
Everyone needs a little help
Rescuing people is his job… But the one person
pararescue jumper Chance Garrison can't seem to help is his
own ailing father, who refuses his much-needed physical
rehabilitation. That is, until Chance hires unconventional
occupational therapist Chloe Callet. To his surprise, Chloe
and her sweet black Lab, Midnight, work wonders. And not
only on the elder Garrison. Chance just may have met the
woman who can get through his own toughened exterior. Can he
persuade the lovely Chloe to take a chance—on him?
Excerpt "Talk about unconventional." U.S. Air Force pararescue
jumper Chance Garrison shoved the gauzy curtain away from
the glass pane cooled by the overworked air conditioner. He
blinked to make sure his eyes weren't playing tricks on him
as he stared at what was coming up the yard he'd just
mown. He pivoted to face his teammate and best bud,
Brock, who approached where he stood near the
window. "What?" Brock joined him and tracked his
gaze. "Maybe that's not her." Chance pulled his
sweat-dampened shirt away from his chest and leaned in. Yep.
The woman—and the hairy thing dragging her—were
definitely headed up the long driveway of the house Chance
had rented for himself and his dad, who was recovering from
a stroke he suffered following the death of Chance's mom.
"What kinda person brings her pet to work?" Brock
pressed his face against the window. "A cute one." He
shouldered himself closer and elbowed Chance out of the way,
presumably to get a better look. "Very
cute." Chance had noticed that too. But the fact
that the pretty, young occupational therapist was lugging
toward them the biggest, blackest Labrador retriever he'd
ever seen was taking his attention away from how cute she
was. For the moment. "Surely she's not thinking
of bringing that animal in here." Brock tracked the odd
pair's approach. "She c-can't. If Dad sees that
th-thing in the house, his blood pressure w-w-will hit the
roof." Chance scowled at the stutter and eyed the bedroom
door where Dad had retreated to watch midday game
shows. The TV blared through the thick walls, which
meant Dad probably didn't have his hearing aid
in. When the woman stepped onto the landing with
dogzilla rather than secure him to the lamppost,
Chance's faith that Dad would comply with his new therapist
and his regimen of home therapy drained, as if someone
pulled the plug on the only hope left somewhere inside him,
like a bathtub quickly draining. But his teammates'
wives trusted this woman, and he trusted his teammates'
wives. If they crooned that this unconventional therapist
could make a difference with Dad, he'd give it a shot. But
what was the deal with the dog? Regardless, he'd see
to it that the animal stayed outside. Chance opened
the door and was greeted with the satisfying smell of
fresh-cut grass and a smile on the therapist's face that was
so radiant his concentration fled. So did his resolve to
order the dog to stay outside. The sudden pounding in his
chest when this woman held his gaze and flashed her
brilliant smile wasn't something he'd been remotely prepared
for. Nor was he prepared for the luxurious sheen of
her brown-gold hair or the vibrance of her eyes. The green
of them matched the glistening beads in her diamond-shaped
earrings, dangling beside beautifully sloped cheeks. As he
looked closer, he realized that the little circles in the
earrings were tiny onyx paws. Before he knew what he
was doing, Chance's hand inched toward them. Then Brock
bumped his arm, and Chance realized he was staring. He
dropped his hand quickly and dipped his chin to find blades
of grass clinging to his rather ripe T-shirt. At least his
deodorant was pulling double duty. Hopefully. Chance
raised his gaze back to her. The woman's grin
extended, and her generous lips parted to reveal shiny,
silver braces. Her easy gaze slid to Brock for the slightest
moment, then returned readily to Chance. And
stayed. Shyness swooped in like a stealth bomber, even
as ripples of delight over the prolonged eye contact tried
to intercept it. "Hi," Chance managed. He concentrated
on not stumbling over Brock's jump boots as he stepped back
to let her in. Smiling, Brock nodded a greeting to the
therapist, then moved toward the bedroom. "I'll help your
dad into his transfer chair." "Hi," the therapist
replied to Chance and stepped fully inside the door. With
dogzilla. She extended her hand. "You must be Chance. I'm
Chloe." "Miss C-C-Callett." Chance engulfed her petite
hand in his and gave it a polite shake. Quiet confidence
returning, he directed a not-so-polite nod to the dog. "Uh,
not sure how to s-say this, but Dad doesn't particularly
care for animals in the house." Chloe knelt, patting
the beast. "That's all right. He's not really an animal.
