Perfect Fit

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Authors: Taige Crenshaw

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BOOK: Perfect Fit
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Table of Contents

Legal Page

Title Page

Book Description

Dedication

Trademarks Acknowledgement

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

New Excerpt

About the Author

Publisher Page

A Total-E-Bound Publication

www.total-e-bound.com

Perfect Fit

ISBN # 978-1-78184-812-8

©Copyright Taige Crenshaw 2013

Cover Art by Posh Gosh ©Copyright October 2013

Edited by Rebecca Douglas

Total-E-Bound Publishing

This is a work of fiction. All characters, places and events are from the author’s imagination and should not be confused with fact. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, events or places is purely coincidental.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any material form, whether by printing, photocopying, scanning or otherwise without the written permission of the publisher, Total-E-Bound Publishing.

Applications should be addressed in the first instance, in writing, to Total-E-Bound Publishing. Unauthorised or restricted acts in relation to this publication may result in civil proceedings and/or criminal prosecution.

The author and illustrator have asserted their respective rights under the Copyright Designs and Patents Acts 1988 (as amended) to be identified as the author of this book and illustrator of the artwork.

Published in 2013 by Total-E-Bound Publishing, Think Tank, Ruston Way, Lincoln, LN6 7FL, United Kingdom.

Warning:

This book contains sexually explicit content which is only suitable for mature readers. This story has a
heat rating
of
Total-e-burning
and a
sexometer
of
2.

This story contains 140 pages, additionally there is also a
free excerpt
at the end of the book containing 13 pages.

Singleton

PERFECT FIT

Taige Crenshaw

Book Two in the Singleton Series

When your love for someone is tested, how do you get beyond the silence and pain to get back to what made you become an us…?

After a busy day, Regina Jacobs gets home to the empty house she used to share with her husband. The sight of the divorce papers waiting for her devastates her. She loves her husband and although they have not lived together for a while or even really talked, she’d thought they could work it out. She pushes off the hurt and embraces the fury. She won’t give up her ‘us’ without a fight. Determined to reclaim the man who she has known was hers from the time she was a teenager, Regina seeks out her husband—the man who knows her heart, soul and body, and sets each aflame.

Spencer Jacobs knows he is doing the right thing in filing for divorce. It is painful but he knows it is necessary. He loves Regina but sometimes love is not enough. When Regina comes to him after receiving the papers, Spencer doesn’t know what to make of her words that he was giving up so easily on them. He’d already fought for them, and is bruised and battered from the loss of the woman who makes him forget all else but being hers. It will take everything he has to return, and this time he know failure means the end.

Can two people who have let the silence between them linger too long find each other again? It will take opening the wounds that led to the silence and getting back to the basic belief to rebuild what has been broken. For these two there is no one else that matches them. Together they are the other half of a…
Perfect Fit
.

Dedication

To my mother, who has always been my number one fan. Because of
you,
I love to read and write. To my big sister and second mother who has always believed in me.

Trademarks Acknowledgement

The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of the following wordmarks mentioned in this work of fiction:

Subaru Tribeca: Fuji Heavy Industries

Bones
: Fox Broadcasting Company

Subaru Forester: Fuji Heavy Industries

War Paint
:
Lorrie Morgan and
Tom Shapiro

George Foreman: Spectrum Brands, Inc.

We Gon’ Fight
: Durrell Babbs and Antonio Dixon

One
: Bono

Trust
: Keyshia Cole and F. Taylor

Toyota Sequoia: Toyota Motor Corporation

Mirrors
: Justin Timberlake, Timothy Mosley, Jerome ‘J-Roc’ Harmon and James Fauntleroy

Escalade: Cadillac, General Motors Company

White Palace
: Universal Pictures

Chapter One

Regina Jacobs rubbed her temple, grateful to finally be home. The duffel bag and purse on her shoulder felt like they weighed a hundred pounds, but Regina knew it was just her tiredness. The three-day event for the Locke family gathering had been fun, but a lot of work, so now on the last day she was feeling tired. The event was held annually, on Labor Day weekend, and she and her partners in Moments—the event planning company she co-owned—always looked forward to planning and attending. They also couldn’t wait to start their sort-of break. Although they still worked at the offices, they had no functions scheduled for three weeks after the Friday before Labor Day, and this year they’d extended the break to four weeks—Regina was looking forward to the time to rejuvenate and getting ready for the rest of the year.

She walked up the steps to the porch then paused, thinking about the news of Julianne Locke and Keenan Callaghan’s engagement. Regina was happy her best friend Julianne had found someone to love again. Regina pressed her hand against her chest as she felt a pang of pain and regret for her own situation. It had happened earlier too, when Julianne had shared her news at the gathering. The joy she felt for Julianne was tempered by her own estrangement from her husband, Spencer Jacobs. Regina wondered for the umpteenth time how had it become so bad that she’d ended up living apart from the man who had her heart and soul.

