
Say You'll Remember Me
- eBook
- Audiobook
- Hardcover
- Book info
- Sample
- Media
- Author updates
- Lists
Synopsis
“Abby Jimenez has proven time and time again to be one of our must-read writers.”―Cosmopolitan
There might be no such a thing as a perfect guy, but Xavier Rush comes disastrously close. A gorgeous veterinarian giving Greek god vibes—all while cuddling a tiny kitten? Immediately yes. That is until Xavier opens his mouth and proves that even sculpted gods can say the absolute wrong thing. Like, really wrong. Of course, there’s nothing Samantha loves more than proving an asshole wrong…
. . . unless, of course, he can admit he made a mistake. But after one incredible and seemingly endless date—possibly the best in living history—Samantha is forced to admit the truth, that her family is in crisis and any kind of relationship would be impossible. Samantha begs Xavier to forget her. To remember their night together as a perfect moment, as crushing as that may be.
Only no amount of distance or time is nearly enough to forget that something between them. And the only thing better than one single perfect memory is to make a life—and even a love—worth remembering.
Release date: April 1, 2025
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Print pages: 384
* BingeBooks earns revenue from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate as well as from other retail partners.
Reader buzz

Author updates
Say You'll Remember Me
Abby Jimenez
The middle-aged woman stood on the other side of the exam table, her dog between us. He was looking back and forth at our faces like he understood the conversation. For his sake I sincerely hoped he didn’t.
“I want you to put him down,” she said.
“He’s healthy,” I replied.
“I know,” she said, peering at him forlornly. “My mom took real good care of him before she passed.”
“Then why?”
She breathed out a dramatic sigh. “It’s what she wanted. She didn’t want him to have to live the rest of his life without her. He’d miss her too much.”
“He can bond with someone else.”
She shook her head. “I don’t think so. He’s too old.”
“He’s four.”
She looked me in the eye like she was about to argue with me over taking an expired coupon. “Look,” she said. “I’m gonna level with you. Me coming here was a compromise. My husband wanted to take him out in the woods and shoot him to save us the three hundred dollars. I told him that’s not humane, and that Mom would have wanted him to go peacefully, so here we are. But if you won’t do it, he will—and he’s not a very good shot. Might take a few tries.”
I stared at her blankly. This is why I hated humans. They were the worst animals on the planet.
The dog looked up at me with sad eyes. “It’s four hundred for euthanasia,” I said flatly.
It wasn’t. It was three hundred. For everyone but her.
She agreed to the cost, and I took the dog and did what I had to do.
An hour later I was sitting in the back room, charting the visit, more irritable than usual by the event.
Tina, one of my vet techs, was standing there glaring at me with her arms crossed.
“What?” I said, without looking up.
“You know what.”
I shot her a look.
“What am I supposed to give her when she comes back for his ashes?” she asked, cocking her head.
“Do you have a fireplace?” I asked.
“No.”
“A charcoal grill?”
She twisted her face thinking about it. “I think it’s gas.”
Maggie, my other tech, opened the cabinet and put a file away. “Didn’t we cremate that one rescue dog that didn’t make it? The St. Bernard mix?” she said. “We can give her those.”
“Fine,” I said. “But give her half. It’s too much.”
Tina was scratching the very not-dead dog’s chin. “What are you gonna name him?” she asked.
“I have no idea,” I mumbled, standing.
I was getting a headache. Clenching my teeth.
“I need you to cut his hair,” I said. “Give him a schnauzer cut or something. Make him look different.”
“But he’s so cute fluffy!” Tina said.
I made pointed eye contact with both of them. “I don’t think I need to remind you that I could lose my license for what I just did.”
Tina looked at me adoringly. “We know. You’re such a hero.”
Maggie was biting her lip and nodding.
They were smiling at me. Beaming actually.
It made me more irritable.
“Do not take any pictures of this dog,” I said. “No social media. Don’t call him by his name. We don’t breathe a word of this to anyone.”
