New York, New York: Callahan's Fate, just released from Evernight Publishing!
New
York City. It’s a city like no
other. Whether it’s a glittering Gotham
to a country mouse, a city brimming with possibilities and pleasures, or the
Big Apple, center of the known world, nothing else compares. My trip to New York last summer made me familiar
enough with the city to be dangerous and I’ll be heading back this year to
RWA. Among other things, the trip gave
me inspiration for a new romantic suspense novel, Callahan’s Fate. It’s out
from Evernight Publishing, just $4.99 at Amazon.com, Bookstrand, All Romance,
and more. Buy it direct from Evernight
and save a little, too.
It’s
a story that involved me on an emotional level and I think it’s a story readers
will enjoy. Although the setting is
vastly different from the rural background of Ryker’s Justice, the winner of the suspense category in the 2014
Evernight Reader’s Choice Awards, I think it has the same emotional depth, fast
paced action, and story.
Here’s
the blurb and then the first chapter in its’ entirety followed by buy links!
Happy reading.
He’s
a cop, one of New York City’s finest.
She’s a transplanted teacher, new to the Big Apple. Callahan is streetwise and world weary. Raine is lost in the urban setting. When they meet, the attraction and the
emotional connection are powerful. When
a former student stalks Raine, he’s also part of Callahan’s unfinished
business. The closer they become, the
more their lives intersect, the greater the danger. Callahan must put his past and burden of
guilt aside. Raine needs to adapt to big
city life. Both seek a happily ever
after together but with old scores to settle, they have to survive first.
Chapter One
On a rare Saturday off duty, Callahan had nothing
much to do. Later that evening, he’d
probably drop into the never-ending poker game some of his buddies hosted at
the firehouse down the street. But for now, the day stretched out empty but
filled with possibilities. He should
sleep but he wouldn’t, since he was a lifelong early riser. Under a deep blue sky with no more than a few
clouds, the mid-October day intensified his recent restlessness. He wanted to be outside and he needed
diversion, so he decided to ride the Staten Island Ferry. As a kid, he’d loved it but as an adult, he
couldn’t remember the last time he had ridden the ferry. The prospect of time out on the water with
the sun on his shoulders and the wind in his face appealed, so he grabbed his
keys and headed for the subway, seizing the moment before he talked himself out
of it.
He ran a few errands en route, stopped to pay a
couple of bills, and grabbed a sweet bun from a favorite bakery along the
way. Callahan descended the steps at
Fulton Street Station to catch the train to South Ferry and stopped, transfixed
by a woman who sat on one of the old wooden benches, head bent over an MTA map.
He
knew right off she wasn’t a New York girl.
It wasn’t just the waist-length hair or the way she clutched her purse,
but something in the way she hunched her shoulders tight. Callahan couldn’t remember seeing a gal with
hair down to her ass lately, but he liked it.
I bet she’s pretty under all that
hair. He wanted to see her face so
he waited until she stood, and when she did, he wasn’t disappointed. A classic, heart-shaped face featuring
brilliant blue eyes, a petite nose, and generous lips radiated with
beauty. If she’d been smiling, he
thought, she would be stunning. But at
the moment, she wore a frown and if he wasn’t mistaken, she might burst into
tears at any moment. Callahan didn’t
think—he reacted. He moved close enough
to catch the scent of her perfume.
“Hey, do you need something?”
She
stepped backward, and for a moment he feared she might tumble onto the tracks.
People did, every year, and some of them died.
To prevent a tragedy, he grasped her arm tight. Her eyes widened as she flinched at his
touch. Shit, I’m scaring her. Callahan released her. “Hey, calm down. All’s I’m doing is offering help. What’s your trouble?”
“I can’t find the right train.” Her voice came out
soft, like a small summer breeze. It
trembled and he sought to reassure her.
“I
can help you find it,” he said. Then he
considered the fact he wore blue jeans faded almost white, an old New York
Yankees T-shirt, and his worn-out Reeboks.
He probably resembled a bum. “You
don’t need to be afraid. I’m a police
officer, one of the city’s finest.”
