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The hotly anticipated follow up to Five Years Gone is here!
ONE YEAR HOME by Marie Force is available now!
He came home a hero and lost the only woman he’s ever loved...
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He came home a hero and lost the only woman he’s ever loved...
John
I have no idea how to survive without my beloved Ava. She had no choice but to move on with her life during my six-year deployment and has now married Eric. I hate him for taking her from me. I’d prefer to wallow in my depression and heartbreak, but the whole damned world wants a piece of the SEAL Team leader who helped capture the world’s most-wanted terrorist. I need help handling the relentless requests, and when Ava sends her new sister-in-law to manage the media circus for me, I’m prepared to hate her on principle. Her brother took my Ava. What else do I need to know about her?
Julianne
It takes five seconds to realize Ava’s ex is going to be the most complicated and difficult client I’ve ever had, but the opportunity to represent the most celebrated man in the world could make my career. I’m determined to do the job, even if I dislike John from the moment I meet him. And I like everyone. So much so that my brothers worry about me being exploited by those who would take advantage of my unwavering love for others. But John… He’s in a class by himself, and his bitterness is a festering wound that I begin to wish I could somehow fix for him. The more time we spend together, the more our mutual disdain morphs into something that feels an awful lot like desire. There’s no way I can want this man, or so I tell myself, and when Eric finds out I’ve developed feelings for the man causing trouble in his new marriage, well…
That’s going to be a hot mess.
------
Excerpt:
Chapter 2
Julianne
He’s so scary looking that it’s all I can do not to shrivel up in a ball or bolt for
the door to get away from him. If I’d run into him on the street, I would’ve moved out of his way
so there’d
be no chance of coming into contact with him. And that’s not like me at all. I talk to everyone I encounter,
which drives my brothers crazy. They swear I’m going to end up dead one of these days because I’m too friendly to
strangers.
I
can’t
help it. That’s
just how I am. But this stranger is different, and I quickly realize he’s not about to do
anything to make this easier for me. He’s also incredibly handsome, but I barely notice that.
The scary requires my full attention.
Muncie
breaks the uncomfortable silence by clearing his throat. “Captain
John West, meet Julianne Tilden.”
Mustering
courage and determination to get through this with my professionalism intact
even if I’m
quaking on the inside, I take several steps forward and extend my hand. “It’s nice to meet you, Captain West. Thank you for your
service.”
He
shakes my hand and offers a brusque nod as he lowers himself carefully onto a
love seat. “Have
a seat.”
I
take one of the straight-back chairs that faces the love seat.
Muncie
produces a take-out cup of coffee, cream containers, sugar and fake sugar. “Wasn’t sure if you drank
coffee or how you take it.”
He
seems very sweet, and I offer him a warm smile, greatly relieved that he’s there in case the
scary captain decides to go postal on me. “Thanks. I can’t function without it.”
“You and the captain have that in common,” Muncie says with a
pointed look for John as if to say, Get your head out of your ass and be nice.
At
least I hope that’s
the message he’s
sending, because it would be very nice if he would get his head out of his ass
and be nice.
I
stir cream and sugar substitute into my coffee. “What can I do for you, Captain West?” He’s not going to make it
easy for me? I can play that game, too.
“Deal with the bullshit.”
“You’re going to need to be more specific, I’m afraid.” I take a sip of the
coffee and thank God once again for whoever thought it would be a good idea to
dump hot water over ground cocoa beans. Did they know at the time what a
service they were doing for all of mankind?
“I’m getting killed with calls from the media. Everyone
wants interviews. They want me to write a book. One company asked me to model
underwear for them. It’s nonstop and totally insane, and I can’t deal with it.”
“How are they contacting you?”
“Somehow, they got my personal cell number.” As he says those words,
a phone on the coffee table vibrates with an incoming call. “That’ll be the first of at
least a hundred calls today.”
“Well, that won’t work. Do you mind if I take the phone and manage the
calls for you?”
He
hesitates, glancing at the phone with such yearning that I feel my heart soften
toward him.
“I’ll get you a new one and make sure she has the new
number,” Muncie
says.
That’s all the captain needs
to hear. “Take
it. It’s
all yours.”
I
take the phone off the coffee table. “Does it have a code?”
“Zero five twenty-five.”
I
write that down in the notebook that’s always with me. I sleep with it under my pillow. It
has all the most important information about my clients in it. My siblings make
fun of my notebook, but a lot of the details contained in there are
ultrasensitive, and I’d never keep them on a smart phone that can easily be hacked. We had a
seminar at work about that topic last year. It scared the crap out of me and
everyone I work with. Quite a few of us have switched to paper and pen since
then.
Captain
John West is my only client at the moment. The powers that be at the firm were
so excited to land him that they bent over backwards to get coverage for all my
other clients so I can give the man of the moment my full attention. After ten
minutes in his presence, I want to give him back.
