Maybe This Christmas: A Sweet Historical Western Holiday Romance Novella (Holidays in Mountain Home Book 2)

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Maybe This Christmas: A Sweet Historical Western Holiday Romance Novella (Holidays in Mountain Home Book 2) Page 1

by Kristin Holt




  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Book Description

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Home for Christmas

  The Bride Lottery

  Maybe this Christmas

  A Sweet Historical Western Holiday Romance Novella (Rated PG)

  Holidays In Mountain Home, Book 2

  by

  Kristin Holt

  The books in this series are loosely connected and may be read in any order.

  Copyright © 2014 Kristin Holt

  www.KristinHolt.com

  ISBN-10: 1634380142

  ISBN-13: 978-1-63438-014-0

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the writer’s imagination or have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, locales or organizations is entirely coincidental.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the author except in the case of brief quotation embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  eBook and Paperback Cover designs © 2014 by Teresa Allen: [email protected]

  eBook and Paperback interior design by Kristin Holt.

  Dedication

  For my mother, a highly skilled tailor, who learned to sew on her grandmother’s treadle machine.

  Thank you for patiently teaching me the intricacies of the craft.

  Maybe this Christmas

  A Sweet Historical Western Holiday Romance Novella (Rated PG)

  Holidays In Mountain Home, Book 2

  The books in this series are loosely connected and may be read in any order.

  Luke Finlay intends to court Effie O’Leary as soon as she puts aside her widow’s weeds. He’s in no hurry…until August Rose, a beau from her youth, steps off the train in Mountain Home wearing a federal badge.

  Effie’s not sure if August—Gus—tracked her down to face criminal charges, or because he’s still sweet on her. Either way, Gus’s arrival causes her all sorts of grief. If Gus isn’t underfoot in her tailor shop, then Luke is. It seems the two men have decided she’s a prize to be won…and the escalating competition between the two leaves her torn.

  She survived one disastrous marriage, so why would she accept either Gus or Luke? But these two can be most persuasive, and have a way of showing her that maybe this Christmas it’s time to open her heart to love.

  Sometimes even an old-fashioned courtship needs a deadline.

  Chapter One

  December, 1899

  Mountain Home, Colorado

  On December first, Effie’s day of reckoning arrived.

  She’d known it would, eventually, so she’d savored every last day of freedom. Two years, three months, and twenty-one days.

  She’d run as fast and as far as she’d known how. More than two thousand miles. It hadn’t been far enough.

  Late afternoon sunlight cast elongated shadows on the street beyond her shop window. Cold, gray shades of winter. In her nightmares, this scene consistently played out against brilliant colors of autumn.

  He stood on the far side of the street, less than thirty feet away. With feet braced wide and fists upon narrow hips, his open greatcoat displayed a federal badge.

  She hadn’t seen him in five years. Dark curls hung longer than in her memory. Yet she’d know him anywhere.

  An icy river flowed sluggish in her veins.

  August Rose, United States Marshal.

  Hunter Kendall stood at her shop’s counter, admiring each piece of the infant layette he’d come for. “You outdid yourself this time, Mrs. O’Leary. Beautiful work. Miranda will be so pleased.”

  Effie tried to pull her panicked attention from Gus and focus on her patron. She blinked rapidly. Hunter Kendall was more than a client—he and his wife, Miranda, were her friends. Good friends who knew nothing of her crimes. She wished to God it were possible to bury her soiled past so deep no one in Mountain Home would hear of it.

  There was no chance of that now.

  Hunter refolded a baby gown made of the finest cotton. “Miranda’s anxious for the little one to come.”

  He seemed to want a response, so Effie made a sympathetic sound. Her throat had constricted, her thoughts scattered to the four winds. She could do no better.

  “We’re staying at the Finlays’ through New Year’s, maybe longer.”

  Of course she’d want to be with her mother, though her own home was a scant mile away.

  “Wish her well for me, won’t you?” How could her voice sound natural?

  A four-horse team pulled a heavily loaded wagon past, blocking her view of Gus. Time slowed like molasses poured in January. Her breathing rasped too loud as her fear doubled.

  “Sure will.” Hunter ambled to the shelves lining the north wall. His gaze roved over the display of fabrics and he paused to finger a cotton flannel in pale buttercup. “This is nice.”

  The wagon finally cleared. Gus strode straight for her door.

  Her heart skipped two beats and slammed back into rhythm.

  “Is this spoken for?” Hunter was oblivious to her distress. “I picture a night dress and wrapper. A timely Christmas present for my wife, don’t you think? I want to give her something that makes her feel beautiful, especially after the baby comes.”

  Effie gripped the wooden counter top, panic rooting her boots to the floor.

  Run!

  The back door. She could make it that far—but he would apprehend her within seconds.

  Hunter seemed to really see her then. “Mrs. O’Leary?”

  She blinked, desperate to mask her terror. If Hunter read her, he’d stay and try to help.

  Gus no doubt brought proof of her true identity, along with a warrant for her arrest.

