Why should I provide my email address?

Start saving money today with our FREE daily newsletter packed with the best FREE and bargain Kindle book deals. We will never share your email address!
Sign Up Now!

Enjoy Our Free Romance of The Week Excerpt Featuring Bestselling & KND Fave Author Kathryn Shay’s Michael’s Family – Now 99 Cents on Kindle

Last week we announced that Michael’s Family, Just One Night & Finally A Family by Kathryn Shay are our Romance of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the Romance category: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Romance excerpt, and if you aren’t among those who have downloaded Michael’s Family, you’re in for a real treat:

Michael’s Family

by Kathryn Shay

5.0 stars – 6 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Once again, Kathryn Shay puts into words what she’s learned as a high school teacher. She also spent time with the public defender and a district attorney to research this book!

“Each page is pure seduction of the senses.” – Genie Romex Reviews

Three years after his wife’s death, Luke Rayburn is still struggling with loneliness and the challenges of being a single father. But when his son, Michael, decides he wants to meet his biological mother, Luke must face one of the biggest challenges of his life. Who knew, when they both meet the haunted, beautiful Meredith Hunter, their lives would get inextricably bound together? Full of hot passion and tender family scenes, MICHAEL’S FAMILY is sure to tug on your heart strings.

“Once again, Kathryn Shay blends realism and romance to flawless perfection. Her strength lies in her ability to capture the voice of children with thoughtful insight into how they think and what they feel. The love story is passionate and bittersweet. There’s no stopping this gifted author!” – The Literary Times, Inc.

“With brilliant characterization and sizzling sensuality, Kathryn Shay gifts us with an emotional powerhouse of a love story.” – RT Book Reviews

Don’t Miss These Bestsellers From Kathryn Shay – Sure to Be Mom’s Favorites!

Just One Night

by Kathryn Shay

4.2 stars – 5 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

“A touching story about goals, emotional insecurity and the ability to grow and change unfolds in the remarkable and realistic page-turner. Ms. Shay has once again gifted us with a beautiful love story filled with hope, healing and the pursuit of happiness.” – Rendezvous Magazine

In this emotionally charged story, Annie Montgomery and Zachary Sloan have shared a complicated past. They met as young college students, married, and planned to live happily ever after. They thought they could deal with their differences, but they were wrong. A bitter divorced ensued, and they both started new lives. Or have they? When they meet during a crisis, Annie and Zach share a bed again. A month later, Annie discovers she’s pregnant. Since having children was one of the stumbling blocks of their marriage, Annie can’t believe Zach is happy about his impending fatherhood. Zach has to convince her he’s changed, and Annie must learn to compromise, because one thing is for certain–they never stopped loving each other!

*  *  *

Finally A Family

by Kathryn Shay

5.0 stars – 2 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

A real life medevac helicopter unit, Mercy Flight Base in Canandaigua, New York, served as the basis for Shay’s research for this book. She is grateful for all the hours the dedicated pilots, paramedics and staff spent with her.

“One of the best features of this romance is the authentic air ambulance / search and rescue backdrop. I enjoyed reading this family focused romance.” – Muse Creations

Guardian Flight Base, a search and rescue air ambulance service, needs another helicopter and Alexis Castle has come to Catasaga Lake to see if her company, Castle Industries, deems them worthy of grant money. She soon finds out that they are very deserving, but not before she falls in love with their head pilot, Spence Keagan, a set-in-his ways, untrusting man. Both Spence and Alexis know getting involved smacks of impropriety, but they can’t help themselves. They’re further bound together when their two kids, both of whom are estranged from their parents, form a bond of their own. Complicated and intense, this relationship sets the stage for some high powered action and passionate love scenes.

 And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt of “Michael’s Family”:

“HEY, DAD, do you believe that sixty-three percent of the men in this survey say they don’t have sex as often as they’d like?”

Michael’s sixteen-year-old voice preceded him into the den, where Lucas Rayburn sat, having just made one of the most difficult decisions of his life. He stared at the boy who was almost a man, and felt his heart constrict. God, he loved the kid.

“Daaad. He-llo?”

“Yes, Michael. I believe that.”

Green eyes focused on Luke as Michael plopped his nearly six-foot body into the wing chair, rolled the magazine he held and tapped it on his knee. “What’s wrong, Dad?”

“Nothing. Why?”

“You usually rib me about my project.”

“With good reason. I’m still wary of a year-long term paper on the sexual practices of the average American.”

“Hey, the new English teacher said we should choose a topic we’re interested in. It’ll make learning the research skills easier. Julie Anne’s doing hers on the rights of adopted children.”

Luke’s smile disappeared abruptly at the mention of the topic Michael’s best friend had chosen for her paper.

“Dad?”

“I’ve decided, Michael.”

He watched his son grip the chair arm hard. “And?”

“I’ve thought about your request. A lot.” The words stuck in his throat, but Luke got them out somehow. “We’ll contact your biological mother.”

Michael swallowed, his youthful Adam’s apple bobbing. “That’s great.”

Great? It was obscene, that’s what it was. The fact that Michael had asked, weeks ago, to find the woman who’d given birth to him stunned Luke at first. Now it just hurt. He tried hard to keep his face neutral and concentrate on what was best for Michael.

“Listen, Dad, I promise it won’t change anything between us. You know, how it’s been for the last three years. Since Mom died. We’ll be buddies, like we’ve always been.”

Luke’s throat clogged. “I know you mean that, son. But you’ve got to realize that when we find her our lives will never be the same.”

Michael shrugged his shoulders. “Maybe our lives will be better.”

“Maybe.”

But Luke doubted it.

o0o

LUKE PULLED his Bronco into the parking lot next to a sleek silver Corvette, and took the time to admire its clean lines and subtle construction. It was not out of place here at the swank condominium complex in an upscale suburb of Romulus, New York. Michael’s birth mother must have done pretty well for herself.

He shut off the engine and leaned his head against the seat. He tried to quell his resentment but his effort was futile, as it had been on the interminable one-hour drive from Sommerfield to Romulus. The only thing his internal debating had achieved was to enhance the dull ache at his temples.

What did it matter how well she’d fared in the intervening years? When Michael was born, she’d turned him over to a family who could raise him better than she could, and Luke had thanked God for it then. It wasn’t fair to judge her now for what he had considered the greatest gift a mother could give her child.

“But she’s not Michael’s mother,” he said aloud, pounding his fist on the steering wheel. “Sara is.”

No, Sara was his mother.

Yanking open the door, and determined to leave the bitter feelings and morbid thoughts behind, Luke made his way to number thirty-four. Before he could change his mind, he reached up and rang the bell. Impatient now, he tapped his foot on the brick steps as he looked around at the lush greenery. Large maple and birch trees swayed in the early-afternoon breeze, infusing the air with the scents of fall. The grass and shrubbery were meticulously clipped, like the grounds of the golf course at the country club Sara had convinced him to join. He was about to ring again, when the door opened.

Luke froze. Staring up at him were Michael’s eyes. His son had the most unusual eyes Luke had ever seen—oval, with large black pupils, surrounded by light green or dark green—depending on his mood or what he wore—and rimmed in black. They’d always reminded Luke of the marbles he used to play with as a kid.

“Hello.” Her voice was strained, and she coughed to clear it. “Mr. Rayburn?”

“Yes. You must be Meredith Hunter.”

She nodded, then inched back to allow him in.

Luke couldn’t shake the feeling that once he entered this house, his life would change forever. But he’d promised Michael. He stepped through the doorway.

Softly she closed the door, and circled him in the large foyer. “Come on in here,” she said, her voice a little stronger. She preceded him into a huge living room.

He tried not to notice that her hair was light brown, and streaked the same as Michael’s with end-of-summer highlights. He tried not to observe that she was about five-eight, tall for a woman. It must be where Michael got his height. Oh, Lord, he told himself, he had to stop these comparisons, or he’d go crazy. He had to remember that this woman gave birth to his son, but he and Sara had given Michael everything else.

“Why don’t you sit down, Mr. Rayburn,” she said, standing beside an overstuffed white leather couch.

He sat. She perched on the matching chair across from him, and was framed by high, arched floor-to-ceiling windows. Vertical blinds allowed in afternoon sunlight which softened her somewhat formal outfit— a navy blue suit with a white blouse.

Stop staring and say something. “Nice place you have here.” Oh, now that was clever.

She scanned the room absently. “Thanks, I like it.”

“Lived here long?”

“Um, yes, about seven years. I was one of the original tenants. That’s how I could afford it.”

He nodded.

“Can I get you something to drink?”

He glanced down at her hands, clasped so tightly in her lap that her knuckles were white. It was the first time he noticed she was trembling. The small show of vulnerability thawed some of his resentment of her. “Not unless you have a magic potion that will make this any less awkward.”

She smiled then, a half smile that Michael often gave Luke when he’d done something right. “This is hard,” she said.

Luke sat back against the comfortable cushions and sighed heavily. “I don’t even know where to begin. I was hoping our mothers could be here to break the ice.” When she didn’t say anything, he added, “You know, because they arranged the adoption.”

Again, the wisp of a smile. “I wish they were here, too.”

“Bad timing that they’re both traveling.”

“Yes, it would have helped if they could have filled us in on the details of each other’s lives before we met.” Her eyes turned bleak. “And of…Michael’s.”

She said his son’s name reverently. Instead of impressing Luke, it irked him. He didn’t want to know how she felt about Michael, or what it had been like to give up her child. “What did my mother tell your mother?” he asked.

“Just that Michael wanted to meet me. And…that his…that your wife had died three years ago.”

“Yes, his mother died of cancer.”

Luke watched her carefully. She’d flinched when he called Sara Michael’s mother, but she’d repressed it immediately.

“I’m sorry,” she said softly. “For you and Michael.”

“You knew nothing about us?”

“No. I assume you knew nothing about me, either.”

He shook his head.

“I agreed with my mother that was the best way to handle the…adoption.” She paused again, and her hands clenched tighter in her lap. “Didn’t you want it that way?”

“Of course. I never thought this day would come.”

“I’m sorry,” she repeated.

“My mother said that she and your mother cut off all contact sixteen years ago—when they arranged the adoption—so she didn’t know how your life turned out.”

“My mother said the same thing. About you, and your life.”

Luke smiled in spite of the gravity of the situation. “We’re parroting each other. This is the stiffest conversation I’ve ever had.”

“It is awkward.”

“I always felt bad my mother gave up her best friend from law school for me.”

Meredith stared over his shoulder. “Me, too. They both made a big sacrifice for Michael’s welfare. I…appreciated it.” She smiled again. “Did you know that they were the only two women in their graduating class at Stanford?”

Relaxing, Luke nodded. “They got each other through, from what I heard. My mother talked about Lydia a lot before the adoption. She never mentioned her afterward.”

“Same here.”

Luke sighed again, watching her. “Well, where do we start?”

“Tell me about him.” Luke thought he saw moisture glaze her eyes, but she blinked and it was gone.

He hesitated. It was hard for him to begin, but he knew he had to start the ball rolling somehow. “He’s a great kid,” he said finally. “He’s a junior in high school—gets good grades but doesn’t have to study much for them. Like most kids, he plays his music too loud, he’s addicted to Reality TV. He wears my clothes without asking. English is his favorite subject, and he writes a lot since his ninth-grade teacher got the kids to keep a journal.”

The intensity on her face reminded Luke of a POW starved for information about the outside world. He felt a pang of sympathy.

“Let’s see, his best friend is Julie Anne Sherman, who lives next door. They’re together most of the time, though he has a lot of buddies from the soccer team who hang around the house.”

Meredith Hunter bit her lip hard.

“Are you all right?” he asked.

She took in a deep breath. “Yes, I, um…it’s all a little overwhelming. Finally…knowing about him.”

She’d either just lied to him, he decided, or hedged. He knew the signs well. She’d reacted when he’d mentioned soccer.

Nervously, she reached up and fingered the braid that fell over one shoulder. She wore no polish on her short fingernails; her hands were unsteady. “What else?”

Probing, to see if she would react again, Luke said, “He’s an excellent soccer player.”

Her shoulders tensed. “What position?”

“Forward. Do you know the game?”

“Yes. Does he drive yet?”

Luke nodded, but let go of the cross-examination. “We kept Sara’s car for him after she died. He uses that.”

“A nice legacy for a teenage boy.”

For some reason the comment angered Luke. “Sara gave him a lot more than that.”

“I’m sure she did.” Meredith swallowed hard. “Look, I’d like some coffee. I’ll be right back.” She fled from the room faster than a beaten dog.

Damn it. Luke hadn’t meant to hurt her. He hadn’t known what to expect—how she’d felt about giving up her son—so he hadn’t thought out his reactions to her. Hell, she seemed pretty controlled to him in general. Almost cold. But one thing was clear. It hurt her to talk about Michael, and about the woman she’d given him to. Luke didn’t want to deal with that. He had his own conflicting emotions to sort out.

