One Hundred Christmas Kisses (An Aspen Cove Romance Book 6)

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One Hundred Christmas Kisses (An Aspen Cove Romance Book 6) Page 9

by Kelly Collins


  She stalled for a second and then gripped his hips and pulled him deep inside her. “Haven’t we wasted enough time?”

  He stilled inside, knowing he’d never felt this good in all his life. Here was a woman who knew he was lacking and yet she made him feel whole.

  He thrust forward and pulled back until her breath caught in her throat and his name left her lips again. The flutter of her release pulled him deeper until he sailed over the edge with her.

  They lay in each other’s arms. “How did you know I was the one?” she asked.

  He laughed. “You told me with every kiss. While I might not have known in my head, I knew in my heart.”

  Chapter Fourteen

  Two Months Later

  She stood back and looked at the fireplace mantel. Front and center was her wedding photo. She’d worn her mother’s simple white dress while her father married them. Trig was so damn handsome in his suit and tie. While it might be odd to some to marry at the cemetery, Charlie wanted her mother present. She knew she was there when way ahead of the season a single yellow crocus bloomed on her grave.

  Everyone joked about a shotgun wedding, but they would have married regardless of the fact that Charlie was eight weeks pregnant. A girl couldn’t go wrong with a wounded warrior who loved basset hounds.

  “Is that everything you wanted from your dad’s?” Trig walked over to her and laid his hand on her flat stomach.

  “I’ve got you. What else do I need?”

  “You keep telling yourself that. Just remember when it comes to marrying me there are no refunds or returns. I come as is.”

  She lifted and kissed him. They’d spent the first month together getting the vet clinic set up. Not only had her father saved the building for her, but he’d also saved her mother’s life insurance policy to make sure it was state of the art.

  It was the best day ever when she walked into her old job to pick up her check and introduce her fiancé to good ole Evan Barkman.

  They also stopped to see Trig’s mom and dad. He wasn’t keen on visiting his parents, but Charlie thought it important they meet her before the couple married.

  Somehow, the sight of their son with a woman who loved him changed the way his parents saw him. Now that he’d made a fresh start, including a new business venture and a successful fiancé who adored him, they saw him as the strong young man they had raised, not the crippled war vet who came back to them. When they got the seal of approval, they headed home only to find out that Charlie was indeed pregnant.

  “When are you going to show?”

  She laughed. “What is it about you? First you have an overweight dog, and now you want to have an overweight wife.”

  He picked her up and carried her to the bedroom. “I can’t wait until you’re big with my baby.”

  The one thing she hadn’t told Trig yet was she was bound to get really big because that first night he made love to her at the bed and breakfast, the angels blessed them twice. “What if I get huge? I mean really huge? Will you love me then?”

  He pulled her shirt up and kissed her stomach. “I’ll love you twice as much.”

  “Oh good, because honey…we’re having twins.”

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  Sneak Peek of One Hundred Lifetimes

  Poppy Dawson walked into the Sheriff Aiden Cooper’s office with one thing on her mind. If she couldn’t get Mark Bancroft to marry her, she’d have to murder him. The problem with her plan was if Mark Bancroft got anywhere near her outside of work, her father would do the job first.

  She took a seat at the corner desk and pulled her notebook from the drawer to jot down reason number 132 for why she loved him. It was the same reason as the other 131 before it. At twenty-eight, she’d never loved anyone else. Since that day on the playground twenty-one years ago when he stopped Brian Decker from pulling her pigtails, it had always been Mark.

  Her most memorable moment with the man of her dreams happened just over four months ago when she pinned him against the wall and stole the kiss she’d wanted her whole life.

  It was an amazing kiss that lasted at least four seconds. That was when Sheriff Cooper walked into the office, caught them, and said her father was looking for her. That was the last time Mark Dawson’s lips touched her.

  She laughed. She didn’t have to kill him herself. All she had to do was tell her dad he kissed her and that would be the end. In truth, she didn’t want Mark in a grave. She wanted him in her bed. Pretending that she hated him was easier than knowing she loved him.

  “Hey, Poppy,” Sheriff Cooper said as he entered.

  “New haircut?” It wasn’t that she noticed the cut as much as she noticed the smell of the shampoo. The Coopers all smelled like coconut unless Aiden got a trim at Cove Cuts and then he smelled like citrus.

  “Can’t be looking like a vagrant.” He took off his hat and set it on the filing cabinet. “Anything hot that I need to know about?”

  “Wes called to ask if you could help with the wedding setup. He’s got tables and chairs that need unloading.” Poppy’s groan happened without thought. Some girls were always a bridesmaid and never a bride. Poppy had never been either.

