Spotlight: Called Out by Jen Doyle

Jack "Ox" Oxford is used to being alone. Granted, when you screw over your friends, being alone isn't always a choice. Playing for the Chicago Watchmen is a last-ditch effort to save his career…and right some of his past wrongs. He's not expecting a warm reception, but he's also not expecting a flat tire to change everything.
 
Recovering control freak, single mom and semiprofessional chaos wrangler Lola Deacon McIntire doesn't need an arrogant ballplayer to swoop in and save her from anything, much less her flat tire. And she definitely doesn't need her body to betray her and decide this is the guy to wake up her rusty libido. She isn't about to upset her sons' lives for any man—much less one who so clearly doesn't think he's dad material.

Jack never thought he'd find someone who wanted to build a life with him, but the more time he spends with Lola and her boys, the more it starts to feel permanent. Even tough-as-nails Lola concedes there just might be a future here—the big, beautiful, messy future neither of them was looking for—but only if Jack will accept he deserves it.

Excerpt

At precisely 9:00 a.m. the next morning Lola was sitting in her car outside the farmhouse.

At 9:04, she was still sitting there, a jumble of thoughts, none of them productive or good.

She finally got herself moving when Jack came around from the back and leaned against the side of the house, his arms folded in front of his chest as he watched her. “Glad to see you’re wearing a shirt,” she said, slamming the car door shut and walking toward him.

He smiled and a huge thrum went through her, proving just how bad an idea this arrangement was. “I’ll state for the record that if you ever choose to declare a no-shirts-while-working day,” he said, “I’m all for it.”

She didn’t for a second believe him. He’d been Nate’s best friend since his rookie season; Silas’s favorite player. She’d watched him on and off the field for years and even though she’d already succumbed to it twice she knew that low drawl and easy smile went along with the part he played. He used them on everyone from the grandmothers whose programs he signed to the reporters who interviewed him. Up until this last year, at least.  

She resisted rolling her eyes as she replied, “I’ll state for the record it’s unlikely to happen.”

“Well, then, I sure hope you weren’t spending all that time in the car thinking about the clothes I did or didn’t have on,” he answered.

Unfortunately, that was exactly what she’d been thinking about. Or, rather, him in various states of undress, her in the same, and how hot and hard he would feel against her. In danger of giving in, she went with the surefire way to shut that conversation down. “I was thinking about my husband, if you’d truly like to know.”

“About him not wearing a shirt?”

“Do you really know how to do this kind of stuff?” He was a professional baseball player from Connecticut. Not exactly the guy she’d call to hang a picture, much less help renovate a house. Then again, Nate had put him here to work and Nate generally knew what he was doing.

Still, it didn’t help when Jack gave answers like, “I’ve got a great phone. I can look up how-to videos from pretty much anywhere.”

She frowned at his grin. “You’re really not worried about your hand?” Pissing his father off was one thing; ruining his career another entirely.

“Don’t you worry,” he said, his smile turning wicked. “My hand works just fine when it needs to.”

Trying not to let on that his smile had hit her right below her belly, she threw her hands up in the air. “Does everything you say have to be some kind of sexual innuendo?”

“I was talking about pitching.” He cocked his head. “Wait, you were talking about sex?”

He wasn’t talking about pitching. She wasn’t that out of practice. But it had been long enough for her to be entirely off her game. The best reply she could come up with was a snorted, “You wish.” Except the second she said it, she snapped her mouth shut, because he looked at her in a way that made her wonder if maybe the whole flirty thing he had going on wasn’t just a way to get under her skin.

No. This was just a game to him; it had to be. He couldn’t seriously be interested.

Except then he swallowed hard and looked away.

Lola’s heart was racing and it felt harder than it should to breathe. But they were both adults here; they each knew exactly how bad an idea it would be to let this go further. And so at the same time they both turned to leave the room. The problem was that they bumped into each other in the process.

“Oh, shit,” he muttered as his hand came down to steady her yet again.

Her thoughts exactly. It was just that it had been so long since she’d touched a man—accidental stumbling excepted—and she wanted so badly to feel that again. He was the wrong person to be thinking this about. Yet she couldn’t stop herself from looking up at him.

Everything was suddenly clearer. Sharper. Even the way he stood, although he hadn’t moved so much as a muscle. His gaze bored into hers, then traveled past her jaw, between her breasts, right down the center of her before coming back up. She felt the heat rise through her, as she dropped her gaze to his lips. She’d done a lot of kissing in her life, but only with Dave. Would Jack taste different? Feel different?

“I’m not a good guy, Lola. You deserve a lot better than me,” he said, his voice gruff as he straightened up a little. But all that did was bring their bodies closer into alignment—close enough for her to feel exactly how aroused he was.

She wasn’t sure what she deserved. She’d been a good wife to her husband. She’d always thought she and Dave deserved to live a long and happy life together. That hadn’t been meant to be. Was it wrong to want so badly to feel a man’s touch, even if it wasn’t Dave’s? To want to touch a man so badly?

“Lola…” he said. Groaned, really. “This is a horrible idea.” But instead of moving away from her, he straightened up all the way, which meant they were now separated only by centimeters. She could feel his heat surrounding her.

“Horrible fucking idea.” This time he spoke more to himself.

But it didn’t stop him, either.

Instead, his hand came up and after a moment of just hanging there, he cupped her jaw, and just the touch of his hand to her skin had her nearly whimpering in longing. This was what it felt like to have a man touch her again. This was what it felt like to have her whole being reawaken. She put her hands on his chest. Everything inside her was humming. Throbbing in the most delicious and frightening of ways. She needed to be listening to what he said because he was absolutely right. And yet she brushed his lips with hers.

