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Synopsis
From the author of Every Little Kiss, a heartwarming novel that proves sometimes the only way to let people in is to let go....
Moving to Harvest Cove has been like a dream come true for Zoe Watson, providing her with a job she loves and close friends she considers practically family. The only problem: a certain prickly—albeit handsome—park ranger who can’t seem to help tracking mud into her art gallery…or showing up in her dreams.
Jason Evans swore off relationships the day his ex-wife walked out the door, and the local gallery owner is no exception. But when an accident forces him to accept the one thing he hates most in the world—help—he discovers that with Zoe in his life, there are more highs than lows. Despite their long-simmering attraction, neither Jason nor Zoe thinks that two people with so little in common could possibly have a future together. But one of these nights, they may just discover how alike they are.…
Release date: September 1, 2015
Publisher: Berkley
Print pages: 352
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One of These Nights
Kendra Leigh Castle
Chapter One
It was going to be one hell of a storm.
Jason Evans ducked his head, walking into a rising wind that made the leaves on the trees rattle and hiss. The air was sultry, loaded with humidity, and scented with the rain that was about to fall. He’d done plenty of work in the rain before, but today he was actually ahead of the game—there were no holes that needed digging, no trails that needed clearing, and, most important, no people who needed directions, saving, or a lecture on why they shouldn’t do whatever they were doing. Most of the visitors had fled the oncoming storm, and Owens State Park was ninety-nine percent squared away, at least for the next hour or so. He’d have plenty to do once the wind had stopped throwing things around. For now, though, there was just one thing left on his list.
He was hoping the teenage kid with the awful sunburn was wrong about the noises he’d heard coming from deep in the trees along this part of the trail. The kid’s flip-flops hadn’t been suited to wading into the underbrush to investigate, but at least he’d been concerned enough to hunt down a park ranger.
Jason stopped near the trail marker he’d been headed for and waited, lifting his head and listening intently. At first he heard nothing but the wind in the trees and the stillness between gusts that was a sound all its own. He breathed deeply, beginning to relax. The kid had thought he’d heard a dog, and maybe he had. Could have been a camper’s pet wandering where it shouldn’t have been. Then again, it could have been a wild animal in the wrong place at the wrong time. The woods were full of creatures that preyed on one another. Those encounters weren’t pleasant things to hear, but nature wasn’t always pleasant.
Mostly, Jason just hoped that whatever the kid had heard out there was gone. He wanted to get back inside and enjoy the storm.
Encouraged by the silence, Jason gave a sharp whistle, then called, “Hey, doggie! You out there? Come here, pup!”
Almost immediately, he heard the whimper. Jason closed his eyes and cursed silently as thunder rolled overhead and rain began to patter to the ground around him, the first fat droplets wetting his face. This was going to be a soaking rain, and he was out in it. Again.
The fact that somebody’s lost dog was also out in it got his feet moving. Jason left the trail and headed into the trees, his boots crunching through pine needles and twigs. He continued calling, and a stronger, sharper yelp had him shifting direction slightly. Sounds like one of those yippy little mutts that bite everybody. Great. My favorite. He rubbed his thumb over the old crescent-shaped scar between the thumb and forefinger on his right hand while he stepped over a fallen branch, then around a jagged old stump. When a twig snapped beneath his boot, the dog began to cry in earnest, howling for all it was worth. It definitely sounded small, Jason decided, and it sounded hurt. But the dog knew he was close, and it was strong enough to make a hell of a lot of noise. That was a good sign.
“Right here, boy,” he said. “I’ll get you.” There was an answering bark, almost lost as the wind picked up and began to whip around him, strong enough to give Jason pause. They were under a severe thunderstorm warning, and out in the trees, with the ground already saturated from last night’s heavy rain, wasn’t the best place to be if this weather really got going. The sky opened up just as Jason stepped over another gnarled, moss-covered branch and saw it—a dirty tan-and-white ball tangled up in some sort of cord and an exposed root. Its dark eyes were bright and a little wild when they met his, but instead of continuing to bark, it just gave a high-pitched whimper that hit him like a gut punch.
