The girls of Mischief Bay

Susan Mallery

Large print - 2015

"Nicole Lord wants to be a good wife, but there's a difference between being supportive and supporting her husband. He quit his job to write a screenplay she's never seen, leaving Nicole to run the house, work full-time, and care for their young son. Can she say enough is enough without losing the man she loves? Sacrificing a personal life for her career is how Shannon Rigg became V.P. at her firm, but she wonders whether she made the right choice. An exciting new love convinces her it's not too late--until he drops a bombshell that has her questioning whether she can have it all. Although Pam Eiland adores her husband, she feels restless now that the kids are grown. Finding sexy new ways to surprise her man brings the h...eat and humor back to their marriage, but when unexpected change turns her life upside down, she'll have to redefine herself. Again. Through romance and heartbreak, laughter and tears, the girls of Mischief Bay will discover that life is richer with friends at your side" -- from author's web site.

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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Published
Waterville, Maine : Thorndike Press 2015.
Language
English
Main Author
Susan Mallery (author)
Edition
Large print edition
Physical Description
549 pages (large print) 23 cm
ISBN
9781410476524
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Shannon is the CFO of her company so busy with her career that she's resorted to online dating. Empty-nester Pam has been married more than 30 years, and she feels that she's in more of a rut than a groove. Nichole is the owner of the Pilates studio where the three women met a few years earlier. Her husband quit his job to write what he believes will be a best-selling screenplay, and he shows almost no interest in her or their young son. Financially, they are barely afloat, and Nichole resents the 60-plus hours a week she works so he can write something he won't even let her see. Mallery skillfully depicts three very different women in different stages of their romantic relationships who enter into unbreakable friendships. Her likable heroines are well-rounded, and the reader goes on an emotional journey with each one of them, thanks to Mallery's acute observations. This first book in the Mischief Bay series will appeal to fans of women's fiction, especially such friendship books as Karen Joy Fowler's The Jane Austen Book Club (2004).--Mosley, Shelley Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

In the coastal town of Mischief Bay, three friends share life's triumphs and troubles despite their varied ages and backgrounds. As a young mother and business owner, Nicole is not averse to hard work. But when her husband announces that he has quit his job to write screenplays, leaving her with all the financial, home, and child-rearing responsibilities, her patience is tested. Sharon, a highly paid chief financial officer for a tech firm, has yet to meet someone and start a family. She is starting to feel that time crunch as she nears 40. Pam, the oldest of the three, seemingly has it all. Her husband owns a successful construction company and her children are all grown, but she feels her life has become too mundane. Her worries about aging come to an abrupt halt when tragedy strikes and she must learn a new way of life. VERDICT New York Times best-selling author Mallery (Evening Stars; Three Sisters) starts a new series that once again creates an absorbing world in which the challenges of life are made easier with the support of true friends.-Joy Gunn, Paseo Verde Lib., Henderson, NV (c) Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Three friends support each other as life throws some unexpected curves their way.Nicole's Mischief Bay Pilates studio is growing every year, and it's a good thing, since her husband just up and quit his secure computer job to write a screenplay. Since he's barely around for their 5-year-old son, hardly helps out in the house and is living off her income, Nicole has discovered that two clients-turned-friends are suddenly emotional rocks she's depending on more than she should but is still very grateful to have. Shannon is the successful professional who's sacrificed a romantic life for her career, while Pam is the happily married yet slightly restless homemaker who's trying to bring a little zing back to her marriage. Suddenly, without planning it, all three women are at crossroads. Shannon has just met a new man who may tempt her to change her workaholic ways; Nicole's husband may actually be on the brink of life-changing success; and Pam will face tragedy that her solid marriage can't help her through. So for each woman, this new set of friends becomes a lifeline as she navigates unexpected terrain on her life journey. Romance superstar Mallery begins a new women's fiction series with a novel that is both heart-wrenching and warmhearted, and readers will likely find the trials and tribulations of Nicole, Shannon and Pam accessible and thought-provoking. A discerning, affecting look at three women facing surprising change and the powerful and uplifting impact of friends. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

