Sleigh bells and seduction...
Mariella Vency never dreamed her son’s favorite soccer star would become his team’s temporary coach. Nor did she anticipate the sexy-as-sin playboy melting her guarded heart. Sam Kelly is everything a single mom could want—successful, charismatic...but completely off-limits. She can’t fall in bed—or in love!—with a man soon leaving town. Will Sam surprise her and make their yuletide fling more permanent?
“Is that a promise?”
Mariella didn’t dare speak, so she nodded, her head moving up and down, seemingly in slow motion. She was glad only the top half of her body was visible behind the counter, as Sam reached behind him to grasp the doorknob. Otherwise, he would have seen her knees almost knocking together as she stared at his muscular frame.
She gave him a little wave as he walked out the door. When he was gone, her gaze morphed back into focus even as her brain tried to capture the spellbound way he’d looked at her, as if he was trying to remember something about her.
She opened the envelope and read the card aloud.
“‘Thank you for helping me to forget.’”
The words, written in neat cursive and signed with his first name only, intrigued and saddened her at the same time.
Forget about what, she wondered. And why?
Mariella set the box down below the counter, next to her purse. While stowing the card alongside the British pound in her wallet, she felt fortunate for their chance meeting, and her heart began to beat more rapidly, as if affirming her feelings were true.
She realized she’d received a third gift from Sam Kelly, though he didn’t know he was the one responsible. Simply by being in his presence, the ice of loneliness encrusted around her heart had begun to thaw.
He’d made her forget, too.
Dear Reader,
Busy lives may leave little time for romance—especially when you’re a single mother, like Mariella Vency, my heroine. Gorgeous soccer star Sam Kelly steps into Mariella’s world when she least expects it, and she is forced to admit to herself how much she’s missed having a man in her life. The question is—does she want him forever and does he want her? That is the beauty...and the tension...of seduction.
I hope you enjoy Winning Her Holiday Love. I’d like to thank all my loyal readers for their support over the past seven years. It’s been a dream writing for you, and I hope to continue to do so in the years ahead. Stay in touch with me on my website, www.harmonyevans.com.
Blessings,
Harmony
Winning Her Holiday Love
Harmony Evans
Harmony Evans received the 2013 Romance Slam Jam EMMA Award for Debut Author of the Year. Her first book, Lesson in Romance, garnered two RT Reviewers’ Choice Best Book Award nominations in 2012. She currently resides in New York City. Visit her at www.harmonyevans.com.
Books by Harmony Evans
Harlequin Kimani Romance
Lesson in Romance
Stealing Kisses
Loving Laney
When Morning Comes
Winning Her Love
Winning the Doctor
Winning Her Heart
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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
Excerpt from Diamonds for the Holidays by Nicki Night
Chapter 1
Mariella cast an eye toward a clock on the wall as she waited for Terrence Jones, the owner of the Beach Bottom Gift Shop, to return from running an errand. She leaned her elbow on the counter and jabbed at a stuffed Santa with her manicured fingernail.
She had been in the midst of shopping for some gag gifts for the office holiday party when he asked her to mind the store. She’d almost said no but the twenty-five percent discount he offered had appealed to her thrifty nature, and would help her win points with her boss.
A former police detective and notorious flirt, Terrence had gotten tired of the rough streets of South Side Chicago and had retired to Bay Point where he peddled trinkets to tourists and residents. Glancing around, she had to give the man some credit. October had just rolled into November and the small shop was already decorated and stocked for the holidays. Terrence had no taste, but at least he had a ton of inventory. She didn’t mind doing him a favor but hoped he would hurry back.
Josh, her son, had the day off from school due to a teacher’s conference, so she’d taken one, too. Shopping with him always left her with a headache. Getting it done in the early afternoon would help her avoid ruining her entire evening.
Her only child was a senior in high school, a soccer fanatic and a trend follower. Like most teenagers, he always wanted to be seen in the latest styles. The past few months had been rough for Josh, so she tried to do whatever she could to make things easier.
At least the store is empty.
A little unusual, she supposed, for midday during a workweek in downtown Bay Point. As a single mother, she’d learned to be thankful for any time alone, however brief, and wherever it occurred. The downside was she tended to dwell too much on the past.
Mariella reached up and massaged away the tension settling at the back of her neck. However long it took Terrence to get back, she was going to make the best of the situation.
Just like she’d done with Josh.
Raising a son without a father was hard, but she had no choice. Jamaal passed away when Josh was just three years old. He was the love of her life, and although they’d married young, Mariella never regretted it.
At the reading of his will, she’d been shocked to learn he’d inherited a small home on the outskirts of town from his late paternal grandmother. It was the only thing Jamaal had ever owned, and he’d kept it a secret from her. His lawyer told her that he’d dreamed of someday living in it, but sadly, never got the chance.
