Bestselling author Carla Cassidy brings in the Men of Wolf Creek to seek a missing woman
Roxy Marcoli cares about three thingsâher restaurant, her sisters and her aunt Liz. When Liz disappears, sheâs forced to turn to shameless playboy cop Steve Kincaid. Every time the sexy detective turns on the charm, he gets Roxyâs hackles up.
Despite his reputation, Steve is no ladiesâ man. His casual flirting hides the pain of an unbearable loss. As they search for clues, he discovers what lies beneath Roxyâs prickly exterior and sharp tongue. As his desire grows, so does his fear. Because itâs not just Aunt Liz the killer wantsâbut Roxy, too.
âWhat did my mother say to you?â
Roxy forced herself to look at Steve. âYour motherâs worried. She thinks youâre falling in love with me.â
âI am.â
Those two words turned her world topsy-turvy. âYou canât be. We said neither of us wanted a relationship.â
âI didnât think I was ready. I thought all my heart could hold was grief, but I was wrong. Thereâs space for you there, Roxy.â
Roxyâs shoulders stiffened. âDonât love me, Steve,â she said. âYour motherâs afraid Iâll break your heart, and I will if you love me.â
âIf youâre about to tell me that you donât care about me, then I wonât believe you,â he said.
âI do care about you,â she admitted. âI care about you more than Iâve ever cared about a man, but that doesnât change the fact that I never intend to invite a man into my life.â
âWhat are you afraid of, Roxy? Why are you so afraid to loveâ¦to be loved?â
Men of Wolf Creek: Small-town lawmen charged with finding the lost...and uncovering true love.
Dear Reader,
Last year my husband and I got the opportunity to take a road trip through Pennsylvania, where we fell in love with the beauty of the countryside, the Amish settlements and chocolate.
The Men of Wolf Creek series was born from the places we saw and the people we met. Iâve taken poetic license in many cases, but hopefully youâll find these books filled with hot heroes, strong heroines and enough suspense to keep you on the edge of your chair.
Thanks and happy reading!
Carla Cassidy
CARLA CASSIDY
is an award-winning author who has written more than one hundred books for Mills & Boon. In 1995 she won Best Silhouette Romance from RT Book Reviews for Anything for Danny. In 1998 she also won a Career Achievement Award for Best Innovative Series from RT Book Reviews.
Carla believes the only thing better than curling up with a good book to read is sitting down at the computer with a good story to write. Sheâs looking forward to writing many more books and bringing hours of pleasure to readers.
To all the people in Pennsylvania who welcomed us into their homes with love and warmth.
I love you all and hope you find these stories as entertaining as we found all of you!
Love, Carla
Chapter 1
For the first time in three and a half years, Aunt Liz was late. Roxy Marcoli checked her watch for the third time in the past five minutes and tried not to panic.
The older woman had never been late delivering the baked goods that were offered each day to the customers of the Dollhouse. She always arrived at six-thirty, a half hour before Roxy turned the closed sign to Open, signaling the beginning of another day at the restaurant.
It was now quarter till seven and still no sign of Aunt Liz. Roxy had already called her auntâs house twice, and there had been no answer. Sheâd also tried Lizâs cell phone, but it had gone directly to voice mail.
âMaybe sheâs held up in traffic,â Josephine Landers, Roxyâs manager, said as she checked the quiches that baked in the oven.
âYeah, because traffic jams are such an issue in Wolf Creek, Pennsylvania,â Roxy replied drily. She couldnât remember the last time sheâd heard of a traffic snarl in the relatively small tourist town twenty miles up the mountain from the bigger city of Hershey.
âYou know sheâd never answer her cell phone if she was driving. Sheâll probably be walking in here any minute now,â Josie said, obviously unconcerned about Liz Marcoliâs punctuality or lack thereof.
What worried Roxy was that her aunt Liz was the one person in the entire world sheâd always depended on, the one person who had always been there for her. She checked her watch once again. Almost seven. This was so out of character for Aunt Liz.
A thousand scenarios played out in Roxyâs head, one worse than the other. Maybe sheâd slipped and fallen in the shower. Or sheâd been in a car accident and was at the hospital. Half the time she forgot to carry her purse with her, so if she was in an accident and rendered unconscious, it was possible that nobody would know her identity.
Stop it, Roxy commanded herself. Stop thinking so negatively. Sheâd been told often enough by both of her sisters and her aunt that she was prone to always seeing the bad side of any situation.