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  Countdown: Grayson

  Allie Boniface

  First Publication: COUNTDOWN: Grayson

  Copyright © 2019 DFM Publishing

  All Rights Are Reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Countdown: Grayson

  10:00 a.m.

  11:00 a.m.

  Noon

  1:00 p.m.

  2:00 p.m.

  3:00 p.m.

  4:00 p.m.

  5:00 p.m.

  6:00 p.m.

  7:00 p.m.

  8:00 p.m.

  9:00 p.m.

  10:00 p.m.

  11:00 p.m.

  Midnight

  1:00 a.m.

  2:00 a.m.

  3:00 a.m.

  4:00 a.m.

  5:00 a.m.

  6:00 a.m.

  7:00 a.m.

  8:00 a.m.

  9:00 a.m.

  One Year Later...

  About the Author

  Other Books You Might Enjoy | COUNTDOWN: Ethan

  COUNTDOWN: Steele

  The Promise of Paradise | (Prequel to the Hometown Heroes series)

  Sign up for Allie Boniface's Mailing List

  Also By Allie Boniface

  He's a retired boxer who finds a baby on his doorstep with the note "She's yours."

  Except she isn't. She can't be. Or maybe she can.

  What's a guy to do but ask his single-mom next door neighbor for help?

  Welcome to Book One in this new series by a USA Today best-selling author! COUNTDOWN: GRAYSON is a full-length, stand-alone novel in a brand new contemporary romance series, where every chapter is an hour in the countdown to find answers before it's too late...

  Retired boxer Grayson Hollister is trying his best to stay off the booze and run a successful martial arts center when he finds a baby on his doorstep. Uncertain who she or the mother might be, he enlists his next-door neighbor to help him find the answers.

  Kara McGarrity runs the town's food pantry and soup kitchen. A single mom who's seen her share of abuse, the last thing she wants is to get involved with someone with a past like Grayson's. But with a baby's future at stake, her maternal instincts kick in.

  Though both Grayson and Kara are determined to put the baby's interests before their own, it's only a matter of time before adrenaline and attraction take over. But the moment they let down their guard, a local threat they never suspected becomes a danger to them all.

  You can read Books 2 and 3 in this series now, too!

  COUNTDOWN: Ethan

  COUNTDOWN: Steele

  Join Allie’s newsletter for free reads, giveaways, and upcoming news about sales, releases, and in-person appearances!

  This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the writer’s imagination or have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, locale or organizations is entirely coincidental.

  10:00 a.m.

  Grayson Hollister walked into the living room completely naked, his hair still wet from the shower. September might have been right around the corner, but here in southern Virginia, it had to be almost eighty degrees. He poured a cup of coffee and left it black. Took a look at his green sobriety chip, hanging by a ribbon on a cabinet door. Ninety-six days and counting.

  A ball of fluff rubbed against his bare ankle and purred. Make that two balls of fluff. He set down his coffee and opened a container of kitten food. “Here you go, little beggars.” He’d adopted Kit and Caboodle from the local pound last month, even though he’d promised Turk he wouldn’t. But when the babe who ran the animal shelter asked him straight out, what was he supposed to say? He had a weakness when it came to pretty women. Always had. Probably always would.

  “Sorry, buddy,” he said as he filled Turk’s food dish on the other side of the kitchen. The aging German shepherd ambled over, giving the calico kittens a wide berth. Turk got to work on his food, and Grayson got to work scrambling three egg whites. Rye bread in the toaster, a handful of strawberries on his plate, and more coffee. He stretched and sighed. Biceps hurt like hell after yesterday’s workout, but he had to get back in shape before next week’s boot camp began.

  Kit meowed at him, and he picked her up with one hand. She weighed a pound, maybe two. He left a light on at night because he was afraid he’d step on her, she was that tiny. Caboodle weighed more than his sister, but he hadn’t quite figured out how to run around on the hardwood floors without wiping out. Now he pawed at Grayson’s foot and looked up with plaintive blue eyes.