So he got up and wandered around the room. Its tidy sparseness added to his impression that this was a woman in control. Everything was in its place, neatly stored or displayed. There were none of the springy plants Sara had populated their house with. Only two pictures graced the bookshelf: one of an older couple, the woman resembling both Meredith and Michael. The other photo was of two guys, arms linked, in football jerseys and shorts. Was one a lover? Michael’s natural father? All Luke knew about the man was that he had died before Michael was born, and that they had no health records from him like the ones he’d gotten from Meredith. Even recently, when Luke’s mother had told him the whereabouts of Meredith Hunter, she’d said that there would be no discussion of the man involved. Which was fine with Luke. Even mention of the guy made his stomach churn. He didn’t want to know any of this! He was Michael’s father.

In the kitchen, Meredith gripped the countertop and took several deep breaths. She reached over and cranked open the window, then splashed some cold water on her face.

Oh, God, this was hard. She’d known it was going to hurt, she just hadn’t planned on the details sucker punching her in the gut.

He was a soccer player. She had a brief flash of herself in the last game she’d ever played, booting in the winning goal from almost midfield.

Shake it off, Meredith. This is too important to fall apart now.

Taking out the canister and filter, she assembled the coffee machine, and watched it brew. Mr. Lucas Rayburn would have to wait until she got herself together. Judging from the looks he’d shot her, she was certain he wouldn’t miss her presence at all. Which was fine with her. Arrogant, intimidating men were her least favorite people.

Eight minutes later, she returned to the living room more composed, a tray containing their coffee in her hands. She found Luke standing in front of her music collection. “You have a lot of jazz.” He held up a Rippington’s CD. “Michael likes this group, too.”

Quelling a surge of joy at yet another shared interest, she set the tray down on the low, glass-topped table. “How do you take your coffee?”

“Black.” He came toward her then, and took a mug. A lock of hair fell across his forehead. It was the color of fall chestnuts. His eyes were slightly darker, she noted, allowing herself to look into them.

She wished she hadn’t. They were a deep, dark masculine brown—and they were filled with wariness.

Nothing you didn’t expect, Meredith.

When they were seated again, she tried to warm her ice-cold hands by circling them around one of the steaming mugs. He watched her.

“Mr. Rayburn, I know this is difficult for you. It’s hard for me, too. Would you answer a question?”

“Maybe.”

“How do you feel about Michael getting to know me?”

He set his mug down on the table, then linked his hands between his knees. For the first time she noticed he was dressed casually, in blue jeans and a gray T-shirt under a blue plaid flannel shirt. Her work suit, tailored yet stylish, seemed formal and fussy for this occasion. “I’m against it,” he said simply.

Oh, God, was she going to lose the boy a second time? She forced a calm into her voice, as she did in the courtroom when she was unsure of her facts. “Then why are you here?” she asked. Susan, her therapist, had told her to focus on what she needed from the situation.

“Because I’ll do anything for Michael. And he wants to meet you.”

Meredith let out a revealing breath. “So you’ll let us…him…see me?”

“Of course. Look, I don’t want to know anything about why you gave him up. All I really need to know is where your head is today.” He paused, then said, “Answer a question for me. Can you do this for him now? Do you want to?”

“Yes, I do. More than you could possibly know.”

“It won’t be easy,” he warned.

You don’t understand the half of it, Mr. Rayburn. “What exactly do you mean?”

“Michael’s a complicated kid. And he’s stubborn. He wants to get to know you now that Sara’s gone, and no one can convince him differently.”

“You’ve tried?”

“I’ve explored all the angles with him. Ultimately, it was his decision.”

“But had it been yours, we wouldn’t be here talking.”

“Absolutely not. I know my son. He’ll have some trouble with…with the fact that you gave him up.”

Meredith felt sick, but she forced herself not to react to his articulation of her worst fear.

“Are you prepared for that?” he asked.

“I honestly don’t know.”

“Why did you agree to this?”

Anger flickered inside her. Could he possibly think she didn’t want to know her own child? His eyes narrowed on her, so she must have reacted outwardly, something she took great pains to avoid doing. “I want this, too.”

“All right.” He sat back and picked up his coffee. “I’d like to know more about you, then.”

Meredith studied him. Know thy enemy. “I feel the same way.”

He smiled and she had the odd feeling it was a rare occurrence in his life these days. “You go first,” he said. “Give me the basics, then I’ll do the same.”

Wanting to relax, she eased back into the chair. “Let’s see. I’m thirty-five. I have an older brother, Nathan, and as you know, my mother is a retired attorney, living in New York City. My dad’s dead. I read and spend time with my best friend, Belle. I like jazz and have an interest in cars. I watch sports on television, but not much else. I work out at a health club four times a week. And I’m an assistant district attorney for the city of Romulus.”

His thick eyebrows raised when she finished. “I didn’t expect the last thing.”

“What do you mean?”

“We have something in common.”

“What?”

“The law. I’m a federal public defender for the counties that include Romulus and Sommerfield.”

Meredith’s hands went clammy and her insides contracted. But she struggled to rein in her conflicting emotions. Luke Rayburn could never know about her bias against public defenders. Of everything in this whole emotional mess, that was the one thing that he could never, ever find out.

She’d go to the grave with that secret.

o0o

LUKE SUCKED IN AIR as he ran up the hill; he glanced over at his son, who wasn’t even breathing heavily. Ah, the advantages of youth. But he wouldn’t trade places with Michael today for anything in the world. When they hit the top of the incline, and Luke was able to talk again, he asked, “Nervous about meeting her?”

Michael’s pace slowed almost imperceptibly, and his face flushed. But he kept running. “Yeah. Stupid, huh?”

Not breaking stride, Luke reached over and squeezed Michael’s arm. “I’d be the same if I were in your shoes.”

“Dad?”

“Hmm?”

“What if I don’t like her?”

I’d fall down on my knees and thank God. Not fair, Rayburn. Maybe the kid needs this. “Well, none of this is irrevocable, you know. You don’t have to continue any relationship with her if you don’t want to.”

“Would that be fair to her?”

Sometimes, good parenting came back to haunt you. You taught your kid to care about others, not to use or abuse them, and then at the worst possible times, they did exactly what you said. “Mike, we haven’t made any promises. We just decided to meet her and see how it goes. It will probably be hard for her if it doesn’t work out.” The memory of sad green eyes appeared before him. “But we’re going to do what’s best for you.”

The boy smiled weakly and picked up the pace of their jog. They ran about a quarter of a mile before he spoke again. “I know you want me to form my own opinions about her. But, ah…is she nice? What’s her personality like?”

Cold. Meredith Hunter definitely struck him as cold. Except when she spoke about Michael. “She seems very reserved to me. Very cautious.”

Another few yards. “She’s smart, though, right?”

Luke smiled, surprised at his son’s question. “I’d guess she’s very bright. Those articles I dug up from the Romulus Herald cited a pretty successful career.”

Once he’d discovered she was an assistant district attorney, he’d done some investigating and found Ms. Hunter had caused quite a stir in the Romulus law community during her seven years in the D.A.’s office. She’d taken the track most county D.A.’s did—putting in a stint of several months in city court, and about a year in town court. Then, she’d prosecuted nonviolent felons, and finally settled in the Major Felonies Bureau. “Champion of Women’s Issues,” one headline had called her, and another newspaper dubbed her as part of the “Sensitive Bureau.”

“And she went to Princeton, right?”

“Yep.”

“Did you ever meet her when you were kids, Dad?”

“Once or twice. But we lived on opposite coasts so it was tough getting the families together.” Luke glanced at his son. “I don’t remember much about those visits.”

“What about as an adult? Your jurisdiction is Romulus, too.”

“Yeah, it is. But I never met her. That’s not unusual. When I was a county public defender, there would be little chance of meeting her since Sommerfield and Romulus each have about forty or fifty A.D.A.’s. No reason for me to come in contact with her. And I’ve only been with the federal department for a year, so it’s not unusual.”

“It’s strange, all the law connections, though.”

“No, son, it isn’t. You know that your grandmothers arranged the adoption. And they were both lawyers. Their children chose law.”

“At least Grandma will get to see her good friend now.”

Luke stopped running; Michael went a few paces before he realized his father wasn’t beside him, then stopped, too. “What is it, Dad?”

“Michael, it’s important that you don’t take responsibility for anything that’s happened here. Your grandmother made her own choices. She got you in the exchange, and never regretted it for a minute. As far as Meredith Hunter is concerned, she also made her own decisions. If this doesn’t work out—letting her into our lives—she’ll learn to live with it.”

Michael grinned at his father. “Okay, Dad, I get it. But can I at least have a minute to feel bad for them?”

Relaxing, Luke returned the grin and walked to Michael, encircling his son’s neck with his arm. “Sorry, kid. But I’m not going to let you get hurt by this.” Please, God, let me be able to do that.

Michael leaned into him for a minute.

“I love you, Mike.”

“Me, too, Dad.” Then he pulled away. “Race ya? Last one home gets to wear your new Broncos’ sweatshirt.”

“You’re on.”

An hour later, Michael, wearing Luke’s Broncos’ sweatshirt, lay sprawled in front of the DVD  playing his favorite video game. Luke had just reached the bottom of the stairs when the doorbell rang. Michael dropped the controls and looked up at his father. For all his height and muscle, he seemed a child today. “Want me to get it?” Luke asked.

His son shook his head and uncurled his long frame. His body was rigid when he stood.

“Mike?”

White-faced, he turned to Luke.

“Remember, this isn’t irrevocable,” Luke lied. “We don’t have to take it any further.”

Nodding, Michael crossed to the foyer.

o0o

OH, DEAR GOD, he looks like me. The thought came uncensored when Meredith saw her son for the very first time. She ground her heels into the concrete and gripped her purse strap. Mostly it was his eyes, but his other features resembled hers, too. And his hair was the same color.

“Hi.” His voice was raspy. Nervous.

“Hello.”

Meredith watched as he scanned her. She’d changed clothes four times, and hoped the casual knit skirt and hip-length top were the right choice. This was really her son, standing here, looking her over.

And his eyes betrayed him. Used to reading people, she saw a myriad of emotions flood him: curiosity, wariness, pleasure and finally, some distrust, which reminded her of Lucas Rayburn—who materialized behind Michael.

“Ask her to come in,” he said gently.

The boy’s face turned red. “Oh, sure, sorry. Come in.”

Michael stood to the side, next to Luke, as Meredith entered the house. Trying to calm her churning stomach, she scanned the interior. Their home was lovely, if not her taste. A large, well-appointed living room sprawled to the right, dining room to the left. Ahead, a hallway led to the rear of the house.

“Come on back,” Luke said, heading down the hall. Michael waited politely for Meredith to go first, and his proximity made her dizzy. She could feel his presence looming behind her.

The family room was huge and airy, decorated, like the rest of the house, in expensive Colonial motif. Luke preceded her into the room, and as Meredith followed, she stumbled and lost her balance. She grabbed for the post that separated the dinette from the family room, as Michael grasped her to steady her.

“You missed the step down,” he said.

The breath went out of Meredith as she looked at the large masculine hand enfolding her arm. Her son’s hand. She struggled against the swell of emotion building within her. She’d promised herself she’d stay in control. Damn it, she wouldn’t cry. She’d handle this well. But, God, her son really touched her. If nothing else ever happened between them, she’d gotten more from him now than she’d ever imagined having.

“Sorry,” she said hoarsely, pulling her gaze away. “I’m not usually this clumsy.” Glancing over, she saw Luke staring at her, examining her. She knew that somehow he sensed what had just happened to her. The distaste in his eyes told her he didn’t like it—and that he felt not a whit of sympathy for her. So be it. She wasn’t going to let him stand in her way. Not if Michael wanted her in his life. You have some say in this now, Meredith, her therapist had said. Go for it.

“Have a seat, Ms. Hunter.” The ice in Luke’s voice confirmed her impressions.

Knees shaking, Meredith crossed to the blue plaid sofa and gratefully sank onto it. Luke leaned against a six-foot-long mahogany wall unit, hands stuck in his jeans, a long-sleeved gray T-shirt hugging his muscles. His whole stance was hostile. She turned from him to Michael.

He, too, was watching her from a distance. He stood by the step she’d stumbled over, head cocked, posture only slightly less tense than Luke’s. The sweatshirt he wore stretched across his wide shoulders.

“Can we get you something?” Luke asked, breaking the silence. When she stared at him, wide-eyed, a ghost of a smile played on his face. “A glass of water, or something? You look like you could use one.”

He’d broken the tension. Even though he hated her presence here, he’d done it for his son. Reluctant admiration swept through her.

“I am a little overwhelmed. Water would help.”

Michael’s shoulders relaxed as Luke walked by and squeezed his arm. Meredith bit her lip, moved by the supportive gesture. She was a bundle of nerves and needed to get control before she started to bawl in front of the Rayburn men.

Taking a deep breath, she focused on Michael. “This must be hard on you,” she said softly.

His eyes—the exact color of hers—watched her. Then he shrugged. “Yeah, it is. For you, too?”

She nodded. “But I’m glad that you wanted to meet me.”

