Spotlight: My Billionaire Fake Fiance by Linda West

My Billionaire Fake Fiance
Linda West
Publication date: November 5th 2019
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Romance

He needs a fiance to seal a deal. She needs a Christmas miracle to save her home.

Devlin is a sexy billionaire with a successful company that supplies boxes to Bamazon. Allie is an activist trying to save the trees. When these two opposites are forced to strike up a deal the fickle snow flurries of fate send them down a destined road they never expected. Set in the adorable snow town of Kissing Bridge with a quirky loveable cast of characters sure to make you smile.

Goodreads / Amazon

EXCERPT:

He looked up with a sneer that somehow made him even more handsome than his usual dumb-looking, charming Peter Pan look.

“Anyway, would you like me to take you home now?” I tried to keep the hope out of my voice.

He pulled the ring out of his pocket and looked at it wistfully. “No. I have to fix this somehow. I just have to think.” He hit himself on the side of the head a little too hard.

I winced. Ouch.

More head hitting—this time harder.

“Hey—hey, stop that,” I said. “You’ll hurt yourself.”

Devlin stopped like a child that had been reprimanded and stared at the ring again in a trance. Rich people problems. Maybe I should take him to his therapist.

“What, exactly, were you trying to get your fiancée to do?” I had to ask. “Because you obviously didn’t want her to be herself.”

Devlin threw his hands up. “She’s beautiful.”

I rolled my eyes.

“And?”

“Balderdash! I thought she was fine being single. Women!”

I looked at him with no sympathy.

He let out a big sigh. “My father’s a traditionalist. I just thought it would be better this way. Make him happy. Win-win.”

I shook my head.

“In what logical world did you think that you were going to bring home an exotic dancer and get her to act like she was a perfect 50’s wife?”

He clenched his hands.

“Right, I was crazy.”

“Well, if you just needed a darn fake date, you would have been better off grabbing somebody off the street than trying to remake Sofia Denario!”

Author Bio:

Linda West loves writing for a living. She grew up in a small town near Buffalo and wrote her first novel at the age of seven to absolutely no acclaim:) Linda is the author of the adorable and enchanting "Christmas Kisses and Cookies." It is a delightful series of holiday romances based around the town of Kissing Bridge and the magical Landers sisters who are the reigning blue ribbon cookie queens thanks to their mothers' 'special' recipe book.
Linda was the owner of Mayberry - a celebrity-filled restaurant in Malibu where many of her recipes enchanted the regulars such as Tom Hanks and Anthony Hopkins to name a few. Her recipes are sprinkled throughout her fiction books much to the delight of her fans.
Her newest venture is in the cozy mystery and humor genre. With - Death by Crockpot - the first in her newest series -Linda takes her favorite known characters from Kissing Bridge and throws them into some side-splitting funny adventures. Her novels are about true love, hope and magic please come visit her wonderful world.
Non-fiction:
Linda West is the best selling author of the most popular law of attraction book 'The Frequency'. She wrote the first book on the science of frequencies as it relates to manifesting and broke a code in the Mayan Calendar where she researched her book alongside famous scientists such as Terrence McKenna. She is a youtube personality and counsels people on the law of attraction all over the world. Her newest book, Advanced Manifesting' is considered the pinnacle of books on manifesting.

Website / Goodreads / Instagram / Twitter


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Spotlight: Firewall: An Emma Streat Mystery by Eugenia Lovett West

Former opera singer Emma Streat has survived the murder of her husband and the destruction of her beautiful old house. Now a full-time single mother, she struggles to move forward and make a home for her two sons. Because of her detection skills, she has become a go-to person for help―so, when her rich, feisty, socialite godmother is blackmailed, she turns immediately to Emma.

Soon, Emma finds herself thrust into the dark world of cybercrime. Mounting challenges take her to exclusive European settings where she mixes with the elite of the financial and art collecting worlds.

When she is targeted by a cybercrime network using cutting-edge technology, it takes all of Emma’s resilience and wits to survive and bring the wily, ruthless criminal she’s hunting to justice.

