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Meredith Summers Books

Lobster Bay Books 1-4 DISCOUNT Bundle (AUDIOBOOK)

Lobster Bay Books 1-4 DISCOUNT Bundle (AUDIOBOOK)

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Books Included In Bundle:

  • Saving Sandcastles
  • Changing Tides
  • Making Waves
  • Shifting Sands
  • BONUS BOOK: Reluctant Romance

Synopsis

This uplifting series is full of fun, friendship and food as well as real-life issues that women in their 40s and beyond have to face.

It’s not sad or angsty - we get enough of that in real life.

Everything is presented in a hopeful way and there’s always a happy ending that will leave you smiling.

Claire’s childhood crush is the one person who can ruin everything she’s worked for.

Jane made a promise she’s not sure she can keep.

Maxi’s husband has a secret, but it’s not what she thinks.

Andie is starting over and not sure where she really belongs.

“Nothing better than small-town cozy stories and Meredith Summers is the Queen of them!”
- Goodreads Reviewer

Each book in this series can be read as a standalone story.

There are no cliffhanger endings and every story is wrapped up at the end. The characters couldn’t stay out of each other’s books (they are best friends after all), so it’s a lot more fun to start at book 1.

Intro Into Chapter One

The new store across the street was nothing to worry about, Claire Turner assured herself as she slid the door to her bakery case open, bent down, and peered inside. Her two best friends were due to arrive any minute for their biweekly morning get-together, and she wanted to have their muffins and coffee ready. 

Hmm, what to choose? She had a variety of flavors—pistachio, chocolate, lemon poppyseed, orange-cranberry. As her hand hovered over the muffins, her attention wavered, drawn across the street again. Through the curved-glass front of the case, she could see that someone had painted the trim and put craft paper over the windows so no one could see inside. There was no sign announcing what kind of shop it was going to be. How odd. Probably just a beach store or shell shop. Lobster Bay had plenty of those, certainly nothing to concern Claire.

Not that she should be concerned. Her bakery, Sandcastles, was a popular destination for both residents and tourists in the sleepy beachside town. Business was booming. Good thing, too, because she’d put her heart and soul into her place, never mind her life savings. It had all been worth it to reinvent herself after her nasty divorce and prove that she could succeed all on her own.

Claire chose a variety of pastries then put them on a tray and navigated past the sandwich board, which announced her daily specials in brightly colored chalk, to an empty table on the brick sidewalk, where she could see the ocean at the end of the street. The sidewalks were wide, and the section in front of her café, designed for outdoor seating, was separated from the common walkways by tall planters loaded with lush leaves and colorful flowers. 

She’d barely set the tray down when she spotted her friends a few stores down. Jane, tall and willowy, was laughing at something Maxi had said. Warmth bloomed in Claire’s chest as she watched Jane’s unfettered smile. It wasn’t often that Jane smiled like that these days.

As Jane walked, she continually tucked strands of her new pixie haircut behind her ear, as if self-conscious about the change. The haircut suited her. The silvery-gray color complemented her fair skin tone, and the cut highlighted her delicate features. It was a big change for Jane, who hadn’t done much to her appearance since her husband died more than a decade ago. It was about time Jane started caring about herself again.

“I’ve got everything ready for you guys.” Claire greeted her friends with a hug and herded them to their seats, where their muffins and coffees—fixed the way she knew they liked them—were laid out. Jane fussed with her hair one more time then smoothed her white-and-navy striped tank top over her navy capri pants before sitting and placing a muffin and coffee mug in front of her. 

Maxi plopped down in her chair, took a sip, and let out a sigh. “Ahh, caffeine.” 

Maxi was dressed more casually than usual in a yellow-and-white flowing gypsy skirt and loose white top. Instead of thrusting her hair into a bun or a chignon, a style Claire suspected was encouraged by her husband, her blond hair was loose, the silver-tinged strands curling around her shoulders and tucked beneath the wide brim of a straw hat. 

“Is James away?” Claire brushed flour off her apron before sitting down. She wasn’t dressed nearly as nicely as her two friends in her usual uniform of frosting-stained apron over her plain gray T-shirt and jeans.

“Yep, conference in Ohio,” Maxi said around a mouthful of muffin.