“Yeah?” The grin that split on his youthful face gave her the encouragement to go on.

“Yes, I am. You’ll never know how much.”

Michael moved into the room, and sat down on a chair adjacent to her. “Okay, good.” He held eye contact. “So, how do we do this?” Meredith smiled inwardly at the similarities between his gestures and words and those of the man who had raised him.

Luke returned with the water, and Meredith hoped neither of them noticed the slight trembling of her hand as she took it. She gulped it down, then set the glass on a coaster on the fancy end table and turned back to Michael. “We’ll do this however you want.”

He glanced at his father, who’d retreated to the wall; Luke gave his son an encouraging smile and nodded.

“Dad thinks we might want to spend some time alone together.”

An unexpected gift. Pure joy shot through her. “I’d love that.”

Michael shifted in the chair and looked longingly out the window. “Want to go for a walk? We’re only a half mile from the high school. I could show it to you.”

“I’d like that.”

He scanned her outfit. “You gonna be okay in those shoes?”

Peering down at her one-inch pumps, she shook her head. “Probably not, but I’ve got my Nikes in the car.”

“Cool.” He stood. “Let’s go then.”

Meredith risked a glimpse at Luke. His face was inscrutable as he pushed away from the wall and followed them to the foyer. “You need a jacket, Michael?”

The boy tugged at his sweatshirt as he opened the front door. “Nah, I got to wear this, remember?”

A smile full of love and pride suffused Luke Rayburn’s face. It made him look young—and handsome, even if Meredith didn’t understand the exchange.

“Don’t rub it in, buddy,” he said gruffly. He turned to Meredith. The warmth drained from his eyes and he scowled. “How about you?” he asked. The strain in his voice told her he was trying hard to inject some concern into his question. “You got a jacket?”

“Ah, no. I don’t. I didn’t think…I was a little rattled this morning when I left Romulus.”

Luke’s features softened. “That’s understandable.” He reached over, opened a closet and yanked out a white nylon jacket. Meredith caught the Sommerfield blue lettering on the back. “Here, you can wear this,” he told her.

She felt the room sway as he placed the jacket over her shoulders. Her son’s jacket. She was actually wearing her son’s jacket. Michael stepped outside; Meredith was forced to follow, though she did so in a daze. A quick glance down to see Mike on the upper left almost destroyed her equilibrium completely. The subtle smell of after-shave surrounded her as the smooth material caressed her arms. She halted on the porch, closed her eyes briefly, savoring the scent of her child. Thank God both men were distracted by Michael’s comment, “Wow, Dad, look.”

Meredith watched Luke and Michael take the steps two at a time and stride to the Corvette parked in their driveway. Michael reached out his hand and smoothed it over the silver-metallic paint and chrome. Luke held himself back, but couldn’t take his eyes off the car. “What year is it?” Michael asked.

Meredith was about to answer, when Luke said, “A silver-anniversary edition, I’ll bet. 1977.”

This from the man who drove a Bronco—a late-model, pricey one, but still a family car. Interesting.

As the two men examined the car and traded comments, Meredith stuck her hands into the pockets of Michael’s jacket. She pulled out two movie-ticket stubs, a pack of gum and a dollar. She swallowed hard. Clues to her son’s life. Traces of his daily activities.

“Ready to go?” she heard him ask.

“Sure, as soon as I get my sneakers.”

She took the stairs carefully, not wanting to repeat her earlier clumsiness. Opening the passenger side of the car, she grabbed the shoes and socks, sat down and slipped off her pumps. When she was ready, she looked up to find Luke’s gaze focused on her legs. He tore his eyes away, like a kid caught doing something he shouldn’t, then cleared his throat. “Well, enjoy your walk.” Peering over the hood of the car, he stared hard at Michael. “I’ll be right here when you get back, son,” he said meaningfully.

Involuntarily Meredith winced at the term. On the other side of the car, Michael didn’t notice. But when she caught Luke’s eyes, she knew he had.

Damn, she’d have to be more careful around this guy. He saw too much. And it would be a cold day in hell before she’d let any man in on her vulnerabilities. Especially Luke Rayburn.

o0o

MIKE STRUGGLED to maintain a slow pace so that the woman beside him could keep up. He jammed his hands into his corduroy jeans and wracked his brain for something to say to her. How did you talk to a mother you’d never met? Man, he didn’t even know what to call her. Meredith, he guessed. His Interpersonal Skills Course never covered this one.

“My dad says you’re a lawyer.”

“Yes, I’m an assistant district attorney in Romulus.”

“You like it?”

“I love it.”

They walked a little farther. “It’s funny, you being a lawyer…Dad’s a lawyer and Grandma Rayburn and your mother are all lawyers.”

“It is a coincidence.”

“But I guess that’s how I got to…to Dad, right?”

She moved away from him, like Julie Anne often did when he pushed her about something she didn’t want to discuss. Must be a girl-thing.

“Yes, Mike, it is. My mother and your father’s mother arranged the adoption.”

His stomach went queasy at the topic. You can ask her anything you want, Dad had said, but don’t feel you have to get into things you’re not ready to discuss.

“Tell me about your job.”

He tried to listen as she told him about the case she was working on now. An eighty-year-old woman had been attacked and Meredith was prosecuting the alleged attacker. She had a strong voice, a lot like the news reporter on channel ten. His mother—Sara, his real mother—had had a soft, feminine voice. He could still hear it sometimes, calling up the stairs for him to come to supper, laughing softly with his father in the den, and in the end, telling him he had to be strong. God, he missed her.

The woman next to him was nothing like her. She was tall. His mother had been barely five feet. Meredith was healthy and athletic-looking. His mother had been sick for all of his life. And fragile. He remembered trying not to do anything to upset her because she was so vulnerable. When he did, he felt guilty about it for days. Just as he felt guilty now. For wanting to know this woman.

The school loomed ahead. Meredith had fallen silent as they walked toward the bleachers. Taking a seat on the first row, he stared out at the field.

“You’re a soccer player, right?” she asked, joining him.

“Yeah.”

“It’s a great game.”

He turned to her. “You know it?”

She smiled, the first real, unselfconscious one she’d given him. “Yep.”

“How?”

“I used to play.”

“Really? What position?”

“Center forward.”

“No kidding, that’s what I play.”

“I know. Your father told me.”

“He didn’t tell me you played.”

She frowned. “I didn’t say much about it. It was a long time ago.”

“Wow, maybe you can come and watch a game sometime.”

He heard her suck in her breath. When he turned to look at her, her eyes were watery. Damn, he hoped she didn’t cry. The few times when Julie Anne had cried, it killed him.

“Are you all right?” he asked.

She coughed again. She’d done that a lot. And cleared her throat. He figured she was pretty choked up about all this. Well, so was he.

“Yes, Mike, I’m okay. And I’d be honored to come and see you play.” She took another deep breath. “Am I going to get to do that?”

Was she? Good question. He wanted her to. He thought he did, anyway. Sometimes. Most of the time. Then there were times he never wanted to lay eyes on her.

“You know, I asked to see you.”

“Yes, I know.”

“Dad thinks it’s a mistake.”

“Did he say that?”

“No, but I can tell. He throws his shoulders back and shoves his eyebrows together whenever he doesn’t agree with something I want to do.”

“Well, that’s understandable. This is a difficult situation.”

“Is this really hard for you, Meredith?” Saying her name for the first time felt strange. When he looked at her, he could tell she sensed it, too.

“Very hard.” Her reply was breathless.

Something pushed at him from inside. He knew he should ignore it. He always knew when he should stop himself from doing things. Like when he was on the soccer field and had the urge to take the ball down alone. He always knew when he should pass. But he often went solo, anyway, believing he could score alone. So, knowing he was making an error in judgment once again, he asked, “Yeah, well, if this is so hard for you, why did you give me up in the first place?”

 Click here to download the entire book: Kathryn Shay’s Michael’s Family>>>

MOTHER’S DAY SPECIAL! It’s All About Mothers in This Special Trio From Kindle Nation Fave Kathryn Shay! 3 Books, 3 Very Different Views of Motherhood, Each on Sale For 99 Cents: Download Michael’s Family, Just One Night & Finally A Family – Mom Will Thank You

Like A Little Romance?

Then you’ll love our magical Kindle book search tools that will help you find these great bargains in the Romance category:

And for the next week all of these great reading choices are sponsored by our Brand New Romance of the Week by Michael’s Family by Kathryn Shay, so please check it out!

Michael’s Family

by Kathryn Shay

5.0 stars – 5 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Once again, Kathryn Shay puts into words what she’s learned as a high school teacher. She also spent time with the public defender and a district attorney to research this book!

“Each page is pure seduction of the senses.” – Genie Romex Reviews

Three years after his wife’s death, Luke Rayburn is still struggling with loneliness and the challenges of being a single father. But when his son, Michael, decides he wants to meet his biological mother, Luke must face one of the biggest challenges of his life. Who knew, when they both meet the haunted, beautiful Meredith Hunter, their lives would get inextricably bound together? Full of hot passion and tender family scenes, MICHAEL’S FAMILY is sure to tug on your heart strings.

“Once again, Kathryn Shay blends realism and romance to flawless perfection. Her strength lies in her ability to capture the voice of children with thoughtful insight into how they think and what they feel. The love story is passionate and bittersweet. There’s no stopping this gifted author!” – The Literary Times, Inc.

“With brilliant characterization and sizzling sensuality, Kathryn Shay gifts us with an emotional powerhouse of a love story.” – RT Book Reviews

Don’t Miss These Bestsellers From Kathryn Shay – Sure to Be Mom’s Favorites!

Just One Night

by Kathryn Shay

4.2 stars – 5 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

“A touching story about goals, emotional insecurity and the ability to grow and change unfolds in the remarkable and realistic page-turner. Ms. Shay has once again gifted us with a beautiful love story filled with hope, healing and the pursuit of happiness.” – Rendezvous Magazine

In this emotionally charged story, Annie Montgomery and Zachary Sloan have shared a complicated past. They met as young college students, married, and planned to live happily ever after. They thought they could deal with their differences, but they were wrong. A bitter divorced ensued, and they both started new lives. Or have they? When they meet during a crisis, Annie and Zach share a bed again. A month later, Annie discovers she’s pregnant. Since having children was one of the stumbling blocks of their marriage, Annie can’t believe Zach is happy about his impending fatherhood. Zach has to convince her he’s changed, and Annie must learn to compromise, because one thing is for certain–they never stopped loving each other!

*  *  *

Finally A Family

by Kathryn Shay

5.0 stars – 2 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

A real life medevac helicopter unit, Mercy Flight Base in Canandaigua, New York, served as the basis for Shay’s research for this book. She is grateful for all the hours the dedicated pilots, paramedics and staff spent with her.

“One of the best features of this romance is the authentic air ambulance / search and rescue backdrop. I enjoyed reading this family focused romance.” – Muse Creations

Guardian Flight Base, a search and rescue air ambulance service, needs another helicopter and Alexis Castle has come to Catasaga Lake to see if her company, Castle Industries, deems them worthy of grant money. She soon finds out that they are very deserving, but not before she falls in love with their head pilot, Spence Keagan, a set-in-his ways, untrusting man. Both Spence and Alexis know getting involved smacks of impropriety, but they can’t help themselves. They’re further bound together when their two kids, both of whom are estranged from their parents, form a bond of their own. Complicated and intense, this relationship sets the stage for some high powered action and passionate love scenes.

About The Author

Kathryn Shay is a lifelong writer. At fifteen, she penned her first ‘romance,’ a short story about a female newspaper reporter in New York City and her fight to make a name for herself in a world of male journalists – and with one hardheaded editor in particular. Looking back, Kathryn says she should have known then that writing was in her future. But as so often happens, fate sent her detouring down another path.

Fully intending to pursue her dream of big city lights and success in the literary world, Kathryn took every creative writing class available at the small private women’s college she attended in upstate New York. Instead, other dreams took precedence. She met and subsequently married a wonderful guy who’d attended a neighboring school, then completed her practice teaching, a requirement for the education degree she never intended to use. But says Kathryn, “I fell in love with teaching the first day I was up in front of a class, and knew I was meant to do that.”

Kathryn went on to build a successful career in the New York state school system, thoroughly enjoying her work with adolescents. But by the early 1990s, she’d again made room in her life for writing. It was then that she submitted her first manuscript to publishers and agents. Despite enduring two years of rejections, she persevered. And on a snowy December afternoon in 1994, Kathryn Shay sold her first book to Harlequin Superromance.

Since that first sale, Kathryn has written twenty-two books for Harlequin, ten mainstream contemporary romances for the Berkley Publishing Group, and two online novellas, which Berkley then published in traditional print format.

Kathryn has become known for her powerful characterizations – readers say they feel they know the people in her books – and her heart-wrenching, emotional writing (her favorite comments are that fans cried while reading her books or stayed up late to finish them). In testament to her skill, the author has had a one of her books serialized in the December 2003 COSMOPOLITAN magazine and has been quoted in PEOPLE and THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. She has won five RT BookClub Magazine Reviewers Choice Awards, three Holt Medallions, two Desert Quill Awards, the Golden Leaf Award, and several online accolades.

