Storm Front by Susan May Warren

Storm Front by Susan May Warren

Author:Susan May Warren [Warren, Susan May]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Contemporary Romance;Rescue work—Montana—Fiction;Christian fiction;FIC042040;FIC027020;FIC027260
ISBN: 9781493413966
Publisher: Baker Publishing Group
Published: 2018-03-04T16:00:00+00:00


He who hesitates is lost. That thought alone rippled through Ben’s brain as he watched Kacey drive away with Garrett.

He could have climbed into the backseat of the truck, could have spent the day with Kacey, and despite the chaos of the chopper noise, maybe figured out a way to talk to her. Beg her not to run away from him.

Give them another chance.

He could have even suggested that they find a quiet corner somewhere in the middle of all this trauma to talk about their future. Audrey.

The fact that Kacey had broken up with him.

But he stood there, watching her drive away, and the loss left him unraveled.

Because, in that moment, he saw it. For some reason, he just kept hesitating. Sure, he said he wanted to get married, but it hadn’t been Kacey who canceled their nuptials, twice.

Worse, he couldn’t put a finger on why. He blamed his busyness. But that was the easy reason. Something else niggled at him, something—

“Ben, you need a ride, buddy?” Pete had pulled up behind him, and he turned at the question. Pete drove a black Hummer with the Red Cross emblem on the door. Gage and Ian were tucked inside.

“Yeah,” he said and climbed in back. Gage scooted over. Ian sat in the front seat and glanced back at him.

“You okay? I thought you were headed out with your dad.”

“Ty got into the truck and said he needed to follow a hunch or something. I . . .” He glanced out the window. “I was going to ride with Kacey, but it looks like she’s got it covered.”

Pete pulled out, following the caravan—Ty in front of him, and Jonas and his brother, along with Shae, in the Suburban out in front. His bandmates had headed out with yet another vehicle to scour the festival site. And check on the towing of his RV to Minneapolis for repairs.

Hopefully they’d also finish salvaging the rest of their equipment. They’d have to rent their instruments for the gig in Wisconsin, but . . .

The gig in Wisconsin. Ben tapped his fingers on his knee, thinking through the text from his manager. And his stupid slip in front of Audrey. He should have never mentioned the gig—the look on her face had opened a wound that was still throbbing in his chest.

But in truth, it tugged at him, the temptation to fall back into the music, wrap himself into the words, the beats, the familiar, and forget, at least for two hours, the fact that somehow he’d blown it again.

He hadn’t a clue how to woo Kacey back into his arms.

“I wish you’d called me when Chet went missing,” Pete was saying, glancing into the rearview mirror as he drove. “I would have been here earlier.”

“Sorry. I called PEAK. I didn’t know what else to do.”

“We should have called you,” Ian said quietly. “Sorry. How is the Red Cross working out?”

Pete lifted a shoulder, strangely noncommittal. And then, “So, Jess isn’t here.” His voice was



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