Release Day & Giveaway: Taking Heart by T. J. Kline
ABOUT THE BOOK
T. J. Kline's Healing Harts series continues as a soldier suffering from PTSD and a therapy dog trainer find that some scars can only be healed by love
Julia Hart knows how much good she does training therapy dogs—it's what helped her overcome her own trials after a relationship turned unexpectedly violent. But moving beyond her mistakes meant trusting only her family with her heart.
Dylan, a former soldier, has run out of hope for recovery. Plagued by nightmares and flashbacks, he doubts anything will help him overcome his PTSD. When his brother convinces him to try one last time, he agrees to get a therapy dog.
He didn't expect to find Julia or a chance for a "normal" future again. But when Julia's attacker is released from prison, Dylan and Julia will have to face the past together.
T. J. Kline's Healing Harts series continues as a soldier suffering from PTSD and a therapy dog trainer find that some scars can only be healed by love
Julia Hart knows how much good she does training therapy dogs—it's what helped her overcome her own trials after a relationship turned unexpectedly violent. But moving beyond her mistakes meant trusting only her family with her heart.
Dylan, a former soldier, has run out of hope for recovery. Plagued by nightmares and flashbacks, he doubts anything will help him overcome his PTSD. When his brother convinces him to try one last time, he agrees to get a therapy dog.
He didn't expect to find Julia or a chance for a "normal" future again. But when Julia's attacker is released from prison, Dylan and Julia will have to face the past together.
BUY LINKS
“What
are we doing at a hospital?”
Dylan
gave the electric doors in front of him a wary glance as Julia
slipped a vest over Roscoe and another over Tango. His stomach
clenched at the thought of going inside. He’d spent more than
enough time in a cold, sterile hospital bed than he cared to ever
remember. Months receiving treatments for his burns and recuperating
from his head wound had left him with a new appreciation for medical
professionals and a newfound aversion to hospitals.
“We’re
taking the dogs to the children’s ward.” She looked up at him as
she connected the clasp and pushed her bangs back. “Remember you
asked me once how I got started doing this? This is one of the
reasons why
I continue doing it.”
He
took a deep breath and looked back at the doors. “You realize this
is one of the last places I want to be, right?”
Julia
cocked her head to one side. “Sometimes the last place we want to
be is exactly where we need
to be. You didn’t want to come to my place either,” she pointed
out. “And you didn’t want Roscoe.”
Dylan
snuck his arm out and wound it around her waist, pulling her toward
him. Julia’s hand still held the dogs’ leashes but her fingers
clenched against the hard wall of his chest. He felt the
uncontrollable longing to be near this woman replace the dread that
was trying to wind around his heart at the thought of entering a
facility that he knew housed pain and fear.
“And
see how well that has turned out?” She slid one hand to his neck,
cupping his jaw and meeting his gaze with tenderness. “I promise we
will leave if it’s too much for you but it’s good for the dogs
and these guys work miracles for the kids. Please, trust me?”
Dylan
bent forward, letting his mouth find hers, losing himself in the
sweetness of her kiss. He didn’t want to go inside, didn’t want
to face the icy fear trying to steal the breath from his lungs, but
he wanted to prove himself to Julia and that was enough of a reason
for him to agree. He wanted to be the man she believed he could be,
the man he used to be. Sheer self-control would have to keep the
anxiety at bay. It wouldn’t make it disappear, so far only the
medication had been able to make him forget it completely, but his
determination to earn Julia’s respect gave him a reason to focus
his willpower to get through the visit.
She
melted against him, her breasts crushed against his chest. The
unyielding wall of his chest cradled her soft curves as his hand slid
up her waist to the middle of her back and held her close. His tongue
met hers, sweeping against it in an erotic caress and she moaned
slightly into his mouth. Dylan felt his body harden in response and
withdrew slightly.
“We
better head inside before Tango realizes I’m kissing you and wants
to slobber on me again.”
She
pressed her lips against his in one last, quick kiss, smiling against
his mouth. “He only does that because he likes you.”
Julia
handed him Roscoe’s leash as Dylan rolled his eyes. “Great. I’d
hate to see what he’d do if he didn’t
like me so much.”
Following
behind Julia, the electric doors opened with a soft woosh
and fans hit them from overhead. Frigid air swept around him and he
wondered why every hospital seemed to think they needed to run air
conditioners year-round. An elderly woman was seated behind the
information desk and smiled broadly when she saw Julia approach, her
face beaming with pleasure.
“It’s
about time you get back in here. Come give me a hug,” she ordered
as she hurried from behind her desk. Her eyes slid to Dylan, sweeping
from the top of his shaved head to the worn boots on his feet. “And
who is this tall drink of water?”
