turkey???
Sierra: Welcome to beautiful Scotland, my bestie! I miss you being in the same time zone as me already. Call me—or literally anyone in my family—if you need ANYTHING. Denver and I are heading back to New York and my schedule is clear to talk whenever you have time. Love you!
Finn: Hey love. I’m in arrivals.
My heart stutters, almost shutting down completely at the last message. Finn is here?
Again, the question that plagues me: why?
Why, oh why? I thought I’d grab a cab to my new apartment and unpack. Have a quiet night in my new life, maybe crack a bottle of wine, and explore my neighborhood for a dinner spot.
But now, Finn’s here.
Gone is the jet-lag. Instead, I’m wide-awake, hyper even. While part of me panics at the thought of seeing Finn when I look less than my best, think greasy hair and crusty eyes, a much larger part of me does a happy dance that he’s here. For me. Or for Anderson PR? Or because Sierra asked him to pick me up?
Thoughts of our last encounter flood back, kicking my nerves into high gear. The surreptitious glances, the sweet, reverent kiss, followed by the sexy, desire-fueled make-out session in my kitchen. The feel of his biceps bunching under my touch, the smooth planes of his back, the narrow taper to his waist. His clear, bright blue eyes and dark hair. The way his kiss swallowed me whole, transporting me to another place entirely. I could lose myself in Finn; I want to lose myself in Finn.
He manages to throw me off guard, whether he’s dressed in one of his attorney power suits, or sipping coffee in my kitchen with a pair of reindeer pajama pants riding low on his hips.
I’ve crushed on him for far too long, becoming breathless and nervous, like a pre-teen girl, in his company. The tables turned over Christmas. But at the end of it, Finn reminded me that nothing would happen between us. Sure, he said it with a sincere apology and a flicker of regret in his eyes, but nonetheless, he put me back into my place—colleague/surrogate cousin.
And I made a New Year’s resolution to live fearlessly. It’s time for me to stiffen my backbone around Finn Anderson and proceed with our friendship, or whatever we’re calling it, on my terms.
Fluffing the roots of my hair with my fingers and smearing on some lip gloss, I stand from my seat and shoulder my carry-on.
Welcome to Edinburgh, Daisy.
在庫取り置きの表示がロードできない
Daisy’s new boss joins her family for Christmas, turning holiday warmth into forbidden temptation. A spicy prequel to Daisy and Finn’s Edinburgh romance. 🎄💙
Weeks after Finn kissed Daisy senseless and walked away, they’re sharing office space in Edinburgh. Keeping things professional may be impossible. 💼🔥
Fifteen years after Aaron broke her heart, a country star returns to Scotland seeking escape. The only man she ever trusted may be her second chance. 🎶💔
Lachlan broke her heart once, but now he’s back in Scotland promising forever. The only problem? She’s not sure she believes him. 💘🌿
gina azzi
Daisy’s new boss joins her family for Christmas, turning holiday warmth into forbidden temptation. A spicy prequel to Daisy and Finn’s Edinburgh romance. 🎄💙
gina azzi
Weeks after Finn kissed Daisy senseless and walked away, they’re sharing office space in Edinburgh. Keeping things professional may be impossible. 💼🔥
gina azzi
Fifteen years after Aaron broke her heart, a country star returns to Scotland seeking escape. The only man she ever trusted may be her second chance. 🎶💔
gina azzi
Lachlan broke her heart once, but now he’s back in Scotland promising forever. The only problem? She’s not sure she believes him. 💘🌿
There’s only one thing harder than sharing office space with Finn Anderson: keeping my mind off him.
There’s only one thing harder than sharing office space with Finn Anderson: keeping my mind off him.
Weeks ago, he kissed me senseless and walked away. But my best friend’s cousin is back – and worse? He’s one of the only people I know in Edinburgh.
With his seductive Scottish accent and alluring blue eyes, one look from Finn sets my heart racing. Exchanging playful quips at office happy hours and smoldering glances through conference room doors proves that our chemistry is undeniable. Our connection, irrefutable.
