Blog Tour~ Mister Wrong by Nicole Williams
Cora Matthews grew up with the Adams boys, twin brothers and best friends who wouldnāt let anything come between them except for one thingāher. One of them became her best friend, the other, her fiancĆ©.
She always knew sheād wind up marrying one of them, and Jacob Adams is the very epitome of Mister Right. At least he is up until he fails to show up for their wedding day. Not that Cora realizes it. At first.
As Jacobās best man, and identical twin, Matt makes a split second decision, but one that will affect the three of their lives foreverāhe steps in to take his brotherās place. In front of the altar, exchanging vows with the woman heās secretly been in love with for years.
Cora eventually finds out about the groom swap. The morning after the wedding. As if realizing she just slept with her fianceās brother wasnāt disturbing enough, sheās forced to confront her feelings for Matt Adams she thought sheād buried years ago.
Mattās wrong for her. In every way. But through the course of her real honeymoon with her fake husband, she starts to uncover truths both Adams brothers were hoping to keep hidden, for opposite reasons. One to protect himself, the other to protect her.
She married the wrong brother, but what if heās been the right one all along?
She always knew sheād wind up marrying one of them, and Jacob Adams is the very epitome of Mister Right. At least he is up until he fails to show up for their wedding day. Not that Cora realizes it. At first.
As Jacobās best man, and identical twin, Matt makes a split second decision, but one that will affect the three of their lives foreverāhe steps in to take his brotherās place. In front of the altar, exchanging vows with the woman heās secretly been in love with for years.
Cora eventually finds out about the groom swap. The morning after the wedding. As if realizing she just slept with her fianceās brother wasnāt disturbing enough, sheās forced to confront her feelings for Matt Adams she thought sheād buried years ago.
Mattās wrong for her. In every way. But through the course of her real honeymoon with her fake husband, she starts to uncover truths both Adams brothers were hoping to keep hidden, for opposite reasons. One to protect himself, the other to protect her.
She married the wrong brother, but what if heās been the right one all along?
āSo?ā I crossed my arms and leaned into the banister behind me. āDid you? Like my brother?ā
She sighed, turning toward the open door. āJacob . . .ā
āWhat? Itās a fair question.ā I shoved off the banister, feeling hope and heat tangling in my veins from the look on her face, from the sound of her voice. Sheād felt something for me, whether it be the most passing of crushes or something much deeper. Realizing that had me feeling drunk from something other than alcohol. āBesides, youāre stuck with me now. Wonāt matter what you āfess up to.ā
Cora started through the doorway. āI donāt want to talk about it.ā
Grabbing the suitcases, I followed her. I wasnāt letting this go. Never. Not if she threatened death or castration or anything else. āWhy not?ā
She broke to a sudden stop a few feet inside the room. āBecause I donāt want to focus on the past. I want to concentrate on the future. Thatās not going to work if you keep asking me questions about Matt.ā
There was a sharpness in her voiceāone she didnāt use too often. She didnāt want to keep talking about me, which only made me want to continue talking about me. Iād struck a nerve, but I wasnāt sure how deep that nerve went.
I needed to know how deep it went. I had to know. My whole life, Iād been under the impression that Cora saw me as nothing more than a good friend and substitute brother. She cared for me, but not in the same way I cared for her.
Or did she?
āThis thing with Matt . . .ā
Her back stiffened.
āWas it a thing? Like ancient history? Or is it still a thing?ā I closed the door and wondered why I could feel my heartbeat in my eardrums.
She kept her back to me, standing in the middle of the dark room like a lone ship on a vast ocean. āI married you.ā
Yeah, she did marry me.
āBut if heād made a play for you, way back before all of thisāāI waved my finger between the two of us, not that she could see itāāwould you have given him a chance?ā
āHe never made a play for me.ā Her voice sounded faraway, like she was out of reach when she was less than an armās length away.
āThat doesnāt answer my question.ā I stepped closer. āIf he had? Would you have?ā
Her back was moving faster from her quickened breathing. This conversation was making her uncomfortable. Why was that?
āStop, Jacob. Enough.ā She spun on me, swaying in place just enough that I reached out to steady her. She shook my hand away like it was white-hot. āIām not going to get into another fight with you over Matt. Iām done. I picked you. I married you. What else do I have to prove?ā
āThat you donātāā
āI donāt love Matt!ā Her arms flung out at her sides as her voice spilled across the room. āThere. I said it. Are you happy now? Are you happy weāve managed to get into another argument over this infatuation youāre convinced I have for your brother? On our wedding night of all times?ā She glared at me with bleary eyes. I couldnāt tell if that was from tears or from alcohol. Maybe both.
āCora, Iām sorry.ā I ran my hands through my hair, wondering what in the hell I was doingāfor the millionth time that day. Deceiving her, betraying her, and now accusing and angering her. Maybe I didnāt know the first fucking thing about love. Maybe Jacob knew more about it than I did, because I wasnāt sure love was supposed to hurt as badly as this did.
āJust . . . enough already.ā As she shouldered past me, I reached for her, but she shook me off. āI need to be alone.ā
She slammed the front door behind her a moment later, leaving me alone with my idiocy.
āCora,ā I called to an empty room. I wasnāt thinking when I rushed toward the door after her. āCora!ā
The moment I pulled the door open, something crashed into me. It made a sharp breath rush out of my mouth as I staggered back a few steps.
