It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!
You never know when I might play a wild card on you!
Today’s Wild Card author is:
and the book:
A Billion Reasons Why
Thomas Nelson; Original edition (February 1, 2011)
***Special thanks to Audra Jennings, Senior Media Specialist, The B&B Media Group for sending me a review copy.***
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Kristin Billerbeck was born in California to an Italian father and a strong Norwegian/German mother. Her mother tried to teach her to do things right, how to cook, clean, sew, and budget accordinglyâall the things a proper girl should know in order to be a contributing member of society. Yet Billerbeck said she âfailed miserably,â although her grandmother must still hold some hope since she gave her a cookie gun for her 40th birthday.
Billerbeck has authored more than 30 novels, including the Ashley Stockingdale series and the Spa Girls series. She is a leader in the Chick Lit movement, a Christy Award finalist, and a two-time winner of the American Christian Fiction Writers Book of the Year Award. She has appeared on The Today Show and has been featured in the New York Times. She lives with her family in northern California.
Visit the author’s website.
SHORT BOOK DESCRIPTION:
There are a billion reasons Kate should marry her current boyfriend.
Will she trade them all to be madly in love?
Katie McKenna leads a perfect life. Or so she thinks. She has a fulfilling job, a cute apartment, and a wedding to plan with her soon-to-be fiance, Dexter.
She can think of a billion reasons why she should marry DexterâŠbut nowhere on that list is love.
And then in walks Luc DeForges, her bold, breathtaking ex-boyfriend. Only now he’s a millionaire. And he wants her to go home to New Orleans to sing for her childhood friend’s wedding. As his date.
But Katie made up her mind about Luc eight years ago, when she fled their hometown after a very public breakup. Yet there’s a magnetism between them she can’t deny.
Katie thought her predictable relationship with Dexter would be the bedrock of a lasting, Christian marriage. But what if there’s more? What if God’s desire for her is a heart full of life? And what if that’s what Luc has offered all along?
Product Details:
List Price: $14.99
Paperback: 320 pages
Publisher: Thomas Nelson; Original edition (February 1, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1595547916
ISBN-13: 978-1595547910
ISLAND BREEZES
Katie McKenna is quite a character. She’s stomping all over Luc DeForges. But of course, he deserves it after publicly humiliating her.
Katie is planning to marry a nice, sensible man when Luc drops back into her life. Now he has tons of money in addition to his drop dead gorgeous looks.
Why can’t he just go away and quit interferring? Instead he’s trying to dance his way back into her heart.
This is the first book I’ve read by Kristin Billerbeck. Now that I’ve learned what I’ve been missing, I’ll have to correct that.
AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:
A Fine Romance
Katie McKenna had dreamed of this moment at least a thousand times. Luc would walk back into her life filled with remorse. Heâd be wearing jeans, a worn T-shirt, and humility. Heâd be dripping with humility.
That should have been her first clue that such a scenario had no bearing on reality.
âKatie,â a voice said.
The sound sent a surge of adrenaline through her frame. Sheâd forgotten the power and the warmth of his baritone. A quick glance around her classroom assured her that she must be imagining things. Everything was in order: the posters of colorful curriculum, the daily schedule of activities printed on the whiteboard, and, of course, the children. All six of them were mentally disabled, most of them on the severe side of the autism spectrum, but three had added handicaps that required sturdy, head-stabilizing wheelchairs. The bulk of the chairs overwhelmed the room and blocked much of the happy yellow walls and part of the large rainbow mural the kids had helped to paint. The room, with its cluttered order, comforted her and reminded her of all sheâd accomplished. There was no need to think about the past. That was a waste of time and energy.
Her eyes stopped on her aides, Carrie and Selena. The two women, so boisterous in personality, were usually animated. But at the moment they stood huddled in the corner behind Austinâs wheelchair.
Carrie, the heavyset one in the Ed Hardy T-shirt, motioned at her.
