1/03/2017

Day 2 of Nan Dixon's Release Party and Giveaway!

Hi, it's Nan again. I had so much fun with your surprise stories yesterday. Keep them coming. I've included the Rafflecopter again.

Today the paperback version of THE OTHER TWIN releases! So if you

love to hold a book in your hand, you can now order the paperback. There is nothing like getting to cuddle a copy of my book. So much fun.

You can find your favorite retailer here.



SALE

I want to let you know that Harlequin has all four eBooks in the series on sale for the month of January. (Sorry not the paperbacks.)
Here's the link eHarlequin.  On the eHarlequin website, you can receive 30% off on any and all Fitzgerald House series books by using the Coupon Code: FITZH30 
   


And here's another excerpt for your reading pleasure!

A BUMP ECHOED above Nathan’s head. The bare bulbs hanging from the ceiling swayed and dust drifted to the dirt floor of the Fitzgerald carriage house.
What were Cheryl and the kid doing, dropping loaded boxes from the top of the bunk bed?
They’d moved into the carriage house this afternoon, barely a week after she’d let the drunk into a secured apartment building. He’d helped unload the truck.
At least she’d be safer here than walking on River Street when the bars closed.
He checked the time on his phone, but the numbers didn’t make sense—6:08 p.m.? It was after dinner. The sun had set. It had to be after eight—8:06 p.m.?
The kid thought he was a butthead. Hell, maybe he was. He planned to keep his distance from the pair. Kids made him uncomfortable. They guessed they were smarter than him.
Everyone was smarter than him. First-graders could read better than he did. Nathan inhaled and choked on the dust.
He unrolled the architect’s plans and anchored them on his toolbox. Since he’d remodeled restaurants in Atlanta, he was in charge of this project.
Studying the blueprint, he willed his eyes and brain to work together for once. He planned to lay out the footings tonight. No way would he let the crew see him struggle.
His twin brother, Daniel, might think Mom and Pop had scraped the bottom of the barrel asking Nathan to return to Forester Construction, but he would prove his brother wrong. He’d grown up in the five years since he’d been kicked out of the family company. Nathan wanted back in, permanently, not just while Pop went through chemo in Texas.
For a week every month, Pop and Mom traveled from Savannah to Houston. Pop was enrolled in a clinical trial to help him beat back the monster Myelodysplastic syndromes. MDS. Cancer.
The thought of not being good enough for the family business still stung. All his life, Nathan had wanted to be normal. Was that too much to hope for? To read without getting confused? To remember the names of people he’d known all his life? Hell, just reading street signs would be nice.
He shook it off. He’d done okay in Atlanta. He’d coped.
Locating the back door on the plans, he calculated where the first wall support would be and recited the numbers into his phone. Then he grabbed a tape measure and a roll of flagging ribbon. Time to translate the plan into the actual space.
He moved to the kitchen area and tucked the end of the tape measure into a crack between the floor and the wall. Checking his phone, he walked straight back. He needed thirty feet. He looked at the numbers on his phone and the ones on the tape measure. The numbers swam and twisted. He closed his eyes and looked again, but it didn’t help.
He ripped off a piece of flagging tape and placed it on the floor, not willing to commit. Then he worked his way through the plan.
After he’d taken a half dozen measurements, he stepped away, comparing the markings with the drawing. The architect’s plan was a rectangle. His mess of orange tags looked more like a star.
“Damn it!”
He kicked one of the pillars supporting the second story. Why couldn’t he do this? He kicked the pillar again and dust rained down.
He’d be here all night and even then he might not get it right. The crew would show up at seven thirty tomorrow and he’d still be doing effing measurements a ten-year-old could do.
He headed to his toolbox, yanked open the bottom drawer and pulled out a flask.
The door to the courtyard creaked open. He tucked the flask in his back pocket and spun to see who was spying on his stupidity.
“Ooh.” Cheryl filled the narrow doorway. “What are you doing?”
“Working,” he snapped.
She crossed her arms over her chest. Her plain gray T-shirt strained against the swell of her small breasts. Her faded cutoff jeans cupped her ass like a man’s hands would.
He fought to keep his eyes on her face. Her blond hair was pulled into a ponytail. He’d only seen it brushing her shoulders a few times. It was straight and fine and would feel like silk in his fingers. Not that he would ever touch Cheryl’s hair.
“Abby told me the work wouldn’t start until tomorrow. It’s almost ten o’clock.” She hesitated before stepping inside. “Did you kick something?”
He swallowed. “The post.”
Her brown eyes grew as large as dinner plates. She stepped back. Yeah. Be afraid.
“What is that?” She moved into the room, pointing at the orange tape.
“A fucking mess.”
Her shoulders straightened. “I know you’re supervising this project. I’d appreciate you warning the crew that a six-year-old boy lives here. I don’t want him learning words like that.”
“Sure.” He ran a hand through his hair, pushing off his cap. The same kid who called him butthead.
It landed at Cheryl’s feet. She picked it up, batted it against her leg to dust off the dirt and then handed it to him. “What are the orange tags supposed to be?”
