The firefighter and the.., p.1

The Firefighter and the Single Mum, page 1

 

The Firefighter and the Single Mum
Select Voice:
Brian (uk)
Emma (uk)  
Amy (uk)
Eric (us)
Ivy (us)
Joey (us)
Salli (us)  
Justin (us)
Jennifer (us)  
Kimberly (us)  
Kendra (us)
Russell (au)
Nicole (au)


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

Larger Font   Reset Font Size   Smaller Font  
The Firefighter and the Single Mum


  When they finally had the fire under control he helped stow the gear, his gaze searching for Lindsey and little Josh. There was no way he was going to allow them to return to their place.

  “Lindsey?” He made his way over to where she and Josh both stood, looking a bit shell-shocked, their arms wrapped around each other for support. “I’ll take you over to my place for what’s left of the night, okay?”

  “A hotel is fine. We don’t need to impose.”

  “You’re not imposing.” Just once, he wished she’d simply give in and let him help. “You can stay with me for as long as you need to,” he said in a low tone.

  She was so beautiful, even with her long blond hair mussed and not a speck of make-up on her face. He had a hard time tearing his gaze from her profile.

  Knock it off, Monroe, he warned himself. Stop thinking of Lindsey as a woman you’re attracted to. He’d promised to take care of them. Lindsey needed a friend right now. A helping hand. A shoulder to lean on.

  Not a man who fantasized about being more.

  Dear Reader

  Isn’t it amazing to discover how Mills & Boon is celebrating its centennial birthday? One hundred years of publishing romance. I’m honoured to be writing for the Mills & Boon family, since I began reading Harlequin romances well over thirty years ago. As a teenager I found hope and comfort in romance, and even today, as a critical care nurse, I’m all too aware of the sadness and realism in the world. I very much prefer a happy ending, where strength and true love always prevail.

  I’m thrilled to be a part of making history with this book, THE FIREFIGHTER AND THE SINGLE MUM. This is the fourth book in the Monroe Family series. When firefighter Austin Monroe discovers his best friend’s widow Lindsey Winters and her son Josh have fallen on difficult times, he feels he must step in to help. Lindsey prefers to remain independent, but she can’t deny her son the male guiding hand he desperately needs. Austin has a reputation for being a playboy, but is it possible that Austin’s love ’em and leave ’em attitude hides a deep, unrequited love for Lindsey?

  I hope you enjoy Austin and Lindsey’s story. Thanks so much for choosing to celebrate one hundred years of romance with Mills & Boon.

  Sincerely

  Laura Iding

  THE FIREFIGHTER AND THE SINGLE MUM

  BY

  LAURA IDING

  Laura Iding loved reading as a child, and when she ran out of books she readily made up her own, completing a little detective mini-series when she was twelve. But, despite her aspirations for being an author, her parents insisted she look into a ‘real’ career. So the summer after she turned thirteen she volunteered as a Candy Striper and fell in love with nursing. Now, after twenty years of experience in trauma/critical care, she’s thrilled to combine her career and her hobby into one—writing Medical™ Romances for Mills & Boon. Laura lives in the northern part of the United States, and spends all her spare time with her two teenage kids (help!)—a daughter and a son—and her husband. Enjoy!

  Recent titles by the same author:

  BABY: FOUND AT CHRISTMAS

  BRIDE FOR A SINGLE DAD

  HIS PREGNANT NURSE

  THE DOCTOR’S CHRISTMAS PROPOSAL

  This book is dedicated to my friend and fellow author, Beth Watson. Thanks for always being there when I need someone to talk to.

  CONTENTS

  PROLOGUE

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

  CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN

  PROLOGUE

  “HEAD FOR THE RIVER, dammit. Run!”

  Austin Monroe could barely hear Sam’s voice over the roar of the wildfire bearing down on them. He didn’t need his buddy’s urging to keep him moving—the heat of the fire scorching his back was motivation enough. The wind had shifted, bringing the fire they’d been fighting straight toward them, breaking through the line. If not for Sam coming back to warn him, he would have been sunk.