But I can’t fall for Finn. Even though I’m halfway there.
He doesn’t do commitment or relationships.
Last month, I thought we were done. Over.
Turns out we’re just getting started.
“I loved this book, both the Kane family and the Anderson family consisted of fantastic characters, who were easy to love. I really loved Daisy's Year of No Fear and her spunky approach to life and Finn was the perfect challenge for her. One Last Chance had tons of heart and great chemistry!” ★★★★★ Dimple, Goodreads Reviewer
“I'd give Finn a dozen last chances! Loved it!” ★★★★★ Danielle G. Spindel, Reviewer
“Again another great read by Gina Azzi who has quickly become a one click author for me!” ★★★★★ Alexis B., A Book Nerd, A Bookseller, and A Bibliophile Blog
“This story is epic!!” ★★★★★ Chloe A. Trivelpiece, Bibliophile Chloe
“An emotional and very angsty second chance romance that will break and mend your heart.” ★★★★★ Deekay, Goodreads Reviewer
CONTINUE READING FREE — CHAPTER 2
gina azzi
Continue reading from the Finding Love in Scotland series.
Finn helps Daisy settle into her new Edinburgh flat, but the chemistry between them is anything but settled.
Continue Reading Free
“Wow.” The word falls from her mouth on a whisper, as Daisy pushes into her new flat. I stand behind her, my fingers still wrapped around the handles of her suitcases, although I can’t tear my eyes away from her. I feel her words skate across my skin, tightening everything in my body.
“You like it?” I ask, my voice gruff, as I close the door behind me.
She nods, walking farther into the space, looking around. She runs a hand over the back of the cream-colored sofa, her gaze lingering on the design books atop the coffee table. “Are you sure this is part of the housing package?” she asks suddenly, turning to me, her eyes skeptical.
I chuckle. “Sure is.” I continue to watch as she makes her way to the kitchen, checking out the quartz countertops and sleek finishing. This apartment is on Anderson’s housing list now. I called in a few favors to make this happen because I want Daisy to like it here and to feel comfortable in Edinburgh, especially when she’s so far from her home and family.
It wasn’t a big deal to add some additional housing options to our company’s list and negotiate an agreeable rate in one of the best flats for Daisy. Plus, my family wants her to have an easy transition and Aunt Jenni thought this neighborhood, Stockbridge, would be the best fit for her. Sierra pushed for The Meadows, arguing she would have more fun living there, but Stockbridge is less rowdy, and I endorsed Aunt Jenni’s idea.
“This place is incredible.” Her voice is laced with awe, her eyes bright with excitement. She peeks in the refrigerator. “Seriously! Even the fridge is stocked.”
I snort at her excited chatter, but relief floods my limbs that she likes the space, that she’s reacting this way. It reinforces that the time I spent finding this flat was worth it.
Daisy looks up, her face open and sweet, and bounces on her toes excitedly. I stifle the groan that crawls up my throat as I watch her. She’s too damn adorable, too cute, bloody alluring without even knowing it.
“Thank you, Finn.” She rushes me, throwing her arms around my middle. “Really.” She pulls back slightly, her cheeks glowing. “I know you pulled strings to make this happen. I’m not an idiot. But I really appreciate it.”
I allow myself this moment to hug her back. Grazing my hand over the top of her head, her silky strands glide through my fingers, and I’m transported to another night, another time, when I raked my fingers through her hair and pressed my mouth against hers.
The air shifts between us, shrinking and tightening, making us both hyperaware of every breath, each blink.
Daisy clears her throat, stepping out of my embrace. “Sorry. I shouldn’t have.” She blushes, gesturing between us. “I was just excited.”
“I know.” The words stick in my throat, tasting bitter. This is what I said I wanted, for nothing to develop between Daisy and me. But on some level, it was a lie. Because she’s still stuck under my skin and I still crave her more than I should.
