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9780373874323

A Soldier's Heart

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780373874323

  • ISBN10:

    0373874324

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2007-05-01
  • Publisher: Steeple Hill
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List Price: $4.99

Summary

Wounded army officer Luke Marino was sent home, his career, his spirit shattered. Now he wanted only to be left alone, refusing even the physical therapy he needed.

But Mary Kate Flanagan Donnelly, a widow with two children to raise on her own, nee

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The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts

She was keeping an appointment with a new client, not revisiting a high school crush. Mary Kate Donnelly opened her car door, grabbed the bag that held the physical therapy assessment forms and tried to still the butterflies that seemed to be doing the polka in her midsection. What were the odds that her first client for the Suffolk Physical Therapy Clinic would be Luke Marino, newly released from the army hospital where he'd been treated since his injury in Iraq? And would the fact of their short-lived romance in the misty past make this easier or harder? She didn't know. She smoothed down her navy pants and straightened the white polo shirt that bore the SPTC letters on the pocket. As warm as this spring had been, she hadn't worn the matching navy cardigan. The outfit looked new because itwasnew--just as new as she was. Nonsense. She lectured herself as she walked toward the front stoop of the Craftsman-style bungalow. She was a fully qualified physical therapist and just because she'd chosen to concentrate on marriage and children instead of a career didn't make her less ready to help patients. The truth was, her dwindling bank balance didn't allow her any second thoughts. She had two children to support. She couldn't let them down. The grief that was never far from her brushed her mind. Neither she nor Kenny had imagined a situation in which she'd be raising Shawna and Michael by herself. Life was far more unpredictable than she'd ever pictured. For Luke, too. He probably hadn't expected to return to his mother's house with his legs shattered from a shell and nerve damage so severe it was questionable whether he'd walk normally again. Ruth Marino's magnolia tree flourished in the corner of the yard, perfuming the air, even though Ruth herself had been gone for nearly a year. Luke had flown from Iraq for the funeral. Mary Kate had seen him standing tall and severe in his dress uniform at the church. They hadn't talked--just a quick murmur of sympathy, the touch of a handshake--that was all. Now Luke was back, living in the house alone. She pressed the button beside the red front door. Ruth had always planted pots of flowers on either side of the door, pansies in early spring, geraniums once the danger of frost was past. The pots stood empty and forlorn now. There was no sound from inside. She pressed the button again, hearing the bell chime echoing. Still nothing. A faint uneasiness touched her. It was hardly likely that Luke would have gone out. Rumor had it he hadn't left the house since he'd arrived, fresh from the army hospital. That was one reason she was here. "You went to high school with him." Carl Dickson, the P.T. center's director, had frowned at the file in front of him before giving Mary Kate a doubtful look. "Maybe you can get him in here for an assessment. He's refused every therapist we've sent. You certainly can't do any worse." She had read between the lines on that. She was new and part-time, so her hours were less valuable. Dickson didn't want to waste staff on a patient who wouldn't cooperate, but he also didn't want to lose the contract from the U.S. Army if he could help it. She pressed the bell again and then rapped on the door, her uneasiness deepening to apprehension. What if Luke had fallen? His determination to reject every professional approach, even simple acts of kindness, left him vulnerable. She grabbed the knob, but it refused to turn under her hand. Kicking the door wouldn't get her inside, tempting as it was, and if Luke lay helpless, he couldn't answer. She stepped from the stoop and hurried around the side of the house toward the back door. She'd grown up less than two blocks away, in the house where her parents still lived. Luke had been at their place constantly in those days, shooting hoops on the improvised driveway court. A frayed basketball hoop still hung from the Marino gara

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