Action-packed and full of twists and turns, Firewall will keep you guessing until the end.

Excerpt

Chapter 1

Excerpted from Firewall: An Emma Streat Mystery by Eugenia Lovett West. Copyright © 2019 Eugenia Lovett West. All rights reserved. Published by SparkPress. 

March 25

A spring blizzard was cascading snow over Boston’s Public Garden. I poured my first cup of coffee and went to the living room window of my temporary apartment. People going to work struggled along the paths, heads bent, feet slipping. I watched, glad that in a few days I’d be on an island in the Caribbean. Lying in the sun with a man. Finding out if a dynamic former relationship could be renewed.

My phone on the counter sounded its little chime. I picked it up and saw that the call was from my godmother, Caroline Vogt. She never called before noon, but today the gravelly tuba voice reverberated in my ear.

“Emma, I need you, and I need you now.” 

This was demanding, even for Caroline. I took a deep breath. “Why do you need me? Are you still down in the Keys?” 

“I’m back in New York and something has happened.” 

“What?”

“Oh God, I can’t believe it, but someone’s trying to blackmail me.”

Blackmail? When?” 

“Just now. I was simply sitting in my bed, eating my breakfast, and the doorbell rang. Minnie went to open it. No one was there, just a note shoved under the door telling me to pay a million dollars to an account in a Miami bank. Pay it today. If I don’t, my dirty little secret will go to the media tomorrow. All the media.” The tuba voice wobbled. 

I shifted the phone. Caroline’s usual reaction to trouble was assault mode. Strike back. Never show weakness. This call for help was totally out of character—and the timing couldn’t be worse.

“Look. I can see why you’re upset,” I said, trying to apply calm. “Blackmail is nasty, but it happens. The dirty little secret bit— everyone has secrets and that person is just trying to scare you. If you’re really worried, I think you should call the police or a detective. Someone who has real expertise.” 

“No. Absolutely not. I won’t have strangers prying into my business. You’re the person we all trust in a crisis. You found Lewis’s killer. You exposed those virus terrorists and saved your niece Vanessa. You have credentials. You have to find this bastard before he comes back and wants more.” 

“Wait. Let me think.” I pushed back my hair. No way did I want to be the family detective, involved in another crisis, but Caroline was now in her eighties, a mega heiress from Chicago, a fixture in New York society. Divorced four times, no children. I was the closest thing she had to family and she was frightened. I must go, but with any luck I could still get to that island. Spend three days sorting her out, then fly there from New York. 

“Emma?” 

“I’m here. Listen. It’s snowing hard in Boston, a freak storm, but I’ll try for a flight today. Failing that, I’ll take the train. I’ll let you know. Relax, no need to be paranoid. Love you,” I said and clicked off. 

A siren went shrieking down Arlington Street, the sound that signaled trouble. I sat down on the stool at the counter and reminded myself that I owed Caroline. She had been my unfailing support from the day I was born. She had taken the place of my dead mother. Fourteen months ago she had given me a stern lecture: 

“You’re still young. You survived losing your rising opera career. You’ve done a superb job bringing up those two hunks of boys, but now they’re off to college. Cut the cord and let them go. You’ve got the money and the energy to do something important. Different.” 

Good advice, but three days later, my husband was murdered and my world had gone up in flames along with my beautiful old house on the Connecticut River. I still had Jake and Steve, but creating a new life wasn’t easy. It was time, past time, to move forward. 

I took a deep breath and picked up a pad of paper. First, call the airlines, then cancel this morning’s appointment for a haircut. Start packing. 

By now experience should have taught me that one small incident can spiral into a tsunami of trouble. But no siren sounded, warning me that by helping Caroline I would be targeted by a network of cybercriminals. No way of knowing that her call would take me to many countries, lead to heartbreak, and nearly cost me my life. 

Excerpted from Firewall: An Emma Streat Mystery by Eugenia Lovett West. Copyright © 2019 Eugenia Lovett West. All rights reserved. Published by SparkPress.

