Christmas At Timberwoods (27 page)

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Authors: Fern Michaels

BOOK: Christmas At Timberwoods
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She got up and gave him a hug. “I guess you heard I was leaving.”
“Yes, Eric Summers told me. His wife said to say hi. Their baby girl is doing just fine.”
Angela smiled. “Erica is as cute as a button. She has the best parents in the world.”
“Yes, but she won’t let them sleep through the night.”
She laughed affectionately. “I’m going to miss Mrs. Summers. And forgive me. I wanted to thank you for helping me, and I never did.”
“That’s all right. I understand.”
“How did you know I was here?” she thought to ask.
“Oh, maybe I’m psychic.” He chuckled at her surprised look. “Kidding. I checked all the restaurants and bars on this side of security one by one. And here you were. Glad I caught you before your flight.” He took a breath. “Just wanted to say good-bye and good luck. I hope we meet again.”
“I won’t be back for a while, Dr. Dayton. My dad thinks I need a new outlook on life. And he can afford it.” She smiled wryly.
“Yes, Eric mentioned you’d be living in London with him. It’s a fascinating city.”
“That’s what I hear.”
“Where is your dad?” Dr. Dayton looked around the bar area.
“Buying books. It’s a really long flight.”
He nodded in agreement. “And what are you going to do for amusement?”
“I’m going to sleep. And I refuse to dream.”
Murray waited with her, standing up when the boarding call came over the loudspeaker for first-class and elite passengers. “That’s us.”
She fought a wave of nervousness. Everything she valued—mostly art supplies and oddments, a few beloved books, basic clothes but nothing fancy—was in two suitcases somewhere in the cargo hold. Did it really take no more than that to start a new life? She was going to find out.
Her father’s cell phone rang and he took it out of his pocket, frowning when he looked at the number on the little screen. “Excuse me, honey.”
Someone was holding up the boarding process, so they had to wait anyway. He moved away and talked to the caller in a low voice. After a minute, he came back and handed the phone to her. “It’s your mother. She wants to say good-bye. I made her swear not to pick a fight.”
Angela took the phone with obvious reluctance. “Hello, Mother. How are you?”
There was a pause and her mother finally spoke in a thin voice. “That’s not important. I called to say good-bye. And that I’m sorry, I suppose.”
Angela said nothing.
“Are you there?” Sylvia asked irritably.
“Yes.”
“Well, then. There’s nothing more to say. Except that I hope you know what you’re doing.”
Angela didn’t have a specific reply to that, either, but she managed a polite farewell.
“Stay in touch,” her mother added.
“I will. Stay well.”
She gave the phone back to her father and they both rejoined the boarding line.
 
 
Heather and Lex strolled through the empty, echoing mall. Long rays of morning sun streamed in through tall, opaque windows on one enormous wall. The Christmas displays were still up—they would remain in place until New Year’s, when the big sales started. They both smiled when they saw Angela’s silent angels, trumpets uplifted to the light.
“Peaceful, isn’t it?” Lex said quietly.
“For now,” Heather answered. She looked at her watch. “We’ve got two minutes until the doors open. Yikes—think about all those returns and unwanted presents. I’m so glad I’m not in customer service.”
He put an arm around her shoulders. “Never mind that. I almost forgot. I have a present for you. I think you’ll like it.”
“Animal, vegetable, or mineral?”
“Mineral,” he said after a beat.
“Bigger than a breadbox?”
“Much smaller.”
“Hmm. I give up.”
“Let me give you a clue. Here goes.” He paused, took her in his arms, and gave her a tender kiss.
“Nice,” she said, laughing as she broke away. “I like clues like that. But I still don’t know what it is.”
He clasped her hand in his and they walked on. “I want you to think about something.”
“What?”
“Marrying me,” he said bluntly. “What would you say to a year’s engagement? I don’t think I could wait longer than that to make you mine.”
“Lex!” Heather stopped and stared at him. He took her by the shoulders and turned her around so she was facing the window of Marsden, the mall’s best jewelry store. The window was empty except for one item that blazed when a ray of sunlight hit it. It was a ring—a diamond solitaire set in platinum.
“Like it?” he asked softly.
“But—but they take all the jewelry out of the window at night and they open an hour after the mall does—Lex! You arranged this ahead of time, didn’t you?”