  “The two of you’ll be the death of me.” He returned Kit to the floor and scooted them both toward the living room. His log cabin wasn’t big, but it was perfect for him. Open floor plan, with a kitchen, breakfast nook, living room, and half bath downstairs, and a loft that held his master bedroom and bathroom upstairs. A balcony looked down over the first floor and the fireplace he’d built by hand from fieldstone gathered around his five acres of property. All told, the cabin was less than a thousand square feet at the end of a dirt road atop Yawketuck Mountain, but the privacy that surrounded it more than made up for the space inside.

  He hadn’t always craved solitude, of course. For a long time, he’d craved the exact opposite: excitement, danger, unpredictability, crowds chanting his name—the bigger, the better, and no matter if they called for his success or his blood. Noise made him feel alive. Living one moment to the next without one fucking thought of the consequences made him feel invincible, triumphant, virile, unstoppable. Better than that, it helped him forget the acts of his past that he couldn’t undo.

  But things changed.

  From the window over his kitchen sink, Grayson could see the corner of the only other house on this road, a small one-story with blue siding and bright red shutters. Kara McGarrity had lived on Fourth Road longer than Grayson, but though he ran into her occasionally, he didn’t know her that well. She kept to herself, didn’t seem to have a man or a family around. She was tall and solid, with long dark hair and an engaging smile. Every so often she stopped by his place, usually to drop off mail that had ended up in her box instead of his. The one time they’d gotten snow, she called to ask him for the name of his plow guy. And once she’d gone away for a week and asked him to keep an eye on her place. She had no pets and no plants to water, but she single-handedly ran the food pantry downtown, so Grayson figured she did most of her nurturing at work. He appreciated having a neighbor like Kara, one who kept to herself but was there just in case he needed a favor. He imagined she probably felt the same.

  He polished off his breakfast and checked his email. Hollister Training Centre was his pride and joy, a boxing gym and martial arts center he’d opened three years ago upon moving from southern California. The town of Yawketuck wasn’t made up of much, just your standard diner, bank, laundromat, gas station, couple of churches, and hardware store. There was a town hall and a police station, a couple of dive bars, and a few shops on the outskirts of town: Italian and Chinese restaurants, a secondhand clothing store, and a liquor store.

  The warehouse that Grayson’s gym occupied sat by the highway, far away from the liquor store. By design. Hollister Training Centre didn’t have much of a view, but people didn’t come there to tree-gaze. He wasn’t sure how business would be when he’d first opened, but he’d built a steady clientele over the last couple of years, and two of his youngest prodigies had turned semi-pro. He had enough regulars now to support the place and then some. Recentl
y, he’d decided to sponsor a boot camp for the locals. Southerners loved their grits, their fried chicken, and their biscuits and gravy, and Grayson had quickly figured out that Yawketuck could use a place to burn off all those calories.

  Life sure was different here than in southern California, but since his former life had just about killed him, he supposed different was good.

  From the living room came the sound of soft snoring, and when he looked over his shoulder, he saw Turk curled up on the sofa with Kit and Caboodle tucked into his furry stomach. Grayson had never considered himself a father figure—he’d ruined one marriage so far, and having kids was a foreign concept to someone who’d fucked up his own life pretty much every way possible. But he’d turned out to be a decent pet owner. It was kind of nice having them around.

  He set his dishes in the sink and rinsed out his coffee mug. In his backyard, two doe grazed beside the chicken coop. He’d have to collect eggs before he left, which meant he needed to get his ass in gear. His six chickens had turned out to be fabulous layers, and he had fresh eggs for breakfast, lunch, and dinner nearly every day. Sometimes he left a couple dozen on Kara’s front porch.

