She canceled the wedding. Rebooked the honeymoon villa alone. What she never expected was him waiting in the kitchen. Grace Mercer arrives at her dream villa in Fiesole with forty-eight hours of solo Tuscan bliss ahead - golden light, perfect gelato, and zero drama. Instead she finds Marco Voss: the razor-sharp New Yorker critic who once tore apart her cookbook in print. and who holds the exact same booking confirmation.
Two bedrooms. One set of house rules. Zero intention of falling. But as they share secret hillside markets, midnight walks along the Arno, and one unforgettable guinea-fowl dinner, the rules start to melt faster than gelato in September sun. One perfect tomato. One honest conversation. One kiss at the villa gate. In exactly forty-eight hours, everything changes. A sensual, slow-burn contemporary romance about food, honesty, second chances, and the invisible ingredient that makes life (and love) taste like more.
Perfect for fans of The Unhoneymooners, One Italian Summer, and anyone who believes Italy can fix almost anything.
She canceled the wedding. Rebooked the honeymoon villa alone. What she never expected was him waiting in the kitchen. Grace Mercer arrives at her dream villa in Fiesole with forty-eight hours of solo Tuscan bliss ahead - golden light, perfect gelato, and zero drama. Instead she finds Marco Voss: the razor-sharp New Yorker critic who once tore apart her cookbook in print. and who holds the exact same booking confirmation.
Two bedrooms. One set of house rules. Zero intention of falling. But as they share secret hillside markets, midnight walks along the Arno, and one unforgettable guinea-fowl dinner, the rules start to melt faster than gelato in September sun. One perfect tomato. One honest conversation. One kiss at the villa gate. In exactly forty-eight hours, everything changes. A sensual, slow-burn contemporary romance about food, honesty, second chances, and the invisible ingredient that makes life (and love) taste like more.
Perfect for fans of The Unhoneymooners, One Italian Summer, and anyone who believes Italy can fix almost anything.