"Okay, how about this--you're walking down the street and suddenly you bump into a tall, dark and handsome stranger who sweeps you off your feet, looks deep into your eyes and says, 'I have never seen such exquisite beauty. Have coffee with me, my mysterious maiden.' Would you go out with him?" Marley Kincaid burst into laughter, nearly spilling her coffee all over the oak work island in the middle of her kitchen. she set down the mug and grinned at her best friend. "'My mysterious maiden'?" she echoed. "Uh, yeah, I'm not sure I could go out with any man who called me that." Gwen Shaffer rolled her eyes. "Okay, pretend he didn't say that. He's just a drop-dead gorgeous guy who wants to buy you a cup of coffee. Would you go?" "I don't know. Maybe." Marley sighed. "Why are you so eager to get me dating again?" Gwen had raised the subject the second she'd walked into the house nearly an hour ago, and Marley was growing tired of it. She didn't usually mind when Gwen popped in on her day off to chat over coffee, but this conversation was beginning to annoy her. Somehow it had gone from Gwen trying to convince her to go on a blind date to what-if scenarios that made no sense. She knew her friend meant well, but what was the point in talking about all the possible ways she might meet a man? "Because you've barely left this house in months," Gwen replied. "I want to see you having fun again. All you do is paint and put up wallpaper and--" "I'm renovating," Marley interrupted. "And I'm enjoying it." "You're hiding from the world, and you know it." Gwen's tone softened. "Look, I understand, hon. That bastard is still on the run. If it were me, I'd be worried, too. I mean, what if he shows up here pleading for help or something?" Marley's entire body tensed. She swallowed hard, turning her head so she was spared the familiar flicker of sympathy in her friend's dark-green eyes. She hated it when Gwen brought up Patrick. Hated being reminded of the disastrous relationship that had ended in a train wreck she hadn't seen coming. Eight months ago, she'd been on top of the world. Working at a job she loved, buying her first home, falling in love. Well, she still had the job and the house, but the man she loved? Turned out he hadn't been all that worthy of her undying affection. She'd met Patrick at the hospital, where he'd been recovering from a nasty stab wound to his side. Mugged on his way home from work, or so she'd believed at the time. She'd been assigned to his room, and it hadn't taken long for Patrick's easygoing charm to lure her in. They went on their first date the night he got discharged from the hospital and, three weeks later, he practically moved into her house. Four months after that, they were engaged. It'd lasted five months. Five months of great sex and laughter and that wonderful feeling of falling in love with a handsome, attentive man. He'd wrapped her in a protective bubble and made her believe anything was possible. Patrick had been good at that, playing make-believe. So good that when the cops had come knocking on her door, she'd actually defended him. She still remembered the disbelief on those police officers' faces when she'd finally realized the truth. That her fiancé was not a freelance web designer, but a drug distributor. Not to mention the prime suspect in the fatal shooting of a federal agent. God, what a fool she'd been. "He won't show up," she said darkly. "He's probably lying on a beach in Mexico, laughing at the law-enforcement officers who couldn't catch him." Fortunately, Patrick hadn't tried contacting her since he'd fled three months before, and good riddance. She never wanted to see that man again, and for the past few months she'd gone to great lengths to permanently erase him from her life. Burned his clothes in the backyard, flushed his engagement ring down the toilet. Too bad none of that had succeeded in actually exorcising him from her mind. "I'm not too happy with the cops, either," Gwen said with a frown. "I still can't believe they thought you were involved." Marley's lips tightened. "Detective Hernandez couldn't accept that I was so naive. How could I not know my fiancé was a criminal?" "You weren't naive. Patrick was just a good liar." "Yeah, he was." Marley picked up her mug, along with Gwen's empty one, and set them both in the sink. "At least the police are finally leaving me alone. I only hope it stays that way. Now, can we please stop talking about Patrick?" Gwen's face brightened. "Okay. Can we talk about Nick's friend then?" Marley suppressed a groan. "I told you, I'm not interested." "I'm not suggesting you marry the guy. It's just a date. One