Au Pair Affair Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Au Pair Affair. Here they are! All 19 of them:

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Forever is composed of nows.
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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In her experience, men could be mild mannered, charming even, on the surface. Easygoing, friendly. They could also be dormant volcanos waiting for the right moment to erupt.
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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Forever is composed of nows. Dickinson said that.
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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I want to get attached, Tallulah,” he said on top of her mouth. β€œNah, I’m already more than a little obsessed with you, aren’t I? You start babbling my name while I spoon-feed you orgasms, I will get attached. Happily. Just like I’ll happily knock out anyone else who tries. Be. Sure.
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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Oh yeah? Then why did I want to stab him in the throat?” I’m going to marry this girl someday.
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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When you’re ready to call me your man, I’m going to spit on this hot little cunt and call it mine before I fuck it. Go ahead. Lie and tell me you don’t want that.
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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He started to brush a hand down the back of Chloe’s head,
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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The inked skin/thick butt/muscle trifecta was really bringing home the fact that she was not simply working for a single father. She was working for a snack. A DILF. A big boy.
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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Forever is composed of nows,
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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I think we'll be better as friends" "Guess you need to be proven wrong
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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The drinking became a little more of a problem when I went to university. My parents had never been particularly present while I was growing up, so one might presume if I was going to go off the rails, why not do it at home, but I saved it for when I went away. I was enough of a disappointment to my father. I didn’t need to give him yet another excuse to help me understand I was not the daughter he wanted. My mother had left her native America when she fell in love with my dad while working for a year as an au pair in Gerrards Cross. She seemed happy when I was very young, then spent most of my teenage years in what I have always thought must have been, albeit undiagnosed a deep, and possibly clinical, depression. I can understand why. What I couldn’t understand is how she ever ended up with my father in the first place. He was handsome, and I suppose he must have been charming when they were young, but he was so damned difficult, I used to think, even when I was young, that we’d all be much happier if they got a divorce. I would sit with friends who would be in floods of tears because their mother had just found out their father had been having an affair, or their parents had decided they hated each other, or whatever the myriad of reasons are that drive people apart, and these friends would be crying at the terrible fear of their families breaking up, and all I could think was: I wish my parents would get divorced. It seemed to me that if ever there were two people on the planet who should not have been together, it was my parents. My mother is laid-back, funny, kind. She’s comfortable in her skin and has the easy laugh you expect from all Americans. She was brought up in New York, but her parents died very young, after which she went to live with her Aunt Judith. I never knew Aunt Judith, but everything about those days sounds idyllic, especially her summers in Nantucket. You look at pictures of my mum from those days and she was in flowing, hippie-ish clothes, always smiling. She had long, silky hair, and she looked happy and free. In sharp contrast to the pictures of her with my dad, even in those early days, when they were newlyweds, supposedly the happiest time of a relationship. He insisted she wear buttoned-up suits, or twinsets and pearls. Her hair was elaborately coiffed. I remember the heated rollers she kept in the bathroom, twisting her hair up every morning, spraying it into tight submission, slicking lipstick on her lips, her feet sliding into Roger Vivier pumps. If my father was away, she left her hair long and loose, wrapping a scarf around her head. She’d wear long gypsy skirts with espadrilles or sandals. I loved her like that most of all. I used to think it was her clothing that changed her personality,
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Jane Green (Cat and Jemima J)
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Why are you taking your clothes off outside my room? If beefcake was on the room service menu, I didn't order it.
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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My instincts are telling me it will be safe to live with you, but I have a hard time relying on my instincts when it comes to men. In other words, I don't.
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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That was life, wasn't it? Making connections, bonding with people and places, then moving forward without them. Missing them. Carrying those influences around, sort of like layers of clothing. Her birthplace was one layer, her family another. Her best friend, Josephine. Antarctica. Now Boston. Sometimes it hurt to collect another layer, to make new friends and have new experiences when she still ached for the layers closest to her skin, but she would keep pursuing nights like this, because she'd made a promise to her sister.
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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They have to experience a few hard losses to appreciate winning. The greatest players are great because they can cope with losing. They've been there, been humbled by getting crowned second or third best.
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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He went into the kiss like a bear being handed a pot of honey after a winter in hibernation.
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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Most people have the benefit of putting on blinders, walking around thinking that will never happen to me. You don’t have blinders and you’re still going. Still doing.
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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I fear too early, for my mind misgives. Some consequences yet hanging in the stars shall bitterly begin.
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))
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Making Tallulah laugh was like taking a shower in sunshine. It just rained down in the form of warmth at the top of his head, coating him down to his toes.
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Tessa Bailey (The Au Pair Affair (Big Shots, #2))