Release Blitz~ Scars & Tats by Kristi Pelton
Title: Scars and Tats
Author: Kristi Pelton
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Release Date: February 21, 2017
Blurb
Scars are tattoos with better storiesā¦
A scarred, lonely woman
A scarred, lonely woman
A curious little boy
One uninvited, tattooed guest
A nasty blizzard
One cabin
Two guns
A set of handcuffs
What could possibly go wrong?
Mela McKinley fled with her infant son and disappeared four years ago trying to heal the awful scars inside and out. Taking refuge in the mountains of Colorado, not one person had come near their secluded doorstepā¦ though she was prepared for a fight.
In the middle of a historic blizzard, little Beck points out the window to a figure approaching in the snow. After hiding Beckā¦and fully armed, Mela confronts Jackson Winslow and has zero reservations about shooting him, if necessary.
Ultimately, saving him from the forces of nature, she takes the uninvited stranger prisoner in her home holding the upper hand. While cautiously tending to him, she realizes how much she has missed a manāthough this scarred and tattooed man is not who he seems. Once he has invaded her thoughts in a delicious way, her guard is down and suddenly, the tables are turned and nowā¦itās his turn.
What could possibly go wrong?
Mela McKinley fled with her infant son and disappeared four years ago trying to heal the awful scars inside and out. Taking refuge in the mountains of Colorado, not one person had come near their secluded doorstepā¦ though she was prepared for a fight.
In the middle of a historic blizzard, little Beck points out the window to a figure approaching in the snow. After hiding Beckā¦and fully armed, Mela confronts Jackson Winslow and has zero reservations about shooting him, if necessary.
Ultimately, saving him from the forces of nature, she takes the uninvited stranger prisoner in her home holding the upper hand. While cautiously tending to him, she realizes how much she has missed a manāthough this scarred and tattooed man is not who he seems. Once he has invaded her thoughts in a delicious way, her guard is down and suddenly, the tables are turned and nowā¦itās his turn.
What she doesnāt know is who he really is and what he brings to her doorstep.
The Book Fairy Reviews's Reviews
Running, hiding, surviving, waiting, that is all Mela had to do. The only thing she lived for, was protecting her son. Something she had been doing for the last 4 years in the mountains. What's that saying... All good things come to an end. For Mela, it was a blizzard that brought the end to her door step.
Jackson was trying to find himself in the mountains. What he found was something that was lost for years. Something he new wanted to stay lost. Something that he now wants more than anything in the world~ Mela and Beck.
An emotional story that will bring you to tears. I connected to her need to protect her child and love again this book is powerful.
Let's see you have, danger Bikers, tatted hotties, suspense and passion that will keep you up till the last page is read. Yeah Krists checked all the right boxes when she set out to tell her story of love.
Jackson was trying to find himself in the mountains. What he found was something that was lost for years. Something he new wanted to stay lost. Something that he now wants more than anything in the world~ Mela and Beck.
An emotional story that will bring you to tears. I connected to her need to protect her child and love again this book is powerful.
Let's see you have, danger Bikers, tatted hotties, suspense and passion that will keep you up till the last page is read. Yeah Krists checked all the right boxes when she set out to tell her story of love.
Trailer
Excerpt
Excerpt
If only it were still Christmas, I thought, in awe of the amount of snow that had fallen through the morning hours this spring. Beck in his newly four-year-old way pressed his forehead against the floor-to-ceiling window, watching in wonder as his breath formed a pillow of condensation that quickly disappeared. Over and over again.
The teakettle whistled, and I fingered through his hair as I walked past.
āMomma. Snow.ā
I laughed. āYes, buddy. Lots of snow.ā
The whistle of the kettle faded when I pulled it from the heat, pouring Beck a hot chocolate and me my tea. The two ice cubes in his mug began to melt instantly.
āMomma, Layne.ā
Stirring honey into my tea, I put one more ice cube in his cup and carried the miniature marshmallows over to him.
