This is the last book in the series, and even though you can totally read it as a standalone, it focuses on Shannon and Troy Wilson. They’ve been married for about 15 years, have four kids, and met back in college—basically childhood sweethearts.
The beginning of the book, maybe the first three chapters or so, is from Shannon’s POV, and honestly, it’s kind of heartbreaking. She’s the main caregiver, juggling the kids, the house, and just everything. She has a toddler, and you can tell she’s overwhelmed and probably depressed. Everything is just a bit chaotic, and she’s feeling like she’s drowning.
Things really start to unravel when Troy, who works at a fire station, picks up more shifts. She ends up missing a brunch and yoga class with her sister, and it’s like the last straw for her. Troy comes home, they reconnect physically, but then she breaks down crying. The next day, she tells him she wants a divorce.
A couple months later, they’re in front of a judge, and the judge tells them to take 30 days to adjust to being separated—sort of like a trial run before the divorce is finalized. So Troy moves out into a small apartment, and the rest of the book follows them trying to figure out life apart.
Shannon starts working again at her old accounting firm, has a creepy boss, but also makes a new best friend. Troy’s trying to deal with the separation too. And what’s refreshing is that there’s no cheating, no “other woman” drama. It’s just two people who still love each other, but who stopped communicating.
We learn that Troy has undiagnosed ADHD, which explains a lot about how he’s been dealing with things—basically by shutting down and avoiding hard conversations. He starts going to therapy, Shannon starts taking antidepressants, and they both really start working on themselves.
There are some sad misunderstandings—like Troy seeing Shannon with her boss and misinterpreting it, or Shannon seeing Troy with his (female) therapist and getting the wrong idea—but it’s nothing wild. Just real, emotional moments that hurt because they care so much about each other.
Eventually, they sit down, have some honest conversations, and start going to couples therapy. Troy moves back in, and the epilogue shows them in a much better, healthier place. Everyone’s happy, and it ends on a really sweet note.
Overall, this book was just cute. Like, really cute. I’ve only read the first book in the series, so I kind of knew it would be PG and not super spicy. But it didn’t need all that—it was warm and real, about two people who genuinely love each other but were just going through tough stuff on their own and didn’t know how to say it out loud. It wasn’t messy, it wasn’t dramatic—just heartfelt and relatable.