But
I won’t
do that for two reasons. One, everyone who is anyone in my business would
literally kill to be me right now, and two, Ava asked me to take care of him,
so I will. I adore Ava. She’s made my brother Eric happier than he’s ever been, and there’s nothing I wouldn’t do for her. This is a
big deal to her—John is a big deal to her. She was in love with the guy for
eight years, more than six of them spent wondering where he was while hoping he
would return to her.
By
the time he did, she was in love with Eric and they were planning a life
together. I know how hard it was for her to see John again after all that time.
I can’t
for the life of me imagine what it must’ve been like for him to hear she’d found someone else and was engaged to be married.
“Why are you staring at me?”
he asks gruffly, startling me.
I
realize, to my horror, that I had in fact been staring at him. “Sorry,” I mutter.
He
rubs his face. “Did
I cut myself shaving again, Muncie?”
“Not this time, sir.”
“I, um, I apologize. I didn’t mean to stare.”
“So you said.” He seems to return the rudeness by taking the
opportunity to blatantly stare at me.
I
try not to wither under the glare of the most intense blue eyes I’ve ever seen, but I
wilt a tiny bit waiting to find out what fresh hell he has in store for me
next. “You
sure I didn’t
cut myself shaving, Muncie?”
The
lieutenant commander laughs. “Nope. All good.”
I
glance at the captain and note that his scowl has softened somewhat, not into
what anyone would call a smile, but perhaps the starting of one.
“Your brother married my Ava.”
And
there it is, the proverbial elephant in the room. “Yes, he did.”
“What’s he like?”
Oh, for God’s
sake. I hadn’t
expected him to ask me that and have no idea what to say.
“Is that a hard question? I take it you’ve known him awhile.”
“All my life, in fact.”
He
leans forward, full of intensity and quiet rage. That’s the only way I can think of to describe the vibe
coming from him.
“Captain…” Muncie’s word of warning goes ignored.
“He’s… He’s a good guy, one of the best guys I know. He’d do anything for
anyone, give you the shirt off his back.” I hate the cliché, but it does the job—and it’s true. In a crisis,
Eric would be the first person I’d call.
“What does he do for a living?”
“High-end investments.”
“What the hell are high-end investments?”
“Five million dollars or more.”
At his look of distaste, I feel the
need to say more. “He can spend a year fully investigating a potential investment, only to
have the acquisition committee in his company turn it down. It’s very complex work.”
Judging
by his expression, that doesn’t help with the distaste. “Sounds like a heck of a way to make a living.”
“He likes it.” I take a deep breath and tell myself to get control of
this meeting. “Back
to the media inquiries.”
“How old is he?”
“Did you ask me here to discuss my brother, Captain
West, or are you interested in my professional services?”
I force myself to look him dead in
the eye and not to let him see that he intimidates me.
He
stares back at me for a long moment before he blinks. “Both, I suppose.”
“I’m only interested in the professional inquiries, if it’s just the same to you.
While I empathize with your situation, I love my brother, and it doesn’t feel right for me to
be discussing him with you.”
He
doesn’t
like that, but too bad. I’m here to do a job, not defend my brother.
“You empathize with my situation? Really?”
“Captain…” The note of warning in Muncie’s tone isn’t lost on either of us.
“Yes, I do empathize with what you’ve been through, and like the rest of America, I’m deeply grateful for
the role you played in bringing a terrorist to justice at great personal and
physical expense.”
He
begins to clap, slowly and dramatically.
Heat
creeps into my face, which is infuriating. The last thing I want him to see is
that he gets to me.
“Did you practice that little speech on the flight out
here?”
“No.”
I wish I could punch him and still
have a job afterward. The partners were thrilled when I told him who my
potential client was. Land him, they’d said, and we’ll consider you for junior partner. “I made it up right
here.”
“Nice to see that you’re good on the fly.”
“I’m outstanding on the fly, which is how I became one of
the top young PR professionals in New York.”
His
cell phone rings, which is when I realize I’m gripping it tightly. With him watching me in that
intense, intimidating way of his, I take the call. “Answering for Captain West.”
It’s a producer for NBC
Nightly News, wanting to book an interview. “Let me take down your contact information and get back
to you.” The
name and number go in my trusty notebook.
“And you are?” the producer asks.
“Julianne
Tilden.”
“Are you working for Captain West?”
“Please hold for one moment.”
I put my hand over the phone so I won’t be overheard. “It’s an NBC News producer. She wants to know if I work
for you.”
He
holds my gaze for a long moment, during which I honestly have no idea what he’s thinking. He gives
nothing away. “Tell
her you do.”
I
offer him a brief nod and return to the call. “I’ll be representing Captain West for media inquiries
going forward. May I give you my number so you can reach me directly?” I recite the number for
my work phone and tell her again I’ll be back in touch. I end the call and glance at my
new client.
The
first thing I do is slide my company’s retainer contract across the table. “Before we go any
further, I need you to sign this.”
He
leans forward to retrieve the document, and after studying it, he says, “Two hundred dollars an
hour?”
“I assure you, I’ll earn every dime of it.”
“Yes, you will,” Muncie
mutters.
I really like him.
“Who’s paying for this?”