Claire caught Jane’s raised-brow look from across the table. Maxi’s husband was the president of the Lobster Bay Bank, and Claire and Jane had noticed that Maxi always dressed more casually when he was away. Claire liked James, but she knew that he valued appearances, and casual was simply not a word in his repertoire.

“So how’s everything going with you guys?” Jane asked. 

“Great. I’m getting the house in order now that we have an empty nest.” Maxi plastered a smile on her face, but something in her tone told Claire that things might not be that great. Not that Claire would pry. They’d been friends long enough to respect each other’s privacy, and she knew Maxi would open up if she wanted to talk. 

“Good here,” Claire said. Forcing herself not to look at the mysterious shop across the street, she took a bite of the chocolate croissant. The dark chocolate filling was decadent enough to soothe her worries about the other shop, not to mention the small water stain she’d spotted in the ceiling of her own. “I’ve hired Sally to do some repairs.”

Like many of the buildings in the village, Sandcastles was quite old. Claire loved the vintage details—the tall tin ceilings, the crown molding, and the wide pine floors. But repairs came along with those. Luckily she ran her business well and had money in the budget for them, a fact of which she was proud. 

“She’ll do a good job,” Jane said. “We’ve had her do some things at Tides.”

“How are things going at Tides?” Jane’s family had owned the bed-and-breakfast on the beach for generations. It had been run by her great-grandparents then her grandparents then her parents. Jane’s dad had died long ago, and her mother, Addie, had run it on her own until her recent memory problems had surfaced. Jane had to take an early retirement from her accounting position so she could help out. Claire was never sure if she should ask Jane about Addie. She wanted Jane to know she cared, but she didn’t want to put a damper on the conversation if Addie was having one of her bad days.

“Things were going smoothly this morning. Mom was like her old self.” Jane looked at the watch on her wrist. “Which reminds me, I can’t stay too long. I need to get back to give Brenda a break.” 

“Of course.” Maxi looked at Jane with concern. “It’s good that your mom was like her old self.”

Jane nodded, absently breaking a piece off her muffin. She smiled, but Claire could see the worry in her eyes. “Let’s hope it lasts for a while.”

A burst of giggling pulled their attention to the street. A group of teenage girls in cover-ups that barely concealed anything stood on the sidewalk, clearly trying to capture the attention of the teenage boys lingering near the beach store on the corner. 

“Reminds you of when we were young, doesn’t it?” Jane’s half smile was wistful. 

Maxi rolled her eyes then shoved the rest of the muffin into her mouth, pulled a pencil from her straw bag, and proceeded to sketch onto her napkin. “That was a long time ago.”

Claire nibbled the flaky edge of her croissant. Memories of the three of them as teenagers bubbled up. Of course, the town had changed over the decades but not as much as one would think. Most of the quaint old buildings were still there, and though new houses and restaurants had been built somehow over the years, the town had retained its old-fashioned small-town vibe despite it becoming an increasingly popular tourist destination.

Claire, Jane, and Maxi had grown up there. They’d had a lot of fun as teens, especially in the summer, when the town’s population would swell with tourists. 

“Did we ever flirt like that?” Claire asked.

Jane laughed. “They seem a lot more accomplished at it. Do you remember how awkward it was when we were that age?”

Claire couldn’t help but smile. “It wasn’t all bumbling. I remember getting some results.”

Jane smirked. “I seem to remember you getting some results with one of the tourist boys near the cedar tree on the Marginal Way, Claire.”

Claire wrinkled her nose and waved her hand dismissively, avoiding her friend’s eye. “That was so long ago. Who could remember one particular boy?”

But Claire did remember, in a hazy, dreamlike way. The edges of the memory were misty, from a time when she’d brimmed with energy and innocence. It felt impossibly long ago, but she still recalled the hot summer night, the full moon rising over the ocean, and the boy who had given her one of her first kisses on the mile-long path that weaved along the ocean cliffs and led from Perkins Cove to the beach. 

It wasn’t like she thought of it often, but sometimes, the memory came up. Odd. With all the boys that had come after, including her ex-husband, she still thought about that one kiss. She didn’t even know who he was. She hadn’t seen him or his friends after that night. 

“What was his name?” Jane muttered to herself. “Teddy? Gerry?”

