Christmas in Echo Creek_A Sweet Holiday Romance

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Christmas in Echo Creek_A Sweet Holiday Romance Page 1

by Kacey Linden




  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Epilogue

  Christmas in Echo Creek

  Kacey Linden

  Page Nine Press

  Copyright © 2017 Kacey Linden

  All rights reserved.

  Published by: Page Nine Press

  Editing by: Janie Dullard at Lector’s Books

  Cover Design, Layout, & Formatting by: Page Nine Media

  This is an original work of fiction. All characters, names, places, and incidents are products of the creative imagination of the author or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons (living or dead), businesses, institutions, places, or events is entirely coincidental. No part of this book may be used, reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any manner without the written consent of the author, excepting short quotations used for the purposes of review or commentary about the work.

  http://KaceyLinden.com

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Epilogue

  Thank You

  About the Author

  Acknowledgments

  Chapter 1

  Deputy Cale Matthews wasn’t sure he was in the mood for Christmas. As he drove his cruiser carefully through the light snow dusting an already icy road, he considered telling his family not to wait for him to hold their celebration this year. He’d just gotten home from the traditional Matthews Family Thanksgiving, so he’d be working Christmas anyway. Plus, now that he was back in Echo Creek, all the memories of warm, festive, family togetherness just made his cold, empty house feel that much colder and emptier.

  He adored his family—every crazy, starry-eyed, hug-loving one of them—but their care and concern had begun to feel oppressive. They wanted him to be happy. They wanted him not to be alone. They wanted him to forget Marissa and move on.

  And that was just it. He’d already moved on. It was their worried glances and too-cheerful questions that pushed him back into wondering what had gone wrong. Besides, spending Christmas on his own in Echo Creek might be just what he needed to break free of this detachment that had plagued him for the past few months.

  Tucked into the foothills of Central Oregon, Echo Creek was frequently called adorable, quaint, friendly, picturesque, or some combination of the above, but to Cale it had simply become home. The town boasted just over three thousand year-round residents, plus the many thousands of tourists who descended every summer and winter without fail. From June through August, they came for the hiking, the camping, the rafting, and the deliciously mild summer sun amidst the mix of pine and fir trees that covered the eastern foothills of the Cascades. In the winter, they came for the snow. The nearby ski resorts were some of the finest in the state, attracting amateurs and professionals alike for numerous winter sports.

  Echo Creek was out of the way enough that it had never achieved the popularity of Bend or Sisters, but its combination of friendly locals and lighter crowds drew enough repeat visitors to keep the town thriving.

  When he reached the north end of town, Cale took a gentle right turn and made his way slowly down the mostly empty Main Street. Christmas decorations glittered brightly from the street lamps while twinkling lights adorned the storefronts of most of the town’s wide selection of tourist shops. The lone holdout, George Alverson, was a sixty-year-old sculptor who hated Christmas, or so he said. His wife, on the other hand, would probably have whacked Mrs. Claus with a frozen fruitcake and ruled the North Pole if such a feat were possible.

  At some point during their marriage, the Alversons had apparently reached an agreement: during the Christmas season, she turned the house into an eyeball-searing celebration of all things festive, while he hunkered down in his shop and created gorgeous metal wall-hangings that had nothing to do with Christmas whatsoever.

  And heaven forbid the Echo Creek Carolers showed up at his storefront on Christmas Eve. He would probably threaten them with a welding torch.

  Just past Alverson’s, Cale pulled his patrol car to a stop and flipped on his lights, muttering under his breath about self-centered tourists. An older Toyota sedan was parked half in, half out of the street, in a fire lane, with no lights on and no one in the driver’s seat.

  Most of the time, Cale would consider himself a forgiving person. He tried to help out whenever he could, and gave grace when possible, but his Christmas spirit had gone missing and he wasn’t in the mood to play nice with thoughtless tourists. He put in a quick phone call to Marty at Tow’n’Go before slapping a parking ticket on the windshield.

  He peered inside as he did so, and noted a duffle bag on the back seat, along with a pillow and a blanket. An empty coffee cup rested in the cup holder, and a worn jean jacket was thrown across the passenger seat.

  Tourist or vagrant? No way to be sure, but Cale wasn’t going to leave a car blocking traffic on an icy night. The roads in town were graveled, but it could get worse, and he didn’t want to wake up to any accidents.

  Climbing back into his car to wait for the tow truck, Cale checked his phone and found two text messages. The first was from his uncle, Pete Parrish.

  Contrary to popular belief, not all born matchmakers were women. A widower of about seventy, Pete was constantly trying to get Cale involved in the town pinochle tournaments down at the Community Center. Every month he would text Cale a report of how many single women had showed up, how old they were, and whether he thought any of them would make a good wife.

  Cale knew Pete was only trying to help but he never, ever responded to any of those texts. Within twenty-four hours, Pete would have talked the single woman in question into showing up on Cale’s front steps with cookies and a proposal.

