Far North: Hide Your Heart - Part 24
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Part 24

"I want privacy. Somewhere we can talk."

No making out then. She was getting ahead of herself.

Signaling left, Lauren turned onto the road leading to the beach. "I know a spot."

Wind whistled past the windshield as she guided the Caddy around the sharp curves toward Bounty Bay's beach. Instead of taking the ramp to the sand, she chose a side road that led to a small parking area overlooking the endless blue curve of ocean. Once she'd parked the car and killed the engine, they sat in silence, the rhythmic hiss of breakers pounding up the beach below the only sound.

"I like your hair," he said. "It suits you."

"Thanks." She drummed her fingers on the Caddy's steering wheel.

Then she swiveled on the bench seat, soaking up every detail of the line of his shoulders beneath a blue-checked shirt and the length of his legs in worn jeans. G.o.d, he stole the breath from her lungs, the thoughts from her head. Everything she wanted to say to him scattered in the whirlwind of love sweeping through her.

Kia kaha, Lauren. You can do this. You can be strong enough. "Aren't you meant to have flown out by now?"

He continued to stare out the windshield, the scent of his warm skin wrapping around her like a feather-soft blanket. Then clearing his throat, he turned toward her.

"Change of plans."

"Oh." Her gaze lowered to the rapid movement of his Adam's apple behind his unb.u.t.toned collar. Her closeness affected him. Something of a boost to her dwindling confidence.

He shifted closer on the bench seat. "My plans had to change because I didn't take the deal with Martin Davis." One of his hands closed over hers and squeezed.

Nate didn't take the deal? He didn't look upset, so maybe he'd changed his mind about selling Mac's place. Maybe he intended to be some part of their lives, after all.

"I've sold it to someone else."

His statement clanged discordantly around her head. The sliver of hope snuffed out. She tried to tug her fingers from under his hand, but he tightened his grip.

"And my dreams have changed a little-h.e.l.l, a lot-in the last few weeks."

"I see."

Throwing herself into the ocean seemed a fine idea about now. Beneath the waves, she could pretend the man she loved hadn't driven all the way up here just to blow her off a second time.

His other hand stroked her hair, and before she could utter a wounded snarl and shove his fingers away, he spoke. "Yep, Savannah's gonna love Mac's place."

She jerked, her muscles icing to robotic stiffness. "Savannah? Your cousin Savannah?"

"The one and only."

Suddenly glad she'd vetoed the fairy floss Drew wanted to share earlier, Lauren decided her churning stomach agreed with what her mind suspected. He wasn't here for her. He'd come as a courtesy call to tell her about her new neighbor.

But d.a.m.n if he'd see her cry.

Heat flared across her cheekbones, and she lifted her chin, armed with an ex-model's best defense-the ability to smile for the camera while her life tore to ribbons. "I guess that'd still work for you. You'll have the money to travel now."

He shook his head and traced the line of her cheekbone with his finger. "Lauren, that's not what this is about."

"So what is it about?"

His gaze bored into her, making her ache for him all over again.

"I want you to understand. Before Steve died, he said something to me I chose to ignore for far too long. He told me not to be like him, to find a woman to love and to make a home with her. Steve said in dying, he'd learned everything about living." His hand slid around to cradle her jaw. "I realized I'm not like Steve. I've found the woman I'll love for the rest of my life. I've found the boy I want to raise as my own son. I've found the family and home I've always wanted but been too proud to admit I need."

"Did you-?" Her blood thrumming so fast it was a small miracle her veins and arteries didn't spontaneously explode, Lauren blinked repeatedly. "Did you just say you love me?"

Moving even closer on the bench seat, he pressed his forehead to hers. "Yeah, for quite a while now. I think seeing you handling that chainsaw did it for me." He chuckled then huffed out a sigh. "I love you, Lauren Taylor. But I know I've been a complete idiot."

"You have." She couldn't prevent the quaver in her voice as she cupped his jaw, the sweet, sweet feel of his raspy stubble bringing tears to her eyes.

"Will you give me another chance?"

