The hit-and-run death of his aunt brings a freelance writer to Canada’s Vancouver Island and a confrontation with his past.
Luke Tremblay has just broken up with Bryce, the boyfriend with whom he shared a home in Toronto, when he gets the unexpected news that his estranged aunt has left him her house and antiques shop in Crescent Cove, which may be just the lifeline he needs. Still bitter over the fact that his beloved aunt Marguerite had joined the rest of his family in cutting him off when he came out as gay, Luke plans on selling the place to finance his future. But memories of happy childhood summers with Marguerite come flooding back when he returns to her beach-view cottage. The first hint of trouble arrives when belligerent Joel Mackenzie insists that he’s bought something from Marguerite and wants it now. Luke has to physically remove him, and the fight, which is witnessed by a teenage delivery girl, puts him in an awkward spot after he discovers Mackenzie facedown in Marguerite’s ornamental pond. Luke, who finds Sgt. Jack Munro of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police both attractive and intimidating, is shocked to realize that he was the boyhood friend who shared his outsider status. Afraid that Jack isn’t looking at anyone else for the murder, Luke decides to use his own investigative skills. Apparently, Mackenzie was searching for letters worth a fortune if he used them for blackmail, and someone was willing to kill to keep them hidden. As his relationship with Jack heats up, Luke learns enough to make himself a target.
There may be both a romantic and sleuthing future for this pair who share wounds from the past.