Today we have the release day blitz for Whatâs Left of Me by Kristen Granata! Check out the release day blitz and be sure to grab your copy today!
Title: Whatâs Left of Me
Author: Kristen Granata
Genre: Contemporary Romance
About Whatâs Left of Me:âItâs very rare that an author surprises me. Kristen Granata didnât just surprise me, she completely blew me away. If you love emotional, poignant, and healing romance, you simply cannot miss Whatâs Left of Me. A five-star must read and a lovely introduction for me to a new author I know Iâll love for years to come.â â Bestselling Author Kandi Steiner Callie Kingstonâs life as an Orange County housewife isnât as perfect as it seems. Her husband isnât the same man she fell in love with nine years ago, and her home is no longer her safe haven. But sheâs determined to keep up appearances, especially when it comes to concealing the bruises her husbandâs temper leaves behind. Until Cole Luciano moves into her best friendâs house across the street. Heâs abrasive and rude, but his steel-blue eyes tell a different storyâone with dark secrets that has Callie curious. After suffering through an unspeakable tragedy, Cole lives in his sisterâs pool house until he can get back on his feet. Heâs convinced that he deserves to live with the guilt he harbors from his past, and wants nothing more than to be left alone. Yet he canât seem to stay away from his beautiful neighbor. He sees right through Callieâs carefully orchestrated lies and is desperate to help her. Callie discovers more than an angry and bitter man underneath Coleâs hard exterior. But when Callie finally finds the courage to create a new life for herself, Cole isnât sure if thereâs enough of his heart left to give in order to be the man she deserves. Can two broken souls heal each other, or are some just too damaged to be put back together? *This book contains some graphic scenes and very sensitive subject matter.
Get Your Copy Today!
Exclusive Excerpt:Iâm not getting out of bed today.
This is an amazing mattress. Just the right amount of firm-to-soft ratio. This comforter rocks too. Itâs puffy but not suffocating. These sheets are a high thread count. Breathable. I did good when I picked these out. I could stay here all day. Donât need to go grocery shopping. Who needs to eat when you have a mattress like this? Laundry? Pffft. I wonât need clothes if I stay in bed. This is the perfect solution to all of lifeâs problems.
But what is that awful smell?
A long, wet tongue slides across my cheek, and I groan. âGo back to sleep, Maverick.â
With my eyelids still closed, I reach out and smooth my fingers through my retrieverâs fluffy fur. His tongue makes another pass over my cheek, and again, Iâm hit with a blast of that stench.
My nose scrunches as my head jerks up off the pillow. âMaverick, did you eat your poop again?â
His head dips down, and he rests it on top of his front paws.
âDonât give me those eyes! Theyâre not going to work on me this time.â
He leaps off the bed and bounds into the hallway, tail swatting from left to right as he waits for me at the top of the stairs.
Guess Iâm getting out of bed.
I flip the comforter off my body, swing my legs to the side of the mattress, and jam my feet into my plush white slippers.
Once Iâm vertical, my head throbs like someone dropped an anvil on it. I grip onto the cool iron bannister and take my time down the spiral staircase. Maverick waits at the bottom, his body thrashing like a shark from the momentum of his tail.
âYou are way too awake for me right now, bud.â
He woofs in response and prances into the kitchen ahead of me.
When I stagger into the kitchen, sunlight streams through the windows, reflecting off the marble countertop and searing my retinas. I yank the cord on the blinds and bury my face in the crook of my elbow, hissing like Dracula.
Maverick plops down at my feet, nuzzling my ankle with his wet nose. We both jump when we hear the creak of the front door, and then he takes off into the foyer.
Paul strides into the kitchen, saturated in sweat from his morning run, and I hold my breath until his lips curve up into a smile.
âGood morning, gorgeous.â
Relief washes over me. âMorning. How was your run?â
Paul snatches a water bottle from the refrigerator and twists off the cap. âFour miles today.â
His royal-blue Under Armour T-shirt clings to his broad chest, the muscles in his biceps flexing with his movements. His blond strands are damp and disheveled, and his skin glows with a golden sheen.
