From New York Times bestselling author J.C. Cervantes comes a sparkling, unforgettable YA romance, perfect for fans of You’ve Reached Sam.
Intrigued? Well read on to discover the synopsis and an excerpt from Always Isn’t Forever by J. C. Cervantes, which is out now.
Best friends and soul mates since they were kids, Hart Augusto and Ruby Armenta were poised to take on senior year together when Hart tragically drowns in a boating accident. Absolutely shattered, Ruby struggles to move on from the person she knows was her forever love.
Hart can’t let go of Ruby either…. Due to some divine intervention, he’s offered a second chance. Only it won’t be as simple as bringing him back to life–instead, Hart’s soul is transferred to the body of local bad boy.
When Hart returns to town as Jameson, he realizes that winning Ruby back will be more challenging than he’d imagined. For one, he’s forbidden from telling Ruby the truth. And with each day he spends as Jameson, memories of his life as Hart begin to fade away.
Though Ruby still mourns Hart, she can’t deny that something is drawing her to Jameson. As much as she doesn’t understand the sudden pull, it can’t be ignored. And why does he remind her so much of Hart? Desperate to see if the connection she feels is real, Ruby begins to open her heart to Jameson–but will their love be enough to bridge the distance between them?
Chapter One
Hart
~ Twenty-five hours before the end ~
It’s always been Ruby.
That’s the first line of this “assigned” love letter, and it’s all it takes to get the juices flowing and put me in the zone.
From the first time I saw her eleven years ago at the local garden center, freeing some ladybugs from their netted prison. There she was, six years old, a mere fifteen feet from me, ripping open the small nets.
She had this fierce expression on her face, lips pressed together, dark eyes blazing with determination. And just like that, I was sucked into her orbit. Even at the ripe old age of seven, I knew she was uncommon.
I still remember how my heart lurched, screaming at me to go over and help her, to be her partner in crime: Take a risk! But I’m not built that way, never have been. Risks lead to injury and injury leads to pain and pain leads to misery. See the problem? Besides, I was seven and the thought of landing in Dick’s Garden jail sounded like the worst kind of misery.
So I hung back with my eyes glued to her, like she was some story and I needed to see how it ended.
Some of the ladybugs were smart enough to take flight; others crawled over the netting, and the rest? They landed on Ruby’s arms and hands. She just stood there, smiling, observing them with this kind of awe that I wished everyone in their life could experience even once.
Most people would have fled the scene of the crime, but not Ruby. See, Ruby’s a study in daredevilry. She didn’t care if she got caught. All that mattered to her was setting those damn ladybugs free.
A wedge of sunlight spilled onto Ruby’s golden-brown tangled hair. She looked up. Her eyes met mine. My face burned with the heat of someone doing something wrong. “Are you a good liar?” she asked.
I quickly spun away, knocking a tiny pot of mint off the shelf. I shrugged, feeling lost in my own skin. “Uh, not really.”
She marched over with so much purpose, I thought maybe I should run, but she was already standing right in front of me. The ladybugs still clinging to her.
“Well, you have to be,” she insisted as she picked up the mint pot and put it back in its place. “If anyone asks, I wasn’t here. You don’t know me.”
“But . . . I don’t know you.”
Just then her mom called to her. “I gotta go,” Ruby said with a smile that showed off a missing front tooth. “Don’t forget.” She mimed something with her hands that I took to mean, You never saw me.
And then she was gone. And I was left standing next to some wilting basil, wondering what had just happened. As I walked back to meet my dad near the Mexican palms, I felt a tickle on the back of my hand. I looked down. One of Ruby’s ladybugs skittered across my skin. Bright red with four black dots, its wings opening and closing, closing and opening. And then it took flight.
Yeah, so like I said, it’s always been Ruby.
Now I look down at the legal pad on my bed, worried as hell that the words won’t be good enough. There’s tons more slashing I’ve got to do, but at least it’s a start for our time capsule that Ruby insists we make for memory’s sake.
The sound of a car engine and an electrical drill fill the space. Me and my dad live above his auto shop, Jorgé’s. His specialty is the restoration of classic cars. I used to hate it, the noise, the grease, the late nights. But now? I see it as his art form; it’s calming to head down there and watch him work on an old Firebird or Porsche.
I glance at the clock. Shit! We’re supposed to be at Martin’s party in fifteen, and I haven’t changed into my swim trunks or . . .