He stared down at her for a few seconds as she pulled slightly back. And then in one swift motion, he picked her up and spun them so her back was against the wall as his mouth took possession of hers.

He wasn’t a big fan of kissing women. Fucking them, yes. Being involved in everything else that led up to the fucking, absolutely. But kissing wasn’t his thing. Not like that, at least. Never like that.

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About the Author

A big believer in happily ever afters, Jen Doyle decided it was high time she started creating some. She has an M.S. in Library and Information Science and, in addition to her work as a librarian, has worked as a conference and events planner as well as a Communications and Enrollment administrator in both preschool and higher education environments (although some might say that there is very little difference between the two; Jen has no comment regarding whether she is one of the “some”).

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Spotlight: Falling For Her Brother's Best Friend by Noelle Adams

Fifteen years ago, three girls were thrown together because their brothers were best friends. Now they're all grown up, and their brothers are grown up too. The Tea for Two series tells their stories. Fans of contemporary women’s fiction will become engrossed in this new series by New York Times Bestselling Author, Noelle Adams.

After too many bad decisions in romance, Emma is going on a man-fast. For the next six months, she’s fasting from men. No sex. No dating. No soulful gazes. No fond memories of her first crush. She’s going to spend the time focusing on her career, getting in touch with herself, and helping her two best friends with the launch of their new tea room. No men.

And that includes her brother’s best friend, Noah Hart, who has just returned to their hometown.

She doesn’t want Noah anyway. He might be even hotter than he was before, but he’s not a nice guy anymore. He’s made a fortune by acting ruthless in business, and the last thing he’s looking for is small-town domestic life. He doesn’t even want to be in town again, but a sick grandmother guilted him into it. Then he has nerve to not even recognize Emma when he sees her again. Maybe it’s been seven years, but a decent guy would remember his best friend’s little sister.

Noah is not a decent guy. Anyway, Emma is on a man-fast. And she doesn’t want Noah. At all.

Excerpt

Copyright © 2017 Noelle Adams

She waited to see if Noah would complain about her walking home alone at night, but he didn’t. He just said, “I’ll walk with you.”

She started to object—automatically but for no particular reason—but she stopped the words from coming out. There was no reason he couldn’t walk a couple of blocks with her. He would probably insist on it, even if she tried to object.

“Okay,” she said. “Thanks.”

They didn’t speak as they walked down the sidewalk and crossed the street to her building. But she was intensely aware of Noah’s presence beside her. It felt so strong, so masculine, so… man.

Why the hell did she always seem to want him so much?

She should know better by now.

She was feeling strangely shy when they reached the front entrance to her building, and she turned to face him, dropping her eyes. “Thanks again.”

“No problem.” There was that husky note in his voice, the one she really liked.

She didn’t dare to look up at him. “I could have made it on my own, you know.”

“I know that.” God, just the sound of his voice sent shivers up and down her spine.

“No matter what you think, I’m not a little girl anymore.”

She had no idea why she was saying this. She was just rambling, too nervous to think through the words that were coming out of her mouth. And she was seriously having to hold herself back from reaching out toward him, taking hold his shirt and pulling him closer.

He smelled so incredibly good. Not anything as strong as aftershave, but something warm and expensive.

She wanted to smell him even more.

She wanted to feel him.

She wanted to taste him.

She wanted to…

He reached out and tilted up her face so she was looking at him. “I know you’re not a little girl, Emma.”

Emma.

He’d called her Emma.

“You do?” she whispered, the world shuddering in front of her eyes.

“Damn it, Emma,” he rasped thickly, raising his other arm so he was holding her face in both hands. “Surely you know I’m seeing you as anything but a little girl.”

She was trembling now, and there was absolutely no way she could hold herself back. He was holding her face like she was precious, and the look in his eyes…

So filled with heat and hunger. She’d never seen anything like it.

She grabbed onto his shirt like she’d always wanted to and drew him even nearer, and then he was finally, finally kissing her.

Naturally, she was kissing him back.

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About Noelle Adams

Noelle handwrote her first romance novel in a spiral-bound notebook when she was twelve, and she hasn’t stopped writing since. She has lived in eight different states and currently resides in Virginia, where she reads any book she can get her hands on and offers tribute to a very spoiled cocker spaniel.

She loves travel, art, history, and ice cream. After spending far too many years of her life in graduate school, she has decided to reorient her priorities and focus on writing contemporary romances.

If you'd like to contact Noelle, please contact her at noelle.s.adams@gmail.com. Or connect with her on TwitterFacebook, and Goodreads.

Read an excerpt from Roar by Cora Carmack

From New York Times bestselling author Cora Carmack comes her debut young adult fantasy, ROAR! Releasing June 13, 2017, ROAR takes readers on an adventure filled with charismatic characters in an enthralling world sure to keep them turning the pages. Order your copy today!

In a land ruled and shaped by violent magical storms, power lies with those who control them.

Aurora Pavan comes from one of the oldest Stormling families in existence. Long ago, the ungifted pledged fealty and service to her family in exchange for safe haven, and a kingdom was carved out from the wildlands and sustained by magic capable of repelling the world’s deadliest foes. As the sole heir of Pavan, Aurora's been groomed to be the perfect queen. She’s intelligent and brave and honorable. But she’s yet to show any trace of the magic she’ll need to protect her people.

To keep her secret and save her crown, Aurora’s mother arranges for her to marry a dark and brooding Stormling prince from another kingdom. At first, the prince seems like the perfect solution to all her problems. He’ll guarantee her spot as the next queen and be the champion her people need to remain safe. But the more secrets Aurora uncovers about him, the more a future with him frightens her. When she dons a disguise and sneaks out of the palace one night to spy on him, she stumbles upon a black market dealing in the very thing she lacks—storm magic. And the people selling it? They’re not Stormlings. They’re storm hunters.

