Read Mistletoe Magic Online

Authors: Celia Juliano

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Holidays, #Clean & Wholesome, #Contemporary, #90 Minutes (44-64 Pages), #Inspirational, #Romance

Mistletoe Magic (4 page)

BOOK: Mistletoe Magic
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Becca stood. “It’s late and I’m tired. You better go.”

 

Pete rose and grasped her hand. “No. Don’t shut me out, Becca.”

 

Becca blinked. Pete paid
attention, that
much was sure. When things got uncomfortable, she ran—to the kitchen, to the store, running away under the guise of helpfulness.

 

Becca swallowed. “Why?” It was all she could manage. She really was tired. Tired and feeling a lot, new feelings and old.

 

Pete pushed out a breath. “Old habits…No, that’s not all of it. Being with you tonight, I’ve never felt that way with anyone. When I got the call, it seemed an easy fix. With you…I don’t want to mess this up.”

 

He was as scared as she was to move forward, to accept joy,
be
open to the future. “You did mess up—by not telling me in the first place. But we’ve all messed up.” Becca kissed him.

 

He grinned. “Kerry and I are done. I want you, Becca.”

 

Becca touched his strong jaw. Her fingers tingled. She wanted him too, but she’d promised herself after her first boyfriend in college that she’d wait for love, commitment. She’d thought she’d had that with her ex-fiancé, but she couldn’t really love him, because she hadn’t really loved herself. And he was a big jerk. She giggled.

 

“Not the response I was hoping for.” Pete tweaked her nose.

 

She grabbed his hand and kissed his fingers. “I want…Let’s just see where things go, okay? Take it slow.”

 

“Okay. We’ll see.” His grin was mischievous.

 

That kind of grin meant trouble…But she might like Pete’s kind of trouble. She kissed him again.
“Tomorrow?”

 

“Definitely.”
Pete walked out as quickly as he’d appeared.

 
Becca clasped her hands. The feeling of his lips on hers lingered, like the taste of a fine chocolate stays on the tongue long after it’s been eaten. She twirled on her toes. Anticipation filled her.
A season of hope…a season of miracles.
She smiled and strolled from the room.  She sang quietly: “’Tis the season to be jolly…”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter Five

 

 

 

Becca’d had a lovely birthday brunch with Grandpop, Gina, and Vincente. Now she sat alone on the balcony outside the guest room. Lita’d gone into labor, and the family had gone to be there in Enzo and Lorenzo’s mansion down the street. Becca could’ve gone, but she wanted to be alone for awhile, to think, to be with her feelings.

 

Her cell phone rang—her father.
“Hi, Dad.
How’s your trip?”

 

“Fine, honey.
Happy Birthday.”

 

“Thanks. How’s Shaina?” Becca hadn’t seen her sister in over six months.

 

“Good. Listen, I’ve had a talking-to…”

 

Grandpop, no doubt.
Becca smiled and leaned her head in her hand.

 

“My old friend Vittorio knows you better than I do. I’m sorry, for a lot.” Dad’s voice was firm. Saying sorry wasn’t something he did often.

 

“I know.
Me too.”
There were years Becca had shut both her parents out. Then, Mom died, and Becca realized wasting time with the people you loved wasn’t a good option.

 

“Shaina and I are coming home as soon as we can. I have to make some excuses, but we want to be there for you.
Should have done it before.
We want to all start the
new year
right—together, a family.”

 

“That’ll be great.” Grandma and Grandpa would be back next week, and they’d all celebrate.

 

Dad rustled the phone. “Pete’s a good guy.”

 

Becca almost dropped her phone. Grandpop really did talk. And people said women were the gossips. She smiled. “Yes, he is.”

 

“You have a good birthday, honey, and we’ll see you soon. I love you.”

 

“Love you back. ‘Bye.” Call ended. But this was a day of beginnings, Becca felt it—light, free. A gentle breeze tickled her cheeks. She pulled the throw she’d draped around herself closer. The sun blazed low on the horizon,
glittering
its reflection across the bay, a dazzling ornament.

 

“Happy Birthday.”

 

Becca turned. Pete handed her a single red rose. He kissed her forehead and knelt next to her. She twirled the rose in her fingers. He gazed at her with that tender expression that made her feel as soft as a marshmallow in hot cocoa. She smiled.

 

“You’re beautiful.” Pete took her hand.

 

Becca touched his cheek, traced the line of his strong jaw. He kissed her hand.

 

“And smart, kind, funny…I don’t want to take it slow. Becca, I know what I want, what I meant to say last night—I love you and I want to marry you. Will you marry me?” Pete pulled a ring from his pocket. It sparkled in the lowering sunlight.

