Now and Always by CJ Burright
Book 1 in the Hearts and Haunts series
General Release Date: 10th January 2023
Word Count: 98,630 Book Length: SUPER NOVEL Pages: 389
Genres:
ACTION AND ADVENTURE CHRISTMAS CONTEMPORARY EROTIC ROMANCE FRIENDS TO LOVERS MYSTERY PARANORMAL THRILLERS AND SUSPENSE
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Book Description
Romance may not be all that awakens while two best friends renovate a mansion rumored to be haunted.
If you kiss your best friendβ¦
Halloween-loving Ren needs a new job. The only problem? The sole accountant opening in her small town requires construction experience, which are skills she lacks. Luckily, her best friend Leoβsexy, grumpy and completely off limitsβis a construction hotshot. Their relationship is perfect as is, and, despite the intense chemistry, Ren refuses to ruin it with romance. Leo agrees to teach her, with one conditionβshe must live on site with himβ¦and somehow survive the temptation.
Youβd better be sureβ¦
Skeptic, sword-swinging Leo has loved Ren since she mistook him for a hardware employee in the plunger section two years ago. While he took his time winning her trust, she caged him in the friend zone. Heβs done hiding his feelings, and living togetherβworking, sleeping, playingβat the Gothic mansion heβs renovating will convince her that best friends make the best lovers.
Itβs meant to be forever.
Ren resolves to resist Leo, even if he bends every rule. Discovering the mansionβs secretsβand lingering spirits, no matter what Leo claimsβoffers distraction enough. But with her defenses splintering, one kiss is all it takes to shatter every boundary, one night of passion to believe in happily ever afterβ¦and one crumbling letter of unrequited love to awaken ghosts forgotten. If Ren and Leo canβt piece together the past for two lost souls, they might lose more than their hearts.
Reader advisory: This book contains characters from the Music, Love and Other Miseries series.
Excerpt
βIsnβt Halloween the best?β Karen grinned at the wrinkled face peering from a warped mirror hanging in the long hallway. Empty eyes gazed back at her. Beside her, Leo pressed closer, his powerful body already invading her personal spaceβnot that sheβd ever complain. The image in the mirror lunged as if to escape the glass. Leo jerked and pushed Karen behind him, almost knocking her over to put himself between her and danger. βBoo!β With a leer, the face in the mirror vanished. βI loathe Halloween,β Leo said, his voice strained. He steadied her with strong hands, but his face gleamed an unholy white in the gloom. βYou know how much I hate it, and you still drag me to these things.β βHearing you squeal is too much fun to resist.β βYouβre sick, Ren.β He scowled but didnβt move away. The lights flickered, giving the hallway a strobe effect. Leoβs black sweater and jeans turned an oily shade of jet. The red letters on her T-shirt reading Be Very, Very Afraid seemed to bleed. In a different section of the haunted house attraction, distant screams echoed like damaged sirens. Leo grabbed her hand in a death hold. Her face hurting from a perpetual smile, she leaned into him and settled her free hand on his biceps for extra support. She wasnβt completely heartless, after all, and sheβd always take advantage of any reasonable excuse to grope his spectacular body without being obvious. It never failed to amaze her that the biggest, strongest, sexiest man she knewβa man who also happened to be her best friend and was therefore off limitsβlost his courage when it came to anything Halloween. He towed her at a quicker pace down the hallway, as if he could escape if he moved fast enough. Her smile stretched wider. There was no escape. A motor roared behind them and filled the corridor with noise. In one nimble move, Leo jumped and spun to face the new threat. For such a big man, he was shockingly quick. As she turned, Leo made a noise somewhere between a shriek and a howl. A clown bearing a roaring chainsaw barreled toward them, his mouth opened wide. Two rows of sharp teeth gleamed like knives in the strobing lights. Karen shivered. Awesome. The thought hadnβt even passed before Leo wrapped an arm around her waist, swept her off her feet and sprinted toward the exit sign at the end of the hall as if an army of hell hounds snapped at his heels. The walls closed in, the corridor narrowing with each of Leoβs pounding steps. Hands reached from the walls and clawed at their clothes as they passed. The clown with the chainsaw kept on coming with a chittering laugh. The exit turned out to be a locked door. Leo skidded to a stop and pounded with his free hand. When that proved ineffective, he switched to kicking and cursing. Not once did he put her down. Karen cackled with delight the entire way. As the demented clown came within reach and lunged, the door opened on a groan. Leo leaped out and slammed the door behind him. A heavy thud followed, and the door shuddered beneath the impact of the clownβs failed pursuit. The chainsaw cut off, leaving them in silence and the crisp air of an early October night. Leo didnβt set her on the ground until heβd jumped over the back porch stairs, onto the lawn and made it past the crooked fence surrounding the staged haunted house. He leaned against the trunk of an oak tree and closed his eyes, his breath ragged. βI need a moment,β he gasped. βOr two.