Dylan
instantly felt the heat rise to his cheeks. The woman laughed
heartily and wound a thin arm around his hips in an awkward hug since
the top of her permed grey head barely hit his ribcage. “And he’s
shy to boot. This one’s a keeper, Jules,” she said, jerking a
thumb his direction.
“Dylan,
meet Betty. She knows everything that goes on in this place so if you
need to know anything, she’s the one to talk to.”
Dylan
didn’t even get the chance to introduce himself before Betty jumped
in again. “That’s right. And that man over there is Jerome.”
She pointed at a middle-aged security guard who nodded their
direction with a smile. It was obvious Betty’s display didn’t
faze him in the slightest. “How is Mr. Tango doing? And who is this
big guy?”
“This
is Roscoe. He’s going to be Dylan’s dog but we thought we’d
bring him in with Tango to see the kids today.”
Betty
moved back to her seat behind the information desk and scribbled on a
sheet of paper before producing two badges for Julia from under the
desktop. “Here you go. Just bring ‘em back when you finish up. It
was nice to meet you,” she shouted to Dylan as he walked with Julia
to the elevators.
“Is
she always like that?” he whispered as the doors opened and they
stepped inside.
Julia
laughed and his chest swelled with joy at the sound. He loved that he
had the power to make her laugh and that joy seemed to always be
waiting just below the surface of her smile. It was a heady feeling
and it made him want to do it even more.
“She’s
been volunteering here as long as I can remember and she knows
everyone.” Julia gave the woman a final wave as the elevator doors
closed. “She was the first person to send flowers when I was in
here.”
Dylan
frowned as his chest constricted and realization struck him like
lightning. This was the hospital where Julia had stayed after her
attack. This was where she’d spent so many weeks reliving the
nightmare, trying to recover from the trauma that had almost killed
her. Why in the world would she want to come back? Why would she want
to face that nightmare again and again when she could simply avoid it
altogether?
“Julia?”
He turned to ask her the questions running through his mind when the
doors opened. He realized it would have to wait until later.
Dylan
felt the difference in the air the moment they stepped out of the
elevator. Artwork and murals might decorate the walls, but the bright
colors couldn’t cover the stale antiseptic stench that permeated
the air in the corridor leading to the nurse’s station. Roscoe
seemed to notice it as well and lifted his nose toward the ceiling
but continue to walk beside Dylan as if nothing was amiss. A sense of
melancholy desperation seemed to hang over floor, like a dark cloud,
in spite of the cheerfully painted walls.
“Jules!”
A nurse beamed from behind the desk and jumped up, waving several
others closer. “Jules is here.”
Dylan
saw several orderlies poke their heads from inside doorways to wave
to Julia. She was well-loved but he understood the attraction. She
had a smile that could light up a dark room and an energy that was
infectious. She was captivating. As nurses surrounded the two of
them, several bending to greet the dogs, he began to feel like a
third wheel. Or, in this case, a fourth wheel, since the dogs
garnered more attention than he did. It was an odd feeling since most
people were prone to stare at his scars, or pretend not to. He
self-consciously ran a hand over the marred flesh.
Then
again, his scars wouldn’t be the worst this staff had seen.
“Are the kids in
the common room?”
Julia
looked his way and gave him a reassuring smile, nodding as if
reminding him that she believed he could get through this. At least
one of them had some confidence in his abilities.
A
woman who appeared to be one of the head nurses chuckled. “They’ve
been gathering in there ever since they found out you planned on
coming today.”
Julia’s
brows dropped forward in a slight frown as she brushed her bangs
back, looking around at a few doors still closed. “Who is still in
their room?”
“Destiny
and Mikayla are too sick today to go.” The nurse took a deep breath
and Dylan could see she was fighting to control her emotions. “Jordan
isn’t able to go either.”
He
saw the flicker of despair in Julia’s eyes before she took a deep
breath. Dylan was confused by the sudden change in her but knew she’d
explain soon enough. “Tell all three of them we’ll come see them
before we leave, okay?” She gave him a sad smile. “Come on, it’s
this way.”
He
followed her down another short corridor. The sounds of laughter and
what sounded like off-key singing came from behind the double doors
ahead. “Ready?”
Dylan
inhaled deeply and nodded. “As I’ll ever be.”
She
pushed open the doors and Dylan saw her face light up as she looked
around the room. As soon as she walked inside, kids ranging from
toddlers to teens rushed them both, most in an attempt to get to the
dogs. He was surprised to see Tango sit at Julia’s feet, letting
his mouth drop open and his tongue loll out happily, appearing to be
smiling as several of the younger kids hugged his legs and neck.