  The sound of tires kicking up gravel startled him, and he glanced outside in time to see a red sedan heading up the road. It passed Kara’s house and was gone before he had time to wonder what it was doing on Fourth Road. Huh. Wasn’t like people came up here to sightsee.

  He shrugged and bounded upstairs, where he put on a clean black polo shirt with the initials HTC embroidered over the pocket, paired with long black shorts and sneakers. He ran some gel through his hair, brushed his teeth, and headed back down. Turk had disappeared, but the two kittens remained sound asleep on the sofa. Damn, they had the power to make him smile. He ran a hand over each one. Kit curled into his touch.

  “Turk, buddy, where’d you get to?”

  The dog wasn’t in the kitchen or sitting at the sliding door that looked out on the backyard. Instead, Grayson found him whining and trembling at the front door.

  “Gotta go again? Hang on.”

  He found the leash and clipped it onto Turk’s collar. “Already walked you this morning,” he reminded the dog. He wondered if Turk was beginning to lose control of his bowels, or if he’d started to go a little senile. Even with all the wildlife that shared their property, the dog rarely got excited. He’d give a woof or two if he saw a buck, and sometimes he pawed at the door when a squirrel got too close, but usually he was content to sleep in the sun. Grayson had never seen him act like this, like he was about to burst through the door headfirst.

  “Here you go,” he said as he opened the door.

  And stopped.

  On the wide front porch that ran the length of the cabin sat two chairs, a welcome mat, and a carrier with a baby strapped inside.

  “What the fuck?”

  The baby looked up at him with wide, clear eyes. It didn’t make a peep, and for a second he thought maybe it was just a doll, but then it blinked and wiggled its toes. Grayson ran to the end of the driveway, but the red car was long gone. This isn’t happening. Maybe he’d imagined it. Maybe he was hallucinating. But when he looked back, the carrier remained on the porch, with Turk sitting as close beside it as he could.

  Holy hell. He retraced his steps. Looked down. The round face with chubby pink cheeks and pale blue eyes stared up at him. A tiny wrinkle appeared above its equally tiny nose, and with one giant gulp of air, the baby began to wail.

  Turk whined and stuck his nose into the carrier.

  “Leave it alone, buddy.” Grayson looked around again. His palms began to sweat. His mouth went dry. This wasn’t a goddamn church or police station. Whoever had driven this baby out here had traveled eight miles straight up Yawketuck Mountain, then passed First, Second, and Third Roads, then driven another two miles down a dead-end road to Grayson’s cabin. He didn’t have a mailbox out on the main road. Or a sign on his property, or anything that indicated he lived here at all. No landline. No paper delivery. He liked it that way. He’d planned it that way.

  So who the hell left a baby here?

  It hadn’t stopped crying, so Grayson picked up the carrier and took it inside. He’d call the police, that was all. Chief Taylor would send someone out, and the kid would go to Social Services or wherever kids went when their parents left them on random strangers’ doorsteps.

  “Shit.” Who would do something like this? Hell, he wouldn’t even do something like this to Kit or Caboodle.

  He sat on the sofa and put the baby on the floor. Its crying slowed, and it looked up at him with those eyes that resembled the sky.

  “Are you a girl or a boy?” he asked, before realizing that was about the stupidest thing he could’ve said. How old was it? It wasn’t a newborn, but it didn’t have any teeth he could see, and its tiny fingers resembled a doll’s.

  A small bag had been wedged beside the baby, with a bottle and what looked like a couple diapers stuffed inside. Grayson bent closer and saw the edge of a piece of paper sticking from between the diapers. He pulled it out and read the three typed lines aloud.

  Her name is Jade.

  Please take care of her.

  She’s yours.

  11:00 a.m.

  Kara McCarrity ran a damp rag over the kitchen counter and checked her grocery list. She hadn’t planned on making another run to Greenway before the weekend, but the Helping Hands food pantry had gotten hit harder than usual this month. Yawketuck’s free breakfast and lunch program in the town park went on hiatus the last two weeks of summer, which meant a lot of the local families didn’t eat much unless they came into Helping Hands. Yawketuck’s only grocery store was small and overpriced, and while Kara hated shopping at the giant supermarket in Greenway, it had everything she needed at half the cost.