He might not be much of a people person, but animals were his soft spot, yappy little mutts included. It was one of the reasons he’d become a park ranger. He got at least as much time with wildlife as he did with humans. Raccoons and Homo sapiens could both be assholes, but raccoons tended to be more entertaining about it.
Jason focused on the little dog, forgetting the rain soaking him. He made his way to it, then crouched down, mindful of the way wounded animals could react to well-meaning humans. “Hey, little guy,” he said softly, and he saw its tail—a curled plume that it probably carried proudly under better circumstances—begin to flutter. The dog whined again and tried to come to him, its bowed front legs scrabbling at the ground without propelling the dog anywhere. Between the dog’s fruitless struggle to get to him and the look on its odd, smooshed-in face, the sight melted him.
“Poor puppy,” Jason said softly, gently reaching out. He half expected to soon find its sharp little teeth in his skin, right in the soft spot already scarred from Great-Aunt Tilly’s Maltese. Instead, the dog quivered beneath his touch, then began licking furiously at his hand while Jason tried to figure out how it was caught. The sky above flickered with light, then crackled and boomed. The rain slapped his face when the wind gusted, plastering his hair against his head, but Jason barely noticed. Someone—someone not fit for animal ownership—had tied a thin cord around the little creature’s neck so tightly that it was a wonder it hadn’t strangled itself out here. That cord, which looked to be maybe four feet long, had snagged on the root, and the dog had wrapped itself around it good. Jason pulled a utility knife from his belt and cut the cord, finding his arms immediately full of ragged, wet, wriggling fur. A startled laugh escaped him.
“Okay, now. It’s okay. Just chill out—I’ve got you.” He liked big dogs, slobbery dogs that chased sticks and chewed giant bones and had big, shaggy heads. Fussy little pillow dogs just weren’t his thing. So the rush of affection he felt for the animal he’d just freed surprised him. That intensified, and mingled with something darker, when a stroke of his hand made it yelp in pain.
Jason glowered at the blood on one of the dog’s haunches. He’d seen this kind of thing before. Somebody had been having some fun with a BB gun.
“Hell,” Jason muttered. He gathered the dog in his arms—all maybe ten pounds of it—and stood, holding tightly as another gust of wind tore at them. “Come on. My cousin Jake’ll fix you up.” There were perks to being related to the town veterinarian. Being able to get this sodden, wounded pup treated ASAP was one.
He began to clomp back through the trees, his boots sinking into soft and muddy ground. The next roll of thunder was so loud he could feel it reverberate all the way through him, and the wind pushed him so hard that he staggered to one side before bracing himself against it again. Unease unfurled in the pit of his stomach as the trees around him crackled and creaked, and a rushing sound filled his ears, blocking out everything else.
When the big old pine tree started to come down, time seemed to slow. Jason was incredibly aware of every tiny movement he made, from clutching the dog more closely to his chest to dodging out of the way and slamming his foot down into a shallow depression in the ground that had been concealed by leaves and debris. He felt a rush of air, scented with a whiff of pine, at the same instant his leg twisted oddly and then snapped. He felt it break, felt the searing pain shoot directly up his injured limb, so intense that it stole his breath. Jason landed hard on one hip, and the world went gray for a few long moments. When the woods, the storm, came back into focus even more sharply than before, he began to wish he’d blacked out. Shock became agony. When he could breathe again, he drew in a giant lungful of air and roared. The dog in his arms shivered, a dim reminder that he wasn’t alone out there. Jason released it as gently as he could, then clutched at the leg now bent at a strange angle. Nausea roiled in the pit of his stomach.
When he could organize his thoughts into something coherent, he grabbed at the radio on his belt to call for help, then curled forward, hands over his face. Through waves of pain, he felt a gentle pawing at his thigh, then heard a soft sound of complaint just before a small, wet, injured dog clambered into his lap. Jason slid his hands down to look into a pair of dark and serious eyes focused intently on him. You take care of me, that look seemed to say, and I’ll take care of you.