Buy on Amazon | Barnes and Noble

About the Author:

Eugenia Lovett West is the author of Firewall: An Emma Streat Mystery. Eugenia was born in Boston, Massachusetts. Her father was Reverend Sidney Lovett, the widely known and loved former chaplain at Yale. She attended Sarah Lawrence College and worked for Harper's Bazaar and the American Red Cross. Then came marriage, four children, volunteer work, and freelancing for local papers. Her first novel, The Ancestors Cry Out, was published by Doubleday; it was followed by two mysteries, Without Warning and Overkill, published by St. Martin's Press. West divides her time between Essex, Connecticut, and Holderness, New Hampshire, where she summers with her large extended family. For more information, please visit http://www.eugenialovettwest.com

Spotlight: Christmas Inn Love by Samantha Chase

About the Book

Running the family B&B has always been Cassidy Ryan's dream. But first, she has to save it from neglect.

Closing the doors to the Silver Bell Inn for the holiday seasons seems like the perfect plan to give the B&B some much needed love and care. Or at least it would be if the inn didn't need a lot more work than Cassidy can handle on her own. She needs help. But asking it is the last thing she wants to do.

Getting stuck in Silver Bell Falls was not part of Beckham Allen's plans. Neither was this cross-country road trip, for that matter. He was supposed to be focusing on himself and on healing after the loss of his father. But nothing, not even his rescue dog Mazie, seems to be able to break him out of his funk.

Or so he thought until he met the sweet innkeeper who takes him in.

After an awkward start, Cassidy and Beckham discover the perks of being snowed in together. And with Christmas drawing closer, they find they may have just been given the greatest gift of all.

Grab Your Copy

Goodreads: https://geni.us/CIL-Goodreads 

Amazon: https://geni.us/CIL-Amazon 

Apple: https://geni.us/CIL-Apple 

Nook: https://geni.us/CIL-Nook 

Kobo: https://geni.us/CIL-Kobo 

Google Play: https://geni.us/CIL-Google 

About the Author

Samantha Chase is a New York Times and USA Today bestseller of contemporary romance. She released her debut novel in 2011 and currently has more than forty titles under her belt! When she’s not working on a new story, she spends her time reading romances, playing way too many games of Scrabble or Solitaire on Facebook, wearing a tiara while playing with her sassy pug Maylene…oh, and spending time with her husband of 25 years and their two sons in North Carolina.

Connect:

Website: https://www.chasing-romance.com/ 

Twitter: https://twitter.com/SamanthaChase3 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SamanthaChaseFanClub/ 

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/samanthachaseromance/ 

Newsletter: http://bit.ly/2HFLHxb 

BookBub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/samantha-chase

Spotlight: The Love Playbook by Suze Winegardner

When Avery Stone learns her dad will be fired if his high school team doesn’t make the playoffs, she has to get her head out of her day planner and do something—anything—to help him win. Even if it means secretly coaching the team’s newest player, who seems to have more game than skill.

Lucas Black just transferred to Hillside with a fake name and a big secret. The MVP of every team he’d played on since he was seven—not to mention the MVP of every post-game party—he can’t understand why since arriving at Hillside, he’s been unable to catch a single. Freaking. Ball.

Until…Avery. Amazing, kind, generous, and crazy-freaking-hot Avery.

As Lucas goes from zero back to hero and Avery struggles with just what Lucas means to her, she inadvertently sets them on a collision course with Lucas’s secret…a secret that could take down not only Lucas but her father too.

DISCLAIMER: This Entangled Teen Crush contains a football player hotter than the Texas sun, hotel cuddles, and a steamy makeout session in the rain.

Excerpt

Avery drove really slow…like really slow. 

Once she’d explained that Brady’s Balls was a football Facebook page—and half the reason anyone in town was even on Facebook—they’d lapsed into a weird silence.

Which gave Avery a chance to actually think.

Maybe this some kind of karma, fate, or destiny. She’d asked the universe for him to come back to help her, and he turned up so close that she nearly sat on his lap. 

