THE LONG ROAD HOME: AN ENEMIES TO LOVERS ROMANCE PAPERBACK
THE LONG ROAD HOME: AN ENEMIES TO LOVERS ROMANCE PAPERBACK
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THE LONG ROAD HOME: AN ENEMIES TO LOVERS, SINGLE DAD, SMALL TOWN ROMANCE PAPERBACK
There are many ways to heal a damaged heart. Some more sensible than others. Riding solo across the US on her Harley presents unforeseen challenges for Camden Burns–but none as difficult as the unfriendly sheriff of a small Kansas town.
When Camden’s bike develops a worrying vibration, she pulls to the side of an endless cornfield to call for help. Unfortunately, the sheriff finds her first and makes it clear there’s no room in his town for her. Fine with Camden. Get the bike fixed and she’ll happily be on her way.
She should know that life is never that easy.
Single dad Dean Wester knows his young daughter Sophie needs a mother and he has just the woman in mind. Someone nice. Someone proper. Someone eager to step into the role of sheriff’s wife. The perfect role model for his little girl. She’s made it clear he only has to ask. And he will, once he sees the back side of the irritating, quirky, surprising Camden Burns.
Of course nothing is that simple. The universe has other ideas, and Camden and the sheriff have no choice but to play along.
PAPERBACK |
242 Pages |
ISBN |
978-1-945856-93-8 |
DIMENSIONS |
5 x 0.605 x 8 |
PUBLISHER |
Timberdoodle Press |
PUBLICATION DATE |
June 20, 2023 |
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THE LONG ROAD HOME: AN ENEMIES TO LOVERS, SINGLE DAD, SMALL TOWN ROMANCE PAPERBACK
Camden Burns kept her eyes on the mountains ahead of her. Rising out of the flat plain that was western Kansas, they were little more than a low, blue-gray ridge topped with white frosting.
She knew that the Rocky Mountains were huge compared to the country’s eastern mountains–with fifty-eight peaks reaching fourteen thousand feet above sea level–and yet they still looked like mere hills from the seat of her Harley.
The size of the country blew her away. This was her second day of driving across Kansas and she didn’t seem to be getting any closer to America’s largest chain of mountains.
Part of that was because she’d gotten tired of sharing Interstate 70 with the big rigs and had dropped south to secondary roads, many of which turned to gravel or simply ended in a tee, forcing her to go north or south until she found another road heading west to pick up. It was an inefficient way to travel, but she hated the way the big trucks pushed the Harley around.
She wouldn’t have minded if Johnny had been riding with her like they’d planned–riding their motorcycles from coast to coast, from Portland, Maine to San Diego, California. The trip was supposed to be their adventure of a lifetime.
Reddish gold fields of wheat stretched to her left and right as far as Camden could see, broken only by the occasional sunflower field or a farmhouse with its barns and assorted outbuildings.
She wondered about the people who lived in those farmhouses. How far did they have to drive for supplies? Did they make a whole day of it? Spend the night? Running to the corner store for a forgotten carton of milk or a loaf of bread was out of the question. These people had to plan. They had to make lists so they didn’t forget anything. If they did forget, they had to go without.
For a woman who’d been born and raised in a small city, living on the vast prairie was a foreign concept. What did the farm families do for entertainment? What about their social lives? How far did the kids have to ride the bus to get to school? How did teens get together and date?
Where on earth did they take their dates?
The sun continued its climb over Camden’s head, disappearing now and again behind huge, puffy white clouds that reminded her of sailing ships marching across the deep blue sky.
She wished Johnny was there to share it with.
For five years they had looked at maps, planned the routes and destinations, changed the plans, and always, always fed on Johnny’s dream.
They had scrimped and saved, rarely eating out and driving older cars, until they could afford to buy the two Harley touring bikes, an outlay of nearly fifty grand. Another two years of saving for the trip expenses–money for food, the occasional hotel, campground fees at the parks they wanted to see, gas, etc.
Finally they decided they had enough cash set aside. The trip dates were set and arrangements made. Then Johnny came home sick from work with what he thought was the flu. When he didn’t get better Camden took him to the doctor. Johnny had pancreatic cancer. Four months later she buried her boyfriend of five years and found herself looking forward to a bleak and lonely future.
Johnny had made Camden promise that she would still make the trip. She had promised, but in her heart she never meant to keep that promise. She didn’t want to make the trip alone–it was meant to be their adventure together, something they could reminisce about in their old age. But by that point she would have said anything to ease Johnny’s passing, even an outright lie.