The idea of this particular dog being able to take care of anybody should have been laughable. Right now, however, it wasn’t a sentiment he was in any position to argue with.
“Okay,” Jason growled, putting one hand lightly on the dog’s soaked back. He was surprised to find its warmth comforting. “Okay. We’ll talk about it. Later.”
That seemed to be good enough for the dog, which turned its head to look out into the woods. Keeping watch, Jason thought, and wasn’t sure whether to laugh or cry. Still, a ten-pound guardian was better than none. Right now, he’d take what he could get.
The wind whipped around them, buffeting Jason and his small would-be protector. Then he heard a siren, distant but getting louder, and knew that Brent had been quick about calling in the emergency from the station. Lightning made the air around him flicker, and another violent burst of thunder echoed so loudly that he felt he must be at the center of it. He heard a sharp crack nearby as another tree gave way, not nearly so close this time, thankfully.
One hell of a storm, he thought. It sure is.
Jason breathed out on a moan of pain and focused on the steady breathing beneath his hand. He’d be fine, he told himself. A broken leg wasn’t the end of the world, even if it felt like it right this second. He’d manage. He always did, especially when he had a job to do.
And as unlikely as it seemed, right now, he had a lap full of wet fur that said he was needed, and might be for quite some time . . . whether he had volunteered for it or not.
* * *
Zoe Watson adjusted the painting, took a step back, and eyed the grouping she’d just put together.
“What do you think of this?” she asked, tilting her head and narrowing her eyes. She could spend hours arranging and rearranging the work on display at her gallery, Two Roads. She found it soothing, even though it drove her assistant crazy. She knew this because Samantha Henry, now Samantha Smith in her day-to-day life, was more than just her right-hand woman and one of the gallery’s top-selling artists. She was also her closest friend in Harvest Cove—close enough to have told Zoe on numerous occasions that she needed to find a better hobby before Sam lost it and stabbed her with a palette knife.
“It looks great.”
Zoe turned her head to glare at the pretty blonde who sat at the antique desk they were currently using to handle purchases and some of the paperwork. Sam’s head was down as she scrawled something on a Post-it, then stuck it on what looked to be a contract.
“You didn’t even look!”
“Yes, I did,” Sam said calmly, with a brief glance up. Zoe got a glimpse of striking blue-green eyes before Sam refocused on whatever she was doing. “It looks almost exactly the same as it did the last time you asked me to look. You know, ten whole minutes ago.”
Zoe tapped a finger against her hip. “Part of your job is to indulge me, you know.”
“Is it? Somehow, I don’t remember signing anything that spelled that out.”
“You’re a terrible henchman, Sam,” Zoe said with a sigh. “You’re supposed to ooh and aah over everything I do, which in turn will give me the confidence I need to take over the world.”
Sam looked up, propped her chin on her folded hands, and smiled innocently. “We prefer ‘henchwomen.’ And if you want me to look at a virtually unchanged grouping of paintings twenty times in the space of an hour while stroking your ego, we’re talking overtime and extra perks.”
Zoe wrinkled her nose. “Thanks a lot, henchwoman.”
“You don’t like it, take it up with the union.”
Zoe gave a soft huff, but she was smiling when she turned to look at her handiwork again. It really hadn’t changed much in the last hour. Enjoyable though fiddling had been, it was probably time to pack it in.
“Fine. You win. I’ll leave it alone. For now.”
“That ‘for now’ means I never really win.” Sam sighed, rising to brace her hands on the small of her back and stretch.
“Come on, now. Every day with me is its own reward.” That earned Zoe a grin.
“Of course it is, O Benevolent Ruler,” Sam said, then glanced at the small silver watch on her wrist. “Any big plans for the evening? I heard a rumor that today is Friday.”
“I heard the same rumor,” Zoe replied. “I have plans.”
That piqued Sam’s interest, as Zoe knew it would. “Seriously? What kind of plans?”
Zoe had a brief, intense urge to make up something interesting—something involving a handsome stranger, a candlelit dinner, and the unspoken potential for the kind of date that was likely to continue through the following morning. Except Sam would know she was full of it, because ever since they’d known each other, Zoe hadn’t been a spontaneous, wildly romantic date kind of person. She never really had been, much as she loved imagining such things.