Legend says that her ancestors first gained their magic by facing a storm and stealing part of its essence. And when a handsome young storm hunter reveals he was born without magic, but possesses it now, Aurora realizes there’s a third option for her future besides ruin or marriage. 

She might not have magic now, but she can steal it if she’s brave enough.

Challenge a tempest. Survive it. And you become its master.

Excerpt

“No need to burn people from the inside out, Etel. This one is with me.”

A large, masculine form pressed into Rora’s side, and a heavy arm draped over her shoulders. The old woman straightened. She scowled and spit on the ground, and when she spoke, her tone was higher, less raspy, “Ye could have told me that, Locke, before I wasted me time.”

Rora froze. Cassius. He’d found her. She had been so distracted by the woman and her wares that she hadn’t thought to keep watch. He pulled her forward, and her feet dragged like lead. She couldn’t take a deep enough breath, and her eyes began to cloud with tears.

What have I done? How will I explain this? What will he do to me?

“Come on, girl. I’m doing you a favor getting you away from that fraud. You could at least play along.”

Rora lurched to a stop, and jerked her head upward. That wasn’t Cassius. Her hood began to slip backward. She tried to catch it, but her movements lagged behind her mind, and her injured arm had grown stiff and numb. Cool air hit her uncovered cheeks, her nose, then her forehead. Even with the scarf hiding her hair, she might be recognized. And she had a feeling this was a very bad place for a princess to be.

The hood’s descent halted; it wasn’t her fingers that had caught the fabric but his. He was so tall that Rora had to crane her head back to see him. His hair was a dark, wavy brown and hung long enough to brush against his shoulders.

“Keep that hood up. This is no place for little girls.”

“I’m not a little girl!” She clamped her mouth shut, immediately wishing she could take the declaration back. Not only because it sounded exactly like what a little girl would say but also because she had not tempered her volume. At all. And thought it wasn’t Cassius who caught her, he was here somewhere. She bit her lip in worry, and the stranger’s eyes tracked down to her mouth briefly before darting around her face.

He still held on to her hood, keeping it back enough that he could see her eyes. “So you’re not a little girl. Still doesn’t mean this is any place for you.”

She could not argue with that.

“She called you Locke.”

His eyes narrowed. “Yes. And?”

“As in…Prince Locke?”

He laughed so hard that he released her hood. She rushed to grab it and pull it down to cover her face. She had no doubt people were staring now. He sucked in a breath, and then as if he couldn’t help himself, burst into laughter all over again.

Still chuckling, he said, “I’m about as much a prince, as you are a princess.”

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About Cora Carmack

Cora Carmack is a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author. Since she was a teenager, her favorite genre to read has been fantasy, and now she’s thrilled to bring her usual compelling characters and swoon-worthy romance into worlds of magic and intrigue with her debut YA fantasy, Roar. Her previous adult romance titles include the Losing It, Rusk University, and Muse series. Her books have been translated into more than a dozen languages around the world. Cora splits her time between Austin, TX and New York City, and on any given day you might find her typing away at her computer, flying to various cities around the world, or just watching Netflix with her kitty Katniss. But she can always be found on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, and her website www.coracarmack.com.

Connect: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Pinterest | Goodreads

Spotlight: What They Don't Know by Dr. K.V. Scruggs

What they don’t know can’t hurt them…or can it?

In the year 2030, the government has seized control of healthcare. Routine treatment is administered to patients and monitored via in-home telemedicine. Hospitals have been replaced by the Center for Standardized Medicine (CSM). No one is a bigger proponent of the changes than reporter Cheyenne Rose, who lost her mother shortly after the Healthcare Crash of 2018 and her fiancé ten years later after a freak accident.

Despite her incredible success and popularity, her life feels empty. Then she meets the Reid family and feels drawn to their simple and honest love for each other. When eight-year-old Ridge Reid’s younger brother develops kidney failure, he agrees to donate one of his kidneys to save his brother’s life. But Ridge unexpectedly dies on the table, and the doctor who performed the surgery vanishes.

Faced with a conspiracy that runs far deeper than a single surgery, Cheyenne finds herself thrust into a dangerous investigation. When one of her informants turns up dead, she realizes the people responsible will do almost anything to keep their secret. Cheyenne will risk everything to uncover the truth.

"An exciting adventure into the world of futuristic medicine where nightmarish consequences await. There are clever and unexpected twists and turns, mixed in with murder and romance, and believable characters that command our sympathies."

- Leonard Goldberg, author of The Daughter of Sherlock Holmes

“This propulsive, dystopian thriller thrusts you into a terrifying, futuristic medical world, and leaves you with an ending you’ll never forget.” - Sandra Block, author of The Girl Without a Name

"Down a dark rabbit hole we go, following headstrong Cheyenne Rose and her need for the truth. This suspenseful tale is an anticipatory tale as much as it is a thriller. Intriguing and compelling, the story dares us to consider what kind of medical care we want for our nation and what we're willing to sacrifice to have it." - Nadia Hashimi, author of International Best-Seller, The Pearl that Broke its Shell

Excerpt

Chapter 1

Then

August 29, 2018

Cheyenne Rose watched the police officers pace the length of the line that had formed outside Raleigh City Hospital, their heels scraping in unison against the concrete. Their guns were holstered but never far from their twitchy, nervous fingers. She quickly averted her eyes when one of the officers glanced her way. Cops made her feel like she needed to confess to something, even if there was nothing to confess. She had never so much as stolen a pack of gum in her entire life, but maybe they somehow knew she was supposed to be in school today, or that she had almost failed the seventh grade last year because of all the days she’d missed.

