"About Last Summer is such an adorable romance story. I was hooked from the beginning that I stayed up late one night because I couldn’t stop. If it weren’t for Mother’s Day weekend, I would have locked myself away and devoured this book. Yup, it’s that good!!! " - Karenjo, Goodreads
Release Date: May 30th, 2017
Pretend to be from Spain? Act like she can barely speak
English? Sure, why not? It wouldn’t be the first time Gabby Vega had agreed to
a challenge from her best friend, Kenzie. Besides, it’s only for a week of
vacation with Kenzie’s cousins. Gabby will prove to Kenzie she can keep up the
fake identity for the whole trip—that she’s not a quitter.
There’s just one major surprise. Noah Jernigan is also
staying with Kenzie’s cousins. Noah, the boy she fell in love with at drama
camp last summer and the boy she had to dump when it was over. The boy who
knows who she really is.
Noah can’t believe it when Gabby appears at the Bryson’s
vacation home in the New Mexico mountains. He hasn’t seen her in a year. It
practically took that long just to get over her. And now she’s Gabriela from
Spain? All he wants is to get as far away as he can. Or maybe the exact
opposite. Stick as close to her as possible and find out what the heck happened
last summer. And definitely get some payback.
Now Gabby has to keep Noah at arm’s length as she pretends
to be Gabriela. She doesn’t want to answer his questions or rehash last summer.
Because one thing is clear—the more time she spends with Noah, the more she’s
in danger of falling for him all over again.
Gabby
We entered a
bright corner room with windows on two sides and twin
beds. It was pretty, but I couldn’t really take it all in.
“Sit down,”
Kenzie said, taking the backpack from my shoulder. “What’s the matter? You look
like you’ve lost your best friend, and I’m still right here, so talk.”
I sat on one of
the beds and slid my hands under my thighs. “Remember last fall when I was
getting over the guy from drama camp?”
“Yeah?”
“That’s him.
Noah Jernigan.”
Kenzie’s mouth
fell open. “No way.”
I nodded.
“But, how
could—? I mean, I thought he lived far away from Austin, like San Diego or
something.”
“No, San
Antonio.”
Kenzie was
shaking her head. “And he goes to Geoff’s school. What are the odds?”
“I don’t know.
But I can’t stay here. This is a nightmare.”
“No, you have to
stay. That would be quitting. You wanted a challenge, didn’t you?”
“This is more
than a challenge. I have no idea what he’s going to do. He knows me, Kenz. He
can tell everyone who I am.”
She plopped onto
the opposite bed. “But you don’t know that for sure. I mean, he went along with
it outside, didn’t he?”
“Yeah, but it
was so sudden. After he thinks about it, he’ll probably want to stand on the
table and announce it to everybody.”
Kenzie laughed.
“Still. He didn’t give you away, and he could’ve.” She got up and walked to the
window. After staring out for a second, she turned back. “I say wait it out.
See what he’s going to do. He might be really cool about it.”
I rubbed my
forehead. “Would you? If someone
dumped you and a year later you saw them pretending to be somebody else … would
you be nice about it?”
***
Noah
I took a swig of
Coke and chanced another look at Gabby. She was staring at Kenzie who was
describing the nearby town and things to do. Gabby’s dark brown hair hung
around her shoulders in loose curls. I could still remember how it felt to wrap
one of those silky curls around my finger, and then let it slide free.
The conversation
went on, but I wasn’t listening anymore. What would it be like to run my hands
through Gabby’s hair again, to have her look only at me? And, as if she heard
my thoughts, she made eye contact. Her smile fell away. There was a weird look
in her dark brown eyes. One I’d never seen before. And then it sank in. Fear.
Gabby was afraid
of me.
I turned back to
my plate, but it was empty. I couldn’t remember finishing the sandwich. A pasty
taste filled my mouth, so I chugged the rest of my soda. What did she have to
be afraid of? I almost laughed out loud. Stupid question. I knew who she was. I
could ruin her little game. The Spanish girl. Anger surged back through me.
The girl from
Spain, who was really the girl from Austin, who was the girl who’d dumped me,
who was the girl I’d been in love with. It had hurt. It was embarrassing how
much it had hurt. Had she cared at all? I doubted it.
But she was
afraid. The opportunity for revenge appeared as easily as if I’d asked someone
at the table to pass it to me.
Hey, Geoff, pass the revenge.
Sure. Mind if I take some first?
Not at all. Help yourself.
Everything inside
me settled into determination. No way was I going home early. Not when I could
spend a week getting back at Gabby Vega. I smiled. She was scared of what I
might do? Good. Because I was just getting started.
***
Gabby
With a sigh, I
fell back against the soft sheets and stared at the flawless white ceiling. No
cracks to stare at to pass the time. I knew I couldn’t focus on a book. Not
when I kept reliving that warm look in Noah’s eyes after I’d done the chicken
impression. It was almost like he wasn’t mad anymore. Like he was enjoying
everything. Even being around me.
