He's spent his whole life fixing everyone else's chaos. He never planned to fall into his.
Aiden Nguyen has a system. As the eldest son of a loud, opinionated Vietnamese-American family, he's mastered the art of managing chaos and keeping the peace - all while going home alone. It's easier that way.
Then Sarah crashes his cousin's wedding reception and sits in the empty chair beside him.
She's witty, warm, and somehow fluent in the unspoken language of his family's dysfunction. She sees straight through him. And she has absolutely no business making him feel this understood by a woman he met forty minutes ago.
But Aiden is the Fixer - not the one who gets fixed. The moment things get real, he does what he always does - protect by shutting her out.
What follows is a warm, funny, and achingly honest love story set against Vietnamese-American family life in Little Saigon - complete with karaoke duets, feng shui disasters, late-night pho, and one very auspicious Dragon baby.
For readers who love romances where the real obstacle isn't circumstance - it's the terrifying risk of letting someone actually see you.