Even in light of her writing success, that initial love of teaching never wavered for Kathryn. She finished out her teaching career in 2004, retiring from the same school where her career began. These days, she lives in upstate New York with her husband and two children. “My life is very full,” she reports, “but very happy. I consider myself fortunate to have been able to pursue and achieve my dreams.”

(This is a sponsored post.)

Victoria Danann’s The Order of the Black Swan COLLECTED TALES, Books 1-3 is Featured in Today’s Free Romance Excerpt – 19 out 20 Rave Reviews

Last week we announced that Victoria Danann’s The Order of the Black Swan COLLECTED TALES is our Romance of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the Romance category: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Romance excerpt, and if you aren’t among those who have downloaded The Order of the Black Swan COLLECTED TALES, you’re in for a real treat:

4.8 stars – 20 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Discover a world of adult fantasy where modern day knights of a secret society interact with an alien, a witch, a demon, a psychic, a berserker, a most unusual vampire, werewolves, elves, and fae. Fairytales intersect adventure, romance, and emotion proving that true love can find you in the strangest places, even when you’re least expecting it, even when you’re far, far from home. 17+ mature readers.

Book 1, My Familiar Stranger: Romancing the Vampire Hunters. (Nominated for best paranormal romance by REVIEWERS CHOICE AWARD and best indie paranormal romance and best indie fantasy romance by READERS CHOICE AWARDS. Night Owl Reviews TOP PICK. Choice Awards.) http://youtu.be/KLRFw_6gP5Q

Book 2, The Witch’s Dream: A Love Letter to Paranormal Romance http://youtu.be/BGKm-A1JqbI NIGHT OWL REVIEWS TOP PICK

Book 3, A Summoner’s Tale: The Vampire’s Confessor. http://youtu.be/iXTRRFM_TuA NIGHT OWL REVIEWS TOP PICK

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

After a few seconds of stillness she realized she had stopped moving. That’s when the true punishment began. The pain was beyond describable, beyond mortal capacity to bear. But through the curtain of anguish, she thought she heard voices, muffled, maybe far away. The noise in the machine had left her hearing partially impaired. If she thought she would live and be whole again, she might have cared.

The only constant was pain. Relentless, excruciating pain.

She might have been in that swirling tunnel for minutes or hours or days. Trauma overrode all sense of time passage. She remembered a sudden burst of frigid air that instantly chilled her wet body and, as a parting insult, she was dropped on a cold, smooth, surface that was hard as rock.

What little wind was left in her lungs was knocked out of her on impact. At first she couldn’t inhale and thought – hoped – she would expire from that. But, just when her vision was going dark, her body involuntarily dragged in an agonizing, ragged breath.

There were muffled voices. She tried to look around, but even the tiniest movement was restricted by pain, breakage, and swelling. Breathing hurt. Moving eyeballs hurt. She thought she was curled into the fetal position, but couldn’t be sure. Through wet strands of hair she saw a blood-covered arm lying on the floor in front of her face. Beyond that, large boots moved into view; well worn brown leather with squared-off toes.

First, she tried raising herself on an elbow, but fell back when her wet forearm slipped out from under her. Once again her body slammed against the stone floor. She probably hadn’t moved an eighth of an inch, an action that would have been imperceptible to onlookers.

The voices were saying, “…fuck. What is that?”

Next she tried to roll over onto a shoulder blade to get an idea where she was and who was speaking. Her first thought was that it must be assassins who had singled her out and were keeping her alive for ransom or torture. She opened her mouth to scream from the shooting pain of rolling over, but all that came out was a groan that sounded like it had originated somewhere else.

From the new position she could see blurred shapes. Oddly, she didn’t get the sense that she was in danger or that they meant her harm, even though she thought she heard one voice say, “Kill it now”. Surely she could not be the “it” to which they referred?

She reached out to a large shape in dark colors, holding her hand toward the figure until her fingers slowly began to curl under involuntarily as if all muscle control wilted away with the last of her energy. Just before losing consciousness, she remembered thinking that was very likely the last thing she would ever do and she welcomed the peaceful escape of the silent blackness.

Suddenly she felt herself being pulled and lifted roughly, aggravating her injuries, jabbing the wounds, making the pain even worse than before. In her mind she was screaming. Just let me die. Please. Just let me be still for a minute. And die.

When her body came to rest it was against a surface softer and warmer than the stone floor. She was being jostled, pressed into the upper body of someone who now carried her. She smelled aftershave, a hint of cigar, and felt the timbre of a masculine voice murmuring assurances about being okay, calmly, but breathlessly.

The recovery room nurse looked at her face, noticed she was awake and said cheerfully, in a strange accent, “Hey there. How you doin’?”

Elora tried to say, “Hurts,” but through torn and swollen lips, it came out more like a hiss, “urrrrzzz”.

“I know, sweetheart. We’re taking care of you though. In just a minute you’re going to get some really good sleep.”

Now that she was lucid and responding to questions, they would grant the boon of deliverance drugs; drugs that temporarily allowed the sweet mercy of sleep. She tried to ask for the locket, but before she could make herself understood, she was claimed by a blissful wave of oblivion.

 

The nurse came in. “That’s enough visiting for today.” He nodded at the nurse over his shoulder without taking his eyes away from the pitiful creature in the bed. “Do you need anything? Something we may not have thought of?”

Elora stared at his face with a pained expression and spoke with effort. “Hwinnn.Doh.”

Storm frowned just a little, but enough for a couple of small lines to appear between his eyebrows. A window was out of the question. They had just built this… holding cell… especially for her. And it had no windows. “We don’t have a room for you with a window. I’m sorry.” He seemed genuinely apologetic. “Is there something about not having a window that would retard your recovery?”

Elora shook her head almost imperceptibly and thought Storm might have looked a little relieved. “You just like to look outside?” Tiny movement of her chin in an up down direction. “Yeah,” he smiled. “Me, too. Okay. I’ll be back tomorrow.” He turned away then thought of something else. “You know, when you’re better, maybe we can go outside sometimes. That’s even better than a window.”

“Thane ooh.”

His smile illuminated his eyes, brilliant and beautiful as a cloudless night. “If there’s anything else…”

“Ah ke.”

He frowned again. “Sorry. I don’t know what that is.” The patient seemed to respond with agitation and he knew it wouldn’t aid recovery if she was upset. “It sounds like ‘ah ke’ to me. Is that what you’re saying?” She shook her head no almost imperceptibly. “You’re not able to say the word clearly because of the swelling around your mouth?”

She sighed. “Hmmm.”

“Pretty soon, maybe even tomorrow you’ll be able to tell me. For now, I’ll think of it as a puzzle and try to solve it.”

He said he would come whenever he could. That turned out to be every day for most of the day. Elora’s speech started to improve and soon she was able to enunciate her full name and correct the misimpression.

Storm didn’t ask a lot of questions nor did he reveal anything pertinent. He would make small talk about weather and ask how she was doing. Every day he asked if she needed anything and every day she answered that she wanted a window, but one day she followed that with a request for “locket”.

“Locket.” He looked perplexed. “You had a locket with you?”

“Yes.”

“Are you sure it was with you when you came here?”

“Yes.” Although she could form words at this point, it was still with great effort, so her sentences were as efficient as possible. “Saw them take.”

He said he would try to find it. He asked the nursing staff about the locket, but no one was on duty who had been there when she arrived. While he was there, he made sure they understood that the bursar in the Operations Office had been instructed to release funds for whatever she wanted when she was able to ask, unless it was a weapon or something that could obviously be used as one. He anticipated the day would come when she would want some of her own clothes or toiletries and such.

Storm came back into the room to let her know he would look for the locket and asked if there was anything else before he left for the day.

“Where am I?”

“You’re in a hospital unit on a military base. We don’t know how you got here, but when you’re better, we’re hoping you’ll tell us. Right now just use your energy for getting well. That’s your only priority. Everything else can be sorted out later. Right?”

“Okay. And thank you. It’s nice they assigned me to somebody named Angel.”

“You speak German?”

“Some.”

“Well, don’t start setting the bar too high. It was wishful thinking on my mother’s part.”

 

 

Sol looked up from reading a brief when he peripherally noticed a shape standing in the open door of his office. Storm was waiting for an invitation. Sol took his feet off the desk and turned the swivel chair toward the door, motioning Storm inside. “Sir Storm. What can I do for you?”

“Sovereign.” Storm replied in kind, using Sol’s formal title, nodding in the way men with combat experience greet each other, as if there was an unspoken fraternal consciousness that only they shared. “It’s about the patient upstairs.”

Sol’s mouth, held semi-permanently in a rigid line, turned up just a little at the corners. “I suspected as much.”

“She says she had a locket when she arrived. Do you know where they would have put something she had on her person that was salvageable?”

Sol scrutinized Storm while contemplating whether it could do any harm to return the locket. He realized, of course, that the hesitation had already given away that he did, in fact, know something about it. The near-imperceptible release of tension in Sol’s shoulders was the tell-tale signal that he had decided to give up the information.

“Go see Monq,” was all he said. When Storm left without another word, Sol called Monq and told him to expect a visitor momentarily. Then he gave Monq clearance to release the locket and brief Storm on the intelligence gathered so far.

After hearing Monq out, Storm paid a second visit to the infirmary. Elora was sleeping. So he pocketed the locket, planning to return the next day.

He decided to spend the evening researching Elora’s supposed counterpart in his dimension. He grabbed a club sandwich to go from the hub diner and took it back to his quarters. When Monq had mentioned the similarity between his name and the owner of the locket, Storm had reasoned that, if Monq’s hypothesis regarding near-parallel experiences held, there would be an Elora Laiken, or someone with a similar name, in their reality.

With relatively little effort the investigation revealed that there was, in fact, an Elora Laiken, born twenty-three years earlier, died at the age of twelve, daughter of a Briton royal clan. Cause of death was a freak case of pneumonia that didn’t respond to any known treatment.

There was a short article written about her with a photo of her in equestrian gear, wearing a shy smile and holding a trophy with blue ribbon that was far too large for her.

The article said she had just won a steeplechase event and that she had personally trained the black, thoroughbred jumper named Crowers Keep. He noticed the photo had a video link. When he clicked it, the photo came to life.

The young Elora was telling an interviewer that the gelding, Crow, had been a gift for her ninth birthday, that he was two-years-old at the time, and that he had shown an extraordinary exuberance for running and jumping, the two skills required for steeplechase. With self-effacing humility and a relaxed and engaging style far beyond her years, she said she couldn’t really take credit for training him, that she had more or less just hung on for the ride.

As if on cue the horse nudged her from behind with his forehead, forcing her to take a short step forward. She laughed, stepped to the side, looked up at him affectionately and began to rub him between the eyes. As she talked, she took the blue ribbon and tied it to the horse’s bridle behind his ear. “You should interview him,” she said. “He’s the one who ran the course.”

The reporter asked her how she felt about winning her division.

She grinned. “Who doesn’t love to win?”

She was as cute as a twelve-year-old could be with a slightly upturned nose and a scattering of freckles. It occurred to Storm that the little boys must have been crazy for her and it made him sad to know she didn’t live to be someone’s lover, someone’s lifelong friend, someone’s great-grandmother.

 

Elora was awake when Storm arrived the next day. Naturally she was happy to see him. His visits were the highlight of her day. He came through the door smiling like he had a secret, walked straight to the side of the bed and, without saying a word, pulled the locket out of his pocket. He held it by the clasp, dangled it above her heart, then slipped it into her palm and draped the chain over her hand so she didn’t have to waste energy or hurt herself reaching for it. When he looked back at her face, he got all the thanks he needed from her expression.

“What else do you need?”

“Catheter. Out.”

The nurses smiled at each other when he brought the request to their station. They knew that a demand for removal of a catheter was the harbinger of a patient getting well. He argued with the doctors on her behalf until they agreed that she could have the catheter out when she could walk back and forth to the bathroom by herself. She could start by trying to sit up on the side of the bed and he could help with that if he wanted.

When he returned to the room to ask if she’d like to try sitting up, he found her more than eager. Nurses stood on either side of the bed and acted as coaches.

They lowered the bed so that her feet would touch the floor, then told Storm he could gently pull her arms while she tried to maneuver her legs and turn her body. She groaned, but told him not to stop. By the time she was sitting on the side of the bed she was breathing hard. He sat down beside her carefully and she slumped over, leaning against him. The nurses praised her for making a big leap of progress and shuffled Storm off so that they could take advantage of the moment to give her a sponge bath and change the bedding.

Since she was staying awake longer at a time, they gave her a TV remote. That’s when she began her second life in a new world. She quickly realized that the tunnel Monq had pushed her through might as well have been Alice’s rabbit hole. She was in a world similar to the one she’d left, but with differences that were inconsistent, surprisingly so.

She was a stranger in a strangish land.