Cheyenne gripped the handles of the wheelchair a little tighter and leaned down. “Mom? You still doing okay?”

Sandra Rose was bent forward with her hands propped on her knees like a tripod, her chest rising and falling at a tempo twice as fast as Cheyenne’s own. The stifling humidity of the North Carolina summer was making it almost impossible for her to catch her breath. Her thin t-shirt had wet circles underneath the armpits and hung on her as though she was nothing more than a skeleton, which was not far from the truth.

Cheyenne made a halfhearted attempt to smooth her frizzy, red hair before realizing it was no use.

“We’re learning about the stock market crash in economics.” She tried to distract her mother.

“Mr. Tremont is a little obsessed.”

“Oh yeah?” Sandra suddenly grabbed her chest, her words cut short and her body rigid.

Cheyenne felt her body tense up, too. She wasn’t sure how much more of this heat her mom could take. Not on top of everything else. She craned her neck to look ahead of them in line, but saw only the same few heads they had been staring at for the last hour and a half.

After a moment, Sandra relaxed. “So. What are you learning?” she asked a little too casually.

Cheyenne kept a wary eye on her mother as she took in the scene around them. Cars were double and triple parked in the lot, and patients were still joining the line, which was wrapped around the building now. People were crowding closer and closer together as they neared the hospital’s main entrance. The double doors opened and closed continuously in response to the weight of the people standing just outside.

“You know how everybody started freaking out and selling their stocks all at once, and how that’s what caused the real problem. Seems sort of similar to what’s happening now.” She didn’t understand why, but it didn’t take a genius to see that, for some reason, people were flocking to the hospital. Too many people.

Sandra nodded. “Seems like everybody’s coming to the hospital just ‘cause. People are saying there’ll be no doctors at all by this time tomorrow, but I don’t know about all that.” Sandra’s smile was pained. “I sure did pick the wrong day to get sick, didn’t I, punkin’?” She strained to force out the last few words before dissolving into a coughing fit.

Cheyenne didn’t answer. Her mom had been sick for a long time. She knew that, and she was sure her mom knew that she knew. But they never talked about it. It was a continuous cycle of good days and bad. Cheyenne would go to school each morning, her mom smiling and waving at the door as she got on the bus. Then, without any warning, she would get home one afternoon and her mom was in bed, too weak to even sit up to eat the dinner that Cheyenne prepared, usually SpaghettiOs or tomato soup.

This would last a couple of days, Cheyenne having to stay home from school to nurse her mom back to health, and then all of a sudden, life was back to normal for several weeks. Inevitably, once Cheyenne had gotten used to things being good again, the cycle would start all over.

It was just the two of them for as long as she could remember, ever since her dad had died in Afghanistan. She had seen pictures of him, but it was like looking at a stranger posing with a younger version of her mom. There were even a couple of pictures with the three of them. Her as a baby, her mom, and a man who just happened to have Cheyenne’s eyes. It was weird seeing that.

The line advanced in front of them a couple of inches, just enough to make Cheyenne feel like they should move forward as well. She knew it was probably from people becoming impatient, moving closer to one another, slowly compressing the line. No real progress. Like going through security at the airport or being in bumper-to-bumper traffic.

She didn’t understand what was going on, but she had a feeling that whatever it was, it was bad. The crowd was growing larger by the minute. For every patient allowed into the building, five more showed up to wait in line. And the influx showed no signs of slowing down.

“You’d think a broken pinkie could wait,” said a large man in a tank top a few feet ahead of Cheyenne, speaking loudly as if wanting to be heard. “I mean, considering.” He gestured toward the line of people.

“Wanna say that to my face?” Another man even further up in the line turned around. “I still have one good fist.”

“Mind your own business,” someone else chimed in. “We’re all here for the same reason. It’s not his fault you’re having to wait.”

“Mind my own business? Are you kidding me right now? That’s all I been doing for the last hour. My wife’s about to have this baby right here in the parking lot, all just so this pansy can get a couple popsicle sticks taped around his finger?”

For the first time, Cheyenne noticed a hugely pregnant woman sitting in a folding chair facing the man. Her head was bent forward, and her eyes were squeezed tight.

“Brent,” the woman whispered. She reached one hand up from where she was clutching her gravid abdomen and batted the air a few times before making contact with his wrist.

“What is it, babe?” He bent down to her level, all his posturing melting away into genuine concern. She said something into his ear, and he stood up like a shot. He looked at her, then at the front of the hospital, then back at her. He said something to her, and she nodded, then slowly stood up with his help. They began to make their way toward the front of the hospital. There was an enlarging dark circle on the back of her dress, and at first, Cheyenne thought the woman had wet herself. Then she realized what it was and looked away, her cheeks burning. The woman continued to leak the clear fluid as she limped toward the entrance of the building. Several people stepped aside for them, but when they got to the man with the broken finger, he stood in their path.

“I don’t think so.” The man’s injured hand was cradled in his other palm, and Cheyenne could see it was more than just a broken pinkie. There was a large amount of gauze stained with yellow, orange and red fluids that looked several days old. Despite the bandage covering it, she could tell his hand was badly misshapen.

“C’mon, dude. Don’t be a douche.” Brent tried to step around him with his wife, but the other man reached out with his good hand in a sort of chopping motion. Before Cheyenne knew what had happened, Brent was lying on the ground clutching his neck and coughing. A couple of women rushed to either side of Brent’s wife, talking her through a poorly timed contraction.

“You’re doing great, sweetie.”

“What’s your name, anyway? Janet, that’s a beautiful name.”

“Pick out a name for this little one yet? Boy or Girl? Surprise? How exciting.”

