For a woman burned by love, a Blue Ridge Christmas is more than a getaway—it's a new beginning—in the USA Today bestselling author's romance novella. Stevie Franklin is thrilled to spend the holiday season helping her best friend Sunny launch her new greenhouse business in Blue Hollow Falls, Virginia. A visit to the quaint mountain town will be a welcome distraction from her recent bad luck with men. But while Sunny's home is under renovation, Stevie must stay at the local inn, whose amenities feature hunky innkeeper, Noah Tyler.
Noah may be tempting, but city-girl Stevie isn't sticking around—and she doesn't do flings. Yet when Noah's chef gets stranded in a Christmas Eve snowstorm, Stevie can't resist pitching in and serving up some of her family's cherished recipes. The magic of Christmas in the Blue Ridge Mountains is already rekindling Stevie's holiday spirit. But can Noah restore her belief in love? Includes original down-home holiday recipes!
Release date:
October 31, 2017
Publisher:
Zebra Books
Print pages:
96
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Stevie Franklin stopped when the trail reached the edge of the woods and gasped. Sunny had told her that the photos didn’t do the place justice, and she hadn’t been kidding. Stevie’s best friend and former coworker at the U.S. Botanic Garden had sent dozens of photos since inheriting the long-abandoned Victorian greenhouse a few months earlier, but no camera angle could ever capture the scene spread out before her now.
“Look at you,” Stevie breathed, the words sending small, crystalline puffs into the air as she spoke. The temperature was barely in the teens this high up in the Blue Ridge Mountains, a good fifteen degrees colder than the already-frigid temps she’d left behind in DC that morning. The winter air was still and silent, felt almost delicate. The sky above the clearing was an impenetrable pale gray, the air heavy with mist, turning the early morning light to a soft eggshell, which only leant to the sense of fragility.
The snow had stopped while she’d been traversing the wooded trail that led away from the parking lot back at the old silk mill. Everything was blanketed in a pristine layer of pillowy white. The only sound was her own breathing, and her pulse reverberating in her ears as she stared at the centuries-old, snow-shrouded greenhouse. Stevie felt as if she were standing in a frozen moment in time. She wanted to hold on to it, ward off anything that might shatter the moment.
In her mind’s eye, she saw the greenhouse as it must have looked in its heyday. It was enormous, almost as big as the commercial-sized structures she worked in, infinitely bigger than any one person would ever need for private use, though she knew from Sunny that it had been built more than a century ago as a wedding gift from husband to wife. The soaring center section was a scallop-shaped dome topped by a tall brass spire. It presided over two wings with hangar-style roofs, jutting out to the west and east, respectively. Lacy ironwork, surprisingly delicate and intricate in its design, framed the front of the scalloped dome. Icing on the cake of the entire structure, itself a masterpiece of wrought iron and green glass.
The thick, leaded panes had been scrubbed free of decade upon decade’s worth of exposure to the vagaries of nature and once again gleamed like emeralds, sparkling against the snowy white landscape. The brass spire, however, was still a heavily patinated green, the lacy iron scrollwork rusted and badly weathered, damaged panes had been boarded over, and who knew what lay underneath the heavy blanket of snow surrounding the place. There was a third section behind the center dome, out of her sight range, that Stevie knew had crumpled and caved in. None of that mattered.
“You’re beautiful,” she whispered, the excitement she’d held at bay on the long drive to southwestern Virginia bubbling forth now, despite the enormity of the task before them. “We’re fixing you up,” she whispered, cupping her gloved hands in front of her mouth to warm her nose and chin as the frigid air seeped in past both her fanciful reveries and the thick padding of her down jacket. “You’ll be a grande dame once again, you’ll see,” she added, even as her teeth began to chatter.
“Coming through!” came a shout from the trail just behind her.
Stevie jumped at the sudden bark of sound, and half-flinched, half-ducked at the same time, as if that fragile, frozen moment in time she’d been experiencing might indeed shatter from the impact of the sudden, noisy intrusion. She must have been so caught up, she hadn’t heard anyone approaching. On instinct honed from years of riding the always crowded DC Metro subway, she reached up to grab the heavy pine branch over her head to steady herself as she twisted around to see who, or what, was coming up the trail behind her. The swift action on her part did keep her from going down, as her boots had begun slipping when she’d been startled. It did not, however, save her from the pile of snow that had been layered on top of that pine branch and all the ones tangled in with it, the entirety of which pummeled down onto her head and shoulders, creating a small heap of fresh snow at her feet that piled all the way up above her calves.