  The second was from Marcia Dillon, proclaiming that the rat in her attic was back and would Cale please come over and do something about it. About seventy-five, white-haired and feisty, Marcia lived alone in a ninety-year-old house. Her husband had passed away when she was only forty, and her only daughter had been killed in a car wreck five years ago. She was lonely, even if she’d never admit it, and Cale didn’t mind spending a few hours a week chasing a non-existent rat if it meant helping her through the toughest time of the year. Marcia loved Christmas, but she had no one left to celebrate it with.

  Marty pulled up a few minutes later and backed into position, his yellow lights flashing. Cale stepped out of the car to help him, shrugging on his heavy jacket to ward off the chill.

  “You gonna look for the driver?” Marty called, as soon as he finished attaching the tow chain.

  “I’ll check the cafe, maybe the drugstore, but no telling where they’d be this time of night.”

  “Well, my lot is pretty empty, so I’m happy to keep her there until this guy pays up.”

  Cale nodded. “Thanks, Marty. I’ll let you know.”

  Marty waved, climbed into his cab and pulled slowly away from the curb, just as Cale heard someone jogging down the sidewa
lk.

  “No, wait! Please wait! Don’t tow my car! I ran out of…”

  Cale whipped around to see an unfamiliar woman running straight towards him, waving frantically. Before he could call out a warning, her feet hit a patch of ice and slipped out from under her, eliciting a yelp of surprise when she fell to the sidewalk and continued to slide. He yelled for her to stop, it was much too late. The concrete was too slick, and she’d been moving too fast. Before he could reach her, the hatless young woman slid shoulder-first into the cement block at the base of a street lamp.

  Grateful for his department-issue winter boots, Cale jogged carefully across the parking lane and onto the sidewalk, where he slowed to a walk to avoid meeting the same fate as the careless tourist. She was already rolling to her knees and struggling to rise, but was clearly too unsteady to stand.

  Again, Cale tried to call out a warning, but he was too late. Her feet, clad in flimsy athletic shoes, zig-zagged across the ice and dropped her to her knees again with an audible cry of pain.

  “Just don’t move,” he ordered, in his best law-enforcement, don’t-mess-with-me voice. “I’ll help you get off the ice patch, but those shoes aren’t going to help much. Didn’t anybody tell you it’s winter in Oregon?” She wasn’t even wearing gloves, he saw, now that he was close enough. Just a thin sweatshirt and jeans.

  Her head jerked up, and when her eyes met his Cale almost took a step back. Her emotions punched him, hard—anger and despair, along with something else.

  Fear.

  She lurched to her feet again. Her blonde hair fell back and that’s when he saw the bruises. Dark, swollen patches down the left side of her face.

  “What kind of crappy town is this?” she demanded, putting her back to the lamp post and holding her ground as he approached. “I didn’t park there, I ran out of gas. I had to walk to find someplace, and the closest station didn’t have a gas can.”

  “I apologize, ma’am, but this is a tourist town, and I’m afraid we have a lot of problems this time of year with out-of-town guests parking in all kinds of illegal places. When I didn’t see a driver, I assumed it was parked there for the night.”

  She folded her arms across her chest and Cale could see her shaking with cold. “Why would I park there all night? There’s nothing here.”

  He thought he could see her lips turning blue. “Look, I’ll be happy to take you to the gas station. We can run by my place and pick up a gas can and then I’ll take you to Marty’s to pick up your car. No harm done.”

  Her arms tightened around her body and her eyes widened. “No. Thanks, but no. I’ll keep walking. Just tell me where to find my car.”

  He couldn’t help a tiny snort of disbelief. “Ma’am, you’re about to freeze just standing here. And there are no stores open this time of night, so you won’t be able to find a gas can. I’m giving you a ride, not arresting you.”

  When she started a little and stared up at him, Cale began to wonder if she was in some kind of trouble with law enforcement elsewhere.

  “No, and before you start thinking it, there are no warrants for my arrest,” she told him sharply. As if she’d read his mind. “I just don’t trust strangers.”

  “Well, a stranger is the only thing standing between you and hypothermia,” he said firmly. “There’s no way I’m letting you freeze to death in my town.”

  “There’s no way I’m getting in your car,” she snapped. “What are you going to do, force me?”

  Cale pulled out his phone and selected a number. It rang twice before someone picked up.

  “Are you here?” an older woman’s voice enquired cheerfully. “I don’t see you at the curb.”

  “That’s because I’m not there yet, Mrs. Dillon. I’ll be there later, maybe tomorrow, but in the meantime, can you do me a favor?”

  “Of course! Do you need dating advice? Help picking out a Christmas tree? Anything!”

  Cale cut her off before she could speculate about even more embarrassing possibilities.

  “I need you to convince a strange woman to trust me. I mean, not that she’s strange, but she doesn’t know me and she’s about to freeze to death in the street.”

  Her response was so forceful, he had to hold the phone away from his ear.