āNo, buddy. We wonāt see Layne today,ā I explained, sitting on the sofa in front of the fire, which needed wood.
āLayne is right there,ā he said, tapping the window.
A sudden chill shuddered up my spine as the hair on the back of my neck stood. In slow motion, my eyes moved to where Beck pointed. The figure stood a hundred yards away, thigh deep in snow. My heart began to pound. The pack on his back showed over his shoulders. I watched through the glass as the steps he tried to take led him in the direction of the cabin.
Sitting my mug on the end table, a jolt of panic shot through me but was quickly calmed by a wave of courageāof confidence.
āBeck. Come here. Now.ā My words were terse, and he immediately padded over to me.
āWhatās wrong, Mommy?ā
āSweetheart, I donāt know who this is, and my job is what?ā
āTo protect me?ā he asked.
āYes.ā I nodded. āTo protect you. Always.ā
He smiled.
āGo. Go now to your cubbyhole. You know where your food is. You know where the water bottles are. You donāt come out until Mommy comes to get you.ā
āOr Layne!ā he shouted.
āYes. Or Layne. But you and Layne have a code word and no one else knows that word. So donāt come out unless you hear that word. Got it?ā Tears started to sting my eyes, but I fought with every ounce of my being not let them win.
āYes. Go now?ā
āYep! Go now, buddy. I love you.ā
āI love you more!ā he yelled as he ran to his hiding spot.
The moment he was gone from my view, I turned my sights on our visitor. Thank God the snow was causing him to struggle. I unhinged the loaded shotgun from the back of the front door, then retrieved the forty-caliber from behind the coffee mugs. Both guns were pumped and cocked with the chambers full in a matter of seconds. Without a coat, I stepped out onto the porch.
āTurn around right now and go back the way you came. Follow your tracks!ā I yelled.
He stopped, held his hands out to the side and swayed a bit in the wind. āI need help.ā His voice was muffled from the scarf covering his mouth.
āYou wonāt find that here. Move along,ā I shouted, then tucked the pistol into my pants. Raising the shotgun to my shoulder, I nestled it tight, resting my cheek against the cold steel while I sighted him down the barrel. The pistol would be a better choiceābut the shotgun may have more effect. Rockās mom had taught me well.
āPlease,ā he said weakly, swaying again.
I watched as the snow cascaded. There was no wind.
āMister. Iām warning you now. Donāt come closer.ā
After another strenuous step in the near three-foot-deep snow, he stumbled backwardāfalling. He lay there for a minute. Hurriedly, I seized the opportunity to grab the binocularsāBeckās toy, plastic ones, but they worked nonetheless.
Bursts of steam puffed from his mouth straight into the air. One hand rose weakly, then collapsed back down, disappearing into the powdery snow. Through the scratched-up binoculars, I watched as he mustered up enough energy to heave himself upright. Still sitting, he pulled the scarf away from his mouth exposing red, swollen lips. Quickly, I lowered the binoculars, taking him in more thoroughly. His shoes and legs were hidden in the snow. Chunks of snow clung to the North Face jacket he wore. His eyes were heavyā¦thick lids blinked deliberately and sluggishly.
Snow fell so heavilyā¦a thin blanket covered him in the minute I stood frozen. Making a hasty decision, I dashed into the house once again and grabbed the handcuffs Rockās mom had given me. From the time I darted inside to when I got back out, he hadnāt moved. Just inside the door, I clicked my snowshoes in place and threw my coat on. The pistol tucked tightly into my waistband, handcuffs in my coat pocket, and ski poles in handā¦I began my trek toward him.
When I purchased the snowshoes, I had no real intention of wearing them too terribly much but theyād been on my feet more than I thought they would. Our unwanted visitor was still on his back with little to no movement. His breaths were visible in the puffs of steam in the air.
āPlease donāt shoot me,ā he begged albeit weakly.
āWhy are you here?ā
āI got caught in the storm.ā
Frozen snot trailed over his upper lip.
