His cheeks burned. She’d sacrificed her own feelings for her daughter. “It must have hurt you to have to do that.” She was stronger than any woman he’d ever known, and he vowed to spend the rest of his life being worthy of her, if only she’d let him.
“It almost killed me.”
Gideon’s calm demeanor belied his shattered inner feelings. He’d almost destroyed the two people he cared about most in this world. He held Lily’s face between his palms. Tears leaked down her cheeks. “It will never happen again, Lily. I promise you.” Lily was worth everything. He would live up to this promise, no matter what. From now on, his purpose was to never let her down again. No more looking back. No more fear. Just faith and love. “I love you and I trust you. Let me prove it to you.”
She searched his face and he stayed still, waiting for her to come to a decision. His stomach clenched, but he wouldn’t give way to fear. Instead, he tried to put all the love and trust he felt into his eyes, willing her to see it. Her green eyes were somber and his heart stuttered. But slowly, they lightened&helip;glowed, like emeralds. “I love you too.”
Warmth radiated throughout his body and joy bubbled in his chest. He was free. He pulled her toward him and kissed her lips, putting all his love and longing into it. “Can we start again?” Gideon asked when they pulled away.
“I can’t lose you twice.”
“You won’t. I’m yours forever,” he vowed. And this vow he planned to keep.
The End
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In the mood for another romance full of love, laughter and happily ever after? Check out an exclusive excerpt from ADDICTED TO LOVE, just ahead!
…and check out Jennifer Wilck's other contemporary romances for more love, laughter, and happily ever
Addicted To Love
Five Minutes To Love
In The Moment
ADDICTED TO LOVE
Book 1 of the Serendipity Series
Chapter One
It wasn’t the sound of a body hitting the floor that registered right away. The thump was in the periphery, a noise that stood out a little more than the background conversations floating around her as Hannah chatted with friends after the concert. It was the silence in the aftermath that drew her attention to the mass of people who moved toward the opposite end of the lobby in the Jewish Community Center of Manhattan.
Through a tangle of limbs, the men and women assisted a man who had fallen. Off to the side was a teenager, propelled out of the way by the ever-helpful gaggle, and who now looked as if she couldn’t decide whether to dive back into the fray or melt into the ground.
Hannah’s heart squeezed. She remembered too well what it was like to be a teenager. With a half-smile, the kind you give to a kindred soul, she walked toward her. “Everything okay?”
The girl kept her gaze focused on the gray-haired man being helped to his feet. “Yeah, the crowd pushed and someone backed into him and his knee buckled and…I tried to help, but they sort of took over.”
She definitely had the “melt-into-the-ground” look.
“You know, if you kind of look through all of them, put your shoulders back and position your lips into a semblance of a smile, no one will notice how embarrassed you are,” Hannah said.
The teen whipped around, straight brown hair swinging. She looked at her askance. “Excuse me?”
“Hi, I’m Hannah.” She held out her hand. After a couple of seconds the teen took it. “Growing up with three older brothers who took great pleasure in embarrassing me, I thought I’d pass along a little of the wisdom I’ve accumulated.” She looked at the teen’s red cheeks and shook her head. “I don’t have any suggestions for how to stop a blush, though. Wish I did, because it drives me crazy even today.”
The teen drew her hands to her cheeks and closed her brown eyes for a moment. “Great, just great.”
“Did you like the concert?”
The girl shrugged. “The guys were hot.”
Hannah laughed. “I know, right? Especially the one with the deep voice.”
Her face lit up. “Love him! Oh, I’m Tess, by the way. Sorry, my dad would kill me for my lack of manners.”
“Your dad?”
Tess took a step toward the same gray-haired man who now limped over to them, leaning heavily on his cane. “Are you okay?”
