Blaze: A Texas Heat Novel

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Authors: Octavia McKenzie

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Blaze

A Texas Heat Novel

By Octavia McKenzie

Kindle & Print Edition

Publisher: Jane Austen & Company

Copyright 2015, Octavia McKenzie

Books by Octavia McKenzie

All Jane Austen’s Men Series

All Jane Austen’s Men, Mr. Darcy’s Journal, Poems & Love Letters 

All Jane Austen’s Men, Mr. Knightley & Captain Wentworth’s Journal, Poems & Love Letters

All Jane Austen’s Men, The Journal, Poems & Love Letters of Mr. Darcy, Mr. Knightley & All

 

Texas Heat Novels

Slow Burn

Where There’s Smoke

 

 

Dear Reader,

It’s a privilege and a joy to write for you!

I love connecting with my readers!

Like me on Facebook & share – Octavia McKenzie, Author

Twitter - @octaviawrites1

Instagram - @octaviawrites1

Email –
[email protected]

This book is dedicated to my teachers, the special ones I’ll never forget, you were amazing, I love you all!

5
th
Grade Mr. Kurs, PS 143 Corona, Queens, NY

6
th
Grade Mrs. Perez, IS 227, Queens, NY

9
th
Grade Mrs. Fishback, Plantation High School, Plantation, FL

Table of contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 1

Aberdeen by the Lake, Texas

Eight year old Dylan Chambers watched the girl with unconcealed fascination. She had to be six or seven. Her clothes shabby and mismatched, shoes scuffed and faded. Strawberry blond hair in a riot of curls piled high in a lopsided ponytail. She looked this way and that to make sure the coast was clear. Before he could blink, she darted behind a rose bush. What in the world? Dylan followed. He looked over his shoulder.

Mom flirted outrageously with the school principal. Dad leaned against an ivy covered wall, ignoring her. He flipped through his notes with glasses perched on the tip of his Roman nose.

The Kindergarten teacher pushed kids on the swing. Dylan followed the girl. She stood with her tiny back to him, shoulder blades hunched, her fly away curls, wispy in the breeze. She stood by a metal link fence. Her lunch box laid open at her feet. Dylan’s jaw dropped as she stuffed her sandwich between the links to a homeless woman on the other side.

“I only got peanut butter n’ jelly today, Alice.”

A grubby hand with filthy fingernails took the offered sandwich.

The homeless lady sat down on the uneven sidewalk. The girl plopped down in the grass, a metal fence between them. She rummaged through her tin lunch box with the superhero Wonder Woman on it. Coco puffs in a zip lock bag. They munched in companionable silence. Alice’s oily grey hair threw her face in shadows. The girl smiled. Her two top baby teeth were missing. Dimples flashed in her rosy cheeks. Dylan’s heart did an odd skip. What an adorable kid! The homeless lady thought so too. She grinned back with yellow stained teeth.

“Emerson, you’re the best part of my day,” she whispered.

The girl beamed. “Wanna double chocolate brownie? I made it with my gran, she says chocolate cures everything.”

Alice nodded. “Your gran sounds like a very wise woman indeed.”

The older woman wore several layers of clothes as the sun shined down. A gentle breeze drifted her stench of grime, sweat and unwashed skin. Dylan realized with a start the woman wore all the clothes she owned. Emerson handed her the brownie through the metal link that divided them. Alice took a bite, closed her eyes and groaned with sheer pleasure. “Oh this is so good.”

“Ah huh,” Emerson agreed, “It’s got love in it.”

Dylan’s heart melted on the spot. The homeless woman’s eyes shined with tears.

A bell echoed in the playground.

“Ooo, I gotta go.” Emerson leaped to her feet. She waved. “See ya later alligator.”

“In a while crocodile.”

Alice faded away. Dylan made a hasty retreat.

“Where have you been scout?” his father asked. He rumpled Dylan’s golden brown hair affectionately.

“See that girl?” He pointed out Emerson as she followed the teacher and other kids inside. “That’s the girl I’m gonna marry.”

George Chambers’ lips twisted in a bittersweet line. He glared at his wife. Mom wore a sleek designer suit, killer heels, matching purse, icy blond hair immaculate, make up flawless. She was a beautiful woman to behold. Dad hated her guts. He sneered in mom’s direction. “A word to the wise, my boy. Love makes a man weak, marriage is a business arrangement, nothing more.”

Dylan had no idea what that meant. At eight years old, he understood that his parents deeply loved him but despised each other. Dad’s assistant whispered something in his ear. He signaled to mom. The married enemies held hands like lovers and smiled for the cameras.

“Mr. Mayor! Mr. Mayor!” The reporters called and maneuvered for position. Dylan’s father smiled, a flash of perfect white teeth. “My education bill will help public schools like this one-”

Dylan looked beyond the flashing cameras, the adoring press and his family limousine parked by the curb.

Across the street, the homeless lady Alice shuffled along with a garbage bag full of her meager possessions.

Ten Years Later…

Emerson wore a thrift store dress to the Senior Prom. Gran embroidered it with scraps of old lace. The shoes were only $2 at a garage sale. Emerson was really proud that she bargained with the seller and talked her down from her original $15 asking price. Gran hovered nearby with a pair of costume diamond earrings.

“My, oh my, don’t you look pretty.”

Emerson made a face. She held the old girl’s hand. Gran’s paper thin skin had miles of pale blue veins. Emerson kissed the back of her grandmother’s wrinkled hands.

“Thanks Gran, for everything.”

Nell Riley blushed, pink as a cherub.

“Where is your young man? He’s late.”

