Sometimes loving enough means letting go…
Caught Looking
Jody Holford
Releasing April 25, 2017
Major league baseball player, Ryan Walker, takes a mandatory leave of absence to escape the paparazzi and the false drug charges against him. All he wants is a little peace of mind out in the middle of nowhere.
Eager to rid herself of the empty socialite life, Frankie Vaughn moves to a rundown home in Minnesota that she inherited from her aunt. But Frankie is shocked at what she discovers inside: three young boys. When Ryan discovers that Frankie, his new neighbor, has taken on the three homeless kids as her own, he has a new hope for humanity.
Despite how easily and lovingly Ryan takes to Frankie and the boys, his past just might be the reason Frankie can't adopt the boys. Now, Ryan must choose between loving them or letting them go. Can he walk away from what he's been looking for all along?
As he edged near the
property line, he caught sight of toned, shapely legs swinging from the branch
of a tree. His neighbor was doing pull-ups. On a tree.
“What the hell are you
doing?” Ryan said the words to himself, his finger sliding off of the trigger.
Frankie hadn’t heard him. Her earbuds’ cord was connected to the iPod strapped
to her arm. He repeated his question, louder, and she startled, dropping from
the limb she’d been holding. Pulling her earphones out, she smiled and gave a
surprised laugh. Lust curled tight in his stomach at the sound. Which pissed
him off since he didn’t need more complications in his life.
“Hey. Didn’t see you
there, neighbor.”
She wiped the sweat off
her brow with the back of her hand. Strands of hair were escaping the ponytail
sitting high on her head. She put her hands on her hips, gulping in air, still
smiling. His eyes roamed over the tone and definition of her arms. Arms weren’t
supposed to be a turn on. They were just something to have wrapped around you.
Along with legs. But legs were a turn on. Still, he couldn’t take his eyes off
of her arms. They led up to sleek shoulders and a graceful collarbone. When his
eyes met hers, she was grinning and he knew he’d been caught looking.
“You’re doing pull-ups on
a goddamn tree?”
“Um, it’s my tree,” she
said, looking back and forth between him and the tree. Small as she was, the
tree didn’t look like it could hold its own branches, never mind a person’s
weight.
“Actually, it’s smack in
the middle of our property line. So stay the hell off it and get a pull-up
bar.”
She rested a hand on the
bark and smiled at him with something like fire flashing in those blue eyes.
Her breath was a bit uneven, but firm. “I’ve never shared a tree with anyone.
It feels like a big step.”
He bit back a smile.
“Funny. This tree needs to be cut down. It’s rotted.” He kicked at the trunk to
show her what he meant.
“Don’t kick our tree,” she
said, not even trying to hide her smirk.
“It’s not safe.” Jesus. She
was hard to be irritated with. Which, oddly, only irritated him more.
“And as much as I
appreciate your neighborly concern, Ryan, I can take care of myself. And our
tree. See, my home gym isn’t quite set up yet so I’m using what’s available. If
you want, we can work out a schedule for tree use.”
There was as much sarcasm
in her stance as in her tone. This time, the grin spread before he could stop
it.
“You’re feisty.”
“You’re a jerk.”
“Yeah. But it’s still not
safe. I have an extra pull-up bar in my garage. You put it in the frame of a
doorway. I’ll grab it and bring it over,” he said, hoping the gesture served as
an apology.
Which he was man enough to
admit she deserved from him.
Frankie’s eyes widened and
she took a step back, wariness overshadowing her amusement.
“No thanks. I’m not ready
for visitors.”
He arched an eyebrow. “I
wasn’t planning on coming for tea.”
She gave a rough laugh. “I
don’t need anything from you, Ryan. I’ll pick another tree. Or do push-ups.”
She backed away, the unease
in her eyes fascinating the hell out of him. She didn’t want him over. And not
because he was a jerk. She waved one perfectly shaped arm over her head as she
went back to her house.
He turned the weed trimmer back on, purposely turning his body in the other direction. He wasn’t going to stand around and watch her go, even across her yard. He’d never watch a woman leave again. Once was enough.
He turned the weed trimmer back on, purposely turning his body in the other direction. He wasn’t going to stand around and watch her go, even across her yard. He’d never watch a woman leave again. Once was enough.
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