  Hunter, bless his good-hearted soul, took a step closer. “You feeling all right, ma’am?”

  Bells hanging from the doorknob clattered as Gus pushed the door open. Winter air swirled in, but Effie was already too cold. She fought to keep her focus on Hunter…and failed.

  Don’t let it be him. Please, let it be a trick of the light, a waking nightmare…

  His gray eyes zeroed in on her, pinned her to the spot.

  Definitely Gus Rose.

  Her stomach rolled all the way over within her too-tight corset.

  Hunter followed her gaze over his shoulder. He glanced at the newcomer long enough to make a decision. He covered one of her clenched hands, a soothing touch meant to convey…something. Support? Kindness? He raised one brow as if to repeat his question: You feeling all right?

  She needed Hunter to leave. Now.

  She didn’t want anyone to witness her humiliation. If anyone overheard the conversation sure to come, the sensational news would spread. By the time Gus forced her onto tomorrow’s train in shackles, everyone would know.

  Hunter leaned both elbows on the counter, as if he had all the time in the world. “Think you’ve got time to squeeze that project in before Christmas? I’ll pay double your rate.” His smile said what words did not�
��he’d look out for her until the stranger was long gone.

  For once, she wished her friend’s husband wasn’t so kind.

  Effie cleared her throat, fought for breath. With trembling hands she pulled out her ledger and scanned the entries, unable to make sense of it. “Yes. For you, yes.” If, by some miracle she were still here, she’d do it.

  “Put it down, then. Can’t have that beautiful cloth going to anyone else now, can I?” He claimed the yardage off the shelf and set it on the counter. He’d been in often enough to know Effie set aside fabric once selected. “I’m thinking a long row of buttons down the front, to make it easy with the baby.”

  “Yes, of course.” She tried to smile, quite impossible with Gus watching her every move.

  “Long sleeves, high neck. Tucks at the shoulders?”

  Fortunately, Gus remained in her line of sight, leaning against the door frame. A smile of triumph curved his mouth—a cat who’d cornered his prey, content to toy with it.

  Passersby bundled against the winter cold paused to admire the display she’d put in the window last night. Two more customers stopped. Move along, keep going.

  Gus drew her attention, his smile now more amusement than triumph. She recognized his compassion in allowing her to finish with her customer...an unexpected kindness.

  “You have her measurements?” Hunter asked.

  She nodded, smiled as genuinely as she could muster, praying he wouldn’t detest her when he heard the sordid details.

  Hunter Kendall was a good man—a rare breed. He and Miranda had been blissfully happy together. Effie had never known contentment—much less love like theirs—in her ill-fated marriage. Which led her to this fate.

  Quickly, she documented Hunter’s order in the ledger, wrapped the baby’s layette in brown paper and tied it with string. He paid in full with a generous tip, despite her protestations.

  “Thank you, Mr. Kendall.” She tried to convey far more than appreciation for his patronage. “Give Miranda my best? Kiss the baby for me.”

  “You’ll come visit after the birth, won’t you? Surely you can get away on a Sunday afternoon.”

  The shop was closed on Sundays, and she’d made a habit of visiting friends. She’d miss it. She’d miss everything about Mountain Home. She nodded.

  The weight of all she would lose provoked tears. She would not cry, she would not plead. She’d made her bed, and she’d lie in it.

  “On second thought—” Hunter dug deep into his pocket. “Let me leave a deposit on the night clothes.” He quickly counted a few coins and set them on the counter. “We’ll settle when I pick it up. Or you can send it with Noelle.”

  Miranda’s younger sister Noelle worked three days a week as Effie’s assistant. Thank goodness the young woman wasn’t here to witness her humiliation.

  “Yes. Th-thank you.” Anxiety flushed her body hot and cold all at once. With Hunter’s departure, nothing stood between the pretense of normality and incarceration.

  Hunter pulled on his gloves, nodded to Gus, and with the layette bundle beneath his arm, left the shop.

  Cold air swirled about Effie’s ankles, swishing the hem of her widow’s weeds.

  The bells hanging from the knob tinkled. The door had barely shut when Gus flipped the sign to CLOSED. He pulled down the rolling shade over the front door’s window.

  Her heart raced.

  Too bad the bay window didn’t have privacy shades because several curious faces peered in. No, no! Must Hunter join the crowd at her window?

  Within the quarter-hour, everyone in Mountain Home would know of her disgrace. Gut-twisting agony made her weak-kneed. So many friends and neighbors trusted her. Numerous orders were half-completed, and she’d accepted payment on dozens not yet delivered. They’d be justifiably angry over the loss of hard-earned money.

  Her thoughts raced ahead—she’d leave instructions with Mr. McGillicudy at the bank to issue refunds—

  Gus twisted the key in the lock. The soft click thrust her heart into a frantic staccato.

  She expected him to pocket the key but he left it in the keyhole. Armed, twice her weight, a predator—she couldn’t escape him and he knew it.

  Bile rose in her throat and she feared she’d be sick.

  His boots thumped ominously on the polished floorboards.

