by Mary Leo
Making love to Rudy was like floating through the air on a silk cloud. Every touch, every kiss felt like heaven. Jenny’s fingers lightly danced across his ripped chest as his hands moved across her body making her arch her back in delight while she lay under him.
“You’re like a restless cat, Jenny Bells,” he said, and gently slid his fingers between her breasts, down her flat belly and stopped between her legs, lingering there, teasing with his touch.
“This cat wants her milk,” she whispered.
He let out a deep groan and she knew he would enter her now. She wrapped her legs around him as he made the first gentle thrust, going deep inside her. She was on fire as they moved with the rhythm of pleasure, deeper, and quicker, their bodies slippery and slick with sweat.
They moved like this, faster, tighter, even deeper until Rudy called out her name and the shudder of climax ripped through each of them releasing years of desire.
When they were spent, neither moved as minutes ticked by. Tears streamed down the sides of Jenny face and dotted the pillow as she tried to control her emotions, scared that Rudy would leave again. That he would break her heart, just as he had once before.
This time, she didn’t know if she could survive it.
He rolled off of her, and pulled the blankets up over them, noticing that she was crying.
“What’s wrong? Are you okay? Did I hurt you?”
She turned toward him. “Not yet.”
He slid a strand of hair off her face. “I told you I would never hurt you, and I meant it.”
She smiled, and nodded. “I know. I’m okay. Really. Just a little emotional.”
“Wow. I’m better than I think.”
She gave him a nudge, “You wish,” then she snuggled up beside him. She wanted nothing more than to sleep in his arms for the rest of the night, and if she had it her way, the rest of their lives.
* * *
For the next few days Rudy and Jenny rarely separated. Not only did they spend each night making love, but they spent each day at Sugar Plums, baking and selling cookies, cakes and bread. Rudy hadn’t felt this happy since he was a kid hanging out with his grandparents.
At the same time, the town started to perk up. The Santa over at Always Christmas was drawing in kids from all the neighboring towns, and because of it, the department store was doing more business than it had in several years. At one point there was a line out the front door and around the corner to see Santa, who just happened to be Rudy’s friend, Kris. It seemed that no one else knew Kris was under all that white hair and red Santa suit, and Rudy wasn’t about to give the secret away. It was fun watching all the kids line up just like they had when he and Kris were growing up.
Never would Rudy have ever imagined Kris as a department store Santa, but there he was, ho-ho-hoing and doing a mighty fine job of it.
The town square was perking up as well, thanks to Nick who was on some kind of repair mission. Rudy didn’t know what had gotten into him, but Nick seemed to inspire everyone in the town to help. At one point, Rudy had gotten out there and helped clean up some of the rubble that had built up in the last few years. Even the weather seemed to be cooperating with the season, and had turned downright cold.
Gramps was loving it.
In the spirit of the season, Rudy hired a couple of the local house painters to spruce up the gazebo, and to hang more twinkling lights around the square. The place was beginning to look a lot like Christmas. Now if it would just cool down enough to snow.
The town was changing right before Rudy’s eyes, and he was changing right along with it. He even spruced up the town’s Webpage, announcing Santa’s favorite cookies were made at Sugar Plums and Gramps had already gotten so many orders the three of them could barely keep up.
The recipe book not only contained recipes that dated back to the early eighteen hundreds, it contained letters from the very first baker in the family, Stan Raindear who claimed to have met Santa one Christmas Eve while he was all alone in the bakery.
A fact Rudy never knew about and had to admit, believing in all this magical stuff was getting easier to do, especially since his own encounter with Santa.
“Taste this and tell me what you think,” Gramps said as the two of them stood in the back of the bakery surrounded with trays of cookies stacked on the large cooling racks, three large ovens and long wooden tables covered in a fine mist of flour from rolling out cookie dough earlier that morning. It was still early in the morning, before the sun was up. Too early for Rudy, but he’d adjusted. Jenny had helped with that adjustment waking him with kisses and more often than not, sweaty, dirty sex. He could get used to this lifestyle with no problem.
