Rescue and Redemption: Park City Firefighter Romance

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Rescue and Redemption: Park City Firefighter Romance Page 17

by Daniel Banner


  “Poppy and Slade aren’t doing too bad, it looks like,” said Mercy.

  “Not at all,” said JFK. “I’ve been teasing him since they got married for moving his little heiress into his dumpy apartment. It turns out they’ve been saving and waiting. This place came up as a short sell and they were ready to pounce. I don’t know how much they put down, but it was more than twenty percent.”

  “Impressive,” said Mercy. “I was proud of myself because I can buy groceries now without having to dig through couch cushions.”

  “Been there,” said JFK. “And as much as I want to, I can’t even make fun of the Powerses for being big nerds. I signed up for that financial class that Powers won’t shut up about.”

  “Poppy’s a disciple too,” said Mercy. She’d been curious, but didn’t have the disposable income to drop on a class about something she didn’t have.

  “I went ahead and registered us both,” said JFK looking at her from the corner of his eye. “I was weak and I gave in to peer pressure.”

  “I’m not buying it, JFK. Peer pressure has the opposite effect on you.”

  “Okay then,” his eyes got really shifty. Whatever came next was going to be an obvious lie. “They gave me two for one, and Quad C and Emily signed up with their wives, so I had no one to go with.”

  “Lie,” she said, and he grunted, knowing he was caught. “And stop calling Uncle Dom Emily’s wife.” She stared at him, but his smirk said he wasn’t about to stop doing that. “For two months we’ve been inseparable, and still you can’t just come out and tell me what’s on your mind.”

  “Okay, I can do this.” JFK slapped one cheek repeatedly, psyching himself up. “I think it’s a worthwhile class. And I think I’m going to be spending a lot of time with you for a long time to come.”

  “Oh, you do?” Mercy decided to keep pushing him. “What makes you think that?”

  “Uh, for starters, how you’re always checking me out and making these lovesick puppy eyes at me.”

  “Lovesick puppy? I don’t think I’ve ever—”

  “Or, I don’t know, maybe it’s the way you’re always telling everyone in the world that I’m the greatest of all time ever and you don’t know what you’d do without me.”

  The greatest of all time ever? While that was true, she doubted she’d ever used those words before. And for the most part she respected everyone’s right to not hear her gush about her amazing boyfriend.

  “And what about the standing or sitting as close as possible to me wherever we go.”

  Okay, so that’s how it was? Mercy would show him sitting as close as possible. She undid her seatbelt and slid back to the center seat. “Really? What else?”

  His eyes went back and forth between Mercy and the road and his confident answers wavered momentarily. “You, uh, can’t keep your hands off me, you know?”

  She ran her hand over his chest, feeling his meaty pecs flex. “I know, right? Can you blame me?”

  “And then, uh,” JFK took a breath and blew it out, “and then, don’t even get me started on the kissing. It’s like my face is a magnet and your lips are iron shavings.”

  Mercy instantly attached her lips to the side of his face. With fake effort she pulled them off, only to have them reattach instantly higher up on his cheek. She repeated it half a dozen times, leaving the right side of his face covered in lipstick.

  JFK tried to lean out of her reach. “Hey now, what was it you said earlier about not making us crash?”

  “I just can’t help it.” She laid another one on him. “Stop being so irresistible.” Again and again she kissed him.

  JFK pulled the truck to the side of the road and turned his face to meet her full on. This time her lips landed on his and he kissed her right back. She was no longer in control of the contact or the kiss. His powerful lips had taken over, and all she could do was ride the wave. JFK somehow had the power to make her body tingle all the way down into her toes. Then he slipped one hand behind her neck and put the other on her side and she was really and truly lost.

  But this time, she didn’t want to be found.

  A horn blared and they both shot up, wide eyed and out of breath.

  Uncle Dom and Emily had pulled up beside them in his fancy Tesla. Mercy saw that they were all in a pull-out with a nice view of Park City. The windows went down in both vehicles.

  “I told Dom to let me watch the show,” said Emily. “He said it’d be different if JFK was trying to swallow my niece’s tongue.”

  That was quite the exaggeration. Mercy and JFK had had some intense make-out sessions, but this wasn’t one of the super hot ones.

