๐Ÿ“•๐Ÿ“˜๐Ÿ“™ THAT SECRET CRUSH by Meghan Quinn is NOW AVAILABLE!! Grab this friends to lovers, secret crush romance today!! ๐Ÿ“•๐Ÿ“˜๐Ÿ“™ Read the included EXCERPT! @AuthorMegQuinn @CandiKanePR

THAT SECRET CRUSH (Getting Lucky #3) by Meghan Quinn
Release Date: February 11th
Genre: Contemporary Romance

 

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Blurb:
USA Today bestselling author Meghan Quinn brings more humor and heart with the third novel of her Getting Lucky series: a story about breaking curses and laying your heart on the line.

What happens when your secret crush isnโ€™t so secret anymore?

Iโ€™ve had feelings for Eve Roberts for as long as I can remember, but because she also happens to be the twin sister of my best friend, Eric, Iโ€™ve never acted on my feelings and long ago resigned myself to keeping my crush under wraps.

But after a terrible falling-out with Eric involving a failed restaurant venture and plenty of blame on both sides, Iโ€™m back in Port Snow without my best friend and without any direction. But can you guess whoโ€™s here? Eve. And my attraction to her is as strong as ever.

As old feelings rush back, Eve and I find ourselves pulled together, whether we like it or not. Lines are crossed, secrets are kept, and we soon discover that the difference between love and friendship may not be so black and white, after all.

Everyone wants that secret crush to love them backโ€ฆbut will I be ready when she does?

 

 

Excerpt:
Prologue

**REID**

What the fuck was that?

Did I just experience real-life witchcraft? Whatever it was, Iโ€™m pretty sure Neptune and Uranus collided in space, because that shit was crazy.

Stunned and nervously laughing at each other, my brothers and I hurry to a more populated part of the city. Weโ€™re soon threading our way through crowded cobblestone Bourbon Street toward a partially broken neon sign advertising huge pretzels.

โ€œShe was scary as shit,โ€ Brig whispers into my ear, reaching for my hand. I swat the idiot away.

Out of all my brothers, Brig is by far the most sensitive, but holding handsโ€”come on, dude, self-respect.

Although I canโ€™t blame him for quivering in his jeans.

It might be all the alcohol I consumed, but damn . . . Iโ€™m feeling a little uneasy and a whole lot terrified.

Why, you ask?

Because Iโ€™m pretty sure an old crone who surfaced from Satanโ€™s lair just cast some weird-as-shit curse on us. She pointed a crooked finger and laid it all out: weโ€™ll have nothing but broken love for life.

And before you scoff at such a blasphemous occurrence, you have to know this: There was fucking wind whipping us in the nuts as she spoke. And on this still, muggy New Orleans night, where the fuck did that wind come from? There were no fans in sight, and there was zero traffic down the narrow cobblestone side road.

Confused? Okay, here are the Cliff Notes.

Baby Brig turned twenty-one, and the four of us Knightly brothers very intelligently chose New Orleans as the place to celebrate because we didnโ€™t want to be clichรฉ and go to Vegasโ€”although Iโ€™m kind of wishing we had right about now. We were in the middle of having a great alcohol-fueled night on the town. But, not paying any attention to where our wobbly legs were taking us, we ran into some old palm readerโ€™s table, and Brigโ€™s fat ass broke it. To make up for the destruction, Brig paid her to read his fortune.

Well, she did a shit job.

Oooh . . . you have brothers. Theyโ€™re going to get you into trouble one dayโ€”thanks, lady, tell us something we donโ€™t know.

Her prediction was a load of crock, and because of that, we might have, you know, vocalized our intoxicated opinion on her subpar storytelling. Thatโ€™s when the crazy shit went down.

Not taking a liking to our constructive criticism, the old bat started flinging her cloak-draped arms around while her evil eyes turned a shade of petrifying yellow, and a huge mole grew on her nose out of nowhere. Pop! Just like that, the mole . . . with accompanying thick black hair.

Okay, maybe the mole isnโ€™t true, and her eyes didnโ€™t change color, but she did wave her arms around, and she said some pretty traumatizing shit. Things like Your dicks are going to fall off and Youโ€™ll forever have sensitive nipples.

