12 Steps to Mr. Right
Cindi Madsen
Publication Date: September 26, 2016
Genres: Adult, Entangled: Contemporary Select, Romance
12 steps to finding Mr. Right, composed by dating coach extraordinaire Savannah Gamble
1: Admit to being powerless over your attraction to the wrong type of guy. (Like Lincoln Wells, who broke your heart after an unforgettable one-night stand.)
2: Believe Mr. Right is out there.
3: Take inventory of past mistakes. (See step #1.)
4: Make a list of qualities you want in a man. (Avoid charming baseball players/reason you made these rules in the first place)
5: Take charge of your own life.
6: Learn to love yourself.
7: Sort the hookup guys from the relationship guys. (Avoid a painful brushoff after an amazing night together.)
8: Never, ever settle. (Even if the chemistry is off-the-charts.)
9: Don’t believe you can change a guy. (Once a commitment-phobe, always a commitment-phobe)
10: Communicate your needs.
11: Open your heart & love fully. (Still working on this one…)
12: Don’t ever, ever stray from the steps.
When I turned to Linc, every thought
involving other guys faded. My focus honed in on his hand still on my back, his
body only a breath away from mine. The temptation to see what’d happen if I made
a move called to me as I remembered exactly what it felt like to be flush
against him.
I
managed to resist that move, but
despite my brain telling me not to do it, I placed my hand on his biceps, my
thumb tracing the curve there. “Did you get your mysterious work done, then?”
“I
got what I need, yeah.” His fingers twitched against my back, the fingertips
radiating five spots of heat. “You ready to go, or do you need to do more
ogling—er, research?”
I
smiled and said, “I think I’m good. To the bar with all the happy Braves fans?”
Just
as I was about to drop my hand, my fingertips hit a rougher patch of skin. My
gaze dropped to the puckered pink scar, and I traced the long line underneath
his elbow, from the bottom of his biceps to the beginning of his forearm. “From
the surgery?”
His
throat worked a swallow. “Yeah.”
“Is
it hard being in the locker room? I’m sure it brings back a lot of memories.”
Linc
glanced around. “Missing it comes and goes in waves. When we first walked in,
it punched me in the gut, but now…” His gaze met mine again, and my heart
tugged, because I could tell how hard he was fighting his emotions. It reminded
me of a night in college when he’d shown up at my door, told me he’d received
some bad news, and asked me to distract him.
Obviously
he wasn’t totally in the not-missing-baseball phase yet, and after seeing the
passion he still had for the game, what he’d been through the past year hit me.
How did you recover from losing the thing you were most passionate about?
“I
remember when you first told me about your big baseball plans—the same night we
climbed on top of the natural science building because you got it into your
head that you needed to be closer to the stars, and I was sure we were going to
get suspended.” While I’d been pursing my English degree, and I liked what I
studied, I’d thought that I’d never been as passionate about anything as he was
about baseball.
“I
remember that night. I also remember that I barely got a C on that project—you
kinda sucked as a constellation-spotting wingman.”
I
poked his chest. “Hey! You’re the one who brought all the beer! Once the stars
blurred and swam together, telling one from the other became impossible. I was
sure I was going to fall to my death on the way down.”
“I
would’ve caught you.” Linc’s hand curled around my hip, like he was prepared to
catch me now, and in that instant, I wanted to fall.
Coming soon!
Cindi Madsen is a USA Today Bestselling author of contemporary romance and young adult novels. She sits at her computer every chance she gets, plotting revising, and falling in love with her characters. Sometimes it makes her a crazy person. Without it, she’d be even crazier. She has way too many shoes, but can always find a reason to buy a new pretty pair, especially if they’re sparkly, colorful, or super tall. She loves music, dancing, and wishes summer lasted all year long. She lives in Colorado (where summer is most definitely NOT all year long) with her husband and three children.
Website | Facebook | Twitter | Pinterest | Goodreads | Newsletter | Amazon Author Profile
No comments:
Post a Comment