Books 5-8 of The Blackbridge Series

The Blackbridge Series Books 5-8 ebook Bundle

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Books 5-8 of The Blackbridge Series

The Blackbridge Series Books 5-8 ebook Bundle

The Blackbridge Series Books 5-8

Save 35% with a 4 Book Bundle!

Sale price  $21.99 Regular price  $31.96

343+ 5-star Reviews

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Four best friends, one small coastal town, and a whole lot of trouble. 

Explore the south-west coast of Western Australia and the close-knit town of Blackbridge which has always been safe and sleepy... until now. 

All the heroes in these books are first-responders including a fire-fighter, SES worker, marine rescue and police officer. 

Tropes

  • Multi-cultural Romance
  • Male/male Romance
  • Second Chance Love
  • Wounded Hero

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐"I couldn't put it down. Started reading this book 2 days ago and everything else (including sleep) has been neglected as I can't stop reading it." Amazon Reviewer

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐"YES this romance most definitely lives up to the anticipation." Amazon Reviewer

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐"I love these Blackbridge characters." Amazon Reviewer

Set in a coastal town on Western Australia’s rugged south coast, the Blackbridge series blends fierce friendship, everyday heroes and pulse-pounding romantic suspense.

Four women grew up inseparable, through heartbreak, dreams, mistakes and second chances, they’ve always had each other backs. But when danger begins circling their tight-knit community, loyalty is tested in ways none of them expected.

As fear creeps into familiar streets and trust fractures under pressure, love becomes both vulnerability and strength. The men who step forward — firefighters, rescuers, police officers — aren’t untouchable heroes. They’re friends. Neighbours.

This is a series about fierce female friendship, ordinary people facing extraordinary pressure, and the kind of love that stands steady when everything else shakes.

Because in a town like Blackbridge, you don’t fight for yourself.

You fight for each other.

