"What lies beneath my veiled perfection is the ugly truth—my truth, my reality, my destiny."
Vivian Graham has an acceptance letter into Harvard, a badass tattoo, loyal friends, ties to marijuana, a penchant for Dunkin’ Donuts, and her pesky V-card.
Everyday she takes the Red Line to her job at The Green Pot in Boston while her friends enter the coveted, black iron gates to higher learning. The ramifications from a tragic accident have put her life on hold while time marches on for everyone around her.
After graduating from Harvard Law, Boston native, Oliver Konrad, moves to Portland to start his career and his life. Three years later, after a horrific discovery, he returns home to trade in his three-piece suit for leather work boots and his suburban home for a condo in Cambridge.
All he brought back to the East Coast was an aversion to pillows and secrets he keeps hidden behind a mysterious locked door. Oliver’s days are predictable and his nights are lonely until he meets Vivian on the subway. Her long raven hair, green eyes, and mile-long legs are achingly sexy, but the way she "innocently" fingers and licks her Boston Kreme doughnut can only be described in two words—complete torture.
When their paths cross at every turn, laughter is abundant, friendship is easy, and love is unintentional. However, their future seems improbable.
*This book contains adult situations and explicit content, 17+
Vivian Graham has an acceptance letter into Harvard, a badass tattoo, loyal friends, ties to marijuana, a penchant for Dunkin’ Donuts, and her pesky V-card.
Everyday she takes the Red Line to her job at The Green Pot in Boston while her friends enter the coveted, black iron gates to higher learning. The ramifications from a tragic accident have put her life on hold while time marches on for everyone around her.
After graduating from Harvard Law, Boston native, Oliver Konrad, moves to Portland to start his career and his life. Three years later, after a horrific discovery, he returns home to trade in his three-piece suit for leather work boots and his suburban home for a condo in Cambridge.
All he brought back to the East Coast was an aversion to pillows and secrets he keeps hidden behind a mysterious locked door. Oliver’s days are predictable and his nights are lonely until he meets Vivian on the subway. Her long raven hair, green eyes, and mile-long legs are achingly sexy, but the way she "innocently" fingers and licks her Boston Kreme doughnut can only be described in two words—complete torture.
When their paths cross at every turn, laughter is abundant, friendship is easy, and love is unintentional. However, their future seems improbable.
*This book contains adult situations and explicit content, 17+
Once in a great
while, you stumble upon a book by an author you have never heard of and find
yourself completely and utterly charmed by their story and writing. Idle Bloom was a complete surprise for me. I laughed, I cried…l wanted a doughnut after
I was done.
Vivian is a landscape
nursery assistant. She had to put off
her dreams of going to Harvard to pay off some medical bills, and that’s how
she ends up at the Green Pot, where she meets Oliver. Oliver is a graduate of Harvard Law, but mysteriously
left the west coast and the law behind to become a handyman at his brother’s
landscaping business. Neither is looking
for more than friendship, but what soon develops between them that alters their
lives forever.
There’s a lot to be
intrigued about by this book. Why is
Vivian a 20-something virgin? Why did
Oliver come back from Portland? Why doesn’t he like pillows? Vivian and Oliver are an odd pair, but odd in
such a way that I had to know their entire story, which made it hard to put
this book down. You get little snippets
throughout the book as to why they have become the way they have, and you just
won’t be satisfied until you know it all.
I was mesmerized and completely enchanted by this story.
The characters in
this book are intricately written and completely adorable. I loved Vivian’s spunk and wit, and her
unabashed love of Dunkin’ Donuts. And
Oliver is such a mystery, but also absolutely loveable and real. This book made me cry, which is a tough sell,
but it happened. You’ll want to have
tissues handy, but don’t let this deter you from reading a beautifully told and
well written story that will stay with you. 5 stars.
I do not say this lightly, but Idle Bloom has got to be one of the best
books I have read this year. It’s a beautiful love story between two broken
people who finally get a chance to heal with one another’s love. As I expected,
I definitely shed quite a few tears several times. What I did not expect was
how much I laughed while reading the book because it’s not a romantic comedy;
rather, Vivian and Oliver have fun and laugh with one another and their
laughter is contagious. This emotional rollercoaster ride made for an immensely
enjoyable reading experience.