 

Becca laughed. Pete stiffened. She leant close to him. His scent, his presence brought her more joy than lighting the Christmas tree, more than singing carols, more than kisses under the mistletoe.

 

“I love you. Yes.” She placed her hand on his heart.

 

He slid the ring on her finger and kissed her. His touch blazed through her, brighter than that sun. She wrapped her arms around him. “Let’s start a new tradition.” Becca rose and walked forward. Pete followed her into the room.

 

Becca clasped the bunch of mistletoe she’d found on her dresser earlier and stood in front of the bed, dangling the green leaves above her head. Pete laughed his way over and into a kiss. They fell back onto the bed. Becca dropped the mistletoe.

 

“What’s the tradition?” Pete asked in between kisses.

 

“Birthday in bed.”
Becca luxuriated in Pete’s caresses.

 

“That’s a tradition I can keep.” Pete nuzzled her neck.

 

Becca giggled. The birthday fun had just begun. Pete kissed her neck, moving into the hollow of her throat. Becca moaned. Their breathing sped, movements slowed. Pete gazed down at her.

 

“Let’s take it slow.” Pete’s mischievous grin promised a night of celebration, a night of discovery.

 

“Mmm-hum.”
Becca slid her arms up Pete’s lean back. Slow and steady wins the prize. She grinned.

 

They wrapped around each other and took tradition to a new level.

 

***

 

Becca woke in Pete’s arms the next morning. She glanced at her ring and kissed her fiancé. “Merry Christmas,” she murmured into his chest.

 

“Merry Christmas.”
Pete kissed her hair. His cell rang from the night stand. He glanced at it. “It’s Grandpop.”

 

“Answer it.” Becca leaned on Pete’s chest.

 

“Yes,” Pete said. “Yes.” He paused. Becca couldn’t hear what Grandpop said. “Okay. See you soon.” Pete ended the call and placed his phone back on the table.

 

“Everything okay?”
Becca snuggled into Pete. Their bodies fit, leaves cradled on the same branch.

 

“Yep.
Lita had a boy last night. Angelo DeGrazia Calabra.
A Christmas angel.
Lita and Lorenzo want everyone to come over later.” Pete caressed her arm.

 

Becca placed her hand on Pete’s.
“Christmas magic.”

 

“Thought I wouldn’t get any.”
Pete faced her.

 

She touched his lips. “You’ve got me.”

 

“We’ve got us.” Pete kissed her again.

 

Becca smiled. “It started under the mistletoe—mistletoe magic.”

 

Pete gazed at her. They laughed. Christmas had it all: from the greatest miracle to the smallest…And God had graced them with every one.

 

“I love you,” they both said at once.
Love, love, love—wow
.

 

 

 

Excerpt from
Always: San Francisco Brides Book One

 

 

 

Vincente cringed at the sounds of whistling and screeching women. Tugging at his tux coat, he shrugged, trying to ease the grip of this damn suit. The jacket tightened across his shoulders and back like a hostile bodyguard had him pinned. He let out a breath. He hadn’t even worn a suit at his own wedding. He rolled his shoulders. His life was different now. His
wife, and the man he’d been, were
gone.

 

He pushed out a breath and checked his tie. If he had to wear this, he’d at least make sure it was smooth and his tie straight.

 

“Your grandpop’s getting some reaction,” Joey D’Angelo said. He held the curtain to the stage open slightly to see out.

 

Vincente looked over Joey’s shoulder at Grandpop striding across the stage. The old man worked the room like a pro.
Which he was, a legend at charming women.
It was a rippling bay of waving hands and red dresses out there. Even younger women were bidding on Grandpop. Vincente’d probably be greeted with silence. Just as well. Then he could leave. Vincente tilted his head to the ceiling, praying for patience.
Better yet, a way to get the hell out of this.

 

Joey let the curtain fall and turned to Vincente, a wide grin on his face. Women found Joey’s smile disarming but to Vincente it said: Better luck next time, buddy. “You’re up next.”

 

Vincente shook his head and stepped toward the exit. He shouldn’t have agreed to do this. He should’ve just donated a few hundred to the women’s heart health group instead of getting roped into doing a bachelor auction. But Grandpop and Uncle Enzo were right. Vincente’s parents would want him to do it, to honor his mom’s memory and raise money so someday no one would go through what his parents had.

