Title: Rocky Road
Author: Susan Lohrer
Genre: Fiction, Romance, Contemporary
Publisher: 5 Prince Books
Formats
Available In: All eBook formats & Print
Release
Date: June 6, 2013
Digital: ISBN 13:978-1-939217-62-2 ISBN
10:1-939217-62-8
Print: ISBN 13:978-1-939217-61-5 ISBN 10:1-939217-61-X
Blurb: Physical therapist Nancy Anne Robertson has her sights set on her
dream promotion. Problem #1: she’s engaged to one of her patients, and if her
secret gets out, she’ll lose her job altogether. Problem #2: her ex-fiancé is
back in town, shooting for the same promotion. Complicating matters are two
mothers (and one fiancé) with alarming secrets, an autistic brother with a
penchant for wandering off at the most inconvenient times, and four rings—the
fake diamond kind, the stolen kind, the sticky wax kind that belongs under a
toilet . . . and maybe, just maybe, the kind meant to make a girl say I do.
Excerpt:
Wouldn’t someone who really wanted to get
married be a little more careful than this? Not that Ancy doubted Mark’s
intentions. He was he One. And she wouldn’t nag him about it.
Honestly though, severing most of the
nerves in his hand should’ve been enough for one week—but no! He had to go and
whop himself on the head too. It wasn’t like Mark to be this accident-prone,
and he’d been getting worse over the
last few months. Working too hard so he’d be a good provider, no doubt. that’s
just the kind of guy he was. She smiled, visualizing him in a black tux.
Focusing on her impending nuptials usually
distracted her from thinking about whether she’d make department head. And
lately, her im-pending groom had been more than enough distraction.
She checked the temperature of the paraffin
tub. “This’ll feel a little hot, but it’ll help with flexibility.” He grimaced
as she dipped his right hand into the warm wax. Then he gave her bum a squeeze
with the left one. “Quit it before
someone sees us.”
Since he wasn’t dragging his feet—that much
seemed obvious—why couldn’t he stay in one piece long enough to put some professional
distance between them?
“Mark, you’ve dropped a wall on your head,
nailed your foot to the floor, and dislocated your shoulder. Are you trying to
get out of our wedding?”
Whoops. She bit her lip and glanced over
her shoulder. Outpatient Physical Therapy was crowded in the afternoon. he last
thing she needed was for someone to overhear her in a lover’s spat… with her
patient. That would not only prevent her promotion to department head, it would
end her career. Instantly. Working quickly, she covered the warm wax with a
plastic bag, then slipped a padded mitten over the whole thing to lock in the
heat.
If only there were a simple way to get
around the patient-therapist dating taboo. But because her specialty was
post-traumatic hand rehabilitation, she was the therapist most qualified to
care for Mark’s injuries—so she and Mark were forced into secrecy until he
regained the use of his hand. “Well, couldn’t you try to be just a little more
careful?” She kept her voice to a low hiss. “At this rate, I’ll be ninety by
the time we even set the date.”
“Aw Ancy, a few more weeks and this thing
will be as good as new.” He grinned and held up his thickly swaddled hand.
Yeah, right. She’d treated her share of
injuries. his one was far from pretty, even though she hadn’t seen it until
after the surgery. His poor body.
“Please just be more careful. I want to
wear my ring on my finger, not on my necklace where no one can see it.” She
displayed her perfectly healthy left hand, its third finger perfectly naked.
Did Mark have any idea how hard it was on her to keep this a secret? And not
just from the department—from Jen, her best friend in the whole world.
Though she was the one best qualified to
treat Mark, Jen—perky, sexy Jen—could have treated his injuries. But then Jen
and Mark—not that she didn’t trust him—but why create temptation by throwing
her beefcake fiancé into the capable arms of her best friend? Besides, every
difficult PT case brought her another step closer to becoming department head.
She couldn’t risk losing that kind of security, not when she almost had it in
her grasp.
“Promise me you’ll be careful.”
“You worry too much.” He looked so hot when
he gave her that wink that said she could count on him no matter what.
“Mark, I’m serious.” She added a stern,
professional note to her voice as Doris Ridgewood, the department head—who was
due for retirement any second—passed by.
“You have to take some time of work to
rest. If you don’t, you’ll never regain full use of your hand.”
Doris nodded approvingly and continued on
her way.
Mark leaned close. “It’s kind of exciting,
don’t you think, Ance?”