“We’ll take it to the grave,” Tina said, clutching her hands at her chest.
“I’d lie for you in court,” Maggie said. “Hand on the Bible and everything.”
Tina nodded emphatically.
“I know you don’t like to hear it,” Maggie said. “But you are truly one of the best people I know, Dr. Rush. It’s an honor to work for you.”
I frowned at the compliment. I didn’t like flattery or praise.
I did like dogs, though. I liked all animals, but especially dogs. We didn’t deserve them—and some people deserved them less than others.
“You have one more patient in room six,” Maggie said. “And God bless you, Dr. Rush.”
I gave her one more flat look, then I grabbed the tablet she handed me as I walked out. They smiled after me.
They’d never tell anyone. I trusted my team with my life—or in this case my license. But I didn’t need all the fawning over me.
I walked into room six reading the chart. Patient was an abandoned kitten, found a few hours before in a wood pile.
“I’m Dr. Rush,” I mumbled, coming in without looking up.
I went to the sink to wash my hands. I shut off the water, took a paper towel, and turned to look at the woman sitting there. Instant jolt of surprise when I saw her.
She was beautiful. My age, maybe twenty-eight, twenty-nine. Long black hair, brown eyes. Curvy.
She had the kitten in her bra. It was tucked in her cleavage sleeping, its chin balanced in the V of her shirt.
“Hey, doc,” she said, standing. “Hold on, let me get her. I think she’s a her? I’m not really good at looking at little kitty bits.”
She pulled the white-and-brown fluff ball out and set her on the table between us. It was purring.
I’d probably be purring too if I’d been in there.
I cleared my throat and started my exam.
“About five weeks old,” I said, my voice low.
The kitten’s gums looked good and pink, eyes were clear. It was underweight. No fleas. Looked in its ears. Mites, but not too bad. I felt the abdomen. Bent its legs and ran my fingers down its spine to check for abnormalities.
The woman was watching me. I couldn’t explain why, but it made me self-conscious.
Nothing made me self-conscious.
But for some reason her eyes on me made me wonder whether I’d shaved this morning.
I could smell the kitten. It smelled like her. Like flowers.
“Are you keeping it?” I asked.
She leaned on the exam table. “I mean, yeah. You don’t turn down the cat distribution system.”
The corner of my lip twitched.
“Did you check around?” I asked, listening to the kitten’s lungs. “Make sure there weren’t any others?”
“Yeah. Just this one.” She gazed at me through thick lashes and smiled.
My heart picked up. My God this woman was gorgeous. I did my best to act like I didn’t notice.
I put my stethoscope around my neck and went to take the kitten’s temperature, trying to act like I was unaffected by her watching me.
When I lifted the tail, I froze.
I raised my eyes to the woman, and she peered back at me. “What?”
“I’d like to get some imaging.”
A half an hour later the scans were done, and I was there to deliver the bad news.
“The kitten has a congenital condition,” I said. “It’s called atresia ani. It’s when the rectum and anus don’t fully develop.”
She blinked at me, then at the kitten back in her shirt. “I’m sorry. What?”
“She doesn’t have a functional anus or a rectum.”
She stared. “You’re saying this kitten doesn’t have a butthole.”
“That is what I am saying.”
She pulled the cat out of her bra and lifted its tail. Her eyes went wide. There was a little fleshy bald spot where the anus should be, but barely a pinprick of an opening. It was easy to miss if you weren’t looking right at it.
“But… but she poops,” she said. “She’s used the litter box.”
“She’s developed a rectovaginal fistula. She passes feces through her vulva. She has stomach parasites, so her stools are watery. This is likely the only reason she’s survived as long as she has. There’s a surgery that could potentially correct this. I don’t do it. She’d need to be seen by a specialist, a board-certified veterinary surgeon.”
She nodded. “Okay. How much is that?” she asked.
“It runs between five to ten thousand dollars.”
Her mouth fell open.
