Baked
Fresh
Portland Heat # 2
Portland Heat # 2
By: Annabeth Albert
Releasing April 13th, 2015
Kensington
Blurb
From its famous coffee to the mouthwatering fare at its cafés, restaurants, and bakeries, Portland, Oregon, has a lot to whet the appetite, including the hard-working men who serve it all up—hot, fresh, and ready to go—with no reservations…
From its famous coffee to the mouthwatering fare at its cafés, restaurants, and bakeries, Portland, Oregon, has a lot to whet the appetite, including the hard-working men who serve it all up—hot, fresh, and ready to go—with no reservations…
Vic
Degrassi is a baker on the rise, and it’s all thanks to his rare ability to
make—and keep—his New Year’s resolutions. Whether it’s losing weight, giving up
smoking, or graduating from culinary school, Vic goes after what he wants—and
gets it. This year? He wants Robin Dawson, the sweet-hearted hottie who
volunteers with him at the local homeless shelter.
When
he learns that Robin is suddenly single after being unceremoniously dumped, Vic
is more than happy to offer a shoulder to cry on—or at least a fresh-baked
pastry to bite into. But it’s been a long time since Vic’s gone on a date, and
he’s nervous about risking his friendship with Robin. So when their flirtation
turns into a steamy night together, Vic and Robin have to figure out if they’re
friends with benefits or lovers in the making, and if Robin is ready for
something more than just a rebound. There’s only one way to find out: turn up
the heat…
Excerpt
From Chapter One of Baked Fresh
“So,
what’s your plan this year?” Cliff asked as we unloaded pallets of food for
Victory Mission. The stinging December wind whipped through the loading dock,
howling against the concrete walls. I had to strain to hear Cliff’s booming
voice. “Sky diving? Marathon? How you gonna top last year, Vic?”
“Dunno.”
I hefted a box of tomato sauce cans. That’s what everyone wanted to know—how I
was going to top last year’s resolution to lose a hundred pounds. Truth was, I
was pretty good at resolutions. Four years ago, I’d resolved to go to culinary
school. Three years ago, I gave up smoking. And last year I lost 111 pounds.
But this year I had a smaller, simpler goal in mind.
“Thought
I might try dating.”
“Dating?
As in a boyfriend?” Cliff snorted, a dry sound that echoed off the metal
loading bay doors. “I’d go with a marathon.”
My
stomach churned as I grabbed another box of rolls. I had my own doubts. I was
hardly a prize catch. I hadn’t dated anyone in the four years I’d been working
for Cliff. Never had a boyfriend beyond the rare three-peat hookup. ’Course,
Cliff didn’t know about my hookups, but I hadn’t even had one of those in eight
long months. Up until a few months ago, I hadn’t realized what I was missing.
Ever since then, this weird, restless longing had plagued me. New Year’s was
the perfect excuse to do something about it. Get out there.
“You
guys done out here? Whole stack of boxes waiting inside. We don’t have all
day.” Robin bustled out onto the dock, bringing a shit-ton of bad mood with
him. A far cry from the sunny, talkative guy who made me think crazy thoughts,
like that maybe dating wasn’t a terrible idea. He was gone before either Cliff
or I could reply.
“What’s
up with him?” I asked Cliff once I heard the pantry door shut inside.
“Melissa
said Paul broke up with him.” Cliff always found the gossip. The food bank
volunteers were like bored high schoolers, passing rumors around their shifts
like joints at a party.
“Finally.”
I didn’t realize I’d said the word aloud until Cliff laughed.
“Aha!
On second thought, I highly approve of your resolution. I’m gonna have to get a
bet going with Trish about whether or not you can land your man. Talk about
aiming high though, kid.”
“Didn’t
say anything about dating Robin,” I mumbled into a sack of rice. The last time
Robin was single, I had spent months thinking about him. Wondering if he was
out of my league. Knowing he was out of my league but trying to work up the
courage to ask him out anyway. Coming to volunteer more often just to be around
him. Then Paul swooped in like a star pitcher and sent me back to the minor
leagues, where I belonged.
I
readjusted my grip on the sack so I wouldn’t accidentally tear the darn thing
in two. No, I wasn’t stupid enough to make a resolution to date Robin. I just
wanted to get out there. Give myself a chance to maybe meet a nice guy who
wouldn’t care about my food issues and my loose skin and my bald-by-choice
look.
But
now that Cliff had planted the dating-Robin idea in my brain, I couldn’t stop
thinking about it. Which irked the hell out of me. I’d worked hard to deep-six
my crush on him. Finding out he was single was a stupid reason to unearth it.
Robin was the nice guy of my
fantasies. And fucking gorgeous. He was sex walking around in KEENs and hipster
T-shirts. He was everything I wanted and everything I wasn’t ever going to
have.
*****
Once
Vic resolves to be Robin’s rebound guy, can he convince Robin that they’re
meant to be? Find out in BAKED FRESH!
Link to Follow Tour: http://www.tastybooktours.com/2015/01/baked-fresh-portland-heat-2-by-annabeth.html
Goodreads Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/23450161-baked-fresh?from_search=true Goodreads Series Link: https://www.goodreads.com/series/144476-portland-heat
Annabeth Albert grew up sneaking
romance novels under the bed covers. Now, she devours all subgenres of romance
out in the open—no flashlights required! When she’s not adding to her keeper
shelf, she’s a multi-published Pacific Northwest romance writer.
Emotionally complex, sexy, and funny
stories are her favorites both to read and to write. Annabeth loves finding
happy endings for a variety of pairings and is a passionate gay rights supporter.
In between searching out dark heroes to redeem, she works a rewarding day job
and wrangles two toddlers.
Represented by Saritza Hernandez of the
Corvisiero Literary Agency
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