Ciara and Xander each came to Aurbor Grove University with the perfect game plan. She would score another chance at finally living up to her college dreams and the high academic expectations set by her mother. He would become the star quarterback and hometown hero he was groomed to be. Yet they find themselves entangled in drama—from the exes who refuse to live without them to the financial struggles that make it seem like college is meant only for the elite to win.
Their friendship has a rocky start, but as the semester passes along they find that their most peaceful moments are spent with each other. Will the pains of the past and pressure on the fields of love and learning squash all hope for their future?
Exes and O’s is Lakeshia Poole’s drama-filled, romantic sequel to Don’t Let Me Fall.
Aurbor Grove University didn’t feel like just a place. Not anymore. It was a living part of Ciara Capers. Like a phantom limb, she felt remnants of her life from before dangling, but not really there.
Families carting luggage, mini refrigerators, and large containers whizzed by her. Housing assistants offered bottled water and waved directional signs pointing the herd to the appropriate check-in lines. AGU’s village of residence halls towered over everyone. The flurry of move-in day activity made Ciara feel so small, like a period in a sweeping, 100,000-word epic novel.
Her eyes darted away from her old dorm, Caldwell Hall. It glowered at her anyway, demanding she acknowledge its presence and her past.
The line for MacDonald Hall spilled from the front desk all the way outside, curving around the gushing fountain in the center of the Village courtyard.
Ciara loosened her grip on the duffle bag stretched to the seams.
“You’re not getting tired on me already, are ya?” Nick asked, stopping at her side.
“Not yet.” The edge of her lips curved up into a half smile.
He craned his neck, peering over the line slowly edging forward. A black AGU baseball cap shaded him from the South Georgia sun beating down on them. Still the dense heat reddened his cheeks and created dark gray splotches on his t-shirt.
“I don’t have much,” she said, shrugging her shoulders.
“If we ever get your keys, it shouldn’t take too long to unload everything.” He pulled a bottle of water from his khaki cargo shorts and handed it to Ciara.
She took a sip, leaning into him. “I know. I’m just—”
“Having second thoughts?”
“No, I’m glad to be back.”
The lie rolled off her tongue smooth and easy, because Ciara had practiced. She’d repeated it to family members, friends, and even herself with the high pitch of fake excitement.
When she decided to return to AGU after a yearlong absence, so many thoughts of what could go wrong raced through her mind.
What if my ex comes back too? What if the classes are too hard? What if everyone still blames me for what happened to Tala?
Ciara kept last summer’s pain and unspoken secrets tucked away, but ever so often regret popped up, tapped her on the shoulder, and whispered in her ear: ‘You do not deserve this.’
She brushed that voice and the perspiration turning her bangs into a crinkly mess to the side. She shaded her eyes with one hand and looked up at her new home: MacDonald Hall or the Mac as many lazily, coolly called it.
The Mac offered a long list of amenities like free yoga classes, private bathrooms, and walk-in closets, which made it sound more like a resort than the typical dormitory. A breezeway bearing AGU’s iconic, cursive A connected two 12-floor towers of curfew-free, coed living. Trees lined the sidewalk, their leaves and branches forming an arc over the sliding door entrance.
Ciara felt an urge to fix the maroon and white ‘Welcome to Move-In Day!’ banner hanging crookedly, but turned to Nick instead.
“Thanks for being here with me today.”
“No problem. You’ve gotta promise me you’re not quitting again.” The lightheartedness of Nick’s joke didn’t dull the sting of his words about her being a quitter.
With every mishap, Ciara wondered if the universe wanted her to quit again. A pre-dawn text message from her sick father left her scrambling to find help. Then an accident on I-75 turned her ride from Atlanta into a five-hour, stop-and-go nightmare. And now she stood in a line that didn’t seem to move.
She closed her eyes, willing the negativity away.
Today’s a perfect day to begin again.
While antsy, red-faced students and families rushed for the doors, Ciara took in the special moment marking her second chance.
She breathed in the hot, magnolia-scented air, held on until she couldn’t stand it anymore and let go.
I’m ready.
Families carting luggage, mini refrigerators, and large containers whizzed by her. Housing assistants offered bottled water and waved directional signs pointing the herd to the appropriate check-in lines. AGU’s village of residence halls towered over everyone. The flurry of move-in day activity made Ciara feel so small, like a period in a sweeping, 100,000-word epic novel.
Her eyes darted away from her old dorm, Caldwell Hall. It glowered at her anyway, demanding she acknowledge its presence and her past.
The line for MacDonald Hall spilled from the front desk all the way outside, curving around the gushing fountain in the center of the Village courtyard.
Ciara loosened her grip on the duffle bag stretched to the seams.
“You’re not getting tired on me already, are ya?” Nick asked, stopping at her side.
“Not yet.” The edge of her lips curved up into a half smile.
He craned his neck, peering over the line slowly edging forward. A black AGU baseball cap shaded him from the South Georgia sun beating down on them. Still the dense heat reddened his cheeks and created dark gray splotches on his t-shirt.
“I don’t have much,” she said, shrugging her shoulders.
“If we ever get your keys, it shouldn’t take too long to unload everything.” He pulled a bottle of water from his khaki cargo shorts and handed it to Ciara.
She took a sip, leaning into him. “I know. I’m just—”
“Having second thoughts?”
“No, I’m glad to be back.”
The lie rolled off her tongue smooth and easy, because Ciara had practiced. She’d repeated it to family members, friends, and even herself with the high pitch of fake excitement.
When she decided to return to AGU after a yearlong absence, so many thoughts of what could go wrong raced through her mind.
