Until The Last Star Fades

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by Jacquelyn Middleton




  Praise for London, Can You Wait?

  GOLD MEDAL FOR ROMANCE

  2018 Independent Publisher Book Awards

  Featured by NBC’s TodayShow.com, USA TODAY, Redbook.com, Buzzfeed, PopSugar, Hypable, Brit+Co, Your Tango, and Coastal Living

  “…Middleton has mastered chick lit…The narration is well-crafted, full of seemingly innocuous tidbits that later become significant, raunchy banter between friends, and the kind of sweet nothings that hopeless romantics die for…A winner for romance and chick lit fans as well as Anglophiles and geeks.”

  —Kirkus Reviews

  “London, Can You Wait? is just as delightful as London Belongs to Me. It’s a fantastic and truly wonderful page-turning read. TOP PICK! 4.5/5.”

  —RT Book Reviews

  “Perfect for fans of Bridget Jones’s Diary.”

  —NBC’s TodayShow.com

  “Jacquelyn Middleton’s London, Can You Wait?, the sequel to London Belongs to Me, will both break your heart and make it swell. Sometimes in rapid succession, sometimes at the same time. And you 1000% should pick it up and read it!”

  —Hypable

  “A passionate, witty page-turner. Middleton has written a delightful and worldly novel with interesting characters and romantic twists and turns!”

  —Renée Carlino, USA Today bestselling author of

  Wish You Were Here

  Praise for London Belongs To Me

  Featured by the Huffington Post, Elle.com, USA TODAY, Cosmopolitan.com, Buzzfeed, MSN, PopSugar, Redbook.com, Reader’s Digest Canada, Today’s Parent, Yahoo! Beauty, Parade, Brit+Co, and Culturalist

  “Middleton’s novel is a love letter to London … even the most skeptical or cynical readers will surrender to the many delights of this compelling narrative. Prepare to be seduced by engaging characters, irresistible in their own quirky way, and transported by keen descriptions of the sights, sounds, and tastes of London.”

  —Kirkus Reviews

  “Middleton’s novel is everything a chick-lit story should be. The heroine is so well-developed—with her quirks, nuances, and relatability … and Middleton’s writing style helps the story flow beautifully and freely … This novel comes with our highest recommendations because it truly makes for a perfect read by the fireplace on a cold winter day. Top pick! 4.5/5 stars.”

  —RT Book Reviews

  “The lovers of Bridget [Jones’s] single girl, younger days in London are going to adore London Belongs to Me, the coming-of-age story of a girl (who could be Bridget’s younger American cousin!) coming to London to find love and adventure.”

  —Redbook

  “Wow, folks, this new London-based novel will send your heart swooning. A stunning portrait of modern London life, with unputdownable prose, this [debut novel] belongs on every Anglophile’s bookshelf!”

  —PopSugar

  Jacquelyn Middleton is an award-winning author and freelance writer. She previously worked in television broadcasting and now lives in Toronto with her husband and Schipperke. She’s addicted to Bookstagram, loves London, and adores theatre a little too much.

  Until the Last Star Fades is her third novel.

  Follow Jacquelyn:

  Instagram @JaxMiddleton_Author

  Twitter @JaxMiddleton

  Facebook @JacquelynMiddletonAuthor,

  or visit her webpage at www.JacquelynMiddleton.com

  Also by Jacquelyn Middleton

  London Belongs to Me

  London, Can You Wait?

  KIRKWALL BOOKS

  USA – CANADA – UK

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Until the Last Star Fades

  ISBN: 978-0-9952117-9-7

  Copyright © 2018 Jacquelyn Middleton

  First Ebook Edition, November 2018

  Kirkwall Books supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and allows authors to make a living. Thank you for purchasing an authorized edition of this book – you are supporting writers and allowing Kirkwall Books to continue publishing stories for readers.

  All Rights Reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in, or encourage piracy of, copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Online ‘stores’ hosted by sites like Facebook are not authorized to sell this author’s work in print or ebook—pirated copies purchased from such sellers are not official or sanctioned by the author or Kirkwall Books, and are often missing chapters and artwork; the author receives no compensation for such sales and the reader doesn’t receive the story as the author intended.