Excerpt from the bundle

Jeremy Mendelson cut the last leg for his new desk and switched off the table saw, the high-pitched buzz fading in the night. He lifted his safety glasses onto his head, brushing his hair off his face and studied his design. Not particularly inspiring. It seemed pointless to make an office desk when he had his whole house to himself and could use the kitchen table.
The scent of smoke tickled his nose. He checked the floor and bench, but nothing was smouldering.
He sniffed again, the smell stronger this time and more acrid. Not a neighbour’s log fire, but more the stench he associated with a house burning down.
His stomach clenched as he strode to the entrance of his shed and scanned his property. His porch light was a beacon against the heavy clouds obscuring the moon and stars. He shifted his gaze higher, above the trees marking his property border, and his pulse skyrocketed. An unmistakable glow. Fire. Too big to be his neighbour with a simple bonfire and far too late at night.
He grabbed his phone from his pocket, dialled triple zero as he left his shed and ran across the yard to his house. “I’ve got a fire on my neighbour’s property, about ten kilometres east of Blackbridge, Western Australia.” He gave the address as he raced into his bedroom, tripping over the boots he’d left on the floor. Where was his gear? Flung over the chair in the corner where he’d left it the last time he’d washed it.
He pulled on his pants while holding the phone between his chin and his shoulder. It dropped to the ground and he threw on his shirt before picking it up. “What was that?”
“What can you see?”
He strode into his living room. “Just a bright glow from here.” His bulldog, Fetch was curled up snoring, his head hanging off his bed. He’d be fine. The fire wouldn’t spread, they’d had a lot of rain in the past week.
Keys. Where were his keys? He scanned the piles of papers and models on the table, the clutter on the kitchen bench and finally saw them in the bowl by the door. For once he’d left them where he was supposed to. On his way out, his fingers brushed the frame containing a photo of him and his dad on a fishing trip. “Focus,” he murmured and headed out to his ute.
“Is anyone inside?” the dispatcher asked.
“I don’t know.” He hoped not.
The drive to his neighbour’s property took only a minute and as he pulled in, he swore. A lot of people milled outside the burning building, staring at the flames, a couple gesturing frantically. “It’s an outbuilding, well alight. If anyone’s inside, there’s not much time to get them out.” He parked at a safe distance and ran to the migrant workers. “Anyone inside?”
One Asian man yelled at him in another language and pointed, gesturing frantically. Not helpful.
Where was Henk? Jeremy scanned the area until he spotted him. Henk stood apart from his workers, yelling to another man. Didn’t he have a garden hose anywhere? Jeremy checked the outside of the building as he strode to him.
“Anyone inside?”
Henk jolted. “Jeremy, thank God you’re here. I didn’t hear the sirens.” He glanced behind Jeremy and frowned.
“They’re still en route. Is everyone accounted for?”
He shook his head. “No. Annisa is still inside.”
Jeremy swore and told the operator, then asked, “Where would she be?”
“Probably her room – back, right-hand corner.”
Of course it fucking was. The furthest away and closest to the fiercest flames. No sirens yet. “What’s the layout? Doors open or closed?”
“Long corridor runs down the middle of both floors with rooms on either side. I think the fire started in the kitchen at the far end of the corridor. Ask the workers about the doors.”
Jeremy threw his phone to Henk. “Update dispatch.” He ran back to the group of Asian men. “Did you leave the doors inside open or closed?” Annisa might have gone into one of the rooms and become disoriented.
The men stared at him and one said, “Annisa di dalam.”
Shit. That sounded like Indonesian. “Bicara bahasa Indonesia?”
“Melayu.”
Close enough. He repeated the question in Indonesian.
“Buka.”
Open. It meant the ventilation would feed the fire, but also prevent a build-up of gases that could cause a backdraft. The flames were already at the main door. Foolish to go that way without a breathing apparatus and a water hose.
Jeremy grabbed the ladder and a hammer from his work ute. He pointed to the man. “Hold the ladder,” he said in Indonesian. To the rest he said, “Move back,” and gestured.
They did as he asked.
“That window?” he yelled at Henk over the crackle of the fire and pointed.
“Yeah.”
In the distance, sirens wailed but not close enough. The extra minutes could be the difference between life and death. He had to go. No one else would die on his watch. Pain washed through him and he gritted his teeth. Focus.
He shoved the hammer into a pocket and leaned the ladder up beside the window. “Hold it,” he barked, pounding the sides of the ladder. The worker nodded and steadied the ladder.
He ignored the nerves humming in his stomach and climbed. No light inside from the fire, so he switched on the torch on his helmet and scanned the room. Empty. Damn it.
“Annisa!” The roar of the fire swallowed his words.
The window was open a crack, but didn’t budge when he tried to widen it. Locked. At least there wasn’t any smoke up here yet. He checked over his shoulder as he pulled out his hammer. No flashing lights. He had to go in. Lowering his helmet shield and leaning away from the window, he smashed it.