Three years ago, when Josh was fourteen, they’d moved from East Los Angeles to Bay Point. She wanted a better life for her son, who was starting to hang around the wrong crowd at school.
The small, friendly community welcomed them with open arms. She and her son felt safe, and Josh had thrived in his new school, despite what he felt was “a ton of homework.” Although he missed his friends, he quickly made new ones.
After a few months she landed a position as executive assistant to the mayor. The pay was decent and her boss, Gregory Langston, was revered. His family was one of the most powerful in town, and he’d achieved more at his young age than most men did in a lifetime.
At the age of twenty-six, Gregory had become the youngest and the first African-American mayor in Bay Point. Now at age thirty-two, he was well into his second term, happily married to Vanessa, owner of Blooms in Paradise, a local floral shop, and a proud parent of a two-year-old girl.
Due to his efforts, and many others’, Bay Point was slowly changing, from boarded-up shops and minimal dining choices to a thriving Northern California tourist destination. New stores, restaurants and housing were popping up everywhere, breathing new life into the old t
own.
Though she was grateful for her job, it wasn’t as challenging anymore. She’d recently finished her bachelor’s degree in economics, with a minor in public policy, and desired a role where she could really make a difference.
She balanced her chin on the heel of her palm. Her future had never been so uncertain. She was thirty-four years old and a widow on the brink of being an empty-nester. If a more suitable job opportunity didn’t open up in Bay Point, there would be little reason to stay. The mere thought of starting over in a new place made her feel ill.
Being alone didn’t necessarily scare her. Though she’d gone out with a few men, the experiences did not go well.
Her child had always been her first priority, and would continue to be even when he was out of the house. Still she couldn’t deny that she missed being in a relationship.
Night after restless night she wrestled with her negative thoughts and pent-up desires. Flipping the pillow over to the cold side never helped. Perhaps a man by her side would.
Forcing a smile, and desperate for something to do, she walked over to the back corner of the store. Terrence stored his cleaning supplies in a small cabinet behind a couple of squat, fake palm trees with thick trunks wound with strands of red and green lights.
She rooted around for a dust cloth, and heard the front door creak open. The glass rattled as it closed. Turning, she stayed crouched down, out of sight.
Terrence didn’t believe in security cameras, and claimed all he needed were those two palm trees. He’d caught a couple of shoplifters by hiding behind them. She did have a full view of the store, and the customer who had just walked in. She held her breath, recognizing him immediately from the posters that hung in her son’s room.
Sam Kelly.
He was one of Josh’s favorite professional European soccer players, though her mind blanked on the name of his team. Wherever he was from, he was a long way from home.
Though she was confident he couldn’t see her behind the fake foliage, she tucked herself in and against the wall. Her yoga practice, which kept her body toned and limber, was paying off.
“Hello? Anybody here?”
Mariella’s heart started to race, like it was doing backflips in reverse, and she couldn’t speak. Sam’s voice had a dignified, majestic quality to it, classy with an edge of curiosity.
Whoa. This is better than any discount. It wasn’t every day she got to spy on a gorgeous man with a British accent.
When nobody answered, he shrugged and began to browse around, hands clasped behind his back.
She’d never scrutinized Sam’s glossy image hanging on her son’s wall. But now that the sports star was here, right before her eyes, she couldn’t help herself.
Sam’s toffee-colored skin had the burnished, healthy tinge of someone who spent a lot of time outdoors. She didn’t know his age, but surmised he was in his early thirties. He was of above-average height, with the lean, muscular build expected of a professional athlete.
Though it was rude not to make her presence known right away, she wanted to play the voyeur, if only for a moment.
His canary-yellow T-shirt had a slight sheen to it, with a blue coat of arms logo. The black athletic shorts he wore were loose around his muscular thighs, just skimming his knees. The expensive sneakers on his feet, black with gold stripes, were the same ones Josh had begged her to purchase for weeks.
Suddenly, her eyes began to water, and a tickling sensation in her nose followed. She sneezed, just once, quietly as she could manage.
He whirled around. “Who’s there?”
She emerged from the palm trees. “May I help you?”
Sam’s deep brown eyes glided over her body, drawing pulses of head-to-toe heat, and gleamed a little brighter under the fluorescent lights.
He folded his arms across his chest. “You can tell me what the devil you were doing hiding behind that palm tree.”
Being a really awful spy, she thought. The truth embarrassed her, so she decided to make light of the situation and held up two fingers, both shaking slightly. “Actually, it was two palm trees.”
A car honked outside, and she nearly jumped out of her skin. Sam acted cool, as if he hadn’t heard it. He was probably used to distractions, like thousands of people cheering for him in the stadiums.