She didn’t immediately react, afraid of what else might befall her, but did slowly lift her head as a deep, masculine voice sang, “In the meadow we can build a snowman.”
Flakes of melting snow dripped off the ends of her eyelashes as she got her first, slightly blurred sight of the owner of that highly amused, and, okay, sexy-as-hell baritone. Even the snowmelt couldn’t hide the fact that he had a face to match. Soul-deep brown eyes framed by thick lashes she’d have paid money to own, full mouth, strong chin, flashy white smile, and what looked like a mop of curly, dark hair peeking out from under the folded-up brim of his knit ski hat.
“I’d offer a hand,” he said, “but they’re a little full at the moment.”
Her eyes widened as she took in the whole scene and not just his pretty, oh-so-pretty face. “Oh,” she gasped. “Sorry!” There was another man a few yards behind Mr. Sexy Baritone, and they had what appeared to be some very heavy, very long pieces of lumber balanced between them, hoisted up on their shoulders. Their very broad, manly man shoulders. “I was so caught up, taking her all in. I didn’t hear—” Stevie broke off and immediately shuffled her way out of her snow pile and off the path to make way for them, then instantly wished she hadn’t. The snow off the packed trail was even deeper. A lot deeper.
The fur-lined, knee-high boots had looked so cute when she’d picked them up on a Black Friday deal at Neiman’s in anticipation of her holiday mountain adventure. As it turned out, cute had been a trade-off for functional. Not only had the thin rubber soles done nothing to keep the cold of the snow pack from seeping through and freezing the soles of her feet and all ten of her freshly manicured toes, but the shallow-yet-everso-stylish snowflake-patterned tread had also failed to provide actual traction. Of any kind. “Holy . . . mother,” she said through gritted teeth, managing to bite off the rest of the less than ladylike retort that sprang to mind when the snow tipped inside the tops of her boots. It seemed to instantly melt into a frigid pool of icy water at her feet, soaking clear through her black, thick knit leggings along the way.
It wasn’t that she didn’t like getting wet or messy. She worked with plants and potting medium every day of her life. Digging in the dirt was what she did. And she loved it. But she wasn’t at work. At least, not yet. And it was precisely because she spent long hours every day with muddy streaks on her face and the better part of the rest of her body caked in dirt, that she expended the effort when she was on her own time to indulge in her love of doing up her hair, making up her face, dressing in fabulous clothes, and yes, feeling pretty. Not to impress anyone, but simply to feel good. “Don’t be a fool,” Granny May had always told her in that gravelly Mississippi twang that forty-eight years of living in the District hadn’t altered one bit. “You take care with those gifts God gave you. Don’t insult the Man, now.”
Her Granny May had worked long, hard hours as a hotel maid and seamstress for each of those forty-eight years, and she’d never once left their little apartment without her lipstick on, her eyebrows carefully penciled in, and her uniform freshly pressed. It was about taking pride in one’s self.
Standing there at that moment, however, Stevie could feel that the hair she’d carefully styled into a sleek little bun that showed off her cheekbones was now a soggy blob hanging halfway down the back of her neck, the perfectly applied mascara that made her green eyes flash was no doubt running in black rivulets down her cheeks, and the wardrobe she’d spent several very enjoyable hours shopping for now sagged under a pile of snowmelt. All of which forced Stevie to admit it was the teensiest bit possible that after Sunny had mentioned the abundance of lumberjack types dotting her new mountain landscape, Stevie might have been the weensiest bit hopeful that all her efforts would have an added side benefit. Maybe. Possibly.
“I’m fine,” she assured them with a weak smile, carefully wiping her cheeks with the side of a gloved finger. “Please, go on. That looks heavy.”
“You must be Stevie.”
She blinked against the rivulets of melting snow still trickling off her lashes and down her nose as she looked at Mr. Sexy Baritone. She took in his green plaid wool jacket, the dark brown canvas pants, and the heavy work boots laced halfway up his calves, then looked up to the heavy wood beams propped on his shoulder, and burst out laughing. All he needed was a big blue ox. Hot lumberjack types indeed. She hadn’t realized Sunny meant that. . .
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