β He cracked an eye to glare. βGive me three.β βSo sad. A grown man scared of ghosties and goblins. The best way to overcome a fear is to face it full on.β βOr go the mature route and avoid it.β He laid his head back and slumped. βThatβs how I roll when it comes to demons and small children demanding candy.β Laughing, Karen plopped onto the grass and stretched out her legs. She crossed her ankles and jiggled her boots, unable to contain the energy buzz still sliding through her. A bit of a frightβand watching Leo freakβhad been exactly what she needed. βThat was epic. Even better than the last two years. The clown at the end was a nice touch.β βHorrifying. All of it.β Leo opened his eyes and inhaled. His broad chest expanded and stretched his black sweater taut in a delicious way that she pretended not to notice. βYou didnβt have to come with me.β βYouβve had a crappy few weeks. If me being tortured cheers you up, I had to do it.β The mention of the last few weeks of her life took her adrenaline-high down a notch. Most people believed the source of said crappiness was Ian OβConnor, the out-of-her-league lawyer at Hamilton & Associates where she worked her accounting magic. Sheβd crush-lusted on him longer than she should have, a physical-only appreciation and shameless flirting that had never reached her heart. Hell, sheβd known she didnβt possess the necessary looks or charms to make more than a single blip on Ianβs radar, and his staunch commitment to noncommitment made any interest harmless. Heβd been an easy distraction fromβ She toyed with a loose thread on her sleeve. It didnβt matter. Now, Ian was engaged to her office friend Gia. And that was when the job situation had gone to Hades on a Harley. The sting of rejection hadnβt slowed her down. She never wasted a minute of beauty sleep on Ian. Even the twist of betrayal that Gia had hooked up with her current crush was nothing a pint of ice cream couldnβt solve. But the sorry looks she caught too often from her coworkers, as if she hid her heartbreak behind a brave face? Warmth invaded her cheeks. Those looks made her want to either stab them or slink away. That pity echoed too closely the memories sheβd moved to Graywood to escape, when the pain had been brutally real. With the Ian dilemma in her face Monday through Friday, the past returned to bite herβ¦hard. A flame-red leaf drifted from the canopy above and landed on her shoulder. Leo plucked it free. The leaf crackled as he twirled it between his long fingers, giving her time to process. He always knew what she needed in any given moment, one of the many reasons why she adored him. That adoration remained part of her own personal perdition, a fact he never needed to know. She sucked at romance and enjoyed his company too much to destroy it with a fling. Fantasies made up for everything she missed. βYou only agreed to come with me tonight because you felt sorry for my pathetic life?β She swiped the leaf from his fingers and tossed it aside. βWhatβs your excuse for last year?β βDonβt pretend you donβt remember.β He gave her a narrow look and tucked his hands into his jeans pockets. βBefore I knew you well enough to understand you canβt be trusted in certain situations, you recorded me at the same haunted house two years agoβwithout my knowledge, you terrible personβand threatened to show it to Liam. Handing any one of my brothers that information would have made my life a living hell, but Liamβs the worst, which you also know.β He shook his head, his mouth tight. βNot one of your finer moments, Ren.β βAll a matter of perspective. Manipulation is a virtue.β She gave him a sweet smile. βCome on, Hughes. Admit it. Wasnβt this more fun than your usual Saturday nights, fighting off your brothers with light sabers?β βNo.β She laughed. βWas it more fun than your usual Saturday night at Seven Devils?β he countered. His expression was calm, his voice steady, but his ocean-blue eyes glittered with an emotion she couldnβt read. Maybe it was the remnants of blood-curdling fear. She shrugged. βDepends on the night.β Leo looked away and straightened, apparently recovered from his near-death experience. βI need a drink.β βYouβre in luck.β She jumped up and looped her arm through his. βThereβs a sports bar right down the block.β βDo they stream sword fighting?β he asked, hopeful, as if watching men swinging swords at one another was in high demand. βIs that even a thing?β He scowled. βWhat about ax throwing?β βUnlikely.β She grinned and patted his arm. βBut Iβll buy to compensate.β βDamn straight youβll buy,β he grumbled, allowing her to guide him onto the sidewalk. Brisk autumn air had her leaning closer to Leo, and she almost wished sheβd brought a jacket. But that would leave her with no excuse to have her arms wrapped around his. Holy hell, the man was built, a toned body from hard years of construction work and combating the other members of the Hughes clan with all manners of weaponsβ¦for fun. And people said she was strange. Maybe that was why theyβd hit it off right away, two oddballs whoβd given up trying to be normal. She tried not to think about his flexing muscles beneath her arms or how good he smelled, like cedar and perfect man, but it was useless. It was always useless. Over the last two years, when it came to Leo, sheβd become frickinβ fantastic at the game of pretend and resist. Their slow steps clicked on the pavement, the sidewalk empty of anyone but them. Stars shone in a clear, moonless sky. It was an ideal night for romance. She sighed, and her breath left a fleeting white cloud. If Leo werenβt her best friend, sheβd drag him to a stop and kiss him right here beneath the lamppost, the distant shrieks of terrified people in the background. Heβd kiss her back, using that luscious mouth of his to set her skin aflame, andβ βI hate it when you sigh like that.