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Change My Mind: Fairfield Romances, #3
Change My Mind: Fairfield Romances, #3
Change My Mind: Fairfield Romances, #3
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Change My Mind: Fairfield Romances, #3

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First impressions aren't everything.

 

The day Levi moved in next door to Marian, they didn't exactly hit it off.

 

Now it's been two years, and things haven't improved—he thinks she's crazy and she hides behind trees to avoid him.

 

But when a middle-of-the-night break-in causes police officer Levi to come crashing through her door, he finds out two things in quick succession—there's an attraction between them he can't deny…and she's keeping a secret, one that should be a deal-breaker.

 

When a string of local robberies forces the pair together, will they overcome the differences between them enough to realize that maybe there's more to both of them than meets the eye?

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 20, 2020
ISBN9781733782760
Change My Mind: Fairfield Romances, #3

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    Book preview

    Change My Mind - L.R. Reeves

    Chapter 1

    MARIAN

    Ihave an addiction to crafts. No, seriously. Some people have hobbies; I have a problem. I was currently adding to that problem by way of a shopping cart piled high with yarn and needles. How had I made it this long without trying knitting?

    True to form, I went all-in. I had straight needles in all sizes, circular needles, double pointed needles. I had row counters and stitch markers and swatch rulers. Point protectors and cable holders. And don’t even get me started on the yarn. I had worsted wools and lace weight silks in every color of the rainbow. Variegated fingerling—I didn’t even know what that meant, but it sounded vaguely dirty—and the softest baby alpaca. Super bulky blends with metallic threads woven into the fibers. I was set. All I needed to do was learn how to knit.

    Knitting this time, is it? Sherry, manning the register at Fairfield Hobby and Craft, pushed an unruly lock of gray hair out of her eyes and peered into my cart with disbelief. Have you really never tried knitting before?

    I know, I said with a wide smile. Nothing—nothing—made me happy the way buying craft supplies did. I can’t believe I’ve waited until now. Just making up for lost time.

    Well, pile it all up here, she told me, pushing her scanner out of the way to make room for my haul. Let’s get you checked out.

    How have you been? I asked as I stacked yarn on the counter, bracing it with my hip so the skeins wouldn’t fall off. Have they scheduled your surgery yet? I could see the slight tightening of her eyes as she shifted her weight, bending down to grab a stack of bags from under the counter. Sherry was in her early seventies, and had been working at FHC for as long as I’d been coming here—which was a long time. I knew she could have retired by now, but she insisted the discount she got on craft supplies was too good to give up. I didn’t doubt it. The thought of taking up a second part-time job here had crossed my mind more than once.

    Oh, Marian, that’s sweet of you to ask. Yes, it’s going to be the end of May.

    Less than a month! I exclaimed. Oh, that’s wonderful. You’ll be able to move so much better with a new hip.

    She nodded, starting to scan my towering mountain of knitting supplies and stuff them into bags. I’m looking forward to being able to walk my dog again. She’s going pretty stir crazy being cooped up. So am I, come to think of it, she added with a wistful smile. Then her eyes narrowed, and she looked me over. What about you, honey? How are you doing? I won’t see you while I’m out for recovery.

    Oh, I’m fine, I said. I’m actually going up to full-time at the bookstore. Geoff left to open his own bakery, so I’m taking over his shift.

    I looked studiously down into my cart, pulling out the last of the yarn, so I missed her narrowed eyes and searching look, but, regardless, I knew they were there. Sherry knew me too well.

    And how do you feel about that?

    I shrugged and laughed a little. It’ll be good, I think. Get me out of the house more. God knew I could use that. The craft store and work were pretty much the only two places I went. Besides, I like my job.

    I looked up at her, and her wrinkled face softened. I know you do, honey. You’ll have less time to learn how to knit, though, she teased, and I laughed.

    That’s okay, I assured her. I’ve got all the time in the world.

    The store was largely empty this early on a Monday morning, so Sherry hobbled around the counter as I loaded my bags and gave me a hug. Come see me before my surgery, she told me. You don’t have to buy anything, just come say hi. I laughed—we both knew I couldn’t set foot in the store and leave empty handed—and returned her hug, promising I would stop by soon.

    Then I loaded the bags onto my arms and made my way out into the bright spring sunlight.

