A Strong-Willed Heart
Trauma nurse Kate Dalton can handle any challengeâexcept love. The combat veteran dreams of settling down, but heartbreak is one risk she wonât take. Then a chance encounter opens her heart to a masked strangerâ¦who might not be a stranger after all! Caleb Landis, the army medic behind the disguise, has always admired Kate, even though she only saw him as her best friendâs brother. What will it take for Kate to discard her fears and discover the man sheâs always hoped to unmask?
Eagle Point Emergency: Saving livesâand losing their heartsâin a small Illinois town
âGo home, Landis. Thatâs an order.â
âWeâre not at work, Kate. You canât boss me around.â
âWatch me.â
A muscle clicked in his jaw. âDonât shut me out.â
âIf you wonât leave, I will.â She pushed past him.
His arm sprang out to stop her. When she tried to go around it, he pulled her in, wrapping his arm around her. Her back rested snugly against his chest and his chin braced the top of her head. âKate, listen a minute. I canââ
âNo, you canât. You canât do anything to help me. You canât fix it. Now let me go!â
With equal reluctance and frustration, he did. She stared him down. âDonât ever do that again.â
He marched off, leaving her confused and upset. She had wanted him to leave her alone, so why did she ache to rush back into his arms and stay there forever?
She didnât need this, this growing dependency on people.
Especially not him.
CHERYL WYATT
An R.N. turned stay-at-home mom and wife, Cheryl delights in the stolen moments God gives her to write action- and faith-driven romance. She stays active in her church and in her laundry room. Sheâs convinced that having been born on a naval base on Valentineâs Day, she was destined to write military romance. A native of San Diego, California, Cheryl currently resides in beautiful, rustic southern Illinois, but she has also enjoyed living in New Mexico and Okla-homa. Cheryl loves hearing from readers. You are invited to contact her at [email protected] or P.O. Box 2955, Carbondale, IL 62902-2955. Visit her on the web at www.CherylWyatt.com and sign up for her newsletter if youâd like updates on new releases, events and other fun stuff.
Every good and perfect gift is from above,
coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows.
âJames 1:17
Dedication:
To Granny Nellie. There is no one else like you and I love you with my whole heart. You are a one-of-a-kind inspiration. Itâs easy to see why so many people
look to you, and up to you.
Acknowledgments:
My Facebook Reader Brigade, thank you for input
on this story. You made it an incredible joy to write. I especially loved your ideas romanticizing the Golden Terrace. Readers rock!
Cara Putman and Sally Shupe, thank you for beta reading this book. I love and appreciate you and your eagle-eye editing. Your friendship is a blessing.
Elizabeth Mazer, what can I say? You are an editorial whiz and I feel fortunate to work with you and hear your fun ideas. Your revision notes make me cackle, grin and best of all, strive to grow. Thank you for putting up with my mischievous humor, âlyâ adverb addiction, my tendency to make up nonexistent words, and for enduring my comma confusion. I would cringe if one of my books ever hit a shelf without first being sifted by editorial brilliance. Thankful for you.
Kristi Alexander, you are my hero(ine) for offering
the idea to use Lois and Clarkâs Dean Cain as inspiration for Caleb. I canât wait to read acknowledgments in your books. Believe.
Andie and Aaron Grube, your beautiful masquerade wedding inspired the theme in this book.
Chapter One
Decorated military veteran turned civilian trauma nurse Kate Dalton was known for keeping a cool head under fire. But sheâd never faced anything like this.
Here she was, back in the United States, biting back bile and terror as strong as any sheâd experienced overseas. When she was in a combat situation, she was braced and prepared for things to go wrong. Here at home, her guard was down. Ten minutes earlier, sheâd been enjoying the reception at her friendsâ masquerade-themed marriage ball. But then the text message arrived.
Phone clutched like a pinless grenade, Kate strode from the wedding reception room to the nearest exit. There. Patio. Best way out. If she could get there before hurling blissfully consumed cake.
Regal-hued LED lights danced over her sapphire costume and skin tanned by a three-year deployment under Middle Eastern sun. She probably looked strikingâif you didnât notice the tension in her shoulders or the frown on her face.
âBreathe, Dalton, thatâs an order. You canât fall apart. Especially not where everyone you know can see you. You donât break down. You donât give in to fear. Thatâs not who you are.â