“My recommendation is to put her down,” I said.
She studied the floor a moment before coming back to me. “But… but she’s happy. She’s a happy baby. I’m not putting her down.”
“Miss—I’m sorry, what is your name?” I asked.
“Samantha. Diaz.”
“Miss Diaz, one of two things is going to happen here. She will become impacted, she will suffer, and she will die. Or she will get an infection, she will suffer, and she will die. Even with the surgery, the prognosis is guarded at best. She’ll need round-the-clock care until she’s recovered—”
“I work from home. I can do that.”
“There’s often further complications that will require additional investment. If you’re not able to or interested in getting her the surgical procedure, I strongly recommend euthanasia.”
She clutched the kitten to her breast. “I can’t.”
“So you’d like the referral to the surgeon?”
“I don’t have that kind of money. Is there a rescue that could help?”
“It’s kitten season,” I said. “The rescues are inundated. And they can save a hundred kittens with the funds it would take to maybe save this one. You could certainly reach out to a few and ask, but I think it’s unlikely they’ll be able to help. I recommend putting her down,” I repeated. “Immediately. Before she’s in pain. Do you have any more questions for me? If not, I can give you some time to say goodbye.”
She stared at me. “I will not be putting this cat down.”
Maybe the knee-jerk annoyance I felt was an overreaction. Maybe it was just the end of a rough day at the end of a very long week and I was already frustrated by the dog situation from earlier, but I couldn’t contain my irritation.
I crossed my arms. “Why bother to come ask for my expertise if you don’t intend to take my advice?”
She blinked at me. “There have to be other options—”
“There aren’t. So what is your plan?”
“I… I don’t know…”
“So it’s the suffering then. Got it.”
She gawked at me. I didn’t care.
I had seen every evil known to man walk through these doors but most of all I was tired of the selfishness and general stupidity I witnessed on a daily basis. The animals that should live, they want to put down, the ones who will suffer, they want to keep alive. They neglect and abuse them, they don’t spay and neuter so the shelters overflow, they dump them, get tired of the responsibility, and abandon them. Well-intentioned stupidity is still stupidity. She was going to prolong this animal’s misery. I hated it and for some reason I also hated that it lowered my opinion of her. I think out of everything, that was bothering me the most.
“Anything else?” I asked. “Or are we done?”
Her eyes flashed. “Has anyone ever told you your bedside manner could use some work?”
“As a matter of fact, they have,” I said. I pushed off the exam table. “Let me know when she stops eating, her stomach distends, and she’s in enough agony for you to make the hard choices that come with pet ownership.”
I walked out.
She followed me.
“What makes you think that I can’t fundraise this money?” she said to my back.
I scoffed. “Human nature?” I said, handing a wide-eyed Maggie the tablet on my way to the office.
“People are inherently good,” she said after me. “They want to help.”
I turned and pinned her with a stare. “People are inherently assholes.”
“Yeah?” she said. “Well, so are you.”
She stood there, her cheeks pink, the kitten’s head poking out of the top of her cleavage. Sexy.
I don’t know why that’s what I thought of in this moment, but sexy was all I could process.
“Fair enough,” I said.
I went to my office and closed the door.
YOU ACTUALLY DID it,” Jeneva said.
“Nothing motivates me more than being told I can’t do something.”
My sister chuckled.
It was four days after the visit with Dr. Asshole. The GoFundMe had almost nine thousand dollars in it.
Pooter was playing with the jingly cat ball I got her in my living room. She’d swat it, then chase it across the floor and pounce on it. I smiled at her on my way to the couch.
“Did you know it was going to go viral?” Jeneva asked.
I shrugged. “I mean, I can’t always be sure. But sort of. Cute baby animal in need, clear call to action, catchy slogan.”
“‘Pooter Needs a Poop Chute’ was genius…”
“It’s what I do.” I plopped onto the sofa with my iced coffee.
“I hope he sees it,” she said.