Coming to Harvest Cove from Atlanta, Georgia, had been her choice. Starting a new life here, trying to plant some roots and make a go of her gallery: also a choice. The lack of attention she’d paid to her personal life had been less of a choice, more of a necessity while she’d been getting things off the ground, but lately, Zoe had started to wonder whether she’d been a little too determined to fly solo until she got settled in here. Because it didn’t get much more settled—or much more single—than she was right now.
And her current dry spell, not counting a brief and ill-advised interlude with an egocentric orthodontist, was at three years and counting.
“It’s true,” Zoe finally said, trying not to let her sudden pang of melancholy creep into her voice. “My plans involve a comfy couch, some hot tea, my favorite blanket, some snuggling—”
“With the blanket, right?”
“Maybe.”
Sam groaned and rolled her eyes. “Zo, we’ve talked about this. Binge watching recorded TV shows is not a substitute for actual human interaction. Why don’t you come hang out with me and Jake? We were talking about going down to Beltane Blues and having a drink later.”
“Just the two of you?”
“Emma and Seth might join us,” Sam replied. “Maybe Shane and Fitz. So don’t start with the third-wheel thing again, because you wouldn’t be. You never are.” Sam closed the distance between them and gave Zoe’s arm a tug. “Come on . . . it’s been a while since you let us drag you out. You’re getting as bad as Emma used to be.”
“Hey, you be nice about your sister,” she said. Emma Henry was a little older than Sam and a lot more uptight, but she’d come a long way since her drunken dance at Sam’s bachelorette party had given her a dose of unwanted local fame. Of course, the fact that her fiancé, Seth Andersen, was the laid-back, quiet type was probably just as much of a factor in her recent loosening up as her brief brush with notoriety.
That was how it should be with couples, Zoe thought. They should bring out each other’s better natures. Lately she thought her better nature might have packed up and gone on permanent vacation, probably somewhere tropical with a lot of half-naked men. If it was smart, anyway. “Not all of us are born party animals, you know,” she added, dismayed that her voice came out as a surly grumble.
“I know, because I’m not one, either,” Sam replied, ignoring Zoe’s tone. “But there’s a lot of space between party animal and hermit. Even Aaron’s been threatening to show up at your door, slap a sparkly bathrobe on you, and force-feed you Jell-O shots until you start having fun again. And I think he’s serious.”
“He usually is, underneath the sass.” Aaron Maclean was a successful sculptor and one of her closest friends. He also took great pleasure in being a complete pain in her butt, though she loved him for it. Zoe rolled her shoulders uncomfortably, allowing herself a brief fantasy of having someone waiting at home to rub the knots out of them before banishing the images to the mental dustbin marked “Unnecessary Distractions.” That thing was full to overflowing, Zoe thought with a wry smile. Kind of like the vacuum she kept in the closet in her office. Full of dust, dirt, sticks, the occasional rock . . .
“You’re starting to sound just like Treebeard, you know that?”
Zoe wrinkled her nose at her nickname for Jason Evans, otherwise known as the Most Unnecessary Distraction of All. The big, surly park ranger darkened her doorstep at least once a week and seemed to take great pleasure in tracking in dirt, spending some time sparring with her, and buying something just often enough that she couldn’t justify booting him out. Calling him Treebeard, after Tolkien’s slow-moving and treelike Ent, made her feel a little better about the encounters. Especially because Jason didn’t know she called him that.
It was as though she’d summoned him into the conversation just by thinking of the messes he left for her to clean up, courtesy of his giant boots.
“I do not.”
“Do, too. You two ought to start a club for antisocial hot people. You’ll be the only members, and I’ll be the outside consultant who sets up your activities since neither of you likes to do things.”
The thought of being alone with Jason was way more appealing than it should have been . . . which would explain why she’d spent a fair amount of time pondering the scenario. Outwardly, Zoe brushed off the teasing.
