A grumpy Cornish publican. The drifter his grandmother hired to save his pub. And a little matchmaking played from beyond the grave.
Maren Voss travels light. Seventeen childhood homes taught her the rule: two suitcases, never a third, and always leave before the goodbyes can cost you anything.
So a dead woman's last request should have been just another job. Modernise a failing Cornish inn, save it from the developers circling the harbour, move on. Nobody warned her that Faye Calloway had chosen her by name. Or that the inn came with Faye's grandson.
Beck Calloway gave up everything he wanted to keep the Anchor & Wren alive, and he is not about to let a clipboard-carrying outsider tell him his grandmother's pub needs saving. He's guarded, he's gruff, and he has no intention whatsoever of falling for the one woman in England guaranteed to leave.
But Faye knew exactly what she was doing.
Perfect for readers who love slow-burn small-town romance: grumpy-sunshine sparks, found family, a meddling matriarch, and a hard-won happy ever after.