Read A Christmas to Believe In Online
Authors: Claire Ashgrove
She swung her head around with a long, slow blink. Her
tail swished. She shifted her weight, cocked out one hind foot,
and dropped her nose back to the hay.
If only he could be so unconcerned.
Clint lifted his eyes to the rafters, beseeching whatever
power that might be listening for aid. Angel couldn't foal. Not
now. Not here in Missouri, and certainly not before the end of
the year. He had fancy monitoring equipment set up in his
barns at home. His vet already stood at the ready. Here, he
knew no one credible. All he had was the milk test strips and
the foaling book he'd read so many times the binding was
crumbling. He could spend all day working on this stall, and it
still wouldn't be anywhere near as safe as his custom-
designed foaling facility in Kentucky.
He sank his head into his hands and let his shoulders
slump. He shouldn't have come. He should have stood up to
his mother and stayed in Kentucky. If he had, he wouldn't be
faced with meeting a new sister and suffering through an
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endless list of wedding plans. Jesse wouldn't be an issue
either. He'd have been tucked away in his barns, blissfully
unaware the girl he'd grown up with possessed curves that
made him lightheaded.
Dragging a hand down his face, he looked to the old
wooden walls and heaved a sigh. He'd better get the stall in
shape. From the looks of things, his mare was determined to
throw him into financial ruin.
Another reason he ought to stay far away from Jesse. One
look at her this morning, and he'd known she'd found
success. Her fashionable clothes, the care she put into
everything right down to those amazing boots—she'd done
well for herself.
He on the other hand, had nothing to offer. A farm on the
brink of bankruptcy. A pocketful of dreams he'd likely never
see. Jesse would never accept that kind of instability.
Certainly not with a child in the picture. He might make for a
good tumble in the sheets, but that's all he'd ever be.
A scowl bunched his eyebrows together. What the hell did
that matter? Since when had he considered anything beyond
that? He'd dated a fair amount. In thirty-six years, he'd never
considered what he had to offer to a woman—why should it
bother him now? A good tumble was perfect. Good memories
to take back home with him when he left the day after
Christmas—foal or no foal.
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Jesse pushed her keyboard away with a mutter. It was no
use—she couldn't keep her mind on the column of figures to
save her life. Each time she turned away from the monitor to
study the fiscal projections from the IT department, her
thoughts wandered back to her barn. Back to Clint.
Leaning forward, she powered down her computer and hit
the speakerphone button. "Susan, I need you to cancel my
three-fifteen with IT. I won't have the budget review
completed until tomorrow."
"Would you like me to reschedule the meeting?"
"No, I won't have time to meet with Jason until after the
holidays. I'll send him the file tomorrow, so he's aware of my
modifications, but exceptions and requests will have to wait
until January."
"All right. I'll tell him."
"Thank you, Susan."
Reclining in her chair, Jesse willed the clock to move
faster. Twenty minutes until her lunch date. Time couldn't
possibly pass any slower. She'd accomplished nothing in the
five hours she'd been here. Tomorrow wouldn't be any better.
Tomorrow, she finalized Ethan's adoption at two. He hadn't
said anything about their court date, which told her he'd
forgotten about it. But she'd be every bit as scatterbrained,
and the pile of budget reports waiting on her approval
wouldn't diminish on their own.
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Today, however, she could solely fault Clint for. He and his
lunch date. Jesse couldn't remember the last time she'd had a
non-business luncheon. Even Susan had lifted her eyebrows
when Jesse told her to black out the noon-to-two time block.
Susan would never say anything—theirs was a strictly
professional relationship. But she'd noticed, despite the casual
way Jesse delivered the instruction.
Jesse picked up a pen and absently tapped the end of it on
her blotter. Fifteen minutes. If she left now, she'd be early.
But if she sat still another minute longer, she'd squirm right
out of her chair.
She grabbed her keys and purse. To hell with it. She could
always claim she'd wanted to beat traffic.
As she left her office, Susan looked up with a bright smile.
"Enjoy your lunch."
Jesse returned her smile. "Thanks."
The walk to her car seemed endless. Never before had an
elevator taken so long to open on her floor. Never before had
she considered just how long it took to trek across the
parking garage. When she finally reached her door, her hands
shook as she inserted the key. She dropped behind the wheel,
tossed her purse on the seat next to her and let out a long
breath that stirred the loose hair around her face.
Lunch. Not a date, just lunch. Alex might have asked her
to join him if he weren't so preoccupied with the Keeley
situation. Heath too. There was absolutely nothing intimate
about Clint's invitation. As it should be.
She started the engine and pulled in a calming breath.
Reversing, she edged out of her reserved space. Jesse flipped
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on the radio, then drove down the narrow lane, around two
turns, and out into the bright Kansas City sunlight.
Though normally packed with vehicles around the noon
hour, the traffic worked against her on the main road. She hit
all the green lights, even when she tried to slow to catch a
red, and the usual back up near the highway on-ramp tallied
only three cars. To her dismay, she arrived at Maude's
Formalwear ten minutes early.
Only, as she nosed into a parking space in front of the
shop, a dark blue pickup two vehicles down caught her eye. A
smile eased the tightness around her mouth. Clint was early.
She should have expected that—she could count on one hand
the number of times he'd ever been late.
