Author: Elizabeth Marx
Genre: Romance, Family Saga, Contemporary/Chick Lit
Publisher: Self Published
Paperback/Ebook
Pages: 477
Purchase:
Through the
corridors of the Windy
City’s criminal courts,
single mother Libby Tucker knows exactly how far she’ll go to save her
cancer-stricken son’s life. The undefeated defense attorney is prepared to take
her fight all the way to the majors.
Circumstances
force Libby to plead her case at the cleats of celebrity baseball player
Banford Aidan Palowski, the man who discarded her at their college graduation.
Libby has worked her backside bare for everything she’s attained, while Aidan
has been indulged since he slid through the birth canal and landed in a pile of
Gold Coast money. But helping Libby and living up to his biological duty could
jeopardize the only thing the jock worships: his baseball career.
If baseball
imitates life, Aidan admits his appears to be silver-plated peanuts, until an
unexpected confrontation with the most spectacular prize that’s ever poured
from a caramel corn box blindsides him. When he learns about his son’s
desperate need, it pricks open the wound he’s carried since he abandoned Libby
and the child.
All Libby
wants is a little anonymous DNA, but Aidan has a magical umpire in his head who
knows Libby’s a fateball right to the heart. When a six-year-old sage and a
hippy priestess step onto the field, there’s more to settle between Libby and
Aidan than heartache, redemption, and forgiveness.
Also check out Cutters vs. Jocks!
On the idyllic
campus of Indiana
University,
Little-Libby-Nobody runs into Band-Aid, All-American-Athlete, and fireworks
explode. Libby and Aidan spiral into a collision course of love at first sight
versus lust you can’t fight. As the game plays out and their affection grows,
they soon realize that labels like cutters and jocks can’t keep them apart.
But when
Libby and Aidan find themselves in trouble they have to confront the reality of
where they each fit in the others’ world. Libby believes superstar jocks don’t
take cutters to Rose Well House, in the center of campus, at midnight and pledge their undying devotion
beneath its sparkling dome. And Band-Aid imagines there’s no place for a
pregnant, small-town waitress in his bull-pen or the major leagues. What
happens when worthy opponents refuse to play their hearts out?
Excerpt:
Binding Arbitration
Aidan 2:15 p.m.
Survival instinct is the reason I initially refused this meeting.
Exposure being the next justification, because a potential scandal was the last
thing I needed right now. I paced the sidewalk in front of the plate glass
window, refusing to glance at my own reflection. I was avoiding the
consequences of the only game, in thirty odd years, I hadn’t seen to
completion.
Curiosity is what lured me here,
like a die-hard Cubs fan to the seventh inning stretch. I wanted to face her
and ease my conscience by laying all the blame on her locker room floor. I
glanced at my watch and pitched myself across the threshold.
“Palowski,” the bartender sneered from behind a beer stein she was
polishing, as if she were expecting me.
Gutheries was a local hangout
two blocks from the ballpark in Wrigleyville. While I’d been here before, it
wasn’t a regular haunt. I enjoyed the earthiness of its roughly carved bar and
rugged, wide-plank flooring, but I lived in Lincoln Park, and neighborhood bars
are a dime a dozen in Chicago.
The soft Irish ballads playing
in the background gave me the impression I’d stumbled into an Irish wake, which
wasn’t reassuring. Whiskey fumes and fish-n-chips filled the air, threatening
to bring the bile up from my stomach. I shook off my nausea and concentrated on
the sepia photographs that hung on the plastered, white-washed walls. The turn
of the century photographs ran the gambit from immigrant families in tattered
clothes to beefy brutes in the stock yards slaughtering cattle right off
boxcars. The vast majority of the images appeared to have last been cleaned
during that same era.
I was waiting at the ascribed place, at the assigned time like a cosseted
school boy. I retreated to a table farthest from the surly barmaid, keeping a
direct bead on the door.
Strike one. The ump grumbled.
“What’ll it be, glitter-boy? The
bartender focused on the trash bags in her hands, instead of looking at me.
“Pale Ale.”
When she returned, she banged the beer on the table, a spray of foam
danced across its top sloshing onto the sleeve of my coat. No napkin, no nuts,
no apology. The feeling she’d like nothing more than to incinerate me along
with the trash at the rear of the establishment snaked up my spine. She returned
to her post in the watering hole and snapped the pages of the Tribune up in front of her, effectively
obstructing me from her line of sight, but I heard her whispering into her cell
phone.
A few gulps of beer later the
small silver bell at the top of the frosted glass door chimed on a blustery
wind. A tall woman, whose expensive boots looked like they’d never step foot in
a place like this, swept through the entry and forced the door shut. She shook
off her trench coat exposing a navy suit. Her lengthy chestnut hair was pulled
back into a chic French twist with a silver barrette exposing a classic
profile.
Her briefcase strained her delicate features, but at the same time
anchored her, if only for the hesitant moment between each determined stride. I
couldn’t pull my eyes away, as I stared at her from behind my shades. My pulse
accelerated.
The woman took in the interior
with a wide sweep of her head as the lenses of her glasses lightened. It wasn’t
until she started toward me with her boots clicking the hardwood that I
realized this ravishing woman was the one I never thought to see again.