“I hope he sees it too. Dick. You know what’s even worse?”
“What?”
“He was like, seriously fucking hot. When he was being mean to me, he actually got hotter. Why am I like this?”
Jeneva clinked dishes around. “Did you write him a bad review?”
I dragged a throw blanket across my lap. “Nah. Honestly, I picked him because he had such good ratings. The reviews actually warn you that he’s all brilliant and crabby, some moody animal whisperer or something.”
“We do love a cranky king,” she said distractedly.
“I mean, I could see where he was coming from, he just didn’t have to be rude about it. I never get why white men are grumpy. Like, we’re living in a patriarchy. You’re the most privileged class on the face of the earth. You’re not walking to your car with your keys through your fingers like wolverine and you’ve got bodily autonomy, why the bad mood?”
“What did he look like?” she asked.
“Like if Rhysand from the ACOTAR series were a real person,” I said, putting my straw between my teeth.
“No…”
“I swear to God. Hold on, I’ll google him, see if I can find a picture.”
I put her on speaker and typed Xavier Rush veterinarian into the search bar and hit images.
A picture of him holding an award popped up on the American Veterinary Medical Association website. He’d been recognized last year for some gargantuan amount of volunteer hours treating rescue animals.
He looked irritated, like he didn’t want to be there. Handsome, but definitely a hostage situation.
“Here,” I said, sending her a screenshot.
I sipped my coffee while I waited for her to look at it.
“Oh yeah…” she said.
“If he doesn’t do the bat wings, tattoo thing for Halloween it’s a seriously missed opportunity,” I said.
“Do you think he smiles at the dogs at least?”
“Probably not.”
“My toxic trait is thinking I could change him,” she said.
“Ha. My toxic trait is not caring if I could change him.”
She laughed.
I could hear Mom come into the room in the background.
“Tell her hi,” I said.
“Samantha says hi.”
“Who?” I heard Mom say.
“Samantha,” Jeneva repeated.
Silence followed. Mom didn’t say hi back.
I stared at Pooter while I tried to get my feelings about this to flatten.
“How is she?” I asked.
“Fine.” Then to Mom, “I’m making you dinner. We’re having pasta. No, you don’t need to help, I got it.”
I reached under the sofa and pulled out my laptop to check the Pooter funds. This was the core source of my serotonin this week. Well, the kitten too. But the GoFundMe was a multipart success for me. It meant I could save my baby, it renewed my already high faith in humanity, and it meant Dr. Asshole was wrong, which was a petty kind of joy, but a solid one nonetheless.
The page loaded and I smiled. Almost ten thousand now. I was close enough that I felt comfortable scheduling the surgery. And just in time too. I was heading to California in six weeks and I’d have to take Pooter with me, so the sooner she started healing the better.
“I’m excited for you to see the house,” Jeneva said. “We’ve done a lot of repairs.”
I heard Mom again.
“We’re having pasta, Mom,” Jeneva said. “Yes, I’m making you dinner. No, just sit, you don’t need to help, I got it.”
I moved the phone away from my mouth like she could hear my expression. Then, instead of letting the knot in my throat thicken, I hit refresh on the donations page.
Someone just donated $500.
I sat up.
Most people gave twenty-five. Maybe fifty. I’d gotten a handful of hundred-dollar donations. Nothing this high. I looked at the name and my eyes went wide.
Jeneva must have heard the gasp. “What?” she asked.
“The grumpy vet,” I breathed. “He just donated all this money to my GoFundMe.”
“Really?”
“Yes!”
I read the note. My three favorite words: You were right.
THIS LOOKS TERRIBLE,” I said.
Tina shrugged. “You told me to make him look different.
He looks different.”
My dog smiled up at me with the goofiest haircut I’d ever seen. He had the beard of a schnauzer and the shaved legs of a poodle. He’d be embarrassed if he cared.
I blew a breath out. I guess ugly was better than dead.
“Still no name?” Tina asked.
