Show No Weakness
Blurb:
She’s a tenderhearted social worker, looking for her
Happy-Ever-After. He’s a distrustful RCMP Corporal who’s sworn off
relationships. Factor in a surly teen heading for delinquency, and you have a
case of passion and turmoil too explosive to handle.
As a defense mechanism to deal with his guilt and grief over
his daughter's death, Cole Dennison has become an expert at compartmentalizing
his feelings. He keeps his personal life private, while making it his
professional mission to rescue children in peril.
Joely Sinclair is fiercely protective and openly
compassionate. When she meets Cole Dennison, she falls hard. He's everything
she admires in a man, and because she wears her heart on her sleeve, she can't
understand how or why Cole keeps all his emotions to himself.
As much as Cole resents his interest in Joely, with her
inquisitive and caring nature, he can't deny her appeal. Against his better
judgment, he becomes involved in both her and her son's lives. Taylor is in
desperate need of a positive male role model, and Cole can't turn his back on
the boy. But when Joely starts talking love, Cole's inability to commit puts an
end to their relationship—until a dangerous situation throws them back
together.
When given a second chance at love, will Cole risk letting
Joely into his battered heart?
Tagline:
Does her love have the power to heal this wounded man?
Excerpt:
“By the time I turned sixteen, I was pregnant. I became a
child bride at seventeen, married to an adult-sized infant with chest hair,
with a real live baby doll to take care of, as well. That marriage was the
biggest mistake I’ve ever made. Before I hit twenty-one, it was over.” She
heard the bitterness in her voice and stopped talking.
“That had to be rough, but isn’t it time to stop beating
yourself up about it? At least you had enough sense to get out.”
The compassion, the offer of understanding in his voice
almost overwhelmed Joely. She wondered if he’d be as sympathetic if he knew she
had left her precious little boy with her alcoholic husband while she worked.
And it took four years and a serious injury before she clued in to the fact her
toddler didn’t get all his bruises from being overactive and clumsy.
No, Cole had it wrong; she didn’t have a whole lot of sense
when she was younger.
He pushed his coffee cup aside and leaned forward in his
chair to stare sharply at her. She realized he must be very good at his
investigative work. Those dark penetrating eyes would intimidate anyone into
telling the truth when they flashed as fiercely as they were right now.
“You’re upset. I didn’t mean to do that,” he apologized. “I
wanted to make you feel better.”
“Oh no, hey, I’m not upset with you. I actually appreciate
your effort. I can’t remember the last time I had a conversation with a man who
cared how I felt about myself. Men are usually much more concerned about how I
feel about them.”
“You already told me you didn’t like me.” He smiled
brilliantly, his eyes crinkling. “Whaddaya say to giving me a chance to change
your mind?”
For just a moment, Joely saw beneath the laughing,
self-confident grin to the flicker of loneliness in his eyes. He was new to the
area, she remembered. He probably didn’t know many people, and here she was
monopolizing the conversation. She ignored his question and posed one of her
own.
“Why did you choose law enforcement for your career?”
His gaze unexpectedly turned cold. His features revealed no
emotion, nothing to indicate why he suddenly shut down. The pause grew a little
too long, giving Joely the impression he preferred not to answer.
“I take a lot of satisfaction out of my job, especially
working with the kids,” he eventually replied, his voice back to that
aggravatingly polite, neutral tone. “But it wasn’t a matter of choice so much
as of doing what was expected.”
“Your parents said you had to become a cop?” Joely wanted to
keep her mouth shut and let him do the talking, but stunned disbelief made her
blurt it out before she could stop herself.
Cole smiled tightly. “My grandfather was a cop, same with my
father. As far as they were concerned, there was no other suitable job for a
Dennison, and they presumed I’d follow their lead. My mom didn’t get a say; she
died when I was five.”
Joely let out an involuntary gasp of sympathy. “Oh, I’m
sorry. How sad for you to grow up without a mother.” Not having a father had
left a gaping hole in her childhood and even though her mom would’ve never won
mother-of-the-year, she’d always given freely of her hugs and kisses. She was
important to Joely, and Joely couldn’t imagine growing up without her.
Cole lifted a shoulder casually. “I survived. You don’t miss
what you never really had.”
“Yes, you do,” she replied fiercely. “You miss it and you
want it terribly. At least I did. I wanted a father more than I wanted anything
else. It was the defining reality of my childhood. How can you say you didn’t
miss your mother?”
Something hard and acrid flashed in his eyes, and he didn’t
acknowledge her words. He pushed out of his chair abruptly. “We should get back
to the detachment. Your son’s waited long enough.”
Buy Links
Roane Publishing: https://www.roanepublishing.com/product-p/snw-01.htm
Author Bio:
Joyce Holmes lives with her husband and very small dog in
the beautiful Okanagan region of British Columbia. Photography and blogging
about her travels are two of her passions, along with visiting her kids and
grandkids. When she's not dreaming up stories in her head or planning her next
great adventure, she’s off enjoying the great outdoors.
Author Links:
http://JoyceHolmes.wordpress.com
https://www.facebook.com/Joyce.M.Holmes
https://twitter.com/Joyce_Holmes
http://www.amazon.com/Joyce-M.-Holmes/
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6431862.Joyce_M_Holmes
1 comment:
Sorry I'm so late with this, but thank you very much for hosting me!
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