Reviewed by EBookObsessed on
Lydia is a curvy bride who finds out that her Prince Charming intended her to be his beard and that their whirlwind romance was intended to keep her from finding out that this Prince really wanted to bat for the other team. But someone sent her a video of her intended with his BFF just before she walks down the aisle. I do wonder that she wasn’t a little more busy that morning dressing and prepping for the wedding that she is checking her emails, but maybe she got bored waiting.
Lydia makes a run from her at-home wedding by climbing over the back fence and climbing into a neighbor’s open window, which is pretty impressive for a plus-size girl in full wedding gown. The house looks slightly abandoned and she hides out in the neighbor’s bathtub hoping no one will find her. That was going well until Vaughan wakes up and decides to take a shower.
So why would a musician get involved with this soggy runaway bride? Vaughan has just returned home after his band broke up. He needs money to return to LA and is going to sell his parents’ house. He hasn’t been back since his parents died and finds being alone there is depressing. Submerging himself in Lydia’s problems keeps him from floundering in his own. So as long as he is in town, Vaughan invites Lydia to stay with him so she get her life back in order and decide what her next step is and this way he isn’t alone in the house flooded with painful memories.
Sadly, Vaughan and Lydia mesh nicely although they admit they probably would never have met if Lydia didn’t climb in his window. I say sadly since we know from the beginning that Vaughn has every intention of leaving town and returning to LA to try to build a new band. While at first Lydia wants to get as far away from her ex and this town as possible, as she meets people outside of her ex-fiance’s social circle, she finds that she wants to stay and make a life here.
While Lydia and Vaughan’s friendship keeps building, it is always intended to be a short-term, two ships passing in the night relationship and you are left with a feeling of that sucks. This is a first person story told by Lydia and we know of her growing feelings toward Vaughan, but Vaughan gets very closed off with any indication of their relationship being anything but temporary since he is determined to go off and make music. Because Vaughan keeps trying to keep in the moment and then move on, the ending solution seemed a little abrupt to me.
Overall I liked the characters introduced here and while not overly exciting, it was a well written story.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 23 March, 2017: Finished reading
- 23 March, 2017: Reviewed