Rudy took a bite of the bar-shaped cookie decorated with vanilla frosting and dusted with silver sprinkles.
“Anise, vanilla, and I want to say there’s more anise in the frosting. Am I right?”
Gramps nodded, smiling.
“I haven’t tasted this cookie since I was a little boy. Brings back a lot of memories. It’s really good. Different.”
“It was your gram’s favorite. I ain’t baked it since she passed. Your gram didn’t think people would like this here cookie, so we never baked it for our customers. I couldn’t remember what was in it, and didn’t care much that I didn’t. You changed that, son. You and Jenny. She’s a special girl. I hope you’ve come to know that.”
“I do,” Rudy told him. “Very special.”
“Then this whole thing between you two is real?”
“Yes, Gramps, it’s about as real as it can get.”
His grandfather was staring at him making Rudy uncomfortable, wondering if for some reason his nose was turning red again.
“Okay then. I don’t see nothing happening to your nose, so you must be telling me the truth. And if that’s the case, I got something I want to tell both of you. Where is she?”
“Out front, working on the display cases.”
“Then get her back here, son. This can’t wait,” Gramps said and sat down hard on high metal stool.
Rudy walked out front. The shop wasn’t officially open yet, but customers were already lining up. Rudy could hardly believe it.
“Gramps wants to talk to us. Can you come on back?”
“Sure,” she said, and she joined Rudy giving him a little kiss on the cheek. She wore the new red apron with the Sugar Plums logo emblazoned on the front. Rudy had commissioned a local tailor who was more than happy to fill the rush order for a dozen aprons.
When they reached the back, Gramps started right in. “I have’ta say, I was thinking this day was never gonna come, but now that it’s here, I’m a happy man. Your gram would’a been happy, too, but I’m sure she’s lookin’ down with a smile on her pretty face. Your gram was so pretty, just like Jenny here. Pretty and sweet.” He smiled over at Jenny, and Rudy noticed the tears already staining Jenny’s cheeks. He put an arm around her and pulled her in tight.
Gramps continued. “Yesterday, I went over to the bank and got the paperwork going to turn over this here business and this property to the both of you. Equal shares. The way you two been carrying on, I’m thinking it’s just a matter of time before my boy here pops the question. I don’t know how much longer I got, so it’s time to turn this business over to the two people I know who will keep it going just like all us Raindear have done for generations. Baking’s in our blood. And even if you deny it, it’s still there like a virus that won’t go away.
“All you two gotta do is go over to the bank and sign them papers and everything is yours. The only thing I want is to be able to stay right here until it’s my time. I ain’t moving anywhere where the winter’s the same as the summer, son. Sorry, but them’s the terms. You two can take ‘em or leave ‘em. But you better do it fast, cause them Smart-Mart folks are trying to buy up this whole town and turn it into some kind of freak show, with everything imported and nothing made right here, locally. They offered to take my recipes and have the cookies made in China of
all places! My cookies, made someplace else. I know you don’t want that to happen, son.”
Rudy’s nose itched.
His phone rang. When he pulled it out of his pocket to look at who was calling, of course, it was his contact at Smart-Mart.
Rudy sneezed five times in a row.
Jenny pulled away.
Gramps stood, a look of total disbelief on his face.
For the first time in days, Rudy’s nose throbbed. “It’s not what you think,” he said.
“No,” Jenny said. “It’s worse.”
She walked away from him, through the bakery and out the front door leaving the sound of the jingle bells ringing in Rudy’s ears as a throng of customers marched into the bakery.
Chapter Five
That evening, Rudy paced inside his hotel room, trying to figure out what he should do. He had been so wrapped up in Jenny and the bakery that he’d completely forgotten about his dinner meeting with the execs from Smart-Mart. Which, only a few days ago, would have seemed impossible to forget. Yet, that was the cold hard truth.
The meeting had completely slipped his mind.
How could this happen?