  They still might die.

  Even as the thought formed, Austin caught sight of the river less than fifty yards ahead. Reaching the river before the fire caught up to them was their only chance of survival.

  A slim chance, if the severe drought hadn’t made the river too low.

  The heavy Kevlar suit he wore wasn’t enough to keep the force of the heat off him. He ignored the sweat rolling into his eyes beneath the helmet as he stayed focused on the river.

  He slipped, nearly fell, but Sam was right behind him, dragging him upright and pushing him forward. With a Herculean effort, he made his way down the bank to the water, jumping in with a feeling of relief, dousing his whole body as best he could in water that was only knee-high.

  It took him a minute to realize Sam hadn’t joined him in the river. He glanced back to see his partner using a drip torch to light a backfire on the grassy area surrounding the riverbank to protect them from a lethal burn-over.

  He pulled himself back out of the water to join Sam. They didn’t have much time as the wildfire bore down on them, moving with astronomical speed as it gobbled up the dry brush with voracious hunger.

  “Get into the river!” Sam shouted, lighting as many fires as he could with the drip torch. Austin had lost his equipment when the fire had changed direction, so he couldn’t do much to help.

  “No.” He wasn’t leaving his partner, the guy who’d come back for him, to face this alone. When the drip torch was empty, Sam tossed it into the smoldering grass fire. Austin grabbed Sam’s arm. “Let’s go. We have to get into the water.”

  This time Sam didn’t argue, but finally followed him back down the bank to the river. When Austin hit the water, he felt Sam fall heavily onto him from behind, pinning him down. Austin reached up and pulled Sam down into the water beside him.

  The backfire didn’t work as well as they’d hoped, and orange flames flickered dangerously close. Following Sam’s lead, Austin ripped off his helmet and took a big gulp of air, before submerging his whole head in the water. He sensed Sam did the same, although the smoke was so thick it was hard to see.

  Over and over again, he quickly lifted his head, gasped for what little oxygen was left in the air and then ducked his head beneath the water again.

  Finally the roar subsided, indicating the fire had burned down, the raging beast having moved on to better prey—thick brush lining the ridge to the west of them.

  “Sam?” Austin levered himself to his hands and knees, reaching for his friend. Sam’s smoke-blackened face peered up at him and his heart squeezed in his chest. Hadn’t Sam continued dunking his head beneath the water? “Are you all right?”

  Sam gave a tiny nod, but his breathing was harsh, labored. Austin reached for his radio, wondering just how much smoke had gotten into his buddy’s lungs. “Mayday, mayday. Firefighter with smoke inhalation is down in the Rock River, two miles east of the river’s bend. Need medic stat.”

  “Roger that. Medevac chopper on the way.”

  “Sam?” Panic clawed up his back as Sam began to cough, his body convulsing so hard he could barely take a breath. “Hang on, they’re coming for us, buddy, just hang on.”

  “Lindsey.” Sam reached up and grasped Austin’s jacket. “Take care of her for me. Take care of Lindsey and Josh.”

  Sam’s plea for his wife and child stabbed his heart. His gut clenched with fear. “Don’t worry about Lindsey and Josh. You’re gonna make it out of here to take care of them yourself.”

  “Too late,” Sam whispered between coughing fits. “Take care of them—promise me. They’ll need…Promise me…” His voice faded as another coughing fit seized him.

  “I promise.” Austin held his partner close, scanning the smoke-darkened sky. Where in the hell was that chopper?

  Sam stopped coughing, closed his eyes and slumped bonelessly in Austin’s arms. No. No! He stared down at his buddy, as the medevac chopper cleared the trees and headed for them, knowing with a sick certainty that Sam had been right.

  It was too late.

  CHAPTER ONE

  SMOKE. ACCOMPANIED by the wail of sirens.

  Lindsey Winters was used to the sirens—they blared past her house often in this part of the city—but it was the acrid smell of smoke that forced her to climb out of her sofa bed located in the center of her living room.