āWhy were you out here? I mean to begin with. What brought you here? Thereāre no trails this way.ā My demanding questions spewed out quickly.
The puffs of air turned to short raspy pants.
āLost. Iā¦justā¦wantedāto get lost.ā
I didnāt believe him. Anger consumed me as my hand trembled when I reached to touch him. Be strong always. The second my fingertips brushed his fiery skin; I sucked in a quick breath. He was burning up. Fever. Damn it!
Instantly, I turned around hoofing it back to the cabin and yanked Becks sled out of the corner of the front porch. Within a minute, I was back at his side. A low groan slid up his throat as I lifted him by the shoulders and scooted his upper body onto the sled. After Iād boosted his legs over, I began the trek back to the cabin remembering Beck was still in hiding. My quads and glutes burned from the haul.
Once I pulled him to the porch clearing the steps, I took a minute to breathe. Thank God, Iād trained enough to be able to heave his ass up there. He seemed to have lost consciousness at some point because as I cuffed him, he didnāt flinch. It wasnāt until Iād lugged him inside next to the fire that I exposed his handsāfinding bluish tinted fingers. Instinctively, I blew on them as if they were Beckās little fingers and Iād done that a hundred times when heād gotten cold. How could this manās fingers be so cold yet he was burning up with fever?
I tossed his gloves near the fire so they could dry out and warm up. The sooner I could get him out of here, the better. His fingers were swollen.
I hustled toward the hideout. āBeck!ā I shouted with a whisper. āWOD. Itās ok. Come here. Mommy needs your help.ā
When I pulled off the manās stocking cap, I was captivated for a moment by his face. Though his cheeks appeared sunken in and dark rings circled his eyes, he was a beautifully, rugged man. His thick brows matched the overgrown beard. The tip of his nose was shiny and bright.
āMommy. Who is that?ā
Directing my attention toward Beck, I gave him a serious look.
āThis man is sick. I need you to get me two of your cereal bowls of warm water. Not hot, ok?ā
He nodded eagerly, and I watched him grab his stool and heave it into the kitchen. I felt awful keeping the man handcuffed, but I couldnāt take a chance with someone I didnāt know. I heard the water running in the kitchen and, in this moment, I was proud of the way Iād raised Beck. He needed to be independent if necessaryāeven if at barely four years old.
Hustling to the medicine cabinet in the bathroom, I grabbed the lip butter and the ibuprofen. I darted to the kitchen and snagged a bottle of water from the fridge.
āHowās it going?ā
āGood,ā Beck said, walking slowly trying not to spill any water from his miniature cereal bowlsāhis tiny hands could barely manage.
We met near the visitor. I took the bowls from Beck.
āNice job, buddy. Thank you.ā
When Beck knelt next to him, my heart skipped a beat. Gripping Beckās shoulders, I shook him just enough to keep his attention and for him to realize I meant business.
āWe donāt know him, Beck. You must keep your distance from him. Deal?ā
He nodded, backing up. āPickle,ā he whispered.
I shook my head. āYou are so silly. Itās dill not deal.ā
My beautiful son smiled, then found a seat on the sofa.
Kneeling next to the stranger, I balanced the bowls of water on his thighs, and then rested his fingers in the water. I tipped his head, angling his neck so his face pointed toward the ceiling. I attempted to pour some of the water through his parted lips. He instantly sputtered and chokedāliquid coming back out, but thankfully his eyes opened.
āMister,ā I said.
His glossy eyes tried to focus.
āI need you to swallow this.ā I kept his head upright, dropped three ibuprofen into his mouth and then tipped the bottle to his lips. When I saw his Adamās apple jut out and back in, I knew heād swallowed them. That was a start.
āMommy. Whatās his name?ā Beck asked from the sofa.
His jeans were wet. Jeans? How ill prepared was this idiot for the storm? After I moved the bowls of water, I unfastened his jeans and began tugging them off. The elastic band of his underwear read Armani. Perfectā¦wealthy and dumb.
