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Changed Plan: Rocky Start Romance, #2
Changed Plan: Rocky Start Romance, #2
Changed Plan: Rocky Start Romance, #2
Ebook119 pages1 hourRocky Start Romance

Changed Plan: Rocky Start Romance, #2

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"Get to the airport early," they said. "You don't want to miss your flight."

I got here three hours before my departure time. But my flight decided to miss me.

It seems like everyone's flight has been canceled.

They can't all have weather delays!

All I want is to roast on a beach in Florida and forget all about the fact that I've been fired. Dismissed. Discharged. Terminated is the word human resources prefers. Because they're actual sadists.

The last thing I need is this human-shaped Golden Retriever, who won't stop smiling at me and telling me it's not so bad. Things could be worse. No sense being angry about what we can't control.

I don't know what I did to attract this man. Was it my entirely unapproachable expression? The way I was screaming at customer service on my phone?

Whatever the reason, I am not sharing a hotel room with him. His snores probably come out in the tune of "You Are My Sunshine."

He's too happy to be real. Even if he does seem genuinely interested in helping me find some joy in spite of my current situation.

It's not like letting him make me smile is going to change anything.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 24, 2025
ISBN9798230947240
Changed Plan: Rocky Start Romance, #2
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Author

Indie Sparks

Indie Sparks writes heroines with hutzpah and heroes with dirty mouths and the skills to walk the talk. She gives them all happy endings, whether HEA or HFN. 

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    Book preview

    Changed Plan - Indie Sparks

    Changed Plan

    A Poorly Scheduled Romance

    Indie Sparks

    Twice Shy Publishing

    Copyright © 2025 by Indie Sparks

    All rights reserved.

    No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except as permitted by U.S. copyright law.

    No part of this book may be used to create, feed, or refine artificial intelligence models, for any purpose, without written permission from the author. For permission requests, please contact: twiceshypub@yahoo.com or sparksbyindie@gmail.com

    The story, all names, characters, and incidents portrayed in this production are fictitious, created without use of AI technology. No identification with actual persons (living or deceased), places, buildings, and products is intended or should be inferred. This book is a work of fiction meant to entertain only, and as such, no part of this story should be interpreted as instructional or as any form of professional advice.

    Book Cover by Indie Sparks

    Edited by Beth Hudson Ink

    Contents

    Dedication

    1.Darby

    2.Zane

    3.Darby

    4.Zane

    5.Darby

    6.Zane

    7.Darby

    8.Zane

    9.Darby

    10.Zane

    11.Darby

    12.Zane

    13.Darby

    14.Zane

    15.Darby

    16.Darby

    Thank you to all the airport and airline workers who have to serve cranky travelers, especially on those bad travel days. Y'all are the real heroes.

    image-placeholder

    To my readers: Be nice to the airport and airline workers, okay? And remember, sometimes, delays and detours create the very best memories, as Zane and Darby are about to show you . . .

    Safe travels, y'all!

    1

    Darby

    image-placeholder

    Business Class

    Another prerecorded airport announcement makes it nearly impossible to hear the person on the other end of my phone call. I’m sorry. Can you repeat that, please?

    The wheel of a haphazardly driven stroller scrapes the back of my ankle as I weave my way through the crowd to stand by the windows, where I will hopefully not be trampled.

    I’ll probably get better reception over here, anyway.

    As soon as I stake my spot and come to a stop, my travel tote slips off my shoulder, landing heavy in the crook of my elbow and causing hot coffee to slosh through the little plastic sipping hole onto my hand. Holy shit! That’s ridiculous.

    The customer service rep’s voice breaks up again, but I make out the words. Cursing and not ridiculous.

    Not you. The coffee. It’s ridiculously hot. I shake droplets away and wipe the back of my hand on my pants. Can we stay on topic, please?

    Her voice comes through loud and clear now, but she is definitely being ridiculous. Allowing myself a steadying breath before I respond, I stare down at workers on the tarmac outside—all bundled up and huddled together.

    Why do they have to stay out there? There are no planes coming or going. It seems like they should at least be able to come inside and get warm.