“Bobby,” Claire answered absently, still halfway trapped in that thirty-five-year-old memory. 

“So you do remember him.” Maxi glanced over slyly from her drawing. 

Claire blushed like she was fifteen again instead of turning fifty come the fall. “I don’t. Not really. I mean, it was thirty-five years ago. I doubt I’d recognize him if we met on the street.” 

Brushing her hair out of her narrowed eyes, Maxi looked at Claire like she didn’t believe the stammered excuse. 

Claire needed a change of topic. She pointed to the napkin Maxi had been working on. “That’s a great sketch.” 

Maxi glanced down and shrugged. “Just a doodle.” 

But it wasn’t just a doodle. It showed one of the girls looking up, enraptured, at a boy whose figure was ominously in shadow. The sketch was exquisite and intricately detailed from what Claire could see before Maxi quickly shoved it into her bag. 

“I have to get back.” Jane looked apologetic.

Claire jumped up, her chair screeching along the bricks as she stood. She turned to face Jane, who started gathering up the trash on the table. 

“Wait here a minute. I’ll get you some muffins for Addie.” 

Claire disappeared into the shop. She found the bag she’d set in a corner earlier—not near the back where she suspected the roof leaked—and hurried back out. She passed the bag to Jane as she hugged her. “I know how Addie loves these.”

Jane smiled and clutched her tight. “Thank you. I really appreciate it.”

Claire beamed. “What are friends for?”

She hugged Maxi as well. As she pulled away, her gaze settled on the store across the street again. The teens had moved on, and now she had an unobstructed view. Her smile faded. 

Her friends must have noticed because they both turned their gaze in that direction.

“Oh! I forgot to mention, I know who’s moving in over there.” Jane’s tone held a hint of excitement at knowing a secret.

“Really? Who?” Claire tried to keep the anxiety out of her voice.

“Bradford Breads.”

Claire’s stomach swooped. She snapped her gaze from the store across the street to Jane. “A bakery?”

“It’s not really a bakery,” Jane said. “Not like yours. They only sell bread.”

Claire glanced back at the store. The papered windows seemed to glare at her menacingly. Where had she heard of Bradford Breads before? Weren’t they some sort of chain? Chain stores were always the bane of the small business owner. Better recognition, lower overhead, and therefore, lower prices.

“Claire?” Maxi was staring at her. “Surely you aren’t worried about them. They don’t sell pastries like you do.”

“Yeah,” Jane agreed. “I went to one of the stores up in Bar Harbor years ago. They make good bread but no pastries, and certainly no sandcastle cakes. It’s a totally different product. Besides, no one can hold a candle to your baked goods.”

Her friends were right. She only sold a few types of bread. She was overreacting. She plastered on a smile so her friends wouldn’t worry. “You’re right of course. It’s just a little disturbing that a bakery would move in across the street from another bakery.”

Jane shrugged. “Maybe not. Since you don’t sell bread, it could be a strategic move. Once the customers get their pastries at Sandcastles, they can pick up fresh-baked bread at Bradfords.”

Or skip buying pastries and just get the bread. 

Claire pushed the thought away. Now she was being paranoid. “I suppose you’re right. Nothing to worry about at all.”

The response appeared to put her friends at ease, and they left. But as Claire picked up the tray and made her way back into the bakery, she couldn’t suppress that seed of worry that insisted on pushing its way into her thoughts.

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Grab the first FOUR BOOKS  in the USA TODAY Bestselling Lobster Bay series for ONE low price!

Cozy beach reads that will keep you laughing!

Charming seaside setting on the coast of Maine.

Humorous and heartwarming stories about strong women with just a splash of romance.

Standalone stories can be read individually, but are much better when you start with book 1: Saving Sandcastles.

READ AN EXCERPT:

Claire needed as many cupcakes as possible, so despite the fact that she had two helpers coming that evening, she started baking as soon as she could the day after their strategy meeting.

She began with the cupcakes she knew would sell the best, the flavors that flew off the shelves. Despite Sandee’s disdain for them, chocolate and vanilla were crowd pleasers. Everyone loved them, and she consistently sold the most of them. She started with one batch of each. While they were baking in her industrial oven, she set a timer on her phone and went out front to help Hailey. 