β Leoβs soft, husky voice splintered her fantasy. βIt means youβre unhappy instead of plotting mischief.β He bored his eyes into her. She refused to squirm beneath the intensity, the sense that he saw straight through all her trappings and discerned the warp and weave of her soul. If he could read minds, he would have been scandalized by her thoughts long ago. βIβve decided I need a change.β βWhat sort of change?β βScenery. Iβve been considering it for a while now, made a pro and con list, looked at my options from every angle. I woke up this morning with a clear answer.β Leo was always her go-to person who she ran everything by first. Almost everything. But saying this new plan aloud made it real, solid, and if she didnβt follow through, sheβd feel like a loser. Karen took a breath and blew it out. βIβm quitting Hamilton & Associates and applying for an accountant job at Cooper Homes. The posting showed up yesterday morning. Even though it doesnβt pay as much as Hamilton, the medical, dental and 401K plans are great.β The confession released a stab of exhilaration edged with scary. Accountant jobs in Graywood were rare. Her timing had been lucky with Hamilton & Associates. Another opening in her field might not come along for months, which would require a job search in other towns, maybe moving. She didnβt want to leave the home sheβd made hereβworrying her bottom lip between her teeth, she glanced at Leoβor the friendships sheβd forged. He narrowed his eyes at some point in the distance, looking thoughtful. βIf you want to switch to a construction company, work for me. Iβve been thinking about farming out the accounting side of my business, to free up some precious time to do more important things.β He winked. βIβm the worst bookkeeper.β βNo way.β She shook her head. βWorking for friends is a bad idea.β βNot if Iβm the friend.β His voice deepened an octave into a blood-warming rumble. βAbsolutely no.β Leo was a great employer, generous and fair, his company always on the business bureausβ best list. But working for him would send her even deeper into the void with all her forbidden fantasies. Already she had trouble keeping them under control. And mixing business and friendship was almost as dangerous as combining best friends and physical desire. Nothing good ever emerged at the end. She wouldnβt add Leo to her romantic wreckage. She focused on the pub at the end of the block, the cheerful lights and hint of fried food, ignoring the weight of his steady stare. Changing her mind about this wasnβt happening, not even with the power of Leoβs super-scowl. Working for him would put pressure on their friendship, warp it into something else. Their relationship was far too important. He was too important. Finally, he exhaled and swiped his fingers through his hair, leaving it rumpled and even more sexy. βWhy do you always insist on being stubborn?β She gave him an impish smile. βVery well. Be that way. But Iβll tell you thisβ The only way youβre going to land the job at Cooper Homes is if you know at least a smidge of construction. Cooper expects all the staff, even office workers, to jump in and help out on site if theyβre short-handed. Construction crews arenβt always the most reliable employees.β βThatβs not listed on the job announcement.β She frowned up at him. His expression was serious, no sign of trickery, but heβd used his sexy voice on her, given her the scowl. He was up to something shady. He shrugged. βI know Cooper.β βYou know everyone.β Graywood was a small town, and the Hughes family fingers were dipped in everything good, charitable and green. Sheβd been in Graywood for a couple of years, not enough to be trusted by the local residents. Even if no one admitted it, unless a soul was born and raised in Graywood, they were considered a permanent outsider. Some things never changed. The one exception was Leo. Right away, heβd made her feel like she belonged. She couldnβt lose that, not for anything. Leo stopped and faced her. Karen braced herself. Here it was, his scheme. βI have a proposal for you.β βIs it indecent?β Karen shut her mouth fast, heat rising to her neck. Flirting level warning, code red. βKidding, of course.β βActually,β he said, drawing out the word. βThe decency level depends on perspective.β He tugged on his ear lobe, a nervous tell. Whatβbesides Halloweenβcould rattle the serious, steady, unshakable Leo Hughes? βYouβve won my full attention.β She poked him playfully in the chest. βLay it on me.β One corner of his mouth curled up in a slow, lazy smile, and all hint of nervousness vanished as he met her gaze. That heat in her neck spread to her face. She hoped he assumed it to be the lamplight glow on her skin, not the tingling warmth curling through her veins. βRemember the Granton estate a few miles out of town?