He chuckled. “Everything but the ray of sunlight. Want to try the ring on? You don’t have to say yes yet.”
Heather saw someone moving inside the closed store and realized it was the jeweler. Mr. Marsden smiled at both of them as he unlocked the door.
“Come in, you two. I was just making coffee. Would you like some?”
He got no answer to that question. Heather and Lex were wrapped in each other’s arms, ignoring him, the ring, and the horde of shoppers that had begun to stream around them.
For more traditional holiday cheer from
bestselling author Fern Michaels,
don’t miss her wonderful, heartwarming
story in
MAKING SPIRITS BRIGHT.
Turn the page for special preview.
 
 
A Zebra paperback on sale in November 2011.
Chapter 1
Placerville, Colorado
November 2011
 
Melanie McLaughlin positioned her cursor on the Send icon, double-clicked, and waited for the window to pop up telling her that her mail had been sent. She signed off her e-mail account, then moved her mouse to exit the complicated graphics program she’d helped design last year. It was her biggest job to date, and she was happy to be finished. She didn’t want to work during the upcoming Christmas season. Fortunately, she was her own boss, so she made the rules. She just wanted to enjoy the holidays without any professional commitments, no last-minute all-night projects to finish. She’d worked diligently through the Thanksgiving holiday to make sure her schedule was completely cleared until after the New Year.
She’d promised Stephanie Marshall, her best friend, that she’d watch Stephanie’s girls, Amanda and Ashley, today, so that Stephanie and her fiancé, Edward Patrick Joseph O’Brien, “Patrick” to his friends, could spend Black Friday Christmas shopping. She thought it very courageous of the couple to tackle the crowds. Melanie had promised the girls she would take them skiing at Maximum Glide, then they would come back to her condo, where they would spend the evening learning to knit. Melanie had been an avid knitter since junior high, long before it was fashionable. Both girls were eager to learn, telling her they wanted to learn to knit so they could give their mother handmade Christmas gifts. Melanie smiled, remembering the first scarf she’d made for her mother. Even with its uneven stitches and horrid fluorescent orange, her mother had been delighted with her gift. She’d kept the scarf packed in a shoe box in the back of her closet all these years. For safekeeping, her mother’d said. Personally, Melanie thought her mother kept it out of sight to prevent temporary blindness by those unfortunate few who’d been forced to
admire
her handiwork. At the time, Melanie had reasoned the color would stand out on the slopes, her mother easily spotted in case of an emergency. She’d made sure to purchase plenty of red and green yarn for the girls’ first project: a pot holder. No way would she subject Stephanie to such a horrific color!
She pushed the power button to turn off her computer. For the entire month of December and what was left of November, she vowed not to turn it back on unless it was a dire emergency. That didn’t mean she couldn’t check her e-mail. She’d just do it from her cell phone.
Melanie rolled her chair away from the desk and almost ran over Odie, her three-year-old boxer. “Hey, bud, don’t sneak up on me like that. You’re liable to give me a heart attack.”
“Woof, woof!” Odie stood up, his shiny brown eyes beseeching her not to leave him behind.
She gave him a quick scratch between the ears. “You’re a lucky boy today. I promised Candy Lee I’d let her dog-sit, so there.” Candy Lee, a high school student who worked parttime at The Snow Zone ski shop, was a die-hard animal lover. Melanie brought Odie to the store whenever she knew Candy Lee was working. Today would be crazy busy, but Melanie knew there were three staff members on loan from their ski-lift positions to assist Candy Lee since both Stephanie and Patrick had taken the day off.
An ear-piercing meow directed her attention to her newly adopted cat, Clovis. He had a rich butterscotch coat and giant jade-colored eyes, which were staring at her to demand her attention. Another earsplitting meow. She reached down and scooped up the giant ball of fur. “I guess this means you want to come, too?” Another meow, and two quick slaps from his bushy tail, and Melanie knew she couldn’t leave Clovis alone. Weighing in at twenty-seven pounds when she’d spied him at the local animal shelter, he’d caught her attention two months ago when, on a whim, she decided Odie needed a pal. Though her intent was to adopt another dog, Clovis had glowered at her from his cage as she’d walked through the shelter. She’d heard his manlike meow, and decided a cat would be a perfect companion for Odie, who was docile and lived for belly rubs and the occasional bit of rare steak. A cat would be perfect given the boxer’s disposition. When she’d taken the husky feline out of his cage, he licked her face just like a dog. He’d captured her heart on the spot. The dog and cat had taken to each other like jelly to peanut butter. She rubbed her nose against Clovis’s before placing him on top of her desk. “Let me load up the ski equipment, guys,” Melanie said, sure both animals understood her.
