âSizzlingââWittyââExcellentââPitch-perfectâSOPHIE IRWIN BETH REEKLES JANE CASEY EMMA HUGHES
How do you get rid of an ex . . .When youâve never actually broken up?
When arrogant new colleague Benjamin swans into Fiaâs small office at her New York law firm, itâs no secret they dislike â no, â each other. But there is one secret no one knows.hate
The last time Fia and Benjamin saw each other was one summer night nearly ten years ago, at a little chapel â in Vegas. Benjamin isnât just Fiaâs co-worker, heâs also her long-lost husband.
They made a promise â they even signed a pact â that theyâd divorce after one year. But they never did. Now, if anyone discovers theyâre husband and wife, both their jobs are on the line.
And as their marriage starts to finally heat up, itâs a secret thatâs getting harder to keep . . .
EVERYONE LOVESTHE BREAK-UP CLAUSE
âI REALLY loved . . . so clever, so good, really excellent charactersâJANE CASEY
âElectric right from the offâŠa witty, wonderful book with such a wholesome take on friendships and a sizzling romanceâBETH REEKLES
âHargan has a light touch and a winning sense of humourâTHE TIMES
âReminds me of Katherine Heiny . . . her crisp scene-setting wit, her pitch-perfect ear for dialogue and her wonderful, wry eye . . . make every page a pleasure to readâEMMA HUGHES
âAn absolute first class rom-com: smart, funny and sizzling with chemistryâSOPHIE IRWIN
âJoyous, funny and very sweet, this is one to savourâSTYLIST
âOne of the very best romcom writers around. It is sublime . . . chemistry/sizzle/snark is off the chartsâCRESSIDA MCLAUGHLIN
What if your work rival was the ex that youâd never actually broken up with?