My Thoughts
I can't even begin to tell you how much I loved this book. It made me laugh out loud and made me swoon. Sam and Tiel meet in an elevator, become the best of friends, and fall in love. There is so much more in between that will have you not able to put it down until the very end. I loved their banter back and forth. I fell hard for Tiel with her love of life and wanting to share all of that with Sam. And that Sam is a delicious naughty talking bossy man. Talk about hot. They share some scorching hot moments together. I loved that they were best friends who fell in love. This was my favorite book in the series so far. Loved it!
I give Necessary Restorations 5 hearts!
I give Necessary Restorations 5 hearts!
About the Book
They liked to call me names. Manwhore. Slut. Player. But I make wrong look so right…
He's a flawed perfectionist…
I can read women better than any blueprint. I understand their thoughts and feelings, their secret desires and insecurities, and I know how to get rid of them once I get off.
But all bets are off when Tiel Desai slams into my life. She redefines what it means to be friends, and she makes it sound like the filthiest thing I've ever heard.
I can't read the gorgeous conservatory-trained violinist, but she's the only one keeping me from shattering by small degrees, and I can't let her go.
She's wildly independent…
My past—and New Jersey—are far behind me, and now my life is blissfully full of music: playing, teaching, and lecturing, and scouring Boston's underground scene with an annoyingly beautiful, troubled, tattooed architect.
I'm defenseless against his rooftop kisses, our nearly naked dance parties, the snuggletimes that turn into sexytimes, and his deep, demanding voice.
I have Sam Walsh stuck in my head like a song on repeat, and I'm happy pretending history won't catch up with me.
The one thing they have in common is a rock-solid disregard for the rules.
They find more in each other than they ever realized they were missing, but they might have to fall apart before they can come together.
It's the wrongs that make the rights come to life.
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Excerpt
Chapter One
Sam
I never thought I'd die in an elevator.
I always figured it would have something to do with my
brother Riley leaving the gas stove on all night, killing us softly in our
sleep.
Or gin. Chances were good that my liver was well on its way
to pickled.
Or doorknobs. Touching those things was like licking the
goddamn plague.
But today was headed for the fires of hell, and it was all
Shannon's fault.
"Hi, you've reached Shannon Walsh. Leave me a message
and I'll get back to you soon."
Fucking voicemail. Again.
"I don't know where the fuck you are, Shan, but I've
been waiting at the Commonwealth Avenue property for a goddamn hour. I thought
we were trying to make a cash offer today, but I can't very well do that
without you here."
Ending the call, I wet my lips and wiped the sweat from my
brow. This heat wave was in its ninth day, and if I had even a lick of common
sense, I would have hitched a ride to Cape Cod with my brother Matt and his
wife Lauren for Labor Day weekend.
But no, I wanted to see the unit that just came available in
the one-hundred-and-thirty-year-old French Revival hotel-turned-condo building
in Boston's Back Bay. Specifically, I wanted my sister Shannon—the one who held
the firm's purse strings—to buy that unit. I wanted to spend the long weekend
drafting plans to demo it down to the studs and then restore the unit to its
original beauty. I wanted to lose myself in lines and materials, things I could
control.
And I wasn't up for third-wheeling it with the newlyweds.
I also wanted to be alone.
I could handle industry crowds and clients any day of the
week and twice on Sundays, and I did it so fucking well they were willing to
drop unreasonable amounts of money for my services. I was beginning to think I
could finger-paint my designs and still collect six-figure commissions.
But I hated small talk. Bullshit conversations about weather
or sports or politics held no appeal for me. I mostly stared at tits and asses
until I was getting head in a coatroom or a drink thrown in my face.
And I was in a strange place these days. It was an odd
in-betweenness; I wasn't sick but I certainly wasn't well. Not suicidal, but
far from happy.
I'd been sliding further into this rut for months, and
letting my work keep me too busy to notice. But while I was restoring
everything I could get my hands on, the bottom was falling out on me. It was
gradual, an evolution too small to notice without stepping back and examining
from a distance. It was better this way. I didn't want anyone noticing.
So I was flying solo this Labor Day.
To me, alone didn't mean hunching over my drafting table all
night, or skulking around the ancient Fort Point firehouse I called home.
No, alone meant drinking myself numb while some nameless
young thing sucked the stress right out of me. There was nothing one hundred
dollars pressed into the palm of the right maƮtre d' and a good cocksucking
couldn't soothe.
But let's be clear: blowjobs didn't solve problems.
If we were talking solutions, we were talking about my dick
in someone's ass, and I didn't have the enthusiasm for that right now.
I needed a steady stream of gin, a blonde who knew her place
was on her knees, and an otherwise interruption-free evening.
