Notes
& Roses
Stanford
Creek #1
By RJ Scott writing as Rozenn Scott
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Release Date: February 26, 2016
Megan Campbell is
horrified when a stranger, covered in blood, collapses in her shop. When that
same stranger, wild and angry, abruptly becomes someone very different, it’s
not her safety she is worrying about, it’s her heart. With his stalker behind
bars, former boy band singer CJ Taylor is starting a new life. He’s bought a
house in a small Vermont town, and taken back the name he was born with. Two
years have passed since he was last in the public eye and as Cody Brennan, he’s
finally feeling safe. Desperate to find some peace, all he wants is to connect
to the music in his head, write new lyrics and forget the tragedy in his past.
What he doesn’t count on is meeting Megan. From her amber eyes to her tempting
smile, she is everything he thought he could do without, the very thing he
promised himself to avoid. But he’s thrown into her family and her life, and
suddenly he’s found a place he wants to stay. Megan’s first instinct is to tame
the powerful attraction she has to this stranger, but very soon desire becomes
something more. Between them can they find the words to make things right? And
can they stay safe long enough to fall in love?
“Besides Notes and
Roses being a beautiful name, Author Rozenn Scott has written a beautiful and
heart warming story.” - 5 Star Review Cutting Muse Blog Review
Chapter One
Megan Campbell stepped away from the cash
register of Notes & Roses and leaned against the back counter. She put
her right hand in her jeans pocket and, as carefully and unobtrusively as
possible, she removed her cell phone and scrolled to Justin’s name. What should
she send to her brother? Help sounded like a good start. Or possibly, there’s a
man in my shop and I think he’s drunk or stoned.
Yep, send something like that to Justin, and he
would come in, all guns blazing. Then he’d pin the weird guy to the floor and
read him his rights. And the man currently staring at a wall didn’t look
dangerous, just lost, homeless maybe?
Something more considered then, like, there is a
vagrant in here, and he needs help, what should I do? The man moved a little.
Away from her side of the store, the ‘roses’ part of the setup, and over to the
‘notes’ side. He was peering at the shelves; a collection of stationery and
household bits and pieces like cushions and local crafts. He stumbled a little,
turned to the side and looked up at the display of posters on the far wall.
Landscapes of Vermont; rivers, small towns and red high-sided barns with gently
rolling hills of emerald green.
“That’s wrong,” he said.
“Sorry?” Megan asked, but he didn’t reply.
He’s talking to the wall now. Should she add
that to the text as well? This was going to end up being one hell of a lot of
typing to explain what he was doing. Despite how odd it all looked, the visitor
wasn’t threatening her. Also, Rachel would be back soon, maybe between them
they could sort this out?
He hadn’t even spoken to her, but something
wasn’t right. Maybe it was the way he’d been standing; his hands in fists at
his sides, staring now at the new Valentine wall display of flowers and hearts.
Maybe it was the way he was dressed; dark jeans caked in mud, heavy boots that
had tracked in the same mud. Not to mention the black hoodie with the hood
partially hiding his face from her view.
Or maybe it was the despair in his hunched
shoulders, the utter defeat in the way he had to support himself to stand.
Whatever it was, Megan was faced with two
options. Talk to the strange man in her shop while she was alone in here, or
call in reinforcements in case things went south.
Her visitor moved, not his feet, but his fists,
unclenching and bringing his hands up to knuckle his eyes and then cover them.
Megan’s cop brother liked to explain these things to her, but she didn’t need
his help to recognize when despair in someone turned to anger.
She sent the standard 911 text, startled when
she looked up and saw the stranger had stepped closer to her while she’d been
distracted.
“Where am I?” he asked, his voice very soft.
“You’re in my shop.”
He shook his head. “I need the music. Someone
took it, and I need it.”
Okay, this was so not going the way she wanted
it to go. He was incoherent. Maybe he was homeless and just needed a place to
get out of the persistent snow that had plagued Stanford Creek the last few
days. He’d evidently been somewhere slushy and muddy if his clothes were
anything to go by.
“I don’t understand, sir; what music do you
need?” she asked, and waited for him to acknowledge her question. Instead, he
took another, shaky, step forward, and covered his eyes again. “Hello? Can I
help you?” she repeated when he didn’t look at her.
That finally got his attention, and his hands
came down, and she got her first clear look at his eyes and face. What she saw
had her reaching to send another text. He had blood on him smeared down from
his temple into his wild beard, and his blue eyes were bright with something.
Drugs maybe? Long dark hair hid some of his features, and he looked like he was
about to keel over.
“Where’s the music?” he mumbled, his voice low
and urgent. He gripped his temples hard and stumbled back, knocking a display
of greeting cards to the floor. The sound was a loud clatter in the otherwise
quiet room. “Shit… I didn’t…”
“Sir?” This time, she was within reaching
distance as he rounded on her, his lips pulled back in a snarl—or a grimace of
pain, she couldn’t be entirely sure. Whatever, it wasn’t the look of someone
who wanted to be spoken to. Time to leave. She glanced at the front door, then the
fire exit. He was between her and the only possible ways out, and she was
trapped. When she focused back on him, all she saw was a situation that could
get out of hand. He was a good six inches taller than her five-nine, broad and
built, with tattoos curling around his wrist, disappearing up under the sleeve
of the hoodie.