  Until the Last Star Fades

  is a love story about…

  a girl and a guy,

  a daughter and her mother.

  This book is dedicated to my favorite mums,

  all strong women I love and admire:

  Sally, my dear friend

  who lovingly looks after my Zoey when I can’t,

  Val, my mother-in-law

  who loves me like one of her own,

  and

  Mum, you’re in these pages, you’re in my heart,

  thank you for the ‘signs’ to keep going…

  I miss you & love you, always

  xoxo

  DEAR READERS,

  Until the Last Star Fades blurs the line between a slow-burn, friends-to-lovers romance and women’s fiction. Riley and Ben’s story is a standalone that takes place in the same ‘world’ as my two previous books.

  Enjoy!

  P.S. I’ve included a glossary at the back of the book to explain a few terms that might not be familiar to all readers.

  Love music? You can find the Until the Last Star Fades playlists on my website at www.JacquelynMiddleton.com listed under ‘Extras’!

  One

  “Remember that everyone you meet is afraid of something, loves something, and has lost something.”

  – Paul Tournier

  New York City, March 17, 2018

  Riley couldn’t do it. An elbow to the kidneys, a strategically delivered shove—even a well-timed foot placed in an unsuspecting path—all viable options, according to her best friend Piper.

  “Rye, just do it already!” The fast-talking voice barked through her secondhand phone. “Force your way to the front. If you don’t leave soon, you’re going to miss St. Paddy’s Day completely!”

  “Yeah, and if I follow your advice I’ll be spending it with the NYPD—in a jail cell.” Riley scrunched up her nose, peering at the sizzling red LED display listing flights awaiting luggage. Raised voices bounced off the walls as passengers from Los Angeles, Toronto, and Minneapolis—her connecting flight from Grand Forks, which had landed a ridiculous ninety minutes earlier—pushed closer to the baggage carousel, hoping to spy their delayed suitcases, grab what was theirs, and exchange the stuffy fluorescent-lit hellhole for the last gasp of the day’s dwindling brightness. A snowstorm in the Midwest had unleashed post-spring break chaos at airports across the country, and LaGuardia’s terminal D hadn’t escaped unscathed. Sweaty, hangry travelers gave each other stink eye as an avalanche of suitcases burst through the rubber partition, piling up and creating a moving mountain of plastic, nylon, and tiny wheels, many rattling and spinning defiantly.

  A heavy sigh left Riley’s lips, her stomach as off-kilter as the precarious cliff of cases. “Pip, I could do without an assault charge, thank you very much.” Jockey
ing for a position along the path of the U-shaped belt, the New York University senior dragged her hand through her wavy ponytail. “I’m not the elbowing type.”

  “Yeah, about that.” Piper snapped her gum.

  I walked right into that one. Riley winced. “I couldn’t go through with it.”

  “Rye, you completely ignored what we talked about before you left. It’s like those conversations didn’t even happen.”

  “I know, but…” Clenching her jaw, she adjusted the Strand bookstore tote on her arm and stretched up on the toes of her boots, fighting for a glimpse of the luggage parade over the shoulders of two ridiculously tall suits. What are you dudes, part giraffe?

  “You’re delaying the inevitable,” said Piper. “Why did you go to North Dakota, huh? ’Cause it sure as hell wasn’t to freeze your butt off watching hockey for five days straight. You could’ve done that here…”

  As Piper rattled on, a chubby bald man who looked like a giant toddler wrestled with a large hard-side roller bag sailing by on the belt.

  “…but hey, at least I didn’t have to go with you. I’m still shaking off the cold I caught watching NYU play. I’m lucky that frozen bench didn’t give me terminal hemorrhoids, the frostbite was bad enough—”

  “Terminal hemorrhoids? Jeez, Pip, that’s a new one!” A chuckle burst through Riley’s lips. “And you didn’t catch frostbite! You ditched me for a warm bar after twenty minutes!” Yawning through a smile, Riley spied a midsized pink case wedged underneath a heavy duffle bag. “Oh! Wait a sec.” She fought with the still-moving baggage, tugging her wheelie case from the mound. The bag’s swinging momentum almost t-boned one of the giraffes mid-conversation.

  Thank God! A huge breath released from Riley’s chest. She extended the case’s handle, returning her phone to her ear as she squeezed through the frowning crowd, her suitcase rolling happily behind her. “Got my case. Look, meet me at my place in an hour and a half, okay?” A large family blocked her path to the exit. “I’ll tell you”—she glanced back at her belongings, her eyes focusing on the ID tag flapping from the side handle—“everyth…” Her stomach plunged into free fall. “FUCK!”

  The mother covered her little boy’s ears, her eyes shooting daggers at Riley.

  “Aaand now I’m deaf, too,” Piper whined. “Thanks, Rye.”

  “Shit!” She lifted the case, her pulse charging, her eyes chasing the swirly girly handwriting on the luggage tag that wasn’t hers: B…something—the last name impossible to decipher. There was no phone number, no address, just B. Something in the most frustratingly illegible cursive Riley had ever seen. Her heart tripped into an unhappy dance. “Pip, I gotta go.”

  “Wha—”

  The twenty-two-year-old’s eyes darted to the unmanned airport help desk…to the cases wheeled away by weary travelers…to the exit and a bright pink blur scooting through the parting glass doors. “Someone stole my case.” Hitting disconnect, Riley cut Piper off.

  “Sorry! Excuse me!” She dashed around the family and a pack of slow-walking, fast-talking French tourists, their elegant parley cut short by the terminal’s doors whisking shut behind her. She inhaled sharply, the frosty air invigorating her senses as a chorus of honking taxis and the stench of bus fumes welcomed her home. Whoever you are, don’t get on the shuttle! Don’t disappear! Her eyes scurried across the slushy pavement crowded with boots and every shape, color, and size of luggage. Dammit. That was the whole point of choosing such a loud color…

  YES! There it is! Identical to the one trailing behind her, it was fugly—bubblegum pink and covered with a rash of white polka dots. But, despite its obnoxious appearance, this case suited her strapped student budget just fine and it was right there, resting beside the salt-stained UGGs of a twenty-something brunette leaning on a row of luggage carts, checking her phone. Riley’s brows eased their ascent as she wriggled past a kissing couple and a guy wearing a green Boston Bruins cap. Oh, thank God.

  A stroller cut her off. Woah! Giving the harried father a wide berth, she turned back to her missing case as the arm of a thin jacket unsuitable for a New York winter swooped in and claimed its extended handle. Salty boot girl didn’t react—at all.

  Green cap guy? What the—? “Hey!” Lunging for the thief’s arm, Riley tripped over her own boots and barely saved herself from kissing the pavement.

  “Fuck!” The guy stopped and lifted the peak of his cap, revealing a mop of misbehaving dark hair falling into his blue eyes—eyes that might’ve made her catch her breath if they hadn’t been so puffy and bloodshot. He was about Riley’s age but appeared pale and drained under his five o’clock shadow, like he was on the losing end of a twenty-four-hour bender. The closer Riley got, the more a waft of whiskey and sweat punished her nostrils, proving her first impression right. The guy scratched at the purple hood poking out from the neck of his jacket, his full lips parting into a charming smile. “You all right, love?” His English accent hung in the air.

  “I think you guys have my case.” Riley’s glare darted from the Brit to the woman. “Which one of you is B. Something-or-other?” She gestured to the identical luggage behind her. “I can’t read the last name.”

  With a sneer, the brunette side-eyed Riley and the guy then walked away, making a call on her phone.

  “Hey! Wait!” Riley waved her arms, but the woman didn’t stop. “I’m talking to you—”

  “Actually, it’s me you want.” His six-foot frame lurched toward her, his grin unwavering underneath cheekbones male models would kill for. “Let me sort this.” His right hand, swaddled in a bloodstained bandage, yanked the tag on the case in his possession, snapping its buckle and sending the owner’s information fluttering to the damp pavement. “Sh-Sh-Shit.” He chuckled and bent over, his earbuds tumbling from his ears and snapping to a halt above the winter muck like two miniature bungee jumpers.

  They both fumbled for the card, but he reached it first. He slowly stood up, adjusting his backpack with a jerk and invading her personal space. He squinted underneath the brim of his cap at the neat penmanship on her tag like he was deciphering a secret code spelled out in hieroglyphics.

  “See?” Riley pointed. “It says R. Hope—right there. My email, RHope@…the tag on the case I have says B. Something.” She leaned away, her eyes telling him to give in and back off.

  He sniffed. “RHope…yeah, that’s definitely not me.” His watery eyes blinked lazily at her. “Soz, Ms. R. Hope. I fucked up.” He laughed, sending boozy, steamy breath into the frosty air. “I can’t believe you’ve got the same shite taste in luggage as my mum—”

  “Lucky me.” Riley didn’t care about his mother or her taste in suitcases or that this hot mess with an accent was adorable. She just wanted to hop on the first shuttle bus and get the hell out of there. She pulled her case away from him and wheeled his mother’s pink monstrosity forward, their transaction complete. “Well, thanks.” The words flew from her lips without a breath between them. “Happy St. Patrick’s.”

  Turning away, she left the hungover dude holding her broken tag. She could catch the Q70 shuttle bus boarding at the far curb and be riding the R train down to the 8th Avenue-NYU stop in the East Village in ten minutes. Racing through the dirty slush, she reached into her tote and pulled out her Pay-Per-Ride MetroCard.

  “R. Hope! Wait! I have your…”

  Riley kept walking and threw a pinched glance over her shoulder. The cute guy was sliding along the sidewalk, holding her luggage tag. She stopped at the fare machine and locked eyes with the bus driver, pleading with him to wait.

  “Sorry.” The Brit handed it to her.

  “Thanks.” Pursing her lips, Riley stuffed it in a pocket and threaded her MetroCard into the machine.

  “This is my first time here. I’m a bit lost, actually.” Rounding his shoulders, he stuffed his hands in his pockets. “Do I need one of those yellow cardy things for the bus?”

  I can’t chit-chat—the bus is gonna leave! Snatching her MetroCard from
the slot, she collected her ticket and turned to him. “A MetroCard, yeah, or if you’ve got coins”—she waved at the smaller machine to her right—“you can pay there.”

  Shivering non-stop, a shaky hand braved the elements to scratch his stubble. “Coins…I can’t add at the best of times, but feeling as rough as I do now? Ugh.” He swallowed, his nose a chilled pink. “You wouldn’t happen to have the right change, would you—please?”

  PFFFFSSSSSSSSSSSSST!

  Riley looked up, catching the bus’s doors closing. For fuck’s sake. She waved furiously. “NO, WAIT!” A warm puff of breath left her lips. “I’m COMING!”

  The guy rushed past her, each coltish stomp plunging his worn sneakers into the gray slush. “Hey, mate”—he slipped, his shoulder smacking into the bus’s front door—“don’t take off on us!”

  The driver rolled his eyes. PFFFFSSSSSSTTTT! The doors opened with a protracted hiss, like they were sarcastically passing judgment.

  “Thanks! Don’t let him drive away.” Riley’s fingers jabbed at the machine, repeating the payment process with her MetroCard. She locked stares with the driver. “I’m paying—for him.”

  The Brit gleefully bounded back to her side. “Oh, cheers, darlin’! You’re the best.”

  Riley nodded as he loaded both suitcases onto the bus.

  Two

  “Only aisle seats left.” Brit boy pointed at two blue plastic seats at the back and picked up Riley’s case, lifting it onto the luggage rack. He reclaimed his own and stowed it safely beside hers.

  “I like the aisle,” said Riley, gripping the yellow poles lining the path to the vacant seats. She hesitated, bracing herself as the bus veered around a corner.

  “Me too. I’m all about the quick exit, you know?”

  Riley unzipped her parka and sat down. Jeez, it’s warm in here. She typed a quick text to her mom, Maggie, and hit send.

 

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