  JFK responded, “Sounds like the romance is fading over there if you’ve got to sneak up on us in your fancy spy car for your kicks.”

  “Don’t worry about us,” said Emily. She shared a look with her fiancé that was sweet and a little bit spicy. “And we could have snuck up on you two on a Harley with a broken muffler. I only interrupted because I didn’t want you to miss the party entirely.”

  Uncle Dom added, “And I didn’t think this was an appropriate time or place for my next great nephew or niece to be conceived.”

  “You,” said JFK, “don’t get any input on that. And why would I go hang out with you people when I could stay here and be alone with Mercy?”

  “We’ll see you there,” said Emily. She rolled up her window and the Tesla flew off down the road.

  JFK looked Mercy in the eyes and said, “As much as I’d like to get back to where we were before that rude interruption, punctuality is part of manners, and if anyone is a manners Nazi, it’s me.”

  “It’s a double-edged sword,” said Mercy, settling back down to her side of the truck.

  He put the truck in gear and pulled back onto the road. “Can I ask you a serious question?”

  Mercy no longer got nervous when he said that. They’d gone back and forth with it enough to know that it didn’t necessarily mean there was something wrong with their relationship. “Yeah, I think it’s your turn.”

  “I’m going to change my name again. For good. Any thoughts?”

  “Not back to Sue, I assume?”

  “Ha. No. If I was smart I wouldn’t have kept Amos when I dumped that gem.”

  What a cool opportunity for him to move past so much of his childhood trauma. “I love the idea! You can be whatever you want to be. Whoever you want to be. I mean, obviously you’ve already proved that. Look how much you’ve changed.”

  “Yeah, well.” He squirmed under the praise again. “I don’t know what to choose. Nobody just picks their own name.”

  “That’s why it’s so awesome. You’re dumping the scripts that were written for you and society can just deal with it.”

  “So what do you think? Any ideas? I thought about JFK, but it’s not even a name. It doesn’t sound right. I don’t have to decide tonight, but I want to start figuring it out.”

  “Hm. You going for funny? Strong? Intelligent?”

  “Not sure,” said JFK. “I kind of like what you said about burning the old script of my life.”

  “So, inspirational,” said Mercy. “Even if it’s not necessarily inspirational to other people, something that inspires you. Who’s your hero?”

  Immediately, he said, “I don’t want to be a hero. I just want—I’ve got it. What do you think of Robert?”

  “Oh, it’s perfect,” said Mercy. “I really can have a ‘my Robert’ just like Mrs. Walker does.”

  “Robert Baker.”

  “Robert Baker,” repeated Mercy. “It’s a winner. Middle name?”

  “We’ll see. Maybe I’ll go with Tarzan.”

  He’d had a lot of fun with that one over the months. So had Mercy, imagining him shirtless swinging around on vines with her in one arm.

  They’d finally reached the upscale, gated neighborhood where Poppy and Slade had moved. The guard at the gate checked his list, then let them in. The second house on the right had a handful of cars in front o
f it, including Uncle Dom’s shiny blue Tesla.

  “That’s their starter home?” asked Mercy. It was absolutely gorgeous. Not as big as some of the other houses on the block, but just so beautiful. Mercy didn’t know architecture, but the house had an old-fashioned look to it. One of the little towers in the corner had a round princess peak to it.

  “Compared to Daddy Mercier’s mansion, it’s a shack. But he swears they’ll pay it off in ten years.” JFK, Tarzan, Iron Chef, Robert—whatever her amazing boyfriend’s name was—pulled up and parked.

  “It’s got to be a million-dollar house,” said Mercy.

  “Million point five,” said JFK. “Powers wouldn’t tell us so we did some research and found out.”

  “I had no idea firefighters made so much,” said Mercy. “Guess I picked right after all.”

  JFK chuckled. “His grant-consulting business brings in three or four times what firefighting does. Anyway, I gotta get outta this coat. Don’t touch that door, okay?”

  “I wouldn’t dream of it. Someone messed up my makeup, so I need to touch it up.”

  As Mercy got her makeup out, JFK unbuttoned his chef coat. She was halfway done with her upper lip when he pulled his coat off and she caught a glimpse of his chest and arms fighting against his tight undershirt. Smiling because she had been the one to pick out those too-tight shirts, she stared.