  “Give that poor woman the phone, right now…”

  He held out his phone. “Here. Mrs. Dillon wants to talk to you.” He grinned.

  The strange woman in question looked at him as though he’d lost his mind, but accepted the phone and held it tentatively up to her ear, all the while watching him suspiciously.

  “Hello?” She listened for a moment while her eyes got wider. “Look, I don’t know you either. I just don’t get into cars with strange men.” A pause. “No, not even police cars.” A longer pause. “Thank you, Mrs. Dillon, but…”

  Cale almost chuckled. He’d just unleashed an irresistible force, even if her unsuspecting victim didn’t know it yet.

  “I don’t see… That’s not… Thank you, ma’am. Yes. Okay. I will.” She handed back the phone, looking stunned. “She wants to talk to you.”

  “Did she accept you as a character reference?” Cale asked Mrs. Dillon, still grinning.

  “I told her nobody freezes to death in Echo Creek right before Christmas and that our Deputy Matthews is one of the kindest people I know, so she didn’t need to worry about a thing.” She made a tsking noise. “Cale, she sounds hungry. Do you think she’s hungry?”

  “Probably.” Cale sobered as he assessed the young woman more closely. She did look as though she’d missed a few meals lately, and there hadn’t been much in her car. And then there were those bruises. Cale felt a surge of anger at whoever had been coward enough to hurt her. “I’ll take care of it. Thanks, Mrs. Dillon.”

  “If you need anything, dear, please come by. And you can look for the rat tomorrow.”

  “I will. See you then.”

  He hung up. “Convinced I’m not an ogre?”

  “Well, whoever Mrs. Dillon is, she’s convinced. What is she, your grandma?”

  “She’s Echo Creek’s grandma,” he answered honestly. “Now, how about we go get a gas can and get your car back?”

  She hesitated. Looked at the ground. Looked back up. “Okay,” she said.

  Willow Renner was out of options and she knew it. Her knees and her ribs hurt from her crash onto the ice, and her face still ached from…

  She blocked out the memories along with the pain. It was harder to block out the cold. She hadn’t been able to sneak her coat out of the hall closet without alerting someone that she was leaving, so she’d left without it. And without her purse, which had been on the table in the hall. It had seemed imperative that she just leave, and now that decision was catching up with her. She had her wallet, with her ID, but no credit cards. No phone. Nothing that could help her.

  The deputy was probably a decent guy, just trying to help, but how did she tell him that she only had two dollars left and it wasn’t going to be enough to get anywhere else? She couldn’t. A small-town cop with his small-town ethics would probably consider her a vagrant and kick her out of his jurisdiction. She was going to have to put that gallon of gas in her car and see where it got her. She wasn’t even totally sure where Echo Creek was. Desperate to get as far away as she could, Willow had simply headed for the mountains, certain that Elliot wouldn’t think to follow her there. He hated leaving the city, and would never guess that she might go that far just to get away from him.

  He was wrong about her. She would do anything. Though she hadn’t planned on freezing to death, which might still be the consequence of her poor decision making. Without her phone, she hadn’t had a map, and hadn’t realized how far from civilization she’d gotten. And now it was snowing and she was out of money.

  At least the back of the squad car was warm. She buckled in and held her hands over a vent.

  The cop—Deputy Matthews—opened the glass partition between the front and back seats. “You okay back there?�
� he called, shooting her a concerned look over his shoulder as he pulled slowly into the street.

  “Fine,” she answered shortly, studying his profile as he glanced from side to side, looking for anything out of place in his town. Like illegally parked cars in fire lanes.

  He was depressingly good-looking, she realized, able to conclude this calmly now that she was warm and he was no longer looking at her so closely. Dark hair, dark eyes, strong, clean-shaven jaw and a straight nose. He had a killer smile too, which meant he was probably married. And probably a jerk, under all that small-town charm. The good-looking ones always were, even if they could cajole old ladies into thinking they were Mr. Perfect.

  Willow wasn’t that easy to convince.

  “Are you in any trouble?”

  She’d been expecting that. There were two types of people—those who saw the bruises and looked the other way or those who tried to convince her to get help. There were far more of the former, but she wasn’t fool enough to expect this cop to be one.

  “Nothing I can’t handle,” she answered.

  “Doesn’t look that way.” He glanced at her in the rearview mirror. “You know, there’s a lot of places you can go. You can even get a restraining order, if you need one. Even if he’s your husband, nobody is going to defend his right to hurt you.”

  “Thanks, but no,” she interrupted firmly. “I’m not married to the guy that did this. It was the first time and the last, so I’ll be fine.”

  He subsided, but she doubted he was finished. That firm jaw was looking particularly stubborn.

  The car turned onto a neat, quiet street and pulled into a lightly snow-covered driveway. The deputy turned off the car and twisted in his seat. “I can’t leave it running—department regulations—but I’ll just be a sec. Gas can in the garage.”

 

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