I fought looking at his crotch but the damn trunks hugged him tightly, and honestly, there was no ignoring the relaxed bulge. Once I had his jeans off, I laid them out in front of the fire, adding more wood, and then covered his lower half with a quilt. Out of sight, out of mind. And I certainly didnāt need Beck asking questions.
His lips were in pretty bad condition so I slathered a thick layer of the lip butter over them. His lower lip was fullā¦plump. Jesusā¦ narcolepsy really wasnāt my thing. But, hey, he was only unconscious not dead
āMommy. Whatās his name?ā
āIām sorry, Beck. I donāt know. Hold on a sec.ā
I reached for his jeans, and, sure enough, the back pocket held a wallet. When I opened it, a Colorado driverās license lay behind a thin piece of plastic.
āHis name is Jackson,ā I announced. āJackson Winslow,ā I whispered beneath my breath and stole a long glance at our bearded stranger.
For the first time, I noticed his hair was longer on one side. This manā¦this stranger was stunningly handsome. Ruggedly beautiful. I shook my head trying to erase any desire. It had been so long since I had felt the touch of a man. Yet, this man could have been sent here to find usā¦to hurt usā¦to take Beck. He was off limits.
Night was falling and the moon cast a beautiful reflection off the three-foot blanket of snow. Beck and I played checkers at the kitchen table. The flickering light of the fireplace flung shadows over the walls. Our stranger seemed to be resting peacefully.
Even though I felt bad for him being cuffed, my sole purpose for living sat across from me, and I had to do whatever was necessary to protect him.
āBuddy. Want to sleep in the hideout?ā
Beckās eyes about bulged out of his head.
āCan I?ā
I stood up. āYep. Letās get you in there and situated.ā
Beck hopped out of his chair, dashing up to his room. There wasnāt anything that could make me smile bigger than witnessing his enthusiasm for life. The boy was a spitting image of his father. Most days that was good.
There was no way of knowing or even speculating what the night could holdā¦so I told Beck he could come out if he needed.
Once he was hunkered down under his covers, inside his tent, with his night light onā¦I closed the door. I hustled to my bathroom, brushed my teeth, washed my face, threw on my comfy sweats to sleep in, then grabbed a bottle of water from the fridge before I stared blankly at the heap of man on my living room floor.
When my eyes finally adjusted to the glow from the fireplace, I noticed Jackson twitching. As I crept closer, I saw he wasnāt twitching; his body shook with tremors. Instinctively, the back of my fingers felt his forehead. Wow. He was burning up. Again.
Immediately, I ran to the kitchen, wetting a rag with cold water. Back in the living room, his eyes shot wide as the cold material made contact with his skin.
A small groan echoed up his throat, but as fast as his eyes opened, they closed. Without thinking, I yanked all the covers off of his body. I hated the ignorance of theāsmother the fever philosophy. His body needed to cool downā¦quickly. Leaving him uncovered and with the cloth on his forehead, I got another bottle of water and snatched both the ibuprofen and the thermometer from the cupboard.
When I slid the digital thermometer between his lips, I realized some of the redness was gone. The lip butter was helping. Once again, his eyes opened. For the briefest of moments, our eyes met before his closed again.
At 104, the thermometer stopped blinking.
āWow,ā I whispered out loud, turning the cloth on his forehead to the cooler side.
āWow,ā he moaned or ow, Iām not sure which, but it caused me to sit back a bit, distancing myself. āAaah.ā
My stranger seemed delirious. The fever. It had to be the fever.
āJackson. I need you to swallow these.ā I lifted his head and slid my folded legs beneath him. I dropped four capsules in his mouth, then as gently as possible, I slapped his cheekā¦his beard was rough to my fingers, but regardless, his eyes opened.
I tipped the cold bottle of water to his lips. āSwallow,ā I demanded, and he did. And once again, our eyes connected. Even though I stared down at him, and he was upside down to me, the force of whatever passed between us triggered me to drop his head and jerk away.