He’d been working non-stop for almost an entire year trying to put all the pieces together to close the deal, and because of sex—unbelievable, earth-moving, to-the-moon sex—and his grandfather’s cookies the whole mega-deal could now potentially fall through.
He had it bad: for Jenny, Gramps and the whole damn town.
Not only had he forgotten about the dinner, but he’d forgotten to send a driver to the airport to bring the execs back to town, an unforgivable mistake. Now they were here, put-off with having to hire their own transportation, staying in the same damn Inn with Rudy, probably right down the hall, and he had no idea what he was going to say or do with these people.
By now he figured the entire town knew what he was up to, and were most likely banding together to form a protest in the square, or better still, to hang him at dawn. But when Rudy looked down at the square from his window, all he saw was his friend Nick and a few other locals setting up some chairs for tomorrow’s Christmas Eve festivities.
I should be out there helping.
But he knew, at this point, no one would want his help. He was a traitor to his own home town, the Benedict Arnold of North Pole, Maine.
How would he ever live it down?
Impossible.
His parents would, of course, be proud if he could still manage to pull off the deal. He’d be a hero in their eyes, a true entrepreneur, his own man.
Fortunately, at this point, he didn’t care what his parents thought.
He turned away from the window and threw himself across the bed, disgusted by his entire adult life. All he had ever cared about since he was five years old was Jenny Bells, and his grandfather’s bakery. When did he lose his dreams, lose the magic?
There was no getting around it, he was in deep reindeer shit, and the only way out was to lie through his cherry-red nose.
* * *
“You have to trust me on this,” Rudy told Jenny as she stood behind the counter at Sugar Plums.
“I don’t have to do anything. Especially not with you,” Jenny snapped back.
“You tell him, girlfriend!” Holly McClaussen said, picking up a phone order. She stood next to Rudy at the counter. All three of them had gone to school together and Holly’s mom used to baby-sit for Rudy after school until he was almost ten years old.
He turned to Holly. “You’re not helping.”
“Why should I help? I heard what you’ve been doing, Rudolph Christopher Raindear, buying up all our property to sell it to Smart-Mart. You should be ashamed of yourself.”
“I am, and I want to do something about it, but I need Jenny’s help.”
Jenny stared at him. “I don’t know how you’re controlling it, but your nose isn’t turning red anymore. Maybe even Santa gave up on you.”
“No, he didn’t. At least I don’t think he did. I’m telling the truth this time.”
Jenny boxed up Holly’s cookies, a Christmas Spice cake, bagged two loaves of French bread then placed everything on the counter and rang up the total on the register. “We’re busy here. I can’t talk to you now. I have to close up for the night.”
She turned to her customer. “Thank you, Holly. I hope your daughter, Joy, likes the gingerbread girl I decorated especially for her.”
“I’m sure she’ll love it, thanks. By the way, I hear there’s going to be a special event tomorrow night in the town square, if Rudy hasn’t already sold it to Smart-Mart. Will we see you there?”
Rudy’s stomach tightened. He wanted to argue with her but instead he chose to stifle his emotions.
Jenny grinned and nodded. “Wouldn’t miss it. If it’s anything like the celebrations we used to have in the town square when we were kids, Joy will really love it!”
Then, with keys in hand, Jenny followed Holly to the door and waited for Rudy to walk out as well.
“Merry Christmas,” Holly said to Jenny, purposely ignoring Rudy. The animosity was already beginning, he thought. He had to fix this, and fast.
“Merry Christmas,” Jenny answered. Holly walked out into the cold, crisp night. The weather had finally cooperated with the season. Not that it made Rudy feel any better. Actually, the cold blast from the open door tore right through him, giving him a deep bone shiver.
“You need to leave. Gramps and I have to get ready for tomorrow. It’s going to be a big day, not that you care.”
She ushered him out the door, but he turned back around. “I went to the bank today and signed my share of Sugar Plums over to you. It’s now completely yours, the business, the building, all Gram’s needlepoint, the recipe book, everything. You now own it all. I can’t make the deal without it. I just need you to show up at dinner and confirm it. Simple.”
