I have joined Manali Dey, a friend on Bookstagram, for the #MillsandBoonReadathon for which we are reading 18 books, coz it's '18! This is Book 7.
Aptly titled, this is my first read by the author. This is Book 1 of The Daycare Chronicles, a three book series by the same author.
Johnny Brubaker, an attorney and Tabitha Jones, a pediatric nurse; work together on a food truck. Can't get a more surprising beginning than that! What they are actually doing is that: Johnny is honouring his dead wife, Angel, while Tabitha is on the lookout for her missing two-year-old. They are partners in grief. He poses as the Dad to visit various daycares in search of young Jackson, while she helps him with the food truck which was Johnny's wife's dream. With three months to go for the end of Johnny's sabbatical, Tabitha couldn't help but feel a little sad. Sad that she hasn't yet found her son. Sad to think where she and Johnny would go from there.
Early in the first half of the story, Tabitha traces her son in a daycare centre, where he is enrolled with the name Jason and a false story. His emotionally unbalanced biological father, Mark, is responsible for his disappearance one year ago. Not a day goes by that Tabitha curses herself for having let Jackson go with him to visit his sick mother, who is now dead. Johnny is moved by the love Tabitha has for her son, a love he feels he didn't even have with his wife, Angel, not that passionate kind of love. He felt for her pain.
Set in Mission Viejo, the author subtly revealed the emotions of the MCs. It was heartening to see how the two of them comforted each other in their times of distress. Even while trying to recover from their respective loss, it's interesting to see them dampening the passion they feel for each other. The heroine seems to have a foot fetish since she can't stop praising the hero's feet. Haha! The time taken to grieve by following the passion of the deceased loved one is a great way to move forward, and seek closure, I think. It was cute, Johnny trying to do the right thing, and yet getting attracted to Tabitha, the cute part is him calling himself names on desiring her even when he deeply felt Tabitha's loss and pain. In the midst of this seriousness, the author manages to put one or two laugh out loud moments.
Mark is a really horrible person who did an abominable thing, separating a baby from his mother. He kidnapped Jackson. It's a pity they don't come face-to-face with Mark. An epilogue would have been nice though.
P.S. I'm reading a Harlequin Special Edition/M&B Cherish/True Love for the first time. And it is as it says..."Category: Home and Family, books featuring heroines finding the balance between their work life and personal life on the way to finding true love".
Reading this was a totally different experience.