I Saw Her First (Forbidden on Fruit Street #2)

Jen Morris


Rated: 3.45 of 5 stars
3.45 · Steam/Spice level: 5 of 5
Explicit and plentiful [?] · 11 ratings · 361 pages · Published: 09 Oct 2024

I Saw Her First by Jen Morris
Passion ignites when a sweet barista and widowed father give in to their forbidden attraction in this steamy, emotional romance about the power of love to heal grief.

Daisy

I never planned on being a virgin at twenty-five, stuck in a dead-end job. And I definitely didn’t plan to fall for Weston, the married hottie in a suit who likes my daily coffee art. At least I think he does. He doesn’t smile much.

Then I meet Jesse. He’s charming and more than happy to relieve me of my V-card, but is he really the one? My world turns upside down when I learn Jesse's father is Weston, my secret crush. Even more surprising? Weston isn't married.

And that changes everything.

Weston

After losing my wife three years ago, I’ve lived in a haze of pain and grief, made worse by my son Jesse’s refusal to talk to me. The only light in the darkness is Daisy, the beautiful barista at my local coffee shop. There’s a connection between us despite our age difference, and I intend to make her mine—until Jesse introduces Daisy as his girlfriend.

Seeing them together drives me crazy, especially as I watch him take her for granted. The more time I spend around her, the more I want her for myself, but it might cost me my son…

Even if I saw her first.

Here’s what you can expect from I Saw Her

♥ forbidden romance (ex-boyfriend’s dad/son’s ex-girlfriend)

♥ age gap (she’s 25, he’s 43)

♥ virgin heroine

♥ widowed hero

♥ “You’re mine”

♥ dirty-talking MMC

♥ no cheating

♥ Brooklyn Heights & beach house setting

♥ interconnected standalone

♥ dual POV

Please this book is a steamy, open-door romance. It contains cursing and on-page sex, including dirty talk. There are discussions of grief, and there is on-page marijuana use (once, by a side character). Additionally, the heroine is a virgin, and the book contains an age gap of eighteen-nineteen years, with an older man/younger woman dynamic (the heroine is 25, the hero 43-44). It is intended for readers 18 years and older.
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