SYNOPSIS
Secrets, Secrets are no fun.
Genevieve “Ivy” Hursch thought she was living the dream! As the newly appointed promotions director for a hot new Chicago station, she was certain she had the radio world wrapped around her well-manicured finger. Coupled with an exciting relationship with her perfect new boyfriend, Ivy was certain life couldn’t get any better. That is until a piece of old news threatens to take down her career.
Heartbreak, scandal, secrets, and lies send Ivy into a free fall of lost dreams and fractured relationships. How will unexpected advice allow Ivy to cope with a life that is less than perfect? Follow Ivy on a journey to discover the secrets of her heart.
Secrets of the Heart is a continuation from Dirty Little Secret. Many of characters and situations from Dirty Little Secret, reappear in Secrets of the Heart, but it can be read as a stand alone novel.
Suggested audience 18+ for mild romantic situations.
PURCHASE
Excerpt
For such a lavish affair, the Lyric
apparently had decided having easily accessible bars was not necessary. Forced to traverse nearly the entirety of the
Hilton Ballroom to reach one of the two bars set up for the party, she decided
to enjoy her drink at said bar, rather than shimmy between chairs back to her
seat without spilling its contents.
“Vodka
tonic, with a lime, please.” She waved a twenty at the overworked bartender,
trying to bribe his attentions away from the gaggle of tuxedoed gentleman placing
drink orders.
“So
how long are we going to keep up this little charade, Ivy?”
Pete
sidled up to the bar, invading Ivy’s personal space while she waited
impatiently for the bartender to return with her vodka tonic.
“Pete.”
Her
senses were all discombobulated. It was
near impossible to keep a thought in her head when someone who smelled so good
was standing so close. It wasn’t a
cologne-type scent either, a fragrance displayed on the shelves at the local
Macy’s. Pete’s scent was something she couldn’t
quite put her finger on. He just smelled
fresh, like his entire body had been laundered and hung out to dry on a beach
somewhere on Cape Cod.
“Ivy.”
Every time he said her name, with that amused chuckle behind the rumble of his
voice, a euphoric bubble fluttered through her bloodstream.
“Why
are you doing this to me?” There was no bite behind her objection, though she
was positive that had been the directive from brain to mouth.
“Doing
what?” Pete’s raised eyebrows and puppy-dog expression only further softened
the fight she kept telling herself she possessed. He ran a finger down her cheek, and it took
her digging angry half-moons into her palms to prevent her eyes from fluttering
closed. “Expressing an interest in reigniting what we started in July at
Venetian Night?”
“Started?
Please, Pete, it was one night.”
One
amazing night, filled with champagne and fireworks, bonfires and shared
blankets, and barefoot running to Gold Coast apartments with beachfront access.
“Why
do you keep giving me the slip?” Pete continued with that voice that could put
a siren to shame. “We’re both available,
attractive individuals. We clearly have a strong interest in each other given
that you and I exchanged a whole lot more than phone numbers a few months ago,
and yet every time I’m around you pretend you can’t stand me.”
Ivy
couldn’t argue with him. Venetian Night had
been magical. The event, which Chicago hosted each year for those individuals
lucky enough to own luxury yachts within the city limits, put on a lakeside
parade every year so those individuals who could only dream of owning such
luxury could enjoy what had become an annual summer ritual. Ivy had insisted their radio station host a
party lakeside, so their listeners and clientele could observe both the boat
parade and closing fireworks in the comfort of an exclusive marina, instead of
on blankets and beach chairs up and down Lake Shore Drive.
The promotion had gone off without
a hitch; she’d been the toast of the event.
Even Artie Goldsmith, the president of Summit Radio Group, had
complimented her on how much revenue it had generated for their little cluster
of radio stations. Of course, copious
amounts of champagne had flowed that evening.
A couple of bottles of Bollinger later and Ivy had woken up in her bed,
tangled with Pete, after having her mind blown by his more than noteworthy
talents between the sheets.
“You
and I both know why we can’t do”—Ivy signaled wildly between the two of them,
nearly knocking over the vodka tonic, which had finally appeared—“what we want
to do because of a little thing we both signed called a non-fraternization
agreement.”
“Oh,
Queenie, discretion is my middle name.
Who will know what we do behind closed doors?” Ivy felt the slight tug
against her scalp as she watched Pete wrap a strand of her copper colored hair
around his finger before letting it go. They both watched it bounce back into
place before Pete continued, “Besides, we’ve already fraternized, so what is
stopping us now?”
Every
time Pete talked, Ivy’s sensible self decided to peace out and she was left in
a strange half-world where the only thoughts in her head were how green Pete’s
eyes were and how his voice did funny things to her bloodstream. Her toes
curled at the remembrance of what they had done three months ago.
“Pete,”
Ivy began, fighting to regain some coherent thought, “you seem to have a very
misguided idea of the type of girl I am.
July was a slip in judgment, and one too many sips of champagne, nothing
more. If you think for one moment”—she
leaned in to his ear so that only he could hear her—“that I am a booty call you
can approach at your leisure for a roll in the sheets, you are sorely
mistaken.”
About the Author
A Chicago girl born and raised, you will find that most of her stories are either based in, or somehow tie back to the city she knows and loves. Her loyalties lie on the North-Side, as she proclaims she is a Cubs fan, and a fan of anyone playing against the White Sox. She can also be found regularly rooting for the Illini, when she isn’t being forced by her husband to betray her loyalty to the Blue and Orange in favor of a weekend cheering on the Spartans.
When she isn’t writing (in the physical sense- as stories are always brewing in her head in some form), she can regularly be found feeding her coffee addiction at the Green Mermaid (otherwise known as Starbucks). She is also a voracious reader and is quite certain that there is a glitter encrusted picture frame bearing her headshot somewhere on the wall at Amazon that says “this woman pays our salary.” You can also find her frequently stalking Goodreads, Pinning, FaceBooking, or hanging out on the Twitter.
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