Read A Christmas to Believe In Online
Authors: Claire Ashgrove
the postponed hearing. He hadn't mentioned court,
reinforcing her suspicion he'd forgotten the date. But if she
didn't say something by Christmas, he'd figure it out on his
own. When he did, he'd stuff all that happiness away. Unable
to trust the setback was only temporary, he'd bottle himself
up until the papers were in his hands and his last name
matched hers.
"Ethan?" she called up the stairwell.
When he didn't respond, she slung her coat over the
banister and went to the kitchen for two cold Pepsis. On her
way out, she grabbed a bag of chips. Junk food always
soothed him. Especially late at night when he'd likely spent
the last few hours hunched over in front of his television,
remote control in-hand.
She climbed the stairs, meandered down the hall, and
tapped on his door with the bottom of a can.
"Yeah."
Letting herself in, she found him as she'd expected.
Tonight's past time, however, didn't involve Indy cars or
wizards and fantasy battles. He focused on one she approved
of far more—online, multi-player Scrabble.
"How's it going?" With one knee on the edge of his
mattress, she passed him her peace offering.
"Eh. I'm stumped."
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Jesse cracked open her cola and squinted at the screen.
Comparing the open letters to the ones in his pallet, she ran
words through her head. "Waif. Up there at the top, off the
A."
He pulled back and looked at her as if she'd uttered
something in a foreign language. "What's that?"
"Someone who's lost. An orphan."
"Oh." He nodded. "Okay. Thanks."
When he finished putting his letters in place, she slid a
sideways glance his way. "Ethan, can we talk for a bit?"
He stared at the screen as someone named Allison slid her
letters into place. "If it's about that guy, no."
Her lips automatically pursed. She gnawed on the inside of
her cheek to halt reactive annoyance. Careful to keep her
voice calm, she asked, "Why not?"
Ethan set his controller on his knee and popped his can of
pop open. "Because I don't want to."
"You're being stubborn."
He shrugged, then picked up his controller.
"C'mon, Ethan, Clint's a decent guy. You'd really enjoy him
if you'd give him a chance. It would make me happy if you'd
at least try."
"Not interested, Mom. I've got friends my age. I don't need
an old fart trying to be cool."
Old fart? Now that was a new one. Did Ethan have any
idea Clint was only a year older than herself? Jesse stifled an
amused chuckle. "I'm not old, am I?"
With lifted eyebrows, he looked at her from the corner of
his eye. "You don't want me to answer that."
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She frowned, entirely uncomfortable with the perception
she was old. Maybe she wasn't as perky as she once had
been, maybe the wrinkles had settled into her face from too
many years in the sun, but she certainly wasn't old.
"There's a difference," Ethan supplied with another casual
lift of his shoulders.
"Oh?"
"You're still ho—" He clamped his mouth shut as his cheeks
burned with crimson color. "Uh. You're cool, and you don't
look old."
Jesse's mouth quirked with amusement. Hot. Her thirteen-
year-old soon-to-be-son thought she was hot. An ego boost
to be sure. However, this conversation wasn't about her. "So
I'm cool. Dontcha think I might have cool friends then?"
"Don't go there, Mom. I don't want to talk about him."
Letting go of the last of her humor, she set her hand on
Ethan's forearm and gave him a hard look. "Well, I'd like to.
Name one good reason, one thing he's done to you, that
justifies all this, and maybe you'll convince me."
He jerked his arm away. "God, let it go already. I told you
I don't want to talk about him."
Scowling, she stared at the hard set of his profile. "Have I
ever once talked to you that way, Ethan? If there's something
you want to discuss, I'm right there. Always."
Silent, he stared at the television. His fingers worked over
the buttons on his controller as he slid two more letter tiles
into place. Frustrated, she resisted the sudden urge to reach
across and rip his controller out of the console. While doing so
might make her feel good for the moment, in the long run, it
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would solve nothing. He'd only become more angry and close
himself off further.
"Ethan, I asked you a question."
Stony, stubborn silence answered. His mouth tightened,
his eyes narrowed. But Ethan didn't respond.
Fine. If he wanted to shut down, two could play at that
game. He might think she was cool, but he'd evidently
forgotten the meaning behind the word
mom
.
Jesse snatched up the bag of chips and stood. "Save your
game."
He blinked at her. "What?"
"You heard me. Save your game. Now."
With a roll of his eyes and a displeased mutter, Ethan
obeyed. He tossed his controller onto the floor at the same
time she jabbed her thumb on the television's power button.
"No games, no television, no computer, no phone until
tomorrow. I'm done with the attitude. Lose it, or you won't go
with Sam tomorrow night either."
He mumbled something as he flopped backwards onto his
bed.
Relying on false bravado to hide the hurt his defiance
created, she stalked out of his room and into hers. None of
this was right. A week ago, she'd envisioned Ethan embracing
Clint and his brothers. He'd met Alex once or twice, had been
friendly even. Heath he had yet to greet, and Clint...
Where Clint made everything in Jesse's world right, he
made everything in Ethan's wrong.
A wealth of conflicting emotion rained down on her as she
sank into her bed. Ethan pushed her farther away the harder
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she tried. She should have expected it, but even armed with
the knowledge of his deep-rooted fears, the reality of the
situation overwhelmed her. With Ethan's distance, she felt
more helpless than she'd ever been. More torn and battered
than a lone soldier atop a bloody hillside.