No backdraft.
Thank God. “Annisa!” He ran the hammer handle around the window frame, smashing as much glass as he could, and climbed through, testing the floor before he put any real weight on it.
It held.
An unmade single bed, a storage box against one wall and no room for anything else. He checked under the bed. Clear.
Shit.
Going further into a burning building with no means to communicate with the people outside was straight up stupid.
He scrambled across the floor to the door and peered outside. “Annisa?” he yelled. Smoke gathered on the ceiling, blocking the torchlight.
Something, maybe a sob, to the left. “Annisa, if you can hear me, yell out.”
“Tolong!”
Indonesian again. “Kembali ke kamarmu.” As he spoke, he crawled towards her voice, keeping the wall on his left. He coughed, moving faster. The smoke could be deadlier than the flame. “Annisa.”
A dark shape in front of him took form. Annisa huddled at the top of the stairs, her eyes wide, body shaking. She sobbed something but he didn’t understand. Black smoke billowed up the stairs, and he turned his head, blinking his eyes. Too thick. Too easy to get lost down there. Better to go back.
His eyes watered and his lungs burned. “This way.” He tugged her arm, gestured for her to follow him.
She shook her head, wrenched her arm away.
“Cara ini, silakan.”
When he got out of here, he’d practise his Indonesian.
She didn’t budge.
He didn’t have time to wait. His head already spun from the smoke. “Don’t panic.” He crouched down and hefted her over his shoulder. She weighed next to nothing. She shrieked and hit him, but he held her legs tight against his chest and double-timed it back to the room at the end. As he burst through the doorway, a masked face was at the window.
Lawrence.
Annisa stopped struggling as he passed her out the window to his fire captain. The floorboards under his feet bowed. “Move!”
Lawrence was already in motion, shimmying down the ladder. Jeremy lunged for the window sill to haul his arse out as the floor gave way.
The crack of disintegrating wood and a roar of flames with a huge burst of smoke and heat. He hung from the window sill, not daring to peer down at the inferno beneath his feet. He felt it fine.
Broken glass dug through his gloves and he hissed as he struggled to pull himself up.
Chin ups were also going on his to-do list.
Muscles straining, head spinning, he scrambled for better purchase and got his arms over the sill, his thick jacket protecting him from the broken glass. Strong arms dragged him further over and then the person lugged him over his shoulder and carried him down the ladder. He was dumped unceremoniously next to the ambulance.
“Anyone else inside?” Nicholas asked.
Jeremy coughed, shaking his head, sucking in deep breaths of fresh air. “Not that I know of.”
Guy, one of the paramedics, pushed him back so he sat on the edge of the ambulance. Annisa lay inside on the bed, being attended to by Cynthia. Guy handed him an oxygen mask, and Jeremy put it on as he took stock of the situation.
Several team members hosed the flames, and the fire hissed in protest.
“Any injuries?” Guy asked.
Jeremy’s throat and eyes burned and his hands hurt like a mother-fucker. Shards of glass stuck out of his gloves.
Guy swore. “Let me check that.”
Jeremy gritted his teeth as Guy pulled the glass out and then slid the gloves off. A couple of gashes in his left hand were bleeding.
“You might need stitches,” Guy said as he cleaned the cuts.
Jeremy grimaced. He had a full schedule of work next week.
“How’s your breathing?”
Lifting the mask away from his face, he croaked, “Throat hurts, so do eyes.”
“We’ll rinse out your eyes in a minute.” Guy bandaged his hand as Lawrence walked over.
“Is he all right?”
Guy nodded. “They both need a proper examination at the hospital, but there’s nothing life-threatening.”
“Good.” He turned back to Jeremy. “What the fuck do you think you were doing?”
Jeremy shrugged. “There wasn’t time to wait.”
“Bullshit. Instead of hauling one person out of the house, we had to haul two.”
“The top floor gave way.”
Lawrence grunted, unimpressed. “I’ll check on you when this is out.” He walked away.
“That sounded like a threat.” Guy laughed.
Jeremy shrugged. Yeah. He’d get reamed. But at least the woman had survived.
“You ready to go?” Guy asked Cynthia.
“When you are.”
“Come on, Jeremy. Let’s get you into the ambo and strapped in.”
As Jeremy stood, dizziness washed over him. He swayed and put his hands out for balance. Guy steadied him. “Take it easy, mate.” With an arm under Jeremy’s elbow, Guy helped him into the vehicle.
As he was strapped in, Jeremy glanced out the door. Everything was under control.
“Ready?” Guy asked.
Jeremy nodded. Annisa was strapped onto the bed and she gave him a small smile.
That one smile made all the shit jobs Lawrence would give him worth it. He grinned at her.
“Wait for me.” Henk climbed into the ambulance. “I can’t have my worker going to hospital alone.”
Annisa’s eyes widened, fear crossing them.
Jeremy frowned. Henk could be a jerk, but why was she scared of him?
His gut clenched. Something wasn’t right.
He’d keep a close eye on Annisa and make sure she was fine.