Both Viv and Oli have baggage from
their past. While some of Viv’s baggage is visible, she reveals her internal
baggage to Oli early on in their relationship. Upon hearing the circumstances
surrounding her tragic accident I felt a mixture of relief (that it wasn’t due
to a sexual assault) and sadness (because of the actual incident and how it
scarred her). While I may have had mixed feelings surrounding her accident I
had no doubts regarding how I felt about her and Oli’s relationship – it was
beautiful. Even when it was painful or hurtful, their love was beautiful and
watching it grow and deepen as they faced far more obstacles than they should
have was an experience I look forward to repeating when I read Idle Bloom again. Equally enjoyable was
the freaking hot sex they had … frequently … and thoroughly. It and their
laughter helped to balance out the overwhelmingly sad circumstances that were
the cause of Oli being broken. It has been quite a while since I have felt such
sympathy for a character in a book. Oli’s loss was devastating and I found it
very easy to understand his reactions. Although both of their pasts are
unbelievably sad, I loved the realism with which Ms. Ann wrote them.
I must admit that as the end of the
book neared, I questioned whether or not Oli and Viv would get their happily
ever after. There was so much that hadn’t been said or done and I found myself
running out of pages with no resolution in sight. Yet Ms. Ann did the unthinkable
– she gave Oli and Viv’s story an absolutely perfect ending for them and did so
without making it feel rushed or contrived. The author maintained the realism
of the characters and managed to leave me wishing this book was the first in a
series instead of a standalone so I could have more time with Oli and Viv. Idle Bloom is an excellent book that has
secured its spot on my re-read list and I cannot wait to check out more of Ms.
Ann’s books.
Copyright 2014
CHAPTER ONE
Ivy League
Doughnuts
Vivian
Wake.
Stretch. Shower. Then navigate through the bustling morning crowd to the subway
via the corner coffee shop. A kaleidoscope of colors and the inviting
bittersweet aroma of America’s favorite pick-me-up dazzles my senses.
No offense
to Paul Revere, but when I think of Boston and its exhausting list of
historical figures, William Rosenberg is the name that warms my chest and
tempts my tummy. It’s my firm belief that his inspiration and influence in the
business world fed my ambition to achieve the high merits that earned my
acceptance into a well-known university north of the Charles River.
“Boston
Kreme and a medium Dunkaccino, please.”
I ignore the
piercing glances, rolling eyes, and subtle head shakes behind me. Yes, at five
foot eleven inches I can eat whatever I want and not gain a pound. Long, wavy,
ink black hair and green eyes, a runway model on the outside. Yeah, yeah, I’ve
heard it all before. My personal assessment of the reflection in my mirror
includes the words lanky, bony, witchy hair, monster eyes, and freaky freckles.
A tiny grin tugs at the corners of my mouth as I focus on my phone, moving my
thumbs over the screen with effortless strokes to send off a text.
Me: Up, bitches? 2 hrs. to study then get your asses to work.
The real world awaits.
Judgments
are nothing more than presumptuous thoughts, flawed opinions at best. What lies
beneath my veiled “perfection” is the ugly truth––my truth, my reality, my
destiny. Though, for now, I grab my decadent treats and sashay out the door
with a wicked smile.
Two years
after I nailed the admissions interview, I have yet to see the inside of a
Harvard lecture hall, but it won’t be long now. Instead, I take the Red Line at
Harvard Square to Central Square every morning while my two bitches enter the
coveted black iron gates to “Grow In Wisdom.” Since my hopes of love and
marriage were snuffed out like a torch my senior year of high school, I have my
whole life to focus on becoming a successful entrepreneur.
The air
grows thick and musty on my final descent to the subway. And then I see him, my
new visual indulgence. He first captured my attention a week ago. A sky scraper
among the diverse sea of heads bowed and drawn into their handheld
technological gods. But then again, when you’re my height the bar for being
considered tall is set pretty high. He must be at least six foot four with lean
muscles, short sandy blond hair, and cornflower blue eyes. Sipping my
Dunkaccino, I peek over the lid and worm my way through the morning crowd,
positioning myself to get on the same car. Everyday he’s dressed in faded
jeans, an old T-shirt, and leather work boots. Maybe he’s married, or has a
girlfriend, but it doesn’t matter. My infatuation will go no further than
basking in his sexy aura and taking mental pictures to use for my own pleasure.