Time to wrap it up, Anderson.
I don’t move to leave her flat.
“Thank you,” she says simply, the gratitude in her expression affecting me even more.
“You’re welcome. If you need anything, you call me.”
“Okay.” She agrees slowly, her shoulders rising to her ears and dropping back down in a casual shrug. “Don’t worry about me, Finn. I’ll be fine. Thanks again for helping me out and making sure I’m all settled in.” She looks around the flat again, tucking her hands into the back pockets of her jeans. “I think I’m good.”
I sigh, knowing she’s ready for me to leave but not wanting to. “Okay.” I walk toward the entrance, and she follows a few steps behind. I’m acutely aware of her gaze settled between my shoulder blades, the floral scent of her perfume surrounding me.
When I get to the door, I turn quickly, and she stumbles back a step, as if I’ve caught her off guard. I reach out to steady her, and my hand lingers on her shoulder, my fingers brushing against the inside of her arm.
She inhales sharply, her eyes widening as they flicker over my lips.
Damn it.
Everything between us is too much, too real.
“Daisy.” My voice is low, and I struggle to control the torrent of emotions that flood me as I stare at her upturned face. I want to pull her flush against me and kiss her senseless as much as I want to turn around and leave. Memories from Christmas flood back. I don’t know what’s going on between us. I had said the words to her on Christmas Day and yet, they ring true now.
The tension between us crackles with energy as I drink in her multi-colored eyes, so bright and intense, I could drown in them. Open desire mixed with anticipation flickers across her expression as she boldly meets my gaze.
Mesmerized by her, conflicted by the emotions running through me, my hands clench into fists. My fingers itch to wrap in her hair, my mouth begs to cover hers. Hell yes, I want her. But I respect her too bloody much to make her one more girl in my long list of one-night stands. Besides the obvious reasons why Daisy and I shouldn’t hook up – we now work together and she’s Sierra’s best friend – she’s also younger, more impressionable, and idealistic. I’m not the man for her, and I never will be, which is why I force myself to lean forward and brush a casual kiss across her cheek. “Make sure you lock the door behind me.”
I hear a small catch in her breath but when I pull back, she regards me carefully. Her face impassive, her posture stiff, she holds the door open. “Night, Finn. Thanks again.”
“See you, Dais.” I step into the hall and walk down the flight of stairs, pausing until I hear the deadbolt latch. Sighing, I scrub my palm over my face. What the hell was that? Blowing out an exhale, I can still smell the vanilla from her shampoo and feel the soft, smooth skin of her cheeks.
I couldn’t forget about Daisy if I tried.
And trust me, I’ve tried.
* * *
The late-night knock on my door is so unexpected, it’s jarring. I stand from the couch slowly and mute the rugby game I’m watching on the telly. Listening closely, I pray it’s not some scorned woman I pissed off after a one-night thing. They’ve never tracked me down at home before, but I’ve had a few unsavory encounters at work that I’d hate to repeat where I live.
“Finn?” My brother’s voice calls out, followed closely by his fist banging against the door.
That has me shifting gears and I jog to the door, pulling it wide open.
“Aaron? Everything okay?” I ask, my concern spiking as I take in his sullen expression, his glazed eyes.
Aaron blows out a deep breath and winces, pushing past me into my flat. “Got anything to drink?”
“A beer?”
“Stronger.”
“Scotch?”
He nods and I head to the kitchen to pour two tumblers, dropping a large, square ice cube in each. I glance over at him and my stomach sinks as he paces back and forth in my living room, muttering under his breath, his voice mouthing barely audible words. What the hell is going on?
Walking over to him, I shake the tumbler gently as I pass it to him. “How’d you get here?”
“Uber.”
Taking a sip of my own drink, I sink into a chair. Staring up at him, I ask the question that leaves me feeling the most unsettled. “Is Livvy okay?”
“What?” Aaron looks up quickly, his eyes unfocused as he processes my question. “Yeah, yeah, mate, Livvy’s fine.”