Feeling more confident about her early arrival, she stepped
out of the car, walked around a plowed bank of snow, and let
herself into the shop. A bell jingled as she shut the door. Her
gaze scanned the wide showroom floor, resting briefly on a
model that sported a wedding gown suitable for a queen,
before she looked to the men's section on the opposite side of
the room.
"May I help you?" a saleswoman asked from behind the
counter near the rear.
"Ah..." Jesse fumbled for a casual smile. "I'm meeting
someone here."
The young blonde's face lit with excitement. "I think he's in
the back. He should be out in a minute or two." She rushed
around the countertop, motioning Jesse to follow. "You'll love
the tux. You have wonderful taste. He'll be the groom of the
century."
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Jesse's face burned with hot color. "Um."
"Really, I mean it." The woman stopped, leaned closer,
and whispered, "Your fiance is gorgeous."
If it were possible, her cheeks heated even more. "He's not
the groom. And I'm not the bride. I'm not even in the
wedding. I grew up with him, we're just having lunch."
The blonde's features fell as her mouth dropped into a
dainty O. Quickly recovering, she snapped her mouth shut
and gave Jesse a short nod. "Well. You'll still like the tux."
She pushed behind a heavy curtain, her voice carrying down
the hall, "Mister King, how's that working for you?"
Out of her element and uncomfortable, Jesse turned to
inspect a rack of evening gowns. Weddings had never been
her thing. Once or twice in college, she'd been a bridesmaid,
but the fervor her friends shared eluded her. If she ever
managed to take a trip down an aisle, she'd much rather wear
something she could use again in life and skip the expense of
elaborate ceremonies. A few words under the big oak at the
park would work just fine.
"Whatcha think, Jesse?" Clint's voice rumbled behind her.
She turned around, and her breath caught. Good Lord, he
filled out that tuxedo perfectly. Accented by the crisp cut, his
broad shoulders screamed strength and power. The starched
white shirt beneath didn't bunch or sag and fit trimly into the
dark crimson cummerbund around his narrow waist. No tails,
but then those would have been reserved for Alex.
"Does it fit okay?" He turned around on a heel. "I think the
cuffs are a little long still."
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Unable to find her tongue, she dropped her gaze. It
skimmed over taut buttocks, thighs that looked firm despite
the loose fabric, and down to his ankles where the material
brushed against the heel of his dress shoes. "No," she
managed.
Wow.
Jesse's heart drummed a faster cadence. The saleswoman
hadn't exaggerated at all. That tux looked like it had been
made with Clint in mind. Funny, he hadn't seemed so
handsome when they'd doubled for Prom.
He turned around and his one-dimple grin tugged at the
corner of his mouth. "Pretty slick, eh? I think Sydney will
approve."
Sydney and every other woman in the tri-state area. "You
look nice." Hot, really. But admitting that threatened her
resolution to ignore the way he made her belly flip-flop like a
fish out of water.
The blonde returned, measuring tape in hand. She gave
Clint a coy smile that made Jesse want to claw out her eyes,
and set her hand on his forearm. "Just need to take a few
measurements, Mister King. Spread your feet, please."
Clint did as instructed, and the blonde knelt before him.
She measured his inseam, the cuffs on his trousers, and his
waist. Biting on her lower lip to dampen a rush of
uncustomary jealousy, Jesse watched through narrowed eyes.
That woman was entirely too close to him. And her hands had
no business fiddling with the inside of his thighs.
She glanced at Clint's reflection in the mirror and blinked
when she found his gaze locked on her. His smile absent, the
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glint in his amber eyes sent a shiver skittering through her
veins. Her breath suddenly unsteady, she ordered herself to
look away. To break that mesmerizing contact before her
lungs forgot how to expand. But she could do no more than
swallow.
"Your date won't be able to keep her hands to herself," the
blonde quipped.
Jesse snapped her stare back to the woman in time to
catch her throw Clint a wink. At his chuckle, the saleswoman
added, "And if you need one, you let me know."
His date. At once, a vision of Clint escorting one of
Sydney's picture-perfect friends down the aisle assaulted
Jesse. Damn. He'd spend all evening entertaining whomever
he'd been paired with. He'd sit at that woman's side, make
her laugh, and toast with her.
Clint's chuckle tightened the growing knot in Jesse's belly.
His words turned her throat dry.
"I filled up my dance card. You'll have to ask Jesse here if
she'll sit out a round."
As Jesse lifted her disbelieving gaze back to his laughing
eyes, he tossed her a wink that tilted her stomach upside
down. Flirting? With her? Surely not.
"A shame," the blonde said on a laugh. She stood up and
gathered her measuring tape. "We'll take in the waist a tiny
bit more and let out the cuffs about half an inch. The coat
doesn't get any more perfect."
"So I'm good to go then?"
"Yep. Pick it up the twenty-third."
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As Clint disappeared behind the heavy curtain, Jesse took
a much needed gulp of air and turned back to the rack of
evening dresses. She really needed to get a hold of herself if
she intended to hold true on her decision to keep Clint from
getting under her skin. He'd caught her off guard. If she'd
stopped to consider what he might look like in a tuxedo, she'd
have anticipated the eye-candy version of her childhood
friend. The fact her heart hammered in double-time had
absolutely nothing to do with anything but surprise, and if he
came out here again now, she'd react no differently than
when she'd seen him in the barn.
Only then too, he'd had a similar effect on her.
Damn. Why, oh why, had she agreed to lunch?
A warm hand in the small of her back jolted her out of her