Shopping for a Highlander ~ Preorder Now

When I ask readers which character in the Shopping for a Billionaire series they most want to read about next, the top answer is Hamish. A sexy as heck Scottish football star (that’s soccer for the American readers) with a talented tongue—mind out of the gutter, I’m talking about his witty wordplay

Preorder Shopping for a Highlander, releasing January 11, 2022.

I’m a professional chickenblocker.

Except “chicken” is a euphemism.

I get paid to follow a womanizing troglodyte who thinks rules are for other people and that my pants are the next pair he’s getting into.

Dream on.

Bet your first professional job didn’t involve babysitting an extremely hot, muscle-bound Scottish Highlander with an ego the size of a kilt and a libido bigger than his…well…

Chicken.

Keeping Scottish football (that’s ‘soccer” to us Americans) player Hamish McCormick away from inappropriate scandals while he does product endorsement campaigns is my mission.

No problem.

Until Hamish decides I’m his next scandal.

And maybe more….

Shopping for a Highlander is an enemies-to-lovers, slow burn romance that opens with a surprise kiss and ends with a happily ever after. This sports comedy in the New York Times bestselling Shopping for a Billionaire world contains no actual chickens, but it has plenty of locker room scenes, a fake relationship, very real banter, and more. You do not have to have read the previous books in this world, though after you read about Amy and Hamish, you’ll want to. 😉

Amazon US:  https://mybook.to/SFAHighlander_AznALL

Apple Books:  https://mybook.to/SFAHighlander_Apple

Kobo:  https://mybook.to/SFAHighlander_Kobo

Nook:  https://mybook.to/SFAHighlander_Nook

Google Play:  https://mybook.to/SFAHighlander_Google

Goodreads:  https://mybook.to/SFAHighlander_GR

BookBub:  https://mybook.to/SFAHighlander_BB

Bargain Books for Your Weekend Binge

Happy Friday! I hope your weekend plans include some one-on-one time with your favorite authors. If you’re looking for something to enjoy, here are some bargain books, audiobooks, and new releases.

Spicy Pickle ~ New from JJ Knight

First, she tampered with my pickle.
Then, she got us both kicked off a cooking show.
Now, we’re fake engaged.
Sit back, friends, this is one crazy tale of treachery and pickle juice.
Anthony:
All right. Here’s how it went.
My pickle went viral. Millions saw it. Thousands ate it.Hold up, pervs. Let me backtrack.I invented a very spicy pickle made with ghost peppers. One bite and you’ll swear someone stuffed a hot coal in your mouth. It’s extremely popular in pranks.

I’m in the middle of filming with a prominent cooking show when in walks Little Miss Perfect Pants from a rival deli to insist she has improvements for my pickle.

It all goes downhill from there.

Magnolia:
Read the reviews and weep, Anthony Pickle.
I got the best of you on reality TV.
You got me back with a very public kiss.

After your new deli poached on my territory, I swore to hate you. But every time those smoky eyes meet mine, I melt a little.

Cheesy, right?

By the time you’ve kissed me, I already know I’m in deep.
But then you propose?

How am I supposed to keep faking it when every swoon is real?
___
Spicy Pickle is a romantic comedy about a culinary feud, potent pickle juice, and the most not-fake fake love story in the history of reality TV.

 

In a Faraway Land ~ Audiobook by Blair Babylon

It’s an impossible situation, but if anyone can save Flicka, it’s her loyal, hot, ripped, bossy, protective, truly maddening, totally off-limits bodyguard.

Flicka von Hannover was a princess, but not anymore, sort of. To hide from her conniving soon-to-be ex-husband and divorce him as soon as possible, she runs to the place specified by her prenuptial agreement, Las Vegas.

She has left everyone and everything behind except Dieter Schwarz, her bodyguard who saved her that terrible night and smuggled her to Paris and now to Nevada. Living with the six-four, ripped, bossy Swiss mercenary is driving her crazy in more ways than one. Every time he comes near her, she wants to rip his clothes off with her teeth.

Her ex knows that she must be in Las Vegas to establish residency to divorce him, and his men are looking for her. When his Secret Service try to kidnap her and Dieter saves her again, the adrenaline and heat of the moment are too much for them to resist.

But her ex knows that she has to file the paperwork to divorce him, and he’ll do anything to stop her, even mounting an assault with his army on the courthouse when she tries to go to court.

