
Title: Take Me Back
Series: Hidden Cove Firefighters
Author: Kathryn Shay
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Release Date: March 23, 2020


But Kate is deadly serious. She made the worst mistake of her life when she left Hidden Cove and sheās determined to fix it. She plans to reinstate herself in the fire department and raise her son in a loving familyāone that includes his father.
A rollercoaster of emotion, devastating fires, a stalker targeting Kate and a sizzling attraction that never diminished, set the two of them on an irrevocable course to reunion. That is if they can all stay alive.
If you liked the face-paced events, breathtaking tenderness, uplifting messages of forgiveness, as well as on-the-edge-of-your-seat fire scenes, all characteristic of the Hidden Cove Fire Department Series, then youāll love New York Times bestselling author Kathryn Shayās ninth installment.
Donāt miss books 1-8 in the beloved Hidden Cove Firefighter series: AFTER THE FIRE, ON THE LINE, NOTHING MORE TO LOSE, AMERICAāS BRAVEST, IT HAD TO BE YOU, CHASING THE FIRE, THE FIRE INSIDE and A BURNING PASSION.

āWhat the hell are you doing here?ā
āHello, Rafe.ā Kate Cassidyās voice was still husky; she used to turn him on with just its sound.
He couldnāt swallow, as if cotton was stuck in his throat. He gripped the door handle. Finally, he was able to reiterate, āWhat do you want, Kate?ā
She straitened her shoulders. It was longer, now. āI came to explain some things.ā
After six years, she wanted to explain some things!
āFrom where? I donāt even know where you ran to.ā
āNot far. Upstate.ā
Ludicrously, because sheād almost left him at the altar and he should be cursing her, he asked, āDid you get a job as a firefighter?ā
āNo. Long story why.ā Sheād let her hair grow some, and light brown waves fell around her face past down her back. Sheād also put on some weight, but there was still that same sadness in her eyes that she always carried with her.
He shrugged away the observation. āWell, whatever you want with me, I donāt want to hear it.ā
āI want you back, Rafe.ā
An ugly laugh escaped him. āYou gotta be kidding me?ā
āIām not.ā She reached out and grasped his arm. āIt's true. I still love you.ā
As if heād been burned, he viciously shook her off. āNo.ā
Stepping back, he closed the door in her face, but stood there staring at it. In a few minutes, the bell rang again. He couldnāt stop himself from opening the door again.
This time, she wasnāt alone. She held a little boy by the hand. It was a punch in gut. He tore his gaze away and the words just blurted out. āHe should have been mine.ā
Kate held his gaze. āLook at him, Rafe.ā
He did. And noticed some things. The boy was probably about five. His hair was a bit curly, dark brown, with dark eyes. The curve of his mouth seemed familiar. And he stuck his hands in his pockets likeā¦oh, my God, like Rafe always did.
Realization slammed into him. āOh, my God?ā
Kate said, āGo back in the car, honey.ā
āBut you saidāā
āJust for a bit. Mommy has some private things to talk to about, then you can see him again.ā
When the boy trudged out of sight, she raised her chin. āHeās your son.ā
āYou said when you left if you ever had a baby, you didnāt want two first responders as parents. That you couldnāt bear to have him end up alone like you did and risk him having a childhood like yours.ā
āI meant every word.ā
Again, he moved await because he didnāt want to grab her in anger. āYou left out one little fact back then. That you were already pregnant.ā
āYou wouldnāt have let me go if you knew.ā
āYouāre right I wouldnāt.ā His voice came out gruff. āI would have insisted we go through with the wedding. Iād have forced us to go to counseling, for as long as it took. Damn you, Kate, I would have protected you!ā The last came out loud.
The boy came running over. He must not have gotten into the car. āMommy, whyās he yelling?ā
Immediately, Rafe squatted. āI shouldnāt have. Itās wrong to shout at people. Iām sorry.ā He smiled. āWhatās your name?ā
āTomaso Rafael Casella.ā
He held her gaze. āAfter my father?ā
āYes, and you.ā
Holding onto his motherās legs, Tommy asked, āAre you my daddy?ā
āDid your mother say I was?ā
āUn-huh, after my other dad, Connor, died.ā
He took in a breath. āYou married someone else?ā
āIāll explain if you let us inside.ā
āCome on, Tommy.ā He stood and led them inside.
At the exact moment when two little guys rumbled down the stairs which led to the foyer. āWeāre ready to go outside.ā
āOh, dear Lord, you already have two boys. Mitch and Megan said you werenāt married. Butā¦ā She frowned. āI donāt understand.ā