She could turn Nate down and refuse to take the risk of trusting him...or she could quit hiding and let her heart be exposed. "Yes. Because I love you, too, and we all deserve a second chance to be happy."

He let go of her hand and tugged her forward. She fell against him and grabbed his arms for balance, but he pulled her onto his lap and kissed her until her toes curled.

"You love me?" he said, chest heaving.

She gripped handfuls of his shirt so tightly the st.i.tching on his shirt pocket tore. "So, so much."

He tilted his head and delivered a kiss that melted her into a quivering puddle. She came back down to earth with a b.u.mp as the kiss ended, and she realized there were words left unspoken.

"Nate, I know you're not the settling down type-"

"About that." He dragged a hand down his face. "Remember I said I had some new dreams?"

She nodded, and his lips curved into a wide smile.

"Well, the new dream involves a coffee-table book but with a different theme." He gently rubbed her arms. "The beauty of Bounty Bay. Whnau. What makes us unique, what brings us together, what it means to be part of a family."

"That sounds wonderful." More than wonderful, an idea so beautiful that only a photograph of her soul could capture what words couldn't. "But you love the rush of photojournalism, Nate-I saw your face at the Waitangi protest."

"Yeah, I do. And I can still freelance with the odd local or short-term a.s.signment. But no more warzones, no more months away. Not when I've found something so much better." Nate nuzzled the soft spot below her ear. "It's you I want to hold every night until you fall asleep. It's you I want to be tangled up with every morning."

Determined not let the weepy-female side of her take over, Lauren hooked her arms around his neck. "You're the best cure for insomnia."

Nate laughed, his chest shaking and his eyes crinkling. "Well, thanks, I think. And by the way? I've left a message with a real estate agent to put my apartment on the market."

Bubbles of joy fizzed in her chest. "You're going to move up here?"

"Todd's promised to rent me a patch of his lawn to pitch a tent on in case you take some convincing to let me back in your life."

She showed him her palms. "I'm convinced. Besides, I wouldn't wish my worst enemy to be Todd's tenant. He'll fleece you dry and talk your ear off."

He ran a light finger down her nose and tweaked the tip. "You're saying there's room for me in your house?"

"There's not only room in my house, there's room in my life, and there's a room in my heart reserved for you, only. Drew and I desperately want you to come home."

"There's just one more thing and it's a deal-breaker."

"Okay." Her stomach clenched tight until she spotted the corner of his mouth twitch.

"Your station wagon," he said. "It's a piece of junk, and it's got to go. There's a Land Rover for sale in Bounty Bay. It's a bit of a fixer-upper, but I figure Drew and I could give you a hand with it. Kind of a new family project."

"A family project, huh?"

"I can't have my wife and son getting stuck in the mud again, can I?"

She couldn't stop herself from squeaking out, "Wife?"

"I love you, Lauren. Marry me, share your son with me and be my family."

She wrapped her arms around his neck and covered his face with "yeses" and kisses. One thought resonated through every part of her being, swelling her heart to overflowing.

Nate loved her, and Nate loved Drew.

And Nate was coming home to where his heart was, with his new family who treasured it, oh so much.

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Available June 17th 2015 Know Your Heart (Far North Book 2) He is the one she couldn't remember. She is the one he couldn't forget...

After being unexpectedly kicked off a movie set, her part given to a younger actress, Savannah Payne flees to her holiday house in Bounty Bay. There, in her little hideaway managed for her by her older cousin, she'll be able to lick her wounds privately, and prepare for an audition of a lifetime in L.A. Only her cousin has rented the place out to an old friend for the next month. A friend whose knowledge of the law means she has no easy way to evict her stop-the-heart s.e.xy tenant. He tempts her, challenges her, and sees to the heart of who she is with knowing ice-blue eyes.

Glen Cooper has woken up and smelled the decaying roses. Working in his father's law firm is murder on his creative heart. A month in New Zealand's sub-tropical Far North without the distraction of family and work is what he needs to finally complete writing the book he's worked on for years. He hadn't antic.i.p.ated the woman who'd haunted his university days arriving on his doorstep, demanding her house back. But the distraction of her close by must stop. With a literary agent's deadline approaching, he has to ignore his growing attraction to Savannah or his dream may never become a reality.