âWhat?â Katie pulled at her white shirt with the delicate pink flowers embroidered along the hem and surveyed the stains. âI know, Iâm a mess. But did you see how wonderfully the kids did on their art projects? It was worth it. Never thought of the oil on the dough staining. Next time Iâll wear an apron.â
Selena and Carrie looked as though there was something more they wanted.
âMaddie, youâre a born artist.â Katie smiled at the little girl sitting behind a mound of colorful clay. Then to the aides: âWhat is the matter with you two?â
Selena, a slight Latina woman, shook her head and pointed toward the door.
Katie rotated toward the front of the classroom and caught her breath. Luc, so tall and gorgeous, completely out of place in his fine European suit and a wristwatch probably worth more than her annual salary, stood in the doorway. He wore a fedora, his trademark since college, but hardly one he needed to stand out in a crowd.
As she stared across the space between them, suddenly the classroom she took such pride in appeared shabby and soiled. When she inhaled, it reeked of sour milk and baby food. Her muddled brain searched for words.
âLuc?â She blinked several times, as if his film-star good looks might evaporate into the annals of her mind. âWhat are you doing here?â
âDidnât you get my brotherâs wedding invitation?â he asked coolly, as if theyâd only seen each other yesterday.
âI did. I sent my regrets.â
âThatâs what Iâm doing here. You canât miss Ryanâs wedding. I thought the problem might be money.â
She watched as his blue eyes came to rest on her stained shirt. Instinctively she crossed her arms in front of her.
âI came to invite you to go back with me next week, on my plane.â
âAh.â She nodded and waited for something intelligible to come out of her mouth. âItâs not money.â
âCome home with me, Katie.â He reached out his arms, and she moved to the countertop and shuffled some papers together.
If he touches me, I donât stand a chance. She knew Luc well enough to know if heâd made the trip to her classroom, he didnât intend to leave without what he came for. âIâm afraid thatâs not possible.â She stacked the same papers again.
âGive me one reason.â
She faced him. âI could give you a billion reasons.â
Lucâs chiseled features didnât wear humility well. The cross-shaped scar beneath his cheekbone added to his severity. If he werenât so dreaded handsome, heâd make a good spy in a Bond movie. His looks belied his soft Uptown New Orleans upbringing, the kind filled with celebrations and warm family events with backyard tennis and long days in the swimming pool.
He pushed through the swiveled half door that separated them and strode toward her.
âThat gate is there for a reason. The classroom is for teachers and students only.â
Luc opened his hand and beckoned to her, and despite herself, she took it. Her heart pounded in her throat, and its roar was so thunderous it blocked her thoughts. He pulled her into a clutch, then pushed her away with all the grace of Astaire. âWill you dance with me?â he asked.
He began to hum a Cole Porter tune clumsily in her ear, and instinctively she followed his lead until everything around them disappeared and they were alone in their personal ballroom. For a moment she dropped her head back and giggled from her stomach; a laugh so genuine and pure, it seemed completely foreignâas if it came from a place within that was no longer a part of her. Then the dance halted suddenly, and his cheek was against hers. She took in the roughness of his face, and the thought flitted through her mind that she could die a happy woman in those arms.
The sound of applause woke her from her reverie.
âYou two are amazing!â Carrie said.
The children all murmured their approval, some with screams of delight and others with loud banging.
Lucâs hand clutched her own in the small space between them, and she laughed again.
âNot me,â Luc said. âI have the grace of a bull. Itâs Katie. Sheâs like Ginger Rogers. She makes anybody she dances with look good.â He appealed to the two aides. âWhich is why Iâm here. She must go to my brotherâs wedding with me.â
âI didnât even know you danced, Katie,â Selena said. âWhy donât you ever come dancing with us on Friday nights?â
âWhat? Katie dances like a dream. She and my brother were partners onstage in college. They were like a mist, the way they moved together. Itâs like her feet donât touch the ground.â
âThat was a long time ago.â She pulled away from him and showed him her shirt. âIâm a mess. I hope I didnât ruin your suit.â
âIt would be worth it,â Luc growled.