When an actual prince – who has a Secret Service, an army, and real spies – is hunting you down, you run, and you hide In a Faraway Land.

Amazon Audio:  https://mybook.to/6QSHmi

 

Shopping for a Billionaire’s Wife by Julia Kent ~ Free Ebook & Audiobook Sale

Who needs a SWAT team to escape from their own wedding? Me.

My Momzilla turned us into hostages at our own ceremony, so Declan and I are getting married the good old-fashioned way, just like everybody else.

By calling in his private security team, stealing away before the ceremony by helicopter, connecting to his corporate jet and heading for Las Vegas.

The Boston wedding of the year is about to become a trashy Elvis drive-thru ceremony.

Until the best man spills the beans and Mom, Dad, my sisters, his brothers, my maid of honor, my friend Josh, and even my cat, Chuckles, all come along for the ride.

I can’t win, can I?

Oh. Yeah. I already did.

Love conquers all.

Even my crazy family.

Shopping for a Billionaire’s Wife is the 8th book in the New York Times and USA Today bestselling Shopping for a Billionaire series. After Declan convinces Shannon to escape from their own wedding minutes before the ceremony begins, the madcap adventures are just getting started. When the mother of the bride pries their location out of the tortured best man, the whole crazy crew follows the bride and groom to Las Vegas in this romantic comedy from Julia Kent.

Amazon ALL:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_AznALL
Apple Books:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_AppleBooks
Kobo:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_Kobo
Nook:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_Nook
Google Play:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_GooglePlay

Add the audio, narrated by Tanya Eby

$2.99 on iTunes and Google Play!

iTunes:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_iTunes
Google Play:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_GPAudio

Also available on:

Audible:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_Audible
Amazon Audio:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_AznAudible

Chasing Allie by Meli Raine ~ 99¢ Romantic Suspense

It turns out my stepfather has plans for me.

Plans that make dying look like a walk in the park.

He’s selling my virginity to a Mexican drug lord to get out of debt. Chase just found out and is here to take me away to safety. To the ocean. To my dreams.

But while I’m gone, a murder takes place back home.
I receive a phone call. It’s the police.

I’m the prime suspect.

And if I go back, I may become the prime victim.

They say love conquers all, but can Chase save me from this?

Amazon:  https://mybook.to/CA_AmazonALL
Apple Books:  https://mybook.to/CA_AppleBooks
Kobo:  https://mybook.to/CA_Kobo
Nook:  https://mybook.to/CA_Nook
Google Play:  https://mybook.to/CA_GooglePlay

Add the audio, narrated by Tanya Eby

Audible:  https://mybook.to/CA_Audible
iTunes:  https://mybook.to/CA_iTunes
Amazon Audio:  https://mybook.to/CA_AznAudio

 

Random Acts of Fantasy by Julia Kent ~ 99¢ Romantic Comedy

You ever really think that you’ll win the lottery? Meet Mr. Right? How about two Mr. Rights?

Somehow the universe is handing me everything I want (except for that lottery part…), and I don’t like it. Not one little bit. Because just when you get all your dreams handed to you on a silver platter, that’s when an airplane dumps its sewage on your house. Or your mama’s diabetes takes a bad turn. Or your mobile phone gets stuck in your hoohaw.

(What? It happens…)

Boring old average me got everything I wanted already, moving from small-town Ohio to big-city Boston to follow my heart. So when the fancy invitation offering me a pile of money to come with the band, Random Acts of Crazy, to perform on an island resort and be their manager arrived, I thought it was a cosmic joke. Enough money to help my mama get what she needed, five days in sunny paradise, and a shot at greatness for the band? Unreal. One big shoe was waiting to drop. On my head.

Just like no one really ever finds a naked man wearing only a guitar standing by the side of the road hitchhiking and ends up falling in love with him and his friend and moving halfway across the country for true love, no one gets an invitation to come to what turns out to be a resort where people make what me and Joe and Trevor do together look like a chaste peck on the cheek. But…

Well.

I guess these things do happen.

To me.

