Pas de Deux is the sequel to Love on Pointe and continues the story of Kate and Vincent. While it can be read as a standalone, readers may enjoy a deeper emotional experience by reading Love on Pointe first.
Kate
I’m finally starting to feel like myself againdancing, writing, maybe even falling in love. Vincent makes it easy. He’s calm where I’m chaotic, steady where I spiral, and every time he holds me, I feel like I might actually be okay.
But when my aunt dies suddenly and I’m pulled back into the orbit of my familythe chaos, the guilt, the blameit all starts to unravel. One funeral, one hotel room ambush, and suddenly I’m the villain in a story I didn’t write. And this time, I’m not sure I have the strength to rewrite the ending.
Vincent
I didn’t come to New Orleans to fall in love. But then I met Katea ballerina with a haunted heart and a laugh that rewires my whole day. I’d do anything to protect her. But when her family comes crashing in after a tragedy, everything shifts. They pick her apart like they have a right to her pain, and all I want to do is shield her from the noise.
Loving her is easy. Getting her to believe she’s worth being loved? That’s the hard part.
She’s unraveling. I’m holding on. And if I’m lucky, maybe we can still choreograph something beautiful from all this grief.
Tender, fierce, and emotionally charged, Pas de Deux is a love story about setting boundaries, healing old wounds, and discovering the kind of family that lifts youonstage and off.
Genre: General Fiction
Kate
I’m finally starting to feel like myself againdancing, writing, maybe even falling in love. Vincent makes it easy. He’s calm where I’m chaotic, steady where I spiral, and every time he holds me, I feel like I might actually be okay.
But when my aunt dies suddenly and I’m pulled back into the orbit of my familythe chaos, the guilt, the blameit all starts to unravel. One funeral, one hotel room ambush, and suddenly I’m the villain in a story I didn’t write. And this time, I’m not sure I have the strength to rewrite the ending.
Vincent
I didn’t come to New Orleans to fall in love. But then I met Katea ballerina with a haunted heart and a laugh that rewires my whole day. I’d do anything to protect her. But when her family comes crashing in after a tragedy, everything shifts. They pick her apart like they have a right to her pain, and all I want to do is shield her from the noise.
Loving her is easy. Getting her to believe she’s worth being loved? That’s the hard part.
She’s unraveling. I’m holding on. And if I’m lucky, maybe we can still choreograph something beautiful from all this grief.
Tender, fierce, and emotionally charged, Pas de Deux is a love story about setting boundaries, healing old wounds, and discovering the kind of family that lifts youonstage and off.
Genre: General Fiction
Used availability for Katherine L Evans's Pas de Deux