Readers looking for something a little different will love The
Change Up by Elley Arden, a twist on the traditional billionaire romance.
Out now! The
Change Up (Arlington Aces #1) by Elley Arden
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Title: The Change Up
Series: Arlington Aces #1
Author: Elley Arden
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Release Date: May 16, 2016
Publisher: Crimson Romance
Length: 66k words
Format: Digital
Digital ISBN: 978-1-4405-9151-8
Synopsis:
Commercial real estate mogul Rachel Reed is the one person her
father can depend on, so when he walks into her Philadelphia office two weeks
shy of her fortieth birthday to drop a personal and professional bomb, she
rises to the occasion. She will help get his independent professional baseball
team up and running before the inaugural season, and then … she will sell the
team to recoup his substantial investment. It’s a tall order, but Rachel knows
one thing for sure: a sexy nuisance from her past and a few acres of trees
won’t stand in her way.
Former minor-leaguer-turned-landscaper Sam Sutter is surprised to
find his brother’s ex in the woods behind the house he bought when he cashed
out his signing bonus and said so long to baseball. He’s even more surprised to
learn “his” trees are on her chopping block. There’s no way he’ll desecrate his
nature-loving mother’s memory by letting that happen. But butting heads with
the beautiful business woman is a tricky task that leads Sam to accept a
position as head groundskeeper at her father’s stadium. Working under Rachel’s
watchful, smoldering eyes might be Sam’s undoing.
She doesn’t know a thing
about baseball. He swore off the sport ten years ago. But strange things happen
when field dust gets in your veins.
Excerpt:
He didn’t trust her, and that was even before she tilted her head and regarded him through narrowed eyes. “You of all people must be excited about my father bringing professional baseball to Arlington.”
He didn’t trust her, and that was even before she tilted her head and regarded him through narrowed eyes. “You of all people must be excited about my father bringing professional baseball to Arlington.”
Here we go. Sam shrugged. “I
don’t really follow baseball these days.”
“That’s a shame.
Sam used to play for the …” she looked from Wes back to Sam, “The Cubs, right?”
Sam nodded once
and added, “Never made it out of the minors.” Why sugarcoat it? Chasing “the
bigs” in a rusty bus, believing he was the next big thing, caused him to miss
out on a lot of things. He was still trying to make up for some of that.
Again he thought
of his mother, and this time the guilt was almost too much to swallow.
“What are you
doing now?” Rachel asked, surprising him, not because he expected her to keep
tabs on his career, but because she’d never been the kind to care much about
other people—at least that had been his experience when she’d labeled him
“whiny little Sammy” who was always trying to come between her and Luke.
“I’m working for
my dad,” he said with little genuine interest in keeping this conversation
going.
“Just like me.”
Except he wasn’t
like her, and he couldn’t leave that assumption hanging between them. “We’re
nothing alike, Rachel. For starters, I would never even think about cutting
down these trees. That would be a really shitty thing to do.”
She shrugged.
“What can I say, Sammy? Progress can be painful, but in the end, it’s the best
thing for everyone.”
“Because the best
thing for you is the best thing for everyone?” He scoffed. She hadn’t changed
one bit in twenty years. “Try telling that to the birds.” Sam looked at the
wide-eyed man taking this all in beside her, and nodded curtly. “Nice to meet
you.”
But that was a
lie. It would only be nice if the guy drove back to Pittsburgh without touching
a single tree. If one trunk fell … Sam hated to even think about it. Thank God
his nature-loving mother wasn’t alive to see this.
He wandered off
with Babe beside him and the warbler overhead, craving the usual Sunday peace
and quiet, but he kept hearing phantom chainsaws and wood chippers. How much
parking did the Reeds need? Surely they wouldn’t cut down all of this. He
reached out and let almond-shaped leaves tickle his palm. But what if they did?
What if he had to say goodbye to Sunday walks and evening fireside chats with his
dad? And what if he had to look out his kitchen window and see a baseball
stadium every damn day. He stopped. Babe stopped, too.
That was not
going to happen.
Author Bio:
Elley
Arden is a born and bred Pennsylvanian who has lived as far west
as Utah and as far north as Wisconsin. She drinks wine like it’s water (a
slight exaggeration), prefers a night at the ballpark to a night on the
town, and believes almond English toffee is the key to happiness.
Elley has
been reading romance novels since she was a sixteen-year-old babysitter,
sneaking Judith McNaught and Danielle Steele novels off the bookshelves of
the women who employed her. To say she’d been sheltered up to that point is an
understatement. No one had ever told her women could live bold, love freely,
and have sex lives that were exciting and fulfilling. (They don’t teach these
things in Catholic school!) Now that she knows, she’s happy to spread the
word. The women she writes about may be fictional, but the success, respect,
and love they find on the page is a universal right for women everywhere.
Elley
writes books with charming characters, emotional stories, and sexy romance.
Visit The
Bookshelf for a detailed listing.
You can
also visit her online at the following places: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Goodreads | Amazon
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