Playing it safe.
"Safe" is Nora Sánchez's friend. "Danger" is her enemy. Stick with those two words and she'll never hurt again.
Opposites attract.
Nora avoids physical contact. Galley Rutherford can't get enough of the coeds touching him and him touching them. When a night of trouble brings Nora and Galley in proximity, they're drawn to one another. Why doesn't she like to be touched? Why can't he keep his hands to himself?
Hearts beating as one.
The more they learn to use touch and words to understand one another, the harder they fall into a safe friend zone. Or is it dangerous when words and touching take them down a path toward heartbreak?
She's played it safe for as long as she could remember. He lives life on the wilder side. When soft and quiet collides with solid and loud, someone's bound to get hurt.
Author note: Galley "filthy-mouthed" Rutherford is THE KING of f-bombs. But he's filthy hot, too. Read at your own risk.