Book #3 from the series: Paradise Bay Romantic Comedy

The Suite Life (PARADISE BAY SERIES Book 3)

About

(All books in the Paradise Bay Series are stand-alone novels, complete with happy-ever-afters, loads of laughs, & fun graphics!)

A banished playboy heir. A single mum who needs his rent money. One chance to restore her faith in love.

Bree Lewis doesn’t believe in fairy tales—not after her daughter, Isabella’s father abandoned them.

She’s a law student by day, a resort concierge by night, and a single mum determined to give her child the stable life she never had. When money gets tight, she converts her backyard shed into a rental suite.

What she does not expect is her only applicant being Leopold Davenport — the resort’s new ridiculously handsome bellboy she loves to hate.

After being banished from the tiny kingdom of Avonia by his father, Leo has six months to prove he can survive without his family’s fortune.

No staff.

No trust fund.

No shortcuts.

Working as a bellboy is humbling enough. Moving into the backyard of the one woman at the resort who clearly can’t stand him? That’s just bad luck.

At least… it should be.

But somewhere between shared late-night conversations, childcare emergencies, and Leo discovering that real life doesn’t come with a butler, irritation starts looking a lot like attraction.

Leo’s never had to fight for anything before.

Until now.

The Suite Life is a warm, witty romantic comedy featuring the world’s most adorable five-year-old girl, an eccentric cat-loving aunt, and a thoughtful, kind hero who must earn his happily ever after.

 Tropes: Enemies to Lovers  |  Opposites Attract  |  Fish Out of Water  |  Forced Proximity  |  Workplace Romance  |  Single Parent Romance  |  Redemption Arc  |  Ticking Clock

 WHAT TO EXPECT

Heat: Steamy  |  Tone: Light & Funny  |  Series: Book 3, Paradise Bay (Interconnected Standalones, reads as standalone)  |  Ending: HEA  |  POV: Dual 1st Person  |  Content Notes: steamy scenes, humor, single parent storyline, fish-out-of-water elements, no dark themes