She
arched one eyebrow. “Are you?”
He dug out his badge case, something he always
carried, and flipped it open to show his ID.
Her shoulders relaxed and she sighed.
She glanced up with a small smile. “So you are. Thanks, I could use some help. I always get mixed up at Fulton Street. I don’t know why.”
Callahan laughed. “You ain’t the only one,
doll. It’s a notorious mess since they
started remodeling it. Someday, if they
ever finish, it’s supposed to be great, but right now it sucks. Where are you
trying to go, anyhow?”
“Times
Square on the number two train.”
“Yeah,
the Seventh Avenue Express,” he said with a nod. “It’ll get you there. I can help you track it down, pardon the
pun.”
“Thank
you,” she replied. Then she tossed her
head, which rippled her hair in a way he found both beautiful and provocative.
“I really appreciate any help I can get, Officer…”
“Callahan,”
he told her. “You can call me that, or Cal for short.”
Her head
dipped in a brief nod. “I’m Raine Teasdale.”
“Pleased to meetcha,” he said. “So you’re off to
Times Square? Are you going to see a show or just the sights?”
He
pegged her for a tourist, but she surprised him when she shrugged. “It’s just
someplace to go on a weekend. I haven’t made many friends yet, and I don’t feel
so alone when I’m in a crowd. I thought
maybe I’d just hang out for a while, watch people and all that.”
“So you live here?”
Raine nodded. “Yes, since late August.”
Any other time, he minded his business and kept his mouth
closed, but curiosity got the better of him. “So what brought you here?”
Please
don’t let her tell me she plans to star on Broadway, write a best-selling
novel, or sing to a packed house at Madison Square Garden, he thought. Too many people poured into New York every
week with big dreams and empty pockets, then were crushed under the heel of the
big city. He didn’t want this pretty
thing to share their sad fate.
“I teach at-risk kids,” she said. That surprised
him. She seemed fragile and somehow too
delicate to work with edgy students.
“Oh yeah?” he replied. “High school, middle school,
or what?”
“Mostly teens,” Raine told him. “I work with kids
who are in juvenile detention, in the hospital or some other facility, in
orphanages, and a few of the schools.
I’m someplace different every day of the week.”
“Whaddya teach them?”
A smile lit her face, the first he’d seen, and it
made her beautiful. “I teach them literature,” she said with apparent pride.
“We read everything from Charles Dickens to Carl Sandburg, from The Outsiders to Harry Potter, with a little Shakespeare and some Dr. Suess. Or, I hope we will. It’s early in the year.”
“That’s awesome,” Cal said and meant it. A teacher had turned him on to reading in the
sixth grade, and he’d been an avid reader ever since. Books had been his salvation from the
sometimes tough streets of his boyhood on the Lower East Side and the Jacob
Riis housing project where he had lived.
Without the escape that reading had provided, he might have fallen prey
to drugs like his Aunt Brenda, the one everyone had called “Birdie,” who died
of a cocaine overdose when he was twelve.
When his mother died two years later, he had moved across the East River
to Brooklyn and lived with his grandmother until he graduated from high school. “I had some good teachers, but I could’ve
used someone like you back in the day.
You’ll make a difference.”
Raine
blushed. “I hope so.”
A
subway train rushed out of the dark tunnel on one side of the platform, and she
turned toward it. “Is that my train?”
Callahan shook his head. “No, it’s a number one
train, so it’s mine. It’s headed the
opposite direction from where you want to go.”
Her
expression wilted. “I was hoping you’d help me get on the right one before you
had to leave.”
“Don’t sweat it, sweetheart. I can miss it,” he said. An idea struck. “Or
you can change your plans and come with me. You wanna ride the Staten Island
Ferry?”
She grinned. “Do you mean it? I’d love to!”
“Then let’s hustle,” he said and grabbed her
hand. The subway cars came to a stop,
and as the doors opened to release passengers, Callahan pulled her toward the
front of the train. As soon as the
people got off, they stepped into the car.
With standing room only, he maneuvered her toward the opposite corner
and secured one of the straps. “You’d
better hang on,” he told her.