  A quick glance around showed nothing amiss. The living room and kitchen were essentially one room and she hadn’t left a candle burning, or any other obvious source of smoke. One nice thing about having a small house was that there weren’t too many places to look for a fire.

  She hastily pulled on a robe and headed down the hall to the single bedroom toward the back of the cottage, where her nine-year-old son slept. “Josh?”

  “Mom?” he said in a sleepy tone, having just woken up, too. “Do you smell smoke? I thought maybe I was dreaming about Dad.”

  “It’s not a dream, Josh.” Her heart squeezed for her son, who obviously missed his father. Sam had died only seven months ago, and so much had happened since then, not least of all the recent move to this house. She could understand why he’d made the connection. When her firefighter husband had been alive, he’d often come home reeking of smoke. It was the sa

me smell filling the air now. “Come here.” She reached out and gathered him in a one-armed hug. “Let’s see what’s going on.”

  In the living room, red and blue lights flashed brightly through the front window. Screaming fire trucks pulled up, too, blocking the end of their driveway. Pressing her nose against the glass, she peered out and saw firefighters and police gathering around the house next door, the Tollivers’ place. There hadn’t been time to get close to her neighbors, but she had briefly met single mom Anna Tolliver and her two girls, who were both a few years younger than Josh.

  “Wow,” Josh whispered beside her. Now that he realized their house wasn’t the one on fire, he relaxed a little. “I’ve never seen a fire this close.”

  “Me neither,” Lindsey admitted. As an ED nurse working in a small community hospital, she’d been exposed to the occasional burns patient, but nothing really serious. All the really serious cases had been airlifted to Los Angeles.

  She shivered, despite the warmth of the balmy California spring night.

  A firefighter dressed in full gear jogged across her front lawn, heading to her front door. She pulled back in surprise, and then opened the door before he had a chance to knock.

  “Lindsey?” Her husband’s best friend and fellow firefighter and paramedic, Austin Monroe, gaped at her in shock. “What in the devil are you doing here?”

  Great. Just what she needed. Not. She stifled a sigh and angled her chin, fervently wishing that out of all the firefighters in Sun Valley, Austin Monroe hadn’t been on duty tonight. “I live here.”

  “What? Since when?” he demanded. Then he gave an impatient shake of his head. “Never mind. Come on, we need you and Josh to evacuate the premises. The fire is too close and too far out of control to ensure your safety.”

  “Is there time for us to change our clothes?” she asked, rubbing one bare foot over the other.

  Austin frowned, glancing down at her bare toes and then at her son’s equally bare feet. “Two minutes. If you’re not ready by then, I’m coming in after you.”

  No need for threats—she believed him. Turning away from the door, she gave Josh a slight push. “Get dressed. Hurry.” As he disappeared down the hall, she grabbed the closest pair of jeans, a sweater, socks and comfortable running shoes she could find and ducked into the bathroom to change.

  In less than two minutes she met Josh and headed outside, resisting the urge to gather her meager yet precious belongings. Through the mass of people milling about she saw Anna Tolliver and her girls standing off to the side, surrounded by police. Thank heavens they were safe.

  Austin noticed them when they stepped out onto the porch and crossed over. He directed them to a spot safely beyond the perimeter of the fire. “I need both of you to stand back here, out of the way.”

  Again, she wasn’t going to argue. Austin had been her husband’s smoke jumping partner and he knew his way around fires, whether they were the domestic sort like at the Tollivers’ house or a thick, raging wildfire. Smoke jumpers were men who fought wildfires by jumping from planes into smoke-filled skies to help prevent the fire from spreading. Her husband and Austin had both trained as smoke jumpers. She’d thought they’d been nuts.

  Now she was grateful for Austin’s experience in fighting fires.

  From their safety zone Lindsey could see orange flames dancing out of the kitchen window of the Tollivers’ house. She swallowed hard when she realized how close the threat was to her cottage. Flames reached up, like gnarled fingers trying to grasp the edge of her roof. The postage-stamp-sized lots on which their cottages were built only gave a couple of feet of clearance between them.

  “Lindsey?” Austin lightly grasped her arm.

