Total pages in book: 69
Estimated words: 69537 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 348(@200wpm)___ 278(@250wpm)___ 232(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 69537 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 348(@200wpm)___ 278(@250wpm)___ 232(@300wpm)
His one, however, had a fiancé. And she was rich. She also lived out of state.
So what other option did he have but to let her go?
Years later, he sees her again at her worst.
Her husband-to-be has stranded her on a hiking trail with a head wound, convinced she’s faking her blindness.
Garrett takes one look at the injured Bindi Howe and knows there’s no way she’s faking it.
Rushing her to the hospital, he gets her there just in time to save her life.
During the craziness, Garrett has no clue it’s her—his one.
He leaves her there with her family and goes back home to his lonely life.
Only fate intervenes for him a third time, and it’s then that Garrett decides that he’s going to go for it.
But, like always, life intervenes, and he’s forced to leave her behind once again to keep her safe.
As luck would have it, fate gives him one last shot, and brings them together one last time, and Garrett refuses to let her go, despite Bindi’s fiancé coming back begging for a second chance.
*************FULL BOOK START HERE*************
Part One
My flabber gets gasted daily.
—Garrett to Gable
GARRETT
2 1/2 years ago
I spotted her from across the hotel lobby.
She was following a man in a business suit, trying in vain to keep up with his quick feet while also lugging two huge suitcases behind her.
She was beautiful.
Beyond beautiful.
She wasn’t tall, but she wasn’t short. She was perfectly in the middle at around five-three or four. She had a slim, wild beauty about her. Her dark brown, almost black, hair was a riot of curls, and every few seconds, she would tuck that wild hair behind her ear to keep it out of her face. But it was a futile effort.
Nothing she could do could tame those wild curls, especially in the Texas heat.
She was wearing a black slip of a dress that hugged each of her curves, and boy, did she have a lot of them. Perfectly shaped hips, slightly rounded belly, a small handful of breasts.
Her olive skin tone was beautiful against the shiny black material of her dress.
But it was her face that held me the most captivated.
She had a smattering of freckles over her cheeks and nose, plump lips that begged for a kiss, and straight white teeth.
She wasn’t wearing a stitch of makeup, either.
At least, not that I could tell.
Her eyes, though.
Her eyelashes were long and probably didn’t need the mascara to help their length. And the dark blue irises reminded me of a lake my family liked to hike to when we had a spare two weeks to play with. Not quite green, not quite blue, but a striking combination of both.
It was like a shock straight to the heart when she looked over and our eyes met.
She smiled softly and dipped her chin, causing my stomach to flutter.
Our eyes held for the longest of times until we were rudely interrupted.
“Would you fucking hurry up, Lea? Jesus.”
The woman I’d been staring at finally looked away, and I felt like I’d lost something important.
Her shoulders slumped, and she hurried, despite the high heels she was wearing that looked like she wasn’t used to wearing them.
Lea. She didn’t look like a Lea to me.
And the tone of the woman’s voice who’d called out to her made me want to snap.
My head turned to face the front of the hotel lobby to find four people—I’d, of course, spotted their pompous asses as soon as they’d arrived down from the elevator—dressed much the same as the man that was in the business suit with the knockout, waiting at the door with harried looks on their faces.
They looked like they bathed in their money.
Jerks.
“I’m sorry.” The woman’s voice was soft, almost hesitant as if she didn’t want to piss these people off.
“Sorry we were late,” the asshole next to her glared. “Someone couldn’t find her shoes.”
The five assholes started walking toward the door, leaving the woman with the shorter legs behind.
The woman sighed. “It’s not like I was the one that packed them, Joseph.”
The “Joseph” imbecile didn’t hear her, luckily.
I would’ve had to hate to blow my cover because this piece of shit rounded on her.
The group left, and I watched them walk to a limo that was outside waiting for them.
I hated watching the woman go.
She was by far the most beautiful creature I’d ever laid eyes on.
When I finally pulled my gaze away from the window, I nearly jolted in surprise.
Because when I looked across the lobby, the woman that I was expecting was walking with purpose to a maid in the corner that I hadn’t seen until now.
She was wearing her police uniform.
Her hair was in a fancy updo that made her look hard and unyielding.
They spoke in the corner of the lobby, and the maid slipped her a key card.
I pulled my phone out of my pocket and recorded the entire thing.
Once the maid disappeared around the corner, I got up and put the phone to my ear.
The phone rang twice before my dad, the chief of police for the Dallas Police Department, answered. “She was given a key card.”
“Make the approach,” my father said. “Be careful.”
He hung up, and I got up with Boss, my K-9 partner, and said, “Let’s go, boy.”
Day 98 without sex. I slammed on my brakes just so I could feel my seat belt choke me.
—Bindi to her mother
BINDI
1 ½ years ago
“Come on, babe.” My fiancé rolled his eyes at me. “Just come. It’ll be fun.”
I wasn’t sure how it could be fun, considering he knew I hated hiking.
Well, let me rephrase. I didn’t hate hiking. I hated hiking with his family.
Why did I hate hiking with his family?
Because they were all douchebags.
I’d never been a hiker before I met them.
Coming from a blue-collar family, we didn’t have the money to just up and go to the mountains anytime we damn well pleased.