  She fell back a step. All determination to accept her fate fled like the wind. “G-Gus, listen, please. I can explain—”

  Two steps closer. His feral grin widened.

  Her back collided with the back wall. “I know it wasn’t right…”

  If he had an ounce of compassion, if he recalled the tender feelings they’d once had—

  He snagged her wrist.

  —for each other, he wouldn’t do this!

  She expected the cold slap of iron.

  Instead, he yanked her arm, tipping her off balance. She fell against his chest and found herself looking up…way up…into eyes the color of a storm-tossed Atlantic.

  “If you knew why I did—”

  In that split second, she glimpsed the intention in his eyes—what? Surely he didn’t mean to—

  Her breath snagged in her throat.

  He lowered his head and claimed her mouth with a kiss.

  Luke pitched hay off the feed wagon. He’d stripped down to shirtsleeves as the hot, sweaty work soaked him through. He welcomed the cold wind.

  Timothy drove the wagon at the pace of a man’s walk, and Dallas pitched hay beside him. The cattle meandered in from the wide expanse of snow-covered pasture where foraging had grown significantly difficult as the past week’s snowstorm buried dormant vegetation.

  Beyond the fence, he caught a glimpse of Hunter returning on his sorrel.

  Hunter dropped the reins, tossed a paper-wrapped package onto the front porch, and ran toward the pasture. He vaulted the fence and sank into a snowdrift.

  “Halt,” Luke called to Tim. “Something’s wrong.” Hunter always checked on Miranda first.

  He leapt from the wagon and met his brother-in-law halfway.

  Hunter cupped a hand about his mouth while a good thirty feet out. “Trouble.”

  “What?” Luke charged the last few steps, nudging aside milling cattle, nearly losing a boot in snow packed by the repeated passage of the feed wagon and hundreds of hooves. “What happened?”

  “A newcomer in town. A stranger.” Hunter breathed hard from exertion. How fast had he ridden on icy roads?

  Awareness prickled his nape.

  “It’s better you hear this from me, from family.” Hunter paused, stretching a beat too long for Luke’s comfort.“And not the rumor mill.”

  “Spit it out.”

  “This newcomer got off the four-o’clock and headed straight to Pettingill’s.”

  Dread curdled in Luke’s gut. “What does he want with Effie?” He trusted his brother-in-law to act in widowed Mrs. O’Leary’s defense or at least fetch the sheriff.

  “He kissed her.”

  The news landed like a slap across his cheek. “He what?”

  “He waited until I left the shop, as patient as could be. I watched through the display window alongside a half-dozen others. The fellow backed her up against the rear wall and kissed her.”

  “A peck?” Some people kissed a cheek in greeting, like maybe…a brother?

  Hunter shook his head. “Full on the mouth.”

  No one should kiss Widow O’Leary but him. Just ‘cause he hadn’t actually kissed her, yet, didn’t mean he didn’t want to.

  “It’s time to act…if you’re going to.”

  The yank on the conversation’s reins caught Luke unprepared. He hadn’t told a soul, certainly not Hunter, that he was sweet on Mrs. O’Leary.

  “I speak from experience.” Hunter glanced toward the feed wagon and back. “Don’t let her get away without a fight. It’s time she knows your intentions.”

  Luke’s stomach curdled. He backed her up against the rear wall of the shop and kissed her. Full on
the mouth.

  It’s too late.

  The slow, not-yet-official courtship—escorting Mrs. O’Leary to the church picnic, occasionally bringing her home to enjoy a Sunday dinner with his boisterous family, oiling hinges on her shop’s door—hadn’t been enough.

  Effie O’Leary had no idea Luke Finlay courted her with an eye toward marriage.

  Until this moment, he’d wanted it that way.

  He’d thought to allow her time to grieve her lost husband, to put aside her widow’s weeds of her own accord before stating his intentions. He’d gradually worked toward a full-fledged courtship, believing he had ample time to win her affections.

  And now a stranger had stepped off the four-o’clock and interrupted Luke’s courtship of Effie before it could officially begin.

  Of all the rotten luck.

  He clenched his jaw against the urge to swear long and hard.

  “Why are you standing here? Go.”

  Luke turned to his younger brothers, standing on the feed wagon. “Finish dropping the hay,” he bellowed, “I’m going to town.”

  Hunter clapped him on the shoulder. “Better take a quick bath if you’re going courting.”

  Luke glared at his beloved brother-in-law, knowing full well he smelled of hay and sweat and horse. “I know all about courting.”

  Hunter’s features fell slack in mock surprise. “You do?”

  Luke refused to rise to the bait. He kept the tone serious. “Thanks for bringing word.”

  “Anytime.”

  “And I’ll thank you,” Luke said, holding Hunter’s gaze, “to keep your suppositions to yourself.”

  “About Effie O’Leary and you?”

  “Yes.”

  “Everyone already knows—except her, but I’ll keep it to myself just the same. Better get on into town before he kisses her again.” Hunter chuckled. “Or drags her in front of Reverend Gilbert.”

  Chapter Two

 

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