Janet’s legs started to give out from under her. Someone brought the folding chair to where she now stood, and she collapsed into it.

Brent stood up and rushed the other man, swinging and shouting obscenities. A few surrounding people tried to pull them off of one another, and a few others tried to cut in line. Several more fights broke out ahead of them.

Two policemen ran toward the commotion, their loaded belts bouncing against their hips. The heavy metallic clicking sound reminded Cheyenne of the soldiers she’d seen in movies, trotting across the desert or the jungle, sweat streaming down their faces. The thought made her scoot a little closer to her mom, the sides of their knees touching just enough to remind Cheyenne she wasn’t alone.

She closed her eyes and imagined she was in PE class. Feet shuffling, grunts, skin against skin. All the sounds were familiar and harmless, she told herself, until she heard a guttural scream coming from Janet’s direction.

Cheyenne opened her eyes just in time to see a paramedic running toward Janet, whose legs were splayed open, a ruined pair of panties on the ground beside her. Bystanders averted their eyes, trying to give her some semblance of privacy. She slumped to the right, leaning on one of the women who had rushed to her aid.

“Alright, Janet. This is it. You have to push now.”

“I can’t,” she sobbed. “Not here.”

“Babe!” Brent’s voice came from a few feet away. Cheyenne looked over to see him being handcuffed by one of the cops. “Babe, I’m right here. You’re doing great. Just breathe like we practiced.” He turned to the officer. “Please, man. You don’t understand,” he said. A bruise was already forming along his jawline. “I gotta be there for her.”

“You should have thought of that before starting a fight while a cop was standing five feet away, dickhead.”

Cheyenne glanced down at her mom, feeling weirdly protective, hoping she hadn’t heard that.

“Seriously, please, do you have kids? What if you had to miss one of them being born?”

The policeman didn’t answer, just jerked Brent onto his feet by his armpits as his counterpart handcuffed the other man. “I got bigger shit to worry about than your sorry ass. Look around.”

The policemen hauled away both of the men, Brent kicking and screaming and the other man eerily silent. As they approached the far corner of the hospital building, Cheyenne heard Brent’s voice degenerate into sobs. She had to look away, tears stinging her own eyes. She didn’t think she had ever seen or heard a man cry.

“Where’s my husband? Where’s Brent?” Janet had just finished another round of pushing and was now looking around in a panic. Someone had found a large sheet and had spread it over her knees.

“Janet, he’s fine. He had to sit down. You need to focus, now. You need to push in one…two—”

“Ahhhhh!” Janet bore down, leaning slightly forward and revealing a ring of sweat along the nape of her neck. The dark tendrils of loose hair from her ponytail were matted to her skin.

“That’s it; that’s it. I see the head. Baby’s coming! Next push, guaranteed,” the paramedic said as Janet collapsed in the chair, and her head dangled precariously over the edge.

“Good birth control, huh?” Sandra quipped from the wheelchair in front of Cheyenne.

“Mom!” Cheyenne punched her lightly on the shoulder, but was secretly glad for the distraction from the garish scene playing out in front of her.

Sandra laughed, then immediately broke into a coughing fit. She clutched the arms of her wheelchair and gasped for air.

“Mom, you okay?” Cheyenne stood patting her mom on the back and fanning her face. She could hear the wheezing from where she stood. Her airways were starting to close up.

“Mom!” She bent down, practically yelling in her mom’s face now, but Sandra’s eyes had glassed over. Cheyenne had seen this look before. She didn’t have much time.

She glanced around them, fighting off the panic that threatened to take over. “Help!” she called out to no one in particular. “My mom can’t breathe. I need some help, here!”

“Here you go, doll. See if this helps.” A thin, plastic tube with two inch-long prongs sticking out of one side appeared as if from nowhere. She’d seen one before, knew exactly what to do with it. She grabbed it and positioned the prongs in her mom’s nostrils, wrapping the extra tubing around her ears. Only when her mom’s breathing slowed and her own heart stopped racing did Cheyenne look to see where the oxygen had come from.

Just behind her stood a heavy woman with swollen, discolored legs and feet that spread out across her shoes until the sides were almost flat with the ground. She had a soiled bandage on her right shin. Her face was pretty, though. Her makeup was perfect, and her hair was stylish and short. She leaned on her oxygen tank for support, and Cheyenne could see the indentations left behind by the cannula that was now in Sandra’s nose.

“I heard there’s been looting in New York,” she said. Cheyenne looked around but couldn’t tell who the woman was talking to. “Pharmacies, hospitals…people are taking whatever they can get their hands on right now. Whatever they think they might need…or be able to sell.”

“Will be here, too, I expect. Before too long, judging by the looks of it,” another woman responded. “Less than twenty-four hours since the announcement and the line’s halfway across the parking lot. It’s only gonna get worse.”

“Thank you, ma’am. So much.” Cheyenne’s voice sounded small and timid.

The woman waved her hand. “It’s no biggie. Doc says I really only need it when I sleep.”

“Well, we really appreciate it. Mom just needed a little help till we get inside. Shouldn’t be too much longer, now.”

Cheyenne saw the two women exchange a look.

“Um, do either of you know what’s going on?” she asked, trying to stand a little taller.

“Didn’t you hear?” the first woman replied. “All the doctors are on strike. Say they can’t keep their lights on and their water running with the amount they’re gettin’ paid. Say healthcare reform has bled ‘em dry.”

“Don’t forget all the ‘rules and regulations’,” the other woman chimed in. “They say doctors might as well be a bunch of computers the way it is nowadays. Say it’s not safe for patients. As if this is.”

Cheyenne glanced at her mom, who was listening intently, before venturing, “Who says?”

