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Authors: Debbie Macomber

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BOOK: 1225 Christmas Tree Lane
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“Okay, that's settled. We'll go and see your friend, pick out a puppy.” Ian pulled out a chair and sat down next to his wife. “Did Cecilia mention the house on Rosewood Lane?”

“We'd just started to talk about it,” Grace said. “I told her it's available and we'd love to rent it to you again.”

Ian shook his head.

“You don't want it?” This surprised Grace because she remembered how fond Cecilia had been of the place and all the small homey changes she'd made. “My mistake. I'm sorry,” she said with some embarrassment.

“Actually, Cecilia and I were wondering,” Ian said, clasping his wife's hand, “if you and Cliff would consider selling us the house.”

“Selling,” Grace repeated. “Oh…I hadn't thought of that.”

“I brought it up to Cliff,” Ian continued, “and he said the decision was yours.”

“Well…yes, I suppose it is,” Grace murmured. Her im
mediate reaction was not to sell. Her emotional attachment to the house on Rosewood Lane remained strong. “Can I think about it and get back to you sometime in the next couple of days?”

“Of course,” Ian said.

The back door opened again and Cliff came in with the two children. Aaron was instantly on the floor, playing with Beau, and Mia ran to tell her mother all about riding Pixie.

The rest of the visit passed in a blur for Grace, preoccupied as she was with Ian's request. She served cocoa and cookies and presented the Randalls with the small Christmas tree, which thrilled the kids, but she was hardly aware of anything that was said. The young family left soon afterward.

Grace and Cliff waved them off and returned to the house.

“From the look on your face, Ian must have said something about wanting to buy the house.” Cliff walked over to the coffeepot and refilled his mug. He leaned against the counter as he waited for her reply.

“He did.”

“And?”

“I…don't know if I can give it up.”

“Then tell them it's only available to rent,” he said matter-of-factly.

“But…this is exactly the type of family I'd want to sell the house to.” Grace found she couldn't keep still. She walked over to the refrigerator and opened it for no reason. Closing it, she circled the kitchen table.

“I understand.” Cliff came up behind her, placing his hands on her shoulders. “It's a big decision.”

Grace exhaled slowly. “It is…but I think it's time,” she said with sudden resolve. “My old life was on Rosewood Lane. My new life is here with you—and Beau.”

Lying on the braided carpet beneath the kitchen table, Beau raised his head and barked once. Apparently, he was in full agreement.

Chapter 3

Two down and eight puppies to go.

Saturday morning, the day before Christmas Eve, Aaron Randall—as well as his parents and little sister—had stopped by and picked out a puppy. Grace, bless her, had agreed to keep tiny Poko until the Randalls returned to Cedar Cove in the second week of January. He was with her now, as it would've been too difficult to look after the puppy in the hotel room.

The Randalls' rental car pulled out of the driveway just as another vehicle turned in.

Kent. Obviously driving a rental, too. It was a bright blue sedan, not his usual style at all.

It couldn't be anyone else. He'd phoned shortly after he'd arrived at Thyme and Tide, and said he was on his way over.

Despite herself, Beth felt another wave of excitement. She hadn't slept all night, trying to make sense of his unexpected need to connect as a family again. Granted, he saw their daughters more often than she did, since both attended college in California. But all four of them together at Christmas… It had been a long time. Even if, as she suspected, Bailey and Sophie were involved in this, Kent didn't have to go along with it. But he had….

Still, she wondered if she was reading more into the situation than it warranted; all the same, she considered scenarios of what this Christmas would be like. Then there was Ted. He was a close friend, and while they'd shared little more than a few chaste kisses, the relationship looked promising. She felt it and thought he did, too.

Beth remembered Christmases when the girls were young. She remembered laughing with Kent, the two of them shushing each other as they stayed up half the night assembling tricycles and later bicycles and then fell into bed exhausted. In an hour or two, Bailey and Sophie would be jumping up and down on the mattress, shrieking that Santa had come.

One Christmas Eve they'd gone for a sleigh ride in freshly fallen snow, snuggling under a blanket, keeping one another warm. Kent had stolen a few hot kisses while the girls giggled and hid their eyes, complaining that it was “yucky” to see their parents kiss.

Beth smiled. They'd had some really good years together. Somewhere along the way, though, their lives had changed. No, their marriage had. They'd grown apart. It wasn't any big disagreement, no betrayal or unforeseen revelation. Instead, an accumulation of small slights and annoyances had eventually grown from a small distance into a huge crevasse. One that had deepened and widened over the years until they'd been unable to reach across it….

Was it possible? Did Kent regret the divorce? Beth had more than a few regrets herself. They'd both been so stubborn, so unreasonable, so eager to prove they didn't need each other anymore.