Hannah did a double-take. When she’d seen him fall, she’d assumed by his cane and his gray hair he was elderly. Now, she vowed to get her sight checked. Tomorrow. Sure, his salt and pepper hair fooled her from a distance, but it was obvious he was one of those prematurely gray people, because his face was unlined, his eyes a bright piercing blue beneath black brows, his jaw square and his posture straight and sure, despite his limp. His hand, which grasped his cane, was powerful and not marked with age spots. He was no elderly grandpa. He was gorgeous.
The man gave a shrug. “My pride is hurt more than anything else.” He touched her shoulder. “Sorry if I embarrassed you.” He turned his gaze to Hannah and stiffened, as if he hadn’t realized she was there. “Do you two know each other?”
The hated blush heated Hannah’s cheeks and neck. “Actually, we just met. I’m Hannah Cohen. Nice to meet you and Tess.”
“Dan Rothberg.”
She held out her hand. His handshake was firm and warm. This close to him, she could smell his spicy aftershave. It reminded her of the clove-filled spice box they passed around during Havdallah, which signaled the end of Shabbat and the start of the new week. She’d always loved the scent.
He frowned as he looked between her and his daughter, as if he were uncomfortable with them talking. Wasn’t the teen a little old for “stranger danger?”
“Did you enjoy the concert?” Hannah asked, hoping to reassure him she was harmless.
He started to respond, but was interrupted. “Dad, can we go?”
“Sorry,” he said to Hannah. “Nice to meet you.” Turning toward Tess, he nodded. “Yes, Tess, we can go.”
The two of them left and she wondered yet again how she mistook him for an old man. With a shake of her head, she returned to her book club friends.
“Do you know him?” Karen, her grandmother’s best friend and one of the women in the book club, asked as she approached. “I’ve seen him and his daughter around, but he doesn’t socialize. In fact, this is the first time I’ve seen him speak to anyone.” She lowered her voice. “I think you two would be perfect together.”
Hannah cringed inside. All she needed was for Karen Black, the “matchmaker,” to turn her focus on her. She raised her voice and said to the group, “Is everyone coming to our apartment next week for book club?”
****
Dan and Tess walked in silence down the Hoboken street toward home. He glanced at his daughter, but she was immersed in her phone. Her hair formed a curtain and prevented him from seeing her face.
“I wish you wouldn’t walk and text. You’ll hurt yourself, or someone else.”
“I’m fine, Dad.”
He held his tongue, though he wanted to say more, or at least comment on the tone in her voice. Her fifteen-year-old moods switched fast enough to make him dizzy and he didn’t feel like dealing with them. Maybe the best way for her to learn was to have something happen. Although with the unevenness of the sidewalk and the ambivalence of the other pedestrians, he was the one more likely to land on his ass. He gritted his teeth at the throbbing in his knee.
Getting knocked over in the crowd made the pain worse, and he looked forward to returning home and putting his feet up. It was an unfortunate end to an otherwise good evening. He’d enjoyed the concert more than he expected. The a cappella group had great voices and a terrific rhythm. He’d even tapped his feet and sung along on occasion. The beat-box rhythm, soulful harmony and Jewish music as varied as hip-hop and
rock was a pleasant surprise.
As they waited for the light to change, the woman he’d met—Hannah, he thought her name was—flashed through his mind, and once again, he frowned. She’d managed to make Tess smile. Maybe it was his mood Tess fought against, or maybe it was her age, but her smiles were few and far between.
Speaking of smiles, Hannah’s was beautiful.
“Dad, Lexi wants to know if I can hang out with her tonight. Can I?”
He blinked as they approached the front of their apartment building. “Will her parents be home?”
She rolled her eyes as her thumbs moved at lightning speed on the phone keyboard. “Yeah, they are.”
“Okay, but I want you home by nine.”
“So early?” She widened her brown eyes and he melted, transported to when she was a toddler and thought he could do no wrong.
“Okay, ten. But no later.”
“Thanks.” She gave him a brief hug. Once inside, she ran past the doorman to the elevator.