Knowing that my six-year-old niece is not the source of Aaron’s distress is a relief. “Alright. What’s going on?”
He strides over to the fireplace in three steps, setting his tumbler on the mantle before picking it up again and turning to face me. His face contorts in pain, then anger, then an emotion I can’t place but forlorn comes to mind. “I don’t fucking know. I don’t know and that’s the bloody problem.” His eyes flash wildly, and I shift my weight forward, leaning my elbows on my knees as I watch my brother struggle to find the words to make sense of his current state.
“Why don’t you start at the beginning?”
Aaron shakes his head, pinching the bridge of his nose, and for a moment, I’m scared he’s going to cry. I’ve only seen my big brother cry once, the day we received word that our parents were both killed in a car accident caused by a drunk driver. That day, under a grey sky with howling wind and sheets of rain, my brother fell apart. Kneeling in the street, the rain viciously slanting across his body, his shoulders shook with the emotion draining out of him like a storm.
But that was it. Not at the funeral, not on the anniversaries of their deaths, not even happy tears on his wedding day.
Rolling the tumbler between my palms, I wait for Aaron to offer some clue as to what’s going on. But the longer I take in his distress, a coldness seeps into my skin, numbing my senses from the inside out. And I know, just know, that it’s something to do with Aaron’s wife Kate.
I’ve worn Aaron’s expression once before. One of utter disbelief mixed with acute longing and unrivaled pain. A confusion sparking from the inability to accept the truth of what is, because it’s too damn devastating to fully absorb.
Watching him, I guess at the truth. In fact, I know it, recognize it stamped into his wounded expression and bunching shoulders, before he does. Wincing, I glance down at the amber liquid in my tumbler and debate tossing the entire thing back.
Whatever emotion he’s struggling with, he gains control of it, his jawline hardening and his nostrils flaring as his temper surges. “It’s Kate. Something’s going on. She hasn’t been herself lately, not with me, and definitely not with Livvy. She’s absent. Even when she’s with us, she’s not really there, you know what I mean?” He looks at me for a beat before shaking his head and continuing. “She’s working all the time, late nights, lunch hours, weekends. There’s a million conferences on the horizon and new clients pouring in, and while I’m proud of her success, I can’t help but feel like her new position is detracting from our family.”
“Have you talked to her about it?” I ask instead of the question that sits on the tip of my tongue: is she cheating on you?
“Of course, I have,” he snaps. “She says I’m acting jealous, like I can’t stand to see her career developing when for so many years the focus has been on my career. And that’s shit, Finn. I’m happy for her, proud of her and all of her hard work. But lately, we aren’t connecting at all. I don’t know where her head is at. It doesn’t make any sense.” He takes a large gulp of his Scotch, hissing as the amber liquid hits his throat and smacking his lips together. “It’s like she’s a completely different person. Like I don’t even know her.”
I sigh, slouching in my chair and tipping back my head. Damn it. Of course Kate is cheating on Aaron. All of the signs are there. How does he not see it?
“Finn?” my brother’s voice cuts through my thoughts and I look up.
“Yeah Aar?”
“What do you think I should do?”
Hire a damn divorce solicitor. I want to shout the words but force myself to slowly drink my Scotch and temper my anger. I thought what Aaron and Kate had was real, the true love bullshit that turns movies into Hollywood hits. I know it exists in theory; I also know it’s not for me.
But how do I tell my brother his family is about to implode? Glancing back up at Aaron, noting the lost expression clinging to his face combined with the sick feeling in the pit of my stomach, I know my suspicions are correct. Sighing, I ask, “Do you think she’s cheating on you?”
I can almost hear the sound of his neck snapping up at my question. His eyes bore into mine and I register his anger, followed closely by shock. And then, resignation. Damn it.
“I don’t know, Finn.” He says quietly, turning away and finishing his Scotch. He places his glass on the mantle and keeps his back to me as he repeats. “I don’t know.”