Perhaps if they'd been the kind of people who yelled and stomped around the house, everything might have gone differently. Instead, once the subject of divorce had been broached, they'd been so darned polite. Attorneys said there was no such thing as a “friendly” divorce, but that hadn't been Beth's experience. Theirs had been not only friendly but accommodating and fair. But maybe
that was just on the surface. Maybe going ahead with the divorce was
unfair
—to both of them.

She'd gotten busy at the college and Kent had his engineering company. They'd been like those ships in the old cliché, passing in the night, each drifting in a different direction. She had her life and he had his.

Kent claimed he found her friends stuffy and boring, and stopped attending social functions with her. Beth decided
his
friends were snobs. He didn't seem to mind that she stayed home when he had an event, and after a while she wondered if he'd met someone else. It wouldn't have surprised her. Although he'd never admitted it… They were so remote at that point, spending almost no time together. Oh, they slept in the same bed but rarely touched, rarely communicated about anything other than routine or functional things. Like who was picking up milk or paying the electricity bill.

She was the one who'd suggested divorce. At first Kent had seemed shocked. But he'd recovered quickly enough. He'd simply said that if she wanted a divorce, he wouldn't stop her…and he hadn't.

They'd divided everything as equitably as possible, sold the house and parted ways. It'd all been so civilized, so straightforward, as if twenty-three years as husband and wife meant nothing.

When the final decree came through, Beth decided to leave the academic world. She'd been seeking a geographical cure, she supposed, considering it now. The Christmas tree farm had been the solution she'd been looking for. She had her dogs and a menagerie of other pets, including two canaries, a guinea pig and now the puppies. Eight puppies. She also fed a number of feral cats. And she'd made new friends and found new purpose….

Kent—and, yes, it was Kent, as she'd expected—parked the car and turned off the engine. Beth pretended she was busy. Too busy to even glance in his direction. But despite herself, she was excited. Happy.

All she'd ever wanted from him was some indication that he still loved her, that he still cared. His insistence on spending Christmas with her and the girls, no matter how it had come about, was the first time either of them had made a move toward the other. Could this be the start of a reconciliation?

Her heart rate accelerated and she brushed her hair behind both ears. She wished now that she'd worn something other than her ever-present jeans. Dressing up a bit would've been a subtle way of letting Kent know how pleased she was that he'd extended an olive branch. She had on a long-sleeved shirt beneath her red V-neck
sweater, which would have gone nicely with her black wool pants. Oh, how she wished she'd put on her black wool pants.

The car door closed, and Kent stood there, looking at her.

“Hello,” she said, surprised by how shaky her voice sounded. “Welcome to Christmas Tree Lane—and Cedar Cove Tree Farm.”

He zipped up his jacket and grinned. “The house is fabulous. The girls were right.”

“Thank you.” The porch railing was covered with swags of evergreen and twinkling white lights. More lights hung from the roofline, glittering brightly in the dull gray winter morning.

The passenger car door opened and Beth saw that Kent hadn't come alone. A lovely, young—much younger than Beth—woman climbed out. She was tall, lithe and stylishly dressed in a full-length black coat and long, high-heeled black boots. She towered an inch or two above Kent, who stood at nearly six feet. Her blond, shoulder-length hair was perfect…. Actually, everything about her seemed perfect in an urban, sophisticated way that contrasted painfully with Beth's farm clothes, disheveled hair and work-roughened hands.

Beth blinked and her heart almost stopped as reality
hit her.
Kent had brought another woman.
They were together. A couple. He was seeing someone else now. This little fantasy she'd built around a reconciliation was only that—wishful thinking.

It took her a moment to recover and realize that every assumption she'd made was completely and totally off-base. Kent hadn't come to spend Christmas with her and the girls. His sole purpose was to show off this…this model.

Nothing had changed. Nothing ever would.

“Hello.” Beth greeted the other woman with a forced smile and an extended hand. “I'm Beth Morehouse. The ex-wife.”

“I know,” the woman said in a sultry voice that was sweet enough to caramelize sugar. “I'm Danielle.”

Just Danielle? No last name? Like Cher or Madonna or Beyoncé?

“Welcome to
my
Christmas tree farm,” she said, placing emphasis on her ownership.

The screen door flew open and Bailey raced onto the porch. “Dad!”

Sophie was directly behind her sister. They darted down the stairs like young fawns in their rush to hug Kent.

Her ex-husband opened his arms, and his daughters launched themselves into his wide embrace.

“How are my girls?” he asked, his voice warm with affection.

“Missing you, Daddy,” Sophie murmured.

“Who's that?” Bailey asked starkly, frowning at Danielle. Apparently, she was as shocked as Beth.

“This is Danielle Martin,” he said, sliding his arms around each of their waists.

Oh, so there was a last name.

“What's
she
doing here?” Sophie demanded.