Everything about him looked wrong. He didn’t
move again, or even acknowledge her; all he did was stare with bright sapphire
eyes, focused on a point behind her. Scary and intense and so damned fixated
with his expression in that scowl.
“What happened?” he groaned and covered his eyes
again. “Call… Zee…”
She texted without looking, only glancing at the
screen briefly to make sure she was sending another text to her brother and not
some random person on her list. 911. Again. The standard sibling instruction
for help me right the hell now, reserved for having one of her brothers rescue
her from one of her many dreadful first dates. Garrett wasn’t even in town, so
there was little point texting him, and Justin may not even be in the sheriff’s
office. She hoped to hell he was, though, and had read her message. She’d know
soon enough because the small sheriff’s office was close.
And still the stranger stood there, staring at
her. At least, he hadn’t moved any closer.
He closed his eyes and wiped at the blood that
was trickling down his face, looking down at his hand and staring at the red
that streaked his skin. She thought she heard a sob, but couldn’t be sure.
Compassion welled inside her. Vagrant or not, dressed in soiled clothes and
with the hood up, he didn’t have to be a criminal.
“Sir? Do you need help?” She held out her hand,
but he stepped closer to her and damn it, she may have had self-defense
training, but she wasn’t stupid. If the man was hopped up on drugs, she had to
stay out of reach. The door opened, and Justin stepped in, all uniform and
pissed-off attitude.
“Two 911’s? This had better be good, Megs.”
Megan inclined her head to the man who Justin
evidently hadn’t seen in his dramatic entrance. Justin could handle himself,
and he had a gun, he’d know what to do.
“What the hell?” Justin said as he assessed the
situation, his hand automatically resting on his holstered weapon.
“I think it’s drugs,” she said loud enough for
Justin to hear. The man looked at Justin and then to her, before shaking his
head a little.
“No.” The voice was raspy, little more than a
growl. “Not those.” He appeared to be struggling to talk, and he pressed his
hands to each side of his head. “Just the music; Zee will know,” he added, but
his voice slurred, and he coughed and doubled over.
Justin pulled his weapon and held it to one
side, his other hand held in front of him as he stepped closer. “Sir? Are you
hurt?”
Megan saw her brother’s hand on the sidearm, the
other placating and suggesting and warning at the same time. She’d seen him
stand like this when he broke up the fight at the drugstore. Not that he’d
drawn his weapon then; he’d dealt with it by intimidation alone, because
everyone involved lived in the town and no one messed with the sheriff. Megan
looked at her brother, who teased her, who’d hidden her dolls and pulled her
pigtails as a kid, but who was now in a situation that was serious. He was all
business.
“What’s your name, sir?” Justin asked.
The stranger stepped back from him, straight
into a pile of notebooks this time. The shelf shuddered and some of the display
tilted. The movement translated into Justin grabbing the man’s hoodie to stop
him falling as he flailed and attempted to stay upright.
He took a swing at Justin, who ducked and
swerved. The attempted hit missed Justin by a mile, and the man followed the
momentum he had begun, smacked his fist against a shelf edge, and collapsed in
a heap on the floor. Then he didn’t move, was absolutely still. Justin
holstered his weapon and crouched next to the prone form of the hooded man,
checking for a pulse and then talking into his radio.
“Dispatch, 390D, medical assistance required at
Notes & Roses.”
Megan didn’t hear the response; she came out
from behind the counter and stood next to her brother. The adrenaline that had
flooded her to deal with this was beginning to ebb, and she went down in the
same crouch. The hood had fallen back and exposed his hair. The stranger was
young; maybe the same age as her, and a long cut on his temple oozed fresh
blood. Thinking on her feet, she located a clean tea towel from the small
kitchen in the back and as an afterthought grabbed the first aid box. There was
nothing more than band aids and small bandages in it, but there may be
something in there to press against the wound, something sterile.
Justin took the box and the towel and pressed
the cloth against the man’s temple.
“Who is he?” Justin asked.
Megan frowned at the unconscious man. “I have no
idea.”
“What was he doing in the shop?”
Megan glanced at her brother and resisted the
urge to give him a sarcastic sister-type comeback. She needed to be
professional.
“He came in and stood in the ‘notes’ side,
staring at the wall.”
“And he didn’t say anything?”
“Something about wanting music and the letter Z.
And when I asked him if he needed help, he turned and stared at me like he
didn’t know where he was.”
“What the hell, Megan? You talked to him?”
“Well, what was I supposed to do? He was a
customer, and looked like he needed help.”
“What did I tell you about drug addicts?” Justin
snapped.