Two days after sitting up for the first time, Elora’s doctors gave approval for her to try to get out of bed and walk to the bathroom for a shower. It was a task equal to racing a triathlon. By the time she got to the bathroom with catheter and IV unit in tow, she was tired but exhilarated by the promise of feeling completely clean and having a few minutes’ privacy. Her first peek at the mirror was shocking. Intellectually she knew that her face must look like the rest of her, but that didn’t prepare her for the emotional upheaval. The face that stared back was a monster mask framed by flat, lifeless hair that could be road kill. They had given her some soap, shampoo, and an ugly cotton gown to change into after her shower.

The shower was adequate in size with nice water pressure and a powerful, triple shower head. Normally these are good things, but not in Elora’s condition. There were no handles for starting or controlling water. In the end she had to give up and ask a nurse, who showed her that she simply needed to enter the water temperature she wanted on the keypad just inside the shower door, then press on or off. Not knowing what temperature that might be, she reasoned that she couldn’t go too wrong with her own body temperature so she punched in 99.2. That felt pretty good, but she made upward adjustments a couple of times after she got used to the water. Washing her hair and body was no small accomplishment, because even the shower stream was painful.

She hurt in places she thought had no nerve endings. After she’d toweled herself off like she was made of blown glass, she tied the gown in place and thought that, without the catheter, she might feel almost human. There wasn’t enough energy left to comb through her hair, but one of the nurse’s aides did it while she sat on the side of the bed and tried to eat solid food for the first time.

She was still sitting up, her hair almost dry when Storm arrived. He didn’t so much enter a room as conquer it. Like always he strode in like a person used to having his way – not arrogance or entitlement, just good old-fashioned self-assuredness. At least her long hair had managed a full recovery. With renewed life and volume, it shined with her true color: light brown with streaks of blond, out-of-this-world fiery red, and a hint of pink. In her dimension it was a common color usually thought boring. In this world it would only be made possible by spending many hours in the best color salon in New York and leaving many dollars behind.

“Wow,” he smiled, “look at you.”

The locket hung from its chain, surrounded by beautiful, thick hair that fell around her breasts, trying to separate into curls where it was dry. She still looked gruesome, but the swelling had receded around her eyes a little more. And now there was this gorgeous hair. For the first time he wondered what she was going to look like when she was well. Her speech was good. She had a beautiful voice, a pleasing accent unlike anything he’d ever heard, and a slight, but noticeable formality in her choice of words.

Doc du jour came in with a nurse while Storm was there and spoke to him as if he was a representative family member advocating for the deaf, mute patient. “Damage to organs or systems is minimal and the fractures have practically healed. No lingering evidence of concussion.” The doctor glanced her way without really looking at her. “Now she’s just one big bruise. Never seen anything like it really.” With that he looked her way again. “Tomorrow, we need to get her up and moving around more. How would you like to help her walk up and down the hallway, big guy?”

“Sure.” Storm looked happy about the prospect of having something physical to do. “Tell me what to do.”

“We’ll talk you through it tomorrow.”

 

One morning Storm and Elora were playing chess in the infirmary break room while having breakfast. Storm wasn’t really thinking about the game. He didn’t need to. He’d always been – what did they say? – too smart for his own good. He had learned chess from a cousin in fifteen minutes when he was ten and had never lost a game since.

Elora took Storm’s knight with her queen and, in the same tone one might use to inquire about the time, asked, “Why are they recording everything I say?”

He stared into those arresting turquoise eyes and realized that they had continued to get bigger and more pronounced as the swelling receded by tiny increments each day. For the first time he noticed her irises had yellow and gold flecks. Scabs had turned to ivory pink skin and it looked like there would be minimal scarring, if any. There was still swelling, but the black and purple bruising had gone through the even more gruesome green and yellow stage. What remained looked more like streaks of jaundice than anything. A nose had slowly emerged in the center of her face and was starting to look like it might be well proportioned and a little upturned like that video of the young Elora Laiken. The mouth that had once been nothing more than a gash in a hideous lump of flesh was now softening into lips formed in the shape of a bow. Her hair was pulled up in a severe ponytail, bound at the crown of her head so that all that thick, beautiful hair hung down to her collar bone, and swiveled enticingly from side to side as she moved her head.

He met her gaze head on so she would know he wasn’t holding back or playing omission games with the truth. “Because you arrived here in a unique way, a way no one has ever seen or heard of, and because we don’t really know anything about who you are, where you came from, or why you’re here.”

“I see.” She sat back in her chair appraising him. “Reasonable. Understandable. Prudent.”

“I don’t know what happened to you, but it doesn’t take a genius to know it was awful and that you probably didn’t volunteer.”

Elora sighed and looked out the window. “Awful,” she repeated. Her eyes seemed to be transfixed on something in the trees, glazing over as she took on that melancholy expression he had seen so often since her face had started to become more readable. Once again the whole trauma was playing across her memory in quick time.

After a beat or two she blinked and turned her attention back to Storm, hair swiveling across her shoulder to her back as the focus in her eyes took on a crystal clarity and seemed to drill through him.

“Who are you? What do you do? And what kind of place is this? Really.”

It was his turn to lean back and study her. He forced himself to smile and deliberately broadcast nonchalant body language. “You want to trade answers? Question for question?”

She stared at him as though evaluating the pros and cons of the offer. “Have you ever heard of someone named Monq?”

“Is that your first question in trade?” He didn’t try to hide the fact that he was amused by the possibility of an intriguing game.

She pressed her lips together. “Your proposal is tempting. Because I do want answers. Of course you know that, don’t you?” She nodded to punctuate that it was rhetorical. “But I don’t want to have to tell my story more than once. I’d rather make a deal for one time. One time only.”

Storm leaned forward, looking intent and serious. “I think that’s fair. When you’re recovered I’ll set it up. You say when.” He looked down at the checkered board between them, moved a piece, and she saw a fleeting hint of satisfaction flash in his eyes right before he said, “Check.”

Her mouth twitched involuntarily. Yes. She was in mourning, but she was still alive and able to relate to the pleasure of winning. After all, who likes to lose? “Just tell me one thing now. Am I a prisoner?”

Storm kept his expression blank while his emotions ran the gamut. Those were the words he had been dreading. A hundred times he had rehearsed what he would say when this moment arrived and now his mind was a blank. His chest heaved with a big sigh.

“Elora, I’ve never deceived you and I don’t want to start now. Your being here, well, you’re a walking paranormal phenomenon. Oddly enough, or maybe not if you believe in synchronicity, that happens to be what we do. So this is probably a best case scenario as far as places where you might have landed. When we’re reassured there’s no reason to be afraid of you…”

Elora barked out a sarcastic laugh. The sound startled him, but Elora was the one who was sorry because the jarring caused some remnant abdominal zingers. “So I am being held as an enemy combatant?”

Storm looked like he was working hard at choosing his words carefully. “No. More as a phenomenon of interest.”

 Click here to download the entire book: Victoria Danann’s The Order of the Black Swan COLLECTED TALES>>>

Three Books in One! 19 out 20 Rave Reviews for KND Brand New Romance of The Week: Victoria Danann’s The Order of the Black Swan COLLECTED TALES, Books 1-3 *PLUS Deals on Romance Kindle Titles!

Like A Little Romance?

Then you’ll love our magical Kindle book search tools that will help you find these great bargains in the Romance category:

And for the next week all of these great reading choices are sponsored by our Brand New Romance of the Week, The Order of the Black Swan COLLECTED TALES, Books 1-3 (Black Swan Anthology), so please check it out!

4.8 stars – 20 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Discover a world of adult fantasy where modern day knights of a secret society interact with an alien, a witch, a demon, a psychic, a berserker, a most unusual vampire, werewolves, elves, and fae. Fairytales intersect adventure, romance, and emotion proving that true love can find you in the strangest places, even when you’re least expecting it, even when you’re far, far from home. 17+ mature readers.

Book 1, My Familiar Stranger: Romancing the Vampire Hunters. (Nominated for best paranormal romance by REVIEWERS CHOICE AWARD and best indie paranormal romance and best indie fantasy romance by READERS CHOICE AWARDS. Night Owl Reviews TOP PICK. Choice Awards.) http://youtu.be/KLRFw_6gP5Q

Book 2, The Witch’s Dream: A Love Letter to Paranormal Romance http://youtu.be/BGKm-A1JqbI NIGHT OWL REVIEWS TOP PICK

Book 3, A Summoner’s Tale: The Vampire’s Confessor. http://youtu.be/iXTRRFM_TuA NIGHT OWL REVIEWS TOP PICK

Reviews

“This series is far more than the total sum of its words.  This is a breathtaking cannot-put-it-down even if it is 3:00 am epic adventure.  The characters are so well developed that the reader identifies with them, cheers them on and can wholly empathize with their trials. This parallel world takes our history, changing its defining moments by a simple deed or decision.  The author plays out these facts and their affect on the current world known by these complex characters.  I am amazed at how the author does this logically, yet dramatically, with realistic results in the universe where those choices or decisions play out.”

“Ms. Danaan is a masterful writer who weaves a story that flows seamlessly.  She leads you down a path, then takes detours creating new forks in every  road.  You will be kept guessing, you will be intrigued and yes you will be surprised. My Familiar Stranger, The Witch’s Dream and now The Summoners Tale should be on your must read list.”

“The Black Swan series is one that, through its brilliant and detailed storytelling, will become the classics our kids (when grown) will read about and love in generations to come. This is not a story about fairies, vampires and witches.  As I stated above, this is an epic adventure that includes things we dream about and what becomes possible in a world where we and they unwittingly co-exist. ” – Christine Merritt

“I’ve read books 1 through 3. I had written you before to let you know how much I enjoyed My Familiar Stranger. You out did yourself again Ms. Danann. Your sense of humor, and blend of paranormal styles is fantastic. I have never had a book that had me laughing so hard I could barely breathe. Much less feel the emotions of the characters. There have been so many versions of paranormal romance novels out there, that truthfully it was getting boring. I use the word paranormal here carefully and loosely.”

“I am not surprised to see you on the bestsellers list, and fully expect to see you there for decades to come. You have taken a genre, and re-written the old school rules. Kudos, and congratulations. Lastly, thank you. I am an avid reader, and will re-read books over and again. Thank you for writing, and thank you for writing such a mind blowing, enjoyable tale. I look forward to many more.” – Laura Hensley

About The Author

 If you’re looking for something new and different in PNR, you’ve come to the right place.

I write unapologetic romances with uniquely fresh perspectives on paranormal creatures, characters, and themes. Add a dash of scifi and a flourish of fantasy to enough humor to make you laugh out loud and enough steam to make you squirm in your chair. My heroines are independent femmes with flaws and minds of their own whether they are aliens, witches, demonologists, psychics, or past life therapists. My heroes are hot and hunky, but they also have brains, character, and good manners – usually – whether they be elves, demons, berserkers, werewolves, or vampires.

My first book, My Familiar Stranger, was nominated for Best Paranormal Romance of 2012 by the Reviewers’ Choice Awards. Each of my books has remained on the Amazon best seller list in category every day since release. All three also earned the Night Owl Reviews TOP PICK award.

My work has been compared to J R Ward, Karen Marie Moning, Sherrilyn Kenyon, and Lara Adrian. For example:

“I do see shades of Lara Adrian’s Breed books and shades of J R Wards Black Dagger books, but this story is unique enough that it stands out all on its own and can stand up along side those other books and I think given time will elbow them out of the way with the rich story telling and deep emotional core that makes you want to know more.” – Kerry, Musings of a Bookworm

The Order of the Black Swan is a series that is also a serial saga. Each book is an episodic installment in an ongoing story. Join me for the adventure.

Victoria Danann
WEBSITE: http://www.VictoriaDanann.com
BLOG: http://VictoriaDanann.me
FACEBOOK: www.facebook.com/vdanann
TWITTER: @vdanann

(This is a sponsored post.)

Summer is Right Around The Corner And so is Love in Today’s Romance of The Week Free Excerpt From When Summer Comes (Whiskey Creek) by Award-Winning Author Brenda Novak – On Sale Now – $1.99 For a Limited Time

Last week we announced that When Summer Comes (Whiskey Creek) by Award-Winning Author Brenda Novak is our Romance of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the Romance category: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Romance excerpt, and if you aren’t among those who have downloaded When Summer Comes (Whiskey Creek), you’re in for a real treat:

4.6 stars – 84 Reviews
On Sale! Regularly $6.99
Text-to-Speech: Enabled
Or check out the Audible.com version of When Summer Comes (Whiskey Creek)
in its Audible Audio Edition, Unabridged!
Here’s the set-up:

One day, Callie Vanetta receives devastating news…

She needs a liver transplant. But her doctors warn that, in her case, the chances of finding a compatible donor aren’t good.

Determined to spend whatever time she has left on her own terms, she keeps the diagnosis to herself and moves out to her late grandparents’ farm. She’s always wanted to live there. But the farm hasn’t been worked in years and she begins to fear she can’t manage it, that she’ll have to return to town.