The train
screeches to a stop and the whoosh of the hydraulic doors sets the crowd in
motion. Most mornings I find a seat opposite my rugged blue-collar worker. We
play a flirty game of peek-a-boo where I unabashedly stare at him until he
glances at me then diverts his shy eyes, taking a deep swallow. I eat my Boston
Kreme doughnut and sip my coffee keeping my eyes fixed on him. Click, click, click—I take my mental
pictures.
This
morning, however, the car is herded to capacity. I find myself next to him with
my drink in one hand and my doughnut in the other. As the rest of the
passengers cram in, I glance up and smile. He returns a hesitant smile, and for
the first time I can see his straight white teeth and dimples. Holy crap! He has dimples. My heart rate
increases exponentially as I lift my doughnut toward my mouth. Dimples! The doors fold shut and the
train jerks forward before my legs have a chance to balance and root into the
floor.
“Oh shit! Oh
my gosh, I’m so sorry!” I’m drowning in horrid humiliation while peeling my
half-eaten doughnut off his gray T-shirt. I can’t look at him.
Through my
squinted eyes, all I see is a smeared glob of chocolate frosting in the middle
of his shirt. Risking a glance, a grimace takes over my face while meeting his
raised brows, eyes darting back and forth between me and his shirt. Depositing
the doughnut back in the bag, I retrieve the wad of napkins I shoved in my
purse and begin to wipe his shirt like a mother would do to a child. He doesn’t
say anything, he doesn’t move. My brain registers the faint giggles and
snickers from a few of the lucky commuters who have witnessed this embarrassing
mishap. I may have to start taking the bus from now on, or dress incognito so
I’m not recognized as the clumsy doughnut girl.
“It’s fine,”
a deep voice sounds. Long fingers encircle my wrist, halting my frantic
strokes. “It’s just a shirt.”
Biting my
lips together, I nod unable to make eye contact. He releases my wrist and I
shove the napkins into my bag.
“I, uh … I’m
just so, very clumsy … embarrassed, and uh, again … sorry.” I. Will. Not. Move.
I shall stay bowed in shame until I leap from the train at the next
opportunity.
“It’s really
okay, no need to feel bad.”
“Central Square,” the speaker sounds as the train’s
piercing brakes pull to a halt.
My frantic
dash to the door threatens to take out a few unsuspecting passengers. I can’t
concern myself with that; sometimes casualties are unavoidable and necessary.
“Is this
your stop?” Mr. Frosting Shirt says with a questioning tone, probably because
for the past week he’s gotten off the train before me.
It is today!
Without
looking back I nod and sprint off the subway.
#
Lucky for
me, when the white sign with the green planter’s pot becomes visible over the
hill, there isn’t a line of miffed people waiting under it to get in the door.
“Maggie, I’m
so sorry,” I say with a genuine apologetic tone as I shove my bag under the
counter and tie on my green apron over my fitted T-shirt and frayed denim
shorts. “I had to take the bus and walk the last mile.”
“Vivian,
dear, why are you apologizing? I told you to take the day off anyway.” Maggie
shakes her head while arranging the packs of seedlings into cardboard flats.
I take over
while she rings the customer’s order up on the register. “I know, but this is
the busiest time of year and who knows if or when Alex and Kai will show up to
help.”
Maggie,
proud owner of The Green Pot nursery, originally started her business as a
front for growing marijuana. She’s not a law-breaking pothead, per say. She’s a
ten-year cervical cancer survivor.
“You don’t
see me looking too concerned do you?”
I laugh.
Maggie has saintly patience and I love working for her. The Green Pot has become
a legitimate greenhouse—one of the top suppliers for local landscaping
companies—but she still has a stash of wacky tabbacky for those who don’t want
to jump through the hoops to get it legally. Her only request is that these VIP
customers don’t all come on the same day with their scarf and bandana wrapped
heads asking for the Brown Bag special.
“Chance
should be here soon if you want to go out back and double check to see if his
order is all there.”
Ah, Chance
Konrad, the horny green jack-of-all-trades owner of The Handy Hunk. Chance is a
real player and, in his eyes, I am the World Series of his playboy game. For
two years he has tried to sweep me off my feet and into his bed. For two years
I have rejected his often times outrageous efforts to win my affection.
The familiar
red flatbed truck backs into the loading zone as I finish double checking the
order. “Vivian.” Chance’s velvety voice caresses my name as he strips me with
his usual lustful gaze.