What if my ex comes back too? What if the classes are too hard? What if everyone still blames me for what happened to Tala?
Ciara kept last summer’s pain and unspoken secrets tucked away, but ever so often regret popped up, tapped her on the shoulder, and whispered in her ear: ‘You do not deserve this.’
She brushed that voice and the perspiration turning her bangs into a crinkly mess to the side. She shaded her eyes with one hand and looked up at her new home: MacDonald Hall or the Mac as many lazily, coolly called it.
The Mac offered a long list of amenities like free yoga classes, private bathrooms, and walk-in closets, which made it sound more like a resort than the typical dormitory. A breezeway bearing AGU’s iconic, cursive A connected two 12-floor towers of curfew-free, coed living. Trees lined the sidewalk, their leaves and branches forming an arc over the sliding door entrance.
Ciara felt an urge to fix the maroon and white ‘Welcome to Move-In Day!’ banner hanging crookedly, but turned to Nick instead.
“Thanks for being here with me today.”
“No problem. You’ve gotta promise me you’re not quitting again.” The lightheartedness of Nick’s joke didn’t dull the sting of his words about her being a quitter.
With every mishap, Ciara wondered if the universe wanted her to quit again. A pre-dawn text message from her sick father left her scrambling to find help. Then an accident on I-75 turned her ride from Atlanta into a five-hour, stop-and-go nightmare. And now she stood in a line that didn’t seem to move.
She closed her eyes, willing the negativity away.
Today’s a perfect day to begin again.
While antsy, red-faced students and families rushed for the doors, Ciara took in the special moment marking her second chance.
She breathed in the hot, magnolia-scented air, held on until she couldn’t stand it anymore and let go.
I’m ready.
I Found Love Between the Notes
It’s like you’re screaming, and no one can hear. You almost feel ashamed that someone could be that important. That without them, you feel like nothing. No one will ever understand how much it hurts. You feel hopeless; like nothing can save you and when it’s over and it’s gone, you almost wish that you could have all that bad stuff back so that you could have the good… ~Opening monologue, “We Found Love” by Rihanna and Calvin Harris video
Music is my muse. Tunes push me toward the finish line and complement my writing, adding to the mood and ambiance in which great characters thrive. While writing Exes and O’s I created Spotify playlists for my main characters, Xander and Ciara, representing their personal favorite songs. Not only did this help with developing my characters, but certain songs help to drive the plot along.
For Exes & O’s, Calvin Harris + Rihanna’s “We Found Love” is the track that best captured my characters’ experience. We found love in a hopeless place…a simple refrain that encompasses so much. In the Village Series, if Don’t Let Me Fall is about falling out of love, Exes & O’s is about falling right back in…heart first.
A major theme throughout Exes and O's is the idea of duality--who others say you are and who you want to be and the tension that happens within those identities. I'm a big fan of soundtracks, and for this project, my go-to was The Dark Knight. Interestingly enough (as if the Universe understood what I wanted to achieve by exploring my characters' 'two faces'), Harvey Two-Face was my favorite composition.
Another soundtrack that captured the moments of falling in love and supported the crafting of my characters comes from the film Beyond the Lights. Cynthia Erivo's Fly Before You Fall seems too perfect for my exploration of going from that feeling of being out of control in a volatile relationship in Don't Let Me Fall to learning how to trust the 'process' of falling again.
Music is my muse. Tunes push me toward the finish line and complement my writing, adding to the mood and ambiance in which great characters thrive. While writing Exes and O’s I created Spotify playlists for my main characters, Xander and Ciara, representing their personal favorite songs. Not only did this help with developing my characters, but certain songs help to drive the plot along.
For Exes & O’s, Calvin Harris + Rihanna’s “We Found Love” is the track that best captured my characters’ experience. We found love in a hopeless place…a simple refrain that encompasses so much. In the Village Series, if Don’t Let Me Fall is about falling out of love, Exes & O’s is about falling right back in…heart first.
A major theme throughout Exes and O's is the idea of duality--who others say you are and who you want to be and the tension that happens within those identities. I'm a big fan of soundtracks, and for this project, my go-to was The Dark Knight. Interestingly enough (as if the Universe understood what I wanted to achieve by exploring my characters' 'two faces'), Harvey Two-Face was my favorite composition.
Another soundtrack that captured the moments of falling in love and supported the crafting of my characters comes from the film Beyond the Lights. Cynthia Erivo's Fly Before You Fall seems too perfect for my exploration of going from that feeling of being out of control in a volatile relationship in Don't Let Me Fall to learning how to trust the 'process' of falling again.
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I liked the excerpt, thank you.
ReplyDeleteTHank you for the chance. I would love to read this book, sounds like a good read.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great book, I've added the book to my TBR and I'm looking forward to reading it! :)
ReplyDeleteExcellent post! I really enjoyed reading the excerpt and the guest post. This book sounds like such a fun, interesting, exciting, and intriguing read! Totally can't wait to read this book!
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like an interesting read! I love the cover.
ReplyDeleteI can't believe there's a hot song with the same title right now! I'm totally singing it in my head. I love sports romance.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on your new release. I loved the post and I can't wait to read this. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteLooks like an interesting book ;)
ReplyDeleteI am glad I got introduced to Lakeshia, courtesy of this blog. Good job...both of you.
ReplyDeleteInteresting series, Good luck with it!
ReplyDeleteSounds great I can't wait to read it!!
ReplyDeleteNeed to read this book!-linda
ReplyDeleteI liked the excerpt, and I have added this book to my book wishlist.
ReplyDeleteExcerpt interesting..and thank you for the giveaway entry
ReplyDelete