One night, a stranger comes knocking at her door…

He’s an attractive and mysterious drifter by the name of Levi McCloud, and he offers to trade work for a few nights’ shelter. Callie figures she doesn’t have anything to lose. He needs a place to stay until he can fix his motorcycle; she needs an extra pair of hands. The arrangement seems ideal until what was supposed to be temporary starts to look more and more permanent. Then she realizes she does have something to lose—her heart. And, although he doesn’t yet know it, Levi stands to lose even more.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

The barking of her dog dragged Callie Vanetta from a deep sleep.

Rifle, the German shepherd her parents had given her for Christmas, was only two years old, but he was the smartest animal she’d ever known, certainly savvy enough not to make a racket in the middle of the night without reason. Despite all the critters that scurried around the place after dark, he hadn’t awakened her like this once in the three months since she’d moved to the farm.

So if he thought she had something to worry about, there was a good chance she did.

Despite the warm June night, chills rolled through Callie’s body as she lay on her back, blinking against the darkness. She’d always felt so safe in her grand­ parents’ home. They’d passed away five years ago, but the comfort of their love and the memories created here lingered on. Sometimes, when she closed her eyes, she could almost feel their presence.

But not tonight. Fear eclipsed all other emotions, and she wondered what she’d been thinking when she gave up the small apartment above her photography studio downtown. She was out in the middle of nowhere, her closest neighbor over a mile down the road, with her dog sounding an alarm and scratching at the front door as if some menace lay beyond it.

“Rifle?” She whispered his name as loudly as she dared. “Hey!” she added, making kissing sounds.

He charged into her room, but he wasn’t about to set­ tle down. He circled in place, whining to let her know he didn’t like something he heard outside. Then he darted back to the front door, singularly determined to show her where the trouble was.

She thought he might try to rouse her again. He obvi­ ously hoped to get her out of bed. But she was so fright­ ened and undecided about what to do she couldn’t move. Especially when he quit barking and emitted a deep, threatening growl—one that told her he’d laid back his ears and bared his teeth.

The hair rose on Callie’s arms. Her dog meant busi­ ness. She’d never seen him like this. What had him so upset? And what should she do about it? She’d watched too many true­crime shows not to realize what could happen. But, given her health, getting murdered would be too ironic. Surely, this couldn’t be leading there.

She’d just decided to call the police when a heavy knock sounded and a male voice carried into the house. “Hello? Anyone home? Sorry to wake you, but… could a man come out here, please? I need some help.” A man? Whoever was at her door wasn’t from Whis­ key Creek. Her family had lived in the area for genera­ tions. Everyone knew that this was the Vanetta farm, that the aging Theona and Herbert had died within

months of each other and she was living here alone. “Hello?” the man called again. “Please, someone an­

swer me!”

Should she respond? Letting him hear her voice would tell him she was a woman, which didn’t seem smart. But she had her dog to defend her. And she had a pellet gun she used to scare off skunks and raccoons and any other animals that might have rabies or get ag­ gressive.

Problem was she couldn’t remember where she’d put it. The screened­in porch that overlooked the outbuild­ ings in back? The mudroom off the kitchen? She might even have left it in the barn. Until now, she hadn’t felt any need for self­defense. All the wildlife she’d encoun­ tered seemed more afraid of her.

Still, she should’ve kept that gun close. What good was it otherwise? She wasn’t going to scare anyone away with her camera.

“Open up!” Bang, bang, bang.

Drawing a shaky breath, she called 9­1­1 on her cell phone, which had been charging on the nightstand, and, speaking as low as she could and still be heard, told the operator that she had a stranger at her door. The opera­ tor advised her to sit tight, a squad car was on its way, but she slid out of bed and groped through the dark­ ness for some clothes. Summer had come early this year. With the weather so mild, she hadn’t worn any­ thing to bed except a pair of panties. In case her visitor tried to break in before the police arrived, she wanted to get dressed.

“Can someone help me?” the man hollered.

Wearing a T­shirt and blue jeans, and armed with the knowledge that someone from Whiskey Creek’s four­ man police force would soon arrive, she crept toward the door. What was wrong?

Despite the ruckus her dog was making, her visitor didn’t seem to be giving up. His determination lent him a degree of credibility, even though she knew her rea­ soning was flawed. His persistence didn’t necessarily mean he was telling the truth. If he had a gun and was capable of using it, he wouldn’t have to worry about getting bitten.

So…was he really hurt? If the answer was yes, how’d he get that way? And how did he come across her prop­ erty, tucked away as it was in the Sierra Nevada foot­ hills? She couldn’t imagine some random individual driving these back roads at one in the morning, espe­ cially midweek. She encountered plenty of strangers during tourist season, which was upon them, but always in town. Not out here.

“Shit,” he grumbled when he got no response. Then something hit the door harder than a knock, as if he’d crumpled against the wooden panel and was sliding to the porch floor.

A flicker of concern warred with Callie’s fear. Maybe he really was hurt. Maybe he’d run his car into a ditch or a tree and injured himself so badly he was about to die… .

She snapped on the porch light. Although it went against her better judgment to let him know she was home, he’d managed to convince her that he might really need help. Some of the TV programs depicting real home­invasion robberies also showed innocent victims who were unable to get help because of other people’s fear.

“What’s wrong with you?” she asked.

A swiping sound suggested he was using the door to steady himself as he clambered to his feet. She peered through the peephole, hoping to catch a glimpse of him, but even with the porch light on she couldn’t see much—just a man’s head covered in a hooded sweat­ shirt.

“Thank God,” he said.

She might’ve thought it was one of the Amos brothers. Although they’d calmed down in recent years, a cou­ ple of the younger ones still caused problems, from drunken ­and­ disorderly conduct to selling crystal meth to fighting. But they lived down by the river on the other side of town, they’d never bothered her before and she would’ve recognized the voice.

“Who are you and what do you want?” she called out over Rifle’s barking. The dog was even more ex­ cited now that he had the support of his master in tak­ ing on this interloper.

“Name is Levi, Levi McCloud. I need a first­aid kit, some water and rags.”

She ignored the second part. “I don’t know a Levi.” “I’m just…passing through, ma’am.”
He was leaning too close to the door for her to dis­ tinguish his features. Was he doing that on purpose? The idea that he could be made her more nervous

than before. “But you decided to stop here?”
“No choice. My motorcycle…broke down a mile or

two back.”
“That’s how you got hurt?”
“No. It was a…a couple of dogs. They ran out and

attacked me…for no reason…while I was pushing my bike. Got me good, too.”

The way he forced his words through his teeth sug­gested that he was in pain, but maybe he was faking it. Maybe he was planning to rob her, rape her, possi­bly kill her.

Where did this happen?” she asked.

He attempted to laugh but the sound died almost immediately. “Hell if I know. I’ve never been around here before.”

“Then what made you come now?”
“Heard it was pretty country.”
That was it? He was out on a joyride? Alone? His

response didn’t seem particularly plausible, but the scenario he gave wasn’t inconceivable. Out here in the country, dogs weren’t always penned up or put on leashes. He could’ve been attacked, as he said.

She was tempted to open the door, if only to verify his story, see his injuries. But she couldn’t take the risk. “How’d you get away?”

“Listen…” He dropped his head against the door, covering the peephole entirely. Now it was impossible for her to see anything. “I don’t mean to frighten you. Is there…is there a man in the house? Someone else who…who might not…be afraid of me?”

She didn’t want to let on that she was alone. But if a male didn’t take command of the situation soon, he’d know, anyway. Perhaps he’d said that to confirm what he already suspected. “Tell me how you got away from the dogs.”

“I…convinced them I wasn’t…anything they wanted to mess with.”

Meaning he’d hurt the dogs as much as they’d hurt him?

She wondered whose pets they were, and if the inci­dent had really happened. “How badly are you hurt?”

“Hard to tell in the dark, but…it’s bad enough to make me bother you, which isn’t something I wanted to do.”

She wiped sweaty palms on her jeans. “Okay, just… stay where you are. I’ve called for help. The police will be here soon.”

“The police?” Instead of reacting with relief, as she’d expected, he cursed and shoved away from the door. “Are you serious? They won’t do anything for me.”

“They’ll get you the medical attention you need,” she said, but he wasn’t listening. He was leaving. She could hear the porch creak under his weight.

“Where are you going?” she yelled.
He didn’t answer.
After hurrying to the window, she dropped to her

knees in an effort to catch a glimpse of him before he could move out of sight.

For just a moment, she could make out the broad shoulders of a tall, spare man wearing jeans with that hoodie.

Why was he taking off without the help he needed? And why had he acted so averse to meeting up with the police? Was he wanted? A known felon?

Possibly. He had to have some reason for avoiding the authorities. But seeing how obviously he favored one leg, she believed he really was hurt.

She checked the time on her cell phone, which she’d brought with her. How long could it take to get a cruiser out here? She didn’t want to be any more vulnerable than she already was, but she also didn’t want to be responsible for the death of a lonely, injured stranger.

“Come on, come on,” she muttered, but each minute felt like an hour. When she couldn’t wait any longer, she sprang to her feet and ordered her dog to silence.

Reassured by this show of strength, Rifle stared up at her, tongue hanging out and tail wagging eagerly. He seemed to be asking, “What now? What are we going to do now?”

“We’re going to see where he went,” she told him. She wasn’t sure he could comprehend her words, but speaking calmed her, and he certainly understood her intention. He barked once to confirm that he was ready.

Holding him by the collar, she slowly, cautiously, opened the door a crack and peered outside. The porch was empty, just as she’d assumed. She couldn’t hear or see any movement, didn’t know where the stranger had gone.

Rifle struggled against the grasp she had on his collar. Then he nudged the door open wide enough to squeeze through and pull her along with him. He even tried to drag her down the steps. Clearly, he wanted to go after the man.

She wasn’t up for that. But before she could insist they go back in and lock the door, she stepped in what her dog had probably smelled—something dark and wet smeared on the floorboards of the porch.

The second she realized it was there, she knew what it was. Blood.

The police had come and gone, and they hadn’t found a thing—no tall, dark stranger hiding on the premises. Not in the old tack shed. Not in the barn. And not in the cellar. They attempted to follow the blood that led down the steps of Callie’s porch, but the trail disappeared in the grass and dirt about ten feet away.

They poked around for over an hour, hoping to dis­ cover what had happened to her guest, but they didn’t have any search dogs with them and Rifle wasn’t trained to track. They tried using him for the first thirty min­utes, but he was so distracted and excited by the two officers who’d come to help, she eventually had to shut him up in the mudroom, where she kept his food and water.

In the end, the police couldn’t figure out where the injured man had gone, which left Callie as unsettled after they drove off as before. She couldn’t help won­ dering if they hadn’t found the stranger because he didn’t want to be found. She didn’t think he’d had time to go far, not injured as he was. So how had he just… disappeared?

Maybe he hadn’t. Maybe he’d reached a neighbor’s property. But if that was the case, why hadn’t anyone else called to report a bloody, hood­wearing stranger? And why hadn’t the cops been able to find his motor­ cycle? Was there a motorcycle? And was it really bro­ ken down?

Exhausted in a way she’d never been before she’d been diagnosed with non­alcoholic fatty liver disease, she finished cleaning up the blood—she didn’t want to see it when she woke up—and went into the house.

Rifle barked and scratched at the mudroom door, whining to be let out. But even now that everyone was gone, he was too excited. She didn’t want to deal with an agitated dog after what she’d already been through. She’d found her pellet gun in the barn, felt that would offer her some defense if the man came back. So she called out a good­night to Rifle, promising she’d take him for a long walk in the morning. Then she used the bathroom off the kitchen and checked all the doors.

Once she was satisfied that the house was as secure as she could make it, she took a final peek through the window, dragged the heavy pellet gun to her bedroom and peeled off her jeans. She was too rattled to sleep almost nude, like she’d been doing earlier, but she knew she’d never get comfortable in fabric as stiff and heavy as denim.

It wasn’t until she’d propped the gun against the wall next to her headboard and crawled beneath the blankets that she heard a noise. She wasn’t sure what it was; it had been too slight. But when it came again her fear returned.

She looked around—eyes wide, breath held—and realized her bathroom door was closed.

She rarely shut that door. It was in the master bed­ room and she lived alone. There was never any rea­son to.

But that wasn’t the only thing that made her heart race. The light was on in there. She could see it through the crack near the floor.

2

Several thoughts went through Callie’s mind at the same time. She had the pellet gun and her cell phone, but her dog was shut in the mudroom. Should she slip out, free Rifle then call the police?

She had to have some way to defend herself until help could arrive. A pellet gun, even a high­powered one, wasn’t the best weapon with which to stop a man. Thanks to a deluge of adrenaline, her limbs felt like rub­ ber. She doubted she’d have the strength to effectively use any weapon, especially a heavy one.

That said yes to the dog. But she wasn’t sure she could stomach what a struggle between Rifle and the intruder would entail. If she’d been told the truth, her visitor had already been attacked by two canines—and he’d beaten them off. She didn’t want to risk Rifle’s life, didn’t want anyone hurt if she could avoid it. Life had become too precious to her. Since her diagnosis, she considered every moment a gift, and she felt that way not just about her own life but everyone else’s.

