What does being a believer mean? Soran believed in God, she was raised to. But her reason for believing wasn't just because she grew up in a Christian home. It wasn't because she went to church every Sunday, or because she read a bible story now and then. Soran believed in God because it's what made the most sense. She was a girl of logic after all. In her mind, God was almost like someone who watched from the sidelines. Someone who never spoke or acted - or perhaps He did speak but Soran never bothered to listen.
This leads us to Sorans' teenage years, where she has developed a crush on her church's golden boy, Patrick Daniels. He's tall, kind, handsome, and the pasters' son. He's every church girl's dream.
So naturally, when he proposes to Soran right after her 18th birthday, she says yes immediately. She doesn't stop and think about how she has hardly spent any time with Patrick alone - or about how she doesn't truly know anything about him and his family. She doesn't stop and listen to the low rumble of a warning creeping into her spirit and invading her mind. Instead, she marries Patrick and finds out he's not what he seems.
Now she's trapped in an abusive marriage, praying to God for guidance...for safety.
When tragedy strikes, Soran has rid herself of one big problem in her life but is left with the shattered pieces. Now she is on trial for a crime she didn't commit and the only person who trusts her word and knows what she's going through is Ryker, Patrick's older brother.
How will Soran navigate devastation, freedom, new love, and God's plan all at once?
As Dallas and Drayton navigate life in the spotlight, Spencer is navigating intense feelings for Nathan - her best friend's brother.
*****
Dallas and Drayton are planning their wedding, talking babies and learning how to navigate life in LA now that Drayton is a hotshot football player in the big leagues. Meanwhile, Spencer and Nathan are back at home in Colorado, coming to terms with their feelings for one another and learning how to co-parent with Grayson, the father of Spencer's daughter. Will the realities of adult life strengthen them - or will their relationships break?
[Sequel to The QB Bad Boy and Me]
[[word count: 150,000-200,000 words]]