Dylan looked at down at Roscoe and gave him the cue to sit. He
followed the command flawlessly, allowing the kids to surround him as
well, not even flinching when a young boy tripped and stepped on his
tail.
Dylan
watched as the more hesitant kids made their way closer, some with
parents but all with some sort of debilitation. More than a few
pushed wheeled I.V. poles as they moved closer.
“Can
I pet your dog?”
Dylan
turned as a little girl approached. She was short for her age but he
wasn’t sure if he was just bad at guessing kids’ ages or if the
task was difficult because of the burn scars that covered her from
the middle of her scalp down one side of her face and neck before
disappearing into the neckline of the hospital gown she wore. He
could tell from the puckered skin that she had already had several
skin grafts and he remembered the pain of the procedure clearly. He
knew first-hand how much it would hurt to move with the burns and
scars she had and fought back the tears that stung his eyes and
squatted down to her level. In that moment, as she looked up at him
with her pretty green eyes shimmering with delight, Dylan thought she
was the bravest person he’d ever met.
“Of
course you can. This is Roscoe.”
“Roscoe,”
she tested the name on her misshapen lips. “He’s pretty.”
“He’s
smart too.” Dylan ran a hand over the dogs head.
“Mom
said that after my next surgery, Julia can help me find a dog so I
can take it school with me. Did she find Roscoe for you?”
Dylan
nodded and looked up at the girl’s mother, standing just behind her
daughter. “I think that would be a great idea. I’m Dylan.” He
held out a hand to the girl, feeling strange to introduce himself to
her the way he would an adult but unsure of a better way. Dealing
with kids might take more than one visit to master.
“I’m
Lisa.” She grasped his hand with her much smaller one. “Did you
get him because of your burns?” She pointed at the scars on his
neck that stretched behind his ear.
“Lisa,”
her mother scolded from behind her. Leave it to a kid to point them
out.
Dylan
met the woman’s gaze and could see her embarrassment. He shook his
head letting her know he didn’t take offense. The wounded look on
Lisa’s face made it clear she hadn’t meant any disrespect. It was
more likely that she was excited to find someone who understood what
she was going through, even if her burns were far more extensive than
Dylan’s were.
“It’s
okay.” He looked back at Lisa. “No, I was in the military and saw
a lot of things that I don’t like to remember. Sometimes they give
me nightmares, even while I’m awake.”
“Oh.”
The child nodded sympathetically. “Sometimes I have bad dreams
about the fire and it’s hard to tell if I’m awake or asleep. It
hurts again,” she said, touching her cheek. “Even though the
doctors say there’s no feeling left there.”
“It’s
sort of like that. Roscoe helps me to remember where I am.”
He
laid his hand on Roscoe’s smooth back, realizing that was exactly
what the dog had been doing for him. He was keeping Dylan focused on
his present reality, living in his now
instead of the pain in his past.
He
turned and saw Julia watching him, a gentle smile on her lips. She’d
been right to bring him here. As difficult as it was, as much as he
was fighting to stay present and focused when there were so many
triggers vying to drag him into his memories and the pain he’d
suffered, she and Roscoe were tethering him to a reality he longed to
live in. His fingers tightened around Roscoe’s leash. Maybe this
time, if he held on tight enough, he could have a future worth living
in spite of his past.
*****
Julia
wanted to talk to Dylan about their time at the hospital, wanted to
know how he was doing or if it had triggered any memories but was
having a difficult time holding her sorrow at bay. Her chest ached
from the pressure of holding her tears in and she bit her lower lip
to keep from allowing the pain to escape.
Usually
when she left the hospital, she took Roscoe into the woods and they
walked, letting the miles soothe the emotions the kids stirred in
her. It wrenched her heart to see them, most with terrible and
debilitating illness and disabilities, but when she spent time with
kids like Jordan, suffering from a terminal illness, it broke her.
She’d become close to the boy after visiting him over the past four
years, watching the leukemia stealing first his childhood, and now
his last days. His days were no longer marked by good moments but
aching breaths that brought more pain.
Julia
had fought back the sobs as Tango gently climbed onto the edge of the
bed and laid his head over the boy’s stomach. Even when Jordan’s
mother gave in to her own tears, Julia held back, comforting the
woman she’d grown to admire as a smile spread over Jordan’s lips
and he mumbled a greeting to Tango, trying to raise a weak arm to pet
the dog. She had never been more pleased with her dog than when he
slid his head under Jordan’s hand, gently, to allow the boy one
final moment with him. The silence in the room, broken only by the
quiet beep
or whoosh
from the medical equipment, was deafening. It revealed a truth no one
wanted to verbally acknowledge. This would be the last time she would
see Jordan alive.