Amazon:  https://mybook.to/RAOF_AznALL
Apple Books:  https://mybook.to/RAOF_AppleBooks
Kobo:  https://mybook.to/RAOF_Kobo
Nook:  https://mybook.to/RAOF_Nook
Google Play:  https://mybook.to/RAOF_GooglePlay

Add the audio, narrated by Sebastian York, Andi Arndt, and Tad Branson

Audible:  https://mybook.to/RAOF_Audible
Amazon Audio:  https://mybook.to/RAOF_AznAudio

 

Three authors walk into a coffee shop…

It’s been a long time since three authors walked into a coffee shop, but if I were to meet up with authors in a coffee shop, it would be my long-time pals Blair Babylon and Gretchen Galway. Since we can’t get together in person, we’re joining up to share three romance reads with you.

Stay safe, stay well, and stay reading.

NEW FROM BLAIR BABYLON

Giving away a billion dollars shouldn’t be this hard.

Maxence saved Dree Clark from some bad guys in a Parisian bar, then he turned up on a charity mission to Nepal, so how the heck is he the Prince of Monaco?

Or, well, not the prince. A prince. He’s the not head honcho because Monaco doesn’t have a sovereign prince right now. But it needs one.

Maxence is the next person in line for the throne, but he doesn’t want it. He doesn’t want anything to do with it. But other people do want the throne and the billions in wealth that go with it, people with evil agendas or who just want the money. Max is the only guy who stands in their way.

And good people seem to be in short supply.

Plus, he’s distracted by the constant thorn in his side, Dree Clark, who he’s conscripted to be his new secretary. Her curves drive him out of his mind, and her sweet soul is more than he’s ever hoped for. He wants to chase her around the desk and then run away with her to somewhere safe.

Because Monaco is anything but safe for Prince Maxence.

Amazon ALL:  https://mybook.to/B50W
Apple Books:  https://mybook.to/YAxv7
Kobo:  https://mybook.to/htelFui
Nook:  https://mybook.to/tMqUDaZ
Google Play:  https://mybook.to/xL5b3

Add the audiobook!

Audible:  https://mybook.to/fN9iqf
iTunes:  https://mybook.to/AYlaA
Amazon Audio:  https://mybook.to/rVrL98

 

FREE FROM JULIA KENT

Who needs a SWAT team to escape from their own wedding? Me.

My Momzilla turned us into hostages at our own ceremony, so Declan and I are getting married the good old-fashioned way, just like everybody else.

By calling in his private security team, stealing away before the ceremony by helicopter, connecting to his corporate jet and heading for Las Vegas.

The Boston wedding of the year is about to become a trashy Elvis drive-thru ceremony.

Until the best man spills the beans and Mom, Dad, my sisters, his brothers, my maid of honor, my friend Josh, and even my cat, Chuckles, all come along for the ride.

I can’t win, can I?

Oh. Yeah. I already did.

Love conquers all.

Even my crazy family.

Shopping for a Billionaire’s Wife is the 8th book in the New York Times and USA Today bestselling Shopping for a Billionaire series. After Declan convinces Shannon to escape from their own wedding minutes before the ceremony begins, the madcap adventures are just getting started. When the mother of the bride pries their location out of the tortured best man, the whole crazy crew follows the bride and groom to Las Vegas in this romantic comedy from Julia Kent.

Amazon ALL:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_AznALL
Apple Books:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_AppleBooks
Kobo:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_Kobo
Nook:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_Nook
Google Play:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_GooglePlay

Add the audio, narrated by Tanya Eby

Audible:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_Audible
iTunes:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_iTunes
Amazon Audio:  https://mybook.to/SFABW_AznAudible

 

 

FREE FROM GRETCHEN GALWAY

Serial temp worker April Johnson is nothing like her wildly successful brothers. She doesn’t have an Olympic gold medal. She doesn’t have millions in the bank from a tech company she founded as a teenager. She doesn’t even have a place to live, not since her boyfriend sneaked off in the middle of the night—skipping out on the rent, his three-legged dog, and her. Now forced to move back home with her mother and grovel for a job from one of her brothers, April decides it’s past time she got serious about her life.

Zack Fain, on the other hand, has been too serious for years. After losing his wife to cancer at the age of twenty-six, he’s done nothing but work on his consulting business. But when he meets April at a new job, he forgets he’s a humorless suit who never gets emotionally involved. She makes him laugh, she turns him on, and he begins to wonder if it’s time he broke a few rules.

Although April refuses to get stuck in yet another dead-end relationship, Zack isn’t like any of the guys she’s dated before. This could be the real deal. This could be serious.

But is either one of them ready for the kind of serious that lasts a lifetime?