measly little date. You said you were ready to date again." "No, I said I might be." She blew a stray strand of hair off her forehead. "But a blind date isn't the way I want to go about it, okay? I'm not having dinner with a complete stranger. It's too forced, too...intimate." "Then we'll make it a double date." "No." Without looking at Gwen, she swallowed back the bitterness sticking to her throat and added, "I can't agree to go out with a stranger. I can't do it, Gwen. Not now, anyway." "Fine, but the subject's not closed, you know. We'll talk about it later." Gwen hopped off the stool, her brown curls bouncing on her shoulders, and reached for the black leather purse she'd set on the counter. "I have to run. I'm meeting Nick for lunch." Marley followed her friend out of the kitchen, her bare feet slapping against the weathered hardwood floor. They reached the front hall, sidestepping the stack of two-by-fours obstructing the way. Marley's younger brother, Sam, had promised to extend the coat closet by a couple feet, so last weekend he'd come over and hacked away at the wall. Then he'd gotten a phone call and taken off to handle a work emergency. He hadn't been back since, and Marley was now left with a gaping hole in the floor and all the supplies he'd brought into her hallway. She didn't mind, though. Sam was busy working at their dad's construction company, and it made her happy he was doing well. Her brother had always been irresponsible and scatterbrained growing up. It was nice seeing him act like an adult, even if it did mean he'd left his sister in the lurch. Gwen paused on the front porch. "Want to come to lunch with us?" she offered. "Thanks, but I'll pass." Marley was so not in the mood to watch Gwen make googly eyes at her longtime boyfriend. The two of them still acted as if they were in the mushy newlywed stage when in fact they'd been together for years. Her friend looked suspicious. "How are you planning to spend the rest of your day off?" "Cleaning out the eaves," she said, fighting back a smile. Gwen blew out a frustrated breath. "You're incorrigible." Marley's smile reached the surface. "Yeah, but you love me anyway." "Can't argue that. All right, I'll see you at the hospital tomorrow." Gwen leaned in to give her a quick side hug, then bounded down the porch steps toward the shiny black Jeep parked behind the red Mazda convertible Marley had owned since she was eighteen years old. Marley waved at her friend, watched Gwen speed away, then walked back inside. Alone, she let out a heavy sigh. Talking about Patrick always brought this awful feeling to her stomach. A cross between sorrow and bitterness, with a hefty dose of anger thrown into the mix. Everyone in her life kept pushing her to forget about him--Gwen, their friends from the hospital, her dad, her brother. None of them seemed to get it. They didn't understand how badly Patrick had hurt her. Not only that, but he'd taken a skewer to her judgment and punched so many holes in it she wasn't sure she could ever trust her instincts again. What kind of woman fell in love with a murderer? How could she have been so blind to Patrick's deception? She knew she wasn't the first and wouldn't be the last woman to be duped by a man. Heck, she'd once watched an entire documentary about serial killers and how they skillfully deceived their loved ones. But that didn't make this situation any better. She still felt like a fool. She'd completely fallen for Patrick's lies and she hated how easily he'd conned her. He'd even convinced her to open a joint savings account, saying they'd need one anyway when they were married. Good thing she hadn't gotten around to depositing anything into it, but it still irked--especially since she couldn't close the damn thing because the cops had frozen it. And sure, maybe she was hiding from the world, just a little, but the renovations on her house helped keep her mind off her fugitive ex-fiancé. Besides, she really was enjoying the work. Her place was nestled in a neighborhood of quaint Victorians and leafy elm trees at the end of the cul-de-sac. Two stories high, it was painted pale cream and in desperate need of new shutters. But she loved the old place. She planned on tackling the exterior after the inside was all spruced up. Heading to the laundry room, she grabbed all the cleaning supplies she needed. She slipped her feet into a pair of white sneakers, then hauled her bucket of supplies out to the side of the house, where the wooden ladder she'd set up earlier leaned against the slate-green roof. Fine, so maybe cleaning out eaves wasn't the most exciting thing to do on one's day off, but it needed to be done. And who knew, maybe one of Gwen's what-if scenarios would come true. A tall, dark and handsome stranger approaches the house. "My mysterious maiden," he says. "Your beauty overwhelms me. Let me clean your rain gutters." Marley smothered a laugh. Rolling her eyes, she snapped a pair