I lift an eyebrow. âHow is it that you look this sexy after a four-mile run?â
He grins. âHow is it that you look this sexy when you just woke up?â
I huff out a sardonic laugh, knowing damn well I resemble the Crypt Keeper at the moment.
Paul leans in with puckered lips, but I make an X with my forearms in front of my face. âThe poop-eating bandit got me. You might want to stay back.â
He looks down at Maverick, and as if he knows weâre talking about him, Maverick ducks around the corner of the island.
âYouâre nasty, dog.â
âIâll call the vet today. Maybe theyâll know how to deter him from eating his own feces.â
Paul leans his hip against the counter. âI think all dogs eat their own crap.â
âWe have to watch him better when heâs out back. Stop it before he can get to it.â I walk around the island so I can start on breakfast. âI read something once that said dogs eat their poop when theyâre lacking vitamins in their diet. Was it an article? Maybe Josie told me. I donât know; I canât remember. Either wayââ
I stop moving and snap my fingers in front of Paulâs face. âAre you even listening to me?â
Paul shakes his head, his eyes roving over my body. âI havenât heard one word since you stood up in those silky shorts.â
I smile and set a frying pan on top of the stove. âPlease. This isnât anything you havenât seen before.â
âYet it never gets old.â He closes the distance between us and stands behind me, trailing his hands up my arms.
I hum at his light touch, welcoming it. âLetâs hope you always think that.â
âI know I will.â He tilts my head to the side and presses his lips to my neck. One of his hands slips under my camisole, cupping my breast, while he tugs my shorts down with the other.
My head falls back against his shoulder, and a long exhale leaves my parted lips. âDonât you have a meeting?â
âJust means weâll have to be quick.â His fingers slide between my thighs and press inside me while his thumb rubs circles on my clit at the same time.
My legs quiver, and I reach forward to grip the edge of the counter. Paul gives my back a gentle push until my chest is pressed against the cool marble, and then he slides his length inside me.
âI love you,â he whispers at my ear, gripping my hips, pumping in and out of me in long, controlled strokes.
I arch my back to meet each of his thrusts, and his fingers return to my clit as he drives into me faster, harder, deeper. I moan, writhing against his hand, and his pace quickens.
I can feel the pleasure mounting in my core, the steady build like a rising wave. Soon, it crashes over me. I cry out as the spasms rack through my body. Paul goes under too, grunting as his hot liquid fills me.
He holds me there, pressing soft kisses to my shoulder, my neck, my temple. âThis is what Iâve missed. Iâm so glad we can finally get back to how things used to be.â
âMe too.â
And thatâs my halfhearted truth.
I should relish in this feeling, the closeness, his gentle love, but my mind crawls toward the analytical place it always goes to, calculating the date, the time, the exact location in my cycle. My fingers itch to reach for my phone and click on the fertility app out of habit, but for the first time in three years, I donât.
And after last night, I never will again.
With a pat on my backside, Paul pulls away and tucks himself back into his running shorts. âIâm hitting the shower.â
My eyes linger on his wide back and confident swagger as he leaves the room with his head held high, free from the anxious thoughts that plague me.
Guilt squeezes my chest when I think about everything that Iâve put him through over the past few years. The stress, the doctorâs appointments, all my tears.
No more.
Paulâs right. We need to get back to the way we used to be. Back before I became obsessed with starting a family. Before I plunged into depression and dragged him down with me. Before the people we were when we got married turned into strangers.
Itâs time to put it to rest.
And itâs up to me to do it.
I can be better.
I can find happiness again.
I straighten my camisole, pull up my shorts, and start gathering the ingredients I need for breakfast.
The kitchen is my favorite room in this entire house. Beautiful marble countertops; tall, white cabinets; stainless steel appliances. Paul had the contractor create it based off of my exact vision. He says itâs because he loves me so much. I say itâs because he needs me to cook for him because Paul could burn water.
Sometimes it feels like Iâm living someone elseâs life, like this is all a dream. Living in a mansion in Orange County, California, married to the Adonis that is my husband, not having to get up and work 9-5 every day. Iâm very fortunate to have everything I could ever need at my fingertips.