When the time came to sell the touring bikes, Camden found that she couldn’t part with hers. It was the strongest link she had left to Johnny, a reminder of the hours they had spent exploring Maine together while they became accustomed to traveling by motorcycle.
Her bike sat in the garage of their rental house for a solid year. She cleaned it and polished the chrome and dutifully applied conditioner to the leather seat, but until that past April, a full year after Johnny’s passing, she never once fired it up or even sat on it.
Maybe it was the anniversary of Johnny’s death. Or maybe it was the growing sense that life was passing her by and would continue to do so unless she made a drastic change, no matter how difficult that change might be.
Whatever the reason, one day after cleaning the bike, Camden sat on it. She reached for the handlebars and decided to drive her bike to San Diego, following the route Johnny had so passionately dreamed of.
The next day she gave her notice at her job.
The following week she packed up all but the clothes she would take with her and donated her belongings to Salvation Army and a local group home. Then Camden did something that would have shocked Johnny–she cut the waist length, thick black hair that he so loved and donated the locks to Wigs For Kids, an organization that provided free wigs for kids with cancer.
She went home with her head feeling ten pounds lighter. Once the weight of all that hair was gone, what was left sprang into gentle curls all over her head. The new hairdo reminded her of a devil’s halo.
The next day she cleaned the rental house and left the key with the real estate agency, hopped on her bike and headed south out of Maine. She had a goal in mind–to reach San Diego. She didn’t care how long it took. After that? She didn’t know. For the first time in her life, Camden decided to let the future take care of itself.
She learned a few things that first week on the road that she and Johnny should have discovered together. She learned to eat her meals at weird times to avoid the crowds–everyone ate between six and eight a.m., noon time, and between five and seven p.m. She settled on a late breakfast, late lunch, and late dinner after stopping for the night.
She learned that one hundred and fifty mile to two hundred miles tops was as far as she wanted to travel in a day. Her arms and hands grew tired from gripping the handlebars and her body stiffened up if she spent any longer in the saddle. She never rode after sunset and always planned out where to stop for the next night before she turned in.
She never spoke to anyone beyond ordering food or requesting a room for the night. Her life fell into a rhythm of riding, stopping for fuel for both her and the bike, visiting a particularly fine view or historic site, and sleeping in strange beds.
While she and Johnny had planned to camp much of their trip in order to stretch their funds, Camden always stopped at a motel for the night. She didn’t have room for camping gear in her hard-sided saddlebags, and she didn’t want to camp alone. With the funds from selling Johnny’s bike and the reduced cost of feeding one body instead of two, she could afford to indulge in a cheap room every night.
She had to admit that she looked forward to a nightly hot shower and a comfortable bed. She missed her habitual long, hot soaks in scented bubble baths, but drew the line at using motel tubs.
She had also traded the silk nighties Johnny preferred her to wear for the more practical tee shirts and boxer shorts. If she ever had to vacate a motel room in the middle of the night due to some emergency like a fire, she didn’t want to be wearing a revealing silk nightgown.
Looking across the wheat fields that seemed to stretch to the very horizon, Camden wondered if she’d be sleeping in the rough that night. She had been thrown off her route earlier that morning when the road she intended to take was blocked by an extra wide load that turned out to be an entire house set on a trailer bed, stretching from ditch to ditch with no room to pass on either side, even for a rider on a motorcycle.
She still couldn’t believe it. Someone had decided to pick up their whole three story farmhouse and move it to another location.
The nice man smoking and leaning against the end of the trailer had informed Camden that they were waiting for the power company to take care of some lines up ahead so the house’s roof wouldn’t tear them down. Shouldn’t take more than a few hours.
Camden thanked him and turned around to look for another road west. The one she ended up on was a minor county road that seemed to only service crop fields and the occasional farmstead. She’d been on it about an hour with no sign of a town or even another vehicle, when she noticed a rough vibration in her handlebars.
At first she ignored the vibration, but it continued to grow worse. The county road was tarmac, bleached pale gray by years of sun, but it was still relatively smooth. It wasn’t responsible for the new feel in her handlebars.
A grinding rumble soon accompanied the vibration, and it became harder to steer. Camden knew she had a mechanical problem with the bike. If Johnny had been with her he could have checked it out for her, but he wasn’t. She would have to deal with the problem herself.
For the first time since setting out, she wished she had never left Maine. Now she was stuck in the middle of nowhere with a possibly unsafe bike.