There was no forgetting her bare leg against his, either.

Ugh. She needed to focus on the problem at hand, not on the butterflies pinballing around her stomach.

He looked at her a couple of times as if to ask why she was driving so slowly, but she ignored him. How could she help him so her dad could keep his job? 

“So, you used to be a good receiver?” she began, trying to smooth her tone so it didn’t shriek “I need you to be better so my family isn’t destroyed!”.

He looked out the side window. “I still am,” he said, in a voice that was less convincing than anything she’d ever heard.

“Uh huh?” She left it hanging there.

He shook his head. More to himself than to Avery.

“What do you think the problem is?” she asked.

“I. Don’t. Know,” he muttered under his breath. Then he looked at her again. “If I knew, don’t you think I’d fix it?”

Good point. Her brain ran through the options, and landed on one she knew something about. “Why did you move school half way through the season? My…” She was about to say “therapist said”, but swallowed the words. “If something bad happened, it can affect your muscle memory, the way your brain works—everything, really.” 

He stared at her. 

She snatched a look at him, but he looked interested instead of annoyed. So tentatively she began to tell him what Dr. Roberts had told her after her mother had died.

“When something really bad happens, you can forget how to do the things you do every day. Even things like how to start a car. You brain is too busy processing other things—the bad stuff—I guess. But you can feel depressed, and anxious, and forgetful, and even feel physically ill. It’s all normal, but you have to give it time to work its way through.” For her, the worst had been over within about eight months. Waves of sadness still washed over her sometimes though,  but the numbness, and tears, and tiredness had gone.

“You sound as if you know what you’re talking about,” he said, in a soft voice. “Look, I’m really sorry about earlier. I didn’t mean to upset you.” He’d shifted in his seat so he was facing her, as if he was trying to gauge how she was reacting to his apology.

Reflexively, she reached over and put her hand on his arm to reassure him. “It’s okay, really. You had no way of knowing.” 

He flashed a smile, and she went to remove her hand, but the friendship bracelet Lexi had given her stuck on his sweater. It snagged, and pulled a thread. “Oh, my God, I’m so sorry,” she said, trying to get herself free, while still watching the road. “Hang on,” she said, flicking on her turn signal with the same hand she was steering with.

She pulled over and cut the engine, and then put the overhead light on to see how she could get her hand back.

“It’s okay—it’s just a sweater I keep in my bag…” he began. “Look, I’ve got it.” He pulled the bracelet in one direction, but it didn’t come free.

“It’s okay, I can just…” She bent her head closer to his arm, and then looked up at him to get him to move his other hand because, come on, guys are shit at that kind of thing. 

He had bent over, too, and now their faces were like a couple of inches apart. She should have jerked away, but the humor in his eyes tightened something inside her stomach, something she didn’t even know was loose, and she hesitated. They looked at each other for some long-ass seconds, until the expression in his eyes slowly changed to something else. 

Suddenly she couldn’t breathe. 

Oh God, he thinks I want to kiss him. 

Oh, God, I think I do want to kiss him.

Lucas’s eyes roamed her face for a second, but then he seemed to shake himself out of it. In a second she realized that he was breaking out of that weird moment, and she dipped her head toward the clasp on her bracelet at exactly the same time as he did.

Their foreheads banged together with a dull thunk.

“Ow,” she said, her hand flying up to her head. The movement jerked Lucas’s hand toward her, and he pulled it away just before it hit her square on the head, too.

Her bracelet broke, and it fell to the floor of the car between her legs.

“Jesus, I’m sorry,” Lucas said, rubbing his own forehead.” He shook his head. “You know, I just shouldn’t be in any kind of polite company.” He slumped in the seat and looked out of his side window.

All at once, Avery remembered why they were there. That she had basically asked if he’d suffered from some trauma, and he hadn’t denied it. Her heart ached that somehow she’d managed to make him feel worse than he had when he got in the car with her. “Don’t worry—I’m not at all polite company. Fuck off. See?”