  “He wants my help now?” he asked. “Sage and Cannon aren’t getting married until the fourteenth.”

  “It’s the twelfth,” she reminded him.

  “No kidding.” He shuffled through a stack of papers on his desk that was two inches high. With growth came funding and Sheriff Cooper was filing for everything he could get, from a second deputy to new cars. “I guess I was preoccupied.”

  She’d like to believe it was all work, but the sheriff had been married for about four months. He’d been busy with his wife, Marina, and his adopted daughter, Kellyn. So busy that Marina was already two months pregnant. It seemed that as Louise had been pushing her eighth kid out around Christmas, Aiden had been putting one inside his wife. Some girls had all the luck.

  “He said he could use a hand or two.” Poppy picked up her Nikon from her desk. “I’ve already got a job. I’m the official photographer.” She’d always loved photography but couldn’t pursue it as a career. She was lucky to have a part-time job at the sheriff’s office. If it weren’t for her mother’s ALS and expensive medications, she’d be stuck at the ranch day in and day out. She let out a sigh that could probably be heard in Kansas.

  “You okay?”

  She perked up. “Sure, I’m great. How about a new photo for the wall? We should have one of you and Mark. You know, the sheriff and his deputy.” She pointed to his desk where he took a seat and folded his hands on top.

  “Like this?” He sat up tall and gave her an almost smile, trying to look serious.

  After a peek into the camera she knew it was all wrong. While he looked professional, the pile of papers on his desk didn’t. She set her camera down and went about setting the stage. Everything looked different from behind the lens.

  When she was certain she had it right, she took the shot. “You should give them a hand. I’ll lock up when I leave.”

  “Thanks, Poppy,” He pocketed his keys and walked toward the door. “How are your sisters doing?”

  She smiled at the thought of Rose, Lily and Daisy. “They’re great. I’m so proud of them.” If it wasn’t for her staying behind and caring for their mom, her sisters would have never been allowed to go off to college, but Lloyd Dawson couldn’t argue when they all received scholarships. Rose was close by at Colorado State, studying agriculture. Lily had ventured further west to Arizona State to study engineering, while Daisy was in
South Dakota diving into environmental sciences. She had her heart set on the forestry service. That left Poppy, her brother Basil and her sister Violet to pick up the pieces.

  “That’s great news.” He plopped his hat on his head. “Your mom hanging in there?”

  “Super, she’s having a really good day today.” She tabled her camera and went back to putting the sheriff’s desk in order.

  “Good to hear. Let us know if there’s anything you need.”

  “Will do.”

  Sheriff Cooper left the office and Poppy to her thoughts. Those thoughts always went back to Deputy Mark Bancroft. She plopped into her seat and scrolled through the forty or fifty pictures she’d taken last week. Seventy percent of them were of him.

  The door opened and in walked Sage, the bride to be. “Just the girl I’m looking for.”

  Poppy loved Sage, who reminded her of a female Lucky Charms leprechaun or maybe a wood sprite. She was always happy and always moving.

  “What do you need?”

  Sage rounded the desk. “It’s not what I need but what you’re going to get.” She took an envelope from her purse and put it into Poppy’s hand. “For your photography services.”

  Poppy shook her head. “That’s not how it works in town.”

  Sage laughed. “I know how it works. I’ve got a bed and breakfast, a job as Doc’s nurse, and a man who’s going to be waiting at the end of the aisle for me. I’m a lucky girl. I’m just spreading the love.” She hopped onto the corner of Poppy’s desk. “Maybe your family has forgotten how things work. We take care of our own. If you don’t want it for yourself, then put it in your mother’s medication fund.”

  A tear slipped from Poppy’s eye. She opened the envelope to find several hundred-dollar bills inside. “It’s too much.” She pressed it toward Sage.

  “It’s not enough. Anyone else would charge us a fortune.”

  “I don’t want to charge you at all.”

  “Take it. Don’t forget I once had a mother. I wished I could have done something…anything…to keep her. I imagine your family is the same. Use it how you see fit. Give your mom a hug for me.”

  “I will. I know she would have loved to come to your wedding, but it’s not good to tire her out.”

  “We understand. You can take some cake and flowers home to her.”

  “She’d like that.” Poppy tucked the envelope inside her desk drawer. Given her father’s distrust of people’s motives and kindness, he’d never let her accept the gift so it was a good thing she was working for it.

  “Are you bringing a date?”

  Poppy didn’t miss the slide of Sage’s eyes to Mark’s empty desk.

  “No, I’m not attending as a guest. This is a job.”

  Sage hopped off the desk. “There’s plenty of time for play too. Maybe you should ask Mark.” She lifted her brow.

  Poppy curled her nose like she smelled something foul. “No way. He’s not my type.” She hated the lie that rolled so easily from her mouth.