Mentally cataloguing all the things she had to do and in what order, Claire whisked away several errant dishes from customers who hadn’t returned them to the front, wiping down the tables as she went. As she bent over one of the tables in front of the window, she smiled at Harry and Bert, sitting with their coffees in hand. They were drinking leisurely despite the clouds rolling in from the west. 

“Good morning, gentlemen. Are you enjoying your coffees?”

“Always do,” Bert said, tipping his up to take a sip from it.

“We can’t wait for that cupcake sale,” Harry added. “We saw the advertisement in the paper. Very classy.”

“Thank you.” She couldn’t really take credit for that. Due to the last-minute rush for the ad, she hadn’t been able to design anything and had left that to Mona. But Bert and Harry didn’t need to know that.

“And the sign you have outside is quite something. I don’t suppose you have samples of some of the flavors you’ll be selling on Saturday?” Bert added.

Claire laughed. “Not today, I’m afraid. I’ve got plain old chocolate and vanilla in the oven right now. But if you come back tomorrow, I’ll try to keep a small sample aside for two of my best customers.”

The old men beamed. “We’ll hold you to that,” Harry said. Bert nodded in agreement. 

As Claire straightened, her gaze was drawn to the stream of tourists walking past the banner that Stacy had made for the sale. She was pleased to see potential customers craning their necks to look. A few even stopped and headed inside despite the sign advertising a sale coming on Saturday. Claire’s chest swelled at the sight of her bustling business. Getting Stacy to fast-track the sign had been the right decision. 

The warm bubble in her chest burst as her gaze lifted from her cheery pink-and-yellow sign to the blatant red Grand Opening sign on the shop across the street. Claire chewed on the inside of her cheek and turned away. She had too much to do to start worrying about that. 

As she headed into the kitchen area, balancing the dishes on her arms, Sally appeared from the hall that led to the bathrooms, where she had been fixing the leak. Claire slipped the dishes onto the counter next to the coffee and faced her. 

“Finished?”

Sally nodded. “I think it should hold for a while.”

Claire’s shoulders relaxed with relief, but then she became wary of the smirk on Sally’s face as the handywoman’s gaze travelled past her to the front of the store. 

“Looks like you have company. I’m going to grab a coffee.”

“Huh?” Claire turned as the bell above the door chimed. Her gaze landed squarely on the man filling her doorway. 

The guy from Bradford Breads. In her store. He paused in the threshold, letting the door fall back into its frame as he scanned the interior of the bakery. Was he examining her products? Trying to figure out how to best compete?

Wiping her hands on her apron, she left the safety of the kitchen area and headed out front. When he saw her, he smiled, the expression deepening the attractive crow’s-feet at the corners of his sapphire eyes. She didn’t return the smile. 

Undaunted, he stepped forward to meet her halfway with a hand extended. “You must be the owner of Sandcastles.” 

Reluctantly, Claire slipped her hand into his. His palm was large and warm, with interesting callouses along the knuckles. She gave him a firm handshake, refusing to show even the slightest bit of weakness. Chin held high, she answered, “I am. Claire Turner.”

“I’m Rob Bradford. I own the bakery across the street. Do you have a minute to talk?” 

So, he was the owner. Claire hadn’t wanted to believe Jane. She wanted the owner to be the soft, balding, work-avoiding guy that she envisioned getting out of his flashy red car with the blond trophy wife. This guy didn’t look anything like that.

She took her phone out of her pocket, quickly checking the time left on the cupcakes she was baking. Seven minutes and counting. She stuffed the phone back into the pocket of her apron and looked Rob Bradford in the eyes, which—her brain happened to inform her, even though she really didn’t want to know—were a pleasingly deep sapphire blue. “I only have seven minutes. Let’s talk outside.”

Something flashed across his face, indefinable and gone in an instant, but it left something niggling in the back of Claire’s mind. The expression had reminded her of something, but she couldn’t think of what. 

The sky had darkened. Appropriate for their meeting, Claire thought as she led him to the farthest table she’d set out on the walkway and sat across from him. Her fingers itched for something to do. Rather than drum them on the table, she linked her hands together in front of her and resisted the urge to look at the timer on her phone.

He flashed her a charming smile that emphasized the cleft in his chin, and she got a funny feeling of déjà vu. “So, I suppose you’ve noticed that I’m opening soon.”