“Sophie,” Beth snapped, appalled at her daughter's lack of manners.

“Danielle's a friend from work who traveled with me,” he said by way of introduction.

“Why don't we all step inside, out of the cold,” Beth suggested, and marched into the house, assuming everyone else would follow.

The girls had obviously been playing with the puppies when Kent arrived because the second the door opened they swarmed onto the porch, eager as jailbirds to make an escape. Four were already out the door and racing down the porch steps.

“Don't just stand there,” Beth cried to her daughters. “Help me.”

Laughing, Sophie and Bailey hurried in one direction while Beth went in the other. Even Kent got involved in the chase. The only one who didn't move was Danielle. With her arms crossed, she remained immobile, as if moving a single inch would have dire consequences.

Once the puppies were all inside the house, Beth brought Kent and Danielle in. Danielle perched on the arm of a recliner with her feet off the carpet. She seemed to fear that all the puppies would rush toward her at one time.

Beth called out instructions. “Get the puppies into the laundry room,” she told the girls. “I'll give them some treats.” This was not the way she'd planned to greet Kent, with puppies creating havoc.

In the momentary quiet of the laundry room, Beth pressed one hand to her chest, which felt as though it was knotted with pain. She would not,
could
not, yield to the icy tide of disappointment or to the surprising burst of white-hot anger. Not now. Not here. She'd rather be dipped in Christmas-tree sap and rolled in holly leaves before she made a fool of herself in front of the girls.

With a deep breath, Beth squared her shoulders and opened a bag of canine treats just as the girls herded in the last three pups. Whether it was the rustle of the bag or the distinctive aroma, Beth didn't care, only that they
all came on the run. On another calming breath, she promised to deal with her emotions later as she distributed the miniature bone-shaped biscuits.

She slowly and deliberately wiped her hands on her jeans while arranging her features in her best hostess smile. Returning to the living room, she motioned Sophie and Bailey to the couch and nodded at her guests. “Now, where were we?”

The girls exchanged a puzzled look and obeyed. At Beth's question, they fixed their gazes on their father.

“Are all those dogs…yours?” Danielle asked incredulously.

“No, no. I'm finding homes for them.”

“Where are
your
dogs?” Kent asked. “Do you still have Lucy and Bixby?”

“Of course. They're in the heated kennel in the back.”

“It's huge. You should see it, Dad,” Sophie said, growing more animated as she spoke. “Mom's got six dogs of her own, and she helps with the Reading with Rover program at the library and…and she trains dogs and she just got a puppy herself.” She was out of breath by the time she completed her list.

“He's been sickly so she keeps him upstairs,” Bailey added.

“In your
bedroom?
” Danielle's eyes widened with what appeared to be horror.

“You started to tell us about Danielle,” Bailey reminded her father, turning away from the other woman.

“Well, yes.” Kent looked at Danielle. “She's a…friend.”

“A good friend,” Danielle murmured. “A
very
good friend.”

 

“I can't believe this.” Bailey paced their bedroom with her hands locked behind her back. “This is all wrong! Nothing is working out like we planned.”

“When did Dad meet Danielle?” Sophie, the practical one, asked. “And where?”

“Why are you asking me? I don't know any more than you do.”

Sitting on the edge of the bed with her hands in her hair—as if trying to pull out an answer—Sophie said, “Well, she wasn't there when we visited him at Thanksgiving. And he didn't say a word about her to me, but I thought he might've mentioned it to you.”

“I wish.” Bailey threw a scowl at her sister. “If he had, we never would've invited him for Christmas. That's for sure. Besides, I'd have told you. What's Dad thinking?
Or
is
he thinking? Anyone with half a brain can see she's all wrong for him.”

“She can't be much older than we are.”

“Did you see how she reacted to the puppies?” Bailey cried. “Like they were diseased or something. Sitting with her feet in the air, as if they'd mistake her leg for a tree trunk. Too bad they didn't.”

Sophie groaned. “And did you hear how she talked to me? Like I'm ten years old. For a minute I thought she was going to pinch my cheek and tell me how cute I was.”

“Dad and Danielle? It's a joke,” Bailey muttered. “A terrible joke.”

“That's what you said about the divorce—until it happened.”

“I know. I just don't want to believe this…whatever it is.” But she'd seen the way Danielle had looked at their father. Clearly, he didn't have a clue. This woman was set on getting a big diamond ring from him. Bailey was bound and determined that wasn't going to happen. Not on her watch. If ever their father had needed help, it was now. They had to do something before he made the second-biggest mistake of his life. The first had been going through with the divorce.

“Well, you'd better come up with an idea fast, or you'll
be spending next Thanksgiving with Dad and your new stepmother. Just you and Danielle and Dad. 'Cause I'm not going. I'll be here with Mom.”

BOOK: 1225 Christmas Tree Lane
11.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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