Even though he was faced away from her, she could tell he was smiling by the rise of his cheek.

“Shit crap. Shit crap ass.” She shrugged. “I mean, I’m just not sure you could find anyone in Hillside less polite than me,” she said.

It worked. He laughed. “Sorry I broke your bracelet,” he said.

“Well I think we can agree that we both broke it, so don’t worry. Lexi can make me a new one in about ten minutes.” In truth, she knew that Lexi would be thrilled to hear about what had just gone down in the car. Not that anything had. But Lexi would still be able to talk about it for a whole evening, no doubt.

“I should go,” he said, opening the door.

“No. I can drive you. I absolutely swear I won’t stick any part of my body to you again.” Wow, that hadn’t come out quite the way she planned. “I promise,” she added, a little lamely.

“Seriously, it’s okay. I can walk from here. He got out and shut the door.

What had she done? The universe had brought him back into her life, into her car. She couldn’t let him walk away. She opened the window.

“Open your eyes!” she half-shouted.

It stopped him in his tracks. “What?” He looked around as if he were about to walk into something.

The lamplight made his eyes shine. She wanted to look at him a second longer, but she only had that second to help him. “Open your eyes when you see the ball. Look at the air around the ball, imagine your hands there, and then keep your eyes open as you catch it.” She was parroting what her father used to tell Colin when they played catch in the backyard. But she’d seen it work.

“Sure,” he said with a half-hearted wave.

Anger flared at his wild dismissal of her attempt to help him. Was he brushing her off because she was a girl? “Who are you, anyway?” she said as she put the window up again. Rude! She took her foot off the brake and coasted around in a giant U at the lights where she’d first set eyes on him about five hours previously. Where did he get off being rude to someone who was just trying to help?

She didn’t look back as she drove away.

And then she did look back.

He was standing in the lamplight staring at the ground. She looked at the road again, and then back in the mirror. He was looking up at her, watching her go. 

Her butterflies returned. Had she just nearly kissed him? She swatted the butterflies back into larvae, and vowed not to think about his eyes. How his eyes had changed from laughing, to…something else. How his gaze had slowly dropped to her mouth… Stop it.

As she took the road toward her neighborhood, she flashed another look in the rearview.   

He was still standing there, still watching.

Buy on Amazon | Barnes and Noble

About the Author

Suze Winegardner is a British YA writer, currently living overseas with her military husband, and lovely Lab. She loves Buffy, Fray Bentos pies, Archer, cheese, and the serial comma. Wait - Cadbury Flakes too. And naps. Wait, what was the question? Anyway, she thinks her life is chock full of hoot, just a little bit of nanny...and if you get that reference, she already considers you kin.

Spotlight: Gardenia Duty by Kathleen Varn


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Women's Fiction, Military
Published: June 2019
Publisher: Gatekeeper Press

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In 1957 jobs are scarce in rural Ashland, Alabama. Bobby Higgins is facing life decisions; his family’s farm struggles and threat of the draft hangs over 18-year-old males as the Cold War rumbles in the distance. Bobby heads off to boot camp, vowing to provide for his family from his pay. Between shore and sea duty, Bobby leaves broken hearts in every port.

When his own heart is stolen by Rose, he’s shocked to learn that she comes with four daughters, a package deal he’s unsure he wants. But when Rose disappears, Bobby finds her and persuades her to marry him. Somehow they navigate their way through the trials of marriage and parenting as he fulfills his patriotic career and his promise to raise four willful daughters.

In the spring of 2004, his daughters are brought together by grief. They forge new bonds, sharing their joys, losses, regrets, and ultimately family secrets that will seal all their fates…if they can summon the courage to report for duty.



 Excerpt

October, 1980

She stared at the venetian blinds, blurred by tears,

gripping the hospital bed rails. They should have

been tears of joy. Her family should have been standing

in the sparsely furnished room. Should have, would

have, could have.