āLetās go to the back and Iāll explain.ā They by-passed a big living room to the right and entered the kitchen. Kate had loved this old Victorian that heād bought when he was twenty and fixed up the three lives.
She stood behind a chair, frowning, as he addressed the kids. āTommy, this is Mike and Mattie. Iād like you guys go in the family room to watch that movie you two wanted to see?ā
The boys scurried away. Tommy hesitated. Until one turned back. āCome on, Tommy, we got a great movie.ā So, he went with them.
It took excruciatingly long to get the boys settled in front of the TV.
āWeāll talk at the table where we can see them.ā The kitchen overlooked the family room.
When Rafe served her mug, sheād blanked her face.
āI have only one thing to say to you, Kate. Any future with me is impossible.ā
#
Sweat soaked the shirt of Rafeās uniform inside his turnout coat as he crawled along the duplexās first floor. Burning timbers fell on each side of him and his group that followed. āEverybody okay?ā
His squad checked in. Brick said, āItās hotter than hell in here, Cap.ā
Firefighters suffered some ill effects of the protective gear. It slowed them down and made movement harder. Which increased heat fatigue.
āYeah. You okay?ā
āUh-huh.ā
āSounds like youāre having trouble breathing.ā The physiological effects of higher heart rate and higher core temperature restricted breathing.
āThe heatās gettinā to me.ā
āMe, too,ā Lorelei Lane put in.
āThereās the stairs,ā Rafe told them after seeing a brief outline of them through the thermal camera. āIāll take Brick and Lorelei with me.ā Which wouldnāt incur as much exertion as climbing. āThe rest of you check upstairs. Lieutenant, youāre in charge.ā
Bronson said, āYes, sir.ā
Laborious minutes later, even for Rafe, they reached their destination, the first-floor bedroom in the back. āThereās not time to quiz you, Lane. Letās just get to the beds.ā
In here, too, black smoke curled around them like fog as they continued their creep, feeling their way along the floor. Rafe, first in line, put his hands on one side of the bed. āA body.ā
Brick had gone to the opposite side. āAnother one here.ā
āCan you get him alone?ā
āDoes a bear shit in the woods?ā His friend sounded offended. Rafe would chide him afterward.
Rafe grunted as he picked up the woman. She was slight and he considered letting Lane carry her out but just then a bad feeling seized him. And he trusted his gut.
āFollow me out, Brick. Lane, you take up the rear.ā
Crashing timbers and the sound of water slapping the flames had gotten louder back here. Rafe coughed. Conditions were worsening. Theyād just reached the exit from the bedroom, when they heard five repeated short blasts of a horn above the cacophony.
Into the radio, BC Peter Baker barked, āEvacuate now. Evacuate immediately.ā
āEverybody hear?ā Rafe asked on their internal channel. He forced himself to stay calm.
Bronson, Ruggero and Sullivan checked in with yeses. āWeāre on our way down. No one up here.ā
āWe need to move faster,ā he called behind him. The acrid scents of burning wood had kicked up.
He walked as fast as possible with the woman over his shoulder.
Theyād almost reached the exit when Lorelei shrieked, āOh, my God, Cap, Brick just went down.ā
āWent down to his knees?ā
āNo, he collapsed forward.ā
Rafe sounded his mayday alarm. A high-pitched screeching rent the air. In seconds, Beth relieved Rafe of the woman, and Murray scooped up the victim whoād gone forward with Brick. Rafe, his heart beating fast, snapped out, āIāll get Brick under the arms. Ruggero take his legs.ā
It seemed to take forever before they got outside. Not only was Brick heavy but they were experiencing fatigue, now, too.
āGet away from the house, quick Rafe,ā Baker shouted as they carried their brother to safety.
They were 30 feet away when the duplex exploded.


A NEW YORK TIMES and USA TODAY bestselling author, Kathryn Shay has been a lifelong writer and teacher. She has written dozens of self-published original romance titles, print books with the Berkley Publishing Group and Harlequin Enterprises and mainstream womenās fiction with Bold Strokes Books. She has won many awards for her work: five RT Book Reviews awards, the Booksellerās Best Award, Foreword Magazineās Book of the Year and several āStarred Reviews.ā One of her firefighter books hit #20 on the NEW YORK TIMES list. Her novels have been serialized in COSMOPOLITAN magazine and featured in USA TODAY, THE WALL STREET JOURNAL and PEOPLE magazine. There are over ten million copies of her books in print and downloaded online. Reviewers have called her work āemotional and heart-wrenching.ā
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