But then the
look had slid off his face as if he were thinking about the worst memory of his
life. Was that me? Was I his worst memory? I had no idea. But it was probably
the reason he was going to so much trouble to make me look stupid.
He was punishing
me. Guilt and frustration warred in my chest. Never in a million years had I
thought I’d hurt him so badly. I’d figured he’d be over me in a couple of weeks
and get on with his life. That I was the only one hurting. Guess I was wrong.
How long had it taken him to get past it all? If he was like me, way too long.
I stood and went
to the window facing the back of the house. A wooden deck partially blocked the
view of Kenzie and the guys shooting baskets. Laughter sounded, clear even
through the closed window. Kenzie jumped up and launched the ball through the
air.
“You suck!”
Geoff’s voice rang out.
I smiled.
Kenzie’s shot must have gone in.
Noah came into
view, shooting what looked like the same shot, his body long and graceful in
the air. I leaned my cheek against the cool glass of the window. He was so
beautiful to watch. But the bang of his shot hitting the rim jerked me out of
my semi-swoon. I gave my head a quick shake. I had to stop this. If I didn’t,
I’d repeat my mistake from last summer and fall in love with him.
Only this time
there was no chance he’d make the same mistake. He hated me.
***
Gabby
“Gamma?” Geoff asked, without looking away from the cards in his hand.
“Did I hear you say ‘Noah’?”
“Yes.”
“Have you seen him?” he asked.
“Yes, a while ago, though. He went out the back door, carrying his
guitar.”
Geoff grunted. “He probably won’t be back for a while then.”
True. When he played guitar, Noah traveled to another world. I couldn’t
stop myself. I pushed away from the window. “Excuse me,” I said to no one in
particular and left the room. I eased out the front door and dropped into one
of the huge wooden rocking chairs that lined the porch. The sounds of a faraway
guitar floated through the air like a feather that refused to land.
I exhaled, relaxing into the sound, wishing I was sitting across a
campfire from him, watching his fingers dance across the strings. A sudden pain
left me pressing a hand to my chest.
The realization of how much I’d missed his music, missed him, left me
almost gasping for air. Why here? Why
now? I massaged my breastbone with the heel of my hand, trying to rub the
ache into nonexistence. Nothing could change between us. I’d made my decision
last summer. It wouldn’t be fair to act like we could start over.
I set the rocking chair into motion. Forget
all of that. Just listen to the music. I let the strumming sound wash over
me for several minutes until my pulse returned to normal. Then the sound dipped
too low for me to hear. I leaned forward, straining with everything I had, but
it was no good. A few notes rose up to tease me, then dropped away again.
I was being stupid. It was just Noah playing guitar. And I wanted to hear
it better. There was no special meaning behind it. None. I rose, jogged down
the steps, and headed around the side of the house.
***
Noah
I was three measures into a different Celtic song when a sound broke my
concentration. A footstep? Probably not. I frowned and kept playing. But somehow,
the shades of darkness shifted. I squinted. Someone stood on the blacktop where
we shot baskets, half hidden by the side of the deck.
My heart rate picked up. There was only one person it could be. The
others were inside, and Amanda didn’t go anywhere without Haley. I kept
playing, just more quietly. “You can come out,” I said. “I know you’re there.”
Gabby’s voice came from the blackness. “How?”
I waited until she reached the bottom of the steps. “A shadow moved or
something.”
“Oh.” She stepped up and sat on the stair just below the deck’s floor.
“That sounds familiar.”
Crap. I’d been playing her song
again. I purposely plucked the wrong string, the flat note twanging out like a
slap. “Haven’t played it in awhile.” Idiot,
idiot. You played it a few minutes ago. If she was outside, she heard it.
She leaned back on her elbows and faced the backyard. “It’s still good.”
I could’ve switched songs. I so
wanted to. But a perverse need to show her just how great the song could be
filled me with determination. So I let myself fall completely into the music,
each note ringing out with precision and aching sweetness.
Finally, when my chest was so tight I could barely breathe, I stopped. My
body still rocked uncontrollably forward and back, the last notes reverberating
into the night.
She said nothing. Just sat there as if she deserved the whole
performance.
And I was caught. I wanted to jump up and go inside. But I also wanted to
lean toward her. Remember how much you
liked that last summer? Do you still? I had to be the biggest fool between
here and whatever the hell river ran through Texas.
She sighed, and it broke through the Gabby-cloud in my mind. “What’re you
doing out here, Gabby?”
She looked over her shoulder at me, but I couldn’t see her face in the
darkness. Just her soft voice floated out. “Why didn’t you play games with
everybody?”
I picked idly at the guitar strings. “I’m tired of games. Especially ones
I can’t win.”
The mother of two grown sons, Patricia B. Tighe lives in
West Texas with her husband and dog. She eats way too much pizza, drinks way
too much coffee, and watches way too much NFL football. On the bright side, she
also reads and writes teen fiction. She promises to include as much romance,
angst, and adventure as possible in her books.
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