“No. I’m waiting for something to speak to me,” I said.
It had been over a month since his “death.” The lady had come in and collected the St. Bernard ashes weeks ago. I figured she wouldn’t have any reason to come back to the clinic, so I’d brought the dog to work so he wouldn’t be home alone. That meant he needed the haircut now that he was out and about—and he needed a new name. I’d been calling him by his old one this whole time, but that wouldn’t work if he wanted to make public appearances.
“So are you definitely keeping him?” Tina asked.
“I think I have to. I can’t exactly put him up on an adoption site.”
“None of your friends can take him?”
“No.”
She scratched behind his ear. “He’s a good boy.”
“They’re all good boys,” I grumbled.
My stomach growled. I looked at my watch. Two o’clock. I’d worked through lunch again.
I was the only doctor at my practice. If a patient needed a last-minute visit, I didn’t like to send them to the ER vet if I didn’t have to. It meant I didn’t always get breaks—in fact most days I didn’t.
Tina must have read my mind. “We brought you some chicken enchiladas. They’re in the fridge.”
“Thanks,” I said.
They were always feeding me. It happened so much I’d started paying them for the groceries.
I opened up the laptop to respond to emails while my dog sat with his chin on my thigh.
“So you’re going with Chris tonight to the thing, right?” Tina asked, leaning in the doorway.
“That is the plan,” I said, not looking up.
“Is he still single?”
“As far as I’m aware.” Chris, Mike, Jesse, Becca—they were all my best friends, practically family.
“You should ask him if he wants to meet my sister,” she said. “She just broke up with that youth pastor?”
“Chris is too busy for dating,” I said, skimming an email about a vaccination clinic for the rescue. “And I am too busy to be in the middle of it.”
“What about Mike?” she said, going on unfazed. “Although he might be too muscly. Not sure she’d like that. Too bad Jesse isn’t single, he’d be perfect. They’re both in finance, you know? But Chris is a pharmacist, that’s really good too. Also, he likes to read and she likes to read. I bet they’d get along, you should ask him.”
How these women managed to glean this much about my friends from the handful of times they’d come in here and the limited information I provided them was beyond me.
Maggie burst into the back. “Dr. Rush!” She was panting. “That lady is here!” she hiss-whispered.
I blinked at her. “What lady?”
Her eyes were wide. “The butthole cat lady.”
I froze. Samantha.
After I’d sent the donation last month, I got a generic thank-you email—not that I expected anything beyond that. I didn’t send it in the hopes she’d reach out, I sent it to help and to apologize. But so much time had passed…
“What does she want?” I asked.
“An exam?” Maggie said. “Says she’s flying with the cat and she needs a health certificate and a sedative.”
Why would she come to me?
I’d been reliving that entire encounter in my head on a loop for the last six weeks. I couldn’t let it go.
I’d acted badly. My behavior had been unprofessional and uncalled-for. The culmination of exhaustion and the general fatigue of dealing with other human beings, but I’d atoned for it and usually that was enough for me to move on.
But I couldn’t shake this and I didn’t know why.
No. I did know why. It was her.
Normally things people said about my personality didn’t bother me. I was dry. I’d always been dry. She had every right to say what she did and call me what she had. She wasn’t even the first person to do it. But coming from this woman it had hit differently for some reason. It bothered me that I’d let her down.
It had made me work more these last few weeks to be softer with people. Like she’d somehow know if I was short with someone and it would disappoint her, which was ridiculous on a thousand different levels, but I was doing it nonetheless.
And now she was here.
I went to the bathroom to check my hair. Then I was mad at myself for checking my hair because she wasn’t here to look at me, she was here for me to look at her cat. I came out and went straight to the hallway to go get this over with, then immediately turned around. “What room?”
Maggie was waiting for me. “Two.”
I left again. Then I came back.
“Tablet,” I said.
Maggie was standing there smiling, holding it up, like she’d known I was coming. I narrowed my eyes at her, took it, and left. Again.