I didnât grow up with all this. I came from an average, middle-class family. But when I met Paul in college, everything changed. Weâve been together for nine years now, and Iâm still not used to this lifestyle. I donât think I ever will be.
As I scoop the egg-white-and-spinach omelet with hash browns into the glass container, Paul struts back into the kitchen, dressed to perfection in his navy suit. I hand him his lunch bag, his breakfast, and his coffee mug.
He presses his lips to the top of my head. âThanks, gorgeous. Iâll see you tonight.â
âHave a good day.â
âBe good, poop breath,â he calls over his shoulder.
Maverick barely lifts his head from where heâs sprawled out by the back door, bathing in the sunspot.
The dog-life of Riley.
When I hear the click of the front door, a long exhale whooshes out of me. I want to walk upstairs and climb right back into bed, but if Iâm going to make things better, I have to start by looking the part. So instead, I drag myself up the stairs and into the bathroom.
Itâs been a while since Iâve cared about my appearance. Been a while since Iâve cared about anything other than becoming a mother.
Fake it âtil you make it, they say.
Flipping on the lights, I shimmy out of my pajama shorts and tear the camisole over my head. I suck in a sharp breath when my eyes land on my reflection in the mirror for the first time this morning. My stomach clenches at the sight of the dark-purple splotches along my left bicep, memories of last night flooding my vision.
Damn you, Maverick. I wanted to stay in bed today.
I blink away the hot tears before they get the chance to brim over, quick to replace the weak emotion with logic.
Paul drank too much last night, and everything weâve been holding in for the last three years came to a head.
It was my fault.
I shouldnât have let things get to that point.
I shouldnât have spoken up.
Iâll do better.
It wonât happen again.
Needing a plan rather than wallowing in self-pity, I examine the span of the bruising and mentally scour through my wardrobe for the right sweater. Hopefully, today will be brisk enough to wear one without drawing attention to myself. Even if the weatherâs hot, I could get away with wearing one of my cardigans with three-quarter-length sleeves. Shouldnât be too conspicuous.
Deep breath in through the nose, and out through the mouth.
Maverick.
California king bed.
Walk-in closet.
Dream kitchen.
Yard with a pool.
Mercedes.
âIâm fine,â I tell my reflection. âEverythingâs fine.â
I twist the lever in the shower and step under the waterfall, letting the warm water cascade over my skin. By the time I lather and rinse, the urge to cry is gone and I can breathe easy again.
Wrapping the towel around myself, I swing open the bathroom door and head to my closet. My pale-yellow sweater covers the mess on my arm, and I leave it unbuttoned over my white-and-yellow floral maxi dress. I spend thirty minutes lining my eyelids, curling my lashes, and passing the flatiron over my blond waves, taming it the way I know Paul prefers it.
With my armor in place, I square my shoulders in the mirror and heave a sigh. âGood as new.â
At the sound of my sandals clunking down the stairs, my overeager dog gallops toward the front door.
âReady for your walk, Mav?â
He woofs and spins in a circle.
Iâm clipping his leash onto his collar when a loud boom echoes outside. My shoulders jolt, and Maverick jumps to scratch at the door, barking like a madman.
âAre we starting with the fireworks already?â
The Fourth of July isnât for another week. Plus, itâs nine oâclock in the morning.
I push the sheer cream curtain aside and peer out the window. A white pickup truck rolls to a stop in front of Josieâs house across the street. Well, there are visible areas of white paintâthe truck was white at one timeâsurrounded by burnt-orange rust spots eating away at the metal. The bed of the truck is covered by a blue tarp, securing the contents underneath with a yellow bungee cord. Thick, black smoke billows from the exhaust pipe, trailing all the way down the block.
The truck pops again as it idles, sending Maverick into another barking fit.
âAll right, bud. Enough.â I reach down to pat his head, keeping my nose glued to the windowpane.