Amazon ALL:  https://mybook.to/5Bwu
Apple Books:  https://mybook.to/7Whqj7
Kobo:  https://mybook.to/bbXj9
Nook:  https://mybook.to/JAg0kWv
Google Play:  https://mybook.to/B1XvFXy

Add the audiobook!

Audible:  https://mybook.to/iuKLf
iTunes:  https://mybook.to/FdjE
Amazon Audio:  https://mybook.to/QuTMMtY

Cover Reveal ~ Shopping for a Turkey

Coming November 2, 2021

Shopping for a Turkey features Scottish football player Hamish McCormick and Amy Jacoby as they navigate unusual cultural norms around American Thanksgiving, new traditions, and the undeniable attraction between these two characters who have been featured as minor players in Julia Kent’s New York Times bestselling Shopping series.

It’s their turn to pull the wishbone. 😉

Preorder your copy today!

Amazon (all countries):  https://geni.us/SFAT_AznALL

Apple Books:  https://geni.us/SFAT_Apple

Kobo:  Coming Soon

Nook:  https://geni.us/SFAT_Nook

Google Play:  https://geni.us/SFAT_Google

 

Add to your Wish List on Bookbub:  https://geni.us/SFAT_BookBub

Mark “Want to Read” on Goodreads:  https://geni.us/SFAT_Goodreads

 

Where does Marie get her Yankee Swap gifts?

‘Twas the Night before the Yankee Swap…

Enjoy this extended excerpt and discover Marie’s secret source for the best (?) Yankee Swap gift. Shopping for a Yankee Swap releases tomorrow. Preorder your copy today ~ this is one gift that does not have a “Do Not Open Until Christmas” label!

 

Shannon

If there is one thing you need to know about my mother, it’s this: She’s generous with advice, information, and product recommendations. Especially the advice.

But she’s stingy as can be when it comes to her Yankee Swap secrets.

Until my cat and her dog nearly burned the house down on Christmas, the annual Yankee Swap was Mom’s time to shine. A weird tradition in its own right, it tends to be the province of weirdos. I mean, who came up with the idea to bring the craziest gift possible, have people pick numbers out of a hat, and then systematically steal the most prized gift from each other?

You have to have a sense of humor and be a bit of a sadist–and a holiday one at that–to enjoy such a ritual.

And “funny eclectic sadist” has my mother written allll over it.

While Declan is up north with Dad, Tyler, Jeffrey, and Andrew, getting wreaths and finding his special tree, I left Ellie with our nanny, Mia, for a day of shopping with Mom. Being married to a billionaire has its financial perks, so you’d think we’d spend the day on Newbury Street, but no.

We’re at a recycling center in Framingham, staring at a tangled ball of rescued Christmas lights. It’s so big that it looks like a mutant cat from outer space hacked it up as a giant plastic green hairball.

We’re in the back of this huge warehouse, a place open to the public, part of an enormous complex. Junkyard isn’t the right term for how Funicularelli’s Salvage Yard works. You can dump your junk off here for a fee, or bring working, usable items and drop them off for free. Whatever they can sell, they do, placing it all in a huge showroom floor-like space, where nothing has a price on it.

That’s right.

You haggle.

See that gleam in Mom’s eye? Her middle name is Haggle.

Marie Haggle Scarlotta Jacoby is in her element.

“Mom?” I call out. Apparently, I’ve lost her in the lawn chair aisle, where a mountain of cheap plastic chaises have folded themselves into an organized favela, complete with union reps and a water filtration plant. No joke: The pile of chairs is at least two stories high.

“I’m over here!” A hand appears above a rattan curio cabinet that looks like something out of the TV set for Three’s Company.

“What’re you doing?” She’s bent over, on her belly, rolling on what looks like a giant barrel on its side, with plastic spikes poking out of it.

“Remember these? Cellulite Buster!” She sings a jingle no self-respecting advertising person would write, but the kind that haunts their nightmares. Rolling onto her back, she sits up, rocking forward, pushing her ample tushie into the spikes. “Mmmmm,” she moans. “My glutes are killing me after Jason woke me up this morning for some nookie.”

“MOM!”

She scoffs, closing her eyes, rocking to some 1970s disco song she begins to hum. “Oh, please. As if you and Declan didn’t get it on. When they have to get up at 4 a.m. for something, the morning wood must be appeased, especially if they’re not headed to work with their brains full of job stuff.”

I start to argue but snap my mouth shut.

