Christmas Treats Box Set: Books 1 - 4

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Christmas Treats Box Set: Books 1 - 4 Page 33

by Holly Rayner


  “You’re excited?” Happy tears filled her eyes.

  “More than I could ever tell you. Thank you, Adison.”

  She looped her fingers through his. “Hey, I didn’t make it happen on my own. By the way, I do have an actual present for you.” She nodded at the tree.

  He kept his eyes on her. “Nothing could be better than this. Except…there is one gift that might equal it.”

  “Really?” She scrunched her nose. “Please don’t say another cat tower. She has enough already.”

  But he wasn’t laughing. In fact, the only thing Ken was doing was getting down on one knee.

  “No, Adison. The only other thing that would make me as happy as you giving me a baby is you agreeing to be my wife.”

  From his pocket, he pulled a black velvet jewelry box. Ironically, the red bow tied around it was a perfect mini version of the bow Adison wore. He flipped it open, revealing a teardrop-shaped diamond ring.

  Adison’s breath caught in her throat. She wanted to say yes, but she was speechless.

  “Will you marry me?” Ken asked.

  Tears welled in the corners of her eyes, and she finally found her voice. “Yes!”

  A broad grin broke across his face. “Thank goodness.”

  “Thank goodness?” She laughed through happy tears as he stood and put the ring on her finger.

  “I was nervous.” Ken drew her flush to him, the bow she still had wrapped around her belly crinkling against his shirt.

  “I was nervous to tell you about the baby.”

  “There was no reason to be.” He ran the back of his hand gently down her face, and she sighed at the touch.

  “Ditto,” she whispered. “I’d be crazy to say no to marrying you.”

  “I just got engaged and discovered I’m a dad in five minutes.”

  “Too much to handle?”

  “No. Not at all.” With his arms around her, he walked them backwards.

  “Where are we going?” she asked as they reached the doorway leading to the hall.

  “Look up,” he said with a smile.

  Adison gasped. “I didn’t put mistletoe there.”

  “Hm. Funny.”

  “Wow. Ken Montoya decorating for Christmas on his own. I wouldn’t have recognized this man a year ago.”

  “There’s a bonus to putting up mistletoe when there’s a pretty woman about.” His lips grazed hers. “Hey, Adison?”

  “Yes?” she said in anticipation of his lips on hers.

  “I think I might believe in Christmas miracles now.”

  The End

  The Sheikh’s Christmas Triplets

  Copyright 2017, 2020 by Holly Rayner

  All rights reserved. Except for use in any review, the reproduction or utilization of this work in whole or in part by any means, now known or hereafter invented, including xerography, photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, is forbidden without the explicit written permission of the author.

  All characters depicted in this fictional work are consenting adults, of at least eighteen years of age. Any resemblance to persons living or deceased, particular businesses, events, or exact locations are entirely coincidental.

  Note: This book was previously released in 2017. It now features a bonus epilogue, previously exclusively available to newsletter subscribers.

  Chapter 1

  “Yvonne, stop!”

  Peeking over the rim of her glasses, Yvonne Hunt glanced briefly at the office manager before turning back to her computer screen.

  “Two minutes. I’m just about done with this report.”

  “You are ridiculous. Even God took a rest on Sunday, Yvonne.”

  “Yes, well that was before financial planning came to be, isn’t it, Mack?”

  Mackenzie crossed her arms and leaned against the doorway to Yvonne’s office, her hot glare burning into Yvonne’s back as she stubbornly finished the report and clicked the send button, emailing it off to her boss to evaluate before passing it onto the customer.

  Swiveling in her comfortable office chair, Yvonne grinned up at her still glaring coworker.

  “Less than that. That had to have been a minute and thirty seconds.”

  “But who’s counting? Now come on. This party is so dull without you there. Shenanigans are happening and we are missing them!”

  “Fine,” Yvonne sighed, rising and stretching her sore back.