The driverâs door swings open, and a man steps out. A navy-blue baseball cap sits on his head, pulled down low over his eyes. His plain white T-shirt, which looks more like an undershirt, is wrinkled and smudged with brown stains. His jeans are rippedânot the kind of rips people pay forâand equally as filthy as his shirt. He strides around the front bumper and up the walkway that leads to Josieâs backyard.
âHe must be the new landscaper.â
Maverick cocks his head to the side as if heâs listening to me.
Josieâs Lexus isnât in her driveway, so I find it strange that sheâd give a stranger the passcode to get in through her back gate. Maybe she left it unlocked for him before she left. Seems odd, but weâve been desperate to find a new landscaping company after one of the workers from our old company got caught having an affair with Mrs. Nelson down the street. If Josie found someone dependable, Iâm going to need his card. Paul will be thrilled. Our shrubs need trimming, and weeds are beginning to poke up through the pavers in our driveway.
âCome on, bud.â I snatch my sunglasses off the entryway table and lead Maverick out the front door.
Once we cross the wide street, Maverick pulls ahead of me, his nose to the ground, sniffing
his way up the path of pavers. The iron gate is ajar, and Maverick continues pulling me through the opening into the backyard.
The layout is like mine. Same-sized rectangular inground pool, similar patio furniture. But Josieâs yard is full of life, whereas mine has barely been touched. Squirt guns, skateboard ramps, and balls from every sport litter her grass. Itâs obvious that a family lives here.
Josie often complains of the mess, but Iâd give anything to step on a Lego block belonging to my child.
The landscaper is standing in front of the pool house with his back to me, one hand on his hip while the other tips the neck of a brown glass bottle into his mouth.
So much for finding a reliable landscaper.
I stop a few feet behind him, wrapping Maverickâs leash around my hand a few times to keep him from pulling me any further.
âDonât think you should be drinking on the job, sir.â
The man spins around and blasts me with a scowl that sends a shiver down my spine. Under the brim of his hat, I spot a deep, disgruntled crease that lies between his dark brows. His prominent, unshaven jaw pops, clenching, as if heâs gritting through physical pain while he glares at me with piercing steel-blue eyes.
The hairs on my arms lift in a whoosh of awareness, and fear slices into me.
I shouldnât have come back here alone.
Maverickâs tail thumps against my leg as he leans forward to get to the stranger, clearly unfazed by the potential danger Iâve put us in.
âI ... Iâm sorry.â I pull Maverick back. âI didnât mean to startle you. I live across the street.â
Great idea. Tell the nice murderer where you live.
He doesnât respond. Doesnât introduce himself. He just keeps hitting me with that unwavering glacial stare. Itâs too much, too powerful to withstand, so I lower my gaze and take in the rest of him.
Strong shoulders span wide, adding to his towering height. His shirt is taut around his upper-body. The muscles in his arms are well-defined striations, more than just swollen biceps and triceps. Heâs carved from stone, detailed and unforgiving. A work of art that people travel from all over to stand in front of in admiration.
This man is beautiful.
Then again, thatâs probably what every woman said about Ted Bundy right before he killed them.
I should leave. Flee back to the safety of my home.
But Iâm frozen, sucked in by the enigmatic energy surging around him like a tornado of rage and agony.
And Iâm standing right in his path.
I swallow, my throat thick with apprehension. âI, uh, weâre in need of a new landscaper. I saw you come back here and figured Iâd come ask for your card.â I swallow again, my gaze flicking to the beer bottle glinting in the sunlight. âItâs a little early to be drinking, donât you think? I mean,you shouldnât be impaired while operating heavy machinery. Donât want to lose a foot in the lawn mower.â
I choke out a laugh, desperate to make light of the situation, but it comes out strangled and strained.
The man doesnât laugh with me. He doesnât crack a smile. Not sure his facial muscles would know how if he tried to. One massive hand is curled at his side, as if heâs gripping the leash on his composure, his self-control ready to snap.
âYouâve got some nerve coming back here like this.â The manâs voice is gruff with a sharp edge, like he gargles with a throatful of razors every morning.
My eyebrows lift in a flash of irritation. âMe? Iâm a potential customer. One who wants to pay you for your landscaping services. Or I did, before I caught you getting drunk on the job.â
Why am I arguing with the scary man?
