Read Walker Pride Online

Authors: Bernadette Marie

Tags: #Romance, #romantic fiction, #the walker family series, #saga, #Bernadette Marie, #5 Prince Publishing, #romantic series, #walker pride, #family saga, #the walker family

Walker Pride (32 page)

BOOK: Walker Pride
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They turned and started back for his truck.

“Are you open to non-traditional baby names?” She jabbed him with her elbow. “I have a list of some really great names.”

“Are you going to move into my house, use the kitchen, and take my last name?”

“I am.”

“Then we can discuss that. The pride is in the Walker.”

He smiled as he opened the door for her and she climbed into his beat up red truck. Yes, pride was having a family that stuck together even when things were not the way everyone thought they should be.

 

 

 

 

SAMPLE OF STARGAZING

BOOK 2 IN THE WALKER FAMILY SERIES

 

Chapter One ~ STARGAZING
 

 

Hands in front of her chest, palms pressed together, Bethany inhaled as she pressed her foot to her inner thigh. Her body wobbled on one leg as she closed her eyes in an attempt to achieve her balance.

The Georgia sun glittered through the trees and the spring air filled her lungs on the patio outside of her bedroom.

She held the pose for five full breaths, letting the peace of the morning wash over her.

Letting her foot slide to the floor, she lifted her hands over her head, sucked in a deep cleansing breath and folded in half. Her spine gave a few pops as it lengthened.

The problem with this pose was she could see her toes were in desperate need of a pedicure. The next exhale was a sigh.

Bethany Waterbury stood, reached for her lemon infused water, and her towel. She wiped the sweat from her brow and sipped her water. In six hours she had an audition for a commercial. This would be her first audition in nearly a year. Deep inside she didn’t know what was worse, having done the horror movies she’d made in L.A. or wanting a grocery store commercial so bad she could taste it.

There was a tapping on her bedroom door.

“Come in,” she shouted as the door opened and her roommate Susan walked in, a cup of coffee in her hand.

“It’s beautiful out here today,” she said as she joined her on the porch.

“It is. Still can’t believe you gave me this room and didn’t take it for yourself.”

Susan shrugged and sipped her coffee. “As soon as the house is built I’ll have my own porch off my master suite,” she said with a smile.

Bethany knew the day was coming. Susan would be moving in with her fiancé, who happened to be Bethany’s cousin Eric.

Two months ago a psychopath, who had once had an affair with Bethany’s mother, had shot Eric and burned his house to the ground. Weeks earlier he’d killed off his animals and caused destruction to Eric’s property as well as grandfather’s. It seemed as though Douglas was obsessed with Eric’s cousin Lydia as well.

She sipped her water again. Guilt still plagued her when she thought about it. Had she just stayed in California, where the magic of Hollywood had long given up on her, none of this would have happened to Eric.

It was her fault. She was the spitting image of her late mother. Just having seen her had set the man into some psychotic episode.

He’d been locked up and she’d been in counseling. When she’d come to Georgia, this wasn’t what she thought she’d be doing. The point in moving was to bond with her father.

Okay, she’d done that—a little bit.

He was a mess of a man, just as her mother had been a mess of a woman. Perhaps that was the common factor that had them together for the short time in which she was conceived.

“You look like you have a lot on your mind,” Susan said as she walked out onto the patio. Her new diamond ring sparkled in the sunlight.

“I was just thinking about everything. My counselor says I can’t blame myself for Eric’s loss, but it’s hard not to.”

“He doesn’t blame you. No one does.”

“Just me.”

Susan moved closer to her. “This is really bothering you.”

“How can it not? I’m lucky that when Douglas shot Eric it didn’t kill him. Or that he didn’t die in the fire.”

Susan knelt down in front of her and rested her hand on Bethany’s knee. “Eric is fine. The house is framed. The stalls are full of horses and you are safe. Honey, you have to be able to move on.”

She nodded. This wasn’t anything that she hadn’t been told already.

Susan stood and held out her hand to Bethany to stand. “What are your plans today?”

“I have an audition.”

Susan’s eyes grew wide. “Really? That’s wonderful.”

“We’ll see.”

“And you’re going with me to Pearl’s bridal shop this afternoon, right?”

Bethany had forgotten she’d promised to wedding dress shop with Susan. At least her sister owned the store. It was another step in getting to know her family—spending time bridal shopping would do that.

“I’ll be there. Pearl is expecting us.”

Susan sipped her coffee. “You’re still able to work tomorrow, right? Lydia has us set to cater the book club dinner. They have Kent Black coming.”

“Kent Black?”

“The writer.” She held out her hand to gesture. “Haven’t you read him? Oh, he’s genius.”

Bethany narrowed her gaze on her. “He writes science-fiction doesn’t he?” she asked and Susan nodded. “Why would I read that? Why do you?”

Susan laughed. “I’m thinking you must be the only person who hasn’t read it. It’s been a New York Times bestseller for months. They’re looking to make a movie of it. Hey, maybe you can put in a good word to him and he can suggest they cast you as Dessilla.”

“Dessilla? Sounds like a roll I was designed for.” She blew a hair from her forehead. “I’m done with horror movies.”

“No, she’s a beautiful alien.”

Bethany groaned. “I don’t think I want to be an alien either. I’d better get ready. And yes, I’ll be available for the book club.”

“Good.”

“How did she get him to come to the book club anyway?”

“I think she’s more connected than we think,” Susan winked. “I’ll talk to you later. Good luck on your audition.”

“Don’t say that. It’s bad luck.”

“Right. Are you supposed to break a leg for TV too?”

“It’ll do,” she joked as Susan walked back out of the bedroom.

 

~*~

 

Coffee houses once were a source of inspiration. They had a vibe and a feel to them. Now, Kent thought, they were more like a bar.

The same people walked in and out of the door every day. They ordered the same addictive concoction and either carried it out or sat for hours and chatted with others.

He missed the days where he could pull up to a table and no one bothered him for hours. Since he was traveling it was one of his only options. Sure, he could hole up in his hotel room, but that wasn’t very inspirational either.

Even though he’d rather be alone, he needed to surround himself with people for inspiration—he just wished they weren’t so noisy.

The door opened again. It had become habit to look up and study the person. This one had him sitting up, removing his fingers from the keyboard of his laptop, and following her with his eyes.

Long red curls bounced over her shoulders, which were bare in a sundress with yellow flowers. She was lean and toned and absolutely radiant.

She walked to the end of the line and Kent turned in his chair to follow her with his gaze.

Smiling at the boy behind the counter, Kent noted that the young man flushed at her simple gesture. That said something.

She continued on to pay for her drink. He heard the woman ringing up her order offer a pastry to which the redhead waved off with her hand and a laugh. Obviously she’d avoid that, he knew just by looking at her. Her drink was probably low fat blah too.

When she turned the beauty of her hit Kent right in the chest. He’d never seen such a beautiful specimen.

She was scanning the room looking for an open seat. Wasn’t it his very lucky day? The only free chair was at his table.

He stood, bravely—as bravely as any man who locked himself in his house and wrote about aliens could possibly be.

Quickly he wiped the crumbs from the front of his shirt and put on a grand smile, just as the redhead waved at a man across the room and headed toward him.

Kent slithered down into his chair and ducked behind his computer screen. He was used to that. Why should today be any different?

He took a Harry Potter movie pen from his Star Wars Celebration bag and jotted a note on the napkin on the table.

Redhead, glorious redhead in yellow flowered sundress.

She’d live on forever, he decided, on the pages of his books as the princess he’d needed to write who lived in the far away galaxy of Vela Centauri.

 

BOOK: Walker Pride
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