Dan followed at a slower pace. Teenagers. They rode the elevator in silence to the third floor. Tess ran to the left toward Lexi’s apartment, while Dan headed right toward their own. He grunted to himself as he unlocked the door, tossing his keys on the marble- topped hall table.
His leg hurt like a sonofabitch. He paused in the doorway of the bathroom. Staring at the medicine cabinet, he clenched his jaw, counted to ten, turned and went into the kitchen for a bag of ice. Before he could change his mind, he shuffled into the office. With a sigh, he sat at the table where his latest jigsaw puzzle, his go-to pain distraction, was spread out. Pulling over an extra chair, he lifted his leg onto it. With one hand, he held the bag of ice on his knee; with the other he played with the pieces. Out of five thousand pieces, he’d completed the outer frame, which left a ridiculous amount for the middle. He could look at the picture on the front of the box, but in his mind, that was cheating. Taking the easy way out always was. He’d done it before and look what happened. He’d never put his daughter at risk again.
With a shake of his head to clear his mind, Dan focused on the puzzle. An under-the-sea scene, with multicolored fish and sea turtles and plants, the puzzle design was complicated and required concentration in order to match the exact shades of color. Although more old-fashioned than phone apps or video games, it was the perfect distraction to keep his focus off the pain. Out of the corner of his eye, a reddish brown puzzle piece caught his eye, and a vision of Hannah floated through his mind. The woman’s hair was the exact color of the puzzle piece. He frowned. Woman? She was barely more than a girl and much too young for him to spare a thought for her. He winced as a shaft of pain sliced through his leg. Focus on the puzzle. Taking a deep breath, he removed all other thoughts from his mind.
The front door slid open, the click of the lock announcing Tess’ return.
“Hey, you’re home early,” he said as she joined him in his home office. “Everything okay?”
She frowned. “Uh, no, it’s ten o’clock, like you said. I’m going to bed. Good night.”
He looked at the clock. Two hours had passed without him noticing it. “Whoa. Good night, Tess. I love you!”
“I love you too, Daddy.”
As he went to his room, he marveled once more at the carousel ride that was his daughter.
****
The next day, Hannah walked during her lunch hour. Her heels clicked along the sidewalk in time to her breathing as she tried to blow off steam. The autumn breeze cooled her neck and temper, allowing her to take in the scenery. It was a beautiful autumn day in New York City. Skyscrapers stood in stark relief against the bright blue sky. The sun glinted off the windows, reminding her of a mirror ball. She would have enjoyed her walk more, but other things occupied her mind. Two things, in fact.
Why did clients have to be so difficult? She fisted her hands at her sides as she thought about their unreasonable demands. Pharmaceuticals made her yawn, but if she wanted a promotion and to develop her own client roster, she needed to succeed with what she was given. It was the only way to get a raise and be able to support her grandmother. She owed her.
Hannah had spent all morning trying to create an interesting angle to highlight her client’s new CEO appointment. There wasn’t one, and none of the large media outlets were biting. Even if she’d been able to fake interest in the subject, there was nothing earthshattering about a new executive in a corner office. Her boss put Hannah in charge of crafting a successful news hook to be able to pitch the story. And Hannah was stumped.
As if that wasn’t enough to fill her stomach with acid, there was Adam. He had the timing of a third-string, second-rate quarterback. How had she ever thought he was worth dating? And in all seriousness, she was never, ever answering her phone without checking caller ID. Remembering his smarmy voice set her teeth on edge.
What started out as a fun set-up with the roommate of her best friend’s boyfriend had turned into anything but. Sure, he was funny and sexy with a great job at his father’s law firm in New Jersey. But he was all flash and about as dependable as catching a taxi in the rain. He’d cancel plans last minute or forget they’d made them in the first place. Even now, a year later, she could taste her disappointment when he once again stood her up. And his attention span? A toddler possessed a longer one. She’d known from the start their relationship was casual. But as time went on, she discovered she wanted someone who understood her commitment to her family. She wanted more than a shallow hookup.