He folds his arms over his chest, accentuating the corded muscles in his forearms. âAnd you assume Iâm a landscaper because why?â
âYour truck, for one.â I wave my arm in front of him. âYouâre too dirty to be pool maintenance. If you were a roofer, youâd have a ladder.â I shrug like itâs simple addition. âAnd this isnât your backyard, so unless youâre here to rob the place ...â My fingers touch my lips. âOh, God. Youâre not here to rob them, are you?â
He edges closer, the look of disgust twisting his featuresâthe look heâs directing at me.
I lift my chin and try not to flinch.
Iâve learned that flinching only makes it worse.
Maverick strains against his leash, his eager nose in the air, wide eyes begging the stranger to pet him. I have to use both hands to tug him back.
Some guard dog you are, Mav! This man is about to kill me, and youâre trying to sniff his crotch and make friends.
The man points his index finger at me, revulsion rolling off his tongue with each syllable. âYou self-righteous, pretentious little princess.â
My mouth falls open, and my stomach bottoms out.
âYou stand there in your designer clothes, your shoes that cost more than a monthâs rent, scrutinizing everyone behind your ridiculous fucking sunglasses, and youâre gonna judge me?â He shakes his head. âMy clothes are dirty because I work my ass off. My truckâs a piece of shit because I have more important things to pay for. And Iâm a grown-ass man, so Iâll drink whenever the fuck I feel like drinking. All you rich motherfuckers act like youâre better than people like me, but I know the sickening truth. I can lay my head down at night with a clear conscience because Iâm not living a lie. Iâd rather look ugly on the outside than be ugly on the inside like you.â
His words pack a physical punch, hitting way too close to home. A tremor rips through me, and before I can stop it, a tear escapes from under my sunglasses.
Itâs time to go.
âIâm sorry.â I whip around and bolt out of the backyard, dragging Maverick behind me.
My legs carry me across the grass as fast as my wedges will allow. I bunch my dress in my fist, hiking it up over my knees so my strides are longer.
When I reach my house, I slam the door closed behind me and press my back against it. My chest heaves as I gasp for air, my heart racing. A sob gurgles in my throat, but I swallow it down.
Maverick.
California king bed.
Walk-in closet.
Dream kitchen.
Yard with a pool.
Mercedes.
Maverick whimpers, nudging me with his cold nose. I sink down to the floor and fling my arms around him, burying my face in the comfort of his soft fur.
âItâs okay, Mav. Iâm okay.â
Everythingâs okay.
I shouldnât have confronted him like that.
Itâs my fault for making him so angry.
My speeding pulse returns to normal after a few minutes of deep breathing, and I push off the floor. Maverick follows me into the kitchen as I swipe my purse and my car keys off the counter.
âSorry, bud. You gotta stay here. Iâm running to the store. Making a special dinner for your dad tonight.â
I kiss the top of his head, and then Iâm back out the door, head down, without so much as a glance at the pickup truck out front.
* * * âMmm. So good, babe.â
My lips spread into a smile. âFigured Iâd surprise you with your favorite dish tonight.â
Paulâs hand slides across the cherry wood table, and he entwines our fingers. âI love it. Thank you.â
âHow was your day?â
He tugs on his tie, loosening it, before popping his collar and slipping the loop over his head. âGood. Meeting went well. I think Haarburgerâs going to sign with us.â
âThatâs great.â
He dabs the corner of his mouth with his napkin. âHow was therapy?â
âIt went well.â
His Adamâs apple bobs up and down. âDid you, uh, tell her what we talked about last night?â
âI told her about our decision to stop trying to have kids. She thinks itâs good that weâre on the same page, that weâre able to move on together.â
âNot what I was referring to, Cal.â
âOh.â
Heâs asking if I told her about the bruises he left on my arm.