  She had worked at ELA International for a few years under the strong (and handsome) leadership of Sheikh Zadid Al-Alamein, the stunningly attractive, incredibly intelligent co-owner of the financial planning firm. As she stepped out of her office and into the hallway, the center lobby echoed with Christmas music from below. Yvonne stared down, looking for a certain gentleman, and finding herself disappointed.

  She hadn’t been the only one missing the festivities, it seemed.

  They made their way down the staircase, Mackenzie chattering on about some boyfriend drama. Yvonne tuned back into the conversation just before she got caught thinking of other things.

  “And I told him, if he wants to make it official with a ring on Christmas, I really don’t mind, I just want to know about it, you know?”

  “Definitely,” Yvonne said, doing her best to act as though she had been paying better attention.

  As they reached the ground floor where the party was in full swing, Yvonne felt a rush of amusement. All around them, her colleagues were drinking from the fancy bar Zadid had rented just for this event.

  With free drinks flying around, every young successful person in the office was letting their guard down, flirting shamelessly with people they would have to be professional with once the shining holiday lights faded into a cold January morning.

  It was going to be a brutal wakeup call.

  “I can’t believe Evan is hitting on Candice. Doesn’t he know she just got dumped?” Mackenzie observed, pulling two flutes from a passing waiter’s tray and handing one to Yvonne.

  She took a delicate sip from her glass. The champagne was certainly top of the line. Zadid had spared no expense to make his people happy. That was so like him, she thought, her eyes scanning the outer perimeter of the room as though he might appear.

  “I think he knows that perfectly well. Why else would he be chatting her up like that?” Yvonne replied, still sticking with the conversation even as her thoughts drifted.

  “Good point. She is going to smack him if he tries to kiss her, though, mark my words.”

  “I doubt they would do that here,” Yvonne said.

  Mackenzie nodded toward a darker corner of the lobby, where a very large ball of mistletoe hung. Yvonne noticed that several couples were standing just out of reach, as though waiting for their moment to sneak someone under for a kiss.

  I wonder if Zadid would be a good kisser, she mused.

  After allowing herself a brief daydream of him dipping her beneath that ball of mistletoe, Yvonne looked up once again to see if she could find him there. To her disappointment, he continued to be the one person not in attendance. Instead, the lobby glistened with gold and silver holiday décor—beautiful, except for his notable absence.

  “Where do you suppose Zadid is?” she asked her friend.

  Mackenzie smirked at her as she took the last sip from her flute. “Why, looking to get some mistletoe action?” she asked, her tone conspiratorial.

  Yvonne’s eyes narrowed as she stared down at the petite woman. Mackenzie’s blond hair and hazelnut brown eyes were a stark contrast to Yvonne’s chestnut hair and crystal-clear green gaze, but the two had been thick as thieves since the moment they’d started their jobs on the same day, years before.

  “I think I’m a little more professional than these folks,” she hedged, gesturing toward the room of flirty twenty-somethings.

  Mackenzie scoffed. “Please. Your crush on Zadid has been so poorly hidden, you couldn’t even disguise the fact that you want to kiss him right now. Next time, don’t stare longi
ngly at the mistletoe corner then ask where Zadid is, and I’ll believe that you only think of him professionally.”

  “I do only think of him professionally,” Yvonne protested weakly. “I’ve given no reason to believe otherwise. He’s a great boss, and it feels weird that he’s not attending a party that he paid for. That’s all.”

  Mackenzie rolled her eyes at her friend’s argument, entirely unconvinced. “Whatever. You can say what you want, Yvonne, but I know the truth. I’ve known it since the first day I met you.”

  “Why are you teasing me? Have another drink and tell me more about how your boyfriend is scheduling his proposal with you on Christmas.”

  “He’s not scheduling it with me. He’s discussing it with me. Totally different,” Mackenzie corrected with a laugh.