“What is?” She checked her watch. Almost
time to unwrap the hand and work on scar mobility.
“Knowing you’ll be mine to have and to
hold.” He waggled his dark brows meaningfully. “His hand is going to make a
full recovery, and you know what I’m gonna do with it.”
She could feel the blood rushing from her
extremities, and probably from a few vital organs, straight to her face.
Jen, between patients, was walking past.
Had she overheard Mark’s titanically not-suitable-for-work innuendo? She
slowed. Cocked her head. Pivoted on her heels. Ancy’s promotion slithered down
to the pit of her belly as Jen marched up to her and pulled her aside, a
thunderstorm brewing in her eyes. “Is this guy giving you a hard time?”
Fresh guilt welled up inside Ancy, and she
was sure her cheeks were as red as if Jen had targeted her with a laser
pointer. Jen didn’t have a clue, and it made Ancy feel like a big, fat liar.
“I um, got something in my eye.” Jen shot
her a strange look. But it was the only thing Ancy could think of on such short
notice. She turned away and pretended to wipe at her face. When she looked
again, Jen was with another patient. Ancy had never kept a secret from her best
friend before, and she was starting to hate the way it made her feel.
Maybe she should tell Jen and just get this
whole thing of her shoulders. But then Jen would be obligated to tell Doris,
and Ancy wouldn’t blame her if she did. And she’d lose her job. Her watch’s
second hand swept up to the 12.
Back to Mark. The mitten, the bag, and the
wax came of, and she began to manipulate his hand through range-of-motion
exercises, bending and stretching all his fingers, careful not to apply too
much pressure to the still-healing surgery scars. His hands were muscular.
Strong hands, dependable hands. the hands of a man who would stand by her
through whatever life threw at them. And he wouldn’t leave her the way Steve
had. he way her father had left her family.
“Nice technique, Ancy.” Doris’s voice
behind her shoulder made her flinch. The woman didn’t approach like a normal
person, she appeared. Ancy had never once heard her coming. “Young man,” Doris
said, skimming over the floor and coming to stand beside Ancy, “our Miss
Robertson is highly qualified in her specialty. She’s one of the best.”
Wow. It wasn’t every day Doris handed out a
compliment like that. Could it reflect an intention to recommend Ancy for the
promotion?
“Of course, Fidelity General Hospital is
soon to be blessed with a second, equally qualified therapist. He’s one of our
alumni. Your case might prove especially interesting to him.” She glided away,
and Ancy pictured Doris as a young, heavy-browed girl balancing a book on her
head.
Her mind was racing. “Mark, do you realize
what this means? It’s the answer to our problems.” Because an equally qualified
therapist who didn’t have her seniority could take over Mark’s case without
threatening her promotion. Then the bit
about the alumnus sank in.
“Ouch, let go!” Mark’s face contorted.
Ancy loosened her grip immediately and
banished the unsettling thought from her mind. “I’m sorry.” She returned to her
work on his hand and whispered, “You can switch to the new therapist, and we
can come out in the open.”
She pulled the curtain halfway around the
bench for a little more privacy before starting to work on Mark’s other
injuries. These weren’t as serious as the one to his hand, and while she
concentrated on deltoidius, trapezius, and rhomboideus major and minor, she
couldn’t help but notice Mark’s build on a more superficial level, which was
part of the reason she’d pulled the curtain. Half the staff would be drooling
over him if they saw his bare chest.
As it was, all she could manage to say to
him when she finished the examination was, “Looks good.”
The curtain behind her swished open, and
the scent of Obsession for Men filled her mind with images from the past.
Steven Stone.
Steve and her, training together, working
together.
Steve, the only guy who’d ever made an
effort to understand her autistic brother and had never made fun of him.
Steve and her, in his fossil fuel–burning
Mustang….
Steve… the second and last man who’d walked
out of her life. A wall slammed down in her heart.
It couldn’t be him. She made herself turn
around. Her arm brushed The paraffin tub, and liquid wax sloshed over the
sides. A distant splash marked its landing on the floor.
Her heart did that funny flipping thing
that made her breath catch in her throat.
It was him.
About Susan Lohrer:
Susan Lohrer grew up all over western
Canada and lives in BC with her husband, their two children who are still at
home, three dogs, and far too many aquariums. She believes life is always
better with a healthy dose of humor.
How
to contact Susan Lohrer:
No comments:
Post a Comment