Because she’s not wrong.

And now I feel guilty it didn’t happen this morning.

“You are three seconds away from a public indecency charge on that thing, Mom.”

“Give me five and I’ll have an experience even better than the one your father gave me this morning.”

I press the ball of my foot against the roller and shove hard enough to make her stand quickly, forced to use her yoga-teacher reflexes. I used to wonder how old Agnes could be so crude. What could make an elderly lady have such a dirty mind?

Now I know.

Dirty old ladies don’t become that way. They just are.

“I am not leaving Ellie with a nanny all day just for you to embarrass me nonstop in public.”

Confusion fills her eyes. “Then why did you come shopping with me?”

A bald dude wearing a dirty blue t-shirt with the salvage yard’s logo–a dumpster with a heart on it and the words We Rescue the Junk in Your Trunk!–passes us, pushing a huge cart loaded with bags of what appear to be stuffed animals. One wheel on the cart gyrates like a dying fish on the beach.

“Ooo, is there a Mickey Mouse in there?” Mom asks.

“You always told me used stuffed animals are nothing but vectors for lice.”

“That’s true for everything but Yankee Swap.”

“You’d give away lice-infested toys?”

“If it’s goofy enough to be the most popular item, yes.”

“Minnie Mouse,” the workman mutters.

“Excuse me?”

“Not Goofy. Minnie Mouse.”

Squeak. Squeak. Squeak.

Mom watches as he passes us and begins unloading bag after bag of stuffed animals. I’m starting to feel like we’ve been teleported to the horror movie version of Al’s Toy Barn.

Something hot pink catches my eye, the big swath of color standing out in the dreary grey of fluorescent light hell. As I focus on it, I realize it’s a Lisa Frank area rug.

And it’s a unicorn.

“I think Carol had that when she was in middle school!” Mom gasps, the sound of my sister’s name transporting me instantly back to the mid-1990s, when I was the annoying little sister and Carol saved up all her mother’s helper babysitting money to buy that damn rug.

“Did she donate it?” Mendon is close enough to Framingham for this to be possible.

“Oh, no! We still have it.”

“You do? In her old room?”

“Probably? It’s not on the floor. Maybe in the closet, or in the attic? I was saving it for my granddaughter.”

“That’s really gendered of you, Mom. What if Jeffrey or Tyler wanted it?”

“I already offered. I’m not that out of touch, Shannon,” she says tightly. “I may be at the tail end of the baby boomers, but I’m plenty hip.”

“Right, Mom.”

“Oh, look! Macrame plant hangers!”

And she’s off.

I take a deep breath, filling my lungs with the odors of old wood, various fabric softeners and upholstery cleaners, dried bleach from the recently washed linoleum, and the unique scent every thrift shop has–distinct yet similar. No retail shop with shiny new merchandise from China or Pakistan or Made in the USA can compete with the eclectic beauty of second-hand stores.

Because places like this are repositories of memory and function.

Other people’s memories, and the persistence of value.

No one wants to throw away something that’s “perfectly good,” even if it’s scratched a little, has some threadbare spots, or looks a wee bit shabby. We’re all the Velveteen Rabbit at some point in our lives, right? Except we go through cycles of rebirth and reinvention, within our own lifespans.

Sometimes the piece of you on display is in need of replacement, other times it’s new, and sometimes you just need to find the right person to see you still have value, even if you’re a bit used up.

The soft spot in Mom’s heart for second-hand stuff came after the very gritty financial need to save money, but it’s not a distant second in her reasons for shopping this way. Drawn to the different, the motley, the hidden and buried treasure, she unearths what touches her.

As for why it resonates, who knows?

And, really, who cares? It just does.

That’s more than enough.

Once I married Declan, I teleported to a financial dimension that might as well be science fiction for the vast majority of people. Dec considers places like this to be literal trash heaps. When we first met, he thought a thrift shop was an antique shop. After I explained the difference, he was perplexed by the idea that you would buy someone’s used items.

He once compared it to buying used condoms or tampons and got an earful from Mom. I’ve never seen him shut up so fast.

Screech, screech, screech.

Someone’s pushing a shopping cart down an aisle on the other side of the enormous warehouse, another cart with a broken wheel. When you spend enough time in discount and secondhand shops, you know that sound all too well. Everything is thrifty in a place like this, even their own equipment.

