Read Winter Rescue (I'll Be Home for Christmas) Online
Authors: Dawn Kimberly Johnson
Tags: #m/m romance, #Advent Calendar 2011, #Nap-size Dream, #Holiday, #Dawn Kimberly Johnson, #2011 Advent Calendar
he smiled up into Oscar’s face.
s they pulled up the drive leading to the Knutzen
farm, snow crunching under the truck’s tires, Curt
A tried to settle his nerves, uncertainty about his
reception taking hold. The sun shone down from a
brilliant blue sky onto the farmhouse from his dream. Fat
fluffy white clouds ambled by above them, and the snow
sparkled magically. Last night’s storm seemed an
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Winter Rescue • Dawn Kimberly Johnson
impossibility in the face of this pristine vision. It wasn’t until
the truck’s powerful engine had been cut off that something
suddenly occurred to him.
“The Christmas presents!” he gasped, staring at Oscar
with wide shocked eyes. “They’re in the trunk of my car.”
“Nope,” Oscar said with a grin. “They’re in the bed of my
truck.”
“Huh?”
“I went out and collected everything from your rental
after putting you to bed last night, and I made an
appointment with Becky’s Tow and Salvage to have the car
brought into Anoka for you.”
It took several seconds for Curt to find his voice. “Thank
you, Oscar,” he breathed.
“No problem.” Oscar smiled, and Curt felt himself blush.
“Now let’s get you inside to your family. They’ve been waiting
quite a while for ya.” They hopped out of the truck and
headed around to the back, their boots crunching in the
shin-deep snow just off the plowed path to the house. “Can I
ask you something?”
“Sure.”
“Why’d you stay away so long? You said it had been
three years.” Oscar opened and lowered the back of the truck
bed, reaching in under the soft bed cover to remove three big
heavy-duty green garbage bags of gifts.
“Oh, well… I left soon after….” Curt wasn’t sure how to
continue, so instead he spotted and grabbed his duffel,
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Winter Rescue • Dawn Kimberly Johnson
slipping the strap over his shoulder and closing the truck
bed for Oscar, whose hands were busy with the heavy bags.
“I can take one of those,” Curt offered, but Oscar shook his
head. The man stood there, big and beautiful, watching
Curt, waiting for an answer.
They heard the front door of the farmhouse squeak
open, followed closely by the screen door. And then, “Curt?
It’s Curt, everybody! Curt’s home!”
He and Oscar continued to stare at each other as what
sounded like a small army rushed out onto the front porch.
“After I told my family I was gay.” Curt watched Oscar’s
face closely for any negative twitch, but it was blank, not a
dimple in sight—so no positive twitches either—despite Curt
squinting desperately in search of one.
The big man swallowed noticeably and cleared his
throat. “We better get in there. Sounds like they’ve missed
you something fierce.” Oscar turned and strode toward the
house, heaving two of the bags over his shoulder, and Curt
followed soon after, trying his best to tamp down his
disappointment and rev up his Christmas glee… for his
family’s sake.
n onslaught of hugs, kisses, slaps on the back, and a
cheek pinch later, Curt was able to remove his coat
A and dump his duffel in his old room. He sighed and
slowly looked around at the changes his father had
made, turning it into his “man cave.” Gone were Curt’s
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Winter Rescue • Dawn Kimberly Johnson
academic trophies and ribbons, replaced by a thirty-six-inch
flat-panel television, with a cable-sports-channel package
and surround sound, no doubt. Gone was Curt’s full-size
bed, replaced by a painfully plaid sofa bed. A crooked grin
spread over his face as he imagined his father entering this
room to escape whatever estrogen-laden activity his mother,
sisters, sisters-in-law, and nieces might have brewing in the
big family kitchen.
“Curt?” his mother called, “Curt honey? Come out here
and help us convince Oscar to stay for dinner.”
Oscar. Hmm. My hero. Yep, I can do that
. Curt kicked off
his shoes and slid into his slippers before rushing back into
the great room. Had his family multiplied in the five minutes
he’d been gone? His sisters, Arianna and Gina, and two
sisters-in-law, were in the kitchen filling plates for their
husbands and children. His brothers, George, Jaspar, and
Seth, were scattered throughout the room, as were their
children.
Sadly, Curt struggled to remind himself which children
belonged to whom. He was sure his mother had kept him up
on all of them over the years, but he couldn’t remember at
the moment and tried to get it all straight in his head.
Before he left Minnesota, his eldest brother, George, and
his wife, Karen, had two daughters: seven-year-old Loretta
and one-year-old Amy. Jaspar and his wife, Irene, had twin
baby girls: Bethany and Rebecca. Now the girls had a two-
year-old brother named Chet. Gina and Randy had a teenage
son, Jerry, and a young daughter, Rosalie. His last brother,
Seth, was dating a young woman whose name Curt didn’t
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Winter Rescue • Dawn Kimberly Johnson
know as of yet. Then there was Arianna and her husband,
Kyle, and their four-year-old Tobin.
Now there was Oscar to think about. Curt saw him
standing by the front door, holding the front of his coat
closed as his tiny mother, Angelica, fought to remove it from
his body.
“I really should get going, ma’am. I appreciate the
invitation, but—”
“Please stay,” Curt piped up. The struggle ended as
Oscar’s and his parents’ faces turned toward him. He smiled
brightly at Oscar. “It’s the least we can do after you saved my
bacon and brought me home.”
“He’s right, young man,” Curt’s father, Aaron, said, his
voice booming. The big blond slapped Oscar on the back
hard enough to stagger him, which Curt hadn’t thought
possible. Oscar smiled nervously and slowly unzipped his
coat, much to Angelica’s delight.
The little woman turned immediately toward the dining
table. “Make room! Everybody, make room. We have a guest
for dinner!” Curt and Oscar laughed at the scattered
applause from every corner of the room, though not a head
turned in their direction.
“Come on, I’ll show you where you can wash up,” Curt
said, turning down a hallway on their left, Oscar in tow.
They squeezed into a tiny—considering the width and
breadth of most of the Knutzen men—bathroom and took
turns washing their hands. Curt watched Oscar closely,
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Winter Rescue • Dawn Kimberly Johnson
while he dried his own hands. “How did it happen you were
out in this weather?”
“Huh?” Oscar asked, turning to him and taking the
towel.
“Sorry, I don’t mean to sound ungrateful, but why were
you out on the roads last night?”
“Oh,” Oscar said with a smile, “I was taking the long
way back from the grocery store after stocking up.” He gave
the towel back to Curt, who hung it on a small rack on the
wall. “I guess… I guess I took that road because… well, it
claimed my grandpa.”
“I’m sorry.”
“Thank you.” Oscar sighed and looked over Curt’s
shoulder, remembering. “He’d never been outside Minnesota
except for a vacation to Disney World my parents took him
and Gran on about eight years ago. If anyone would have
known his way and the dangers of this weather, it was him,
but….”
“But you just never know, huh?”
Oscar nodded. “We called all his friends, his garage—
Dad and I drove around out there for hours, trying to find
him, but it was two days before someone came across his
truck. That’s the one I’m driving now. It had flipped off the
road in the worst of it and was covered quickly. He was
pinned inside.”
“Oh my God.”
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