That would be a curve ball.
All these years later, I
couldn’t allow myself the luxury of a full recollection of time spent with her.
That might’ve required admitting I’d never scratched my itch for her out. All
the numerous women, every shade from platinum to strawberry- blonde, couldn’t
dish out half the heartache a wild-haired brunette cutter had put me through
with her flaming green eyes and a mouth so lush it made my tongue ache to taste
it.
I swallowed a long swig of beer,
the steely grain helping me bottle my reaction. I attempted to reconcile what I
was seeing with what I had expected. She still had it, more of it--that special
something some women have that first draws men’s attention--then buzzes their
brains into crushed barley.
She hesitated in front of the
table. I refused to stand and I didn’t remove my Oakleys. Let her stare at her
own likeness, while I took my time studying the perfectly sculpted lines of her
face, which lead to a defiant chin.
Libby tossed her briefcase
between us on the tabletop, as if that paltry item could provide a barrier
between us. I grinned at the thought of it until my dimple ached.
She perched on the edge of her
chair.
I spun my beer bottle on the graffiti-riddled wood.
I watched her green eyes blink in agitation, her opal skin blanched to
ivory and her overly generous lips flattened out. She threaded her hands
together like an angry teacher about to reprimand an unruly school boy. We
stared each other down.
“You’ve grown even more beautiful with time.” I saluted her charms with
my bottle, arching a brow in challenge.
Her eyes enlarged for a second;
the rest of her demeanor was a veiled mask of harnessed hostility. “Smarter
too.”
She’s cute, cute, cute for a
cutter,
She ain’t easy to fluster.
I ignored the ump’s baritone.
Libby’s calm demeanor gave the distinct impression that she was an Elizabeth
now. “You always were too smart for your own good.”
I thought I saw an instantaneous spark of pain, but then her eyes bored
into me. “Obviously not, or we wouldn’t be having this exchange.”
“Does that say something about me, or you?” I grinned.
“Whatever, I don’t care to
rehash the past. And thank you, but no, I don’t care for a drink.”
“I don’t see what else we would
have to talk about.” I shuffled in my seat, making to leave like a rude jerk.
She put her hand on the sleeve
of my leather jacket holding me in place with those serious eyes, which I had
been able to read once upon a time. “Don’t you?” A red flush crept up her neck,
as she jerked her hand away, shaking it.
“Why don’t you dispense with the mystery, and
tell me what you want? Just be prepared to get in line like everyone else.”
Libby swallowed. Whatever it
was, she wasn’t any happier about asking, than I was about waiting. She fished
around in her briefcase and pulled out a computer printed form. “All I need is
a blood sample.” She pushed it toward me with a perfectly manicured hand.
My eyes went to the title on the
form and my hands clinched the beer bottle. She held out all this time never
asking for anything. I was about to get my biggest one-year paycheck, and
somehow she not only knew the exact figure, she wanted a share. She thought I owed
her something. I pushed the lab form back at her. “Why on earth would I want to
do that?”
Her long dark lashes met her
cheeks and her voice wobbled over words that had much of the emotion sucked
from their core. “Because my child is dying from Leukemia, and you might be the
only chance he has to live through the rest of this year.”
Strike two.
It was the second sucker punch I’d received today. My chest felt like
someone had dropped a two hundred-pound barbell across it, when I didn’t have a
spotter. When I caught my breath, I took in her serious bearing. Whatever I had
anticipated this meeting would be about, it wasn’t some concocted story to see
me again or even to blackmail me. She might’ve tried to check the volatility of
her words, but the fear that washed her face was right below the surface, ready
to erupt from her quivering lips.
She blinked in rapid succession
before looking at me. She was angry and hurting and there were other emotions I
couldn’t read in her fathomless eyes. But none of that could appease the beast
raging in me. “You kept the kid?” I seethed.
“…equal parts heart-tugging and steamy—strictly for romance
enthusiasts.” ~Kirkus Reviews
“Marx’s romance is full of twists and turns, some expected,
and some not, with an emotionally complex central conflict, lively (though at
times infuriating) characters and a carefully drawn Chicago setting.” ~Kirkus Reviews
About the Author:
Windy city
writer, Elizabeth Marx, brings cosmopolitan life alive in her fiction—a blend
of romance, fast-paced Chicago
living, and a sprinkle of magical realism. In her past incarnation she was an
interior designer, not a decorator, a designer, which basically means she has a
piece of paper to prove that she knows how to match things, measure things and
miraculously make mundane pieces of furniture appear to be masterpieces. Elizabeth says being an
interior designer is one part shrink, one part marriage counselor and one part
artist, skills eerily similar to those employed in writing.
Elizabeth grew up in Illinois, but has also lived in Texas and Florida. If she’s not
pounding her head against the wall trying to get the words just right, you can
find her at a softball field out in the boonies somewhere or sitting in the
bleachers by a basketball court. Elizabeth
resides with her husband, girls, and two cats who’ve spelled everyone into
believing they’re really dogs.
Elizabeth has traveled extensively, but still
says there’s no town like Chi
Town.
Find the Author:
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