The Last to See Her by Courtney Evan Tate
The Last to See Her, by Courtney Evan Tate is coming
next week on 15December. It is a thrilling book about Genevieve and her sister
Meg. Meg convinces Genevieve to go with her to a convention she has in New York
City. It’s meant to be a bonding time for the sisters and to help Genevieve celebrate
divorcing her cheating husband. On their first night in New York City, Genevieve
goes missing and Meg quickly becomes the top suspect as she was the last to see
Genevieve. Where is Genevieve and will they find her in time?
This
was my first book by Courtney Evan Tate, despite that she has written Such
Dark Things and I’ll be Watching You. I will definitely be checking
out these books after reading The Last to See Her. It’s a plot twist
filled book that will keep you guessing. I was thrilled to be asked by the
author to be a part of the blog tour for this book. Please enjoy the first
chapter of this book as a taste of what’s to come!
Excerpt
Genevieve tipped the courier and
set the certified letter on the coffee table.
She
knew what it was. She’d been waiting for it for almost a week.
Every
day, she’d wondered, Will it be today?
And
each day it wasn’t.
Until
today.
Nervous
energy buzzed through her fingers and toes, tingling through her veins, like
ants scurrying in a thousand directions. She paced for a minute, stopping at
the floor-to-ceiling windows, staring at the magnificent cityscape lining the
horizon. Buildings burst through the hazy pollution, their tips scraping the
clouds.
People
far below her were bustling here and there, quick to walk, slow to linger. They
had things to do, places to be, and she didn’t.
Not
anymore.
She ripped open the envelope,
pulling the banded documents out, scanning through the words, hunting for the
official stamps and signatures that declared this an official act of the court.
They
were all there.
This
was real.
It
was finally happening.
She
focused her gaze on the words before her.
Honestly,
they were simple.
The
black-and-whiteness of them was stark and startling. There were no gray areas,
no areas open to interpretation.
They
reduced the last ten years of her life into a handful of legal phrases and
technical terms. Incompatible differences associated with adultery, marriage
dissolution and absolute divorce.
She
stared at the words.
Soon,
she would be absolutely divorced. She just had to sign the papers.
It
had only taken six months of her life to iron out the details. To separate all
of their worldly possessions into two camps, his and hers, to figure out who
got what. Divorcing a lawyer was the only thing worse than being married to
one. No matter that he was the one in err, because he repeatedly fucked someone
else, he was out for blood and it took months to sort it all out.
But
thank God no children were involved.
That’s
what people kept saying, like it was a good thing or a blessing.
But
if she’d had a child, she wouldn’t be all alone, and someone would still love
her.
She felt like she was floundering.
For so long, she’d put all of her energy into a man who hadn’t deemed her
worthy to stay faithful to. That had done something to her self-confidence.
Something terrible. It wounded her in places she hadn’t known she had, and now
she had to figure out who she was without him.
She
wasn’t Genevieve Tibault anymore, one half of a whole. She was Genevieve
McCready again, and what was Genevieve McCready going to do now, now that she
had to stand alone?
She
pushed herself off the couch and ran water in her coffee cup. It was a habit
Thad had taught her. He hated it when the cups developed coffee rings. She
stared at the running water, and then set her cup down.
She
didn’t have to do what he wanted anymore. If she wanted coffee rings or tea
rings or any kind of fucking rings, she could have them.
It
was an epiphany.
She
was her own person again. It had been so long since she was a me instead
of a we.
She
looked around, at the condo she had fought so hard for…the marble floors that they
couldn’t agree on—she’d wanted slate, he’d wanted marble—at the modern light
fixtures that he’d gotten his way on, at even the tan wall colors. She’d wanted
gray.
Why
had she even wanted this place?
It
was all Thad, and none of Genevieve.
A
sense of exuberance, a strange jubilation, welled up in her as she searched
online for a realtor and then dialed the phone.
Bubbles
of excitement swelled in her belly as she arranged a time for the realtor to
come see the place.
And
then again, as she stared at a map.
Unlike
Thad, someone who had spent years building up his legal practice and honing his
networking skills in this one city, she could work from anywhere.
She wrote novels.
She
could work in Antarctica if she wanted to.
She didn’t
want to, but she could.
She
already had a plan. She knew where she was going, and what she was doing. She
just had to have the courage to do it.
She
picked up the phone and called her only sister, Meghan.
“Meg,
I’m moving home.”
Her
sister paused. “Home as in…?”
“Cedarburg.”
There was a long pregnant pause now.
“Um.
Why would you want to move back to Wisconsin? You haven’t lived there in…”
“In
eighteen years. Since I left for college. Yes.”
“But…why?”
“I
don’t know,” Gen said honestly. “I just feel a need to get back to my roots. I
love Chicago, but the traffic and the noise…” She stared out from her twentieth
floor windows again. Even from up here, even though the vehicles looked like
Matchbox cars, she could still hear the honking. “This feels like Thad. I want
to feel like me.”
“There’s
nothing there,” Meg said carefully. “Nothing but fields and cold and—”
“And
friendly people,” Gen interrupted. “And our parents, and familiarity, and open
spaces, and distance from Thad.”
“But
I won’t be there,” Meg reminded her gently. “I’m not moving back. I think you
need to be near me, Gen. You need a support system. Divorce is no joke.”
“I
know that,” Gen said patiently. “I’m the one living it. You’re still with your
Prince Charming and point five children living the American Dream, and I’m the
one sitting in an empty condo.”
She fought to keep the bitterness out of her voice, as she
compared Meg’s bustling, messy home to her own stark and empty condo in her
mind’s eye.
“I’ll
tell Joey that you’re counting him as a point five,” Meg chuckled.
“Well,
he’s only five, so it’s fitting. I mean, honestly. He’s not a whole person
yet.”
They
laughed again, and then Meg sobered up.
“Is
this really something you want to do?”
Gen
nodded. “Yeah. I think so.”
Meg
took a big breath. “Well, let’s do it, then. I’ll help you with your condo, and
finding a moving company, and looking online for a house there, and hell’s
bells, we’ve got a lot to do!”
“You
don’t have to help with all that…” Gen trailed off, but Meg interrupted with
their life-long pact.
“Sisters
forever,” she decreed. They’d used that pact since they were kids. Whenever one
didn’t want to do something, the other would remind them “sisters forever,” and
they would concede.
Gen
realized she wasn’t going to get away with not letting Meg get her hands in all
the new plans.
“Sisters
forever,” she agreed.
“But
first, you promised to go to my convention with me,” Meg reminded her.
Gen
hesitated.
“Don’t
tell me you forgot. New York City? Spa days, shopping—you need a new wardrobe,
sis—and nights on the town. You promised.”
Gen
paused again, and Meghan cajoled, “Pleassssse. We need this. You need this. It
can be your divorce party.”
“Okay,”
Gen found herself saying. “Fine. I’ll still come.”
Her sister squealed and Gen hung up before Meg could get too
excited. She was moving away from everything she’d known for over a decade.
Even though the world seemed unsettled and uncertain, for the first time in at
least five years, she felt at peace.
Excerpted from The Last to See Her by
Courtney Evan Tate, Copyright © 2020 by
Lakehouse Press, Inc. Published
by MIRA Books
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