I wince at the pain in his voice and curse Kate for causing this mess. But isn’t this the way of things?
“Aaron, maybe you and Kate should sit down and talk about –” I start to explain rationally before my brother cuts me a look. I take in his expression, the worry lines around his mouth, and the purple smudges underneath his eyes. “Hire a solicitor. That’s what I’d do.” I finish off my Scotch, pointing to my guest bedroom. “If Livvy is sleeping at Aunt Jenni’s, why don’t you stay here tonight?”
Aaron nods, not saying anything as he walks over to the window and peers out into the darkness of the night. I leave him with his desperate thoughts, his uncertainty and doubt, his memories of what was and what will never be again.
I know better than anyone that in the end, it never works out. Not the way you imagined anyway. This is why men shouldn’t hand it all over to a woman and give up the biggest pieces of themselves in the name of love. Because when it all comes crumbling down, and it almost always does, there aren’t enough pieces to build something whole again.
* * *
When my alarm sounds on Sunday morning, I groan, even though it’s my favorite day of the week. Swinging my legs to the side of the bed, I sit there for several seconds, letting sleep clear from my eyes.
It’s early, barely five. I know the weather without having to check my app; it’s frigid cold, grey, and windy. Layering up in my warmest clothes, I grab some hard-boiled eggs and orange juice from the fridge and pound them back. Checking in on Aaron, I’m relieved he’s sleeping, snoring loudly in fact. Shouldering my rugby bag, I lock up just after five-thirty and head toward the rugby pitch. Nothing like watching the sunrise while playing the greatest sport ever invented.
Throwing myself into the game, I finally clear my head from everything that happened this weekend. Daisy being here, stirring up a bunch of feelings I’m not used to. Aaron and Kate’s marital bliss crashing and burning. The never-ending stack of folders on my desk that I’m barely making a dent in. I let all of it go and focus on the game, enjoying the distraction, the physical exertion, and the camaraderie.
Stretching afterwards, my muscles ache and throb, partly from playing and partly from the bloody cold. But my mind is clear, my energy good, and my spirits high. All in all, it’s the perfect start to the day.
“Nice job out there, Anderson,” my best mate, Roger, comments, sitting down on the cold ground beside me.
“You too.”
“Want to grab a pint?” he asks, the same way he does every week.
“Absolutely. And some breakfast.”
He shrugs, the way I knew he would, but agrees. This is our tradition. Every Sunday morning, we have breakfast and pints at a local pub that’s open twenty-four hours a day. Roger and I have been mates a long time, since our school days, since before Mum and Dad passed, and Uncle James took Aaron and me under his wing and transitioned us into the family business. In many ways, Roger knows me better than my friends from today. He knows me from before, back when I was a scrawny punk getting into stupid fights and cursing wildly at whoever would stop to give me attention in the wake of my parents’ death.
Through all the changes that occurred after my parents passed, Roger was there. When the lads from my town grew jealous at my new life with Uncle James, Roger understood I’d trade it all back for more time with Mum and Dad. After all these years, it doesn’t matter that I’m a solicitor and he tends bar at a restaurant in Leith Docks, we’re still cut from the same cloth and are as close as brothers.
“Ye ready?” Roger asks, interrupting my thoughts. “After breakfast, I told my sister I’d take Gerry for a bit. She’s got a cleaning job in Stockbridge so I thought Gerry and I could play some catch, take a walk through the Sunday market. Wanta come?”
“Yeah.” I stand and shoulder my bag. “I’d like to see the little bugger.” Roger and I walk to the pub in silence, the cold wind whipping around us, making conversation difficult.
I’m grateful for the solitude. During the walk, my mind wanders, settling on Daisy. I almost kissed her last night; bloody hell, I wanted to kiss her last night. What was I thinking?
