Book Summary
First, he saved me. I lived because he was a hero. And then he
was gone. Uprooted by the fire that destroyed our home, my family moved away
and I never saw David Andrews again. Then, he found me. Eighteen years
later, he rescued me again - in much simpler terms, of course. By loving me, by
giving me the fairy tale I’d always hoped for, he provided me with the perfect
life. Now, he needs to be saved. It’s my turn to be strong, to be brave,
to be valiant. When flames threaten to turn us to ashes, it’s up to me to
pull us From the Wreckage.
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EXCERPT
“Want to come up for some coffee?” I ask, hoping to spend just a
little more time with him.
“Coffee?” he arches an eyebrow, as one side of his lips pulls up.
My eyes roll skyward. “Yes, coffee. And no that’s not code for sex.” He
chokes on his own laughter as I call his bluff.
Not even bothering to wait for a response, I pull my keys out of my bag
and walk in front of him. Walking up the small flight of stairs to the main
entryway, I can feel his heat at my back.
When we step into the elevator, I press the button for my floor. His
eyes scan the small enclosure, reaching into all four corners before settling on
the fire inspection certificate behind the flimsy piece of plastic next to the
buttons.
“Needs an inspection soon,” he says absentmindedly.
Clicking my heels together, I mock salute him. With an assured, “Yes,
sir,” falling from my mouth, he laughs at me and my goofball reaction to him and
his seriousness.
“Come on in.” Standing to his side, I extend my hand into the opened
doorway. There’s not much to the apartment, but considering that it’s a
two-bedroom apartment in lower Manhattan, it’s not too shabby. Jade and I
decided to move here about a year ago. The six mile commute to the school was
only a minor inconvenience and since Jade’s parents helped out considerably, I
was pretty much along for the ride. Since it was a given that she’d have a job
in the financial district, this was the best location for her career.
However, there’s a pile of laundry on one cushion of the couch. On top
of which is of course my panties. “Sorry.” I toss everything into the basket on
the floor in a rush. “I wasn’t expecting you.”
“I wasn’t expecting you either.” His softly spoken words stop me in my
tracks.
Not wanting any weirdness to halt the conversation, I offer to make the
coffee I promised him. Realizing I’m still holding Burning Desire, my newest
firefighter romance, in my hand, I hide it behind my back. Quickly, hoping he
doesn’t see it, I tuck the book in my laundry basket before showing him into the
small kitchen.
If anyone ever judged me on my laundry skills, or lack thereof, I’d
fail—miserably. Thank God, it was there today, though. Having to explain that
book would have made my cheeks flame for sure.
David’s large body devours the tiny kitchen, his broad shoulders
literally taking up the entire doorframe. On the tips of my toes, I reach up
into the highest cabinet ever made and struggle to get down two mugs. With empty
hands, I turn around to see David grinning like a fool at me. Arms folded across
his chest, he’s simply standing there watching me lose the battle with the
too-tall cabinet.
“Something funny?” I pull a face at him over my shoulder. Turning
around, I lean back against the counter. He’s in front of me in two short
strides, eyes heated and bright with amusement.
“Nope, nothing at all.” Smiling down at me, I can feel his low chuckle
vibrate between us. Without having to reach up an inch, he opens the cabinet
door and effortlessly pulls down two mugs, bathing me in his heat as he does so.
“Looking for these?” Quirking up a brow, he lightly mocks my vertical
deficiency.
Reaching around me, he places them on the counter. “Coffee’s up there,
too.” My voice is thin and wispy, barely audible. With hardly a stretch, he
pulls down the can of coffee, setting it beside the mugs. Instead of stepping
away from me, as I’d expect him to do now that I have everything I need, he puts
his hands on the counter, one on each side of me. Locking me in place, he
continues to smile down at me. If I thought he ate up the space before, I was
sadly mistaken.
“Anything else?” he asks, a playful lilt in his voice.
“No,” I choke.
Looking up into his dark eyes is as if I’m staring into the night sky.
His pupils are so wide, the black erases the brown. The little sparks of light
look like stars dotting the sky. It’s a look so precisely mixed with desire and
hunger, laughter and mirth it stops my brain from
functioning.
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