At least now she understood why her dog had con­tinued to strain at his leash and wouldn’t calm down when they were searching. She’d chalked his behavior up to youth and inexperience, but that wasn’t it at all.

He was the only one who could smell, probably even hear, that they still had company.

Sneaking into the house while she and the police were searching the outbuildings was a bold move—so bold she’d never seen it coming. Why had the stranger taken such a risk? Was he so badly hurt he’d had no choice?

Could be.

Or he was determined to gain whatever he wanted from her.

The memory of his blood on the porch, on her bare foot when she stepped in it, weighed heavily on Cal­ lie’s mind. If he’d given her AIDS, there wouldn’t be much point in continuing to search for a liver donor… .

Sweat poured down her body as she once again slid out of bed and pulled on her jeans. She’d simply va­ cate the room, take her phone and her gun and barri­ cade herself in the mudroom with her dog while she called the police.

But then she heard a curse, a clatter and a crash that was so loud, her dog started jumping against the door clear on the other side of the house.

What had happened? If Callie had her guess, the man had fallen.

“Hello?” she called out, hesitating midway across the room. She was holding her phone as well as the gun, which made it difficult to use either one.

There was no answer. No sound or movement, either.

Had he hit his head and knocked himself out—or worse?

“Oh, no,” she murmured. In order to lift and aim the gun, she had to put down her phone. She hated to do that, but she was quickly growing more worried than scared, so she set it on her dresser close by. “I know you’re in there.”

“I pretty much…figured that…at this point.” He sounded tired. No, more than tired. Drained. That was hardly what she’d expect from someone who meant her harm. But she’d never encountered a psychopath be­ fore—not knowingly, anyway. She had no clue how one might act.

“I’ve got a gun!” she warned.

“Unless you plan…on shooting me for no reason… I don’t really care,” he said. “Just tell me the police are gone.”

Why would she admit she was alone? “They’re not. They’re right outside. I can call them in if necessary.”

There was another long silence.
“Did you hear me?”
“Let them go and I…I’ll leave. I just…needed some

soap and water. That’s all. Some gauze would’ve been nice. But you don’t have that. What kind of woman doesn’t have a first­aid kit?”

“I have a first­aid kit. But I don’t keep it the medi­cine cabinet.”

“Too bad. It would sure…make a nice send­off pres­ent, if you…could…forgive my intrusion.”

What condition was he in? He was slurring his words. Talking at all seemed a struggle for him. “How’d you get inside my house?”

“Wasn’t hard. You and those…two officers…” “Yes?”
He made an attempt to rally. “You were so intent on

trying to use your dog to follow my trail I just…circled around behind you. I could tell where you were at all times. Until you brought him in.”

“How’d you keep from dripping blood all over?”

“I wrapped my sweatshirt around my arm…hoped that would help.”

It had done the trick. The trail of blood had dis­ appeared completely. “Sneaking in here takes a lot of nerve,” she said.

“Lady, sometimes you…have to do…what you have to do. What else can I tell you.”

Lady? That made her sound old. She thought of her good friend Cheyenne marrying Dylan Amos just four months ago, right before the doctor had given her the bad news about her liver, and winced. She’d wanted a husband, a family. She’d never had a hint of health problems, no reason to believe she wouldn’t eventu­ ally have kids. Now chances were that she’d die before summer’s end.

There were more noises. These Callie couldn’t fig­ ure out. “What’s going on?” she asked, worried again.

“I’m trying to get…the hell out of…your bathtub.”

She was beginning to believe this whole night really had been about his injury. “What’s wrong? You can’t?”

“It’d be easier…if I wasn’t so…damn dizzy.”

What was she going to do now? She wasn’t sure she had the heart to call the police on him again. It wasn’t as if he’d waited in her bedroom and attacked her. “I don’t understand why you wouldn’t let me get you some help,” she said. “I tried.”

“No, you called the police.”
“Same thing.”
“Not quite.”
She inched closer. She still held her gun at the ready

but she was feeling more and more confident that she wouldn’t have to use it. “Why are you so afraid of the authorities?”

He didn’t respond for a few seconds. Judging by the noise, he was once again trying to get up. “Why do you think?”

“You’re wanted?”

“Not for anything serious.” He cursed as though he’d done something that hurt.

“Are you okay?”

He didn’t answer. Instead, he reverted to the ques­ tion she’d asked before. “I have a few…unpaid speed­ ing tickets.”

That sounded far too innocuous to explain his reac­ tion. Surely it couldn’t be the truth. “You’re lying,” she said. “Why would that make you afraid of the police?”

“We don’t get along.”
“Meaning…”
“I’ve had…a few run­ins with them. They don’t like

vagrants. Besides, a warrant is a warrant. Whether it’s for a speeding ticket or…or whatever else, they’ll take you in. I can’t let that happen.”

He’d called himself a vagrant, but he didn’t sound like one. Although she could tell he was in considerable pain, he was mostly coherent. Articulate, too. “Where are you from?”

“Does it matter? Look, if you’ll…help me a minute, I’ll be…on my way.”

“Where?”
“Wherever the road takes me.”
She crept right up to the door. “I thought your mo­torcycle broke down.”
“I’ll fix it. Believe me…I want to leave as badly as you want me gone. I have to get to my…my ride before someone else comes across it.”

Including the police. No doubt they’d impound it.

She listened for movement but didn’t hear anything. “Are you coming out or not?”

“I think…you’re going to have to come in. Just… whatever you do…keep that dog of yours away.”

“He’s in another room. But I can get him in here pretty darn fast if I need to,” she added.

“I won’t hurt you. Give me some bandages. Then I’ll go.”

Lifting the barrel of the gun so she could reach the knob, Callie pushed the door wide.

Sure enough, the man she’d first spotted on the porch was in her tub. He must’ve stumbled and fallen while trying to clean himself up, because he’d broken the shower curtain rod on the way down. The curtain lay on the floor, stained with blood. Blood speckled the vanity, the floor and the bath mat, too. But that wasn’t what concerned Callie. He didn’t look good. He’d man­ aged to get to his feet, but he was huddled, shivering in nothing but a pair of bloodstained jeans in the corner, where he could use the walls to hold himself up.

Callie felt her jaw drop. “Look at you.”

He seemed to summon what strength he had left. “About that first­aid kit…”

“You need more than a Band­Aid.” About her age, maybe a little younger, he had blood smeared all over him as if he’d swiped here and there to staunch the flow. The hooded sweatshirt he’d been wearing was tied around one arm; his bloody T­shirt lay on the floor not far from the shower curtain. She couldn’t ascertain the injuries on the arm that was covered, but she could see he’d been bitten several times on the arm that was bare. “You need painkiller, maybe food, a good doctor—

and a heck of a lot of sleep.”
He didn’t respond. There was a gray cast beneath

his tanned skin. That was probably new. But Callie suspected his gaunt, ravaged look wasn’t. This man was accustomed to living a hard life. His cheekbones were pronounced, testament to the fact that he was too thin, especially since he had such wide shoulders and big hands. And yet…he wasn’t unhandsome. Some­ how his rawboned features gave him a rebel air and enhanced the impact of his hazel eyes, which regarded her with the wariness of a wild animal cornered be­ cause of injury.

He didn’t trust her any more than she trusted him, she realized.

Lowering the gun, she set it aside. Maybe dropping her guard was the wrong thing to do. Maybe it put her own safety in jeopardy. But she no longer cared in the same, fearful way she had before. Without a function­ ing liver, she was going to die soon, anyway.

But maybe she could save him.

The woman was small, even for a woman, and curvy. With platinum­ blond hair and big blue eyes, she had a certain…bombshell look about her. Thirty or so, she was wearing a pair of jeans and a T­shirt with no bra. The no­bra part was unmistakable.

“Come here.” She stretched an arm toward him. “Let me help you out of the shower.”

Levi shrank against the tile. There wasn’t any reason for her to touch him. She’d only get blood on her clothes, and he’d caused her enough trouble for one night. “I just need—” he fought the dizziness that made it almost im­ possible to stay on his feet “—your first­aid kit.”

Somehow he had to stop the bleeding so he could see how bad his injuries were. He could tell that both arms were chewed up, especially his right, which he’d swaddled in his sweatshirt. He’d also been bitten on the back of the neck, his shoulder and his leg in two places. He didn’t know much about the dogs that’d attacked him, wasn’t sure of the breed—it’d been too dark and things happened too fast. The only thing he could say for sure was that he hadn’t been able to outrun them, even after he ditched his bike. When sharp teeth sank into his flesh, he’d been forced to fight. After that it had been a blur of snarling, lunging and gnashing teeth— on his part and that of the dogs.

Fortunately, he’d won. Or they’d all lost. One dog had finally taken a hard enough kick that he didn’t want any more and the other had followed him when he limped away, whining. Levi had done his share of limping, too. It hadn’t been a minor encounter for any of them.

The woman with the smooth complexion and soft, round features still had her hand out. “I’m afraid it can’t be that simple, Mr. McCloud. You need a doctor. Come on, I’ll take you to the hospital.”

“No.” He had no permanent address, no insurance and very little money. Everything he owned was stuffed into the backpack he’d left with his bike, except for the clothes on his back and the wadded­up bills in his pocket. Maybe twenty bucks at the most, it was just enough to buy food until he found his next odd job.

Worry tightened her voice. “How many times were you bitten?”

“Several.” Closing his eyes, he rested his head against the wall. “I’ve never seen animals so intent on tearing someone to pieces.” He winced at the memory. He’d been chased by a few dogs since returning from Afghanistan. Being out on the streets left him vulner­ able. But he’d never been attacked. He’d made it through six years in the military, fighting in some of the worst hot spots in the Middle East without taking a bullet, only to be mangled by dogs in his own country.

“My arms took the brunt of it,” he explained. “They wanted the front of my…neck, my jugular, but I kept blocking them. I would’ve been…better off with my leather jacket on. But I’d worked up a sweat pushing my bike and…had taken it off. Bad luck.” He chuckled, but the thought of his bike, his jacket and his pack brought back the concern he’d been feeling earlier. He had to re­ trieve his belongings before someone stole them or the police came by. He’d had to leave his motorcycle right there on the side of the road, couldn’t continue to push it after the attack. It was too damn heavy.

“Okay, well, at least sit down. You’ll only hurt your­ self more if you don’t.”

“I’ve gotta go.” He tried to step out of the tub, nearly toppled over and had to let her help him down onto his ass. Muttering something he couldn’t quite make out, she rolled up a towel she got from a cupboard and put it behind his head. Then she brought in a heavy blan­ ket and covered him, right there in the tub. “Stay put,” she ordered as she tucked it tightly around him. “I’ll be back in a minute.”

The decisiveness in her voice made him lift his head. “Where are you going?”

“To get the first­aid kit, since that’s all you’ll accept.”

Relieved, he let his head fall back. If she was going to call the police again, she wouldn’t have braved coming in. Surely that meant he’d soon be bandaged up and on his way. He’d walk his bike to the small gold­rush town a few miles back where he’d had dinner and find the necessary parts and tools to make the repairs. Maybe he could offer his services to an auto shop for a few days in trade for what he’d need. He’d done that before. He could fix any kind of engine, had been in charge of the heavy equipment for his platoon in Afghanistan.

Trying to keep his mind off the pain, Levi concen­ trated on the gas station with the repair bays he’d no­ ticed in town before settling on a café. But he must’ve drifted off despite his efforts to remain lucid, because when he opened his eyes there was another man in the room. He was easily in his seventies, his hair completely gray, and he had a hook nose, full beard and paunch that hung over his belt. He’d removed the blanket that had kept Levi warm, which was what had disturbed him.

The woman who’d covered him was now wearing a bra under her shirt. She wrung her hands as she peered over the old man’s shoulder. “Is he going to be okay?”

Levi didn’t give him a chance to respond. “Where’s the first­aid kit?” he asked, calling her on the deception. She had the grace to look abashed. “I’m sorry. I was

afraid you were going into shock. You need a doctor.” The other man glanced up at her. “I’m not a doctor.” She sent Levi an apologetic grin. “But he is a vet­erinarian.”
“Who’s mostly retired,” the guy said with a note of

exasperation.
“Still good at his craft.” She patted his shoulder with

obvious affection. “This was my grandfather’s friend and next­door neighbor. Now he’s my friend and neigh­bor. Godfrey Blume, meet Levi McCloud.”

“So what do you think?” Callie shooed Rifle out of her way so she could pour the coffee she’d put on a few minutes earlier. Levi McCloud was asleep in her bed, but Godfrey was sitting at her kitchen table.

Every time her neighbor yawned she felt bad about waking him in the middle of the night. He was near­ ing eighty. But she hadn’t expected providing Mr. Mc­ Cloud with medical attention to take several hours. She’d been so caught up in helping to wash and ban­ dage his wounds, she hadn’t noticed the passage of time until she saw the break of dawn. Now her rooster was out in the yard, crowing for all he was worth.