In the crowded car, he could smell her perfume and
the scent of her shampoo. Raine stood in
front of him, her back against his torso. Then she turned toward him and stood
on her toes. “I will,” she whispered into his ear.
Her hair fanned out and brushed against his bare
arm. It tickled, and the intimacy of it
sent a shiver through Callahan. His dick
twitched in response, and for a moment he wanted her with an unreasonable urge
so strong he imagined taking her where she stood. It would be easy enough to raise the black
skirt she wore and nail her from behind.
The moment passed and he chided himself for the thought. Jeez, she’s a nice gal, a teacher yet, and
I’m thinking dirty thoughts already. He
would never have made a knight, not when he wanted to fuck the damsel in
distress, but he’d never claimed to be either a gentleman or noble-minded.
At Rector Street, when anyone heading to South Ferry
had to cram into the first five cars, he grabbed a pair of seats. She sank down beside him with a smile.
“Thanks.”
“For sitting down?” he asked. “You’re welcome.”
“Thank you for inviting me to ride the ferry,” she
told him. “It’s one of the things I’ve wanted to do and haven’t yet. Is it as cool as I’ve heard it is?”
“Better,” he replied. “It’s one of my favorite
things to do, and I’m a native New Yorker.
You’ll love it, I bet.”
At the South Ferry station, they got off the train
and climbed the steep stairs to street-level.
Along the way, he held her hand, telling himself it was because he
didn’t want to lose her in the crowds.
Truth was, he enjoyed the contact.
He told her how the brand-new, multimillion-dollar subway station had
opened but had been destroyed by Hurricane Sandy. “This is the original one,
built back in the early 1900s. I’ve
always liked to imagine the ladies in their long skirts and picture hats, and the
men in suits and waistcoats or wearing fedora hats.”
He couldn’t believe he shared that. His sometimes
fanciful imagination wasn’t something he shared. He wished he could snatch the words back,
until she smiled. “I love those images,” she said. “I know I haven’t even seen
the ferry yet, but it brings to mind Edna St. Vincent Millay’s poem, you know,
“Recuerdo.”
Cal didn’t, but he did know the word meant something
like remembrance in Spanish. “Tell me
how it goes, teach.”
Raine quoted a few lines, “We were tired, we were merry, we had gone back and forth all night on
the ferry.”
He snapped his fingers. “Oh, yeah, I do know
it. Part of that is on the wall
somewhere at the ferry terminal. I don’t read much poetry, never did, but I
like that one.”
They entered the terminal and ascended to the second
level. Callahan got a kick out of the
way she gawked at the food vendors, the uniformed officers with drug dogs, and
the crowds. Seeing the place through her
eyes gave him a fresh perspective. As
they stood among the others waiting for the next cruise, he leaned down and
brushed her hair back from her face. “There,” he said. “That’s better. So this is okay? You don’t mind missing Times
Square?”
She
shook her head. “No, I don’t. It’ll be
there, and I’ve been, once. I just
didn’t have anything else to do today.”
“I know the feeling,” he told her.
Together
they boarded the John F. Kennedy, one
of the older ferryboats still in service.
Callahan had ridden it since childhood, but he still experienced a
thrill when he stepped on board. He
maneuvered Raine to a spot near the railing on the right side as they headed
out into the bay so they’d have the best view of the sights. Acting like a tour guide, he pointed out the
sights as they passed. They made small
talk, and he delighted in watching the expressions change on her face from
delight to wonder and back again.
She
intrigued him and evoked a deep curiosity.
Everything about her shouted small-town-raised
and country girl. He could imagine her doing rural things,
maybe milking a cow or pulling eggs from beneath a hen. Of course, he didn’t know anything about such
chores, and his notions came from books or movies, not personal
experience. She possessed a delicious
combination of beauty and vulnerability.
Callahan wanted to French kiss her—hell, to be honest, he ached to take
her hard and fast. He also wanted to
hold her hand, too, though, and cherish her like a virgin on prom night. Cal yearned to know what she liked and what
she didn’t, to discover her thoughts, and get acquainted.