What the living hell? Did I know him? My left hand trembled as I set the water bottle next to him. Not that he could drink it. Both his hands were bound by metal. The clock read 10:15. The fever should be down within an hour. Iād check on him them. Other than that, I wanted nothing to do with him.
Sitting on the sofa, my eyes flickered back and forth between the fire and him. I heard Layneās words in my ear. Information is good. Always find out what you can. I uncovered and picked up Jacksonās wallet from where I left it earlier.
Colorado drivers license. His picture was perfect. Whoās drivers license pic looked that good? Thirty-one years old. Six foot two. One hundred ninety pounds. Blue eyes. Organ donor. Ian was an organ donor and I had no idea if his organs were donated. If he was living inside someone elseā¦
This man had no pictures of girls, family, kids, no pictures at all.
One Visa card.
One American Express card.
The teakettle whistled, and I fingered through his hair as I walked past.
āMomma. Snow.ā
I laughed. āYes, buddy. Lots of snow.ā
The whistle of the kettle faded when I pulled it from the heat, pouring Beck a hot chocolate and me my tea. The two ice cubes in his mug began to melt instantly.
āMomma, Layne.ā
Stirring honey into my tea, I put one more ice cube in his cup and carried the miniature marshmallows over to him.
āNo, buddy. We wonāt see Layne today,ā I explained, sitting on the sofa in front of the fire, which needed wood.
āLayne is right there,ā he said, tapping the window.
A sudden chill shuddered up my spine as the hair on the back of my neck stood. In slow motion, my eyes moved to where Beck pointed. The figure stood a hundred yards away, thigh deep in snow. My heart began to pound. The pack on his back showed over his shoulders. I watched through the glass as the steps he tried to take led him in the direction of the cabin.
Sitting my mug on the end table, a jolt of panic shot through me but was quickly calmed by a wave of courageāof confidence.
āBeck. Come here. Now.ā My words were terse, and he immediately padded over to me.
āWhatās wrong, Mommy?ā
āSweetheart, I donāt know who this is, and my job is what?ā
āTo protect me?ā he asked.
āYes.ā I nodded. āTo protect you. Always.ā
He smiled.
āGo. Go now to your cubbyhole. You know where your food is. You know where the water bottles are. You donāt come out until Mommy comes to get you.ā
āOr Layne!ā he shouted.
āYes. Or Layne. But you and Layne have a code word and no one else knows that word. So donāt come out unless you hear that word. Got it?ā Tears started to sting my eyes, but I fought with every ounce of my being not let them win.
āYes. Go now?ā
āYep! Go now, buddy. I love you.ā
āI love you more!ā he yelled as he ran to his hiding spot.
The moment he was gone from my view, I turned my sights on our visitor. Thank God the snow was causing him to struggle. I unhinged the loaded shotgun from the back of the front door, then retrieved the forty-caliber from behind the coffee mugs. Both guns were pumped and cocked with the chambers full in a matter of seconds. Without a coat, I stepped out onto the porch.
āTurn around right now and go back the way you came. Follow your tracks!ā I yelled.
He stopped, held his hands out to the side and swayed a bit in the wind. āI need help.ā His voice was muffled from the scarf covering his mouth.
āYou wonāt find that here. Move along,ā I shouted, then tucked the pistol into my pants. Raising the shotgun to my shoulder, I nestled it tight, resting my cheek against the cold steel while I sighted him down the barrel. The pistol would be a better choiceābut the shotgun may have more effect. Rockās mom had taught me well.
āPlease,ā he said weakly, swaying again.
I watched as the snow cascaded. There was no wind.
āMister. Iām warning you now. Donāt come closer.ā
After another strenuous step in the near three-foot-deep snow, he stumbled backwardāfalling. He lay there for a minute. Hurriedly, I seized the opportunity to grab the binocularsāBeckās toy, plastic ones, but they worked nonetheless.