  The two women continued to watch the crowd make some serious social mistakes, sipping their drinks and relaxing for the first time in weeks. Life working at a financial planning firm was anything but boring, and Yvonne had found herself completely swept away from the moment she’d stepped foot in that building. Of course, the feeling hadn’t always been entirely work-related.

  “What are you doing for Christmas?” Mackenzie asked, shaking Yvonne from her drifting thoughts once more.

  She frowned. “Nothing,” she replied, and Mackenzie stared at her with narrowed eyes.

  “What do you mean, nothing? You’re not going to be alone on Christmas, are you?”

  Yvonne shrugged. The holidays had been a complicated time ever since her parents separated and remarried, starting new families of their own. Even though her family was happy, it was convoluted.

  “Both sets of parents happened to schedule their Christmas day festivities out of town before they realized that left me with nowhere to go. Instead, they planned two different Christmas Eve meals, which is going to be quite the marathon.”

  Mackenzie’s eyes filled with sympathy as she rested a comforting hand on her friend’s arm. “I’m so sorry, Yvonne! I wish I’d known! I would invite you to spend the day with me, but…”

  “But you’ve got a romantic engagement to experience. Don’t even think about letting me butt in on that. Not happening.”

  Mackenzie’s smile was still sympathetic as she stared at her friend. “There’s got to be something you can do. It’s Christmas day!”

  Yvonne chuckled, trying to lighten the mood. “Yes, and there will be another one next year, and the year after that. They don’t all have to be special and filled with magic.”

  “Nonsense. Every Christmas should be magical.”

  “I think Evan agrees with you,” Yvonne said, taking the attention off herself as the two of them watched him lean in to kiss a bright-eyed Candice.

  As he cradled her face, his lips touching hers, Yvonne looked away. She was a single woman surrounded by lovers in a place where none of it should be happening. Setting her drink down, she took a step toward the staircase.

  “I’d better get going,” she said. “I’ll see you in the new year.”

  “You barely spent any time here. At least have some food or something. Zadid set up a whole cookie and milk bar over there.”

  Yvonne glanced across the room, where a table filled with glistening milk pitchers on ice was surrounded by warm cookies of every variety. She wondered when she’d walked in how he had managed to get the whole lobby to smell like freshly baked cookies, and the answer had shown itself. Shaking her head, she leaned over to give Mackenzie a hug.

  “I’m good. I’ve got a busy day tomorrow and there will be plenty of food, believe me.”

  Mackenzie frowned at her friend, unconvinced. “If you say so. Merry Christmas, Yvonne.”

  “Merry Christmas,” she replied, leaving her friend with a gentle wave of her hand.

  She was still wondering where Zadid had gone off to as she packed up her work bag to take home. If nothing else, there were a few other reports she could work on Christmas Day to get them over with. Then, she could take their week off and simply enjoy herself, if that were possible.

  It was a lonely apartment she lived in, after all.

  She locked her door, her coat buttoned up, her green scarf wrapped tightly around her neck. She turned to leave, but her feet refused to budge. Instead, she found herself glancing up in the direction of Zadid’s corner office, on the far side of the building. Curiosity winning out, she walked on silent carpet to the opposite end of the building, where Zadid’s office towered above, encased in glass.

  There, standing alone, Zadid stared down at the lobby far below. His dark hair and eyes were shaded, even in the light of his office. He held a tumbler filled with amber liquid in his hand, looking somber and lonely. Seeing him like that cracked Yvonne’s heart, and before she knew it, she was on the stairway to his office, knocking gently on his door before entering.

  Zadid continued to stare out the window.

  “You know, there’s a party going on out there,” she said.

  Zadid turned, his eyes clouded with an emotion she couldn’t quite pin down as he stared at her. “I know,” he replied.

  “Hiding from the festivities, are we?” she teased gently.

  Zadid’s face remained unchanged, and he didn’t answer her question.

  Curious, Yvonne moved to stand beside him, and they both turned to gaze down at the party below.

  “Do you have any plans for the holidays?” Yvonne asked.