    My apartment was only a fifteen-minute walk from the craft store. That was good because I didn’t own a car, but it also meant that I was forced to limit myself to buying only what I could carry. I was pushing it today, with bag handles wrapped up both forearms, but at least the bulk of it was yarn, which was pretty light. Rain or snow—probably even tornadoes—couldn’t keep me away from the craft store, but today it was bright and sunny, the warmth of spring finally breaking through the chill Indiana air. I swung the bags on my arms as I walked, the sunshine bolstering my already good mood.

    I’d made this trek a million times, but it was a little different each time, and I made finding the tiniest changes into a sort of game. The grass on the edge of the sidewalk was starting to turn green again after all the recent rain, and the bright yellow daffodils were pushing up around the sign in front of the Chinese restaurant. The gas station on the corner had changed their sign, and the motel next door was in the process of washing the winter grime off their windows.

    Beyond that was the strip mall, and flowers were blooming there too, tulips in front of the nail salon and—oh no.

    Next to the nail salon, the door to the martial arts gym was swinging open, disgorging a loud group of sweaty men in matching uniforms out into the parking lot. They called to each other, slapping backs and waving, and I deliberately slowed my steps, waiting to see if—yes, there he was.

    My eye fixed on the man in the back, and my heart jumped into my throat. He wasn’t tall, not compared to some of the other men spilling out of the doorway, though still taller than my diminutive five-foot-three-inch frame. But even without the height, his build was thick and muscular in a way that made everything about him seem menacing—big hands, broad shoulders, and a faint scar that traced over one cheek and down the side of his jaw.

    Frantically, unreasonably, I looked for a place to hide. Not easy to do when I was right out on the sidewalk and loaded down by a pile of squeaky shopping bags. He hadn’t noticed me yet, so I did the best I could, lunging for the thick trunk of a towering oak tree growing up through the sidewalk, its roots dislodging the heavy cement blocks and forcing them apart at the seams. I pulled the bags in around me as tight as I could and hugged myself close to the trunk, mentally becoming one with the shadows. Then I peeked around the trunk as far as I dared, and watched the group of men—and three women, I now noticed—begin to disperse.

    Most of them made their way to cars in the small parking lot, donning sunglasses and throwing duffel bags in trunks. But the man in question—Levi—just nodded farewell to his friends and strolled out toward the sidewalk. He passed not ten feet from my hiding place, and I held my breath the whole time, but he didn’t glance my way. I let my breath out in a thin trickle of air, not daring to make a sound, and watched his broad back move away from me down the sidewalk.

    Though I knew the men practiced in bare feet, he had donned a pair of tennis shoes, and I could hear his footsteps on the pavement. Just as I’d noticed the tiny changes of spring on my walk home, I couldn’t help but pick out the little changes in him.

    His hair was messy, sweaty from practice and a little longer than the last time I’d seen him. I noted the way it curled around his ears. The uniform they practiced in was made of heavy canvas, and his was a faded blue, folded over itself in the front and held in place with a long brown belt that wrapped twice around his waist. Faded strips of cloth made stripes on the ends of the belt where it hung down in front, and a new stripe had appeared since I’d last seen him in the uniform, but I had no idea what it meant beyond marking his level.

    I waited behind the tree, feeling foolish, until he was far enough ahead of me not to notice when I stepped back onto the sidewalk, continuing at a sedate pace so as not to catch up. It was not the first time I’d passed in front of his gym just as class was letting out, but it was the first time I’d hidden behind a tree to avoid detection. Because I sure as hell wouldn’t make the mistake of talking to him again.

    I’d done that just once, the day he’d moved in next door to me nearly two years ago. I’d first caught sight of him as he’d been lugging furniture across the parking lot, sandy hair falling in his eyes, sweat soaking through his t-shirt. I’d immediately been struck by the sheer power of a man who could move a loveseat across a parking lot on his own seemingly without effort. It had been impressive to watch. And the hard angle of his stubbled jaw and ropes of corded muscle in his forearms hadn’t hurt either.

    That evening I’d brought him a small potted geranium, planted in a little ceramic hedgehog I’d found at the grocery store, introduced myself, given him a friendly smile, tried to be neighborly. And he hadn’t said a word, just took the plant, stared through me with those icy blue eyes the color of a frozen lake, then shut the door in my face. He hadn’t even smiled.

    I gave him a wide berth after that, and he was nothing if not consistent. He still never spoke to me, just looked at me with those cold eyes when we passed in the hall. Sometimes he nodded politely, but never a word or a smile.

    For a long time, I still smiled at him; I could be friendly even if he couldn’t. Even if those muscles were equal parts intimidating and attractive. Even

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