Butterly Bayou is a delightful story, about an uptight city girl who survives a horrendous experience and decides to recover from it by moving to rural Louisiana and taking over a clinic in a small town. is a delightful story, about an uptight city girl who survives a horrendous experience and decides to recover from it by moving to rural Louisiana and taking over a clinic in a small town.
Lila Daley studied medicine as a way to overcome her crappy childhood and was happy with her fancy apartment, designer clothes and boyfriends who never challenged her. But when a friend is attacked and killed in her hospital and she is taken hostage, her view of everything changes. Unable to enter her hospital without seeing the attack, she moves to Papillion, Louisiana to be close to her sister. No sooner has she reached the community, than an alligator in the road causes her to speed to get away from it, and the hot sheriff, Armie LeVeigne, gives her a ticket and asks her out.
Quite honestly, I didn’t like Armie. From giving Lila a ticket to talking her into living with him, then kicking her out, he was not kind, and his actions spoke louder than his words. It took intervention from his friends and another situation where she was endangered for him to realize he really did love her. I’m not sure I liked Lila, but I did respect and admire her character. Instead of letting one bad moment define her, she moved on, opening herself to love and caring. She is a true heroine, saving people’s lives and making differences in her chosen community.
The secondary characters, from Rene, Zep and Nicole to the animals, Peanut and Otis, were fun to read about. The story line is captivating but straightforward, and I look forward to more in this series.
Review copy provided for a voluntary review.