Can a snowbound mom-to-be find love with the sexy stranger who delivers her baby? Find out in the newest installment of Those Engaging Garretts, the sizzling series by award-winning author Brenda Harlen!
Being trapped in a strange town in a freak blizzard is scary enough, but Julie Marlowe went into labor in someoneâs driveway! Lucky for her, a handsome stranger came to her rescue. Several hours later, Julie was the proud mother of an infant son â¦and in danger of falling for the sexy vet who delivered her baby!
Lukas Garrett didnât know how much he wanted to be a fatherâor a husband!âuntil he helped bring Julieâs little boy into the world. Now mother and child have grabbed hold of his once-guarded heart. But Julieâs past could derail her future with Luke, unless sheâs willing to trust her heart to this man for the chance to have the family of her dreamsâ¦.
There was something about the way Luke was looking at her, the intensity in his eyes that started Julieâs heart pounding just a little bit faster again.
âYouâre always beautiful,â he said. âEven the first time I saw youâthrough the foggy window of your carâyou took my breath away.â
âOf course, that was before I got out from behind the wheel and you saw me waddle like a penguin behind the belly of a whale,â she teased.
âYou never waddled,â he denied.
âI was eight-and-a-half months pregnant,â she reminded him.
âAnd beautiful.â
He brushed his knuckles down her cheek, but it was her knees that went weak.
âAnd Iâve been thinking about kissing you since that first day.â His words were as seductive as his touch, and the heat in his gaze held her mesmerized as he lowered his head, inching closer and closer until his lips hovered above hers.
Dear Reader,
Iâve always loved stories in which ordinary people learn that theyâre capable of extraordinary things. In A Very Special Delivery, Lukas Garrett is an ordinary man (well, heâs a tall, dark and handsome romantic hero, so maybe heâs not completely ordinary) and Julie Marlowe is an ordinary woman (albeit a young and beautifulâand very pregnantâromantic heroine).
On his way home from work one day, Lukas discovers a car in the ditch beside his house. Julie is behind the wheel of that vehicleâand in serious denial about the fact that sheâs in labor.
Itâs been a lot of years since my kids were babies, but I havenât forgotten the experience of childbirth, or how much it meant to have my husband by my side. Itâs the type of experience that would create a special bond between any two people, even virtual strangers.
For Lukas and Julie, that bond just might be the beginning of a family.â¦
I hope you enjoy their story.
Happy reading,
Brenda Harlen
BRENDA HARLEN is a former family law attorney turned work-at-home mum and national bestselling author who has written more than twenty books for Mills & Boon>®. Her work has been validated by industry awards (including an RWA Golden Heart Award and the RT Book Reviews Reviewersâ Choice Award) and by the fact that her kids think itâs cool that sheâs âa real author.â
Brenda lives in southern Ontario with her husband and two sons. When she isnât at the computer working on her next book, she can probably be found at the arena, watching a hockey game. Keep up-to-date with Brenda on Facebook or send her an email at brendaharlen@yahoo. com.
This book is dedicated to my husband, Neill, an only child who gained two brothers (in-law) when we married.
Thanks for being a wonderful husband and the best father our boys could possibly have. XO
Chapter One
When she woke up the morning of November first staring at water stains on a stippled ceiling, Julie Marlowe wondered if she was having a bad dream. Then she remembered that uncomfortable twinges in her lower back had forced her to take a break on her journey home the day before, and the closest available accommodations had been at the Sleep Tite Motor Inn.
She managed to roll her pregnant body off the sagging mattress and swing her feet over the edge. The bathroomâs tile floor was cold beneath her feet, and the trickle of spray that came out of the shower head wasnât much warmer. She washed quickly, then dried herself with the threadbare but clean towels on the rack. She had another long day of travel ahead of her, so she dressed comfortably in a pair of chocolate-colored leggings and a loose tunic-style top. Then she slipped her feet into the cowboy boots sheâd bought âjust becauseâ when sheâd been in Texas.
Seven months earlier, sheâd had a lot of reasons for wanting to leave Springfield. But after traveling eight thousand miles through twenty-seven states and sleeping in countless hotel rooms, she was more than ready to go home.