Just the thought of him lit her body with want. He was less than ten minutes away from their home, but he could be on another planet for how large the space between them was. She pressed her palm against her stomach, the fluttering sensation increasing. Regina shook off thoughts of her husband and headed to the door of the house. She opened it and went to step in, but stopped when she spotted an envelope that looked as if it had been pushed under her door. The house alarm beeped a warning, and she stepped over the envelope and punched in the code to disarm it. She placed her duffel on the floor by the entry table beside the front door, and her purse on the surface.

Unsure what the envelope could be, she went back to it and squatted down to look. Her breath caught as she recognised the scrawled writing on it as her husband’s. Her heart ached as she saw
‘Regina
’ instead of Reggie, what he usually called her. She took a breath then picked up the envelope and opened it quickly, expecting a letter.

Maybe he wants to work things out. That w—
Shock and hurt filled Regina as she read the top of the sheaf of papers. In the next moment, she shook as rage blossomed through her, pushing every other emotion out. She shut down, thinking what the papers meant. Rising, she reached to retrieve her purse. She turned the lock on her front door, then pivoted on her feet, stepping outside and slamming the door behind her. With rapid steps, she descended the stairs and strode to her vehicle. In moments, she was inside, starting the SUV and driving around the circular drive back towards the entrance of the property. She made a right onto Simmons Avenue, then gunned the engine. There wasn’t far to go, but the minutes felt like an eternity. She tightened her hands on the wheel, then released as she breathed in and out, working to calm her temper. Finally, in ten minutes, she turned into a road, stopping before the gates. She had forgotten about them. How was she going to get in?

“Damn, I did—” She watched as the gates opened. “Humph. So he was expecting me.” Regina drove through the open gates and up to the house.

The sprawling, two-storey, ranch style house was very similar to the outer exterior of her own, but the differences, especially inside, showed the tastes of their owners. The house in front of her was more organised and contained, while hers was more comfortable and homey. She parked, grabbed the papers, then was out of her vehicle, rushing across the drive to the steps and up them to the front door. She raised her fist to knock, not caring to press the doorbell. The door swung open before she could.

“I didn’t hear the bell.” The man who had opened the door was looking behind him. “What do you mean the door is fo—” He turned his head and blinked.

Although she was pissed off, Regina’s knees went weak as she viewed the familiar, deep blue-eyes. Unconsciously, she studied his blond hair that fell in messy disarray around his sexy face. His porcelain skin was paler than usual.
He looks so tired. Is he not sleeping? Oh, Spencer, you always work yourself so hard that you forget to sleep or eat.
His lean frame was even skinnier than usual.

“Regina—”

At the sound of her full name, Regina’s concern dissipated and she focused on why she was here. She slapped the papers against his chest.

He took them and gazed at them, shaking his head.


You coward
. Dropping this off when you knew I wasn’t home.” She pushed past him into the house.

She didn’t see who he had been talking to when he’d opened the door, but she knew they were smart enough to make themselves scarce. Regina crossed her arms over her chest and turned, waiting for him to say something.

“Don’t make this difficult, Regina. I—”

“You don’t get to say that. Don’t get to call this just ‘difficult’.” Regina advanced on him. “You left divorce papers under my door, Spencer.” She said his whole name, since he was using hers. “
Divorce papers
,” she spat the words out, shaking at the thought. “Under my door, when you knew I would be at the gathering.”

The guilt on his face showed he knew what he had been doing.

“If you want a divorce, you should be man enough to say it to my face.” Regina lifted her hand, pointing at him. “Not this way. So cold and detached. Like we meant not—” Her voice broke, and she cleared her throat, battling back tears. “Nothing. The years we had meant less than the shit on your shoes.”

“Regina. I couldn’t”—he took a step towards her—“face you. I can’t look at you and ask for this.” He held up the papers.

Hope filled her, and Regina stepped to him.

“But we have to do this. We’ve put it off long enough.” Spencer’s tone was firm.

She stopped and stared at him in disbelief. “Long enough. Is that all our marriage means to you? A long enough time?”

“You’re twisting my words, Regina. We haven’t been man and wife for a couple of years.” Spencer rubbed his hand over his face, and when he lowered it, he looked even more tired.

“Spencer, we have some problems, and we can wo—”

“How would we work thorough them? You won’t talk with me,” he said quietly.

Regina flinched at the softness. When Spencer lowered his voice it was equivalent to a shout, since he rarely lifted his voice when angry or making a point.

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