by Amie Denman
A summer bargain...
That could lead to forever
For firefighter Brady Adams, racing into burning buildings is no problem. Forgetting the kiss he once shared with aspiring flight attendant Kate Price—that’s a bigger challenge. Brady longs to buy a house and settle down, while free-spirited Kate insists that relationships have an expiration date. But as their no-strings summer fun deepens into tenderness, will Kate admit her heart has found a haven?
“Beautiful summer nights like this can be...nice...with someone else,” Kate said.
“As long as we keep things in perspective, we could share fries and face down hungry seagulls together every now and then until the summer’s over,” she added.
Every now and then was better than nothing, and Brady let his heart persuade him that some of her time was worth the risk, even though he’d be alone come autumn.
Kate grabbed his hand and tugged him toward the end of the boardwalk where the mermaid statue rose up from the edge of the beach. “The ice cream vendor is down here, and I’m not going back to my apartment without some.”
She dropped his hand as they walked toward the floodlights illuminating the forlorn mermaid looking out to sea and waiting for her true love to return.
Dear Reader,
Thank you for spending time in Cape Pursuit, Virginia, where the firefighters are tough but tender and the scenery is beautiful. I love the seaside and the sounds of summer, so it’s always fun for me to write a book with a beach setting. If you like reading books in order, here are the three books in this series: In Love with the Firefighter, The Firefighter’s Vow and A Home for the Firefighter.
Each book features a different firefighter from the Cape Pursuit Fire Department, but they all find a happily-ever-after with a heroine who is someone you might want to have as a friend.
I love hearing from readers, so please send me a note at [email protected] or visit @amiedenman on Facebook or Twitter. I hope this book leaves you feeling as if you’ve just returned from a sweet and satisfying vacation.
Best,
Amie
A Home for the Firefighter
Amie Denman
Amie Denman is the author of twenty contemporary romances full of humor and heart. A devoted traveler whose parents always kept a suitcase packed, she loves reading and writing books you could take on vacation. Amie believes everything is fun, especially wedding cake, show tunes, roller coasters and falling in love.
Books by Amie Denman
Harlequin Heartwarming
Starlight Point Stories
Under the Boardwalk
Carousel Nights
Meet Me on the Midway
Until the Ride Stops
Back to the Lake Breeze Hotel
Cape Pursuit Firefighters
In Love with the Firefighter
The Firefighter’s Vow
Carina Press
Her Lucky Catch
Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com for more titles.
Contents
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
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
EXCERPT FROM CHARMED BY THE COOK’S KIDS BY MELINDA CURTIS
CHAPTER ONE
BRADY ADAMS DUCKED as a personal watercraft did a swift turn just seconds before it would have hit the fireboat. He caught a glimpse of his friend Charlie Zimmerman at the controls of the personal watercraft and knew a huge wave was coming. The fire chief, who was standing next to Brady, didn’t duck, and a cold bath of ocean water meant for Brady hit Chief Tony Ruggles right in the face.
“I could have him arrested for being a public menace,” Brady suggested as the chief used both hands to sluice water off his face. “We could make an example out of him as a cautionary tale for all the tourists.”
The chief laughed. “I think that’s Charlie’s motto. If you can’t be a good example to others, at least be a horrible warning.”
The personal watercraft slowed and came alongside, and Brady noticed the contrite expression on Charlie’s face. Dousing the chief with salt water had probably not been the plan.
“Just trying to make it more realistic,” Charlie yelled. “The ocean’s never this calm and peaceful when we get called out.”
Tony shot him a caustic glare. “The new guys on the department don’t have much experience with ocean rescue, so when you’re bobbing around out there maybe they’ll find you before the fish eat you.”
Brady smothered a smile and grabbed the line Charlie threw him. He tied the personal watercraft to the side of the fireboat and turned off the diesel engines. He remembered his first time going out on the fireboat and practicing rescue techniques offshore. He glanced at the sparkling white beaches of Cape Pursuit. The tourist town with its huge influx of summer visitors kept the fire department busy but also challenged them to prepare for any emergency on land or water.
“Twenty feet,” Brady said, looking at the depth finder on the dashboard of the rescue boat. “Think that’s too deep?”
“We’re staying on top of the water today,” Chief Ruggles said. He grinned as Charlie climbed over the side of the deep-hulled fireboat. “Being optimistic.”
The new members of the department who accompanied them this afternoon had completed some water training in a pool and then in an inland lake, but being on the ocean with waves and salt water was different and more difficult. Brady tossed out the anchor and put on his baseball cap with the logo of the Cape Pursuit Fire Department embroidered on the front. The sun was already hot even though it was only the middle of May.
“What’s the plan?” Brady asked.
“We’ll toss Charlie in and he can play the part of the struggling swimmer who panics and fights our new recruits all the way back to the boat,” Tony said. “After that, we’ll move closer to shore and sink the dummy to the bottom and do the human chain search. Water’s still pretty cold, but you couldn’t ask for a nicer day.”
