MMA CHAMPION AND THE NURSE PRACTIONER
While this story was previously released (Fight For Her)--I will admit that I had missed reading it. Like many others, I liked the angst, the passion, and that it wasn't about younger people. Two opposite that are drawn together like magnets. In the book world, it is nice not to have another "copy-cat" book/story-line. Vanessa Vale has a knack for bringing her characters to life--even with the good, the bad, and the, oh so sexy! This story is about Grayson "Gray" Green, The Outlaw, and Emory.
Emory is a divorced woman, left to raise her son, who is now in the Naval Academy. She didn't just become a nurse; she is a nurse practitioner, having a bachelor's and master's degree in nursing. When it comes to men, she is entirely naïve and out of the dating game. So at her friend's engagement party, dealing with one man might be easy, but meeting Gray when he comes to rescue her and act as her date is another.
Gray lived a crappy childhood, lost his mother in an accident, and put up with an abusive father. A gym teacher helped Gray with his anger, taking him to a gym where he learned how to fight properly and several martial arts. After high school, he went into the Marines, and after that, he fought professionally. Now, he owns a gym and trains fighters.
The plot will have Gray and Emory meeting at the engagement party, but Emory flummoxes gray. She is shy, reserved, but not afraid to take a stand—and she honestly does not know who is his—that he is famous. That is the most refreshing thing to him—she doesn't come on to him—and she is cautious but shows interest in him, Gray, a man, not an image. "Emory had lived, survived, and still was so innocent in so many ways."
"Trust me, I'm right where I want to be. I'm not looking either, but I'm not not looking as well."
"I'm glad you're wary because that means you protect yourself. I understand because that's my job, to help people defend themselves. I'm also glad you feel safe with me. Like I said the other night, I won't hurt you. No one will hurt you when you're with me. That's a promise."
The story will be the relationship of Gray and Emory—but they take things slow and easy. But this story also shows how caring Emory is for others—like Jackson Baker. Helping out a hurt child doesn't go unnoticed by Jackson's grandfather, Quake Baker, and he lets her know that she has his protection. When Emory falls into danger, someone breaking into her apartment, she will be rescued by Gray and Reed, but she will also have Quake coming to her aid.
"You have no idea, do you? The effect you have one people." –Gray
"Where have you been all this time?" I whispered, wondered."—Emory
"Waiting for you."--Gray
This story has the good, the bad, and the ugly of people. Emory's relationship with her ex has her doubting herself as a woman and not feeling comfortable entering a relationship. It will have Gray showing her, he is patient, and he isn't running away. It has a father who thrives on using threats and scares to manipulate people. It has a motorcycle club placing Emory in their protection—and dealing with troublemakers. But best of all, it is a beautiful, slow-burning, all-encompassing, heart-throbbing romance between two people, Gray and Emory.
"She was fresh air and sunshine and light and brightness, and she'd directed it all right one me.
The attraction, the chemistry between us was explosive, but it was more than that. It was some kind of connection that went bone-deep, soul-deep that I knew I would never be able to escape. I didn't want to."
As a loyal reader of Ms. Vale's books for years, there is just something extra about this new series that I love—the connection of the characters is so deep and moving--I can't wait for more in the series.