“The same as attackers, drunks, and anyone else
who got anywhere near me, call you. I did that.”
The man on the floor moved, his eyes flickering
open and staring up at Justin and Megan. “I don’t feel…” He never finished the
sentence, his eyes closing again.
All Megan could think was, whoever he was, he
had pretty eyes, the kind of blue that jumped out at you and screamed gorgeous.
She couldn’t see much of his face, covered as it was with a bushy beard and
blood.
“Should we find his ID or something?”
“SOP is not to go searching in drug addicts’
pockets,” Justin said with exaggerated patience.
“You think he’s a drug addict?”
The door chimed again, but it wasn’t the
paramedic yet. Instead her business partner and cousin, Rachel, stood in the
door, her jaw dropped and the cold of the rain blustering in behind her.
“Shut the door,” Justin and Megan said at the
same time. Rachel closed the door with exaggerated care, and her expression
didn’t change.
“Why is there a man lying on the floor of our
shop?” she managed. Then she stepped closer, staring down at John Doe, and her
eyebrows climbed before she paled and grabbed hold of the nearest display.
“Shit, there’s so much blood. Is he dead?” Like he’d heard her speak, the man
coughed and curled in on himself on one side, muttering something, and she
stumbled backward with a yelp.
“He’s clearly not dead,” Justin said. “Drugs, head
wound, we don’t know yet.” Then he spoke into his radio. “Dispatch, do we have
an ETA on the paramedics?”
“Three minutes out.”
“10-4, dispatch.”
“Is he bleeding out?” Rachel asked, her hand on
her chest and her skin pale. Megan frowned; they really should get Rachel out
of here. She’d never liked blood, not since the incident where she’d broken her
arm in kindergarten and the bone had pierced the skin.
“Not enough blood for that,” Justin said.
“Do we know who he is?” Rachel asked. “Should we
check his wallet or something? He could be here with someone?” She glanced out
the shop window as if expecting the man’s friends or family to be searching for
him.
“I can’t look for his wallet yet,” Justin
explained. “SOP with suspected addicts.”
“SOP?” Rachel half whispered as an aside.
“Standard operating procedure,” Megan whispered
back. “The guy could have needles on him.”
“What about the recovery position?” Rachel
pointed out. “Should we, at least, move him?”
Justin indicated the unconscious man with a wave
of his hand. “Think he already did it himself.”
Then in silence they stood and waited for the
paramedics to arrive, and all that time Megan stared down at the stranger,
memorizing every bump and scratch on his face. What a waste. He could be so
handsome, almost pretty, with those stunning sky eyes and the plump lips. He’d
be a killer if he smiled, she thought.
“He doesn’t smell,” Rachel commented, even
though she wrinkled her nose. She gestured at him. “And those jeans? They’re an
expensive brand you know. So he’s probably not homeless.”
Megan didn’t feel much like discussing the
unconscious man. She just wanted the help to get here soon.
The paramedics arrived and in a flurry of
motion, they asked rapid questions of Megan, which she couldn’t answer in full.
‘Did he have a fit? Did he choke?’ She answered as best she could and hoped
that was enough for them to have some idea what had happened. They checked John
Doe’s vitals, hefted him onto a gurney, and left, all without the man regaining
consciousness. Justin followed soon after, giving Megan a quick hug and
extracting a promise from her to stay safe, and then it was Rachel and Megan
alone in the shop.
Rachel looked anywhere except at the blood and
Megan knew she had to get her out of the shop. “You go up to Carter’s and get
some fresh coffee.”
“You need help,” Rachel began. She looked torn
as she gestured at the floor.
“I’ll clear this up. Go.”
“What if someone else comes in?”
“Another vagrant covered in blood?” Megan smiled
as she said it. She hoped she’d had her full quota of vagrants for this year.
“You never know,” Rachel said, frowning.
“Go.”
Rachel looked at the door and back at Megan, as
if she were expecting another strange man to come in while she was out and was
worried about leaving her. Megan went back to the small storage room at the
back of the store. She pulled out the mop and bucket and the cleaning supplies
and by the time she came back out Rachel had gone. She wasn’t surprised.
Evidently alongside her phobia about blood, Rachel had analyzed the situation
with her rational, logical approach and had decided Megan could manage another
strange man collapsing on their floor if she had to. She cleaned up the smears
of scarlet, the tracked in mud, and realigned all the notebooks and stationery
on the knocked shelf. While she worked, all she could think was despite the
shock and drama of what had happened, the man with the beautiful sapphire eyes
hadn’t seemed dangerous to her.
Confused, high or drunk, desperate, traumatized,
wet, and muddy, maybe. But certainly not dangerous.
Full time romance
writer Rozenn Scott creates passionate love stories with a guaranteed happy
ever after.
Her series of
novels, set in the beautiful Vermont town of Stanford Creek, focus on
strong, independent women who find love.
Writing as RJ
Scott, she is the author of over ninety bestselling gay romance novels and has
never met a bottle of wine she can’t defeat.
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