Heartless, p.1

  Heartless, p.1

Heartless
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Heartless


  Heartless

  Book Six in the Nashville Nights Series

  Cheryl Douglas

  Copyright © by Cheryl Douglas

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, including photocopying, graphic, electronic, mechanical, taping, recording, sharing, or by any information retrieval system without the express written permission of the author and / or publisher. Exceptions include brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  Persons, places and other entities represented in this book are deemed to be fictitious. They are not intended to represent actual places or entities currently or previously in existence or any person living or dead. This work is the product of the author’s imagination.

  Any and all inquiries to the author of this book should be directed to

  info@cheryldouglasbooks.com

  Heartless © 2012 Cheryl Douglas

  Heartless – Book Six

  Derek McCall was devastated when his girlfriend married his best friend, Josh. He respected the boundaries of friendship for years, but one night they gave in to temptation. Feeling guilty for betraying his best friend, Derek left town, determined to put the past and Ashley behind him.

  Ashley Cooper has loved two men in her life, her ex-husband, Josh, and her ex-boyfriend, Derek. This single mom is finally ready to start dating again when Derek returns to town, ready to throw his hat in the ring. Her kids are dead-set against the relationship, but will she risk their disapproval for a chance to re-write history?

  Read What the Reviewers Are Saying About Nashville Nights…

  “Shameless has wonderfully flawed characters that have to fight to get back what they lost, but when they get it right, it is absolutely fantastic.”

  Cocktails and Books

  “This series is very emotional and I can’t wait to pick up a new book after it’s release.”

  Book Travels

  “I read the whole series and let me tell you, I love it. I read all four books in two days. I couldn’t put them down.”

  My Eclectic Bookshelf

  “Shameless is a sensual story packed full of passion, temptation, and forbidden love.”

  For the Love of Reading

  “Shameless drew me in heart and soul from the very first page to the satisfying conclusion after the final page was turned. Those wanting an emotional roller coaster ride, climb on board and add this one to your bookshelf.”

  Wow from the Scarf Princess Blog

  “There were times throughout Shameless where I was actually overcome with emotion. It made me cry and smile, and sometimes gasp or laugh out loud; a piece of art that couldn’t have come at a better time. Simply a must read. I give this book a solid five stars!”

  Read2Review

  “The flow of this story (Fearless) was perfect. I cannot wait for the 3rd installment.”

  Insightful Minds Reviews

  “I really adore all of the characters in this series.”

  Autumn Review

  Table of Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Epilogue

  About the Author

  Coming Soon

  Chapter One

  Derek McCall sat listening to his brother’s friends and family pay tribute to a life cut short in the line of duty, fighting for his country. They called him a hero. But to his sobbing wife, he was a husband who would miss out on the opportunity to dance with her at their daughter’s wedding, and a father who wouldn’t live long enough to hold his first grandchild.

  Derek and his late brother were cut from the same cloth. A soldier and a cop, who believed in fighting for what was right, standing up against injustice and crime, and putting your life on the line when necessary. Only Dave had paid the ultimate price for his beliefs, and it left Derek to question when his number would be called. When it was, would he have a wife and children to mourn him or would he be lying on his death bed wishing for more time to live the life he’d dreamed about?

  He glanced across the aisle of the small church and was reminded why he was still waiting for his life to begin... Ashley Cooper, his best friend’s ex-wife, his college girlfriend, and the only woman he ever loved. She was as beautiful now as she was back then, and it reminded him of the girl he’d fallen in love with a lifetime ago. She had grown children now, but when he looked at her, Derek felt as though time had stood still.

  He could still remember lying on a blanket in the bed of his truck, holding her in his arms and watching the fireworks explode over the lake on the 4th of July, or making love in the tall grass when she planned an impromptu picnic to celebrate the start of their first summer together. They would plan for the future, dream about the kids they would have, the exotic places they would travel, and the careers they were planning.

  Derek’s life took a sharp turn during his junior year. Football started monopolizing more of his time, keg parties dominated his weekends, teammates became his family, studies became an afterthought, and Ashley got tired of waiting by the phone for the calls that never came. That’s when she told him it was over, and instead of trying to win her back, Derek dealt with the pain by partying harder and pretending he didn’t care.

  He watched her fall in love with his best friend, Josh Cooper. He stood by Josh as he married the woman who should have been his bride. He snuck into the hospital room the day their twins were born, kissed cheeks, shook hands, and went home and cried for the first time, cried for the life he’d lost.

  Josh was his partner on the Nashville police force for years, his other brother. It wasn’t his fault they’d fallen in love with the same woman. Derek didn’t want to lose his best friend and the woman he loved, so he remained quiet, living a lie, pretending it wasn’t tearing his heart out every time he saw their happy family.

  He was the ‘cool uncle’ to Ashley’s kids, taking them to hockey games, coaching Little League, and savoring the piece of their lives they were willing to share with him. He loved those kids like they were his own. If things had turned out the way they were supposed to, they would have been his.