“I apologize, but remain confused.”
He bowed before her, a gesture that seemed destined for a royal court. It charmed her as much as his posh accent. She wanted to run to the window to see if there was a carriage outside, but suspected there would only be a limousine.
“I was looking for a dust cloth,” she explained.
“Behind one, I mean, two palm trees?”
Mariella nodded, despite his dubious tone.
A smile flecked at the corners of his mouth. “What an odd place to keep cleaning supplies.”
He shrugged, and then ran a hand over his close-cropped black hair. “Anyway, I’m looking for a holiday gift. Can you help me?”
She let out a breath of relief, thankful he’d changed subjects. “Of course, Mr. Kelly.”
“Wait a minute. How do you know my name?”
He took a step toward her, his eyes cautious and his tone guarded.
“My son talks about you all the time. He loves soccer.”
She left out any mention of the poster, and that she sometimes watched European soccer on television with Josh. The latter only because she rarely paid attention to the game, preferring to use the time to read a book or shop online.
“Nice to know I have a fan in this town. I was getting a bit worried.”
He smiled, more in wonder than in ease, and she couldn’t take her eyes off him.
“You’re the first person to recognize me.”
“Really? Do I get a prize?”
She blushed, not meaning to sound coy or flirtatious, but she was a little surprised at his statement.
Bay Point had begun to rebuild its prior reputation as a destination for celebrities, so it wasn’t so unusual he was here. Many of the townspeople were movie and TV buffs. It wasn’t inconceivable that some wouldn’t be aware of popular sports stars, especially those from overseas.
Sam began to sort through a rack of beach towels. A look of amused horror on his face, he held up one emblazoned with pink and green pineapples.
“I don’t know. That depends.”
Hope rose within her, but she paused to ensure she answered him with an even tone. “On what?”
“On whether you’re a fan of mine, too.”
She held back a smile. Was he simply being pretentious? Flirting with her? It was difficult to tell. His overall politeness and good looks could cover a multitude of sins or internal thoughts.
She opened her arms wide.
“I don’t know. You just got here.”
A smile tipped from his lips right into her heart.
“What’s your name?”
She steadied her gaze on his, wondering if she should tell him. If he was just passing through town, she would never see him again.
Sam nudged her elbow playfully as if he sensed her reluctance. “It’s only fair, since you already know mine.”
“My name is Mariella.”
He repeated her name, in a lower voice than before, bringing his accent to a whole new level of sexy. It was as if he was savoring it in his mouth, and an unexpected spark of electricity looped through her body.
“Very pretty.”
A knot formed in her throat at his compliment, even though she wasn’t sure if he was referring to her name or her looks.
“Thank you,” she managed. “Now that we’ve got the introductions out of the way, I can help you find what you need.”
He glanced about the store, in the haphazard way men do when they are overwhelmed by the task of shopping.
“I’m looking for a gift to send back to England.”
“For a special girl?”
“Yes. My mum.”
His leaned-in, gotcha-grin made her cheeks blaze. Maybe he’s single, she thought, and maybe she should just mind her own business.
“Oh? How sweet.” She took a step back, and crashed into a rack of orange bikinis.
Her face heated when one dropped on the floor. She crouched down to pick it up and got an eyeful of Sam’s muscular thighs. She was naturally clumsy, so pretending to struggle with the hanger to get a closer look was easy. When she stood, she felt his eyes on her shoulder as she replaced the merchandise to its proper spot.
“Is it her birthday?” she asked, a little light-headed.
She mulled over a rack of maxi dresses emblazoned with colorful beach umbrellas, thinking that might be a nice gift. Considering she lived in Great Britain, which she heard had a lot of rain, she might appreciate a real umbrella instead. Unfortunately, Terrence didn’t sell those, so she moved on to a table filled with petrified sea life.
“No. Mum is just a little upset I’m in the States. I need something really nice so she’ll know I’m safe, alive and healthy.”
Sam picked up a green bejeweled starfish, and shook his head in disgust. “By the way, the more tasteful and expensive it is, the more it will keep her off my back.”
Mariella worried her lip, concerned that due to Terrence’s gaudy inventory, she wouldn’t be able to help Sam find the perfect gift.
“In that case, I’m not sure if this is the store for you. We cater to tourists who want a special memento of their visit to Bay Point. We may not have what you need.”
“I’m sure you have everything I need.”
His warm smile and upbeat tone made her almost believe he was talking about her, not something to buy, and reinvigorated her confidence.
“I’m sure I can help you find something.” She motioned for him to follow her. “Is she picky?”
“Does the queen live in Buckingham Palace?”
His tone held a note of annoyance, much like Josh’s did whenever he felt she was being too overbearing.
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