Lola Figmud has spent years building a successful career as a senior publicist at Strauss and Adder. Work has become her safe place, a way to escape the grief she never fully healed from after losing her beloved aunt, the woman who raised her and taught her to dream. Love, to Lola, feels too risky. Loving means losing, and she's not sure she can survive that again. But when fate brings her face-to-face with Lukas Heinrich, her childhood best friend, now a famous celebrity chef. Everything she's carefully kept locked away begins to stir. Old memories. New feelings. And a second chance she never thought she'd get. Will Lola let her fears hold her back, or will she find the courage to choose love again?
IF A RESTAURANT COULD ROMANCE, I'd be a goner. Nancy, Dave, and I sat at a small table in the Olive Branch, a Michelin-starred spot in SoHo Dave had begged to try. I wasn't usually one for long lunches, but it was a Friday in summer, and I owed Nancy a favor after bailing on a play she'd wanted to see. As an editor always chasing fresh talent, Nancy had dragged us to the strangest concerts and events-no small feat considering I'd visited forty-three countries with my aunt, who had a knack for weirdness.
This, however, was very-very-nice.
"This is officially the fanciest lunch I've ever been to," Nancy announced, popping another bacon-wrapped date into her mouth. It was the only thing we'd ordered so far that she could eat-the rare wagyu slices were out of the question for a person seven months pregnant. Nancy was tall and waifish, with dyed-periwinkle hair and pale white skin. She had dark freckles across her cheeks and always wore kitschy earrings she found at flea markets on the weekends. Today's flavor was metal snakes with signs in their mouths that read FUCK OFF. She was Strauss & Adder's best in-house designer.
Beside her sat Dave, a newly minted senior editor at Strauss & Adder, speared another wagyu slice. With his short curly hair, warm brown skin, and signature 1910s-explorer look, tan trousers, white button-down, suspenders - he was unmistakable. Next to him, I felt underdressed in my free Everything Café T-shirt, old light-wash jeans, and duct-taped red flats from college. Three days without washing my hair, dry shampoo could only do so much - but I'd been late to work and hadn't had time to care.
I was a senior publicist at Strauss & Adder, a perpetual planner, and somehow I had not planned for this outing in the slightest. To be fair, it was a Summer Friday, and I hadn't expected anyone to be in the office today.
"It is really fancy here," I agreed. "It's much better than that poetry reading in the Village."
Nancy nodded. "Though I did enjoy how all of their drinks were named after dead poets."
I made a face. "Emily Dickinson gave me the worst hangover."
Dave looked incredibly proud of himself. "Isn't this place just so nice? You know that article I sent you? The one in Eater? The author, Alfred Chado, is the head chef here. The article is a few years old, but it's still a great read."
"And you want him to do a book with us?" Nancy asked. "For-what-a cookbook?".
Dave seemed genuinely hurt. "What do you take me for, a plebeian? Absolutely not. A cookbook would be wasted on someone who is such a wizard with words."
Nancy and I exchanged a knowing look. Dave had said the same about the play I dodged last week while moving into my late aunt's Upper East Side apartment. On Saturday, as I hauled a record player into the elevator, Nancy confessed she'd never swim in the ocean again. Still, Dave had a gift - he could see what someone could write, not just what they had. He thrived on possibility. That's what made him different. He always took in the underdogs and helped them bloom.
"What's that look for?" Dave asked, looking pointedly between the two of us. "My instincts were right about that musician we saw on Governors Island last month."
"Sweetheart," Nancy replied patiently, "I'm still getting over the play I saw last week about a man who had an affair with a dolphin."
Dave winced. "That was...a mistake. But the musician wasn't! And neither was that TikToker who wrote that amusement park thriller. It's going to be phenomenal. And this chef . . . I know this chef is special. I want to hear more about that summer when he turned twenty-six-he alluded to it in Eater, but not enough."
"You think there's a story there?" Nancy asked.
"I'm sure there is. Right, Lola?"
Then they looked at me expectantly.
"I... haven't read it, actually," I admitted, and Nancy tsked in that way of hers that will end up making their future child incredibly contrite. I ducked my head in embarrassment.
"Well, you should!" Dave replied. "He's been all around the world, just like you. The way he relates food to friendship and memories-I want him." He turned his hungry gaze toward the kitchen. "I want him so badly". And whenever he had that kind of look in his eyes, there was no stopping him.