Hmm . . . that doesnโ€™t seem right.

Did she say that?

Confused, I break the silence hanging over all of us. โ€œDid she say our dicks were going to fall off?โ€

Panic rises in Brigโ€™s voice. โ€œShit, did she? Did I miss that part?โ€ He grabs his crotch with both hands as he continues to walk. โ€œI canโ€™t afford to have my dick drop dead.โ€

โ€œAs if we can?โ€ Rogan, the group pessimist, says, ducking around a rowdy bachelorette party. โ€œPretty sure we all need our dicks, dude.โ€

Griffin, the oldest and most sensible despite his alcohol intake tonight, speaks up. โ€œThere was no mention of dicks falling off. She just said weโ€™ll be cursed with broken love.โ€

โ€œOkay, so broken dicks,โ€ I clarify.

โ€œLike, Iโ€™ll never be able to get it up again?โ€ Brig steps in front of all of us. โ€œQuick, take me to a strip club. I need to make sure thatโ€™s not what she meant.โ€

โ€œShe didnโ€™t mean that, you idiot.โ€ Rogan wraps his arm around Brigโ€™s neck and continues down the street, giant pretzels in sight.

โ€œThat lady was a fucking whack job. Clearly she has some kind of mental health issue. Itโ€™s best if we just forget about everything and move on,โ€ Griffin says.

Sage advice from the brightest out of all of us.

And even though Iโ€™m not as freaked out as Brigโ€”I mean, Iโ€™m not clutching my dick and praying to the good Lord right nowโ€”I have to admit whatever happened back in that alley didnโ€™t seem entirely kosher.

What did she say again? Something about having broken love, and it wonโ€™t be until our minds have matured that the curse will be cured? What the hell does that even mean? Not that Iโ€™m looking for love, not when my restaurant is my life right now, but it would be nice to know that I still have the option.

When my best friend, Eric, and I were getting through culinary school, pretty much every instructor told us that we werenโ€™t going to have any time for relationships. The only love of our lives would be our knives.

Thatโ€™s turned out to be true. Betty, Beverly, and Barbie are my girls. Every night we have a foursome, and weirdly, theyโ€™re the best Iโ€™ve ever had. They enjoy my hands, and I enjoy their cutting edgeโ€”fuck, Iโ€™m hilarious.

So even though that lady was weird, I donโ€™t think I have anything to worry about.

Broken love.

Curses.

Yeah, okay, you old crone. Go tickle someone else with your mole hairโ€”weโ€™re not interested.

Together, we step inside the crowded, noisy pretzel bar and take a seat before putting in our order. Brig sits next to me, bouncing his knee and scanning the restaurant, its garage doors tucked up into the ceiling, used for closing time only. Everything about this placeโ€”selling giant pretzels in the heart of the French Quarter for all the drunk touristsโ€”is genius. Despite the sticky bar top, peeling walls, and dirt-encrusted floors that probably havenโ€™t seen a mop in a few years, thereโ€™s no doubt in my mind that it makes a killing . . . on just pretzels. Brig leans in and whispers, โ€œI think she followed us; I can feel her here, staring at me.โ€

โ€œDude, youโ€™re fucking paranoid right now. Chill, man.โ€

โ€œDid you not hear her?โ€ Brig seethes with worry. โ€œShe said we would never have dicks again.โ€

Christ.

I drag my hand over my face. We are way too drunk to be dealing with something like this. โ€œShe said we would have broken love. Your dick is fine.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s what you think? Have you looked at yours yet? What if she turned them green or something? And broken love . . . thatโ€™s even worse. You know my goal in life is to be a husband. How can that happen if Iโ€™m cursed with broken love?โ€

Luckily, at that moment, my phone vibrates in my pocket. I reach for it and see Ericโ€™s name flash across the screen. He knows Iโ€™m in New Orleans celebrating Brigโ€™s birthday, so this must be important.

I hold up the phone to my sweating, hysterical brother. โ€œHave to take this. Talk to Griffโ€”heโ€™ll hold your hand.โ€

โ€œReally? You think so?โ€

I donโ€™t bother to reply and take off toward the hallway that leads to the employee entrance at the back of the bar, trying to gain a little bit of privacy and to get away from the loud, pounding music.