Odie dropped down on his haunches, and Clovis perched upright as though saying, “Okay, but speed it up.”
She made fast work of getting her skis, poles, boots, and helmet from the front closet. She grabbed a tote that held her ski pants and all the miscellaneous gear one needed when skiing. She peered inside the bag just to make sure she had a full bottle of sunscreen. The morning sun blazed like a giant lemon in the powder-blue sky. Given that and the blustering winds, sun- and windburn were a sure thing without proper protection.
That day, Melanie was thankful her condo had its own private garage. The temps were supposed to be in the low teens. Her six-year-old Jeep Wrangler took forever to warm up when left outside. After stuffing her equipment in the back, she tossed her tote, full of supplies, on the front passenger seat.
She made three trips to the condo and back to the Jeep before she had all her supplies. Since she was bringing Odie and Clovis to The Snow Zone, she’d brought their beds just in case Candy Lee needed them out of the way. Odie didn’t like being shifted to the small office at the back of the store. Melanie was sure he understood the difference between the rows of sweaters and ski coats and the actual ski equipment. She’d often commented to Stephanie that if she were ever in a pinch, Odie was sure to be a great assistant. Neither of her pets liked being relegated to the back office, yet they seemed to make the best of their situation. Both animals got along famously. So far, they’d remained in the office without any signs of mass destruction.
Once they were all secured properly in their seats, Melanie made the short drive to Stephanie’s little ranch house in Placerville. She grinned at the memory of last year’s Christmas. She had purchased the little ranch home for Stephanie and the girls. She’d placed the deed and the rest of the paperwork that goes along with purchasing a house in a plain envelope, as though its contents were unknown to her. Stephanie still told anyone who would listen what a grand gesture Melanie had performed.
Melanie inherited millions when her Mimi died. Her parents had bought real estate when the market was hopping, before she was born, and they, too, weren’t lacking in the financial department. This made their lives and those of many others better. Her mother always told her you get back what you give, tenfold, and it wasn’t necessarily a monetary return. Melanie tried to practice on a daily basis what her mother preached. So far, she’d never been disappointed.
Melanie had come to love Stephanie like the sister she’d always dreamed of having. Adding her two adorable daughters, Ashley and Amanda, they completed the rest of the family she didn’t have. Settling the three of them into a home of their own was the least she could do, given all they’d been through. Married to an abusive husband who was about to be an abusive father, Stephanie had found Hope House for her and the girls. The secret shelter was for battered women and their families. Melanie’s mother had long been a financial supporter of Hope House. It was there that Melanie found Stephanie and her girls. Grace Landry, the founder and a therapist, had taken the family of three under her wing and given them their first real chance for a normal life. The little garage apartment Grace had secured for them was owned by Melanie’s parents. Melanie lived right down the road. And as they say, the rest is history.
Melanie adjusted the heater controls on the dash, then stretched her arm over the seat to reach for a large blanket, which she placed over Odie and Clovis. Both readjusted their positions, allowing the blanket to drape comfortably around them.
“Okay, we’re outta here,” Melanie informed her two passengers.
They both shot her a look that said, “Duh, we know that.”
She smiled from ear to ear as she engaged the four-wheel drive and skillfully maneuvered the steep, winding road leading to Stephanie’s. Careful not to slide off the side of the mountain, Melanie safely pulled into Stephanie’s freshly shoveled driveway ten minutes later.
Patrick. It was his new mission in life to take care of Stephanie’s every need, no matter how great or small. And the girls had him so tightly wrapped around their little fingers, their wish was his command even before they asked. Patrick of all men. A confirmed bachelor, he’d always intended to remain single. And then Stephanie Marshall entered the picture. Though they’d had a few rough patches, anyone who saw them together knew they were madly in love.
