Read Bayview Heights Trilogy Online
Authors: Kathryn Shay
Tags: #teachers, #troubled teens, #contemporary romance, #cops, #newspaper reporter, #principal, #its a wonderful life, #kathryn shay, #teacher series, #backlistebooks, #boxed set, #high school drama, #police captain, #nyc gangs, #bayview heights trilogy, #youth in prison, #emotional drama teachers
Kurt stared at Johnny’s back as he followed
him out the door. Something about the flicker in his eyes reminded
Kurt of when Johnny was a street kid...But the boy was heading down
the hall, chart in hand. It wasn’t until they reached the examining
room that Kurt said, “Johnny, I need to see the chart.”
“What? Oh, sorry. We’re swamped. And I was up
late studying.” He nodded to the door. “Think you could do this on
your own? Dr. Frank asked for my help.”
“Yeah sure, but send in a nurse.” Kurt shooed
him away.
“Glad to have you back, Kurt,” Johnny called
over his shoulder, again a strange note in his voice. Humorous,
almost.
Shaking his head, Kurt studied the chart.
Forty-one-year-old woman. Chest pains for weeks. He checked the
name. Johnny’s scribble was worse than usual. He couldn’t decipher
it. Jeez, it looked like nobody had even taken her vitals. Knocking
briefly on the door, he was still staring at the chart when he
stepped inside. “Good morning,” he said, taking out a pen. “It
seems I can’t read your na—” Then he looked up.
Seated on the examining table, dressed in a
faded hospital gown that skimmed her thighs, was Zoe. Behind her,
the fickle February weather changed dramatically, and the sun made
a rare appearance and streamed in the window, bathing her in its
warm glow. In that moment he knew in his heart that she was the
love of his life.
Shoulders back, she cocked her head. “Good
morning, Doctor.” Her eyes devoured him, as his did her. She
did
look a little thin, but so good he was immobilized for
a minute.
Finally he said, “Good morning. What can I do
for you?”
She cleared her throat. “I’m, um, not feeling
well,” she said softly. “I really need your attention.”
His heartbeat hit double time at the meaning
of her words. Slowly he walked toward her and pulled a light out of
his pocket. “Fine. Let’s check your vitals. Look at my nose,” he
said as he turned on the light and stared deeply into her eyes.
“Eyes seem fine. More than fine. Beautiful as ever.”
His gaze roamed over her face. “Good color.
Maybe a little pale.” Then, for the first time in almost ten weeks,
he touched her. “What did you say was the problem, miss?” he asked
hoarsely, his hand on her throat.
She grasped his wrist and slowly drew his
hand down to her chest. “Right here,” she said, achingly. “My
heart. It hurts. Badly.”
His eyes locked with hers. He opened his palm
and pressed it against her. “How long has this been going on?”
“Nine weeks, three days and—” she checked the
clock “—a few hours.”
The corners of his mouth turned up, and
simultaneously he felt a hurt so deep it stunned him.
He untied the gown and slid it gently down
her shoulders. The freckles he bared beckoned him. Leaning over, he
placed his lips on a little patch he was particularly fond of. She
startled, then grasped his shoulders. “Oh.”
“Something wrong, miss?”
“I’m, um, feeling weak,” she whispered.
“Then hold on to me.” He slid the stethoscope
to the area over her heart as she clutched his upper arms.
“Hmm. Your heart rate’s up.” He studied her
face again. “I’ll bet your blood pressure’s right off the
charts.”
“I wouldn’t be surprised.”
“I wonder what’s wrong with your heart.”
“I know what’s wrong with it.”
He arched a brow.
“It’s broken.”
His throat clogged. “Zoe—”
She raised her hand and stopped his words.
“The man I love broke it when he left me. And—” she smiled, though
her eyes clouded “—I’ve found I just can’t live without him.
Nothing’s the same. Everything I always loved—teaching, spending
time with my friends, even shopping—aren’t any fun.”
“Wow, even shopping?” He picked up her hand
and cradled it against his chest. “This is a very serious symptom.”
He kissed her fingers.
“But I’m not sure I can help you. I haven’t
been very reliable in that field lately. Maybe you need someone
else. I can re—”
She leaned into him and looped her arms
around his neck. “I don’t want anyone else,” she whispered. “Ever.
I want you.”
There was only a moment’s hesitation before
his arms closed around her. Both their hearts beat with a dangerous
arrhythmia.
He buried his face in her hair. “I missed you
so much.”
She hugged him to her. “I missed you, too. I
need you, Kurt. Please give us another chance.”
“I can’t bear the thought of hurting you
again. Letting you down.”
“None of that matters,” she said. “We just
need to be together.”
Brushing back her hair, he asked, “Are you
sure?”
She brought his hand to her heart again. “I’m
sure. I love you. I’ll always love you.”
“I love you, too,” he whispered, his voice
catching on the last syllable.
They held each other for long moments. Then
she drew away. “So, are you going to take my case, Doctor?” Her
brown eyes, shining with moisture like his own, were also filled
with devilment.
“It looks that way.” Without releasing her
gaze, he stepped back to the door and snicked the lock behind
him.
Those eyes of hers danced.
“But I’ll have to spend a lot of time with
you, miss.”
She shrugged, letting the gown slip an inch.
“How long?”
“Oh, the next fifty or sixty years ought to
do it.”
“Sounds good to me.”
He came closer. “Mmm, me, too. We’ll start
with a thorough examination.” He reached for the gown.
“Now?” she asked huskily.
“Now,” he whispered in her ear. “And
forever.”
“Can I count on that?”
He drew away. Looked deeply into her eyes.
“You can count on that. And on me.”
