Fans of Jill Shalvis should prepare to swoon over Jack and Lola's HEA.
CALLED OUT
A Calling It Novel
Jen Doyle
Releasing May 29, 2016
Carina Press
Jack
"Ox" Oxford is used to being alone. Granted, when you screw over your
friends, being alone isn't always a choice. Playing for the Chicago Watchmen is
a last-ditch effort to save his career…and right some of his past wrongs. He's
not expecting a warm reception, but he's also not expecting a flat tire to
change everything.
Recovering control freak, single mom and semiprofessional chaos wrangler Lola Deacon McIntire doesn't need an arrogant ballplayer to swoop in and save her from anything, much less her flat tire. And she definitely doesn't need her body to betray her and decide this is the guy to wake up her rusty libido. She isn't about to upset her sons' lives for any man—much less one who so clearly doesn't think he's dad material.
Jack never thought he'd find someone who wanted to build a life with him, but the more time he spends with Lola and her boys, the more it starts to feel permanent. Even tough-as-nails Lola concedes there just might be a future here—the big, beautiful, messy future neither of them was looking for—but only if Jack will accept he deserves it.
Recovering control freak, single mom and semiprofessional chaos wrangler Lola Deacon McIntire doesn't need an arrogant ballplayer to swoop in and save her from anything, much less her flat tire. And she definitely doesn't need her body to betray her and decide this is the guy to wake up her rusty libido. She isn't about to upset her sons' lives for any man—much less one who so clearly doesn't think he's dad material.
Jack never thought he'd find someone who wanted to build a life with him, but the more time he spends with Lola and her boys, the more it starts to feel permanent. Even tough-as-nails Lola concedes there just might be a future here—the big, beautiful, messy future neither of them was looking for—but only if Jack will accept he deserves it.
Excerpt
#3
The only person who
didn’t seem to notice was Jack. She didn’t particularly expect any special
treatment, and it was clear he wasn’t interested in a long, happy life together
any more than she was. But when he pushed his plate aside and started to say
his goodbyes, she did have to turn her back to make sure her face didn’t betray
her disappointment.
When he did finally come
up behind her to say goodbye, it was without leaning in and whispering in her
ear, and he kept his hands far away from her. It was clear that whatever had
happened between him and Deke—and Lola could read a room enough to know that
something had happened—meant things
were about to come to an end.
Lola was okay with that. She hadn’t really expected anything
after the other morning anyway. Still, it was an effort to plaster a smile on
her face, especially when he nodded his head toward the hallway. “Can I talk to
you for a minute?”
Lola sighed. “Cover me?”
she said to Mary. And then she turned to move past him and walked straight
ahead.
“So,” she said when they
got to the back hallway. She didn’t think it counted as breaking up when they
weren’t together, but she’d never actually been broken up with before so she
wasn’t sure. And although she wasn’t willing to make it easier for him, she
wasn’t about to make it hard.
“So,” he said. He was
nervous. This was going to be worse than Lola had thought.
Well, it wasn’t going to
be worse than having Tuck show up in his police uniform the night of the
accident, or spending all those long lonely nights when Dave was deployed
wondering whether he was still alive.
“Obviously,” Jack said,
“we have two very different lives.”
Yep. Lola nodded for him
to go on.
“And we both know I am
not by any means a catch.”
It kind of depended on
how you defined it, but this wasn’t the time to agree or disagree. She clasped
her hands behind her back.
“This is probably a
really, really bad idea.” He ran his hands through his hair and Lola tried not
to think about how cute he was. How cute it
was, to have the big, bad Iceman be so nervous because of her. Even if it was
because he was about to tell her that he never wanted to see her again.
“But how would you feel
about seeing me tonight after you get off?”
“I’m sorry?” That was not what she’d expected him to say.
He closed his eyes and
shook his head. “Not get off. That
innuendo was not intentional. I meant
after you’re done with your shift.”
Wow. He wasn’t even
making double entendre jokes. This was seriously strange. And not how she’d
expected this to go.
He started pacing.
“I, uh…”
He cleared his throat. “Jules mentioned the babysitter puts your kids to bed
and stays over on the nights you work late.”
“She did?” Jules was so
much more of a troublemaker than she led anyone to believe.
Jack nodded. “I was
thinking maybe I could pick you up and take you to dinner somewhere.”
And now Lola was
irritated. Never mind that ten o’clock was too late to have dinner. “Seriously?
We’re doing the dating thing?” She may have had her breakdown earlier, but it
didn’t change her overall goal. “What part of ‘fuck me against the wall’ did
you not understand?” Lola was fairly certain she’d been clear on that.
Jack tensed before
straightening up to his full height. Then the Jack she knew was back and in
front of her—crowding right up against her, pinning her between him and the
wall. This time his grin was natural and easy and entirely carnal—just the way
she liked it. “I never said fucking against the wall was off the table. I just
thought maybe you’d like to grab a bite first.”
Resisting the impulse to
say that she would, actually, like to take a bite out of something first, she
set her lips in a grim line. Was this truly what he wanted? Or was it just what
he thought she wanted, despite what
she’d said? Trying to keep the frustration out of her voice, she said, “I don’t
want to go on dates, Jack. I don’t want a boyfriend. I don’t want another thing
to add to the list.” She wasn’t pulling punches. Not today.
Although he winced and
said, “Ouch, babe. That was harsh,” he didn’t seem overly upset. Especially not
as he slid his thigh between her legs, looking entirely as if he were going to
eat her up. “I don’t want to go on dates, Lola.” He brought his hand up between
them. “And I really don’t want a girlfriend.” Though he seemed utterly calm,
she could feel his heart beating as rapidly as hers was. “But I do have a list,
and it includes fucking you repeatedly, and not just against the wall.” Then
his hand closed over her breast, and he pinched the increasingly sensitive tip,
and to her annoyance, she couldn’t hold back her gasp. Right here in the
hallway of her family’s restaurant.
“I do, however,” he said,
“have higher standards than an unheated, unfinished farmhouse.” Her breath
hitched as he rolled her nipple between his thumb and forefinger, twisting just
enough for a moan to make its way out of her throat.
“Hey,” she managed to
say. “That’s my unheated, unfinished farmhouse you’re talking about. Be careful
what you say.”
He smiled but didn’t
reply. Unless you counted taking her earlobe between his teeth and giving
enough of a tug for her to feel it shoot down to her core.
“Okay.” She needed to
work at not being quite so easy. “I suppose that could be added to my list,
too.”
“Great.” His voice low
and raspy, he didn’t pull back. “So what do you say?”
She let her head fall
back against the wall as she closed her eyes. Dorie was right. The date itself
didn’t matter. She had no illusions about Jack and she wasn’t looking for a
replacement for Dave. But she was a thirty-six-year-old woman who had a whole
lot of living left to do. She took a deep breath as she opened her eyes,
“Okay.”
In a startlingly gentle
way, he brushed her cheek with his thumb as he smiled. “I’ll be back at ten to
pick you up.”
Keeping the wall at her
back, she nodded. “It’s not a date.”
“Not a date,” he
repeated, bending down and touching his lips to hers, giving the slightest of
reminders as to what his mouth was truly capable of. Then he backed away,
keeping his eyes on her until he disappeared from sight.
A big
believer in happily ever afters, Jen Doyle decided it was high
time she started creating some. She has an M.S. in Library and Information
Science and, in addition to her work as a librarian, has worked as a conference
and events planner as well as a Communications and Enrollment administrator in
both preschool and higher education environments (although some might say that
there is very little difference between the two; Jen has no comment regarding
whether she is one of the “some”).
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