It’s true that she makes my blood hum and my mind freeze. I’ll admit that I sabotaged my own hook-up on Hogmanay because I couldn’t stop thinking about Daisy, wondering if she was kissing some random bloke when the ball dropped on New Year’s. But we have too much history, too many personal connections, for a casual hook-up. Shaking my head, I try to clear my jumbled thoughts as Roger and I approach the pub.
No, I need to lock down my attraction to Daisy and treat her respectfully, like Sierra’s best friend and someone my entire family cares about. I’m not the right guy for her and I like her too much to pretend otherwise.
Arriving at the pub, Roger and I slide into a booth at the back.
“All right, mate. What gives?” Roger asks me.
“What do you mean?”
“Yer brooding, thinking of a lass, yeah? Still the same girl from Christmas?”
“I’m not brooding. And her name is Daisy.”
“That’s right. Daisy. Yer cousin’s best friend.”
“That’s the one.”
“She’s still got ye tied up in knots? I thought ye added some distance?” He taps his fingers against the tabletop.
I give him a look and blow out a deep breath. “She landed in Edinburgh this weekend, starts at Anderson tomorrow morning.”
“And?”
“Nothing. She’s fine, a good girl.”
“Then why do ye look so miserable?”
I sigh, scraping a palm down my face. “Things between us are complicated.”
Roger clucks his tongue with mock sympathy. “Yeah. Must be bloody awful to like a woman and want to take her home. I feel sorry for ye, mate. It’s a tough situation yer in.”
“Fuck off. Of course I’d like to take her home for a night. But there’s too much history between us to do that. So I can’t really do anything, can I?”
He laughs then, the sound loud and rich, almost echoing in the early morning quiet. “History has never stopped ye before.”
“It’s different with her.” I bite out.
“Ah, so yer just fallin’ on yer sword then? Takin’ the high road? Ruinin’ any chance of havin’ somethin’ with this girl so you can protect her? From what, exactly?”
I clear my throat, not answering Roger since I know he’s working up to his point. He’s just going to irritate me by dragging it out.
“Or protectin’ yerself from finally feelin’ somethin’ for a lass?” He adds off-handedly, as if his point is a bloody afterthought.
“I’m not doing either. I’m just being respectful of our history, our family connection, of her.”
“What’s so different about her anyway?”
I sigh, grappling to find the correct words. “She’s… happy. She’s fun to be around, has an easy-going personality. She’s not angling for anything from me and when I’m with her, things between us are natural. And the fucking chemistry,” I groan, remembering how I pinned Daisy against the kitchen wall and kissed her recklessly, with abandon, on Christmas, “yeah, I want to take her home for the night. But what happens the next day when we see each other at work? Or the following week when I take a different girl home and see Daisy at some family event? It’s too complicated, too many messy emotions involved, and loose ends to tie up afterwards. It’s not worth it for one bloody night of good sex.”
Mind-blowing sex.
“Besides, I dropped her at her flat last night and she was cool, acting like there’s nothing between us except friendship. Like there never was.”
“Isn’t that good then? I thought ye didn’t want her to get attached.”
“I didn’t. Don’t.” I growl out.
Roger tilts his head, studying me far more intently than I’m comfortable with. I drop my gaze to the worn table before looking around for a server. “But ye don’t want her to get attached to anyone else either, huh? Is that it?” he asks finally.
I sigh, not bothering to refute his observation since it’s obvious he’s right. Yeah, I’m not going to take Daisy home. But it bothers the hell out of me to think of her going home with some other guy. Especially one she meets here in Edinburgh.
“So, make a move. Ask her to have coffee. Or lunch. Just see what happens between ye. It’s awfully presumptuous of ye to know what’s best for the girl.”
“I can guarantee that Daisy and me hooking up, having a one-night thing or a one-week fling, and then seeing each other at work every day, is not what’s best for her.”
Roger tilts his head, “Yeah, well, when ye put it like that, I see yer point. Why are ye limitin’ yerself to just one-night?”
“Come on, I’m not going to settle down and do the boyfriend thing and that’s not fair to her. It’s better to know where we both stand.”