âKatie, whereâd you learn to dance like that?â Carrie asked.
âToo many old movies, I suppose.â She shrugged.
âYou could be on Dancing with the Stars with moves like that.â
âExcept Iâm not a star or a dancer, but other than that, I guessââ She giggled again. It kept bubbling out of her, and for one blissful moment she remembered what it felt like to be the old Katie McKenna. Not the current version, staid schoolmarm and church soloist in Northern California, but the Katie people in New Orleans knew, the one who danced and sang.
Luc interrupted her thoughts. âSheâs being modest. She learned those moves from Ginger and Fred themselves, just by watching them over and over again. This was before YouTube, so she was dedicated.â
Katie shrugged. âI was a weird kid. Only child, you know?â But inside she swelled with pride that Luc remembered her devotion to a craft so woefully out-of-date and useless. âAnyway, I donât have much use for swing dancing or forties torch songs now. Luc, meet Carrie and Selena. Carrie and Selena, Luc.â
âI donât have any âuseâ for salsa dancing,â Selena said. âI do it because itâs part of who I am.â
âTell her she has to come with me, ladies. My brother is having a 1940s-themed wedding in New Orleans. Heâd be crushed if Katie didnât come, and Iâll look like a hopeless clod without her to dance with.â
Katie watched the two aides. She saw the way Lucâs powerful presence intoxicated them. Were they really naive enough to believe that Luc DeForges could ever appear like a clod, in any circumstance or setting? Luc, with his skilled charm and roguish good looks, made one believe whatever he wanted one to believe. The two women were putty in his hands.
âKatie, you have to go to this wedding!â Selena stepped toward her. âI canât believe you can dance like that and never told us. Youâd let this opportunity slip by? For what?â She looked around the room and frowned. âThis place?â
The cacophony of pounding and low groans rose audibly, as if in agreement.
âThis may be just a classroom to you, but to me, itâs the hope and future of these kids. I used to dance. I used to sing. It paid my way through college. Now Iâm a teacher.â
âYou canât be a teacher and a dancer?â Selena pressed. âItâs like walking and chewing gum. You can do both. The question is, why donât you?â
âMaybe I should bring more music and dancing into the classroom. Look how the kids are joining in the noise of our voices, not bothered by it. I have to think about ways we could make the most of this.â
But she hadnât succeeded in changing the subject; everyoneâs attention stayed focused on her.
âYou should dance for the kids, Katie. You possess all the grace of an artistâs muse. Who knows how you might encourage them?â
Katie laughed. âThatâs laying it on a bit thick, Luc, even for you. I do believe if there was a snake in that basket over there, it would be rising to the charmerâs voice at this very minute.â
Lucâs very presence brought her into another time. Maybe it was the fedora or the classic cut of his suit, but it ran deeper than how he looked. He possessed a sense of virility and take-no-prisoners attitude that couldnât be further from his blue-blood upbringing. He made her, in a word, feel safe . . . but there was nothing safe about Luc and there never had been. She straightened and walked over to her open folder to check her schedule for the day.
Tapping a pencil on the binder, she focused on getting the day back on track. The students were involved in free playtime at the moment. While they were all situated in a circle, they played individually, their own favorite tasks in front of them.
âCarrie, would you get Austin and Maddie ready for lunch?â
âIâll do it,â Selena said. âAnd, Katie . . . you really should go to the wedding.â
âI canât go to the wedding because itâs right in the middle of summer school.â
âYou could get a substitute,â Carrie said. âWhat would you be gone for, a week at most? Jenna could probably fill in. She took the summer off this year.â
âThanks for the suggestions, ladies,â Katie said through clenched teeth. âBut Iâve already told the groom I canât attend the wedding for professional reasons.â
The women laughed. âIâm sorry, what reasons?â Carrie asked, raising a bedpan to imply that anyone could do Katieâs job.