A
single tear escaped the corner of her eye as she tried to blink it
back and she wiped it away with her finger, hoping Dylan didn’t
see. She should have known better. It didn’t surprise her when he
reached over Roscoe on the seat between them and laid his hand on her
thigh.
“Are
you okay?” His voice was quiet, somber, as if he knew Jordan was on
her mind.
Julia
knew she shouldn’t stop the car, shouldn’t talk about this with
him now. She needed to decompress, to get away from everyone, to hide
somewhere so she could release the pent up fury at the injustice. But
Dylan’s voice was a key that unlocked the vault where she kept her
heart hidden. His one question released the flood of emotions she’d
been trying to hold back and the dam on her tears fractured into a
million painful shards.
Her breath rushed
from her lungs and the choking sobs threatened to blind her as she
pulled to the shoulder of the road. The cab of the truck was
suffocating and she couldn’t draw in a breath as her chest burned
from trying to control the sorrow ripping through her. She dropped
the truck into Park and climbed out as quickly as she could, running
toward the tailgate but having no idea where to go, where she could
hide from this agony. Julia doubled over at the back of the truck as
a car flew past. She covered her head with her arms, squatting low,
unable to move and feeling the grief tearing at her soul. Tango’s
sharp bark from his crate in the bed of the truck broke through the
keening wail she hadn’t realized was coming from her lips but it
was Dylan’s arms around her, lifting her, cradling her against his
broad chest that coaxed her back to the reality of the moment.
She
felt herself moving as he took her back to the passenger side of the
truck and settled her into the seat but she wrapped her arms around
his waist, unwilling to release him or the security she felt in his
arms.
“Julia,
shh, it’s okay. Let go.” His voice quietly reassured her,
allowing her to release the pain pulsating throughout her body making
her tremble against him. Her tears soaked through his shirt as she
pressed her face against the heated wall of his chest, letting
Dylan’s strength surround her. His fingers trailed over her spine,
soothing her as her sobs slowed making her breath hitch.
When
he took a step back, his hand slid to cup her jaw and look down into
her face. Julia lifted her eyes to see his brimming with tears. Just
knowing that he understood the pain she felt made her heart swell
with love for this man. They didn’t simply share a past trauma,
even their present emotions were connected, intertwined in a
complexly beautiful tapestry, woven together in ways she couldn’t
begin to explain. He filled a void in her that no one else had ever
come close to even knowing existed. As much as her family loved and
supported her, they couldn’t understand the brokenness inside. But
Dylan did.
Apart,
they were two beaten and broken people, but together, they pieced
together the fragments into a priceless mosaic. Julia reached her
hand toward his face and he turned, pressing a kiss against her palm,
the rasp of his jaw rough but it felt good to feel something, even
pain.
“Why
do you go?” he whispered against her hand. “If this is what it
does to you, why do you put yourself through this?”
“Because
they need the dogs, the same way you and I do. They need something to
make them remember that there is still something good in spite of the
pain they face every day.” She gave him a sad smile as she thought
about him talking to Lisa. “I hate seeing what those poor kids go
through, the pain and sickness they face every day. But I imaging
them facing that without the dogs and that seems even more unfair.”
“I’ve
never met anyone like you, Julia. Never known anyone with a heart
like yours.”
He
didn’t let her say any more, didn’t let her explain how she’d
seen doctors stumped by how much the time with the dogs helped kids
heal, or how focusing on helping them had given her a purpose when
she’d wanted to sink into the dark pit of guilt and doubt after
Evan’s attack. His lips found hers in a tender kiss. She could
taste the salty wetness on their lips but she wasn’t sure which of
them the tears belonged to, nor did it matter. They had become one
and, for the only time since Evan’s attack, she felt whole. And, in
spite of each imperfection and flaw they each possessed, it felt like
perfection.
T. J. KLINE was bitten by the horse bug early and began training horses at fourteen as well as competing in rodeos and winning several rodeo queen competitions but has always known writing was her first love. She also writes under the name Tina Klinesmith. In her spare time, she can be found spending as much time as possible, laughing hysterically, with her husband, teens and their menagerie of pets in Northern California.
Links
Giveaway Time! a Rafflecopter giveaway
I want to check this one out.
ReplyDeleteLooks good, doesn't it!
DeleteI want to check this one out.
ReplyDeleteOh that's a lovely cover. I might have to check this one out :D
ReplyDeleteI like the cover too. Draws you to it.
Delete