  Perhaps changing the subject would make him more comfortable? Yvonne had seen Zadid in any number of foul moods—they worked in a high-stress environment together nearly every day—but this somber version of him was almost unbearable. After a pause, he released a breath.

  “None, I’m afraid. I was going to head back to my home country for the week, but family drama has convinced me otherwise.”

  “Family can be tough,” Yvonne offered, and she meant every word.

  She waited for him to say anything to that. Instead, he took another sip from his drink, the sharp scent of the whiskey tickling Yvonne’s nose. An idea occurred to her then, and before she could chicken out, she gazed up at her handsome employer.

  “Would you want to have Christmas dinner at my place?”

  His eyes darted down to hers in surprise. “You don’t have plans?”

  She shook her head. “All my plans are tomorrow. I’ve got nothing to do with myself on the day itself. Why don’t I cook you a traditional Christmas dinner, Hunt style?”

  The corner of Zadid’s full lips turned up, and Yvonne’s stomach stirred with butterflies. The man was positively delectable—and he was her boss! She was being a fool, she knew, but she couldn’t help it. She would do anything to remove the sad look from his eyes.

  “I would like that very much. I’ve never actually celebrated the holiday in America before.”

  “What? You don’t know what you’re missing!”

  “I’m sure I don’t. Based on the décor around here, it appears to be quite the celebration.”

  “That’s an understatement. Come to my place, and I’ll show you exactly how great an American Christmas can be. Deal?”

  She held out her hand for him to shake. He stared at her with an amused expression for a moment before clasping her hand firmly, his warm palm fitting perfectly against her own.

  “Deal. I look forward to it, Yvonne. Thank you for taking me in.”

  She blushed, waving off his statement. “Now neither of us has to spend the day alone. Then, we can move onto those reports you wanted me to tackle.”

  She purposefully moved the conversation back to business, removing her hand from his. She had no reason to believe that she had a future with Zadid. He was her boss, for heaven’s sake! It would do her well to remind herself of that fact at least twice a day, if not the fifty times she could feel herself crushing on him day in and day out.

  His eyes hardened slightly at her topic change. “Yes, indeed. Have a good evening, Yvonne. I’ll see you soon.”

  “Goodnight, Zadid.”
<
br />   She turned away from him, making a quick exit as she wondered what she had been thinking. Then, she grinned.

  Yvonne was going to show the Sheikh just how great Christmas really could be. Maybe in the process, she could even show herself.

  Chapter 2

  Yvonne stepped out of the office building on light feet as a wave of cold air flowed over her face. All around her, office parties were in full swing, lights and music and the sound of happy chatter echoing through the air. She passed by other city dwellers, enjoying the window displays in the D.C. shops.

  She inhaled, enjoying the crisp cold scent of a winter’s night.

  On a whim, she decided to do a tour of the window displays. The streetlights around her were strung with twinkle lights, casting a warm glow onto the sidewalks as she made her way along. On either side of her, shops had filled their windows with nutcrackers, reindeer, and a million splashes of red, white, gold and green.

  Somehow, even after her parents’ divorce, Yvonne had managed to hold onto her love for the holiday season. There was something so hopeful and promising about how people managed to find a way to light the darkest time of the year, keeping the burning embers of peace and love and good will alive, even during the gloomiest of times.

  She took a turn down another block as she headed home, knowing it would be a bit of a journey. After the office party, she could do with a little fresh air. She thought about what she should make for Zadid when he came to her house, planning out every favorite dish she knew how to create.

  It was going to be spectacular! She would make sure of it.

  A long line of people stood along a wall, and Yvonne focused back in on her surroundings, curious. She stopped and asked a woman what was going on.

  “The shelter is open late for the next few days as families prepare for their Christmas dinners,” the woman explained.

  She looked embarrassed to be standing in that line, and Yvonne did her best to keep her tone neutral. She didn’t want the woman to think she was pitying her, but seeing the line and how it wasn’t moving, she saw an opportunity.

 

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