It was no use. The two women were thoroughly under Lucâs spell, and who could blame them?
âMaybe we should talk privately,â Luc said. He clasped her wrist and led her to the glass doors at the front of the classroom. âItâs beautiful out here. The way youâre nestled in the hills, youâd never know thereâs a city nearby.â
She nodded. âThatâs Crystal Springs Reservoir on the other side of the freeway. Itâs protected property, the drinking water for this entire area, so itâs stayed pristine.â
âIâm not going back to New Orleans without you,â he said.
Apparently the small talk had ended.
âMy mother would have a fit if I brought one of the women Iâd take to a Hollywood event to a family wedding.â
Katie felt a twinge of jealousy, then a stab of anger for her own weakness. Of course he dated beautiful women. He was a billionaire. A billionaire who looked like Luc DeForges! Granted, he was actually a multimillionaire, but it had been a long-standing joke between the two of them. Did it matter, once you made your first ten million, how much came after that? He may as well be called a gazillionaire. His finances were too foreign for her to contemplate.
âAnd who you date is my problem, how?â
âIf my date tries to swing dance and kicks one of my motherâs friends in the teeth, Iâll be disinherited.â
âSo what, would that make you the fifth richest man in the United States, instead of the fourth?â
âKatie, how many times do I have to explain to you Iâm nowhere near those kinds of numbers?â He grinned. âYet.â He touched his finger to her nose lightly. âMy fate is much worse than losing status if you donât come. My mother might set me up to ensure I have a proper date. A chorus line of Southern belles. And I guarantee you at least one will have the proverbial glass slipper and think her idea is so utterly unique, Iâll succumb to the fantasy.â
âWow! What a terrible life you must lead.â She pulled a Keds slide from her foot and emptied sand out of her shoe. A few grains landed on Lucâs shiny black loafer. âTo think, with courtship skills like that, that any woman wouldnât be swept off her feetâitâs unfathomable.â She patted his arm. âI wish you luck, Luc. Iâm sure your mother will have some very nice choices for you, so go enjoy yourself. Perk up, thereâre billions
more to be made when you get back.â
âSarcasm doesnât suit you, Katie.â
e was right, but she didnât trust herself around him. Sheâd taken leave of her senses too many times in that weakened state. Since moving to California, sheâd made it her goal to live life logically and for the Lord. She hadnât fallen victim to her emotions since leaving New Orleans, and sheâd invested too much to give into them now.
âIâm sorry,â she said. âI only meant that Iâm sure there are other nice girls willing to go home and pretend for your mother. Iâve already done that, only you forgot to tell me we were pretending. Remember?â
He flinched. âBelow the belt.â
A pencil fell from behind her ear, and she stooped to pick it up, careful not to meet his glance as she rose. âIâm sorry, but Iâm busy here. Maybe we could catch up another time? Iâd like that and wonât be so sidetracked.â She looked across the room toward Austin, an angelic but severely autistic child in a wheelchair. He pounded against his tray. âThe kids are getting hungry. Itâs lunchtime.â She pointed to the schedule.