    No, I say, answering the customer service rep’s latest question. Of course, I don’t expect you to be able to control the weather! I respond louder than I intend, but nothing about the way the airlines are handling this makes any sense. But I am a business traveler, and I do expect you to have some sort of priority list for rescheduling!

    Never mind that I’m not traveling for business today. She doesn’t need to know that.

    I pause to take a tiny slurp of my lava-hot coffee before I start to really yell, and not only due to the airline’s ineptitude, but this has got to be the loudest airport I’ve ever been in. Every gate is filled with victims of canceled flights.

    Do you have any idea what we’re dealing with here? There are people standing outside in a blizzard for no reason, babies are crying, I’m pretty sure the couple next to me at the bar a few minutes ago was outlining the terms of their divorce on a cocktail napkin, and all I’m asking from you is—

    I’m assaulted again, this time by the guy next to me swinging his backpack up from the floor as he turns to walk away, never even looking back to apologize. I know he knows he hit me with that thing. Jerk.

    Hello? Hello? She fucking hung up on me? Unbelievable.

    No one cares about anyone else anymore. We are an entire society of ruthless assholes.

    Nobody in this terminal knows I got fired today—even though I feel like it’s been stamped on my forehead—but not a single one of these people would care, anyway.

    But I care a whole hell of a lot because I genuinely cared about that job. And not just for the paycheck. I lived for that damn job. And I was the best PR executive the agency had. Nepotism is a bitch.

    It’s okay, though. They’ll regret letting me go. And when they come crawling back, I’ll already be on to bigger and better things. Screw them.

    Right now, I’m supposed to be on a plane headed for Florida to decompress on a beach for a week. It’s been scheduled since long before I got the corporate ax, and I need it now more than ever.

    A woman looks up to make eye contact from her seat at the end of a row. She gives me a look of solidarity. Women get it. We know when one of our own is going through some shit.

    How can every flight have a weather delay? I ask, throwing my hands up in disbelief. I swear, they make this shit up as they go, right? The entire country is not having bad weather! It’s sunny and warm in southern Florida right now!

    The woman yanks her glasses from her face and stares down her nose at me. "You are not the only person in this airport. It might shock you to learn you’re not even the only one being inconvenienced. Clearly, the weather here is the problem. Florida has got nothing to do with it, and I think we’ve all heard quite enough of your self-centered tantrum!"

    Oh, it’s like that, huh? I thought she was another strong woman ready to commiserate. But no, she’s just another passive passenger, willing to take whatever abuse the airlines dole out. Fucking sheep. I don’t have to stand here and be condescended to like this.

    I turn on my heels and slam face-first into a wall—a wall sporting such a curated business-casual look he could be on his way to a photo shoot. No one outside of a menswear ad is this put together on a random Friday afternoon.

    Look at those shoulder-length waves of chestnut hair, just messy enough to make him look approachable, which is the last vibe anyone should want to give in an airport.

    The only flaw on him is my coffee spilled all over his off-white leather slip-on shoes. Great! Now, I have to apologize to this walking designer billboard, who is probably going to make it a whole thing because men who look like him always do.

    Look, I’m sorry, okay? I didn’t realize you had creeped up on me like that. I’ll pay for your shoes.

    No worries.

    Oh, perfect. There’s the million-dollar smile that completes the look.

    He pulls a stack of napkins from his computer bag, crouches down, and wipes off his shoes. They’re wipeable, see?

    But they’re leather, so they’re also stainable. Who has the audacity to wear any shade of white shoes on a travel day?

    Or any day.

    Not stainable, he says, standing back up to tower over me by a good six inches. "Sustainable. Vegan leather."

    I definitely should’ve seen that coming.

    He jogs off to a trashcan to dispose of his coffee-soaked napkins. I walk away in the other direction.

    Wait up.

    He can’t be serious. What does he want from me? His eco-friendly shoes are fine. I speed up.

    Are we power walking? he asks as his long legs close the gap between us in a few strides.

    "Listen, I have

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