Something about Glen stirs Savannah's blood and the slippery memories of a quiet young man she glimpsed in the background of her tumultuous teenage years begin to return. But how can they make the sacrifice love requires when she has one foot out the door-ready to walk away from him a second time?

Click here to pre-order Know Your Heart at a special discounted price. Reserve your copy today!

EXCERPT OF KNOW YOUR HEART.

Chapter 1.

"I know who you are. What do you want?"

Savannah Payne blinked at the scruffy man in blue jeans filling up the front door of her hideaway house in Bounty Bay.

Granted, she hadn't expected a warm Far North welcome, considering she planned to kick him off her property. She'd had an a-ha moment back home in Auckland yesterday as she packed her suitcases. Her cousin, Nate, had called a month ago when she was on location in the States, asking if an old university friend could stay in her house for six weeks to write his book. She'd agreed with a mi casa es su casa sort of thing, impatient to get back to filming the movie which would catapult her back into the limelight.

But now she was twenty-seven years old and effectively unemployed. And Nate's friend was in her house.

A house she desperately wanted to curl up in and hide from paparazzi who'd love the chance to snap a photo of Savannah Payne, failing actress.

Is there any truth to the rumors about the last years of your marriage? And Savannah, Savannah! How do you feel about being kicked out of your comeback movie role by an actress five years younger and twenty-five pounds lighter?

Karma, maybe?

Cue slathering on the charm, in order to get Nate's friend out.

"Oh." She slid up the oversized sungla.s.ses onto her head and bared her teeth in what she hoped was an irresistible smile with enough wattage to turn the man's frown upside down. "I'd like to have a little chat with you-I'm the owner of this property."

"As I said, Savannah, I know who and what you are." The man lounged in the doorway, making no move to invite her in or to come out to chat with her.

His pale blue gaze skipped coolly up her length, from the tips of her suede boots to the long hair spilling over her silk shirt. Good thing after her latest humiliation she hadn't succ.u.mbed to the ranks of the Sweatpants Brigade. Yet. Peering in the rear-view mirror a few minutes ago she'd taken the time to apply another coat of mascara and fluff up her travel-weary hair. If you look confident, her mother's voice instructed in Sav's inner ear, you'll be confident-and when you were about to evict a stranger from your house, it seemed pertinent to use every weapon at your disposal.

"So, Nate told you I owned the place?"

"Yeah." Muscles flexed beneath his long-sleeved, grey Henley as he pushed his gla.s.ses up his nose.

The muscles were a surprise, but the tortoisesh.e.l.l, hipster-style gla.s.ses on a guy supposedly writing a book? Please. What a stereotype.

"You're friends from university days, aren't you?" She kept her tone light and easy. A determined we're having a nice, friendly chat kind of tone. "Nate and I spent a lot of time together back then, but I don't remember you."

Three years younger than her cousin, Savannah was still in high school while Nate slogged away at his journalism degree. She'd often hang with him and his mates at his student flat. Another quick peek of impressive biceps as the man folded his arms. Wouldn't she remember such a hottie amongst Nate's friends?

"Why would you?" He huffed out a sigh. "Look, I'm right in the middle of something, so can we skip the school days memories?"

Behind her, in the thousands of acres of native bush surrounding the house, wind soughed through the trees, bringing with it the kiss of rain. She shivered in the spring air. She should've brought her coat from her hired four-wheel-drive, since apparently this guy had the manners of a man raised by jackals.

Savannah's smile wavered. "Can I at least come inside? Gavin, isn't it?"

A long pause. "Glen. Glen Cooper. And no, I'd rather talk to you out here."

"But it's my house."

"Yep, it is."

Yep? Yep, with folded arms and a thousand-yard stare? Surely, a guy supposedly writing a book could be a little more verbally forthcoming. "I'd like it back. My house, that is."