All expression left her face. He had no idea what she was thinking. He thought she’d be happy with this news. Instead, she shook her head, cocked a hip, smirked and said, “So that’s how you’re going to handle this? Put it all on me. Tell these guys you can’t make the deal because you don’t own Sugar Plums. You don’t get it, do you? I thought you changed. That you finally got what this town, this bakery, Christmas is all about.” Tears welled up in her eyes. Rudy wanted to die right there. “I’m sorry. I’ve got work to do.”
And she closed the door, leaving Rudy standing out in the cold.
* * *
Sales in the bakery on Christmas Eve day were so good they made up for the entire year. Not only were Jenny and the two new girls Gramps had hired busy with local orders, but tourists had bought everything the bakery had to offer, including most of the new anise cookies.
Plus, the on-line orders had been so incredible Kringle Special Delivery had had to make two stops a day for the past week. According to Gramps, the bakery was doing better than it had ever done. Jenny didn’t know what combination of events contributed to all this, but she had a sneaking feeling it had something to do with a strong dose of Christmas magic. Ever since Rudy, Nick and Kris had gotten together at Yule Tide’s the whole town seemed to be happier.
And miracle of miracles it had been snowing on and off all day, those great big flakes that Jenny, along with a few of the local kids, had caught on their tongues, then laughed and giggled before they caught more.
“We better close up if we’re gonna get over to that party on time to hand out these here cookies. The city council came through this year and bought enough cookies and hot chocolate for damn near the entire town. So we’d best hustle up and start spreadin’ cheer before they want their money back,” Gramps said with a chuckle.
It was nice to see Gramps in a good mood again. It had been a long time coming, and Jenny appreciated the moment. She went over and gave him a hug.
“What’s this all about?” Gramps asked while holding onto her.
“It’s Christmas Eve and we’re standing under the mistletoe.”
&nb
sp; And sure enough, they were. She gave him a kiss on the cheek and he blushed when she stepped away.
“Thank you, Jenny. That’s the best present an old fool like me could ever get.”
“You’re welcome, and you’re a long way from being an old fool.”
“Not according to my grandson. Ah, well, it’s Christmas Eve. Anything can happen on Christmas Eve.” He slipped on his coat. “You comin’?” he asked, as he fumbled with the buttons.
He was such a nice man Jenny couldn’t stand to see him glum.
“I’ll be right there, Gramps. I just want to make sure everything is locked up tight so I don’t have to think about anything tomorrow.”
Gramps and his two new employees, pastry students from the culinary school in the next town, were loaded down with baked goods, several large thermoses of hot chocolate, a couple whipped cream makers and an oversized bag of mini-marshmallows.
“Whatever you gotta do,” Gramps said, “but don’t be long. I heard a rumor that the ‘old man’ hisself might be dropping by to pick up his new sleigh. Rudy’s friend Nick’s been working on a souped-up version. You don’t wanna miss that.”
The two students rolled their eyes, and walked out snickering. Little did they know they were about to get a lesson in Christmas magic.
Mrs. Claus would be happy that Santa’s favorite bakery had been spared, at least for the time being. Jenny wasn’t so sure how long it could last. Rumor had it that Rudy had closed the deal for the inevitable demise of the town.
How could he?
Almost in tears, Jenny walked through Sugar Plums turning out lights as she went, and as each light lost its glow, she felt a bit more sad about losing Rudy one more time. She had once again fallen in love with him, and once again he had broken her heart.
When she arrived in the back room of the bakery, she grabbed her red coat and hat off the hook and slipped her arms into the sleeves. Just as she did, the back door burst open and Santa walked in. “Hi ho, Jenny Bells. I’ve come for my favorite cookies.”
Jenny yelped and fell back a step, completely startled by his entrance. Then, a moment later, three elves came rushing in behind him, wearing the usual elf attire, under bright red vests that read ‘Santa’s Security’.