

This book was sweet, and I can see why the author decided to write this book as a why choose–where she “ends up” with all three of them. All three of them were in the military, and they’re each damaged in their own way. He lives with two of his closest friends and their adorable dog. When she helps a handsome man who’s having car trouble, he offers her a job as his household’s new housekeeper/cook (which they actually needed). Avery drives as far as she can with the little money she has, and now she and her five-year-old daughter are living out of her car while she tries to figure out what to do next. This book took a few of my favourite tropes (woman on the run, single mother, romantic suspense) in a new direction. Kanga (dog) – The lady makes his pack happy and her female pup reminds him that there’s fun to be had, dimming the memories of bullets and bombs that took him and his pack out of the fight. When he finds the man who hurt them, he will annihilate him in the most painful way possible. The tiny wisp of a girl cracks all his armor with her sweetness and her mother feels like a missing piece of his soul when she’s in his arms. A man of few words, his main forms of communication are long drawn out growls and grunts. Ryker – His sheer size and bulk intimidate and keep a safe distance between him and others. Avery sees the man not the injury and the hole inside him slowly begins to fill with a love he never thought he’d have a chance at again. One tiny girl has him changing his prospective on his injuries. Zack – The charming playboy had his self-esteem gutted by the scars his body carries and the loss of his leg. He fights his attraction to Avery with an iron will.

His honor demands that he care and protect them. He sees too many parallels to his own childhood trauma with Avery and Chloe. They fall hard for Avery and Chloe and will burn the world down to keep them safe.Įaston – carries the guilt of failure at losing half his unit in their last engagement. One good deed on a snowy night, changes everything.ģ former military men and 1 German Shepherd with their own damage, take the mother and daughter in. On the run, living in their car as winter sets in, Avery will do whatever it takes to hide from a monster and keep her daughter safe. The main heroine finds love with all three men as they heal each other and become a family. This sweet and steamy, contemporary romance standalone has references to domestic abuse that may cause triggers.

Ninety two dollars and fifty seven cents. Something I vow never to let happen again. And now, I see my five year old daughter’s arm in a cast. There’s ninety two dollars and fifty seven cents hidden in a Ziploc bag in the lining of the couch along with a double stack of polaroid pictures that might buy me some time.Įvery person who has met my husband thinks he’s the most charming man and would never believe what he does to me behind these four walls.