Luc scooped a hand under her chin and forced her to look at him. âWhere else am I going to find a gorgeous redhead who knows who Glenn Miller is?â
âDonât, Luc. Donât charm me. Itâs beneath you. Buy one of your bubble-headed blondes a box of dye and send her to iTunes to do research. Problem solved.â
He didnât let go. âRyan wants you to sing at the wedding, Katie. He sent me personally to make sure youâd be there and sing âSomeone to Watch Over Me.â Iâm not a man who quits because somethingâs difficult.â
âAnyone worth her salt on Bourbon Street can sing that. Excuse meââ
âKatie-bug.â
âLuc, I asked you kindly. Donât. Iâm not one of your sophisticated girls who knows how to play games. Iâm not going to the wedding. That part of my life is over.â
âThat part of your life? What about that part of you? Where is she?â
She ignored his question. âI cannot be the only woman you know capable of being your date. Youâre not familiar with anyone else who isnât an actress-slash-waitress?â She cupped his hand in her own and allowed herself to experience the surge of energy. âI have to go.â She dropped his hands and pushed back through the half door. âIâm sure you have a meeting to get to. Am I right?â
âItâs true,â he admitted. âI had business in San Francisco today, a merger. We bought a small chain of health food stores to expand the brand. But I was planning the trip to see you anyway and ask you personally.â
âUh-huh.â
âWeâll be doing specialty outlets in smaller locations where real estate prices are too high for a full grocery outlet. Having the natural concept already in these locations makes my job that much easier.â
âTo take over the free world with organics, you mean?â
That made him smile, and she warmed at the sparkle in his eye. When Luc was in his element, there was nothing like it. His excitement was contagious and spread like a classroom virus, infecting those around him with a false sense of security. She inhaled deeply and reminded herself that the man sold inspiration by the pound. His power over her was universal. It did not make her special.
âName your price,â he said. âIâm here to end this rift between us, whatever it is, and Iâll do the time. Tell me what it is you want.â
âThere is no price, Luc. I donât want anything from you. Iâm not going to Ryanâs wedding. My life is here.â
âDay and night . . . night and day,â he crooned and then his voice was beside her ear. âOne last swing dance at my brotherâs wedding. One last song and Iâll leave you alone. I promise.â
She crossed the room to the sink against the far wall, but she felt him follow. She hated how he could make every nerve in her body come to life, while he seemingly felt nothing in return. She closed her eyes and searched for inner strength. He didnât want me. Not in a way that mattered. He wanted her when it suited him to have her at his side.
âEven if I were able to get the time off work, Luc, it wouldnât be right to go to your brotherâs wedding as your date. Iâm about to get engaged.â
âEngaged?â He stepped away.
She squeezed hand sanitizer onto her hands and rubbed thoroughly.
âIâll give a call to your fiancĂ© and let him know the benefits.â He pulled a small leather pad of paper from his coat pocket. âIâll arrange everything. You get a free trip home, I get a Christian date my mother is proud to know, and then your life goes back to normal. Everyoneâs happy.â He took off his fedora as though to plead his case in true gentlemanly fashion. âMy mother is still very proud to have led you from
your . . .â He choked back a word. âFrom your previous life and to Jesus.â
The announcement of her engagement seemed to have had little effect on Luc, and Katie felt as if her heart shattered all over again. âMy previous life was you. She was proud to lead me away from her sonâs life.â She leaned on the countertop, trying to remember why sheâd come to the kitchen area.
âYou know what I meant.â
âI wasnât exactly a streetwalker, Luc. I was a late-night bar singer in the Central District, and the only one who ever led my reputation into question was you. So Iâm failing to see the mutual benefit here. Your mother. Your date. And I get a free trip to a place I worked my tail off to get out of.â
She struggled with a giant jar of applesauce, which Luc took from her and opened easily. He passed the jar back to her and let his fingers brush hers.
âMy mother would be out of her head to see you. And the entire town could see what they lost when they let their prettiest belle go. Come help me remind them. Donât you want to show them that youâre thriving? That you didnât curl up and die after that awful night?â
âI really donât need to prove anything, Luc.â She pulled her apron, with its child-size handprints in primary colors, over her head. âIâm not your fallback, and I really donât care if people continue to see me that way. They donât know me.â
âWhich you? The one who lives a colorless existence and calls it holy? Or the one who danced on air and inspired an entire theater troupe to rediscover swing and raise money for a new stage?â Luc bent down, took her out at the knees, and hoisted her up over his shoulder.
âWhat are you doing? Do you think youâre Tarzan? Put me down.â She pounded on his back, and she could hear the chaos heâd created in the classroom. âThese kids need structure. What do you think youâre doing? I demand you put me down!â