He jammed his cap back on his head. “I was marking off the kitchen. We’re pouring footings tomorrow.”
Now he’d have to ask one of the crew to help. Apparently, he couldn’t measure and mark. The other option was to have his twin help. Perfect Daniel would give him the look. The one that said Nathan was an idiot. Besides, he’d lied and told Pop and Daniel he could do this.
Cheryl stared at the mess on the floor, frowned and then moved to the plans he hadn’t rolled up. She carried them to where he’d been measuring. “This is close.”
“Does it look like a rectangle to you?”
Her head snapped up at the snarl in his voice. Her brown eyes flashed. “Do you want help or not?”
She was willing to help him? Relief ran through him like a warm shower, easing the strain in his shoulders. “Yeah, I do.” Then he remembered her son. What the hell was his name? “What about your...kid?”
“Josh sleeps like a rock.” She turned. Clipped to her back pocket was some sort of monitor. “If he wakes, I’ll hear him.”
His eyes lingered on her lovely rounded butt. He wouldn’t mind wrapping his hands around those cheeks.
Too bad she had the kid. Josh. Josh always glared at him. Kids were a deal breaker.
“Let’s start over,” she said. “What’s the scale?”
He knew this. “It’s...” The words slipped away. His fingers formed fists.
She stared at the drawings. “Is it an eighth of an inch equals a foot?”
He nodded, afraid the words would tangle. The story of his life. His fingers flexed against his thighs.
“Wait. They already have the feet marked here. That’s what this means, right?”
She moved close, showing him the blueprint. She smelled like—apples. His mouth watered. When her head turned, her hair brushed against his arm, a silky, soft brush.
He’d known it would be.
She shook the blueprint. Using her thumb, she pointed to a number. “Is that the measurement from one wall to another?”
“Yes.” He choked out the word, hoping he’d answered correctly. Sometimes, as much as he concentrated, everything came out twisted.
“Let’s see where you went wrong.” She set down the plans. “Can you hold the other end of the tape measure?”
He headed to the wall to be a friggin’ anchor.
“This one’s right.” She tapped the first piece of tape he’d placed.
They slid along the wall.
“This one needs to be here.” She moved the orange tape. And kept checking and rechecking each measurement. He’d gotten half of them right. What had taken him thirty minutes took her five.
“That looks right, doesn’t it?” She held the blueprint and compared it with the tape they’d run and anchored.
He stood behind her, inhaling another whiff of apples. “Yeah.”
He could see the space now. There were the doors into the kitchen and more doors into Abby’s large storage area.
Cheryl helped him mark off the walk-in freezer, too.
“Now I can finish running the tape for the footings.” Relief eased out of him like a curl of wood from a plane. “Thank you.”
“You’re welcome.” She dusted off her hands. “Anything else you want to get done tonight?”
“I’ll mark the wall and doors.” That way, if the crew moved the tape when they did demolition, he’d know where everything was supposed to go. He’d developed tricks over the years to convince people that he was in control.
“Then I’ll head home.”
“Thank you.” Too bad Cheryl had a kid. Otherwise he would ask her out.
She moved to the door, stopped and turned back. “Do you...have trouble reading?”
Reality slapped him in the face. “I can read,” he growled. Sometimes.
“I could help.” She gave him a small smile. “At the army school, I worked with kids who had trouble reading.”
His face heated with shame. Kids. She’d helped kids. “I don’t need help.”
She jerked back a step at the snap in his voice. The woman was scared of her shadow. “It’s just...”
“Thanks for the help.” He pulled the flask out of his pocket. He wouldn’t admit his flaws.
Her face paled and she crept backward again. “I’d appreciate if you didn’t drink in front of my son.”
“I’ll bet you would.” He took a big swig. Not wanting her to see she’d hurt him.
She dashed outside. Her footsteps pounded the stairs to the carriage house apartment.
He twirled the cap back on. He’d been a jerk. But he didn’t need any help from a do-gooder like Cheryl Henshaw. His flaws couldn’t be fixed.

Keep the Surprise Stories coming!  Here's the rafflecopter again!


a Rafflecopter giveaway

10 comments:

  1. My biggest surprise was bumping into a former high school classmate, a casual acquaintance, I hadn't seen in 7 years and both of us realizing that we were perfect for each other. We have been married 44 years and enjoy our three children and their families. Best of all, we still enjoying each other's company.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Ahhhh Librarypat -- I love that story! Thanks for stopping by!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Happy release day!

    ReplyDelete
  4. My bosses gave me extra money when I was first starting my career and money was extremely tight.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Imbigwillie -- what a wonderful and needed supply. Thanks for stopping.

      Delete
  5. Biggest surprise I guess would be getting pregnant with my first child

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Mary - what a great surprise! Thanks for commenting!

      Delete
  6. The biggest surprise that has ever happened in my life would have to be when my husband proposed because I was not expecting it at all. It happened to be the best surprise of my life as well!

    ReplyDelete