 

But for it to be on Valentine’s Day, his anniversary, no less.
Throw the widower out there as a cheery Valentine’s date? Not that he was still grieving after five years. He rubbed his palms on his slacks. He liked chance meetings, a slow build, not online dating, not set-ups, and definitely not being bought at auction. But, as Grandpop had pointed out so many times, Vincente’s old-fashioned ways weren’t producing results.

 

“If I’m doing this, so are you,” Joey said, shoving him toward the backstage curtain. Joey’s mom, Sophia, was notorious for trying to set him, and Vincente, up on dates. She’d convinced Joey to participate tonight.

 

Vincente’s grandpop appeared from behind the curtain, his silver hair gleaming in the bright backlight, a broad smile on his face, his “I’m the most interesting man in the world” subtle swagger completing the picture. That guy in the beer commercial had nothing on Grandpop.

 

“I got them all warmed up for you,” Grandpop said. He patted Vincente’s shoulder with a vigorous smack.

 

“Isn’t one DeGrazia enough out there?” Vincente slid his hands over the sides of his short hair.

 

“Ten thousand graces
is
not enough in this world. Besides, your dream woman is out there.
Andiamo
!”
Grandpop waved his hands.

 

“Yeah, go!” Joey said with a shove on Vincente’s back.

 

“And here, ladies, we have Vincente DeGrazia,” the announcer, an old family friend, Paolo Francis, said as Vincente stepped out from behind the heavy gold and cream curtain onto the stage. “He’s the grandson of the fabulous gentleman we just met. Vincente, come on, don’t be shy,” he goaded and motioned for Vincente to walk forward.

 

Vincente should be bold and work the room, like Grandpop had, but that just wasn’t him. The gold and blue Venetian Room at the Fairmont was flamboyant enough. And Paolo knew Vincente wasn’t flashy. Vincente could prank him later, but Paolo was already giving up his Valentine’s Day to do this, so he’d let it go.

 

“Vincente is, as you see, the strong, silent type. He’s thirty, works as foreman and general manager at DeGrazia Construction, and enjoys quiet nights by a fire…I bet he could start some fires, huh, ladies?”

 

Vincente shot Paolo a grimace. The dance floor in front of the stage was filled with women. Some sat at the cloth-covered tables dotting the room. A bar stood in a corner. He couldn’t wait to get another drink. He wasn’t usually a drinker, but tonight…

 

Paolo waved his hands up and down, urging the crowd to make some noise. Hoots and catcalls rang out. No luck on the silence. Vincente moved to the front of the stage. He stopped. In the mass of red gowns and raucous women, one caught his attention. He couldn’t tell if she was relaxed, bored, or what, but the way she leaned against a far wall in her low-cut white gown, a white feathered half-mask covering most of her face, intrigued him. No one else was masked. He wondered why. Was she a public figure, not wanting to be seen here? Or…He smoothed his jacket lapels. He wanted to see her face, if it matched the beauty of her.

 

Damn, she had a body on her—
smooth
olive skin, curves like the actresses of classic Hollywood, or some hot combination of Selma Hayek and Jennifer Lopez. He tugged at his collar and focused on the gold-damask-papered far wall, hoping to stop the blood coursing down to his lower half. Maybe Grandpop wasn’t just being a smart ass when he’d said Vincente’s dream woman was out there. He blew out a breath.
Those couple of drinks earlier were
already making him slightly irrational.

 

“Give us a turn, Vincente,” Paolo shouted.

 

Vincente stood still for a moment longer. Dammit, he was staring at the woman in white. He stepped backward, turned, and walked in a small circle.
Stay cool.
He smoothed his jacket as he faced the room again.

 

“What am I bid for this fine specimen of man?”

 

Shit. What sins had he committed to deserve this? He swallowed.
Plenty.
And apparently part of his payment had come due.

 

***

 

Gina signaled the auctioneer. She wouldn’t be outbid this time. With a scowl, she glanced at the older woman who’d outbid her for the—she had to admit, dashing—old man. Not that Gina’d wanted a date with him. No, she planned to find out as much as she could—about his family, his shady business, the old man’s brother getting engaged to her Grandma Celeste, and why the DeGrazias were trying to take over her family’s business.

 

Gina tapped her foot and waved her hand as the bids went higher. She wished she could’ve had fun tonight, catching up with the auctioneer, Paolo, who’d been her cousin Janetta’s best friend since high school. He’d gotten Gina through her awkward freshman year, and the mistakes of her sophomore year. She hunched, as images of her first boyfriends, and all the ones after, flipped through her mind. Tonight wasn’t about her past. She pulled her shoulders back. This was about the future, saving it for…For her family.

