Welcome to Saturday Sample. We'll continue with out excerpts from Flood. I hope you're enjoying them because I really enjoyed writing the book. Before we get to the except, let me share an Amazon 5 star review with you. I was very pleased with it.
If you love animals and romance, this is the book for you. Aria is a caring veterinarian and Caleb is a former convict who ends up working for her. The romance has a nice, steady build, not too much at once. You can see how these people really fall for each other. I love how protective Caleb is and how Aria believes in him. The flood adds a tense, exciting element to the climax. I definitely recommend this book!
Blurb:
Drawn together by their love of animals, Aria De Luca and Caleb Hawkins burn for each other. They never suspected that malignant forces around them were successfully plotting Caleb’s ruin from the moment he entered her life. When the flood of a century strikes Aria’s hometown, an alienated Caleb is all that stands between her and catastrophic loss.
Last Week:
“Thanks for the help.”
The woman gestured to an old man dozing in a plastic chair positioned to catch the sunshine. “That’s Bob Roach. He has a taxi if you’d like to wake him.”
Caleb smiled at the sight of the relaxed old man. In prison you learned not to sleep too deeply.
“Thank you.”
He touched the man’s shoulder, hoping not to startle him. “Mr. Roach?”
“Huh?”
“Mr. Roach, I’m looking for a ride to the animal hospital. Are you interested?”
The old man blinked and wiped his face. “Yeah, give me a minute.”
Actually, Mr. Roach took ten minutes to wake up, but he took Caleb right to the animal hospital. It was a pretty drive. The hospital was located in a relatively rural area with freshly plowed fields just waiting for the weather to warm up enough to plant. Pale green fuzz decorated most of the trees and gave the promise of shade once the leaves grew a little more.
The woman gestured to an old man dozing in a plastic chair positioned to catch the sunshine. “That’s Bob Roach. He has a taxi if you’d like to wake him.”
Caleb smiled at the sight of the relaxed old man. In prison you learned not to sleep too deeply.
“Thank you.”
He touched the man’s shoulder, hoping not to startle him. “Mr. Roach?”
“Huh?”
“Mr. Roach, I’m looking for a ride to the animal hospital. Are you interested?”
The old man blinked and wiped his face. “Yeah, give me a minute.”
Actually, Mr. Roach took ten minutes to wake up, but he took Caleb right to the animal hospital. It was a pretty drive. The hospital was located in a relatively rural area with freshly plowed fields just waiting for the weather to warm up enough to plant. Pale green fuzz decorated most of the trees and gave the promise of shade once the leaves grew a little more.
“Want me to wait?” Roach asked as he stopped in front of the animal hospital.
“No, thanks.” He had seen a motel not a mile from St. Francis. He’d stay there for the night.
“No, thanks.” He had seen a motel not a mile from St. Francis. He’d stay there for the night.
He paused for a moment to look the place over. The
hospital was set in a grove of oak trees that would provide
shade in the summertime and let the sun in during the
winter months. The building was made of concrete blocks
that had been painted dark green. It had white shutters and
a white door. Someone had added window boxes and
filled them with spring flowers in shades of pink, red, and
yellow. A curvy walkway made of small gravel led from
the parking lot to the front door. All in all it looked like a
nice place, a place where the doctor and her staff cared
about the animals entrusted to them.
This week:
He drew a deep breath of the fresh air and noted that
for the past three years he’d mostly missed out on the
beauty of the springtime. From his cell he hadn’t been
able to see even a sliver of the sky. The Department of
Corrections initiative that had let him work at the animal
clinic had been a lifesaver for him. If not for that escape
from his cell, he had no idea what would have become of
him, but he suspected it wouldn’t have been anything
good. He loathed being cooped up and always had.
He saw movement out of the corner of his eye. A big,
yellow dog with floppy ears was following a slender,
dark-haired woman from behind
building. Eagerness
filled him. Peaches. The dog was Peaches.
Buy link: http://amzn.to/2qRgYD7
You've really brought out the feel of springtime in this snippet. A nice glimpse into his character, as well. :-)
ReplyDeleteNo post for me this week. :-)