I give him
the eye roll he’s come to expect while shaking my head. “Chance.”
I’m not
naive enough to think that he has been waiting in patient celibacy for me to
succumb to his advances. In fact, I can’t imagine him going a single night
without some gullible girl’s naked body wrapped around his. Not that I too
don’t find him physically appealing, but I’ve resigned myself to believe that
all my orgasms will be self-induced. Chance is eye candy, another visual for my
private moments. Click. Click. Click.
“Hate to
disappoint you, I know how much you look forward to our sexy banter, but my
brother is working with me now so you’ll need to use a little more discretion
with your advances,” Chance says as he leans against the back of his truck with
his arms folded over his chest.
Uncontrolled
laughter erupts from my chest but halts in my throat, nearly choking me, as the
other door to the truck opens and a very tall guy steps out with a chocolate
stain stamped in the middle of his gray T-shirt.
Kill. Me.
Now!
“Viv, this
is my brother Oliver. Don’t mind his shirt. Some chick on the subway rammed
into him with her doughnut.”
My eyes are
so wide I think they’re locked in this position. “That uh, really sucks. She
must have felt awful.”
“Yeah, what
did you say?” Chance looks at Oliver. “That she scurried off at the next stop
with her tail between her legs?” Chance laughs.
Oliver
grimaces, glancing at me. “I don’t think that’s exactly what I said.”
“Yeah, bro,
it was. You also said––”
“I’m sure
she gets the point!”
I nod and
cross my arms over my chest. “Oliver’s right. I get it. I can totally imagine
it. But I’m sure she didn’t run off with her
tail between her legs. It was probably just her stop.” I give Oliver a
tightlipped grin and offer my hand. “Anyway, Vivian Graham, nice to meet you.”
Oliver
stares at my hand for a few moments then meets my eyes. “Nice to meet you,
Vivian.” We shake hands and my grip cinches to convey my unspoken displeasure
with his interpretation of what happened this morning.
“Mind if I
use the restroom before we load up and head out?” Chance asks, not waiting for
my response before he heads into the building.
Oliver and I
divert our gazes away from each other as an awkward silence closes in on us. I
glance at his shirt and an uncontrollable giggle bubbles up and out.
“What are
the chances?” I laugh, shaking my head and meeting his gaze.
He grins and
chuckles.
“I really am
sorry. I’ll get you a new shirt.”
Wiping his
hand over the dried chocolate stain, he licks his lips and smiles so big his
dimples steal my attention. “Not necessary. It will probably come out and if
not, I’m quite certain I have at least twenty other old T-shirts just like it.”
“Load ’em
up!” Chance emerges from the building as we slip on our work gloves and start
arranging the plants into the back of the truck.
When
everything is loaded and secured, Chance hops in the truck, starts the engine,
and rolls down the window. “Let’s go, Oliver, no need to flirt with my girl.
After two years of rejecting yours truly, I’m pretty sure she’s a lesbian. And
for some reason that makes my dick even harder.”
Oliver
closes his eyes and shakes his head as I laugh. “Please excuse my vulgar
brother. He doesn’t have a delay button between his brain and mouth.”
I wave a
dismissive hand. “I’ve been putting up with him for two years. His potty mouth
is the highlight of my lesbian day.”
Oliver
furrows his brow with a slow nod. “All right then, I guess I’ll see you
around.”
“Later,
guys.” I hand the order receipt to Oliver with a wink and walk away to check on
Maggie.
#
Oliver
“Now I know
why you’re taking on so many landscaping jobs instead of sticking to mowing and
home repair.” I flash Chance a knowing glance.
“She’s hot
as hell, isn’t she?” He grins, pulling out of the back parking lot.
I shake my
head. “It’s been two years. I think it’s safe to say she’s not interested.”
He lifts his
shoulders. “She’s baiting me, slowly reeling me in.”
“She’s
stamped rejection on your head so many times you have brain damage and can no
longer see you make her skin crawl with your dick talking out of your mouth.”
“She’s a
nice girl. We have a good thing going. Didn’t you notice how she defended the
doughnut chick from this morning?”
“Shit.” I
laugh and run my hands though my hair. “She is
the doughnut chick from this morning, dickhead.”
“What the
hell are you talking about?”