The woman shrugged. “They got a spokesperson. Kevin? Karl? I don’t know how this is supposed to be better. As of yesterday, when the announcement was made, a third of all the doctors had quit. More are leaving every hour.”

“Who knows if there’s even any doctors left here,” the other woman added, swinging a lazy hand toward the hospital entrance. Her skin reminded Cheyenne of fingertips that had soaked in water too long, only instead of translucent white, it was tan and spotted. She had thinning, brittle hair that she lifted off her neck as she spoke and fanned herself in time with her words. “Maybe we’re all just waiting in this line for nothing.”

Cheyenne’s heart skipped a beat. She hadn’t considered the possibility that their patience wouldn’t eventually be rewarded, that they wouldn’t get to the front of the line sooner or later so her mother could see a doctor. She glanced down at her mom, watching her work for each breath, and felt the panic starting to return. Did they even have a Plan B?

“You think that’s true?” She spoke to her mother now, the other women forgotten.

“Don’t listen to them, Cheyenne,” Sandra whispered, patting the back of Cheyenne’s thigh where her arm rested in an awkward embrace. Cheyenne was barely five feet tall, but she still towered over her mom in the wheelchair. “They’re just repeating rumors they’ve heard. The truth is probably much more boring.” She took a slow, deep breath. Her voice trembled ever so slightly when she spoke again. “Most of the people you see here are just afraid. Everything is going to turn out just fine. It always does.”

Cheyenne wanted to believe her, but she knew her mom had lied to protect her before. She felt like everything she had taken for granted was slipping away. She couldn’t look at her mom, afraid she might start crying. Or worse, that her mom would.

“It’s a boy!” Cheyenne’s gaze followed the voice back to the commotion ahead of them in line. The paramedic now held up an angry, wrinkled baby, as proud as if he, himself, were the father. Janet sat crumpled and sobbing into the chest of a woman who patted her back and stroked her hair.

The paramedic passed off the baby and cut the umbilical cord. Janet was cleaned off and transferred to a wheelchair to be moved inside. It seemed a little late for that, in Cheyenne’s opinion, but what did she know?

Cheyenne sat down on the curb of the sidewalk leading into the hospital, ankles crossed and arms resting on knobby knees. She risked a glance up at her mom. From this vantage point, she didn’t look so sick.

She thought about what the big woman had said. If it was true, if that many doctors had quit in one day, then that would explain these long lines. It might also explain the fights and the fact that the police were there. But if that was the problem, what was the solution?

She racked her brain and couldn’t think of one. And, looking around, it was obvious no one else had any bright ideas, either. How long could this go on before people really started getting hurt? Or worse?

“What do you think is going to happen, Mom?” She wasn’t sure whether she was asking about the crisis unfolding in front of their eyes or her mom’s illness or—the scariest question of all—what Cheyenne was going to do when her mom was no longer around. Maybe all three.

“I don’t know, sweetheart.” Sandra answered all of Cheyenne’s questions in one exhausted, sad breath. “I just don’t know.”

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About the Author

K.V. Scruggs is an alumnus of Clemson University and received her MD from the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston. She completed her residency in Internal Medicine at the University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill. She is currently working as a hospitalist and lives in Raleigh, North Carolina with her husband and two sons. In her writing, Dr. Scruggs not only draws from her experience as a physician, but as a wife, friend and mother.

Spotlight: Hello, Agnieszka by Evy Journey

Elise thought she knew her mother. Agnieszka Halverson is a caring woman, a great cook, and an exceptional piano player; but living in a secure, predictable world, she’s also a little dull. Her world is devastated when her oldest son attempts suicide, and Elise finds her mother has a past—both sweet and bitter—that she must now reveal to explain the suicide attempt. A past rich with a passion for music and shattered dreams, betrayal of a sweet but tragic first love, second chances and renewed hopes.

Born to immigrant parents weighed down by their roots, Agnieszka takes solace in learning to play the piano, taught by a sympathetic aunt who was a concert pianist in Poland before World War II. But when her aunt betrays her and her parents cast her aside for violating their traditional values, can Agnieszka’s music sustain her? Can she, at eighteen, build a life on her own?

When she finally bares her soul to her children, Agnieszka hopes they can accept that she has a past that’s as complex as theirs; that she’s just as human, just as vulnerable as they are. But do her revelations alienate her husband and can they push Elise farther away from her?

Excerpt

Elise Halverson-Thorpe sat, perusing a client's testimony at her desk in mid-afternoon, green highlighter in hand. She still had a half-inch thick of testimony transcripts to go through before she could stop for the day. She might have to bring some work home again.

She lifted the highlighter to mark a phrase in the transcript, but the cellphone in her shirt pocket vibrated and interrupted her movement for an instant. She groped for the phone while she dragged the clear green ink across the phrase.

She knew it couldn’t be Greg, who usually called sometime around noon. Before she swiped it, she glanced at the screen.

“Dad,” she muttered to herself, surprised to see her father’s face.

He rarely called her at work, aware that she might be arguing a case at court or taking testimony or deposition from a witness. What could he want from her at two in the afternoon?

“Dad. What’s up?”

“We’re at the hospital, but don’t be alarmed. Everything’s okay now. It’s Peter.”

Her father’s voice was low and calm, but she detected an edge to it. He was struggling to sound normal and in control.

“Peter?”

She put the green highlighter down, next to a red one, and closed the two-inch thick transcriptions of testimony taken from the woman she was currently defending on a murder charge. Her third such case in as many years of working with the Public Defender.

She leaned against the back of her chair and gripped the telephone tighter. Her father was taking a while to answer, and she grew apprehensive with every second he remained silent.

