More Than Fine: A Sweet Romantic Comedy
About
“I could never love you.”
Those words play on repeat in my mind as I run away from my year-long stint volunteering with Nurses Around the World and head straight home to Henderson, NV. I still don’t understand how my boyfriend, er, I guess he’s my ex-boyfriend now, could be so heartless.
My only conclusion is that he’s secretly a player, and he played me for the past year while we “dated” and served tribal communities in the Amazon rainforest together. I thought what we had was real. I thought he was the one. I’m heartbroken, to say the least.
As I step off the plane and get hit with the arid heat of Las Vegas in June, I force a smile and tell myself I’ll never fall into that trap again.
But thirty minutes later I’m standing on the back porch of my childhood home staring down the biggest player in the entire world as he shamelessly tries to flirt with me. Jonathan Chancey. I’ve heard enough stories about this guy to know that he’s trouble. And by trouble, I mean he’s a drop-dead gorgeous FBI agent who oozes charm and charisma and was gifted with all the right genes to make women swoon.
And he knows it. Because he flirts with any woman with a pulse. Hence why he’s flirting with me.
Despite my determination to keep my distance, I can’t help but find myself drawn to him. The more I’m with him, the less I think about my ex, and the more I realize that he isn’t the guy he pretends to be. He might actually be a good person underneath that annoying persona. Which only makes this harder because I can’t fall for another player. I don’t think my heart can handle it.
“More Than Fine” is a dual POV sweet romantic comedy with plenty of laughs, some swoon-worthy moments, and no explicit scenes or language.