This was his town now
Tiny Antelope Springs, Colorado, had provided a place for police officer Dallas Brooks to forget about the big-city trauma that had almost destroyed him three years ago. Now drug dealers threatened to take over his small town, targeting the schools and ripping apart families. Suddenly Dallas was back in the fray. He vowed to just do his job, not get emotionally involved. But beautiful social worker Kira Matthews was right beside him, putting her heart on the line, asking him to care about people again - asking him to care about her. Pretending he didn't was his toughest fight yet.
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What I liked best is that so much of it was unusual for average Christian fiction. Kira is an African-American woman who was adopted in her youth by a family with three boys, who all became policemen. The sibling relationship is very well written, with believable exchanges between siblings, and humorous moments when her brothers get overprotective. But Kira is a strong woman who knows her own mind, and nobody's going to get in the way of her helping a brother and sister through her job as a social worker. Except said brother and sister are in the middle of a drug ring, and all the officers have to work together to solve the crimes and make sure the kids have a safe chance at starting over.
Definitely enjoyed the storyline for this one. Also, the romance is understated and enjoyable. No smut.