“That’s all I need,” she said as she pulled
him to her.
-o0o-
Dear Reader,
I hope you enjoyed
Count on Me,
the
third book of the Bayview Heights Trilogy which also included
Cop of the Year
and
Because It’s Christmas
. I
think
Count on Me
tackled a difficult subject, just as the
other two did, while focusing on the joys and heartbreak of
teaching kids today in a modern high school.
First let me comment on the focus of the
story—the romance between Kurt Lansing and Zoe Caufield. Kurt
betrayed Zoe in the most elemental way a man can betray a woman. In
the course of the book, he had to learn just how hard it is to win
back the trust of the woman he’s never stopped loving. In turn, Zoe
learns that her feelings for him haven’t diminished despite the
mistake he made and that she can, indeed, count on him this time.
The road to happiness was rocky, but worth the trip.
One of my favorite parts of this book is
Caufield’s Chicks, the group of girl students Zoe is close to. They
remind me of different students I had in my teaching career—ones I
got close to and got involved (sometimes, too involved) with. I
loved those kids as much as Zoe loves her girls, and they made my
three-decade-long teaching career satisfying and worthwhile.
Last, I hope the message of this book was
clear: with enough concern and caring, any problem—between men and
women, between teachers and students, among friends and family—can
be overcome.
Kathy Shay
o0o
Contact Kathryn Shay
at
www.kathrynshay.com
(contact Kathryn);
www.facebook.com/kathrynshay
;
www.twitter.com/KShayAuthor
o0o
Kathryn Shay’s Books available on Smashwords:
People in the stock car racing town Glen Oaks
called them The Outlaws when they were young, but no one knew the
kids on the streets would grow up to be such upstanding citizens.
Follow these three relationships between these couples throughout
the book: Linc, now a minister and Margo, a confirmed atheist; Beth
who falls for the man the town blames for her husband’s death ten
years ago; and Annie and Joe whose marriage broke up over truly
irreconcilable issues.
Meet stoic by-the book Secret Service Agent
Joe Stonehouse who’s paired with rebel Agent Luke Ludzecky as they
go undercover in a typical American high school that has been
tagged as having the potential to erupt in deadly violence. Their
task of infiltrating the student body is hard enough, but when Joe
becomes involved with principal Suzanna Quinn, and Luke is
attracted to teacher Kelsey Cunningham, who thinks he’s a student,
the operation gets even more explosive.
Follow the firefighters of Hidden Cove, a
remarkable team of heroes like you’ve never seen before. Their
daily lives on the line and in the bedroom will leave you with
unforgettable characters and plots ripped straight from the
headlines. Read all three or as stand-alone full length novels.
The Rescue Squad in the Hidden Cove Fire
Department deals with blazing fires, horrific car accidents and
medical calls. They also have complicated personal relationships
due to the nature of their jobs. In AMERICA’S BRAVEST, each of the
six novellas details the love and work of one firefighter, but the
stories are tied together with an arson case and a blogger out to
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Reese Bishop and Kate Renado were young
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they were wrong. Competing jobs, a child, differing outlooks on
their future and acute jealousies caused a bitter divorce. But when
a woman they defended hangs herself in prison and blames them in a
suicide note for her despair, they have to come together to prove
their integrity to the legal world. In the process, they find each
other again and the sparks fly.
Meet the O’Neils: Bailey, the Street Angel
who fights conservative senator Clay Wainwright for funds and
Washington support to do her work; Aidan, her older brother who
falls for a Secret Service agent guarding his sister; and Liam,
another older brother and a sensitive widower with a troubled seven
year old who meets, loves but can’t have daring firefighter Sophie
Tyler. Read all three or as stand-alone full length novels.
In book one of the Educators series, Annie
Jacobs has made something of herself after a rough adolescence.
She’s the mother of twin boys, a respected and well-liked English
teacher and has good friends. But when her former high school
teacher, Dylan Kane, comes back to town, Annie’s carefully created
world starts to crumble. She and Dylan have a past, one which
almost destroyed her. Now, he wants to be the next principal of her
school. Annie’s afraid their previous relationship will endanger
the job she loves. She’s even more fearful that her feelings for
Dylan will rekindle, or worse, never died.
In book #2 of The Educators, teacher Brie
Gorman and Coach Nick Corelli come together to help the star of the
football team. A fiery passion erupts between them, even when they
clash over the best way to save the boy’s life.
In book #3 of The Educators, Maybe This Time,
teacher Delaney Dawson and lawyer Gage Grayson hook up before they
know he's the father of one of her students. Putting aside their
feelings, they try to help Gage’s daughter stay on the straight and
narrow. All three are threatened by the deadly violence which is
about to erupt in their school.
Darcy Weston and Jordan Mackenzie meet as
teenagers when she flees to her grandparents’ abandoned farm in
upstate New York and he helps hide her. Twelve years later, she’s a
famous painter and he’s published a book, one that reveals secrets
he kept for her years ago. The two are thrown together over murder,
police investigations and their irrepressible passion for each
other.
When law student Nick DiMarco meets school
counselor Amanda Carson, they clash over the best way to handle his
very depressed daughter. What they don’t expect is a passion for
each other that they can’t deny.
In
Just One Night
, polar opposites
Zach Sloan and Annie Montgomery married despite their differences,
then divorced because of them. Five years later, they come together
during a tragedy and in the aftermath, conceive a child. But will
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A Price Worth Paying
is Kathryn
Shay’s sizzling new summer read that includes passion, romance, a
sexual predator, infidelity and the enduring love of two characters
whose marriage withstands the unthinkable. This is a major original
novel by the author who reviewers say has “earned a well deserved
place among the top romance authors.”