I roll down
my window and pull my Red Sox baseball cap on. “Vivian was the one on the
subway who fell into me with her doughnut. Thanks to you, now I look like a real
asshole because you had to run your mouth about the whole tail between the legs
comment.”
Chance
laughs. “Damn, you lucky son of a bitch! I should start taking the T. I’m
probably missing out on a huge untapped population of hot women. They’re
wasting their time bumping into you, the one guy who won’t ever give them the
time of day.”
I sigh.
“You’re right. I couldn’t care less.”
#
At the
chance of risking what’s left of my manhood to some philosophical bullshit, I
have to admit that digging in the dirt and being in the sun all day is somewhat
therapeutic. I can’t help but mentally pat myself on the back for coming to
that conclusion without the help of a psychiatrist. Lord knows in an effort to
save one hundred and forty dollars an hour, I can ask myself how I’m feeling
and why I think I’m feeling it with less resentment than I felt from those damn
therapists in Portland.
We’re adding
raised-bed gardens to a hotel in the Seaport district so they can use the fresh
vegetables and herbs in their restaurant. Just one of a million reasons I love
this town.
“Wanna go
out tonight?” Chance asks while mixing the compost into the soil.
“Nope.”
“Tara is
going to bring her sister. We’re going to some new Italian place by the wharf
then to Mike’s for Cannoli.”
“Who’s
Tara?” I sit back on my heels and wipe the sweat from my brow with the bottom
of my chocolate-stained shirt.
“The girl I
took to Mom’s birthday dinner.”
“Not
interested.”
“Oliver, you
need to get out.”
“You don’t
know what I need and I told you never to mention a fucking second of my past!”
“Jeez, dude!
I’m not talking about your past. I’m talking about now! Nothing more than dinner with a pretty woman. She just
graduated from MIT and she’s brilliant. A nerdy scholar like yourself. It’s
okay to let a nice piece of ass make your dick twitch every once in awhile.
Gives your hand a break.”
“Bite me!”
“Nobody says
that anymore, but whatever, your loss.”
I hate that
he’s right, but I’d rather gnaw off my own arm than admit it out loud.
“Sorry,
Chance, I’m just … shit, I’m just not ready. I’m not saying never, just not
now.”
He pats me
on the shoulder. “Don’t sweat it, Bro.”
With a deep
sigh, I close my eyes and try to shake the image of the one person who does
make my dick twitch. And when that fails, I decide to call it a day. It doesn’t
appear that my hand will be getting a rest anytime soon.
#
I’ve been
back for two months settling into my new life. I feel like a zombie most of the
time. Food lacks taste, I see the sun but I can’t feel it touch my skin, comedy
is void of humor, and the monotonous play of life in all its muted colors
doesn’t catch my eye. At least that was the case until last week when I started
working with my brother.
Living in
Cambridge, I take the Red Line to South Station. Every morning for the past
week, I’ve sat across from this long-legged woman with raven hair falling in
unruly waves around her slender shoulders and down her back. Soft green eyes
peek through sexy long lashes, casting a spell on me, and I’ve found myself locked
in a trance watching her eat her cream filled doughnut with chocolate frosting.
She makes a complete mess of it, and by the time she’s done every guy in the
subway car is sporting a boner from watching her lick her full lips and suck
the sticky sweetness off her long fingers one at a time like a fucking Dunkin’
Donuts porn movie.
So now the
only thing I smell is a mixture of coffee and doughnuts. I can taste sweet
cherry red lips that I will never kiss. It’s absurd I’m so fucking enthralled
with her just the thought of the subway elicits a pathetic schmuck grin, and
the vision of her lingers like a drunken haze even when I close my eyes. But
most disturbing is the part of my body she awakens that I swore I’d never use
again.
I’m so
screwed.
With 10 years of flossing lectures under her belt, she
took early retirement from her dental hygiene career to stay home with her
three awesome boys and manage the family business.
After her best friend of nearly 30 years suggested a few
books from the Contemporary Romance genre, Jewel was hooked. Devouring two and
three books a week but still craving more, she decided to practice sustainable
reading, AKA writing.
When she’s not donning her cape and saving the planet one
tree at a time, she enjoys yoga with friends, good food with family, rock
climbing with her kids, watching How I Met Your Mother reruns, and of
course…heart-wrenching, tear-jerking, panty-scorching novels.
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