This is Midnight, my assistant." Assistant? An
unintended laugh tumbled from Chance's mouth. "A dog is
your assistant?" She rose, braced smile
stiffening. "Yes. My specialty is that I use rescued animals
to help rehabilitate humans." Instant remorse hit
Chance with a thud. "Look, I didn't m-mean to offend…." He
stepped closer to Chloe and her mutt, who actually was kind
of cute. Though not as cute as the girl. Chance
cleared his throat and was trying to formulate a more
articulate apology when Chloe graced him with another
stunning smile, this one as genuine as the first. "It's
okay, really. I get that reaction a lot." She gave the
dog a command and he stood. "I know this is a shock if
you're not used to it, but please, for your father's sake,
trust us?" "Us?" "Us." She placed an
affectionate, protective palm on Midnight's massive head.
The deep compassion he detected in her voice when she spoke
of his dad helped Chance nod without hesitation. The
sincerity in her expression and tone enveloped him in
familiar warmth. "Your eyes remind me of my late
mother's hugs." Yikes! No idea what made him blurt
that. Stress maybe. Chloe paused, blinked. "Thanks."
She passed Chance and smiled again. Her very essence
enchanted him. The perfume, vivid makeup, neon-green nail
polish, shiny lime patent-leather sandals and colorful
geometric sundress didn't hurt. If he could sum up
Miss Callett in one word, it would be alive. Full of
life and loving it. He hoped some of that would rub
off on his dad. "M-may I offer you something to
d-d-drink, Miss Callett?" "Nope. I'm good." She
grinned. "And it's Chloe." He smiled. Mostly because
he'd run out of anything to say. Chloe eyed the living room,
which made Chance wish he'd cleaned up evidence of all the
fast food and takeout he'd been ordering lately. "With
moving and work and taking care of Dad plus getting a house
ready to sell, I don't have time to cook." Chance felt like
he needed to explain. He wrestled a pile of foam
containers from the coffee table and dumped them in a trash
bag. "Life at this point consists of convenience, which
means less h-h-home-cooked and lots of
takeout." "Understandable. Does Ivan like home-cooked
meals?" "Yeah, but I'm not that great of a cook and
he's picky." Thankfully, his dad's appetite was still
healthy, unlike Chance's, which had atrophied a lot, like
his father's now-unused hands. A thoughtful look
entered her captivating eyes. "I noticed from Ivan's medical
history that he doesn't have dietary restrictions other than
sodium. Do you?" "No, ma'am." "What does he
like
to eat?" Where was she going with this? "Old-fashioned
meat and potatoes." "And you?" "That suits me
too." They both liked lots of red meat, even though it
supposedly clogged the pipes. Chance hadn't been eating or
sleeping well for months, and it was definitely starting to
take its toll. "That's good. Protein to feed your
muscles for all that bodybuilding I can tell you do." She
winked, causing his cheeks to flush. He brought his hand up
to feel the scorch. "Do you compete?" She pulled items
from her bag. "No, ma'am. I have to stay in this kind
of shape for my job." That elicited her attention, and the
respect he saw in her gaze suddenly added an extra benefit
to all the daily pain and strain he put in at his team
leader Joel's gym. Chance instantly felt ten feet taller and
two tons of stress lighter. "I see." Chloe pivoted in
a graceful circle and eyed the room. "Are either of you
allergic to flowers?" What did flowers have to do with
anything? he wondered, but just said, "No." Lifting
her pixie chin, Chloe appeared quite pleased with herself;
her grin looked to harbor a well-planned secret. Her eyes
veered toward his stack of Bible study books. Curiosity
flitted across her features until her vision snagged on one
book… then soured. Why? He eyed the title,
Becoming an Effective Youth Pastor. He returned his
gaze to her. Professional mask back in place, she
folded petite hands in front of her trim middle. "Shall we
get started?" Chance nodded concession to her as she
stepped boldly toward the ruckus forming at his dad's
bedroom door. "I don't need anyone coming in here and
telling me what to do!" Ivan could be heard loud and
clear. Chance cringed. Dad's mood was already
festering, and he was about to see a dinosaur of a dog. In
the house. "And what in tarnation is that?"
Ivan now squinted at his first glimpse of the massive
black dog. He yanked his glasses from his chest pocket,
squinted even more, and jabbed his good finger at Midnight.
"Who let that heap-a-hair in here?" he bellowed and scowled
at Chance. Before Chance could offer an explanation,
Chloe stepped forward. "Hi, Mister Garrison. I'm Chloe
Callett. This is Midnight. We're here to assess your need
for in-home OT, better known as occupational
therapy." "We? What's that doggone mutt got to do with
it?" Ivan glowered at Chloe to the point that drool fell
from the weak side of his sullen mouth. Brock dabbed
it with a red, bandit-style kerchief hanging loosely around
Ivan's neck. Ivan let him but grunted. Brock pretended not
to notice. He tried to finish discreetly until Ivan skewered
him with a glare. "On that note, I'll let myself out.
Good luck," he said to Chloe and Chance and chuckled his way
out the door. Chloe didn't cringe at Brock's rapid
departure or cower under Ivan's escalating disapproval and
hollers, even though his pinched face shaded redder by the
second. Ivan's bulging eyes wrinkled at the corners
and his nose squished up as he went nose to nose with Chloe.