“Honey! Look! A wine refrigerator!” Mom shouts, her voice echoing. There are only three or four other people in the entire store. Mom’s a pro like that, too: She only shops during the quiet times, and she knows when they are. When eBay became a thing, people who make a living buying low and selling high began flocking to places like this, coming during sale days and red-tag clearances to make a small profit off whatever they could find.

Mom avoids those times.

She’s not here to make money.

She’s here to make discoveries.

“A wine refrigerator? Here?” As I turn the corner and follow her gaze, I realize she’s staring at a small fridge, the size you use in a dorm room. It has a clear glass front, but it looks… off.

A hospital sticker is on the front, and a big orange warning label with details on how to discard sharps.

“See! You billionaires aren’t the only ones who can have these fancy things.” Bending into a squat, she starts to lift it.

“What’re you doing?”

“Buying it!”

“Mom! I don’t think that’s a wine refrigerator. I think that’s for storing insulin safely!”

“Even better. It’ll do double duty if anyone in the family ever develops diabetes.”

“Why don’t you just store wine in the regular kitchen fridge?”

“Why do wealthy people have wine fridges?”

“So they can have temperature-controlled storage,” I say automatically, a mental image of ours flitting through my mind. “But you don’t have a collection.”

“Not yet,” she sniffs. “We haven’t been able to have one because we didn’t have a wine fridge, silly!”

The guy in the blue t-shirt walks by carrying a big stack of plastic storage bins, three on top of each other, and plunks them down a few feet to Mom’s right.

“Excuse me?” she asks him. He’s shaved bald, has a greying goatee, and lashless brown eyes that look like a serial killer’s.

Until he smiles.

“Yeah? Whatcha need?”

“How much for this?”

He blinks rapidly. “Just that? You’re not getting more? Normally, you fill the cart up and we give you a price.”

I look at him. “She comes in here that often?”

The guy laughs. “She comes in here so often, we’re close to creating one of those punch card systems. You know, buy nine cartloads, get the tenth half off.”

“FREE!” Mom exclaims. “It should be free!”

Tension that used to live between my shoulder blades, a muscle memory of a time when money was what I thought about, talked about, worried about, and always needed more of, returns for a brief moment, just long enough for me to realize what I’ve lost–and gained–over the years.

I didn’t marry Declan for his money.

But it sure is true that while money can’t buy happiness, it can buy a kind of peace that I deeply appreciate.

As Mom and the guy talk about the fridge, he explains that it’s from a lab that studied stool samples.

My brain grinds to a screeching halt.

“Stool? As in poop?” Mom asks, pulling away from her find.

“Yeah. Gotta tell you, it’s one of the weirdest junk hauls we ever got. Twenty-five of those. Turns out the government changed some regulation and the lab had to get new ones. Decommissioned these. This is the last one.”

“Did you tell everyone what they used to store?”

“Sure. No one cares, right? Just bleach the hell out of it before you put your beer or whatever in. You want it? I’ll put it aside for you so you don’t have to push it around in the cart.”

Mom eyes the fridge, her lips twisted to one side, teeth biting down as she contemplates.

“How much are they going for?” I ask, certain they’ll cost more than Mom would ever pay.

“Twenty bucks or so. Depends. You know how it works,” he says to Mom. “Fill the cart and we start the fun.”

“Fun?” I ask.

“You pay by the cart here.”

“There’s a flat rate?”

“No. You fill it up, I eyeball it, and give you a price.”

“And then I counter with a fairer price.”

“Hey, lady. Fair is in the eye of the beholder.” He winks at Mom.

“So is value,” Mom shoots back.

“Hey! Cory! Getcher ass out on the loading dock!” someone shouts from behind a cheap plastic bi-fold door. Fluorescent lights flicker from what looks like a hallway.

He thumbs toward the voice. “Gotta go. It’s the beginning of the month and that means cleanouts.”

“Cleanouts?”

“Apartments. People moving. They leave their junk and our guys go and get it.” He rubs his palms together in a gesture of eagerness. “Lots of work right now.”

“Anything good coming in?” Mom asks breathlessly.

He laughs as he leaves. “You one of those people who think all the good stuff is in the back?”

And then the doors swallow him.

Mom plants her hands on her hips and mutters, “He didn’t answer my question.”

Cory jogs back, slaps a Reserved sticker on the fridge, and winks at Mom again before rushing away.

“Let’s get back to our real goal, Mom.”

“We have a goal?”