Excerpt from the bundle

Jamie Zanetti scanned the bush for signs of the missing boy.
To his left, other State Emergency Service volunteers called Noah’s name, their bright orange clothes visible through the straggly gum trees. To his right was more bush. His black steel-capped boots crunched over the damp native grasses.
How far could a four-year-old walk in a few hours? They didn’t have enough volunteers to cover the whole national park. The winery had disappeared from sight a long time ago and he couldn’t even hear the sound of cars along the highway. At least the ground was relatively flat and it was too cold for the dugites and tiger snakes to be active. The sun sank closer to the horizon, the temperature dropping. It would be dark soon and that would be terrifying for a young kid. Thick grey clouds threatened to make the day even more miserable by dropping rain.
Christ, he hoped they found Noah soon—alive.
Jamie had been back in Blackbridge for six months, and in that time he’d been on far too many searches for missing people. Sometimes they found them alive with only minor injuries, sometimes they didn’t. But this time it was a kid. Jamie visualised the photo they’d been shown—wide brown eyes and a cheeky grin. Noah had been wearing a green rain jacket and black jeans, so would blend with the surrounding bush.
Jamie cupped his hands around his mouth. “Noah!” He waited. Only the echo of other searchers calling the boy.
Jamie moved more to the right, still able to see his fellow volunteer, Elijah Johnson, but widening the area of the search. If he were four, what would he do?
He sighed. As soon as he realised he was lost, he would have sat down and waited for someone to find him. His parents had drilled that into him. But that had been after he’d decided to visit his friend Kit by himself. Kit had a new puppy and he’d wanted to play with it.
Jamie glanced around. What would have caught Noah’s attention? Had he followed something—a bird or a kangaroo? Yeah, he could imagine him running into the bush after an interesting animal, especially because the child was English. Most of Australia’s animals would be unusual to him. Perhaps he’d wandered further and further away until he’d lost sight of whatever he was following and then realised he didn’t know his way back.
“Noah!”
A sound. A sob?
Jamie froze, straining to hear. “Noah, is that you?” He stepped towards the noise.
A quiet cough, or maybe a hiccough reached him.
Jamie’s heart raced as he yelled to Elijah, “Over here.” He strode towards the sound. “Wave your arms for me, Noah, so I can find you.”
The boy wailed and Jamie pinpointed him sitting next to a tree, his cheeks tear- and dirt-streaked. Relief made him dizzy. “I’ve found him!” He crashed through the bush. As he reached the boy, his ankle rolled on a rock and he dropped to his knees, pain coursing through him.
Shit.
Noah recoiled.
Jamie gritted back the pain and smiled at the sobbing young boy. “Hey, kiddo. My name’s Jamie. I’m with the SES. We’ve been searching for you.”
“I want my Dad!” The boy shook, hugging himself.
Jamie glanced up. The other volunteers were coming. “He’s on his way. He’s been so worried about you.”
Noah bit his lip. “Am I in trouble?”
“Nah. Your parents will be happy to have you back.”
Footsteps as Elijah approached. Jamie squeezed the boy’s hand and then other members of the Blackbridge SES converged on them. Elijah’s wide smile made Jamie’s heart stutter. “Hey, Noah. Glad we found you.”
Their section leader, Morgan spoke into his radio. “We’ve found him.”
“Noah!” The frantic call of the boy’s father as he pushed through the volunteers.
“Dad!” Noah flung himself at his father who picked him up and held him tight, his eyes closed.
“You’re all right.” The man’s voice shook. “Are you hurt?” He examined his son and then hugged him again. “You scared me to death. Don’t ever do that again.”
The boy buried his head into his father’s shoulder and mumbled sorry amidst his cries.
Jamie’s heart clenched and he blinked his watery eyes. Reunions like this were the best possible outcome. He swallowed hard and quietly cleared his throat. Elijah squeezed his shoulder and smiled. No judgement.
“It’s OK. You’re safe. I’ve got you.” The father dried Noah’s tears and kissed his cheek. “Why did you wander off?”
“I saw a kangaroo.”
His father sighed and glanced at Jamie. “Thank you. Thank all of you.”
Morgan nodded. “We’re glad he’s safe. Let’s get him back to the winery. There’s an ambulance there to check him.” He led the way.
Jamie rotated his ankle and hissed at the fresh pain shooting up his leg. Damn it.
“Need help?” Elijah held out his hand.
They wore identical orange uniforms, but somehow, Elijah wore his with style. His French-tucked shirt drew Jamie’s eye to his belt and made him imagine what lay beneath it. He met Elijah’s deep green eyes, and hesitated. He’d been avoiding Elijah since he’d moved back, fighting his attraction. But who was he kidding? If he could choose anyone to rescue him, it would be Elijah. “I twisted my ankle.”
Concern crossed Elijah’s face and he squatted. “How bad is it?”
“Not sure if I can put any weight on it.”
Elijah clucked his tongue and examined Jamie’s foot, his touch light. “All right, honey. Let’s get your shoe off and then I can help you back.” He worked quickly on the laces of Jamie’s boot and gently pulled it off.
Jamie gritted his teeth at the pain.