  He looked over at the boys, who weren’t boys anymore. Jay and Mike Cooper were grown men, both successful in their own right, and sons any father would be proud to call their own.

  Uncle Derek hadn’t been their hero since they found out he slept with their mother while she was still married to their father. Now he was just the guy they loved to hate.

  Derek’s younger brother, J.T., nudged him. “Hey, you okay?”

  No. How could he be okay? They were getting ready to lower their brother’s lifeless body into the ground for eternity. Nothing would ever be okay again. Their family would never be the same. But Derek couldn’t say that because he had to be the strong one. Now that Dave was gone, they were all counting on him to be the glue that held their shattered family together.

  “Yeah, I’m okay. How ‘bout you, kid?”

  J.T. squeezed his fiancée Nikki’s hand and she smiled up at him. “I’m gettin’ through it, man.”

  For the first time, Derek envied his younger brother. At least J.T. had someone to help him get through it. After the last guest left and silence fell, J.T. would have someone to hold him, someone to remind him that life went on. Derek only had the promise of a big empty bed waiting for him.

  “It’s time,” J.T. whispered, rising to his feet.

  They all watched Dave’s fellow soldiers carry the casket out of the church, across the field to his final resting place. A small cemetery flanked the pristine land surrounding the church. One of the few places untouched by progress, and the place Dave had chosen as his eternal home.

  Dave was honored with the fallen hero’s service, complete with the presentation of their flag, a reminder that his life mattered, his service was appreciated, and he was part of something bigger and more important than most could comprehend.

  Derek walked beside his mother, holding her trembling frame as she tried to come to terms with the fact that she’d lost her first-born son. Derek couldn’t begin to comprehend his parents’ pain. Losing a brother was devastating. He couldn’t begin to imagine what it must feel like to know that your child’s life was cut short in his prime.

  The mourners all sat in silence, listening, praying for strength to navigate the coming weeks and months without their brother, son, husband, father, and friend.

  By the time he tossed the final rose on the lacquered casket, Derek just wanted to disappear. He’d faced his fears before. He’d looked down the barrel of a gun, felt a bullet ricochet through his body, negotiated with mad men, but he’d never felt so lost before. He’d always had direction, known where he was going and how he was going to get there. Today, he felt adrift, as though he’d been cast out on a deserted island with no tools for survival or hope of being rescued.

  He felt the heat of a hand sear through his suit and he knew only one person could make him feel that way. Ashley.

  She reached up to hug him and he held on to her as though she were throwing him a lifeline in a sea of never-ending water. He didn’t care that her sons and ex-husband were proba
bly watching the scene unfold. He needed her now, and to hell with what everyone else thought.

  “I’m so sorry, Derek,” she whispered, stroking his hair. “Your brother was a good man.”

  “The best.” He cursed the tremor in his voice. He was raised to believe that cowboys don’t cry. He may be a big city cop now, but he would always be a rancher at heart. He cleared his throat. “I still can’t believe he’s gone. It just doesn’t seem real.”

  “I know,” she said, brushing away the tear that slipped down her cheek. “I can’t even imagine how Christine and the kids must be feeling right now.”

  He took her hands in his. It was the first time he’d felt free to touch her in years. “We’ll do everything we can to help them get through this.”

  She squeezed his hands, a small smile tugging at the corner of her full mouth. “But who’s going to help you get through it? You’re always so busy taking care of everyone else you forget to take care of yourself.”

  Ashley still knew him so well, even after all these years. He had dozens of relationships over the years, some serious, but no one had ever been able to read his mind the way she could. “I’m just takin’ it one day at a time.”

  “How long are you in town?”

  He shrugged. “I have a lot of unused vacation time. I can afford to take a month if I need to.”

  Jay and Mike walked up behind their mother. They were both dark and brooding and, like their father, tall and imposing. Derek couldn’t see any of their mother’s softness or compassion in the hard set of their square jaws.

  Mike was the first to extend his hand. “I’m sorry for your loss. Dave was a good man.”

  Derek accepted his outstretched hand. “Thanks, Mike.”

  This was the same kid who’d driven around with him on a Sunday afternoon with the top down, begging for ice cream. Now, he spoke to him like he was a stranger. One night, one moment of weakness obviously had the power to erase years of good memories.

  Jay put his hand on his mother’s shoulder, forcing her to take a step back, before offering Derek his hand. “I’m sorry for your family. It shouldn’t have happened to a man like Dave. His wife and kids needed him.”

  Derek didn’t know if he was just being sensitive or feeling sorry for himself, but he couldn’t help but wonder whether Jay intended to imply that it should have been him instead of his brother. He didn’t have a wife or kids counting on him; no one waited for him to come home.

  “Thanks for comin’, guys. I appreciate it.”

  They both nodded. “Mom, we’re leavin’ now. Do you need a ride to the reception?”

  She shook her head. “No, I’m going with Josh and Lexi, thanks.” She kissed each of her sons on the cheek. “I’ll see you there in a little bit, okay?”