My arms barely had time to wrap around her before Coraās mouth was on mine, moving in such a way that made staying upright next to impossible. Before I had a chance to catch up to the fact that I was kissing Cora in an entirely different way than weād kissed at the wedding and reception, her fingers were working at my belt. Quickly.
I didnāt know sheād already gotten it undone before sheād moved on to my zipper. The sounds she was making as she kissed me, the way her body felt aligned against mine, the way her mouth knew the intricate balance of submission and domination . . . one moment at a time, Cora was crushing the last remnants of my resolve. Destroying the final pieces of my views of right and wrong.
She sighed, turning toward the open door. āJacob . . .ā
āWhat? Itās a fair question.ā I shoved off the banister, feeling hope and heat tangling in my veins from the look on her face, from the sound of her voice. Sheād felt something for me, whether it be the most passing of crushes or something much deeper. Realizing that had me feeling drunk from something other than alcohol. āBesides, youāre stuck with me now. Wonāt matter what you āfess up to.ā
Cora started through the doorway. āI donāt want to talk about it.ā
Grabbing the suitcases, I followed her. I wasnāt letting this go. Never. Not if she threatened death or castration or anything else. āWhy not?ā
She broke to a sudden stop a few feet inside the room. āBecause I donāt want to focus on the past. I want to concentrate on the future. Thatās not going to work if you keep asking me questions about Matt.ā
There was a sharpness in her voiceāone she didnāt use too often. She didnāt want to keep talking about me, which only made me want to continue talking about me. Iād struck a nerve, but I wasnāt sure how deep that nerve went.
I needed to know how deep it went. I had to know. My whole life, Iād been under the impression that Cora saw me as nothing more than a good friend and substitute brother. She cared for me, but not in the same way I cared for her.
Or did she?
āThis thing with Matt . . .ā
Her back stiffened.
āWas it a thing? Like ancient history? Or is it still a thing?ā I closed the door and wondered why I could feel my heartbeat in my eardrums.
She kept her back to me, standing in the middle of the dark room like a lone ship on a vast ocean. āI married you.ā
Yeah, she did marry me.
āBut if heād made a play for you, way back before all of thisāāI waved my finger between the two of us, not that she could see itāāwould you have given him a chance?ā
āHe never made a play for me.ā Her voice sounded faraway, like she was out of reach when she was less than an armās length away.
āThat doesnāt answer my question.ā I stepped closer. āIf he had? Would you have?ā
Her back was moving faster from her quickened breathing. This conversation was making her uncomfortable. Why was that?
āStop, Jacob. Enough.ā She spun on me, swaying in place just enough that I reached out to steady her. She shook my hand away like it was white-hot. āIām not going to get into another fight with you over Matt. Iām done. I picked you. I married you. What else do I have to prove?ā
āThat you donātāā
āI donāt love Matt!ā Her arms flung out at her sides as her voice spilled across the room. āThere. I said it. Are you happy now? Are you happy weāve managed to get into another argument over this infatuation youāre convinced I have for your brother? On our wedding night of all times?ā She glared at me with bleary eyes. I couldnāt tell if that was from tears or from alcohol. Maybe both.
āCora, Iām sorry.ā I ran my hands through my hair, wondering what in the hell I was doingāfor the millionth time that day. Deceiving her, betraying her, and now accusing and angering her. Maybe I didnāt know the first fucking thing about love. Maybe Jacob knew more about it than I did, because I wasnāt sure love was supposed to hurt as badly as this did.
āJust . . . enough already.ā As she shouldered past me, I reached for her, but she shook me off. āI need to be alone.ā
She slammed the front door behind her a moment later, leaving me alone with my idiocy.
āCora,ā I called to an empty room. I wasnāt thinking when I rushed toward the door after her. āCora!ā
The moment I pulled the door open, something crashed into me. It made a sharp breath rush out of my mouth as I staggered back a few steps.
My arms barely had time to wrap around her before Coraās mouth was on mine, moving in such a way that made staying upright next to impossible. Before I had a chance to catch up to the fact that I was kissing Cora in an entirely different way than weād kissed at the wedding and reception, her fingers were working at my belt. Quickly.
I didnāt know sheād already gotten it undone before sheād moved on to my zipper. The sounds she was making as she kissed me, the way her body felt aligned against mine, the way her mouth knew the intricate balance of submission and domination . . . one moment at a time, Cora was crushing the last remnants of my resolve. Destroying the final pieces of my views of right and wrong.
Nicole Williams is the New York Times and USATODAY bestselling author of contemporary and young adult romance, including the Crash and Lost & Found series. Her books have been published by HarperTeen and Simon & Schuster in both domestic and foreign markets, while she continues to self-publish additional titles. She is working on a new YA series with Crown Books (a division of Random House) as well. She loves romance, from the sweet to the steamy, and writes stories about characters in search of their happily even after. She grew up surrounded by books and plans on writing until the day she dies, even if itās just for her own personal enjoyment. She still buys paperbacks because sheās all nostalgic like that, but her kindle never goes neglected for too long. When not writing, she spends her time with her husband and daughter, and whatever timeās left over sheās forced to fit too many hobbies into too little time.
Nicole is represented by Jane Dystel, of Dystel and Goderich Literary Agency.
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