When I opened the door to room two, Samantha was in the same place as last time, cat in her shirt.
“Hello, Dr. Rush,” she said wryly.
Beautiful. Even more than last time.
“Miss Diaz,” I said, my voice low.
I went to the sink to wash my hands, mostly to buy myself time before I had to talk to her.
When I turned back around, she was smiling at me. “Would you like to see my kitten’s butthole?”
I snorted. Then I straightened and tossed the paper towel in the trash. “I actually would like to see that.”
She pulled the cat out of her bra and handed her to me.
I set her on the exam table and lifted her tail. Then I raised my eyebrows. “That’s an excellent-looking butthole.”
“Riiiight?” She grinned.
I had to work to keep my face straight.
“The surgeon said the deformity was more minor than we thought,” she said, watching me examine Pooter. “She came through it great, she’s not incontinent or anything.”
“Are her bowel movements normal?” I asked, feeling her stomach.
“Yup.”
“How many a day?”
“Two to three,” she said.
“How do they look?”
“I brought you a picture because I just knew you’d want to see it.”
She took out her phone and swiped and then held it out to me. I nodded sagely. “Perfect.”
I felt her watch me as I checked the kitten’s teeth and eyes.
The cat smelled like her perfume again. Again I liked it.
She put her phone back in her purse and leaned against the wall. “I accept your apology by the way,” she said.
I glanced up at her. “I was wrong. I can admit when I’m wrong. I underestimated the people of the internet.”
“No, you underestimated me and how funny I can be, which is worse.”
She got a small smile out of me.
I took out my stethoscope and listened to Pooter’s heart and lungs.
“You raised more than you needed,” I said. “What did you do with the rest?”
“I donated it all to Bitty Kitty Brigade.”
I wrapped the stethoscope around my neck. I liked that.
“I think she’s in good shape,” I said. “I can clear her to fly. I’ll give you something for the trip.”
“Thanks.”
Then she waited, giving me a Well? look.
Well indeed.
“Would you like to go on a date with me?” I asked.
“Absolutely,” she said without even thinking about it. “But you have to take me tonight. I leave tomorrow.”
“Pick you up or meet you somewhere?” I asked.
“Pick me up.”
“Six thirty?”
“Sounds good,” she said. “My number’s in Pooter’s chart.”
I handed her the kitten, took the airline health certificate she brought for me to fill out, and I left.
I saw Tina in the back. “She needs a prescription for gabapentin and proof of vaccinations. I’ll fill out the health certificate before I leave.”
I was talking to Tina but looking through the tablet for Samantha’s number.
“Oh my God, he’s smiling,” Tina said.
My head jerked up. “What?”
She was looking at me with wide eyes. “You’re smiling.”
“He is smiling.” Maggie’s mouth was open. “Is it her? Do you like her??”
I didn’t get to answer. Tina gasped and started bouncing. “He likes her!”
“Stop it. No I don’t.”
Maggie made a circling motion with her finger. “Yeeeessss you dooo! We can tell.”
I stared at both of them flatly. Then I turned toward my office and shut the door. I stood in front of my desk and wiped a hand down my mouth.
I felt bad that I said I didn’t like her. It wasn’t true.
I came back out.
“I do like her. We’re going on a date tonight. I don’t want to hear anything else about it, it’s not a big deal.”
Apparently it was a big deal. They started screaming.
“This isn’t my first date,” I said defensively.
“Oh, we know,” Maggie said, beaming. “But this one is different.”
“Why?”
“She called you an asshole.”
I snorted.
“Normally I would tell you not to be all scary and serious, but I think she’s into it,” Tina said.
“Thank you, but I do not need your advice. I do not exactly have a difficult time finding people to go out with me,” I said.
I didn’t. I don’t know why they were so excited.
“You go on dates with a very specific kind of woman,” Maggie said.
“Do I,” I said, unamused.
“Your. . .
We hope you are enjoying the book so far. To continue reading...