Straight from culinary schoolโ€”and after working multiple jobs and saving every last penny we ever earnedโ€”Eric and I were able to scrape enough money together to start our own restaurant in Boston, which we named Bar 79 after Harbor 79, our favorite place to fish in our hometown, Port Snow.

After six months of tireless menu prep, designing the space, and marketing the hell out of our New Englandโ€“inspired cuisine with a twist, we opened our doors. And weโ€™re only three months in, but weโ€™re killing it so far. The food blogs love us, and three major articles have been written about our impeccable flavoring and our incredibly close bond.

I accept the call and bring the phone up to my ear. โ€œHey, man, whatโ€™s up?โ€

โ€œHey, I know youโ€™re out with your brothers, but I, uh . . . I have a problem.โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™s going on? Is it the restaurant, or is it something with Janelle?โ€ Eric has been dating our business manager for the past three months, ever since we opened. I told him it was risky and maybe not the smartest idea heโ€™s ever had, but he was gung ho on making a move, and there was nothing I could say or do to stop him.

โ€œUh . . . yeah.โ€

Still drunk, but not so much that I canโ€™t help out with any restaurant issue, I lean against the wall. โ€œWalk me through it.โ€

Eric has always been the big picture guy, the dreamer, the extravagant one, while Iโ€™m more grounded and work out the fine details. So when he calls with a problem, Iโ€™m usually pretty confident in my ability to help him work through whatever it is.

โ€œUh . . .โ€ His voice shakes, a crack in his usually even-keeled persona. Cue the worry. This canโ€™t be good. โ€œDid you recently ask Janelle to make a transfer?โ€

Janelle has been handling our business for the past five months, ever since Eric confronted me about not being able to juggle everything as we were gearing up for the opening. I was dropping the ball on multiple responsibilities, like managing our funds, paying vendors, and getting all our orders in on time while still trying to cook and develop the menu, so he found Janelle and brought her into the mix to help manage everything. With her MBA and businesslike confidence, she was doing a good job, I thoughtโ€”well, until this very moment.

โ€œA transfer of funds?โ€

โ€œYeah.โ€

โ€œNo. Why? Did she?โ€

โ€œShe did.โ€

โ€œOkay, so whatโ€™s the problem?โ€

โ€œShe, uh . . . she kind of transferred all the funds.โ€

I press my hand to my forehead, wishing I wasnโ€™t drunk right now. โ€œDude, spell it out for me, okay? Iโ€™ve been drinking all damn day, I just got my dick turned green, and Iโ€™m hungry for a pretzel. What the hell is going on?โ€

โ€œShe took it all, Reid. She fucking took it all.โ€

โ€œTook what? Our money?โ€ That canโ€™t be right.

โ€œYeah. Took every last penny and just disappeared.โ€

โ€œWait. What?โ€ I pinch the bridge of my nose, trying to comprehend what Eric is telling me. โ€œShe took all of our money? Where did she go?โ€

โ€œNo fucking idea.โ€

โ€œSo . . . we donโ€™t have any money in the joint account?โ€ I think back to how much was in there. After all our expenses and the cost of the opening, we were at about twenty grand, I think. Okay, donโ€™t panic.

โ€œNo, man. She took it all, out of all of the accounts.โ€

My heart seizes in my chest as my breath comes out in gasps. Confusion and understanding collide in my brain, sending my stomach into a nauseous roll.

โ€œWhat the fuck are you telling me right now?โ€

โ€œThe restaurant . . . fuck, man, itโ€™s broke.โ€

My head falls back against the wall, my body going limp as I slide to the sticky ground that hasnโ€™t seen a mop in a decade.

Broke.

As in, no funds?

There has to be a solution. The police, lawyers . . . this shit isnโ€™t legal.

โ€œDid you report her?โ€

โ€œYeah, but because sheโ€™s a partner, there isnโ€™t much we can do. She had access to everything. She fucked us over.โ€

I rub my hand across my forehead, eyes shut, preparing for the worst. โ€œSo what the fuck are you trying to tell me?โ€

โ€œWe were already behind on bills. Janelle apparently wasnโ€™t paying them but was still paying herself. Rent is two months overdue, vendors want their money, contractors still need to be paid. Weโ€™re fucked, Reid. Utterly fucked.โ€ He lets out a long breath and says the last thing I ever expected to hear. โ€œWe have to close.โ€

No fucking way.