Claire raised a brow. Did the guy think she was blind? “Of course. Is that why you came over?”

His smile faltered. Clearly he’d been expecting her to fall for his charms. The bakery owners that he’d surely put out of business in the other towns he’d infiltrated probably crumbled at those perfect teeth and the appealing crinkles around his eyes. He probably expected her to do the same and acquiesce to his plan for town dominance of baked goods. 

Claire smiled inwardly knowing that her frosty response had thrown him off balance.

He cleared his throat. “I was thinking we should team up. If we combine our efforts, we could both benefit. Take the sale—there’s no reason customers visiting the grand opening of my store won’t want to step across the road and pick up a batch of cupcakes and vice versa. We can help one another.”

Sure they could. Claire imagined how he would maneuver things in his favor. If they worked together, he would know more about her resources. He would be able to figure out ways to hurt her business. That wasn’t going to happen, but she didn’t want to let on that she was on to him—better to let him think she was naive and unaware of his plans. 

With a tight smile, she told him, “I’ll think about it. Right at the moment, though, I’m very busy.”

He looked surprised at her bluntness. Frankly she couldn’t blame him. She had come off a bit ruder than she’d intended. Oh well, better to let him know right off the bat that they were not going to be friends. 

As she stood, he did too. He flashed her an uncertain smile. That time a dimple winked in and out of life in his left cheek, making him seem almost boyish. Something in his blue eyes, a twinkle, brought back memories.

It was him. Bobby from under the cedar tree. That one magical kiss of her youth that she’d never forgotten. He was standing right in front of her, thirty-five years later.

Memories of that night came rushing back to her, as if she were there again: the darkness sheltering their shyness and making them braver, her heart fluttering in her throat as she leaned into the kiss, the hope that she would see him again the next day, get to know him better, steal another kiss. 

But then there was the bitter disappointment she’d felt at not finding him on the beach or in town the next day, the next night, all through the next week. She’d learned through a friend of a friend that he and his family had left Lobster Bay. Their vacation had ended. He hadn’t said goodbye. He hadn’t made contact with her again. 

And even if their kiss had predated the days of Facebook or cell phones and she’d been too swept up to remember to give him her number, he could have found her if he’d only put in a little effort. If anything, the way he’d kissed her and left town without a second thought only proved that he wasn’t to be trusted. 

She realized that she was standing in front of him, gawking, not saying a word. He appeared to be too absorbed in his own thoughts to call her on her peculiar behavior. His forehead was wrinkled with concentration, that teasing look replaced with something else. Something pensive. 

He tucked his hands into his pockets, curling his shoulders inward like he was a sheepish teenager. “There’s something familiar about you. Have we met before?”

Panic surfaced. She couldn’t let him know she remembered. That might give him an advantage. And maybe her pride was a bit wounded that he’d never made an effort to contact her. She didn’t want to give him the satisfaction of knowing she remembered that long-ago kiss.

She crossed her arms over her chest. “Have you been to Lobster Bay before?”

“I have. It was a long time ago, when I was a teenager. I vacationed here with my family. I think I met a girl named Claire.”

“Really? Huh, I don’t remember you, but there are a lot of girls named Claire. I’m sure it wasn’t me.”

He stared at her for a few more seconds then smiled again. “Sorry. You seemed familiar.”

She cleared her throat and turned away. “If you’ll excuse me, I have a business to run. I’ll think about your offer to work together.”

She managed to reach the door to her bakery without turning back to look at him, but as she opened it, the itch between her shoulder blades grew unbearable. She turned to pull the door shut behind her, taking the opportunity to look at him one more time. He stepped off the curb to cross the street, his strides long and confident. His polo shirt clung to his shoulders, framing the line of his body as he crossed smoothly toward his store on long legs. 

One thing was for sure, he hadn’t lost any of his good looks in the past thirty-five years. If anything, he’d filled out from the lanky teenager into a distinguished man who probably drew the eye of any woman with a pulse. 

That included Sally, who lurked by the doorway, watching him leave, and made an appreciative sound under her breath. Claire sighed, then her brows snapped together. 

What was burning?

Jerking the phone from her pocket, she checked her timer only to find that she had turned it on silent by accident. Her alarm had already gone off. 

Oh no—my cupcakes!