The middle is.
Harper Leigh and Ethan Reyes didn't fall in love the dramatic way.
They didn't crash into each other, break apart, or need a grand gesture to prove anything.
They talked.
They showed up.
They stayed.
Now that the rooftop kiss is behind them and the "what if" has turned into "what now," Harper and Ethan are learning something no one warns you about: the beginning isn't the hardest part of love-the middle is.
The middle is where routines form, fears resurface, and love stops being hypothetical and starts being real. Where anxiety doesn't magically disappear just because someone chooses you. Where two imperfect people have to decide, again and again, to communicate instead of retreat.
Tomorrow, Maybe is a warm, emotionally intelligent romantic comedy about:
Choosing honesty over assumptions
Navigating anxiety without trying to "fix" it
Building a relationship through quiet moments instead of big drama
Learning that staying can be braver than starting
Tender, funny, and deeply relatable, this sequel to The Wrong Plus-One is for readers who love romance grounded in communication, comfort, and connection.
Because love isn't about never being afraid.
It's about being afraid-and staying anyway.