“No way. I know enough about how your twisted little mind works. I don’t need to see what you’d come up with for awkward seduction scenarios, which is all those so-called activities would be.”
“By ‘awkward’ I’m going to assume you mean ‘amazingly smooth.’”
“Amazingly something, anyway,” Zoe replied. “Kind of like you, in fact.”
Sam snorted. “You love me. Me and my schemes for getting you and Jason together for an evening of hard liquor and strip poker.”
“Setting aside the fact that I don’t even know how to play poker . . . oh my God.”
“Exactly.” Sam’s evil grin made her laugh, at least. And it was a good reminder that one thing she did have here in Harvest Cove was friendship. The important, tell-each-other-anything kind. The sort of friendship that stayed.
“There. You don’t look quite as stabby now, at least. Remember that the next time you disparage my skills as a henchwoman.”
Zoe laughed again and shook her head. “I’ll try. And I’m not stabby. Just tired, I guess. Long week.”
“Longer when you don’t take days off,” Sam admonished her, but her voice was full of affection. “Well, you’ve earned hanging out with your blanket and TV if that’s what you want to do. But we’d love to have you along if you want to come tonight, okay?”
She was being let off the hook, Zoe knew. But that was Sam’s way. Never a frontal assault, just a little smacking around with a velvet glove, followed by a hug. That was usually all that was needed, and this time was no different.
“I probably could stand to spend some time in civilization. Maybe I’ll swing by. Okay?”
Sam’s smile was immediate and full of delight. “Way more than okay. We should be there around eight.”
Zoe bit back a groan, partly in complete disgust with herself. When eight o’clock sounded late, when the thought of being in her favorite pajamas at that hour on a Friday night was preferable to anything else she could think of, she worried she was turning into her grandmother. And at thirty-two, she was hardly grandmother material.
Whatever was wrong with her lately, she needed to break the cycle, Zoe decided. Maybe it was the fact that her friends all seemed to be moving into the coupled-up phase of their lives. Maybe she was still down from her brother Marcus heading back home after his visit. But she needed a change, and there was a cute little halter top with the tags still on it hanging in her closet at home that had How you doin’? written all over it. She’d been waiting to take it for a spin—knowing that the wait might wind up being forever—but really, there was no time like the present.
“All right,” Zoe said lightly. “I’ll see you there a little after eight.”
Sam clapped her hands together, then did a small happy dance that shouldn’t have been possible in heels. “Yes!”
“Don’t get too excited. You know I’m only good for a couple of hours before I need to go curl up in a corner somewhere.”
Sam waved her hand dismissively. “And you know I’m the same way. We can use each other as an excuse to bail and go watch some trash TV together when we’ve had it. And the people watching should be good in the meantime.”
This, Zoe thought with a smile, was one of the many reasons she loved Sam. Though they operated at different levels of sociability, they were both homebodies at heart. She started to head back to her office, then paused, suddenly suspicious.
“You didn’t find a way to drag Treebeard out of his forest to meet us tonight, did you?” she asked, turning back to narrow her eyes at Sam.
“Uh, that would require superpowers I don’t possess, but I’m flattered you think I could manage it,” Sam replied.
Zoe expected to feel relief, but there was some definite disappointment mingling with it. Sam was right. She really did need to get out more, especially if she was missing the sight of Jason Evans.
“I’ve seen you be formidable when you want to be,” Zoe replied, then waved a hand. “Just making sure. You brought him up, so I thought maybe you’d cooked up some kind of crazy plan.” She frowned. “You know, he hasn’t been in to pester me in a couple of weeks. It’s a little strange. I hope he wasn’t eaten by bears or something.”
Sam tilted her head, a puzzled smile playing at the corners of her mouth. “You mean you didn’t hear?” The surprise in Sam’s voice meant that she’d managed to miss out on some widespread local gossip, a subject Zoe prided herself on keeping up with. She might not be from the Cove, but this was her home now, and she liked to know what was going on. Things that escaped her notice irritated her, especially when they were things she tried so hard to pretend to ignore.
“Hear what?” she asked.