  “Hey,” she told him, “just because I came close to making you crash doesn’t mean you can make me wreck my lipstick with that kind of distraction.”

  “Make yourself up at your own risk.” He flexed his nearest bicep and Mercy had to reach out and grab it. Even with both hands she couldn’t wrap all the way around it. He didn’t have the cut physique of the calendar boys, just huge muscles that could probably lift a car if he wanted. Man, oh man, was he irresistible!

  “It’s like you’re packing boulders under your skin,” she said, giving him one last squeeze. If she didn’t let him go now, she might start kissing him again and this time they might not make it to the party at all.

  He pulled on a grey button up shirt, and Mercy finished with her lipstick. Then he climbed out of the truck and walked around to her side. After what they’d been through on their first date, she didn’t think she’d ever take that simple act for granted.

  Mercy was perfectly capable of climbing out of the truck herself, but she enjoyed leaning on his strong arm to climb down. The transition to holding hands as they walked up to the house was as natural as everything else he did to treat her right.

  Exterior lighting showed off every angle of the house as they walked up to it. Mercy said, “It’s no yak-hair cenotaph, but at least I’m with my Robert.”

  “I’m saving the yak-hair date for when I propose,” he said. “Too bad Two Hearts doesn’t still have that yak or we could make it really authentic.”

  The thought of being married to him made her heart race. Just walking hand-in-hand was so satisfying. For 730 days she’d struggled with sobriety, then this guy came along and except for a couple hiccups at the beginning, the support and love she’d received from him had made the last 50 days or so a cakewalk.

  And while she knew he wanted much more than just to kiss and hold hands—they’d talked about it—not once had he pushed her to be more intimate than they’d agreed on. Talking to pretty much everyone who knew him pre-Mercy, she’d put together an image of a guy who was coarse and crude and didn’t understand the meaning of the word propriety. She believed people could and did change, but he’d taken it to a whole new level and he’d done it for her. Because she was worth it.

  No, she didn’t need anything artificial to make her feel good about herself or to make it through a hard day.

  “Emily will have already told them she busted us,” said JFK. “So be ready for some comments.”

  “I hope they do push me,” said Mercy with a smile. “My social inhibitions are way more lax than any of theirs. If they want uncomfortable, I’ll show ‘em exactly what we were doing.”

  “I am so in love with you right now.”

  “We’re perfect together,” agreed Mercy, leaning into his arm even harder.

  “Never in a million years did I think I’d be perfect with anyone, much less someone like you. I keep expecting to wake up dreaming.”

  Mercy pulled up in front of him and put her arms around his neck. “Do we have to go in and be on time?”

  JFK rolled his eyes. “To a party whose purpose is because someone moved out of a hole apartment? Just give me an excuse to show up an hour from now.”

  Mercy planted a kiss on his lips, which brought his thick arms around her.

  “That’ll do,” said JFK, resting his forehead against hers. “C’mon.” He took her hand and started running back to the truck.

  “What happened to manners and punctuality and all that?”

  Pulling her door open, JFK gave her a wicked smile. “What can I say? I’m kind of a bad boy.”

  Mercy climbed in, licking her lips and loving the idea of being an hour late.

  “My Robert,” she said, watching him walk confidently around the front of the truck.

  Oh how she planned to say that for years and years to come.

  The End

  About the Author

  This is Daniel Banner’s third book in the Park City Firefighter Romance series, but not his last. For over 15 years he has worked as a fireman and paramedic, collecting experiences by day and making up stories by nights, and sometimes vice versa. For Daniel, writing is an escape from the traumatic days, and a celebration of the triumphant days.

  If you sign up for his bi-monthly newsletter—in which he shares real thoughts on writing, firefighting, and life—you can get Two Hearts Rescue for free and get inside info on sales and new releases. If you already own Two Hearts Rescue, you can get a hearty thanks.

  Thanks! Daniel loves his readers!

  www.dcolemanbooks.com/banner

  facebook.com/authordanielbanner

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  playlist

  Once upon a Dream Lana Del Ray

  Kryptonite – Three Doors Down

  Believer – Imagine Dragons

  All These Things that I’ve Done – The Killers

  Reason - Hoobastank

  Running to Stand Still – U2

  I Am – AWOLNation

  I’m Shakin’ Jack White

 

 

 


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