“The Yankee Swap? Remember?”

“Oh. Right.” Funicularelli’s uses the same furniture they’re selling to display many of their wares. Bookshelves have books on them. Curio cabinets are filled with tchotchkes. If you want to buy the furniture, I assume they clear it and just relocate all the merchandise somewhere else.

I come upon Mom opening and closing a box. Inside is a figure of a woman on her knees, in front of a man with a huge penis.

“MOM!”

“What? It’s in a tasteful box.”

“What is that?” I pick it up and turn it over. “Envelope licker?”

Understanding brightens her eyes. “Oh! I see. Like the little sponges you use when you’re a secretary. I wondered why her tongue was so huge.”

“What’s the point of the guy’s… you know?”

“I think you rest the flap of the envelope between his legs and his doinker pushes it close to her sponge tongue.”

“DOINKER?” I erupt into uncontrollable giggles. Haven’t heard that term before.

“We’re opening and closing an office supply item that has a man’s raging hard-on as a working part, Shannon, and doinker is what makes you fall apart? Really? I raised you better.”

“What does raising me have to do with anything?” I ask as Mom quietly closes the box and slips it into the cart.

“Hmph.”

“You’re actually buying that thing? Is that it? You found your Yankee Swap gift?”

“That? You think that would win the Yankee Swap? Heck, no. I’ll give that to Agnes.”

“Agnes?” I snort. “I’ll bet she hand carved that thing seventy years ago.”

“Pretty sure she was around when that sponge was born, deep in the ocean.”

For the next half hour, we wander, my mind attaching prices to everything. Declan would consider this a gigantic waste of time, insisting that my new assistant, Shayla, could order whatever I need and have it shipped to our house. He’s pushing me lately to rely on other people so that I have more time for family life and, to his credit, he’s doing the same.

Declan’s presence is precious, and we’re gradually getting more and more of it.

But farming out the pieces of life that I actually enjoy doesn’t make sense to me.

Sure, I could skip all this. Go on eBay and find a quirky item. Order it and help someone to make a tiny profit off the very activity I’m enjoying with Mom right now. Calculating the value of my time and delegating work to people whose time is “worth” less might make sense in a business setting, but these hours with Mom can’t be project managed.

My mommy brain downshifts and I start to really enjoy the slow shop. You know the kind, when you take your time, look at everything, reflect on whether you like it, and move on.

So simple.

So rare when you’re parenting a little one. How do I prioritize something that’s solely for me?

Maybe that’s Declan’s point. Give over the work that isn’t central to who I am, so I can focus on me.

“Shannon?” I turn to find Mom standing there, cart overflowing, holding a ThighMaster.

“Hmm?”

“Which color ThighMaster do you think Jason would like most?”

“Does Dad… have a favorite ThighMaster color?”

“He broke the last one. It was blue.”

Do not ask Mom how he broke the ThighMaster. Do not ask Mom how he broke the ThighMaster. Do not ask Mom how he broke the ThighMaster. Do not ask Mom how he broke the–

“He broke it during a Boy Scout meeting.”

Whew.

“What was Dad doing with one of those at a Boy Scout meeting?”

“Something to do with teaching the boys how to build a trebuchet. You know. A catapult.”

“I know what a trebuchet is. We never learned anything like that in Girl Scouts.”

“Maybe Ellie will.” She contemplates the item in her hand. “I think I’ll get him two. One blue, one pink. Jason said they have a nonbinary child in the troop, so let’s get some welcoming colors.”

“Why not get green and yellow, then? Just avoid the gender stereotyping entirely.”

“Ooo! I like that idea!” Mom pushes her cart down the aisle toward a tangled heap of ThighMasters at least six feet high. “You know,” she says, manhandling one, “Jason could attach this to the porch ceiling and it would make a fine plant hanger.”

That’s what’s so great about thrift shopping: You can use your imagination to turn a cheesy ’70s “As Seen on TV” product into a functional piece of home décor.

My stomach is now growling so much, it’s howling at the moon. We wheel the basket over to Cory, who is chatting with a fellow worker in rapid-fire Portuguese. They finish quickly, and he turns to us.

Mom’s entire demeanor changes.

Marie Scarlotta Jacoby has spent her entire life squeezing every bit of value out of every penny she can get her hands on. Declan and I have tried over the years to let our money be theirs, but Dad and Mom are proud to a fault, and it’s trickled down to my sister Carol, too. She’ll let us help with Tyler’s therapies, and we created accounts to fully fund college for both kids, but other than working for Anterdec, she won’t take more help.