Suck it up, cupcake, she thought. She knew this day

would come. She had to think about what was best for…

for him. And once she had finally decided, even the excitement

of her budding career had been overshadowed. She

scanned the room through the blur, now void of the nurse

who had taken pity on her solitude. The never-ending

loop of self-recrimination flooded her brain yet again.

Funny, she thought she’d be over it by now, that somehow

the loop would be flushed—like afterbirth.

How could she have been so careless? Why hadn’t she

focused on school instead of letting herself be attracted to

Larry’s blue eyes? With that twinkle and his boyish grin,

he had relentlessly worked his way into her heart on a

girls’ night out. Eventually, walks on the beach, romantic

dinners and line dancing at The Lazy B. If she had known

his orders were only five months away, would she have

continued the romance? She didn’t let just anyone in. She

was the Master of Unavailable and The Life of the Party.

But Larry had pulled her off center and made her laugh.

She thought he’d bore her. She thought she’d grow tired

of him. But no. Damn you, Larry. The aching memories

made this day that much more difficult.

There was a knock on the thick blonde door. “Dinner

time,” the nurse said. She stared at the tray as the nurse

gently placed it on the table. She peeked under the lid and

was hit with the aroma of chicken and broccoli. Typical

hospital menu; something from all the food groups.

“Does the chef suggest a wine pairing?” she smiled

weakly. Her nurse smiled back and checked the IV bag.

There was iced tea and a little carton of milk on the fiberglass

tray, the same type served up in school when her

biggest decisions were made on a playground, or when

sneaking a cigarette on the senior lawn behind the huge

live oak.

“When can I shower?” she asked, poking at the

mashed potatoes.

“After this bag runs out I’ll take out the IV.”

Her nurse’s deep blue scrubs were adorned by a shiny

chrome stethoscope. “Can I do anything else?” Her eyes

betrayed the facade of pity for her situation. This may

have been her first rodeo, but the nurse had seen too many

of her situations. “No, I’m good. Well, not good. I mean,

you’ve been wonderful,” she fumbled.

The nurse walked back to the door, patting her feet

with a soft hand on the way. She felt the tears welling

again. How she needed her sisters. But, no one could

know. She needed to get back on track at work and put

this behind her. How the hell do you put something like this

behind you, she thought to herself. She suspected it would

always haunt her. “Please, God, give me the peace I need. I

hope you know I’m not heartless. This is for his future. I’m

still a kid.”

There was another knock on the door. As the couple

entered the room, he was carrying a fast-food bag, Taco

Bell. She carried flowers. It had to be as awkward for them

as it was for her. “You’re a lifesaver! I hope there are tacos

in that bag,” she said, with as much bravado as she could

muster. But she knew there was a deeper meaning to the

first part of her comment.

“Did y’all finally decide on his name?” she asked.



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About the Author

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Kathleen Varn's love affair with words manifested when she turned four and taught herself to read. As she grew older, books and reading were an escape from responsibility. Eventually, Kathleen dove into journaling, which helped her find solace in the grief of a toxic relationship. Kathleen is now very happily married to her soulmate. She resides in Charleston, South Carolina, where she worked for an adoption attorney for twenty-three years. Her first novel, Ameera Unveiled, released in 2013. Gardenia Duty is her second novel.       



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Spotlight: My Path to You by Kate Carley

My Path to You
Kate Carley
Publication date: November 4th 2019
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Romance

A pharmacist and a recovering drug addict. What could go wrong?

There are certain combinations that simply don’t work. Not on paper and not in real life. It is a life lesson Sawyer Ferris might just learn the hard way.

Nothing has ever been out of Sawyer’s reach. He has the financial means, the brains, and the brawn to turn any desire into a reality. But when the new high school counselor catches his eye, he quickly discovers he can’t have everything he wants. At least, not without taking a risk.

Cass’s attraction for the leather-wearing, Harley-riding pharmacist has her running for her sanity and her sobriety. But in the small town of Krysset, it is nearly impossible to avoid the ruggedly handsome businessman. And the truth of the matter is, she doesn’t really want to.

The pursuit is on, and it’s never been sweeter. Until Cass’s addiction collides with Sawyer’s past.