***

I pace the sealed concrete floor of Bar 79โ€™s kitchen, still trying to comprehend what the hell happened while I was gone.

I told Eric to meet me here in the morning after I got back, but he has yet to show up. Iโ€™m seriously starting to worry that heโ€™s stood me up when the back door bangs open. I glance up to see Eric stumble inside, a bottle in his hand, a hitch in his gait. What the ever-living fuck?

โ€œAre you drunk?โ€

โ€œI canโ€™t believe youโ€™re sober.โ€ He makes his way to a prep table and hoists himself on top of it before taking another swig of what I can only imagine is a bottle of scotch.

โ€œHow the hell am I supposed to have a conversation about our restaurant when youโ€™re drunk off your ass?โ€

โ€œJust a wee bit twisted,โ€ he says, holding his fingers up. โ€œAnd thereโ€™s nothing to talk about. Weโ€™re fucked, Reid. She took it all. We put every ounce of our savings into this place, and my parentsโ€™ money . . .โ€ His face twists in grief before he takes another swig.

โ€œWe have to be able to find some investors, some partners. We have great reviews; weโ€™re up and coming on the restaurant scene. We have options.โ€

He shakes his head. โ€œNews is already spreading. No one is going to want to work with two idiots who donโ€™t know how to manage a business.โ€

I run my hands through my hair, tugging at it. โ€œThis canโ€™t be it. There has to be something we can do.โ€

โ€œWe owe vendors a shit ton of money, Reid. We are so far in debt that even if an investor likes our talent, theyโ€™re not about to scoop up all the debt we owe. Face it, this is over.โ€ He leans back on one hand and takes a sip of his drink.

โ€œFuck!โ€ I shout and kick a garbage can across the kitchen. โ€œFuck! I told you not to date her. I told you it was a bad idea.โ€

Gaining a little clarity, Eric sits tall and jabs at his chest with the hand thatโ€™s holding his bottle. โ€œAre you blaming this on me?โ€

โ€œShe worked you, man. She used you and took what she wantedโ€”that was her plan all along. I never should have let you hire her.โ€

โ€œI never would have had to hire her if you didnโ€™t drop the fucking ball on all the business shit. Donโ€™t blame me, Reid. When we went into this partnership, you said you could handle the business end while I took over the big picture planning. I did my part. You were the one who fucking failed on his end. I stepped in and tried to find the solution.โ€

โ€œWith a pair of tits,โ€ I shoot back. โ€œYou hired her because of her tits, not her qualifications.โ€

โ€œFuck you.โ€ He slides off the prep table, the slap of his sneakered feet reverberating through the kitchen. โ€œWe never would have been in this situation if you didnโ€™t fuck us over to begin with. Donโ€™t blame this shit on me, not when youโ€™re just as much at fault. Face it, Reid, we might be good in the kitchen, but when it comes to running a business . . . we both just destroyed our careers.โ€

I donโ€™t want to admit that heโ€™s right, and I donโ€™t want to take blame for this, even though a heavy weight is pressing down on my chest, reminding me over and over that this very well might be my fault.

I should have asked for help.

I should have interviewed Janelle.

I shouldnโ€™t have been so lazy when it came to decisions.

But . . .

โ€œI trusted you,โ€ I say, hands on my hips, staring at Eric. โ€œI trusted you to make the right decision for the business, and you thought with your dick instead of your head.โ€

He tosses the bottle to the side, the glass shattering as it hits the floor. โ€œYeah, well, I trusted you to hold up your end of the bargain, and you didnโ€™t, so looks like weโ€™re both shitheads.โ€ He shakes his head and starts to walk toward the back door. โ€œGood luck with your life, Reid. Just donโ€™t ever try to run a business again. Anything you do is guaranteed to crash and burn, just like Bar 79.โ€

 

 

About the Author:
USA Today Bestselling Author, wife, adoptive mother, and peanut butter lover. Author of romantic comedies and contemporary romance, Meghan Quinn brings readers the perfect combination of heart, humor, and heat in every book.

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