Bursts of steam puffed from his mouth straight into the air. One hand rose weakly, then collapsed back down, disappearing into the powdery snow. Through the scratched-up binoculars, I watched as he mustered up enough energy to heave himself upright. Still sitting, he pulled the scarf away from his mouth exposing red, swollen lips. Quickly, I lowered the binoculars, taking him in more thoroughly. His shoes and legs were hidden in the snow. Chunks of snow clung to the North Face jacket he wore. His eyes were heavyā¦thick lids blinked deliberately and sluggishly.
Snow fell so heavilyā¦a thin blanket covered him in the minute I stood frozen. Making a hasty decision, I dashed into the house once again and grabbed the handcuffs Rockās mom had given me. From the time I darted inside to when I got back out, he hadnāt moved. Just inside the door, I clicked my snowshoes in place and threw my coat on. The pistol tucked tightly into my waistband, handcuffs in my coat pocket, and ski poles in handā¦I began my trek toward him.
When I purchased the snowshoes, I had no real intention of wearing them too terribly much but theyād been on my feet more than I thought they would. Our unwanted visitor was still on his back with little to no movement. His breaths were visible in the puffs of steam in the air.
āPlease donāt shoot me,ā he begged albeit weakly.
āWhy are you here?ā
āI got caught in the storm.ā
Frozen snot trailed over his upper lip.
āWhy were you out here? I mean to begin with. What brought you here? Thereāre no trails this way.ā My demanding questions spewed out quickly.
The puffs of air turned to short raspy pants.
āLost. Iā¦justā¦wantedāto get lost.ā
I didnāt believe him. Anger consumed me as my hand trembled when I reached to touch him. Be strong always. The second my fingertips brushed his fiery skin; I sucked in a quick breath. He was burning up. Fever. Damn it!
Instantly, I turned around hoofing it back to the cabin and yanked Becks sled out of the corner of the front porch. Within a minute, I was back at his side. A low groan slid up his throat as I lifted him by the shoulders and scooted his upper body onto the sled. After Iād boosted his legs over, I began the trek back to the cabin remembering Beck was still in hiding. My quads and glutes burned from the haul.
Once I pulled him to the porch clearing the steps, I took a minute to breathe. Thank God, Iād trained enough to be able to heave his ass up there. He seemed to have lost consciousness at some point because as I cuffed him, he didnāt flinch. It wasnāt until Iād lugged him inside next to the fire that I exposed his handsāfinding bluish tinted fingers. Instinctively, I blew on them as if they were Beckās little fingers and Iād done that a hundred times when heād gotten cold. How could this manās fingers be so cold yet he was burning up with fever?
I tossed his gloves near the fire so they could dry out and warm up. The sooner I could get him out of here, the better. His fingers were swollen.
I hustled toward the hideout. āBeck!ā I shouted with a whisper. āWOD. Itās ok. Come here. Mommy needs your help.ā
When I pulled off the manās stocking cap, I was captivated for a moment by his face. Though his cheeks appeared sunken in and dark rings circled his eyes, he was a beautifully, rugged man. His thick brows matched the overgrown beard. The tip of his nose was shiny and bright.
āMommy. Who is that?ā
Directing my attention toward Beck, I gave him a serious look.
āThis man is sick. I need you to get me two of your cereal bowls of warm water. Not hot, ok?ā
He nodded eagerly, and I watched him grab his stool and heave it into the kitchen. I felt awful keeping the man handcuffed, but I couldnāt take a chance with someone I didnāt know. I heard the water running in the kitchen and, in this moment, I was proud of the way Iād raised Beck. He needed to be independent if necessaryāeven if at barely four years old.
Hustling to the medicine cabinet in the bathroom, I grabbed the lip butter and the ibuprofen. I darted to the kitchen and snagged a bottle of water from the fridge.
