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A Mistletoe Christmas: Santa's Mistletoe Mistake / A Merry Little Wedding / Mistletoe Magic

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Год написания книги
2018
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“You were supposed to be getting ready for a bath,” Melody said.

“I wanted to show Cowboy Jake my pink tutu and show him my two most important dance steps,” Libby replied.

Jake raised a dark eyebrow, making him look like a dashing rake from a romance novel. “I definitely think showing me important dance steps is way more important than getting ready for a bath.”

Libby beamed him a smile that pleased Melody. She wanted Libby to like Jake as much as she did. And she so liked Jake. Every minute she spent with him only made her more excited for the possibilities of their relationship.

Somehow in the past two days she’d put aside her reluctance to get involved with another cowboy. She’d managed to rationalize to herself that Jake was a wonderful man who just happened to wear a cowboy hat.

“Okay,” Libby said, pulling Melody from her thoughts. “This is the step I do when I’m happy. It’s just a flap.” She executed the two-tone step around the table.

“That sounds like a happy tap,” Jake observed, amusement twinkling in his eyes.

“And this is my mad step. It’s a flap ball change.” Once again she made her way around the table. The tap of her feet definitely sounded angry as she flapped hard and ball changed even harder.

She came to a halt at Jake’s side and leaned into him just a bit. “Now you know without me telling you if I’m happy or mad.”

“I think that’s a good thing to know,” Jake replied.

She leaned closer to him, pulled his head down and then cupped her hand around her mouth and whispered in his ear. When she was finished, she stepped back from him.

“I’ll keep that in mind,” he said to her.

Libby looked back at Melody. “I know, I know. Bath time.” She flapped her way out of the kitchen and back down the hallway.

“What was that all about?” Melody asked Jake the moment Libby was gone.

“Ah, a gentlemen never tells secrets,” he replied. “All I can say is that it was nothing for you to worry about.”

Melody looked at him dubiously. “With that kid I never know what to expect.”

“She’s an absolute delight.”

Melody laughed. “Most of the time that’s true, but she can be as hardheaded as a mule at times.”

“A trait she picked up from her mother?”

“Perhaps,” Melody agreed with another laugh.

“I’m ready,” Libby’s voice drifted to the kitchen.

Melody stood. “If you’ll excuse me for just a minute, I need to set the water temperature for her bath.”

“Take as much time as you need,” he replied, looking utterly relaxed and as if he belonged at her table.

She hurried down the hallway to the bathroom, where Libby sat naked on the edge of the tub. “Bath and then bed,” Melody said as she turned on the faucets. “And what did you whisper to Jake before you left the kitchen?”

Libby yawned and then shrugged. “I just told him he’d better enjoy spending his time with you now ’cause after Santa comes you won’t have time for Cowboy Jake anymore.”

“And why is that?” Melody put in the drain stopper and felt the flow of water one last time.

“I can’t tell you. It’s a secret between me and Santa.” Libby crossed her arms over her chest, an indication that no matter how hard Melody pressed, Libby wasn’t going to give up her Santa secret.

Libby slid down into the filling tub. “Don’t overfill, and call me when you’re ready for a tuck in,” Melody said.

When she returned to the kitchen, Jake was still in place, his long legs sprawled beneath the table and his cup of coffee nearly gone.

“Sorry about that,” she said, and went directly to the coffee carafe and refilled his cup. “She told me what she whispered to you.” She rejoined him at the table. “I have no idea what she thinks Santa is bringing to me that will take up all my time.”

“Maybe one of those yarn kits where you have to pull little pieces of yarn through holes to make a rug,” he said. “Stacy got one of those at her wedding shower. It was to make a little rug of sunflowers to go in front of the kitchen sink. She worked on it for months and finally packed it up in a box half-finished.”

“So she was the crafty type?” Melody asked, curious about the woman who had captured his heart.

He smiled softly. “She never met a Popsicle stick she couldn’t turn into a birdhouse or a Christmas ornament.”

“I admire people who can make something useful out of everyday things,” Melody replied. “The closest I get to anything crafty is bedazzling outfits for my little dancers.”

“There’s room for both talents in this world.”

She took a sip of her coffee and drank in the vision of him. She set her mug back down. “And you—what’s your talent, Jake Hanson?”

“I raise quality cattle and I can hammer down a fence post fairly fast. I’m not bad at a two-step and I can cook a mean pot of chili. Stacy used to say I gave the foot massage from heaven.”

“Don’t underestimate the value of a good foot massage. That’s a dancer’s dream,” she replied.

“Now tell me about your dancing. Were you a little tutu-wearing tap dancer when you were Libby’s age?” he asked.

“Absolutely. My parents put me in dance classes when I was three, and in that first lesson I fell in love with it.”

“Did you ever dance professionally?”

She shook her head. “As much as I loved dancing, it was always in my plans to become a teacher. I wasn’t willing to make the kind of sacrifices professional dancers have to make. I wanted marriage and a family. I love dancing, but it isn’t the sum of my life.”

“I’m glad I didn’t have to go all the way to Broadway to meet you,” he said.

She smiled, heated by the look in his eyes. “All you had to do was look out your window.” Her insides trembled slightly as she thought about how often she’d watched him from her kitchen window.

Had he noticed her when she’d been out in the yard? Had he been drawn to her as she’d been to him? Did he feel the attraction that crackled in the air at this very moment? Or was she the only one feeling a magnetic pull toward him?

“Mom, come tuck me in,” Libby yelled from her bedroom.

“And that sounds like my cue to call it a night,” Jake said. He got up from the table as she did, and she wanted to protest and tell him that the night was still young.

Instead she walked with him to the front door, pausing as he grabbed his coat and pulled it on. “It was a lovely evening, Jake.”

“Yeah, it was,” he agreed. His eyes darkened as his gaze lingered on her face, and then on her lips. “Good night, Melody.”

He turned and walked out the door.
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