Small Town Swoon (Cherry Tree Harbor #4) Read Online Melanie Harlow

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Erotic, Forbidden Tags Authors: Series: Cherry Tree Harbor Series by Melanie Harlow
Advertisement

Total pages in book: 101
Estimated words: 98789 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 494(@200wpm)___ 395(@250wpm)___ 329(@300wpm)
<<<<345671525>101
Advertisement


“Okay,” I said, pulling out my phone to change my plane ticket. “But can you please see about getting me an audition for the Katherine Carroll film? I’ll fly back if I have to. Or I can send a video. Whatever they want.”

“I might have to call in a favor, but yes. I think I can do it.”

“Thank you.” I opened up the airline app and switched my flight so that I was leaving this Saturday morning—in two days—and flying home a month later. I figured that was long enough to walk around naked and get reacquainted with my childhood self or whatever. I wasn’t convinced it would help, but on the off chance Delphine wasn’t totally batty, I’d make the effort. Sometimes those woo-woo people were right about stuff.

Funny how she resembled Ari DeLuca so closely.

I wondered what Ari was up to these days. I knew she’d gone to the Culinary Institute after high school and then moved to New York City, but recently Mabel had mentioned she was back in Cherry Tree Harbor working at her parents’ diner. Maybe I’d go see her.

Surely enough time had gone by that she’d gotten over the rejection. After all, it had been eight years.

She couldn’t still hold a grudge, could she?

TWO

ari

Moe’s Morning Skillet

Fried Chicken and Waffles

Lemon Blueberry Buttermilk Pancakes

Baked French Toast w/ Maple Coffee Syrup

I yawned as I wrote the Saturday morning breakfast specials on the chalkboard behind the counter at Moe’s Diner—two old favorites and two creations of mine, which was the deal I’d struck with my parents.

“Tired?” my mother asked as she began brewing the coffee.

“A little.”

“What time did you get home last night?”

“Late,” I said, frowning at the way my printing sloped downward. I erased everything and started again. “Xander was short-handed at the pub, so I offered to stay longer. Then I came in early this morning to bake.”

“You’re working too much and not getting enough rest,” my mother admonished. “I’m worried about you.”

“I’m fine.” I yawned again.

“Why do you need a second job?”

“I just bought a house, remember? And I make good tips at the bar.”

“But you don’t have any time for your personal life.”

I snorted. “What personal life?”

“That’s my point! You’re young and beautiful, you should be out dating and having fun. If you need help finding someone, I can⁠—”

“No,” I said, glaring at her over my shoulder. “No more fixing me up with anyone. I’ve either known them since kindergarten and watched them eat too many boogers or they live in their mom’s basement and just want to talk about gaming. I’d rather be single.”

Her heavy sigh told me how she felt about that.

“Hey, listen,” I said, switching tracks before she started naming all my cousins who’d gotten married already. “I’d like to add some new things to the summer menu using in-season fruit. I’ve been testing out this galette that would be fantastic with Michigan strawberries and rhubarb. And I’ve got this idea for smashed cherry, basil, and goat cheese sliders on⁠—”

“That sounds too fancy for Moe’s,” my mother interrupted. “People come here because it’s familiar. They know what to expect.”

“But it’s boring.”

“It’s comforting,” she countered.

“You let me add a few dishes last summer, remember? A couple of them were really popular.” I put the chalk away and hopped off the counter.

“And expensive,” she reminded me. “You insisted on those pricey ingredients, and we had to charge more. Dad didn’t like that.”

“He never said that to me.”

“He wouldn’t—he adores you too much. But Moe’s Diner has been in the DeLuca family for three-quarters of a century! He doesn’t want to be the DeLuca to run it into the ground.”

“I’m not going to run Moe’s into the ground, Mom. I’m just trying to elevate it a little.” I made a lifting gesture with my hands.

“But Moe’s is down to earth, Ari. That’s the appeal. It’s not that Dad and I don’t appreciate your skills, because we do,” she said earnestly. “Nothing made us happier than when you came back home and said you wanted to work here.” She turned and cradled my face in her hands. “After all, you’re the only child we’ve got—our little miracle baby.”

I rolled my eyes but tolerated the brush of her thumb across my cheek. My parents hadn’t thought they could have children, and I’d been a late-in-life surprise gift. I appreciated being loved and wanted, I really did, but the whole miracle baby thing was getting old. “Can you please stop calling me that now? I’m twenty-four.”

“I know, darling. We’re getting older too. And there’s no one we trust but you to take the reins, to keep Moe’s alive for the next generation.”

“I get it, Mom.”

“We haven’t wanted to burden you,” she went on, “but the truth is, Ari, the last few years haven’t been the greatest. Tourism is down, there’s that new breakfast place up the street, we replaced all the kitchen equipment last year and we’re still paying off the loan . . .” Her voice trailed off, and the lines in her forehead grew deeper. “It’s not as easy as it looks to keep this place in the black.”


Advertisement

<<<<345671525>101

Advertisement