Elijah called to one of the other volunteers, holding up the boot. “Can you carry this?”
“What happened?” Brenton asked.
“Twisted it,” Jamie said, taking hold of Elijah’s hand and bracing his good foot on the ground as Elijah lifted him. Fresh-smelling aftershave tickled Jamie’s nose and the firm arm around Jamie’s waist revealed the strength below Elijah’s slim build. A bolt of desire replaced Jamie’s pain.
“I’ll tell Siobhan.” Brenton walked off. Jamie barely heard him.
Giving in to his attraction to Elijah would complicate his life and the very thought of it made his throat tighten and his pulse race. He swallowed. Don’t think about it. He had to get back and have his ankle assessed.
Elijah tucked his shoulder under Jamie’s arm, his head so close. “Is this all right?”
It was too nice. Jamie nodded, unable to stop his quick smile in response.
“OK, hop with me.”
Jamie was forced to use Elijah’s strong body as a crutch, leaning on him every time he hopped. It wasn’t how Jamie had imagined having Elijah’s body rubbing against his.
“What did you do?” Siobhan, their team leader walked over to them, her bright blue hair clashing with her orange uniform.
“Twisted my ankle.”
“Let me help.” She wrapped her arm around Jamie’s waist on his other side, her body softer and curvier. He blocked the memory of running his hands over her breasts when they’d been in high school. Such a long time ago. He was no longer attracted to her, though she would be the easier choice. No one would bat an eyelid if they dated.
Elijah squeezed Jamie’s waist as he tripped, and the flush of desire swept through him again.
OK, so no. Ignoring Elijah wouldn’t work.
But he’d think about it later, when he was away from Elijah, when he could think clearly.
Right now, he needed to get back to base.
And it was a long way back to the winery.
The first drop of rain hit the back of his hand. The clouds were full to bursting. Another drop of rain, and then another.
He sighed. What a day.
“What made you move to Blackbridge, Elijah? I don’t reckon it was the weather.” Siobhan’s voice startled Jamie out of his thoughts.
“My parents live here,” Elijah said.
“Elijah went to the agricultural college,” Jamie added. “He was in our year.” He’d first met Elijah at Kit’s sixteenth birthday party. That had been a revelation. Elijah had been a little awkward-looking, all arms and legs, but he was already out and proud. The first gay person Jamie had met. “Is that when they moved here?”
Elijah shook his head. “It was after I graduated. They fell in love with the town when they came to pick me up from boarding school, but it took a couple of years for Dad to find a job.”
“And you work for Kit van Ross?” Siobhan said.
“Kit Zanetti,” Jamie and Elijah corrected at the same time. They grinned at each other. Kit had married Jamie’s brother recently and had happily discarded her maiden name. She wanted the world to know Lincoln was hers.
“Yeah,” Elijah continued. “She needed a new farmhand just after I moved back. It was perfect timing.”
From all reports, Elijah had fitted in perfectly. Kit didn’t suffer fools and she was passionate about her farm, so if Elijah hadn’t pulled his weight, she would have fired him by now—friend or not. Instead she was always talking about how great Elijah was which made it harder for Jamie to pretend he thought of Elijah as just an acquaintance. He’d stopped himself from asking how Elijah was at their weekly family dinners, but luckily Elijah featured regularly in Kit’s stories about the farm.
“How’s the ankle?” Elijah asked as they stopped to rest.
“Throbbing.” Jamie leaned against a gum tree to get his breath back. They were maybe halfway to the winery and the other volunteers had long since outpaced them, eager to get back before the spits of rain turned into a downpour.
Elijah smirked. “Title of your sex tape.”
Jamie laughed. “You watch that show too?”
“It’s one of my favourites.”
“What are you two talking about?” Siobhan frowned.
“A show on Netflix,” Jamie told her. “It’s a cop sitcom where the running gag is—” At her bored expression he said, “Never mind.”
Elijah placed his arm around Jamie’s waist again. “Let’s keep moving.”
Jamie leaned against him as Siobhan took his other side.
“I’ve convinced Adam he has to watch it,” Elijah said. “You should join us.”
“Sounds like fun.” With Elijah’s roommate there as chaperone, Jamie wouldn’t have to worry about how Elijah made him feel.
Siobhan laughed. “Don’t tell people you’re going to Elijah’s to Netflix and chill or they might get the wrong idea.”
“No, they won’t.” Jamie’s denial came out a little more forcefully than he meant. His face flamed and he avoided looking at Elijah. “No one thinks Adam and Elijah are partners.”
Elijah’s fingers tightened on his hip for a second before releasing. He winced. He’d sent the wrong message. Maybe he should say he didn’t care, that he was bi, but only his family and closest friends knew. That was part of the problem.
His injured foot brushed the ground and pain pierced him. He’d deal with his attraction to Elijah later.
He checked where they were.
Not too far to go.

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Tropes

  • second chance love
  • male/male romance
  • opposites attract
  • grumpy sunshine

Books in this Bundle

Book 5 - Shelter
Book 6 - Shield
Book 7 - Harbour
Book 8 - Protect

Heat Level

Sexy

Author's Note

Format Details

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