I took another sip of too-dry wine and scanned the dessert menu. We usually lunched together - a perk of working in the same building - but mostly stuck to Midtown, where options were limited. I'd eaten more food truck sandwiches and lobster mac and cheese than I cared to admit. In summer, with tourists everywhere, finding a decent spot without a reservation was nearly impossible.
"Well, when you get him, I have a question about this dessert menu," I said, pointing to the first item there. "What the hell is a manicured Apple pie?"
"Ooh, that one is the chef's specialty," Dave informed us as Nancy snatched the menu from me to read about it. "I definitely want to try it."
"If it's just a slice of Apple sprinkled with some granular sugar on a graham cracker," Nancy said, "I'm going to laugh."
I checked my phone for the time. "Whatever it is, we should probably order it and head back. I told Monique I'd be back by one."
"It's Friday!" Nancy argued, waving the dessert menu at me. "No one works on Fridays in the summer. Especially not in publishing."
"Well, I do," I replied. Monique Adder was my boss, the director of marketing and publicity, and co publisher. She was one of the most successful women in the business. If there was a bestseller to be had in a book, she knew exactly how to squeeze it out, and that was a talent in and of itself. Speaking of talent, just so Nancy and Dave knew the situation, I added, "I have three authors on tour right now-and something is bound to go wrong."
Dave nodded in agreement. "Murphy's Law of Publishing."
"Murphy's Law," I echoed. "And Juliette cried herself sick this morning because of her boyfriend, so I'm trying to lighten her load today."
"Fuck Romeo-Rob," Dave intoned.
"Fuck Romeo-Rob," I agreed.
"Speaking of dating." Nancy sat up a little straighter, and put her elbows on the table. Oh, I knew that look, and I inwardly suppressed a groan. She leaned in to look at me, arching her eyebrows.
"How're you and Fredy doing?"
Suddenly, the wineglass looked very interesting, but the longer she stared at me waiting for an answer, the less resolve I had, until I finally sighed and said, "We broke up last month."
Nancy gasped like she'd been personally insulted. "Last month? Before or after you moved?"
"While I was moving. The night you all went to the play."
"And you didn't tell us?" Dave added, more curious than his distraught wife.
"You didn't tell us!" Nancy echoed in a cry. "That's important! And it's been over a month? You've been single for a month and we didn't know?"
"It really wasn't that big of a deal." I shrugged. "It was over text messages. I think he's already dating somebody he met on Hinge."
My friends looked at me with utter pity, but I waved it off. "Really, it's fine. We weren't that compatible anyway." Which was true, but I didn't include the fight we had before the texts. Fight was a strong word for it, though. It felt more like a shrug and a white flag tossed onto an already-abandoned battlefield.
"Again? You have to work late again?" he'd asked. "You know this is my big night. I want you here with me."
To be fair, I had forgotten that it was the opening night of a gallery with his work. He was an artist-a metalworker, actually-and this was a big thing for him.
"I'm sorry, Fredy. This is important." And it was, I was sure of it, even though I couldn't remember what the emergency had been to make me stay late. He was quiet for a long moment, and then he asked, "Is this how it's going to be? I don't want to be second to your job,Lola."
"You're not!"
He was. I kept him at arm's length so he wouldn't see how broken I was. I could keep lying, keep pretending I was fine-because I had to be. People had enough to worry about without adding me to the list. That was the whole appeal of Lola Figmud: she always figured it out. Fredy sighed, heavy and deep. "Lola, I think you need to be honest." And just like that, the nail hit the coffin.
"You're so closed off. You hide behind work. I don't think I even know you anymore. You won't open up, won't be vulnerable. What happened to the girl with watercolor under her fingernails?"
Vivienne's father warned her to stay far away from Adrian Blackwood the dark, dangerous heir with a reputation for breaking rules and hearts. But Vivienne has never been one to back down from a challenge. Determined to prove herself and help her father's business, she steps into Adrian's world, a world of sharp suits, sharper words, and a pull she hadn't bargained for. What Adrian wants isn't just business. And what Vivienne feels isn't just hatred. In a steamy, hate-to-love clash of wills, Vivienne must navigate forbidden desires, dangerous secrets, and betrayal from a devilish bad boy who might just burn down every wall she's built. Dancing With The Devil's Heir is a dark, steamy romance packed with girl power, arrogant charm, and a love story that was never supposed to happen.