Emerson glanced at the grandfather clock. When Jake Callahan asked her to the prom she could hardly believe it. Tall, muscled up, fashion model profile, captain of the basketball team and wildly popular. Mister All American was forty-two minutes late.

“Oh no, I was supposed to meet him there,” Emerson said.

She hurried to the door with her eyes averted. Gran always said her eyes expressed her every emotion.

“What?” Gran huffed, “Back in my day a young man escorted a girl to the dance.”

“It’s all right Gran.” She kissed the weathered cheek.

“I have to go.” Emerson rushed out.

“Have a wonderful night darling, make memories.”

Emerson practically ran down the stairs. She turned back to wave. Gran stood on the porch with a wistful smile. Emerson walked briskly. She would not cry for that bastard. Jake didn't stand her up. Oh no. He asked her to the prom as a joke. He and his buddies were probably having a good laugh at her expense. That son of a B! Emerson was furious that he made her lie to her Gran. Well she'd go to the prom come hell or high water with or without a date. Make memories, Gran said. That’s exactly what Emerson planned to do. Jake Callahan can go suck it!

Dylan Chambers wore the crown at a jaunty angle. He held hands with his queen, Amber, head cheerleader. She had a lithe body that wrapped around his on the dance floor. The prom king and queen swayed under the neon lights as the live band played. She whispered X-rated things in his ear as he held her close. Dylan grinned. Later, his eyes promised. She all but purred and rubbed herself against him. Oh the king would score tonight! She’d been all over him in the limousine.

“Pookie,” she whispered, “Daddy’s lending us the private jet tonight.”

Dylan raised a single eyebrow. “Really? Where are we going?”

“A few thousand feet, long enough for us to join the mile high club.”

Dylan flashed a sexy grin. “Let’s go now.”

She squealed. “I’ll be right back.” He saw her join her Barbie posse as they giggled all the way to the makeup room.

Dylan made his way to the punch bowl. “Vanilla Spice!” Jake slapped his back.

“Hey,” Dylan said.

“I see you got Amber on lock.”

Dylan shrugged with a secretive smile. “You and Tiff going out later?”

“You know it,” Jake crowed. “Gonna take the yacht out to the lake and rock the boat, know what I’m sayin’?”

“Enjoy, I know I will.”

“Yo, I got a funny for you, I asked another girl to the prom.”

“Don’t tell Tiff, she’ll go all
Fatal Attraction
on you.”

Jake laughed. “Check it, I asked Bookworm and stood her geek ass up.”

Dylan went very still. The look he gave Jake wiped the smile off his smug face.

“You did what?” his voice lashed out in a way that made Jake back up a few steps.

“Chill man, it’s a joke, she has to know that I wasn’t serious, someone like me ask out a nobody like her? Come on!”

The cruelty of it angered Dylan beyond reason. “Why?” he hissed, “Why would you do that to her? She has nothing.”

Jake held up his hands. “Don’t shoot, okay?”

No asshole, not okay!

Dylan bristled with hostility. He growled in Jake’s face. “What has she ever done to you?”

Amber, Tiffany and their popular clique joined the guys.

“Yo Amber, back me up, I played a joke on Bookworm.”

Amber rolled her eyes. “Emerson Riley should just kill herself already.”

Dylan’s jaw dropped. “What the hell Amber?”

The pretty blond shrugged. “She’s ugly, fat, a total nerd, dirt poor white trash.”

Dylan’s jaw clenched. Tiffany chewed her pink bubble gum with a loud snap and pop. “What do you care?” she asked Dylan. “You never talk to her anyways.”

He had a damn good reason for that but he wasn’t about to explain himself to a girl who thought The American Civil War was fought in the 1970s.

“Oh snap, look what just crawled out of the garbage dump,” Jake said.

Emerson walked under the arch of balloons with her head held high, shoulders squared. Dylan rarely allowed himself the luxury of looking directly at her. He stared his fill. She was an itty bitty thing, petite. The homemade dress did nothing to conceal her perky breasts, slender waist and an ass that made him wanna just-

“Dude,” Jake said, “She’s a bottom feeder, way, way low on the food chain.”

“Bet she got that
Little House on the Prairie
dress from Goodwill,” Amber sneered.

“Salvation Army couture,” Tiffany countered. The girls laughed and high fived.

“Let’s go,” Amber pouted prettily.

Dylan didn’t spare her a glance. “Give me a sec.” Suddenly, sex at 37,000 feet with Amber no longer appealed to him. He knew she was every boy’s wet dream but after the ugly things she said, Dylan felt completely turned off. He stalled by getting them both glasses of punch. As the music blared he scanned the crowd. Couples danced, chaperons stood guard and the band rocked on. His blue eyes locked on Emerson Riley.

She walked regally past their ‘in’ crowd. She didn’t give Jake the satisfaction of acknowledgement. Dylan felt a surge of pride. Good for you girl! She walked to the back of the dance hall where the wallflowers mingled.

These were the unwanted, the least popular girls of Aberdeen Prep. Most were at the exclusive private high school on scholarship. They knew what it meant to be the working poor. Some were plump, others wore bottle glasses, braces or had a face covered in zits. Dylan thought Emerson would join them but much to his surprise she grabbed two of the girls by the hand and led them to the dance floor. Within minutes, Emerson had all the wallflowers dancing, smiling and laughing. Dylan felt his heart melt.

How did she do it? Her empathy and compassion moved him, touched him. God, she’s so damn sweet! It never occurred to him to even look in the wallflower’s direction let alone ask them to dance. But she knew how those girls felt – rejected, unattractive, definitely not wanted. Dylan had no idea he’d had a change of heart until he told Amber where to shove her daddy’s jet.

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