“Yes. He swallowed a bottle of pills. Mom found him unconscious in the tub. But he’s okay now.”

“What? What are you saying? He tried to … kill himself? Peter?”

“Yes.”

She thought, gasping, refusing to believe that loaded one-word answer: No, not possible. Not you, Peter. No. I don’t understand. Her mind went blank for some seconds at the weight of it. She began to breathe a little faster as she struggled against what it meant. But she could not resist the full force of it as a tangle of thoughts and emotions closed in on her: Why? What’s going on with you? Why choose death over life? No! How could you? How could anyone?

“Elise, are you all right? Are you still there?” Her father’s anxious voice broke through her turmoil.

She swallowed hard to clear her throat. “He did it in your tub?”

“Yes, he came last weekend, said he missed us so much he wanted to stay a week. That was unusual, but we never wondered why. We were just so happy to have him with us for a while. He travels so much in his work, we hardly ever see him.”

“The pills, how …?”

“He must have had them. We don’t have any in the house.”

Still refusing or unable to believe what her father just told her, Elise was silent again. She could hear her father breathing, echoing her own labored one.

She forced herself to speak again. “But … he’s okay now?”

“Yes. Yes. And he’s been seen by a psychologist. How were we to know that he was going to do it? Nothing was different about him.”

“That’s apparently not unusual,” she said weakly, her father’s news still weighing on her like a huge, festering, unsolvable puzzle. Peter tried to kill himself. But why?

Her father said, “How can anyone know then?”

That was, at least, a question to which she might have some answer.

She said, “People serious about suicide don’t often say a thing, according to our psychiatric experts. We have defendants who attempt suicide and if they have no history of similar attempts, psychiatrists can’t always diagnose them early enough to put them on suicide watch.”

Elise had to control the quiver in her voice and she hoped she sounded authoritative enough.

“He was in a good mood,” her father said with a sigh.

“We’ve seen that, too.”

“I can’t help thinking we went wrong somewhere.”

“I don’t think it’s anything you did.”

“He made dinner for us twice this week.”

“I didn’t think he could cook.”

“I don’t know why we didn’t see it coming.”

“None of us might have.”

“I thought I knew my children very well.”

“I thought I knew Peter well.”

“I’ve never seen Peter so hopeless.”

“Neither have I. Nor so desperate that he’d try to end his life.”

“He’s kind of intense.”

“But people say that about me, too.” Her voice was finally as calm as she wanted it to sound.

Her father let out another long sigh. “We have so many things we must work out. I still have to call Justin. Mom wants you both to come for dinner tomorrow. Greg, too, of course, and Goyo. Can you make it at three?”

“Yes, of course. How is she?"

“Worse than me, I’m afraid. As if she wants to take the whole burden of guilt on herself. Anyway, talk to her tomorrow.”

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About the Author

Evy Journey has always been fascinated with words and seduced by beautiful prose. She loves Jane Austen and invokes her spirit every time she spins tales of love, loss, and finding one's way—stories she interweaves with mystery or intrigue and sets in various locales. SPR (Self Publishing Review) awarded Evy the 2015 Independent Woman Author bronze for her writing.

She's lived and traveled in many places, from Asia to Europe. Often she's ended up in Paris, though—her favorite place in the world. She's an observer-wanderer. A flâneuse, as the French would say.

The mind is what fascinates her most. Armed with a Ph.D., she researched and spearheaded the development of mental health programs. And wrote like an academic. Not a good thing if you want to sound like a normal person. So, in 2012, she began to write fiction (mostly happy fiction) as an antidote.

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Spotlight: Tracking You by Kelly Moran

Love isn't always loud. Sometimes it's silent.

Gabby Cosette has always been dubbed the good girl of quaint Redwood Ridge, Oregon, and being permanently put in the friend zone has left her dating life stagnant. With no prospects in sight, she clings to her friends and resolves to not let loneliness drag her under. So when the town Battleaxes set their matchmaking sights on her, she figures it can't hurt. Yet the guy they think is perfect for her just happens to be not only her boss at the veterinarian clinic, but her best friend. Sure, Flynn O'Grady is attractive and the nicest guy around, but going there with him would topple both of their carefully constructed worlds and there would be no going back. Even if he is starting to make her girly parts zing.

Having been born deaf, Flynn has already felt like an outsider most of his life. Aside from his brothers, Gabby is about the only person who's gone out of her way to treat him as more than a handicap. Which is exactly why he's banked his secret attraction for his sweet, beautiful vet tech. Except his meddling family is trying to play Cupid and ruin the best thing to ever happen to him. Without Gabby, his work as a veterinarian, never mind his personal life, wouldn't flow. Determined to ignore the antics, he's secure in the knowledge she's not interested in him romantically. But then a kiss changes everything . . . and he's wondering if taking the ultimate shot at love might be worth the risk.

Excerpt

Gabby Cosette smoothed her hand down the simple baby blue sundress she meticulously picked out for this evening and tried not to look too eager. Or throw up. That wouldn’t do either.

From a back booth, she glanced around the only Italian restaurant in Redwood Ridge, comforted by the fact it was still early yet for the dinner rush. The place was a good choice. Right? Not as casual as Shooters—the bar she and her friends frequented—but not as formal as one of the seafood restaurants that dotted their Oregon coastal town. A step above grabbing coffee or a beer, yet it didn’t scream desperation.

Was a booth in the back too obvious? Had she overdone it with her makeup? Maybe she should’ve put her hair up instead of down?

No, no. She went for light and natural on purpose. The patrons of Redwood Ridge had known her all her life. It wasn’t far out of the realm of ordinary for her to wear a dress and light cosmetics. She was being a basket case.