One evening after Stephanie invited them all over for dinner—making her specialty, threecheese manicotti and her famous homemade garlic-knot rolls—Melanie, Grace, and Grace’s husband, Max Jorgenson, along with their new baby daughter, Ella, listened intently as Patrick told them about Shannon, his niece, who’d died of an extremely rare blood disorder called thrombocytopenia on the day she was supposed to graduate from high school. Suddenly, Melanie understood his fear of getting close to Stephanie and the girls too soon. He was afraid of being hurt all over again. But Patrick, being a truly decent guy, had taken another look at Stephanie and her girls. And just as his best bud, Max Jorgenson, famous Olympic gold medalist skier, had proposed to Grace, Patrick asked Stephanie to marry him. On New Year’s Day, they were planning to take their vows at the top of the slopes, and, together, as husband and wife, they’d ski down Gracie’s Way, and at the bottom of the run all would celebrate the muchanticipated union of the couple.
Melanie hopped out of the Jeep, stomping her tan-colored Uggs on the cleared pavement. “You two sit tight. I’ll be right back,” she called out to her menagerie. She hurried up the short steps to the front porch, where she grabbed the door knob, only to have it slip from her grasp before she even had a chance to twist it.
“Auntie M, Auntie M, are you really taking us skiing today? Are we still gonna go back to your house and learn how to . . .”
“Shhh, Amanda. We’re not supposed to tell, remember?” Ashley chastised her little sister.
Stephanie chose that moment to join them at the front door. “Seems like I almost overheard a secret.”
Amanda and Ashley looked away, not meeting their mother’s stern look. Melanie broke in before the girls revealed their afternoon plans. “I’m teaching the girls a new skill. We’re just not telling what it is,” Melanie said.
“Good. I don’t know what I’d do if you were to . . . to . . . do something like you did last year.”
They all broke out in laughter, even the girls. Melanie tossed her long blond braid over her shoulder. “I don’t think I’ll be able to top that gift, at least not for a while. At the rate you’re all going, I’ll be a hundred and six before you stop ragging me about that.”
“It is the best, Mel. Have you seen the bathroom since I painted it? Patrick installed granite counters, and it’s just absolutely to die for, not that it wasn’t in the first place, but this just feels so . . . elegant. Come on and have a look-see.”
“As much as I would love to, Odie and Clovis are waiting in the Jeep. They’re staying with Candy Lee while the girls and I ski. I hope that’s not a problem.”
“Of course not. Candy Lee says Odie directs the customers to the ski equipment. Tell Candy Lee if Odie keeps this up, her job might be in danger.”
“Mom!” Ashley shouted. “She needs this job. She’s saving up for college.”
Stephanie took her older daughter in her arms. “Oh, sweetie, we’re teasing. Candy Lee has a job forever if she wants.”
Melanie knew the girls were a bit on the sensitive side. They’d seen so much violence from their father that oftentimes, when the girls thought someone was being wrongly disciplined or spoken to in a harsh manner, they spoke up for themselves and others. Melanie knew Stephanie was pleased with this but didn’t want them to take every word she said quite so literally.
“I would bet my last nickel Candy Lee gets that soccer scholarship she’s applying for. She’s a straight-A student and a killer soccer player,” Melanie stated.
“How come you know all this, Auntie M?”
Melanie observed Stephanie as she lowered herself by her daughters and placed a hand on each of their pink-and-purple padded ski jackets. “It’s not always polite to ask questions about situations that don’t concern us. I’m sure Candy Lee will manage to get to college, so let’s leave it at that. Now, Clovis and Odie are probably freezing their fur off in the Jeep. You two grab your bags, and I’ll take care of your skis and poles.” Stephanie looked at Melanie. “Keeping up with them wears me out sometimes, but it’s the best worn-out you’ll ever experience.”
Melanie squinted her eyes and scrunched up her nose. “As Mom keeps reminding me, I don’t have a man in my life, no children, and I just don’t see either one happening any time in the near future. At the rate I’m going, I’ll be lucky to adopt another animal from the shelter, so I’ll just take your word even though the time I spend with the girls is the best ever.” She teared up at the thought of not having the two little sprites in her life. She was content to remain Auntie M.
For now.
With Odie and Clovis relegated to the hatchback and both girls safely ensconced in their seat belts, Melanie glanced in her rearview mirror one last time, making sure they all were where they should be. She recalled the last time she’d taken the girls skiing. They’d wound up lost in a snowstorm and had delivered a litter of pups. Now she could smile at the memory. Grateful that Stephanie still allowed her within pitching distance of the girls, she shrugged her thoughts aside, focusing on their plans for the day.

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