
TURNABOUT BY LAUREL GREER
Release Date: May 6, 2021
Purchase here β https://geni.us/AmazonTurnabout
Add to Goodreads β https://bit.ly/35VpOWG
Series Page β https://hearteyespress.com/wotn#/vino-and-veritas/
All the links in one spot β https://shor.by/vino-and-veritas

About the Book:
I donβt have time for an unplanned visit home to help out in my fatherβs struggling letterpress shop. My stint in Vermont will have to be short, for a couple of reasons:
One, Iβm a busy executive trying to climb the corporate ladder.
Two, my ex is still my dadβs right-hand man in the shop. And I am not over him.
Nothing has changed at the Burlington shop. Auden still has his infuriatingly sexy Scottish accent. Heβs still hot, and still stubborn. Between operating the antique press with his shirtsleeves rolled up, and moonlighting at Burlingtonβs hottest inclusive wine bar, he pushes every one of my attraction buttons.
My falling-in-love-again buttons, too. Except Iβm his polar opposite. I love change, and taking chances. Everything he avoids in life.
So why am I trying to convince him to reach for more than weβve ever dreamed ofβthe possibility of forever?
Turnabout is a second-chance romance with interfering family, groveling, and a large helping of artisan stationery geekery.

Excerpt:
He lifts a dark eyebrow. βI said, I want to work with someone willing to wallow with paper and design. Tease out the one-of-a-kind magic.β
His voice is quiet, soothing. It demands I take a deep breath and get out of my feelings.
βIβve been reminded of how much of an art it is,β I say. βAnd that I can get by, but youβyou have a gift.β
Rosy splotches bloom on his cheeks. βYou know what youβre doing, too.β
βI donβt have the rhythm of it like you do. The innateβ¦ mastery, I guess. The relationship.β
Auden tilts his head and looks out the front window.
βWhat?β I ask. βHeβs not coming back.β
βI know, but hearing the words rhythm and mastery and relationship when it comes to using a press… I’m looking for locusts, frogs, horsemenβany sign of the apocalypse.β
βFuck off,β I mutter.
Rhythm, mastery.
When he repeats the words like that, Iβm not thinking of cast iron machinesβIβm thinking about sex.
I canβt believe he didnβt call me on how filthy that sounded.
Heβs biting his lip, still a little pink in the face.
Okay, maybe heβs thinking it, at least.
βI could show you,β he says.
Meeting his gaze is like swimming in a lake, when you dive down, down on a bright day, and you have the dark depths below, and the streams of light from above, and it blends around you like youβre wearing a crown of green water and sunlight.
Holy fuck. Heβs too much sometimes.
βCome here.β He crooks a finger for me to meet him at the Chandler and Price.
Definitely too much.
I join him anyway.
He takes my left hand and places it on the small shelf on the front of the press where weβd normally collect the cards during a run. The wood is smooth. And it would feel exactly like palming a flat piece of wood always does, except his big hand covers mine.
βArtisanry demands that relationship.β His voice is insanely low, but heβs only inches from me, so I donβt miss a syllable.
βIβm not anββ
βYou have the artistic talent. You just need a little patience.β He puts his other hand on my right hip and positions me square to the press. He taps his toe against my heel, a silent command to put my foot on the treadle.
βWeβre missing some parts.β Paper. Ink. The frame. Everything that actually turns into a product.
βWeβre not making anything.β Heβs at an angle to me. If he leaned forward three inches, his dick would be pressed into my hip. His left hand is still holding mine to the shelf. The other is a heavy weight just below my waist.
βI donβt understand,β I say.
βJust watch it, Carter.β He sounds amused. βYou want to know every quirk. And not to try to learn when youβre rushing through eight jobs at once. When you have time to go easy.β
βReally.β
βReally,β he says. βGrip the wood with your other hand, too.β
βGrip the wood? Youβre fucking with me.β
βA little.β I canβt see his face from where he is behind me, but I hear his smirk.
A little? A lot. I grab hold of the shelf anyway.
βJust work the treadle,β he says.
I press my toe into the pedal, making the flywheel whir.
βAnd listen,β he says. βWatch.β
I do that, too.
Iβve been so damn busy since I got hereβpaper in, paper out, paper in, paper outβI havenβt actually watched anything Iβve done.
The rollers, mesmerizing as they glide over the circular, iron platen.
βWhat colorβs the ink?β Audenβs hand tightens on my hip. His breath tickles the side of my neck.
There is no ink.
βGreen,β I say. I canβt get that sunlit lake off my mind.
(I donβt want to. Ever.)
My tieβ¦ Why am I wearing something meant to restrict my airflow? I want to loosen it, but Auden told me to keep my hands on the shelf, so Iβm keeping my hands on the goddamn shelf.
βHear anything in the flywheel?β he says.
Just the whir and clicks and whuffs it normally makes. βShould I be?β
βNothing unusual, but the more you know the sounds of it, the more you know exactly when to feed the paper.β He taps the top of my hand once. Twice. Again. Matching it up to some sensory memory thatβs so ingrained in him, he probably dreams in that rhythm.
Anchored by his touch, Iβm the one who leans in the three inches. My shoulder, touching his chest. His breath, much more than a tickle. A caress.
βItβs a pulse,β he murmurs, so gruff, the consonants and vowels mix together. His fingers brush the hollow above my shirt collar. My knees wobble.
βA pulse.β I tilt my head to the side, exposing my neck.
βAye.β Bending his head, his lips land on the same sensitive spot.
My headβs turning faster than the flywheel.
βAuden.β
βSee? You know the rhythm.β
Oh god, I donβt know anything right now.