Brady tugged on the straps of Charlie’s life jacket and then clapped him on the shoulder. “Good luck, buddy.”
Charlie laughed and stepped off the boat. He splashed and flapped his arms in the water and screamed in a high falsetto voice.
“He’s not much,” Chief Tony Ruggles told the two new firefighters, “but he’s got a wonderful wife and a toddler. Better go save him.”
The new guys, Hal and Chase, followed their training by checking their own life jackets first and then tossing a life ring to the simulated victim in the water. Charlie ignored the life ring and yelled, “Come save me!”
Hal and Chase jumped into the water and started swimming toward Charlie, who swam away from them in the opposite direction. Brady picked up a long rope with a life ring attached. “I think I could hit him from here,” he said, chuckling.
Tony crossed his arms over his chest and sat on the gunwale of the boat. “I knew h
e’d make this fun for them. That’s why I told them Charlie has a wife and child. It makes him a more sympathetic character.”
Brady knew the families of all the other guys. He’d been to a few of their weddings and tossed in cash for group baby gifts. Been to some funerals, too. Although the fire department was like a big family, most of the other firefighters were going home to their own spouses and children. Brady’s half of a rental house had been empty and silent until a week earlier when his brother and niece had shown up on his doorstep. He loved hearing the water running in the evenings for Bella’s bath and having extra dishes in the sink, and he hoped Noah and Bella would stay for a long time. Brady wasn’t afraid of burning houses or dangerous rescues, but loneliness got under his skin.
“There you go,” Tony yelled, encouraging the two new firefighters. “Hook the life ring to his vest.”
Brady forced his thoughts back to the training rescue in the small choppy waves. “Charlie must have gotten tired of leading them on a chase,” he said. He laughed as he saw Charlie stretch out on his back, hands behind his head, and float on the water like a big raft, making Hal and Chase work together to drag him toward the boat.
“It would be tempting to jump on that personal watercraft and give him a dose of his own medicine,” Tony said.
Brady grinned and nodded. “But you’re too nice a guy to do that.”
“Correction. I’m too nice to do that to Hal and Chase,” Tony said.
An hour later, Brady was at the wheel of the fire engine on the way back to the station. The diesel noise and the low hum of radio traffic was the background music of his life as a firefighter in the coastal town of Cape Pursuit, Virginia.
“Did I do okay?” the new recruit, Hal, asked. “I’ve been around boats a lot.”
Brady smiled. “I can tell. If we end up going out on a water rescue, I wouldn’t mind having you aboard.”
He didn’t look at Hal, but he knew the twenty-year-old would appreciate the compliment. Brady was only five years his senior, but every day of those five years had been a learning opportunity. Sometimes he thought the fire and rescue service should have no more surprises for him, but each day was still different, demanding and fantastic.
“Too bad we didn’t have time for the beach rescue exercise,” Hal said.
While they were still on the boat, Tony had heard the radio traffic from two ambulances that were called out on a car accident. He didn’t like leaving the station with low manpower even though there were off-duty firefighters and more than a dozen volunteers they could call in. Out of caution, he’d shortened the training exercise, returned to the dock and sent Brady back in the pumper with Hal while the chief drove the smaller rescue truck with Chase. Charlie had driven his own car to the dock where he kept his personal watercraft because he was, technically, off duty and had volunteered to help.
A string of tall hotels with balconies and beach views lined the waterfront in Cape Pursuit, and the strip of road behind the hotels was the flashy area of tourist dining, entertainment and shopping. Restaurants, bars, miniature golf courses, stores selling beach blankets and sunscreen, and upscale shops selling art made the downtown area inviting well beyond the beach. Brady slowed for a tourist on a bicycle who weaved down the side of the street. He wasn’t in a huge hurry, and if a call did come in he could flip on the lights and siren. Safety came first, though. Always.
The wandering bicyclist turned at a stop sign, and Brady came to a full stop with the massive fire engine. Facing him at the four-way stop was the Cape Pursuit sightseeing trolley. The glorified bus, painted and styled to look like an old-fashioned trolley car, was a familiar sight in the tourist town. There were several of them, and they ran a daily circuit through Cape Pursuit, providing a way for visitors to hop on and off at hotels, restaurants and several locations along the beach. The longer runs took visitors up the coastline to Norfolk and destinations along the way.
Brady knew most of the trolley drivers and had, in fact, spent the previous summer making extra cash driving one. He was planning another summer of the same trolley shifts mixed with fire station shifts. With another summer of working two jobs, he could finally put away enough savings to make a down payment on his dream of home ownership.
He waved automatically to the driver of the trolley as he always did, but she didn’t seem to notice him as she turned to say something to a passenger in the front seat.
It was only a glance.
He could be wrong.