Return to Krysset, the resort town in northern Minnesota, for a love story of courage and strength in the aftermath of personal loss and physical abuse.

Goodreads / Amazon

EXCERPT:

“It seems like Jack has a hard time playing nice with his friends,” Cass said.

“Look, Donovan, that may be, but you don’t need to punish him for it. Guys will be guys. They’re just working out their differences.” Coach Jenkins met Sawyer’s eyes. “Right, Dr. Ferris? Guys tend to play rough.”

Since Sawyer and his close proximity had been called out, he sidled up between the coach and the woman—who finally gave him a peek. And wow was the only word that came into his mind. Her asymmetrical haircut was cute and chic and so perfect for the delicate features of her face.

“Yeah, as a general rule. Guys fight and get over it.” He turned and stuck out his hand. “I’m Sawyer.”

Studying his face, she offered him a smile at the same time she offered him her hand. “Cass Donovan.”

“Donovan, I’ve got to deal with the post-game wrap-up in the locker room. We’ll talk next week.” Jenkins turned and hustled away.

Cass gave Sawyer her full attention, eyeing him with feminine curiosity. It was the equivalent of a shot of good whiskey easing, warm and smooth, throughout his body.

“It’s good to meet you.” She tilted her chin upward slightly. Her bulky wool coat hung open at the front, displaying her petite body and the slender line of her neck. “Are you a parent of one of the players on the team?”

“No. Just a family friend. Came to watch Ryder play.”

Immediately, at Ryder’s name, her face lit up, and a smile with dimples on either cheek brightened her face. It seemed as if all the anger from moments ago with Jenkins had faded away. “Ryder is a good kid.”

“He is. You’re new to town, right?”

“Moved here at the end of August,” she said, tucking a strand of hair behind her ear with her left hand. No ring.

“Just in time for the school year.”

Sawyer took a step closer while Cass surveyed him with the most enchanting honey-colored eyes he’d ever seen. It seemed intimate, her perusal, as if she were taking in every nuance of his face, and filing it away for future reference. And his face? Well, it wasn’t much to look at. A hawkish nose and a square jaw. He hadn’t shaved this evening before coming out, so he knew he was scruffy, and his goatee needed a trim. But he hadn’t cared. Wasn’t out to impress anyone. Except maybe now, he’d like to make an impression on Ms. Cass Donovan.

Without thought, he lifted his hand and scratched at the stubble on his face. “I’d love to get to know you, Cass. Would you like to go to dinner tomorrow night?”

Wide-eyed, she shook her head hard enough for the longer strands of hair to bounce up and cover her left eye, and then she brushed them back. “I don’t date.”

“I don’t bite.” His words must’ve caught her by surprise, because a sweet little trill of laughter bubbled out.

“Did I hear Coach call you Dr. Ferris?”

“Um, yeah. Most everyone just calls me Sawyer though,” he said.

“Oh?” She pursed her lips into a playful pout. She was teasing. The expression said as much. “So, a doctor that no one speaks of, huh? A proctologist?”

Sawyer chuckled. She was cute. And she had a sense of humor.

“No. But there is something about a proctologist that makes even the manliest man shudder. No, I’m a pharmacist. I own Krysset Apothecary on Main Street.”

Instantly, Cass shut down. The playfulness disappeared, and the smile fell from her face and crashed to the wood-planked floor of the gymnasium. Felt like his heart fell down there, too.

With the blandest expression, she said, “It was good to meet you, Dr. Ferris. Good night.” Then she whirled around and scurried away, leaving him to watch her nimbly mount the steps of the bleacher and disappear out the doors above.


Author Bio:

Kate spent seven years working as an IT professional before 'retiring' to stay at home with her two little boys. Now--two more children and two decades later--Kate is launching her new book series: Changing Krysset.

When Kate isn't writing, she's cooking for her brood. Late at night, you'll find her curled up by the fireplace reading a romance novel.

Kate lives in the Midwest with her husband of twenty-seven years and their four children.

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