She had a right to personal happiness. There were
boundaries she didn't dare cross as a parent, but Ethan
couldn't expect her to live the rest of her life alone. Be it
Clint, or someone else in the future, he'd have to come to
terms with this.
If only the hearing hadn't been pushed back. If they'd
gone to court today, she wouldn't have near the uphill battle
on her hands. Even if Ethan couldn't let go enough to trust
Clint, he wouldn't resort to the only defense he knew—
complete and utter distance.
Rolling onto her side, she stared at the phone on her
nightstand. Everyone she knew would be asleep at this hour.
The friends who understood all Ethan had been through,
those who could offer advice and guidance wouldn't
appreciate a midnight phone call. Besides, the only person
who could provide any real solutions would be Carmen,
Ethan's long-time counselor. And Jesse suspected she already
knew what Carmen would say—to expect it, handle it with
patience, give Ethan time.
Years ago, she would have called her brothers for advice.
Had on so many occasions she couldn't count them all. Would
it be so terrible to do so now? To reach out to the stability
and comfort she treasured?
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Ignoring the tugging worry that a ringing phone might
disturb Amelia, Jesse picked up the phone and dialed the
number she knew by heart.
Clint answered on the second ring. "Hello?"
"It's me. Sorry I called so late."
"No." His voice softened. "It's all right. Is everything
okay?"
"I... yes..." She heaved a sigh and rolled onto her back,
staring at the ceiling. "I don't know. I had an argument with
Ethan. Again."
"About me." He flatly stated the obvious.
"Yeah."
"Sweetheart, you've got to trust me. Don't push it. I'm
okay with his attitude. Do I like it? No. But I understand it.
Give it time. It'll come together."
Logic lived in his words, but she couldn't escape the
incessant voice that screamed she didn't have time. Clint
would leave before Ethan ever warmed up to him. All she
longed for was a few days of peace. A few fleeting days of
carefree happiness.
All things she couldn't explain to Clint. With a sad smile,
she changed the subject. "I miss you already," she
murmured. "I wish I could have stayed."
"Mm. Me too." The roughness in his quiet confession sent
tingles to her nerves. "You left so fast, Jesse. Don't do that to
me again. Let me hold you for a while. You feel so good in my
arms."
She shivered at the vivid memory of Clint's strong arms
wrapped around her. Her toes curled into the bedding, and a
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genuine smile tugged at the corners of her mouth. "Ethan's
spending the night with Sam tomorrow. Would you like to
stay here? My vacation starts tomorrow—we can sleep in."
"Yeah," he whispered. "I would."
Stretching, Jesse glanced at the pillow beside hers. She
ran her hand over the mattress, picturing how Clint would
look in the moonlight that poured in through her window. "I'll
make dinner."
"I'll bring wine."
A long comfortable silence fell between them. Through the
line, she heard the rise and fall of his breath, the creak of
mattress springs as he shifted. "Clint?" she asked quietly.
"What, babe?"
"I like this. A lot."
"I do too, sweetheart."
Her smile widened, and she snuggled into the comforter as
giddiness swept through her blood. "Okay. I'll let you sleep.
I'll see you tomorrow."
"Goodnight, Jesse."
"Night."
Twisting, she dropped the phone into the cradle and
yielded to a contented sigh. Something about that man made
everything right. Like a soothing balm, he took away the sting
of Ethan's biting words. His rough whispers, the way he didn't
hesitate to tell her what he wanted or how he felt, gave her
hope in the impossible. Made her believe someday, somehow,
the three of them might sit down to a dinner where everyone
laughed and where Ethan embraced Clint as readily as he
accepted her.
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Jesse's voice still rang in Clint's head as he stared at the
constellations on his ceiling.
I like this a lot.
Such a simple
statement, yet laden with meaning. Had any other woman
uttered the same, it wouldn't hold the same weight. But
coming from Jesse, it said far more. Mirrored all the
conflicting emotions that churned around in his gut. She
cared for him. Enough to mention the change in their
relationship, but not yet ready to confront any deeper
attachment.
A confrontation he'd warred with since she walked out of
his house. He liked it too much. Jesse belonged here, at his
side, wrapped up in the covers with her legs tangled through
his. Just as he belonged at her dinner table, arguing with a
thirteen-year-old who harbored insecurities only time could
cure. A lifetime of friendship created deeper intimacy that he
had only begun to tap into. She knew him so well. Understood
his needs, as he understood hers. He wanted nothing more
than dig down and discover every fascinating facet of a life
with Jesse.
Yet, as thrilling as the prospect was, he couldn't shake the
foreboding feeling making love to her had been a mistake.
She deserved the whole package—a man who could stick
around, provide for her, be a father-figure to Ethan. Sadly, he
was none of that. Barring complications with his horse, he
would leave in five days. His stables demanded his attention.
He couldn't walk away from unfulfilled dreams and create yet
another failure.
Providing for her was out of the question. Much as he'd like
nothing more, his finances were pitiful. He had just enough
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saved to get through the coming season, and if his three-
year-old colt didn't break his maiden with a significant purse,
next year would be bleak, if it existed at all. Entirely too close
to losing everything, Clint couldn't fulfill the necessary
element of providing for a family.
And Ethan most certainly meant family.
He kicked a foot out and frowned. Hell, if considering
family didn't say mountains about his feelings for Jesse,
nothing would. Not once had he ever thought beyond the
picture of owning a successful racing operation with he as