One More for Christmas - Sarah Morgan Page 0,126

cottage by the loch. She imagined him, coffee cooling in mugs as he focused, and considered hiking through the snow to surprise him. Common sense stopped her.

Imagine how awkward that could be. He’d be too polite to rebuff her, and she had too much pride and dignity to put them both in that position. She didn’t want to spend Christmas Day hiding behind the Christmas tree, trying to avoid an embarrassing encounter. She didn’t want it to feel awkward whenever they had to call each other in the future about a client.

The fact that he hadn’t joined her the night before was presumably his way of saying that for him it had just been a one-night thing.

He’d only taken her to his cabin because she’d been upset.

He was a kind, decent guy. He’d been helping.

She’d told him she wanted to see stars, and he’d given her stars. She’d never forget it. Not the clarity of the night sky, or the skill of his kiss. At some point the whole experience had merged and she wasn’t sure which of the stars were celestial and which were conjured by her thoroughly oversensitized body.

Rather than feeling sad, she should feel grateful that they’d had that one night. It was something to remember. Something to measure other relationships by, because she knew now that what she wanted wasn’t a dream, or a fantasy, or something that only happened between the pages of a book.

If you were lucky enough to find the right person, it could happen in real life too, as it had for her sister.

Exhausted with smiling, she hid herself away in the library under the pretext of wrapping gifts. While she was there, she also caught up with emails, the whole time trying to listen to the voice of reason in her head.

That one night they’d spent together had been just that. One night.

She tucked a gift into the paper, wrapped it neatly and measured a length of ribbon.

Two consenting adults. That was a perfectly legitimate type of relationship.

She wrote neatly on the label, pushed the gift to one side and started on the next one until finally she had a neat pile, ready to be transferred to the tree in the living room, where it had been agreed they’d be opening their gifts the following morning.

Tab had already hung up her stocking, and Samantha had filled a stocking for her sister, as she’d done every year since Ella was born.

With no more gifts to wrap, she was tempted to stand in the window and see if she could catch sight of the cottage from here, but she forced herself to stay seated and instead reached for her laptop.

She sent messages to all her staff and clients, dealt with a few issues, made a note to deal with others once the holiday season had passed. Through the closed door she could hear Tab’s excited shrieks and Bear’s barks as her niece and the dog chased each other round the house.

She could hear her mother’s voice.

“Tab? Shall we leave a treat for Santa? One of Mary’s cakes, perhaps? A drink?”

Samantha glanced up from her email. Had her mother really just said that? Her mother finally embraced the magical fantasy of Santa? Maybe miracles really did happen at Christmas.

Just not for her.

Determined not to feel sorry for herself, she returned to her emails, only half listening as Ella answered Tab’s questions.

“Yes, I’m sure he’ll be hungry.”

“But will he have time to stop and eat? Won’t that make him late?”

“It won’t make him late.”

“He doesn’t have a schedule?”

Samantha closed her laptop, unable to concentrate for the first time in her working life.

It could wait. It could all wait. There was more to life than work.

She stood up, scared. Where had that thought come from? What was happening to her? For once, inner Samantha seemed to be getting the better of outer Samantha.

She moved to the window seat, staring at the snow, pretending to herself that she wasn’t hoping to see Brodie striding toward the lodge wanting to talk to her about something.

What had he needed so desperately on Christmas Eve that he’d had to drive to the village?

When she could no longer justify staring, she joined her family in the living room and played with Tab, until finally the little girl went to bed and a contented hush fell over the house.

“Drink.” Ella collapsed on the sofa and waved a hand. “Michael, I need a drink.”

He grinned, poured her one and handed it to her.

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