āHowās it going?ā
āGood,ā Beck said, walking slowly trying not to spill any water from his miniature cereal bowlsāhis tiny hands could barely manage.
We met near the visitor. I took the bowls from Beck.
āNice job, buddy. Thank you.ā
When Beck knelt next to him, my heart skipped a beat. Gripping Beckās shoulders, I shook him just enough to keep his attention and for him to realize I meant business.
āWe donāt know him, Beck. You must keep your distance from him. Deal?ā
He nodded, backing up. āPickle,ā he whispered.
I shook my head. āYou are so silly. Itās dill not deal.ā
My beautiful son smiled, then found a seat on the sofa.
Kneeling next to the stranger, I balanced the bowls of water on his thighs, and then rested his fingers in the water. I tipped his head, angling his neck so his face pointed toward the ceiling. I attempted to pour some of the water through his parted lips. He instantly sputtered and chokedāliquid coming back out, but thankfully his eyes opened.
āMister,ā I said.
His glossy eyes tried to focus.
āI need you to swallow this.ā I kept his head upright, dropped three ibuprofen into his mouth and then tipped the bottle to his lips. When I saw his Adamās apple jut out and back in, I knew heād swallowed them. That was a start.
āMommy. Whatās his name?ā Beck asked from the sofa.
His jeans were wet. Jeans? How ill prepared was this idiot for the storm? After I moved the bowls of water, I unfastened his jeans and began tugging them off. The elastic band of his underwear read Armani. Perfectā¦wealthy and dumb.
I fought looking at his crotch but the damn trunks hugged him tightly, and honestly, there was no ignoring the relaxed bulge. Once I had his jeans off, I laid them out in front of the fire, adding more wood, and then covered his lower half with a quilt. Out of sight, out of mind. And I certainly didnāt need Beck asking questions.
His lips were in pretty bad condition so I slathered a thick layer of the lip butter over them. His lower lip was fullā¦plump. Jesusā¦ narcolepsy really wasnāt my thing. But, hey, he was only unconscious not dead
āMommy. Whatās his name?ā
āIām sorry, Beck. I donāt know. Hold on a sec.ā
I reached for his jeans, and, sure enough, the back pocket held a wallet. When I opened it, a Colorado driverās license lay behind a thin piece of plastic.
āHis name is Jackson,ā I announced. āJackson Winslow,ā I whispered beneath my breath and stole a long glance at our bearded stranger.
For the first time, I noticed his hair was longer on one side. This manā¦this stranger was stunningly handsome. Ruggedly beautiful. I shook my head trying to erase any desire. It had been so long since I had felt the touch of a man. Yet, this man could have been sent here to find usā¦to hurt usā¦to take Beck. He was off limits.
Night was falling and the moon cast a beautiful reflection off the three-foot blanket of snow. Beck and I played checkers at the kitchen table. The flickering light of the fireplace flung shadows over the walls. Our stranger seemed to be resting peacefully.
Even though I felt bad for him being cuffed, my sole purpose for living sat across from me, and I had to do whatever was necessary to protect him.
āBuddy. Want to sleep in the hideout?ā
Beckās eyes about bulged out of his head.
āCan I?ā
I stood up. āYep. Letās get you in there and situated.ā
Beck hopped out of his chair, dashing up to his room. There wasnāt anything that could make me smile bigger than witnessing his enthusiasm for life. The boy was a spitting image of his father. Most days that was good.
There was no way of knowing or even speculating what the night could holdā¦so I told Beck he could come out if he needed.
Once he was hunkered down under his covers, inside his tent, with his night light onā¦I closed the door. I hustled to my bathroom, brushed my teeth, washed my face, threw on my comfy sweats to sleep in, then grabbed a bottle of water from the fridge before I stared blankly at the heap of man on my living room floor.
When my eyes finally adjusted to the glow from the fireplace, I noticed Jackson twitching. As I crept closer, I saw he wasnāt twitching; his body shook with tremors. Instinctively, the back of my fingers felt his forehead. Wow. He was burning up. Again.