β He didnβt wait for her unnecessary answer. Sheβd been intrigued by the abandoned property since the moment sheβd driven into Graywood job hunting, glimpses of the Gothic mansion and storybook landscape, full of secrets and gloom. βI bought it.β Karen gasped. βWithout telling me?β βClosed this afternoon. I was waiting for the right moment to share the news.β His eyes gleamed with humor. βNow, back to my proposal.β βIf it has anything to do with Granton, Iβm in.β She bounced in her boots, unable to keep still. Her best friend had bought Granton Hall. She couldnβt wait to get inside. βAlways require full disclosure before making any binding agreements, Ren. As it happens, there is some fine print in this particular proposal.β That sounded ominous. She folded her arms and waited for him to continue. βFirst, the background. Thereβs a locals-only construction competition starting tomorrow. It involves renovating a single room by the end of the month. Whoever wins gets the bid to renovate town hall and a spread in Renovation & Remodel, the magazine every construction company aspires to be in. The publicity for that alone is worth the effort.β βSince when do you need extra attention or work?β Hughes & Sons Construction had been established by Leoβs great-great-grandfather and passed down through the generations, growing in reputation and building an empire to fund all the Hughesβ family good deeds. Leo had a few days over two years holding the reins. His father had passed right before Ren had met him, and he took the responsibilities of carrying on the family legacy very seriously. βSince I bought Granton Hall.β He tucked her arm through his again and strolled toward the pub. βThe rules are simple. Must be a local company to enter. The owner must personally renovate their chosen room with the assistance of a single volunteer.β He glanced at her. βSince youβre in need of some construction experience and I need a reliable volunteer, itβs a win-win.β Karen studied his unreadable expression. The opening for the position at Cooper Homes didnβt close until the end of the month, enough of a window to gain some basic skills. Learning construction from Leo in her spare time would be perfect. But something about this proposal had made him nervous. βWhatβs the catch?β βI need you at least part-time.β She ignored how her blood heated at the words βI need youβ. With all the personal days and vacation hours sheβd built up at Hamilton & Associates, she could make it part-time. Escaping the cubicle and coworkers for half a day every day until she had the skills to land the job at Cooper Homes would be a definite bonus. Working only part-time with Leo, she could manage her fantasies, and Granton Hall would be the best distraction. βNo problem.β She paused with him outside the pub entrance. Voices and laughter drifted out with delicious smells. A basket of garlic tots was about to meet its final destiny. βWhat else?β βWe have until Halloween to renovate one room at Granton Hall and impress the judges. Today was the last day to enter the competition, so the timing was perfect. Not going to lieβ It will be a lot of hard labor.β She studied her stubby fingernails. βGuess Iβll have to miss the manicurist for a month.β βReady for the fine print?β At his low, sultry voice, she lifted her gaze to his, and her breath caught. Behind the confident mask, another emotion flickered, banked and steaming. That heat in her veins rose a few degrees. Controlling her libido for a month was a small price to pay for the dream of walking the antique halls of Granton and learning a few construction skills on the side. I can do this. βGo on.β βSo that any spare minutes may be spent on the project, not wasting drive time, Iβd require you to live at the mansion.β βSeriously, Leo?β For the first time in weeks, the excitement bubbling up erased all the shadows left by rejection reminders and dreams long lost. She fisted his sweater to keep from bouncing up and down like a pogo stick. βWhen do we start?β βNot so fast. Thereβs one last detail to my proposal.β She released his sweater and smoothed it out, one pat more than necessary of his firm chest. βWhatever it is, Iβm in.β He gave her a lopsided smile, the one he used on only her. βGlad to hear it, but you wonβt be living at Granton alone.β βI wonβt?β The words tangled in her dry throat. βNo, Ren, darling.β His eyes deepened to stormy seas, his voice to molten honey. He opened the pub door and motioned her inside. As the heat and chaos surrounded her, he leaned near her ear and whispered, βYouβll be living with me.βChoose Your Store First For Romance
About the Author
C.J. Burright 
C.J Burright is a native Oregonian and refuses to leave. A member of Romance Writers of America and the Fantasy, Futuristic & Paranormal special interest chapter, while she has worked for years in a law office, she chooses to avoid writing legal thrillers (for now) and instead invades the world of paranormal romance, fantasy, and contemporary romance. C.J. also has her 4th Dan Black Belt in Tae Kwon Do and believes a story isnβt complete without at least one fight scene. Her meager spare time is spent working out, refueling with mochas, gardening, gorging on Assassinβs Creed, and rooting on the Seattle Marinersβ¦always with music. She shares life with her husband, daughter, and a devoted cat herd.
You can find C.J. at her website here and follow her on Pinterest.
Giveaway
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