Hannah broke it off with him, and he’d seemed to take it in stride. Until today, when he called out of the blue looking for a “good time,” as he put it. In other words, he was in between girlfriends and horny. Lovely. Even now, thinking about what he’d said on the phone made her heart race, and not in a good way. Thanks to him, her concentration, along with the glimmer of an idea, evaporated.
Since her appetite disappeared as soon as he said, “Hey, babe,” she walked during her lunch hour, trying to calm down and remember what she’d planned to suggest as a media hook. Her stomach had other ideas, though, and growled as she smelled the hotdog vendor on the corner. No matter how gross they were, something about those dirty water dogs appealed to her. She ordered one with mustard and a diet soda. When the vendor collected the money and passed over the food, she turned around and smacked into a hard body behind her.
“Oh, I’m so sor—”
It was the silver-haired guy from the night before. What was his name? Dan. “Hi,” she said. His hand clasped her elbow to steady her as he balanced with his cane.
“Sorry, I didn’t know you were behind me.”
“Strange coincidence, isn’t it? No damage done, no apology necessary.”
He backed away with a hitch in his step, giving her room to move. But his hand was still on her elbow and not wanting to upset his balance, she followed, engaging in a silent dance routine. Meanwhile, others in line backed away. He frowned, took another step back and again she followed. His grip was firm, warm, and made the little hairs on her arm stand on end. A part of her didn’t want him to let go. However, the practical side of her realized if he didn’t do it soon, they would block the vendor or land on the ground. She looked pointedly at her arm and his gaze followed. His eyes crinkled, his mouth curved in a smile as he huffed a breath and let go of her arm.
“Oh, so that’s how you do it,” he said. “Next time I’ll know better. Kind of weird, though, running into you here. Or maybe not weird, but…”
She laughed. He was awkward, charming, and chatty, which was a surprise after his aloofness yesterday.
“No worries, although maybe we should move out of the way.” Hannah tossed a glance over her shoulder at the hotdog cart. “We’re blocking the vendor from his customers. Or did you want to order a hotdog?”
“Yeah, I did. Wait a sec?”
“Sure.” She moved to the side, surprised he didn’t give her the brush-off, since yesterday he seemed eager to leave.
Moments later, he
joined her. “I didn’t mean weird before.”
His body gave off warmth and an invisible string pulled her closer. “Yes, you did, but I understand. It is kind of weird.”
His shoulders relaxed. “I also owe you an apology. You were great with Tess, somehow making her smile when I never seem to be able to, and I was surprised. I never properly thanked you.”
“You’re welcome. She’s lovely. I enjoyed talking with her.”
He tilted his head as if trying to translate what she said. His gaze compelled her to look, and she couldn’t turn away. “Not many people say that about teenagers. Do you have any?”
“No, but I was one. And I have three older brothers, two of whom have children, and one of my nieces will turn thirteen this year, so…”
“So you’re well prepared. I thought so when she talked to you rather than played with her phone or ran away.”
Hannah raised her eyebrows. “I doubt she would have run away without knowing if you were okay.”
He shifted from one foot to the other, looking uncomfortable. Hannah had an urge to comfort him.
“True.” He cleared his throat. “Do you work near here?”
She looked around. Her thoughts had distracted her, and she’d walked much farther than she intended, almost ten blocks.
“Actually, no, I don’t. I walked to distract myself and evidently, I did a good job.”
They approached an empty bench and Hannah sat. “You can join me if you like.” A part of her hoped he’d stay. This was turning into the best part of the day, and she didn’t want it to end too soon, not when she was getting to know him. With her luck, though, he would grab a quick bite to eat and return to work.
“Sure.” When he lowered himself onto the bench, she warmed at his desire to stay a little longer. He took a bite of his hotdog with mustard and relish, resting his cane against his leg. She wondered if he’d been recently injured.
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