  Jay and Mike exchanged a brief glance before glaring at Derek over their mother’s shoulder. “Okay,” Jay said, finally. “We’ll see you there.”

  Derek sighed as he watched them walk away. “They still hate me.”

  Ashley closed her eyes as she shook her head. “They’re still bitter. They think we betrayed their father.”

  “We did betray Josh.” Derek raked his hand through his hair. “No sense sugarcoatin’ it, Ash.”

  “That was a lifetime ago. Josh forgave us. Don’t you think it’s time we forgave ourselves?”

  Derek watched Jay and Mike climb into a black SUV. “Your kids have obviously forgiven you, but you’re their mom. Think they’ll ever be able to forgive me?”

  She looked down at the ground, giving him his answer.

  “I’m sorry. I know it’s not fair, but you know how loyal they are to Josh. It doesn’t matter that he told them it’s time to let it go. They can’t.”

  “I can’t imagine they wanted to come here today, knowin’ I’d be here?”

  She set her sunglasses in place to shield her eyes. “They love your family. You know that.”

  He clenched his jaw in frustration. He knew she was just trying to spare his feelings, but he preferred to know where he stood, rather than being blindsided. “That’s not what I asked.”

  “Josh encouraged them to come.”

  Josh walked up behind them and gripped Derek’s shoulder. “Josh encouraged who to go where?”

  Derek turned to his old friend, trying to find a hint of the animosity he saw in Ashley’s sons, but it wasn’t there. Josh had moved on with his life. He had a beautiful wife, two children with her, and the kind of marriage he and Ashley were never able to forge, no matter how hard they tried.

  “We were talkin’ about your sons and the fact that they can’t stand me.”

  Josh sighed. “Are we back to that again?” He watched the mourners filing in to their cars. “We’re here to honor Dave, not rehash the past. You worry about grievin’ for your brother. Let me handle my boys.”

  Derek shoved his hands in his pockets, trying to resist the urge to clench his fists. He was used to being in control. He hated feeling so damn helpless. “Your boys aren’t kids anymore, Josh. They’re twenty-four years old. You can’t send them to their room for refusin’ to play nice.”

  Josh chuckled. “No, I guess you’re right.” He smirked. “I guess I’m used to dealin’ with Aiden and Brianna, huh?”

  Aiden and Brianna were the kids Josh shared with his current wife, Lexi. Derek tried not to envy the fact that his best friend had four great kids who idolized him, a wife who loved him, and an army of friends and family to watch his back. He loved Josh like a brother, but it was tough not to covet his life.

  “Don’t worry about it,” Derek said, sighing. “I’ll deal with Jay and Mike.”

  Ashley began wringing her hands, a sure sign she was nervous. “I don’t think that’s such a good idea. Maybe we should just let it go.”

  Derek stared at her for a long time before responding. At forty-six, she was still the same beautiful girl he’d fallen in love with back in college. Sun-kissed hair framed a heart-shaped face with big blue eyes, still so wide and seemingly innocent, though Derek knew that was wishful thinking on his part. She had to be tough to be a single parent to two rowdy boys. A lifetime had passed since they were young and idealistic. She may look like the same girl, but she wasn’t. She was a mature woman now, a mother with a failed marriage and a lifetime of experiences behind her… experiences that didn’t include him.

  “I don’t want to let it go, Ash. We’ve tried to bury this under the rug for too long. Don’t you think it’s time we dealt with it?”

  She set her sunglasses atop her head and looked to her ex-husband, obviously hoping he would back her up. “I don’t see what good it would do. You’re going back to Arkansas in a few weeks anyway.”

  “Those kids were an important part of my life once. Josh and I are still close, and I have to assume I’ll be spendin’ a lot more time here, at least for the foreseeable future. If I could have a civil relationship with them, I’d like to try.”

  She rolled her eyes. “Good luck with that.”

  Josh looked at her long and hard. “Are you forgettin’ how persuasive Derek can be, Ashley? Nobody knows that better than you, right?”

  Her mouth fell open. “What the hell—”

  He held his hand up to silence her. “Lexi’s over by the car. Do you still need that ride?”

  “I’ll take her back to the house,” Derek said quickly. He suspected, given the choice, she would rather be trapped in a car with him right now. Besides, it would give them a chance to talk. Something they should have done a long, long time ago.

  Ashley clasped her hands in her lap and counted off the miles to the McCall house. The low drone of country music in the background did little to mask the sound of her heart pounding in her ears.

  A lifetime had passed since the last time Ashley was alone in a car with Derek, yet it felt like yesterday. If she closed her eyes, she could still imagine them as young lovers: carefree, laughing, holding hands, and teasing each other mercilessly. What she wouldn’t give to go back in time, just for a day, to relive that moment when anything seemed possible.

  “Do you like living in Arkansas?” she asked, hoping to fill the awkward silence and remaining miles with innocent conversation.

 
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