 

Her rhinestone-encrusted stilettos were almost as uncomfortable as the mask she wore. But both, like her sleek, low-cut white dress, were necessary to her plan. What shouldn’t be needed was to spend her paltry savings buying a date with someone she could talk to for free the next time Enzo DeGrazia invited her family to dinner. But she couldn’t do that in front of her family, especially not Grandma Celeste, who would probably spot Gina’s tactics from another room. Plus, this way, she’d paid for his time and if he tried to bail, she could sue for breach of promise. She nodded.

 

“Sold, to the lady in white,” Paolo shouted.

 

Gina flashed a smile, confident she wouldn’t be recognized from a distance, not with a mask on. With a determined stride, she made her way through the crowd to the auction table where she handed in her check. Luckily, even though Vincente DeGrazia was as handsome, and fifty years younger, than his grandfather, his woodenness on the stage had garnered less attention than his grandfather or the previous bachelors. And there were still a few to come, so no one was desperate yet.
Though it might seem desperate to be here on Valentine’s Day paying for a date just to spy on the DeGrazias.
But Gina had reasons enough, from passed-down family tales about the corrupt DeGrazias to the underhanded dealings of old man DeGrazia’s daughter.

 

“And here’s our next bachelor—Joey D’Angelo.”

 

Gina’s shoulders hunched again. Crap, her cousin Joey. She’d seen him—for the first time in years—at his parents’ house for dinner a couple of nights ago, the night after she’d first returned home, so he’d probably recognize her. She needed to find somewhere to hide for awhile. The dates weren’t supposed to start until the auction was over. Gina studied the room. The grand space shone with nostalgic opulence. Blue draperies and gold damask walls matched the blue and gold carpet. A cream-colored side door stood in a far corner.

 

Gina crossed the room and stepped out onto a patio. Potted palms rustled in the breeze and muffled the sounds of traffic from the surrounding streets. The chill night air nipped at her. She rubbed her arms. The city stretched before her, as curvaceous and alive and varied as the women inside. The skyline
twinkled,
San Francisco Bay shimmered in the distance. She closed her eyes and exhaled. Home, she was finally home.

 

She hugged her arms. Seeing her family again only made her
more sure
of her plan for saving D’Angelo’s Market. She’d grown up there, at Grandpa Frank’s store, helping Grandma Celeste with the baking, serving customers with her father, stocking the shelves and going over the books with her mom. The market was her home, her grandfather’s legacy. Baking had been her tenuous connection to home for the years she’d been gone. Now she wanted more.

 

“Cold?” a man’s deep, intense voice said.

 

Before she could turn, a soft but weighty coat draped around her shoulders. She warmed but her back tensed. What was she doing? Some stranger was trying to pick up on her—again. This one was doing the gentleman bit. She turned and faced Vincente DeGrazia.

 

Her body tingled, not from the cold, but from his intensity. His steady gaze took her in, his short black hair and clean-shaven, square-jawed face, along with the tux, made him seem even more the gentleman. His body, almost stocky, but lean, an athlete’s physique, increased the sizzle crackling through her.
No
. She stepped back, pressed into the railing. Every time she felt this way, it ended in disaster.
Because, every time, she’d fallen for cheaters, liars, womanizers.

 

He ran his finger under his collar. Damn, he reminded her of her favorite actor crush, the guy who’d played Lorenzo Alcazar on
General Hospital
, all those years ago, when she used to watch with her Grandma Valeria. She turned again and lifted her mask to dab at her eye. She wouldn’t cry, no matter how much she missed Grandma, no matter how far her life had strayed from where she’d dreamed.

 

Vincente touched her shoulder. She almost gasped from the sensation—a lit fuse speeding its way to exploding.

 

“You okay?” He sounded genuine, concerned.

 

She gripped the railing. No way was she going to fall for his deception. She knew about men like him and his corrupt, immoral family. He was a mobster, a lowlife gangster. Talk about life imitating art—that’s just the kind of guy fictional Lorenzo Alcazar was. But he’d also been smoking hot, intense,
ready
to do anything, risk anything, for the people he loved.

 

She slid the mask back on. “Yeah, I’m fine.” Like hell she was. She was practically drooling over Vincente. So she hadn’t had sex in almost a year. “I thought the dates didn’t start until later.”

 

“It was hot in there.”

 

She turned in time to see him shrug. He shoved his hands in his pockets. Was he uncomfortable? Good, better to have him off-balance.

 

“I didn’t realize this was a masked ball,” he said in an offhand tone, but the way his lips curved slightly, she figured he was trying to tease her.

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