I look down at my spaghetti. âNo, I didnât mention it.â
âGood.â He sets his fork down beside his plate. âBecause I meant what I said last night. It wonât happen again.â
I nod, unsure of what he wants me to say to that. It wasnât the first time he put his hands on me, nor was it the first time he promised that it wonât happen again. I want to call him out on that. I want to ask him why he feels the need to hurt me in order to get his point across. I want to ask him why he canât control his temper. I want to ask him what happened to the sweet man I met in college. I want to ask him to get some help.
But sometimes, silence is easier than navigating around all the egg shells lying at my feet.
He picks his fork back up. âDid you call the vet?â
âI did. They said to watch him when heâs in the backyard so he doesnât get the opportunity to eat his poop.â I lift my goblet to my lips and take a long sip.
âDid you ask why heâs doing this?â
My stomach coils. âThe, uh, the doctor said it could be due to anxiety.â
âAnxiety. Like you.â
âYeah. He asked if weâve been stressed, because dogs can pick up on our feelings.â
Recognition flashes across Paulâs face, his light-brown eyes hardening. âSo what did you tell him?â
âI told him everythingâs fine, of course. He said we could put Maverick on a low dose of anxiety medication, but I said that wonât be necessary. Weâll just watch him better when heâs outside. Wonât happen again if we keep an eye on him.â I force a smile and clasp my hands together. âReady for dessert?â
He shakes his head and pushes his chair back as he stands. âIâm going to change. Got some e-mails to send out.â
âOf course. Iâll get this all cleaned up.â
Heâs gone before the sentence leaves my lips.
Couldâve gone worse, I suppose.
I release a sigh and begin stacking our plates.
While I rinse off the dishes in the sink, I gaze out the window into the darkened yard. The pool house at the far end elicits the memory of the bizarre encounter in Josieâs backyard this morning.
Iâve tried not to think about the rude stranger all day, but my mind keeps drifting back to him. Back to what heâd said.
He was right. Iâd judged him by his appearance and made an assumption based on it. Shouldnât have been that big of a deal, though. He couldâve laughed it off like a silly misunderstanding. He didnât need to go off on me like he did. People judge books by their covers all the time.
Hell, he did the same thing with me, didnât he? He lumped me in with the wealthy people in this neighborhood, pointing out my expensive clothes and accessories, calling me a fake without knowing anything about me. I could call him a jerk and chalk it up to him being mean.
But his words carry weight.
I am a fake.
I am living a lie.
Who was that man, and how did he read me so easily?
More importantly, does Josie know that someone was in her yard today?
I dry my hands on a dishtowel and dig through my purse to find my phone. Before I can tap out a text, I spot one already waiting in my inbox. When I click on it and read the words that pop up on the screen, my hand clamps over my mouth.
Josie: So I heard you met my brother this morning.
About the Author:Kristen Granata is a teacher by day, and an (exhausted) author by night. Known for writing emotional New Adult Romance, she loves creating realistic, flawed characters who struggle through the darkest parts of life and come out stronger on the other side. Kristen is a self-proclaimed "bitter cynic trapped in a hopeless romantic's body." Her characters pack a sarcastic punch, make you laugh, make you think, make you ugly cry - and they will always live happily ever after. If you're a lover of moving, inspirational reads, Kristen's your girl. Kristen was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1986. She moved to Staten Island with her family and lived there for almost twenty years. There she attended community college and became a teacher. Despite her passion for writing, and despite her professors strongly suggesting she become a writer, she took the more sensible route (bitter cynic, remember?) After going through a difficult divorce when she was only twenty-nine, Kristen returned to writing. The raw story that poured out of her led her to publish her debut novel, Collision, in March of 2018. Soon after in August 2018, the sequel, Avoidance, was published. Her third novel, The Other Brother, released in April 2019. Kristen openly shares her mental health struggles with depression and anxiety with her Instagram following. Her message is a beacon of hope to anyone who is suffering: You are not alone. She delicately weaves this theme into her writing, and demonstrates the ability of love to heal trauma. When she's not teaching or writing, Kristen is reading, Instagramming, indulging in her messy love affair with popcorn, and annoying her wife and step-daughters by incessantly singing along to The Greatest Showman soundtrack.
Connect with Kristen:
Instagram | Facebook | Website | Amazon | GoodReads | Twitter
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |