Second Chance with the Best Man

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by Katrina Cudmore




  Can the man who broke her heart...

  ...be the one to mend it?

  After traveling to France to bless her best friend’s marriage, wedding celebrant Hannah McGinley is determined not to fall for the man who broke her heart once before—best man and marriage skeptic Laurent Bonneval. But their chemistry is impossible to ignore, and amid the champagne and confetti her resolve melts... Yet for Hannah to consider a future with Laurent, he must prove he’s dealt with his past.

  “Hannah...” Her heart pinged at the concern in his eyes. “Are you okay?”

  The low, intimate sound of Laurent’s voice almost undid her. Memory after memory rushed through her brain. How he used to leave her voice mails that made her blush and giggle. His mouth against her ear when they would be out with others, whispering a compliment, a promise. The Saturday mornings when they used to cycle to their favorite French bakery in Putney Heath and eat breakfast while playfully flirting, her legs trembling when his fingers would stroke her hand, her arm, her cheek, before he would suggest that they head home. His murmured words when they made love afterward that had swelled in her heart and burst like joyful bubbles in her bloodstream.

  Hannah breathed in deeply. She was over him. She had to remember that fact.

  Dear Reader,

  A few years ago I vacationed in Bordeaux and in the nearby Charente-Maritime region. I was blown away with the beauty of both the city and the countryside—think magnificent châteaux, picture-perfect villages, historic cognac houses and gentle rolling hills of endless vineyards. Inspired by the region and in particular by the fairy-tale-pretty châteaux I knew I had to write a wedding story featuring a gorgeous French best man and base it in the picturesque town of Cognac.

  I adore second-chance stories. They hold so much poignancy and heartache. So I created my two characters to be ex-lovers whose relationship ended when it became apparent that they held very different views on marriage—Hannah McGinley, my reserved, cautious but ever-so-brave heroine and wedding celebrant, and Laurent Bonneval, my charismatic cognac house CEO and marriage-skeptic best man, who guards his heart ferociously for fear of giving another person the power to hurt him.

  I hope you find this book with its central theme of owning and respecting our feelings an uplifting read and that you enjoy escaping to the beauty and tranquility of this very special but sometimes overlooked region of France.

  Happy reading!

  Katrina

  Second Chance with the Best Man

  Katrina Cudmore

  A city-loving book addict, peony obsessive Katrina Cudmore lives in Cork, Ireland, with her husband, four active children and a very daft dog. A psychology graduate with an MSc in human resources, Katrina spent many years working in multinational companies and can’t believe she is lucky enough now to have a job that involves daydreaming about love and handsome men! You can visit Katrina at katrinacudmore.com.

  Books by Katrina Cudmore

  Harlequin Romance

  Romantic Getaways

  Her First-Date Honeymoon

  Swept into the Rich Man’s World

  The Best Man’s Guarded Heart

  Their Baby Surprise

  Tempted by Her Greek Tycoon

  Christmas with the Duke

  Resisting the Italian Single Dad

  Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com.

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  To Majella, the best little sister in the world!

  Praise for

  Katrina Cudmore

  “Poignant, uplifting and impossible to resist...The Best Man’s Guarded Heart is the perfect book to lose yourself in on a lazy afternoon.... [S]killfully balances humor and warmth with pathos and powerful drama leaving the reader on the edge of her seat and eager to find out what happens next.”

  —Goodreads

  Contents

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

  CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  EPILOGUE

  EXCERPT FROM THE PRINCE’S FORBIDDEN BRIDE BY REBECCA WINTERS

  CHAPTER ONE

  THE BEAST PRESSED his snout against Hannah McGinley’s car window, the glass instantly fogging up. ‘Good doggy, off you go, now,’ Hannah called out, trying to sound in control but also cheerful—the last thing she wanted to do was anger this beast any further. Her arrival on the driveway of Château Bonneval had already caused him to run alongside her car like an entry at the Grand National, his incessant barking almost causing her to drive into one of the hornbeam trees lining the long avenue.

  As a farmer’s daughter from Shropshire, she’d been told time and time again she’d no cause to be so scared, but no amount of cajoling from her family had ever rid her of her terror of even the smallest of dogs, never mind the donkey-sized version staring at her right now as though he couldn’t wait to sink his teeth into her.

  Looking in the direction of the front door of the château, Hannah willed someone to come out and rescue her. Surely they had heard the beast’s hound-from-hell baying?

  Not for the first time, Hannah wondered at her decision to agree to travel to France to act as the celebrant at her best friend Lara’s wedding blessing. An easy, joyful decision in most circumstances, but not when you had dated and fallen in love with the best man and brother to the groom, Laurent Bonneval, only for him to end it all. And the worst part of it all was that the wedding was taking place in his home—Château Bonneval. Why couldn’t it at least be at a neutral venue? Her only hope was that they would be surrounded by others all weekend and she would manage to project the air of calm professionalism she’d been rehearsing ever since Lara and François had travelled to London from Manchester, where they lived, just to ask her to be their wedding celebrant.

  Though moved beyond words that they trusted her to perform their wedding blessing, especially given the fact that she was so new to being a celebrant—this would only be her fourth wedding—she’d asked if they were really, really sure it was she they wanted to be the one to perform the ceremony. Lara and François had exchanged a tentative glance before Lara had leant across the table of Hannah’s local Richmond coffee shop, and touched her arm. ‘You’ve been my best friend since we were seven.’ Pausing, Lara had given her a half-smile, one that had asked Hannah to understand, to trust her. ‘It would make our day even more magical to have you bless our marriage.’

  Tears had blinded Hannah for a moment as she’d remembered how Lara had waded in on her first day at Meadlead Primary School and told Ellie Marshall and her gang to mind their own business when they had interrogated Hannah during the break with endless questions as to who she was, why she was joining the school in the middle of term, why she was so skinny. Frozen inside, confused by everything in her life, Hannah had been taken aback at just how grateful she was to Lara when she’d led her away from her interrogators. For weeks after, she’d remained silent. And while that had garnered her endless suspicious glances and whispered words behind cupped hands from the rest of class, Lara had cheerfully chatted away, her quirky humour and buoyant outlook on life thawing Hannah’s numb heart.

  That day in t
he café in Richmond, Hannah had turned to François, her heart as usual jolting in remembrance—some of François’s features were so like Laurent’s: the thick dark wavy hair, the strong and proud Gallic jawline, the wide, high cheekbones, the clean blade of a nose. ‘Will...?’ She tried to form the word Laurent, but it stuck in her throat and refused to budge. Eventually she managed to mutter, through a false smile, ‘Will having me as the celebrant be okay with all of your family?’

  François’s eyes were different, a softer, more forgiving blue, none of the striking, pain-inducing brilliance of Laurent’s. The care in his eyes had matched his gentle tone when he had answered, ‘Laurent is to be my best man,’ but Hannah had still felt it like a whip to her heart.

  She’d looked away from the discomfort in both Lara’s and François’s expressions, hating that they had been put in this position. Their wedding should be a carefree celebration, not tainted by the fact that she’d foolishly fallen in love with Laurent, confusing his Gallic charm and romantic gestures for a sign that he’d felt what she did, that he too had wanted more.

  In the months after he’d left London to return to the family business and château in Cognac, telling her before he left that he didn’t want to continue their relationship, she’d puzzled over the overwhelming effect he’d had on her. The pain, the disappointment, the humiliation had been so engulfing she’d struggled to comprehend it all. Was it the fact that he was the first man she’d ever truly fallen in love with? Which admittedly was pretty tragic at the age of twenty-nine. But up until then, she’d never met anyone who had quickened her heart, who had communicated so much with a glance, who intrigued her.

  At first she’d resisted the chemistry between them, her age-old need to protect herself holding him at arm’s length. But in truth she’d been changing and had been more receptive to allowing someone into her life. She’d chased security and stability throughout her early twenties, desperately needing the safety of establishing her career in finance and buying her own apartment. But as she neared thirty, she’d realised she wanted more. A more free life, a more optimistic life. One of taking chances and not being so afraid. And into this new way of thinking and daring to dream had walked Laurent Bonneval. The brother of her best friend’s new boyfriend. And he’d swept her off her feet. But ten months later he’d left her with a broken heart.

  But that heart was now mended and firmly closed to Laurent Bonneval’s charms.

  Hannah jumped as the beast’s tail hit against her door panel as he turned and bounded away, disappearing around one of the château’s fairy-tale turrets that sat at each corner of the four-storey building.

  She breathed out a sigh of relief. But then her heart plummeted to the car floor. From around the corner, sprinting at first, slowing to a jog when he took in her car, came Laurent, the beast at his side.

  Stopping, he raised a hand to shield his eyes from the low evening sun. Behind him his shadow spilt across the gravelled drive, his tall, broad frame exaggerated.

  She waited for him to move. Tried not to stare at the fact that he was wearing only running shorts that revealed the long length of his powerful legs and a lightweight vest top that showcased the taut, muscular power of his broad shoulders and gym-honed arms. His skin glistened with perspiration.

  Heat formed in her belly.

  He moved towards her car.

  Her heart somersaulted.

  She grasped for the window control and buzzed down her window a couple of inches, only then realising how stifling the car had become as she’d been held hostage by the beast. She longed to run a hand through her hair, check her make-up in the mirror. But she resisted giving him any sign that she cared how she looked in his eyes.

  He came to a stop a few feet away from the car. The beast came to heel at his command. ‘Hannah...’ Her heart pinged at the concern in his eyes. ‘Are you okay?’

  The low, intimate sound of his voice almost undid her. Memory after memory rushed through her brain—how he used to leave her voicemails that had her blush and giggle. His mouth against her ear when they would be out with others, whispering a compliment, a promise. The Saturday mornings when they used to cycle to their favourite French bakery in Putney Heath and eat breakfast while playfully flirting, her legs trembling when his fingers would stroke her hand, her arm, her cheek, before he would suggest that they head home. His murmured words when they made love afterwards that had swelled in her heart and burst like joyful bubbles in her bloodstream.

  Hannah breathed in deeply. She was over him. She had to remember that fact. Her focus now was on deciding which direction her life should take. Stay in her career in finance either in London or Singapore or take the risk of becoming a full-time wedding celebrant in Spain. Her old cautious side told her to hold on to her regular income and secure career but deep inside of her she wanted to be free to make her own decisions away from the confines of corporate life, to make a difference by being an integral part of one of the most important days in any person’s life.

  She was here to support Lara. To celebrate with her and François. Laurent Bonneval was just a minor aggravation in what should be a gloriously happy weekend.

  Now was the time to enact the calm professionalism she’d sworn she would adopt for the weekend. Unfortunately her trembling hands and somersaulting stomach didn’t appear to have received that particular memo.

  She buzzed down her window a fraction more. Nodded in the direction of the beast. ‘I’d appreciate it if you’d lock him away.’

  * * *

  Something unyielding kicked in Laurent’s chest at the coolness of Hannah’s tone and stony expression. He pointed in the direction of the stables; at his command Bleu ambled away to where he slept alongside the horses.

  Hannah’s gaze followed Bleu’s every step and even when he disappeared from view, her gaze remained fixed in that direction. ‘Will he come back?’

  He edged closer to her door, crouched over to speak to her in the small gap of the window. ‘I heard him barking—I’m sorry if he scared you.’

  She shook her head as though to deny any suggestion she’d been scared. ‘Is he yours?’

  ‘Yes.’

  She grimaced at that. He knew that she was scared of dogs. He cursed himself for not having locked Bleu away. Lara had told him Hannah was due to arrive around this time but Bleu had looked so despondent when he’d led him to his kennel earlier, Laurent had relented and allowed him to accompany him as usual on his evening run. ‘Despite appearances, he’s as soft as a marshmallow. He just wanted to say hello to you.’

  Hannah shook her head, clearly not believing him. ‘He’s terrifying—I’ve never seen anything like him.’

  ‘He’s a Grand Bleu de Gascogne. He has a very affectionate temperament.’ Moving to the car door, he opened it. Hannah’s gaze shot back to the corner of the château where Bleu had disappeared and then back to him. He gave her a smile of encouragement. ‘He won’t come back, I promise. You can trust me on that.’

  Her forehead bunched and her mouth dropped into an even deeper scowl.

  For long seconds she stared at him unhappily, heat appearing on her high cheekbones, but then with a toss of her head she yanked her handbag off the passenger seat and stepped out of the car.

  In the silence that followed he cursed François. When François had told him that Hannah was to be their wedding celebrant he’d been incredulous. François knew of their history, how uncomfortable it would be for them both, but François, usually so sanguine, had refused to change his mind in the face of Laurent’s demand that someone else take on the role. His only compromise was his pledge that he and Lara would be present in the château at all times over the weekend to smooth any awkwardness between him and Hannah.

  ‘Your journey—was it okay?’

  Hannah shrugged at his question and moved to the boot of her car. ‘I’d like to go inside and see Lara.’


  By her tone, he knew she was as keen as he was for the others to be present in the château. But once again, his father had decided to make life difficult for everyone around him. He followed her to the boot of the car and lifted out her suitcase. ‘François and Lara called me earlier—there’s been a change of plans. They’re now staying in the family apartment in Bordeaux overnight. Lara tried calling you but she couldn’t get through.’

  Her expression appalled, Hannah pulled her phone from her handbag, ‘I’m having problems connecting to the French network.’ Then with an exasperated breath she asked, ‘Why are they staying in Bordeaux?’

  ‘Apparently my father had already made a restaurant booking for them and refuses to cancel. He wants to show Lara and her parents some of the city’s nightlife.’

  Her head turning in the direction of the château, she asked uneasily, ‘So who’s staying here tonight?’

  ‘Just you and me.’

  Her eyes widened with horror.

  Irritation flared inside him. He’d known she wouldn’t be keen for his company, but did she have to make it so obvious?

  But then his indignation sank into guilt. He and he alone was the cause of all this tension. The least he could do was try to make this weekend somewhat tolerable for them both.

  Leading her in the direction of the main entrance, he said, ‘Let me show you to your room. All of the château staff have this evening off as they will be working long hours in the coming days with the wedding.’ Inside the coolness of the double-height hallway of the château, his desperation to take a shower and have something cool to drink abated a fraction. The heatwave hitting most of south-west France for the past week was becoming unbearable. He kicked the front door shut with his heel, knowing he was only trying to kid himself—the weather had little to do with how he was overheating.

  This always happened when Hannah was nearby.

 

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