From the moment he saw her at the subway station,
he’d gone from admiration and a desire to offer help to something deeper. He had never believed in love at first sight—and
he still didn’t—but Cal wanted to, and that was huge. By the time they docked at the St. George
terminal on Staten Island, he knew he wanted to spend the rest of the day
getting to know her. He liked her
company and wanted more. The poker game
he’d planned to join for the evening no longer seemed as desirable or fun.
“So you want a soda or something?” he asked as they
walked into the terminal with the crowd. “Or you just wanna go back?”
Raine gazed up at him. “No, I don’t, unless you have
somewhere else you need to be. I’d love
something to drink. I’m thirsty.”
They settled for bottled green tea in the terminal,
then boarded another ferry for the return trip.
This time, they stood on the upper deck against the rail and watched
Manhattan as it grew larger. Minutes
before they reached the Whitehall terminal, Callahan turned to her. “You
wouldn’t want to ride it again, would you?”
Her grin answered before she spoke. “I’d love to,
Officer Callahan.”
He looped one arm over her shoulders, friendly more
than intimate. “Aw, don’t insult me like that,” he said. “I told you, call me
Callahan or Cal.”
“Don’t you have a first name?”
“I do.”
One small giggle escaped her mouth. “I figured you
did. So what is it?”
“That’s on a need-to-know basis,” he said. His
parents had saddled him with a proud, old family name, one his grandfather and
great-grandfather had endured before he did.
During grammar school, he’d taken his share of ribbing about it. He never shared it willingly with anyone
since, and even his closest buddies had no idea. Callahan could never
understand why his parents saved it for the last kid, the third son.
Raine lifted one finger and touched the corner of
his mouth, then traced his upper lip.
He kissed it, more a reflex than a romantic notion. “I think I need to know,” she told him. “I
wouldn’t want to think you’ve been holding out on me.”
Her touch affected him like a match to a short
fuse. His body tingled with something
close to anticipation, and he resisted the overwhelming urge to kiss her. “If I tell you, you gotta promise not to call
me by it,” he said. “And make a pinky-swear you’ll never tell another living
soul.”
Laughter erupted from Raine, and she crooked her
little finger around his. “I promise.”
“Awright, awright, I’ll tell you. It’s Aloysius.”
Cal cringed as he said it, the long, old-fashioned
moniker still able to bring embarrassment, and waited for her reaction. He figured, like everyone else, she would
laugh like crazy, but she didn’t.
Instead, she repeated it as if committing it to memory.
“Al-oo-wish-us,” Raine said.
“Yeah.”
“That’s not so bad.
Didn’t your family give you a nickname or something?”
He dredged it up from the past. “Yeah, they called
me Buddy. So whaddya think, doll?”
Her eyes met his and held the gaze. “I think it’s a
fine, old family name, an heirloom of sorts, but I can understand why you don’t
like to use it, Callahan.”
God, he liked the way his name sounded on her
tongue. Somehow, in her soft voice,
sweeter and kinder than a New York accent, it became almost a caress. Cal snaked one arm around her waist as the
ferry docked and when the boat shifted in the process, he pulled her tight. “I
like you, Raine,” he said. “Something
about you gets me here.”
Callahan tapped his chest somewhere near his heart.
Raine put her hand over his. “You had my attention
from the moment you asked if I needed help.
I don’t know what happened. I’m usually shy with strangers, but I’m not
with you.”
“Good. Then
let’s go get lunch somewhere, then we’ll come back and ride the ferry again.”
“Okay. What
happens after that?”
A rush of joy washed over him, so potent he could
all but taste it. Cal wanted to
laugh. His feet yearned to dance and he
wanted to sing, even though he knew he sang off-key at best. “We’ll figure it out then,” he said. “Are you
willing?”
Her lips curved upward into a quirky smile as she
answered. “Yes.”
“Then let’s go,” he said.
He grabbed her hand and they merged with the crowds
spilling back into the terminal, then made their way through the building and
outside. Cal couldn’t remember when he’d
been happier, and for once he forgot the tragedies in his past and lived in the
moment.
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