Roger sighs. “Mate, Cassie was a one-off. Not ever girl ye meet is going to pull the same crazy shit as her.”
“This has nothing to do with Cassie.”
Roger smirks. “Really?”
“Daisy’s too young for me. She’s Sierra’s best friend. There’s a line of respect that needs to be maintained. I can’t just bang her and move on.”
“I didn’t realize ye were in the habit of disrespectin’ women.”
“That’s not what I meant, you bawbag.”
Roger holds up a hand in surrender, chuckling. “I know what ye meant. But I think this lass is deeper under yer skin than yer admittin.’ I’ve never seen ye this hung up on a girl before. Not even Cassie. Which means ye need to man up and ask her out or move past it and not stand in her way when she meets someone else.”
I nod once, knowing he’s right but not giving him the satisfaction of admitting it. “I could really use that pint.” I say instead.
Across from me, Roger flags down a server.
Bibliophile Chloe
One Last Chance
This story is epic!
One Last ChanceDiann Bryan
This Time Around
A story of hope and courage.
This Time AroundRobin Hill
My Christmas Wish
Scottish deliciousness… Finn is a real treat.
My Christmas WishFlattLinesNoodle
This Time Around
Love, heartbreak, and second chances.
This Time AroundChristopher Copping
My Christmas Wish
You can feel the pull between Daisy and Finn.
My Christmas WishJacque Hunt
One Last Chance
A very entertaining read from start to finish.
One Last ChanceGoodreads Reviewer
One Great Love
So good! I wish this book had been longer.
One Great LoveJenny Lynn
This Time Around
I devoured this book in one sitting!
This Time AroundShelly
My Christmas Wish
I adored every single page of this novella.
My Christmas WishBibliophile Chloe
One Last Chance
Gina’s descriptive words are magic.
One Last ChanceShereads
This Time Around
Heartwarming and sweet.
This Time AroundDanielle Gaudet
My Christmas Wish
This really got me ready for the main event!
My Christmas WishBibliophile Chloe
One Last Chance
The chemistry between Finn and Daisy is hotter than Hades.
One Last ChanceLili
This Time Around
Aaron and Everly are so good together!
This Time AroundA. Richard
My Christmas Wish
Lots of emotion plus delightful characters.
My Christmas WishJenny Lynn
One Last Chance
I loved Finn and Daisy! They totally clicked.
One Last ChanceSabatesreader
This Time Around
A heartbreaking and heart-lifting story.
This Time AroundDiann Bryan
My Christmas Wish
I love the way Gina Azzi pulls you into the Kane family.
My Christmas WishShrykespeare
One Last Chance
Another great romance from Gina Azzi.
One Last ChanceRebecca J. Claxon
This Time Around
A deep book that made me think.
This Time AroundKindle Customer
One Last Chance
Lots of highs, and lots of lows. Intriguing.
One Last ChanceTracy Fritts
This Time Around
A heartfelt and wonderful second chance romance.
This Time AroundDiann Bryan
One Last Chance
Daisy and Finn’s love story plays out beautifully.
One Last ChanceShannon Pozsgai
This Time Around
I loved the story and arc of Aaron and Everly.
This Time AroundT.A. Fisher
One Last Chance
A sweet friends-to-lovers romance.
One Last ChanceJenny Lynn
This Time Around
Heartbreaking and empowering at the same time.
This Time AroundShrykespeare
One Last Chance
Characters that feel like real people.
One Last ChanceJLM
This Time Around
What a grand story.
This Time AroundYes — all 5 Ebooks are delivered digitally via BookFunnel. Nothing ships.
After purchase, you'll get an email with a download link from BookFunnel. Open it on your phone, tablet, or desktop in the BookFunnel app and start reading immediately.
All sales are final on digital products. If something goes wrong with delivery or playback, email shop@ginaazzi.com within 7 days and we'll fix it.

Instant delivery. Binge-worthy romance.
Cart