My bedroom door swings open. It’s Ruby.
Quickly, I shove the essay under a pillow, nearly knocking my guitar off the bed, and decide it’s best to head her off at the pass: “Give me ten and I’ll be ready.”
“You’re going to be late to your own funeral,” Ruby says, still standing in the doorway like she isn’t sure if she’s going to come in. She’s got her dark sun‑streaked hair tied back and her Ray‑Bans are perched on top of her head, getting stretched out because her head is way big. She’s wearing a pair of jean shorts, and a T‑shirt that hangs off one shoulder, revealing a red bikini top.
“I was working on the letter for our time capsule thing. I guess I lost track of time.”
“You’re a songwriter. This should be easy for you.” She takes a few steps into my minimalistic room, glancing around like she half hopes to find a discarded sock. What kind of a monster doesn’t use the hamper?
Knowing Ruby, her letter will be five words long. She can’t even write a proper birthday message in a card, so I don’t know why she would torture herself like this. Even if this was her idea. She falls back onto my bed, simultaneously smacking my chest.
Her sunglasses fly off her head and onto the floor.
“Hey, you okay?” I lie on my side, resting on my elbow, looking down at her, wondering how after all this time she has this unraveling effect on me. Whenever she’s this close, I just want to feel her skin against mine, to breathe her in, while I think I’ve gotta be the luckiest guy alive because she chose me.
She hesitates. There’s a long silence and I’m not sure if she’s formulating a joke or a killer comeback. She’s capable of both, but she does neither. “I guess I can’t believe five months is the only thing between us and senior year and everything is happening too fast and . . .”
I wrap her hand in mine. “Hey, I’m the worrier, remember?
And you’re totally encroaching on my territory.” She doesn’t lean into the levity.
“I just feel like . . . I don’t know.” She squeezes my hand, looking out the window to the sunny skies beyond.
Here’s the thing about Ruby: she never worries about anything. Ever. Sneak off campus? Rules are meant to be broken. Leap from a sea cliff? Keep your eyes open. Flat tire on a back road? Let’s get lost in the woods.
“And this is why we are supposed to be making killer memories, like tonight.”
“The party?” she teases, knowing full well I meant the surprise I have for her later that I’ve been planning for months and when she sees it, she’s going to flip.
“Or we could do it another night,” I tease back with a shrug. “Don’t even think about it.” She gives me a kiss, meant to be a peck, but I’m greedy, and in a nanosecond the kiss is deeper, our bodies pressed so close I think we could melt into this mattress. Sometimes I wish we had never agreed to wait to have sex until college, because right now she’s seriously ruining me.
In an instant she pushes off of me, sucks in a lungful of air like she’s having the exact same thought. Or not. She dives past me, reaches beneath the pillow, and jerks free the essay. Like she knew it was there all along. Am I really that predictable?
I lunge, falling on top of her. She squeals, shoves the paper under her back, and stares up at me defiantly. We’re so close that our foreheads are pressed together. “What happened to being late for the party?” I ask.
She makes a sad pout. She’s perfected the expression over the years, a look I can’t say no to. “Just give me one line,” she says, “kind of like a prompt.”
I laugh. “If I give you one line, will you give me back the paper?”
Her lashes look longer from this close, and the golden specks in her dark eyes look brighter. She blinks, her lashes tickling my cheek. “I promise.”
I pull back, so I can see her face in full view when I say the words. She does a half‑hearted drumroll. Voices carry from the shop below. A car engine rumbles.
“Are you sure you’re ready for this?” I say, still smiling. “It can’t be that good.”
“Oh, it is.”
She rolls her eyes. “Lay it on me.”
I hesitate, let her squirm another second before I say, “It’s always been Ruby.”
Her face shifts from wonder to surprise to frustration in the span of half a second. Then she bunches my T‑shirt in her fists and says, “I really hate you, Hart Augusto.”
I kiss the tip of her nose. “I really hate you, too, Ruby Armenta.”
“How much?”
“So much. I will hate you for so long; I plan to get sick of you.” “Deal!” She’s up and hovering over me with a hand on her hip.
“So are we going to do this party slash surprise, or what?”
I change super quick, and as we head out, I sling my arm over her shoulder and kiss the side of her head, thinking my first line is perfect.
Yeah.
It’s always been Ruby.