“Jason got caught out in those severe storms that came through last week. The ones that caused that nasty accident out on Juniper, with the hail? Some trees came down, and he broke his leg getting out of the way of one of them. Totally out of commission for the time being.” Sam’s look turned sheepish. “Sorry. I thought you knew.”
“No.” It was unexpected news, accompanied by an equally unexpected burst of concern that hit her like a punch to the gut. She spent a lot of time telling herself she didn’t like Jason. Almost as much time as she spent wondering when he’d be in to bother her again. She felt her cheeks heating as Sam watched her, an involuntary reaction that was entirely unwelcome. She didn’t fluster easily. And certainly not over men like Treebeard.
“Are you . . . blushing?” asked Sam, watching her with more interest—not to mention amusement—than she thought was warranted. Zoe gave her a warning look and turned on her bootheel to head for her office. Naturally, Sam followed.
“You are blushing! Aha!” she said, trailing her.
“Aha nothing,” Zoe said without turning her head. She opened the door to her little office, which she thought of as Command Central. She kept it as neat as she could, but the paperwork was a constant battle. And if she let it go for a couple of days, the various cups she drank her tea out of began threatening a hostile takeover of her space. It hurt her neat freak’s heart, but it seemed like the nerve center of her tidy little universe was destined to stay just a little messy. Zoe inhaled deeply, surveying the clutter, and tried to push the current conversation out of her mind. “I’ve been slacking. These cups have got to go.”
“You know,” Sam said in a tone that clearly indicated she was about to say something Zoe wouldn’t like, “since you brought him up, Jason is a loyal customer. It might be nice to send, I don’t know, a get-well card or something.”
“You brought him up, remember? I just didn’t know he’d busted his leg. I’m sure it’s done wonders for his personality. Surprised he didn’t bite the doctors who treated him.” She stacked four cups one inside the other, straightened a stack of papers, and then braced her hands on the desk without turning around, dropping her head. “You’re serious. You want us to send him a fruit basket.”
“I know you don’t like him all that much—well, you’re good at pretending not to, anyway—but it’d be a nice gesture.” Sam’s voice was full of gentle, affectionate reproach.
“I don’t dislike him. I don’t anything him. Apart from his purchasing habits and his dirty footprints, Treebeard isn’t even on my radar.”
“Which is why he merits a special nickname, at least one daily mention, and those fire-engine red cheeks?”
Zoe turned to give Sam a pained look. “Really? We’re going to go there again?”
“Nope,” Sam replied. “Mostly because I value my life, and I really want you to come out tonight. I’m just saying that despite his more frustrating qualities, Jason has been supportive of the gallery in his own special way. He’d probably appreciate the well-wishes.”
Zoe grabbed her big leather tote and slung it over her shoulder, heaving a loud sigh. “You may be right. I’m just finding the whole appreciative-Treebeard thing hard to picture. He doesn’t respond to nice, that I’ve seen.”
Sam’s brows lifted. “You’ve tried nice?”
“In my own special way.”
“Hmm.” Sam waited as Zoe grabbed a few things she needed, slid them into her tote, and then walked out of her office.
“You’re still following me, I see,” Zoe said calmly as she checked the locks and switched off most of the lights. “Okay. Will it make you happy if I say I’ll send a card? Maybe some flowers? Though he’d probably rather have a bundle of twigs. Seems like it’d be more his thing. He could light them on fire, poke people with them. . . .”
“Yes, it’ll make me happy. Unless you really do send twigs.” Sam laughed softly. “Some dog food and a few squeaky toys might be more useful.”
Zoe turned, frowning. “Why? Is this some weird fetish of his I don’t want to hear about, or did that man give up on humanity altogether and decide to inflict himself on some poor animal instead?”
Though it wasn’t an expression she saw from her often, Zoe thought that Sam looked a little smug. It was rare that she knew something before Zoe heard about it, and she was obviously relishing the triumph.
“Neither. Well, maybe a little of the second thing, but not on purpose. Jason was out in the storm because he was saving a dog.” When Zoe simply stared, unable to quite process that, Sam elaborated. “One of the park
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