Darya spent three years loving Micah, worshipping the ground he walked on. Until his neglect and his family's abuse finally woke her up to the ugly truth-he doesn't love her. Never did, never will. To her, he is a hero, her knight in shining armour. To him, she is an opportunist, a gold digger who schemed her way into his life. Darya accepts the harsh reality, gathers the shattered pieces of her dignity, divorces him, takes back her real name, reclaims her title as the country's youngest billionaire heiress. Their paths cross again at a party. Micah watches his ex-wife sing like an angel, tear up the dance floor, then thwart a lecher with a roundhouse kick. He realises, belatedly, that she's exactly the kind of woman he'd want to marry, if only he had taken the trouble to get to know her. Micah acts promptly to win her back, but discovers she's now surrounded by eligible bachelors: high-powered CEO, genius biochemist, award-winning singer, reformed playboy. Worse, she makes it pretty clear that she's done with him. Micah gears up for an uphill battle. He must prove to her he's still worthy of her love before she falls for someone else. And time is running out.
Linsey was stood up by her groom to run off with another woman. Furious, she grabbed a random stranger and declared, "Let's get married!" She had acted on impulse, realizing too late that her new husband was the notorious rascal, Collin. The public laughed at her, and even her runaway ex offered to reconcile. But Linsey scoffed at him. "My husband and I are very much in love!" Everyone thought she was delusional. Then Collin was revealed to be the richest man in the world. In front of everyone, he got down on one knee and held up a stunning diamond ring. "I look forward to our forever, honey."
Lindsey's fiancé was the devil's first son. Not only did he lie to her but he also slept with her stepmother, conspired to take away her family fortune, and then set her up to have sex with a total stranger. To get her lick back, Lindsey decided to find a man to disrupt her engagement party and humiliate the cheating bastard. Never did she imagine that she would bump into a strikingly handsome stranger who was all that she was currently looking for. At the engagement party, he boldly declared that she was his woman. Lindsey thought he was just a broke man who wanted to leech off her. But once they began their fake relationship, she realized that good luck kept coming her way. She thought they would part ways after the engagement party, but this man kept to her side. "We gotta stick together, Lindsey. Remember, I'm now your fiancé. " "Domenic, you're with me because of my money, aren't you?" Lindsey asked, narrowing her eyes at him. Domenic was taken aback by that accusation. How could he, the heir of the Walsh family and CEO of Vitality Group, be with her for money? He controlled more than half of the city's economy. Money wasn't a problem for him! The two got closer and closer. One day, Lindsey finally realized that Domenic was actually the stranger she had slept with months ago. Would this realization change things between them? For the better or worse?
In her previous life, Kimberly endured the betrayal of her husband, the cruel machinations of an evil woman, and the endless tyranny of her in-laws. It culminated in the bankruptcy of her family, and ultimately, her death. After being reborn, she resolved to seek retribution against those who had wronged her, and ensure her family's prosperity. To her shock, the most unattainable man from her past suddenly set his sights on her. "You may have overlooked me before, but I shall capture your heart this time around."
"Love is blind!" Lucinda abandoned her beautiful and comfortable life because of a man. She married him and slaved off for him for three long years. One day, the scales finally fell off her eyes. She realized that all her efforts were in vain. Her husband, Nathaniel still treated her like shit. All he cared about was his lover. "Enough is enough! I quit wasting my years with an ungrateful man!" Lucinda's heart was shattered into many pieces, but she summoned up the courage to ask for a divorce. The news caused a stir online! A filthy rich young woman recently got divorced? She was a good catch! Countless CEOs and handsome young men immediately swarmed to her like bees to honey! Nathaniel couldn't take it anymore. He held a press conference and begged with teary eyes, "I love you, Lucinda. I can't live without you. Please come back to me." Would Lucinda give him a second chance? Read to find out!
Kara Martin was known as Miss Perfect. She was a beauty with good personality and successful career. Unfortunately, her life changed at one night. She was accused of adultery, losing her job, and abandoned by her fiance. The arrogant man who slept with her did not want to take responsibility. He even threatened to kill her if they met again. What's worse, Kara was pregnant with twins and she chose to give birth to them. Four and a half years later, Kara returned to work at a large company. As the secretary, she would frequently face their notorious CEO. Kara thought it wouldn't be a problem, but as it turned out ... the CEO was the father of the twins!