It’s just… Well, she hadn’t had a date in a year. A year!

To calm her nerves, she drew in a deep breath and focused on the red checkered tablecloth. A votive candle flickered on the windowsill to her right, the flame reflecting off the tinted glass. The parking lot stretched beyond, where her date’s car was not in one of the available spots.

It was silly to get this worked up over a first date, especially with Tom.

She’d gone to elementary and high school with him. His parents still lived down the street from hers. Strange how he’d never shown any interest in her romantically, yet out of the blue, he’d asked her out this week.

Then again, most everyone in town viewed her as the sweet Cosette girl, everyone’s friend. Thus the no date in a year. It was hard to get a guy to think about kissing her, never mind imagining her naked, when she had platonic all but tattooed on her forehead.

The waitress strolled over in her apron, holding a notepad in her hand.

“Are you waiting on someone, sweetie pie?”

“Yes.” She smiled and grabbed her cell on the table. Tom was five minutes late. “He should be here any minute.”

“Ooh. Is it a date?” Mavis planted a hand on her plump waist and grinned, the wrinkles around her eyes growing to crevices. Gabby wasn’t sure how old Mavis was, no one really knew, but she never seemed to age past the state from when Gabby was a child.

Gabby opened her mouth to answer, but Tom strode toward her, weaving around tables and plopping in the seat across the booth.

“Couldn’t find ya at the bar. I wasn’t expecting a table.”

It was still early, and Le Italy didn’t get that crowded even on a Friday night. How hard could it possibly have been to locate her? “Give us a sec,”she told Mavis and waited for her to step away.

Tom had blond hair too short for her preference and a thin mouth. His unremarkable brown eyes darted around the restaurant and back to her. He made no attempt to apologize for being late, and it appeared as if he’d just come from work. His jeans and T-shirt were paint-splattered. The hazard of working for his dad’s commercial painting and roofing company.

“Thanks for meeting me.” He took off his ball cap and scratched his head.

Why did that sound un-date-like? “Um…sure thing. How’s work going?”

Her gaze dipped to his hands, no better off than his clothes. Maybe she should’ve picked Shooters after all.

Something felt very, very off as her belly twisted. Not with nerves this time. Confused, Gabby’s mind scrolled through their conversation from earlier in the week when he’d brought his dog into the vet clinic where she worked. As he was checking out, he’d anxiously spun around to face

her and asked if she could meet him.

“Good. Work’s good.” He put his hat back on and glanced outside.

“Getting to be warmer out, so the jobs are picking up.” Perhaps he was just nervous, too. Her tension drained a degree.

Mavis returned and asked for a drink order.

Tom lifted his hand to wave her off. “Nothing for me, thanks. I can’t stay long. Got a poker game with the guys tonight. I need to shower before they show up.”

The forced smile Gabby had plastered on her face began to wilt like her mom’s petunias in August. What did he mean he couldn’t stay long? And why would he ask her out and schedule a card game on the same night?

Plus, he could shower for his friends, but not her?

Mavis divided her gaze between them, a mix of bewilderment and irritation lifting her brows. She tapped her pen to her pad as the silence hung. “Can I get you something?” She focused on Gabby, her tone indicating she should order something.

“I’ll have a sweet tea. Thank you.” When the waitress walked away, Gabby looked at Tom. He’d thrown his arm over the back of the booth and had stretched his legs out. The aroma of Eau de Paint Thinner wafted across the table. “So…?”

“Right, right.” Tom leaned forward and crossed his arms. “I appreciate you letting me do this in person.”

She stilled. “Do what?” Because she was definitely getting the this-is-not-a-date vibe now.

A warring shift in contradiction took over her body. Everything inside grew rapidly chilly while her skin heated in what she hoped wasn’t a blush. Her pale complexion always gave away her emotions and she hated that more than she’d hated freshman algebra. Math was evil.

He let out a tense laugh, which sounded more like a guffaw, and drew several heads from other diners. “Not exactly a conversation you want to have over the phone or somethin’, ya know?”

No. She didn’t know. “Maybe if you just tell me?”

He played with the parmesan shaker, not meeting her gaze. “Well, the whole town’s buzzing about Rachel and Jeff’s split.”

She frowned, not connecting the dots on his crazy pattern. Her older sister had only dated Jeff for a few weeks which, per Rachel standards, might as well have been marriage. Rachel liked to keep her options—and legs—open.

Guilt immediately consumed her for the crass thought, but it didn’t make it any less true. She and Rachel couldn’t be any more different. Rachel was aloof and sexy. Gabby was the girl next door. Men desired Rachel. The only thing they desired from Gabby was a shoulder to cry on after her sister shot them down.

She twirled a strand of hair around her finger to keep from fidgeting. “I don’t understand what Rachel and Jeff have to do with…” Unable to finish the sentence—because she had no idea anymore what “this” was—she waved her hand between them.

“Well,” he said in an aw-shucks kind of way that made her want to grind her teeth, “now that Rachel’s available, I thought maybe you could put in a good word for me?”

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About the Author

Bestselling author Kelly Moran says she gets her ideas from everyone and everything around her and there’s always a book playing out in her head. No one who knows her bats an eyelash when she talks to herself, and no one is safe from becoming her next fictional character. She is a Catherine Award-Winner, Readers Choice Finalist, Holt Medallion Finalist, and earned one of the 10 Best Reads by USA Today's HEA. She is also a Romance Writers of America member. Her interests include: sappy movies, MLB, NFL, driving others insane, and sleeping when she can. She is a closet caffeine junkie and chocoholic, but don’t tell anyone. She resides in Wisconsin with her husband, three sons, and two dogs. Most of her family lives in the Carolinas, so she spends a lot of time there as well.

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