Go ahead: call me a manwhore.
Slut.
Player.
For all the disgust packed into those words, they were
always tied with a fine, shiny thread of admiration. I did what everyone else
wished they could, and I made it look good.
And I'd heard far worse. Someone always had some name to
call me, and some of those names were hard to shake. For the better part of
this year, I'd been replaying my last conversation with my father. The record
was stuck on repeat in my mind, scratching and skipping back to the raw, awful
parts.
My younger brother, Riley, had been leading a walk-through
at a property in Bunker Hill—a string of decent row houses that my miserable
bastard of a father Angus bought and dumped on us to restore—with Patrick,
Matt, and me.
We were almost finished when Angus showed up, and I knew the
minute he walked through the door that he was drunk. He'd been various shades
of drunk since my mother died, and that day, he was cruel drunk.
And that was the day I refused to ignore his bullshit. I
didn't want to walk away that time. It wasn't rolling off my back. I'd absorbed
decades of his hatred, and that tank was long since overflowing.
He attacked everything that I was—my sexuality, my work, my
relationship with my mother and my sister, Shannon—and told me I was a mistake.
That I was too fucked-up to be alive. That I shouldn't have been born.
That was Angus's gift. He could hear every dark, twisted
thought I had, and he knew how to sharpen them into daggers. Ten months later,
I couldn't stop hearing those words.
I walked through the unit one last time, photographing what
was left of the original design elements and noting restoration ideas. In the
hallway joining the twin penthouse units, I texted Shannon to reiterate my
annoyance. Then I hit up the manager at the new whiskey bar in the South End to
reserve my preferred booth.
Tapping the corner of my phone to the elevator call button,
I watched a woman emerge from the other unit. I stared at her, all summery and
happy in her long yellow skirt and sleeveless magenta top, with a face like
sunshine and a jingling ankle bracelet announcing her approach.
No one was allowed to look that pleased with life when it
was too hot to exist.
"Hi," she said with a smile, her thumb beating a
rhythm against the call button. Dark, shoulder-length hair fell across her face
as she leaned forward. "This thing being slow again? It was slow last
week, too. I guess that's part of the deal with old buildings, right?"
She was too much and too loud, and I dug in my pocket for
some hand sanitizer. I'd come in contact with enough germs for one afternoon. I
glanced up from her ankle and stopped attempting to extrapolate a good reason
why any civilized person would wear a noisemaker, and shrugged.
She laughed, and said, "Okay then."
She started humming, and then shaking her ankle with the
tune, and I looked for the stairwell. I couldn't stand in this hall with a
chattering music box much longer, and sharing an elevator with her would
require a sedative.
Despite my penchant for the high-end bar scene, I preferred
quiet. Growing up with five siblings who made Attila the Hun's crew look like a
chill group of guys who enjoyed churning their own butter meant I had to find
that quiet for myself. Noise-canceling headphones, soundproofed insulation in
my office, and enough space so that my brother Riley and I could go weeks
without seeing each other in the firehouse we shared.
Noticing a doorway at the far end of the hall, I gestured
for her to step aside. A humid stairwell was a reasonable price to pay for
serenity.
"Hey," she said, her hand grabbing my elbow.
"It's here."
I met her eyes for the first time since she jangled into my
personal space, and as much as I wanted to scowl at her invasion, her smile was
too warm, her hazel eyes too bright. She was pretty in a way I couldn't
comprehend—maybe it was her shortage of rail-thin, blue eyed blondeness, or the
fact she wasn't made up, blown out, or put together, or that she wasn't simply
looking at me but she was seeing me—and her smile transformed her whole face.
Soon, I was smiling too.
Like a fucking lunatic.
Then I felt the first spasms of panic stirring my stomach,
squeezing my lungs, making my skin too tight.
My instincts told me to walk away from Miss Music Box, pop
some pills to cage the ugly green anxiety monster, and hike down eleven flights
of stairs.
I always listened to my instincts. Beyond my siblings, they
were the only things I could trust in this world.
But I stepped into that elevator anyway, gazing at her light
eyes, and within ten seconds of the door closing, I was hurtling to my death.
About the Author
Kate Canterbary doesn't have it all figured out, but this is what she knows for sure: spicy-ass salsa and tequila solve most problems, living on the ocean--Pacific or Atlantic--is the closest place to perfection, and writing smart, smutty stories is better than any amount of chocolate. She started out reporting for an indie arts and entertainment newspaper back when people still read newspapers, and she has been writing and surreptitiously interviewing people—be careful sitting down next to her on an airplane—ever since. Kate lives on the water in New England with Mr. Canterbary and the Little Baby Canterbary, and when she isn't writing sexy architects, she's scheduling her days around the region's best food trucks.
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