"What have you got stuck in your teeth
there?" "Braces." "Aren't you too old for
that?" She shrugged and bit back a grin.
"Maybe." Ivan scowled. "Ask me, it's a waste of good
money. My boy there's got crooked teeth and he's not
bothered by it." He wasn't? True. He
wasn't. Until Chloe's gaze fell on his mouth. His face
heated again. "Au contraire, Dad. I h-have one tooth
that doesn't s-sit right. One." Chance chuckled and held up
a pointer finger. He also placed a clandestine hand on
Ivan's shoulder and prepared to squeeze if his manners
bounced any further out of bounds. The stroke had definitely
adversely affected his father's cognitive and social
judgment. Chance didn't mind his dad taking pokes at him,
but Ivan was picking on Chloe. Chance would intervene. "Dad,
we have a lady present." As Chance increased pressure
of his hand, Ivan stared Chance down, then swerved his head
back toward Chloe. "Say, how old are you anyway? You
married? 'Cause my son here is not, and it's about time he
took the plunge." Chance clamped his mouth shut and
his hand tighter and tried not to laugh at the shocked look
on Chloe's face. He cast an apologetic glance her way while
his dad prattled on. Undaunted other than a slight
flush to her cheeks, Chloe calmly pulled a clipboard out and
knelt in front of Ivan's chair. She made a couple of
adjustments on the footrest then reached for Ivan's hand.
"Squeeze for me?" Ivan scowled but squished her hand
with his good one. Hard. Harder than Chance thought
necessary. Chloe grimaced but her eyes grinned. "Nice
grip. You've got the hands of a hardworking man." A
sliver of a smile creased the unaffected side of Ivan's
mouth. The scowl eased from his face and a twinkle dared to
dance in his eyes. Until Chloe reached for his
affected hand. "Now let's try the other one." Back
came the scowl. "Don't you read anything in that chart? My
stroke made it so I can't do the other one." She
smiled sweetly. "Try." She held his listless hand. A
grunt. More intent scowling. But no response from his
hand. "I know you don't like dogs in your house. So go
ahead. Squeeze and pretend you're knocking me upside the
noggin for bringing Midnight in here." She
winked. Ivan blinked as though surprised by her
candor, then bit back what might have been either the
beginnings of a smile or a taunt, Chance couldn't be certain
which one. Ivan's wrist strained in effort, but his
fingers didn't move and his hand didn't clench. His
countenance fell. "Told ya! It's no use. I'm a useless man."
He looked away. Pain streaked through Chance. He
wanted to drop to his knees and beg: Dad, don't give up.
Please don't give up. Compassion filled Chloe's
expression. "Try again, Ivan. Please." "Why? Got
nothing other'n Chance left to live for. And he'd do fine
without me." "I'm sure he doesn't want to have to do
without you. So come on. Try." She held her hand out closer
to Ivan. They stared at each other in a state of silent
stalemate. Then fury flashed over Ivan's face. He
glared at Chloe's outstretched hand and growled. Then he
called her names that would have sent a weaker woman sobbing
from the house. Jaw clenched, Chance pinched Ivan's shoulder
to get the message across to be respectful to the lady.
"Dad, that's quite enough." Chance felt mortified. But
Chloe, serene, didn't budge. After a moment, she knelt
closer and whispered, "I think your late wife would want you
to try. I know Chance does." Chloe winked. "Think of all the
beautiful grandbabies you have to look forward to in the
future. They'd want you to try." At first, Ivan
scowled again. But as her words finally seeped in, he
blinked several times. Met Chance's gaze, which had been
reduced to pleading. Ivan's face softened. With a quaky
motion, Ivan brought his hand to hers. A clumsy tremor
proved his attempt to squeeze with all his might. "Not
bad." Chloe made notes on her paper, then stood. "So,
what do you think?" Fear streaked through Chance that Chloe
would turn them away as clients. Then reassurance
sparkled like the gold in Chloe's eyes as she met his gaze
briefly before grinning at Ivan. "I think by the time
Midnight and I get through with Ivan, he'll be strong enough
to pick us both up and toss us in the yard. With his
affected arm." Relief rushed Chance at the confidence
in her words. Ivan sat straighter. "You saying the
sooner I do my exercises, the sooner you and that oversize
mutt'll go away and not bother me anymore?" "That's
what I'm saying." Chloe repositioned Ivan's hand on a small
towel from her bag. She rolled it, then secured it with tape
and rested it on the table beside Ivan. "Curl your fingers
around this. Squeeze whenever you think about
it." "Only if I can think of pinching the nose off
that mongrel pup so everybody'll quit controlling my
life." "Fair enough." Chloe said a command to the dog,
who'd been sitting obediently, stoic and watching.
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