Immediately, I ran to the kitchen, wetting a rag with cold water. Back in the living room, his eyes shot wide as the cold material made contact with his skin.
A small groan echoed up his throat, but as fast as his eyes opened, they closed. Without thinking, I yanked all the covers off of his body. I hated the ignorance of theāsmother the fever philosophy. His body needed to cool downā¦quickly. Leaving him uncovered and with the cloth on his forehead, I got another bottle of water and snatched both the ibuprofen and the thermometer from the cupboard.
When I slid the digital thermometer between his lips, I realized some of the redness was gone. The lip butter was helping. Once again, his eyes opened. For the briefest of moments, our eyes met before his closed again.
At 104, the thermometer stopped blinking.
āWow,ā I whispered out loud, turning the cloth on his forehead to the cooler side.
āWow,ā he moaned or ow, Iām not sure which, but it caused me to sit back a bit, distancing myself. āAaah.ā
My stranger seemed delirious. The fever. It had to be the fever.
āJackson. I need you to swallow these.ā I lifted his head and slid my folded legs beneath him. I dropped four capsules in his mouth, then as gently as possible, I slapped his cheekā¦his beard was rough to my fingers, but regardless, his eyes opened.
I tipped the cold bottle of water to his lips. āSwallow,ā I demanded, and he did. And once again, our eyes connected. Even though I stared down at him, and he was upside down to me, the force of whatever passed between us triggered me to drop his head and jerk away.
What the living hell? Did I know him? My left hand trembled as I set the water bottle next to him. Not that he could drink it. Both his hands were bound by metal. The clock read 10:15. The fever should be down within an hour. Iād check on him them. Other than that, I wanted nothing to do with him.
Sitting on the sofa, my eyes flickered back and forth between the fire and him. I heard Layneās words in my ear. Information is good. Always find out what you can. I uncovered and picked up Jacksonās wallet from where I left it earlier.
Colorado drivers license. His picture was perfect. Whoās drivers license pic looked that good? Thirty-one years old. Six foot two. One hundred ninety pounds. Blue eyes. Organ donor. Ian was an organ donor and I had no idea if his organs were donated. If he was living inside someone elseā¦
This man had no pictures of girls, family, kids, no pictures at all.
One Visa card.
One American Express card.
And some sort of ID. His pictureāhe looked younger but still strikingly handsome. United States Attorney. This man was an attorney. My mind raced in a thousand directions. I dropped his wallet at my feet. What brought this attorney in our direction? I couldnāt help but wonder if he came intentionally to my cabin or if this was some kind of fluke. But, if this man was looking for a fightā¦a warā¦he came to the right doorstep. I was ready.
Author Bio
Just the fact that someone may be reading my ābioā thrills me. What does one say in an author bio? Well, I LOVE to write! Sometimes characters talk to me in my head (in a non-psychotic way) and I have to get what they are saying out on paper! So, here we are! š
I am a part-time juvenile probation officer and full time wifeā¦but I spend the majority of the time helping my two favorite sons (only 2) navigate through life and hopefully become the best humans they can be.
I am a huge fan of the Kansas Jayhawks, the Oregon Ducks and the 2016 World Series Champsāthe Chicago Cubs! (I have a dog named Wrigley)
Iām terribly addicted to musicāALLLLL kinds and driving in the car with the sunroof open and radio turned up helps the creative juices flow.
I am deliciously addicted to queso, Dr. Pepper, and cupcakes; but even with all thatā¦I like to slowly kill my body with Crossfit.
People ask me āwhat has been your favorite book to writeāāI would have to say my original series. (I think it sold 100 copies) š Somedayā¦I may have to tweak them a bit because my heart was poured into those booksābut they need help! Slick was my Amazon best sellerā¦but every one of them mean something to me.
In the end, I truly believe life is taken way too seriously by mostā¦I say enjoy every moment, have an adult beverage and READ!! Cheersā¦.
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