  I should be in by 4, she texted Harmony, the college student who helped at the pantry. They didn’t open their doors until six, so there wasn’t any rush. She straightened her white T-shirt and gray capris. On her feet she wore Converse sneakers with red and blue stripes. Comfortable, casual, and clean, like always. She never tried to look or act like she was better than anyone who came to the pantry. She wasn’t. Everyone in the world had been down on their luck at some point, including her. She’d spent years living on food stamps and the favors of strangers. Didn’t make her proud, but neither did it make her less worthy than anyone else.

  Outside, Grayson’s chickens pecked at the edge of her lawn. As far as neighbors went, he wasn’t a bad one. She’d lived on Fourth Road for almost ten years, and while she loved her privacy, she’d admit that a retired boxer was a nice security feature to have next door. Not that she’d ever been bothered by strangers. Not even salesmen or religious recruiters knocked on her door, and that was fine by her.

  Her cell phone buzzed, and she answered on the first ring. “Harrison!”

  “Hi, Ma.”

  She sank into a chair at the kitchen table. Every morning her only son called. Just to check in, he claimed, but she knew he worried about her living alone on the mountain. “I’m not even forty,” she told him over and over again. “Healthy as a horse, and I can take care of myself.” She glanced at the long scar on her left arm. I always have.

  “Working today?” Harrison asked.

  “Just this afternoon.”

  “You gonna get to Nashville to visit us one of these days? Charity has two more teeth. She’s cutting ’em like a pro.” First-time parental pride filled his voice.

  “Really? You’ll have to send me pictures.” Her son and only granddaughter lived almost three hours away, which meant Kara only saw them every few months.

  “I will. But can’t you come and visit? Even for a day or so? Lisa has the spare room all made up for you.”

  “It’s busy season here for the pantry.”

  “Isn’t it always?”

  Sadly, yes, she wanted to say. It amazed her, the way some of those movie stars or billionaire politicians lived, spending money like it was wa
ter when there were so many hardworking people who could barely keep the lights on or put food on the table.

  “How’s work?” she asked instead of answering. Harrison had put himself through vocational school and was now one of the top electricians in his community. Kara was fiercely proud of him, especially considering the way he’d grown up.

  “Busy. Crazier than ever. Which is good for my bank account, but not so good for seeing my wife and kid.”

  “You’re a good father. A good provider.” A lump rose in her throat. So many men weren’t. So many men knocked up their girlfriends, or knocked around their girlfriends, cheated and drank and swore and hurt the people who loved them most.

  “So are you, Ma. A good provider, I mean. You always were.”

  She watched the chickens peck their way through her yard and back toward Grayson’s. She hadn’t seen him leave for work yet, which was odd. He was usually down the mountain before her, certainly before eleven in the morning. Idly, she wondered if he was sick. Or maybe hungover. He seemed like the party type: covered in tattoos, with a strong jaw, quick smile, and a rough-and-tumble background. Lord, people in town loved to talk. And since the day Grayson arrived, they hadn’t stopped.

  “Have a good day, Ma,” Harrison said. “And take a look at your calendar. Get Harmony or one of the other girls to fill in for you. Come visit us.”

  “I will. I promise.” She hung up and pulled her long hair into a ponytail. Though crow’s feet had settled into her skin a few years ago, and she’d taken to using reading glasses at night, there wasn’t a touch of gray in her hair. She didn’t care if it was vanity, she was proud of that and kept it long and loose except at work. She’d cut it only once, years ago. Sometimes she fantasized about chopping it all off again, especially on hot days like this one, but then she remembered what had led her to cut it in the first place. She’d never go back to that bleakness.