  “Really? I always thought you liked him.”

  Her memory went back to that kiss, then fast-forwarded to an hour later when her father found her at home and told her that he’d settled the Mark Bancroft issue once and for all. Poppy had been certain he’d shot the poor man until she showed up to work and found him at his desk. Everything had changed since that day. While he was kind and considerate, he treated her as no more or less than an employee.

  “No, Mark and I are…” She shook her head. “It would never work out.”

  Sage gave her a look that said I don’t believe you, but she didn’t press. “Anything is possible if you want it bad enough.”

  “That’s true. Cannon did get you to the altar on Valentine’s Day.”

  Sage nearly skipped to the door. “Not yet, but he’s got a high likelihood of success.” She giggled as she walked out the door. Before it shut, Sage popped her head back inside. “You know, the best way to make a man want you is to show interest in another. Luke Mosier will be at the wedding and he doesn’t have a date. Should I sit you next to him?”

  Poppy smiled. Luke Mosier was beyond handsome. As one of the newest residents and Aspen Cove’s fire chief, he had all the girls drooling. All except Poppy because she was foolishly in love with a man she could never have.

  Was anything really possible? She’d have to move mountains to get her father to accept Mark. Before that could happen, she’d have to get Mark to prove he was a better man than his father. Her father had a strong belief that the apple never fell far from the tree. When Mark’s father was the foreman for the Dawson’s ranch and stole everything her dad had worked so hard to earn, he never let another stranger work his land. That’s how at twenty-eight, Poppy Dawson was stuck living with her parents and chasing a dream that never belonged to her.

  Add to that her mother’s debilitating disease, and she’d be lucky if she ever got a date, let alone a husband. Maybe Sage was right. Maybe it wasn’t Poppy who had to prove herself to anyone. Wasn’t it time Mark showed her father he was the man she knew him to be? She shouldn’t have to fight for his place in her life. He should be fighting for her in his life.

  She straightened her spine. “You know what? I’d love to sit next to Luke. Please, if it’s not too much trouble, could you place Mark close enough to see me, but too far to engage?”

  Sage let out a hoot that could be heard down the street. “You got it. This is going to be fun.”

  Poppy packed up her desk and set the phones to transfer to Mark’s cell. “Yes, as long as no one gets shot.” She put the envelope into her purse and took her jacket from the coat rack in the corner.

  “You taking off early?”

  Poppy walked to the door. “Yes. If I’m going to catch a fireman, I have to turn up the sizzle.”

  The women walked out the door and Poppy locked up.

  “Do you really want to catch a fireman?”

  “Of course not, but Mark doesn’t know that.”

  Sage gave her a hug. “I knew you had it in you!”

  They walked side by side until Poppy reached her truck. It was a beat-up old thing that used to belong to the ranch. The door creaked open, and she tossed her purse on the seat.

  “The question is, does Mark have it in him? The bigger question is will he take the bait?”

  “Something tells me he might.”

  It took Poppy several pumps to the gas pedal and two turns of the key for the engine to cough to life. She drove out of town on her way home. Never in a hundred lifetimes would she think she and Mark could be possible, but Sage had said it herself. Anything was possible if you wanted it badly enough. There were several things she wanted in this life. One was for her mother to get healthy. Given her diagnosis of ALS that would never happen. Two was to be able to pursue her dream of photography. Now that the Guild Creative Center was a reality, she still had a whisper of a dream that she’d one day have a studio there—a place where she could show off her photographs. The last thing she truly wanted was Mark. Everything seemed like a pie-in-the-sky dream, but hey, a girl could dream.

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  Need More from Aspen Cove?

  An Aspen Cove Romance Series

  One Hundred Reasons

  One Hundred Heartbeats

  One Hundred Wishes

  One Hundred Promises

  One Hundred Excuses

  One Hundred Christmas Kisses

  One Hundred Lifetimes

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  Acknowledgments

  To every reader who has invested their time reading my work. Thank you!

  It takes more than a great story to create a novel or in this case a novella. The author comes up with an idea and runs with it, but without moral support, the talent of a graphic designer, an editor, proofreaders, publicist, PA and a formatter, it’s just words on paper.

  Thank you for loving Aspen Cove!

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  About the Author

  International bestselling author of more than thirty novels, Kelly Collins writes with the intention of keeping the love alive. Always a romantic, she blends real-life events with her vivid imagination to create characters and stories that lovers of contemporary romance, new adult, and romantic suspense will return to again and again.

  Kelly lives in Colorado at the base of the Rocky Mountains with her husband of twenty-seven years, their two dogs, and a bird that hates her. She has three amazing children, whom she loves to pieces.

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