So we have to get creative.

No, I won’t step in and buy this for Mom, though it’s tempting. I could hand Cory a couple of hundreds and make his day, but that would strip the thrill of the shop away from Mom. What might seem like kindness and generosity on the face of it really wouldn’t be.

But I’m totally buying lunch, and she doesn’t get to skimp.

The music to High Noon plays in my head, Dad’s old westerns with the whistling twang running through as Cory takes a pencil and taps once on every single item in the cart, keeping a mental tally in his head. You can see the adding machine ticking through numbers in his brain, until finally he looks up, moves his mouth soundlessly, then looks at Mom and says, “One seventy-two.”

“One twenty-five.”

“You’re killing me, lady.”

“That’s not a no.”

“One sixty.”

“Pffft. One thirty.”

Bzzz

My phone rescues me from their haggle, Declan’s text coming at the perfect moment.

How’s it going at the dump? he asks.

It’s not a dump, and Mom found a new ThighMaster for Dad.

I don’t even want to know what that means. Are you having fun?

Yes.

That’s what I want to hear.

How’s the wreath trip?

Good. You never told me about Perlman.

My heart leaps, galloping in my chest. Oh, dear. He’s right. I never did tell him about Perlman.

Is he there? Tell him I said hi.

He’s here. And he certainly remembers you.

Texts can’t communicate tone or attitude, but Declan’s use of the word certainly communicates plenty. My husband can be deeply jealous, and this is one of those times when I need to defuse it.

But it’s Perlman, for goodness sake! Derpy Perlman. He was a sweet, nerdy kid who had a crush on me forever. Every year from the time I was eleven and he was thirteen, we’d go to get the tree from Pops and Nanny’s tree farm and he’d be there, moon-eyed and so besotted with me, I didn’t know what to do.

Carol teased me mercilessly the entire car trip home the first year.

And the whole way up and back after that.

Perlman was always a gentleman, and never tried anything. Never touched me, never tried to kiss me, nothing.

Maybe if he’d tried, I’d have tried right back. While he was never my type, his crush was sweet, and I had enough awkward years as a teen that it might have been nice to have a stolen kiss from a boy who lived in Maine.

Who am I kidding?

My awkward years weren’t limited to my adolescence.

Shannon? Declan texts.

Perlman’s an old friend. Stop it.

Best to cut Declan’s macho b.s. off at the knees.

Stop what? Just letting you know your old friend thinks I’m lucky for marrying you.

Awwww. That’s sweet. Give Perlman a kiss for me, I text back.

Ring!

Mom and Cory, mid-negotiation, both jump at the sound of my phone ringing. Mom’s head tilts in inquiry.

“It’s Declan. He met Perlman and he’s jealous,” I explain to her.

“Jealous? Of PERLMAN?”

I shrug. “The man gets jealous when I have a male salesclerk at the shoe store.” I open the call.

“That’s not funny,” Declan snaps.

“I thought it was.”

“Perlman loved the kiss, though. Said I used just the right amount of tongue.”

“Dec!”

“You didn’t tell me about Bessie, either.”

“The tree? Dad’s cutting old Bessie down this year?”

Mom’s in the middle of peeling off the exact amount of cash needed to buy the cart full of stuff when I hear her say, “Can you believe it, Shannon? Finally.”

“I haven’t been to the tree farm in years, Dec. I hope you’re having fun.”

“We should bring Ellie up here next year. Start buying our trees here.”

“You just want to show Perlman that you own me.”

“You’re not wrong,” he growls. “But they do have nice trees up here, and it’s very New England.”

“Too bad you never met Pops. He was the Yankee-est Yankee you could ever imagine.”

“Jason holds him in high esteem.”

“We all did.” I pause. “How’s Andrew handling the trip?”

“He’s been bent over his phone most of the time.”

I hear Andrew shout loudly in protest in the background.

“Look, we have to go. I’m calling because there’s a gli–”

And he disappears into thin air, the three beeps of the call dropping making me look at my phone as if it’s responsible.

“That’s weird,” I mutter. Declan’s phone must have died. Hah! For once, I can tease him about not keeping it charged.

“Everything ok?”

“I hope so.”

Shopping for a Yankee Swap coming 12.23.20!