Captain West asks Muncie.
“We’ve got it covered. Sign the form.”
He
signs it and hands it over to me. “Now what?”
“Now we need to talk about what you’re willing to do—and
what you’re
not willing to do.”
“If he had his druthers, he wouldn’t do anything,” Muncie says.
I
never divert my gaze from the captain. “Why is that?”
“I don’t want to talk about it, but the navy has decided to
make me their new poster boy for recruitment. I just want to retire and ride
off into the sunset, but they’re not going to let that happen.”
“What’s the minimum that he can do?”
I ask Muncie.
“They haven’t given us a minimum. They want him to take full
advantage of the opportunities he’s being offered, whatever that means.”
I
redirect my attention to the captain. “What’re your physical limitations?”
If
looks could kill, I’d be a goner. “I have no physical limitations.”
“So you can travel?”
“Yes,” he says through gritted teeth.
“Here’s what I suggest… We book a New York media tour, including morning
shows, nightly news, late night, and then we come back out here and do an LA
leg.”
As
soon as I say the word “leg,” I wish I could take it back. Not that the word is
incorrect, but I don’t want him to think I’m fixated on what he’s lost. And why would he think that exactly? Shut up, Julianne. I
hate that inner voice that constantly critiques me. It’s my mother’s voice. She made a career out of critiquing my every
move until the blessed day I left for college at Barnard and could breathe for
the first time in my life.
He
doesn’t
respond to my suggestion.
I
clear my throat. “Would
that work for you?”
“I guess.”
I
glance at Muncie, who shrugs as if to say damned if I know what his problem is. Great. He’s been dealing with him
for months, and he has no clue. What chance do I have?
I
open my notebook and uncover my favorite gel pen. “Let’s cover what you will and won’t talk about.”
“I won’t talk about the raid, the mission or anything to do
with Al Khad.”
“That’s what they’re going to want to know.”
“Despite the fact that Al Khad’s camp released the video of the raid, the mission is
still classified on our end. I’m not at liberty to discuss the particulars, and even
if I was, I wouldn’t.”
“Can you talk about what it was like to be deployed for
more than five years?”
“Yeah. It sucked.”
“You have to say more than that.”
“What else should I say?”
“What did you do for all that time?” The question is one
that I’ve
had since I first heard the story about him and how he’d deployed the day Al Khad’s organization had taken out a US-based cruise ship
with suicide bombers, killing four thousand innocent people. My sister-in-law,
Ava, who’d
been John’s
live-in girlfriend at the time, waited five years in San Diego for him to come
back before returning home to New York to start over.
“We looked for Al Khad.”
“Where did you look for him?”
He
thinks about that, seeming to decide what he should say. “Our search spanned several countries that’re hostile to
Americans, so we had to embed and blend in with the locals to get information.
That took time and patience, among other things.”
“When you joined the navy, did you know you might have
to deploy for so long without any word to your loved ones at home?”
“Other than the girlfriend I wasn’t supposed to have, I didn’t have loved ones at home, which is why I was
initially chosen for the unit. In an interview, I could only say that I didn’t have loved ones at
home. I can’t
say I had a girlfriend.”
“What does it matter now?”
I ask. “Cat’s out of the bag.”
“It matters. I don’t want her dragged into this.”
“Yes, that’s true.” I respect that he’s protecting her, even now. “I agree that we’re better off not arousing curiosity about her. The
press would be relentless in their efforts to locate and interview her.”
“Which would be inconvenient and disruptive to your
brother.”
Infuriated
all over again, I stare him down. “It would be inconvenient, disruptive and intrusive for Ava. I’m sure you’ll agree she’s already been through
enough.”
Muncie
makes a sound that might be laughter, but he quickly coughs to cover it up.
“I agree,” John says. “Ava’s been through enough, and that’s entirely my fault.”
My
heart breaks a little for him, because even though he tries to hide it, the
pain of losing her is as obvious as his blue eyes, prominent cheekbones and
sexy lips.
God
help me, but the man is sexy—and completely off-limits to me for so many
reasons, it would take me days to list them all in my notebook.
About the Author
Marie Force is the New York Times bestselling author of contemporary romance, including the indie-published Gansett Island Series and the Fatal Series from Harlequin Books. In addition, she is the author of the Butler, Vermont Series, the Green Mountain Series and the erotic romance Quantum Series. In 2019, her new historical Gilded series from Kensington Books will debut with Duchess By Deception.
All together, her books have sold 6.5 million copies worldwide, have been translated into more than a dozen languages and have appeared on the New York Times bestseller list many times. She is also a USA Today and Wall Street Journal bestseller, a Speigel bestseller in Germany, a frequent speaker and publishing workshop presenter as well as a publisher through her Jack’s House Publishing romance imprint. She is a two-time nominee for the Romance Writers of America’s RITA® award for romance fiction.
Her goals in life are simple—to finish raising two happy, healthy, productive young adults, to keep writing books for as long as she possibly can and to never be on a flight that makes the news.
AUTHOR LINKS:
Website: http://marieforce.com/
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