What We Make Room For (The Aster House Trilogy #1)

Sage Hayes


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Each book in this series features a different couple and a complete happily ever after.

At fifty-two, Jaya Raman has built her entire life around restraint. She keeps receipts. She keeps portion sizes. She keeps everyone's secrets but her own. When a long, quiet marriage finally ends and the sale of the marital flat leaves her without an address, she takes a temporary room at Aster House under the practical pretense of untangling its books before a funding audit. A spreadsheet problem, she tells herself. Not a life problem.

Cora Ng runs The Long Table like a promise the rest of the city has stopped making: you can be hungry here, and no one will make you apologize for it. When typhoon damage floods the staff quarters and leaves them sharing a fold-out bed in shifts, Jaya finds herself noticing things she hasn't had language for — the way Cora moves through a kitchen, the warmth of a shared thermos at 3 a.m., the humiliating tenderness of being watched while you eat and not being judged.

Forced proximity has a way of dissolving the careful distances Jaya has maintained for decades. But Cora has seen too many women treat her like a midlife experiment to let herself become one. And Jaya has spent so many years equating control with worth — a controlled body, a controlled voice, a controlled desire — that appetite itself feels like evidence of failure.

This is a story about what it costs to stay small, and what it takes to finally ask for more.

Can Jaya choose nourishment and honesty in parallel — not after love fixes her, but as the condition that makes love real?

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