  She tore her gaze from the horrifying image of the flames leaping toward her home. “What?”

  “Don’t leave without me, OK? I’ll take care of you and Josh. Just wait for me.”

  Her throat was clogged with fear so she simply nodded. No matter how annoyed she may have been with him earlier, right now it was nice to know she wasn’t totally alone in the world. Austin may be a bit of an interfering control freak, but he was definitely a man of his word. Her gaze followed him as he turned and jogged back, taking his role in fighting the fire. She wanted to watch him work, but quickly lost him amidst the sea of firefighters, unable to distinguish him from the others beneath the heavy gear.

  “Mom?” Josh asked, in a tiny, scared voice. “Is our house gonna burn, too?”

  She clutched him close, wishing she could sound positive when she had a sinking feeling that things were about to go from bad to worse. After Sam had died, she’d discovered a mountain of debt. She’d been forced to sell the house, grasping the first meager offer that had come in, and had moved here, into this tiny one-bedroom cottage in a not-so-nice part of town.

  This probably wasn’t the time to admit she had absolutely no insurance. Heck, they’d only moved in two months ago. It had been hard enough to make sure there had been money for food and gas, much less for home owner’s insurance.

  “I hope not, Josh,” she said, watching the flames of her neighbor’s house dance closer. The firefighters aimed a wide, forceful stream of water directly toward the source of the fire, completely drenching her house in the process.

  She knew she should be glad they were all OK, but what would happen if their house did catch fire? Where would they go? Where would they live?

  She blinked away tears of useless self-pity. “I really hope not.”

  Still reeling from the shock of finding Lindsey and Josh in the tiny, cramped house on Puckett Street, Austin concentrated on fighting the fire. Thankfully, the occupants of the house had gotten out safely, but the fire, having somehow started in the electrical system inside the walls, had traveled along the electrical wires, engulfing the entire place before anyone had even realized what had happened.

  The house was a total loss. The goal now was to contain the fire, hopefully preventing it from spreading to the homes on either side.

  Particularly to Lindsey’s house.

  Damn, he wondered what in the heck had happened. Why on earth had she moved out of the nice place she’d lived in with Sam? Because of the memories? Or for financial reasons? As much as he’d tried to be there for Lindsey, especially during those first few weeks after Sam’s death, she’d resisted his support. In fact, they’d had a huge fight when he’d tried to give her some advice on how to handle Josh. She’d shouted at him to get a life of his own and to leave her alone.

  He’d backed off, giving her the space she’d needed. He hadn’t been to see her in five months. First he’d headed off to a smoke jumping tour, being dropped via parachute into the depths of the Oregon forest to fight a wildfire burning out of control, and then, when he’d gotten back, he’d gone home to visit his parents, haunted by memories of Sam the whole time he had been in Oregon.

  But he’d failed Sam again, because things were obviously worse for Lindsey than he’d realized. She’d kicked him out of her life once, but he shouldn’t have left. He’d assumed she had at least been happily settled in her home. He never wanted to hurt her, but this time he wasn’t leaving her alone until he knew she and Josh were safe and secure.

  And preferably not living in that death trap masquerading as a house.

  When they finally had the fire under control, he helped stow the gear, his gaze searching for Lindsey and Josh. He figured the police had gotten the Red Cross involved to help relocate the family that had just lost their home. There was no way he was going to allow Lindsey and Josh to return to their place either, not until he’d had the structure thoroughly checked out.

  Might be a good idea to check the electrical wiring in the house, too. He had a sneaking suspicion it wasn’t up to code, as the footprint of Lindsey’s house was exactly the same as the one that had gone up in flames. Just the thought of faulty wiring lining the walls made his blood run cold.

  “Lindsey?” He made his way over to where she and Josh both stood, looking a bit shocked, their arms wrapped around each other for support. “I’ll take you over to my place for what’s left of the night, OK?”

 

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
Add Fast Bookmark
Load Fast Bookmark
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Scroll Up
Turn Navi On
Scroll
Turn Navi On
183