She couldn’t help smiling when she caught sight of the old bird strutting past her kitchen window. She loved early mornings. They reminded her of summers with her grandparents and awaking to the smell of frying bacon.

“I did what I could,” Godfrey said. “But I wish he would’ve let us take him to the hospital. Or even to a real doctor. I’ve never seen an attack like that.”

And her neighbor had worked with animals his whole life! She frowned as she set the sugar and cream on the table. “We did what we could.”

“Mr. McCloud is a surprisingly stubborn man, given the extent of his injuries.”

Once Godfrey had ascertained the large number of stitches their patient required, they’d both tried, once again, to get him in her car. Godfrey could only offer him a topical analgesic to ease the pain—and Tyle­ nol. But there was nothing they could do to overcome

Mr. McCloud’s resistance. He tried to leave on his own power when they insisted, and would’ve done so if they’d pushed it any further. At that point, Godfrey had relented and agreed that some care was better than none.

“We should report the dogs to animal control,” she said. “They need to be restrained before they hurt some­ one else—a child, for instance.”

“I plan on looking into it.” Her neighbor had been the only veterinarian in town for most of his life. He’d offi­ cially retired three years ago, when the newly licensed Harrison Scarborough opened his practice. But some people still brought their animals to Godfrey.

“Do you have any idea whose pets they might be?” she asked while pouring herself some cranberry juice. She was on a strict diet that precluded alcohol, salt and coffee, among other things.

He smoothed his shirt over his belly. “My bet? There’s a couple of pit bulls down the road, around the bend.”

“Really?” Callie had never seen any, but she’d been pretty preoccupied of late. Adjusting to the shock of her diagnosis, especially since she’d never consumed much booze, hadn’t been easy. She’d thought only alcoholics had to worry about cirrhosis. “You think it’s them?”

“I can’t imagine what other dogs it could be. I know all the rest of the animals in the area, and they wouldn’t do something like what we saw.”

“Whose pit bulls are they?”

“Belong to a couple of young men, maybe twenty­ eight or twenty­nine, who are renting the old Gruper place. They’re here for the summer, doing some pros­ pecting.”

Gold panning and dredging had become popular pas­ times. A lot of tourists visited “the heart of gold coun­ try” to relive the history of the ’49er. Coloma, where gold was first discovered in California, was an hour away, but the entire area had been rich in ore. At 5,912 feet, the nearby Kennedy mine was one of the deepest gold mines in the world.

“So you’ve met these men?” she asked.

“Just last week. I was selling my gold dredge. They saw my flyer on the bulletin board at the diner and came over to buy it. I guess they weren’t finding anything using the panning method.”

“Did you like them?”

“Not a bit.” Godfrey spoke with his usual candor, but she’d already guessed his feelings from his sour expression.

“Why not?”

“They’re unruly braggarts with big mouths and no respect. If I hadn’t known better, I would’ve thought they were related to the Amoses.”

The Amoses weren’t as bad as they’d been imme­ diately after their father went to prison. As a matter of fact, she really liked Cheyenne’s husband. But she didn’t mention that she now knew Dylan and cared about him. She didn’t want to veer off topic. “I’m surprised they didn’t hear their dogs growling and barking. You’d think they would’ve gone out to see what was going on.”

He shrugged. “They were probably passed out, drunk.”

“They’re big partiers?”
“That’s the impression they gave me.”
“Great.” She rolled of her eyes. “Just who you want living so close—and with a couple of unsafe pit bulls, too.”

He acknowledged her sarcasm with a tip of his cup. “Fortunately, it’s only for three months.”

Rifle brushed up against her, wanting some atten­tion, so she bent to scratch behind his ears. “Short­ timers or no, they still have to keep their dogs from biting people,” she said. “Mr. McCloud could’ve been killed.”

Godfrey sipped his coffee before responding. “I plan on heading over there later.”

Knowing he’d do whatever needed to be done, she changed the subject. “Will Mr. McCloud be okay?”

Her neighbor’s hands were oversize, like her injured guest’s, except that Godfrey’s were also thick. When he was stitching up Levi’s bite wounds, Callie had been impressed by how dexterous his sausagelike fingers could be.

“As long as those bites don’t get infected, he should be. He’ll have a few scars, but I made the stitches very small. That’ll help. In my opinion, he should get a tet­ anus booster, but he claims he was in the military, that his shots are current.”

“They make sure soldiers stay up on that sort of thing, don’t they?”

“They do. If he was really a soldier.”

Apparently, Godfrey was taking nothing for granted. The people of Whiskey Creek could be suspicious of outsiders. But Callie believed at least that much of Mc­ Cloud’s story. He had a tattoo on one shoulder depicting an eagle with the word Freedom. A tattoo on the other arm said R.I.P. Sanchez, Williams, Phelps, Smith. The names were in different fonts, as if they’d been added as he’d lost friends.

She preferred not to consider how hard that would be to cope with.

“I can’t tell you how much I appreciate your help, G.,” she said, using the nickname her grandfather had given him. Poppy had coined a nickname for everyone. It was usually a shortened version of that person’s first name but Godfrey became a little tricky. Only his wife sometimes teased him by calling him God.

“Happy to help. You know how much Mina and I care about you.” Although his words were kind, he shot her a warning look from beneath his hairy eyebrows that indicated she might not like what was coming next.

“But…” she said, giving him the opportunity to speak his mind.

“But I’m going to stick my nose into your business and tell you that I think you should send this man on his way.”

“I will, of course. As soon as he’s better.”
“I mean as soon as he wakes up.”
Rifle wandered off as she sat down at the table. “G.,

he just got over a hundred stitches!”
“That’s okay. In a few hours he’ll be able to walk

well enough to vacate the premises.”
But how far would he have to go? Godfrey had men­tioned infection as if it was a serious concern. Certainly heading off into the wild blue yonder wouldn’t mini­ mize that risk. And what if Levi couldn’t find his mo­ torcycle? For all she knew, the cops had impounded it. Even if the bike was exactly where he’d left it, it wasn’t running. That was the whole reason he’d been in a po­sition to be attacked in the first place. “He needs time to recover.”

“We don’t know anything about him, Callie. We don’t even know if his version of what happened is true. Having him here might not be safe.”

Callie sipped her juice. “But he has no home.” And he had no mode of transportation. “Where will he go?”

“Wherever he was going before he met you.”

His protectiveness wouldn’t allow him to consider any mitigating factors, so she didn’t argue further. “I’ll send him off as soon as I can,” she promised.

Godfrey finished his coffee and got up to bring his cup to the sink. “I’d better go. I’m sure Mina’s wonder­ing where on earth I am.”

“Of course. Thanks again.” When she ushered him out, she put Rifle into the fenced part of the yard so he could get some exercise. Then she returned to the house and stiffened in surprise. Levi McCloud was no longer asleep. He was coming out of her bedroom.

Click here to download the entire book: Darby Davenport’s Walk Away with Me (A Loving Nature Novella)>>>

Over 75 Rave Reviews & Now On Sale During Its Reign As KND Romance of The Week – For A Limited Time When Summer Comes (Whiskey Creek) by Award-Winning Author Brenda Novak is Now Just $1.99!

Like A Little Romance?

Then you’ll love our magical Kindle book search tools that will help you find these great bargains in the Romance category:

And for the next week all of these great reading choices are sponsored by our Brand New Romance of the Week, When Summer Comes (Whiskey Creek), so please check it out!

4.6 stars – 82 Reviews
On Sale! Regularly $6.99
Text-to-Speech: Enabled
Or check out the Audible.com version of When Summer Comes (Whiskey Creek)
in its Audible Audio Edition, Unabridged!
Here’s the set-up:

One day, Callie Vanetta receives devastating news…

She needs a liver transplant. But her doctors warn that, in her case, the chances of finding a compatible donor aren’t good.

Determined to spend whatever time she has left on her own terms, she keeps the diagnosis to herself and moves out to her late grandparents’ farm. She’s always wanted to live there. But the farm hasn’t been worked in years and she begins to fear she can’t manage it, that she’ll have to return to town.

One night, a stranger comes knocking at her door…

He’s an attractive and mysterious drifter by the name of Levi McCloud, and he offers to trade work for a few nights’ shelter. Callie figures she doesn’t have anything to lose. He needs a place to stay until he can fix his motorcycle; she needs an extra pair of hands. The arrangement seems ideal until what was supposed to be temporary starts to look more and more permanent. Then she realizes she does have something to lose—her heart. And, although he doesn’t yet know it, Levi stands to lose even more.

Reviews

The characters’ “heartwarming romance develops slowly and sweetly. The sex is fantastic, but the best part is how Simon and Gail tease and laugh as they grow closer.” –Publishers Weekly on When Lightning Strikes

“Novak delivers a lively, sparkling series debut…romantic gold by a superior novelist. The love story blossoms naturally, which is rare nowadays…. Additionally, by populating Whiskey Creek with realistic characters-instead of ‘quirky’ caricatures-Novak ensures that readers will eagerly await their next visit.” –RT Book Reviews on When Lightning Strikes

“Whenever I see a new Brenda Novak book, I buy it and read it, pronto. I can always count on her for a solid, exciting story, full of adventure and romance.”-Linda Lael Miller, #1 New York Times bestselling author

“Any book by Brenda Novak is a must-buy for me.” –Reader to Reader Reviews

“Brenda Novak’s seamless plotting, emotional intensity and true-to-life characters who jump off the page make her books completely satisfying. Novak is simply a great storyteller.” –Allison Brennan, New York Times bestselling author

About The Author

It was a shocking experience that jump-started Brenda Novak’s career as a bestselling author–she caught her day-care provider drugging her children with cough syrup to get them to sleep all day. That was when Brenda decided she needed to quit her job as a loan officer and help make a living from home.
“When I first got the idea to become a novelist, it took me five years to teach myself the craft and finish my first book,” Brenda says. But she sold that book, and the rest is history. Her novels have made the New York Times, USA Today and Borders/Waldenbooks bestseller lists and won many awards, including three Rita nominations, the Book Buyer’s Best, the Book Seller’s Best and the National Reader’s Choice Award.
Brenda and her husband, Ted, live in Sacramento and are proud parents of five children–three girls and two boys. When she’s not spending time with her family or writing, Brenda is usually working on her annual fund-raiser for diabetes research–an online auction held on her Web site (www.brendanovak.com) every May. Brenda has raised over $1.6 million to date.

(This is a sponsored post.)

Brand New Romance of The Week: 33 out 36 Rave Reviews! Darby Davenport’s Walk Away with Me (A Loving Nature Novella) Now Just 99 Cents!

Like A Little Romance?

Then you’ll love our magical Kindle book search tools that will help you find these great bargains in the Romance category:

And for the next week all of these great reading choices are sponsored by our Brand New Romance of the Week, Walk Away with Me, so please check it out!

4.2 stars – 36 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

A man with a painful past, a woman who fears commitment, and a dog with only one more chance at life–together, can they find love?

Evolved Publishing presents “Walk Away with Me,” the first in the “Loving Nature Novella” series by Darby Davenport. These fun stories combine some occasionally steamy romance with a wholesome taste of the outdoors. FOR ADULTS ONLY. (Novella: Complete at 25,000 Words)

What is Charlie Rockwell supposed to do when the sad Rottweiler’s eyes connect with hers through the TV screen and work their way straight into her heart? She adopts him without a second thought or the slightest knowledge how to take care of the large, needy dog with the traumatic past.

Ethan Porter is not happy when a savage Rottweiler picks a fight with his mild-mannered Golden Retriever at the dog park. But his anger quickly dissipates when tears begin to form behind the eyes of the dog’s beautiful owner–eyes that are far too familiar for his liking. Disregarding his instincts, Ethan can’t deny her plea when she asks him to teach her the basics of dog ownership.

Can he ignore the fact that she bears a strong resemblance to his ex and finally learn to trust again? Will she find committing to both man and dog more exciting than the freedom of a single, unrestrained life?

One Reviewer Notes

“Lovable characters, compelling plot, and an exciting twist that will leave you on the edge of your seat as Charlie and Ethan find their happily-ever-after.” ~ Lucy Kevin, New York Times bestselling author of THE WEDDING KISS

About The Author
Darby Davenport never believed in love–that is, until it happened to her. Now she’s a firm believer that every story is a love story, and has taken to writing out her favorite romantic fantasies and sharing them with the world.

Darby, who also writes young adult and children’s fiction under the pen name Emlyn Chand, lives in suburban Detroit with her own personal soul mate–fellow writer, Falcon Storm–and private zoo, which includes a music-loving Sun Conure, hyper-active Golden Retriever, and two scrappy little rescue mutts.

You can connect with her at www.DarbyDavenport.com.

Be sure to watch for the first in her contemporary romance trilogy, Walk Away with Me, coming from Evolved Publishing on March 19, 2013, with Skinny-Dipping at Dawn and Melt My Heart to follow later in the year.

(This is a sponsored post.)