But that driver looked just like Kate Price, who had kissed him and left without a word at the end of the previous summer. There was no way she could be back for another summer...was there?
* * *
“CAN I DRIVE?” asked the little boy seated in the first row of seats as Kate pressed the accelerator on the Cape Pursuit trolley after stopping at a four-way stop.
“No, but—”
“Fire truck!” the boy said.
Kate had been about to tell the boy he could ring the bell at the next stop even though she couldn’t let him drive the trolley, but she’d been upstaged by a fire truck. She didn’t see who was behind the wheel, and it didn’t much matter to her. She wasn’t back in Cape Pursuit because of a certain firefighter.
She had better reasons.
“How far to the lighthouse?” she heard a woman ask. Kate didn’t have to answer because her roommate and coworker, Holly, was in charge of guest relations and narrating the sights and stops along the trolley route. Sometimes they switched jobs and Kate took the role of tour guide, expounding on the history of Cape Pursuit, embellishing a story about pirates and their role in the Virginia town’s founding, and making sure guests knew the best place to disembark to get to their destination.
Today, all she had to do was drive the route.
She glanced in the side mirror and saw the huge fire truck retreating down the street. If Brady chose to work the trolley again for the summer, it would be tough to avoid him. When she’d taken the job, she’d known it was a risk, but the money was hard to pass up now that she finally knew what she wanted to do with her life.
Becoming a flight attendant would give her the entire world to roam and ensure she didn’t have to put her shoes on the same mat two nights in a row. But if she wanted to get a job with a good airline, she needed to attend one of the training schools so she would stand out from the other applicants. A great school was housed at the airport, a day’s drive down the coast in Orlando, Florida, but it came with a price tag.
With enough hours on the trolley throughout the summer, she could bank the tuition and buy herself the kind of freedom she’d been seeking all twenty-four years of her life.
“Next stop, the mermaid statue,” Kate heard Holly say. “It’s a great place to enter the public beach, and the pier with shops and restaurants is close by.”
Kate slowed the trolley and took a quick glance at the little boy seated behind her. “I could sure use someone to pull this gold chain and ring the bell,” she said.
The little boy leaned forward and tugged, and then he giggled when the bell clanged with an electronically simulated old-fashioned sound. Kate smiled. There were far worse ways to earn tuition money than driving cheerful tourists around in a beach town known for its hot sand and fun vibe. The job came with decent summer housing, too, which was a bonus. No lease to sign, no commitment.
More than half the riders on the trolley got off at the mermaid statue stop as Kate had imagined they would. They jostled beach bags as they passed her to climb down the steps at the front of the trolley. Many of the riders paused, made eye contact and thanked her. A few stuffed bills into the tip jar she would share with Holly later. The rest of them shuffled off, their flip-flops slapping the steps, intent on their vacation.
Kate didn’t blame them. She was always thinking about where she was going next.
“Did you see him?” Holly asked a
s she sat on the bench right behind the driver’s seat.
“Who?”
“Last summer’s romance. Your firefighter boyfriend.”
Kate chuckled dismissively and shook her head. “He was not a romance. And definitely not my boyfriend.”
“Are we talking about Brady, the tall dark-haired man with the big hero shoulders and smile?” Holly asked.
Kate got up and descended the steps to get off the trolley for a few minutes. Fresh air was all she needed, and maybe Holly would give up the conversation. No luck. Holly followed her off the bus and together they flanked the door. Tourists lined up and showed their trolley passes, and Kate and Holly smiled at them and welcomed them aboard.
“He was driving that fire truck across from us at that stop sign,” Holly said. “You had to see him, and he certainly had to see you.”
“I didn’t notice,” Kate said. “I was busy doing my job.”
She tried to sound haughty and judgmental of Holly, but Holly just laughed.
“I wonder if he’ll work the trolley again this summer. Wasn’t he saving his pennies to buy a house?” Holly asked.
Kate boarded the trolley and searched the small bin of supplies they kept by the driver’s seat. She grabbed a roll of stickers with a cartoon trolley on them and went down the center aisle, giving one to each child already seated. She heard Holly greeting riders and smelled the pungent aroma of salty ocean-wet bathing suits and sunscreen. Riders getting on the bus around noon had already put in their beach time and were probably ready to hit the showers and buffet at their hotels.
She sat in the driver’s seat and gave trolley stickers to the last children boarding with their parents. Holly climbed up the steps, closed the door and leaned close to Kate to whisper, “This could be your chance to rekindle the flame.”
Kate shooed her away with a sweep of her hand. There was nothing to rekindle. She had worked with Brady, gone out with a group a few times that included him and gone to two bonfires on the beach for summer workers. The kiss over Labor Day weekend had been spontaneous and unexpected. For both of them, she’d thought. She’d been quick to assure him it meant nothing, and then she’d said goodbye to Cape Pursuit, her summer job and Brady Adams.