book cover of The Song We Lost
 

The Song We Lost

(2026)
(The third book in the Soundtrack series)
A novel by

 
 
They were supposed to take on the world together.

Bailey Brooks and Luke Carter grew up chasing the same dream; guitars in their hands, music in their bones, and a love that once felt impossible to break.

From a trailer park in rural Canada to the bright lights of Nashville, they built a life side by side. A marriage. A career. A future that always belonged to both of them.

Until it didn’t.

Success came fast, and somewhere along the way, the boy Bailey trusted most became someone she barely recognized. Fame, addiction, betrayal, and the pressure of living under a spotlight slowly fractured the life they built together, leaving Bailey carrying the weight of a love she no longer knew how to save.

Then tragedy changes everything.

As grief pulls Bailey out of the public eye, rumours explode across the internet, and the country music industry begins feeding on the silence she leaves behind. But while the world speculates about what destroyed them, Luke is finally forced to face the truth about himself, the choices he made, and the woman he still loves more than music, fame, or the life he thought he wanted.

Because some songs aren’t just about love.

They’re about survival.
About finding yourself after the world takes pieces of you.
Learning that healing doesn’t erase the damage, it teaches you how to carry it.


And sometimes the people who break your heart are also the ones willing to help you rebuild it.

The Song We Lost is an emotionally layered second-chance romance about grief, forgiveness, addiction, family, fame, and finding your way back to the people who feel most like home.



Content NoteThis story explores emotionally heavy themes including:

• grief and the loss of a loved one
• terminal illness and cancer
• addiction, alcoholism, and substance abuse
• marriage struggles, betrayal, and emotional infidelity
• anxiety, depression, and emotional trauma
• public scrutiny and media exploitation
• emotionally difficult family and life events


Reader discretion is advised.





Genre: Romance



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