of rubber gloves onto her hands and climbed the first rung of the ladder. "This maiden needs no man to take care of her," she murmured to herself with a grin. Caleb Ford leaned back in the plush swivel chair and wondered when exactly he'd become a voyeur. His job had forced him to sit through many a stakeout but somehow this one seemed.wrong. Arousing as hell...but damn it, wrong. He'd been a DEA agent for ten years, had put dozens of criminals behind bars, gotten shot twice in his career--and yet this one little stakeout was killing him. It should've been easy, a wait-and-grab he could've done in his sleep. The location was perfect, the electronic equipment was sweet, and his target, despite the irregular hours she worked, didn't leave the house much. Yep, in theory, this stakeout should've been a piece of cake. But none of his theories had taken into consideration the powerful allure of Marley Kincaid. Caleb shifted in the chair, hoping to ease the ache in his groin. A sip of the cold soda sitting on the desk in front of him helped cool his throat, but did nothing to snuff out the fire in his lower body. A quick glance at the screens displaying Marley's front and back doors showed no movement. Not that he had to be so vigilant; the motion detectors they'd set up caused the monitors to release a loud buzz every time anyone walked by them. There was plenty of movement at the side of the house, however. Marley was up on a ladder, wearing faded cut-off shorts, a red tank top and yellow rubber gloves, and she was cleaning out the eaves using a long brush. Wet leaves and mud went sailing down to the grass ten feet below, remnants of last night's thunderstorm. Damn, she was cute up there on the ladder, her blond ponytail swishing back and forth as she worked. When he'd taken the case, he'd seen pictures of Marley, sure, but seeing her in person was a different story altogether. It had been a week since he'd hunkered down next door to her, and already he'd memorized every detail of her face--her golden-brown eyes set over a pair of unbelievably high cheekbones, her cute upturned nose, her full sensual lips. God, those lips. She had a mouth made for sin. Not to mention a body that could cause a man to forget his own name. For seven days now he'd wondered what she looked like naked. But they only had clearance to install cameras outside the house. And she always closed her drapes when she undressed, forcing his imagination to run wild as he stared at her enticing silhouette removing various undergarments. His cell phone began to ring, a much-needed distraction from the woman next door. Sighing, he snatched the phone from its perch near the computer keyboard and pressed the talk button. "Ford," he said. His voice came out hoarse, and he had to clear his throat before speaking again. "I'm at the Starbucks around the corner," came AJ Callaghan's southern drawl. "Want some coffee?" Caleb tore his gaze away from the monitor. "Hell, yes," he told his partner. "Huh. You sound cranky. Ms. Kincaid doing yoga again?" "Nope, cleaning the rain gutters." "Darn. I won't hurry then. But call me if she starts up with the yoga." AJ's tone revealed the man was no doubt sporting a huge grin. "You know," AJ added, "I can't see Grier staying away from her for much longer. We already know he was infatuated with Nurse Hottie, and seriously, with that bod, who could blame the guy?" Oh, Caleb couldn't blame Patrick Grier for craving Marley's extremely delectable body, either. Thanks to all the cameras Caleb and AJ had set up around the perimeter of Marley's house providing visuals of the kitchen, living room and bedroom, Caleb had firsthand experience with Kincaid's assets. And he was doing a little bit of craving himself. Fortunately, all it took was one swift glance at the picture taped to the side of his computer monitor, and the need for vengeance replaced his desire. As Caleb hung up the phone, he stared at Patrick Grier's grainy features. What pissed him off the most was how normal Grier looked. Brown hair, brown eyes, handsome in a preppy sort of way. That was drug-dealing murderers for you--they rarely ever looked like the scum they were. If it were any other scumbag dealer, Caleb might have handed the case over to a junior agent and focused on the bigger fish swimming around in the drug pond. But this particular scumbag had murdered Caleb's best friend, and he wasn't going to rest until Patrick Grier was behind bars. He looked back at the monitor and grinned when he noticed Marley leaning to the side, one slender arm stretched out as she attempted to tackle a clump of leaves that refused to dislodge. The grin faded, however, when something caught his eye. One of the rungs on the ladder looked...wrong. He leaned closer, squinting at the screen. "Damn it," he muttered under his breath. Excerpted from The Girls of Mischief Bay by Susan Mallery, Elle Kennedy All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.